[287] "Diary," December 19, 1666.
[288] Reresby's "Memoirs," p. 231.
[289] "Extracts of the Journals and Correspondence of Miss Berry," vol. ii. p. 35.
[290] Samuel Rogers' "Recollections," p. 112.
[291] Townsend's "History," vol. ii. p. 93.
[292] Campbell's "Lives of the Chancellors."
[293] Grant's "Recollections of the House of Lords" (1834). (This is not the only instance of a well-known quotation passing unrecognized in Parliament. In 1853, when Bishop Wilberforce made a good-humoured attack on Lord Derby, the latter remarked that a man might "smile and smile and be a villain," and thereby caused much excitement among the Lords, who had not recently studied their "Hamlet.")
[294] "Quarterly Review," vol. cxlv. p. 247.
[295] "Letters of Runnymede," p. 6.
[296] Trevelyan's "Life of Macaulay," vol. ii. p. 76.