{263b} Ibid., vi. 568.
{263c} M’Crie, 248.
{264a} Bannatyne’s Memorials, 5-13 (1836).
{264b} Calderwood, ii. 515-525.
{266} Bannatyne’s Transactions, 70-82. Bannatyne was Knox’s secretary, and fragments dictated by the Reformer appear in his pages.
{267a} Melville’s “Diary,” 20-26.
{267b} Knox, vi. 606-612.
{268a} Bannatyne, 223, 224 (1836).
{268b} Knox, vi. 620-622.
{268c} Ibid., 236
{269a} Bannatyne, 268.
{269b} Ibid., 273.
{269c} Ibid., 278.
{269d} John Knox, ii. 282, 283.
{270} Cf. Leicester’s letter of October 10, 1574, in Tytler, vii. chap, iv., and Appendix.
{271} Tytler, vii. chap. iv.; Appendix xi, with letters.
{272a} Knox, ii. 356; Bannatyne, 281, 282.
{272b} Morton to Killigrew, August 5, 1573.
{273} Bannatyne, 283-290.
{274} There was another Falsyde.
{275a} See the letter in Maxwell’s Old Dundee, 399-401.
{275b} Bain’s Calendar is misleading here (vol. i. 202). Why Mr. Bain summarised wrongly in 1898, what Father Stevenson had done correctly in 1863 (For. Cal. Eliz,, p. 263) is a mystery.
{276a} See the “Prefatio,” Knox, i. 297, 298. In this preface Knox represents the brethren as still being “unjustly persecuted by France and their faction.” The book ends with the distresses of the Protestants in November 1559, with the words, “Look upon us, O Lord, in the multitude of Thy mercies; for we are brought even to the deep of the dungeon.”—Knox, i. 473.
{276b} Knox, vi. 22, 23.
{276c} M’Crie’s Knox, 360.
{277a} Knox, i. 317-319.
{277b} Hume Brown, John Knox, ii. 6.
{277c} John Knox, ii. 4.
{277d} Scot. Hist. Review, January 1905.
{278a} Lesley, ii. 40, Scottish Text Society, 1895.
{278b} In the French Archives MS., Angleterre, vol. xv.
{279a} Melville, 79 (1827).
{279b} Spottiswoode, i. 320.
{279c} Keith, i. 493, 494 (1835).
{280a} Angl. Reg., xvi., fol. 346.
{280b} Teulet, i. 407.
{280c} Ibid., i. 410.
{280d} For. Cal. Eliz., 1559-60, p. 453.
{280e} Ibid., p. 469.
{280f} Ibid., p. 480.