[1] Polydor. But now touching the dooings about the new K. You shall vnderstand, that by reason of his yoong yeares, as yet he was not able to gouerne himselfe, and therefore Iohn duke of Lancaster,The duke of Lancaster & the earle of Cambridge appointed protectors. and Edmund earle of Cambridge, with other péeres of the realme, were appointed to haue the administration. He was of good disposition and towardnesse, but his age being readie to incline which way soeuer a man should bend it, those that were appointed to haue the gouerne|ment of his person, did what laie in them now at the first, to keepe him from all maner of light demeanor. But afterwards, when euerie one began to studie more for his owne priuate commoditie, than for the aduancement of the common-wealth, they set open the gates to other, which being readie to corrupt his good nature, by little and little grew familiar with him, and dimming the brightnesse of true honour, with the counterfeit shine of the contrarie, so maske|red his vnderstanding, that in the end they brought him to tract the steps of lewd demeanor, and so were causers both of his and their owne destruction. This séemeth to be touched by C. Okland, who speaking of the death of the old king and the erection of the new, saith of him according to our annales, as followeth:
In Angl. prael.Vndecimum puer hic nondum transegerat annum,Cùm iuuenile caput gessit diademate cinctum.Qui postquam princeps iustis adoleuerat annis.Dicere non facile est quantum distaret auitisMoribus atque animo, fuit hic quàm disparemente,Dissimili ingenio clarae matríque patríque.