[3] For additional details regarding the quarrel between the aliens and the natives, the reader is referred to my Booke of Sir Thomas Moore.
[4] The Acts of the Privy Council of England, 1901, vol. 4, pp. 187, 200, 201, 222.
[5] See The Booke of Sir Thomas Moore, pp. 96-98.
[6] They were rediscovered by Professor F.S. Boas in 1898 and are preserved in the British Museum, where they bear the mark MS. Harl. 6848, ff. 187-189. Professor Boas reprinted them, in reverse order, in his book, The Works of Thomas Kyd, London, 1901. His book contains a facsimile of the first page of the alleged treatise. A correct transcript of all three pages and a facsimile of the second page appear in my Booke of Sir Thomas Moore.
[7] Op. cit., pp. 43, 47.
[8] "On a document concerning Christopher Marlowe," in Studies in Philology, April, 1920, vol. 20, pp. 153-159.
[9] It is not impossible, however, that the endorsement was the work of a clerk of the Privy Council or of the prison to which Kyd was committed.
[10] That the Lord whom Thomas Kyd served, probably in the role of secretary, was Ferdinando Stanley, I have shown in my Booke of Sir Thomas Moore, pp. 38-41.
[11] The whole of this interesting and important letter (B.M., MS. Harl., 6849, ff. 218-19) is finely facsimiled (but not accurately transcribed) in Professor Boas' book. The reader will find it in my book, pp. 108-11.
[12] B.M., MS. Harl. 6848, ff. 154.