Bapst, Edmond, Deux Gentilshommes-Poetes de la cour de
Henry VIII., Paris, 1891, pp. 26, 60.
Footnote 26: Letters and Papers of Henry VIII., vol. ii., Part I., No.
2149.
Footnote 27: Ibid., vol. xi., No. 60; vol. xv., No. 581.
Footnote 28: D. Lloyd, State Worthies, vol. i. 105.
Footnote 29: Letters and Papers of Henry VIII., vol. v. p. 751.
Footnote 30: Camden, History of England.
Footnote 31: In the First Boke of the Introduction of Knowledge, 1547.
Footnote 32: Hall's Life of Henry VIII., ed. Whibley, 1904, vol. i.
175.
Footnote 33: The Travels and Life of Sir Thomas Hoby, ed. Powell,
1902, pp. 18, 37.
Footnote 34: Ascham's Works, ed. Giles, vol. i., Part II., p. 265.
Footnote 35: I refer to the death of Bucer and P. Fagius. Strype (Life
of Cranmer, p. 282) says that when they arrived in England in the month
of April they "very soon fell sick: which gave a very unhappy stop to
their studies. Fagius on the fifth of November came to Cambridge, and
ten days afterwards died."
Footnote 36: Taming of the Shrew, Act I. Sc. ii.
Footnote 37: Coryat's Crudities, ed. 1905, p. 17.
Footnote 38: Ed. 1591, p. 91.
Footnote 39: Works, ed. Grossart, ix. 139. In which the father of
Philador, among many other admonitions, forestalls Sir Henry Wotton's
famous advice to Milton on the traveller's need of holding his tongue:
"Be, Philador, in secrecy like the Arabick-tree, that yields no gumme
but in the darke night."
Footnote 40: