[[13]] The temporary chapel, now used as the Sisters' community-room. Bishop Grant was at this time acting as chaplain to the nuns, and saying Mass for them daily. Bute attended this Mass for a week previous to his reception, breakfasting afterwards with the bishop (who was giving him a course of instruction) in the convent parlour.
[[14]] Ante, Chapter I, p. [11].
[[15]] Charles Scott Murray, who had just got his commission in the 1st Life Guards.
[[16]] The writer was misinformed as to this. There had been a Catholic chapel at Rothesay since 1839; and a larger church (St. Andrew's) had been opened two years before Bute's conversion. The number of Catholics at this time was probably between two and three hundred.
[[17]] See post, pp. [102], [103]. This book had just been published at Oxford. Two volumes of selections from Canon Jenkins's MSS. writings were issued in 1879, after his death.
[[18]] Colonel James Frederick Crichton Stuart, Liberal for Cardiff from 1857 to 1880.