"The house in which Temple last lived and died is written thrice in his (probably) holograph will, and always as Moreparke or More Parke." Albert Forbes Sieveking (1908). Sir William Temple upon the Gardens of Epicurus, with Other XVIIth Century Garden Essays, pp. xx–xxi.
Sieveking, A. F. (1908) Sir William Temple Upon the Gardens of Epicurus, pp. xxii–xxiii.
Kuitert, Wybe; "Japanese Robes, Sharawadgi, and the landscape discourse of Sir William Temple and Constantijn Huygens" Garden History, 41, 2: (2013) pp.157-176, Plates II-VI and Garden History, 42, 1: (2014) p.130 ISSN 0307-1243 Online as PDF
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See further a contemporary account of the incident A Sad and lamentable account of the strange and unhappy misfortune of Mr. John Temple, the person who leaped out of the boat under London-bridg, and was drowned on Friday the 19th of this instant April. : Together with the manner of finding him, and the circumstances that attended this gentlemans ruine, with an account of the paper left by him in the boat, &c., London,: Printed by W.D. in Bartholomew-Close., 1689.[1]