[Henry VIII. by A. F. Pollard]@TWC D-Link book
Henry VIII.

CHAPTER IV
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085) in Henry's camp were not likely to remain long united; Wolsey could hardly approve of any "second king" but himself, especially a "second king" who had acquired a family bond with the first.

The Venetian ambassador plainly hints that it was through Wolsey that Suffolk lost favour.[202] In the occasional notices of him during the next few years it is Wolsey, and not Henry, whom Suffolk is trying to appease; and we even find the Cardinal secretly warning the King against some designs of the Duke that probably existed only in his own imagination.[203] [Footnote 196: _Ibid._, ii., 367, 226.

The letters relating to this episode in _L.

and P._ are often undated and sometimes misplaced; _e.g._, this last is placed under March, although from Nos.

295, 296, 319, 327, 331, we find that Mary did not leave Paris till 16th April.] [Footnote 197: _L.


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