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716 ([return])
[ Paris Gazette, Aug. 11. 1696.]

[ [!-- Note --]

717 ([return])
[ On the 7th of August L'Hermitage remarked for the first time that money seemed to be more abundant.]

[ [!-- Note --]

718 ([return])
[ Compare Edmund Bohn's Letter to Carey of the 31st of July 1696 with the Paris Gazette of the same date. Bohn's description of the state of Norfolk is coloured, no doubt, by his constitutionally gloomy temper, and by the feeling with which he, not unnaturally, regarded the House of Commons. His statistics are not to be trusted; and his predictions were signally falsified. But he may be believed as to plain facts which happened in his immediate neighbourhood.]

[ [!-- Note --]

719 ([return])
[ As to Grascombe's character, and the opinion entertained of him by the most estimable Jacobites, see the Life of Kettlewell, part iii., section 55. Lee the compiler of the Life of Kettlewell mentions with just censure some of Grascombe's writings, but makes no allusion to the worst of them, the Account of the Proceedings in the House of Commons in relation to the Recoining of the Clipped Money, and falling the price of Guineas. That Grascombe was the author, was proved before a Committee of the House of Commons. See the Journals, Nov. 30. 1696.]

[ [!-- Note --]

720 ([return])
[ L'Hermitage, June 12/22., July 7/17. 1696.]