[{108b}] Desmarquets, Mem. Chronol. Jour. l’Hist, de Dieppe, i. 210.
[{109a}] Corp. Ref., xlv. (Calv., xvii.) 541.
[{109b}] Naissance de l’Hérésie à Dieppe, Rouen, 1877, ed. Lesens.
[{111}] Knox, i. 321-323.
[{112}] Knox, vi. 23.
[{113a}] Corpus Reformatorum, xlvi. 609, xlvii. 409-411, August 13, 1561.
[{113b}] The learned Dr. M‘Crie does not refer to this letter to Mrs. Locke, but observes: “None of the gentry or sober part of the congregation were concerned in this unpremeditated tumult; it was wholly confined to the lowest of the inhabitants” (M‘Crie’s Life of Knox, 127, 1855). Yet an authority dear to Dr. M‘Crie, “The Historie of the Estate of Scotland,” gives the glory, not to the lowest of the inhabitants, but to “the brethren.” Professor Hume Brown blames “the Perth mob,” and says nothing of the action of the “brethren,” as described to Mrs. Locke by Knox. John Knox, ii. 8.
[{117}] Theses of Erastus. Rev. Robert Lee. Edinburgh, 1844.
[{120}] Knox, i. 341,342; vi. 24. Did the brethren promise nothing but the evacuation of Perth?
[{121a}] “Historie,” Wodrow Miscellany, i. 58.