Page:History of england froude.djvu/424

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402
REIGN OF HENRY THE EIGHTH
[ch. 5.

The Pope's language was ambiguous, and the writer did not allow himself to derive from it any favourable augury; but the tone in which the suggestions had been made was by many degrees more favourable than had been heard for a very long time in the quarter from which they came, and the symptoms which it promised of a change of feeling were more than confirmed in the following winter.

Charles was to be at Bologna in the middle of December, where he was to discuss with Clement the situation of Europe, and in particular of Germany, with the desirableness of fulfilling the engagements into which he had entered for a general council.

This was the avowed object of the meeting. But, however important the question of holding a council was becoming, it was not immediately pressing; and we cannot doubt that the disquiet occasioned by the alliance of England and France was the cause that the conference was held at so inconvenient a season. The Pope left Eome on the 18th of November, having in his train a person who afterwards earned for himself a dark name in English history, Dr Bonner, then a famous canon lawyer attached to the embassy. The journey in the

    ausim. Id certe totum vestræ prudentiæ considerandum relinque. Et quamvis dixerim Pontifici, nihil me de eo scripturum, nolui tamen majestati vestræ hoc reticere; quæ sciat omni me industriâ laborâsse in us quæ nobis mandat exequendis et cum Anconitano qui me familiariter uti solet, omnia sum conatus. De omnibus auteni me ad communes literas rejicio. Optime valeat vestra majestas.—Romæ die xviii. Septembris, 1530.

    Clarissimi vestrai Majestatis,
    Humillimus servus,
    Gregorius Cassalis

    Lord Herbert, p. 140.