[318] S. P. Gunpowder Treason, Part I. n. 108; Exam. of Wm. Ellis, 20 Nov. 1605.

[319] Jardine’s G.P., p. 70.

[320] Jardine, p. 114.

[321] S. P. Dom. James I., Nov. 1605, Vol. 16. n. 94.

[322] S. P. Gunpowder Treason, 1605, I. n. 108; W. Ellis.

[323] Narrative of the G. P., Gerard, p. 110. See also an account of the money Sir E. D. had taken with him; ib., p. 92,—“above £1000 in ready coin, as his servants since have averred, that did escape, and one of them delivered up great part of the money to the king’s officers so soon as he saw his master had fallen into the lapse.”

[324] Exam. of Sir E. D.

[325] “Sir Fulke Greville, a man of letters, and a distinguished courtier in the reigns of Elizabeth and James I., who, at the coronation of the latter prince, was made a Knight of the Bath, and soon after was called from being Treasurer of the Navy to be Chancellor of the Exchequer, and was sworn of the privy council. In the 2nd of King James’s reign he obtained a grant of Warwick Castle and other dependencies about it, and was elevated to the peerage, 29 Jan. 1620-1, by the title of Lord Brooke, &c.”Burke’s Peerage, 1886, p. 1390. Sir Fulke Greville is represented by the present Earl of Warwick.

[326] Narrative of the G. P., p. 110.

[327] Narrative of the G. P., p. 111.