son and young Walter R. playmates, [114];
at Sherborne, [116];
accused by Essex, [118];
advised by R. to show Essex no mercy, [118]-[9];
decline of friendship with R., [125];
invited to Bath by R., [127];
R. complains of Lord Bindon to, ib.;
craftiness towards R., [129];
created a peer by King James, [133];
estranged from the Brookes, [135];