I smell the blood of an English man;"
which Shakspeare, with great attention to the times, changed, in the following manner:—
"His word was still, Fie, foh, fum,
I smell the blood of a British man."
But, the fact is, that there was issued from Greenwich a royal proclamation, on the 13th of May, 1603; declaring that, till a compleat union, the King held, and esteemed, the two realms, as presently united, and as one kingdom; and, the poets, Daniel and Drayton, who wrote gratulatory verses, on his accession, spoke of the two kingdoms, as united, thereby, into one realm, by the name of Britain;
and of the inhabitants of England and Scotland, as one people, by the denomination of British." And he then adds, in a note: "Before King James arrived at London, Daniel offered to him 'A Panegyrike congratulatory, delivered to the King's most excellent Majesty at Burleigh-Harrington in Rutlandshire;' which was printed, in 1603, for Blount, with a Defence of Rhime:—
"Lo here the glory of a greater day
Than England ever heretofore could see
In all her days. ———— ———— ————
And now she is, and now in peace therefore