which have been given in and laid before us concerning
the said marriage; having further seen and in like
manner inspected all the treaties and leagues of peace
and amity on this account entered upon and concluded
between Henry VII., of immortal fame, late King of
England, and the said Ferdinand, of glorious memory,
late King of Spain; having besides seen and most carefully
weighed all and every of the acts, debates, letters,
processes, instruments, writs, arguments, and all other
things which have passed and been transacted in the
said cause at any time; in all which thus seen and
inspected, our most exact care in examining, and our
most mature deliberation in weighing them hath by us
been used, and all other things have been observed
by us, which of right in this matter were to be observed;
furthermore, the said most illustrious Prince, Henry
VIII., in the forementioned cause, by his proper Proctor
having appeared before us, but the said most serene
Lady Catherine in contempt absenting herself (whose
absence we pray that the divine presence may compensate)
[cujus absentia Divina repleatur praesentia.
Lord Herbert translates it, “whose absence may
the Divine presence attend,” missing, I think,
the point of the Archbishop’s parenthesis] by
and with the advice of the most learned in the law,
and of persons of most eminent skill in divinity whom
we have consulted in the premises, we have found it
our duty to proceed to give our final decree and sentence
in the said cause, which, accordingly, we do in this
manner.
“Because by acts, warrants, deductions, propositions,
exhibitions, allegations, proofs and confessions,
articles drawn up, answers of witnesses, depositions,
informations, instruments, arguments, letters, writs,
censures, determinations of professors, opinions, councils,
assertions, affirmations, treaties, and leagues of
peace, processes, and other matters in the said cause,
as is above mentioned, before us laid, had, done,
exhibited, and respectively produced, as also from
the same and sundry other reasons, causes, and considerations,
manifold arguments, and various kinds of proof of
the greatest evidence, strength, and validity, of
which in the said cause we have fully and clearly informed
ourselves, we find, and with undeniable evidence and
plainness see that the marriage contracted and consummated,
as is aforesaid, between the said most illustrious
Prince, Henry VIII., and the most serene Lady Catherine,
was and is null and invalid, and that it was contracted
and consummated contrary to the law of God: therefore,
we, Thomas, Archbishop, Primate, and Legate aforesaid,
having first called upon the name of Christ for direction
herein, and having God altogether before our eyes,
do pronounce sentence, and declare for the invalidity
of the said marriage, decreeing that the said pretended
marriage always was and still is null and invalid;
that it was contracted and consummated contrary to
the will and law of God, that it is of no force or