[1] [2] When this proclamation was reported in Eng|land by the noble men that returned from the ma|riage:English nobi| [...]tie craue [...] of the [...] to go [...] to the [...]. the duke of Suffolke, the marquesse Dorset, and his foure bretheren, the lord Clinton, sir Ed|ward Neuill, sir Giles Capell, Thomas Cheneie, and other sued to the king to be at the chalenge, which re|quest he gratiouslie granted. Then the lords and knights prepared all things necessarie for their en|terprise, and shipped there horsses and harnesse, and did so much by iourneie, that they came to Paris at the end of October, which were hartilie welcomed of the king and the Dolphin: but most of all of the French queene which then laie at saint Denise, and was not yet crowned nor entered into Paris. The Dolphin desired the duke of Suffolke and the lord marquesse Dorset, to be two of his immediat aids, which thereto assented.