100 (return (#x3_x_3_i27))
[ Burnet, i. 676.]
101 (return (#x3_x_3_i28))
[ Burnet, i. 675. ii. 629.; Sprat's Letters to Dorset.]
102 (return (#x3_x_3_i31))
[ Burnet, i. 677.; Barillon, Sept. 6/16. 1686. The public proceedings are in the Collection of State Trials.]
103 (return (#x3_x_3_i32))
[ 27 Eliz. c. 2.; 2 Jac. I. c. 4; 3 Jac. I. c. 5.]
104 (return (#x3_x_3_i32))
[ Clarke's Life of James the Second, ii. 79, 80. Orig. Mem,]
105 (return (#x3_x_3_i32))
[ De Augmentis i. vi. 4.]
106 (return (#x3_x_3_i33))
[ Citters, May 14/24 1686.]
107 (return (#x3_x_3_i33))
[ Citters. May 18/28 1686. Adda, May 19/29]
108 (return (#x3_x_3_i33))
[ Ellis Correspondence, April 27. 1686; Barillon, April 19/29 Citters, April 20/30; Privy Council Book, March 26; Luttrell's Diary; Adda Feb 26/Mar 8 March 26/April 5, April 2/12 April 23/May 3]
109 (return (#x3_x_3_i34))
[ Burnet's Travels.]
110 (return (#x3_x_3_i34))
[ Barillon, May 27/June 6 1686.]
111 (return (#x3_x_3_i35))
[ Citters, May 23/June 1 1686.]
112 (return (#x3_x_3_i35))
[ Ellis Correspondence, June 26. 1686; Citters, July 2/12 Luttrell's Diary, July 19.]
113 (return (#x3_x_3_i35))
[ See the contemporary poems, entitled Hounslow Heath and Caesar's Ghost; Evelyn's Diary, June 2. 1686. A ballad in the Pepysian collection contains the following lines
"I liked the place beyond expressing,
I ne'er saw a camp so fine,
Not a maid in a plain dressing,
But might taste a glass of wine."]
114 (return (#x3_x_3_i36))
[ Luttrell's Diary, June 18. 1686.]
115 (return (#x3_x_3_i37))
[ See the memoirs of Johnson, prefixed to the folio edition of his life, his Julian, and his answers to his opponents. See also Hickes's Jovian.]
116 (return (#x3_x_3_i42))
[ Life of Johnson, prefixed to his works; Secret History of the happy Revolution, by Hugh Speke; State Trials; Citters, Nov 23/Dec 3 1686. Citters gives the best account of the trial. I have seen a broadside which confirms his narrative.]
117 (return (#x3_x_3_i43))
[ See the preface to Henry Wharton's Posthumous Sermons.]
118 (return (#x3_x_3_i43))
[ This I can attest from my own researches. There is an excellent collection in the British Museum. Birch tells us, in his Life of Tillotson, that Archbishop Wake had not been able to form even a perfect catalogue of all the tracts published in this controversy.]
119 (return (#x3_x_3_i44))
[ Cardinal Howard spoke strongly to Burnet at Rome on this subject Burnet, i. 662. There is a curious passage to the same effect in a despatch of Barillon but I have mislaid the reference.
One of the Roman Catholic divines who engaged in this controversy, a Jesuit named Andrew Patton, whom Mr. Oliver, in his biography of the Order, pronounces to have been a man of distinguished ability, very frankly owns his deficiencies. "A. P. having been eighteen years out of his own country, pretends not yet to any perfection of the English expression or orthography." His orthography is indeed deplorable. In one of his letters wright is put for write, woed for would. He challenged Tenison to dispute with him in Latin, that they might be on equal terms. In a contemporary satire, entitled The Advice, is the following couplet
"Send Pulton to be lashed at Bushy's school,
That he in print no longer play the fool."
Another Roman Catholic, named William Clench, wrote a treatise on the Pope's supremacy, and dedicated it to the Queen in Italian. The following specimen of his style may suffice. "O del sagro marito fortunata consorte! O dolce alleviamento d' affari alti! O grato ristoro di pensieri noiosi, nel cui petto latteo, lucente specchio d'illibata matronal pudicizia, nel cui seno odorato, come in porto damor, si ritira il Giacomo! O beata regia coppia! O felice inserto tra l'invincibil leoni e le candide aquile!"
Clench's English is of a piece with his Tuscan. For example, "Peter signifies an inexpugnable rock, able to evacuate all the plots of hell's divan, and naufragate all the lurid designs of empoisoned heretics."
Another Roman Catholic treatise, entitled "The Church of England truly represented," begins by informing us that "the ignis fatuus of reformation, which had grown to a comet by many acts of spoil and rapine, had been ushered into England, purified of the filth which it had contracted among the lakes of the Alps."]
120 (return (#x3_x_3_i45))
[ Barillon, July 19/29 1686.]