41-2.
Footnote 212: Balade, "Les chevaliers ont honte d'etudier" (OEuvres
Completes, tome iii. p. 187).
Footnote 213: De la Noue, Discours Politiques et Militaires, 1587, p.
111.
Footnote 214: De la Noue, op. cit., pp. 118-22. Court and Times of
Charles I., vol. ii. pp. 89, 187.
Footnote 215: A Method for Travell. Shewed by taking the view of
France. As it stood in the yeare of our Lord, 1598.
Footnote 216: By James Howell.
Footnote 217: Supra, note (1).
Footnote 218: A Survey of the Great Dukes State of Tuscany. In the
yeare of our Lord, 1596.
Footnote 219: The View of France, fol. X.
Footnote 220: The View of France, fol. H 4, verso.
Footnote 221: William Thomas, The Pilgrim, 1546.
Footnote 222: Survey of Tuscany, p. 34.
Footnote 223: A Method for Travell, Fol. B 4, verso.
Footnote 224: The first edition of The View of Fraunce was printed
anonymously in 1604 by Symon Stafford: When Thomas Creede brought out
another edition, apparently in 1606, Dallington inserted a preface "To
All Gentlemen that have Travelled," and A Method for Travell,
consisting of eight unpaged leaves, and a folded leaf containing a
conspectus of A Method for Travell.
Footnote 225: As the use of Latin waned, a knowledge of modern languages
became increasingly important. The attitude of continental gentlemen on
this point is indicated by a Spanish Ambassador in 1613, to whom the
Pope's Nuncio used a German Punctilio, of speaking Latin, for more
dignity, to him and Italian to the Residents of Mantua and Urbino.