Chapter 230

[1046]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 50.[1047]Aubrey gives in colours the coat: 'sable, a fret and a canton argent'; also Halley's horoscope.[1048]Halley did not graduate in the ordinary course, but was made M.A. by diploma in 1678.[1049]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 10.[1050]Aubrey, in MS. Wood F. 49, fol. 39v.[1051]MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 16v. Hamey was M.D., Leyden; incorporated at Oxford, Feb. 4, 1629/30.[1052]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 5v.[1053]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 10v.[1054]In June, 1679: Clark's Wood'sLife and Times, ii. 453.[1055]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 68v.[1056]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 35.[1057]'Country,' with Aubrey, = county.[1058]Added as a suggestion that Hariot's family may be looked for in those counties.[1059]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 12.[1060]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 91.[1061]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 12.[1062]Aubrey writes in the margin the reference 'vide pag. 40,' i.e. fol. 9v,ut infra.[1063]Subst. for 'Steward.'[1064]See Clark's Wood'sLife and Times, ii. 24, 25, 33, 53.[1065]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 35.[1066]Perhaps because the letters ended in tridents; see Clark's Wood'sLife and Times, i. 498, and the facsimile.[1067]Anthony Wood writes 'R. Hues' in the margin.[1068]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 91.[1069]Aubrey, in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 138: Sept. 2, 1671.[1070]Aubrey, in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 141: Oct. 27, 1671.[1071]MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 72.[1072]Seesupra, p.157.[1073]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 11.[1074]i.e. Friday, Jan. 3, 1611/2. The date is noted also in MS. Aubr. 21, fol. 103.[1075]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 98.[1076]Written in pencil only, being a later insertion.[1077]Jane, daughter of Sir William Samwell of Upton, co. Northts.[1078]Written in pencil only, being a later addition.[1079]Scil. of theRotaclub, describedinfra.[1080]i.e. at the meetings at Miles's.[1081]Subst. for 'night.'[1082]Dupl. with 'Mr.'[1083]These two names are struck out, as is Marietinfra.[1084]Struck out.[1085]Subst. for 'Also, as.'[1086]i.e. as listeners only. Those above were of Harrington's 'party.' The 'antagonists,' who wished to break up the meetings, follow.[1087]Dupl. with 'lord.'[1088]Dupl. with 'opponents.'[1089]'Officers' dupl. with 'soldiers.' These, like Aubrey, were 'auditors' only.[1090]Subst. for 'came in drunke.'[1091]Dupl. with 'Howse.'[1092]Harrington.[1093]MS. Aubr. 6, a slip at fol. 98v.[1094]Subst. for 'sent.'[1095]Dupl. with 'grew conceited that.'[1096]Subst. for 'a versatile timber house built.'[1097]i.e. window frames; French 'châsse.'[1098]i.e. the coat given in note 1 from MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 29v.[1099]Subst. for 'though neer a.'[1100]Verso of the slip at fol. 98vof MS. Aubr. 6.[1101]i.e. John Aubrey.[1102]MS. Aubr. 21, fol. 3.[1103]The passage in square brackets is Harrington's autograph.[1104]Aubrey, in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 308: June 6, 1678.[1105]A slip pasted to a slip inserted at fol. 98vof MS. Aubr. 6, a direction to Anthony Wood.[1106]supra, p.290.[1107]MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 121v.[1108]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 64.[1109]MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 108v.[1110]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 64.[1111]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 66v.[1112]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 18.[1113]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 64.[1114]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 64v.[1115]Dupl. with 'a kind of Convocation-house.'[1116]Subst. for 'the king.'[1117]Anthony Wood writes 'Adrian Scrope' in the margin, to mark this place for use in hisAthenae.[1118]RectiusJune: Clark's Wood'sLife and Times, i. 128.[1119]Subst. for 'great.'[1120]Subst. for 'St. Dunstan's church in the....'[1121]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 65.[1122]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 65v.[1123]The records of the Steward's court of the University of Oxford show several cases of homicide, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, from the hasty drawing of daggers worn as part of the ordinary dress. See alsosupra, p.150.[1124]Dupl. with 'complexion like wainscott.'[1125]Dupl with 'our.'[1126]Dupl. with 'see.'[1127]Subst. for 'to know him.'[1128]Subst. for 'would.'[1129]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 66.[1130]Subst. for 'William.'[1131]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 66v.[1132]Dupl with 'this towne.'[1133]i.e. prescriptions.[1134]i.e. Shaftesbury; Lord High Chancellor, 1672.[1135]MS. Aubr. 21, fol. 12.[1136]Dupl. with 'despicable.'[1137]i.e. of those who have married for policy.[1138]i.e. in inducing gentlemen to marry into noble families in order to impale a distinguished coat.[1139]MS. Aubr. 21, fol. 15. The sowgelder, in Aubrey's comedy, is dissuading Sir John Fitz-ale from marrying a widow.[1140]Dupl. with 'proud.'[1141]Dupl. with 'retarders.'[1142]MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 9.[1143]MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 15v.[1144]Subst. for 'transmographie.'[1145]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 21.[1146]MS. Aubr. 6, a jotting on a slip at fol. 86, explained by the next paragraph, which is found on the back of the slip.[1147]'Mr. Elize Hele': see the details of the endowment in Lysons' Britannia (Devonshire), pp. 405, 609.[1148]John Maynard (1602-1690): Serjeant at Law 1654.[1149]'did ordered' in MS., by a slip for 'did order it.'[1150]MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 96v.[1151]i.e. took to his bed. The astrologer then took his 'decumbiture,' i.e. position of the stars at the time of his being laid up.[1152]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 28.[1153]i.e., I suppose, in Aubrey's pocket Almanac for 1672: see pp.39,51.[1154]'lib. B' is a lost volume of Aubrey's own antiquarian notes.[1155]See, for the explanation of this jotting, in George Herbert's life,infra, p.310.[1156]The blank is perhaps for 'wife of Sir John Danvers.'[1157]MS. Aubr. 8, a slip at fol. 95.[1158]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 95.[1159]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 95v.[1160]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 96.[1161]Subst. for 'the parsonage of Bemmarton.'[1162]i.e. step-mother.[1163]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 5v.[1164]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 18.[1165]Some portions of the text, three lines in all, are suppressed here.[1166]Subst. for 'elaborator.'[1167]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 81v.[1168]Subst. for 'but he.'[1169]Anthony Wood corrects this to 'Juliana,' i.e. Berners.[1170]Some expressions in the text, two lines in all, are suppressed here.[1171]MS. Aubr. 6, a slip at fol. 81.[1172]Subst. for 'kill'st.'[1173]Dupl. with 'his.'[1174]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 95.[1175]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 95v.[1176]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 80.[1177]'one time' followed, scored out.[1178]Dupl. with 'runne.'[1179]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 80v.[1180]Dupl. with 'face.'[1181]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 81.[1182]MS. Aubr. 6, a note on fol. 80v.[1183]MS. Aubr. 21, fol. 106v.[1184]23 March.[1185]MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 55v.[1186]MS. Aubr. 6, a slip at fol. 81.[1187]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 4v.[1188]i.e. Ashmole.[1189]Anthony Wood notes here:—'Sir William Backhouse, quaere.'[1190]i.e. among N. Culpepper's papers.[1191]i.e. cited in the MS. he was exploiting.[1192]Aubrey in Wood MS. F. 39, fol. 160v: 16 Jan. 1671/2.[1193]Inserted by Anthony Wood.[1194]Wrongly changed by Wood to 1663.[1195]Ibid., fol. 156: 30 Dec. 1671.[1196]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 38v.[1197]The words follow, scored out, 'but no writer that ever I heard of, or if he was,' [his writings].[1198]Subst. for 'or remembered him.'[1199]The statement in square brackets is scored out, and the comment added 'negat.' Aubrey had enquired of Philips.[1200]Aubrey in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 389: 15 July 1689.[1201]Wood notes 'false.'[1202]Ibid., fol. 389v.[1203]Aubrey in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 389.[1204]Ibid., fol. 354: 21 June 1681.[1205]MS. Aubr. 9, fol. 30.[1206]This title is subst. for 'Supplementum vitae Thomae Hobbes, Malmsburiensis': see p.17.[1207]There are two other drafts of the opening sentence:—'The ancients, when they writt the lives'; 'It was usuall with the writers of the lives of the ancient philosophers, in the'.[1208]Dupl. with 'stock.'[1209]Dupl. with 'rich' or 'illustrious.'[1210]Dupl. with 'derived.'[1211]Dupl. with 'though of no illustrious family.'[1212]Dupl. with 'extraction.'[1213]Dupl. with 'great parts.'[1214]MS. Aubr. 9, fol. 29v.[1215]i.e. for the etymology;infra, p.324.[1216]Aubrey's MS. is only a rough draft for Anthony Wood's perusal. Hence these queries.[1217]For the pedigree supplied by William Aubrey, seeinfra, p.388.[1218]MS. Aubr. 9, fol. 30.

[1046]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 50.

[1046]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 50.

[1047]Aubrey gives in colours the coat: 'sable, a fret and a canton argent'; also Halley's horoscope.

[1047]Aubrey gives in colours the coat: 'sable, a fret and a canton argent'; also Halley's horoscope.

[1048]Halley did not graduate in the ordinary course, but was made M.A. by diploma in 1678.

[1048]Halley did not graduate in the ordinary course, but was made M.A. by diploma in 1678.

[1049]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 10.

[1049]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 10.

[1050]Aubrey, in MS. Wood F. 49, fol. 39v.

[1050]Aubrey, in MS. Wood F. 49, fol. 39v.

[1051]MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 16v. Hamey was M.D., Leyden; incorporated at Oxford, Feb. 4, 1629/30.

[1051]MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 16v. Hamey was M.D., Leyden; incorporated at Oxford, Feb. 4, 1629/30.

[1052]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 5v.

[1052]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 5v.

[1053]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 10v.

[1053]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 10v.

[1054]In June, 1679: Clark's Wood'sLife and Times, ii. 453.

[1054]In June, 1679: Clark's Wood'sLife and Times, ii. 453.

[1055]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 68v.

[1055]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 68v.

[1056]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 35.

[1056]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 35.

[1057]'Country,' with Aubrey, = county.

[1057]'Country,' with Aubrey, = county.

[1058]Added as a suggestion that Hariot's family may be looked for in those counties.

[1058]Added as a suggestion that Hariot's family may be looked for in those counties.

[1059]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 12.

[1059]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 12.

[1060]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 91.

[1060]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 91.

[1061]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 12.

[1061]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 12.

[1062]Aubrey writes in the margin the reference 'vide pag. 40,' i.e. fol. 9v,ut infra.

[1062]Aubrey writes in the margin the reference 'vide pag. 40,' i.e. fol. 9v,ut infra.

[1063]Subst. for 'Steward.'

[1063]Subst. for 'Steward.'

[1064]See Clark's Wood'sLife and Times, ii. 24, 25, 33, 53.

[1064]See Clark's Wood'sLife and Times, ii. 24, 25, 33, 53.

[1065]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 35.

[1065]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 35.

[1066]Perhaps because the letters ended in tridents; see Clark's Wood'sLife and Times, i. 498, and the facsimile.

[1066]Perhaps because the letters ended in tridents; see Clark's Wood'sLife and Times, i. 498, and the facsimile.

[1067]Anthony Wood writes 'R. Hues' in the margin.

[1067]Anthony Wood writes 'R. Hues' in the margin.

[1068]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 91.

[1068]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 91.

[1069]Aubrey, in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 138: Sept. 2, 1671.

[1069]Aubrey, in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 138: Sept. 2, 1671.

[1070]Aubrey, in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 141: Oct. 27, 1671.

[1070]Aubrey, in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 141: Oct. 27, 1671.

[1071]MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 72.

[1071]MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 72.

[1072]Seesupra, p.157.

[1072]Seesupra, p.157.

[1073]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 11.

[1073]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 11.

[1074]i.e. Friday, Jan. 3, 1611/2. The date is noted also in MS. Aubr. 21, fol. 103.

[1074]i.e. Friday, Jan. 3, 1611/2. The date is noted also in MS. Aubr. 21, fol. 103.

[1075]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 98.

[1075]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 98.

[1076]Written in pencil only, being a later insertion.

[1076]Written in pencil only, being a later insertion.

[1077]Jane, daughter of Sir William Samwell of Upton, co. Northts.

[1077]Jane, daughter of Sir William Samwell of Upton, co. Northts.

[1078]Written in pencil only, being a later addition.

[1078]Written in pencil only, being a later addition.

[1079]Scil. of theRotaclub, describedinfra.

[1079]Scil. of theRotaclub, describedinfra.

[1080]i.e. at the meetings at Miles's.

[1080]i.e. at the meetings at Miles's.

[1081]Subst. for 'night.'

[1081]Subst. for 'night.'

[1082]Dupl. with 'Mr.'

[1082]Dupl. with 'Mr.'

[1083]These two names are struck out, as is Marietinfra.

[1083]These two names are struck out, as is Marietinfra.

[1084]Struck out.

[1084]Struck out.

[1085]Subst. for 'Also, as.'

[1085]Subst. for 'Also, as.'

[1086]i.e. as listeners only. Those above were of Harrington's 'party.' The 'antagonists,' who wished to break up the meetings, follow.

[1086]i.e. as listeners only. Those above were of Harrington's 'party.' The 'antagonists,' who wished to break up the meetings, follow.

[1087]Dupl. with 'lord.'

[1087]Dupl. with 'lord.'

[1088]Dupl. with 'opponents.'

[1088]Dupl. with 'opponents.'

[1089]'Officers' dupl. with 'soldiers.' These, like Aubrey, were 'auditors' only.

[1089]'Officers' dupl. with 'soldiers.' These, like Aubrey, were 'auditors' only.

[1090]Subst. for 'came in drunke.'

[1090]Subst. for 'came in drunke.'

[1091]Dupl. with 'Howse.'

[1091]Dupl. with 'Howse.'

[1092]Harrington.

[1092]Harrington.

[1093]MS. Aubr. 6, a slip at fol. 98v.

[1093]MS. Aubr. 6, a slip at fol. 98v.

[1094]Subst. for 'sent.'

[1094]Subst. for 'sent.'

[1095]Dupl. with 'grew conceited that.'

[1095]Dupl. with 'grew conceited that.'

[1096]Subst. for 'a versatile timber house built.'

[1096]Subst. for 'a versatile timber house built.'

[1097]i.e. window frames; French 'châsse.'

[1097]i.e. window frames; French 'châsse.'

[1098]i.e. the coat given in note 1 from MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 29v.

[1098]i.e. the coat given in note 1 from MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 29v.

[1099]Subst. for 'though neer a.'

[1099]Subst. for 'though neer a.'

[1100]Verso of the slip at fol. 98vof MS. Aubr. 6.

[1100]Verso of the slip at fol. 98vof MS. Aubr. 6.

[1101]i.e. John Aubrey.

[1101]i.e. John Aubrey.

[1102]MS. Aubr. 21, fol. 3.

[1102]MS. Aubr. 21, fol. 3.

[1103]The passage in square brackets is Harrington's autograph.

[1103]The passage in square brackets is Harrington's autograph.

[1104]Aubrey, in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 308: June 6, 1678.

[1104]Aubrey, in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 308: June 6, 1678.

[1105]A slip pasted to a slip inserted at fol. 98vof MS. Aubr. 6, a direction to Anthony Wood.

[1105]A slip pasted to a slip inserted at fol. 98vof MS. Aubr. 6, a direction to Anthony Wood.

[1106]supra, p.290.

[1106]supra, p.290.

[1107]MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 121v.

[1107]MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 121v.

[1108]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 64.

[1108]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 64.

[1109]MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 108v.

[1109]MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 108v.

[1110]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 64.

[1110]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 64.

[1111]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 66v.

[1111]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 66v.

[1112]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 18.

[1112]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 18.

[1113]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 64.

[1113]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 64.

[1114]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 64v.

[1114]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 64v.

[1115]Dupl. with 'a kind of Convocation-house.'

[1115]Dupl. with 'a kind of Convocation-house.'

[1116]Subst. for 'the king.'

[1116]Subst. for 'the king.'

[1117]Anthony Wood writes 'Adrian Scrope' in the margin, to mark this place for use in hisAthenae.

[1117]Anthony Wood writes 'Adrian Scrope' in the margin, to mark this place for use in hisAthenae.

[1118]RectiusJune: Clark's Wood'sLife and Times, i. 128.

[1118]RectiusJune: Clark's Wood'sLife and Times, i. 128.

[1119]Subst. for 'great.'

[1119]Subst. for 'great.'

[1120]Subst. for 'St. Dunstan's church in the....'

[1120]Subst. for 'St. Dunstan's church in the....'

[1121]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 65.

[1121]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 65.

[1122]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 65v.

[1122]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 65v.

[1123]The records of the Steward's court of the University of Oxford show several cases of homicide, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, from the hasty drawing of daggers worn as part of the ordinary dress. See alsosupra, p.150.

[1123]The records of the Steward's court of the University of Oxford show several cases of homicide, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, from the hasty drawing of daggers worn as part of the ordinary dress. See alsosupra, p.150.

[1124]Dupl. with 'complexion like wainscott.'

[1124]Dupl. with 'complexion like wainscott.'

[1125]Dupl with 'our.'

[1125]Dupl with 'our.'

[1126]Dupl. with 'see.'

[1126]Dupl. with 'see.'

[1127]Subst. for 'to know him.'

[1127]Subst. for 'to know him.'

[1128]Subst. for 'would.'

[1128]Subst. for 'would.'

[1129]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 66.

[1129]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 66.

[1130]Subst. for 'William.'

[1130]Subst. for 'William.'

[1131]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 66v.

[1131]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 66v.

[1132]Dupl with 'this towne.'

[1132]Dupl with 'this towne.'

[1133]i.e. prescriptions.

[1133]i.e. prescriptions.

[1134]i.e. Shaftesbury; Lord High Chancellor, 1672.

[1134]i.e. Shaftesbury; Lord High Chancellor, 1672.

[1135]MS. Aubr. 21, fol. 12.

[1135]MS. Aubr. 21, fol. 12.

[1136]Dupl. with 'despicable.'

[1136]Dupl. with 'despicable.'

[1137]i.e. of those who have married for policy.

[1137]i.e. of those who have married for policy.

[1138]i.e. in inducing gentlemen to marry into noble families in order to impale a distinguished coat.

[1138]i.e. in inducing gentlemen to marry into noble families in order to impale a distinguished coat.

[1139]MS. Aubr. 21, fol. 15. The sowgelder, in Aubrey's comedy, is dissuading Sir John Fitz-ale from marrying a widow.

[1139]MS. Aubr. 21, fol. 15. The sowgelder, in Aubrey's comedy, is dissuading Sir John Fitz-ale from marrying a widow.

[1140]Dupl. with 'proud.'

[1140]Dupl. with 'proud.'

[1141]Dupl. with 'retarders.'

[1141]Dupl. with 'retarders.'

[1142]MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 9.

[1142]MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 9.

[1143]MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 15v.

[1143]MS. Aubr. 7, fol. 15v.

[1144]Subst. for 'transmographie.'

[1144]Subst. for 'transmographie.'

[1145]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 21.

[1145]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 21.

[1146]MS. Aubr. 6, a jotting on a slip at fol. 86, explained by the next paragraph, which is found on the back of the slip.

[1146]MS. Aubr. 6, a jotting on a slip at fol. 86, explained by the next paragraph, which is found on the back of the slip.

[1147]'Mr. Elize Hele': see the details of the endowment in Lysons' Britannia (Devonshire), pp. 405, 609.

[1147]'Mr. Elize Hele': see the details of the endowment in Lysons' Britannia (Devonshire), pp. 405, 609.

[1148]John Maynard (1602-1690): Serjeant at Law 1654.

[1148]John Maynard (1602-1690): Serjeant at Law 1654.

[1149]'did ordered' in MS., by a slip for 'did order it.'

[1149]'did ordered' in MS., by a slip for 'did order it.'

[1150]MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 96v.

[1150]MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 96v.

[1151]i.e. took to his bed. The astrologer then took his 'decumbiture,' i.e. position of the stars at the time of his being laid up.

[1151]i.e. took to his bed. The astrologer then took his 'decumbiture,' i.e. position of the stars at the time of his being laid up.

[1152]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 28.

[1152]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 28.

[1153]i.e., I suppose, in Aubrey's pocket Almanac for 1672: see pp.39,51.

[1153]i.e., I suppose, in Aubrey's pocket Almanac for 1672: see pp.39,51.

[1154]'lib. B' is a lost volume of Aubrey's own antiquarian notes.

[1154]'lib. B' is a lost volume of Aubrey's own antiquarian notes.

[1155]See, for the explanation of this jotting, in George Herbert's life,infra, p.310.

[1155]See, for the explanation of this jotting, in George Herbert's life,infra, p.310.

[1156]The blank is perhaps for 'wife of Sir John Danvers.'

[1156]The blank is perhaps for 'wife of Sir John Danvers.'

[1157]MS. Aubr. 8, a slip at fol. 95.

[1157]MS. Aubr. 8, a slip at fol. 95.

[1158]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 95.

[1158]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 95.

[1159]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 95v.

[1159]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 95v.

[1160]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 96.

[1160]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 96.

[1161]Subst. for 'the parsonage of Bemmarton.'

[1161]Subst. for 'the parsonage of Bemmarton.'

[1162]i.e. step-mother.

[1162]i.e. step-mother.

[1163]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 5v.

[1163]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 5v.

[1164]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 18.

[1164]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 18.

[1165]Some portions of the text, three lines in all, are suppressed here.

[1165]Some portions of the text, three lines in all, are suppressed here.

[1166]Subst. for 'elaborator.'

[1166]Subst. for 'elaborator.'

[1167]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 81v.

[1167]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 81v.

[1168]Subst. for 'but he.'

[1168]Subst. for 'but he.'

[1169]Anthony Wood corrects this to 'Juliana,' i.e. Berners.

[1169]Anthony Wood corrects this to 'Juliana,' i.e. Berners.

[1170]Some expressions in the text, two lines in all, are suppressed here.

[1170]Some expressions in the text, two lines in all, are suppressed here.

[1171]MS. Aubr. 6, a slip at fol. 81.

[1171]MS. Aubr. 6, a slip at fol. 81.

[1172]Subst. for 'kill'st.'

[1172]Subst. for 'kill'st.'

[1173]Dupl. with 'his.'

[1173]Dupl. with 'his.'

[1174]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 95.

[1174]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 95.

[1175]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 95v.

[1175]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 95v.

[1176]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 80.

[1176]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 80.

[1177]'one time' followed, scored out.

[1177]'one time' followed, scored out.

[1178]Dupl. with 'runne.'

[1178]Dupl. with 'runne.'

[1179]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 80v.

[1179]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 80v.

[1180]Dupl. with 'face.'

[1180]Dupl. with 'face.'

[1181]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 81.

[1181]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 81.

[1182]MS. Aubr. 6, a note on fol. 80v.

[1182]MS. Aubr. 6, a note on fol. 80v.

[1183]MS. Aubr. 21, fol. 106v.

[1183]MS. Aubr. 21, fol. 106v.

[1184]23 March.

[1184]23 March.

[1185]MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 55v.

[1185]MS. Aubr. 23, fol. 55v.

[1186]MS. Aubr. 6, a slip at fol. 81.

[1186]MS. Aubr. 6, a slip at fol. 81.

[1187]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 4v.

[1187]MS. Aubr. 8, fol. 4v.

[1188]i.e. Ashmole.

[1188]i.e. Ashmole.

[1189]Anthony Wood notes here:—'Sir William Backhouse, quaere.'

[1189]Anthony Wood notes here:—'Sir William Backhouse, quaere.'

[1190]i.e. among N. Culpepper's papers.

[1190]i.e. among N. Culpepper's papers.

[1191]i.e. cited in the MS. he was exploiting.

[1191]i.e. cited in the MS. he was exploiting.

[1192]Aubrey in Wood MS. F. 39, fol. 160v: 16 Jan. 1671/2.

[1192]Aubrey in Wood MS. F. 39, fol. 160v: 16 Jan. 1671/2.

[1193]Inserted by Anthony Wood.

[1193]Inserted by Anthony Wood.

[1194]Wrongly changed by Wood to 1663.

[1194]Wrongly changed by Wood to 1663.

[1195]Ibid., fol. 156: 30 Dec. 1671.

[1195]Ibid., fol. 156: 30 Dec. 1671.

[1196]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 38v.

[1196]MS. Aubr. 6, fol. 38v.

[1197]The words follow, scored out, 'but no writer that ever I heard of, or if he was,' [his writings].

[1197]The words follow, scored out, 'but no writer that ever I heard of, or if he was,' [his writings].

[1198]Subst. for 'or remembered him.'

[1198]Subst. for 'or remembered him.'

[1199]The statement in square brackets is scored out, and the comment added 'negat.' Aubrey had enquired of Philips.

[1199]The statement in square brackets is scored out, and the comment added 'negat.' Aubrey had enquired of Philips.

[1200]Aubrey in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 389: 15 July 1689.

[1200]Aubrey in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 389: 15 July 1689.

[1201]Wood notes 'false.'

[1201]Wood notes 'false.'

[1202]Ibid., fol. 389v.

[1202]Ibid., fol. 389v.

[1203]Aubrey in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 389.

[1203]Aubrey in MS. Wood F. 39, fol. 389.

[1204]Ibid., fol. 354: 21 June 1681.

[1204]Ibid., fol. 354: 21 June 1681.

[1205]MS. Aubr. 9, fol. 30.

[1205]MS. Aubr. 9, fol. 30.

[1206]This title is subst. for 'Supplementum vitae Thomae Hobbes, Malmsburiensis': see p.17.

[1206]This title is subst. for 'Supplementum vitae Thomae Hobbes, Malmsburiensis': see p.17.

[1207]There are two other drafts of the opening sentence:—'The ancients, when they writt the lives'; 'It was usuall with the writers of the lives of the ancient philosophers, in the'.

[1207]There are two other drafts of the opening sentence:—'The ancients, when they writt the lives'; 'It was usuall with the writers of the lives of the ancient philosophers, in the'.

[1208]Dupl. with 'stock.'

[1208]Dupl. with 'stock.'

[1209]Dupl. with 'rich' or 'illustrious.'

[1209]Dupl. with 'rich' or 'illustrious.'

[1210]Dupl. with 'derived.'

[1210]Dupl. with 'derived.'

[1211]Dupl. with 'though of no illustrious family.'

[1211]Dupl. with 'though of no illustrious family.'

[1212]Dupl. with 'extraction.'

[1212]Dupl. with 'extraction.'

[1213]Dupl. with 'great parts.'

[1213]Dupl. with 'great parts.'

[1214]MS. Aubr. 9, fol. 29v.

[1214]MS. Aubr. 9, fol. 29v.

[1215]i.e. for the etymology;infra, p.324.

[1215]i.e. for the etymology;infra, p.324.

[1216]Aubrey's MS. is only a rough draft for Anthony Wood's perusal. Hence these queries.

[1216]Aubrey's MS. is only a rough draft for Anthony Wood's perusal. Hence these queries.

[1217]For the pedigree supplied by William Aubrey, seeinfra, p.388.

[1217]For the pedigree supplied by William Aubrey, seeinfra, p.388.

[1218]MS. Aubr. 9, fol. 30.

[1218]MS. Aubr. 9, fol. 30.


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