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OF THE

COURT OF CHARLES THE SECOND,

BY

COUNT GRAMMONT,

WITH NUMEROUS ADDITIONS AND ILLUSTRATIONS, AS EDITED BY

SIR WALTER SCOTT.

ALSO:

THE PERSONAL HISTORY OF CHARLES,

INCLUDING

THE KING'S OWN ACCOUNT OF HIS ESCAPE AND PRESERVATION
AFTER THE BATTLE OF WORCESTER, AS DICTATED TO PEPYS.

AND

THE BOSCOBEL TRACTS,

OR, CONTEMPORARY NARRATIVES OF HIS MAJESTY'S ADVENTURES,
FROM THE MURDER OF HIS FATHER TO THE RESTORATION.

CAREFULLY EDITED,

WITH ADDITIONAL ILLUSTRATIONS.

LONDON:

HENRY G. BOHN, YORK STREET, COVENT GARDEN.

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Printed by J. & H. COX, BROTHERS, 74 & 75, Great Queen Street,

Lincoln's-Inn Fields.

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ADVERTISEMENT.

THE justly acquired popularity of the MEMOIRS OF COUNT GRAMMONT, "which paint the chief characters of the court of Charles the Second with an easy and exquisite pencil," renders it unnecessary for the publisher to say any thing concerning their intrinsic value.

The present edition contains the entire work as revised by Sir Walter Scott, in 1811, with all the notes; and, in addition, a considerable number of illustrative anecdotes, gleaned from the most authentic sources.

The PERSONAL HISTORY OF CHARLES THE SECOND has been compiled with care from all previous authorities, and presents, it is believed, in a small compass, the most complete picture of the merry monarch in dishabille, yet given to the public.

The KING'S ACCOUNT OF HIS ESCAPE AFTER THE BATTLE OF WORCESTER, as dictated by himself to Pepys, is one of the most romantic pieces of English history we possess. It was first published by Sir David Dalrymple, in 1766, as the King's, on the authority of the Pepys' manuscripts, preserved in Magdalen College, Cambridge. The minute and personal character of the narrative, its lively and careless style, and the collation of it with other accounts, concur in proving it

unquestionably genuine. The remarks subjoined are by Mr. Pepys, and include many corrections and additions subsequently obtained from the King, Father Huddlestone, and Colonel Philips. These are inserted in the form of notes, and are respectively distinguished by the initial letters of K, P H, and Ph.

The so-called "BOSCOBEL TRACTS" are contemporary narratives, written in the quaint language of the time, by Thomas Blount, author of the "Fragmenta Antiquitatis," or Ancient Tenures of Land, and various other works. As they give curious variations and highly interesting additions to the King's own narrative, and are, to use the words of the Retrospective Review, "now among the most scarce and highly prized historical pamphlets of the seventeenth century," it has been thought desirable to conjoin them.

The publisher permits himself to observe, that the matter now presented in a single volume, could not, in any other shape, be procured for twenty times its present price.

H. G. B.

YORK STREET, June 1, 1816.

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