[12] Scripsit enim et Dialogos quos non magis philosophiæ annumerare possis, quam Historiæ. Seneca, Ep. c.
[13] Lord Shaftesbury’s Moralists, P. 1. S. I.
[14] Adv. to an Author, P. 1. S. III.
[15] Adv. to an Author, P. 1. towards the end.
[16] The scene of Dr. More’s Divine Dialogues, printed in 1668.
[17] At Beaconsfield in Bucks, the supposed scene of the Dialogue.
[18] See his works, where are some pieces of a very early date; though Lord Clarendon tells us, he was near thirty years of age, before he was much taken notice of as a Poet. Contin. of his Life, P. I. p. 25.
[19] Dr. Andrews, bishop of Winchester, and Dr. Neal, bishop of Durham. The story is well known.
[20] Dr. George Morley.
[21] This alludes to the impeachment of Mr. Justice Crawley, July 6, 1641, for his extra-judicial opinion in the affair of Ship-money. Mr. Waller’s speech on this occasion is extant amongst his works.