[Henry VIII. by A. F. Pollard]@TWC D-Link bookHenry VIII. CHAPTER VI 3/76
It was not merely that Charles had a staunch ally in his aunt Catherine of Aragon, who is said to have "made such representations and shown such reasons against" the alliance with Francis "as one would not have supposed she would have dared to do, or even to imagine".[377] It was not merely that in this matter Catherine was backed by the whole council except Wolsey, and by the real inclinations of the King.
It was that the English people were firmly imperialist in sympathy.
The reason was obvious.
Charles controlled the wool-market of the Netherlands, and among English exports wool was all-important.
War with Charles meant the ruin of England's export trade, the starvation or impoverishment of thousands of Englishmen; and when war was declared against Charles eight years later, it more nearly cost Henry his throne than all the fulminations of the Pope or religious discontents, and after three months it was brought to a summary end.
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