[35a] D’Argenson’s Mémoires, v. 98, fol.

[35b] Ibid. v. 183.

[36a] Published by the Duc de Broglie, in Revue d’Histoire Diplomatique. No. 4. Paris, 1891.

[37a] Browne, iv. 36–38.

[38a] Genuine Copies of Letters, &c. London, 1748.

[38b] An Account of the Prince’s Arrival in France, p. 66. London, 1754.

[39a] There are letters of Bulkeley’s to Montesquieu as early as 1728. Voyages de Montesquieu, p. xx. note 3.

[40a] In his work on Madame de Pompadour (p. 109), M. Capefigue avers that he discovered, in the archives of the French Police, traces of an English plot to assassinate Prince Charles; the Jacobites believed in such attempts, not without reason, as we shall prove.

[41a] Walton. S. P. Tuscany. No. 55.

[43] Mémoires, iv. 322.