This signature, with other of the more sensational documents connected with the Plot, is exhibited in the newly established museum at the Record Office.
[408] Dom. James I. xviii. 97, February 27th, 1606, N. S. (Latin).
[409] Narratio de rebus a se in Anglia gestis (Stonyhurst MSS.). Published in Father G. R. Kingdon's translation under the title of During the Persecution.
[410] During the Persecution, p. 83.
[411] Court and Character of King James, p. 350 (ed. 1811).
[412] Sir William Waad, Lieutenant of the Tower, to whose charge the Powder Plot conspirators were committed, was afterwards dismissed from his office on a charge of embezzling the jewels of the Lady Arabella Stuart.
[413] Presumably the same Arthur Gregory who at an earlier period had counterfeited the seals of Mary Queen of Scots' correspondence.
[414] Dom. James I. xxiv. 38.
[415] March 3rd, 1605-6 (Hatfield MSS.).
[416] Eudaemon Joannes cites the renegade Alabaster as testifying to having seen a letter seemingly of his own to Garnet, which he had never written. (Answer to Casaubon, p. 159.)