[ [101] Defoe, p. 21; Mackenzie’s Memoirs, p. 197.
[ [102] “A modern account of Scotland, being an exact description of the country, and a true character of the people and their manners. Written from thence by an English gentleman.” Printed in the year 1670 (Harleian Miscellany, vi. 135). “Scotland characterized: In a letter written to a young gentleman, to dissuade him from an intended journey thither” (Harleian Miscellany, vii. 377). “The False Brother, or A New Map of Scotland, drawn by an English Pencil, London, 1651.”
[ [103] Leven and Melville Papers (Bannatyne Club), 7th March 1689.
[ [104] Lords Journals, 21st March 1690.
[ [105] Act concerning Patronages, 19th July 1690.
[ [106] Address of the Scottish Bishops to James II., 3rd Nov. 1688.
[ [107] It would appear from a memorandum among the Rawlinson MSS. in the Bodleian Library that several English bishops, some of the Scottish peers, and some members of the Scottish Whig party, had held a private conference and agreed that the Jacobite clergy should be unmolested. The English bishops represented the case of the Scottish Episcopal clergy to William about the same time. But it was doubtless felt that any attempt to pass an Act of Toleration through the Scottish Parliament would fail. (Rawlinson MSS. c. 985.)
[ [108] A Memorial for his Highness the Prince of Orange, by two persons of quality. London, 1689.
[ [109] A Vindication of the Government in Scotland during the reign of King Charles II., by Sir George Mackenzie, late Lord Advocate there. London, 1691.
[ [110] Evelyn’s Diary, 7th March 1690.