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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 December 2009
1 Hayward reports this conversation with Prince Henry in his dedication (to Prince Charles) of The Lives of the III Normans, Kings of England (London, 1613).Google Scholar
2 This remark to Willam Lambarde, her Keeper of the Rolls (4 August 1601), was first reported by John Nichols in The Progresses and Public Processions of Queen Elizabeth (and ed., 1823), iii, 552Google Scholar; cited by Chambers, E. K., The Elizabethan Stage, (4 vols., Oxford, 1961), ii, 206Google Scholar; See also Historical MSS Commission, Fourth Report (1874)Google Scholar, col. 330. The exchange with Lambarde, cited by almost all commentators upon perceived parallels between Richard and Elizabeth, includes the queen's celebrated remark connecting the Essex rebellion with the theatrical popularity of the Richard story: ‘…this tragedy was played 40 times in open streets and houses.’
3 Sir Francis Bacon his Apologie, in Certain Imputations Concerning the Late Earle of Essex (1604), 34–5Google Scholar. Bacon dates the exchange at about the middle of Michaelmas term, 1599.
4 Wolfe's testimony, July 1600: PRO SP 12/275, no. 28.
5 PRO SP 12/275, no. 25. (Coke's investigation of the Hayward case is detailed below.)