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The Last Revolution

Page 46

by Patrick Dillon


  10.Speck, James II, p.119.

  11.Rapin, History of England, vol 13, lxii, footnote.

  12.Rapin, History of England, vol 13, lxii, footnote.

  13.Ailesbury, Memoirs, i p.201.

  14.Ailesbury, Memoirs, i pp.202–6.

  15.Ailesbury, Memoirs, i p.206.

  27 ‘A Foreign Enemy in the Kingdom’

  1.Ailesbury, Memoirs, i p.209.

  2.Ailesbury, Memoirs, i pp.209–10.

  3.BL, Add MSS 32,095 fols. 303–7.

  4.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.363.

  5.Universal Intelligence, 18 December 1688.

  6.London Mercury, 18 December 1688.

  7.Ailesbury, Memoirs, i p.201.

  8.National Archive, SP 8/2 part 2 fol. 42.

  9.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.365.

  10.HMC Dartmouth, 11th Report, appendix, part 5, p.236.

  11.National Archive, SP 8/2 part 2 fol. 91.

  12.Ailesbury, Memoirs, i p.216.

  13.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.381.

  14.Clarendon, Diary, 17 December 1688.

  15.HMC 14th Report, 9th appendix, p.452.

  16.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.377.

  17.BL, Althorp MSS 75,366, fol. 3.

  18.BL, Althorp MSS 75,366, fol. 15.

  19.BL, Althorp MSS 75,366, fol. 2.

  20.Beddard, Kingdom without a King, p.60.

  21.North, Life of the Honourable Sir Dudley North, p.21.

  22.Ailesbury, Memoirs, i pp.218–19.

  23.Bohun, Autobiography, p.82.

  24.Clarendon, Diary, 18 December 1688.

  25.BL, Egerton MSS 2,717 fol. 417.

  26.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.378.

  27.A True Account of His Highness the Prince of Orange’s Coming to St James’s, 1688.

  28.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.404.

  28 ‘Nostalgia’

  1.Hoferus, Dissertatio Medica de Nostalgia, p.4, p.7.

  2.Fontaine, Memoirs of the Reverend Jaques Fontaine, p.127.

  3.London Mercury, 31 December 1688.

  4.Hoferus, Dissertatio Medica de Nostalgia, p.13.

  5.Ailesbury, Memoirs, i p.219.

  6.Clarke, The Life of James the Second, ii p.267.

  7.Dalrymple, Memoirs of Great Britain and Ireland, ii p.224.

  8.Cruikshanks, By Force or by Default? p.31.

  9.HMC Dartmouth, 11th Report, appendix, part 5, p.238.

  10.Ailesbury, Memoirs, i p.224.

  11.His Majesty’s Reasons for Withdrawing Himself from Rochester.

  12.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.391.

  13.Davies (ed), Papers of Devotion of James II, p.61.

  14.Beddard, The Revolutions of 1688, p.46.

  15.Clarendon, Diaries, 31 December 1688.

  Part 2

  1 ‘The Throne Vacant’

  1.Straka, The Final Phase of Divine Right Theory in England, p.650.

  2.Clarendon, Correspondence, ii p.505.

  3.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.420.

  4.North, Life of the Honourable Sir Dudley North, p.186.

  5.Clarendon, Diary, 3 January 1689, 15 December 1688.

  6.BL, Egerton MSS, 2,621, fol. 83.

  7.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.385.

  8.BL, Althorp MSS, 75,366, vol. lxvi (16).

  9.Beddard, The Revolutions of 1688, p.26.

  10.HMC Dartmouth, 11th Report, appendix, part 5, p.241.

  11.National Archive, SP 31/4, fol. 220.

  12.London Gazette, 3–7 January 1689.

  13.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.385.

  14.English Currant, 4–9 January 1689.

  15.BL, Add MSS 32,520, fols. 133–4.

  16.Reflections upon our Late and Present Proceedings, p.3.

  17.Clarendon, Diary, 14 January 1689.

  18.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.379.

  19.Locke, Correspondence, letter 1099, Carey Mordaunt to Locke, 21/31 January 1689.

  20.Ferguson, A Brief Justification, p.3, p.7, p.8, p.12.

  2 ‘An Occasion of Amending the Government’

  1.Reresby, Memoirs, 22 January 1689.

  2.London Mercury, 27 December 1688.

  3.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.444.

  4.Schwoerer (ed), A Jornall of the Convention, p.261.

  5.Ferguson, A Brief Justification, p.22.

  6.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.400, p.447.

  7.Ailesbury, Memoirs, i pp.229–30.

  8.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.451.

  9.Jones, The Revolution of 1688 in England, p.306.

  10.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.458.

  11.Evelyn, Diaries, 29 January 1689.

  12.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iii p.394.

  13.Evelyn, Diaries, 29 January 1689.

  14.Beddard (ed), The Revolutions of 1688, p.72.

  15.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iii p.393.

  16.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iii p.395.

  17.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.435.

  18.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iii p.398, footnote.

  19.Clarendon, Diary, 6 February 1689.

  20.Locke, Correspondence, letter 1102, Locke to Edward Clarke, 29 January / 8 February 1689.

  21.Locke, Correspondence, letter 1100, Locke to van Limborch, 26 January / 5 February 1689.

  22.D’Avaux, Négociations, vi p.333.

  23.Doebner (ed), Memoirs of Queen Mary of England (1689–93), p.7.

  24.Doebner (ed), Memoirs of Queen Mary of England (1689–93), p.10.

  25.Evelyn, Diaries, 12 February 1689.

  26.King, Natural and Political Observations, Life, p.18.

  27.Schwoerer, The Declaration of Rights, p.230.

  28.London Mercury, 11–14 February 1689.

  3 ‘A Curtail’d Mungril Monarchy, Half Commonwealth’

  1.Holmes (ed), Britain after the Glorious Revolution, p.119.

  2.Reresby, Memoirs, 9 February 1689.

  3.Reresby, Memoirs, 13 March 1689.

  4.An Account of the Ceremonial at the Coronation ... p.3.

  5.King, Natural and Political Observations, p.18.

  6.Cibber, An Apology for the Life of Mr Colley Cibber, p.39.

  7.Israel (ed), The Anglo-Dutch Moment, p.34.

  8.Collier, The Desertion Discuss’d, p.149.

  9.Bohun, Autobiography, p.87.

  10.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iv p.25.

  11.Defoe, The True-Born Englishman, ll. 1025ff, 1029ff.

  12.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iv p.2, p.197.

  13.Tarlton, The Rulers Now on Earth, p.291.

  14.Evelyn, Diaries, 11 April 1689.

  15.Evelyn, Diaries, 12 April 1689.

  16.Bohun, Autobiography, p.123.

  17.North, Life of the Honourable Sir Dudley North, p.159, pp.188ff.

  18.Holmes (ed), Britain after the Glorious Revolution, p.41.

  19.Evelyn, Diaries, 26 April 1689.

  20.Ailesbury, Memoirs, i p.232.

  21.Bohun, Autobiography, p.82.

  22.Bohun, History of the Desertion, preface.

  23.Bohun, Autobiography, p.83.

  24.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iv p.4.

  25.Morrice, Entring Book, Q pp.507–8.

  26.Doebner (ed), Memoirs of Queen Mary of England (1689–93), p.59.

  27.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.509.

  28.London Gazette, 28–31 October 1689.

  29.De Krey, A Fractured Society, p.61.

  30.London’s Great Jubilee, p.4.

  31.London Gazette, 28–31 October 1689.

  32.London’s Great Jubilee, p.9, p.14.

  33.Holmes (ed), Britain after the Glorious Revolution, p.122.

  34.De Krey, A Fractured Society, p.63.

  35.Toland, The Danger of Mercenary Parliaments, p.3.

  36.Locke, Two Treatises of Government, preface.

  37.Schwoerer (ed), The Revolution of 1688, p.99.

  38.Stephens, An Account of the Growth of Deism, p.13.

  39.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iii p.389.

&nb
sp; 40.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iv p.187, p.213.

  41.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iv p.190.

  4 ‘Equal Liberty for All’

  1.Gough (tr), Locke, Epistola de Tolerantia, introduction, x.

  2.Fontaine, Memoirs of the Reverend Jaques Fontaine, p.132.

  3.Whiting, Persecution Expos’d, p.73.

  4.Keates, Purcell, p.104.

  5.Jones (ed), Liberty Secured?, p.128.

  6.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.384.

  7.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.259, p.378.

  8.Reresby, Memoirs, 14 April 1689.

  9.Gough (tr), Locke, Epistola de Tolerantia, p.121, p.145.

  10.Morrice, Entring Book, Q p.496.

  11.Locke, Correspondence, letter 1182, Locke to van Limborch, 10 September 1689.

  12.Locke, Correspondence, letter 1147, Locke to van Limborch, 6 June 1689.

  13.Axminster Ecclesiastica, p.141.

  14.Walsh, Haydon & Taylor (eds), The Church of England, c1689–c1833, p.130.

  15.Clarendon, Diary, 22 March 1689.

  16.Hickes, An Apology for the New Separation, pp.10–11.

  17.Evelyn, Diaries, 8 July 1691.

  18.North, Autobiography, p.124.

  19.Walsh, Haydon & Taylor (eds), The Church of England c1689–c1833, p.151.

  20.Porter, Enlightenment, p.108.

  21.Schwoerer (ed), The Revolution of 1688, p.133.

  22.Stephens, An Account of the Growth of Deism, p.10.

  5 ‘The Sad Tidings of His Own Defeat’

  1.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iii p.373.

  2.Dalrymple, Memoirs of Great Britain and Ireland, iii p.54.

  3.Gibson (ed), Religion and Society in England and Wales 1689–1800, Humphrey Prideaux to John Ellis, 13 June 1692.

  4.Evelyn, Diaries, 30 January 1690.

  5.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iv p.71, p.73, p.219.

  6.Evelyn, Diaries, 11 January 1690.

  7.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iv p.83.

  8.Hogan (ed), Négociations de M le Comte d’Avaux en Irelande 1689–1690, p.2.

  9.Hogan (ed), Négociations de M le Comte d’Avaux en Irelande 1689–1690, p.29, p.23.

  10.Ailesbury, Memoirs, i p.253.

  11.Hogan (ed), Négociations de M le Comte d’Avaux en Irelande 1689–1690, p.192.

  12.Doebner (ed), Memoirs of Queen Mary of England (1689–93), p.31.

  13.Courtenay (ed), Memoirs of Sir William Temple, p.254.

  14.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iv p.249.

  15.Dalrymple, Memoirs of Great Britain and Ireland, iii pp.68ff, Mary to William, 17 July 1690.

  16.Doebner (ed), Memoirs of Queen Mary of England (1689–93), p.29.

  17.Dalrymple, Memoirs of Great Britain and Ireland, iii pp.68ff, Mary to William, 26 August 1690.

  18.Dalrymple, Memoirs of Great Britain and Ireland, iii pp.68ff, Mary to William, 3 July and 7 July 1690.

  19.Doebner (ed), Memoirs of Queen Mary of England (1689–93), pp.29–30.

  20.Dalrymple, Memoirs of Great Britain and Ireland, iii pp.68ff, Mary to William, 24 June and 22 June 1690.

  21.HMC, 10th Report, part 5, p.132.

  22.Morrice, Entring Book, R p.79.

  23.Ailesbury, Memoirs, i p.270.

  24.HMC, 10th Report, part 5, p.132.

  25.His Majesty’s Speech to the Lord Mayor &c upon his Quitting of Dublin ... , July 2nd, 1690.

  26.HMC, 10th Report, part 5, p.136.

  27.Miller, Seeds of Liberty, p.114.

  28.Evelyn, Diaries, 13 August 1690.

  29.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iv p.103.

  6 ‘An Infinite Desire of Knowledge’

  1.Toland, Christianity Not Mysterious, p.74.

  2.Locke, Correspondence, letter 886, Locke to Edward Clarke, 21/31 December 1686.

  3.Locke, Correspondence, letter 1065, Anne Grigg to Locke, London, 22 June & 8 July 1688.

  4.Locke, Correspondence, letter 1220, Locke to Mary Clarke, 12 December 1689.

  5.Locke, Correspondence, letter 1127, Locke to van Limborch, 12 April 1689.

  6.Locke, Correspondence, letter 1121, Locke to Anne Grigg, 16 March 1689.

  7.Locke, Correspondence, letter 1375, Locke to van Limborch, 13 March 1691.

  8.Cranston, John Locke, p.342.

  9.Locke, Correspondence, letter 886, Locke to Edward Clarke, 21/31 December 1686.

  10.Locke, Essay, Epistle to the Reader.

  11.Locke, Essay, I, i, 7.

  12.Locke, Essay, IV, iii, 29.

  13.Locke, Essay, I, iv, 24.

  14.Locke, Essay, II, i, 2.

  15.Locke, Correspondence, letter 2221, Molyneux to Locke, Dublin, 16 March 1697.

  16.Locke, Correspondence, letter 1040, Lady Masham to Locke, Oates, 7 April 1688.

  17.Locke, Correspondence, letter 2340, Locke to van Limborch, 29 October 1697.

  18.Locke, Correspondence, letter 1301, Tyrrell to Locke, Oakley, 30 June 1690.

  19.Bentley, Confutation of Atheism, 1st sermon, p.13.

  20.Israel, Radical Enlightenment, p.606.

  21.Ray, Synopsis Stirpium Britannicarum, preface.

  22.Evelyn, Diaries, 1 January 1692.

  23.Locke, Correspondence, letter 1659, Newton to Locke, 16 September 1693.

  24.Bentley, Confutation of Atheism, 7th sermon, p.8.

  25.Bentley, Confutation of Atheism, 6th sermon, p.5.

  26.Evelyn, Diaries, 4 April 1692.

  27.Locke, Correspondence, letter 2131, Molyneux to Locke, 26 September 1696.

  28.Higgins-Biddle (ed), Locke, The Reasonableness of Christianity, introduction, p.196.

  29.Locke, Correspondence, letter 1826, Locke to van Limborch, 11 December 1694.

  30.Tillotson, Works, I, sermon vi, p.154.

  31.Temple, Essay upon Ancient and Modern Learning, 1754, Works ii, p.164.

  32.Levine, Battle of the Books, p.51.

  33.Porter, Enlightenment, p.110.

  34.Grell, Israel and Tyacke (eds), From Persecution to Toleration, p.165.

  35.Tillotson, Works, I, sermon vi, p.155.

  36.Wotton, Reflections upon Ancient and Modern Learning, p.408.

  7 ‘One Hundred Per Cent Immediately!’

  1.Cotton, Compleat Gamester, p.1.

  2.Israel (ed), The Anglo-Dutch Moment, p.435.

  3.Orange Gazette, 8–12 February 1689.

  4.Evelyn, Diaries, 18 December 1682.

  5.De la Court, True Interest of Holland, p.230.

  6.North, Life of the Honourable Sir Dudley North, p.187.

  7.Backscheider, Daniel Defoe, p.46.

  8.Defoe, Essay upon Projects, p.25.

  9.Angliae Tutamen, p.23, p.20.

  10.Hooke, Micrographia, preface.

  11.Temple, Essay upon Ancient and Modern Learning, 1754, Works ii, p.179.

  12.Collection for Improvement of Husbandry and Trade, 6 April 1692, 27 April 1692, 22 June 1694.

  13.North, Life of the Honourable Sir Dudley North, p.150, p.195.

  14.Angliae Tutamen, p.16, p.21.

  15.Angliae Tutamen, p.23.

  16.Shadwell, The Volunteers, p.23.

  17.Defoe, Essay upon Projects, pp.11–12.

  18.Defoe, Essay upon Projects, p.123.

  19.New Atalantis quoted in Morgan, A Woman of No Character, p.51.

  20.Morrice, Entring Book, R p.80.

  21.Perry, The Celebrated Mary Astell, p.151.

  22.New Atalantis quoted in Morgan, A Woman of No Character, p.49.

  23.Cotton, Compleat Gamester, p.1.

  24.Defoe, Essay upon Projects, pp.171–2.

  25.Brown, Amusements Serious and Comical Calculated for the Meridian of London, p.55.

  26.Cotton, Compleat Gamester, p.11, p.13, p.9, p.4.

  27.New Atalantis quoted in Morgan, A Woman of No Character, p.51.

  28.Rudé, Hanoverian London, p.71.

  29.King, Natural and Political Observations, Life, p.22.

  30.King, Natural and Political Observations, p.
31.

  31.Clarke, Betting on Lives, p.76.

  8 ‘Things Have No Value’

  1.Barbon, Discourse of Trade, p.20.

  2.Grassby (ed), North, manuscript passage from The Life of Sir Dudley North, p.337.

  3.Grassby (ed), North, Discourses upon Trade, p.292, p.294, p.296.

  4.Grassby (ed), North, Discourses upon Trade, p.297.

  5.Locke, Correspondence, letter 1336, Furly to Locke, 11/21 November 1690.

  6.Locke, Some Considerations of the Consequences of the Lowering of Interest, p.44.

  7.Thompson, Moral Economy of the English Crowd, p.85.

  8.Grassby (ed), North, manuscript passage from The Life of Sir Dudley North, p.332.

  9.New Atalantis quoted in Morgan, A Woman of No Character, p.58.

  10.Grassby (ed), North, Discourses upon Trade, p.297.

  11.Barbon, Discourse of Trade, p.65, p.67, pp.72–3.

  12.Locke, Some Considerations of the Consequences of the Lowering of Interest, p.93.

  13.Barbon, Discourse Concerning Coining the New Money Lighter, p.43.

  14.Barbon, Discourse of Trade, p.69.

  15.Fontaine, Memoirs of the Reverend Jaques Fontaine, p.141, p.146.

  9 ‘The Idle and Gay Folk of the Town’

  1.Brown, Amusements Serious and Comical Calculated for the Meridian of London, p.10.

  2.Brown, Amusements Serious and Comical Calculated for the Meridian of London, pp.11–12.

  3.Brown, Amusements Serious and Comical Calculated for the Meridian of London, pp.21–3.

  4.Miège, New State of England, i p.153.

  5.Defoe, Complete English Tradesman, i pp.312–15.

  6.London Gazette, 14–17 October 1689.

  7.Burnet, History of His Own Time, iv p.2.

  8.Harley, Music in Purcell’s London, p.48, p.147, p.146.

  9.Brown, Amusements Serious and Comical Calculated for the Meridian of London, p.21.

  10.Brett-James, Growth of Stuart London, p.463.

  11.Morrice, Entring Book, R p.191.

  12.Miège, New State of England, i p.149.

  13.McKendrick, Brewer & Plumb, The Birth of a Consumer Society, p.52.

  14.Ward, London Spy, vii p.138.

  15.McKendrick, Brewer & Plumb, The Birth of a Consumer Society, p.52.

  16.Miège, New State of England, i p.153.

  17.Cibber, An Apology for the Life of Mr Colley Cibber, p.45, p.105, p.101, p.60.

  18.Misson, Travels, p.219.

  19.Cibber, An Apology for the Life of Mr Colley Cibber, p.109.

  20.Keates, Purcell, p.204.

  21.Arundell (ed), Dryden, King Arthur or The British Worthy, introduction ix, Prologue xiii.

  22.Luttrell, Brief Historical Relation, ii p.435.

  23.Arundell (ed), Dryden, King Arthur or The British Worthy, introduction vi.

 

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