[302] Ibid. etc. i. 313.
[303] The correspondence will be found in The Works of John Knox, etc. i. 267, ff., iv. 251 ff.
[304] The Works of John Knox, etc. iv. 349.
[305] Calendar of State Papers, Foreign Series, on the Reign of Elizabeth, 1559-60, pp. 73, 77; 1558-59, pp. 306, 310.
[306] The Works of John Knox, etc. v. 5.
[307] This summary has been taken from Dr. Hay Fleming’s admirable little book, The Scottish Reformation (Edinburgh, 1904), p. 44.
[308] The Works of John Knox, etc. i. 319.
[309] Calendar of State Papers, Foreign Series, of the Reign of Elizabeth, 1558-59, pp. 245, 259; 1559-60, p. 182. The whole of Dr. Mundt’s correspondence is interesting, and shows that after the Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis continual incidents occurred showing that the Romanists were regaining the hope of repressing the whole Protestant movement.
[310] Ibid. 1559-60. p. 68: “All good men hope that England, warned by the dangers of others, will take care, by dissimulation and art, that the nation near to itself, whose cause is the same as her own, shall not be first deserted and then overwhelmed” (Dr. Mundt to Cecil, Oct. 29th, 1559).
[311] Calendar of State Papers, Foreign Series, of the Reign of Elizabeth, 1559-60, p. 84.