[{135c}] Knox, i. 363; cf. Keith, i. 213, 214; Spottiswoode, i. 280, 281.
[{136a}] Knox, i. 363-365; For. Cal. Eliz., 337.
[{136b}] Teulet, i. 338-340.
[{137a}] Bain, i. 218; For. Cal. Eliz., 1558-59, 339. 340.
[{137b}] Knox, vi. 45.
[{138}] In Dr. Hay Fleming’s The Scottish Reformation (p. 57), he dates the Regent’s proclamation July 1. He omits the charge that, as proof of their disloyalty, “they daily receive Englishmen with messages, and send the like into England” (Knox, i. p. 364). “The narrative of the proclamation, Knox says, is untrue,” Dr. Hay Fleming remarks; but as to the dealing with England, the Reformer confessed to it in his “History,” Book III., when he could do so with safety.
[{139a}] Knox, i. 365.
[{139b}] Spottiswoode, i. 282.
[{139c}] Teulet, i. 331. The Regent’s instructions to Du Fresnoy.
[{141}] Teulet, i. 334, 335, citing Archives Etrangéres, Angleterre, xiv. (xv.?), f. 221 (see the English translation), For. Cal. Eliz., 1558-59, 406, 407; Keith, i. 220, 221; Spottiswoode, i. 285, 286.