[1] [2] Frier Pate|shull forsa|king his pro|fes [...]on prea|cheth openlie against his owne order.Now bicause such as obteined this fauour, inioied great liberties, manie were glad to bestow largelie, to be so preferred, the frier being redie to admit those that offered most. Among other, one Peter Pate|shull, a frier of the Augustines order, was made by him the popes chapleine, a man not vnlearned, and one that fauoured Wicliffes doctrine, and there vp|on forsaking his priuate profession, gaue himselfe to a publike trade of life, which might séeme to him more holie, commendable, and sure. Héerevpon, he tooke vpon him to preach against his owne order, namelie in a sermon which he made in saint Christo|phers church in London. He inueied so earnestlie a|gainst the abuses and heinous crimes which the fri|ers, sometimes his brethren, vsed to put in practise, that it was an horror to heare.Wickleuists. There were present an hundred at the least of Wicliffes opinion at his ser|mon. Now in the meane while that he so laid foorth what he knew against his late brethren, some per|sons there were that ran to the Augustine friers, and declared the whole matter; wherevpon a dozen of the hardiest and lustiest fellowes among them came to the church, where this Pateshull was preaching, and hearing what was said, they began to be sore moo|ued, insomuch that one of them more zealous in his religion than the other, stepped foorth, and gainesaid those things which the preacher proponed.