[236] Evelyn.

[237] See Pepys’s graphic account of the crossing of Charles II from The Hague, and Evelyn’s account of his reception in London.

[238] Petty’s invention of a “double-bottomed boat,” which made a great talk at the time.

[239] Discourses Useful for the Vain Modish Ladies and their Gallants. 1696.

[240] Charlotte Jemima Henrietta-Maria Boyle, who married a Howard (nephew of Lord Broghill’s wife). Their child, “Stuarta Howard,” died unmarried.

[241] Evelyn’s Diary, October 15, 1664. The first house, built by Sir John Denham, to be succeeded by the later house (Cunningham’s London).

[242] Birch’s Ed. Works, vol. vi.

[243] Life of Edward Mountagu, K.G., First Earl of Sandwich, by F. R. Harris, vol. ii. p. 179.

[244] “Lyttle Francke” m. (1) Colonel Courtenay, and (2) Wentworth Dillon, Earl of Roscommon. There were several daughters, and it was the fourth daughter who married Lord Hinchinbroke. The fifth daughter married Laurence Hyde, son of the Earl of Clarendon; and the third daughter became Lady Thanet, the “virtuosa,” who used to speak much of her uncle Robert Boyle, vide Evelyn’s letter to Wotton.

[245] Diary, 1668.