St Paul's Cathedral, the fashionable promenade.
Footnote 127: Cooper's Athenae Cantabrigienses, i. 381.
Footnote 128: Life and Travels of Thomas Hoby, Written by Himself, p.
19, 20.
Footnote 129: Bercher, Ded. to Queen Elizabeth, in The Nobility of
Women, 1559, ed. by W. Bond for the Roxburghe Club, 1904.
Footnote 130: Ibid. Introduction by Bond, p. 36.
Footnote 131: D.N.B. Article by Sir Sidney Lee.
Footnote 132: Hist. MSS. Commission, 12th Report, App. Part IV. MSS. of
the Duke of Rutland, p. 94.
Footnote 133: Ibid.
Footnote 134: E. Lodge, Illustrations of British History, ii. 100.
(Gilbert Talbot to his father, the Earl of Shrewsbury.)
Footnote 135: Hatfield MSS. (Calendar), ii. 83.
Footnote 136: Ibid., ii. 129.
Footnote 137: Ibid., ii. 114.
Footnote 138: Hatfield MSS. (Calendar), ii. 129.
Footnote 139: Ibid., p. 131.
Footnote 140: Ibid., p. 144.
Footnote 141: See "Sir Henry Sidney to his son Robert," 28th Oct. 1578,
in Collin's Sidney Papers, i. 271.
Footnote 142: In A Method for Travell, c. 1598, Fol. C.
Footnote 143: John Stowe, Annales, ed. 1641, p. 868.
Footnote 144: Ibid.
Footnote 145: Gabriel Harvey, Letter-Book, Camden Society, New Series,
No. xxxiii. p. 97.
Footnote 146: Stowe, Annales, ed. 1641, p. 867.
Footnote 147: Ibid., p. 869.
Footnote 148: Harrison's Description of England, ed. Withington, p.
111.
Footnote 149: T. Birch, Court and Times of James I., i. 191.
Footnote 150: E. Lodge's Illustrations of British History, ii. 228.
Footnote 151: Harleian Miscellany, vol. v. pp. 400-401.
Footnote 152: Leland, J., De Scriptoribus Britannicis, vol. i. 482.
Footnote 153: Calendar of State Papers, Foreign, 1562, Nos. 1069 and
1230.
Footnote 154: E. Nares, Memoir of Lord Burghley, vol. iii. p. 513.
Footnote 155: Lambeth MSS., No. 647, fol. iii. Printed in Spedding's
Letters and Life of Bacon, vol. i. p. 110.
Footnote 156: Calendar of State Papers, Domestic, 1603-1610, p. 634.
Footnote 157: Quoted in Life and Letters of Sir Henry Wotton, ed. by
L. Pearsall Smith, vol. ii. p. 462.
Footnote 158: Fuller, The Church-History of Britain, ed. 1655, book x.
p. 48. The alleged reason for Mole's imprisonment, Fuller says, was that
he had translated Du Plessis Mornay, "his book on the Visibility of the
Church, out of French into English; but besides, there were other
contrivances therein, not so fit for a public relation" (supra, p.
49).
Footnote 159: Fourth Baron Wentworth of Nettlestead and first Earl of
Cleveland, 1591-1667, who became a Royalist general in the Civil War. At
the time of Wotton's letter (1609) he was completing his education
abroad after residence at Oxford. See Dictionary of National
Biography, which does not, however, mention his foreign tour.
Footnote 160: He was at once "reconciled" to the Church of Rome, entered
the Society of the Jesuits, and "died a most holy death," in 1626, while
filling the office of Confessor of the English College at Rome.