248 THE HISTORY OF NEWMARKET. [Book IY. 



repose in the Prince's Lodgings, (his Highness being 

 then gone for Spaine,) they were introduced by the 

 Earle of Arundel ^°" meeting them in the Presence, 

 then to the Privy-Chamber-door, through it and the 

 withdrawing chamber into the king's Bed-Chamber, 

 (where all others but the Agent of the Archdutchess 

 Monsieur Van Mall, who attended him there) were 

 excluded ; they had an hour's audience of his Majesty, 

 and returned that night to Cambridge. The next day, 

 passing their time in sight of severall coUedges and 

 of the Schooles (where at a Congregation purposely 

 called they were admitted Masters of Arts, and heard 

 after that a Disputation in Phylosophy) they the next 

 morning parted thence to Audley-end and, entertained 

 there that night by the Lord Walden (in absence of 

 his Father the Earle of Suffolk) they the next day 

 came to London." * 



^°- Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel, was born July 

 7, 1592. Being deprived by his father's attainder of the 

 honours and the greatest part of the estates of his family, 

 he had only the title of Lord Maltravers by courtesy during 

 Queen Elizabeth's reign ; but he was restored, by Act of 

 Parliament, in the first year of James I. (1603), to all such 

 titles of honour and precedence as Philip, Earl of Arundel, 

 lost by his attainder, as also to the honour, state, and 

 dignity of Earl of Surrey, and to such dignity of baronies 

 as Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, lost by his attainder. He 

 was created Earl-Marshal in 162 1, and Earl of Norfolk, 

 June 6, 1644. His lordship married, in 1606, Lady Alatheia 

 Talbot, daughter, and eventually sole heiress, of Gilbert, 7th 

 Earl of Shrewsbury. He died October 4, 1646. 



* Finetti, " Philoxenis," fo. 119. 



