FOOTNOTES:
[1] Dec. 2, 1718.
[2] See Vol. I. p. 321, &c.
[3] See Vol. I. p. 276.
[4] See Vol. I. p. 273.
[5] See Vol. I. p. 258.
[6] See Vol. I. p. 212 to 215.
[7] See Vol. I. p. 268.
[8] See Vol. II. p. 364.
[9] See Vol. I. p. 364.
[10] See Vol. I. p. 224 to 257.
[11] See Vol. I. p. 87, &c.
[12] See Vol. II. p. 181.
[13] See Vol. II. p. 180.
[14] See Vol. II. p. 173, &c.
[15] See Vol. II. p. 143.
[16] See Vol. II. p. 141.
[17] See Vol. I. p. 425. Vol. II. p. 130.
[18] This Prince died in June 1737, and is succeeded by the Duke of Lorrain.
[19] She is now Regent for the Duke of Lorrain, who is at the Head of the Imperial Army against the Turks.
[20] See Vol. II. p. 1, &c.
[21] See Vol. I. p. 423.
[22] See Vol. I. p. 423.
[23] See Vol. I. p. 395, &c.
[24] See Vol. I. p. 422.
[25] See Vol. I. p. 152, 167.
[26] See Vol. II. p. 171.
[27] The Duke de la Force.
[28] Eccles. ii. 23.
[29] See Vol. II. p. 450, &c.
[30] Our Author made too short a Stay at this time in England, and was too much circumscrib’d in his Conversation while he was here; or surely he would not have ventur’d to have charg’d our Country in general with the idle Surmises of the ignorant Vulgar.
[31] Since the Author wrote, this Antipathy seems to be much abated.
[32] When our Author was here, short Cloaks were hardly in the Fashion.
[33] See Vol. I. p. 196.
[34] See Vol. I. p. 185.
[35] See Vol. I. p. 82.
[36] See Vol. I. p. 210.
[37] See Vol. I. p. 204.
TRANSCRIBER’S AMENDMENTS
Transcriber’s Note: Blank pages have been deleted. On pages that remain, some unnecessary page numbers may have been deleted when they fall in the middle of lists. Some illustrations may have been moved. Footnotes have been moved to the preceding pages. When the author’s preference can be determined, we have rendered consistent on a per-word-pair basis the hyphenation or spacing of such pairs when repeated in the same grammatical context. The publisher’s inadvertent omissions of important punctuation have been corrected. A table of contents has been added. Duplicative front matter has been removed.
The following list indicates any additional changes. The page number represents that of the original publication and applies in this etext except for footnotes and illustrations since they may have been moved.
Page Change
3 Minister of Spoin[Spain],
7 the Kiug[King] and Queen,
11 {footnote} See Vol. I. [p.] 268.
30 the Palace of the Tuilleries[Tuileries],
113 His Catholick[Catholic] Majesty thereby order’d
114 Thunder-struck when he ready[read] this Letter,
128 there’s her Picture in a Medaillon[Medallion],
132 Galleries and an Amphitheatre, which, acccording[according]
134 a Marble Ballustrade[Balustrade], adorn’d with Statues of the
224 I saw the Court more than once at Aranjues[Aranguez],
272 the Baron de Durremberg[Duremburg];
284 but scalding hot, which is the more surprizeing[surprizing],
288 St. Winceslaus[Wenceslaus] King of Bohemia346 the Comeing[Coming] of our Lord,