Footnote 55: Turler, The Traveiler, p. 12.
Footnote 56: Kirchner in Coryat’s Crudities, vol. i. 131.
Footnote 57: Turler, op. cit., p. 48.
Footnote 58: Lipsius, Turler, Kirchner.
Footnote 59: Turler, The Traveiler, p. 47.
Footnote 60: Turler, op. cit., p. 107.
Footnote 61: Methodus Apodemica, p. 26.
Footnote 62: An Essay of the Meanes how to make our Travailes in forraine Countries the more profitable and honourable. London, 1606.
Footnote 63: London, 1578.
Footnote 64: Sidney, Letter to his brother, 1580.
Footnote 65: Profitable Instructions. Written c. 1595. Printed 1633.
Footnote 66: Profitable Instructions, 1595, Harl. MS. 6265, printed in Spedding’s Letters and Life of Bacon, vol. ii. p. 14. Spedding believes these Instructions to be by Bacon.
Footnote 67: State Papers, Domestic Elizabeth,
1547-80, vol. lxxvii.,
No. 6.
Footnote 68: Hist. MSS. Comm. 12th Report, App. IV., January 31, 1571.
Footnote 69: Life, Written by Himself, Oxford, 1647.
Footnote 70: Devereux, Lives and Letters of the Devereux, vol. ii. 233.
Footnote 71: Birch, Life of Prince Henry of Wales, App. No. XII.
Footnote 72: Life and Letters, by Pearsall Smith, vol. i. 246.
Footnote 73: Op. cit.
Footnote 74: Talbot, MSS. in the College of Arms, vol. P, fol. 571.
Footnote 75: Davison’s Poetical Rhapsody. I. Biographical Notice, p. xxiii.
Footnote 76: Sloane MS. 1813.
Footnote 77: State Papers, Domestic, 1547-80, vols. xviii., No. 31; xix., No. 6-52 passim; xx., No. 1-39 passim.
Footnote 78: Direction for Travailers.
Footnote 79: Stowe’s Annals, p. 600.
Footnote 80: Works, ed. Giles, vol. i., Pt. ii., Epis. cxvi.
Footnote 81: Op. cit.
Footnote 82: Fox-Bourne’s Life of Sidney, p. 91.
Footnote 83: Op. cit.
Footnote 84: Thomae Erpenii, De Peregrinatione Gallica, 1631, pp. 6, 12.
Footnote 85: Copy-Book of Sir Amias Poulet’s Letters, Roxburghe Club, p. 89.
Footnote 86: Letter-Book, p. 16.
Footnote 87: Letter-Book, p. 89.
Footnote 88: Poems of Thomas Carew, ed. W.C. Hazlitt, 1870. Pp. xxiii.-xxx.
Footnote 89: T. Birch, Court and Times of James I., vol. i. p. 218.
The embarrassments of an ambassador under these circumstances are hardly exaggerated, perhaps, in Chapman’s play, Monsieur D’Olive, where the fictitious statesman bursts into a protest: