[168] Ibid., i. 166.

[169] Ibid., 157.

[170] Entring Book, January 9, Morice MSS.

[171] Macaulay, ii. 337, 453; Secretan’s Life of Nelson, 24.

[172] Concilia, iv. 612.

[173] Abridgment, 373.

[174] April 19/29, 1686. Quoted in Macaulay, ii. 375.

[175] October 4, 1685. Dalrymple, ii. 177.

[176] Lingard, xiii. 105. In the Entring Book, Morice MSS., under date 1687, January 8, there are allusions to the anti-Jesuitical Papists, as uneasy at present proceedings—fearing lest by an ill-understanding between the King and the Prince of Orange, there should come a revolution, and Roman Catholics should be destroyed. It was still treason to be reconciled to the Church of Rome; and Papists might be convicted now by law, though twenty years after the fact. It was asked, if the King pardoned their past conversion, would not the continuance of their fellowship with the Romish Church be a continuance of treason?

[177] All this information I gather from the Morice MSS., Entring Book, 1687, April 30; May 14, 28.