[1] Doctor Weston being (as you haue heard before) prolocutor of the conuocation house,Doctor We|ston resigneth the deanrie of Westminster by compulsion and is rec [...]m|pensed. was at this time in displeasure with cardinall Poole, and other bishops: bicause he was vnwilling to resigne his deanrie of Westminster vnto the queene, whose pur|pose was to place there (as in old time before) the re|ligion of moonks, whome in déed he fauoured not, al|though in all other things he stood with the church of Rome. Neuerthelesse, by verie importunate sute, or rather compulsion, he with his collegues resigned the deanrie of Westminster. In recompense wherof he was made deane of Windsor, where not long af|ter he was taken in adulterie, and for that fact was by the cardinall depriued of all his spirituall liuings, from whose sentence he appealed vnto the court of Rome. For the following of which appeale he sought secretlie to depart the realme: but he was apprehen|ded by the waie, and committed to the tower of Lon|don, where he remained prisoner, vntill (by the death of quéene Marie) quéene Elizabeth came vnto the crowne, by whome he was set at libertie, and foorth|with fell sicke and died.