[1191] A slip for 'uno ore.'
[1192] 'Ward' followed: scored out.
[1193] MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 87.
[1194] Subst. for 'country.'
[1195] Henry Broome, or Brome, a Londer bookseller: MS. Aubr. 26, fol. 64.
[1196] MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 86v.
[1197] MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 87.
[1198] Dupl. with 'continue.'
[1199] A memo. to bring in here an account of the bishop's last illness.
[1200] MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 8.
[1201] Aubrey in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 386v: June 29, 1689.
[1202] Ibid., fol. 387.
[1203] Seth Ward, B.D.
[1204] MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 87v.
[1205] MS. Aubr. 10, fol. 65.
[1206] MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 8.
[1207] MS. Aubr. 6, a slip at fol. 86.
[1209] MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 8.
[1210] MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 34.
[1211] Subst. for 'servant.'
[1212] Subst for 'printed.'
[1213] MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 34v.
[1214] Anthony Wood marks 'quaere.'
[1215] The Tables of Logarithms.
[1216] MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 5.
[1218] Aubrey in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 135: Aug. 9, 1671.
[1219] Aubrey in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 144.
[1220] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 42v. Anthony Wood queries:—'Which Dr. Webb do you meane? whether him that was a bishop in Ireland?'
[1221] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 80v.
[1222] 'A thick 8vo, printed anno Domini 1635' followed; scored out.
[1223] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 81.
[1224] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 97.
[1225] MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 9v.
[1226] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 6v.
[1227] MS. Aubr. 9, a slip pasted on to fol. 27v. Also noted by Aubrey in MS. Ballard 14, fol. 113v; Nov. 7, 1674.
[1228] In the Trin. Coll. Oxon. register, where he was adm. Scholar May 28, 1635, aet. 16, he is entered as of 'Elvington in Goringe parish, Oxon.'
[1229] MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 6.
[1230] Aubrey in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 234: Nov. 15, 1673.
[1231] Ibid., fol. 282v: Oct. 24, 1674.
[1232] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 104.
[1233] Which he had given Trenchard as dowry with his daughter.
[1234] i.e. Richard Aubrey, his step-son.
[1235] Dupl. with 'man.'
[1236] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 104v.
[1237] Subst. for 'stately.'
[1238] Dupl. with 'with a great deale of state.'
[1239] MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 2.
[1240] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 6v.
[1241] MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 92. Aubrey gives in trick the coat:—'See of Chester; impaling, argent, on a bend engrailed cottised sable, 3 martlets or, a crescent for difference.'
[1242] Dupl. with 'partes.'
[1243] Dupl. with 'family.'
[1244] Subst. for 'after the peace in Germany was made.'
[1245] In error for Richard Cromwell.
[1246] MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 92v.
[1247] MS. Aubr. 8, fol 16v.
[1248] Dupl. with 'topique.'
[1249] A plea that the failure of this shorthand to gain credit abroad is no argument against its excellence.
[1250] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 4v.
[1251] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 6v.
[1252] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 16v.
[1253] i.e. he used to ride over to Abingdon on market-days, in hope of practice.
[1254] i.e. before he took his Doctor's degree.
[1255] Dupl. with 'in Canterbury College.'
[1256] Sir Walter Smith of Great Bedwin, Wilts.
[1257] Subst. for 'suddenly.'
[1258] Dupl. with 'brindle.'
[1259] MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 55v.
[1260] Dupl. with μετανοεῖτε.
[1261] MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 56.
[1262] Aubrey in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 141v: Oct. 27, 1671.
[1263] Aubrey in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 173: May 25, 1672.
[1264] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 50v.
[1265] Wood says the Marshalsea.
[1266] MS. Aubr. 8, fol 8.
[1267] i.e. look in Aubrey's diary for 1673 (or about that year, 'plus, minus') for a note concerning him.
[1268] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 10v.
[1269] Dupl. with 'rector.'
[1270] i.e. Theophilus.
[1271] MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 75v, 76.
[1272] Sunday.
[1273] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 9.
[1274] MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 91.
[1275] The words in square brackets are substituted for 'haz been very well assured.'
[1276] 'of' <a slip for 'or'> 'Cardinall' followed: struck out.
[1277] MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 91v.
[1278] See the facsimile at the end of this volume.
[1279] Aubrey in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 273v: May 30, 1674.
[1280] Thomas Stephens (q.v.), from whom Aubrey received this traditional story.
[1281] MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 62v.
[1282] MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 53.
[1283] East Knoyle.
[1284] MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 8v.
[1285] i.e. he misses most the meetings of the Society, and would willingly pay for a regular account of each meeting.
[1286] i.e. Aubrey's initials, J. A., disguised.
[1287] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 82v.
[1288] 'Edward' subst. for 'Edmund.'
[1289] Subst. for 'called.'
[1290] Sic.
[1291] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 83.
[1292] MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 60v.
[1293] Sic.
[1294] i.e. the Ashmolean.
[1295] MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 31.
[1296] This is Aubrey's patron, so often mentioned as giving him information.
[1297] Sept. 3, 1658.
[1298] MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 5.
[1299] i.e. March 1683/4, probably. The leaf is dated 'January 1684/5.'
[1300] MS. Aubr. 21, p. 19. Anthony Wood also alludes to her prowess with the tankard (Clark's Wood's Life and Times, ii. 219).
[1301] See Clark's Reg. Univ. Oxon, II. i. 50.
[1302] Simon Latham:—Falconry, in 2 books, Lond. 1614; Another new book of Falconry, Lond. 1618.
[1303] i.e. when naughty are not threatened by their nurses with 'the bogy-man.'
[1304] i.e. subsequent to 1680, for this MS. was begun in that year.
[1305] William Dobson, i. 78.
[1306] Clark's Wood's Life and Times, i. 480: Johannes Falcandus of Lucca is said by Clement Reyner (Apostol. Bened. in Anglia) to have been the first apothecary in England, A.D. 1357.
[1307] The words in square brackets are scored out.
[1308] Wood's Hist. et Antiq. Univ. Oxon. (1674).
[1310] Subst. for 'Roman.'
[1311] i.e. crotalum.
[1312] Dupl. with 'orloge.'
[1313] i.e. in one of the lives written by Aubrey. The reference is to the quotation given supra from MS. Aubr. 6.
[1314] The same matter is found in MS. Ballard 14, fol. 126, in a letter from Aubrey to Anthony Wood, dated Feb. 17, 1679/80.
[1315] Subst. for 'Parliament-house.'
[1316] See Clark's Wood's City of Oxford, i. 175; Doble's Hearne's Collections, iii. 215; Madan's Early Oxford Press.
[1317] Sic, in MS.
[1318] Subst. for 'the cathedrall church.'
[1319] Some of the older sets of college rooms in Oxford still show the difference of rooms referred to here and several times in the Lives. There was a large room, the 'chamber' or living and sleeping room, with two or more beds; off this, there were two or more tiny rooms, the 'studies,' in which the students did their work by day, boxed up close in winter for warmth. See T. G. Jackson's Wadham College, p. 133.
[1320] Heraldic memorials of the events of our Saviour's passion.
[1321] The slip is perhaps of date Dec. 1681, or a little later: cp. Clark's Wood's Life and Times, ii. 558, iii. 3. The index to the MS. is dated July 1, 1681 (MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 5).
[1322] Dupl. with ''twas begun.'
[1323] See i. 65. These notes by Aubrey's brother perhaps account for the loan of the volume to him, which has caused its loss.
[1324] i.e. MS. Aubr. 3.
[1325] Henrietta Maria, consort of Charles I, came to England 1625.
[1326] Alathea (died 1654), daughter of Gilbert Talbot, 7th earl of Shrewsbury, married in 1606 Thomas Howard, earl of Arundel.
[1327] Henry Howard, 6th duke, obiit Jan. 11, 1683/4.
[1328] Aubrey has a reference 'vide page 16 b,' i.e. MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 28v, as given infra. See also supra, p. 181.
[1329] i.e. the duty levied on it.
[1330] Supra, p. 91.
[1331] See Clark's Wood's Life and Times, iii. 31, 310.
[1332] i.e. a note for Aubrey's 'Observations on Ovid's Fasti' (see i. 44), a Lansdowne MS., since printed.
[1333] 'Apicati cincta.'
[1334] I do not know what MS. of his Aubrey is here thinking of inserting Avebury in; possibly the lost 'Liber B.' MS. Aubr. 9, fol. 55v, is an envelope addressed 'for Dr. Blackburne with care,' and has the notes 'Templa Druidum,' 'or if Druidum Templa rediviva,' apparently suggested titles for a treatise by Aubrey. MS. Aubr. 11 is a treatise by Aubrey on Stonehenge.
[1335] In North Wilts.
[1336] i.e., perhaps, Mr. Lancelot Morehouse ascribed witchcraft to demoniacal possession.
[1337] Alt. to 'in the young men.'
[1338] To introduce them into Aubrey's projected comedy The Country Revel.
[1339] Henry, 5th earl, 1st marquess.
[1340] Edward, 4th earl.
[1341] Edward, 2nd marquess of Worcester; his son Henry was created duke of Beaufort, Dec. 2, 1682.
[1342] i.e. 90 years before 1670, the date of this note.
[1343] North Wilts.
[1344] Aubrey no doubt cites text and note from Thomas Farnaby's edition.
[1345] Ad quem in terrâ defixum foeminae se exercent tanquam tyrones ut simulata pugna, feriendi, insiliendi, recedendi veram disciplinam ediscant (Vegetius.)
[1346] See facsimile at end of this volume.
[1347] The heavy wooden roller with which the ground is rolled after sowing, or when the corn sprouts in April and May.
[1348] Sic in MS.
[1349] For a similar birth at Middleton-Stony, Oxfordshire, in 1552, see Clark's Wood's Life and Times, iv. 64.
[1350] i.e. except the first and second stones, they are more or less (plus, minus) about 4 feet high. The diagram gives Aubrey's measurement of the circle: p. = paces.
[1351] i.e. measure exactly their height.
[1352] There is no indication of the person who saw the apparition. Anthony Wood (Life and Times, ii. 4) reports an apparition which appeared to Richard Lower in 1664.
[1353] Scil. of lying in that position.
[1354] See supra, i. p. 128.