[28] Reverdil, p. 437.
[29] The judges evidently acted on the principle that if they threw mud enough, some of it would be sure to stick.
[30] The royal promise to grant him a pension of 3,000 dollars when he retired from active service.
[31] Struensee's younger brother, the lieutenant in Falckenskjold's regiment, also obtained employment in Prussia.
[32] Canute the Great, A.D. 1028, founded on Munkholm a Monastery of Benedictines, the first of that order established in Norway; a low round tower is all that remains of it, and this is within the walls of the fortress. It was in a small gloomy chamber in this tower that the Staats minister of Denmark, Graf von Griffenfeldt, was immured from 1680 to 1698. He was originally, Peter Schumacker. This dungeon is no longer shown; but it is said that he had worn a deep channel in the pavement in walking up and down, and indented the stone table where he had rested his hand in passing it. This fortress has ceased to be used for state prisoners, but it is still the dark and solitary rock which Victor Hugo has described in his "Hans of Iceland," looking more like a prison-house than a fortress.—Murray's Handbook for Denmark, &c.
[33] A small fort built by King Christian IV., more than 200 years ago, as a protection for the Danish fisheries, and to guard against Russian encroachments in the Varanger Fjord.—Murray's Handbook for Denmark, &c.
[34] De Flaux: "Du Danemarc."
[35] "Memoirs of an Unfortunate Queen," p. 94.
[36] General Evening Post, May 14.
[37] "Walpole's Journal of the Reign of George III.," vol. i. pp. 89-91.