[1000] Flecknoe, Characters, p. 12.

[1001] Satire against the French, 1691.

[1002] Acted 1671; Act II. Sc. 2.

[1003] Mémoires, ed. cit. pp. 51-52.

[1004] Ibid. p. 143.

[1005] Lord Rutherford, for instance, begs pardon for his English, being more accustomed to the French tongue (Cal. of State Papers, 1661-62, p. 4).

[1006] Hamilton, op. cit. p. 82.

[1007] The story goes that Grammont was leaving England without marrying Miss Hamilton, when her brother overtook him and told him he had forgotten something, whereat he realized his oversight and returned to repair it. It is said that this incident supplied Molière with the subject of his Mariage forcé.

[1008] Hamilton, op. cit. p. 82.

[1009] Cal. State Papers, Dom., 1661-62, p. 28.