[273.] Addit. MS. 19253 (British Museum).
[274.] Memoires du Comte de Grammont, Strawberry Hill, 1772.
[275.] In The Compleat Gentleman, 1622.
[276.] Nicolaus Clenardus Latomo Suo S.D., Epistole, Antverpiæ, 1566, pp. 20-4, passim. See p. 234 for the historic incident of the drinking cup, broken by Vasæus, and so impossible to replace, after a search through the whole Spanish village, that the rest of the party were obliged to drink out of their hands. As to expenses, Clenardus scoffs at the poets who sing of "Auriferum Tagum." "Aurum auferendum" would better express it, he found.
[277.] Ellis, Original Letters, 2nd Series, vol. ii. p. 38.
[278.] Ibid.
[279.] James Howell, A Discours or Dialog, containing a Perambulation of Spain and Portugall which may serve for a direction how to travell through both Countreys, London, 1662.
[280.] Relation du Voyage d'Espagne, a la Haye, 1691 (translated in 1692 under the title of "The Ingenious and Diverting Letters of the Lady ---- Travels into Spain").
[281.] Comtesse d'Aunoy, op. cit., p. 99.
[282.] Reprinted in The Life of Sir Tobie Matthew, by A.H. Mathew, p. 115.