[304] This was naturally not without exceptions. For instance, Sir Nicholas Bacon, father of Francis, was noted for his support of the attempt to drive all the French from the country after the St. Bartholomew massacre (Archaeologia, xxxvi. p. 339).
[305] F. Foster Watson, "Religious Refugees and English Education," Proceedings of the Huguenot Society, London, 1911.
[306] The Nobles or of Nobilitye, ut supra.
[307] Athenae Cantab. ii. 274. A certain L. T. attacked Baro about a sermon of his on the text in the third chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, twenty-eighth verse (Brit. Mus. Catalogue).
[308] Hug. Soc. Pub. x. pt. iii. p. 360.
[309] Ellis, Original Letters, 1st series, i. pp. 341-3.
[310] Arte of Rhetorique (1553), ed. G. H. Mair, 1909, p. 13.
[311] Lord Herbert of Cherbury's Autobiography, ed. Sir S. Lee (2nd ed. 1906), p. 37, n.
[312] Letters and Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII., xiv. pt. ii. No. 601; and Works, Parker Society, i. p. 396.
[313] E. J. Furnivall, Manners and Meals in Olden Time, pp. ix et seq.