[75] Luttrell.
[76] Reresby’s Memoirs.
[77] Reresby.
[78] Luttrell.
[79] Luttrell.
[80] See chap. vi.
[81] ‘Celebrated Trials,’ ii. 322.
[82] ‘Celebrated Trials,’ ii. 326.
[83] Dr. Oates in the next reign was to some extent indemnified for his sufferings. When quite an old man he married a young city heiress with a fortune of £2000; and a writer who handled this “Salamanca wedding,” as it was called, was arrested. Oates was in the receipt of a pension of £300 from the Government when he died in 1705.
[84] The practice of fining jurors for finding a verdict contrary to the direction of the judge had already been declared arbitrary, unconstitutional, and illegal.