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There had been some sort of reconciliation between Coke and Lady Elizabeth in July, 1621, says Woolrych in his life of Coke, "a reconciliation effected through the mediation of the King." It was not, however, cordial; for "we have good reason to suppose that they lived apart to the day of Coke's death," says Campbell.

Letter quoted by Woolrych. S.P. Dom., James I., Vol. CLXXXIII., No. 52. S.P. Dom., James I., Vol. CXII., No. 1. S.P. Dom., James I., No. 18. Stonyhurst MSS., Angliæ, Vol. VII. And Records of the English Province of the Society of Jesus, Series I., p. 532. Also Records of the English Province of the S.J., Series I., p. 533. Biog. Brit., notice of Sir E. Coke. S.P. Dom., James I., Vol.

If ever there was a case of adding insult to injury, surely this piece of canting impertinence was one of the most outrageous. By H.W. Woolrych. London: J. & W.T. Clarke, 1826, pp. 145-48. Lipscomb's History and Antiquities of the Co. of Bucks, 1847, Vol. IV., p. 548. Gray made the churchyard of Stoke Pogis the scene of his famous Elegy, and he was buried there in 1771. Ency. Brit., Vol.

S.P. Dom., James I., Vol. XCII, No. 101, 22nd July, 1617. S.P. Dom., James I., Vol. XCIII., No. 18, 12th August, 1617. S.P. Dom., James I., Vol. XCIII., No. 28, 18th August, 1617. Life of Sir Edward Coke. By Humphrey Woolrych. London: J. & W.T. Clarke, 1826, pp. 146-48. Life and Correspondence of Francis Bacon. London: Saunders, Otley & Co., 1861, p. 459.