[85] Ibid. fol. 37 verso.
[86] I have seen this binding on an octavo copy of the Ædiloquium of 1530, now in the Bibliothèque Nationale and on the Sommaire de Chroniques de J. B. Egnasio, of 1529, owned by M. Didot. [The famous collection of M. Didot has since been dispersed.]
[87] Book of Hours of 1556, owned by M. Niel. This volume was printed by the Kervers, who had bought Tory's old plant.
[88] I have seen it on the Hours of 1531, and the Diodorus of 1535, which two volumes also are [1865] owned by M. Didot.
[89] [See nos. 1 and 2, on p. [45], infra.]
[90] Fol. 43 verso. Inadvertently, no doubt, this mark is reversed on the first page of Champ fleury. Tory attached little importance to the error, for the same engraving often appeared afterward. It is not signed [with the double cross], like the one here reproduced.
[91] Here, and in numberless other passages in his books, Tory alludes to Italy, of which he always retained a grateful memory.
[92] Champ fleury, fol. 43 recto.
[94] The Renaissance, at this time, was at its height.