[338] Notes to Dodds’ Church Hist. of Eng., Vol. iv. p. 64.
[339] Dixon’s Her Majesty’s Tower, Vol. ii. p. 191.
[340] S. P., James I., Dom., Vol. xvi. n. 30.
[341] Dixon’s Her Majesty’s Tower, Vol. ii. p. 191.
[342] See S. P. Dom. James I., Vol. xvi. n. 21.
[343] Letters of Sir E. D. (p. 170), No. 1.
[344] In the Tower, he wrote to his wife with lemon juice on slips of paper as opportunity offered. These were kept as precious relics by his family. See Biographia Britannica, Vol. iii. p. 1698.
[345] S. P. Dom. James i., Vol. xvi. n. 94, 95.
[346] The King wrote:—“The gentler tortours are to be first usid unto him, et sic per gradus ad ima tenditur, and so God speede youre goode worke.”S. P., James I., Dom., Vol. xvi. n. 17, Nov. 6.