No More Learning

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the Scots; and that the parliament might make it PART
a new matter of reproach against the king, that iie



had sent the heir apparent of the crown out of the
kingdom ; which could be no otherwise excused, at
least by those who attended him, than by evident
and apparent necessity : those reasons appeared of
so much weight to the prince himself, (who had not
a natural inclination to go into France,) and to all
the council, that the lord Capel and the lord Cole-
pepper were desired to go to Paris, to satisfy the
queen why the prince had deferred yielding a pre-
sent           to her command.