[666] Satyra (addressed to Ben Jonson), 1608. Poems of Lord Herbert of Cherbury, ed. J. Churton Collins, London, 1881.
[667] Henry VIII., Act I. Sc. 3.
[668] A. T. Thomson, Memoirs of the Court of Henry VIII., London, 1826, i. p. 259.
[669] Epigram by Sir Th. More: translated from Latin by J. H. Marsden, Philomorus, 2nd ed., 1878, p. 222.
[670] English Monsieur: Works, London, 1875, viii. p. 190. Cp. other satires and epigrams of the time: Hall, Satires, lib. iii. satire 7; Skialetheia, 1598, No. 27; H. Parrot, Laquei, 1613, No. 207; Scourge of Villanie, ed. Grosart, 1879, p. 158.
[671] H. Glapthorne, "The Ladies' Privilege," Plays and Poems, 1874, ii. pp. 81 sqq. It was sometimes the good fortune of the gallant to "live like a king," "teaching tongues" (T. Scot, Philomythie, 1622).
[672] 1510? Colophon: "Here endeth this treatise made of a galaunt. Emprinted at London in the Flete St. at the sygne of the sonne by Wynkyn de Worde." Alex. Barclay, Andrew Borde, Skelton and others, all satirize the mania for French fashions. Every opportunity of getting the latest French fashion was eagerly seized. Thus Lady Lisle, wife of Henry VIII.'s deputy at Calais, constantly sent her friends in England articles of dress "such as the French ladies wear" (Letters and Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII., i. 3892). Moryson says the English are "more light than the lightest French."
[673] Purchas, Pilgrimes, 1625.
[674] Sylvester, Lacrymae Lacrymarum: Works (ed. Grosart), ii. p. 278.
[675] Sir T. Overbury, Characters, 1614: "The Affected Traveller."