[206] Description des royaulmes d'Angleterre et d'Escosse, Paris, 1558.

[207] C. H. and T. Cooper, Athenae Cantabrigienses, vol. i., 1858, p. 155.

[208] List of Denizations, 1509-1603, Huguenot Society Publications VIII.

[209] Athenae Cantab. ut supra.

[210] S. R. Maitland, List of some of the early printed books in the Archiepiscopal Library at Lambeth, 1843, pp. 290 et seq.

[211] "'a' also betokeneth 'have' or 'has,' when it cometh of this verbe in Latin, habeo, as hereafter ye may see."

[212] "Sur toultes choses doibuit noter gentz Englois que leur fault accustomer de pronuncer la derniere lettre du mot françois quelque mot que ce soit (rime exceptée) ce que la langue engleshe ne permet, car la ou l'anglois dit 'goode breade,' le françois diroit 'goode' iii sillebes et 'breade' iii sillebes."

[213] J. A. Jacquot, Notice sur Nicolas Bourbon de Vandœuvre, Troyes et Paris, 1857. Bourbon was born in 1503, and died in 1550. He went to Paris in 1531, leaving behind him in his native town a reputation won by his Latin verses. On his return from England, Queen Margaret of Navarre entrusted to him the education of her daughter, Jeanne, who was the mother of Henry IV.

[214] Nicolai Borbonii vandoperani Lingonenis Παιδαγωγειον, Lugduni, 1536.

[215] J. H. Marsden, Philomorus, 2nd ed., 1878, p. 261.