MS 18 consists of 16 foolscap folios, closely written on both sides in George Wyatt's hand. It forms the preface to, and the first fragment of, his magnum opus in defence of Anne Boleyn; of which MS 7 is an earlier, and much briefer, draft. The project was a grandiose one, apparently involving a total refutation of papal claims to authority in England, in a manner similar to that of MS 19. George's approach is far more detailed, however, and if it had been completed his work must have been far longer. This fragment of the main work comes to an end at the year 640, and how much of the remainder was ever written is problematical. The document published here comprises the preface only; four complete folios and a portion of the fifth. Had the work ever been put into its final form, this would no doubt have been addressed ‘to the Christian reader’, and the general view of history which it expresses is conventional and unremarkable. Fifty years before, John Proctor, following classical and other precedents, had written in the dedication to his Historie of Wyates rebellion:
It hath been allowed … for a necessary policy in all ages … that the flagitious enterprises of the wicked … as also the wise and vertuous policies of the good … should by writing be committed to eternal memory. Partly that they of that age in whose time such things happened might by the oft reading conceive a certain gladness in considering with themselves, and beholding as it were in a glass, from what calamity and extreme ruin, by what policy and wisdom, their native countries were delivered … partly for a doctrine and monition serving both for the present and for future time. But chiefly and principally that the traitors themselves … may always have before their eyes the miserable end that happeneth as just reward to all such caytives ….