[536] Ibid., 271.
[537] Durie gives long and amusing accounts of his conversations with Archbishop Laud. Laud promised to use his influence with the King to procure him a living. He did so, and Durie went down into Devonshire, where the living was situated, to take possession, but he found it occupied by some one else. Laud paid Durie's travelling expenses. The letters are given in Mr. Bruce's interesting preface to the Cal. Dom., 1633-1634.
[538] Calendar Dom., 1633-34, 525.
[539] Calendar, Dom., 1633-34, p. 562.
[540] Ibid., p. 565, 566.
[541] Calendar Dom., 1634-35, p. 148.
A number of other interesting letters from or respecting Durie are condensed by Mr. Bruce in his Calendar.—See pp. 89, 96, 195, 204, 530.
[542] Harris's Cromwell, 304.
[543] See letters illustrative of Durie's efforts abroad in Vaughan's Protectorate of Cromwell, i. 48, 104, 117.
[544] Notices of Durie may be found in Bayle's Dict., in Biog. Brit., in Brook's Lives, and in Herzog's Encycl.