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

CHAPTER VII
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193) were a grief to Henry, the pain and the sorrow were hers in far greater measure; if they had made her old and deformed, as Francis brutally described her in 1519,[549] the fact must have been far more bitter to her than it was unpleasant to Henry.

There may have been some hardship to Henry in the circumstance that, for political motives, he had been induced by his council to marry a wife who was six years his senior; but to Catherine herself a divorce was the height of injustice.

The question was in fact one of justice against a real or supposed political necessity, and in such cases justice commonly goes to the wall.

In politics, men seek to colour with justice actions based upon considerations of expediency.

They first convince themselves, and then they endeavour with less success to persuade mankind.
[Footnote 548: _Sp.


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