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

CHAPTER V
14/53

_n._) is very indignant at this allegation, and when recording Chapuys' statement in 1529 that Pace had been imprisoned for two years in the Tower and elsewhere by Wolsey, declares that "Pace was never committed to the Tower, nor kept in prison by Wolsey" but was "placed under the charge of the Bishop of Bangor," and that Chapuys' statement is "an instance how popular rumour exaggerates facts, or how Spanish ambassadors were likely to misrepresent them".

It is rather an instance of the lengths to which Brewer's zeal for Wolsey carried him.

He had not seen the despatch from Mendoza recording Pace's committal to the Tower on 25th Oct., 1527, "for speaking to the King in opposition to Wolsey and the divorce" (_Sp.

Cal._, 1527-29, p.

440).


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