[291]: New View of London, 1708.
[292]: Atterbury's Correspondence, ed. 1784, vol. iii. p. 87.
[293]: His brother. Bishop Trelawney was also a baronet; and he had an unepiscopal habit of swearing occasionally, but when such a faux pas occurred he always said it was the baronet, not the bishop, that swore. The inconvenience of this arrangement was pointed out to him one day by a friend, who remarked that, if the baronet was damned for swearing, what would become of the bishop.
[294]: Spectator, No. 31.
[295]: Spectator, No. 87.
[296]: Hickelty Pickelty.
[297]: Spectator, 49.
[298]: The Scowrers.
[299]: Motteux, in the Preface to his Poem in Praise of Tea.
[300]: Spectator, No. 49.