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eives orders and prepares no despatches without his direction, and hath only a fee of a hundred pound a year. And therefore, except it hath been in the hands of a person who hath had some other employment, it hath fallen to the fortune of inconsiderable men as Weckerlin was the last" (_Hist. MSS. Com._, _Heathcote Papers_, 1899, p. 9). [51:1] _The Rehearsal Transprosed_.--Grosart, iii. 126. [55:1] Even Mr. Firth can tell me nothing about this Ward of Cromwell's. [56:1] For reprints of these tracts, see _Social England Illustrated_, Constable and Co., 1903. [57:1] "England's Way to Win Wealth." See _Social England Illustrated_, p. 253. [57:2] _Ibid._ p. 265. [58:1] Dr. Dee's "Petty Navy Royal." _Social England Illustrated_, p. 46. [58:2] "England's Way to Win Wealth." _Social England Illustrated_, p. 268. [59:1] Ranke's _History of England during the Seventeenth Century_, vol. iii. p. 68. [61:1] See Leigh Hunt's _Wit and Humour_ (1846), pp. 38, 237. [62:1] Butler's lines, _A Description of Holland_, are very like Marvell's:-- "A Country that draws fifty foot of water In which men live as in a hold of nature. ... ... They dwell in ships, like swarms of rats, and prey Upon the goods all nations' fleets convey; ... ... That feed like cannibals on other fishes, And serve their cousin-germans up in dishes: A land that rides at anchor and is moor'd, In which they do not live but go aboard." Marvell and Butler were rival wits, but Holland was a common butt; so powerful a motive is trade jealousy. [67:1] "To one unacquainted with Horace, this Ode, not perhaps so perfect as his are in form, and with occasional obscurities of expression, which Horace would not have left, will give a truer notion of the kind of greatness which he achieved than could, so far as I know, be obtained from any other poem in our language."--_Dean Trench_. [70:1] "In the last war, when France was disgraced and overpowered in every quarter of the globe, when Spain coming to her assistance only shared her calamities, and the name of an Englishman was reverenced through Europe, no poet was heard amidst the general acclamation; the fame of our counsellors and heroes was entrusted to the gazetteer."--Dr. Johnson's _Life of Prior_. CHAPTER IV IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS Cromwell's death was an epoch in Marvell's history. Up to that date he had, since he left the U
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