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44. May 19,1667, Pepys, Diary, VIII, 223, X, 34–39; Nov. 4, 1624, Beck, Diary, 199–200, passim; Canon, Diary, 41,56; Blaak, "Reading and Writing," 64–76,83—87.
45. Apr. 27, 1706, Cowper, Diary, passim; Jagodzinski, Privacy and Print, 20, 25–43; Francois Lebrun, "The Two Reformations: Communal Devotion and Personal Piety" and Chartier, "Writing," in HPL III, 96-104,130–134.
46. Yehonatan Eibeshiitz, Yearot Devash (Jerusalem, 2000), 371; Rabbi Aviel, ed. Mishnah Berurah: Laws Concerning Miscellaneous Blessings, the Minchah Service, the Ma'ariv Service and Evening Conduct… (Jerusalem, 1989), 413; Salo Wittmayer Baron, The Jewish Community: Its History and Structure to the American Revolution (Westport, Ct., 1972), II, 169,176, III, 163.
47. Thomas Wright, Autobiography… 1736–1797 (London, 1864), 24; Steven Ozment, Three Behaim Boys Growing Up in Early Modem Germany: A Chronicle of Their Lives (New Haven, 1990), 103; Alexander Teixeira de Mattos, trans., The Memoirs of Francois Ren'e Vicomte de Chateaubriand… (New York, 1902), I, 54.
48. Dec. 31,1666, Pepys, Diary, VII, 426, X, 174–176, passim; Apr. 26,1740, Kay, Diary, 34.
49. Tilley, Proverbs in England, 79; Jan. 2,1624, Beck, Diary, 27–28, passim; Cereta, Letters, ed. Robin, 101, 31–32, passim; Lorraine Reams, "Night Thoughts: The Waking of the Soul: The Nocturnal Contemplations of Love, Death, and the Divine in the Eighteenth-Century and Nineteenth-Century French Epistolary Novel and Roman-M'emoire" (Ph. D. diss., Univ. of North Carolina or Chapel Hill, 2000), 138; William Riley Parker, Milton: A Biography (Oxford, 1968), 1,578, II, 710; Blaak, "Reading and Writing," 79–87; Chartier, "Writing," Madeleine Foisil, "The Literature of Intimacy," and Jean Marie Goulemont, "Literary Practices: Publicizing the Private," in HPL III, 115–117,157-159, 327–332, 380–383.
50. Henry Halford Vaughan, ed., Welsh Proverbs with English Translations (1889; rpt. edn., Detroit, 1969), 94; Michael J. Mikos, ed., Polish Renaissance Literature: An Anthology (Columbus, Ohio, 1995), 168; RB, I, 84.
1. Shakespeare, Antony and Cleopatra, III, 13,184–187.
2. Verdon, Night, 127–131; Pierre Jonin, "L'Espace et le Temps de la Nuit dans les Romans de Chr'etiens de Troyes," M'elanges de Langue et de Litt'erature M'edi'evales Offerts `a Alice Planche 48 (1984), 242–246; Gary Cross, A Social History of Leisure Since 1600 (State College, Pa., 1990), 17–18.
3. Edward Ward, The London Spy (1709; rpt. edn., New York, 1985), 43; Koslofsky, "Court Culture," 745–748; Thomas D'Urfey, The Two Queens of Brentford (London, 1721); Another Collection of Philosophical Conferences of the French Virtuosi…, trans. G. Havers and J. Davies (London, 1665), 419; Schindler, Rebellion, 194–195.
4. Diary of Robert Moody, 1660–1663, Rawlinson Coll. D. 84, Bodl.; Marie-Claude Canova-Green, Benserade Ballets pour Louis XIV (Paris, 1997), 93—160.
5. Ben Sedgley, Observations on Mr. Fielding's Enquiry into the Causes of the Late Increase of Robbers… (London, 1751), 8; "A Short Account, by Way of Journal, of What I Observed Most Remarkable in My Travels…," June 2,1697, Historical Manuscripts Commission, 8th Report, Part 1 (1881), 99—100; Marcelin Defoumeaux, Daily Life in Spain: The Golden Age, trans. Newton Branch (New York, 1971), 70–71; Koslofsky, "Court Culture," 745–748; Thomas Burke, English Night-Life: From Norman Curfew to Present Black-Out (New York, 1971), 11–22.
6. Tobias George Smollett, Humphry Clinker, ed. James L. Thorson (New York, 1983), 1, 87; P. Brydone, A Tour through Sicily and Malta… (London, 1773), II, 87–90; Remarks 1717, 56; Sedgley, Observations, 8; The Memoirs of Charles-Lewis, Baron de Pollnitz… (London, 1739), 1,222; Burke, Night-Life, 23–70, passim.
7. US and WJ, Feb. 28,1730; Vanessa Harding, The Dead and the Living in Paris and London, 1500–1670 (Cambridge, 2002), 197, passim; Craig M. Koslofsky, The Reformation of the Dead: Death and Ritual in Early Modern Germany, 1450–1700 (New York, 2000), 138,133–152, passim; Clare Gittings, Death, Burial and the Individual in Early Modern England (London, 1984), 188–200.
8. Richards, The Tragedy of Messaliina (London, 1640).
9. Walter R. Davis, ed., The Works of Thomas Campion… (New York, 1967), 147; Terry Castle, "The Culture of Travesty: Sexuality and Masquerade in Eighteenth-Century England," in G. S. Rousseau and Roy Porter, eds., Sexual Underworlds of the Englightenment (Manchester, 1987), 158; Terry Castle, Masquerade and Civilization: The Carnivalesque in Eighteenth-Century English Culture and Fiction (Stanford, Calif., 1986).
10. The Rich Cabinet… (London, 1616), fo. 20; Sara Mendelson, "The Civility of Women in Seventeenth-Century England," in Peter Burke et al., eds., Civil Histories: Essays Presented to Sir Keith Thomas (Oxford, 2000), 114; Stephen J. Greenblatt, Renaissance Self-Fashioning: From More to Shakespeare (Chicago, 1980).
11. Castle, Masquerade, 25,1—109, passim; Castle, "Culture of Travesty," 166–167; HMM and GA, Jan. 28,1755.
12. Castle, Masquerade, 73,1—109, passim; "W.Z.," GM 41 (1771), 404; WJ, May 16,1724; Occasional Poems, Very Seasonable and Proper for the Present Times… (London, 1726), 5; Amanda Vickery, The Gentleman's Daughter: Women's Lives in Georgian England (New Haven, 1998), 243.
13. Castle, Masquerade, 73, 1—109, passim; Nancy Lyman Roelker, ed. and trans., The Paris of Henry of Navarre, as Seen by Pierre de l'Estoile: Selections from His M'emoires-Journaux (Cambridge, Mass., 1958), 58; Bulstrode Whitelock, The Third Charge… (London, 1723), 21.