John Aubrey: My Own Life (61 page)

BOOK: John Aubrey: My Own Life
10.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

50
 
Following my questions:
MS Aubrey 12, fols. 314, 315.

51
 
Mr Potter has written:
MS Aubrey 13, fol. 147; Robert Boyles’s
Memoirs for the Natural History of Human Blood
(1684): Hunter and Knight; Frank (1981), p.170.

52
 
At Kington St Michael: Natural History
, p.15.

53
 
As you ride: Three Prose Works
, p.314; MS Aubrey 1, fol. 17.

54
 
Captain Stokes:
Natural History
, p.12.

55
 
More Roman money:
Wiltshire Collections, p.5.

56
 
I think I will send:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.400–2; Clark, vol. 2, p.219–225.

57
 
In Weekfield:
Wiltshire Collections, p.5.

58
 
Mr Samuel Hartlib:
Lodwick, p.22.

59
 
The draft of my will:
MS Aubrey 21, fol. 75.

60
 
Mr Potter has still not:
MS Aubrey 13, fol. 149.

61
 
Mr Hobbes’s friend:
MS Top. Gen. C.24, fol. 219.

62
 
Mr Selden meant:
Bennett, vol. 1, pp.400–6; Clark, vol. 2, pp.219–25.

63
 
Mr Hobbes’s
De Corpore: Malcolm, p.148.

64
 
Mr Hales is a pretty little man:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.399; Clark, vol. 1, p.280.

65
 
Slough, near Eton:
MS Aubrey 5, fol. 60v.

66
 
I find it strange: Monumenta
, p.90.

67
 
The downs surrounding Avebury:
Aubrey is an early user of the word ‘romantic’, and he also uses the word ‘romancy’ (see
Surrey
, vol. 1, p.8).

68
 
Ever since I came upon: Monumenta
, p.20.

69
 
I have asked Dr Harvey: Natural History
, p.43.

70
 
Dr Harvey’s brother:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.198; Clark, vol. 1, p.298.

71
 
Dr Harvey tells me:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.201; Clark, vol. 1, pp.300–1.

72
 
I have seen Dr Harvey:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.203; Clark, vol. 1, p.302.

73
 
I had a fall:
MS Aubrey 4, fol. 180.

74
 
I have evaporated water: Natural History
, p.20.

75
 
Hancock’s well:
Natural History
, p.20.

76
 
I have received:
Clark, vol. 1, p.305; MS Aubrey 21, fol. 112.

77
 
My friend Lord Nicholas Tufton:
Became 3rd Earl of Thanet in May 1664; imprisoned in Tower December 1655–September 1656 and September 1657–June 1658; married Elizabeth, daughter of Richard Boyle (Earl of Burlington) in April 1665.

78
 
I visited Sherborne House: Natural History
, p.38.

79
 
Mr Lydall tells me:
MS Aubrey 12, fols 317, 318.

80
 
I have been visiting:
Bennett, ‘John Aubrey and the Circulation’.

81
 
Here at Draycot:
Wiltshire Collections, p.233;
Natural History
, p.21.

82
 
Mr Potter has suggested:
MS Aubrey 13, fols 152, 153.

83
 
My friends:
Bennett, vol. 1, pp.586–7; Clark, vol. 2, p.32.

84
 
I have started collecting:
MS Aubrey 1, fol. 6.

85
 
Henry Lyte:
MS Aubrey 2, fol. 51.

86
 
I have drawn:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.212; Clark, vol. 1, p.78.

87
 
A second coffee:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.338; Clark, vol. 1, p.110.

88
 
My tedious lawsuit:
Powell (1948), p.80.

89
 
Mr Rumsey is much troubled:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.689; Clark, vol. 2, p.207; Rumsey; Ellis, pp.132–3.

90
 
As I rode:
MS Aubrey 15 (MS Top. Gen. C.25, fol. 65).

91
 
I visited Caerphilly Castle:
Aubrey’s erroneous identification of Caerphilly Castle as Roman is discussed by K. J. Williams (2012), in his thesis, John Aubrey’s Antiquarian Scholarship, see chapter entitled ‘Monumenta Britannica: II. Mapping Roman Britain’.

92
 
I went to Monmouth church:
Surrey
, vol. 1, pp.15–16.

93
 
Veneris morbus:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.440.

94
 
In his will:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.195; Clark, vol. 1, p.295.

95
 
My honoured friend:
Clark (1891–1900), vol. 1, p.229.

96
 
He left the college: Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London
, vol. 27, no. 2 (Feb. 1973), pp.193–217, 208; Mydorgius.

97
 
Dining at Hampton Court:
Natural History, p.190; Powell (1948), p.91.

98
 
John Wilkins has been made:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.294; Clark, vol. 2, p.301; Bennett (2009), p.336.

99
 
On this day Oliver Cromwell:
Three Prose Works
, p.27.

100
 
The experimental philosophical club:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.506; Clark, vol. 2, p.322; MS Aubrey 8, fol. 6.

101
 
On this day:
MS Aubrey 1, fol. 1b; Clark, vol. 1, p.252.

102
 
Wiltshire is too great:
Wiltshire Collections, p.3.

103
 
Sir George Penruddock: Natural History
, p.102. Sir George Penruddock of Broad Chalke was born at Westminster: MS Aubrey 23, fol. 61.

104
 
Today, riding at a gallop:
MS Ballard 14, fol. 158b.

105
 
I have gone:
MS Aubrey 9, fols 32–3; Clark, vol. 1, pp.326–7.

106
 
Mr Hobbes’s horoscope:
Clark, vol. 1, p.328; MS Aubrey 9, fol. 33.

107
 
Mr Stafford Tyndale:
MS Aubrey 13, fol. 230.

108
 
I have sold the old manor:
MS Aubrey 13, fols 245r, 255r.

109
 
I am sharing lodgings:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.56; Clark, vol. 2, p.75.

110
 
I am an auditor:
Bennett, vol. 1, pp.318–19; Clark, vol. 1, pp.289–90.

111
 
My Trinity College friend:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.532; Clark, vol. 2, p.148.

Part V: Restoration

1
 
On this day:
Aubrey includes in his life of Monck
A Letter from his Excellence the Lord General Monck, and the Officers under his Command, to the Parliament, In the name of themselves and the souldiers under them
, printed by John Macock, London, 1660. The letter is dated 11 February 1659.

2
 
Someone anonymous:
Bennett, vol. 1, pp.59–60; Clark, vol. 2, p.78.

3
 
The news has spread:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.57; Clark, vol. 2, p.76.

4
 
Mr Harrington’s Rota Club:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.320; Clark, vol. 2, p.74.

5
 
Samuel Pordage:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.459; Clark, vol. 2, p.160.

6
 
Earlier this month:
MS Aubrey 1, fol. 85v.

7
 
The aurora:
Uglow, p.35.

8
 
As the morning:
Clark, vol. 2, p.153.

9
 
On this day:
Uglow, p.40.

10
 
Last month, I wrote:
Foskett, p.36.

11
 
At Rye: Three Prose Works
, p.331.

12
 
Mr Hobbes tells me:
Clark, vol. 1, p.340; MS Aubrey 9, fol. 41.

13
 
The King and Mr Hobbes:
MS Aubrey 9, fol. 41.

14
 
I have heard:
Wiltshire Collection, p.255.

15
 
My turquoise ring has changed:
MS Aubrey 1, fol. 85v.

16
 
I am one of the signatories: Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London
, vol. 28, no. 2 (1 April 1974), p.167.

17
 
My most honoured:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.633; Clark, vol. 2, p.82.

18
 
My servant saw:
McMains.

19
 
The astrologer:
Joyce escaped with his family to the Netherlands, where he was last heard of in August 1670.

20
 
I have been to visit: Natural History
, p.97.

21
 
The cloudy spot:
MS Aubrey 1, fol. 85v.

22
 
Since the return:
Hannibal Potter was reinstated as President of Trinity College on 3 August 1660.

23
 
Sir John Hoskyns:
MS Aubrey 12, fol. 189.

24
 
I discussed the lace:
Three Prose Works
, p.28.

25
 
Mr Hollar is very short-sighted:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.77; Clark, vol. 1, pp.407–8.

26
 
Sir John Hoskyns writes:
MS Aubrey 12, fols 224, 190.

27
 
My cousin James Whitney:
Bennett (2009), p.334.

28
 
The natives seem:
Hobbes (1994), vol. 2, p.520.

29
 
In Dublin we met:
Three Prose Works
, p.349.

30
 
Mr Tyndale writes:
MS Aubrey 13, fols 231–2.

31
 
I am delighted:
Clark, vol. 1, p.394.

32
 
My friend Mr Wenceslaus Hollar:
Hunter (2010), p.97.

33
 
Mr Samuel Cooper:
John Evelyn’s diary, January 1662.

34
 
Sir John Hoskyns writes:
MS Aubrey 12, fol. 193.

35
 
Mr Hobbes has silenced:
Clark, vol. 1, p.335; MS Aubrey 9, fol. 38. Note this summary of
Leviathan
is from
Mr Hobbes Considered in his Loyalty, Religion, Reputation and Manners
.
By way of Letter to Dr Wallis
(1662), which Aubrey is quoting.

36
 
Mr Hobbes says: Education
, p.128; Malcolm, pp.21–2.

37
 
Mr Tyndale complains:
MS Aubrey 13, fol. 235.

38
 
Parliament has passed:
Malcolm, p.348.

39
 
Mr Hooke is of but middling stature:
Clark, vol. 1, p.411.

40
 
Sir William Petty presented:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.51; Clark, vol. 2, p.146.

41
 
Dr Walter Charleton:
Birch, vol. 1, p.166.

42
 
On this day:
Birch, vol. 1, p.172.

43
 
To my great joy:
Birch, vol. 1, p.179; Aubrey,
Three Prose Works
, p.359.

44
 
The minister of Avebury: Natural History
, p.44.

45
 
I presented the Society:
Gunther (1925), vol. 6, p.116; Birch, vol. 1, p.206.

46
 
Mr Hooke’s report:
Gunther (1925), vol. 6, p.116; Birch, vol. 1, p.207.

47
 
I mentioned before:
Birch, vol. 1, p.212.

48
 
Mr Potter has been invited:
MS Aubrey 13, fols 154–5.

49
 
I also described:
Birch, vol. 1, p.234.

50
 
Quaere: if a bladder:
Clark, vol. 2, p.327.

51
 
The new charter:
Birch, vol. 1, p.236.

52
 
When I was about: Natural History
, p.23.

53
 
At Crudwell: Natural History
, p.23.

54
 
Sir Kenelm Digby:
Birch, vol. 1, p.300.

55
 
I have found:
Hobbes (1994), vol. 2, p.555.

56
 
I have also found:
MS Aubrey 12, fols 162–3.

57
 
The rivulet that runs: Natural History
, p.28. Crawfish are crayfish.

58
 
In his book: Monumenta
, pp.25, 129.

59
 
I think Mr Charleton: Monumenta
, p.85.

60
 
Today I met: Monumenta
, p.21.

61
 
Afterwards, as we were leaving:
MS Top. Gen. C.24, fols 23–5.

62
 
His Majesty also: Monumenta
, p.34.

63
 
While I think it: Monumenta
, p.92.

64
 
The monument is still: Monumenta
, p.86.

65
 
Mr Francis Potter:
Birch, vol. 1, p.329.

66
 
St Andrew’s Day:
Bennett, vol. 1, p.48.

67
 
I am lovesick:
MS Aubrey 12, fol. 194.

68
 
I have been elected:
Lennard.

69
 
I have described:
Birch, vol. 1, p.422.

Part VI: Stone, Water, Fire

1
 
I have reached Paris:
Hobbes (1994), vol. 2, p.620.

2
 
The shopkeepers here:
Powell (1948), p.8.

Other books

Sink or Swim by Laura Dower
Jaded by Tijan
DS02 Night of the Dragonstar by David Bischoff, Thomas F. Monteleone
Mail Order Match Maker by Kirsten Osbourne
Heart of Stone by Debra Mullins
The Prince's Pet by Wiles, Alexia
Fracture by Amanda K. Byrne
The Scream by John Skipper, Craig Spector
The Legatus Mystery by Rosemary Rowe