"If it had not been for the impertinent meddling," they have been accustomed to say, "of such foreigners as Bucer, Peter Martyr, and John a-Lasco, we might have been enjoying at the present day the admirable and truly Catholic devotions set forth in the fresh morning of the Reformation, before the earth-born vapors of theological controversy and ecclesiastical partisanship had beclouded an otherwise fair sky."
"A Short History of the Book of Common Prayer"
William Reed Huntington
Writing to Peter Martyr of his Latin version of the controversy between Cranmer and Gardiner, he says of the latter: "In his periods, for the most part, he is so profuse, that he seems twice to forget himself, rather than to find his end.
"Early Theories of Translation"
Flora Ross Amos
323 Corfe, Eadward the Martyr slain at, i.
"History of the English People, Index"
John Richard Green