[!-- Note Anchor 19 --][[Footnote 19]: The life and the limbs of subjects depend on the king. Chamberlayne, Part 2, chap. iv., p. 76.]
[!-- Note Anchor 20 --][[Footnote 20]: This fashion of sleeping partly undrest came from Italy, and was derived from the Romans. "Sub clarâ nuda lacernâ," says Horace.]
[!-- Note Anchor 21 --][[Footnote 21]: The author is apparently mistaken. The Chamberlains of the Exchequer divided the wooden laths into tallies, which were given out when disbursing coin, and checked or tallied when accounting for it. It was in burning the old tallies in an oven that the Houses of Parliament were destroyed by fire.—TRANSLATOR.]
[!-- Note Anchor 22 --][[Footnote 22]: Villiers called James I., "Votre cochonnerie.">[
[!-- Note Anchor 23 --][[Footnote 23]: "Depart, O night! sings the dawn.">[