[61] Parnell, "Rise of Woman."
[62] August 4, 1851.
[63] A well-known starting-point in the valley below where the Holborn Viaduct now is.
[64] Seventh daughter of the 1st Lord Ravensworth, whose wife was my grandmother's only sister.
[65] Grandson of my adopted grandfather's elder brother.
[66] Madame de Staël.
[67] Ernest Augustus, Duke of Cumberland, 5th son of George III.
[68] The 8th Earl of Denbigh, as Lord Feilding, married, 1st, Louisa, daughter of David Pennant, Esq., and Lady Emma Pennant.
[69] The whole of this account was corrected by Lord Feilding, then Earl of Denbigh.
[70] "He spoke of the twin brothers George and James Macdonald as two simple, single-minded, and veracious men, and more than this, as eminently godly men. He described how the healing of their sister occurred. She had lain for long bedridden and entirely helpless. One day they had been praying earnestly beside her, and one of the brothers, rising from prayers, walked to the bed, held out his hand, and, naming his sister, bade her arise. She straightway did so, and continued ever after entirely healed, and with full use of her limbs."—J. C. Shairp, "Thomas Erskine."