[111] General History of England, iii. 757.
[112] History of His Own Times, i. 11.
[113] Church History, Book X. § 39.
[114] Antipathie of the English Lordly Prelacie, to the regall Monarchie and Civill Unity, p. 151.
[115] A Short View of the English History, p. 296.
[116] Note to Fuller's Church History, x. § 39, and to the Student's Hume.
[117] Illustrations, iii. 172.
[118] Parker and Co. This author says of Cecil and his rival Raleigh, "Both were unprincipled men, but Cecil was probably the worst. He is suspected not only of having contrived the strange plot in which Raleigh was involved, but of being privy to the proceedings of Catesby and his associates, though he suffered them to remain unmolested, in order to secure the forfeiture of their estates" (p. 338).
[119] Criminal Trials, ii. 68.
[120] History of England, i. 254, note.