111. Ibid, p. 849.
112. State Papers.
113. Ibid, pp. 972, 975.
114. Hacket, from Cabala, p. 223.
115. State Papers.
116. Ellis’s Original Letters, 2nd series, vol. iii., p. 245-46. There are nineteen volumes in the Sloane MSS., British Museum, consisting of notes in Latin, in the handwriting of Mayerne, forming a journal of the cases which he attended from 1611 to 1649. “These,” says Sir Henry Ellis, “may be styled, for the period they embrace, ‘Medical Annals of the Court of England.’”
117. State Papers. Letter from Edward Herbert to James I., p. 168.
118. State Papers, vol. cliv., No. 2.
119. Ibid, No. 17.
120. Letter from Chamberlain to Carleton.
121. State Papers, vol. clxiv., No. 17.
122. Coke’s Detections, p. 224.
123. Lord Middlesex.
124. State Papers, vol. clxiv., No. 53.
125. Nichols, 970.
126. State Papers, vol. clix., Nos. 45, 46.
127. Nichols, 790.
128. State Papers, vol. clx., No. 63.
129. Ibid, No. 68.
130. State Papers, No. 27.
131. State Papers, vol. clxiv., No. 10.--Locke to Carleton.
132. State Papers, vol. clxiv., No. 12.
133. Ibid, No. 44.
134. Note in Nichols, 937, from Finett’s Philoxenis.
135. Letter from Chamberlain to Carleton, Nov. 21.
136. State Papers, vol. clxvi., No. 62.
137. State Papers, vol. clxv., No. 29.
138. Ibid, vol. clxix., No. 14.
139. Light open baskets for flowers, and still so called by gardeners.--Gifford’s Ben Jonson.
140. State Papers, vol. clxii, No. 13.
142. State Papers, clxiv., No. 12.
143. May 5th, 1624.--State Papers.
144. State Papers, clxiv., No. 86.
145. Parl. History, 1411, 1471.--See Lord Campbell, Article Coke.
146. State Papers.
147. State Papers, vol cxlii., Nos. 44, 54.
148. State Papers, vol. clxxxv., No. 48.
149. Probably typhoid, which is characterized by some spots. State Papers, vol. clxxxv., No. 99.
150. Hardwicke, State Papers, 562, 564.
151. Dated March 16, from Theobald’s.
152. Ibid, 563.
153. Letter of Conway to Lord Carlisle; dated March 16, from Theobald’s, 566.
154. Macaulay, vol.i., p.441.
155. Weldon, in James’s time, which, in a writer wholly without principle, is not surprising, attaches guilt to Buckingham in this case; but that Brodie should credit the slanderous statement against Charles and the Duke, seems to modern readers wonderful.
156. Coke’s Detection, vol. i., p. 126.
157. Ibid, 177.
158. Fuller’s Church History, b. x. p., 113.
159. Nichols.--From Harleian MSS., 389.
160. Ibid.
161. Weldon, p. 39.
164. Ibid, 119.
165. Letter from Andrew Herriott to Nicholas, State Papers. Calendar, by Mr. Bruce, vol. xliv., No. 27, dated May 27, 1627.
166. Oldmixon, 70.
167. Harleian MSS., 405. It was revived by the disaffected in 1642, with some alteration of language.--Nichols, 41033.
168. Oldmixon, 70.--From Wilson and Weldon.
169. Nichols, 1032.
170. Nichols, 1054.
171. See Inedited State Papers. Foreign, for 1625.
172. Rushworth, vol. i., p. 167.
173. Coke’s Detection, vol i., p. 182.
174. Lives of the Queens of England, vol. viii., p. 13.
175. His mother, the Countess of Warwick, lived for some time with, and afterwards married, the Earl of Devonshire.
176. On the 24th of September, 1624.--Clarendon’s History of the Rebellion, vol. i., p. 61.
177. Brydges’s Peers of James I., p. 385. Also Clarendon, vol. i., p. 62.
178. Life of Lord Keeper Williams, 209.
179. Ibid.
180. Cabala.--Letter from Lord Kensington to the Duke of Buckingham, vol. i., p. 286.
181. Henrietta Maria.
182. Cabala.--Letter from Lord Kensington to the Prince p. 287.
183. Mr. Chamberlain to Sir D. Carleton. State Paper Office. Dated 24th October, 1624.
184. State Paper Office. Dated Nov. 1, 1624.
185. Cabala, vol. i., p. 288.
186. Memoires de Madame de Motteville, vol. i., p. 21.
187. Cabala, 291.
188. Ibid.
189. Cabala, 286.
190. Ellis’s Original Letters, 2nd series, vol. iii., p. 199.
191. Letter from Lord Kensington to the Duke of Buckingham.--Ellis’s Original Letters, 3rd series, vol. iii., p. 169; also, Cabala, p. 294.
192. Cabala, p. 1287. This letter is dated Feb. 26, 1624.
193. Rushworth’s Collection, p. 169.
194. Ibid.
195. According to one account, the Duke of Anjou, the brother of Henrietta, was proxy for the King of England.--See Mr. Mead’s Letter to Sir Martin Stuteville, April 30; Ellis’s Letters, 1st series, p. 190. 1625.
196. Ellis’s Letters, vol. iii., p. 187.
197. Ibid.
198. Ellis’s Letters, vol. iii., p. 187.
199. The 31st of March.
200. Decoration at this time was carried to such an extent in France, that Lord Kensington describes some of the masquers at a court fête as having almost all their clothes embroidered with diamonds; embroidery of gold and silver being at that time forbidden.--Cabala, 290.
201. See Ellis’s Original Letters, 1st series, vol. i., p. 189.
202. Ellis’s Letters.
203. Rushworth, p. 170.
204. Louis XIV. was not born on the 5th of September, 1538.--See Memoir of Madame de Motteville, vol. i., p. 71.
205. Memoir of Madame de Motteville, vol. i., p. 428.
206. Ibid, 199, said by Henry III. of France.
207. Ibid, 11.
208. Madame de Motteville, pp. 29, 30.
209. Madame de Motteville, p. 20.
210. Madame de Motteville, p. 33.
211. Biographie Universelle.
212. Petilot, Notice sur Richelieu, ii., p. 112.
213. Petilot, x., 126.
214. Memoirs of the Court of King James, by Bishop Goodman, edited by the Rev. T. B. Brewer, vol. ii., p. 344. Taken from the original Hol. Tan., lxxiii., 392. Translated from the French.
215. Memoires de Madame de Motteville, vol. i, p. 14.
216. Memoires de Madame de Motteville, vol. i., p. 16.
217. Reliquiæ Wottonianæ, 221.
218. Miss Aikin’s Memoirs of Charles I., vol. i.
219. Bishop Goodman, vol. i., p. 290. Letter from Balthazar Gerbier of the Duke of Buckingham. Also State Papers, vol. iii., No. 7.
220. Punctilio was then at its height. The point of etiquette, whether the Earl of Carlisle was to wait upon the Cardinal first, or the Cardinal upon the Earl, was settled by Richelieu’s feigning sickness and continuing in bed.--Miss Aikin’s Court of Charles I., p. 24.
221. Madame de Motteville, vol. i., p. 15.
222. Court and Times of James I., by Bishop Goodman, vol. ii., p. 265.
223. Ibid, p. 311.
224. Rushworth, p. 170.
225. Inedited Letter in the State Paper Office. (Not in the Calendar.)
226. State Papers, vol. iii., No. 25.
227. Rushworth, p. 171.
228. Kennet’s Complete History of England, vol. ii., p. 4.
229. Ibid.
230. Inedited Letter in the State Paper Office.
231. Life of Lord Keeper Williams, p. 10.
232. Court of King Charles, Secret History of the Court of James I., p. 23.
233. Ibid.
234. Lilly’s True History of James I. and Charles I.
235. State Papers, vol. clxxxiii., No. 41.
236. State Papers, vol. clxxxiv., No. 7.
237. State Papers.--Letter dated Feb. 19th.
238. Letter from Sir R. Heath and Sir T. Coventry to the Duke of Buckingham.--See Bishop Goodman’s Memoirs, vol. ii., p. 376.
239. State Papers, vol. clxxiv., No. 47. Inedited Papers, Domestic, 1625.
240. State Papers, vol. clxxiv., No. 47.--Chamberlain to Sir D. Carleton, Feb. 26th, 1625. Inedited State Papers.
241. Inedited Letter from Mr. Chamberlain to Sir D. Carleton, State Paper Office.
242. State Papers, vol. cxxxv., No. 12.
243. Campbell’s Life of Sir E. Coke, p. 335, note.
244. Lloyd’s State Worthies.
245. State Papers, vol. cliv., No. 85.
246. Goodman’s Memoirs, vol. ii., p. 313.
247. Ibid, p. 264.
248. Dated April 1st, 1623; Harl. MSS., 1581, p. 129.
249. One of the Duke’s attendants.
250. Harl. MSS., 1581, p. 279.
251. Inedited Documents in the State Paper Office, July 13th, 1624.
252. State Papers.
253. To the Earl of Carlisle, 22,000 crowns. To the Earl of Holland, 20,000 crowns. Sir G. Young had a diamond from the King worth 2,000 francs; from the queen-mother one of 300l., and curious plate to the value of 12,000l.--State Papers, 1624.
254. Parallel. Reliquiæ Wotton., p. 172.
255. Ibid, 174.
256. Letter from Mr. Chamberlain to Sir D. Carleton. In edited State Papers, June 13th, 1624.
257. In the State Paper Office there are several letters from Endymion Porter to his wife, written in the inflated style of love letters of that period, which the curious in such matters will find in the Domestic Papers, 1624, 1625.
258. On the 22nd of June, 1625. I have not found this account in any of our historians.--State Papers, inedited.
259. Sturgeon, as well as whales, were excepted from the other great fishes, sea dogs, called royal fishes, to which the Lord High Admiral laid claim, when they came near the shore by right.--See Chamberlayne’s State of England, p. 81.
260. Chamberlain to Sir D. Carleton, June 25.--State Papers inedited.
261. Chamberlain to Sir D. Carleton, June 25.--State Papers inedited.
262. State Papers, for 1625.
263. Chamberlain to Sir D. Carleton, Jan. 1, 1619-20.
264. Hume.
265. Those in the State Paper Office, to which Mr. Lechmere the Keeper, and Mr. Lemon the Deputy Keeper, first directed my attention; and to those gentlemen I am, therefore, wholly indebted for any new view of Buckingham’s character which these remarks, and those which are to follow, may afford. The Domestic Papers have been within the last few years completely arranged, and an accurate calendar made of them, by which the historical reader may derive the greatest possible assistance.
266. Anderson’s History of Commerce, vol. ii., p. 140.
267. The largest of Queen Elizabeth’s ships, at her death, was of 1,000 tons, carrying 340 mariners and 40 cannon; the smallest, of 600 tons, carrying 150 mariners and 30 cannon; besides the hired vessels.--Macpherson’s History of Commerce.Commerce.
268. Hist. World, lib. 5, cap. 1, sect. 6.
269. Bishop Goodman’s Life of King James I.
270. See the Domestic Papers for 1619-20, State Paper Office.
271. Domestic State Papers, inedited. The agreement is dated July 17, 1624.
272. Letter from Mr. Chamberlain to Sir Dudley Carleton, dated London, Nov. 12, 1619.
273. A note of the charge of the fleet, among the undated papers in the State Paper Office, probably 1625, computes it at 65,656l. Our Navy Force had then been considerably augmented. Some of the items are as follow:--"For bringing of the King’s shippes into full equipage, for clothes for the men, for impress for surgeons."
274. Macpherson’s History of Commerce.
275. Domestic Papers. Letters from J. Burgh, dated Plymouth January 8, 1628.
276. Macpherson, 339.
277. Macpherson, iv., 4, 377.
278. Ibid.