Footnote 109: James Howell, Letters, ed. Jacobs, p. 69.
Footnote 110: William Thomas, The Historic of Italie, 1549, p. 2.
Footnote 111: Travels and Life of Sir Thomas Hoby, Written by Himself,
ed. Powell, p. 10.
Footnote 112: William Thomas, op. cit. p. 2.
Footnote 113: Fynes Moryson, An Itinerary, etc., Glasgow ed. 1907, i.
159.
Footnote 114: Ibid.
Footnote 115: Thomas Hoby, op. cit. pp. 14, 15.
Footnote 116: William Thomas, op. cit. p. 85.
Footnote 117: Robert Greene, All About Conny-Catching. Works, x.
Foreword.
Footnote 118: Epistola de Peregrinatione in De Eruditione
Comparanda, 1699, p. 588.
Footnote 119: Turler, The Traveller, Preface, and pp. 65-67.
Footnote 120: The Unton Inventories, ed. by J.G. Nichols, p. xxxviii.
Footnote 121: Sir Robert Dallington, State of Tuscany, 1605, p. 64.
Footnote 122: Arthur Hall, Ten Books of Homer's Iliades, 1581, Epistle
to Sir Thomas Cicill.
Footnote 123: Nicholas Breton: A Floorish upon Fancie, ed. Grosart, p.
6.
Footnote 124: Thomas Wright, Queen Elizabeth, ii. 205.
Footnote 125: "A letter sent by F.A. touching the proceedings in a
private quarrel and unkindnesse, between Arthur Hall and Melchisedech
Mallerie, Gentleman, to his very friend L.B. being in Italy." (Only
fourteen copies of this escaped destruction by order of Parliament in
1580. One was reprinted in 1815 in Miscellanea Antiqua Anglicana, from
which my quotations are taken.)
Footnote 126: St Paul's Cathedral, the fashionable promenade.
Footnote 127: Cooper's Athenae Cantabrigienses, i. 381.
Footnote 128: