[52]. Hist. of Castle Combe, p. 282.

[53]. Wylie, iv. p. 74.

[54]. Wylie, iv. p. 86.

[55]. The warrant for his pay, 18th June, is in Rymer’s Fœdera, ed. 1740, iv. pt. ii. p. 130.

[56]. According to the Boke of Noblesse (see below, p. xliii.), p. 15, “the seyd erle made Ser John Fastolfe, chevaler, his lieutenaunt with mlvc soudeours.”

[57]. Rymer, iv. pt. ii. p. 153. Dict. Nat. Biogr. has 1417–18.

[58]. The Boke of Noblesse, after praising him for his care in provisioning his garrisons, goes on to say (p. 68), “and that policie was one of the grete causes that the regent of Fraunce and the lordes of the kyngys grete councelle lefft hym to hafe so many castells to kepe that he ledd yerly iiic sperys and the bowes.” The value of his foresight in this respect is then illustrated by an anecdote of what happened when the Bastille was threatened with a siege in 1420.

[59]. The Dict. Nat. Biogr. oddly calls the place Mons!

[60]. Act iii. sc. 2, ll. 104–109; Act iv. sc. 1, ll. 9–47.

[61]. Paston Letters, i. p. 37; Stevenson, Wars of the English in France, Rolls Series, ii. pt. ii. p. [549].