His first engagement in Philadelphia was with a bookseller, who employed him as editor of the Philadelphia Magazine, for
His first engagement in Philadelphia was with a bookseller, who employed him as editor of the Philadelphia
Magazine, for which he had an annual salary of fifty pounds
currency. When Dr. Rush of that city suggested to Paine
the propriety of preparing the Americans lor a separation
from Great Britain, he seized with avidity the idea, and
immediately beg^n the above mentioned pamphlet, which,
when finished, was shewn in manuscript to Dr. Franklin
and Mr. Samuel Adams, and entitled, after some discussion, “Common Sense,
” at the suggestion of Dr. Rush.
For this he received from the legislature of Pennsylvania,
the sum of 500l.; and soon after this, although devoid of
every thing that could be called literature, he was honoured
with a degree of M. A. from the university of Pennsylvania, and vvas chosen a member of the American Philosophical Society. In the title-page of his “Rights of Man,
”
he styled himself “Secretary for foreign affairs to the
Congress of the United States, in the late war.
” To this
title*, however, he had no pretensions, and so thorough a
republican ought at least to have avoided assuming what he
condemned so vehemently in others. He was merely a
clerk, at a very low salary, to a committee of the congress;
and his business was to copy papers, and number and file
them. From this office, however, insignificant as it was,
he was dismissed for a scandalous breach of trust, and then
hired himself as a clerk to Mr. Owen Biddle of Philadelphia; and early in \1&0, the assembly of Pennsylvania
chose hiii) as cierk. fn 1782 he printed at Philadelphia,
a letter to the abbé Raynal on the affairs of North Amer ca, in which he undertook to clear up the mistakes in
Raynal’s account of the revolution; and in the same yer
he also printed a letter to the earl of Shelburne, on his
speech in parliament, July 10, 1782, in which that nobleman had prophesied that, “When Great Britain shall acknowledge American independence, the sun of Britain’s
glory is set for ever.
” It could not be difficult to answer
such a prediction as this, which affords indeed a humiliating instance of want of political foresight. Great Britain
did acknowledge American independence, and what is
Great Britain now? In 1785, as a compensation for his
revolutionary writings, congress granted him three thousand dollars, after having rejected with great indignation
a motion for appointing him historiographer to the United
States, with a salary. Two only of the states noticed by
gratuities his revolutionary writings. Pennsylvania gave
him, as we have mentioned, 500l. currency; and NewYork gave him an estate of more than three hundred acres,
in high cultivation, which was perhaps the more agreeable
to him, as it was the confiscated property of a royalist. lu
1787 he came to London, and before the end of that year
published a pamphlet on the recent transactions’ between
Great Britain and Holland, entitled “Prospects on the
Rubicon.
” In this, as may be expected, he censured the
Cneasures of the English administration.
, historiographer, printer, and bookseller to the king, and genealogist of the duchy of Burgundy, was born
, historiographer, printer, and bookseller to the king, and genealogist of the duchy of Burgundy, was born at Paris, March 19, 1608. In his youth
he showed a taste for genealogy, and heraldic studies, in
which he appears to have been instructed and encouraged
by his relation, Louvain Gelliot, who published a work on
armorial bearings. In his twenty -fifth year he settled at
Dijon, where he married Vivanda Spirinx, the daughter of
a printer and bookseller, with whom he entered into business. At his leisure hours, however, he still continued
his heraldic researches, and laboured with so much perseverance in this study as to produce the following works:
1. “Le parlement de Bourgogne, avec les armoiries,
” &c.
Genealogie des comtes d'Amanze,
” fol.
3. “La vraie et parfaite science des Armoiries de Gelliot,
avec de plus de 6000 ecussons,
” Histoire
genealogique de comtes de Chamilli.
” 5. " Extraits de
la hambre des comptes de Bourgogne, fol. He left also
thirteen volumes of ms collections respecting the families
of Burgundy. It is an additional and remarkable proof of
his industry and ingenuity, that he engraved the whole of
the plates in these volumes with his own hand. His history
of the parliament of Burgundy was continued by Petitot,
and published in 1733. Palliot died at Dijon in 1698, at
the age of eighty-nine.
t scholar, and a man of singular modesty. He never took the oaths after the revolution. He married a bookseller’s daughter at Oxford, where he resided with a numerous family
It must have been as the last effort of a desperate cause
when he sent a “Discourse
” to James, persuading him to
embrace the protestant religion, with a “Letter
” to the
same purpose, which was printed at London in 1690, 4to.
His works have but few readers at this day; and Swift
observes, that “MarvelPs remarks on Parker continued to
be read when the book which occasioned them was long
ago sunk.
” He left a son of his own name, who was an
excellent scholar, and a man of singular modesty. He
never took the oaths after the revolution. He married a
bookseller’s daughter at Oxford, where he resided with a
numerous family of children to support which he published some books, particularly, 1 “An English Translation of Tully de finibus, 1702,
” 8vo, in the preface to
which he has some animadversions upon Locke’s Essay concerning Human Understanding. 2. “An abridgment of
the Ecclesiastic Histories of Eusebius, Socrates, Sozornen,
and Theotloret,
” Reverendi admodum in Christo
patris Samuelis Parkeri episcopi de rebus sui temporis commentariorum libri quatuor,
” Bibliotheca Biblica,
” printed at Oxford in 5 vols. 4to, the first
of which appeared in two parts in 1720, and the fifth in
1735, with an account of the other writings of the author,
and some particulars of his life, drawn up by Dr. Thomas
Haywood, of St. John’s college, to whom were attributed
most of the dissertations in the work. He describes it as
“being a new Comment upon the five Books of Moses,
extracted from the ancient fathers, and the most famous
critics both ancient and modern, with occasional annotations or dissertations upon particular difficulties, as they
were often called for.
” Mr. Parker died July 14, 1730,
in his fiftieth year, leaving a widow and children. The
metrical paraphrase of Leviticus xi. 13, &c. in vol. Hi.
was written by Mr. Warton, of Magdalen college, father
to the late learned brothers, Joseph and Thomas Warton;
and the “Fragment of Hyppolitus, taken out of two Arabic
Mss. in the Bodleian,
” in the fourth vol. was translated by
the late Dr. Hunt. Mr. Parker never was in orders, as he
could not reconcile his mind to the new government; but
he associated much and was highly respected by many
divines, particularly nonjurors, as Dr. Hickes, Mr. Collier,
Mr. Dodwell, Mr. Leslie, Mr. Nelson, and Dr. Grabe,
whose liberality lessened the difficulties which a very large
family occasioned. He appears to have had a place in the
Bodleian library, as Mr. Wheatly, in a letter to Dr. Rawlinson, dated Dec. 1739, says, “Sam. Parker’s son I had
heard before was apprenticed to Mr. Clements: but the
account you give me of his extraordinary proficiency is
new. If it be true also, I hope some generous patron of
learning will recall him from the bookseller’s shop, and
place him in his father’s seat, the Bodleian library.
” This
son, Sackville Parker, was afterwards for many years an
eminent bookseller at Oxford, and one of the four Octogenarian booksellers, who died in 1795 and 1796, namely,
James Fletcher, at eighty-six; Sackville Parker, at eightynine; Stephen Fletcher, at eighty -two, and Daniel Prince,
at eighty-five. They were all born at Oxford, except
James Fletcher. The present worthy bookseller, Mr. Joseph Parker, is nephew and successor to Mr. Sackville
Parker.
common necessaries of life these two days, and can hardly hold to subscribe myself,” &c. Curll, the bookseller, finding some of his compositions well received, And going through
, an unfortunate poet, was born
at Peasmarsh, in the county of Sussex, in 1706, and was
the son of a farmer at that place, who rented a considerable estate of the earl of Thanet. He discovered excellent
parts, with a strong propensity to learning and his father,
not being in circumstances to give him a proper education,
applied to his noble landlord, who took him under his protection, and placed him at Appleby school in Westmoreland. Here he became acquainted with Mr. Noble, a clergyman of great learning and fine taste, who promoted his
studies and directed his taste. Upon his leaving Appleby,
he went to Sidney college in Cambridge, where he pursued the plan Mr. Noble had given him, and went through
the classics, as well as all our English poets, with great
advantage. Of these last, Spenser’s “Fairy Queen
” and
Brown’s “( Britannia’s Pastorals
” are said to have given him the greatest delight. He had, however, unfortunately contracted a habit of desultory reading, and had no relish for academical studies. His temper could not brook restraint; and his tutor, he thought, treated him with great rigour. A quarrel ensued; and, to avoid the scandal of expulsion, with which he was threatened, he took his name out of the college book, and went to London. Even now his friends would have forgiven him, and procured his readmission; but the pleasures of the town, the desire of
being known, and his romantic expectations of meeting
with 0u,e generous patron to reward his merit, rendered
him deaf to all advice. He led a pleasurable life, frequented Button’s, and became acquainted with some of
the most eminent wits of the time. As he had no fortune,
nor any means of subsistence, but what arose from the
subscriptions for the poems he proposed to publish; and,
as he wanted even common prudence to manage this
precarious income, he was soon involved in the deepest
distress and most deplorable wretchedness. In a poem,
entitled “Effigies Authons,
” addressed to lord Burlington, he describes himself as destitute of friends, of money;
a prey to hunger; and passing his nights on a bench in
St. James’s park. In a private letter to a gentleman, he
thus expressed himself: “Spare my blushes; I have not
enjoyed the common necessaries of life these two days,
and can hardly hold to subscribe myself,
” &c. Curll, the
bookseller, finding some of his compositions well received,
And going through several impression>, took him into his
house; and, as Pope affirms in one of his letters, starved
him to death. But this does not appear to be strictly true;
and his death is more justly attributed to the small-pox,
which carried him off in 1727, in his 21st year. His biographer says, that he had a surprising genius, and had
raised hopes in all that knew him, that he would become
one of the most eminent poets of the age; but surh of his
poems as we find in the collection published in 2 vols. 8vo,
in 1728, would not in our days be thought calculated to
Support such high expectations.
fellow of the Royal Society. In 1768, his British Zoology was published in two volumes, 8vo, and the bookseller gave Mr. Pennant lOOl. for permission to do so, which he immediately
In 1765, he made a short tour to the continent, where
he enjoyed the company of the celebrated Buffon, who
pubicly acknowledged his favourable sentiments of Mr.
Tenant’s studies in the fifteenth volume of his “Natural
Hislry.
” They had afterwards a dispute on branches of
thei respective studies, but, adds our author, “our blows
werdight, and I hope that neither of us felt any material
inju
” At Ferney he visited Voltaire, who happened to
be in good humour, and was very entertaining; but in his
attempt to speak English, satisfied the visitors that he was
master of the oaths and curses which disgrace that
language.
During this tour, Mr. Pennant visited also baron Haller,
the two Gesners, the poets, and Dr. Trew, a venerable
patron of natural history, who resided at Nuremberg. At
the Hague, he met with Dr. Pallas, and this meeting gave
rise to his “Synopsis of Quadrupeds,
” and the second edition, under the name of the “History of Quadrupeds,
” a,
work received by the naturalists of different parts of Europe
in a manner uncommonly favourable. Mr. Pennant had
proposed this plan to Pallas, but owing to the latter being
promoted at the court of Petersburgh, it ultimately devolved on himself. In 1767, after his return, he was
elected fellow of the Royal Society. In 1768, his British
Zoology was published in two volumes, 8vo, and the bookseller gave Mr. Pennant lOOl. for permission to do so, which
he immediately vested in the Welsh charity-school.
author to his pupil J. B. Boehmer, upon condition that it should not be published, was printed by a bookseller, Fritsch, into whose hands a copy of it fell eighteen years
He left only three different works, the first of which,
entitled “Institutiones Chirurgise Rationalis, turn medicae,
turn manualis,
” Leipsic, Opusculorum Chirurgicorum et Anatomicorum Tomi
duo: Dissertationes et Prolusiones,
” ibid. Ars medendi singulis morbis accommodata,
” ibid.
r the press, an obstruction which appeared very formidable was thrown in his way by Cornelius Bee, a bookseller, who, in a paper or pamphlet called “The case of Cornelius Bee,”
With much encouragement he had also some difficulties
to encounter. When the first volume was ready for the
press, an obstruction which appeared very formidable
was thrown in his way by Cornelius Bee, a bookseller,
who, in a paper or pamphlet called “The case of Cornelius
Bee,
” accused Mr. Pool of invading his property. To understand this it is necessary to know that this Mr. Bee, unquestionably a man of an enterprizing spirit, equal perhaps to any instance known in our days among the trade,
had published a very few years before, i. e. in 1660, the
“Critici Sacri,
” or a body of criticisms of the most
learned men in Europe, amounting to ninety, on the Old
and New Testament, given at large from their works, and
extending to nine volumes folio. Bee had a patent for this
work, and unquestionably deserved every encouragement
and protection the law could give, but the language of his
patent seems to have given him a narrow notion of literary
property. It stated that no person should print the Critics
either in whole or in party and therefore he considered
Mr. Pool as prohibited from taking any thing from this vast
collection of criticisms which separately were in every
persons’ hands, or from making any abridgment, or compiling any work that resembled the “Critici Sacri,
” however improved in the plan, or augmented, as Pool’s was,
from a variety authors not used in it. He also complained
that he should sustain a double injury by the “Synopsis:
”
first, in the loss of the sale of the remaining copies of his
own work, for which he did Mr. Pool the honour to think
there would be no longer a demand; and secondly, in being
prevented from publishing an improved edition of the
“Critici Sacri
” which he intended.
blication of Letters between him and his friends, which falling into the hands of Curll, a rapacious bookseller of no good fame, were by him printed and sold. This volume containing
"One of the passages of Pope’s life, which seems to deserve some inquiry, was a publication of Letters between him and his friends, which falling into the hands of Curll, a rapacious bookseller of no good fame, were by him printed and sold. This volume containing some letters from noblemen, Pope incited a prosecution against him in the House of Lords for breach of privilege, and attended himself to stimulate the resentment of his friends. Curll appeared at the, bar, and knowing himself in no danger, spoke of Pope with very little reverence. ‘ He had,’ said Curll, ‘ a knack of versifying, but in prose I think myself a match for him.’ When the orders of the house were examined, none of them appeared to have been infringed: Curll went away triumphant, and Pope was left to seek some other remedy.
an time he was not reluctant to employ his pen in similar undertakings. In 1785, when Nicholson, the bookseller of Cambridge, was preparing a new edition of Xenophon’s ft Anabasis,"
From this time, instead of lectures, it is said he turned
his thoughts to publication; but before this, he had been
a contributor to some of the literary journals, of articles
which displayed his critical acumen. In the 3d vol. of
Maty’s Review, he published a criticism on Schutz’s JEschylus“, dated from Trinity college, May 29, 1783. His
other criticisms in that Review are, Brunck’s Aristophanes,
vol. IV. Hermesianax, by Weston, vol. V. Huntingford’s Apology for
” his Monostrophics, vol. VI. He also
furnished Mr. Maty with a transcript of the letters of
Bentley and Le Cierc, vol, IX. p. 253. He was an occasional contributor to the Monthly Review, the Gentleman’s
Magazine, and, it is believed, to other publications. The
account of Robertson’s Parian Chronicle, inthe Monthly
Review, was written by him; and the review of Knight’s
Essay on the Greek Alphabet, January 1. 1794, has, from
internal evidence, been given to him. Of the ironical defence of Sir John Hawkinses Life of Johnson he was
unquestionably the writer: this was comprised in three
humourous letters inserted in the Gentleman’s Magazine
for 1787, under the signature of Sundry Whereof. Some
letters upon the contested verse, 1 John, v. 7, appeared
subsequently in the same work; which at lengtn caused
the publication of his letters to Archdeacon Travis, in
which he is thought by many to have completely invalidated the authority of that much-disputed text.
Not long after he had taken his first degree, it was in
the contemplation of the syndics of the university press at
Cambridge to publish Æschylus, with Stanley’s commentaries, in ms. in the public library of that university. Mr.
Porson offered to undertake the work, if allowed to conduct
it according to his own ideas of the duty of an editor but
this offer was rejected, and in a manner so discouraging,
that we are told it in a great measure operated, for a short
period, to extinguish in him that ardent love of fame which
is, generally speaking, the concomitant of learning and the
emanation of genius. We shall find hereafter how much
he had at heart the elucidation of this very difficult author,
and in the mean time he was not reluctant to employ his
pen in similar undertakings. In 1785, when Nicholson,
the bookseller of Cambridge, was preparing a new edition
of Xenophon’s ft Anabasis," he prevailed upon Mr. Porson
to furnish him with some assistance, which he accordingly
did to the extent of twenty-eight pages of addenda, which,
although avowedly written in hatete, attest the hand of a
master. In the year 1787, he communicated to the delegates of the Clarendon press some notes upon Toup’s
Emendations on Suidas, which appeared with that important work in 1790. These notes were probably composed
by him at the request of his friend Mr. Tyrwhitt; a gentleman of whose learning and genius he had the highest
opinion, and not only used to mention the talents and
acuteness of Mr. T. with approbation, but with reverence.
n manuscript, to be printed in Almon’s Parliamentary Register. He is also said to have assisted that bookseller in his “American Remembrancer,” a periodical paper which contained
At the general election, 1768, he was chosen representative in parliament for Tregony in Cornwall, and in 1775
for Minehead in Somersetshire, and on all cccasions vigorously opposed the measures which led to the war with
America; and, from the knowledge which he was supposed
to have acquired in that country, was listened to with attention. Of the importance of his speeches he had himself a considerable opinion, by his sending them in manuscript, to be printed in Almon’s Parliamentary Register.
He is also said to have assisted that bookseller in his “American Remembrancer,
” a periodical paper which contained
all the calumny, as well as all the arguments, which the
opponents of the measures of administration could bring
together. At the general election in 1780 he retired from
parliament, and resided, in his latter years, at Bath, where
ie died Feb. 25, 1805, in the 83d year of his age, if our
date of his birth be correct.
ess. After his failure in this attempt, he subsisted chiefly by writing. He also was for some time a bookseller at Bath, where, and at other places, he occasionally delivered
, a poet and miscellaneous
writer, is said to have been born of a good family, at St.
Ives, in Huntingdonshire, Dec. 25, 1749. He was ed located at Felstead, in Essex, and was originally brought up
to the church. This, however, he appears to have quitted
for the stage, which he attempted in London, in 1774,
with very little success. After his failure in this attempt,
he subsisted chiefly by writing. He also was for some time
a bookseller at Bath, where, and at other places, he occasionally delivered lectures on the English language. For
many years after his appearance on the stage, he assumed
the name of Courtney Melmoth, which likewise is prefixed to
most of his publications. As. an author, he was very prolific.
The first of his productions which attracted the notice of the
public, was “The Tears of Genius, occasioned by the Death
of Dr. Goldsmith, 1774,
” whose poetical works he endeavoured, and not always unsuccessfully, to make the model of
his own. His poem of “Sympathy
” was perhaps his best, and
has passed through many editions, and is characterized by
feeling, energy, and beauty. His first novel, entitled
“Liberal Opinions upon Animals, Man, and Providence,
”
Shenstone Green,
” “Emma Corbett,
” “The Pupil of Pleasure, or the New System (Lord Chesterfield’s) illustrated,
”
had likewise a temporary popularity. His other novel of
any note was entitled “Family Secrets,
” The Fair Circassian,
”
taken from Hawkesworth’s “Almoran and Harriet,
” which
required all the support of himself and friends, in the
newspapers, to render it palatable for a few nights. His
other dramatic pieces, enumerated in the Biog. Dram,
were so little successful as to be soon forgot.
f Sweden to that of France, in order to have it printed in that kingdom. His brother offered it to a bookseller, who gave it Mezeray to peruse. Mezeray thought it worth printing,
We have already mentioned his first work his second
was, 2. “De Statu Germanici Imperii liber unus,
” which
he published in Severini di
Mozambano,
” with a dedication to his brother Isaac Puffendorf, whom he styles “Laelio Signor de Trezolani.
”
Puffendorf sent it the year before to his brother, then ambassador from the court of Sweden to that of France, in
order to have it printed in that kingdom. His brother
offered it to a bookseller, who gave it Mezeray to peruse.
Mezeray thought it worth printing, yet refused his approbation, on account of some passages opposite to the interests of France, and of others in which the pritfsts and
monks were severely treated. Isaac Puffendorf then sent
it to Geneva, where it was printed in 12mo. The design
of the author was to prove that Germany was a kind of republic, the constituent members of which being ill-proportioned, formed a monstrous whole. The book and its doctrine, therefore, met with great opposition; it was condemned, prohibited, and seized in many parts of Germany;
and written against immediately by several learned civilians. It underwent many editions, and was translated into
many languages and, among the rest, into English by
Mr. Bohun, 1696, in 12mo. 3. “De Jure Naturae &
Gentium,
” Leyden, De Jure
Belli & Pacis,
” since the same subjects are treated in a
more extensive manner, und with greater order. It was
translated into French by Barbeyrac, who wrote large notes
and an introductory discourse, in 1706; and into English,
with Barbeyrac’s notes, by Dr. Basil Kennet and others,
in 1708. The fourth and fifth edition of the English translation have Mr. Barbeyrac’s introductory discourse, which
is not in the three former. In the mean time Puffendorf
was obliged to defend this work against several censurers
the most enraged of whom was Nicholas Beckman, his
colleague in the university of Lunden. This writer, in.
order to give the greater weight to his objections, endeavoured to draw the divines into his party, by bringing religion into the dispute, and accusing the author of heterodoxy. His design in this was, to exasperate the clergy
of Sweden against Puffendorf; but the senators of that
kingdom prevented this, by enjoining his enemies silence,
and suppressing Beckman’s book by the king’s authority.
It was reprinted at Giessen; and, being brought to Sweden, was burned in 1675 by the hands of the executioner:
and Beckman, the author, banished from the king’s dominions for having disobeyed orders in republishing it,
Beckman now gave his fury full scope, and not only wrote
virulently and maliciously against Puffendorf, but likewise
challenged him to fight a duel he wrote to him from Copenhagen in that style, and threatened to pursue him
wherever he should go, in case he did not meet him at the
place appointed. Puffendorf took no notice of the letter, but
sent, it to the consistory of the university yet thought it
necessary to reply to the satirical pieces of that writer,
which he did in several publications. Niceron gives a
good account of this controversy in the 18th vol.- of his
“Memoires.
”
completed, after the labour of thirty years. He was still unable to publish it, nor could he find a bookseller who would run the hazard of assisting him. At length his friend
He was apprenticed to a shoemaker, who, like the master of George Fox, mentioned in this work, employed his
apprentice in keeping sheep. This gave our young student leisure for reading; and he occupied it in the indis-.
criminate perusal of such books as came into his hands
but the Scriptures had the preference in his mind.
Among other books which came'in his way, was one written
by Samuel Fisher, a Quaker, entitled “Rusticus ad Academicos,
” in which some inaccuracies in the translation of
the Bible being pointed out, Purver determined to examine
for himself; and, with the assistance of a Jew, soon acquired a knowledge of the Hebrew language. About the
20th year of his age he kept a school in his native country;
but afterwards, for the sake of more easily acquiring the
means of prosecuting his studies, he came to London,
where he probably resided when he published, in 1727, a
book called “The Youth’s Delight.
” The same year he
returned to his native place, and a second time opened a
school there; but previous to this, in London, he had embraced the principles, and adopted the profession of the
Quakers. He is said to have been convinced of the truth
of their tenets at a meeting held at the Bull and Mouth in
Aldersgate-street; whether by means of the preaching of
any of their ministers, we are not informed; but on the
day month ensuing, he himself appeared as a minister
among them, at the same meeting*house. On his second
settling at Husborn, he began to translate the books of the
Old Testament and applied himself also to the study of
medicine and botany but, believing it his duty to travel
in his ministerial function, he again quitted his school and
his native place; not, however, probably, until after he
had resided there some years; for his course was to London, Essex, and through several counties to Bristol; near
which city, at Hambrook, he was in the latter part of
1738. At this place he took up his abode, at the house of
one Josiah Butcher, a maltster, whose son he instructed
in the classics, and there he translated some of the minor
prophets, having before completed the book of Esther,
and Solomon’s Song. Here he became acquainted with
Rachael Cotterel, who, with a sister, kept a boardingschool for girls, at Frenchay, Gloucestershire; and whom,
in 1738, he married, and soon after himself opened a
boarding-school for boys at Frenchay. During his residence in Gloucestershire, (which was not at Frenchay all the time) he attempted to publish his translation of the
Old Testament in numbers at Bristol; but he did not meet
with sufficient encouragement; and only two or three numbers were published.
In 1758, he removed to Andover, in Hampshire; and
here, in 1764, he completed his translation of all the books
of the Old and New Testament, a work which has not
often been accomplished before by -the labour of a single
individual. It consists of two volumes, folio, published in
1764, at the price of four guineas. It appears, that this
work was originally intended to be printed in occasional
numbers; for, in 1746, the late Dr. Fothergill wrote a
letter to the Gentleman’s Magazine, in which he strongly
recommended the author of a work then under publication,
which was to be continued in numbers if it should meet
with encouragement. This was a translation of the Scriptures, under the title of “Opus in sacra Biblia elaboratum.
” Purver is not named, but that he was intended is
known by private testimony. After speaking in high terms
of his learning, Dr. Fothergill says, “As to his personal
character, he is a man of great simplicity of manners,
regular conduct, and a modest reserve; he is steadily attentive to truth, hates falsehood, and has an unconquerable aversion to vice; and to crown the portrait, he is not
only greatly benevolent to mankind, but has a lively sense
of the divine attributes, and a profound reverence of, and
submission to the Supreme Being.
” The mode of publication in numbers was probably unsuccessful, and soon
dropped; yet he went on with his translation, which he
completed, after the labour of thirty years. He was still
unable to publish it, nor could he find a bookseller who
would run the hazard of assisting him. At length his
friend Dr. Fothergill generously interfered gave him a
thousand pounds for the copy, and published it at his own
expence. Purver afterwards revised the whole, and made
considerable alterations and corrections for a second edition, which has not yet appeared but the ms. remains in
the hands of his grandson. Purver appears, in this great
work, a strenuous advocate for the antiquity, and even the
divine authority, of the Hebrew vowel points. He is also
a warm assertor of the purity and integrity of the Hebrew
text, and treats those who hold the contrary opinion with
great contempt; particularly Dr. Kennicott, of whom,
and his publication on the state of the Hebrew text, he
never speaks but with the greatest asperity. He has taken
very considerable pains with the scriptural chronology, and
furnishes his reader with a variety of chronological tables.
He prefers the Hebrew chronology in all cases, to the
Samaritan and Greek, and has throughout endeavoured to
connect sacred and profane history. His version is very
literal, but does not always prove the judgment or good
taste of the author. Thus, he says, that “The Spirit of
God hovered a top of the waters
” and instead of the majestic simplicity and unaffected grandeur of “Let there be
light, and there was light,
” he gives us, “Let there be
light, which, there was accordingly
” Thus his translation,
though a prodigious work for an individual, will rather be
used for occasional consultation than regular perusal; and
though it may afford many useful hints, will not supply the
place of the established translation.
nd which he filled for twenty years, until the derangement of the prince’s affairs made him inform a bookseller that he intended to part with his library. This came like a
, perpetual secretary of the academy of
inscriptions and belles lettres, was born at Bugey, Nov. 23,
1709, of an ancient family that had lost its titles and property during the wars of the league. Although the eldest
of twelve children, his father destined him for the church,
and he studied with great approbation and success at the
college of Lyons, and had so much distinguished himself
that when the tim'e came that he should study theology,
two seminaries disputed which should have him. His own.
determination was in favour of that of the Jesuits, in consequence of the superior having promised to remit a part of
his expences in order that he might be able to purchase
books. At the age of twenty-six he went to Paris to the
seminary of Trente-Trois, where he became successively
master of the conferences, librarian, and second superior.
When he had finished his studies, he wanted the necessary
supplies to enable him to travel from one diocese to another; and the archbishop of Lyons having t refused this, from
a wish to keep him in his own diocese, Du Puy resolved to
give up all thoughts of the church, and devote himself to
the sciences and belles-lettres. He now sought the acquaintance of men of polite literature, and particularly obtained a steady friend in the academician Fourmont, whose
house was the rendezvous of men of learning and learned
foreigners. It was Fourmont who procured him the editorship of the “Journal cles Savans,
” which he accordingly
conducted for thirty years, and contributed many valuable
papers and criticisms of his own. His knowledge was very
various; he knew Hebrew, Greek, and mathematics, so as
to have been able to make a figure in either, had he devoted himself wholly to one pursuit; but his reading and
study were desultory, and it was said of him in mathematical
language, that he was the mean proportional between the
academy of sciences and that of inscriptions. In 1768 the
prince de Soubise made him his librarian, a situation of
course much to his liking, and which he filled for twenty
years, until the derangement of the prince’s affairs made
him inform a bookseller that he intended to part with his
library. This came like a clap of thunder to poor Du Puy,
and brought on a strangury, of which, after seven years of
suffering, he died April 10, 1795.
is history, which, it is said, he burned because the first had sold so slowly that it had ruined his bookseller, it is scarcely worth notice; for it appears that there was
He was however reprieved, and committed prisoner to
the Tower of London, where he lay many years, his lady
living with him, and bringing him a second son, named
Carew, within the year. His estate was at first restored to
him, but taken again, and given to the king’s minion Robert Carr, afterwards earl of Somerset. Ralegh found a
great friend in Henry, the king’s eldest son, who laboured
to procure him his estate, and had nearly effected it; but,
that hopeful and discerning prince dying in 1612, all his
views were at an end. The prince is reported to have said,
that “no king but his father would keep such a bird in a
cage.
” During his confinement, he devoted the greatest
part of his time to reading and writing, and indeed the productions, of his pen at this time are as many, a if original
writing and compilation had been the whole pursuit of his
life. His writings have been divided into poetical, epistolary, military, maritimal, geographical, political, philosophical, and historical. But, however excellent these miscellanies are allowed by others to be written, he considered
them as trivial amusements compared to his grand work “The
History of the World;
” the first volume of which was published in History
” it has been said, that the design was equal to the great-ness of his mind, and the execution to the strength of his parts, and the variety of his
learning. His style is pure, nervous and majestic; and
much better suited to the dignity of history, than that of
lord Bacon. Ralegh seems to have written for posterity,
Bacon for the reign of James I. This admirable work of
Ralegh has been thought a just model for the reformation
of our language, yet is now little read or consulted.
nsion, when I went into the prince’s service. I lost another 100l. about the same time by a bankrupt bookseller. His royal highness died in my debt 65l. every farthing of which
The death of the prince of Wales was a severe blow to
Ralph. In a letter to Doddington he thus states his situation “My brain, such as it is, is my whole estate. I lost
half a year’s pension, when I went into the prince’s service. I lost another 100l. about the same time by a bankrupt bookseller. His royal highness died in my debt 65l.
every farthing of which I had a thousand pressing occasions
for it is almost two years since that event. I did not alter
my manner of living except in a few particulars thereon
I. because I was put in hope that friends would have
been found to assist, if not provide for me, till I could
again be useful 2d, because I thought it for their credit,
that I should not appear a ruined man, while they continued to honour me with their countenance and 3dly, because I knew I should be provided for (if ever' I was provided for at all) in exact conformity to the figure I lived in,
which I cannot yet be humble enough to suppose is better
than I have pretensions to, unless the pretensions of
players, fiddlers, rope-dancers, &c. to a decent manner of
living, should be thought better than mine,
” &c.
his poetical genius and growing passion for literary knowledge. All this he accomplished by turning bookseller, in which employment he succeeded very much to his satisfaction,
But, although young Ramsay was of that happy temper which readily accommodates itself to accidental circumstances, yet, poor as he was, he could not heartily reconcile himself to an occupation in which his active and liberal mind found no exercise that was fit for it. He therefore thought how he might procure for himself a decent maintenance by some means more connected with his poetical genius and growing passion for literary knowledge. All this he accomplished by turning bookseller, in which employment he succeeded very much to his satisfaction, publishing sometimes his own works, sometimes those of other authors, as they occasionally presented themselves.
ibrary consists of nine parts. The amount of the fiva first parts was 2409l. Mr. Charles Marsh, late bookseller at Charing-cross, used to say, that the sale of Mr. Thomas Rawlinson’s
, knt eldest surviving son of
Daniel Rawlinson, citizen and wine-merchant of London, descended from the ancient family of that name at
Graisdale, in the county of Lancaster, was born in the
parish of St. Dionis Backchurch, in Fenchurch-street,
London, March 1647 appointed sheriffof London by James II.
1687, colonel of the white regiment of trainee! bands, and
govt rnor of Bridewell and Bethlem hospitals, 1705; and,
in 1706, lord mayor of London, when he beautified and
repaired Guildhall, as appears by an inscription in the
great porch. He married Mary, eldest daughter of Richard
Taylor, esq. of Turnham-green, with whom he lived 27
years, and by whom he had 15 children. She died at
Chelsea, Feb. 21, 1724-5, aged sixty-three. He died in
his own parish, November 2, 1705, and was buried with
his father, who died in 1679, aged sixty-six, Of his children, four daughters, Anne- Maria, Mary, Margaret, Susan;
and two sons, both named Daniel, died before him. William died in 1732, and was buried at Antwerp. John, of
Little Leigh in Cheshire, esq. died January 9, 1753.
Tempest, the youngest son, by profession a dry-salter, died
January 1, 1737. Sir Thomas Rawlinson, it maybe added,
had been foreman of the grand jury at the trial of alderman
Cornish; and was elected sheriff by royal mandate. His
eldest son, Thomas, for whom Mr. Addison is said to have
intended his character of Tom Folio, in the Taller, No. 158,
but with infinitely too satirical a vein, was a great collector
of books; and himself a man of learning, as well as patron
of learned men. Mattairehas dedicated to him his edition
of Juvenal; and Hearne’s publication, entitled “Aluredi
Beverlacensis Annales, &c.
” was printed from the original
ms. in this gentleman’s possession. Very numerous indeed
were the communications that editor received from Mr.
Thomas Rawlinson, for all which he takes every opportunity of expressing his gratitude. While Mr. Rawlinson
lived in Gray’s inn, he had four chambers so completely
filled with books, that his bed was removed out into the
passage. He afterwards removed to London-house, the
ancient palace of the bishops of London, in Aldersgate-street, where he died August 6, 1725, aged forty-four,
and was buried in the church of St. Botolph Aldersgate.
In London-house his library was sold after his decease;
and there also lived and died his brother Richard, who left
a portrait of his brother Thomas in crayons, another of
himself, and another of Nicolas Salmon, LL. D. the antiquary, to the Society of Antiquaries, all afterwards revoked.
His Mss. took sixteen days to sell, from March 4, 1733-4.
The catalogue of his library consists of nine parts. The
amount of the fiva first parts was 2409l. Mr. Charles
Marsh, late bookseller at Charing-cross, used to say,
that the sale of Mr. Thomas Rawlinson’s library was one of
the first events he remembered upon engaging in business;
and that it was the largest collection at that time known to
have been offered to the public.
of his alphabetical catalogue of English plants being sold off, and some pettifogging reasons of his bookseller’s standing in the way of a third, with any improvements, he
Though Mr. Ray’s health began to be impaired by years
and study, yet he continued from time to time to give his
works to the public. He published, in 1688, “Fasciculus
Stirpium Britannicarum;
” and, in Synopsis Methodica Stirpium Britannicarum.
” The learned president
of the Linnaean society observes, that if the fame or the
utility of Ray’s great botanical works has, neither of them,
been commensurate with the expectations that might have
been formed, this “Synopsis
” amply supplied all such
defects, and proved the great corner stone of his reputation
in this department of science. The two editions of his
alphabetical catalogue of English plants being sold off,
and some pettifogging reasons of his bookseller’s standing
in the way of a third, with any improvements, he remodelled the work, throwing it into a systematic form, revising the whole, supplying generic characters, with numerous additions of species, and various emendations and
remarks. The uses and medicinal qualities of the plants
are removed to the alphabetical index at the end. A second edition of this “Synopsis
” was published in Synopsis
” is
the most perfect that ever came under our observation.
He examined every plant recorded in his work, and even
gathered most of them himself. He investigated their
synonyms with consummate accuracy; and if the clearness
and precision of other authors had equalled his, he would
scarcely have committed an error. It is difficult to find
him in a mistake or misconception respecting Nature herself, though he sometimes misapprehends the bad figures,
or lame descriptions, he was obliged to consult. Above a
hundred species are added, in this second edition, and the
cryptogamic plants, in particular, are more amply elucidated. A controversial letter from Rivinus to Ray, and its
answer, with remarks upon Tournefort, are subjoined to
this second edition. Much of the dispute turns upon the
now obsolete distinction of plants, in a methodical system,
into trees, shrubs, herbs, &c. The letters are well written, in Latin: and liberal, though perhaps hypercritical,
in their style. Ray took no delight in controversy.
Jun6 1693 and he then finished a. “Synopsis of Birds aad Fishes,” which was so long neglected by the bookseller, that it was thought to have been destroyed but, after Mr. Ray’s
Soon after these theological pieces, his “Synopsis Methodica Animalium Quadrupedum
” was published in Jun6
1693 and he then finished a. “Synopsis of Birds aad
Fishes,
” which was so long neglected by the bookseller,
that it was thought to have been destroyed but, after Mr.
Ray’s death, it was published by Mr. Derham in 1713.
He made a catalogue of Grecian, Syrian, Egyptian, and
Cretan, plants, which was printed with RauwolfTs Travels
in 16!j3 and, the year after, published his “Sylloge
Stirpium Europearum extra Britanniam.
” He had afterwards some little contests with Rivinus and Tournefort,
concerning the method of plants, which occasioned him to
review and amend his own method, and to draw it up in
a completer form than he had used in his “Methodus
Plantarum,
” published in Historia Plantarum.
” He began now to be grievously afflicted with a
continual diarrhoea, and with very painful ulcers in his
legs, which ate deep into the flesh, and kept him waking
whole nights: by which means he was so disabled, that,
as he tells Dr. Tancred Robinson, in a letter of September
30, 1698, he could not so much as walk into the neighbouring fields. He still, however, kept up to the last his
correspondence with his friends, in the vivacity and clearness of style which was natural to him. Latin and English,
it is said, were equally ready to his pen. So indefatigable
was he in the cultivation of the study of Nature, that within
a year or two of his death, he began to collect his scattered
notes for a work on insects, and actually drew up a “Methodus Insectorum,
” which was printed, soon after his decease, in a little octavo of sixteen pages, and republished
in the front of his “Historia Insectorum.
” This last book,
comprising all his own and Mr. Willoughby’s descriptions
of insects, came from the press in 1710, at the expence of
the Royal Society, and under the superintendance of Dr.
Derham. It consists of 375 quarto pages, besides an apdendix of twenty-three more, on British Beetles, by Lister.
This work is a mass of accurate and authentic observation,
but, for want of plates, has never come into popular use.
of being rewarded by an ill-paid salary of one hundred dollars a year. In the autumn of that year a bookseller at Leyden agreed with him for a publication of Abulfeda’s History
After some stay at his native place Zorbig, where he
could find no opportunity of settling advantageously, he
was obliged to return to Leipsic. In 1747, he tells us he
was made professor for the publication of a tract, entitled
“De principibus Mahummedanis literarum laude claris.
”
From this time he lived, during many years, in want and
obscurity, frequently not knowing where to get bread to
eat. What he did get, he says, was hardly earned, by
private instruction, writing books, correcting for the press,
translations, and working for reviews; and thus he went
on from 1746 to 1758.
In the mean time, in 1748, he wrote his “Prograrmna
de epocha Arabum, &c.
” for which he was made Arabic
professor, but in tins office he complains of being rewarded
by an ill-paid salary of one hundred dollars a year. In the
autumn of that year a bookseller at Leyden agreed with
him for a publication of Abulfeda’s History in Latin and
Arabic: the first sheet was accordingly printed, and made
him known in France and England; and the whole, he
says, would have followed, if it had not been for his quarrel
with Schultens. Reiske appears to have had an extraordinary propensity to quarrelling, and being a reviewer, vva&
not sparing of the means, by reviewing in an arrogant and
petulant style the works of those persons with whom he
was living in apparent friendship. He even unblushingly
avows that a sort of revenge led him to speak ill of the
works of some of his friends. He speaks at the same time
of the bitter remorse with which he reflected on his treatment of Schultens, who “had been a father to him,
” acknowledges the acid of youthful pride which mixed with
his criticisms, and yet talks of being influenced by the
“conscience and duty
” of a reviewer
my happiness.” The work at length appeared in 1770. His “Theocritus,” published in 1765, he calls a bookseller’s job, and it certainly is not the best of his critical efforts.
About 1763 he translated Demosthenes and Thucydides
into German, and married Mrs. Reiske, a woman of great
literary accomplishments. In 1768 he issued proposals for
his edition of Demosthenes, which forms the first two volumes of his “Oratores Graeci.
” On this occasion we have
an interesting note from Mrs. Reiske. “When the work
went to press, only twenty thalers of the subscription
money had come in. The good man was quite struck down
with this, and seemed to have thrown away all hope. His
grief went to my soul, and I comforted him as well as I
could, and persuaded him to sell mv jewels, which he at
length came into, after I had convinced him that a few
shining stones were not necessary to my happiness.
” The
work at length appeared in 1770. His “Theocritus,
” published in Plutarch
” and
“Dionysius Halicarnassensis
” were also edited by him for
the booksellers but the “Oratores Graeci
” was the work
of his choice, and one on which his reputation may safely
rest.
who all died young. His second wife (who survived him many years) was Elizabeth sister of Mr. Leake, bookseller, of Bath. By her he had a son and five daughters. The son died
His first wife was Martha Wilde, daughter of Mr. Ailington Wilde, printer, in Clerkenwell, by whom he had five sons and a daughter, who all died young. His second wife (who survived him many years) was Elizabeth sister of Mr. Leake, bookseller, of Bath. By her he had a son and five daughters. The son died young; but four of the daughters survived him; viz. Mary, married in 1757 to Mr. Ditcher, an eminent surgeon of Bath; Martha, married in 1762 to Edward Bridgen, esq. F. R. and A. Ss.; Anne, unmarried; and Sarah, married to Mr. Crowther, surgeon of Boswell-court. All these, are now dead.
9, and so eager and extensive was the sale, that before the end of that month, he was desired by his bookseller to prepare for a, second edition. “It was regarded,” says his
In the mean time, his leisure hours had been so well
employed that, in 1758, he went to London to concert
measures for the publication of his first celebrated work,
“The History of Scotland during the reigns of queen Mary
and king James VI. till his accession to the crown of England; with a review of the Scottish history previous to that
period; and an Appendix, containing original papers,
” 2
vols. 4to. The plan of this work is said to have been formed soon after his settlement at Gladsinuir. It was accordingly published on the 1st of February, 1759, and so eager
and extensive was the sale, that before the end of that
month, he was desired by his bookseller to prepare for a,
second edition. “It was regarded,
” says his biographer,
“as an attempt towards a species of composition that had
been cultivated with very little success in this island; and
accordingly it entitles the author, not merely to the praise
which would now be due to an historian of equal eminence,
but to a high rank among those original and leading minds
that form and guide the taste of a nation.
” Contemporary
puhlications abounded in its praises, but it would be superfluous to coiiect options in favour of a work familiarized
to the public by so ^any editions. Among the most judicious of the literati of that period who were the first to perceive and predict the reputation our author was about to
establish, were, hon. Horace Walpole, bishop Warburton, lord Royston, the late sir Gilbert Elliot, Dr. Birch,
Dr. Douglas, late bishop of Salisbury, Dr. John Biair, late
prebendary of Westminster, and Mr. Hume. It may suffice to add, that fourteen editions of this work were published in the author’s life-time.
shilling each. The expence of printing amounted to 51. 10s. He was next employed by Freebairne, the bookseller, on a new edition of Gawin Douglas’s “Virgil’s yneid,” which
He was soon after engaged as a tutor in a gentleman’s
family, which situation he quitted in about a year for that
of schoolmaster in the parish of Lawrence-Kirk. After
passing three years and a half in this employment, he had
a favourable opportunity of removing to advantage, owing
to an accidental introduction to the celebrated Dr. Pitcairne. This gentleman happening to pass through Lawrence-Kirk, was detained by a vidlent storm, and wanting
amusement, inquired of his hostess whether she could procure him any agreeable companion at dinner. She replied,
that the parish schoolmaster, though young, was said to
be learned, and, though modest, she was sure could talk.
Pitcairne was delighted with the conversation and learning
of his new companion, and invited him to Edinburgh, with
a promise of his patronage. Ruddiman accordingly quitted Lawrence-Kirk, and soon after his arrival at Edinburgh
was appointed assistant- keeper of the advocates’ library.
The emoluments of this place were trifling, but it made him
known and made him learned; and after the regular hours
of attendance at the library (from 10 to 3) he occupied his
leisure hours as a private tutor in the Latin language to various young gentlemen. As his merits became better known,
his assistance was anxiously solicited by those who were
engaged in literary publications. His first employment of
this kind was as editor to sir Robert Sibbald’s “Introductio
ad historiam rerum a Romanis gestarum in ea Borealis Britannise parte quse ultra murum Picticum est,
” and he likewise contributed his aid to Sir Robert Spottiswood’s “Practiques of the Laws of Scotland.
” So little was literary labour rewarded at that time, that for the former of these
works he received only 3l. and for the latter 5l. Such poor
encouragement obliged him, in 1707, to commence auctioneer. The same year he published an edition of “Voluseni de Animi Tranquillitate Dialogus,
” to which he prefixed a life of Volusenus, or Wilson, a learned countryman,
who had been patronized by cardinal Wolsey. In 1709,
h published “Johnstoni Cantici Solomonis Paraphrasis
Poetica,
” and “Johnstoni Cantica,
” with notes, which he
dedicated to his i'riend and patron Dr. Pitcairne. The edition consisted of two hundred copies, which he sold at one
shilling each. The expence of printing amounted to 51. 10s.
He was next employed by Freebairne, the bookseller, on a
new edition of Gawin Douglas’s “Virgil’s yneid,
” which
he corrected throughout, added the glossary, and probably
the forty-two general rules for understanding the language,
for all which he received the sum of Sl 6s. Sd.
siness; and some years after he was appointed printer to the university along with James Davidson, a bookseller. In 1718, he became one of the founders of the first literary
After having been so long accustomed to superintend the
press, Ruddiman was led to form the plan of erecting a
printing-office himself. Accordingly, in 1715, be
commenced printer, in partnership with his brother Walter,
who had been regularly bred to the business; and some
years after he was appointed printer to the university along
with James Davidson, a bookseller. In 1718, he became
one of the founders of the first literary society in Scotland.
In 1725, he published the first part of his “Grammatical
Latinae Institutiones,
” which treats of etymology; and the
second part, which explains the nature and principles of
syntax, appeared in 1732. He also wrote a third part on
prosody, which is said to be more copious and correct than
any other publication on the subject, but, for want of encouragement, he published only an abridgment of it. He
next engaged in the management of a newspaper, “The
Caledonian Mercury,
” from which he derived more profit
than fame, it being a mere dry record of occurrences.
This paper continued in his family until 1772, when it was
sold to Mr. Robertson, and still exists.
Rushworth supplied himself plentifully from the grand collection of pamphlets made by Tomlinson the bookseller, which commenced from the latter end of 1640, and was carried
It is said that Rushworth supplied himself plentifully
from the grand collection of pamphlets made by Tomlinson
the bookseller, which commenced from the latter end of
1640, and was carried down to the Restoration. They
were uniformly bound in upwards of two thousand volumes
of different sizes, and consisted of about thirty thousand
tracts. Tomlinson is said to have refused four thousand
pounds for this collection. William Prynne had by far the
greatest hand in these pamphlets, having written above
160 of them himself. Near an hundred were written by
and concerning John Lilburne. The catalogue, which was
taken by Marmaduke Foster, the auctioneer, consists of
tsvelve folio volumes. So scarce were many of these tracts,
even at their first publication, that king Charles I. is reported to have given ten pounds for only reading one of
them over, which he could no where else procure, at the
owner’s house in St. Paul’s Church-yard. The author from
whom we have borrowed these particulars, says that Mr.
Rushworth “did, most plentifully, supply himself from
these fountains, how abundantly soever he represents the
facts therein corrupted with fiction; how fondly soever he
seems to magnify his own sagacity, in the distinguishment
of one from the other; and how suspiciously soever he discountenances all farther examination into them, than that
wherewith he hath been pleased to present us; where he
expresses himself thus slightingly of these very authorities,
which have yet so liberally contributed to such of the massy
tomes, passing under his name, whereof he was the real
compiler. ‘Posterity,’ says he (i. e. Rushworth), should
know, that some durst write the truth, whilst other men’s
fancies were more busy than their hands; forging relations; building, and battering castles in the air; publishing speeches, as spoken in parliament, which were never
spoken there; printing declarations, which were never
passed; relating battles which were never fought; and
victories which were never obtained; dispersing letters
which were never writ by the authors; together with many
such contrivances to abet a party or interest Pudet h<ec
opprobria. Such practices, and the experience I had thereof, and the impossibility for any man, in after-ages, to
ground a true history, by relying on the printed pamphlets
of our days which passed the press while it was without
controul, obliged me to all the pains and charge I have
been at for many years together, to make a great collection; and, whilst such things were fresh in memory, to
separate truth from falsehood, things real from things fictitious, or imaginary.'
”
ion had amazing success, and the second sold with still greater rapidity. Two noblemen coming to the bookseller’s, found only one single copy remaining, which each was for
, the first of French novelists,
was born, according to one of his biographers, in 1677, at
Ruys, in Britanny; or, according to another, in 1668, at
Vannes. At the age of twenty-five he came to Paris, with
a view to study philosophy. His talents, although they
did not display themselves very early, proved to be equally
brilliant and solid. He made himself first known by a paraphrastic translation of the “Letters of Aristsenetus,
”
which he published in two small volumes. He then travelled
through Spain, and applied to the study of the Spanish
language, customs, and writers, from whom he adopted
plots and fables, and transfused them into his native tongue
with great facility and success. His works of this kind are,
“Guzman D'Alfarache
” the “Bachelor of Salamanca;
”
“Gil Bias;
” “New Adventures of Don Quixote,
” originally written by Avellaneda; “The Devil on two Sticks,
”
as it is called in our translation, in French “Le Diable boiteux,
” and some others of less note. Of the “Devil on
two Sticks,
” we are told that the first edition had amazing
success, and the second sold with still greater rapidity.
Two noblemen coming to the bookseller’s, found only one
single copy remaining, which each was for purchasing:
and the dispute grew so warm, that they were going to
decide it by the sword, had not the bookseller interposed.
He was also distinguished for some dramatic pieces, of
which “Crispin,
” and “Turcaret,
” both comedies, were
the most successful, and allowed to fall very little short of
the genius of Moliere. “Turcaret,
” which was first played
in
to have risen to any eminence, as Wood speaks of him as living, in his latter days in the house of a bookseller in St. Paul’s church-yard. His principal object appears to have
, a Welsh
antiquary, was born of an ancient family in Denbighshire,
and studied for some time at Oxford, whence he removed
to Thaives-lnn, London. Here he applied to the law, but
does not appear to have risen to any eminence, as Wood
speaks of him as living, in his latter days in the house of
a bookseller in St. Paul’s church-yard. His principal object appears to have been the cultivation of the Welsh
Janguage, and the translation into it of the Bible, &c. It
would appear that queen Elizabeth gave him a patent, for
seven years, for printing in Welsh the Bible, CommonPrayer, and “Administration of tjie Sacraments.
” “He
compiled
” A Dictionary in English and Welsh,“Lond.
1547, 4to.
” A Little Treatise of the English pronunciation of the Letters.“” A plain and familiar introduction“to the same, Lond. 1550, 4to.
” 'Battery of the Pope’s
Bottereulx, commonly called the High-Altar,“ibid. 1550,
8vo.
” The Laws of Howell Dha.“” A Welsh Rhetorick," revised, enlarged, &c. by Henry Perry, B. D.
The period of his death is uncertain, but he was living in
1567.
ny. Sancho left a widow, who is, we believe, since dead; and a son, who carried on the business of a bookseller for some years, and died very lately.
Such was the man whose species philosophers and anatomists have endeavoured to degrade as a deterioration of
the human; and such was the man whom Fuller, with a
benevolence and quaintness of phrase peculiarly his own,
accounted “God’s image, though cut in ebony.
” To the
harsh definition of the naturalist, oppressions political and
legislative were once added, but the abolition of the slave
trade has now swept away every engine of that tyranny.
Sancho left a widow, who is, we believe, since dead; and
a son, who carried on the business of a bookseller for some
years, and died very lately.
ression of the second volume was suppressed as soon as completed, and remained in the warehouse of a bookseller at Brussels until 1695, in which year that city was bombarded
1644, 2 vols. fol. a most superb book, well known to the
collectors of foreign history and topography. There is an
edition published at the Hague in 1730, 3 vols. fol. but the
original is preferred on account of the superior beauty of
the engravings. 14. “Chorographia sacra Brabantia, sive
celebrium aliquot in ea provincia ecclesiarum et ccenobiorum descriptio,
” Brussels and Antwerp,
ong lain dispersed in magazines and fugitive publications, were collected and published by T. Evans, bookseller, in the Strand, in an elegant edition in two volumes, octavo,
The works of this original writer, after having long lain
dispersed in magazines and fugitive publications, were
collected and published by T. Evans, bookseller, in the
Strand, in an elegant edition in two volumes, octavo, to
which are prefixed the admirable “Memoirs of Savage,
”
written by Dr. Samuel Johnson. They have since been incorporated in the “English Poets.
”
his departure from Basil he left a manuscript, entitled “De Trinitatis Erroribus,” in the bands of a bookseller, who sent it afterwards to Haguenau, whither Servetus went,
, a famous Anti-trinitarian, and
the great martyr of the Socinian sect, was born in 1509, at
Villaneuva in Arragon, or at Tudela in Navarre, in 1511.
His father, who was a notary, sent him to the university of
Toulouse, to study the civil law: and there, or as some
say, when in Italy, he imbibed his peculiar notions
respecting the doctrine of the Trinity. After he had been
two or three years at Toulouse he resolved to remove into
Germany, and propagate his opinions. He went to Basil,
by way of Lyons and Geneva; and, having had some conferences at Basil with Oecolampadius, set out for Strasburg, to converse with Bucer and Capito, two celebrated reformers of that city., At his departure from Basil he left a
manuscript, entitled “De Trinitatis Erroribus,
” in the
bands of a bookseller, who sent it afterwards to Haguenau,
whither Servetus went, and had it printed in 1531. The
next year, he printed likewise at Haguenau another book,
with this title, “Dialogorum de Trinitate libri duo:
” in
an advertisement to which he retracts v/hat he had written
in his former book against the Trinity, not as it was false,
but because it was written imperfectly and confusedly^
He then resolved to return to France, because he was
poor, and did not understandthe German language; as he
alleged upon his trial to the judges, when they asked him
why he left Germany. He went accordingly to Basil,
thence to Lyons, where he lived two or three years, and
afterwards to Paris, where, having studied physic under
Sylvius, Fernelius., and other professors, he took his degree
of master of arts, and was admitted doctor of physic in the
university. He now settled as a practitioner for two or
three years in a town near Lyons, and then at Vienne in
Dauphiny, for the space of ten or twelve. In the mean
time, his writings against the Trinity had excited the indignation of the German divines, and spread his name throughout all Europe. In 1533, before he had left Lyons, Melancthon wrote a letter to Camerarius, in which he allowed
that Servetus was evidently an acute and crafty disputant,
but confused and indigested in his thoughts, and certainly
wanting in point of gravity. While Servetus was at Paris,
his books being dispersed in Italy, were very much approved by many who had thoughts of forsaking the church
of Rome: which, in 1539, excited Melancthon to write a
letter to the senate of Venice, importing, that “a book of
Servetus, who had revived the error of Paulus Samosatenus,
was handed about in their country, and beseeching them
to take care, that the impious error of that man may be
avoided, rejected, and abhorred.
” Servetus was at Lyons
in 1542, before he settled in Vienne; and corrected the
proofs of a Latin Bible that was printing there, to which
he added a preface and some marginal notes, under
the name of Villanovanus, from the town where he was
born.
ly the works she had so long intended for the press; and her “Letters” to Mr. Constable, the eminent bookseller of Edinburgh. In the same year, 18)0, these gentlemen executed
After the publication of the “Sonnets,
” Miss Seward did
not undertake any large poem, yet she continued to pour
forth her poeitcal effusions upon such occasions as interested her feelings, or excited her imagination. These efforts,
however, were unequal to those of her earlier muse. Age
was now approaching with its usual attendants, declining
health, and the loss of friends. Yet her interest in literature and poetry continued unabated, and she maintained
an unrelaxed correspondence, not only with her former
friends, but with those later candidates for poetical distinction, whose exertions she approved of. For a year or two
preceding 1807, Miss Seward had been occasionally engaged in arranging and preparing for the press the edition
of her poems published after her death by Mr. Scott, and
which she would probably have published herself, but her
constitution, infirm for years, was now rapidly declining,
and after nearly two years of much suffering from bodily
complaints, she expired, March 25, 1809. To Waiter
Scott, esq. she bequeathed her literary performances, and
particularly the works she had so long intended for the press;
and her “Letters
” to Mr. Constable, the eminent bookseller of Edinburgh. In the same year, 18)0, these gentlemen executed the trust reposed in them; the latter, by
an elegant publication of her “Letters,' 7 in 6 vols. and the
former by a publication of her
” Poems,“and some literary
correspondence, in 3 vols. 8vo, with a biographical preface, written with Mr. Scott’s usual taste and acumen. The
” Poems“will always remain a monument of Miss Seward’s
talents, and place her in an honourable rank among the
female candidates for literary honours. Her
” Letters,"
however, are, in our opinion, less calculated to leave a
favourable impression of her character. They may be
justly considered as the annals of vanity and flattery, and
in point of style exhibit every defect which bad taste could
introduce.
London to publish under or Mary Cooper was at that time a the assumed name of Cooper. The well known bookseller in Paternosteruniversity, a? soon as they discovered row, and
* This story has been differently the publisher, and the edition was suptold. Mr. Gough, in a letter in the pressed, so that the rarity of the quarto
Gent. Mag. Vol. LXXII. says that copies, more than any intrinsic merit,
“Shebbeare being engaged by the has now enhanced their value.
” This
university to arrange or transcribe the seems probable, except what relates to
Clarendon Mss. transmitted a copy to Cooper being an assumed name. M.
a ncokseller in London to publish under or Mary Cooper was at that time a
the assumed name of Cooper. The well known bookseller in Paternosteruniversity, a? soon as they discovered row, and was frequently Dodsley’s city
the trick, obtained an injunction against publisher.
While confined in the King’s Bench prison, he solicited
Subscriptions for the first volume of a History of England, '
from the revolution to the then present time; but this, at
the persuasion of his friends, he altered to a first volume of
the History of England and of the.constitution from its origin, and is said to have made some progress in the design,
which, however, after many excuses and promises, was
never accomplished. At the expiration of his imprisonment a new reign had commenced, and the king was not
only persuaded to entertain a favourable opinion of Dr.
Shebbeare, but to grant him a pension. From this time he
became an uniform, defender of the measures of government; but still his character was not such as to conciliate
the good opinion of all the friends of power. Smollet introduced him in no very respectful light, under the name
of Ferret, in the novel of Sir Launcelot Greaves, and Hogarth made him one of the groupe in the third Election
print. Scarce a periodical publication was without some
contemptuous notice of him, to which he in general paid
little attention: but in 1774 he published a pamphlet in his
own defence, coupled with such a virulent attack on the
character of king William, as roused the indignation of
every Whig in the kingdom.
e to the profession, was. thought an infringement upon the privileges of the House of Lords, and the bookseller was called to the bar, for the publication of it. Sir Bartholomew
Two editions of “Cases in parliament resolved and adjudged upon petitions and writs of error,
” by sir Bartholomew, have been published, one in Reports of cases in Banco Regis from 30
Car. II. to 6 William III.
” 1708, and 1720, 2 vols. folio;
bnt the second volume is first in point of time. A second
edition was published in 1794, in 2 vols. 8vo, by Thomas
Leach, esq. with additional notes and references.
king up a jury without food, until they agree upon their opinion. The attorney general called at his bookseller’s, who refused to give up the name of the author. “Well,” said
He published the same year, “Some proposals for the
revival of Christianity,
” another piece of irony against the
enemies of the church, which was imputed to Swift, who,
as usual, neither affirmed nor denied; but only observed,
that the author “had not continued the irony to the end.
”
In 1737, he published a “Dissertation on the constitution
and effects of a Petty Jury.
” In this, among other things,
^eems to object to locking up a jury without food, until
they agree upon their opinion. The attorney general
called at his bookseller’s, who refused to give up the name
of the author. “Well,
” said the attorney general, “give
my compliments to the author, and inform him from me,
that I do not think there is virtue enough in the people
of this country ever to put his scheme into practice.
”
o London, and dispose of it there. On his arrival, he submitted his manuscript to Andrew Millar, the bookseller, to know if he would purchase it, and have it printed at his
After he returned to his curacy, he was offered a school
xvorth 500l. a year, arising from the benefit of the scholars,
but refused it as interfering with the plan of literary improvement and labour which he had marked out for himself; and when told that he might employ ushers, he said
he could not in conscience take the money, without giving
up his whole time and attention to his scholars. In 1744,
he published “The Candid Reader, addressed to his terraqueous majesty, the WorUl.
” The objects of his ridicule
in this are Hill, the mathematician, who proposed making
verses by an arithmetical table, lord Shaftesbury, and Johnson, the author of a play called “Hurlothrumbo,
” with a
parallel between Hurlothrumbo and the rhapsody of Shaftesbury. In the same year he also published “A Letter
to the authors of Divine Analogy and the Minute Philosopher, from an old officer,
” a plain, sensible letter, advising the two polemics to turn their arms from one another
against the common enemies of the Christian faith. During
the rebellion in 1745, he published a very seasonable and
shrewd pamphlet, entitled the “Chevalier’s hopes.
”
On the death of Dr. Sterne, the see of Clogher was filled
by Dr. Clayton, author of the “Essay on Spirit,
” a decided
Arian; and between him and Skelton there could consequently be no coincidence of opinion, or mutuality of respect. In 1748, Mr. Skelton having prepared for the press
his valuable work entitled “Deism revealed,
” he conceived it too important to be published in Ireland, and
therefore determined to go to London, and dispose of it
there. On his arrival, he submitted his manuscript to Andrew Millar, the bookseller, to know if he would purchase
it, and have it printed at his own expence. The bookseller desired him, as is usual, to leave it with him for a
day or two, until he could get a certain gentleman of great
abilities to examine it. Hume is said to have come in
accidentally into the shop, and Millar shewed him the ms.
Hume took it into a room adjoining the shop, examined it
here and there for about an hour, and then said to Andrew, print. By this work Skelton made about 200l. The
bookseller allowed him for the manuscript a great many
copies, which he disposed of among the citizens of London, with whom, on account of his preaching, he was a
great favourite. He always spake with high approbation of
the kindness with which he was received by many eminent
merchants. When in London he spent a great part of his
time in going through the city, purchasing books at a cheap
rate, with the greater part of the money he got by his
“Deism revealed,
” and formed a good library. This work
was published in 1749, in two volumes, large octavo, and
a second edition was called for in 1751, which waacomprized in two volumes 12mo. It has ever been considered
as a masterly answer to the cavils of deists; but the style
in this, as in some other of his works, is not uniform, and
his attempts at wit are rather too frequent, and certainly
not very successful. A few months after its publication
the bishop of Clogher, Dr. Clayton, was asked by Sherlock, bishop of London, if he knew the author. “O yes,
he has been a curate in my diocese near these twenty
years.
” “More shame for your lordship,
” answered Sherlock, “to let a man of his merit continue so long a curate
in your diocese.
”
fort he had in this dreary solitude, and relieve his indigent parishioners with the money. Watson, a bookseller in Dublin, who had advertised then: for sale without success,
In 1757 a remarkable dearth prevailed in Ireland, and no where more than in Mr. Skelton’s parish. The scenes of distress which he witnessed would now appear scarcely credible. He immediately set himself to alleviate the wants of his flock, by purchases of meal, &c. at other markets, until he had exhausted all his money, and then he had recourse to a sacrifice which every man of learning will duly appreciate. He resolved to sell his books, almost the only comfort he had in this dreary solitude, and relieve his indigent parishioners with the money. Watson, a bookseller in Dublin, who had advertised then: for sale without success, at last bought them himself for 80l. and immediately paid the money. Soon after they were advertised, two ladies, lady Barrymore and a Miss Leslie, who guessed at Skelton’s reason for selling his hooks, sent him So/, requesting him to keep his books, and relieve his poor with the money; but Skelton, with many expressions of gratitude, told them he had dedicated his books to God, and he must sell them; and accordingly both sums were applied to the relief of his parishioners. Every heart warms at the recital of such an act of benevolence, and all reflections on it would lessen the impression. One other circumstance may be added. The bookseller sold only a part of the books in the course of trade, and those that remained, Mr. Skelton, when he could allord it, took from him at the price he sold them for, but insisted on paying interest for the sum they amounted to, for the time Mr. Watson had them in his possession.
n abusive poem, “a long elaborate work, which he has read at alehouses and cyder cellars, and if any bookseller will run the risk, will publish.” To this heavy accusation,
“The Hilliad,
” which is perhaps one of the most bitter
satires ever published, would afford a very unfavourable
opinion of our author’s character, had it not been an attack
on a man who had rendered himself ridiculous and contemptible by practising with unblushing effrontery every
species of literary and medical quackery. According to
Smart, Hill gave the first public provocation, in one of his
“Inspectors,
” where he accuses Smart of ingratitude. Hill
alledged that he had been the cause of Smart’s being
brought up to town; that he had been at all times his friend,
and had supported his character; and, long before he appeared as “Inspector,
” he spoke well of those pieces, on
the merit of which Smart’s fortune at that time depended;
he hints also among other favours, that he had been the
means of introducing him to Newbery; and for all this, the
only return Smart made was by an abusive poem, “a long
elaborate work, which he has read at alehouses and cyder
cellars, and if any bookseller will run the risk, will publish.
”
To this heavy accusation, Smart pleaded not guilty in
totOy solemnly declaring in an advertisement in the Daily
Gazetteer, that he never received the least favour from
Hill, directly or indirectly, unless an invitation to dinner,
which he never accepted, might be reckoned such. He
denied at the same time having ever been in his company
but twice, the first time at Mr. Newbery’s, the second at
Vauxhall gardens; and asserts that Hill had been his enemy
as much as it was in his power, particularly in the “Impertinent,
” another of his papers, in which he abuses not only
Smart, but Fielding, who was his particular friend. This
declaration was corroborated by an advertisement from honest Newbery, who adds that he introduced Smart to Hill,
six months after the former had engaged with himself
(Newbery) in business, when they met as perfect strangers.
With respect to Hill’s assertion that he had been the means
of introducing Smart to Mr. Newbery, the latter declares
it to be an absolute falsehood.
The publication alluded to, was the “Universal Visitor and Memorialist,” published by Gardner, a bookseller in the Strand. Smart, and Holt, a political writer, are said
The publication alluded to, was the “Universal Visitor
and Memorialist,
” published by Gardner, a bookseller in
the Strand. Smart, and Holt, a political writer, are said
to have entered into an engagement to write for this
magazine, and for no other work whatever; for this they
were to have a third of the profits, and the contract was to
be binding for ninety-nine years. In Boswt-Il’s Life of
Johnson, we find this contract discussed with more gravity
than it seems to deserve. It was probably a contrivance of
Gardner’s to secure the services of two irregular men for a
certain period. Johnson, however, wrote a few papers for
our poet, “not then,
” he added, “knowing the terms on
which Smart was engaged to write, and thinking I was doing him good. I hoped his wits would soon return to him.
Mine returned to me, and I wrote in the Universal Visitor
no longer.
” The publication ceased in about two years
from its commencement.
ment was soon afterwards erected to his memory. In 1682 his library was sold by Chiswell, the famous bookseller of St. Paul’s Church-yard, by a printed catalogue, “to the great
, one of the earliest book-collectors
upon record, and the Isaac Reed of his time, was the son
of Richard Smith, a clergyman, and was born at Lillingston
Dayrell, in Buckinghamshire, in 1590. He appears to
have studied for some time at Oxford, but was removed
thence by his parents, and placed as clferk with an attorney
in London, where he spent all the time he could spare from
business in reading. He became at length secondary of
the Poultry counter, a place worth 700l. a year, which he
enjoyed many years, and sold it in 1655, on the death of
his son, to whom he intended to resign it. He now retired to private life, two thirds of which, at least, Wood
says, he spent in his library. “He was a person,
” adds
the same author, “infinitely curious and inquisitive after
books, and suffered nothing extraordinary to escape him
that fell within the compass of his learning desiring to
be master of no more than he knew how to use.
” If in
this last respect he differed from some modern collectors,
he was equally indefatigable in his inquiries after libraries
to be disposed of, and passed much of his time in Little
Britain and other repositories of stall-books, by which
means he accumulated a vast collection of curiosities relative to history, general and particular, politics, biography,
with many curious Mss. all which he carefully collated,
compared editions, wrote notes upon them, assigning the
authors to anonymous works, and, in short, performing all
the duties and all the drudgery of a genuine collector. He
also occasionally took up his pen, wrote a life of Hugh
Broughton, and had a short controversy with Dr. Hammond
on the sense of that article in the creed “He descended
into hell,
” published in to the great reluctance,
” says Wood, “of public-spirited
men.
” His “Obituary,
” or “catalogue of all such persons as he knew in their life,
” extending from 1606 to
1674, a very useful article, is printed by Peck in the second volume of his “Desiderata.
”
left a large and well-chosen library of books, and many curious Mss. Of this collection Whiston, the bookseller, gives the following account " Sir Joseph Jekyll, master of
The other works attributed to lord Somers, with more
or less authority, are, 1. “Dryden’s Satire to his Muse;
”
but this has been disputed. Mr. Malone says, the author of
this severe attack on Dryden has never been discovered.
Pope assures us that lord Somers “was wholly ignorant of
it;
” but, says Mr. Maione, “if Somers had written any
part of this libel (we cannot suppose him to have written the scandalous part of it) thirty years before he was acquainted with Pope, is it probable that he would have made
a young author of four-and-twenty the depositary of his
secret? Two years before this satire was published, he
had appeared as a poet; and near two hundred lines of it,
that is, nearly two parts out of three, are a political encomium and vindication of the whigs, without any offensive
personality, couched in such moderate poetry as is found
in Somers’s acknowledged poetical productions.
” Lord
Somers’s other and acknowledged poems were, 2. “Translation of the Epistle of Dido to Æneas.
” 3. “Translation
of Ariadne to Theseus.
” Of the prose kind were, 4.
“Translation of Plutarch’s life of Alcibiades.
” 5. “A just
and modest Vindication of the proceedings of the two last
Parliaments,
” The Security of Englishmen’s Lives, or the trust, power, and duty of the Grand
Juries of England explained according to the fundamentals
of the English government, &c.
”Lord
Somers’s Judgment of whole kingdoms in the power, &c.
of Kings,
” A
Speech at the conference on the word Abdicated,'
” in the
General Dictionary, and probably published separately.
9. “Another on the same occasion.
” 10. “Speeches at
the trial of lord Preston.
” 11. “His letter to king William on the Partition-treaty.
” 12. “His answer to his Impeachment.
” 13. “Extracts from two of his Letters to lord
Wharton.
” 14. “Addresses of the Lords in answer to Addresses of the Commons.
” 15. “The Argument of the lord
keeper Somers on his giving judgment in the Banker’s Case,
delivered in the exchequer chamber, July 23, 1696.
” He
is supposed likewise to have written “The preface to Dr.
Tindal’s Rights of the Christian Church,
” a “Brief History of the Succession, collected out of the records, written for the satisfaction of the E. of H.
” This was in
favour of the attempt to exclude the duke of York, and
was re-printed in 1714. The Mss. of this able statesman
and lawyer filled above sixty folio volumes, which were
destroyed by fire in Lincoln’s Inn, in 1752. Some remains, which the fire had spared, were published by lord
Hardwicke in 1778, 4to, entitled “State Papers, from 1501
to 1726.
” This noble editor informs us that the treatise on
Grand Jurors, the Vindication of the last Parliament of
Charles II. above-mentioned, and the famous last Speech
of king William, were all found in the hand-writing of
lord Somers. The “Somers Tracts,
” so frequently referred to, are a collection of scarce pieces in four sets of
four volumes each, 4to, published by Cogan from pamphlets chiefly collected by lord Somers. His lordship left a
large and well-chosen library of books, and many curious
Mss. Of this collection Whiston, the bookseller, gives
the following account " Sir Joseph Jekyll, master of the
rolls, married one of his sisters the other was married to
ned to Ireland. During his absence in the succeeding year, the fame he had now obtained, induced his bookseller to collect and print his smaller pieces, one of which only is
After the publication of the “Faerie Queene,
” Spenser
returned to Ireland. During his absence in the succeeding year, the fame he had now obtained, induced his
bookseller to collect and print his smaller pieces, one of
which only is said to have been a republication. The title
of this collection is, “Complaints, containing sundrie
small Poemes of the World’s Vanitie, viz. 1. The Ruines of
Time. 2. The Teares of the Muses. 3. Virgil’s Gnat.
4. Prosopopoia, or Mother Hubberd’s Tale. 5. The Ruines
of Rome, by Bellay. 6. Muiopotinos, or the Tale of the
Butterflie. 7. Visions of the World’s Vanitie. 8. Bellaye’s
Visions, 9. Petrarche’s Visions.
”
ley, esq.) relates to a squabble Mr. Stackhouse had with Ediin (who appears to have been a mercenary bookseller of the lower order, and a petty tyrant over his poor authors),
The earliest of his publications, or at least the first which
Brought him into notice was, l. “The miseries and great
hardships of the Inferior Clergy in and about London; and
a modest plea for their rights and better usage; in a letter
to a right rev. prelate,
” Memoirs of' bishop
Atterbury, from his birth to his banishment,
” A Funeral Sermon on the death of Dr. Brady,
” 172G,
8vo. 4. “A complete body of Divinity,
” A fair state of the Controversy between Mr. Woolston:
his adversaries containing the substance of what he asserts in his discourses against the literal sense of our blessed
Saviour’s miracles; and what Bp. Gibson, Bp. Chandler,
Bp. Smalbroke, Bp. Sherlock, Dr. Pearce, Mr. Ray, Mr.
Lardner, Mr. Chandler, &c. have advanced against him,
”
is not a mere; compilation, but shows the author intimately
acquainted with the controversy, and fully able to strengthen
the cause for which Woolston was opposed. As this work
was soon out of print, he incorporated its principal contents in a larger volume, entitled, 6.
” A Defence of the
Christian Religion from the several objections or' Antiscripturists,“&c. 1731, 8vo. 7.
” Reflections on the nature and property of Languages,“1731, 8vo. 8.
” The
Book-binder, Book-printer, and Book-seller confuted, or
the Author’s vindication of himself from the calumnies in
a paper industriously dispersed by one Edition. Together
with some Observations on the History of the Bible, as it
is at present published by the said Ediin. By the rev. Mr.
Stackhouse, curate of Finchley,“17.'J2, 8vo. This v
scarce pamphlet, of which but one copy is known (now in the curious collection of James Bindley, esq.) relates to a
squabble Mr. Stackhouse had with Ediin (who appears to have been a mercenary bookseller of the lower order, and a petty tyrant over his poor authors), respecting Mr. Stackhouse’s
” History of the Bible.“Stackhouse, however,
engaged afterwards with more reputable men, and produced, 9. his
” New History of the Bible, from the
beginning of the world to the establishment of Christianity,“1732, 2 vols. folio. This has always been considered as a
work of merit, and has been often reprinted the best edition is said to be that of 1752, of which the engravings
are of a very superior cast to what are usually given in
works published periodically. 10.
” A Sermon on the 30th
of January.“1736, 8vo. 11.
” A Sermon on the Decalogue,“1743, 8vo. 12.
” A new and practical Exposition
oo the Creed,“1747, folio. 13.
” Vana doctrinae emolumenta,“1752, 4to. This is a poem, and his last publication, in which he deplores his miserable condition in the
language of disappointment and despair. Besides these,
he had been, we know not at what period, the author of,
14.
” An Abridgment of Burnet’s Own Times,“8vo. 15.
” The art of Short- hand,“4to. 16.
” A System of Practical Duties,“8vo. Long after his death, if they were not
re-publications, appeared, under his name, a
” Greek
Grammar,“and
” A general view of Ancient History, Chronology, and Geography, &c." 4to. There was a rev. Thomas Stackhouse, styled minister of St. Mary Magdalen at
Bridgnorth in Shropshire, who communicated to the Royal
Society som-e extracts from a topographical account of
Bridgnorth (Phil. Trans, vol. XLIV.) but whether this was
our author does not appear.
ee version, executed with spirit and success, 1720, 8vo. 11. “A Funeral Sermon on Mr. Richard Sayer, bookseller,” 1724, 4to. This was so highly approved, that it went through
together, after they had been very regiment has escaped all his biograin this kind of rhetoric so na- phers.
of “Charron on Wisdom,
” The
Meditations of the Emperor M. Aurelius Antoninus,
” translated, with Dacier’s notes and Life of the emperor, 1699,
4to. 4. “Sermons upon several occasions,
” fifteen in
number, with a scheme, in the preface, of the author’s general design, 1700, 8vo. 5. In the same year, a translation
of “Epictetus,
” with the commentary of Simplicius, 8vo.
6. “Paraphrase on the Epistles and Gospels,
” The truth and excellence of the Christian Religion asserted, against Jews, infidels, and heretics; in sixteen sermons preached at Boyle’s Lectures,
”
Rochefoucault’s
Maxims,
” translated, Parsons’s Christian Directory,
” St. Augustin’s Meditations,
” a free version, executed with spirit and success,
1720, 8vo. 11. “A Funeral Sermon on Mr. Richard
Sayer, bookseller,
” Twelve Sermons, on several occasions,
” The grounds and principles of the Christian Religion,
”
translated by Wanley from Ostervald, and revised by Dr.
Stanhope. 14. Several Sermons on particular occasions
between 1692 and 1724. 15. “A posthumous work, being a translation from the Greek devotions of Dr, Lancelot
Andrews,
”
life will not admit of their making presents of their labours, in such proportion as Mr. Tonson (his bookseller) shall think to be adequate to their merits. What follows is
He then proceeds to assure those who may think proper to assist him, that their contributions shall appear with or without their names, as they shall direct; and that he will gladly pay those whose situation in life will not admit of their making presents of their labours, in such proportion as Mr. Tonson (his bookseller) shall think to be adequate to their merits. What follows is the language of a man who knew not himself, or who concealed his real character and intent, and who was at no very distant period to prove himself, unquestionably a most acute, yet at the same time a most arrogant, supercilious, and malignant critic on his fellow-labourers.
ministers, and she immediately issued out a proclamation against it; and the autuor and printer, or bookseller, being discovered, they were soon apprehended, and sentence
, a learned lawyer in
queen Elizabeth’s reign, was born about 1541, and is said
by Mr. Strype to have been a member of Corpus Christi
college, Cambridge. He removed thence to Lincoln’s-inn
for the study of the law, and contracted an acquaintance
with the most learned and ingenious men of that society.
He became a puritan in consequence, as some suppose, of
his connection with the celebrated Thomas Cartu right,
who had married his sister. About 1579, when the report
of the queen’s intended marriage with the duke of Anjou,
brother to the king of France, had created an extraordinary
alarm, lest such a match should eventually be injurious to
the Protestant establishment, Mr. Stubbs published a satirical work against it, entitled “The Discovery of a gaping
gulph wherein England is like to be swallowed up by
another French marriage,
” &c. This highly incensed the
queen, whose passions ha -I always much -way over her
actions, and too much over htr ministers, and she immediately issued out a proclamation against it; and the autuor
and printer, or bookseller, being discovered, they were
soon apprehended, and sentence given against them, that
their right hands should be cut off, according to an act of
Philip and Mary, “against the authors and publishers of
seditious writings.
” When Stubbs came to receive his
punishment, which was inflicted with great barbarity,
with a butcher’s knife and mallet, he immediately took off
his hat with his left hand, and cried “God save the
queen!
”
” Second Defence of the Rights of the Christian Church, occasioned by two late indictments against a bookseller and his servant for selling one of thf said books. In a Letter
The lower house of convocation, in queen Anne’s reign,
thought that such a character of “The Rights of the Christian Church,
” &c. from a man of Le Clerc’s reputation for
parts and learning, must have no small influence in
recommending the book, and in suggesting favourable notions of
the principles advanced in it; and therefore, in their representation of the present state of religion, they judged
it expedient to give it this turn, namely, “that those infidels
” (meaning Tindal and others) “have procured abstracts and commendations of their own profane writings,
and probably drawn up by themselves, to be inserted in
foreign journals, and that they have translated them into
the English tongue, and published them here at home, in
order to add the greater weight to their wicked opinions.
”
Hence a notion prevailed in England, that Le Clerc had
been paid for the favourable account he gave of Tindal’s
book; upon which he took occasion to declare, in a subsequent journal, that there never was a greater falsehood, and
protests as an honest man before God, “that, for making
mention of that or any other hook, he had never had either
promise or reward.*' It will easily be imagined that, in
the course of this controversy, Dr. Tindal’s antagonists
would object to him his variableness and mutability in matters of religion, and insult him not a little upon his Hrst
apostatizing to the chjirch of Rome, upon the prospect of
a national conversion to Popery, and then, at the revolution, reverting to Protestantism. To <his he replied, that
” Coming, as most boys do, a rasa tabula to the university,
and believing (his country education teaching him no better) that all human and divine knowledge was to be had
there, he quickly fell into the then prevailing notions of
the high and independent powers of the clergy; and meeting with none, during his long stay there, who questioned
the truth of them, they by degrees became so fixed and
riveted in him, that he no more doubted of them than of
his own being: and he perceived not the consequence of
them, till the Roman emissaries (who were busy in making proselytes in the university in king James*s time, and knew how to turn the weapons of high church against them)
caused him to see, that, upon these notions, a separation
from the church of Rome could not be justified; and that
they who pretended to answer them as to those points, did
only shuffle, or talk backward and forward. This made
him, fur some small time, go to the Popish mass-house;
till meeting, upon his going into the world, with people
who treated that notion of the independent power as it deserved, and finding the absurdities of Popery to be much
greater at hand than they appeared at a distance, he began
to examine the whole matter with all the attention he was
capable of; and then he quickly found, and was surprised
at the discovery, that all his till then undoubted maxims
were so far from having any solid foundation, that they
were built on as great a contradiction as can be, that of
two independent powers in the same society. Upon this
he returned, as he had good reason, to the church of England, which he found, by examining into her constitution,
disclaimed all that independent power he had been bred
up in the belief of; Candlemas 1687-8 being the last time
he saw any of the Popish tricks, the very next opportunity
(namely, Easter) he publicly received the sacrament (the warden giving it him first) in his college chapel, &c. And
thus having made his escape from errors which prejudice
of education had drawn him into, he resolved to take nothing on trust for the future; and, consequently, his notions concerning our civil, as well as religious liberties,
became very different from those in which he was educated.“What Dr. Tindal says here may be true; yet it is observable, that his conversion to Popery, and re-conversion to
Protestantism, lay between February 1685, and February
1688, that is, between the twenty-seventh and thirtieth,
year of his age; and many will be ready to suspect, that a
man of his reasoning and inquiring turn must, before then,
have been too much fixed and settled in his principles,
either to be a dupe of Popish missionaries, or then to discover first the absurdity and falsehood of fundamental principles. In the mean time he endeavoured to defend his
work, in a
” Defence of the Rights of the Christian Church
against a late visitation sermon, entitled The Rights of the
Clergy in the Christian Church asserted, preached at Newport- Pagnell in the county of Bucks by W. Wotton, B. D.
and made public at the command and desire of the bishop
of Lincoln, and the clergy of the deaneries of Buckingham
and Newport,“London, 1707, in 8vo, and in his
” Second
Defence of the Rights of the Christian Church, occasioned
by two late indictments against a bookseller and his servant
for selling one of thf said books. In a Letter from a- gentleman in London to a clergyman in the country. To which
are added two tracts of Hugo Grotius on these questions;
I. Whether the Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper may be
administered where there are no pastors? II. Whether it
be necessary at all times to communicate with the Symbols?
As also some tracts of Mr. John Hales of Eaton, viz. Of
the Lord’s Supper, the Power of the Keys, of Schism,
&c.“London, 1707, in 8vo. In 1709 he published at
London in 8vo, a pamphlet entitled,
” New High Church
turned old Presbyterian“and in 1710 several pamphlets,
viz.
” An High Church Catechism;“” The jacobitism,
perjury, and popery of High Church Priests;“”The
merciful judgments of 'High Church-triumphant on offending clergymen and others in the reign of Charles I.“In
1711 and 1712 he published at London in 8vo,
” The Nation vindicated from the aspersions cast on it in a late
pamphlet entitled, A representation of the present State of
Religion, with regard to the late excessive growth of infidelity, heresy, and profaneness, as it passed the Lower
House of convocation,“in two parts. In 1713, and some
following years he published several other pamphlets,
mostly political, which attracted more or less attention,
but are now forgotten. He had hitherto passed for an
enemy to the church of England, but was soon determined
to show himself equally hostile to revealed religion, and in
1730, published in 4to, his
” Christianity as old as the
Creation, or the Gospel a Republication of the Religion of
Nature.“It might have been expected from the title of
this book, that his purpose was to prove the Gospel perfectly agreeable to the law of nature; to prove, that it has
set the principles of natural religion in the clearest light, and
was intended to publish and confirm it anew, after it had been
very much obscured and defaced through the corruption ct
mankind. We should be further confirmed in this supposition from his acknowledging, that
” Christianity itself,
stripped of the additions which policy, mistake, and the
circumstances of time, have made to it, is a most holy religion, and that all its doctrines plainly speak themselves
to be the will of an infinitely wise and good God:“for
this, and several declarations of a similar nature, he makes
in his work; and accordingly distinguishes himself and his
friends with the title of
” Christian Deists.“Yet whoever
examines his book attentively will find, that this is only
plausible appearance, intended to cover his real design;
which was to set aside all revealed religion, by showing,
that there neither is, nor can be, any external revelation
at all, distinct from what he calls
” the external revelation
of the law of nature in the hearts of all mankind;“and
accordingly his refuters, the most considerable of whom
was Dr. Conybeare, afterwards bishop of Bristol, Foster,
and Leland, have very justly treated him as a Deist. It
appears from a letter written by the rev. Mr. Jonas Proast
to Dr. Hickes, and printed in Hickes’s
” Preliminary Discourse“cited above, that Tindal espoused this principle
very early in life; and that he was known to espouse it
long before even his
” Rights of the Christian Church" was
published. The letter bears date the 2d of July, 1708,
and is in the following terms:
Society. In 1723, several thousand pounds were left him by his elder brother, Mr. Benjamin Tooke, a bookseller in Fleet-street; yet, notwithstanding this addition to his fortune,
, a learned English schoolmaster, was the second of five sons of Benjamin Tooke, citizen and stationer of London, and born in 1673. He was educated at the Charterhouse-school, and in 1690 sent to Clare-hall in Cambridge, where he took both the degrees in arts, that of B. A. in 1693, and of M.A. in 1697. In 1695, he was chosen usher of the Charterhouse-school; and, in 1704, professor of geometry in Gresham college, in the room of Dr. Hooke; being recommended by a testimonial from the master, Dr. Burnet, and other officers of the Charterhouse. In Nov. following, he was chosen a fellow of the Royal Society. In 1723, several thousand pounds were left him by his elder brother, Mr. Benjamin Tooke, a bookseller in Fleet-street; yet, notwithstanding this addition to his fortune, he still held his place of usher in the Charterhouse-school, and was preferred to the mastership of the school in 1728; and, the year after, married the widow of Dr. Henry Levett, physician to the Charterhouse. He then, as he was obliged by the statutes, resigned his professorship of Gresham, and from that time attended no other business but his school. This began to be too much for him, for he had some years before declined in his health, till at length he fell into a dropsy, which carried him off, Jan. 20, 1731, in his fifty-eighth year. He was buried in the Charter-house*chapel, in the middle of which is placed a white marble monument, in the form of a shield, against a pillar, with a Latin inscription upon it; to his memory. He had taken deacon’s orders, and sometimes preached, but devoted himself principally to the instruction of youth, for which he was no less fitted by his temper than learning.
About this time he acquired some property by marriage, and laid it out partly in furnishing a bookseller’s shop in Fore-street. Here he carried on trade for about nine
About this time he acquired some property by marriage,
and laid it out partly in furnishing a bookseller’s shop in
Fore-street. Here he carried on trade for about nine
years, but with no great success. During this time he
published various pamphlets on the political topics of the
day, and always in opposition to the measures and supporters of administration. In 1774 he resigned his business, and was ordained a preacher among the dissenters,
and soon after chosen pastor of a congregation at Highgate. In 1778 he exchanged this situation for the office
of forenoon preacher at Newington Green, where Dr. Price
preached in the afternoon. When Dr. Kippis was employed by the London booksellers on a new edition of the
“Biographia Britannica,
” he recommended Mr. Towers
as his assistant; and he wrote several lives, but, as already
noticed, under the influence of prejudices which did no
credit to the work. It seems indeed rather surprising that
a work in which the lives of the eminent men of the church
of England must necessarily be expected to form a large,
if not the largest share, should be entrusted to one who had
no sympathy with the constitution or doctrines of that
church, and who, while he probably exerted as much impartiality as he was capable of, could not, in the nature of
things, divest himself of a degree of prejudice which must
damp his praise, if it did not dispose him to censure.
er of “a man of wonderful moderation, and of, great piety,” and adds, what it is very natural for a, bookseller to praise, that “he was very generous, and would not receive
, a pious English divine, was a
native of Flintshire, and born near Broadoak, in that county,
but in what year we have not discovered. Our particulars
indeed of this gentleman are extremely scanty, he having
been omitted by Wood. Previously to his going to Oxford, he was for some time an inmate in the house of the
celebrated Philip Henry, partly as a pupil, and partly as
an assistant in the education of Mr. Henry’s children, one
of whom, Matthew, the commentator, was first initiated in
grammar-learning by Mr. Turner. This was in 1668, after
which Mr. Turner entered of Edmund hall, Oxford, where
he took his degree of M.A.June 8, 1675. He became
afterwards vicar of Walberton, in Sussex, and resided there
in 1697, at the time he published his principal work, but
the date of his death we have not been able to ascertain.
In 1695 he published a “History of all Religions,
” Lond.
8vo; but the work by which he is best known is his “Cornpleat history of the most remarkable Providences, both of
Judgment and Mercy, &c. to which is added, whatever,
is curious in the works of nature and art. The whole digested into one volume, under proper heads; being a work
set on foot thirty years ago, by the rev. Mr. Pool, author of the ‘ Synopsis Criticorum;’ and since undertaken
and finished by William Turner,
” &c. History of the Little World,
”
but is superior, perhaps, to both in selection and conciseness. Dunton, in his “Life,
” gives Mr. Turner the
character of “a man of wonderful moderation, and of,
great piety,
” and adds, what it is very natural for a, bookseller to praise, that “he was very generous, and would
not receive a farthing for his copy till the success was
known.
”
page: “Opus integrum ab Auctore auctum et recognitnm;” which, Dr. Smith observes, was a trick of the bookseller. Usher’s work was solemnly presented by archbishop Abbot to
In 1612 he took his doctor of divinity’s degree; and the
next year, being at London, his first publication appeared,
entitled “De Ecclesiarum Christianarum Successione &
Statu,
” in 4to. This is a continuation of bishop Jewel’s
“Apology,
” in which that eminent prelate had endeavoured
to shew that the principles of protestants are agreeable to
those of the fathers of the six first centuries. Usher’s design
was to finish what Jewel had begun, by shewing that from,
the sixth century to the reformation, namely, for 900 years,
Christ has always had a visible church of true Christians,
untainted with the errors and corruptions of the Roman
church; and that these islands owe not their Christianity
to Rome. This work is divided into three parts. The first
reaches to the tenth century, when Gregory VII. was raised
to the popedom. The second was to have reached from that
period to the year 1370. And the third was to bring it to
the reformation. How far he had brought it in this edition
is stated in the followirig extract of a letter written to his
brother-in-law, Thomas Lydiat, dated at Dublin, August
16, 1619: “You have rightly observed,
” says be, “that in
my discourse ‘ De Christianarum Ecclesiarum Successione
et Statu,’ there is wanting, for the accomplishment of the
second part, a hundred years [from 1240 to 1370, viz. the
last chapter of this part]; which default, in the continuation
of the work is by me supplied. I purpose to publish the
whole work together, much augmented, but do first expect
the publication of my uncle Stanyhurst’s answer to the
former, which, I hear, since his death, is sent to Paris, to
be there printed. I am advertised, also, that even now
there is one at Antwerp who hath printed a treatise of my
countryman De sacro Bosco (Holywood), ‘ De ver Ecclesise investigatione,’ wherein he hath some dealing with me.
Both these I would willingly see before I set about reprinting my book, meaning, that if they have justly found
fault with any thing, I may amend it; if unjustly, I may
defend it.
” His uncle’s answer, however, was never published, nor did our author publish any other edition of his
work, as he here purposed; probably prevented by the distraction of the times. It was reprinted at Hanover in 1658,
8vo, without any amendments. In the last edition of 1687,
containing likewise his Antiquity of the British Churches,
are these words in the title-page: “Opus integrum ab
Auctore auctum et recognitnm;
” which, Dr. Smith observes,
was a trick of the bookseller. Usher’s work was solemnly
presented by archbishop Abbot to king James, as the eminent first fruits of the college of Dublin.
is friends, and although one of the best which had appeared on the subject, sold so slowly, that tKe bookseller was obliged more than once to have recourse to the trick of
, a learned chronologist,
was born Oct. 29, 1649, at the castle of Aubais, in Languedoc, of a very ancient family, and received a liberal
education. His preparatory studies being finished, he passed
a year at Geneva, and heard a course of lectures ou divinity. His father had intended him for the army, but was
unwilling to put any restraint upon his inclinations, and
therefore permitted him to go to Saumur, and afterwards
to England, to complete his divinity studies. In 1675 he
returned to Aubais, and was appointed minister of that
church, which he afterwards resigned for that of Cailar,
and while he performed the functions of his order with
great zeal, found leisure at the same time to indulge his
taste for chronological researches. On the revocation of
the edict of Nantz he returned to Geneva, and afterwards
to Berlin, where he was appointed pastor of the church of
Schwedt. When his merit became better known, he had
the choice of many churches of more emolument, but ^ave
the preference to that of Brandenburgh, on account of its
vicinity to the metropolis, where he might enjoy opportunities of study. In the mean time he began to form an
intimacy with many eminent men, as Lenfant, La Croze,
Kirck, &c. and distinguished himself by some learned papers inserted in the iiterary journals. When the royal society of Berlin was founded in 1701, he was chosen one of
the members, and at the suggestion of Leibnitz was invited
to settle in Berlin, that the new society might profit by his
communications. With this he appears to have complied,
and on the formation of the society of the Anonymi was
chosen their secretary. In 1711 he became one of the
editors of the “Bibliotheque Germanique,
” which he enriched with many valuable criticisms, and analyses of books.
Amidst all these employments he did not neglect the duties
of his profession, but was a very frequent preacher, and
having obtained the cure of Copenick, near Berlin, he
passed his summers there, and there composed his great
chronological work, the plan of which he published in
1721, but the whole did not appear until some years afterwards. Its success did not answer the expectation of the
author, or of his friends, and although one of the best
which had appeared on the subject, sold so slowly, that
tKe bookseller was obliged more than once to have recourse
to the trick of a new title-page. Vignoles, however, satisfied with a moderate competence, a stranger to worldly
ambition and passions, lived quietly and happily among
his books, with the occasional conversation of a few agreeable and steady friends. His wife died in child-bed, and
none of the children she brought survived him. He was,
in his old age, on the point of losing his sight by two cataracts, the one of which was dissipated naturally, and the
other removed by an operation, the particulars of which he
published in the “Miscellanea Berolinensia,
” vol. IV. The
king and queen shewed him many marks of kindness. The
latter, it appears from the dedication of his chronology,
had at one time ordered the eve of his birth-day to be kept
by an entertainment, at which her proxy expressed her
royal wishes forthe continuance of his life. He died at
Berlin, July 24, 1744, aged upwards of ninety-four. His
principal work, already noticed, was published under the
title of “Chronologic de l‘historie sainte et des histoires
etrangeres depuis la sortie d’Egypte jusqu'a la captivite
de Babylone,
” Berlin,
n to have the preface unaltered. This was a few years ago in some measure destroyed by Mr. Lunn, the bookseller, who printed a fac simile of the republican preface, as it has
Nine languages, as we have observed, are used in this Polyglott, yet there is no one book in the whole Bible printed in so many. In the New Testament, the four evangelists are in six languages; the other books only in five; tnd those of Judith and the Maccabees only in three. The Septuagint version is printed from the edition at Rome in 1537. The Latin is the Vulgate of Clement VILI. But for these and many other particulars of the history and progress of this work, so great an honour to the English press, we must refer to Dr. Clark’s Bibliographical Dictionary, and that invaluable fund of information, Mr. Nichols’s Literary Anecdotes. The alterations in the preface to the Polyglott, in which the compliments to Cromwell are omitted or altered so as to suit Charles II. have been long the topic of curious discussion, which has had the effect to give a factitious value to the copies that happen to have the preface unaltered. This was a few years ago in some measure destroyed by Mr. Lunn, the bookseller, who printed a fac simile of the republican preface, as it has been called, which may be added by the possessors of the royal copies.
ted to the rectory of Aynhoe in Northamptonshire, by Thomas Cartwright, esq. where John Whiston (the bookseller) says “he lived a very agreeable and Christian life, much esteemed
, a very learned scholar, was born in Yorkshire in 1672, and educated at Queen’s college, Cambridge,
where he took his bachelor’s degree in 1694, that of master in
1698, and that of bachelor of divinity in 1707. Before this
he had assisted Kuster in his edition of Suidas, as appears
by a letter of his, giving an account of that eminent critic.
(See Kuster.) In 1710 Wasse became more generally
known to the literary world by his edition of “Sallust,
”
4to, the merits of which have been long acknowledged.
He amended the text by a careful examination of nearly
eighty manuscripts, as well as some very ancient editions.
In Dec. 1711 he was presented to the rectory of Aynhoe
in Northamptonshire, by Thomas Cartwright, esq. where
John Whiston (the bookseller) says “he lived a very agreeable and Christian life, much esteemed by that worthy family and his parishioners.
” He had an equal regard for
them, and never sought any other preferment. He had a
very learned and choice library, in which he passed most
of his time, and assisted many of the learned in their publications. He became at length a proselyte to Dr. Clarke’s
Arianism, and corresponded much with him and with Will.
Whiston, as appears by Whiston’s Life of Dr. Clarke, and
his own life. According to Whiston he was the cause of
Mr. Wasse’s embracing the Arian sentiments, which he
did with such zeal, as to omit the Athanasian creed in the
service of the church, and other passages which militated
against his opinions. Whiston calls him “more learned
than any bishop in England since bishop Lloyd,
” and informs us of the singular compliment Bentley paid to him,
“When I am dead, Wasse will be the most learned man
in England.
”
g two sons, one of whom, Rodolphus, was professor of divinity at Basil, and the other, John Henry, a bookseller at Amsterdam. He had published, in 1673, with notes, Origen’s
, mentioned above as one of
the tutors to John James Wetstein, was born September
1, 1647, at Basil, and was grandson of John Rodolphus
Wetstein, burgomaster of that city, a man of great merit,
who rendered important services to his country at the peace
of Munster, in the Imperial court, and in his native place.
John Rodolphus, the subject of this article, succeeded his
father as professor of Greek, and afterwards of divinity,
and died at Basil April 21, 1711, leaving two sons, one
of whom, Rodolphus, was professor of divinity at Basil,
and the other, John Henry, a bookseller at Amsterdam.
He had published, in 1673, with notes, Origen’s “Dialogue against the Marcionites,
” with the “Exhortation to
Martyrdom,
” and the letter to Africanus concerning the
“History of-Susanna,
” which he first took from the Greek
Mss. We have several other valuable discourses or dissertations of his. Henry Wetstein, one of his brothers,
also well acquainted with Greek and Latin, settled in Holland, where he followed the business of a bookseller, became a celebrated printer, and died April 4, 1726. His
descendants long remained in Holland.
ouse he died. This lady died in 1791. His surviving sons were George and John, the latter an eminent bookseller, who died in 1780. Whiston had a younger brother, the Rev. Daniel
Whiston married, in 1 69y, Ruth, the daughter of the Rev.
Mr. Antrobus, master of Tamworth-school, by whom he had
several children, three of whom survived him. The eldest
a daughter, Sarah, was married to Samuel Barker of Lyndon, in Rutlandshire, esq. at whose house he died. This
lady died in 1791. His surviving sons were George and
John, the latter an eminent bookseller, who died in 1780.
Whiston had a younger brother, the Rev. Daniel Whiston,
frequently mentioned in his “Memoirs,
” and who appears
to have entertained an equal aversion to the Athanasian
Creed. He was curate at Somersham for fifty-two years;
but his principles did not permit him to accept of any living. He died in 1759, leaving a son, the Rev. Thomas
Whiston, who died in 1795. Of this Daniel Whiston, we
have heard nothing more remarkable than that he left behind him several hundred manuscript sermons, which he
had never preached.
o the last edition of his “Roman Conversations,” by Mr. Bickerstaff, the successor of Mr. Brown, the bookseller, to whom he bequeathed that edition, with an express provision,
These, and many other acts of beneficence, both of a
public and private nature, the latter always performed
with the utmost delicacy, are specified at large in the very
interesting memoirs prefixed to the last edition of his
“Roman Conversations,
” by Mr. Bickerstaff, the successor
of Mr. Brown, the bookseller, to whom he bequeathed that
edition, with an express provision, “to indemnify him
from any loss which might be incurred by the expences of
the first edition.
” His classical taste, contracted by long
reading, led him to Italy, and it appears to have been in
the once “metropolis of the world,
” that he laid the foundation of the “Roman Conversations,
” his principal work,
which may justly be recommended to the young, and indeed to readers in general. In it he separates the truth of
Roman history from the errors which disfigure it, bestowing just praise on the real patriots of Rome, and equally
just censure on those whose patriotism was only feigned;
and distinguishing between the insidious arts of demagogues, and the integrity of true friends to the public. In
nice investigations of character, he appears to be free
from prejudice, attentive to truth, and often strikingly
original in his remarks. The chief defect is a want of regard to style, and a prolixity of remark and digression,
which perhaps will be more easily pardoned by the old
than the young, fur whom the work was chiefly calculated;
yet it is a work which cannot fail to be perused by every
student of Roman history with the greatest advantage. It
is calculated to excite religious and moral reflections on
that history, and to adapt and direct the study of it to the,
best and wisest purposes of a Christian education.
. The worthy Dr. Prideaux, dean of Norwich, being offered some Arabic manuscripts in parchment, by a bookseller of that city, thinking, perhaps, that the price demanded for
, a tailor, who, from an extraordinary love of study, became a professor of the Oriental languages, was born in the city of Norwich about 1684, where he was educated at a grammar-school till he was almost qualified for the university; but his friends, wanting fortune and interest to maintain him there, bound him apprentice to a tailor, with whom he served seven years, and afterwards worked seven years more as a journeyman. About the end of the last seven years, he was seized with a fever and ague, which continued with him two or three years, and at last reduced him so low as to disable him from working at his trade. In this situation he amused himself with some old books of controversial divinity, in which he found great stress laid on the Hebrew original of several texts of scripture; and, though he had almost lost the learning he had obtained at school, his strong desire of knowledge excited him to attempt to make himself master of that language. He was at first obliged to make use of an English Hebrew grammar and lexicon; but, by degrees, recovered the knowledge of the Latin tongue, which he had learned at school. On the recovery of his health, he divided his time between his business and his studies, xvhich last employed the greatest part of his nights. Thus, self-taught, and assisted only by his great genius, he, "by dint of continual application, added to the knowledge of the Hebrew that of all or most of the oriental Ianguages, but still laboured in obscurity, till at length he was accidentally discovered. The worthy Dr. Prideaux, dean of Norwich, being offered some Arabic manuscripts in parchment, by a bookseller of that city, thinking, perhaps, that the price demanded for them was too great, declined buying them; but, soon after, Mr. Wild hearing of them, purchased them; and the dean, on calling at the shop and inquiring for the manuscripts, was informed of their being sold. Chagrined at this disappointment, he asked of the bookseller the name and profession of the person who had bought them; and, being told he was a tailor, he bad him instantly to run and fetch them, if they were riot cut in pieces to make measures: but he was soon relieved from his fears by Mr. Wild’s appearance with the manuscripts, though, on the dean’s inquiring whether he would part with them, he answered in the negative. The dean then asked hastily what he did with them: he replied, that he read them. He was desired to read them, which he did. He was then bid to render a passage or two into English, which he readily performed, and with great exactness. Amazed at this, the dean, partly at his own expence, and partly by a subscription raised among persons whose inclinations led them to this kind of knowledge, sent him to Oxford; where, though he was never a member of the university, he was by the dean’s interest admitted into the Bodleian library, and employed for some, years in translating or making extracts out of Oriental manuscripts, and thus bad adieu to his needle. This appears to have been some time before 1718. At Oxford, he was known by the name of the Arabian tailor. He constantly attended the library all the hours it was open, and, when it was shut, employed most of his leisure-time in teaching the Oriental languages to young gentlemen, at the moderate price of half a guinea a lesson, except for the Arabic, for which he had a guinea, and his subscriptions for teaching amounted to no more than 20 or 30l. a year. Unhappily for him, the branch of learning in which he excelled was cultivated but by few; and the reverend Mr. Gagnier, a Frenchman, skilled in the Oriental tongues, was in possession of all the favours the university could Bestow in this way, being recommended by the heads of colleges to instruct young gentlemen, and employed by the professors of these languages to read public lectures in their absence.
one day upon the Wells- walk with his friend Mr. Fairbard, of Gray’s-Inn, just as he came up to the bookseller’s the countess of Drogheda, a young widow, rich, noble, and
Wycherley, however, soon lost the favour of the king
and of the courtiers. Dennis relates, that, immediately
after he had received the preceding offer from the king, he
went down to Tunbridge, to take either the benefit of the
waters, or the diversions of the place when, walking one
day upon the Wells- walk with his friend Mr. Fairbard, of
Gray’s-Inn, just as he came up to the bookseller’s
the countess of Drogheda, a young widow, rich, noble,
and beautiful, came to the bookseller, and inquired for
“The Plain Dealer.
” “Madam,
” says Mr. Fairbeard,
“since you are for `The Plain Dealer,' there he is for
you,
” pushing Wycherley towards her. “Yes,
” says Wycherley, “this lady can bear plain dealing; for she appears
to be so accomplished, that what would be compliment
said to others, spoken to her would be plain dealing.
”
“No truly, sir,
” said the countess, “I am not without my
faults, any more than the rest of my sex and yet I love
plain dealing, and am never more fond of it than when it
tells me of them.
” “Then, madam,
” says Mr. Fairbeard,
“you and the Plain Dealer seem designed by heaven
for each other.
” In short, Wycherley walked with the
countess upon the walks, waited upon her home, visited
her daily at her lodgings while she was at Tunbridge, and at
her lodgings in Hatton-garden, after she went to London;
where, in a little time, he got her consent to marry her,
which he did without acquainting the king.
was the contempt of riches. Upon his first arrival in Athens, going accidentally into the shop of a bookseller, he took up a volume of the Commentaries of Xenophon, and formed
, the founder of the Stoic sect (a branch from the Cynic, ad a far as respected morals, differing from it in words more than in reality), was a native of Cittius, a
maritime town of Cyprus, and as this place was originally
peopled by a colony of Phenicians, he is sometimes called
a Phenician. His father, a merchant, encouraged him in
the study of philosophy, and bought for him several of the
writings of v the most eminent Socratic philosophers, which
he read with great avidity and when he was about thirty
years of age, determined to take a voyage to Athens, which
was so celebrated both as a mart of trade and of science.
Whether this voyage was in part mercantile, or wholly undertaken for the sake of conversing with those philosophers
whose writings Zeno had long admired, is uncertain. If
it be true, as some writers relate, that he brought with him
a valuable cargo of Phenician purple, which was lost by
shipwreck upon the coast of Pira3us, this circumstance will
account for the facility with which he at first attached himself to a sect whose leading principle was the contempt of
riches. Upon his first arrival in Athens, going accidentally
into the shop of a bookseller, he took up a volume of the
Commentaries of Xenophon, and formed so high an idea of
the author, that he asked the bookseller, where he might
meet with such men. Crates, the Cynic philosopher, happening at that instant to be passing by, the bookseller
pointed to him, and said, “Follow that man,
” which he did,
and was so well pleased with his doctrine, that he became
one of his disciples. But though he highly admired the
general principles and spirit of the Cynic school, he could
not easily reconcile himself to their peculiar manners; nor
would his inquisitive turn of mind allow him to adopt their
indifference to scientific inquiry. He therefore attended
upon other masters, who professed to instruct their disciples in the nature and causes of things, and when Crates,
displeased at this, attempted to drag him by force out of
the school of Stilpo, Zeno said to him, “You may seize my
body, but Stilpo has laid hold of my mind.
” After continuing to attend upon the lectures of Stilpo several years,
he passed over to other schools, particularly those of Xenocrates and Diodorus Cronus. By the latter he was instructed
in dialectics; and at last, after attending almost every other
master, he offered himself as a disciple of Polemo, who suspected that his design was to collect materials for a new
system: nor was he mistaken. The place which Zeno
chose for his school was called 2/rea, or the Porch, and hence
the name of Stoics. Zeno had advantages as the founder
of a new sect; he excelled in that kind of subtle reasoning
which was at that time popular, and while he taught a system of moral doctrine, his own morals were unexceptionable. He therefore soon became much followed, and on
account of his integrity the Athenians deposited the keys of
their citadel in his hands, and honoured him with a golden
crown and a statue of brass.
In his person Zeno was tall and slender; his aspect was
severe, and his brow contracted. His constitution was
feeble; but he preserved his health by great abstemiousness. The supplies of his table consisted of figs, bread,
and honey; notwithstanding which, he was frequently honoured with the company of great men. It was a singular
proof of, his moderation, mixed indeed with that high
spirit of independence which afterwards distinguished his
sect, that when Democharis, son of Laches, offered to
procure him some gratuity from* Antigonus, he was so
offended, that from that time he declined all intercourse
with him. In public company, to avoid every appearance
of an assuming temper, he commonly took the lowest place.
Indeed, so great was his modesty, that he seldom chose to
mingle with a crowd, or wished for the company of more
than two or three friends at once. He paid more attention
to neatness and decorum in external appearance, than the
Cynic philosophers. In his dress indeed he was plain, and
in all his expences frugal, which arose from a contempt of
external magnificence. He showed as much respect to
the poor as to the rich; and conversed freely with persons
of the meanest occupations. He had only one servant, or,
according to Seneca, none. Yet with all these virtues,
several philosophers of great ability and eloquence employed their talents against him, and Arcesilaus and Carneades, the founders of the middle and new academy, were
his professed opponents. Towards the latter end of his
life he found another powerful adversary in Epicurus, whose
temper and doctrines were alike inimical to the severe
gravity and philosophical pride of the Stoic sect. Hence
mutual invectives passed between the Stoics and other
sects, to which little credit is due. At least it may be
fairly presumed that Zeno, whose personal character was
so exemplary, never countenanced gross immorality in his
doctrine.