[56] El Viage Entretenido de Agustin de Roxas. Madrid, 1793.
[57] For this rather unexpected side to the character of Philip IV., and strange feature of the Spanish life of the time, see Cartas de las Venerable Madre Sor Maria de Agreda y del Señor Rey Don Felipe IV. Don Francisco Silvela. Madrid, 1885.
[58] For this example of the Inquisition at work see the papers of his case in vols. x. and xi. of the Documentos inéditos.
[59] My own obligation is mainly to M. Paul Rousselot’s Mystiques Espagnols, Paris, 1867, which the Spaniards have found it easier to call insufficient than to displace.
[60] All the writers mentioned here will be found in the Tesoro de Escritores Místicos Españoles of Ochoa. Paris, n.d.
[61] Tottel’s Miscellany has been reprinted by Mr Arber, who has also republished Gascoigne’s Steel Glass, and the Eclogues, Epitaphs, and Sonnets of Barnabe Googe in his English reprints. Turberville is in vol. ii. of Chalmers’s British Poets. Works of Thomas Sackville, Lord Buckhurst, 1859.
[62] The Complete Poems of Sir Philip Sidney, edited by the Rev. A. B. Grosart, 2 vols., 1873, in “The Fuller’s Worthies Library.”
[63] Poems of Thomas Watson, in Arber’s English reprints.
[64] For Barnes, Percy, Constable, Lynch, Zepheria, and Smith, see Mr Arber’s English Garner; for Daniel and Drayton, vols. iii. and iv. of Chalmers’s British Poets.
[65] Mr Arber in his English Garner, and Mr Bullen in his Lyrics from the Song-books of the Elizabethan Age, 1887, have made selections from these sources.