[!--Note--] 70 ([return])
This Lord Sunderland not only changed his party and his opinions, but his religion, with every breath that blew from the court.

[!--Note--] 71 ([return])
Horace Walpole's Correspondence, vol. ii. p. 227.

[!--Note--] 72 ([return])
Anne Brudenel.

[!--Note--] 73 ([return])
See Pepys's Diary.

[!--Note--] 74 ([return])
I was told that a female servant of the family was so terrified by this picture that she could never be prevailed on to pass through the door near which it hangs, but made a circuit of several rooms to avoid it.

[!--Note--] 75 ([return])
She is supposed to have been poisoned by her husband, at the instigation of the Chevalier de Lorraine.

[!--Note--] 76 ([return])
Elizabeth Brooke, poisoned at the age of twenty.

[!--Note--] 77 ([return])
See the scene between Beck Marshall and Nell Gwyn, in "Pepys."

[!--Note--] 78 ([return])
Walpole.

[!--Note--] 79 ([return])
The gay, gallant St. Evremond, besides being naturally ugly, had a wen between his eye-brows. There is a fine picture of him and Hortense as Vertumnus and Pomona, in the Stafford gallery.