[502] A. Alison's Life of Marlborough, chap. ix. § 30.

[503] Guardian, No. 69.

[504] Lord Lyttelton's Dialogues of the Dead, No. 3.

[505] R. Savage's Miscellaneous Poems,' Character of Rev. J. Foster.'

[506] Jortin's Letters, ii. 43.

[507] R.H. Vaughan, Hours with the Mystics, ii. 226.

[508] C. Leslie's 'Snake in the Grass.'—Works, iv. 1-14. So also Lavington's Enthusiasm, &c., 346.

[509] 'In England her works have already deceived not a few.'—Leslie, Id. 14. 'What think you too of the Methodists? You are nearer to Oxford. We have strange accounts of their freaks. The books of Madame Bourignon, the French visionnaire, are, I hear, much enquired after by them.'—Warburton to Doddridge, May 27, 1738. Doddridge's Correspondence, &c., iii. 327.

Francis Lee, the Nonjuror, an excellent man, one of Robert Nelson's friends, was 'once a great Bourignonist.'—Hearne to Rawlinson, App. in. 1718, quoted in H.B. Wilson's History of Merchant Taylors' School ii. 957.

[510] M.J. Matter, Histoire du Christianisme, iv. 344.