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God prosper your grace with long life, and increase of honour." Oxford Collection, II. 353. Clarke, Progr. of Marit. Disc. I. App 1. Oxford Collection, I. viii. Epitome of the Ancient and Modern Discoveries of the World, chiefly by means of Navigation, from the Flood to the close of the Fifteenth Century.

BIBLIOGRAPHIES. Justin Winsor, Narrative and Critical History, VI. passim, VII. 1-214, VIII. App.; and Readers' Handbook of the Revolution; W. F. Allen, History Topics, 107, 108; W. E. Foster, References to the Constitution of the United States, 11-14; Channing and Hart, Guide, secs. 136-141. GENERAL ACCOUNTS. G T. Curtis, Constitutional History, I. chs. i. iv.

Dino Compagni's Chronicle contains the account of a contemporary. See Varchi, vol. i. p. 169; Mach. Ist. Fior. end of book ii. Archivio Storico, vol. xvi. See also the article 'Perugia, in my Sketches in Italy and Greece. Vol. iii. p. 347. See App. ii. for the phrases 'Squittino' and 'Borse. Of these new nobles the Albizzi and Ricci, deadly foes, were the most eminent.

But many documents have been published since, which were then unknown, particularly the letters of Clarendon Papers, iii. App. xcvi.; and Mr.

Clarendon Papers, ii. App, xlviii. Cobbett, Parl. Hist. 1152. But the victors were not suffered to enjoy their triumph.

App. pp. xi.-xii.; Randall, Life of Jefferson, i. 348-352. Calendar Va. State Papers, ii. 152. MS. Hist. Va. Jour. Va. House Del. for Nov. 27. Jour. Va. House Del. for Dec. 21. For example, Bland Papers, ii. 51; Rives, Life of Madison, i. 536; ii. 240, note. Jour. Va. House Del. 42. John Tyler, in Wirt, 233, 236. John Tyler, in Wirt, 237-238. Howe, Hist. Coll. Va. 222.

Both armies, in accordance with the military tactics of the age, were drawn up in line, the infantry in three divisions, with strong bodies of cavalry on each flank. In force they were nearly equal, amounting to twenty-three or twenty-five thousand men; but there was this peculiarity in the arrangement of the parliamentarians, that in each division the App. 88.

Some laws had been enacted, during the reign of Henry VII., against depopulation, or the converting of arable lands into pasture. * See note D, at the end of the volume. Rush. vol. ii. p. 270; vol. iii. App. p. 106. * Rush. vol. iii. p. 333. Franklyn, p. 478. May, p. 16. v Strafford's Letters and Despatches, vol. ii. p. 117. v* Rush. vol. ii. p. 270.

But of this Hugo's existence we have no definite record, and of him we know nothing more than that he witnessed the document above referred to, and one other about 1195, namely, a Charter of Strathyla, in which the words occur "Willelmo filio Freskyn, Hugone filio Freskyn" quoted by Shaw, page 406, App. No. xxvii, in the edition of 1775.

The king had yet no reason to repent of his confidence in Hammond; but that governor, while he granted every indulgence to his captive, had no intention of separating his own lot from that of the army. He consulted the officers at the head-quarters, and secretly resolved to adhere to their instructions. Charles recommenced his former intrigues. Through the agency of Dr. App. xliv. Berkeley, 385.