Up and Down Stairs - Jeremy Musson [170]
60. Charles Carlton, Going to the Wars (1992), p. 51.
61. Verney, p. 33 and p. 40.
62. Daniel Defoe, Memoirs of a Cavalier (1908), p. 173.
63. John Aubrey, Brief Lives (1982), p. 154.
64. Verney, pp. 46–7.
65. Miriam Slater, Family Life in the Seventeenth Century (1984), pp. 112–13.
66. Slater, p. 113.
67. Verney, p. 47.
68. Slater, p. 72.
69. Verney, p. 51.
70. Verney, p. 82.
71. Verney, p. 85.
72. Susan Whyman, Sociability and Power in Late-Stuart England (1999), p. 26 (afterwards Whyman).
73. Whyman, p. 35.
74. Verney, p. 171.
75. Whyman, p. 117.
76. Whyman, p. 22.
77. Dorothy Stuart, The English Abigail (1946), pp. 61–81.
78. Whyman, p. 60.
79. Gladys Scott Thomson, Life in a noble household 1641–1700 (1965), pp. 85–91 (afterwards Scott Thomson).
80. Scott Thomson, pp. 118 and 328–30.
81. Scott Thomson, p. 119.
82. Scott Thomson, pp. 120–1.
83. Scott Thomson, pp. 142–3 and p. 151.
84. Scott Thomson, pp. 124–5.
85. Scott Thomson, p. 125.
86. Cliffe, p. 101.
87. Cliffe, p. 101.
88. D.R. Hainsworth, Stewards, Lords and People: The Estate Steward and his World in Later Stuart England (1992), p. 47.
89. Cliffe, p. 105.
90. Giles Waterfield et al. (eds), Below Stairs (2004), p. 143 (afterwards Waterfield).
91. Sim, pp. 36–8.
92. See M. Sherlock, The Story of the Jamaican People (1998) and Bonham C. Richardson, The Caribbean in the Wider World 1492–1992 (1992).
93. Claire Tomalin, Samuel Pepys: The Unequalled Self (2002), p. 410, n. 27.
94. Whyman, p. 7.
95. Andrew Browning (ed.), Memoirs of Sir John Reresby (2nd edn, 1991), p. 108 (afterwards Browning).
96. Browning, p. 108.
97. Browning, p. 109.
98. For more on the current debate on authorship, see Women Writers Resource Project at the Lewis H. Beck Center at Emory University, Atlanta; see http://chaucer.library.emory.edu/wwrp.
99. The Gentlewomans Companion (2nd edn, 1675), pp. 204–17; also see The Compleat Servant Maid (1685).
100. The Gentlewomans Companion, p. 205.
101. The Gentlewomans Companion, p. 121.
102. The Gentlewomans Companion, p. 206.
103. The Gentlewomans Companion, pp. 207–8.
104. The Gentlewomans Companion, pp. 212–3.
105. The Gentlewomans Companion, p. 213.
106. The Gentlewomans Companion, p. 214.
107. The Gentlewomans Companion, pp. 214–5.
108. The Gentlewomans Companion, pp. 215–6.
109. The Gentlewomans Companion, p. 216.
110. The Gentlewomans Companion, pp. 215–16.
111. The Gentlewomans Companion, pp. 108–10.
112. The Gentlewomans Companion, p. 110
113. Worsley, p. 240.
114. Worsley, p. 236.
115. Cliffe, p. 97.
116. Tom Jaine, ‘Mary Evelyn’s Oeconomis to a Married Friend’ (1677), Petits Propos Calinaries, Vol. 73, July 2003, pp. 59–73 (afterwards Jaine), which includes a full version of the text from a manuscript at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, Texas; the review is published on dialspace.dial.pipex.com.
117. Jaine, p. 65.
118. Jaine, p. 66.
119. Jaine, p. 71.
120. Jaine, p. 71.
121. Jaine, p. 72.
122. Jaine, p. 72.
123. Girouard, Life in the English Country House p. 138, and Colin Plate, The Great Rebuildings of Tudor and Stuart England (1994), pp. 157–8, p. 103.
124. Christopher Morris (ed.), The Illustrated Journeys of Celia Fiennes (1982), p. 47.
125. Cliffe, pp. 103–4.
126. Cliffe, p. 104.
127. Cliffe, p. 104.
128. John Evelyn, Diary (1956), pp. 639–40.
129. Cooper, p. 272.
130. Cooper, p. 272.
131. Cooper, pp. 287–9.
132. Cooper, p. 289.
133. Mary Yakushi, and others (ed.), The Treasure Houses of Britain (1985), p. 147.
134. Cliffe, p. 104.
Chapter 3: The Household in the Age of Conspicuous Consumption
1. See especially Mark Girouard, Life in the English Country House(1978), pp. 181–244; Christopher Christie,