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Rh Rome, ; objection to the summoning of Parliament, ; first interview with Chapuys, sq.; demands from Rome instant sentence in her cause, ; dislike of Wolsey up to his death, ; fresh efforts to persuade her to take the veil, ; the suggestion of a neutral place for the trial, ; alarm at the enforcement of Præmunire, ; a party formed in her favour in the House of Commons, ; letter of Catherine to Clement, ; sends a special representative to Rome, ; reception of the news that Henry had declared himself "Pope" in England, ; distrust of Clement's intentions, ; renewed appeal to the Emperor, ; causes of her popularity, ; her answer to a delegation of Peers and Bishops urging a neutral place of trial, ; sneer at the "Supremum Caput," ; question of the consummation of her marriage with Prince Arthur, ; Catherine separated from her daughter, and sent to Moor Park, ; English nobles make another effort to move Catherine, ; her reply, ; annoyed at the Pope's delays, ; her opinion on the probable result of the meeting of Henry and Francis, ; complaints to Charles, ; the proposal that Cranmer should try the cause in the Archbishop's court, ; Catherine pressed by English peers to withdaw her appeal, after the passing of the Act of Appeals, ; her reply, ; résumé of her position in regard to Henry,  sq.; summoned, refuses to appear before Cranmer's court at Dunstable, ; her rejection of the demand that she be styled and endowed as "Princess Dowager," ; allowed to have the Princess Mary with her, ; said to have desired a marriage between the Princess and Reginald Pole,, ; absolute refusal of the renewed Cambrai proposition, ; sent to Kimbolton, and separated again from her daughter, ; fear of foul play, ; insistence that Chapuys should appeal to Parliament for her, ; refusal to take the Succession oath, ; two accounts of her interview with Tunstal and Lee on the subject,  sq.; suspected evil intentions of Anne against her, ; disquiet at the Emperor's inaction, ; obliged to refuse to receive Chapuys at Kimbolton, ; her household reduced by Anne, ; endeavours to quicken the Emperor's resolution, ; anxiety caused by her daughter's second illness, ; the Emperor's refusal to interfere the death-knell of her hopes, ; another appeal to Charles, ; appeal to the Pope to "apply a remedy," ; a similar appeal to Charles, ; what the "remedy" was, ; Catherine's expectation of "martyrdom," ; seized with fatal illness, ; her last letters, ; interviews with Chapuys, ; her death, ; suspicion that she was poisoned,  sqq.; her burial as "widow of Prince Arthur,".

Cellini, Benvenuto: anecdote of Clement VII,.

Chabot, Admiral Philip de,.

Chapuys, Eustace (Imperial ambassador to England): his character, ; his reception in England, ib.; interview with Henry, ; and with Catherine, ; report on the feeling of the people, ib.; report of Henry's refusal to aid Charles with money against the Turks, ; and of Henry's attack on the Pope and Cardinals, ib.; on Henry's firm determination to marry again, ; on English popular hatred of the priests, ; suggestion of reference to the Sorbonne, ; on Norfolk's dread of Wolsey's return to office, ; statement that the Commons were sounded on the divorce, ; report of Norfolk's opinion of probable results of refusing the divorce, sq.; Chapuys's mistaken estimate of English feeling, ; on Wolsey's communications with Catherine, ; and his desire to "call in the secular arm," ; secrets obtained from Wolsey's physician, ; his account of De Burgo's (Nuncio) first interview with Henry (1530), ; advice to the Nuncio, ; on Anne Boleyn's jubilance, ; dislike of his position in England, ; reply to Norfolk's statement of the superiority in England of the King's to the Pope's authority, ; astounded by the enforcement of Præmunire against the English clergy, ; blames Clement's timidity and dissimulation, ; his account of Henry's treatment of the Pope's attempts at friendly negotiations, ; report of Henry's denunciation of Papal claims in England, ; desires the Emperor to make war on England, ; interview with Henry after the passing of the Act of Appeals, ; report on Cranmer's judgment, ; bold action, and consequent discussion with the Council, ; proposes a special Spanish embassy to London, ; his high opinion of Thomas Cromwell, ; attempt to combine Scotland and England through a marriage between James and the Princess Mary, ; interview with Henry as to Catherine's appeal to Parliament, ; his intrigues with