[101] Afterwards Mrs. Owen Grant.
[102] Coleridge.
[103] The High Church author, son of my father's first cousin, Charles Shipley.
[104] I have always thought that Sir John Paul must have been rather mad. After he had done his best to ruin all his family, and had totally ruined hundreds of other people, he said very complacently, "This is the Lord's doing, and it is marvellous in our eyes."
[105] My mother in her youth had often visited the ladies at Plas Newydd—Lady Eleanor Butler (ob. 1829, æt. 90) and Miss Sarah Ponsonby (ob. 1831, æt. 76). They always wore men's hats and waistcoats, short petticoats and thick boots.
[106] William Owen Stanley, twin brother of Edward-John, 2nd Lord Stanley of Alderley.
[107] "Quite untrue, probably."—Note by the Dean of Llandaff, formerly head-master of Harrow, who read this in MS.
[108] Hon. Carolina Courtenay Boyle
[109] The declaration had already been made in private to Lady Stratford de Redcliffe at Constantinople.
[110] Rectors of St. Paul's, Knightsbridge, and St. Barnabas', Pimlico.