| Son |
| | | | (name unknown.) |
Henry. Thomas. W[illiam?] | |
| |
Charles = Elizabeth, d. and |
nat. 1646, matr. h. to Thomas Aubrey |
19, vii., 1661, ob. of Llantrithid. |
s.p. 1668. |
|
+-----------------------+
|
John = Catherine Watkins.
|
John = Susan, d. of Humphry
| Howarth of Whitehouse,
| Herefordshire.
|
+----------+------------+
| |
Charles. John, Rector of Llanhamlach,
nat. 1675, matr. 3, ii., 1696.
P. 193. In Zodiacum Marcelli Palingenii.
Marcellus Palingenius, or Petro Angelo Manzoli, wrote his didactic and
satirical poem, the _Zodiacus Vitae_, about 1535. It was translated into
English by Barnabee Googe in 1560-1565. The latest edition of the
original is that by C. C. Weise (1832). As we may gather from Vaughan's
lines, Manzoli was an earnest student of occult lore. _Cf._ Gustave
Reynier, _De Marcelli Palingenii Stellatae Poctae Zodiaco Vitae_ (1893).
P. 195. To Lysimachus.
_Bevis ... Arundel ... Morglay_. The allusion is to the _Romance of Sir
Bevis of Hampton_ (ed. E. Koelbing, E. E. T. S., 1885). Arundel was Sir
Bevis' horse, and Morglay his sword.
P. 197. On Sir Thomas Bodley's Library.
If Vaughan was not himself an Oxford man (_Biog. Note_, vol. ii., p.
xxvi), he may have been in Oxford with the King's troops at the end of
August, 1645 (_Biog. Note_, vol. ii., p. xxxi).
_Walsam_, Walsingham, in Norfolk, famous for the rich shrine of Our Lady
of Walsingham, to which many offerings were made.
P. 200. The Importunate Fortune.
I. 105. _My purse, as Randolph's was._ The allusion is to Randolph's
|