ician at the court of Brunswick. His reputation being now at its height, he was several times chosen dean of the faculties, both of philosophy and physic, and in 1604,
In 1584 Liddel returned to Francfort, and again applied to physic, and at the same time instructed some pupils in various branches of mathematics and philosophy. In 1587, being obliged to leave Francfort on account of the plague, he retired to the university of Rostock, where his talents attracted the esteem of Brucseus, and Caselius, which last observes, that, as far as he knew, Liddel was the first person in Germany who explained the motions of the heavenly bodies according to the three different hypotheses of Ptolemy, Copernicus, and Tycho Brahe. With these learned men he lived more like a companion than a pupil; and Brucxus, himself an excellent mathematician, acknowledged that he was instructed by Liddel in the more perfect knowledge of the Copernican system, and other astronomical questions. It was probably during his residence here that Licldel became acquainted with Tycho Brahe. In 1590, having taken his master’s degree at Rostock, he returned once more to Francfort; but, hearing of the increasing reputation of the new university at Helmstadt, where his friend Caselius had accepted the chair of philosophy, he removed thither, and in 1591 was appointed to the first or lower professorship of mathematics, and in 1594 to the second and more dignified mathematical chair, which he filled with great reputation to himself and to the university. In 1596 he obtained the degree of doctor of medicine, and both taught and practised physic, and was employed as first physician at the court of Brunswick. His reputation being now at its height, he was several times chosen dean of the faculties, both of philosophy and physic, and in 1604, pro-rector of the university, the year before he resigned his mathematical professorship.
, a distinguished botanist* was born at Newent, in the forest of Dean, Gloucestershire, Dec. 9, 1735. His father, Stephen Lightfoot,
, a distinguished botanist* was born at Newent, in the forest of Dean, Gloucestershire, Dec. 9, 1735. His father, Stephen Lightfoot, was a reputable yeoman or gentleman farmer, who died in 1769, with a very amiable character, expressed on a small marble monument in the parish church of Newent His son was educated at St. Crypt’s school,Jat Gloucester; from whence he became an exhibitioner in Pembroke-college, Oxford; where he continued his studies with much reputation, and took his master’s degree in July 1766. He was first appointed curate at Colnbrook, and afterwards at Uxbridgef which he retained to his dying day.
g informed that there was a great treasure buried in the cloister of Westminster-abbey, obtained the dean’s (Dr. Williams, bishop of Lincoln), leave to search for it
In 1634, having procured a manuscript, with some alterations, of the “Ars Notoria
” of Cornelius Agrippa, he
became so infatuated by the doctrine of the magical circle,
and the invocation of spirits, as not only to make use of a
form of prayer prescribed there to the angel Salmonaeus,
and to fancy himself a favourite of great power and interest with that uncreated phantom, but even to claim a
knowledge of, and a familiar acquaintance with, the
partieular guardian angels of England, by name Salmael and
Malchidael. After this he treated the more common mystery of recovering stolen goods, &c. with great contempt,
claiming a supernatural sight, and the gift of prophetical
predictions, and seems to have known well how to profit
by the credulity of the times. Such indeed was his fame, as
to produce the following notable story. When one Ramsay,
the king’s clock maker, being informed that there was a great
treasure buried in the cloister of Westminster-abbey, obtained the dean’s (Dr. Williams, bishop of Lincoln), leave
to search for it with the divining or Mosaical* rods, he applied to Lilly for his assistance. Lilly, with one Scot,
who pretended to the use of the said rods, attended by
Ramsay and above thirty persons more, went into the
cloister by night, and, observing the rods to tumble over
one another on the West side of the cloister, concluded the
treasure lay hid under that spot; but, the ground being'
dug to the depth of six feet, and nothing found but a
coffin, which was not heavy enough for their purpose,
they proceeded, without opening it, into the abbey. Here
they were alarmed by a storm, which suddenly rose,
and increased to such a height, that they were afraid the
West end of the church would have been blown down
upon them; the rods moved not at all; the candles and
torches, all but one, were extinguished, or burned very
dimly. Scot was amazed, looked pale, and knew not what
to think or do; until Lilly gave directions to dismiss the
chcinons, which when done, all was quiet again, and each
man returned home. Lilly, however, took care not to expose his skill again in this manner, though he was cunning
enough to ascribe the miscarriage, not to any defect in the
art itself, but to the number of people who were present
at the operation and derided it; shrewdly laying it down
for a rule, that secrecy and intelligent operators, with a
strong confidence and knowledge of what they are doing,
are necessary requisites to succeed in this work.
was inducted into the rectory of Chelsea, was made a prebendary of Westminster, and afterwards sub - dean. In 1685 he was licensed to the church of St. Botolph Aldersgate,
, a learned scholar, was descended from the Westcot family of Mounslow, in Worcestershire, and born Nov. 8, 1627, at Hales-Owen, in Shropshire, of which place his father, Thomas, was vicar. He was educated under Dr. Busby, at Westminster-school, and in 1644 was chosen student of Christ-church, Oxford, but was ejected by the parliament visitors in Nov. 1648. This ejection, however, does not seem to have extended so far as in other cases, for we find that, soon after, he became usher of Westminster-school; and in 1658 was made second master, having for some time in the interim taught school in other places. In July 1670, being then chaplain in ordinary to the king, he accumulated his degrees in divinity, which were conferred upon him without taking any in arts, as a mark of respect due to his extraordinary merit. This indeed had been amply attested to the university by letters from Henchman, bishop of London, recommending him as a man eminently learned, of singular humanity and sweetness of manners, blameless and religious life, and of genius and ready faculty in preaching. In Sept. 1674, he was inducted into the rectory of Chelsea, was made a prebendary of Westminster, and afterwards sub -dean. In 1685 he was licensed to the church of St. Botolph Aldersgate, which he held about four years, and then resigned it, possibly on account of some decay in his constitution.
the same year, was installed archdeacon of Merioneth, in the church of Bangor, of which he was made dean in 1672. This year he obtained also a prebend in the church
, a very learned English bishop, was originally of Welsh extraction, being grandson of David Lloyd of Henblas, in the isle of Anglesey. He was born at Tilehurst, in Berkshire, in 1627, of which place his father, Mr. Richard Lloyd, was then vicar, and also rector of Sunning, in the same county. Having been carefully instructed by his father in the rudiments of grammar and classical learning, he understood Greek and Latin, and something of Hebrew, at eleven years of age; and was entered, in 1638, a student of Oriel college, in Oxford, whence, the following year, he was elected to a scholarship of Jesus college. In 1642 he proceeded B. A. and left the university, then garrisoned for the use of the king; but, after the surrender of it to the parliament, he returned, was chosen fellow of his college, and commenced M. A. in 1646. In 1649 he was ordained deacon by Dr. Skinner, bishop of Oxford, and afterwards became tutor to the children of sir William Backhouse, of Swallowfield, in Berkshire. In 1654, upon the ejection of Dr. Pordage by the Presbyterian committee, he was presented to the rectory of Bradfield, in the same county, by Elias Ashmole, esq. patron of that living in right of his wife; but this right being disputed by Mr. Fowler and Mr. Ford, two ministers at Reading, who endeavoured to bring in Dr. Temple, pretending the advowson was in sir Humphrey Forster, he chose to resign his presentation to Mr. Ashmole, rather than involve himself in a contest. In 1656 he was ordained priest hy Dr. Brownrig, bishop of Exeter, and the same year went to Wadham college, in Oxford, as governor to John Backhouse, esq. a gentleman-commoner, with whom he continued till 1659. In Sept. 1660, he was incorporated M. A. at Cambridge; and, about the same time, made a prebendary of Rippon, in Yorkshire. In 1666 he was appointed king’s chaplain; and, in 1667, was collated to a prebend of Salisbury, having proceeded D. D. at Oxford in the act preceding. In 1668 he was presented by the crown to the vicarage of St. Mary’s in Reading; and, the same year, was installed archdeacon of Merioneth, in the church of Bangor, of which he was made dean in 1672. This year he obtained also a prebend in the church of St. Paul, London. In 1674 he became residentiary<of Salisbury; and, in 1676, he succeeded Dr. Lamplugh, promoted to the see of Exeter, in the vicarage of St. Martin’s in the Fields, Westminster; upon which occasion he resigned his prebend of St. Paul’s.
reprinted in 1689, 4to. 5. “An Alarm for Sinners,” 1679, 4to. This was published by our author when dean of Bangor, from an original copy containing the confession,
Besides the “Considerations,
” &c. mentioned above,
he wrote, 1. “The late Apology in behalf of Papists, reprinted and answered, in behalf of the Royalists,
” A seasonable Discourse, shewing the necessity
of maintaining the Established Religion in opposition to
Popery,
” A reasonable Defence of the Seasonable Discourse,
” &c. The difference between the Church and the Court of
Rome considered,
” An Alarm for
Sinners,
” An historical account of Church
Government,
” A Letter to Dr. William
Sherlock, in vindication of that part of Josephus’s History,
which gives an account of Jaddua the high priest’s submitting to Alexander the Great,
” A Discourse of God’s ways of disposing Kingdoms,
” The Pretences of the French Invasion examined,
”
&c. A Dissertation upon Daniel’s 70
Weeks,
” the substance of which is inserted in the chronology of sir Isaac Newton. 12. An exposition of the same
subject, left printed imperfect, and not published. 13.
*‘ A Letter upon the same subject, printed in the ’ Life of
Dr. Humphrey Prideaux,' p. 288, edit. 1758,“8vo. 14.
” A
System of Chronology,“left imperfect, but out of it his
chaplain, Benjamin Marshall, composed his
” Chronological Tables,“printed at Oxford, 1712, 1713. 15.
” A Harmony of the Gospels,“partly printed in 4to, but left imperfect. 16.
” A Chronological account of the Life of
Pythagoras,“&c. 1699. 17. He is supposed to have had
a hand in a book published by his son at Oxford, 1700, in
folio, entitled
” Series Chronologica Olympiadum,“&c.
He wrote also some
” Explications of some of the Prophecies in the Revelations,“and added the chronological dates
at the head of the several columns, with an index to the
Bible, and many of the references and parallel places, first
printed in the fine edition of the Bible published in folio,
under the direction of archbishop Tenison, in 1701. He
left a Bible interlined with notes in short hand, which was
in the possession of Mr. Marshall, his chaplain, who married a relation, and would have published these notes had
he met with encouragement, as Whiston informs us, who
always, even in his index, calls Dr. Lloyd
” the great
bishop,“and in speaking of Wasse says,
” one more
learned than any bishop in England since bishop Lloyd."
for expelling him from the college, and application to be made for that purpose to bishop Fell, the dean; in obedience to this command, the necessary information was
During his residence in Holland, he was accused at
court of having written certain tracts against the government of his country, which were afterwards discovered to
be the production of another person; and upon that suspicion he was deprived of his studentship of Christ-church.
This part of Mr. Locke’s history requires some detail.
The writer of his life in the Biographia Britannica (Nicoll)
says that “being observed to join in company with several
English malcontents at the Hague, this conduct was communicated by our resident there to the earl of Sunderland,
then secretary of state; who acquainting the king therewith, his majesty ordered the proper methods to be taken
for expelling him from the college, and application to be
made for that purpose to bishop Fell, the dean; in obedience to this command, the necessary information was given
by his lordship, who at the same time wrote to our author, to
appear and answer for himself on the first of January ensuing,
but immediately receiving an express command to turn him
out, was obliged to comply therewith, and, accordingly,
Air. Locke was removed from his student’s place on the
15th of Nov. 1684.
” This account, however, is not correct. All that lord Sunderland did, was to impart his majesty’s displeasure to the dean, and to request his opinion
as to the proper method of removing Mr. Locke. The
dean’s answer, dated Nov. 8, contains the following particulars of Mr. Locke, and of his own advice and proceedings against him. “I have,
” says the dean, “for divers
years had an eye upon him; but so close has his guard
been on himself, that after several strict inquiries, I may
confidently affirm there is not any man inthe college,
however familiar with him, who had heard him speak a
word either against or so much as concerning the government; and although very frequently, both in public and
private, discourses have been purposely introduced to the
disparagement of his master, the earl of Shaftesbury, his
party and designs, he never could be provoked to take
any notice, or discover in word or look the least concern.
So that I believe there is not a man in the world so much
master of taciturnity and passion. He has here a physician’s place (he had taken the degree of B. M. in 1674)
which frees him from the exercise of the college, and the
obligations which others have to residence in it; and he is
now abroad for want of health.
”
Thus far we might suppose the dean had advanced enough in behalf of the innocence of Mr. Locke.
Thus far we might suppose the dean had advanced
enough in behalf of the innocence of Mr. Locke. What
follows, however, will be read with regret, that so good a
man as bishop Fell should have given such advice. “Notwithstanding this, I have summoned him to return home,
which is done with this prospect, that if he comes not
back, he will be liable to expulsion for contumacy; and
if he does, he will be answerable to the law for that which
he shall be found to have done amiss. It being probable
that, though he may have been thus cautious here, where
he knew himself suspected, he has laid himself more open
at London, where a general liberty of speaking was used,
and where the execrable designs against his majesty and
government were managed and pursued. If he don't r^turn by the first of January, which is the time limited to
him, I shall be enabled of course to proceed against him
to expulsion. But if this method seems not effectual or
speedy enough, and his majesty, our founder and visitor,
shall please to command his immediate remove, upon the
receipt thereof, directed to the dean and chapter, it shall
accordingly be executed.
” In consequence of this, a warrant came down to the dean and chapter, dated Nov. 12,
in these words: “Whereas we have received information
of the factious and disloyal behaviour of Locke, one of the
students of that our college; we have thought fit hereby to
signify our will and pleasure to you, that you forthwith
remove him from his student’s place, and deprive him of
all rights and advantages thereunto belonging, for which
this shall be your warrant,
” &c. And thus, on the 16th
following, one of the greatest men of his time was, expelled the college at the command of Charles II. without,
as far as ia known, any form of trial or inquiry. After the
death of Charles II. William Penn, the celebrated quaker,
who had known Mr. Locke at the university, used his interest with king James to procure a pardon for him) an J
would have obtained it, if Mr. Locke had not said, that he
had no occasion for a pardon, since he had not been guilty
of any crime.
and took his degree of B. D. and that of D. D. in the following year. In 1514 he was promoted to be dean of Salisbury, and in 1519 had the additional preferment of a
After becoming a fellow of his college, he was in 1505 chosen principal of Magdalen-hall, which he resigned in 1507. In 1510 he was admitted to the reading of the sentences, and took his degree of B. D. and that of D. D. in the following year. In 1514 he was promoted to be dean of Salisbury, and in 1519 had the additional preferment of a canonry of Windsor. At this time he was in such favour with Henry VIII. as to be appointed his confessor, and upon the death of Atwater, bishop of Lincoln, he was by papal provision advanced to this see in 1520, and was consecrated May 3, 1521. In the same year (1520) we find him at Oxford assisting in drawing up the privileges for the new statutes of the university. In 1523 he was at the same place as one of those whom. Wolsey consulted in the establishment of his new college; and when the foundation was laid on July 15, 1525, Longland preached a sermon, which, with two others on the same occasion, he dedicated to archbishop Warham. He was afterwards employed at Oxford by the king, to gain over the learned men of the university fo sanction his memorable divorce. It is said, indeed, that when Henry’s scruples, or, as we agree with the catholic historian, his pretended scruples, began to be started, bishop Longland was the first that suggested the measure of a divorce. The excuse made for him is, that he was himself over-persuaded to what was not consistent with his usual character by Wolsey, who thought that Longland’s authority would add great weight to the cause; and it is said that he expressed to his chancellor, Dr. Draycot, his sorrow for being concerned in that affair. In 1533 he was chosen chancellor of the university of Oxford, to which he proved in many respects a liberal benefactor, and to poor students a generous patron. The libraries of Brazenose, Magdalen, and Oriel colleges, he enriched with many valuable books; and in 1540 he recovered the salary of the lady Margaret professorship, which had almost been lost, owing to the abbey from which it issued being dissolved. It must not be disguised, however, that he was inflexible in his pursuit and persecution of what he termed heresy. In 1531, we find him giving a commission to the infamous Dr. London, warden of New college, and others, to search for certain heretical books commonly sold at St. Frideswyde’s fair near Oxford. He died May 7, 1547, at Wooburn in Bedfordshire, where his bowels were interred; while his heart was carried to Lincoln cathedral, and his body deposited in Eton-college chapel, where it is thought he once had some preferment. He built a curious chapel in Lincoln cathedral in the east part, in imitation of bishop Russel’s chapel, with a tomb, &c. He also gave the second bell at Wooburn church, and built almshouses at Henley, his birth-place.
ppened not to be the case, Mr. Lowth being only a master of arts, and the statute requiring that the dean should be at least a bachelor of divinity. The bishop in a day
, an English clergyman, was born iir
Northamptonshire about 1630, and is supposed to have
been the son of Simon Lowth, a native of Thurcaston in
Leicestershire, who was rector of Dingley in that county in
1631, and was afterwards ejected by the usurping powers.
This, his son, was educated at Clare Hall, Cambridge,
where be took his master’s degree in 1660. He was afterwards rector of St. Michael Harbledown in 1670, and vicar
of St. Co.Miius and Damian on the Blean in 1679, both in,
Kent. On Nov. 12, 1688, king James nominated him,
and he was instituted by bishop Sprat, to the deanery of
Rochester, on the death of Dr. Castillon, but never obtained possession, owing to the following circumstances.
The mandate of installation bad issued in course, the
bishop not having allowed himself time to examine whether
the king’s presentee was legally qualified; which happened
not to be the case, Mr. Lowth being only a master of arts,
and the statute requiring that the dean should be at least
a bachelor of divinity. The bishop in a day or two discovering that he had been too precipitate, dispatched letters
to the chapter clerk, and one of the prebendaries, earnestly
soliciting that Mr. Lowth might not be installed; and afterwards in form revoked the institution till he should have
taken the proper degree. On Nov. 27 Mr. Lowth attended
the chapter, and produced his instruments, but the prebendaries present refused to obey them. He was admitted
to the degree of D.D.Jan. 18 following, and on March
19 again claimed instalment, but did not obtain possession,
for which, in August of this year, another reason appeared,
viz. his refusing to take the oaths of allegiance; in consequence of which he was first suspended from his function,
and afterwards deprived of both his livings in Kent. He
lived very long after this, probably in London, as his death
is recorded to have happened there on July 3, 1720, when
he was buried in the new cemetery belonging to the parish
of St. George the Martyr, Queen Square. He published,
1. “Letters between Dr. Gilbert Burnet and Mr. Simon.
Lowth,
” History of the Reformation.
” 2. “The subject
of Church Power, in whom it resides,
” &c. A Letter to Edward Stillingfleet, D. D. in answer to the
Dedicatory Epistle before, his ordination-sermon, preached
at St. Peter’s Cornhill, March 15, 1684, with reflections.
on some of Dr. Burnet’s letters on the same subject,
” an honour,
” bishop
Nicolson says, “which he (Lowth) had no right to expect;
”
Lowth had submitted this letter both to Stillingfleet and
Tillotson, who was then dean of Canterbury, but, according to Birch, “the latter did not think proper to take the
least public notice of so confused and unintelligible a
writer.
” Dr. Hickes, however, a suffering nonjuror like
himself, calls Lowfeh “a very orthodox and learned divine,
”
and his book an excellent one. His only other publication,
was “Historical Collections concerning Deposing of Bishops,
”
, surnamed Brugensis, from being a native of that city, was a doctor of Louvain, and dean of the church of St. Omer. He studied under Arias Montanus,
, surnamed Brugensis, from being a
native of that city, was a doctor of Louvain, and dean of
the church of St. Omer. He studied under Arias Montanus, and acquired an extensive knowledge of the Greek,
Hebrew, Chaldee, and Syriac languages. He has left,
1. “Critical notes on the Holy Scriptures,
” Antwerp,
3 vols. 4to, which are commended by Simon, in his Critical History. 2. Latin commentaries on the New Testament, in 3 vols. folio. 3. Concordances of the Bible, published at Cologne in 8vo, by Egmond, in 1684, which are
convenient in size, and printed with correctness and beauty.
He died Feb. 19, 1619.
de particular mention of this curious and very scarce volume in the preface to his elaborate life of dean Newell, and an account has since been published in the Bibliographer.
, whom Granger, by mistake, calls
Dr. Lupton, was one of the earliest publishers of biographical collections in English, but with his own history we
are almost totally unacquainted. We can only gather from
one of his dedications that he had served in the army several years, and from the contents of his two principal publications, that he was a man of piety, and an admirer of the
characters of those eminent fathers and divines who made
the greatest figure in the church from the earliest periods
to the reformation. The first of these is entitled “The
History of the Moderne Protestant Divines, &c. faithfully
translated out of Latin,
” Lond. farmers of the
custom-house.
” It contains twenty-two foreign lives, and
twenty-three English, translated from Holland’s “Heroologia, and Verheiden’s
” Effigies,“with each an engraved
head dopied, in small, from those in Holland and Verheiden. Mr. Churton has made particular mention of this
curious and very scarce volume in the preface to his elaborate life of dean Newell, and an account has since been
published in the Bibliographer. The other biographical
collection said to be by Lupton is a 4to volume, entitled
” The Glory of their Times, or the Lives of the Primitive
Fathers,“&c. London, printed by J. Okes, 1640. This
contains forty four lives, with heads of the same scale as.
the other, but of less value, as being mostly imaginary.
We know not on what authority this work is attributed to
Lupton, >as there is no mention of his name in any part of
the copy now before us, and the preface, or address to
the reader, is signed Typographies. From internal evidence,
however, we should be inclined to think it was his compilation. Lupton’s other productions werte,
” London and the
countrey carbonadoed and quartered into several chafacters,“1632, 8vo
” ObjectorUm reductio; or daily employment for the soule,“1634, 8vo
” Emblems of Rarities; or choice Observations out of worthy Histories, &c.“1636, l&tTio; and
” England’s command of the Seas; or
the English Seas guarded," 1653, 12mo.
of LL. B. March 28, 1745; LL. D. June 18 the same year; was appointed king’s chaplain in Dec. 1747, dean of Exeter in May 1748, and was consecrated bishop of Carlisle,
, third son of sir Thomas, and
brother to George lord Lyttelton, was born at Hagley, in
1714. He was educated at Eton-school, and went thence
first to University-college, Oxford, and then to the InnerTemple, where he became a barrister at law; but entering
into orders, was collated by bishop Hough to the rectory
of Alvechurch, in Worcestershire, Aug. 13, 1742. He
took the degree of LL. B. March 28, 1745; LL. D. June
18 the same year; was appointed king’s chaplain in Dec.
1747, dean of Exeter in May 1748, and was consecrated
bishop of Carlisle, March 21, 1762. In 1754 he caused
the cieling and cornices of the chancel of Hagley church
to be ornamented with shields of arms in their proper colours, representing the paternal coats of his ancient and
respectable family. In 1765, on the death of Hugh lord
Willoughby of Parham, he was unanimously elected president of the society of antiquaries; a station in which his
distinguished abilities were eminently displayed. He died
unmarried, Dec. 22, 1768. His merits and good qualities
are universally acknowledged; and those parts of his character which more particularly endeared him to the learned
society over which he so worthily presided, shall be
pointed out in the words of his learned successor dean
Milles: “The study of antiquity, especially that part of
it which relates to the history and constitution of these
kingdoms, was one of his earliest and most favourable pursuits; and he acquired g cat knowledge in it by constant
study and application, to which he was led, not only by his
natural disposition, but also by his state and situation in
life. He took frequent opportunities of improving and enriching this knowledge by judicious observations in the
course of several journies which he made through every
country of England, and through many parts of Scotland
and Wales. The society has reaped the fruits of these
observations in the most valuable papers, which his lordship from time to time has communicated to us; which
are more in number, and not inferior either in merit or importance, to those conveyed to us by other hands. Blest
with a retentive memory, and happy both in the disposition and facility of communicating his knowledge, he was
enabled also to act the part of a judicious commentator
and candid critic, explaining, illustrating, and correcting
from his own observations many of the papers which have
been read at this society. His station and connections in
the world, which necessarily engaged a very considerable
part of his time, did not lessen his attention to the business
and interests of the society. His doors were always open
to his friends, amongst whom none were more welcome
to him than the friends of literature, which he endeavoured
to promote in all its various branches, especially in those
which are the more immediate objects of our attention.
Even this circumstance proved beneficial to the society,
for, if I may be allowed the expression, he was the centre
in which the various informations -on points of antiquity
from the different parts of the kingdom united, and the
medium through which they were conveyed to us. His
literary merit with the society received an additional lustre
from the affability of his temper, the gentleness of his
manners, and the benevolence of his heart, which united
every member of the society in esteem to their head, and
in harmony and friendship with each other. A principle
so essentially necessary to the prosperity and even to the
existence of all communities, especially those which have
arts and literature for their object, that its beneficial effects are visibly to be discerned in the present flourishing
state of our society, which I flatter myself will be long
continued under the influence of the same agreeable principles. I shall conclude this imperfect sketch of a most
worthy character, by observing that the warmth of his affection to the society continued to his latest breath; and
he has given a signal proof of it in the last great act which
a wise man does with resp'ect to his worldly affairs; for,
amongst the many charitable and generous donations contained in his will, he has made a very useful and valuable
bequest of manuscripts and printed books to the society,
as a token of his affection for them, and of his earnest desire to promote those laudable purposes for which they were
instituted.
” The society expressed their gratitude and respect to his memory by a portrait of him engraved at their
expence in 1770.
aries, published in the “Archaeologia,” there is in Gutch’s “Collectanea Curiosa,” vol. II. p. 354, “ Dean Lyttelton’s Memoir concerning the authenticity of his copy of
Besides his contributions to the papers of the society of
antiquaries, published in the “Archaeologia,
” there is in
Gutch’s “Collectanea Curiosa,
” vol. II. p. 354, “Dean
Lyttelton’s Memoir concerning the authenticity of his copy
of Magna Charta,
” from the minutes of the antiquarian
society, and an answer by judge Blackstone.
er-lane, London. In 1729, he was appointed clerk of the closet to queen Caroline. In 1733, he became dean of Wells, and was consecrated bishop of St. Asaph, in 1736.
, a famous English prelate, born at
London, July 27, 1697, of obscure parents, whom he lost
while he was young, was taken care of by an aunt, who
placed him in a charity-school, and afterwards put him on
trial to a pastry-cook; but, before he was bound apprentice, the master told her that the boy was not fit for trade;
that he was continually reading books of learning above his
(the master’s) comprehension, and therefore advised that
she should take him away, and send him back to school, to
follow the bent of his inclination. He was on this sent, by
an exhibition of some dissenting friends, to one of the
universities of Scotland, Cole says, that of Aberdeen; but,
not caring to take orders in that church, was afterwards,
through the patronage of bishop Gibson, admitted to
Queen’s-college, Cambridge, and was favoured with a
doctor’s degree at Lambeth. After entering into orders,
he first was curate of St. Bride’s, then domestic chaplain
to Dr. Waddington, bishop of Chichester, whose niece he
married, and was afterwards promoted to the rectory of St.
Vedast, in Foster-lane, London. In 1729, he was appointed clerk of the closet to queen Caroline. In 1733,
he became dean of Wells, and was consecrated bishop of
St. Asaph, in 1736. He was translated to the see of Worcester, in 1743. In 1733 he published the first part of
the “Review of Neal’s History of the Puritans,
” under
the title of, “A Vindication of the Government, Doctrine,
and Worship of the Church of England, established in the
reign of queen Elizabeth:
” of which the late bishop Hallifax said, “a better vindication of the reformed church
of England, I never read.
” He was a great benefactor to
the London hospitals, and the first promoter of the Worcester Infirmary in 1745, which has proved of singular
benefit to the poor, and a great advantage to medical and
surgical knowledge in that neighbourhood. He was also a
great encourager of trade, engaging in the British fishery,
by which he lost some money. He likewise was a strong
advocate for the act against vending spirituous liquors.
He married Elizabeth daughter of Richard Price, esq. of
Hayes in Middlesex, in 1731; and had two daughters and
a son, of whom only one daughter survived him, and was
afterwards married to the hon. James Yorke, bishop of
Gloucester, and late bishop of Ely. He died Sept. 27,
1739. Bishop Madox published fourteen occasional sermons preached between the years 1734 and 1752. Among
other instances of his benevolence, we may mention his assigning 200l.perann. during his life, for the augmentation of
the smaller benefices of his diocese. He corresponded with
Dr. Doddridge with affectionate familiarity, and visited him
when at Bristol, offering in the most obliging manner to convey him to the Wells in his chariot, at the stated times of
drinking. He used to anticipate any hints respecting his
origin by a joke which he was fond of repeating. When
tarts wera on his table, he pressed the company to partake,
saying “that he believed they were very good, but that they
were not of his own making
” This he varied, when John
Whiston dined with him, into, “some people reckon me a
good judge of that article!
” Upon the whole he appears
to have been an amiable and benevolent man, and to have
employed his wealth as well as his talents to the best purposes. His widow survived him thirty years, dying Feb.
19, 1789.
, dean of the cathedral of Munster, and celebrated for his inquiries
, dean of the cathedral of
Munster, and celebrated for his inquiries into typographical antiquities, was certainly a learned man, but very turbulent and ambitious. Hence it happened that he was
named to two bishoprics without taking possession of either,
and that he died in prison for his opposition to another
prelate. The emperor Ferdinand I. appointed him to the
bishopric of Ratzebourg, and he was, a few days after,
elected to the see of Minden. But his ambition was to be
bishop of Munster, and not succeeding, in 1650, he intrigued and raised seditions against the bishop who had
succeeded, till in 1655, he was degraded from his dignity
of dean. Nor yet warned, he continued his machinations,
and in 1657, the bishop had him arrested and confined in
the castle of Otteinzheim. Here he continued till his
death, which happened suddenly, March 7, 1664. He
wrote in Latin, 1. “De natura et usu Literarum,
” Munster, De ortu et progressu artis Typographica;,
” Cologne, Monumenta Typographica,
” vol. I. De Archicancellariis S. R. imperil,
” Munster, Paralipomenon de Historicis Gracis,
” Cologne,
the university of Dublin, became chaplain to Dr. Michael Boyle, archbishop of -Dublin, and at length dean of Derry. During the reign of James II. in 1686, being disappointed
, a Roman catholic writer, was the son
of lieutenant-colonel Manby, and after being educated at
the university of Dublin, became chaplain to Dr. Michael
Boyle, archbishop of -Dublin, and at length dean of Derry.
During the reign of James II. in 1686, being disappointed
of a bishopric, which he had hopes of obtaining by means
of the lord primate, he attempted to rise by popish interest,
and publicly embraced that religion, in vindication of
which he wrote several books. But the revolution preventing the accomplishment of his wishes, he removed to
France, and thence to England, and died at London in
1697. He wrote “A Letter to a Nonconformist minister,
”
Lond. A brief and practical Discourse on
Abstinence in Lent,
” Dublin, Of Confession to a lawful Priest,
” &c. Lond. The
Considerations which obliged Peter Manby, Dean of Derry,
to embrace the Catholic religion. Dedicated to the Lord
Primate of Ireland,
” Dublin, A reformed Catechism in two Dialogues,
”
the first only of which appeared in
t, his first physician, and the kings of Prussia continued this title to him during his life. He was dean of the faculty at Geneva at the time of his death, Aug. 15,
, a learned physician and laborious historian of that science, was horn June 19, 1652,
at Geneva, where his father was an eminent merchant. His
father’s brother, author of a work on fevers, was physician
to the king of Poland. Manger, having finished his classical studies at the age of fourteen, bestowed two years on
philosophy, and then studied theology for five years, when,
changing his destination, he entered on a course of medical reading (for he says he had no teacher but his books),
and made such proficiency, that in 1678, he received his
doctor’s degree at Valence, along with the celebrated
Hartman. On his return home he entered upon practice,
to which he joined the laborious perusal of many medical
works, which served as the foundation of his own publications. In 1699, the elector of Brandenburgh appointed
him, by letters patent, his first physician, and the kings
of Prussia continued this title to him during his life. He
was dean of the faculty at Geneva at the time of his death,
Aug. 15, 1742, in the ninetieth year of his age. His works
are: l.“Messis Medico-spagyrica, &c.
” Geneva, Pauli Barbetti Opera omnia
Medica et Chirurgica,
” with additional cases and illustralions. 3. “Bibliotheca Anatomica,
” Compendium
Medicinae Practicum,
” of J. And. Sehmitz. 5. The
“Pharmcopeia Schrodero-Hoffmanniana.
” 6. The “Tractatus de Febribus,
” of Franc. Pieus; and, 7. The “Sepulchretum
” of Bonetus, to which he added several remarks and histories. 8. In 1695, he published his “Bibliotheca Medico-Practica,
” four vqls. folio; a vast collection of practical matter relative to all the diseases of the
human body, arranged in alphabetical order. 9. “Bibliotheca Chemica curiosa,
” Bibliotheca Pharmaceutico Medica,
” Bibliotheca Chirurgica,
” Theatrum Anatomicum, cum Eustachii
Tabulis Anatomicis,
” Traite de la Peste recueilli des meilleurs Auteurs,
” Nouvelles Reflexions sur l'Origine, la
Cause, la Propagation, les Preservatifs, et la Cure de la
Peste,
” 12mo. 15. His “Observations sur la Maladie qui
a commence depuis quelques annees a attaquer le gros
Betail,
” was a collection of the opinions of the Genevese
physicians concerning the distemper of horned cattle. The
last work of Manget was his “Bibliotheca Scriptorum Medicorum veterum et recentiorum,
” at which he laboured
when at least eighty years of age, and published it in 1731,
in four vols. folio. It is the most important of his productions, being an useful collection of medical lives, and
catalogues of writings. It has not been so much thought
of since the appearance of Haller’s Bibliotheca, and particularly of Eloy’s; but the plans are different, and Manget’s, as well as the rest of his voluminous compilations,
may be yet consulted with advantage. Although he was so
intent on accumulating information, and reprinting scarce
works and tracts, that he did not employ his judgment always, either in selection or arrangement, yet those, who,
like himself, wish to trace the progress of medical knowledge, will find his works of great use. They contain, indeed, the substance of many libraries, and a variety of
treatises which it would not be easy to procure in their separate form.
ets, some of which would not disgrace the best pen then engaged in the” defence of government. After dean Swift relinquished “The Examiner,” she continued it with great
, an English lady, authoress
of a noted piece of scandal called “The Atalantis,
” was
born in Guernsey, or one of those small islands, of which
her father, sir Roger Mauley, was governor. He wa* the
second son of an ancient family, and had been a great sufferer for his loyalty in the reign of Charles I. without receiving either preferment or recompense in that of Charles
II. He was a man of considerable literary talents, wnich
appeared in several publications, particularly his Latin
commentaries on the rebellion, under the title of “Commentaria de Rebelhone Anglicana, ab anno 1640 ad annum
1685,
” Lond. History of the late
wars of Denmark,
” Turkish Spy,
” which
was found among his papers, and continued to its present
number of volumes by Dr. Midgley, a physician, who had
the care of his papers; but this has been justly doubted
(See Marana). His daughter, the subject of this article,
received an education suitable to her birth, and gave indications of genius above her years, and, as her biographer
says, “much superior to what is usually to be found
amongst her sex.
” The loss of her parents before she
was settled in life, seems to have been peculiarly unfortunate, for her father confided the care of her to his nephew,
a married man, who first pretended that his wife was dead,
then by a series of seductive manoeuvres cheated her into
a marriage. When he could no longer conceal his infamy,
he deserted her, and the world tamed its back upon her.
While in this situation, she accidentally acquired the
patronage of the duchess of Cleveland, one of Charles II.'s
mistresses, having been introduced to her by an acquaintance to whom she was paying a visit; but the duchess, a
woman of a very fickle temper, grew tired of Mrs. Manley
in six months, and discharged her upon a pretence that
she intrigued with her son. When this lady was thus dismissed, she was solicited by general Tidcomb to pass
some time with him at his country-seat; but she excused
herself by saying, “that her love of solitude was improved
by her disgust of the world; and since it was impossible
for her to be in public with reputation, she was resolved
to remain concealed.
” In this solitude she wrote her first
tragedy, called “The Royal Mischief,
” which was acted
at the theatre in Lincoln’s-inn-fields, in 1696. This play
succeeded, and she received such unbounded incense from
admirers, that her apartment was crowded with men of wit
and gaiety, which proved in the end very fatal to her
virtue, and she afterwards engaged in various intrigues.
In her retired hours she wrote her four volumes of the
“Memoirs of the New Atalantis,
” in which she was very
free with her own sex, in her wanton description of loveadventures, and with the characters of many high and distinguished personages. Her father had always been attached to the cause of Charles I. and she herself having a
confirmed aversion to the Whig ministry, took this method
of satirising those who had brought about the revolution.
Upon this a warrant was granted from the secretary of state’s
office, to seize the printer and publisher of those volumes.
Mrs. Mauley had too much generosity to let innocent persons suffer on her account; and therefore voluntarily presented herself before the court of King’s -bench, as the
author of the “Atalantis.' 1 When she was examined before lord Sunderland, then the secretary, he was curious
to know from whom she got information of some particulars
which they imagined to be above her own intelligence.
She pleaded that her only design in writing was her own
amusement and diversion in the country, without intending
particular reflections and characters; and assured them
that nobody was concerned with her. When this was not
believed, and the contrary urged against her by several
circumstances, she said,
” then it must be by inspiration,
because, knowing her own innocence, she could account
for it no other way.“The secretary replied, that
” inspiration used to be upon a good account; but that her writings
were stark naught.“She acknowledged, that
” his lordship’s observation might be true; but, as there were evil
angels as well as good, that what she had wrote might still
be by inspiration.“The consequence of this examination
was, that Mrs. Manley was close shut up in a messenger’s
house, without being allowed pen, ink, and paper. Her
counsel, however, sued out her habeas corpus at the
King’s-bench bar, and she was admitted to bail. Whether
those in power were ashamed to bring a woman to a trial
for this book, or whether the laws could not reach her,
because she had disguised her satire under romantic names,
and a feigned scene of action, she was discharged, after
several times exposing herself in person, to oppose the
court before the bench of judges, with her three attendants, the printer, and two publishers. Not long after, a
total change of the ministry ensued, when she lived in high
reputation and gaiety, and aroused herself in writing poems
and letters, and conversing with wits. To her dramatic
pieces she now added
” Lucius,“the first Christian king
of Britain, a tragedy, acted in Drury-lane, in 1717. She
dedicated it to sir Richard Steele, whom she had abused
in her
” New Atalantis,“but was now upon such friendly
terms with him, that he wrote the prologue to this play,
as Mr. Prior did the epilogue. This was followed by her
comedy called the
” Lost Lover, or the Jealous Husband,“acted in 1696. She was also employed in writing for queen
Anne’s ministry, certainly with the consent and privity, if
not under the direction, of Dr Swift, and was the author
of
” The Vindication of the Duke of Maryborough,“and
other pamphlets, some of which would not disgrace the best
pen then engaged in the
” defence of government. After
dean Swift relinquished “The Examiner,
” she continued
it with great spirit for a considerable time, and frequently
finished pieces begun by that excellent writer, who also
often used to furnish her with hints for those of her own
composition. At this season she formed a connection with
Mr. John Barber, alderman of London, with whom she
lived in a state of concubinage, as is supposed, and at whose
house she died July 11, 1724.
ropriation and advowson of the parish of Milton, co. Oxford. In 1763 he was presented by Dr. Greene, dean of Salisbury, to the vicarage of Godalming, in Surrey, and was
In 1741 he was elected to a fellowship of his college, in right of which he had the living of St. Botolph, in Cambridge, which he held until his marriage, in 1755. He took the degree of M. A. in 1744, and that of B. D. in 1753. In 1760, Dr. Thomas, bishop of Lincoln, to whom he was chaplain, gave him the prebend of Milton Ecclesia, in the church of Lincoln, consisting of the impropriation and advowson of the parish of Milton, co. Oxford. In 1763 he was presented by Dr. Greene, dean of Salisbury, to the vicarage of Godalming, in Surrey, and was instituted Dec. 22, he preferring the situation to that of St. Nicholas in Guildford (though a better living) which was offered to him by the same patron. Here he constantly resided till the time of his death, beloved and respected by his parishioners, and discharging his professional duty in the most punctual and conscientious manner. In 1769 he was presented to the rectory of Pepperharrow, an adjoining parish, by viscount Middleton. He was elected F. R. S. in 1767, and F. S. A. in 1770. To the sincere regret of his parishioners, and of all who knew him, Mr. Manning died Sept. 9, 1801, after a short attack of pleurisy, having entered his eighty-first year. By Catherine, his wife, daughter of Mr. Reade Peacock, a quaker, mercer, of Huntingdon, he had three sons and five daughters, all of whom survived him, except his eldest son, George Owen, and one of the daughters.
inity; lOOl. to poor widows, chiefly clergymen’s. His benefactions to the church of Ely were, to the dean and chapter for ever, all his close called hundred acres in
Dr. Mapletoft lived very hospitably at Ely, and wherever he resided, and was esteemed for the many pious and charitable acts in his life-time; and, at his death, after many gifts, legacies, and charitable donations, he bequeathed to the university 100l. towards purchasing Golius’s library of Oriental books for the university library; and in case that design was not executed, then to some permanent university use, at the discretion of the vicechancellor and the two professors of divinity; lOOl. to poor widows, chiefly clergymen’s. His benefactions to the church of Ely were, to the dean and chapter for ever, all his close called hundred acres in the Wash in the town of Coveney, for the increase of the Dinging men’s stipends, and on condition that they should frequent early prayers in the cathedral. He also bequeathed to the same church his library of books, and 100l. toward fitting up a place to receive them, and furnishing it with more books; to each of the prebendaries a ring of 20,?. to each minor canon and schoolmaster 20s. to each singing-man and verger 10s. and to the choristers 5s. each.
ncerts of vocal and instrumental music for his own amusement, both at Exeter-college and Alban-hall. Dean Swift must have been under the influence of the most virulent
Dr. Marsh appears to have employed the greater part of
his life and income in acts of benevolence and utility.
While he presided over the see of Dublin, he built a noble
library, and filled it with a choice collection of books;
having for that purpose bought the library of Dr.
Stillingfleet, late bishop of Worcester, to which he added his own
collection; and to make it the more useful to the public,
he settled a handsome provision on a librarian and sublibrarian, to attend it at certain hours. This prelate also
endowed an alms-house at Drogheda, for the reception of
twelve poor clergymen’s widows, to each of whom he assigned a lodging, and 20l. per annum. He likewise repaired, at his own expence, many decayed churches within
his diocese, and hought-in several impropriations, which
he restored to the church. Nor did he confine his good
actions to Ireland only; for he gave a great number of
manuscripts in the oriental languages, chiefly purchased
out of Golius’s collection, to the Bodleian library. He
was a very learned and accomplished man. Besides sacred
and profane literature, he had applied himself to mathematics and natural philosophy: he was deep in the knowledge of languages, especially the oriental; he was also
skilled in music, the theory as well as the practice; and
he frequently, in the earlier part of his life, had concerts
of vocal and instrumental music for his own amusement,
both at Exeter-college and Alban-hall. Dean Swift must
have been under the influence of the most virulent spleen,
when he wrote of such a man as Dr. Marsh, the gross caricature published in his works. As an antidote, we would
recommend a letter from this excellent prelate, published
in “Letters written by eminent persons,
” &c.
inary to his majesty, rector of Bladon near Woodstock in Oxfordshire, in May 1680, and was installed dean of Gloucester on April 30, 1681. He resigned Bladon in the year
, an English divine, was born at Barkby in Leicestershire, about 1621, and educated there in grammar learning, under the vicar of that town. He was entered of Lincoln college, Oxford, in 1640; and, about the same time, being a constant hearer of archbishop Usher’s sermons in All-hallows church in that university, he conceived such a high opinion of that prelate, as to wish to make him the pattern of his life. Soon after, Oxford being garrisoned upon the breaking out of the civil wars, he bore arms for the king at his own charge; and therefore, in 1645, when he was a candidate for the degree of bachelor of arts, he was admitted to it without paying fees. Upon the approach of the parliamentary visitors, who usurped the whole power of the university, he went abroad, and became preacher to the company of English merchants at Rotterdam and Dort. In 1661, he was created bachelor of divinity; and, in 1663, chosen fellow of his college, without his solicitation or knowledge. In 1669, while he was at Dort in Holland, he was made doctor of divinity at Oxford; and, in 1672, elected rector of his college, in the room of Dr. Crew, promoted to the bishopric of Oxford. He was afterwards appointed chaplain in ordinary to his majesty, rector of Bladon near Woodstock in Oxfordshire, in May 1680, and was installed dean of Gloucester on April 30, 1681. He resigned Bladon in the year 1682. He died at Lincoln-college in 1685. By his will he gave to the public library at Oxford all such of his books, whether manuscript or printed, as were not then in the library, excepting such only as he had not other-wise disposed of, and the remaining part to Lincoln-college library; in which college also he fitted up the common room, and built the garden-wall.
professed, they informed the cardinal of their progress, who immediately wrote to Dr. Marshall, the dean, a letter, which by no means exhibits Pole as a man possessed
We have mentioned that Peter Martyr’s wife died at
Oxford, in 1551, and was buried in the cathedral of Christ
church. Here her remains quietly reposed until 1556,
when cardinal Pole appointed a set of commissioners to
reform the university of Oxford, from all remains of the
new religion, or heresy, as it was called. In the discharge
of their functions, they were ordered to take into their
consideration the manners and life “of one Catherine
Cathie, or Dampmartin, the late wife of Dr. Peter Martyr,
who died about four years ago, and was buried in the cathedral of Christ church, near to the reliques of St. Frideswyde.
” They accordingly summoned several persons of
her acquaintance, “to the end that if they could find any
thing of her, favouring of heresy, they might take up her
body and commit it to the fire
” but, as these witnesses
pretended they did not understand her language, and therefore could not tell what religion she professed, they informed the cardinal of their progress, who immediately
wrote to Dr. Marshall, the dean, a letter, which by no
means exhibits Pole as a man possessed of that greatness
of mind which his late biographers have attributed to him.
He tells the dean that “forasmuch as Catherine Cathie, of
detestable memory, who had professed herself the legitimate wife of Peter Martyr, a heretic, though he and she
had before marriage entered into solemn vows of religion,
and that she had lived with him in Oxford in cursed fornication, when he denied the truth of the Sacrament, and
that also after her death she was buried near the sepulchre
of that religious virgin St. Frideswyde; he should according to his discretion deal so with her carcass that it should
be far enough cast from ecclesiastical sepulture.
” Melchior Adam imputes this conduct on the part of the cardinal, to a motive of resentment, which he had conceived
against Peter Martyr. The cardinal had formerly been
his most intimate friend, and even continued to appear so,
after Martyr had expressed his disgust at the errors and
superstitions of Rome; but when Martyr left Italy, he became his most inveterate enemy, and exercised that indignity, and even cruelty upon the wife, which it was not in
his power to shew to the husband.
The body was accordingly taken up and buried in the dunghill near the dean’s stable, and remained there, until queen Elizabeth was settled
The body was accordingly taken up and buried in the
dunghill near the dean’s stable, and remained there, until
queen Elizabeth was settled on the throne, when a singular act of retaliation took place. The archbishop of Canterbury, bishop of London, and others, having ordered
some of the society of Christ church to replace the body,
Dr. Calfhill, the subdean, not content with this, made
search for the relics of St. Frideswyde, and having found
them, put them into the coffin along with the remains of
Martyr’s wife, that in time they might become (indistinguishable. In this state the coffin was solemnly interred in Christ church. On this occasion one of the Oxford wits proposed by way of epitaph, “Hie jacet religio cum superstitione.
” Dr. Calfhiil published in the following year (Historia cte
exhuumione Katherinee nuper uxoris Petri Martyris,
”
in 8vo.
l, with some others, to visit the church, city, and deanry of Bristol. In the same year, he was made dean of Christ-church; and then obtained, from the pen of Camden,
, an eminent English prelate, was the son of John Matthew, a merchant of Bristol, and born in that part of the city which lies in Somersetshire, in 1546. He received the first rudiments of learning in the city of Wells, and at the age of thirteen became a student in the university of Oxford, in the beginning of 1558-9. In Christ Church college he took the degree of bachelor of arts, Feb. 11, 1563, and in June 1566, was made master of arts; about which time he entered into holy orders, and was greatly respected for his learning, eloquence, conversation, friendly disposition, and the sharpness of his wit. On the 2nd of November 1569, he was unanimously elected public orator of the university; which office he filled with great applause. In 1570, he was made canon of the second stall in the cathedral of Christy-church, and November 28 following was admitted archdeacon of Bath. In 1571, he petitioned for his degree of bachelor of divinity, but was not admitted to it for two years. In 1572, he was made prebendary of Teynton-Regis with Yalmeten in the church of Salisbury; and in July following was elected president of St. John’s college, Oxford: at which time, being in high reputation as a preacher, he was appointed one of the queen’s chaplains in ordinary. On December lOth, 175S, he was admitted bachelor of divinity; and next year, May 27, proceeded doctor. On the 14th of June, 1576, being archdeacon at Bath, he was commissioned by archbishop Grindal, with some others, to visit the church, city, and deanry of Bristol. In the same year, he was made dean of Christ-church; and then obtained, from the pen of Camden, the distinguished character of " Theologus praestantissimus/' Camden adds, that learning and piety, art and nature, vied together in his composition. Sir John Harrington is also full of his praises, and even Campian the Jesuit speaks highly of his learning and virtues.
, archbishop Grindal being then under the queen’s displeasure, it was agreed, that our prelate, then dean of Christ-church, should, in the name of that assembly, draw
In 1579, he served the office of Vice-chancellor of the
university. At a convocation held in 1580, archbishop
Grindal being then under the queen’s displeasure, it was
agreed, that our prelate, then dean of Christ-church,
should, in the name of that assembly, draw up an humble
address to her majesty, for the archbishop’s restitution;
but it was not favourably received. June 22, 1583, he was
collated to the precentorship of Salisbury; and Sept. 3
following, was made dean of Durham, being then thirtyseven years of age, on which he resigned his precentorship. From this time, says Le Neve, to the twenty-third
Sunday after Trinity in 1622, he kept an account of all the
sermons he preached, the place where, the time when,
the text what, and if any at court, or before any of the
prime nobility; by which it appears, that he preached,
while dean of Durham, seven hundred and twenty-one;
while bishop of Durham five hundred and fifty; and while
archbishop of. York, to the time above mentioned, seven
hundred and twenty-one; in all one thousand nine hundred
and ninety-two sermons; and among them several extempore. This prelate, adds Le Neve, certainly thought
preaching to be the most indispensible part of his duty;
for in the diary before quoted, wherein, at the end of
each year, he sets down how many sermons he had preached at the end of 1619, “Sum. Ser. 32, eheu! An. 1620,
sum. ser. 35, eheu! An. 1621, sore afflicted with a rheume
and coughe diverse months together, so that I never could
preach until Easter-daye. The Lord forgive me!
” On
the 28th of May, 1590, he was inducted to the rectory of
Bishopwearmouth, co. Durham; and in 1595, April 13,
was consecrated bishop of Durham, and resigned Bishopwearmouth.
ate was much engaged in political matters: Strype gives a letter of his, dated April 9, 1594, whilst dean of Durham, to lord Burleigh, touching Bothwell’s protection;
Our prelate was much engaged in political matters:
Strype gives a letter of his, dated April 9, 1594, whilst
dean of Durham, to lord Burleigh, touching Bothwell’s
protection; in which he says, “I pray God the king’s protestations be not too well believed, who is a deep dissembler, by all men’s judgement that know him best, than is
thought possible for his years.
” Such was the character
he gave of the prince who was shortly to come to the
throne of England. In 1596, commissioners were appointed by the queen to treat with Scotland, and redress
grievances on the borders: the English commissioners were
the bishop of Durham, sir William Bowes, Francis Slingsby, esq. and Clement Colmer, LL.D. The place of
convention was Carlisle, and many months were spent on
that duty; but the good effect of their assiduous
application to the work of peace was much retarded, and almost
rendered abortive, by the outrages repeatedly committed on
the eastern and middle marches. The first article of this
treaty, however, says Ridpath, in his “Border History,
”
does honour to the character of the prelates of the church,
one of whom stood first in the list of commissioners from
each nation. In this article it was resolved, “that the
sovereigns of each king should be addressed, to order
the settlement of ministers at every border-church, for the
sake of reforming and civilizing the inhabitants, by their
salutary instructions and discipline: and for this purpose,
the decayed churches should be repaired: and for the safety
of the persons of their pastors, and due respect to be paid
them in the discharge of their offices, the principal inhabitants of each parish should give security to their
prince.
”
n of the preceding, and a very singular character, was born at Oxford, in 1578, while his tather was dean of Christ church; and matricuJated in 1589, when only eleven
, eldest son of the preceding, and
a very singular character, was born at Oxford, in 1578,
while his tather was dean of Christ church; and matricuJated in 1589, when only eleven years of age. He was
the year after admitted student, and by the advantage of
quick parts, and a good tutor, he soon acquired considerable distinction as an orator and disputant. After taking
his degrees in arts, he left England in 1605, for such improvement as travelling could confer, and made himself a
master of some foreign languages. This journey, however,
was much against his father’s inclination, who expressly
forbade his going to Italy, suspecting probably what happened when he broke his word and went to that country,
where he was converted to popery by the celebrated Jesuit
Parsons, to the great grief of his father, who was theu in
so distinguished a station in the church. He himself informs us that the first impressions made upon him arose
from the devout behaviour of the rustics in the churches
abroad, and from being convinced of the reality of the
liquefaction of the blood of St. Januarius at Naples; but
that his complete conversion was reserved for father Parsons, who gave him to read Mr. William Reynolds’ s “Reprehension of Dr. Whitaker,
” which he esteemed the most
valuable work on wit and humour he had ever seen. It
affords, however, no very favourable idea of Mr. Matthew’s
conversion, that it was begun by an imposture, and perfected by wit and humour.
he was received a member of the Arcadi; and Innocent XII. delighted with his talents, appointed him dean of Alicant. At that place he died,. Dec. 18, 1737, being then
, a Spanish poet, was born at Oropesa in New Castile, in 1663. His poetical essays were published in 1682, in one volume, 4to. This fortunate commencement encouraged the young poet; but it gained himjnvoluntarily, as he was an ecclesiastic, the affections of a lady of great beauty and high rank. In order to retire from this temptation, he went to Rome, where he was received a member of the Arcadi; and Innocent XII. delighted with his talents, appointed him dean of Alicant. At that place he died,. Dec. 18, 1737, being then 74 years old. His letters and Latin poetry, published at Madrid in 1735, in 2 voh. 12mo, prove that he was gifted both with facility of writing and with imagination.
eath, which happened in 1707. He was five times rector of the university of Leipsic, and seven times dean of the faculty of philosophy. He published several works; many
, in Latin Menckenius, a learned
German writer, was born of a good family at Oldenburg,
in Westphalia, in 1644. He cultivated his first studies in
his native place; and at seventeen went to Bremen, where
he applied himself to philosophy. He stayed there one
year, and removed to Leipsic, where he was admitted master of arts in 1664; and afterwards visited the other universities, Jena, Wittemberg, Groningen, Franeker, Utrecht,
Leyden, and Kiel. Upon his return to Leipsic, he applied himself for some time to divinity and civil law. In
1668 he was chosen professor of morality in that university;
and, in 1671, took the degree of licentiate in divinity.
He discharged the duties of his professorship with great
reputation till his death, which happened in 1707. He was
five times rector of the university of Leipsic, and seven
times dean of the faculty of philosophy. He published
several works; many of his own, and some of other people.
The edition of sir John Marsham’s “Canon Chronicus,
”
at Leipsic, in 4to, and a new edition of “Camden’s Annals of queen Elizabeth,
” were procured by him. But his
most considerable work, and what alone is sufficient to
perpetuate his name, is the “Acta eruditorum
” of Leipsic,
of which he was the first author, and in which he was
engaged till his death. When he had formed that design,
he began a correspondence with the learned men of all
nations, in order to inform himself of what passed in the
republic of letters. For the same purpose he took a journey to Holland, and thence to England. He afterwards
formed a society of several persons of eminent abilities, to
assist him in the work, and took all proper measures to
render it lasting. The elector of Saxony contributed, by
his generosity, to the success of the design. The first
volume was published at Leipsic, in 1682, in 4to. Our
author continued to publish, with the assistance of colleagues, every year a volume while he lived, with supplements from time to time, and an index once in ten years.
His share ends with the thirtieth volume.
is with some degree of humour, and is not unsuccessful in imitating the mode of reasoning adopted by dean Milles and Mr. Bryant, in the case of Chatterton.
On his arrival in England, in November 1780, he was appointed joint agent for the disposal of the valuable prizes taken during the Commodore’s cruize; and by the profits of this place, and his share of the prize-money, he was enabled to discharge his debts. This had long been the ardent wish of his heart, the object of all his pursuits, and an object which he at length accomplished with the strictest honour, and with a satisfaction to his own mind the most pure and delightful. Jn 1782 our poet published /'The Prophecy of Queen Emma," a ballad, with an ironical preface, containing an account of its pretended author and discovery, and hints for vindicating the authenticity of the poems of Ossian and Rowley. This irony, however, lost part of its effect by the author’s pretending that a poem, which is modern both in language and versification, was the production of a prior of Durham in the reign of William Rufus, although he endeavours to account for this with some degree of humour, and is not unsuccessful in imitating the mode of reasoning adopted by dean Milles and Mr. Bryant, in the case of Chatterton.
haeological Epistle,” and the more wicked irony of George Steevens in the St. James’s Chronicle. The dean died Feb. 13, 1784, and was buried in the church of St. Edmund,
Bishop Milles left his fortune to his nephew, Jeremiah,
who was born in 1714, and educated at Eton school, when
he entered of Queen’s college, Oxford, as a gentleman
commoner, and took his degrees of M. A. in 1735, and B.
and D. D. in 1747, on which occasion he went out grand
compounder. He was collated by his uncle to a prebend
in the cathedral of Waterford, and to a living near that
city, which he held but a short time, choosing to reside in
England. Here he married Edith, a daughter of archbishop
Potter, by whose interest he obtained the united rectories
of St. Edmund the King and St. Nicholas Aeon in Lombard-street, with that of Merstham, Surrey, and the sinecure rectory of West Terring, in Sussex. To Merstham
he was inducted in 1745. From the chantorship of Exeter
he was promoted to the deanery of that cathedral, in 1762,
on the advancement of Dr. Lyttelton to the see of Carlisle,
whom he also succeeded as president of the society of
antiquaries in 176.5. He had been chosen a fellow of this
society in 1741, and of the Royal Society in 1742. His
speech, on taking upon him the office of president of the
Society of Antiquaries, was prefixed to the first volume of
the Archoeologia. In other volumes of that work are some
papers communicated by him, one of which, “Observations on the Wardrobe Account for the year 1483, wherein are contained the deliveries made for the coronation of
king Richard III. and some other particulars relative to the
history,
” was answered by Mr. Walpole, afterwards lord
Orford, in a paper or essay, very characteristic of his lordship’s ingenuity and haughty petulance. In the early part
of his life, Dr. Milles had made ample collections for a
history of Devonshire, v*hich are noticed by Mr. Gough in
his Topography. Ha was also engaged in illustrating the
Da ish coinage, and the Domesday Survey, on both which
subjects, it is thought, he left much valuable matter. His
worst attempt was to vindicate the authenticity of Rowley’s
poems, in an edition which he printed in 1782, 4to. After
what Tyrwhitt and Warton had advanced on this subject, a
grave answer to this was not necessary; but it was the
writer’s misiortune to draw upon himself the wicked wit
of the author of “An Archaeological Epistle,
” and the more
wicked irony of George Steevens in the St. James’s Chronicle. The dean died Feb. 13, 1784, and was buried in
the church of St. Edmund, which, as well as his other preferments, he retained until his death, with the exception
of the rectory of West Terring, which he resigned to his
son Richard. His character is very justly recorded on his
monument, as one conspicuous for the variety and extent
of his knowledge, and for un remitted zeal and activity in
those stations to which his merit had raised him; nor was
he in private life less distinguished for sweetness of disposition, piety, and integrity.
atin, in which he was assisted by a memory of such uncommon powers, that his biographer, the present dean of Carlisle, says that he never saw his equal, among the numerous
, a pious and learned divine and ecclesiastical historian, was born in the neighbourhood of
Leeds in Yorkshire, Jan. 2, 1744, and was educated at the
grammar school of his native place, where he made great
proficiency in Greek and Latin, in which he was assisted
by a memory of such uncommon powers, that his biographer, the present dean of Carlisle, says that he never saw
his equal, among the numerous persons of science and literature with whom he has been acquainted. This faculty
which Mr. Milner possessed, without any visible decay,
during the whole of his life, gained him no little reputation at school, where his master, the rev. Mr. Moore, often
availed himself of his memory in cases of history and mythology, and used to say, “Milner is more easily consulted than the Dictionaries or the Pantheon, and he is
quite as much to be relied on.
” Moore, indeed, told so
many and almost incredible stories of his memory, that the
rev. Mr. Murgatroyd, a very respectable clergyman, at
that time minister of St. John’s church in Leeds, expressed some suspicion of exaggeration. Mr. Moore was a man
of the strictest veracity, but of a warm temper. He instantly offered to give satisfactory proof of his assertions.
“Milner,
” said he, “shall go to church next Sunday, and
without taking a single note at the time, shall write down
your sermon afterward. Will you permit us to compare
what he writes with what you preach
” Mr. Murgatroyd
accepted the proposal with pleasure, and was often heard
to express his astonishment at the event of this trial of
memory. The lad,“said he,
” has not omitted a single
thought or sentiment in the whole sermon; and frequently
he has got the very words for a long way together."
ent to Queen’s college, Cambridge, in 1770, of which he is now master, professor of mathematics, and dean of Carlisle. Of the affection between those brothers, the survivor
When he had obtained deacon’s orders, he applied for
the place of head-master of the grammar-school at Hull,
and having obtained it, was soon after chosen afternoon,
lecturer in the principal church in that town. Under his
auspices, the school, which had decayed through the negligence of his immediate predecessors, soon acquired and
retained very considerable celebrity, and as the master’s
salary rose in proportion to the increase of scholars, his
income now, on the whole, amounted to upwards of 200L
a year. The first use he made of this great change of circumstances was to discharge those duties that arose from
the situation of his father’s family. His pious affection instantly led him to invite his mother (then living at Leeds in poverty) to Hull, where she became the manager of his
house. He also sent for two indigent orphans, the children
of his eldest brother, and took effectual care of their education. At this time his youngest brother, Isaac, whose
prospects of advancement in learning were ruined by his
father’s death, was now humbly employed in the woollen
manufactory at Leeds. From this situation his brother Joseph instantly removed him, and employed him as his assistant in teaching the lower boys of his crowded school at
Hull. By his brother’s means also, he was sent to Queen’s
college, Cambridge, in 1770, of which he is now master,
professor of mathematics, and dean of Carlisle. Of the
affection between those brothers, the survivor thus speaks,
“Perhaps no two brothers were ever more closely bound
to each other. Isaac, in particular, remembers no earthly 7
thing without being able to connect it, in some way, tenderly with his brother Joseph. During all his life
” he has
constantly aimed at enjoying his company as much as circumstances permitted. The dissolution of such a connection could not take place without being severely felt by
the survivor. No separation was ever more bitter and
afflicting; with a constitution long shattered by disease, he
never expects to recover from That wound."
and made equal progress in mathematics and medicine, he was first chosen professor of medicine, and dean of that faculty, and afterwards royal professor of mathematics.
, an able mathematical
and medical writer, was born at Rheims about 1536, of a
family which possessed jthe estate of Monantheuil in the
Vermandois, in Picardy. He was educated at Paris in the
college de Presles, under Kamus, to whose philosophical
opinions he constantly adhered. Having an equal inclination and made equal progress in mathematics and medicine,
he was first chosen professor of medicine, and dean of that
faculty, and afterwards royal professor of mathematics.
While holding the latter office he had the celebrated De
Thou and Peter Lamoignon among the number of his
scholars. During the troubles of the League, he remained
faithful to his king, and even endangered his personal
safety by holding meetings in his house, under pretence
of scientific conversations, but really to concert measures
for restoring Paris to Henry IV. He died in 1606, in the
seventieth year of his age. His works are, 1 “Oratio pro
mathematicis artibus,
” Paris, Admonitio
ad Jacobum Peletarium de angulo contactus,
” ibid. Oratio pro suo in Regiam cathedram ritu,
” ibid.
Panegyricus dictus Henrico IV. statim a
felicissima et auspicatissima urbis restitutione,
” &c. ibid.
1594, translated into French in 1596. 5. “Oratio qua
ostenditur quale esse debeat collegium professorum regiorum,
” &c. ibid. 15&6, 8vo. 6.“Commentarius in librum
Aristotelis Tt^I Tuv /x>i%avjv,
” Gr. and Lat. ibid. 1599, 4to.
7. “Ludus latromathematicus,
” &c. ibid. De puncto primo Geometriae principio liber, 7 '
Leyden, 1600, 4to. This was at one time improperly attributed to his son, Thierry. 9.
” Problematis omnium quse
&
now been carried on for some months, lieutenant-general Monk was joined with the admirals Blake and Dean in the command at sea; in which service, June 2, 1653, he contributed
About this time his elder brother died without issue male; and the family estate by entail devolving upon him, he repaired it from the ruinous condition in which his father and brother had left it. He had scarce settled his private affairs, when he was called to serve against the Scots (who had proclaimed Charles II.) under Oliver Cromwell; by whom he was made lieutenant-general of the artillery, and had a regiment given him. His services were now so important, that Cromwell left him commander in chief in Scotland, when he returned to England to pursue Charles II. In 1652, he was seized with a violent fit of illness, which obliged him to go to Bath for the recovery of his health: after which, he set out again for Scotland, was one of the commissioners for uniting that kingdom with the new-erected commonwealth, and, having successfully concluded it, returned to London. The Dutch war having now been carried on for some months, lieutenant-general Monk was joined with the admirals Blake and Dean in the command at sea; in which service, June 2, 1653, he contributed greatly by his courage and conduct to the defeat of the Dutch fleet. Monk and Dean were on board the same ship; and, Dean being killed the first broadside, Monk threw his cloak over the body, and gave orders for continuing the fight, without suffering the enemy to know that we had lost one of our admirals. Cromwell, in the mean time, was paving his way to the supreme command, which, Dec. 16, 1653, he obtained, under the title of protector; and, in this capacity, soon concluded a peace with the Dutch. Monk remonstrated warmly against the terms of this peace; and his remonstrances were well received by Oliver’s own parliament. Monk also, on his return home, was treated so respectfully by them, that Oliver is said to have grown jealous of him, as if he had been inclined to another interest, but, receiving satisfaction from the general on that head, he not only took him into favour, but, on the breaking out of fresh troubles in Scotland, sent him there as commander in chief. He set out in April 1654, and finished the war by August; when he returned from the Highlands, and fixed his abode at Dalkeith, a seat belonging to the countess of Buccleugh, within five miles of Edinburgh: and here he resided during the remaining time that he stayed in Scotland, which was five years, amusing himself with rural pleasures, and beloved by the people, though his government was more arbitrary than any they had experienced. He exercised this government as one of the protector’s council of state in Scotland, whose commission bore date in June 1655. Cromwell, however, could not help distrusting him at times, on account of his popularity; nor was this distrust entirely without the appearance of foundation. It is certain the fcing entertained good hopes of him, and to that purpose sent to him the following letter from Colen, Aug. 12, 1655.
ings and more postillions than any man in Europe.” He was indeed so active a traveller, according to Dean Swift, that queen Anne’s ministers used to say, they wrote at
Lord Peterborough was a man of great courage and
skill as a commander, and was successful in almost all
his undertakings. As a politician, he appears also to much,
advantage, being open, honest, and patriotic in the genuine sense. Lord Or ford has characterized him well in
other respects, as “one of those men of careless wit and
negligent grace, who scatter a thousand bon-mots and
idle verses, which (such) painful compilers (as lord Orford)
gather and hoard, till the owners stare to find themselves
authors. Such was this lord of an advantageous figure,
and enterprizing spirit as gallant as Amadis, and as brave,
but a little more expeditious in his journeys; for he is said
to have seen more kings and more postillions than any man
in Europe.
” He was indeed so active a traveller, according to Dean Swift, that queen Anne’s ministers used to
say, they wrote at him, and not to him . What lord
Peterborough wrote, however, seems scarcely worth notice,
unless in such a publication as the “Royal and Noble
Authors,
” where the freedom of that illustrious company is
bestowed on the smallest contributors to literary amusement. He is said to have produced “La Muse de Cavalier; or, an apology for such gentlemen as make poetry
their diversion, and not their business,
” in a letter inserted
in the “Public Register,
” a periodical work by Dodsley,
A copy of verses on the duchess of Marl-'
borough
” <c Song, by a person of quality,“beginning
” I said to my heart, between sleeping and waking, &c.“inserted in Swift’s Works.
” Remarks on a pamphlet,“respecting the creation of peers, 1719, 8vo; but even for
some of these trifles, the authority is doubtful. His correspondence with Pope is no little credit to that collection.
He was the steady friend and correspondent of Pope, Swift,
and other learned men of their time, as he had been of
Pryden, who acknowledges his kindness and partiality.
The
” Account of the Earl of Peterborough’s conduct in
Spain,“taken from his original letters and papers, was
drawn up by Dr. Freind, and published in 1707, 8vo. Dr.
Jf reind says, that
” he never ordered off a detachment of
a hundred men, without going with them himself.“Of
his own courage his lordship used to say, that it proceeded
from his not knowing his danger; agreeing in opinion with.
Turenne, that a coward had only one of the three faculties
of the mind apprehension. Of his liberality, we have this
instance, that the remittances expected from England, not
coming to his troops when he commanded in Spain, he is
said to have supplied them for some time with money from
his own pocket. In this he differed considerably from his
great contemporary the duke of Marlborough, and the difference is stated in one of his best bon-mots. Being once
taken by the mob for the duke, who was then in disgrace
with them, he would probably have been roughly treated
by these friends to summary justice, had he not addressed
them in these words:
” Gentlemen, I can convince you
by two reasons that I am not the duke. In the first place,
I have only five guineas in my pocket; and in the second,
they are heartily at your service." So throwing his purse
among them, he pursued his way amid loud acclamations.
Many other witticisms may be seen in our authorities,
which are less characteristic.
four or five hours’ sleep in the night. He was also a diligent attendant on the public preaching of dean Colet, whom he chose for his spiritual father, and once had
When admitted to the bar, he had read a public lecture,
in the church of St. Lawrence Jewry, upon St. Austin’s
treatise “De civitate Dei,
” in which, without attempting
to discuss any points of divinity, he explained the precepts
of moral philosophy, and cleared up difficulties in history,
and that with such skill, eloquence, and ability, as to attract a large number of hearers among persons of note
and learning; and Grocyn himself, who had been his master in Greek, also became one of his auditors. The reputation of this lecture, which appears to have been gratuitous, made him be appointed law-reader at FurnivaPs-inn,
which place he held above three years. Some time after,
the superstition which we lament in this illustrious man’s
character, led him to take lodgings near the Charter-house,
where he went through all the spiritual exercises of that
society. He disciplined himself every Friday, and on high
fasting days; he used also much fasting and watching, and
often lay either upon the bare ground, or upon some bench,
with a log under his head, and allowed himself but four or
five hours’ sleep in the night. He was also a diligent attendant on the public preaching of dean Colet, whom he
chose for his spiritual father, and once had a strong inclination to enter into the order of the Franciscans, as well
as to take the priesthood. But rinding that all his austerities were of little avail in procuring him the gift of continence, he took Dr. Colet’s advice, and resolved to marry.
Having some acquaintance with John Colt, esq. of Newhall in Essex, he now accepted an invitation to visit him.
Mr. Colt had three accomplished and agreeable daughters,
the eldest of whom Mr. More chose for a wife, although
his inclination rather led him to the second, but he considered it “would be a grief and some blemish to the eldest,
”
should he act otherwise. Bringing his wife to town he
took a house in Bucklersbury, and attended the business of
his profession at his chambers in Lincoln’s inn, where he
continued till he was called to the bench, and had read
there twice. This was a very honourable post at that time:
and some of these readings are quoted by lord Coke as uncontested authorities in the law. In the mean time he was
appointed, in 1508, judge of the sheriff’s court in the city
of London; made a justice of the peace; and became so
eminent in the practice of the law, that there was scarcely
a cause of importance tried at the bar in which he was not
concerned. Sir Thomas told his son-in-law Roper, that
be earned by his business at this time, with a good conscience, above 400l. a year, which is equal to six times
that sum now. He was, however, uncommonly scrupulous in the causes he undertook. It was his constant method, before he took any cause in hand, to investigate the
justice and equity of it; and if he thought it unjust, he refused it, at the same time endeavouring to reconcile the
parties, and persuading them not to litigate the matter in
dispute. Where not successful in this advice, he would
direct his clients how to proceed in the least expensive and
troublesome course. It may, indeed, be seen in his
“Utopia,
” that he satirizes the profession, as if he did not
belong to it.
ng to Baxter, was the most fluent and chief speaker of all the bishops. Some time after, he was made dean of his majesty’s royal chapel; and, in 1662, upon the death
When all things were preparing for the king’s restoration, Morley was sent over by chancellor Hyde, two
months before, to help to pave the way for that great event.
In this undertaking he had some trouble in repressing the
intemperance of the royalists, who accustomed themselves
to inveigh against the republicans in a manner calculated
to irritate those who had as yet a considerable share of
power in their hands. He conversed also with the heads
of the presbyterian party, without entering too deeply
into particulars, but avowed himself a Calvinist, because
he knew that they entertained the most favourable opinion
of such churchmen as were of that persuasion. His chief
business, however, in this kind of embassy, was to confute
the report that Charles II. was a papist. In this he was
probably more successful than correct. Upon the king’s
return, he was not only restored to his canonry, but also
promoted to the deanry of Christ-church. He was installed,
July 1660, and nominated to the bishopric of Worcester,
October following. In 1661, he was a principal manager at
the conference between the episcopal and presbyterian
divines, commissioned under the great seal to review the
liturgy; and, according to Baxter, was the most fluent
and chief speaker of all the bishops. Some time after, he
was made dean of his majesty’s royal chapel; and, in 1662,
upon the death of Dr. Duppa, was translated to the bishopric of Winchester; when the king, it is said, told
him, “he would be never the richer for it.
” He was, in
truth, a great benefactor to this see; for, besides the repairing of the palace at Winchester, he spent above 8000l.
in repairing Farnham-castle, and above 4000l. in purchasing Winchester-house at Chelsea, to annex to this see.
Many other benefactions of his are recorded. He gave
300/ per ann. to Christ-church in Oxford, for the public
use of that college: he founded five scholarships of lOl. per
annum each, in Pembroke-college, three for the Isie of
Jersey, and two for Guernsey he gave, at several times,
upwards of 1800l. to the church of St. Paul, London and
he bequeathed in his will 1000l. to purchase lands for the
augmenting of some small vicarages. By temperance and
exercise he reached a very old age, and died at Farnhamcastle, Oct. 29, 1684, and was’buried in Winchester cathedral.
for the church, as he was a younger son, with a view to succeed his uncle Bertin de Mornay, who was dean of Beauvais and abbe of Saumur, and who had promised to resign
, lord of Plessis Marly, an illustrious French protestunt, privy-counsellor of Henry IV. and governor of Saumur, was born at Buhi or Bishuy, in the French Vexin, in 1549. He was descended from an ancient and noble family, which had, in course of time, divided itself into several brandies, and produced many great aiKi eminent men. His father, James de Morn ay, had done great services to the royal family in the wars; but in the time of peace led a very retired life, and was much attacnecl to the religion of his country He designed Philip for the church, as he was a younger son, with a view to succeed his uncle Bertin de Mornay, who was dean of Beauvais and abbe of Saumur, and who had promised to resign those preferments to him; but this plan was rendered abortive by the death of the uncle. In the mean time his mother, who was the daughter of Charles du Bee Cre^pin, vice-admiral of France, and chamberlain to Francis II. was secretly a protestant, and had taken care to inspire her son insensibly with her own principles. His father died when he was not more than ten years of age; and his mother, making open profession of the protestant religion in 1561, set up a lecture in her own house, xvhich confirmed hirn in it. His literary education was all the while carrying on with the utmost care and circumspection he had masters provided for him in all languages and sciences and the progress he made in all was what might be expected from his very uncommon parts and application.
t to St. John’s college in Cambridge, and placed under the tuition of Mr. Anthony Higgon, afterwards dean of Rippon, who left him to the care of Mr. Henry Nelson, afterwards
, a learned English bishop in the
seventeenth century, was of the same family with cardinal
Morton, and was the sixth son of nineteen children of Mr.
Richard Morton, an eminent mercer and alderman of York,
by Elizabeth Leedale his wife. He was born at York,
March 20, 1564, and was 6rst educated there under Mr. Pullen, and afterwards at Halifax under Mr. Maud. In 1582
he was sent to St. John’s college in Cambridge, and placed
under the tuition of Mr. Anthony Higgon, afterwards dean
of Rippon, who left him to the care of Mr. Henry Nelson,
afterwards rector of Hougham ia Lincolnshire, who lived
to see his pupil bishop of Durham, and many years after.
In the beginning of November 1584, he was chosen to a
scholarship of Constable’s foundation, peculiar to his native county of York; and in 1586 took the degree of bachelor of arts, and in 1590 that of master, having performed the exercises requisite to each degree with great
applause. He continued his studies at his father’s charge
until March 17, 1592, when he was admitted fellow, of the
foundation of Dr. Keyson, merely on account of his merit,
against eight competitors for the place. About the same
time he was chosen logic lecturer of the university, which,
office he discharged with ^reat skill and diligence, as appeared from his lectures found among his papers. The
same year he was ordained deacon, and the year following
priest by Richard Rowland, bishop of Peterborough. He
continued five years after this in the college, pursuing his
private studies, and instructing pupils. In 1598 he took
the degree of bachelor of divinity; and ahout the same
year was presented to the rectory of Long Marston four
miles from York. He was afterwards made chaplain to the
earl of Huntingdon, lord president of the North, who selected him for his zeal and acuteness in disputing with the
Romish recusants. It was queen Elizabeth’s command to
his lordship, to prefer arguments to force with these people: and this she expressed, as the earl used to say, in the
words of scripture, “Nolo mortem peccatoris.
” Afterwards, when lord Huntingdon was dead, and lord Sheffield
was appointed lord president, Morton held a public conference before his lordship and the council, at the manor-,
house at York, with two popish recusants, then prisoners
in the castle. In 1602, when the plague raged in that
city, he behaved with the greatest charity and resolution.
The year following, the lord Eure being appointed ambassador-extraordinary to the emperor of Germany, and king
of Denmark, Morton attended him as chaplain, along with
Mr. Richard Crakenthorp, and took this opportunity to
make a valuable collection of books, as well as to visit the
universities of Germany. At his return he became chapJain to Roger earl of Rutland, and was afterwards presented
by archbishop Matthews to a prebend in the cathedral of
York. In 1606 he took the degree of doctor of divinity;
and about the same time was sworn chaplain in ordinary to
king James I. and preferred to the deanery of Gloucester,
June 22, 1607. While he was dean there, the lord Eure
above mentioned, then lord president of Wales, appointed
him one of his majesty’s council for the marches. In 1609,
he was removed to the deanery of Winchester; and while
there, the bishop (Bilson) collated him to the rectory of
Alesford. In the same year, Dr. Sutcliff, dean of Exeter,
founding a college at Chelsea, for divines to be employed
in defending the protestant religion against the papists, he
was appointed one of the fellows. About this time, he
became acquainted with Isaac Casaubon. In 1615, he
was advanced to the see of Chester and, in 1618, to that
of Lichfield and Coventry about which time he became
acquainted with Antonio de Dominis, abp. of Spalato,
whom he endeavoured to dissuade from returning to Rome.
The archbishop’s pretence for going thither was, to attempt
an unity between the church of Rome and that of England, upon those terms which he had laid down in his
book entitled “De Repnblica Christiana.
”
22, 1659, in his ninety-fifth year. His funeral sermon was preached by Dr. John Barwick, afterwards dean of St. Paul’s, and printed at London, in 1660, under this title,
out of the Old and New Testament, he over to him. He died at about twentycotnmitted them perfectly to memory, six years of a$e,
iipon his uncle’s twice reading them
granted at first by the lady Saville, in the minority of her
son sir George, and afterwards confirmed by himself when
he came to be of age. At last he was obliged to quit
Durham-yard, by the soldiers who came to garrison it, a
little before the death of Charles I.; and then went to
Exeter-house in the Strand, at the invitation of the earl of
Rutland, where he continued but a short time. After several removals, he took up his abode with sir Henry Yelverton, at Easton Mauduit in Northamptonshire, where he
died Sept. 22, 1659, in his ninety-fifth year. His funeral
sermon was preached by Dr. John Barwick, afterwards dean
of St. Paul’s, and printed at London, in 1660, under this
title, “Ιερονικησ: or, The Fight, Victory, and Triumph,
of St. Paul, accommodated to the Right Rev. Father in
God, Thomas, late Lord Bishop of Duresme.
”
lundered, and persecuted. After the restoration we can trace him more exactly. He was made, in 1660, dean of Christ Church, Dublin, and in 1662, prebendary of Knaresborough
, was a learned and pious Irish
prelate, of whose early history we find no account. Mr.
Nichols, in his “Anecdotes,
” says that he “appears to
have been appointed to be minister of St. Peter’s, Paul’s
Wharf, London, after the sequestration of Edward Merbury;
” but this is quite, inconsistent with bishop Kenn’s
account of him, in his funeral sermon on lady Margaret
Maynard. There he says that Dr. Mossom, during the
usurpation, was silenced, plundered, and persecuted. After the restoration we can trace him more exactly. He
was made, in 1660, dean of Christ Church, Dublin, and
in 1662, prebendary of Knaresborough in the cathedral of
York. From thence he was promoted to the see of Derry
in March 1666, with which he held his deanery of Christ
Church, but resigned his prebend. He died at Londonderry, Dec. 21, 1679, and was buried in the cathedral.
Harris mentions his book entitled “The Preacher’s Tripartite,
” Lond. Variae colloquendi Formulas, in usum condiscipulorum in palaestra
literaria sub paterno moderamine vires Minervales exercentium, parthn collects, partim composite a Roberto
Mossom,
” Lond. Narrative panegyrical
on the life, &c. of George Wild, bishop of Derry,
” Zion’s prospect in its first view, in a summary
of divine truths, viz. of God, Providence, decrees,
” &c.
llo Ccesarem a just Appeal against two unjust Informers” which, having the approbation of Dr. White, dean of Carlisle, whom king James ordered to read, and give his sense
In 1624 he became involved in those controversies and
imputations on his character as a divine, which, more or
less, disturbed the tranquillity of the whole of his life.
They were occasioned by the following circumstance:?.
Some popish priests and Jesuits were executing their mission at Stamford -Rivers, in Essex, of which he was then
rector; and to secure his flock against their attempts, he
]eft some propositions at the place of their meeting, with
an intimation that, if any of those missionaries could give a
satisfactory answer to the queries he had put, he would
immediately become their proselyte. In these, he required of the papists to prove, that the present Roman
church is either the catholic church, or a sound member of
the catholic church that the present church of England is
not a true member of the catholic church and that all
those points, or any one of those points which the church
of Rome maintains against the church of England, were,
or was, the perpetual doctrine of the catholic church, the
decided doctrine of the representative church in any general council, or national approved by a general council, or
the dogmatical resolution of any one father for 500 years
after Cnrist. On their proving all this in the affirmative,
he promised to subscribe to their faith. Instead, however,
of returning any answer, a small pamphlet was left at last
for him, entitled “A new Gag for the old Gospel.
” To
this he replied, in “An Answer to the late Gagger of the
Protestants,
” Appello Ccesarem a just Appeal against two unjust Informers
” which, having the approbation of Dr. White, dean of Carlisle, whom king James
ordered to read, and give his sense of it, was published in
1625, 4to, but addressed to Charles I. James dying before
the book was printed off.
nes of that period appeared from the answers to his “Appeal” published by, It Dr. Matthew Sutcliffe, dean of Exeter. 2. Mr. Henry Burton in his “Plea to an Appeale,”
In this work many of the acknowledged doctrines of the
church of England are undoubtedly maintained with great
force of argument, but there are other points in which he
afforded just ground for the suspicions alleged against him;
and that this was the opinion of many divines of that period
appeared from the answers to his “Appeal
” published by,
It Dr. Matthew Sutcliffe, dean of Exeter. 2. Mr. Henry
Burton in his “Plea to an Appeale,
” Lond. Testis Veritatis,
” ibid. Ibis ad Caesarem,
” ibid. Pelagius Redivivus; or, Pelagius raked out of the ashes by Arminius and his scholars,
”
ibid. Examination of those
things, wherein the author of the late Appeale holdeth the
doctrines of the Pelagians and Arminians to be the doc-
”
trines of the church of England," ibid. 1626, 4to.
it, obtained many powerful friends. Among the foremost of these was Dr. Fontayne, the late venerable dean of York; who, when Dr. Green died, towards the latter end of
, doctor of music, an eminent composer and teacher in that science, under whom some of the
first musicians of the present day received the whole or
part of their education, was tfce son of Mr. Nares, who
was, for many years, steward to Montague and Willoughby,
earl* of Abingdon. He was born, as well as his brother,
the late Mr. Justice Nares, at Stanwell in Middlesex; the
former in 1715, the latter in 1716. His musical education he commenced under Mr. Gates, then master of the
royal choristers; and completed it under the celebrated
Dr. Pepusch. Thus prepared, he officiated, for some time,
as deputy to Mr. Pigott, organist of Windsor; but, on
the resignation of Mr. Salisbury, organist of York, in
1734, was chosen to succeed him, being then only nineteen. It is related, on undoubted authority, that, when
the old musician first saw his intended successor, he said,
rather angrily, “What! is that child to succeed me?
”
which being mentioned to the organist-elect, he took an
early opportunity, on a difficult service being appointed,
to play it throughout half a note below the pitch, which
brought it into a key with seven sharps; and went through
it without the slightest error. Being asked why he did so,
he said, that “he only wished to shew Mr. Salisbury what
a child could do.
” His knowledge in all branches of
his profession was equal to his practical skill in this instance; and, during his residence at York, where he
was abundantly employed as a teacher, and where he
married, Mr. Nares, by his good conduct, as well as
professional merit, obtained many powerful friends.
Among the foremost of these was Dr. Fontayne, the
late venerable dean of York; who, when Dr. Green died,
towards the latter end of 1755, exerted his interest so
successfully, that he obtained for him the united places of
organist and composer to his majesty. He removed,
therefore, to London in the beginning of 1756; and,
about the same time, was created doctor in music at Cambridge.
In 1722 he published a pamphlet, entitled “A Letter to the Rev. Dr. Francis Hare, dean of Worcester, occasioned by his reflections on the Dissenters,
In 1722 he published a pamphlet, entitled “A Letter
to the Rev. Dr. Francis Hare, dean of Worcester, occasioned by his reflections on the Dissenters, in his late visitation Sermon and Postscript,
” 8vo. In the same year he
published a tract which excited considerable attention from
the novelty and importance of its subject, “A Narrative
of the method and success of inoculating the Small-pox, in
New-England, by Mr. Benjamin Colman; with a reply to
the objections made against it from principles of conscience, in a letter from a minister at Boston. To which
is now prefixed, an historical introduction.
” This procured him an interview with their royal highnesses the
prince and princess of Wales, afterwards George II. and
queen Caroline.
cassel was elected in his place by the chapter of that city; but, Alexander VII. preferring M. Catz, dean of the chapter of Harlem, they agreed between them, as a means
, a celebrated bishop of the
catholics in Holland, known by the title of bishop of Castoria, was born at Gorcum in 1626. He entered the congregation of the oratory at Paris, and, having finished his
plan of education there, went to be professor of philosophy
at Saumur, then of divinity at Mechlin, and was afterwards
archdeacon of Utrecht, and apostolical provincial. James
de la Torre, archbishop of Utrecht, being dead, M. de
Neercassel was elected in his place by the chapter of that
city; but, Alexander VII. preferring M. Catz, dean of the
chapter of Harlem, they agreed between them, as a means
to preserve peace, that M. Catz should govern the diocese
of Harlem under the title of archbishop of Philippi, and
M. de Neercassel that of Utrecht, under that of bishop of
Castoria. This agreement being approved by the nuncio
of Brussels, they were both consecrated in the same day at
Cologn, September 9, 1662; but, M. Catz dying a year
after, M. de Neercassel remained sole bishop of all the
catholics in Holland, of which there were above four hundred thousand. He governed them with great prudence,
and, after having discharged the duties of his office in the
most exemplary manner, died June 8, 1686, aged sixty,
in consequence of the fatigues attending the visitation of
his churches. This prelate left three tracts in Latin, the
first “On reading of the Holy Scriptures;
” to which he
has added a dissertation “On the Interpretation of Scripture;
” the second “On the worship of the Saints and the
Holy Virgin;
” the third, enticed “Amor Prerii tens.
” This
last is a treatise on the necessity of the love of God in the
sacrament of penitence. The two first have been translated into French by M. le Roy, abbot of Haute- Fontaine,
2 vols. 8vo, and the third by Peter Gilbert, a Parisian,
1741, 3 vols. 12mo. The best Latin edition of “Amor
Pcenitens
” is that of Amor Prenitens
” condemned at Rome
but pope Innocent XL to whom the application was addressed, declared that “the book contained sound doctrine, and the author was a holy man.
”
aac Newton; and our author, apparently by the advantage of his fellow-traveller’s instructions, sent dean Tillotson a description of it. Before he left Paris he received
In 1680 he was chosen F. R. S. probably by the introduction of his friend and school-fellow, Dr. Halley, for
whom he had a particular regard, and in whose company
he set out on his travels the same year. In the road to
Paris they saw the remarkable comet which gave rise to
the cometical astronomy of sir Isaac Newton; and our
author, apparently by the advantage of his fellow-traveller’s instructions, sent dean Tillotson a description of
it. Before he left Paris he received a letter from a friend
in the English court, suggesting to him to purchase a place
there, and promising his assistance in it. But although
Nelson had a great affection for king Charles and the duke
of York, and was at first pleased with the thoughts of aU
taching himself to the court, on which, however, at that
time, he was more likely to confer honour, than to derive
any from it, yet he could not resolve upon an affair of
such consequence without the approbation of his mother
and uncle. He first, therefore, applied to Tillotson to
obtain their opinion, with assurances of determining himself by their and the dean’s advice; but, finding no encouragement from either of the parties, he relinquished his
intention, and pursued his journey with his fellow-traveller
to Rome. Here he became acquainted with a lady considerably older than himself, the lady Theophila Lucy,
widow of sir Kingsmili Lucy, of Broxburne, Herts, bare,
and second daughter of George earl of Berkeley, who soon
discovered a strong passion for him, which concluded in a
marriage, after his arrival in England, in 1682. His disappointment was, however, very great, when he found
that she had deceived him in one very essential point, that
of her having been won over to the popish religion while
on this tour; and it was some time before she confessed
this change, which was owing to her acquaintance with
Bossuet, and conversations at Rome with cardinal Philip
Howard, who was grandson of the earl of Arundel, the
collector of the Arundelian marbles, &c. and had been
raised to the purple by Clement X. in May 1675. Nor
was this important alteration of her religious sentiments
confined to her own mind, but involved in it her daughter
by her first husband, whom she drew over to her new religion; and her zeal for it prompted her even to become a
writer in one of the controversies so common at that time.
She is the supposed authoress of a piece printed in 1686,
4to, under the title of “A Discourse concerning a Judge
of Controversy in matters of Religion, shewing the necessity of such a judge.
”
ot vetustiss. quos in commune bonum congessit W. K. dec. Petriburg. 1712.” These books are kept with dean Lockyer’s, in the library of Lady-chapel, behind the high altar,
, an English divine, was born at
Wotton, in the parish of Stanton Lacy, near Lud'low in
Shropshire, in 1694, and was educated at St. John’s college, Cambridge, where he took his degree of B. A. in
1714. He appears then to have left college, and became
schoolmaster of Spalding, and minor-canon of Peterborough, where he was a joint-founder of “The Gentleman’s
Society,
” and became its secretary. He was afterwards
prebendary of Lincoln, archdeacon of Huntingdon in 1747,
and rector of Alwalton in Huntingdonshire, where he died
Feb. 3, 1757, aged sixty-three. There is an inscription to
his memory against the West wall of the North transept,
in which he is styled D. D. In 1727, he communicated to
the Spalding Society “An Essay on the invention of
Printing and our first Printers,
” and bishop Rennet’s donation of books to Peterborough cathedral. In the first
leaf of the catalogue (3 vols. in folio, written neatly in the bishop’s own hand) is this motto “Upon the dung-hill was found a pearl. Index librorurn aliquot vetustiss.
quos in commune bonum congessit W. K. dec. Petriburg.
1712.
” These books are kept with dean Lockyer’s, in the
library of Lady-chapel, behind the high altar, in deal
presses, open to the vergers and sextons. In a late repair
of this church, which is one of the noblest monuments of
our early architecture, this benefactor’s tomb-stone was
thrust and half-covered behind the altar, and nothing marks
the place of his interment. Mr. Neve was chaplain to,
and patronised by Dr. Thomas, bishop of Lincoln, and
published one sermon, being his first visitation-sermon,
entitled “Teaching with Authority;
” the text Matth. vii.
28, 29. Dr. Neve bore an excellent character for learning
and personal worth. He married, for his second wife,
Christina, a daughter of the rev. Mr. Greene, of Drinkstone, near Bury, Suffolk, and sister to lady Davers of
Rushbrook. His son Timothy was born at Spalding, Oct.
12, 1724, and was elected scholar of Corpus Christi college, Oxford, where he proceeded M. A. 1744; and in
1747 was elected fellow. In 1753, he took his degree of
B. D. and that of D. D. in 1758, and on being presented by the college to the rectory of Geddington in Oxfordshire, resigned his fellowship in 1762. He was also
presented by Dr. Green, bishop of Lincoln, to the rectory
of Middleton Btoney, in the same county. On the death
of Dr. Randolph (father to the late bishop of London), in
1783, he was elected Margaret professor of divinity, at
Oxford, and was installed prebendary of Worcester in
April of that year. He was early a member of the Literary
Society of Spalding. He died at Oxford Jan. 1, 1798, aged
seventy-four, leaving a wife and two daughters.
, dean of Canterbury, and an eminent benefactor to Trinity college,
, dean of Canterbury, and an eminent benefactor to Trinity college, Cambridge, brother to the preceding, was born in Canterbury, to which city his father, who had spent his younger days at court, had, in his declining years, retired. He entered early at Pembroke-hall, Cambridge, of which he was elected a fellow in November 1570. In 1580, he was senior proctor of the university, and in 1582 was presented to the mastership of Magdalen -college by the then patron of that office, Thomas lord Howard, first earl of Suffolk. In 1587, the queen, to whom he was chaplain, conferred on him the second prebend in the church of Ely, at which time he was also rector of Doddington cum Marchj in the isle of Ely. In 158S, he was elected vice-chancellor of the University, but relinquished the office, in the following year, to Dr. Preston, master of Trinity-hall. While he presided in this station, he took the degree of D. D. During his being vice-chancellor, it is only recorded, that he had occasion to repress the freedoms which two of the university preachers took when speaking in their sermons of the established church.
lf was removed, and the monuments, in taking down, almost entirely destroyed. The inscription to the dean only remains, and is placed between two mutilated figures of
By his munificence to Trinity-college, Dr. Nevile has secured to himself the gratitude and admiration of posterity. He expended more than 3000l. in rebuilding that fine quadrangle, which to this day retains the name of Nevil’s-eourt. He was also a contributor to the library of that college, and a benefactor to East-bridge hospital in his native city. He was not less a generous patron of many scholars who became the ornaments of the succeeding age. He was buried in Canterbury-cathedral, in the ancient chantry in the South aile, which he had fitted up as the burial-place of his family, and which was afterwards called NeviPs chapel. Here he placed a monument to the memory of his father, mother, and uncle; and another was erected to himself: but in 1787, when the cathedral was new paved, the chapel itself was removed, and the monuments, in taking down, almost entirely destroyed. The inscription to the dean only remains, and is placed between two mutilated figures of himself and his elder brother Alexander, in the chapel of the Virgin Mary.
ntroversy between him and Dr. Conybeare, then rector of Exeter, and afterwards bishop of Bristol and dean of Christ church. In August 1740, however, he obtained the charter
“He died at Lavendon Grange, extremely lamented by
all the poor of that neighbourhood, to whom he was a kind
benefactor, and by all his friends and acquaintance throughout the kingdom. Upon his death-bed, he ordered all his
writings to be destroyed, as his worthy widow informed
me; and she was a conscientious person. His friend, Dr t
Hunt, advised her to be cautious, and to be sure she did
not mistake his meaning, especially with regard to some
articles. I also, to whom she paid a favourable regard,
presumed to suggest the same caution. How far that
good lady proceeded in the proposed destruction of the
worthy doctor’s papers, I am not able to say; but do hitherto suppose she reduced them to ashes. Upon a
vacancy of the public orator’s place at Oxford, Newton
offered himself a candidate; but Digby Cotes, then fellow
of All Souls-college, and afterwards principal of Magdalenhall, carried the point against him. Newton’s friends
thought him to be by far the more qualified person for that
eminent post; though orator Digby was also, I think, a
man of worth as well as reputation. Newton survived him.
Dr. Newton was well skilled in the modern foreign languages, as well as in the ancient ones of Greece and Rome.
A well-polished gentleman, and, at the same time, a sincere Christian. He carried dignity in his aspect, but
sweetened with great modesty, humility, and freedom of
conversation. This I know, having carefully observed
bim, and having always found him even and uniform, both
in his temper and in his conduct. One thing comes novr
into my mind. Being a guest for a night or two at his
house at Lavendon, in the summer-1749, and in my way
to Oxford and London, &c. I had much familiar and free
discourse with him, and particularly upon the subject of a
reasonable reform in some particulars relating to our ecclesiastical establishment a reform, to which he was a hearty
welt- wisher. One evening, there being present his worthy vice-principal Mr. Saunders, and an ingenious young
gentleman of fortune, a pupil of Saunders, the doctor
was pleased to propose to us this question: What share are
ifce to allow to Common Sense and Reason in matters of lieKgion? Those two gentlemen and myself being silent, he
addressed himself particularly to me, who was, in pqiuT-qf
age, superior to them both. I freely answered, that, in
my poor opinion, the due exercise of common sense and
reason^ and private judgment in all matters of religion,
ought to be allowed to all Christians. He said, he was of
the same mind. He read prayers in his family at Lavendon, morning and evening, being select parts of the public liturgy. On Wednesdays and Fridays the litany only.
He appointed to his studious guests several separate apartments (being parlours) for private study, with pen, ink,
and paper, for each, and the use of his library, which was
near those apartments, &c. When Pelham was minister,
that station corrupted the man, and made him like other
ministers; for when he was asked why he did not place, in
proper station, the able and meritorious Dr. Newton, he
said, `How could I do it? he never asked me' forgetting
his tutor. Mr. Pelham more than once employed Dr.
Newton to furnish king’s speeches.
”
His foundation of Hertford-college, for which chiefly he
is now remembered, was an unfortunate speculation, ft
was preceded by some publications calculated to make
known his opinions on academic education. The first of
these, which appeared in 1720, was entitled “A Scheme of
Discipline, with Statutes intended to be established by a
royal charter for the education of youth in Hert-hall;
” and
in University Education,
” which chiefly relates
to the removal of students from one college to another,
without the leave of their respective governors, or of the
chancellor. This appears to have involved him in some
unpleasant altercations with his brethren. His application,
for a charter to take Hert-hall from under the jurisdiction
of Exeter- college, and erect it into an independent college,
occasioned a controversy between him and Dr. Conybeare,
then rector of Exeter, and afterwards bishop of Bristol and
dean of Christ church. In August 1740, however, he obtained the charter for raising Hert-hall into a perpetual
college, for the usual studies; the society to consist of a
principal, four senior fellows or tutors, eight junior fellows
or assistants, eight probationary students, twenty-four actual students, and four scholars. He contributed an annuity of 55l. 6s. Sd. issuing out of his house at Lavendon,
and other lands in that parish, to be an endowment for the
four senior fellows at the rate of 13l. 6s. Sd. each yearly.
He then purchased some houses in the neighbourhood of
Hert-hall for its enlargement, and expended about 1500l.
on building the chapel and part of an intended new quadrangle. Very few benefactors afterwards appeared to
complete the establishment, which, by the aid of independent members subsisted for some years, but has of late
gradually fallen off, and it is but within these few months
that a successor could be found to the late principal Dr.
Bernard Hodgson, who died in 1805. Dr. Newton’s radical error in drawing up the statutes, was his fixing the
price of every thing at a maximum, and thus injudiciously
overlooking the progress of the markets, as well as the
state of society. He seems indeed to have been more intent on establishing a school upon rigid and ceconomical
principles, than a college which, with equal advantages in
point of education, should keep pace with the growing
liberality and refinement of the age.
Besides some single sermons, Dr. Newton published in
answer to the learned Wharton on pluralities, a volume
entitled “Pluralities indefensible,
” Proposals for printing by subscription 4000 copies
of the Characters of Theophrastus, for the benefit of Hertford-college;
” but this did not appear until a year after
his death, when it was published by his successor Dr. William Sharp, in an 8vo volume. The produce to the college
is said to have amounted to 1000l., which we much doubt,
as the price was only six shillings each copy. In 1784, a
volume of his “Sermons
” was published by his grandson,
S.Adams, LL. B. 8vo.
directed to the chapter, and not to the bishop, and the date thereof being July 15, though the late dean (Grahme,) did not resign till the 5th of August, and some dispute
In 1702, on the eve of Ascension day, our author was
elected bishop of Carlisle, confirmed June 3, and
consecrated June 14, at Lambeth. This promotion he owed to
the interest of the house of Edenhall. On Sept. 15, 1704,
the celebrated Dr. Atterbury, who had reflected with
much harshness on some parts of the “Historical Library,
”
waited upon bishop Nicolson at Rose, for institution to the
deanery of Carlisle; but the letters patent being directed
to the chapter, and not to the bishop, and the date thereof
being July 15, though the late dean (Grahme,) did not resign till the 5th of August, and some dispute also arising
about the regal supremacy, institution was then refused.
The bishop, however, declared at the same time that the
affair should be laid forthwith before the queen; and that,
if her majesty should, notwithstanding these objections, be
pleased to repeat her commands for giving Dr. Atterbury
possession of the deanery, institution should be given,
which was accordingly done in consequence of her intimation to the bishop through the secretary of state. This
preferment, however, was followed by many unpleasant
consequences, as we shall have occasion to notice, a^ter
enumerating the remaining productions of our learned prelate.
The archbishop left three ms volumes, fol. to the dean and chapter of Carlisle, consisting of copies and extracts from
The archbishop left three ms volumes, fol. to the dean
and chapter of Carlisle, consisting of copies and extracts
from various books, Mss. registers, recorus, and charters,
relating to the diocese of Carlisle, from which many articles in the “History of Cumberland,
” by his nephew
Joseph Nicolson, esq. and Dr. Richard Burn, were transcribed. There is also a large octavo ms. of his, containing miscellaneous accounts of the state of the churches,
parsonage and vicarage houses, glebe lands, and other
possessions, in the several parishes within the diocese, collected in his parochial visitation of the several churches in
1703, 1704, and 1707, which, in 1777, was in the possession of his nephew. Bagford, in his catalogue prefixed
to Gibson’s edition of Camden’s “Britannia,
” Leges Marchiarum,
”
where we find much information respecting the ancient
state of Northumberland, but we are not permitted to
doubt that a separate work was his original design. In
1692 he speaks of his having hopes that his “Essay on the
Kingdom of Northumberland,
” would be completed in a
few months; and that Mr. Ray had promised (in the preface to his late collection of English words), that it should
shortly be published. He informs us also that he was the
author of the “Glossarium Northanhymbricum,
” in Ray’s
work.
. Atterbury. The latter, unfortunately for both parties, considering their hostile tempers, was made dean of Carlisle while Nicolson was bishop. In any other arrangement
The publication of the first part of his “Historical Library
” involved him in the first literary controversy in
which he was engaged. Two of his antagonists were Dr,
Hugh Todd, and Dr. Simon Lowth, against whom he appears to have defended himself with much reputation, as
they were both far beneath him in talents and learning.
In Atterbury, who likewise attacked him, he had an antagonist more worthy of his powers; but even against him he
was very successful, although not very temperate, in the
long letter addressed to Dr. Kennett, which was originally
a separate publication, and has since been prefixed with
some alterations to the various editions of the “Historical
Library.
” This, however, perhaps laid the foundation for
that degree of animosity which prevailed between our prelate and Dr. Atterbury. The latter, unfortunately for
both parties, considering their hostile tempers, was made
dean of Carlisle while Nicolson was bishop. In any other
arrangement of preferments, their passions might have had
leisure to cool, but they were now brought together, with
no personal respect on either side, and the consequences
were what might have been expected. Nicolson, it must
be allowed, had some reason to complain, or some apology
for his feelings concerning Atterbury: Atterbury had made
an, attack on his “Historical Library,
” in very contemptuous language; but what was worse, Atterbury appears
to have been the cause of Nicolson 9 s being for some time
refused a degree at his own university, when, on his promotion to the bishopric of Carlisle, he applied for that of
D. D. For an explanation of this we must refer to the
principles of the times, as well as of the men; and both perhaps will be sufficiently illustrated by the following paper
which was sent to Mr. Nicolson (in answer to his request of having a doctor’s degree by diploma) by the vice-chancellor, Dr. Mander, “Whereas the members of the university of Oxford, in a very full convocation held the (fifth)
day of (March) 1701, did unanimously agree to confer the
degree of Doctor of Divinity upon the reverend Mr.
Francis Atterbury, as a testimony of the sense which they
had of the signal service he had done the church, by his
excellent book entitled The Rights, Powers, and Privileges of an English Convocation, 7 &c. (See Atterbury, vol. III. p. 113, &c.) And whereas W. Nicolson,
archdeacon of Carlisle, in a pamphlet, entitled ‘ A Letter to
Dr. White Kennett, in defence of the English Historical
Library against the unmannerly and slanderous objections
of Mr. Francis Atterbury, preacher at the Rolls,’ &c. and
printed in 1702, doth, in and through the said pamphlet,
term the said doctor Mr. Atterbury only, in a seeming
contempt of the honour done him by the said university:
And whereas the said archdeacon (in the thirty-fourth page of the said pamphlet) hath these words: viz.
” I need not,
Sir, acquaint you what a toil and expence the very collecting of those materials hath brought upon me; nor how
much trouble I have had in the composure. And it is but
a discouraging prospect (after all) to see so many men of
gravity and good learning, to whom I thought my labours
might have been chiefly useful, caressing an empty misrepresenter of our antiquities, histories, and records; and
patronizing an ambitious wretch in his insolent attempts
against our ancient and apostolical church-government;
which words are conceived to contain a severe and undecent reflection upon the proceedings of the university; it
is humbly proposed to Mr. Vice-chancellor, by several
members of your venerable convocation, whether it can be
consistent with the honour of the university to bestow any
mark of favour upon the said archdeacon, before he shall
have made suitable satisfaction for so high an indignity,
and open an affront, as he hath hereby put upon her."
or that of these members of the convocation, it was not to be expected that when Atterbury was made dean of Carlisle, there could be much cordiality between them. Nicolson
The vice-chancellor, who communicated this paper to
bishop Nicolson, added that he would notwithstanding
propose the degree, if “he would please to order him what
to say in answer.
” Nicolson, however, irritated at the
superiority thus given to his antagonist, determined to send
no answer. His own words on this occasion are: “Mr.
Vice-chancellor not having acquainted me who the masters
or members of the venerable convocation are, that presented this libellous memorial to him: the most civil treatment, which (as I thought, by advice of my friends) could
be given to it, was, to take no manner of notice of its
coming to my hand.
” He accordingly applied to Cam-bridge, where the degree in question was readily granted;
and, what must have been yet more gratifying, he received
the same honour from the university of Oxford, on July 25
following. The former refusal seems to have been that of
a party, and not of the convocation at large. In one of
his letters written at this time to Dr. Charlett, master of
University-college, he enters upon a defence of his vindication of the “Historical Library,
” and not unsuccessfully.
The objection that he had called the doctor Mr. Atterbury
was certainly trifling and unjust, for he was Mr. Atterbury
when he wrote against Nicolson. He also alludes to the
coarse treatment of himself in the above paper, where he
is styled only William Nicolson, although at that time a
bishop elect. But whatever may be thought of bishop Nicolson’s conduct, or that of these members of the convocation, it was not to be expected that when Atterbury was
made dean of Carlisle, there could be much cordiality between them. Nicolson knew to whom he had been indebted for the affront he had received from the university;
and Atterbury was equally out of humour with the bishop,
in addition to his usual turbulence of disposition. In 1707,
when the bishop found that Atterbury was continually raising fresh disputes with his chapter, he endeavoured to appease them once for all, by visiting the chapter in pursuance of the power given by the statutes of Henry VIII. at
the foundation of the corporation of the dean and chapter.
But Dr. Todd, already mentioned, one of the prebendaries, was instigated by Atterbury to protest against any
such visitation, insisting upon the invalidity of Henry
VIII's statutes and that the queen, and not the bishop,
was the local visitor. Nicolson, conscious of his strength
in a point which he had probably studied more deeply than
any of the chapter, during the course of his visitation
suspended and afterwards excommunicated Dr. Todd on
which the latter moved the court of common pleas for a
prohibition, and obtained it unless cause shown. In the
mean time such proceedings alarmed the whole bench of
bishops; and the archbishop of Canterbury, Tenison, wrote
a circular letter on the subject to all his suffragans, considering the cause of the bishop of Carlisle as a common
cause, and of great concern to the church, which, he added,
“will never be quiet so long as that evil generation of men
who make it their business to search into little flaws in ancient charters and statutes, and to unfix what laudable
custom hath well fixed, meet with any success.
” Soon
afterwards a bill was carried into parliament, and passed
into a law, which established the validity of the local statutes given by Henry VIII. to his new foundations. Bishop
Nicolson published on this occasion, “Short Remarks on
a paper of Reasons against thepassing of a bill for avoiding
of doubts and questions touching the statutes of divers cathedrals and collegiate churches,
” 4to, in one half sheetj
without date. His triumph was now compleat, and a fevr
years afterwards, when Atterbury was preferred to the
deanry of Christ-church, his old friends of the university
of Oxford had reason to change their sentiments of him.
submitted to this decision, although it was not correct as to the law; for none below the dignity of dean or archdeacon were bound to personal appearance in the convocation;
In the first parliament of queen Mary, in 1553, Nowell
was returned one of the burgesses for Loo, in Cornwall;
but a committee being appointed to inquire into the validity of the return, they reported that *' Alexander Nowell
being a prebendary of Westminster, and thereby having a
voice in the convocation-house, cannot be a member of
this house,“and a new writ was directed to
” be issued accordingly. Nowell quietly submitted to this decision, although it was not correct as to the law; for none
below the dignity of dean or archdeacon were bound to
personal appearance in the convocation; but these were
not times for men desirous of retaining peace and a good
conscience, to insist rigidly on their right, against the prevailing party; and he soon afterwards found it necessary to
join his countrymen who were exiles in Germany, from
the persecuting spirit of popery. Of this event we are
only told, that Bonner, having intended him as one of his
victims, he was assisted in his escape by Francis Bowyer,
at that time a merchant, and afterwards sheriff of London.
In 1554, we find him at Strasburgh, with Jewell, Poinet,
Grindal, Sandys, and other men of future eminence in the
Reformed Church. In the unfortunate disputes which
afterwards took place among these exiles, respecting church
discipline, Nowell took a moderate part, sometimes, for
the sake of peace, conceding to the presbyterian party:
but at last, with equal wisdom and firmness, pressing unity
in essentials, and’submission in smaller matters to authority
duly appointed and legally exercised.
appened, as it is recorded in a great man’s memorials (sir H. Sidney), who lived in those times. The dean having met with several fine engravings, representing the stories
He now became a frequent preacher at St. Paul’s cross,
and on one occasion, a passage of his sermon was much
talked of, and grossly misrepresented by the papists, as
savouring of an uncharitable and persecuting spirit. He
had little difficulty, however, in repelling this charge,
which at least shews that his words were considered as of
no small importance, and were carefully watched. One of
his sermons at St. Paul’s cross was preached the Sunday
following a very melancholy event, the burning of St. Paul’s
cathedral by lightning, June 4, 1561. Such was. his reputation now, that in September of this year, when archbishop
Parker visited Eton college, and ejected the provost,
Richard Bruerne, for nonconformity, he recommended to
secretary Cecil the choice of several persons fit to supply
the place, with this remark, “that if the queen would have
a married minister, none comparable to Mr. Nowell.
” The
bishop of London also seconded this recommendation; but
the queen’s prejudice against the married clergy inclined
her to give the place to Mr. Day, afterwards bishop of
Winchester, who was a bachelor, and in all respects worthy
of the promotion.
In the course of the ensuing year, 1562, No well was
frequently in the pulpit on public occasions, before large
auditories; but his labours in one respect commenced a
little inauspiciously. On the new-year’s day, before the
festival of the circumcision, he preached at St. Paul’s,
whither the queen resorted. Here, says Strype, a remarkable passage happened, as it is recorded in a great
man’s memorials (sir H. Sidney), who lived in those times.
The dean having met with several fine engravings, representing the stories and passions of the saints and martyrs,
had placed them against the epistles and gospels of their
respective festivals, in a Common Prayer-book; which he
caused to be richly bound, and laid on the cushion for the
queen’s use, in the place where she commonly sat; intending it for a new-year’s gift to her majesty, and thinking
to have pleased her fancy therewith. But it had a quite
contrary effect. For she considered how this varied from
her late injunctions and proclamations against the superstitious use of images in churches, and for the taking away
all such reliques of popery. When she came to her place,
and had opened the book, and saw the pictures, she frowned
and blushed; and then shutting the book (of which several took notice) she called for the verger, and bade him bring
her the old book, wherein she was formerly wont to read.
After sermon, whereas she used to get immediately on
horseback, or into her chariot, she went straight to the
vestry, and applying herself to the dean, thus she spoke
to him: “Mr. Dean, how came it to pas’s, that a new service-book was placed on my cushion r
” To which the dean
answered, “May it please your majesty, I caused it to be
placed there.
” Then said the queen, “Wherefore did
you so
” “To present your majesty with a new year?s
gift.
” “You could never present me with a worse.
” “Why
so, madam?
” “You know I have an aversion to idolatry,
to images, and pictures of this kind.
” “Wherein is the
idolatry, may it please your majesty?
” “In the cuts resembling angels and saints; nay, grosser absurdities, pictures resembling the blessed Trinity.
” “I meant nq
harm; nor did I think it would offend your majesty, when
I intended it for a new-year’s gift.
” *“You must needs
be ignorant then. Have you forgot our proclamation
against images, pictures, and Romish reliques, in the
churches? Was it not read in your deanery?
” “It was
read. But be your majesty assured I meant no harm when
I caused the cuts to be bound with the service-book.
” “You
must needs be very ignorant to do this after our prohibition
of them.
” “It being my ignorance, your majesty may the
better pardon me.
” “I am sorry for it; yet glad to hear
it was your ignorance rather than your opinion.
” “Be
your majesty assured it was my ignorance.
” “If so, Mr.
dean, God grant you his spirit, and more wisdom for the
future.
” “Amen, I pray God.
” “I pray, Mr. Dean,
how came you by these pictures who engraved them
”
“I know not who engraved them I bought them.
” “From
whom bought you them
” “From a German.
” “It is
well it was from a stranger. Had it been any of our subjects, we should have questioned the matter. Pray let no
more of these mistakes, or of this kind, be committed
within the churches of our realm for the future.
” “There
shall not.
” Strype adds to this curious dialogue, that it
caused all the clergy in and about London, and the churchwardens of each parish, to search their churches and
chapels; and to wash out of the walls all paintings that
seemed to be Romish and idolatrous; in lieu whereof,
suitable texts of Holy Scripture were written.
secretary Cecil; desiring him to be a means to the queen, and to her honourable council, to give the dean thanks for his great pains, taken among his countrymen.
NowelPs preaching as well as writing, appears to have greatly assisted the reformation. In 1568 we find him among his friends in Lancashire; where, by his continual preaching in divers parts of the country, he brought many to conformity; and obtained singular commendation and praise, even of those who had been great enemies to his religion. So Downham, bishop of Chester, who this year visited his whole diocese, and therefore had the better opportunity of informing himself, reported the matter to secretary Cecil; desiring him to be a means to the queen, and to her honourable council, to give the dean thanks for his great pains, taken among his countrymen.
ranslated into English, by Thomas Norton, of whom we have lately taken notice, and into Greek by the Dean’s nephew, Whitaker, but the Greek translation of the larger,
The principal remaining monument of Nowell’s fame is
his celebrated “Catechism,
” of the history of which and of
catechisms in general, his biographer has given a very interesting detail. The precise time when he wrote it has
not been discovered; nor whether, as is not improbable,
he first devised it (or some such summary) for the use of
his pupils in Westminster-school, It is, however, certain that it was composed, and in readiness for publication,
before the convocation sat in 1562, for, among the minutes of matters to be moved in that synod, we find two
memorable papers, both of them noted by the archbishop
of Canterbury’s hand (Parker), and one of them drawn up
by one of his secretaries, in both of which there is express
mention of Nowell’s catechism. For the proceedings of
the convocation on the subject, we must refer to his excellent biographer. The work was not published until
June 1570, 4to. This is what is called his “Larger Catechism,
” and in the preface it is announced that he intended to publish it, reduced into a shorter compass, as
soon as possible. The abridgment accordingly came out
the same year, and both in Latin. They were soon after,
for the sake of more extensive usefulness, translated into
English, by Thomas Norton, of whom we have lately taken
notice, and into Greek by the Dean’s nephew, Whitaker,
but the Greek translation of the larger, which was first
printed (along with the Latin) did not appear until 1573,
and that of the smaller in 1575. His biographer gives
some account of a third Catechism, attributed to Nowell,
but its history seems involved in some obscurity. There
seems reason to think that this was, in whole or in part,
what is now called “The Church Catechism.
” Nowell’s
other catechisms were in such request as to go through a
great many impressions, and long continued to be used in
schools, and the use of them appears to have been frequently enjoined by the founders of schools, and mentioned expressly in the statutes drawn up for such seminaries. What public authority and private influence could
do, was not wanting to recommend these catechisms as
the foundation of religious knowledge. In fact, the church
catechism, the homilies, and Nowell’s catechisms, appear
to have long been the standard books, which were quoted
as authorities for all that the church of England believed and taught; and Nowell’s were within these few
years reprinted in the “Enchiridion Theologicum,
” by
Dr. Randolph, late bishop of London, and by Dr. Cleaver,
late bishop of St. Asaph.
g or hanging, pointed out. Campion, the great emissary from Rome, being apprehended, Nowell, and May dean of Windsor, held, in August 1581, a conference with him in the
In 1572 he completed the endowment at one and the
same time, of a free- school at Middleton in Lancashire,
and of thirteen scholarships in Brazen-nose college and
as these benefactions were both of them established by
royal patent (her majesty also of her free bounty encouraging and assisting him), he chose that the school should
be called queen Elizabeth’s school, and the scholars queen
Elizabeth’s scholars. This benefaction to the college was
peculiarly seasonable, as in consequence of a severe plague
at Oxford, in the preceding year, and for want of exhibitions to assist them in their studies, some of the scholars
were compelled to go about requesting alms, having licence so to do, as an act of parliament required, under
the common seal of the university. Nowell was at all times
a zealous patron of learning, and was much looked up to
in that character, as appears not only by his being frequently consulted on schemes for the promotion of liberal
education, but also by the numerous dedications of learned
books to him. Books that had a tendency to inculcate the
principles of the reformation were also frequently published
under the protection of his name, as one acknowledged
“to be a learned and faithful preacher of God’s word, and
an earnest furtherer of all godliness.
” In 1580 the queen
granted him a licence of non-residence for three months
and fourteen days, that he might visit his scholars of Brasen-nose, and the school at Middleton, her majesty “having long, by sure proof, known his experience and skill in
business, as well as earnest desire and constant solicitude
for the training up of youth in learning and virtue.
” It
was indeed his great success as a preacher, and his eminence as an opponent of popery, that procured him the
honour of having his works proscribed in the “Index librorum prohibitorum;
” and his name, together with that of
Fox, Fleetwood the recorder, and others; inserted at Rome
in a “bede-roll,
” or list of persons, that were to be dispatched, and the particular mode of their death, as by
burning or hanging, pointed out. Campion, the great
emissary from Rome, being apprehended, Nowell, and May
dean of Windsor, held, in August 1581, a conference with
him in the Tower, of which an account was afterwards
published under the title of “A True Report of the disputation or rather private conference had in the Tower of
London, with Ed. Campion Jesuite, &c.
” Lond. in
consideration of his constant preaching of the word of God,
during the space of almost forty years;
” and because he
had lately resigned the rectory of Hadham and prebend of
Willand, as being, through age and imbecility of body,
not equal to the duties of them; nor likely, on account of
his extreme age and infirm health, long to enjoy either his
present or any future preferment. He lived, however, to
succeed to a canonry of Windsor in 1594. In 1595, on
the death of Mr. Harris, the fourth principal of Brasennose college, Nowell was chosen to succeed him. This
election of a man now on the verge of ninety was perhaps
intended or accepted rather as a compliment, than with a
view to the performance of much actual service, and ac-r
cordingly he resigned it in a few months.
Dean Nowell died Feb. 13, 1601-2, in the ninety-fifth year of his
Dean Nowell died Feb. 13, 1601-2, in the ninety-fifth
year of his age, almost forty years after he had begun to
reckon himself an old man. “But notwithstanding his very
great age and frequent sicknesses, such was the original
strength of his constitution, and such the blessing of providence on a life of piety, peace, and temperance, that
neither his memory nor any of his faculties were impaired;
and to the last, it is said, he was able to read thesmallest
print without the help of glasses.
” He was interred in St.
Mary’s chapel, at the back of the high altar in St. Paul’s,
in the same grave where, thirty-three years before, he had
buried his beloved brother Robert Nowell. He was twice
married, but had no issue by either of his wives.
ii For the minutiae of his character, the reader will find
ample gratification in the elaborate life lately published by
Mr. Archdeacon Churton. It concerns a long period of
our ecclesiastical history, and in every history indeed mention is made of Nowell’s eminent services in promoting and
establishing the reformed religion. Endowed, says Mr.
Churton, with excellent parts, he was soon distinguished by
the progress he made in the schools of Oxford; where he
devoted thirteen years, the flower of his life and the best
time for improvement, to the cultivation of classical elegance and useful knowledge. His capacity for teaching,
tried first in the shade of the university, became more conspicuous when he was placed at the head of the first seminary in the metropolis; and at the same time his talents
as a preacher were witnessed and approved by some of the
principal auditories of the realm. Attainments such as
these, and a life that adorned them, rendered him a fit
object for Bonner’s hatred; but Providence rescued him
from the fangs of the tyger, in the very act of springing
upon his prey. Retirement, suffering, and study, in the
company of Jewell, Grindal, and Sandys, stimulated by
the conversation and example of Peter Martyr, and other
famed divines of Germany, returned him to his native land,
with recruited vigour and increasing lustre, when the days
of tyranny were overpast. Elizabeth, and her sage counsellor Burghley, placed him at once in an eminent situation among those of secondary rank in the church, and
accumulated other preferments upon him; and would probably have advanced him to the episcopal bench, had not
his real modesty, together with the consciousness of approaching old age, been known to have created in him a
fixt determination not to be raised to a station of greater
dignity which, however, all things considered, could
scarcely, in his case, have been a sphere of greater usefulness. Near to his friend and patron, the excellently pious
and prudent archbishop Parker, and not distant from the
court, he was an able coadjutor to each and to alj, in
bringing forward and perfecting, what they all had at
heart, the restoration of true and pure religion.
, younger brother to the preceding, and dean of Lichfield, was entered of Brasen-nose college, Oxford, in
, younger brother to the preceding, and dean of Lichfield, was entered of Brasen-nose college, Oxford, in 1536, the same year in which his elder brother in the same college became B. A. After a little while, Wood says, he went to Cambridge, was admitted to the degree of B. A. in that university, and reincorporated at Oxford in July 1542, where he proceeded M. A. March 18, 1544. In 1546 he was appointed master of the grammar-school at Sutton Colfield, in Warwickshire; but was not yet, as Wood makes him, in sacred orders; for he was not ordained a deacon till 1550. He was not suffered to continue long in quiet possession of the school; for articles of complaint were exhibited against him by the corporation, as patrons of the school, in the court of chancery, upon a pretence of neglect of duty; though the real ground of offence appears to have been his zeal for the reformation; and therefore, on appeal to the king in council, he justified his character and conduct so well, that letters were issued to the warden and fellows of the King’s town of Sutton, not to remove him from his place of schoolmaster, nor to give him any farther molestation or disturbance.
o his brother Alexander and the exiles in Germany. On his return he was made archdeacon of Derby and dean of Lichfield, in April 1559; had the prebend of Ferring in the
During the troubles in Mary’s days he was concealed
for some time in the house of sir John Perrot, at Carewcastle in Pembrokeshire; but before the queen died, he
went to his brother Alexander and the exiles in Germany.
On his return he was made archdeacon of Derby and dean
of Lichfield, in April 1559; had the prebend of Ferring in
the cathedral of Chichester in August 1563, and of Ampleford in York in 1566, and the rectory of Haughton and
Drayton Basset, in the county of Stafford. He died in
or about the month of October, 1576.
He was, as Wood justly observes, “a most diligent
searcher into venerable antiquity.
” He bad also this peculiar merit, that he revived and encouraged the neglected
study of the Saxon language, so essential to the accurate
knowledge of our legal antiquities, as well as to the elucidation of ecclesiastical and civil history. In these studies,
while he resided, as is said, in the chambers of his brother
Robert Nowell (the queen’s attorney- general of the court of wards), he had the celebrated William Lambarde for his
pupil, who availed himself of his notes and assistance in
composing his learned work on the ancient laws of England.
He wrote a Saxon vocabulary or dictionary, still extant in
manuscript, which he gave to his pupil Lambarde, from
whom it passed to Somner, the learned antiquary of Canterbury, who made use of it in compiling his Saxon dictionary. It then came into the hands of Mr. Selden, and
is now, with other books of that great man, printed and
manuscript, reposited in the Bodleian library at Oxford.
Mr. Thoresby, the historian of Leeds, had a quarto ms.
entitled “Polychronicon,
” a miscellaneous collection, as
it seems, containing perambulations of forests and other
matters, in the hand-writing of Lawrence Nowell, 1565.
There are also “Collectanea
” by him, relating chietiy to
ecclesiastical affairs, in the Cotton library. He appears to
have been in learning, piety, and meekness of spirit, the
worthy brother of the dean of St. Paul’s.
a practitioner, and in 1564 was appointed inspector of the apothecaries, and perpetual vicar to the dean of the college of physicians. He died in 1605. He published
, one of a family' of physicians of
considerable eminence, was born at Augsburgh, Oct. 17,
1524. When he had finished his medical studies under
his father, a physician of Augsburgh, who died in 1572,
and at the university, he soon became noted as a practitioner, and in 1564 was appointed inspector of the apothecaries, and perpetual vicar to the dean of the college of
physicians. He died in 1605. He published a “Pharmacopoeia
” in Imperatorum Romanorum Numismata
a Pompeio M. ad Heraclium,
” Strasburgh, 4to and folio.
This is an excellent book of general reference, being a list
of all the coins in every reign, digested into the years in
which they were apparently struck. It was first printed
in 1579, and again in 1600, which is the best edition.
One afterwards published by Mezzabarba is not so highly
valued, as this editor’s additions are of doubtful authority.
Among Gesner’s letters is a learned “Epistola Graeca de
Oxymeli helleborato, aiiisque ad rem medicam spectantibus,
” written by Occo, who was an excellent Greek
scholar.
ntal Meditations*” among whom were the rev. Mr. Hunter, vicar of Weaverham, in Cheshire, Dr. Tucker, dean of Gloucester, and Dr. Adams, master of Pembroke college, Oxford.
Several eminent divines of the establishment expressed
their high approbation of the “Sacramental Meditations*
”
among whom were the rev. Mr. Hunter, vicar of Weaverham, in Cheshire, Dr. Tucker, dean of Gloucester, and
Dr. Adams, master of Pembroke college, Oxford.
In 1700, the clergy of Neufchatel chose Mr. Ostervald for their dean, an annual office to which he was frequently re-elected, and
In 1700, the clergy of Neufchatel chose Mr. Ostervald
for their dean, an annual office to which he was frequently
re-elected, and held it at one time for three successive
years. In 1700, also, the London society for the propagation of the Gospel chose him a member, and had before
so far honoured him as to cause his “Abridgment of the
Sacred History
” prefixed to his Catechism, to be translated
into Arabic, in order to be sent to the East Indies. The
year that he was first chosen dean was distinguished by the
introduction of a new version of the Psalms in the churches,
and various regulations of great utility in the modes of
theological study and discipline, in all which he took an
active part. He began also from this time to give a complete course of instructions to divinity students, which he
carried on for forty-five years with great success and approbation. Such indeed was the fame of his lectures, that
some of his pupils, eager to diffuse their usefulness more
extensively, published some part of them, without either
his knowledge or consent. In this way his “Ethica Christiana
” was published in Latin, at London, in Compendium Theologiae,
” and “Trait4 du Ministere Sacre,
” were
also published in the same manner. Against all these
Ostervald advertised, that they were published without his
knowledge, and that he would not be responsible for their
errors. Even this, however, had very little effect on the
sale, so highly was every thing valued of which he was the
reputed author; and, after all, there were not any errors
faund in them which could affect his reputation. The last
mentioned treatise was published in English in 1781, by
the rev. Thomas Stevens, who considered it as the most
complete that had then appeared, under the title of “Lectures on the exercise of the Sacred Ministry.
”
on he had acquired, and his favouritism with Cromwell, pointed him out for a higher station, that of dean of Christ church, in room of Dr. Reynolds, afterwards bishop
In Sept. 1650, Cromwell required Mr. Owen to go with
him to Scotland and when he found him averse to another
absence from his flock at Coggeshall, he procured an order
of parliament, which could not be disobeyed. He remained
at Edinburgh about half a year, and returning to Coggeshall, expected, as his biographers say, to have passed
the remainder of his days there. But the general reputation he had acquired, and his favouritism with Cromwell,
pointed him out for a higher station, that of dean of Christ
church, in room of Dr. Reynolds, afterwards bishop of
Norwich, who had been placed in this office by the authority of the parliamentary visitors. Mr. Owen appears
to have owed his promotion to the parliament itself, as appears by the following document “The House, taking into
consideration the worth and usefulness of Mr. John Owen,
student of QueenVcollege, M. A. has ordered that he be
settled in the deanry of Christ-church, Oxford, in the
room of,
” &c. This was the first intimation Mr. Owen had
of his appointment; but he afterwards received a letter
from the principal students of the college, signifying their
great satisfaction, and a commission from Cromwell, who
was at this time chancellor of the university, to act as vicechancellor. Accordingly he went to Oxfprd in 1651, and
on Sept. 26 of the following year, was admitted vicechancellor. About the same time he took his degree of
D. D. His rise seems calculated to have gratified the ambition he acknowledged in his youthful days, for he had
not been above twelve or fourteen years absent from Oxford, and was now only in his thirty-sixth year.
, on Communion with God." In 1657 he was succeeded as vice-chancellor by Dr. Conant, and in 1659, as dean of Christ-church by Dr. Reynolds. For these changes his biographers
During his vice-chancellorship, he was a frequent
preacher at St. Mary’s, and other places in the county,
and published some of his numerous works, particularly in
1654, his “Saint’s Perseverance,
” in answer to Goodwin’s
“Redemption redeemed;
” and in Vindiciæ
Evangelicæ, or, the Mystery of the Gospel vindicated,
and Socinianism examined,
” against Biddle, who had published two Socinian Catechisms. In the preface to this
work, which he wrote at the desire of the heads of houses
and many other divines of Oxford, is a succinct and perspicuous history of Spcimanism from its first appearance.
This was followed by his more popular treatise, often reprinted till this day, on Communion with God." In
1657 he was succeeded as vice-chancellor by Dr. Conant,
and in 1659, as dean of Christ-church by Dr. Reynolds.
For these changes his biographers no otherwise account
than as parts of that general change which the restoration
was about to effect. Dr. Owen, however, lost his vicechancellorship on the death of Oliver Cromwell, whose
successor, Richard, appointed Dr. Conant. The latter was
evidently an ejectment, and it is supposed the presbyterians had a hand in it.
les V. In 1516, Pace was instituted treasurer of Lichfield, which he resigned in 1522, on being made dean of Exeter. In 1511), he succeeded Colet as dean of St. Paul’s;
In 1519, Maximilian died, and the kings of France and
Spain immediately declared themselves candidates for the
Imperial throne. Henry, encouraged by the pope, was
also induced to offer himself as a candidate, and Pace was
ordered to attend the diet of the empire, sound the opinions of the electors, and endeavour to form a judgment of the likelihood of his success. Pace, however,
soon discovered that his royal master had started too late,
and that tven the electors of Mentz, Cologn, and Triers,
who were disposed to favour his pretensions, pleaded,
with a shew of regret, that they were pre-engaged. The
election fell on Charles V. In 1516, Pace was instituted treasurer of Lichfield, which he resigned in 1522,
on being made dean of Exeter. In 1511), he succeeded
Colet as dean of St. Paul’s; and some say, held also the
deanery of Sarum, but this is not quite clear, although he
is called dean of Salisbury by Herbert, in his “Life and
Reign of Henry VIII.
” In 1521, he was made prebendary
of Combe and Harnham, in the church of Sarum, and we
find mention of some other church preferments he held
from 1516 to 1522, but they are so dubiously related that
it is difficult to give them in due order.
different preferments he was indebted either to the venerable bishop of Carlisle, Dr. Law, or to the dean and chapter of the cathedral church. While his residence was
While at Appleby, he published a small volume selected
from the Book of Common Prayer, and the writings of
some eminent divines, entitled “The Clergyman’s Comr
panion in visiting the Sick.
” This useful work at first appeared without his name, but it has passed through nine
editions, and is now printed among his works. In June
1780, he was collated to the fourth prebendal stall in the
cathedral church of Carlisle, and thus became coadjutor in
the chapter to his friend Mr. Law, who was now archdeacon; but in 1782, upon Dr. Law’s being created an
Irish bishop, Mr. Paley was made archdeacon of the
diocese, and in 1785, he succeeded Dr. Burn, author
of “The Justice of Peace,
” in the chancellorship. For
these different preferments he was indebted either to the
venerable bishop of Carlisle, Dr. Law, or to the dean and
chapter of the cathedral church. While his residence was
divided between Carlisle and Dalston, Mr. Paley engaged
in the composition of his celebrated work, “The Elements
of Moral and Political Philosophy;
” but hesitated long as
to the publication, imagining there would be but fewreaders for such a work; and he was the more determined
on this point after he had entered on the married state,
thinking it a duty that he owed his family to avoid risking
any extraordinary expense. To remove this last objection,
Dr. John Law presented a living then in his gift to Mr. Paley,
on the promise that he would consider it as a compensation for the hazard of printing, and he immediately set
about preparing his work for the press, which appeared
in 1785, in quarto. Of a work * so generally known and
admired, and so extensively circulated, it would be unnecessary to say much. Although the many editions which
came rapidly from the press stamped no ordinary merit on
it, yet some of his friends appear to have not been completely gratified. They expected, that from his intimacy
with Jebb, and the latitudinarian party at Cambridge, he
would have brought forward those sentiments which Jebb
in vain endeavoured to disseminate while at the university;
and they were surprized to find that his reasoning on subscription to articles of religion, and on the British constitution, in which he not only disputes the expediency
of reform in the House of Commons, but vindicates the
influence of the crown in that branch of parliament, was
diametrically opposite to their opinions and wishes.
2, he was instituted to the vicarage of Addingham, near Great SaJ-j kcld, on the presentation of the dean and chapter of Carlisle. During the political ferment excited
On the death of the venerable bishop of Carlisle in 1787,
Mr. Paley drew up a short memoir of him. (See Law, Edmund). His next work places him in a high rank among
the advocates for the truth and authenticity of the Christian
Scriptures. It is entitled “Horae Paulina; or, the Truth of
the Scripture History of St. Paul evinced, by a comparison
of the Epistles which bear his name with the Acts of the
Apostles, and with one another,
” which he dedicated to
his friend Dr. John Law, at that time bishop of Killala.
The principal object of this work is to shew, that by a comparison of several indirect allusions and references in the
Acts and Epistles, independently of all collateral testimony,
their undesigned coincidence affords the strongest proof of
their genuineness, and of the reality of the transactions to
which they relate. Instead of requiring the truth of any
part of the apostolic history to be taken for granted, he
leaves the reader at liberty to suppose the writings to have
been lately discovered, and to have come to our hands destitute of any extrinsic or collateral evidence whatever. The
design was original, and the execution admirable. Soon
after he compiled a small work, entitled “The Young
Christian instructed in Reading, and the Principles of Religion.
” This having brought upon him a charge of plagiarism, he defended himself in a good-humoured letter
in the Gentleman’s Magazine. Previously to the appearance of these works he was offered by Dr. Yorke, bishop of
Ely, the mastership of Jesus college, Cambridge, which,
after due deliberation, he declined. In May 1792, he was
instituted to the vicarage of Addingham, near Great SaJ-j
kcld, on the presentation of the dean and chapter of Carlisle. During the political ferment excited by the French,
revolution, he published “Reasons for Contentment, addressed to the labouring classes,
” and the chapter in his
“Moral Philosophy,
” on the British Constitution. In
lesiae Gallicanae.” 10. “Memoralia insignium Francis Famiiiarum.” He was an ecclesias.ic, and became dean of Beaujeu.
, a French historian, and laborious writer of the sixteenth century, was still living in
1581, and was then turned fourscore. He was the author
of many works, among which the following are remarkable: 1. “The History of Aristseus, respecting the version
of the Pentateuch,
” 4 to. 2. “Historia sui temporis,
”
written in Latin, but best known by a French version which
was published in 1558. 3. “Annales de Bourgogne,
”
De moribus
Gallic, Historia,
” 4to. 5. “Memoires de l'Histoire de
Lyon,
” De rehus in Beigio, anno 1543
gestis,
”l:>4:i, 8vo. 7. “LaChroniquede Savoie,
” Histuna Galliae, a Fraiu isci I. coronatione ad annum
1550.
” 9. “Historia Ecclesiae Gallicanae.
” 10. “Memoralia insignium Francis Famiiiarum.
” He was an ecclesias.ic, and became dean of Beaujeu.
m to the canonry and prebend of Covingham, in the church of Lincoln, where he was soon after elected dean, upon Dr. Taylor’s promotion to that see. He had before been
In 1552 the king presented him to the canonry and prebend of Covingham, in the church of Lincoln, where he
was soon after elected dean, upon Dr. Taylor’s promotion
to that see. He had before been nominated to the mastership of Trinity-college, probably on the death of Dr. Redman in 1551, but this did not take effect. It is also said
that he declined a bishopric in this reign. On the accession of queen Mary, however, the scene was changed, and
he, with all the married clergy who would not part with
their wives, and conform to those superstitious rites and
ceremonies they had so lately rejected, were stript of their
preferments. He bore this reverse of fortune with pious
resignation. “After my deprivation
” (he says, in his private journal) “I lived so joyful before God in my conscience, and so neither ashamed nor dejected, that the
most sweet leisure for study, to which the good providence
of God has now recalled me, gave me much greater and
more solid pleasures, than that former busy and dangerous
kind of life ever afforded me. What will hereafter befall
me, I know not; but to God, who takes care of all, and
who will one day reveal the hidden things of men’s hearts,
I commend myself wholly, and my pious and most chaste
wife, with my two most dear little sons.
” It appears also
by a ms. in the college, quoted by Strype, that Dr. Parker
“lurked secretly in those years (the reign of queen Mary)
within the house of one of his friends, leading a poor life,
without any men’s aid or succour; and yet so well contented with his lot, that in that pleasant rest, and leisure
for his studies, he would never, in respect of himself, have
desired any other kind of life, the extreme fear of danger
only excepted. And therein he lived as all other good
men then did. His wife he would not be divorced from, or
put her away all this evil time (as he might, if he would, in those days, which so rigorously required it), being a woman
very chaste, and of a very virtuous behaviour, and behaving herself with all due reverence toward her husband.”
hat they induced her to change her opinion on this matter, from the anecdote given in our account of dean Nowell, who incurred her displeasure by only presenting her
In 1561, archbishop Parker and some of the other prelates made an application to the queen against the use of
images, to which her majesty still discovered a very great
inclination, and it may be inferred that they induced her
to change her opinion on this matter, from the anecdote
given in our account of dean Nowell, who incurred her
displeasure by only presenting her with a prayer-book,
illustrated with engravings. In other respects she adhered
to many of her father’s notions, and when about this time
she took a journey into Essex and Suffolk, she expressed
great displeasure at finding so many of the clergy married,
and at observing so many women and children in cathedrals
and colleges. She had, indeed, so strong an aversion to
matrimony in the clergy, that it was owing to Cecil’s courage and dexterity, as appears by a letter of his to Parker,
that she did not absolutely prohibit the marriage of all
ecclesiastics. He was, however, obliged to consent to an
injunction, “that no head or member of any college or
cathedral, should bring a wife, or any other woman, into
the precincts of it, to abide in the same, on pain of forfeiture of all ecclesiastical promotions.
” Archbishop Parker took the liberty to remonstrate with the queen against
this order, and on this interview she treated the institution
of matrimony with contempt, declared to him that she repented her making any of them bishops, and wished it had
been otherwise; nay, threatened him with injunctions of
another nature, which his grace understood to be in favour
of the old religion. In his letter to Cecil on this occasion,
he assures him that the bishops have all of them great reason to be dissatisfied with the queen; that he repents his
having engaged in the station in which he was; and that
the reception which he had from her majesty the day
before, had quite indisposed him for all other business, and
he could only mourn to God in the bitterness of his soul;
but if she went on to force the clergy to any compliance,
they must obey God rather than men, and that many of
them had conscience and courage enough to sacrifice their
lives in defence of their religion.
ch in 1558, where they were written, and republished now. Among the commendatory verses is a copy by dean Nowell, to whom two of the epigrams are addressed, and who was
His works have not much connexion with his profession,
all, except his letters, being Latin poetry on sundry occasions. He was indeed one of the translators of the Bishops’ Bible, of which his share was the Apocrypha from
the book of Wisdom to the end; but he is best known to
the curious by his “Ludicra, sive Epigrammata juvenilia.
”
In T572 he sent a copy of these to his old and dear friend
Dr. Wilson, master of St. Catherine’s, as a new-year’s gift,
and styled them his “good, godly, and pleasant epigrams;
”
and they were in the following year printed by Day, in a
small 4to volume. Why Anthony Wood should give the
report that these epigrams were as indecent as Martial’s,
when he adds at the same time that “he cannot perceive
it,
” seems unaccountable; but even Blomefield has adopted
this false accusation. Many of them appear to have been
first printed at Zurich in 1558, where they were written,
and republished now. Among the commendatory verses
is a copy by dean Nowell, to whom two of the epigrams
are addressed, and who was not likely to have commended
indecencies, if we could suppose our pious prelate capable
of publishing such. “His epigrams,
” says archdeacon
Churton, “affording notices of persons and things not
elsewhere easily found, are on the Grecian rather than the
Roman model, not sparkling with wit, but grave and didactic.
” The other works attributed to bishop Parkhurst
are, 1. “Epigrammata in mortem duorum fratrum Suffolciensium, Caroli et Henrici Brandon,
” Lond. Epigrammata
seria,
” ibid. Summa et
synopsis Nov. Test, distichis ducentis sexaginta comprehensa.
” 3. “Vita Christi, carm. Lat. in lib. precum privat.
” ibid.
e socius sacerdos, or chaplain fellow. In 1572 he proceeded M. A. was bursar that year, and the next dean of the college; but it is said that being charged by the society
, in both which ways he wrote his name, a celebrated English Jesuit, was the son of a blacksmith, at Nether Stowey, near Bridgewater in Somersetshire, where he was born in 1546; and, appearing to be a boy of extraordinary parts, was taught Latin by the vicar of the parish, who conceived a. great affection for him t, and contributed to his support at Oxford, where he was admitted of Baliol college in 1563. In the university he became so remarkable, as an acute disputant in scholastic exercises, then much in vogue, that, having taken his first degree in arts in 1568, he was the same year made probationer fellow of his college. He soon after became the most famous tutor in the society, and when he entered into orders, was made socius sacerdos, or chaplain fellow. In 1572 he proceeded M. A. was bursar that year, and the next dean of the college; but it is said that being charged by the society with incontinency, and embezzling the college-money, to avoid the shame of a formal expulsion, he was permitted, out of respect to his learning, to resign, which he did in Feb. 1574, obtaining leave to keep his chamber and pupils as long as he pleased, and to have his commons also till the ensuing Easter. These last circumstances have induced some writers to think that it was merely a change of religious principles which occasioned his resignation.
.” This book is really an excellent one, and was afterwards put into modern English by Dr. Stanhope, dean of Canterbury; in which form it has gone through eight or ten
His works are, 1. “A brief Discourse, containing the
Reasons why Catholics refuse to go to Church,
” with a Dedication to Queen Elizabeth, under the fictitious name of
John Howlet, dated Dec. 15, 1530. 2. “Reasons for
his coming into the Mission of England, &c.
” by some
ascribed to Campian. 3. “A brief Censure upon two
Books, written against the Reasons and Proofs.
” 4.“A
Discovery of John Nichols, misreported a Jesuit
” all
written and printed while the author was in England. 5.
“A Defence of the Censure given upon his two Books,
&c.
” De persecutione Anglicana epistola,
”
Rome and Ingolstadt, A Christian Directory,
”
A Second Part of a Christian Directory, &c.
”
A Christian Directory, guiding men to their Salvation,
&c. with m.my corrections and additions by the Author
himself.
” This book is really an excellent one, and was
afterwards put into modern English by Dr. Stanhope, dean
of Canterbury; in which form it has gone through eight or
ten editions. 9. “Responsio ad Eliz. Reginse edictum
contra Catholicos,
” Romae, A Conference about the next Succession to the Crown of England, &c.
” A temperate
Wardword to the turbulent and seditious Watchword of sir
Fr. Hastings, knight, 7 ' &c. 1599, under the same name.
12.
” A Copy of a Letter written by a Master of Arts at
Cambridge, &c.“published in 1583. This piece was commonly called
” Father Parsons’s Green Coat,“being sent
from abroad with the binding and leaves in that livery,
but there seems reason to doubt whether this was his (see Ath. Ox. vol. II. new edit, note, p. 74). 13.
” Apologetical Epistle to the Lords of her Majesty’s Privy Council,
&c.“1601. 14.
” Brief Apology, or Defence of the Catholic Ecclesiastical Hierarchy erected by pope Clement
VIII. &c.“St. Omers, 1601. 15.
” A Manifestation of
the Folly and bad Spirit of secular Priests,“1602. 16.
” A
Decachordon often Quodlibetical Questions/' 1602. 17.
“De Peregrinatione.
” 18. “An Answer to O. E. whether
Papists or Protestants be true Catholics,
” A
Treatise of the three Conversions of Paganism to the
Christian Religion,
” published (as are also the two following) under the name of N. D. (Nicholas Doleman), in 3
*6ls. 12mo, 1603, 1604. 20. “A Relation of a Trial made
before the king of France in 1600, between the bishop of
Evreux and the lord Plessis Mornay/' 1604. 21.
” A Defence of the precedent Relation, &c.“22.
” A Review
of ten public Disputations^ &c. concerning the Sacrifices
and Sacrament of the Altar,“1604. 23.
” The Forerunner of Bell’s Downfall of Popery,“1605. 24.
” An Answer to the fifth Part of the Reports of Sir Edward Coke,
&c.“1606, 4to, published under the name of a Catholic
Divine. 25.
” De sacris alienis non adeundis, questiones
duae,“1607. 26.
” A Treatise tending to Mitigation towards Catholic subjects in England, against Thomas Morton (afterwards bishop of Durham),“1607. 27.
” The
Judgment of a Catholic Gentleman concerning king James’s
Apology, &c.“1608. 28.
” Sober Reckoning with Thomas
Morton,“1609. 29.
” A Discussion of Mr. Barlow’s
Answer to the Judgment of a Catholic Englishman concerning the Oath of Allegiance,“1612. This book being
left not quite finished at the author’s death, was afterwards
completed and published by Thomas Fitzherbert. The
following are also posthumous pieces: 30.
” The Liturgy
of the Sacrament of the Mass,“1620. 31.
” A Memorial
for Reformation, &c.“thought to be the same with
” The High Court and Council of the Reformation,“finished after twenty years’ labour in 1596, but not published till after Parsons’s death; and republished from a
copy presented to James II. with an introduction and some
animadversions by Edward Gee, under the title of,
” The
Jesuits Memorial for the intended Reformation of the
Church of England under their first Popish Prince,“1690,
8vo. 32. There is also ascribed to him,
” A Declaration
of the true Causes of the great Troubles pre-supposed to
be intended against the Realm of England, &c. Seen
and allowed, anno 1581.“33. Parsons also translated
from the English into Spanish,
” A Relation of certain
Martyrs in England,“printed at Madrid 1590, 8vo.Several of his Mss. are preserved in Baliol college library, particularly a curious one entitled
” Epitome controversiarum,
hujus temporis."
In 1650 he was chosen dean of the faculty of medicine, and afterwards succeeded Riolan,
In 1650 he was chosen dean of the faculty of medicine, and afterwards succeeded Riolan, the younger, in the professorship of medicine in the Royal-college, where he taught with great reputation. The disputes which took place in his time respecting the use of antimony roused all his spleen, as he regarded this medicine as a poison, and had even made out a list of patients, which he called the martyrology of antimony. Great, however, was his mortification when, in 1666, a majority of the faculty decided to admit emetic wine into the list of prescriptions. He was quite inconsolable.
In the interim, in July 1672 he was made prebendary of Westminster, and dean of Peterborough in Aug. 1679. Here he completed the “History
In the interim, in July 1672 he was made prebendary
of Westminster, and dean of Peterborough in Aug. 1679.
Here he completed the “History of the Church of Peterborough,
” which had been compiled by Simon Gunton,
who was a native and prebendary of Peterborough. Gunton died irr 1676; and Patrick published, in 1686, his
manuscript in folio, with a large “Supplement,
” from
page
indly, desired him to abate his zeal against his church, and quietly enjoy his own religion: but the dean replied, with proper courage, “That he could not give up a religion
Such is the account given of this debate by Kennet in
his “Complete History of England:
” bishop Burnet’s account is somewhat different. He says, “That the king
desired of the earl, he would suffer himself to be instructed
in religion. He answered, he was fully satisfied about his
religion; but, upon the king’s pressing it that he would
hear his priests, he said he desired then to have some of
the English clergy present, to which the king consented;
only he excepted to Tillotson and Stillingfleet. Lord Rochester said he would take those who should happen to be
in waiting; for the forms of the chapel were still kept up.
And Drs. Patrick and Jane were the men.
” “Patrick,
”
adds Burnet, “told me, that at the conference there was
no occasion for them to say much. The priests began the
attack. And when they had done, the earl said, if they
had nothing stronger to urge, he would not trouble those
learned gentlemen to say any thing; for he was sure he
could answer all that he had heard. And so answered all
with much heat and spirit, not without some scorn, saying,
Were these grounds to persuade men to change their religion? This he urged over and over again with great vehemence. The king, seeing in what temper he was, broke
off the conference, charging all that were present to say
nothing of it.
”
The king had often taken pains to gain over Patrick,
sent for him, treated him kindly, desired him to abate his
zeal against his church, and quietly enjoy his own religion:
but the dean replied, with proper courage, “That he
could not give up a religion so well proved as that of the
Protestants.
” Conformably to this principle, he opposed
the reading of his majesty’s declaration for liberty of conscience; and assisted Dr. Tenison in setting up a school
at St. Martin’s, in opposition to the popish one, opened at
the Savoy, in order to seduce the youth of the town into
popery; and this was the origin of the ward and parish
schools of London. He had also a great share in the comprehension projected by archbishop SanCroft, in order to
bring over the dissenters, which, it is well known, was unsuccessful.
At the Revolution in 1688, great use was made of the dean, who was very active in settling the affairs of the church:
At the Revolution in 1688, great use was made of the dean, who was very active in settling the affairs of the church: he was called upon to preach before the prince and princess of Orange; and was soon after appointed one of the commissioners for the review of the liturgy. He was thought to have excellent talents for devotional composition, and his part now was to revise the collects of the whole year, in which he introduced some amendments and improvements of style. In October 1689, he was made bishop of Chichester; and employed, with others of the new bishops, to compose the disorders of the church of Ireland. In July 1691, he was translated to the see of Ely, in the room of Turner, who was deprived for refusing the oaths to government. Here he continued to perform all the offices of a good bishop, as well as a good man, which he had ever proved himself on all occasions. He died at Ely, May 31, 1707, aged eighty; and was interred in the cathedral, where a monument is erected to his memory, with an inscription said to have been written by Dr. Leng, afterwards bishop of Norwich.
of the late queen Caroline’s having recommended him to sir Robert Walpole, Dr. Pearce was appointed dean of Winchester. He informs us in his memoirs of what led to this
In 1739, in consequence of the late queen Caroline’s
having recommended him to sir Robert Walpole, Dr. Pearce
was appointed dean of Winchester. He informs us in his
memoirs of what led to this promotion. When vicar of St.
Martin’s, lord Sundon was one of his parishioners, and
one of the members of parliament for Westminster. These
two circumstances brought them acquainted together, and
Dr. Pearce was sometimes invited to dinner, where he became acquainted with lady Sundon, queen Caroline’s farourite, and by her means was introduced to her majesty,
who frequently honoured him with her conversation at the
drawing-room, The subjects which her majesty started
were not what are often introduced in that circle. One
day she asked him if he had read the pamphlets published
by Dr. Stebbing, and Mr. Foster, upon the sort of heretics
meant by St. Paul, whom in Titus iii. 10, 11, he represents as self-condemned. “Yes, madam,
” replied the
doctor, “I have read all the pamphlets written by them on
both sides of the question.
” “Well,
” said the queen,
“which of the two do you think to be in the right
” The
doctor answered, “I cannot say, madam, which of the
two is in the right, but I think that both of them are in
the wrong.
” She smiled, and said, “Then what is your
opinion of the text?
” “Madam,
” said the doctor, “it
would take up more time than your majesty can spare at
this drawing-room, for me to give my opinion and the
reasons of it; but if your majesty should be pleased to lay
your commands upon me, you shall know my sentiments
of the matter in the next sermon which I shall have the
honour to preach before his majesty.
” “Pray do then,
”
said the queen, and he accordingly prepared a sermon on
that text, but the queen died a month before his term of
preaching came about, and before he was promoted to the
deanry of Winchester. In 1744 the dean was elected prolocutor of the lower house of convocation for the province
of Canterbury, the archbishop having signified to some of
the members, that the choice of him would be agreeable
to his grace.
In 1748 dean Pearce was promoted to the see of Bangor, but the history of
In 1748 dean Pearce was promoted to the see of Bangor,
but the history of this and of his subsequent translation to
Rochester, will be best related in his own words: “In the
year 1746,
” says he, " archbishop Potter being alone with
dean Pearce one day at Lambeth, said to him, ‘ Why do
you not try to engage your friend lord Bath * to get you
made a bishop?’ * My lord,‘ said the dean, ’ I am extremely obliged to your grace for your good opinion of
me, and for your kind intentions in my favour; but I have
never spoken to him on that subject, nor ever thought of
doing so, though I believe he would do what lies in his
power; but I will tell your grace very frankly, that I have
no thoughts of any bishopric. All that I have in view in
this: I am now dean of Winchester; and that deanry is
worth upwards of 600l. a year; my vicarage of S,t. Martin’s
is about 500l. a year, and this last I should be glad of an
opportunity of resigning, on account of the great trouble
and little leisure which so large a parish gives me; but if
I should out-live my father, who is upwards of eighty years
Accordingly he spoke to the earl of Bath, and they two agreed to try what they could do to make the dean of Winchester a bishop.
S‘. Martin’s church, and gradually in the heuie of lords as carl of Ba’.h, ld, I shall come to his estate, being his eldest son, which will enable me to resign my vicarage; and the profits of the deanry alone, with my father’s estate, will make me quite contented.' The archbishop smiled, and said, " Well, if you will not help yourself, your friends must do it for you.' Accordingly he spoke to the earl of Bath, and they two agreed to try what they could do to make the dean of Winchester a bishop.
"In 1748 the bishopric of Bangor became vacant. The dean was then at Winchester, and received there a letter from Mr.
"In 1748 the bishopric of Bangor became vacant. The dean was then at Winchester, and received there a letter from Mr. Clark (afterwards sir Thomas, and master of the rolls) informing him, that lord chancellor Hardwicke wished to see dean Pearce thought of on that occasion, and that he hoped the dean would answer Mr. Clarke’s letter in such a way, as when seen, might be approved of by the ministry. Dean Pearce answered the letter with acknowledgment of the favour thought of for him; but assuring Mr. Clark, who, as he perceived, was to communicate the answer to lord Hardwicke, that he had long had no thoughts of desiring a bishopric, and that he was fully satisfied with his situation in the church and that as to the ministry, he was always used to think as favourably of them as they could wish him to do, having never opposed any of the public measures, nor designing so to do. In truth, the dean had then fixed upon a resolution to act no otherwise than as he had told the archbishop he should do, upon his father’s death. The dean received no answer to this letter written to Mr. Clark, and he thought that there was an end of that matter.
"About a fortnight after this, the dean went up to his parish in Westminster; but in his way thither,
"About a fortnight after this, the dean went up to his parish in Westminster; but in his way thither, lay one night at his father’s house, in Little Ealing, near Brentford; where, the next morning early, a letter was brought to him from the duke of Newcastle by one of his grace’s servants, signifying that his grace had his majesty’s order to make the dean of Winchester an offer of the bishopric of Bangor, and desiring to see him at the cockpit the next day at 12 o'clock. Accordingly he waited upon him, when, with many kind expressions to the dean, the duke signified the gracious offer of his majesty, which he had the order to make him. The dean asked his grace, whether he might be permitted to hold his deanry of Winchester in commendam with Bangor, to which the answer was, No; but that he might hold the vicarage of St. Martin’s with it. The dean said, that he was desirous to quit the living, which was troublesome to him, and would be more so as he was growing in years; but if that could not be indulged him, he rather chose to continue in his present situation. The duke used some arguments to persuade the dean to accept of the offer with a commendam to hold the living. He could not, however, prevail with the dean any farther, than that he would take three days’ time to consider of it. During that time, the dean had brought his father and lord Bath to consent, that he might decline to accept of that bishopric without their displeasure; but before the dean saw the duke a second time, lord Hardwicke, then chancellor, sent for him, and desired him to be, without fail, at his house, that evening. He went, and lord Hardwicke told him. that he found, by the duke of Newcastle, that he made difficulties about accepting the bishopric which was so graciously offered him. The dean gave his lordship an account of all that had passed between the duke and him; upon which his lordship used many arguments with the dean to induce him to accept the ofter, as intended. Among other things, he said, * If clergymen of learning and merit will not accept of the bishoprics, how can the ministers of state be blamed, if they are forced to fill them with others less deserving?‘ The dean was struck with that question, and had nothing ready in his thoughts to reply to it. He therefore promised lord Hardwicke to consent, the next day, when he was to see the duke of Newcastle. ’ Well then,‘ said lord Hardwicke, * when you consent, do it with a good grace.’ The dean promised to do that too; and accordingly he declared to the duke, the next day, his ready acceptance of his majesty’s offer, with such acknowledgments of the royal goodness as are proper on the occasion; and on Feb. 21, 1748, he was consecrated bishop of Bangor.
Being now (1763) seventy-three years old, and finding himself less fit for the duties of bishop and dean, he informed his friend lord Bath of his intention to resign
“Sometime after, in the same year (the bishop of Rochester declining very fast), the duke of Newcastle sent to the
bishop of Bangor, and desired to see him the n x ext day.
He went to him, and the duke informed him, that he was
told, -that the chancellorship of Bangor was then vacant,
and he pressed the bishop so much to bestow it upon one!
whom he had to recommend, that the bishop consented to
comply with his request. ‘ Well, my lord,’ said the duke,
* now I have another favour to ask of you.‘ * Pray, my
lord duke,’ said the bishop, e what is that?‘ c Why,’ said
the duke, ‘ it is, that you will accept of the bishopric of
Rochester, and deanry of Westminster, in exchange for
Bangor, in case the present bishop of Rochester should
die.’ * My lord,‘ said the bishop, ’ if I had thoughts of
exchanging my bishopric, I should prefer what you mention before any other dignities.‘ ’ That is not,‘ said the
duke, * an answer to my question: will you accept them in
exchange, if they are offered to you?’ ‘ Your grace offers
them to me,’ said the bishop, ‘ in so generous and friendly
a manner, that 1 promise you to accept them.’ Here the
Conversation ended; and Dr. Wilcocks dying in the beginning of the year 1756, the bishop of Bangor was promoted
to the bishopric of Rochester and deanry of Westminster.
”
On the death of Dr. Sherlock, bishop of London, lord
Bath spoke to the bishop of Rochester, and offered to use
his endeavours with his majesty for appointing him to succeed that eminent prelate; but Dr. Fearce told him, that
from the earliest time that he could remember himself to
have considered about bishoprics, he had determined nevefc
to accept the bishopric of London, or the archbishopric of
Canterbury, and he begged his lordship not to make any
application in his behalf for the vacant see of London.
Lord Bath repeated his offer on the death of Dr. Osbaldiston in 1763, but Dr. Pearce again declined the proposal,
and was indeed so far from desiring a higher bishopric,
that he now meditated the resignation of what he possessed.
This is one of the most remarkable circumstances in the
Jife of Dr. Pearce. Being now (1763) seventy-three years
old, and finding himself less fit for the duties of bishop
and dean, he informed his friend lord Bath of his intention
to resign both, and to live in a retired manner upon his
own private fortune; and after much discourse upon,
the subject at different times, he prevailed upon his
lordship at last to acquaint his majesty with his intention,
and to desire, in the bishop’s name, the honour of a private audience from his majesty for that purpose. This
being granted, Dr. Pearce stated his motives as he had
done to lord Bath, adding that he was desirous to retire
for the opportunity of spending more time in his devotions
and studies; and that he was of the same way of thinking
with a general officer of the emperor Charles V. who,
when he desired a dismission from that monarch’s service,
told him, ‘.’ Sir, every wise man would, at the latter end
of life, wish to have an interval between the fatigues of
business and eternity.“The bishop then shewed the king,
in a written paper, instances of its having been done several times, and concluded with telling his majesty, that he
did not expect or desire an immediate answer to his request, but rather that his majesty would first consult some
pf his ministers as to the propriety and legality of it. This
the king consented to do; and about two months after, he
sent for the bishop and told him, that he had consulted
with two of his lawyers, lord Mansfield and lord Northington, who saw no objection to the proposed resignation,
and in consequence of their opinion, his majesty signified
his own consent. The interference, however, of lord Bath,
in requesting that his majesty would give the bishopric and
deanry to Dr. Newton, then bishop of Bristol, alarmed the
ministry, who thought that no dignities in the church should
be obtained from the crown, but through their hands.
Lord Northington suggested to his majesty some doubts
on the subject, and represented that the bishops in general disliked the design; and at length Dr. Pearce was told
by his majesty, that he must think 110 more about resigning
Vtae bishopric but
” that he would have all the merit of
having done it." In 1768, however, he was permitted to
resign his deanry, which was nearly double in. point of income to the bishopric which he was obliged to retain.
ng, he made his brother William Pearce, esq. his heir and executor. He bequeathed his library to the dean and chapter of Westminster, except such books as they already
Bishop Pearce married, in Feb. 22, the daughter of Mr. Adams, an eminent distiller in Holborn, with a considerable fortune, and lived with her upwards of fifty-one years in the highest degree of connubial happiness. Their children all dying young, he made his brother William Pearce, esq. his heir and executor. He bequeathed his library to the dean and chapter of Westminster, except such books as they already had. His manuscripts, with the books not left to Westminster, and the copy-right of all his works, except the Longinus sold to Mr. Tonson, he gave to his chaplain, the rev. John Derby. Besides some legacies to individuals, and some to various public charities, he left a noble bequest of five thousand pounds Old South Sea Annuities, towards the better support of the twenty widows of clergymen, who are maintained in the college of Bromley, the funds of which had become too seamy for that kind of genteel provision intended by the founder, bishop Warner. Bishop Pearce’s benefaction raised the widow’s pensions to 30l. per ann. and the chaplain’s salary to 60l. His heir, William Pearce, esq. who died in 1782, left a reversionary legacy of 12,Ooo/. for the purpose of building ten houses for clergymen’s widows, in addition to bishop Warner’s college, and endowing them. This legacy falling in a few years ago, the houses were completed in 1802.
“De Oratore” was published by him, when he was bachelor of arts, and Cicero “De Omciis, when he was dean of Wiucheste in 1745. The edition of Cicero undertaken by Olivet,
The diligence of bishop Pearce’s early studies, says his
biographer, appeared by its effects; he was first known to
the public by philological learning, which he continued
to cultivate in his advanced age. Cicero “De Oratore
”
was published by him, when he was bachelor of arts, and
Cicero “De Omciis, when he was dean of Wiucheste
in 1745. The edition of Cicero undertaken by Olivet,
produced a correspondence between him and Dr. Pearce, in
which Olivet expresses, in terms of great respect, his esteem,
of his learning, and his confidence in his criticism. But Dr.
Pearce did not confine his attention to the learned languages: he was particularly studious of Milton’s poetry,
and when Dr. Bentley published his imaginary emendations
of the
” Paradise Lost,“wrote in opposition to them a full
vindication of the established text. This was published in
1733, 8vo, under the title of Review of the Text of Paradise Lost,
” and is now become very scarce; but many,
both of the conjectures and refutations, are preserved in
bishop Newton’s edition.
hat baronef obtained for him the perpetual curacy of Brampton, near Chesterfield, in the gift of the dean of Lincoln; but the parishioners insisting that they had a right
Being now possessed of a living, and of some independent personal property inherited from his mother, he married, in April 1732, miss Anne Clarke, the only daughter of Benjamin Clarke, esq. of Stanley, near Wakefield, in Yorkshire. While he resided in Kent, which was for the space of twenty years, he made himself universally acceptable by his general knowledge, his agreeable conversation, and his vivacity. Having an early propensity to the study of antiquities as well as of the classics, he here laid the foundation of what in time became a considerable collection of books, and his cabinet of coins grew in proportion; by which two assemblages, so scarce among country gentlemen in general, he was qualified to pursue those collateral studies, without neglecting his parochial duties, to which he was always assiduously attentive. Here, however, the placid course of his life was interrupted by the death of Mrs. Pegge, whom he lamented with unfeigned sorrow; and now meditated on some mode of removing himself, without disadvantage, to his native country, either by obtaining a preferment tenable with his present vicarage, or by exchanging this for an equivalent. Having been induced to reside for some time at Surrenden, to superintend the education of Sir Edward Dering’s son, that baronef obtained for him the perpetual curacy of Brampton, near Chesterfield, in the gift of the dean of Lincoln; but the parishioners insisting that they had a right to the presentation, law proceedings took place, before the termination of which in favour of the dean of Lincoln, Mr. Pegge was presented by the new dean of Lincoln, Dr. George, to the rectory of Whittington, near Chesterfield. He was accordingly inducted Nov. 11, 1751, and resided here upwards of forty-four years without interruption. About a fortnight after, by the interest of his friend sir Edward Dering with the duke of Devonshire, he was inducted into the rectory of Brinhill, or Brindle, in Lancashire, on which he resigned Godmersham. Sir Edward also obtained for him in the same year a scarf from the marquis of Hartington (afterwards the fourth duke of Devonshire) who was then called up to the house of peers by the title of baron Cavendish of Hard wick. In 1758 Mr. Pegge was enabled, by the acquiescence of the duke of Devonshire, to exchange Brinhill for Heath, alias Lown, which lies within seven miles of Whittington; a very commodious measure, as it brought his parochial preferments within a smaller distance of each other. The vicarage of Heath he held till his death. His other preferments were, in 1765, the perpetual curacy ofWingerworth; the prebend of Bobenhull, in the church of Lichfield, in 1757; the living of Whittington in Staffordshire, in 1763; and the prebend of Louth, in Lincoln church, in 1772. Towards the close of his life he declined accepting a residentiaryship in the church of Lichfield, being too old to endure, with tolerable convenience, a removal from time to time. His chief patron was archbishop Cornwallis, but he had an admirer, if not a patron, in every dignitary of the church who knew him; and his protracted life, and his frequent and almost uninterrupted literary labours, made him very generally known. In 1791, when on a visit to his grandson, sir Christopher Pegge, of Oxford, he was created LL. D. by that university. He died, after a fortnight’s illness, Feb. 14, 1796, in the ninety-second year of his age, and was buried, according to his own desire, in the chancel of the church of Whittington, near Chesterfield, where his son placed a mural tablet of black marble, over the east window, with a short inscription.
on some elegant and very raluable Anglo-Saxon Remains,” 1756, 4to. 2. “Memoirs of Roger de Weseham, dean of Lincoln, afterwards bishop of Lichfield, and the principal
His independent publications on numismatical, antiquarian, and biographical subjects were also very numerous:
1. “A Series of Dissertations on some elegant and very
raluable Anglo-Saxon Remains,
” Memoirs of Roger de Weseham, dean of Lincoln, afterwards bishop of Lichfield, and the principal favourite of
Robert Grossetete, bishop of Lincoln,
” An Essay on the Coins of Cunobelin in an epistle to
the right rev. bishop of Carlisle (Dr. Lyttelton), president
of the society of antiquaries,
” An assemblage of coins fabricated by authority of the archbishops of
Canterbury. To which are subjoined two Dissertations,
”
Fitz-Stephen’s Description of the city of
London,
” &c. The Forme of Cury. A
roll of ancient English cookery, compiled about the year
1390, temp. Rich. II. with a copious index and glossary, 7 '
1780, 8vo. The original of this curious roll was the property of the late Gustavus Brander, esq. who presented it
afterwards to the British Museum. Prefixed to this
publication is his portrait, engraved at the expence of
Mr. Brander. 7.
” Annales Eliae de Trickenham, monachi ordinis Benedictini. Ex Bibliotheca Lamethana.“To which is added,
” Compendium compertorum; ex
bibliotheca ducis Devoniae,“1789, in 4to. Both parts
of this publication contain copious annotations by the
editor. The former was communicated by Mr. Nichols,
to whom it is inscribed,
” ad Johannem Nicolsium, celeberrimum typographum;“and the latter was published by
permission of the duke of Devonshire, to whom it is dedicated. 8.
” The Life of Robert Grossetete, the celebrated
bishop of Lincoln,“1793, 4to. This has very justly been
considered as the chef-d'oeuvre- of the author. Seldom has
research into an obscure period been more successful. It
is a valuable addition to our literary history. 9.
” An historical account of Beauchief Abbey, in the county of
Derby, from its first foundation to its final dissolution,“1801, 4to. 10.
” Anonymiana; or Ten centuries of observations on various authors and subjects," 1809, 8vo, a
very entertaining assemblage of judicious remarks and
anecdotes. It is needless to add that these two last publications were posthumous.
. 10. “Interest of the Whigs with relation to the Test- Act,” London, 1718, 8vo. 11. “Reflections on Dean Sherlock’s Vindication of the Corporation and Test Acts,” London,
, an eminent dissenting minister, distinguished for his zealous defence of the principles of nonConformity, and a no less zealous latitudinarian in opinion,
was born in 1673, at Wapping in London, of reputable
parents. By hrs mother, who died last, when he was
about seven years old, he, with a brother and sister, both
older than himself, was committed to Mr. Matthew Mead,
the famous dissenting minister at Stepney, as his guardian,
at whose house he lived for some time after his mother’s
death, and was taught by the same tutors Mr. Mead kept
for his own sons. He was afterwards, by Mr. Mead’s direction, put to other grammar-schools, and at last sent to
Utrecht in Holland, where he had his academical institution, and studied under Witsius, Leydecker, Graevius, Leusden, De Vries, and Luyts, and was well known to the
celebrated Mr. Hadrian Reland, who was then his fellow
student, and afterwards when he was professor corresponded
with Mr. Peirce. The latter part of his time abroad Mr.
Peirce spent at Leyden, where he attended Perizonius
and Noodt especially, hearing Gronovius, Mark and Spanheim, occasionally; and with some of these professors in
both universities he afterwards held a correspondence.
After he had spent above five years in these two places, he
lived privately in England, for some time at London,
among his relations, and for some time at Oxford, where
he lodged in a private house, and frequented the Bodleian
library. After this, at the desire of his friends, he preached
an evening lecture on Sundays at the meeting-house in
Miles-lane, London, and occasionally in other places, until
he settled at Cambridge, where he was treated with great
respect and civility by many gentlemen of the university.
In 1713 he was removed to a congregation at Exeter,
where he continued till 1718, when a controversy arising
among the dissenters about the doctrine of the Trinity,
from which some of them were at this time departing,
three articles were proposed to him, and Mr. Joseph HalJet, senior, another dissenting minister in Exeter, in order
to he subscribed; which both of them refused, and were
ejected from their congregation. After this a new meeting
was opened March 15, 1618-9, in that city, of which Mr.
Peirce continued minister till his death, which happened
March 30, 1726, in the 53d year of his age. His funeral
sermon was preached April the 3d following by Mr. Joseph
Hallet, jun. and printed at London, 1726, in 8vo; in
which he was restrained by Mr. Peirce himself from bestowing any encomiums on him; but Mr. Hallet observes in a
letter, that “he was a man of the strictest virtue, exemplary
piety, and great learning; and was exceedingly communicative of his knowledge. He would condescend to converse on subjects of learning with young men, in whom he
found any thirst after useful knowledge; and in his discoursing with them would be extremely free, and treat
them as if they had been his equals in learning and years.
”
His works have been divided into four classes. Under
the philosophical class, we find only his “Exercitatio Philosophica de Homoeomeria Anaxagorea,
” Utrecht, Eight Letters to Dr. Wells,
” London,
Consideration on the sixth Chapter
of the Abridgment of the London Cases, relating to Baptism and the sign of the Cross,
” London, Vindiciae Fratrum Dissentientium in Anglia,
” London, An Enquiry into the present duty of a Low
Churchman,
” London, Vindication of the
Dissenters,
” London, A Letter to Dr.
Bennet, occasioned by his late treatise concerning the
Nonjurors’ Separation,
” &c. London, Preface to the Presbyterians not chargeable with King Charles’s
death,
” Exeter, Defence of the' Dissenting Ministry and Ordination,
” in two parts, London,
The Dissenters’ Reasons for not writing
in behalf of Persecution. Designed for the satisfaction of
Dr. Snape, in a letter to him,
” London, Interest of the Whigs with relation to the Test- Act,
”
London, Reflections on Dean Sherlock’s Vindication of the Corporation and Test Acts,
”
London, Charge of misrepresentations
maintained against Dean Sherlock,
” London, Loyalty, integrity, and ingenuity of High Church
and the Dissenters compared,
” London, The Case of the
Ministers ejected at Exon,
” London, Defence of the Case,
” London, Animadversions on the true Account of the Proceedings at Salter’s
Hall: with a Letter to Mr. Eveleigh,
” London, A Second Letter to Mr. Eveleigh, in answer to his
Sober Reply,
” Exeter, A Letter to a
subscribing Minister in Defence of the Animadversions,
”
&c. London, Remarks upon the Account
of what was transacted in the assembly at Exon,
” London,
’s domestic chaplains. He was then doctor of divinity, and expected, as Wood tells us, “to be made a dean; but being not a person of activity, as others who mind not
Mr. Pell’s eminence, however, in mathematical knowledge, was now so great, that he was thought worthy of a
professor’s chair in that science; and, i.pon the vacancy
of one at Amsterdam in 1639, sir William Bos -ell, the
English resident with the States-general, used his interest,
that he might succeed in that professorship; which was not
filled up till above four years after, 1643, when Pell was
chosen to it. The year following he published, in two
pages 4to, “A Refutation of Longomontamis’s Discourse,
De vera circuli mensura,
” printed at Amsterdam in Idea Matheseos,
” which he had addressed to Mr. Hartlib, who in
An
Idea of Mathematics,
” at the end of Mr. John Dury’s
“Reformed Library-keeper.
” On the death of the prince
of Orange, in to be made a dean; but being not a person of activity, as others who mind not learning are, could
never rise higher than a rector.
” The truth is, adds
Wood, “he was a helpless man as to worldly affairs; and
his tenants and relations dealt so unkindly by him, that
they defrauded him of the profits of his rectory, and kept
him so indigent, that he was in want of necessaries, even
ink and paper, to his dying day.
” He was for some time
confined to the King’s-bench prison for debt; but, in
March 1682, was invited by Dr. Whistler to live in the
college of physicians. Here he continued till June following, when he was obliged, by his ill state of health, to
remove to the house of a grandchild of his in St. Margaret’s
church-yard, Westminster. From this too he was again
removed, for we find that he died at the house (in Dyot street) of Mr. Cothorne, reader of the church of St. Giles’s
in the Fields, Dec. the 12th, 1685, and was intecred by
the charity of Busby, master of Westminster school, and
Sharp, rector of, St. Giles’s, in the rector’s vault under
that church. Besides what have been mentioned, Dr. Pell
was the author of, 1. “An Exercitation concerning Easter,
”
A Table of 10,000 square numbers,
”
&c. Rhonius’s Algebra,
” printed
at London An Introduction to Algebra; translated out of the High Dutch into
English by Thomas Branker, much altered and augmented
by D. P. (Dr. Pell).
” Also a Table of odd numbers, less
than
ater, a celebrated writer in the twelfth century, was born at Troyes, of which city he was canon and dean, afterwards chancellor of the church of Paris. These benefices
, or the Eater, a celebrated writer
in the twelfth century, was born at Troyes, of which city
he was canon and dean, afterwards chancellor of the church
of Paris. These benefices he resigned to enter as a regular canon of St. Victor at Paris, where he died in October
1198, leaving a work entitled “Scholastica historia super
Nov. Test.
” which contains an abridgment of the sacred
history, from Genesis to the Acts, first printed at Utrecht
in 1473, small folio, and reprinted at Vienna in the same
year, and several times since. He dedicated this work to
cardinal William de Champagne, archbishop of Sens. He
is the author likewise of “Sermons,
” published by Buse'e,
under the name of Peter de Blois, 1600, 4to; and a “Catena temporum,
” or universal history, is attributed to him,
which was printed at Lubec, 1475, 2 vols, folio, and translated in French under the title of “Mer des Histoires,
”
Paris,
articularly Mr. Henry Carey, who by some lines in Philips’s style, and which were once thought to be dean Swift’s, fixed on that author the name of Namby Pamby. Isaac
Besides Pope, there were some other writers who have
written in burlesque of Philips’s poetry, which was singular in its manner, and not difficult to imitate; particularly Mr. Henry Carey, who by some lines in Philips’s style,
and which were once thought to be dean Swift’s, fixed on
that author the name of Namby Pamby. Isaac Hawkins
Browne also imitated him in his Pipe of Tobacco. This,
however, is written with great good humour, and though
intended to burlesque, is by no means designed to ridicule
Philips, he having made the same trial of skill on Swift,
Pope, Thomson, Young, and Gibber. As a dramatic
writer, Philips has certainly considerable merit, and one
of his plays long retained its popularity. This was “The
Distressed Mother,
” from the French of Racine, acted in
The Briton,
” a tragedy, acted
in Humfrey Duke of Gloucester,
” acted also
in Distrest Mother
” was concluded with
the most successful Epilogue, written by Budgell, that
was spoken in tin: English theatre. It was also highly
praised in the “Spectator.
”
Philips’s circumstances were in general, through his life,
not only easy, but rather affluent, in consequence of his
being connected, by his political principles, with persons of
great rank and consequence. He was concerned with Dr.
Hugh Boulter, afterwards archbishop of Armagh, the right
honourable Richard West, lord chancellor of Ireland, the
rev. Mr. Gilbert Burnet, and the rev. Mr. Henry Stevens,
in writing a series of Papers, many of them very excellent,
called “The Free Thinker,
” which were all published together by Philips, in 3 vols. 8vo. In the latter part of
queen Anne’s reign, he was secretary to the Hanover club,
a set of noblemen and gentlemen who had formed an association in honour of that succession, and for the support of
its interests; and who used particularly to distinguish in
their toasts such of the fair sex as were most zealously attached to the illustrious house of Brunswick. Mr. Philips’s
station in this club, together with the zeal shewn in his
writings, recommending him to the notice and favour of
the new government, he was, soon after the accession of
king George I. put into the commission of the peace, and
in 1717, appointed one of the commissioners of the lottery.
On his friend Dr. Boulter’s being made primate of Ireland,
he accompanied that prelate, and in Sept. 1734, was appointed registrar of the prerogative court at Dublin, had
other considerable preferments bestowed on him, and was
elected a member of the house of commons there, as representative for the county of Armagh. At length, having
purchased an annuity for life, of 400l. per annum, became
over to England sorne time in 1748, but did not long enjoy his fortune, being struck with a palsy, of which he
died June 18, 1749, in his seventy -eighth year, at his
house in Hanover-street; and was buried in Audley chapel.
“Of his personal character,
” says Dr. Johnson, “all I have
heard is, that he was eminent for bravery and skill in the
sword, and that in conversation he was somewhat solemn
and pompous.
” He is somewhere called Qunker Philips,
for what does not appear. Paul Whitehead relates, that
when Mr. Addison was secretary of state, Philips applied
to him for some preferment, but was coolly answered,
“that it was thought that he was already provided for, by
being made a justice for Westminster.
” To this observar
tion our author with some indignation replied, “Though
poetry was a trade he could not live by, yet he scorned to
owe subsistence to another which he ought not to live by.
”
“Among his poems,
” says Dr. Johnson, the * Letter
from Denmark,‘ may be justly praised; the Pastorals,’
which by the writer of the Guardian were ranked as one of
the four genuine productions of the rustic muse, cannot
surely he despicable. That they exhibit a mode of life
which did not exist, nor ever existed, is not to be objected; the supposition of such a state is allowed to Pastoral. In his other poems he cannot be denied the praise
of lines sometimes elegant; but he has seldom much force,
or much comprehension. The pieces that please best are
those which, from Pope and Pope’s adherents, procured
him the name of Namby Pamby, the poems of short lines,
by which he paid his court to all ages and characters, from
Walpole, the “steerer of the realm,
” to Miss Pulteney in
the nursery. The numbers are smooth and sprightly, and
the diction is seldom faulty. They are not loaded with
much thought, yet, if they had been written by Addison,
they would have had admirers: little things are not valued
but when they are done by those who can do greater. In
his translations from Pindar he found the art of reaching
all the obscurity of the Theban bard, however he may fall
below his sublimity; he will be allowed, if he has less fire,
to have more smoke. He has added nothing to English
poetry, yet at least half his book deserves to be read: perhaps he valued most himself that part which the critick
would reject."
w Pilkington, a gentleman once known in the poetical world by his volume of Miscellanies, revised by dean Swift, who had reason afterwards to be ashamed of the connection.
, an English wit and poetess,
of no very eminent rank, was the daughter of Dr. Van
Lewen, a gentleman of Dutch extraction, who settled in
Dublin, by a lady of good family; and born there in 1712.
She had early a strong inclination and taste for letters,
especially for poetry; and her performances were considered as extraordinary for her years. This, with a lively
manner, drew many admirers; and at length she became
the wife of the rev. Matthew Pilkington, a gentleman once
known in the poetical world by his volume of Miscellanies,
revised by dean Swift, who had reason afterwards to be
ashamed of the connection. In a short time Mr. Pilkington grew jealous, as she relates, not of her person, but of
her understanding; and her poetry, which when a lover
he admired with raptures, was changed now he was become
her husband, into an object of envy. During these jealousies, Mr. Pilkington, in 1732, went into England, in
order to serve as chaplain to Mr. Barber, lord mayor of
London; and absence having brought him into better humour with his wife, he wrote her a very kind letter, in
which he informed her that her verses were full of elegance
and beauty; that Pope, to whom he had shewn them,
longed to see the writer; and that he himself wished her
heartily in London. She accepted the invitation, went,
and returned with her husband to Ireland, where they were
soon after separated, in consequence of a gentleman being
found in her bed-chamber at two o'clock in the morning.
Her apology is rather curious: “Lovers of learning, I am
sure, will pardon me, as I solemnly declare it was the attractive charms of a new book, which the gentleman would
not lend me, but consented to stay till I read it through,
that was the sole motive of my detaining him.
” Of her
guilt, however, no doubts were entertained. “Dr. Delany,
” says dean Swift, in a letter to alderman Barber, “is
a very unlucky recommender, for he forced me to countenance Pilkington; introduced him to me, and praised
the wit, virtue, and humour of him and his wife; whereas
he proved the falsest rogue, and she the most profligate
w e in either kingdom. She was taken in the fact by her
own husband; he is now suing for a divorce, and will not
compass it; she is suing for a maintenance, and he has
none to give her.
”
rliament of Paris in 1633, and rose to various honours in his profession; and was, at his death, sub- dean of the company of advocates. He owed his success in life to
, a learned jurist, son of a professor of law of the same name, was born at Bourges in 1612.
He was admitted an advocate in the parliament of Paris in
1633, and rose to various honours in his profession; and
was, at his death, sub-dean of the company of advocates.
He owed his success in life to his great knowledge of the
law of benefices, in which he was regarded as the oracle,
and which he illustrated by several learned works. Of
these were, “Traité des Benefices;
” “La Pragmatique
Sanction de St. Louis, et celle de Charles VII. avec Commentaires
” “Notes sommaires sur les Indults, accorded
a Louis XIV. &c.
” “Trait^s des Regales,
” 2 vols. 4to,
which is said to be a very learned and useful performance.
This industrious writer died at Paris, Oct. 10, 1691.
zotinto are excellent. Among the latter, Strutt mentions bishop Crew, archbishop Sterne, Dr. Comber, dean of Durham, Henry Gyles, the artist, and general Lambert. In
His etchings, particularly of landscapes and birds, from Griffier, are admirable. The free style in which he treated the foliage of his trees, proves his judgment and good taste; and his portraits in mezzotinto are excellent. Among the latter, Strutt mentions bishop Crew, archbishop Sterne, Dr. Comber, dean of Durham, Henry Gyles, the artist, and general Lambert. In Thoresby’s Topography of Leeds are some churches drawn by Place; the plates for Godartius’s book of Insects are by him; and he also executed many views in Yorkshire.
the professorship of pathology and in 1747 to that of therapeutics. He was also nominated perpetual dean of the faculty, and consulting physician to the court of Saxony.
, an able physician, was born at Chemnitz, in Misnia, in August 1694. He was first intended for merchandize, but the rapid progress which he made in his studies, induced his father to consent that he should direct his attention to medicine, for which he had manifested a strong inclination. He studied, therefore, at Leipsic, for three years, and afterwards at Halle, where he received the degree of doctor in September 1716. He then travelled through various parts of Europe, for four years, and finally settled at Leipsic in 1720. In 1721 he was appointed professor extraordinary of anatomy and surgery. In 1724 he obtained the chair of physiology, which had become vacant by the death of Rivinus; in 1737 he was promoted to the professorship of pathology and in 1747 to that of therapeutics. He was also nominated perpetual dean of the faculty, and consulting physician to the court of Saxony. He did not live long, however, to 6njoy these flattering distinctions; for he was carried off suddenly on the 19th of December 1747, in the fifty-fourth year of his age, by a paroxysm of asthma.
gth of the bishop, in a Turkish dress, painted by Liotard, in the possession of the late Dr. Milles, dean of Exeter, his first cousin. He was a great traveller, and visited
, D. D. who was distantly related to the preceding, but added the e to his name, was
the son of Mr. Richard Pococke, sequestrator of the. church
of All-saints in Southampton, and head master of the freeschool there, by the only daughter of the rev. Mr. Isaac
Milles, minister of Highcleer in Hampshire, and was born
at Southampton in 1704. He received his scbool-learning
there, and his academical education at Corpns-Christi college, Oxford, where he took his degree of LL. B. May 5,
1731 and that of LL. D. (being then precentor of Lismore) June 28, 1733 together with Dr. Seeker, then rector of St. James’s, and afterwards archbishop of Canterbury. He began his travels into the East in 1737, and
returned in 1742, and was made precentor of Waterford
in 1744. In 1743, he published the first part of those
travels, under the title of “A Description of the East,
and of some other Countries, vol. I. Observations on
Egypt.
” In Observations on Palestine, or the Holy Land,
Syria, Mesopotamia, Cyprus, and Candia,
” which he dedicated to the earl of Chesterfield, then made lord-lieutenant of Ireland attended his lordship thither as one of his
domestic chaplains, and was soon after appointed by his
lordship archdeacon of Dublin. In March 1756, he was
promoted by the duke of Devonshire (then lord-lieutenant)
to the bishopric of Ossory, vacant by the death of Dr.
Edward Maurice. He was translated by the king’s letter
from Ossory to Elphin, in June 1765, bishop Gore of
Elphin bc'ing then promoted to Meath; but bishop Gore
finding a great sum was to be paid to his predecessor’s
executors for the house at Ardbracean, declined taking out
his patent; and therefore bishop Pococke, in July, was
translated by the duke of Northumberland directly to the
see of Meath, and died in the month of September the
same year, suddenly, of an apoplectic stroke, while he was
in the course of his visitation. An eulogium of his Description of Egypt is given in a work entitled “Pauli Ernestt
Jablonski Pantheon Ægyptiorum, Praetat. ad part, iii.
”
He penetrated no further up the Nile than to Philse, now
Gieuret Ell Hiereff; whereas Mr. Norden, in 1737, went
as far as Derri, between the two cataracts. The two travellers are supposed to have met on the Nile, in the neighbourhood of Esnay, in Jan. 1738. But the fact, as Dr.
Pococke told some of his friends, was, that being on his
return, not knowing that Mr. Norden was gone up, he
passed by him in the night, without having the pleasure of
seeing him. There was an admirable whole length of the
bishop, in a Turkish dress, painted by Liotard, in the
possession of the late Dr. Milles, dean of Exeter, his first
cousin. He was a great traveller, and visited other places
besides the East His description of a rock on the westside of Dunbar harbour in Scotland, resembling the GiantsCauseway, is in the Philos. Trans, vol. LII. art. 17; and in
Archaeologia,vol. II. p. 32, his account of some antiquities
found in Ireland. When travelling through Scotland
(where he preached several times to crowded congregations), he stopped at Dingwal, and said he was much
struck and pleased with its appearance for the situation
of it brought Jerusalem to his remembrance, and he
pointed out the hill which resembled Calvary. The same
similitude was observed by him in regard to Dartmouth
but a 4to volume of his letters, containing his travels ia
England and Scotland, was lost. He preached a sermon
in 1761 for the benefit of the Magdalen charity in London, and one in 1762 before the incorporated Society in
Dublin.
g physician, and Duke Henry II. instituted a faculty of medicine at Pont-aMousson, and nominated him dean and first professor. Being now enabled to take his doctor’s
, son of the preceding, was born at
Nancy in 1563, and educated at the college of Navarre,
at Paris, where he distinguished himself by his rapid advancement in the knowledge of the languages, belles lettres, and philosophy. He received the degree of M. A,
in the university of Paris in 1581, and immediately
commenced his career in the schools of medicine, which
he pursued at Paris, Padua, and other schools of Italy.
When he returned to Paris in 1588 he took his bachelor’s
degree in medicine, and became a licentiate but having
already expended his little income on the previous parts
of his medical progress, he was obliged to leave Paris
without having taken the degree of doctor. He then returned to his native city, where duke Charles III. of Lorraine appointed him his consulting physician, and Duke
Henry II. instituted a faculty of medicine at Pont-aMousson, and nominated him dean and first professor.
Being now enabled to take his doctor’s degree, he went
to Paris for that purpose and, on his return, commenced
the duties of his professorship in November 1598, which
he performed for many years with the highest reputation, and enjoyed very extensive practice until his death,
which was occasioned by the plague, at Nancy, whither
he had gone to administer relief to those afflicted by that
disorder, in 1633. His principal publication is entitled
“Selectiorum Observationum et Consiliorum de proeteritis hactenus morbis, effectibusque praeter naturam ab
aqua, seu scrosa colluvie et deiuvie ortis, Liber singularis,
” Pont-a-Mousson, Piso enucleatus,
” in 12mo. His other works were,
“Physicum Cometae Speculum,
” Ponte ad Montionem,
Discours de la Nature, Causes, et
Remedes, tant curatifs que prevservatifs, des maladies populaires, accompagnees de Dysenteric et autres Flux de
Ventre,
” ibid. Ludovici Mercati Institutiones ad
usum et examen eorum qui artem luxatoriam exercent,
”
Francfort, Caroli III., Serenissimi,
Potentissimique Ducis Lotharingiae, &c., Macarismos, seu
felicitatis et virtutum egregio Principe dignarum coronse,
”
1690.
rning was still his favourite pursuit appears from his requesting from the king a grant of the house dean Colet had built in the Carthusian monastery, where he had first
Pole had acquired a considerable degree of reputation in Italy, which made his mother, now countess of Salisbury, and other friends, desirous of his return, that the same display of his talents might sanction the honours intended for him and it was his design to set out for England in 1525; but being desirous of seeing the jubilee, which was celebrated this year at Rome, he resolved to visit that city first. On his journey to Rome he was, we are told, every where received with great respect but at Rome he contented himself with viewing 1 what was most curious, without appearing at the papal court. On his arrival in England, he was welcomed with great respect by the royal family, and by the public at large, which he seems to have merited by his elegant and accomplished manners, as well as the proficiency he had made in learning. That learning was still his favourite pursuit appears from his requesting from the king a grant of the house dean Colet had built in the Carthusian monastery, where he had first been educated, and where he now devoted himself to study for about two years.
h his father to Binfield near Oakingham and for some time was under the care of another priest named Dean, but with so little advantage, that the youth determined to
In 1700, when he had attained his twelfth year, he retired with his father to Binfield near Oakingham and for
some time was under the care of another priest named
Dean, but with so little advantage, that the youth determined to study on a plan of his own, reading all such books
as he could procure, but with a decided preference, even
at this early age, to poetical works. It does not appear
that any of the learned professions were pointed out to
him, or that his father attempted in any way to direct his
studies. “He was,
” says Dr. Warton, “invariably and
solely a poet, from the beginning of his life to the end.
”
Of the poets which he read, Dryden soon became his favourite and model; and we are told that he entreated a
friend to carry him to Button’s coffee-house which Dryden.
frequented, that he might gratify himself with the hare
sight of a man whom he so much admired, and of whom
he continued to speak well throughout life.
torship expired, he obtained leave to travel, but returned probably before 1660, as we then find him dean of Wadham college and when, in the same year Mr. (afterwards,
Towards the end of the above year, 1658, and before his proctorship expired, he obtained leave to travel, but returned probably before 1660, as we then find him dean of Wadham college and when, in the same year Mr. (afterwards, sir) Christopher Wren resigned the professorship of astronomy in Gresham college, Mr. Pope was chosen in his room, and Sept. 12 of that year was created doctor of physic; but the statutes not permitting him to hold both, he was obliged on this occasion to resign his fellowship in Wadham. In May 1663 he was chosen one of the first fellows of the Royal Society along with the other eminent men whom the nation then yielded, and soon after had licence to travel for two years, during which he made the tour of Italy, and remitted to the Royal Society various observations collected on his journey. In 1667 he was chosen into the council of the Royal Society, and in the following year, his half-brother Dr. Wilkins, being promoted to the bishopric of Chester, made him registrar of that diocese. In 1686 he was recovered of an inflammation in his eyes, which endangered the loss of sight, by Dr. Turbervile, an eminent oculist, as he gratefully acknowledged in an epitaph which he wrote upon him after his deatii. In the following year he resigned his Gresham professorship.
Dr. Porter, who, astonished at his talents, recommended him to the notice of the master, Dr. Tyndal, dean of Ely, by whose influence ie was chosen fellow in 1609. This
, a celebrated divine in the beginning
of the seventeenth century, descended from the Prestons,
of Preston in Lancashire, was born at Heyford, in Northamptonshire, in Oct. 1587. An uncle on the mother’s side,
who resided at Northampton, undertook the care of his
education, and placed him at first at the free-school of that
town, and afterwards under a Mr. Guest, an able Greek
scholar, who resided in Bedfordshire. With him he remained until 1584, when he was admitted of King’s
college, Cambridge. Here he applied to what his biographer
tells us was at that time the genius of the college, viz.
music, studied its theory, and practised on the lute but
thinking this a waste of time, he would have applied himself to matters of more importance, could he have remained
here, but as not coming from Eton school, he could not be
upon the foundation. Being therefore incapable of preferment, he removed to Queen’s college, and by the instructions of Oliver Bowles, an able tutor, he soon became distinguished for his proficiency, especially in the philosophy
of Aristotle, and took his degrees with uncommon reputation. Bowles leaving college for a living, his next tutor was
Dr. Porter, who, astonished at his talents, recommended him
to the notice of the master, Dr. Tyndal, dean of Ely, by
whose influence ie was chosen fellow in 1609. This he
appears to have thought rather convenient than honourable,
for at this time his mind was much set on public life, and
on rising at court. He continued, however, to pursue his
studies, to which he now added that of medicine; and,
although he did this probably without any view to it as a
profession, we are told that when any of his pupils were
sick, he sometimes took the liberty to alter the physicians’
prescriptions. Botany and astronomy, or rather astrology,
also engrossed some part of his attention. But from all
these pursuits he was at once diverted by a sermon preached
at St. Mary’s by Mr. Cotton, which made such an impression on him, that he immediately resolved on the study of
divinity, and began, as was then usual, by perusing the
schoolmen. “There was nothing,
” says his biographer,
“that ever Scotus or Occam wrote, but he had weighed
and examined; he delighted much to read them in the first
and oldest editions that could be got. I have still a Scotus
in a very old print, and a paper not inferior to parchment,
that hath his hand and notes upon it throughout yet he
continued longer in Aquinas whose sums he would sometimes read as the barber cut his hair, and when it fell upon
the place be read, he would not lay down his book, but
blow it off,
”
elf so assiduous in his studies as considerably to impair his health. When it came to his turn to be dean and catechistof his college, he began such a course of divinity
Mr. Preston’s part in this singular disputation might
have led to favour at court, if he had been desirous of it
and sir Futk Greville, afterwards lord Brook, was so pleased
with his performance that he settled 50l. per ann. upon
him, and was his friend ever after; but he was now
seriously intent on the office of a preacher of the gospel, and
having studied Calvin, and adopted his religious opinions,
he became suspected of puritanism, which was then much
discouraged at court. In the mean time his reputation for
learning induced many persons of eminence to place their
sons under his tuition and Fuller tells us, he was “the
greatest pupil- monger ever known in England, having sixteen fellow-commons admitted into Queen’s college in one
year,
” while he continued himself so assiduous in his
studies as considerably to impair his health. When it
came to his turn to be dean and catechistof his college, he
began such a course of divinity -lectures as might direct the
juniors in that study; and these being of the popular kind,
were so much frequented, not only by the members of
other colleges, but by the townsmen, that a complaint was
at length made to the vice-chancellor, and an order given
that no townsmen or scholars of other colleges should be
permitted to attend. His character for puritanism seems
now to have been generally established, and he was
brought into trouble by preaching at St. Botolph’s church,
although prohibited by Dr. Newcomb, commissary to the
chancellor of Ely, who informed the bishop and the king,
then at Newmarket, of this irregularity. On the part of
Newcomb, this appears to have been the consequence of
a private pique; but whatever might be his motive, the
matter came to be heard at court, and the issue was, that
Mr. Preston was desired to give his sentiments on the 1U
turgy at St. Botolph’s church by way of recantation. He
accordingly handled the subject in such a manner as
cleared himself from any suspicion of disliking the forms of
the liturgy, and soon after it came to his turn to preach
before the king when at Hinchingbrook. The court that
day, a Tuesday, was very thin, the prince and the duke
of Buckingham being both absent. After dinner, which
Mr. Preston had the honour of partaking at his majesty’s
table, he was so much complimented by the king, that
when he retired, the marquis of Hamilton recommended
him to his majesty to be one of his chaplains, as a man
“who had substance and matter in him.
” The king assented to this, but remembering his late conduct at Cambridge, declined giving him the appointment.
yen de Killerine,“1733, 6 vols. 12mo, translated into English, 3 vols. 12mo, under the title of” The Dean of Coleraine.“8.” History of Margaret of Anjou,“1740, 2 vols.
The following are the works of the abbé Prevot 1. “Memoires d'un Homme de Qualite, qui s’est retire du monde,
”
6 vols. 12mo. This romance has been translated into
English in 2 vols. 12mo, and in 3 vols. 12mo, under the
title of the “Memoirs of the marquis de Bretagne
” to
which is added, another romance of Prevot' s. See art. 3.
2. “Histoire de M. Cleveland, fils naturel de Cromwell,
”
Histoire du Chevalier des Grieux, & de Man on Lescaut,
” Pour & Contre,
”
a literary journal, The first volume of a translation ofThuanus,
” A translation of Dryden’s play, All for Love,
” 1733, 6 vols. 12mo, translated into English, 3 vols.
12mo, under the title of
” The Dean of Coleraine.“8.
” History of Margaret of Anjou,“1740, 2 vols. 12mu.
translated into English, 2 volumes 12mOr 9.
” Histoire
d'une Grecque Moderne,“1741, 2 vols. 12mo, translated
into English, 1 vol. 12mo. 10.
” Campagnes Philosophiques, ou Memoires de M. de Montcalm,“1741, 2 vols.
12mo, part history, and part fiction. 11.
” Memoires pour
servir a Histoire de Malthe,“1742, 12mo. 12.
” Histoire
de Guillaume le Conquerant Roi d'Angleterre,“1742,
12mo. 13.
” Voyages du Captaine R. Lade,“1744, 2 vols.
12mo. 14.
” A translation of Cicero’s Letters to Brutus,“with notes, 1744, 12mo; and a translation of his Familiar
Letters, 1746, 5 vols. 12mo. 15.
” A translation of Middleton’s Life of Cicero,“1743, 4 vols. 12mo. 16.
” Memoires d'un honnete homme,“1745. 17.
” Histoire generale des Voyages,“1745, &c. 16 vols. 4to, and 64 vols.
12ino. La Harpe has abridged this compilation in 21 vols.
8vo; he has also added, Cook’s Voyages. 18. A Dictionary of the French language, 1751, 8vo, and a new
edition, 2 vols. 8vo. 19 and 20.
” Clarissa Harlowe,“1751, 12 parts; and,
” Sir Charles Grandison,“8 parts,
1755 both translated from Richardson. 21.
” Le Monde
Moral,“1760, 4 vols. 12mo. 22.
” A translation of Hume’s
history of the Stuarts,“1760, 3 vols. 4to, and 6 vols. 12mo.
23.
” Memoires pour servir a la Histoire de la Vertu,“1762, 4 vols. 12mo, translated from the English. 24.
” Almoran and Hamet,“translated from Hawkesworth,
1762, 2 vols. 12mo. And, 25. A posthumous translation
from the English, entitled
” Letters de Mentor, a une
jeune Seigneur," 1764, 12mo.
under Dr. Busby, at Westminster-school, and in 1668 admitted a student of Christ Church, Oxford, by dean Fell. His attainments here must have distinguished him very
, a learned English divine,
was born at Padstow, in Cornwall, May 3, 1648. He was
the son of Edmund Prideaux, esq. of an ancient and honourable family in that county, and was equally well descended by his mother, the daughter of John Moyle, esq.
of Bake, in Cornwall. After some elementary education
at Liskard and Bodmin, he was placed under Dr. Busby,
at Westminster-school, and in 1668 admitted a student of
Christ Church, Oxford, by dean Fell. His attainments
here must have distinguished him very early: for we find
that in 1672, when he took his bachelor’s degree, Dr. Fell
employed him to add some notes to an edition of Florus,
then printing at the university press: and soon after, he
was requested to be the editor of Malela, a Greek historian, from a ms. in the Bodleian library but having represented this as a work not worth the printing, being
fabulous and trifling, the design was laid aside, until Dr.
Hody, who was of a different opinion, undertook the task.
Mr. Prideaux, about the same time, was employed in
giving a history of the Arundelian marbles, with a comment, which was published in May 1676, under the title
*' Marmora Oxoniensia,“folio. Such a work was well calculated to advance his reputation abroad, as well as at
home; and there was such a demand for it, that within a
few years it could not be procured but at a very high price.
It suffered, however, very much from the carelessness and
neglect of a Mr. Bennet, then corrector to the university
press, and contained so many typographical errors, that
Mr. Prideaux never could speak of it with complacency.
A more correct edition was published by Maittaire, in
1732. In 1675 Mr. Prideaux took his degree of M. A.
Having, by order, presented one of the copies of the
” Marmora“to the lord chancellor Finch, this introduced
him to his lordship’s patronage, who soon after placed one
of his sons under him, as tutor at Christ Church and in
1679 presented him to the rectory of St. Clement’s, in the
suburb of Oxford, where he officiated for several years.
The same year he published two tracts out of Maimonides
in Hebrew, with a Latin translation and notes, under the
title ec De Jure pauperis et peregrini apud Judeos.
” This
he did in consequence of having been appointed Dr. Busby’s
Hebrew lecturer in Christ Church, and with a view to teach
students the rabbinical dialect, and to read it without points.
In 1681, the lord chancellor Finch, then earl of Nottingham, presented him to a prebend in the cathedral of- Norwich. In Nov. 1682, he was admitted to the degree of
bachelor in divinity, and on the death of lord Nottingham,
found another patron in his successor sir Francis North;
who, in February of the following year, gave him the rectory of Bladen, with Woodstock chapelry, in Oxfordshire;
and as Mr. Prideaux had been appointed librarian to Christ
Church, to which no salary belongs, he was allowed to hold
this living with his student’s place.
rshall, Bernard, Mills, Godolphin, &c. On the death of bishop Fell, when king James imposed a popish dean on Christ Church, Mr. Prideaux determined to quit Oxford, and
He now devoted himself entirely to his studies and the duties of his function, going constantly to Bladen and Woodstock every Sunday; and he kept a resident curate at Woodstock, for the discharge of all parochial duties; for whose convenience, as well as that of his successors, Dr. Fell, now bishop of Oxford, built, at his own expence, a house. The terms of the purchase and building he left to Mr. Prideaux, who completed it in 1685. In college he exerted himself in reforming many abuses, and restoring discipline, which was not very acceptable to many of "the students, but procured him the friendship and esteem of his learned contemporaries at the university, particularly bishop Fell and Drs. Pocock, Marshall, Bernard, Mills, Godolphin, &c. On the death of bishop Fell, when king James imposed a popish dean on Christ Church, Mr. Prideaux determined to quit Oxford, and settle on his cures; and accordingly, having, in 1686, proceeded doctor in divinity, he exchanged his living of Bladen for the rectory of Saham. in Norfolk, and then left Oxford, to which he never returned. A few days before this he attended the funeral of his revered friend, Dr. Fell.
return to Norwich, the care of the cathedral affairs again devolved upon him, in the absence of the dean (Dr. Fairfax), who resided mostly in London. In 1696, the dean
In 1691, on the death of Dr. Pocock, his professorship
(of Hebrew) was offered to Dr. Prideaux but he declined
it, says his biographer, “for several reasons, which at
that time made it inconvenient to him to accept it, but
afterwards it proved much to his detriment that he did
not.
” As after the act of toleration, many people imagined
themselves at liberty either to go to church or stay at
home, as they thought proper, by which means the churches
were much deserted, Dr. Prideaux drew up a circular letter, directed to the ministers of his archdeaconry, which
was afterwards published, in 1701, at the end of his “Directions to Churchwardens.
” In
ch experienced in his archdeaconry this has gone through many editions. In 1702, on the death of the dean of Norwich, Dr. Henry Fairfax, Dr. Prideaux was installed as
In 1697 he published his “Life of Mahomet ,
” 8vo, of
which three editions were printed the first year. He intended to have written a history of the Saracen empire,
and with it the decay and fall of the Christian religion
but he gave up this design for reasons stated in the preface
to the Life of Mahomet. This valuable work was followed
by his useful little treatise called “Directions to Churchwardens,
” whose negligence he had very much experienced in his archdeaconry this has gone through many
editions. In 1702, on the death of the dean of Norwich,
Dr. Henry Fairfax, Dr. Prideaux was installed as his successor on June 8th of that year, and a more proper person
could not be found. He now continued, with better effect,
if possible, that attention to regularity and discipline which
he had before paid and although this made him obnoxious to the persons whom he censured or dismissed,
the benefit to the general body was too obvious not to be
approved. In December 1702, on a public thanksgivingday for the success of the expedition to Vigo, he preached
a sermon on the subject, which we notice as the only one
he ever printed and, had it been left to his own inclination, would never have been thought of by himself for that
purpose. In 1703 he published a tract in vindication of the
ecclesiastical law, which gives the successor in any ecclesiastical benefice or promotion, all the profits, from the
day of the avoidance. This was occasioned by an alteration in the law which bishop Burnet was about to have
introduced; but our author’s arguments carried such
weight, that the design was given up.
of nature, for judgments 4 and to apply them superstitiously as such.” There are letters between the dean, and his cousin Mr. Moyie, concerning some passages in this
Being enabled, however, to return to his studies, after
improving a new edition of his “Directions to Church
Wardens,
” in The Connection of the History of the Old
and New Testament;
” the first part of which was published
in Cato’s Letters,
” had certainly no prejudices
in favour of Prideaux, or of his work yet he styles it “a
body of universal history, written with such capacity, accuracy, industry, and honesty, as make it one of the best
books that ever came into the world, and shew him to be
one of the greatest men in it. No book was ever more universally read and approved it is, indeed, a great public
service done to mankind, and entities the author to the
highest public gratitude and honour. But though I never
saw any great work, to which 1 found fewer objections, yet
as a memorable proof how inseparably mistakes and prejudices cleave to the mind of man, the great and candid Dr.
Prideaux is not without them. I therefore do not upbraid
him with them, but rather admire him for having so few.
There are, however, some of his theological observations,
which seem to me not only ill-grounded, but to have a tendency to create in his readers wrong notions of the Deity,
and to encourage them to mistake the common accidents
of life, and the common events of nature, for judgments 4
and to apply them superstitiously as such.
” There are
letters between the dean, and his cousin Mr. Moyie, concerning some passages in this “Connection,
” &c. printed
in the “Miscellaneous Works
” of the latter, and in Dr.
Prideaux’s life. No man could be more willing to listen
to reasonable objections, or to correct what could be proved
to be wrong. Candour was the distinguishing feature of
Dean Prideaux’s character.
minster school and Christ-church, Oxford, where his talents and industry became so conspicuous, that dean Aldrich appointed him to make the congratulatory speech to queen
, Earl Of Bath, an eminent English statesman, was descended from an ancient family, who took their surname from a place of that appellation in Leicestershire. His grandfather, sir William Pulteney, was member of parliament for the city of Westminster, and highly distinguished himself in the House of Commons by his manly and spirited eloquence. Of his father, little is upon record. He was born in 1682, and educated at Westminster school and Christ-church, Oxford, where his talents and industry became so conspicuous, that dean Aldrich appointed him to make the congratulatory speech to queen Anne, on her visit to the college. Having travelled through various parts of Europe, he returned to his riative country with a mind highly improved, and came into parliament for the borough of Heydon in Yorkshire, by the interest of Mr. Guy, his protector and great benefactor, who left him 40,000l. and an estate of 500l. a year.
n no Jonger capable of discharging the duties annexed to it, he gave in his resignation, both to the dean and chapter of Norwich, and also to the mayor and corporation
His sentiments will further appear by his publishing his
“Paraphrase on the Acts, and all the Epistles,
” in the
manner of Dr. Clarke. This was followed by his “Paraphrase on the Revelation of St. John,
” and on the “Historical books of the Old Testament;
” all which, comprising what was thought necessary for illustration, within a
small compass, and in a plain and perspicuous manner,
were much recommended and much read. His writings
are generally characterised by perspicuity and manly
sense, rather than by any elevation of style yet in the
delivery of his sermons, so impressive was his elocution
that, both in the metropolis and in the country, he was one
of the most admi /ed preachers of his time. His sole aim
was to amend or improve his auditors. For this purpose
he addressed himself, not to their passions, but to their
understandings and consciences. He judiciously preferred
a plainness, united with a force of expression, to all affectation of elegance or rhetorical sublimity, and delivered hi*
discourses with so just and animated a torie of voice, as
never failed to gain universal attention.
Although he lived in friendship and familiar correspondence with many eminent churchmen, as bishop Hoadly,
Dr. Clarke, Dr. Sykes, &c. yet he remained long in a situation of comparative obscurity. This, according to a passage in one of archbishop Herring’s letters to Mr. Duncomb, was, “in some measure, owing to himself; for that
very impetuosity of spirit which, under proper government, renders him the agreeable creature he is, has, in
some circumstances of life, got the better of him, and
hurt his views.
” This probably alludes to his being heterodox with respect to the Trinity, which was common
with most of the divines with whom he associated. He continued to be preacher at St. Nicholas, King’s Lynn, till
1732, when he succeeded to the vicarage of St. Margaret,
which he held till 1755. Being then no Jonger capable of
discharging the duties annexed to it, he gave in his resignation, both to the dean and chapter of Norwich, and also
to the mayor and corporation of Lynn, early in the summer of that year. He then retired to SwafFham, where he
died, Dec. 31, 1756, aged eighty-two > and was buried in
the church of Lynn All Saints.
der Francis Vatable, and became professor of Hebrew and Syriac in the college of France in 1554, and dean of the royal professors, which high office he held at the time
, or, in French, Cinq-Arbres (John),
a learned Hebrew scholar, was born at Aurillac in
Auvergne, about the beginning of the sixteenth century.
He studied the Oriental languages under Francis Vatable,
and became professor of Hebrew and Syriac in the college
of France in 1554, and dean of the royal professors, which
high office he held at the time of his death in 1587. In
1546 he published his “Hebrew Grammar,
” to which was
added a short treatise on the Hebrew points. This was
often reprinted both in France and elsewhere in 4to, under
the title “Linguae Hebraicae institutiones absolutissimae.
”
The edition of Targum of Jonathan, son of Uziel, on Jeremiah,
” which
was published in Targum in Osean, Joelem, Amosum,
” &c. He also published in
and on the 30th was so ill, tiiat it was thought he could not live till the next day. Dr. Stanhope, dean of Canterbury and Mr. Whitfield (then queen’s chaplain, and
In 1703, Radcliffe was himself taken ill (on Wednesday, March 24), with something like a pleurisy neglected it;
drank a bottle of wine at sir Justinian Isham’s on Thursday,
took to his bed on Friday and on the 30th was so ill, tiiat
it was thought he could not live till the next day. Dr.
Stanhope, dean of Canterbury and Mr. Whitfield (then queen’s chaplain, and rector of St. Martin, Ludgate, afterwards vicar of St. Giles, Cripplegate), were sent for by
him, and he desired them to assist him. By a will, made
the28th, he disposed of the greatest part of his estate to
charity; and several thousand pounds, in particular, for
the relief of sick seamen set ashore. Mr. Bernard, the
serjeant-surgeon, took from him 100 ounces of blood
and on the 31st he took a strange resolution of being removed to Kensington, notwithstanding his weakness, from
which the most pressing entreaties of his friends could not
divert him. In the warmest time of the day he rose, and
was carried by four men in a chair to Kensington, whither
he got with difficulty, having fainted away in his chair.
“Being put to bed,
” says Dr. Atterbury, on whose authority
we relate these particulars, “he fell asleep immediately, and
it is concluded now (April 1) that he may do well so that
the town- physicians, who expected to share his practice,
begin now to think themselves disappointed.
” Two days
after, the same writer adds, “Dr. Radclitfe is past all
danger: his escape is next to miraculous. It hath made
him not only very serious, but very devout. The person
who faath read prayers to him often (and particularly this day) tells me, he never saw a man more in earnest. The
queen asked Mr. Bernard how he did and when he told
her that he was ungovernable, and would observe no rules,
she answered, that then nobody had reason to take any
thing ill from, him, since it was plain he used other people
no worse than he used himself.
”
to him, without their knowledge, two hours before the queen’s death. In this letter from Mr. Ford to dean Swift, which is dated the thirty-first of July, it is said,
In 1713 he was elected into parliament for the town of
Buckingham. In the last illness of queen Anne, he was
sent for to Carshalton, about noon, by order of the council.
He said, “he had taken physic, and could not come.
”
Mr. Ford, from whose letter to Dr. Swift this anecdote is
taken, observes, “In all probability he had saved her life
for I am told the late lord Gower had been often in the
same condition, wtth the gout in his head.
” In the account
that is given of Dr. Radcliffe in the “Biographia Britannica,
” it is said, that the queen was struck with death the
twenty-eighth of July that Dr. Radcliffe’s name was not
once mentioned, either by the queen or “any lord of the
council
” only that lady Masham sent to him, without their
knowledge, two hours before the queen’s death. In this
letter from Mr. Ford to dean Swift, which is dated the
thirty-first of July, it is said, that the queen’s disorder began
between eight and nine the morning before, which was the
thirtieth and that about noon, the same day, Radcliffe
was sent for by an order of council. These accounts being
contradictory, the reader will probably want some assistance
to determine what were the facts. As to the time when
the queen was taken ill, Mr. Ford’s account is most likely
to be true, as he was upon the spot, and in a situation
which insured him the best intelligence. As to the time
when the doctor was sent for, the account in the Biog. Brit,
is manifestly wrong for if the doctor had been sent for
only two hours before the queen’s death, which happened
incontestably on the first of August, Mr. Ford could not
have mentioned the fact on the 31st of July, when his letter
was dated. Whether Radcliffe was sent for by lady Masham,
or by order of council, h therefore the only point to be
determined. That he was generally reported to have been
sent for by order of council is certain but a letter is
printed in the “Biographia,
” said to have been written by
the doctor to one of his friends, which, supposing it to be
genuine, will prove, that the doctor maintained the contrary. On the 5th of August, four days after the queen’s
death, a member of the House of Commons, a friend of
the doctor’s, who was also a member, and one who always
voted on the same side, moved, that he might be summoned
to attend in his place, in order to be censured for not
attending on her majesty. Upon this occasion the doctor
is said to have written the following letter to another of
his friends
is gentleman’s protection, he was sent, in June 1621, to Westminster school, Dr. Williams being then dean of Westminster. In all these places his progress was marked
, a pious and exemplary bishop of Carlisle, was born April 20, 1608, at Bliton, a village in Lincolnshire near Gainsborough. His father, Thomas, was at this time rector of Bliton, and afterwards of Wintringham in the same county; both which preferments he owed to the Wrays of Glentworth. He married Rebecca Allen, daughter of the rev. David Allen, rector of Ludbrough, a very learned lady, who had been successfully taught Latin, Greek, and Hebrew, by her father. Under such parents he had the advantage of a religious as well as learned education. For the latter purpose he was sent first to Fillingham, and next, in 16 19, to the public school of Gainsborough, whence, in April 1620, he was removed to Peterborough in Northamptonshire, and put under the tuition of Dr. John Williams, afterwards archbishop of York, but then a prebendary of Peterborough, and a good friend of old Mr. Rainbow. In order to have the farther advantage of this gentleman’s protection, he was sent, in June 1621, to Westminster school, Dr. Williams being then dean of Westminster. In all these places his progress was marked by great diligence and proficiency in his studies, and a conduct which did credit to the instructions of his parents.
his care, the sons of some noblemen, particularly Theophilus earl of Suffolk. In 1639, he was chosen dean of his college, and the following year attended James earl of
Kirton school; to which he had now removed, was never much to his liking, and he therefore soon left it, and came to London. When he was admitted to orders does not appear, but we first hear of his preaching at Glentworth in 1632. In London he first took up his residence in Eulier’s Rents, but in three months removed to Sion college for the sake of the library there. He also became a candidate for the preachership of Lincoln’s-inn, but was not successful. In June of that year, however, he was appointed curate at the Savoy, and being invited back to his college by Dr. Smith the master, and some others of the society, he was, in 1634, admitted to a fellowship. After his return to the university, he appears to have resided occasionally, or for some stated time, annually, at London, where, in the year above mentioned, he preached one sermon, printed at the request of his friends, and another in 1639 hut it was at the university that his sermons were most admired, and his hearers most numerous. Here too, as in the case of the tripos, he was suddenly called upon to supply the place of a gentleman who was unexpectedly absent, and acquitted himself with great credit, in an extempore discourse. He does not, however, appear to have reviewed his early sermons with much pleasure, finding that he had indulged too much in a declamatory kind of style, which he did not think becoming in such compositions, nor to be preferred to the plain exposition of the doctrinal parts of the Holy Scriptures. With the same conscientious feeling, when he became a college tutor in 1635, he added to other branches of instruction, a knowledge of the foundation and superstructure of religion and so acceptable was his mode of teaching, that the master of the college recommended to his care, the sons of some noblemen, particularly Theophilus earl of Suffolk. In 1639, he was chosen dean of his college, and the following year attended James earl of Suffolk, son to Theophilus, to the Long parliament. In 1642, on the death of Dr. Smith, he was elected master of Magdalen college, with the concurrence of the earl. In 1646 he took his degree of D. D. and chose for the subject of his thesis a defence of the principles of the church of England, as containing every thing necessary to salvation. For some time he does not appear to have been molested for this attempt to support a church which the majority were endeavouring to pull down. In 1650, however, when he refused to sign a protestation Against the king, he was deprived of the mastership, which he was very willing to give up rather than comply with the party in power. His steady friend, however, the earl of Suffolk, gave him the small living of Little Chesterford near Audley Inn in Essex, in 1652, but this he held only by his lordship’s presentation, as he determined never to submit to an examination by the republican triers, as they were called.
term, and had a crowded auditory. Wood says erroneously, that when appointed to this lecture he was dean of Lincoln; but this dignity was not conferred upon him until
In June 1579, he took the degree of bachelor of divinity,
and in June 1585 that of doctor, and on both occasions
maintained theses which had for their subject, the defence
of the church of England in her separation from that of
Rome. This was a point which he had carefully studied
by a perusal of ecclesiastical records and histories. He
held also a controversy with Hart, a champion for popery
and on this, as well as well as every other occasiqn, acquitted himself with so much ability, that in 1586, when a
new divinity lecture watf founded at Oxford by sir Francis
Walsingham, principal secretary of state, he desired that
Dr. Rainolds might be the first lecturer, and he was accordingly chosen. Wood and Collier, whose prejudices
against the reformation are sometimes but thinly disguised,
represent the design of the founder and of others in the
university with whom he consulted, as being “to make
the difference between the churches wide enough
”-*-“to
make the religion of the church of Rome more odious, and
the difference betwixt them and the protestants to appear
more irreconcileable,
” &c. The intention, however, plainly
was, to counteract the industry of the popish party in propagating their opinions and seducing the students of the
university, in which they were too frequently successful.
And Wood allows that the founder o? this lecture, “that
he might not fail of his purpose to rout the papists and
their religion,
” could not have chosen a fitter person, for
Rainolds was a man of infinite reading, and of a vast memory. He accordingly read this lecture in the divinity
school thrice a week in full term, and had a crowded auditory. Wood says erroneously, that when appointed to
this lecture he was dean of Lincoln; but this dignity was
not conferred upon him until 1593, (not 1598 as Wood says). It was the gift of the queen, who was much pleased
with the report of his services in opposing popery, and
offered him a bishopric but he preferred a college life,
where he thought he could do most good by training up a
race of defenders of the reformation, a measure then of
great importance. That he might have no temptation to
relax in this care, he, in 1598, exchanged the deanery of
Lincoln for the presidentship of Corpus Christ! college,
and was elected Dec. 11 of that year, and soon after removed to the president’s lodgings at Corpus, from some
chambers which he had been allowed in Queen’s college.
To Corpus Christ! he became an eminent benefactor by
restoring their finances, which had been impoverished by
the neglect or avarice of some of his predecessors, at the
same time that he made more effectual provision for the
scholars, chaplains, and clerks, that he might retain in
college such as were useful. He also repaired the chapel,
hall, and library; but his more particular attention was
paid to the rules of discipline, and the proficiency of the
students in learning and religion.
ned, that the Catechism in the Common-Prayer-book was too brief; for which/reason one by Nowel, late dean of St. Paul’s, was added, and that too long for young novices
In 1603, when the Hampton-court conference took
place, we find him ranged on the puritan side; on this
occasion, he was their spokesman, and it may therefore
be necessary to give some account of what he proposed,
as this will enable the reader in some measure to determine
how far the puritans of the following reign can claim him
as their ancestor. At this conference, he proposed,
1. “That the Doctrine of the Church might be preserved
in purity, according to God’s word.
” 2. “That good
Pastors might be planted in all churches to preach the
same.
” 3. “That the Church*government might be sincerely ministred according to God’s word.
” 4. “That the
book of Common Prayer might be fitted to the more increase of Piety.
” With regard to the first he moved his
majesty, that the book of “Articles of Religion
” concluded
in After we have received
the Holy Ghost, we may depart from Grace;
” notwithstanding the meaning may be sound, yet he desired, that
because they may seem to be contrary to the doctrine of
God’s Predestination and Election in the 17th Article,
both these words might be explained with this or the like
addition, “yet neither totally nor finally v and also that
the nine assertions orthodoxall, as he termed them, i. e.
the Lambeth articles, might be inserted into that book of
articles. Secondly, where it is said in the 23d Article,
that it is not lawful for any man to take upon him the
office of preaching or administering the Sacraments
” in the.
congregation,“before he be. lawfully called, Dr. Rainolds
took exception to these words,
” in the congregation,“as
implying a lawfulness for any whatsoever, * 4 out of the
congregation,
” to preach and administer the Sacraments,
though he had no lawful calling thereunto. Thirdly, in
the 25th Article, these words touching “Confirmation,
grown partly of the corrupt following the Apostles,
” being
opposite to those in the collect of Confirmation in the Communion-book, “upon whom after the example of the
Apostles,
” argue, said he, a contrariety each to other;
the first confessing confirmation to be a depraved imitation of the Apostles; the second grounding it upon their
example, Acts viii. 19, as if the bishop by confirming of
children, did by imposing of hands, as the Apostles in
those places, give the visible Graces of the Holy Ghost.
And therefore he desired, that both the contradiction
might be considered, and this ground of Confirmation examined. Dr. Rainolds afterwards objected to a defect in
the 37th Article, wherein, he said, these words, “The
Bishop of Rome hath no authority in this land,
” were not
sufficient, unless it were added, “nor ought to have.
”
He next moved, that this proposition, “the intention of
the minister is not of the essence of the Sacrament,
” might
be added to the book of Articles, the rather because some
in England had preached it to be essential. And here
again he repeated his request concerning the nine “orthodoxall assertions
” concluded at Lambeth. He then complained, that the Catechism in the Common-Prayer-book
was too brief; for which/reason one by Nowel, late dean
of St. Paul’s, was added, and that too long for young novices to learn by heart. He requested, therefore, that one
uniform Catechism might be made, which, and none other,
might be generally received. He next took notice of the
profanation of the Sabbath, and the contempt of his majesty’s proclamation for reforming that abuse; and desired
some stronger remedy might be applied. His next request
was for a new translation of the Bible, because those which
were allowed in the reign of Henry VIII. and Edward VI.
were corrupt and not answerable to the original of which
he gave three instances. He then desired his majesty,
that unlawful and seditious books might be suppressed, at
least restrained, and imparted to a few. He proceeded
now to the second point, and desired that learned ministers might be planted in every parish. He next went on
to the fourth point relating to the Common -Prayer, and
jcomplained of the imposing Subscription, since it was a
great impediment to a learned ministry; and in treated,
that “it might not be exacted as formerly, for which many
good men were kept ont, others removed, and many disquieted. To subscribe according to the statutes of the
realm, namely, to the articles of religion, and the king’s
supremacy, they were not unwilling. Their reason of
their backwardness to subscribe otherwise was, first, the
books Apocryphal, which the Common-Prayer enjoined to
be read in the church, albeit there are, in some of those
chapters appointed, manifest errors, directly repugnant to
tjie scriptures. . The next scruple against subscription was, that in the Common-Prayer it is twice set down,
‘Jesus said to his Disciples,’ when as by the text original
it is plain, that he spake to the Pharisees. The
third objection against subscription were ‘ Interrogatories
in Baptism,’ propounded to infants.
” Dr. Rainolds owned
“the use of the Cross to have been ever since the Apostles
time; but this was the difficulty, to prove it of that ancient
use in Baptism.
” He afterwards took exceptions at those
words in the Office of Matrimony, “With my body I thee
worship
” and objected against the churching of women
by the name of Purification. Under the third general
head touching Discipline he took exception to the committing of ecclesiastical censures to lay-chancellors. “His
reason was, that the statute made in king Henry’s time for
their authority that way was abrogated in queen Mary’s
time, and not revived in the late queen’s days, and
abridged by the bishops themselves, 1571, ordering that
the said lay-chancellors should not excommunicate in matters of correction, and anno 1584 and 1589, not in matters
of instance, but to be done only by them, who had the
power of the keys.
” He then desired, that according to
certain provincial constitutions, they of the clergy might
have meetings once every three weeks first, in rural
deaneries, and therein to have the liberty of prophesying,
according as archbishop Grindal and other bishops desired
of her late majesty. Secondly, that such things, as
could not be resolved upon there, might be referred from
thence to the episcopal synods, where the bishop with his
Presbyteri should determine all such points as before
could not be decided. Notwithstanding our author’s conduct at this conference, Dr. Simon Patrick observes, that
he professed himself a conformist to the church of
England, and died so. He remarks, that Dr. Richard Crakanthorp tells the archbishop of Spalato, that the doctor was
no Puritan (as the archbishop called him). “For, first,
be professed, that he appeared unwillingly in the cause at
Hampton-court, and merely in obedience to the king’s
command. And then he spoke not one word there against
the hierarchy. Nay, he acknowledged it to be consonant
to the word of God in his conference with Hart. And in an
answer to Sanders’ s book of the ‘ Schism of England 7 (which is in the archbishop’s library) he professes, that he approves
of the book of * consecrating and ordering bishops, priests,
and deacons.’ He was also a strict observer of all the
orders of the church and university both in public and his
own college; wearing tbte square cap and surplice, kneeling at the Sacrament, and he himself commemorating their
benefactors at the times their statutes appointed, and
reading that chapter of Ecclesiasticus, which is on such
occasions used. In a letter also of his to archbishop Bancroft (then in Dr. Crakanthorp’s hands), he professes himself conformable to the church of England, ‘ willingly
and from his heart,’ his conscience admonishing him so to
be. And thus he remained persuaded to his last breath,
desiring to receive absolution according to the manner
prescribed in our liturgy, when he lay on his death-bed
which he did from Dr. Holland, the king’s professor in
Oxford, kissing his hand in token of his love and joy, and
within a few hours after resigned up his soul to God.
”
king Charles I, and by that title was created D. D. in 1636. January the 13th, 1641, he was admitted dean of Wells on the death of Dr. George Warburton. During the rebellion
, an eminent English divine in the
seventeenth century, was second son of sir Carew Ralegh
(elder brother of the celebrated sir Walter Ralegh.) His
mother was relict of sir John Thynne, of Longleate, in
Wiltshire, and daughter of sir William Wroughton, viceadmiral under sir John Dudley (afterwards duke of Northumberland) in the expedition against the Scots in 1544.
He was born at Downton, in Wiltshire, in 1586, and educated in Winchester-school, whence he was sent to Magdalen college, Oxford, of which he became a commoner in
Michaelmas term, 1602. In June 1605, he took the degree of B. A. and in June 1608, that of master and being
a noted disputant, was made junior of the public act the
same year, in which he distinguished himself to great advantage. About that time he entered into holy orders, and
became chaplain to William earl of Pembroke, in whose
family he spent about two years, when he was collated by
his lordship to the rectory of Chedzoy, near Bridgewater,
in Somersetshire, in the latter end of 1620. Being settled
here, he married Mary, the daughter of sir Richard Gibbs,
and sister of Dr. Charles Gibbs, prebendary of Westminster. He was afterwards collated to a minor prebend in the
church of Wells, and to the rectory of Streat, with the
chapel of Walton in Wiltshire. About the time of the
death of his patron, the earl of Pembroke, which happened
in 1630, he became chaplain in ordinary to king Charles I,
and by that title was created D. D. in 1636. January the
13th, 1641, he was admitted dean of Wells on the death of
Dr. George Warburton. During the rebellion he was sequestered on account of his loyalty, and afterwards treated
with the utmost barbarity. It being his month to wait on
the king as his chaplain, the committee of Somersetshire
raised the rabble, and commissioned the soldiers to plunder his parsonage-house at Chedzoy and in his absence
they seized upon all his estate spiritual and temporal,
drove away his cattle and horses, which they found upon
his ground, and turned his family out of doors. His lady
was forced to lie two nights in the corn-fields, it being a
capital crime for any of the parishioners to afford them
lodging. After this she went to Downton, in Wiltshire,
the seat of sir Carew Ralegh, where her husband met her.
The king’s party having had some success in the West, Dr.
Ralegh had an opportunity to return to his family, and resettle at Chedzoy but the parliament party soon gained
the ascendant by the defeat of the lord Goring, and he was
obliged to take refuge at Bridgewater, then garrisoned by
the king. Here he continued till that town was surrendered to Fairfax and Cromwell, when he was taken prisoner, and after much severe usage set upon a poor horse,
with his legs tied under the belly of it, and so carried to
his house at Chedzoy, which was then the head -quarters of
Fairfax and Cromwell and being extremely sick through
his former ill treatment, obtained the favour of continuing
prisoner in his own house. But as soon as the generals
marched, Henry Jeanes, who was solicitous for his rectory
of Chedzoy, and afterwards succeeded him in it, entered
violently into the house, took the doctor out of his bed,
and carried him away prisoner with all his goods. His
wife and children were exposed to such necessities, that
they must have perished if colonel Ash. had not procured
them the income of some small tenements, which the doctor had purchased at Chedzoy, After this Dr. Ralegh wa&
sent prisoner to Ilchester, the county-gaol; thence to
Banwell-house, and thence to the house belonging to the
deanery in Wells, which was turned into a gaol and here,
while endeavouring to secrete a letter which he had written
to his wife, from impertinent curiosity, he was stabbed by
David Barrett, a shoe-maker of that city, who was his
keeper, and died of the wound October 10, 1646, and was
interred on the 13th of the same month before the dean’s
stall, in the choir of the cathedral of Wells. His papers,
after his death, such as could be preserved, continued for
above thirty years in obscurity, till at last coming into the
hands of Dr. Simon Patrick (afterwards bishop of Ely) he
published them at London, 1679, in 4to, under this title:
“Reliquiae Raleghanae, being Discourses and Sermons on
several subjects, by the reverend Dr. Walter Ralegh, dean
of Wells, and chaplain in ordinary to his late majesty king
Charles the First.
” This editor tells us, that “besides the
quickness of his wit and ready elocution, he was master of
a very strong reason which won him the familiarity and
friendship of those great men -who were the envy of the
last age, and the wonder of this, the lord Falkland, Dr.
Hammond, and Mr. Chillingvvorth the last of which was
wont to say (and no man was a better judge of it than himself) that Dr. Ralegh was the best disputant that ever he
met withal; and indeed there is a very great acuteness
easily to be observed in his writings, which would have appeared more if he had not been led, by the common vice of
those times, to imitate too far a very eminent man (meaning, perhaps, bishop Andrews) rather than follow his own
excellent genius.
” He is said to have been a believer in
the millenium, or reign of Christ on earth for a thousand
years, and to have written a book on that subject, which is
lost. In 1719 the rev. Lawrence Howell published at Lond.
8vo, “Certain Queries proposed by Roman catholics, and
answered by Dr. Walter Ralegh,
” &c. which appears to
be authentic.
28th of July, 1813. He was one of the governors of the Charter-house; trustee of the British Museum; dean of the Chapel royal; visitor of Sion college; and provincial
Bishop Randolph died suddenly on the 28th of July, 1813. He was one of the governors of the Charter-house; trustee of the British Museum; dean of the Chapel royal; visitor of Sion college; and provincial dean of Canterbury.
, he was chosen into the respective offices of the college, as praelector primarius, in 1657; junior dean in 1658; and twice college-steward, in 1659 and 1660.
, an eminent English natural philosopher, was the son of a blacksmith at Black Notley, near Braintree, in Essex, and was born there Nov. 29th, 1628. He was bred a scholar at Braintree school; and sent thence, in 1644, to Catharine-hall in Cambridge. Here he continued about two years, and then removed, for some reason orother, to Trinity-college with which, says Derham, he was afterwards much pleased, because in Catharine-hall they chiefly addicted themselves to disputations, while in Trinity the politer arts and sciences were principally cultivated. In Sept. 1649 he was chosen a minor fellow along with his ingenious friend Isaac Barrow, and was chosen major fellow, when he had completed his master’s degree. The learned Duport, famous for his skill in Greek, who had been his tutor, used to say, that the chief of all his pupils, and to whom he esteemed none of the rest comparable, were Mr. Ray and Dr. Barrow. In 1651, Mr. Ray was chosen the Greek lecturer of the college; in 1653, the mathematical lecturer; in 1655, humanity-reader; which three appointments shew the reputation he had acquired, in that early period of his life, for his skill in languages, polite literature, and the sciences. After he had been of greater standing, he was chosen into the respective offices of the college, as praelector primarius, in 1657; junior dean in 1658; and twice college-steward, in 1659 and 1660.
ned to come into the royal society, and was admitted fellow thereof in 1667. Being then solicited by dean (afterwards bishop) Wilkins, to translate his-“Real Character”
Having now left his fellowship, and visited most parts of
his own country, he was desirous of seeing what nature afforded in foreign parts; and accordingly, in April, 1663,
himself, with Mr. Willoughby,' Mr. Skippon, and Mr. Nathanael Bacon, went from Dover to Calais, and thence
through divers parts of Europe; which, however, it is sufficient just to mention, as Mr. Hay himself, in 1673, published the “Observations
” they made in that tour. Towards the end of their journey, Mr. Willoughby and Mr.
Ray separated; the former passing through Spain, the
latter from Montpelier through France, into England,
where he arrived in March, 1665-6. He pursued his philosophical studies with his usual ardour, and became so
distinguished, that he was importuned to come into the
royal society, and was admitted fellow thereof in 1667.
Being then solicited by dean (afterwards bishop) Wilkins,
to translate his-“Real Character
” into Latin, he consented;
and the original manuscript of that work, ready for the
press, is still extant in the library of the royal society.
from parliament, which now was supreme in all matters, created D. D. In March 1648 he was appointed dean of Christ church, in the room of Dr. Fell, who was ejected with
In this mission he and his colleagues were at first interrupted by certain enthusiasts among the soldiers, headed
by one Erbury, who maintained that the ordination of these
divines was unlawful, and that no ordination was necessary
for any man who had gifts. This was a favourite topic in
those days, and is not yet exhausted. In the following year
he was nominated to the more obnoxious office of one of
thevisitors of the university, and in Feb. 1 648 was chosen
vice-chancellor, on the recommendation of the earl of
Pembroke, then chancellor of the university. ID this last
office he was to continue until August 1649. He was also,
by a mandate from parliament, which now was supreme in
all matters, created D. D. In March 1648 he was appointed dean of Christ church, in the room of Dr. Fell,
who was ejected with no common degree of violence, Mrs.
Fell and her family being literally dragged out of the
deanery house by force. Dr. Reynolds being admitted into
office in form, Wood says, “made a polite and accurate
oration,
” in Latin, in which “he spoke very modestly of
himself, and how difficult it Was for a man that had sequestered himself from secular employments to be called
to government, especially to sit at the stern in these rough
and troublesome times; but since he had subjected himself
to those that have authority to command him, he did desire that good example and counsel might prevail more in
this reformation than severity and punishments.
”
llorship of the church of Lincoln, in July 1334; he was next made archdeacon of Chester in 1336, and dean of Lichfield in April 1337. These, or some f them, he owed to
, archbishop of Armagh in the fourteenth
century, called sometimes Armaciianus, and sometimes
Fitz Ralph, which was his family name, is supposed to
have been born in Devonshire, or, according to Harris, at
Dunda'k, in the county of Louth. He was educated partly
at University, and partly at Balliol, college, Oxford, under
the tuition of John Baconthorp, whom we have already noticed as an eminent scholar of that age. He made great
progress in philosophy, divinity, and civil law, and became
so great a philosopher and logician, “and in both sorts of
theology so famed, that the whole university ran to his
lectures as bees to their hive.
” He commenced doctor of
divinity at Oxford, and in 1333 was commissary-general
of that university, whence some authors have called him
chancellor; but, according to Collier, the office he held
was only somewhat superior to that of vice-chancellor. His
first church promotion was to the chancellorship of the
church of Lincoln, in July 1334; he was next made archdeacon of Chester in 1336, and dean of Lichfield in April
1337. These, or some f them, he owed to the favour of
Edward III. to whom he was recommended as well deserving his patronage.
n Northumberland; and was entered of St. John’s college, Cambridge, in 1774. Dr. Ferris, the present dean of Battle, and Dr. Pearce, now dean of Ely, were his tutors
, a man of letters, was originally of Hexham in Northumberland; and was entered of
St. John’s college, Cambridge, in 1774. Dr. Ferris, the
present dean of Battle, and Dr. Pearce, now dean of Ely,
were his tutors at the university. Under the superintendance of those two excellent scholars, he acquired sound
learning and a correct taste. He possessed, indeed, an
excellent understanding, and a sort of intuitive knowledge
of mankind. He distinguished himself at college by the
elegance, beauty, and vigour, of his prose and poetical
compositions; a love of the Muses very early in life took
possession of his mind, and often interfered with the laborious duties of his studies. He entered himself a student
of the Middle Temple in 1779, and was called to the bar
in 1784. But literary pursuits and political connections
took up too much of his time to admit of his pursuing, with
sufficient diligence, the study of the law; otherwise, it is
highly probable that he would have become a distinguished
ornament of the bar. The chief works in which he was
publicly known to have taken a part were in those celebrated political satires, “The Rolliad,
” and the “Probationary Odes,
” in the composition of which his talents were
conspicuous. He wrote also the comedy of “The Fugi*
live,
” which was honoured by a considerable share of applause, both on the stage and in the closet. In private life
so happily was the suavity of his temper blended with the
vigour of his understanding, that he was esteemed by his
adversaries in political principles, as well as by a very large
circle of private friends. He was brought into parliament
by the duke of Northumberland, in whose friendship he
held a distinguished place, and by whose loan of 2000l.
(which the duke has given up to his family) he was enabled
to become proprietor of a fourth part of Drury-Iane theatre.
He was suddenly taken ill on June 8, 1803, and died next
day, leaving a widow and four daughters, to lament the loss
of their affectionate protector. He was interred in Egham
churchyard.
d 400l. in the handsomest manner, but declined accepting it. He died Sept. 27, 1781, at his house in Dean-street, Soho, in his fiftieth year. He printed only two occasional
His only son, Robert Richardson, D. D. F. R. S. and S. A. was prebendary of Lincoln, rector of St. Anne’s Westminster, and of Wallington in Hertfordshire, which last was given to him by sir Joseph Yorke, with whom he resided as chaplain many years at the Hague. Whilst in that employment, the papers on both sides, previous to the trial of the great cause, Douglas against Hamilton, being sent over to his excellency, Dr. Richardson, for his own curiosity, digested them, and drew up the state of the question, which was printed in 4to for private distribution, and so well approved by the gentlemen of the bar, that it was put into the hands of the counsel for the party he espoused as their brief; of which perhaps there never was a similar instance. He had the honour to see the opinion he supported confirmed by the House of Peers. After the trial he was offered 400l. in the handsomest manner, but declined accepting it. He died Sept. 27, 1781, at his house in Dean-street, Soho, in his fiftieth year. He printed only two occasional sermons.
lbeach to the bishopric of Lincoln. He was consecrated Sept. 25, in the chapel belonging to Dr. May, dean of St. Paul’s, in the usual form, by chrism, or holy unction,
The greatest part of 1545 Dr. Ridley spent in retirement at Herne. He had, as we have noticed, been hitherto a believer in transubstantiation, influenced by the decrees of popes and councils, the rhetorical expressions of the fathers, and the letter of scripture; but it is supposed that a perusal of the controversy between Luther and the Zuinglians, with the writings of Ratramnus or Bertram, which had fallen into his hands, induced him to examine more closely into the scriptures, and opinions of the fathers; the result of which was, that this doctrine had no foundation. Cranmer also, to whom he communicated his discoveries, joined with him in the same opinion, as did Latimer. In the close of 1545, Cranmer gave him the eighth stall in St. Peter’s, Westminster. When Edward ascended the throne in 1547, Dr. Ridley was considered as a celebrated preacher, and in his sermons before the king, as well as on other occasions, exposed, with boldness and argument, the errors of popery. About this time, the fellows of Pembroke-hall presented him to the living of Soharo, in the diocese of Norwich; but the presentation being disputed by the bishop, Ridley was admitted to the living by command of the king. On Sept. 4 following, he was promoted to the bishopric of Rochester, vacant by the translation of Dr. Holbeach to the bishopric of Lincoln. He was consecrated Sept. 25, in the chapel belonging to Dr. May, dean of St. Paul’s, in the usual form, by chrism, or holy unction, and imposition of hands; and after an ath renouncing the usurped jurisdiction of the Roman pontiff, was vested, according to the ancient rites, with the robes and insignia appropriated to his dignity. Yet Dr. Brookes, in the subsequent reign, would not allow Ridley to have been a bishop, and only degraded him from his priest’s orders, which is not easy to be accounted for; because if the pretence was that his abjuration of the pope invalidated his consecration, the same objection might be made to Bonner, Tonstall, Gardiner, &c.
osophy at the college of Boncour, at Paris, where he took his degree in 1574, and held the office of dean of the faculty in 1586 and 1587. He died Oct. 18, 1606. He was
, an able French physician, a native
of Amiens, and distinguished by his attainments both in
literature and science, is said not only to have written
and spoken the learned languages with facility, but to have
been thoroughly intimate with the contents of almost all
the writings of the ancients. We have, however, very
few particulars of his life, unless that he gave lessons in
natural philosophy at the college of Boncour, at Paris,
where he took his degree in 1574, and held the office of
dean of the faculty in 1586 and 1587. He died Oct. 18,
1606. He was a strenuous advocate for the doctrine of
Hippocrates and the ancients, whom he defended with
great ardour against the chemists. His works, which are
indicative of genius, were collected and published, together with some posthumous tracts, at Paris, in 1610,
under the title of “Opera Omnia,
” and some were separately published, particularly one against the ignorance of
the practitioners of surgery in his time, entitled “Ad Impudentiam quorundam Chirurgorum, qui Medicis suquari
et Chirurgiam publice profiteri volunt; proveteri dignitate
Medicinal Apologia philosophica,
” Paris,
mers; but it does not appear that he advanced much further. In queen Mary’s reign, 1557, he was made dean of Durham, and refused a bishopric. This dignity he might have
In 1549 he was associated with other divines, ordered by
Edward VIth’s council to form the new liturgy or common
prayer; and thus far, as Dodd remarks, he complied with
the reformers; but it does not appear that he advanced
much further. In queen Mary’s reign, 1557, he was
made dean of Durham, and refused a bishopric. This
dignity he might have retained when Elizabeth came to
the throne, or have obtained an equivalent; but he refused
to take the oath of supremacy. Nothing more is known
with certainty of his history, unless that he died about
1560. Among the records collected at the end of Burnet’s
History of the Reformation, are, of Robertson’s, “Resolutions of some questions concerning the Sacraments,
” and
“Resolutions of Questions relating to Bishops and Priests.
”
His grammatical tracts, entitled “Annotationes in Lib.
Gulielmi Lilii.de Lat. Norn, generibus,
” &c. were printed
together at Basil,
oppose it so obstinately as to put a period to that demand. This proceeding of the Commons provoked Dean Swift to write “The Legion- Club.” Mr. Robertson soon after
Lord Hay had introduced Mn Robertson to bishop
Hoadly, who mentioned him to archbishop Wake, and he
was entertained with much civility by those great prelates.
As he was then too young to be admitted into orders, he
employed his time in London in visiting the public libraries, attending lectures, and improving himself as opportunities offered. He had the honour to be introduced to
lord-chancellor King, by a very kind letter from Dr. Hort,
bishop of Kilmore, and was often with his lordship. In
1727 Dr. John Hoadly, brother to the bishop of Salisbury,
was nominated to the united bishoprics of Ferns and Leighlin in Ireland. Mr. Robertson was introduced to him by his
brother; and, from a love of the natale solum, was desirous
to go thither with him. Mr. Robertson then informed the
archbishop of Canterbury of his design; and his Grace
gave him a letter of recommendation to Dr. Goodwin,
archbishop of Cashel, who received him in a most friendly
manner, but died soon after. The first person whom Dr.
Hoadly ordained, after he was consecrated bishop of Ferns,
was Mr. Robertson, whose letters of deacon’s orders bear
date January 14, 1727; and in February the bishop nominated him to the cure of Tullow in the county of Carlow:
and here he continued till he was of age sufficient to be
ordained a priest, which was done November 10, 1729;
and the next day he was presented by lord Carteret, then
lord-lieutenant of Ireland, to the rectory of Ravilly in the
county of Carlow, and to the rectory of Kilravelo in the
county of Widow; and soon after was collated to the
vicarages of the said parishes by the bishop of Ferns.
These were the only preferments he had till 1738, when
Dr. Synge, bishop of Ferns, collated him to the vicarages
of Rathmore and Straboe, and the perpetual cure of Rahil,
all in the county of Carlow. These together produced art
income of about 200l. a-year. But, as almost the whole
lands of these parishes were employed in pasture, the
tithes would have amounted to more than twice that sum if
the herbage had been paid for black cattle, which was certainly due by law. Several of the clergy of Ireland had,,
before him, sued for this herbage in the Court of Exchequer, and obtained decrees in their favour. Mr. Robertson, encouraged by the exhortations and examples of his
brethren, commenced some suits in the Exchequer for this
herbage, and succeeded in every one of them. But when
he had, by this means, doubled the value of his benefices,
the House of Commons in Ireland passed several severe resolutions against the clergy who had sued, or would sue, for
this “nexv demand,
” as they called it, which encouraged the
graziers to oppose it so obstinately as to put a period to that
demand. This proceeding of the Commons provoked Dean
Swift to write “The Legion- Club.
” Mr. Robertson soon
after published a pamphlet, entitled “A Scheme for utterly
abolishing the present heavy and vexatious Tax of Tithe;
”
the purport of which was, to pay the clergy and impropriators a tax upon the land in lieu of all tithes. This
went through several editions: but nothing farther was
done in it.
ersalium, &c. Tomus Unicus, lib. 14. absolutus,” &c. Lond. 1677, fol. improved by Dr. Thomas Peirce, dean of Salisbury, by the king’s command. Wood adds, that he wrote
, a learned divine and schoolmaster,
was born in St. Mary’s parish, in the county of Anglesea,
and educated at Winchester school, where he was admitted
probationary fellow of New college, Oxford, in 1603, and
in 1605 perpetual fellow. He completed his master’s degree in 1611, and about three years after, leaving college,
became chief master of Winchester school. He was afterwards archdeacon of Winchester, canon of Wei is, D. D.
and archdeacon of Gloucester. Having sided with the
party that were reducing the church to the presbyterian
form, and taken the covenant, he lost the advantages of his
canonry and archdeaconry, but obtained the rectory of Hinton, near Winchester, in room of a loyalist. He died March
30, 1655, and was buried in St. GilesVin-the-Fields, London. Wood gives him the character of an excellent linguist,
an able divine, and very conversant in ancient history. He
wrote for the use of Winchester school, “Preces; Grammaticalis quaedam & Antiquae Historian Synopsis,
” printed together at Oxford in Scholar Wintoniensis Phrases Latinse,
” Lond. Annalium mundi universalium, &c.
Tomus Unicus, lib. 14. absolutus,
” &c. Lond.
to England, her majesty, queen Anne, was so sensible of the value of his services, that she made him dean of Windsor, registrar of the order of the garter, and prebendary
, a distinguished English prelate and
statesman, was born at Cleasby, in Yorkshire, Nov. 7, 1650,
and educated at Oriel college, Oxford, to which he was
afterwards a liberal benefactor. After he had completed
his master’s degree, and taken orders, he went about 1683
to Sweden, as domestic chaplain to the British ambassador
at that court; and in his absence was appointed first resident, then envoy extraordinary, and lastly ambassador.
He remained in this rank until 1708. During this time he
published his “Account of Sweden, as it was in 1688,
”
which is generally printed with lord Molesvvorth’s account
of Denmark. On his return to England, her majesty, queen
Anne, was so sensible of the value of his services, that she
made him dean of Windsor, registrar of the order of the
garter, and prebendary of Canterbury. He was also in
1710 preferred to the bishopric of Bristol. His political
knowledge recommended him to the confidence of the earl
of Oxford, then at the head of administration, who resolved
to have him of the privy council. For this purpose, he was
first made lord privy seal, and afterwards was admitted to a
seat at the council board, where he so distinguished himself that queen Anne made choice of him as one of her plenipotentiaries at the memorable treaty of Utrecht. With
what spirit he behaved on this occasion, appears from the
common histories of the treaty, and Swift’s “Four last years
of the Queen.
” He was also appointed one of the commissioners for finishing St. Paul’s cathedral, and for building fifty new churches in London; was a governor of the
Charter-house, and dean of the chapel royal. On the
death of Dr. Compton in 1714, he was translated to the see
of London, and the qneen, indeed, had such regard for
him, that had she outlived the archbishop of Canterbury,
she would have made Dr. Robinson primate.
x, afterwards bishop of Gloucester, Dr. Beadon, afterwards bishop of Bath and Weils, and Dr. Tucker, dean of Gloucester. Some years after, Mr. Lindsey published, first
In the year 1776, during the controversy respecting the
divinity of Christ, which had been carried on principally
by members of the church of England, Mr. Robinson published “A Plea for the Divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ,
&c.
” This piece is written with much ingenuity, and it
procured the author a number of handsome compliments,
not only from dissenting ministers, but also from several
dignitaries of the established church. Among the latter
were Dr. HinchlirTe, Bishop of Peterborough, Dr. Hallifax,
afterwards bishop of Gloucester, Dr. Beadon, afterwards
bishop of Bath and Weils, and Dr. Tucker, dean of Gloucester. Some years after, Mr. Lindsey published, first
without, but afterwards with his name, “An Examination
of Mr.Robinson’s Plea for the Divinity of Christ;
” to
which Mr. Robinson, although frequently called upon, declined to reply. To his friends he said, “The anonymous
examiner has not touched my arguments, and his spirit is
bitter and contemptuous. His faith stands on criticisms;
and my argument is, that if the doctrine requires critical
proof, it is not popular, and therefore not divine.
” This
silence, however, occasioned some suspicion that he was
not very sincere, which his conduct afterwards continued.
In 1777, Mr. Robinson published a small tract, entitled
“The History and Mystery of Good Friday,
” in which he
employed the same “bitter and contemptuous spirit,
”
which he had just complained of, in ridiculing the commemoration of the death of our Saviour. In 1778, Mr. Robinson published *' A Plan of Lectures on the Principles of
Nonconformity, for the instruction of Catechumens.“This
piece contains an outline of the whole controversy of the
dissenters with the church of England, and of their history,
from the period of the reformation, to 1778, which of
course appeared highly satisfactory to his brethren. Towards the close of the same year, he published
” An Essay
on the Composition of a Sermon, translated from the original French of the rev. John Claude, with Notes,“in 2
vols. 8vo. The preface to the first volume of the Cl Essay
”
consists of memoirs of the life of the author.
, an antiquary, and a man of taste, was born Aug. 2, 1711, in Dean-street, Soho, and received the first rudiments of education
, an antiquary, and a man of taste, was born Aug. 2, 1711, in Dean-street, Soho, and received the first rudiments of education at a private school near the Mews, but he did not for some time after this devote himself seriously to literary pursuits. When he did, however, he exerted that innate industry and application, which constituted a striking part of his character; and, with no aid but his own abilities, overcame all other difficulties which stood in the way of an acquaintance with learning and science. In May 1731, he was placed in the Custom-house, where he executed the duties of the several places which he held, with strict attention and integrity, and at length arrived at the office of clerk of the certificates, in which he continued almost to the end of his life.
r, he was elected canon residentiary of the church of Wells; in which he also bore the office of sub- dean. In 1719, he engaged in the Bangorian controversy, and published,
, an English divine, was born in
1679, at Ensham in Oxfordshire, where his father was vicar
and rector of Wick-Rissington, in Gloucestershire. He
was educated at New college school, in Oxford; and, in
1693, elected scholar of Corpus Christi college. After
taking the degrees in arts, and entering into orders, he
waited a long time for a fellowship, by reason of the slowsuccession in the college; but at length succeeded Mr,
Edmund Chishull, in 1706, but in the mean time had becti
presented to the vicarage of Buchland, in Berkshire, about
ten miles from Oxford, in which he continued about five
or six years, dividing his’ time usefully between his cure
and the university. At the former he became so popular,
that the inhabitants entered into a handsome subscription
for an afternoon sermon by him, which was discontinued
after he left them. Jn 1710, be took a bachelor of divinity’s degree; and, two years after, went to London, to be
lecturer of St. Clement’s Danes. He afterwards became
lecturer of the united parishes of Christ-church, and St.
Leonard’s Foster-lane. In 1716, he was presented to the
rectory of Wrington, in Somersetshire; and, the same year,
resigning his fellowship, married the hon. Mrs. Lydia Hare,
sister to the lord Colerane, who was his pupil in the university. Some time after, he was elected canon residentiary of the church of Wells; in which he also bore the
office of sub-dean. In 1719, he engaged in the Bangorian
controversy, and published, upon that occasion, “A Discourse of the visible and invisible Church of Christ: in
which it is shewn, that the powers, claimed by the officers
of the visible church, are not inconsistent with the supremacy of Christ as head, or with the rights and liberties of
Christians, as members of the invisible church,
” 8vo. The
Rev. Dr. Sykes having published an “Answer to this Discourse,
” our author replied to him in “A Review of the
Discourse of the visible and invisible Church of Christ.
”
he country, chiefly at Wrington: but he had not been there long, when he received an offer, from the dean and chapter of St. Paul’s, of the vicarage of St. Giles’s Cripplegate,
The same year, 1726, having resigned his lecture of St.
Clement’s Danes, he retired from London, with an intention to spend the remainder of his life in the country, chiefly
at Wrington: but he had not been there long, when he
received an offer, from the dean and chapter of St. Paul’s,
of the vicarage of St. Giles’s Cripplegate, in London. Be
was instituted to it, Oct. 1728, but with the greatest anxiety and reluctance; for he had set his heart upon the
country, and was then, as he had always been from hi
youth, remarkably fond of rural exercises and diversions.
He did not enjoy his new preferment above six months;
for he died May 1, 1729, in his fiftieth year. He was
buried in the parish church of Ensham, where a handsome
monument is erected to his memory: his funeral sermon
was preached by Dr. Marshall. After his decease, some
volumes of his sermons were published and two tracts, viz.
“Reasons against Conversion to the Church of Rome,
” and
“A Persuasive to Conformity addressed to Dissenters,
”
never before printed.
He died suddenly, after a lingering illness, at his lodgings in Dean-street, Soho, March 3, 1801, about fiftyeight years of age,
He died suddenly, after a lingering illness, at his lodgings in Dean-street, Soho, March 3, 1801, about fiftyeight years of age, and was buried at St. Giles’s-in-theFields. His drawings, of which he left a large collection, produced, at a sale of four days, the sum of 1240l. He was chosen among those who were elected the first associates of the Royal Academy. There was something rough in his manners, but he was a man of integrity.
ded from an ancient and illustrious family, originally of Picardy. He was first canon of Noyon, then dean of St. Quintin, and lived at the papal court while the popes
, archbishop of Rheims in the fourteenth century, was the son of Matthew le Roye, the
fourth of that name, grand master of the French archery,
descended from an ancient and illustrious family, originally
of Picardy. He was first canon of Noyon, then dean of St.
Quintin, and lived at the papal court while the popes resided
at Avignon; but followed Gregory XI. to Rome, and afterwards attached himself to the party of Clement VII. and of
Peter de Luna, afterwards Benedict XIII. Guy le Roye
was successively bishop of Verdun, Castres, and Dol, archbishop of Tours, then of Sens, and lastly, archbishop of
Rheims in 1391. He held a provincial council in 1407,
and set out to attend the council of Pisa two years after;
but on his arrival at Voutre, a town situated five leagues
from Genoa, one of his suite happened to quarrel with one
of the inhabitants, and killed him. This naturally excited
a violent tumult among the populace, who in their fury
surrounded the prelate’s hous*e and whiie he was endeavouring to appease them, one of the mob wounded him
from a cross-bow, of which he died June 8, 1409. He
founded the college of Rheims at Paris, in 1399. He left a
book, entitled “Doctrinale Sapientiae,
” written in Doctrinal de Sapience,
” printed in 4to,
black letter, with the addition of examples and short stories, some of which have a species of simple and rather
coarse humour; but not ill adapted to the taste of the
times. The good archbishop is said to have written it “for
the health of his soul, and of the souls of all his people,
”
and had such an opinion of its efficacy, that he gave it the
authority of homilies, commanding that every parish in his
diocese should be provided with a copy, and that the curates and chaplains of the said parishes, should read to the
people two or three chapters, with promises of pardon for
certain readings. Caxton, who seems to have entertained
almost as high an opinion of this work, translated and
printed it in 1489, in a folio size. According to Mr. Dibdin, who has given a minute description, with specimens,
of this “Doctrinal of Sapyence,
” there are not more than
four perfect copies extant.
1667, he preached his funeral sermon, which was printed. The bishoprics were now divided; Dr. Boyle, dean of Cork, was nominated bishop of Down and Connor, and Dr. Rust,
, one of the learned divines who was
contemporary with Cudworth, Whichcot, Tillotson, and
Worth ington, at the university of Cambridge, was a native of that town, and educated at Christ’s college, of which
he became fellow, and probably took his degrees at the
usual periods, though we do not find his name in the list of
graduates published some years ago. Mr. Joseph Glanvil,
in his preface to Dr. Rust’s “Discourse of Truth,
” tells us
that, when at the university, he “lived in great esteem
and reputation for his eminent learning and virtues, and
was one of the first in the university who overcame the prejudices of the education of the times before the restoration,
and was very instrumental to enlarge others. He had too
great a soul for the trifles of that age, and saw early the
nakedness of phrases and fancies. He out-grew the pretended orthodoxy of those days, and addicted himself to
the primitive learning and theology, in which he even then
became a great master.
” In 1651 he delivered in his own.
chapel a discourse upon Proverbs xx. 27, which in 1655
he preached again at St. Mary’s in Cambridge. This piece
was first published by Mr. Joseph Glanvil at London in
1682, in 8vo, under the title of “A Discourse of Truth,
”
in a volume entitled “Two choice and useful Treatises;
the one Lux Orientalis: or an inquiry into the opinion of
the Eastern sages concerning the pre-existence of souls:
being a key to unlock the grand mysteries of Providence
in relation to man’s sin and misery.
” The other, “A Discourse of Truth, by the late reverend Dr. Rust, lord bishop
of Drornore in Ireland. With annotations on them both.
”
The annotations are supposed to be written by Dr. Henry
More, to who-e school Dr. Rust appears to have belonged.
On the restoration, bishop Jeremy Taylor, foreseeing the
vacancy in the deanery of Connor in Ireland, sent to Cambridge for some learned and ingenious man, who might be
fit for that dignity. The choice tell upon Dr. Rust, which
corresponding with the great inclination he had to be conversant with that eminent prelate, he gladly accepted of it,
hastened to Ireland, and landed at Dublin about August
1661. He was received with great kindness and respect
by bishop Taylor, and preferred to the deanery of Connor
as soon as it was void, which was shortly after, and in 1662
to the rectory of the island of Magee in the same diocese.
Upon the bishop’s death, August 13, 1667, he preached his
funeral sermon, which was printed. The bishoprics were
now divided; Dr. Boyle, dean of Cork, was nominated
bishop of Down and Connor, and Dr. Rust, bishop of Dromore, in which he continued till his death, which was occasioned by a fever in Dec. 1670. He was interred in the
choir of the cathedral of Dromore in a va'ult made for his
predecessor bishop Taylor, whose body was deposited there.
Mr. Glanvil, who was very particularly acquainted with
him, tells us “that he was a man of a clear mind, a deep
judgment, and searching wit, greatly learned in all the best
sorts of knowledge, old and new, a thoughtfql and diligent
inquirer^ of a free understanding and vast capacity, joined
with singular modesty and unusual sweetness of temper,
which made him the darling of all that knew him. He was
a person of great piety and generosity, a hearty lover of
God and man, an 'excellent preacher, a wise governor, a
profound philosopher, a close reasoner, and above all, a
true and exemplary Christian. In short, he was one, who
had all the qualifications of a primitive bishop, and of an
extraordinary man.
” Dr. Rust’s other works were, “A
Letter of Resolution concerning Origen and the chief of
his opinions,
” Lond. 1661, 4to; two sermons, one at the
funeral of the earl of Mount-Alexander, the other on the
death of bishop Taylor; and “Remains,
” published by
Henry Hallywell, Lond.
and Blake, near the mouth of the Channel. In the month of June, Tromp and De Ruyter engaged Monk and Dean off Nieuport; and after a battle of two days, in which the two
, a celebrated Dutch admiral, was born at Flushing in 1607, and entered into the naval service of his country very early. Much of the early part of his life was spent in the service in the West Indies, to which he is said to have made eight voyages, and two to Brasil. Jn 1641 he was sent to the assistance of the Portuguese, who had thrown off the yoke of Spain, and on this occasion he was raised to the rank of rear-admiral. He afterwards rendered some important services on the Barbary coast, entering the road of Sallee in a single ship, although five Algerine corsairs disputed the passage. When war broke out, in 1652, between the English and Dutch, Van Tromp having been disgraced, De Ruyter was appointed to the command of a separate squadron, for the purpose of convoying home a rich fleet of merchantmen. He fell in with the English admiral Ayscough, with whom he had an engagement off Plymouth, in the month of August, which lasted two days, and terminated so far to the advantage of the Dutch, that he brought his convoy safe into port. In the following October De Ruyter aud De Witte had an action with Blake and Ayscough on the Flemish coast, which was severely contested; but De Ruyter, being deserted by some of his captains, found it advisable to retreat to his own coast, the loss having been Dearly equal on both sides. Van Tromp was now restored to the chief command, and De Ruyter had a squadron under him in the battle of December, offFolkstone, in which Blake was obliged to take shelter in the Thames. De Ruyter likewise distinguished himself in the terrible battle of three days, fought in February 1653, between Tromp and Blake, near the mouth of the Channel. In the month of June, Tromp and De Ruyter engaged Monk and Dean off Nieuport; and after a battle of two days, in which the two Dutch admirals successively rescued each other from imminent danger, the Dutch confessed their inferiority by retiring behind their own sand-banks, where having received a reinforcement, they were enabled to attack the English under Monk and Lawson, near Scheveling. In the final battle between the two fleets Tromp was killed, and De Ruyter compelled to withdraw his shattered ships to the Meuse. After the peace, which was concluded the following year, De Ruyter was sent to cruize in the Mediterranean, to reinforce Opdam; and this service being effected, he returned to his station, and put an end to the predatory warfare carried on by the French privateers. The Dutch having quarrelled with Portugal, De Ruyter exhibited his vigilance, taking several Portuguese ships at the mouth of the Tagus, and made several prizes from the Brazil fleet, till a want of provisions obliged him to return to Holland. War having recommenced between the Swedes and Danes in 1658, De Ruyter, who was sent with a fleet to the assistance of the latter, made a descent on the island of Funen, defeated the Swedes, and forced them to surrender at discretion in Nyborg, whither they had retired. He then wintered at Copenhagen, where the king of Denmark ennobled him for his services. In 1662 he was sent with a strong squadron to curb the insolence of the Barbary states, who had exercised their piracy upon the Dutch shipping, and succeeded entirely to the satisfaction of his employers. At the commencement of the disputes between Charles II. and the United Provinces, De Ruyter had a command on the coast of Africa, where he recovered the forts which had been taken from the Dutch by the English, and made prizes of some merchant ships. After the defeat of the fleet of Opdam by the duke of York in 1665, D Ruyter returned, and was raised to the rank of lieutenant-admiralgeneral of the Dutch navy. The first service of De Ruyter was to convoy home a fleet of merchantmen; and in June 1666, the great fleets of the two maritime powers met in the Downs; the Dutch commanded by De lluyter and Tromp, the English by prince Rupert, and Monk, now the duke of Albemarle. In the three days’ fight which ensued, the Dutch had the advantage, though the valour of the English rendered the contest very severe; and on the fourth, the English, who had been the greatest sufferers, withdrew to their harbours.
ad also interest enough with the ministry to provide very amply for one of his brothers; yet, as the dean had said before, Aug. 24, 1711,” they hated and affected to
, D. D. a man whose history affords a very striking example of the folly of party
spirit, was the son of Joshua Sacheverell of Marlborough,
clerk, who died rector of St. Peter’s church in Marlborough, leaving a numerous family in very low circumstances. By a letter to him from his uncle, in 1711, it appears that he had a brother named Thomas, and a sister
Susannah. Henry was put to school at Marlborough, at
the charge of Mr. Edward Hearst, an apothecary, who,
being his godfather, adopted him as his son. Hearst’s
widow put him afterwards to^Magdalen-college, Oxford,
where he became demy in 1687, at the age of 15. Here
he soon distinguished himself by a regular observation of
the duties of the house, by his compositions, good manners, and genteel behaviour; qualifications which recommended him to that society, of which he became fellow,
and, as public tutor, had the care of the education of most
of the young gentlemen of quality and fortune that were
admitted of the college. In this station he had the care of
the education of a great many persons eminent for their
learning and abilities; and was contemporary and chamberfellow with Addison, and one of his chief intimates till the
time of his famous trial. Mr. Addison’s “Account of the
greatest English' Poets,
” dated April 4, 1694, in a farewell-poem to the Muses on his intending to enter into
holy orders, was inscribed <c to Mr. Henry Sacheverell,“his then dearest friend and colleague. Much has been said
by Sacheverell’s enemies of his ingratitude to his relations,
and of his turbulent behaviour at Oxford; but these appear
to have been groundless calumnies, circulated only by the
spirit of party. In his younger years he wrote some excellent
Latin poems, besides several in the second and third volumes of the
” Mus as Anglicanae,“ascribed to his pupils;
and there is a good one of some length in the second volume, under his own name (transcribed from the Oxford collection, on queen Mary’s death, 1695). He took the
degree of M. A. May 16, 1696; B. D. Feb. 4, 1707; D. D.
July 1, 1708. His first preferment was Cannock, or Cank,
in the county of Stafford. He was appointed preacher of
St. Saviour’s, Southwark, in 1705; and while in this station preached his famous sermons (at Derby, Aug. 14, 1709; and at St. Paul’s, Nov. 9, in the same year) and
in one of them was supposed to point at lord Godolphin,
under the name of Volpone. It has been suggested, that
to this circumstance, as much as to the doctrines contained
in his sermons, he was indebted for his prosecution, and
eventually for his preferment. Being impeached by the
House of Commons, his trial began Feb. 27, 1709-10;
and continued until the 23d of March: when he was sentenced to a suspension from preaching for three years, and
his two sermons ordered to be burnt. This prosecution,
however, overthrew the ministry, and laid the foundation
of his fortune. To sir Simon Harcourt, who was counsel
for him, he presented a silver bason gilt, with an elegant
inscription, written probably by his friend Dr.
Alterbury. Dr. Sacheverell, during his suspension, made a kind
of triumphal progress through various parts of the kingdom;
during which period he was collated to a living near
Shrewsbury; and, in the same month that his suspension
ended, had the valuable rectory of St. Andrew’s, Holborn,
given him by the queen, April 13, 1713. At that time his
reputation was so high, that he was enabled to sell the first
sermon preached after his sentence expired (on Palm Sunday) for the sum of 100l.; and upwards of 40,000 copies,
it is said, were soon sold. We find by Swift’s Journal to
Stella, Jan. 22, 1711-12, that he had also interest enough
with the ministry to provide very amply for one of his
brothers; yet, as the dean had said before, Aug. 24, 1711,
” they hated and affected to despise him.“A considerable estate at Callow in Derbyshire was soon after left to
him by his kinsman George Sacheverell, esq. In 1716,
he prefixed a dedication to
” Fifteen Discourses, occasionally delivered before the university of Oxford, by W.
Adams, M. A. late student of Christ-church, and rector of
Staunton upon Wye, in Oxfordshire.“After this publication, we hear little of him, except by quarrels with his
parishioners. He died June 5, 1724; and, by his will,
bequeathed to Bp. Atterbury, then in exile, who was supposed to have penned for him the defence he made before
the House of Peers , the sum of 500l. The duchess of
Maryborough describes Sacheverell as
” an ignorant impudent incendiary; a man who was the scorn even of those
who made use of him as a tool.“And Bp. Burnet says,
” He was a bold insolent man, wiih a very small measure
of religion, virtue, learning, or good sense; but he resolved to force himself into popularity and preferment, by
the most petulant railings at dissenters and low-church
men, in several sermons and libels, written without either
chasteness of style or liveliness of expression." Whatever
his character, it is evident that he owed every thing to an
injudicious prosecution, which defeated the purposes of
those who instituted it, and for many years continued
those prejudices in the public mind, which a wiser administration w r ould have been anxious to dispel.
erjeant Bradshaw. He was admitted of Bene‘t college, Cambridge, June 11, 1690, where his tutors were dean Moss and archdeacon Lunn, and took the degree of LL. B. in 1695.
, an English antiquary, was the
son of the rev. Thomas Salmon, M. A. rector of Mepsall in
Bedfordshire, by a daughter of the notorious Serjeant Bradshaw. He was admitted of Bene‘t college, Cambridge,
June 11, 1690, where his tutors were dean Moss and archdeacon Lunn, and took the degree of LL. B. in 1695. Soon
after he went into orders, and was for some time curate of
Westmill in Hertfordshire; but, although he had taken
the oaths to king William, he had so many scruples against
taking them to his successor, queen Anne, that he became
contented to resign the clerical profession, and with it a
living of 140l. per annum ’offered him in Suffolk. He then
applied himself to the study of physic, which he practised
first at St. Ives in Huntingdonshire, and afterwards at Bishops Stortford, in the county of Hertford. His leisure
time appears to have been employed in studying the history
and antiquities of his country, on which subjects he published, 1. “A Survey of the Roman Antiquities in the Midland Counties in England,
” A Survey of
the Roman Stations in Britain, according to the Roman
Itinerary,
” The History of Hertfordshire,
describing the county and its ancient monuments, particularly the Roman, with the characters of those that have
been the chief possessors of the lands, and an account of
the most memorable occurrences,
” The Lives of the
English Bishops from the Restoration to the Revolution, fit
to be opposed to the Aspersions of some late Writers of
Secret History,
” A Survey of
the Roman Stations in England,
” The Antiquities of Surrey, collected from
the most ancient records, and dedicated to Sir John Evelyn, bart. with some Account of the Present State and
Natural History of the County,
” 1736, 8vo. 7. “The History and Antiquities of Essex, from the Collections of Mr.
Strangeman,
” in folio, with some notes and additions of
his own; but death put a stop to this work, when he had
gone through about two thirds of the county, so that the
hundreds of Chelmsford, Hinkford, Lexden, Tendring,
and Thurstable, were left unfinished.
bishop of Oxford, continued there till 1750, when he was nominated minister of Great Yarmouth by the dean and chapter of Norwich. Here he performed the duties of that
, a learned English divine, was the
eldest son of Dr. Samuel Salter, prebendary of Norwich,
and archdeacon of Norfolk, by Anne-Penelope, the daughter of Dr. John Jeffery, archdeacon of Norwich. He was
educated for some time in the free-school of that city,
whence he removed to that of the Charter-house, and was
admitted of Bene't-college, Cambridge, June 30, 1730,
under the tuition of Mr. Charles Skottowe. Soon after his
taking the degree of B. A. in 1733, he was chosen into a
fellowship, and took his master’s degree in 1737. His natural and acquired abilities recommended him to sir Philip
Yorke, then lord-chief-jqstice of the King’s-bench, and
afterwards earl of Hardwicke, for the instruction of his
eldest son the second earl, who, with three of his brothers,
in compliment to abp. Herring, was educated at that college. As soon as that eminent lawyer was made Jordehancellor, he appointed Mr. Salter his domestic chaplain,
and gave him a prebend in the church of Gloucester, which
he afterwards exchanged for one in that of Norwich. About
the time of his quitting Cambridge, he was one of the writers
in the “Athenian Letters.
” Soon after the chancellor gave
Mr. Salter the rectory of Burton Goggles, in the county of
Lincoln, in 1740; where he went to reside soon after, and,
marrying Miss Seeker, a relation of the then bishop of
Oxford, continued there till 1750, when he was nominated
minister of Great Yarmouth by the dean and chapter of
Norwich. Here he performed the duties of that large
parish with great diligence, till his promotion to the
preachership at the Charter-house in January 1754, some
time before which (in July, 1751), abp. Herring had honoured him with the degree of D. D. at Lambeth. In 1756,
he was presented by the lord-chancellor to the rectory of
St. Bartholomew near the Royal Exchange, which was the
last ecclesiastical preferment he obtained; but in Nov.
1761, he succeeded Dr. Bearcroft as master of the Charter-house, who had been his predecessor in the preachership. While he was a member of Bene't college, he
printed Greek Pindaric odes on the nuptials of the princes
of Orange and Wales, and a copy of Latin verses on the
death of queen Caroline. Besides a sermon preached on
occasion of a music-meeting at Gloucester, another before
the lord-mayor, Sept. 2, 1740, on the anniversary of the
fire of London, a third before the sons of the clergy, 1755,
which was much noticed at the time, and underwent several alterations before it was printed; and one before the
House of Commons, Jan. 30, 1762; he published “A
complete Collection of Sermons and Tracts
” of his grandfather Dr. Jeffery, Moral and Religious Aphorisms,
” by Dr. Whichcote, with large additions of some
letters that passed between him and Dr. Tuckney, “concerning the Use of Reason in Religion,
” &c. and a biograpiiical preface, 1751, 8vo. To these may be added,
“Some Queries relative to the Jews, occasioned by a late
sermon,
” with some other papers occasioned by the
“Queries,
” published the same year. In Letters of Ben Mordecai;
” written by the rev. Henry
Taylor, of Crawley in Hants. In 1776, Dr. Salter printed
for private use, “The first 106 lines of the First Book of
the Iliad; nearly as written in Homer’s Time and Country;
” and printed also in that year, “Extract from the
Statutes of the House, and Orders of the Governors, respecting the Pensioners or poor Brethren
” (of the Charterhouse), a large single sheet in folio; in 1777, he corrected
the proof-sheets of Bentley’s “Dissertation on Phalaris;
”
and not long before his death, which happened May 2,
1773, he printed also an inscription to the memory of his
parents, an account of all which may be seen in the
“Anecdotes of Bowyer.
” Dr. Salter was buried, by his
own express direction, in the most private manner, in the
common burial-ground belonging to the brethren of the
Charter-house.
received priest’s orders, and was made successively archdeacon of Trevino in the diocese of largos, dean of Leon and dean of Seville. The first preferment he held twenty
, a
Spanish prelate, admired for his writings in the fifteenth
century, was born at Santa Maria de Nieva, in the diocese
of Segovia, in 1404. After being instructed in classical
learning, and having studied the canon law for ten years at
Salamanca, he was honoured with the degree of doctor in
that faculty; but afterwards embraced the eqclesiasUca!
profession, received priest’s orders, and was made successively archdeacon of Trevino in the diocese of largos, dean
of Leon and dean of Seville. The first preferment he held
twenty years, the second seven, and the third two years.
Ahout 1440, John II. king of Castille, appointed him envoy to the emperor Frederick III. and he was also afterwards employed in similar commissions or embassies to
other crowned heads. When Calixtus III. became pope,
Henry IV. king of Castille, sent him to congratulate his
holiness, which occasioned him to take up his residence at
Rome. In all his embassies, he made harangues to the
different princes to whom he was sent, which are still preserved in ms. in the Vatican library. On the accession of
pope Paul II. he made Sanchez governor of the castle of
St. Angelo, and keeper of the jewels and treasures of the
Roman church, and afterwards promoted him to the
bishoprics of Zamora, Calahorra, and Palencia. These last
appointments, however, were little more than sinecures, as
he never quitted Rome, and employed what time he could
spare from his official duties in that city in composing a
great many works, of which a list of twenty-nine may be
seen in our authorities. He died at Rome Oct. 4, 1470$
and was interred in the church of St. James of Spain. Although so voluminous a writer, by far the greater part of
his works remain in ms. in the Vatican and other libraries )
we know of three only which were published, 1. his history
of Spain, “Historiae Hispanise partes quatuor.
” This Marchand seems to think was published separately, but it was
added to the “Hispania Illustrata
” of Bel and Schott, published at Francfort in Speculum vitse humaoce, in quo de omnibus omnium vitte ordinum ac conditionum commodis ac incommodis tractatur,' r
Rome, 1468, folio, which, with three subsequent editions,
is accurately described in the
” Bibliotheca Speuceriana.“This work contains so many severe reflections on the clergy
of the author’s time, that some protestant writers have been
disposed to consider him as a brother in disguise. It is
certainly singular that he could hazard so much pointed
censure in such an age. 3.
” Epistola de expugnatione
Nigroponti>,“folio, without date, but probably before the
author’s death. A copy of this likewise occurs in the
” Bibl. Spenceriana." Those who are desirous of farther
information respecting Sanchez or his works may be amply
gratified in Marchand, who has a prolix article on the subject.
sted with it. His grace took one part to himself; another was committed to a then pious and reverend dean (Dr. Patrick), afterwards a bishop of our church. The reviewing
, an eminent English prelate, was born at Fresingfield, in Suffolk, Jan. 30, 1616,
and educated in grammar-learning at St. Edmund’s Bury,
where he was equally remarkable for diligent application
to his studies, and a pious disposition . In July 1634, he
was sent to Emanuel college in Cambridge, where he became very accomplished in all branches of literature, took
his degree of B. A. in 1637, and that of M. A. in 1641, and
was in 1642 chosen fellow of his college. His favourite
studies were theology, criticism, history, and poetry , but
in all his acquirements he was humble and unostentatious.
In 1648 he took the degree of B. D. It is supposed he never
subscribed the covenant^ and that this was connived at, because he continued unmolested in his fellowship till 1649;
at which time, refusing the engagement, he was ejected.
Upon this he went abroad, and became acquainted with the
most considerable of the loyal English exiles; and, it is
said, he was at Rome when Charles II. was restored. He
immediately returned to England, and was made chaplain
to Cosin, bishop of Durham, who collated him to the rectory of Houghton-le-Spring, and to the ninth prebend
of Durham in March 1661. In the same year he assisted
in reviewing the Liturgy, particularly in rectifying the
Kalendar and Rubric. In 1662 he was created, by mandamus, D. D. at Cambridge, and elected master of Emanuel college, which he governed with great prudence. In
1664 he was promoted to the deanery of York, which although he held but a few months, he expended on the
buildings about 200l. more than he had received. Upon
the death of Dr. John Barwick he was removed to the
deanery of St. Paul’s; soon after which, he resigned the
mastership of Emanuel college, and the rectory of Houghton. On his coming to St. Paul’s he set himself most diligently to repair that cathedral, which had suffered greatly
from the savage zeal of the republican fanatics in the civil
wars, till the dreadful fire in 1666 suggested the more noble
undertaking of rebuilding it. Towards this he gave 1400l.
besides what he procured by his interest and solicitations
among his private friends, and in parliament, where he
obtained the act for laying a duty on coals for the rebuilding of the cathedral. He also rebuilt the deanery, and
improved the revenues of it. In Oct. 1668, he was admitted archdeacon of Canterbury, on the king’s presentation, which he resigned in 1670. He was also prolocutor
of the lower house of convocation; and was in that station
when Charles II. in 1677, advanced him, contrary to his
knowledge or inclination, to the archiepiscopal see of Canterbury. In 1678 he published some useful directions concerning letters testimonial to candidates for holy orders.
He was himself very conscientious in the admission to orders or the disposal of livings, always preferring men of
approved abilities, great learning, and exemplary life. He
attended king Charles upon his death-bed, and made a very
weighty exhortation to him, in which he is said to have
used a good deal of freedom. In 1686 he was named the
first in James I I.'s commission for ecclesiastical affairs; but
be refused to act in it. About the same time he suspended
Wood, bishop of Lichfield and Coventry, for residing out
of and neglecting his diocese. As one of the governors of
the Charter-house, he refused to admit as pensioner in
that hospital Andrew Popham, a papist, although he came
with a nomination from the court. In June 1688, he joined
with six of his brethren the bishops in the famous petition
to king James, in which they gave their reasons why they
could not cause his declaration for liberty of conscience to
be read in churches. For this petition, which the court
called a libel, they were committed to the Tower; and,
being tried for a misdemeanor on the 29th, were acquitted,
to the great joy of the nation. This year the archbishop
projected the vain expedient of a comprehension with the
protestant dissenters. We have the following account of
this in the speech of Dr. W. Wake, bishop of Lincoln, in
the house of lords, March 17, 1710, at the opening of the
second article of the impeachment against Dr. Sacheverell.
“The person,
” says he, “who 6rst concerted this design
was the late most reverend Dr. Sancroft, then archbishop
of Canterbury. The time was towards the end of that unhappy reign of king James II. Then, when we were in
the height of our labours, defending the Church of England against the assaults of popery, and thought of nothing
else, that wise prelate foreseeing some such revolution as
soon after was happily brought about, began to consider
how utterly unprepared they had been at the restoration of
king Charles II. to settle many things to the advantage of
the Church, and what happy opportunity had been lost for
want of such a previous care, as he was therefore desirous
should now be taken, for the better and more perfect establishment of it. It was visible to all the nation, that the
more moderate dissenters were generally so well satisfied
with that stand which our divines had made agaiust popery,
and the many unanswerable treatises they had published in
confutation of it, as to express an unusual readiness to
come in to us. And it was therefore thought worth the
while, when they were deliberating about those other matters, to consider at the same time what might be done to
gain them without doing any prejudice to ourselves. The
scheme was laid out, and the several parts of it were committed, not only with the approbation, but by the direction of that great prelate, to such of our divines, as were
thought the most proper to he intrusted with it. His grace
took one part to himself; another was committed to a then
pious and reverend dean (Dr. Patrick), afterwards a bishop
of our church. The reviewing of the daily service of our
Liturgy, and the Communion Book, was referred to a select
number of excellent persons, two of which (archbishop Sharp, and Dr. Moore) are at this time upon our bench
and I am sure will bear witness to the truth of my relation.
The design was in short this: to improve, and, if possible,
to inforce our discipline to review and enlarge our Liturgy, by correcting of some things, by adding of others
and if it should be thought adviseable by authority, when
this matter should come to be legally considered, first in
convocation, then in parliament, by leaving some few ceremonies, confessed to be indifferent in their natures as indifferent in their usage, so as not to be necessarily observed
by those who made a scruple of them, till they should be
able to overcome either their weaknesses or prejudices,
and be willing to comply with them.
” In October, accompanied with eight of his- brethren the bishops, Sancroft
waited upon the king, who had desired the assistance of
their counsels; and advised him, among other things, to
annul the ecclesiastical commission, to desist from the exercise of a dispensing power, and to call a free and regular
parliament. A few days after, though earnestly pressed
by his majesty, he refused to sign a declaration of abhorrence of the prince of Orange’s invasion. In December,
on king James’s withdrawing himself, he is said to have
signed, and concurred with the lords spiritual and temporal,
in a declaration to the prince of Orange, for a free parliament, security of our laws, liberties, properties, and of
the church of England in particular, with a due indulgence
to protestant dissenters. But in a declaration signed by
him Nov. 3, 1688, he says that “he never gave the prince
any invitation by word, writing, or otherwise;
” it must
therefore have been in consequence of the abdication that
he joined with the lords in the above declaration. Yet
when the prince came to St. James’s, the archbishop neither
went to wait on him, though he had once agreed to it, nor
did he even send any message. He absented himself
likewise from the convention, for which he is severely censured by Burnet, who calls him “a poor-spirited and fearful man, that acted a very mean part in all this great
transaction. He resolved,
” says he, “neither to act for, nor
against, the king’s interest; which, considering his higli
post, was thought very unbecoming. For, if he thought,
as by his behaviour afterwards it seems he did, that the
nation was running into treason, rebellion, and perjury, it
was a strange thing to see one who was at the head of the
church to sit silent all the while that this was in debate,
and not once so much as declare his opinion, by speaking,
voting, or protesting, not to mention the other ecclesiastical methods that certainly be.came his character.
”
as published in 18 13; and a translation in the following year, by the rev. Robert Boucher Nickolls, dean of Middleham, with an application to the case of R. Kendall
Though of considerable abilities and uncommon learning, he published but very little. The first thing was a
Latin dialogue, composed jointly by himself and some of
his friends, between a preacher and a thief condemned to
the gallows; and is entitled, 1. “Fur Prædestinatus sive,
dialogismus inter quendam Ordinis proedicantium Calvinistam etFurem ad laqueum damnatum habitus,
” &c. Modern Politics, taken from Machiavel,
Borgia, and other modern authors, by an eye-witness,
”
3652, 12mo. 3. “Three Sermons,
” afterwards re-printed
together in Defence of the vulgar Translation of the Bible,
” with a
preface of his own. 5. He drew up some offices for Jan.
3O, and May 29. 6. “Nineteen familiar Letters of his to
Mr. (afterwards sir Henry) North, of Mildenhall, bart. both
before, but principally after, his deprivation, for refusing
to take the oaths to king William III. and his retirement to
the place of his nativity in Suffolk, found among the papers
of the said sir Henry North, never before published,
” were
printed in 1757, 8vo. In this small collection of the archbishop’s “Familiar Letters,
” none of which were probably
ever designed to be made public, his talents for epistolary
writing appear to great advantage. He left behind him a
multitude of' papers and coUections in ms. which upon his
decease came into his nephew’s hands; after whose death
they were purchased by bishop Tanner for eighty guineas,
who gave them, with the rest of his manuscripts, to the
Bodleian library. From these the Rev. John Gutch, of
Oxford, published in 1781, 2 vols. 8vo, various “Miscellaneous Tracts relating to the History and Antiquities of
England and Ireland,
” &c.
rham, the bishopric of which was then vacant, but was refused admittance by Whittingham, the puritan dean. The archbishop, however, with his wonted firmness proceeded
Years were now coming upon him, and a numerous family demanded a provision; but as it was a new and unpopular thing to see the prelates of the church abandoning their cathedrals and palaces, and retiring to obscure manor-houses on their estates, in order to accumulate fortunes for their children, an abundant portion of obloquy fell upon Sandys, who seldom lived at York, and not very magnificently at Southwell. Yet he visited his diocese regularly, and preached occasionally in his cathedral with great energy and effect. In 1577, during a metropolitical visitation, he came in his progress to Durham, the bishopric of which was then vacant, but was refused admittance by Whittingham, the puritan dean. The archbishop, however, with his wonted firmness proceeded to excommunication. The issue of this contest will come to be noticed in our account of Whittingham. In the month of May 1582, being once more in a progress through his dipcese, a diar bolical attempt was made to blast his character. He happened to lie at an inn in Doncaster; whertf, through the contrivance of sir Robert Stapleton, and other enemies, the inn-keeper’s wife was put to bed to him at midnight when he was asleep. On this, according to agreement, the inn-keeper rushed into the room, waked the archbishop with his noise, and offered a drawn dagger to his breast, pretending to avenge the injury. Immediately sir Robert Stapleton came in, as if called from his chamber by the inn-keeper; and putting on the appearance of a friend, as indeed he had formerly been, and as the archbishop then thought him, advised his grace to make the matter up, laying before him many perils and dangers to his name and the credit of religion that might ensue, if, being one against so many, he should offer to stir in such a cause; and persuading him, that, notwithstanding his innocency, which the archbishop earnestly protested, and Stapleton then acknowledged, it were better to stop the mouths of needy persons than to bring his name into doubtful question. With this advice, Sandys unwarily complied; but, afterwards discovering sir Robert’s malice and treacherous dissimulation, he ventured, in confidence of his own innocency, to be the means himself of bringing the whole cause to examination before the council in the star-chamber. The result of this was, that he was declared entirely innocent of the wicked slanders and imputations raised against him; and that sir Robert Stapleton and his accomplices were first imprisoned, and then fined in a most severe manner. This affair is related at large by sir John Harrington, a contemporary writer; and by Le Neve, who gives a fuller account of it, from an exemplification of the decree, made in the star-chamber, 8 May, 25 Eliz. preserved in the Harieian library.
o quarrelled alike with protestants and papists, with his successor in one see (Aylmer) and with his dean in another, who in his first two dioceses treated the clergy
Dr. Whitaker, whose late life of archbishop Sandys we have irs general followed, as the result of much research and reflection, observes that after all the deductions which truth and impartiality require, it will still remain incontestable, that Sandys was a man of a clear and vigorous understanding, of a taste, in comparison, above that of the former age or the next, and, what is more, of his own: that he was a sincere Christian, a patient sufferer, an indefatigable preacher, an intrepid and active ecclesiastical magistrate. W r hat was his deportment in private life, we are no where told. On the other hand, it cannot be denied, that the man who after his advancement to the episcopal order, in three successive stations, either, kindled the flames of discord, or never extinguished them, who quarrelled alike with protestants and papists, with his successor in one see (Aylmer) and with his dean in another, who in his first two dioceses treated the clergy with a harshness which called for the interposition of the metropolitan, and who drew upon himself from two gentlemen of the country, the extremity of violence and outrage, must have been lamentably defective in Christian meekness and forbearance *. In every instance, indeed, he had met with great provocation, and in the last the treatment he received was atrocious; but such wounds are never gratuitously in-, flicted, and rarely till after a series of irritations on both sides. In doctrinal points his biographer attempts, by various extracts from his sermons, to prove archbishop Sandys less inclined to Calvinism than some of his contem* We know not if Mr. Lodge has be. easy elegance of a courtier trith as
ough the neck, of which wound he instantly died. He was buried in St. Patrick’s cathedral, where the dean and chapter erected a small monument to his honour, at their
He was censured by some for not making a bold attempt;
and such complaints were sent of this to king William, that
his majesty wrote twice to him, pressing him on the subject. But the duke saw that the enemy was well posted
and well provided, and had several good officers among
them; and knew that, if he met with a check, his whole
army, and consequently all Ireland, had been lost, since
he could not have made a regular retreat. The surest method was to preserve hi’s army; which would save Ulster,
and although his conduct exposed him to the reproaches of
some persons, better judges thought, that his management
of this campaign was one of the greatest actions of his life.
At the battle of the Boyne, July 1, 1690, he passed the
river in his station, and immediately rallied and encouraged the French Protestants, who had been left exposed
by the death of their commander, with this short harangue;
“Aliens, messieurs, voila vos persecuteurs,
” pointing to
the French Papists in the enemy’s army. But these words
were scarcely uttered, when a few of king James’s guards,
who returned full speed to their main body, after the
slaughter of their companions, and whom the French refugees suffered to pass, thinking them to 1 be of their own
party, fell furiously upon the duke, and gave him two
wounds over the head, which, however, were not mortal.
Upon this, the French regiment acknowledged their error
by committing a greater; for, firing rashly on the enemy,
they shot him through the neck, of which wound he instantly died. He was buried in St. Patrick’s cathedral,
where the dean and chapter erected a small monument to
his honour, at their own expence, with an elegant inscription by Dr. Swift, which is printed in the Dean’s works.
During the whole time that he was dean of St. Paul’s, he attended divine service constantly in that
During the whole time that he was dean of St. Paul’s, he attended divine service constantly in that cathedral twice every day, whether in residence or not and in concert with the three other residentiaries, established the custom of always- preaching their own turns in the afternoon, or exchanging with each other only, which, excepting the case of illness, or extraordinary accidents, was very punctually observed. He also introduced many salutary regulations in the financial concerns of the church, the keeping of the registers, &c. &c. In the summer months he resided constantly at his episcopal house at Ctiddesden, the vicinity of which to Oxford rendered it very pleasing to a man of his literary turn. His house was the resort of those who were most distinguished for academical merit, and his conversation such as was worthy of his guests, who always left him with a high esteem of his understanding and learning. And though in the warm contest in 1754, for representatives of the county (in which it was scarce possible for any person of eminence to remain neuter), he openly espoused that side 'which was thought most favourable to the principles of the revolution; yet it was without bitterness or vehemence, without ever departing from the decency of his profession, the dignity of his station, or the charity prescribed by his religion.
t year. The performers of each of the London theatres gave a benefit to defray the expences, and the Dean and Chapter of Westminster took nothing for the ground. The
In the year 1741, a monument was erected to our poet in Westminster Abbey, by the direction of the earl of Burlington, Dr. Mead, Mr. Pope, and Mr. Martyn. It was the work of Scheemaker (who received 300l. for it), after a design of Kent, and was opened in January of that year. The performers of each of the London theatres gave a benefit to defray the expences, and the Dean and Chapter of Westminster took nothing for the ground. The money received by the performers at Drury-Iane theatre amounted to above 200l. but the receipts at Covent-garden did not exceed 100l. From these imperfect notices, which are all we have been able to collect from the labours of his biographers* and commentators, our readers will perceive that less is known of Shakspeare than of almost any writer who has been considered as an object of laudable curiosity. Nothing could be more highly gratifying than an account of the early studies of this wonderful man, the progress of his pen, his moral and social qualities, his friendships, his failings, and whatever else constitutes personal history. But on all these topics his contemporaries and his immediate successors have been equally silent, and if aught can hereafter be discovered, it must be by exploring sources which have hitherto escaped the anxious researches of those who have devoted their whole lives, and their most vigorous talents, to revive his memory and illustrate his writings. In the sketch. we have given, if the dates of his birth and death be excepted, what is there on which the reader can depend, or for which, if he contend eagerly, he may not be involved in controversy, and perplexed with contradictory opinions and authorities
The merit of dean Sharp was now in the highest estimation, and upon the deprivation
The merit of dean Sharp was now in the highest estimation, and upon the deprivation of those bishops who refused the oaths to William and Mary, he was considered as a proper person to succeed to one of the vacant sees. But neither the favour of his majesty, nor the persuasion of his friends, could prevail on him Ho accept the offer. He declined the promotion, not from any scruple of conscience, but from a delicacy of feeling; for he entertained a particular esteem for the prelates who were deprived. This refusal, however, which reflects equal honour on his disinterestedness and on his sensibility, displeased the king. But his friend, Dr. Tillotson, the day after his nomination to the see of Canterbury, waited on him, and proposed an expedient, by which he might accede, without violating his resolution, to the kind intention of his majesty. This was, that he should promise to accept the see of York, when it should become vacant, and that he should ground his present refusal on his wish to be preferred to his native county. To this he agreed, and Dr. Tillotson acquainted the king with what had passed; when his majesty signified his approbation of Dr. Sharp’s intention. In a few days afterwards, Lamplugh, the archbishop of York, died, and Sharp was consecrated in his room, July 5, 1691. His elevation to this dignity, says Thoresby, the historian of Leeds, was not only to the comfort and honour of his native county and family, but to the universal satisfaction and joy of the whole nation.
ed to the archdeaconry of Northumberland; and in 1755, succeeded Dr. Mangey in the officially of the dean and chapter. He died March 6, 175S, and was interred in Durham
, a younger son of the preceding,
was born about 1693. He was admitted of Trinity college,
Cambridge, in 1708, and took his degrees of B. A. in 1712,
and M. A. 1716. He was also a fellow of his college, and
took the degree of D. D. in 1729. He was chaplain to
archbishop Dawes; and in July 1720, was collated to the
rectory of Rothbury, in the county of Northumberland.
He held the prebend of Southwell, and afterwards that of
Wistow, in York cathedral. In 1722, he was collated to
the archdeaconry of Northumberland; and in 1755, succeeded Dr. Mangey in the officially of the dean and chapter. He died March 6, 175S, and was interred in Durham
cathedral, of which also he had held the tenth prebend
from the year 1732. He published a “Concio ad Clerum,
” when he took his doctor’s decree; and in The Rubric in the book of Common Prayer, and the
Canons of the church of England, so far as they relate to
the Parochial Clergy, considered in a course of visitation
sermons,
” 8vo. A volume of his “Sermons on several occasions
” was published in Discourses on the antiquity of the
Hebrew tongue and character.
”
1799, in the living of Hartshorn, a village rendered remarkable as the birth-place of the celebrated dean Stanhope, whose father enjoyed this preferment. Here he spent
In 1801 he published the first part of his second volume, which was in all respects equal to the former. He had now succeeded his father, who died at the close of 1799, in the living of Hartshorn, a village rendered remarkable as the birth-place of the celebrated dean Stanhope, whose father enjoyed this preferment. Here he spent the summer, and found some relaxation from his severe studies, in improving his house and garden. But his enjoyments were not uninterrupted. A bilious habit rendered him perpetually subject to slow fevers. The fatigue of exercise in a burning sun now brought on a more fierce attack. He recovered, however, and returned to London in the winter of 1801, and went on with his work. But it was soon perceived that his constitution had received an alarming shock. Early in the spring he found himself unfit for his usual occupations. A new attack of a dreadful and lamentable fever ensued but from this too he was at length restored. All application to books was now prohibited and in June or July it was deemed advisable for him to pay a visit to the Kentish coast, attended by his only relation, an affectionate half-sister, the daughter of his father by a second wife. They went first to Ramsgate, and thence removed to the more quiet seclusion of Sandgate, near Hythe. Here he passed the autumn, and was so well that he joined some friends in a few days expedition to the opposite coast, and visited Boulogne. Towards the end of October 1802 his disorder suddenly returned with more violence than before. After a struggle of ten days, it was deemed right to remove him to London for better advice, where he died on the 28th, aged forty-one, deeply lamented by all vvho knew him, and leaving a chasm in the department of literature which he had embraced, not easy to be supplied
r took re-possession. On the king’s return he met his majesty at Canterbury, and was soon after made dean of the royal chapel; and upon bishop Juxon’s translation to
During his majesty’s being at Newmarket that year, and afterwards in the Isle of Wight, Dr. Sheldon attended on him as one of his chaplains. On March 30, 1647-8, he was ejected from his wardenship by the parliament-visitors, and imprisoned with Dr. Hammond, in Oxlord, and other places, that they might not only be no hindrance to the changes going on in the university, but be prevented from attending the king at the Isle of Wight. Dr. Sheldon remained confined above six months, and then the reforming committee set him at liberty, Oct. 24, 1648, on condition that he should never come within five miles of Oxford; that he should not go to the king in the Isle of Wight, and that he should give security to appear before them at fourteen days’ warning, whenever cited. Upon his release he retired to Snelston in Derbyshire, where, at his own expence, and by contributions from his friends, he sent money constantly to the exiled king, and followed his studies until the approach of the restoration. On March 4, 1659-60, Dr. John Palmer, who iiad ^been placed in the wardenship in his room, dying, and there being an immediate prospect of his majesty’s return, there was no election made of a successor, but Dr. Sheldon was restored, though he never took re-possession. On the king’s return he met his majesty at Canterbury, and was soon after made dean of the royal chapel; and upon bishop Juxon’s translation to the see of Canterbury, was made bishop of London, to which he was elected October 9, 1660, and consecrated the 28th of that month. He held the mastership of the Savoy with that bishopric; and the famous conference between the episcopal and presbyterian clergy concerning alterations to be made in the liturgy, in 1661, was held at his loggings in the Savoy, in the course of which he exerted himself much against the presbyterians. Upon archbishop Juxon’s death he was elected to the see of Canterbury Aug. 11, 1663. In 1665, during the time of the plague, he continued at Lambeth, and exerted the utmost benevolence to those who would otherwise have perished in their necessities; and by his letters to all the bishops, procured considerable sums to be returned out of all parts of his province. On December 20, 1667, he was elected chancellor of the university of Oxford, but on the 31st of July, 1669, resigned that office. He died at Lambeth, November 9, 1677, in the eightieth year of his age, and was interred in Croydon church in Surrey, where a monument was erected to his memory by his heir, sir Joseph Sheldon, then lately lord mayor of London, son of his elder brother Ralph Sheldon of Stanton in Staffordshire.
, D. D. the intimate friend of Dean Swift, is said by Shield, in Cibber’s “Lives of the Poets,”
, D. D. the intimate friend of
Dean Swift, is said by Shield, in Cibber’s “Lives of the
Poets,
” to have been born about Sufficient for
the day is the evil thereof.
” On this being known, he was
struck out of the list of chaplains to the lord-lieutenant,
and forbidden the castle.
One of the volumes of Swift’s Miscellanies consists almost entirely of letters between him and the dean. He published a prose translation of Persius-, to which he added
One of the volumes of Swift’s Miscellanies consists almost entirely of letters between him and the dean. He published a prose translation of Persius-, to which he added the best notes of former editors, together with many judicious ones of his own. This work was printed at London, 1739, in 12mo.
and when the danger was over, proceeded on his travels, tinder the tutorage of Dr. John Watson, then dean, and afterwards bishop of Winchester, to whom sir Francis Walsingham
During this massacre, Mr. Sidney preserved his life,
by taking refuge with several of his countrymen, in the
house of sir Francis Walsingham, the English ambassador;
and when the danger was over, proceeded on his travels,
tinder the tutorage of Dr. John Watson, then dean, and
afterwards bishop of Winchester, to whom sir Francis
Walsingham recommended him. Having left Paris, he
pursued his journey through Lorraine, by Strasburgh and
Heidelberg, to Franc fort. At the latter place, he lodged
at the house of Andrew Wechel, the celebrated printer,
and here was honoured with the friendship of Hubert
Languet (See Languet), who was then a resident from
the elector of Saxony; and to him he was principally indebted for his extensive knowledge of the customs and
usages of nations, their interests, governments, and laws,
and nothing could be more honourable to a youth of the
age of nineteen, than the choice of such a companion and
guide. Sidney has gratefully commemorated Languet in
some lines in the third book of his “Arcadia.
” When
they were separated, Languet renewed in his letters the
strongest assurances of his regard, intermixed with the
most useful and most endearing lessons of advice.
ar (1689) he proceeded master of arts, entered into holy orders, and about 1692 was appointed by the dean and chapter of Westminster to be minister of Tothill-fields
During this time, Smalridge did not neglect classical
literature, in which he excelled, and afforded an excellent
specimen of his talent for Latin poetry in his “Auctio
Davisiana,
” first printed in Musae Anglicange.
” In July of the same year
(
stan’s, having been made one of the canons of Christ-church, on the same day that Atterbury was made dean; and the latter having resigned the deanery of Carlisle, Dr.
In the following year, 1711, he resigned the lectureship of St. Dunstan’s, having been made one of the canons of Christ-church, on the same day that Atterbury was made dean; and the latter having resigned the deanery of Carlisle, Dr. Smalridge succeeded him in that preferment, as he did likewise in the deanery of Christ-church, in 17 Is, when Atterbury was made bishop of Rochester. In 1714 Dr. Smalridge was consecrated bishop of Bristol, and the queen soon after appointed him her lord almoner, in which capacity he for some time served her successor George I.; but refusing to sign the declaration which the archbishop of Canterbury and the bishops in and about London had drawn up against the rebellion in 1715, he was removed from that place. In this measure he probably was influenced by Atterbury; but he soon regained his favour with the princess of Wales at least, afterwards queen Caroline, who was his steady patron till his death.
ut he did not amend his irregularities, by which, he gave so much offence, that, April 24, 1700, the dean and chapter declared ' the place of Mr. Smith void, he having
He died in 1710, in his forty-second year, at the seat
of George Ducket, esq. called Hartham, in Wiltshire;
and was buried in the parish church there. Some time
before his death, he engaged in considerable undertakings;
and raised expectations in the world, which he did not live
to gratify. Oldisworth observes, that he had seen of his
about ten sheets of Pindar, translated into English; which,
he says, exceeded any thing in that kind he could ever hope
for in our language. He had drawn out a plan for a tragedy
of Lady Jane Grey, and had written several scenes of it; a
subject afterwards nobly executed by Mr. Rowe. But his
greatest undertaking was a translation of Longinus, to which
he proposed a large addition of notes and observations of
his own, with an entire system of the art of poetry in three
books, under the titles of “thoughts, diction, and figure.
”
He intended also to make remarks upon all the ancients and
moderns, the Greek, Latin, French, Spanish, Italian, and
English poets; and to animadvert upon their several beauties and defects.
Oldisworth has represented Smith as a man abounding
with qualities both good and great; and that may perhaps
be true, in some degree, though amplified by the partiality
of friendship. He had, nevertheless, some defects in his
conduct one was an extreme carelessness in the particular of dress which singularity procured him the name of
“Captain Rag.
” The ladies, it is said, at once commended
and reproved him, by the name of the “handsome sloven.
”
It is acknowledged also, that he was much inclined to intemperance which was caused perhaps by disappointments, but led to that indolence and loss of character,
which has been frequently destructive to genius, even of a
higher order than he appears to have possessed. Dr. Johnson thus draws up his character: “As his years advanced,
he advanced in reputation; for he continued to cultivate
his mind; but he did not amend his irregularities, by which,
he gave so much offence, that, April 24, 1700, the dean
and chapter declared ' the place of Mr. Smith void, he
having been convicted of riotous misbehaviour in the house
of Mr. Cole, an apothecary; but it was referred to the
dean when and upon what occasion the sentence should be
put in execution. Thus tenderly was he treated; the governors of his college could hardly keep him, and yet wished
that he would not force them to drive him away. Some
time afterwards he assumed an appearance of decency; in
his own phrase, he whitened himself, having a desire to
obtain the censorship, an office of honour and some profit
in the college; but when the election came, the preference
was given to Mr. Foulkes, his junior; the same, I suppose,
that joined with Freind in an edition of part of Demosthenes; it not being thought proper to trust the superintendance of others to a man who took so little care of himself. From this time Smith employed his malice and his
wit against the dean, Dr. Aldrich, whom he considered as
the opponent of his claim. Of his lampoon upon him, I
once heard a single line too gross to be repeated. But
he was still a genius and a scholar, and OxtV-rd was unwilling to lose him: he was endured, with all his pranks
and his vices, two years longer; but on December 20,
1705, at the instance of all the canons, the sentence declared five years before was put in execution. The execution was, I believe, silent and tender; for one of his
friends, from whom I learned much of his life, appeared
not to know it. He was now driven to London, where he
associated himself with the whigs, whether because they
were in power, or because the tories had expelled him, or
because he was a whig by principle, may perhaps be
doubted. He was, however, caressed by tnen of great
abilities, whatever were their party, and was supported by
the liberality of those who delighted in his conversation.
There was once a design, hinted at by Oldisvvorih, to have
made him useful. One evening, as he was sitting with a
friend at a tavern, he was called down by the waiter, and,
having stayed some time below, came up thoughtful. After
a pause, said he to his friend, ‘ He that wanted me below
was Addison, whose business was to tell me that a history
of the revolution was intended, and to propose that I should
undertake it. I said, ’ What shall I do with the character
of lord Sunderland?‘ And Addison immediately returned,
’ When, Rag, were you drunk last?' and went away. Captain Rag was a name that he got at Oxford by his negligence
of dress. This story I heard from the late Mr. Clark, of
Lincoln’s Inn, to whom it was told by the friend of Smith.
Such scruples might debar him from some profitable employments; but as they could not deprive him of any real
esteem, they left him many friends; and no man was ever
better introduced to the theatre than he, who, in that
violent conflict of parties, had a prologue and epilogue
from the first wits on either side. But learning and nature
will now-and-then take different courses. His play pleased
the critics, and the critics only. It was, as Addison has
recorded, hardly heard the third night. Smith had, indeed, trusted entirely to his merit; had insured no band
of applauders, nor used any artifice to force success, and
found that naked excellence was not sufficient for its own
support. The play, however, was bought by Lintot, who
advanced the price from fifty guineas, the current rate, to
sixty; and Halifax, the general patron, accepted the dedication. Smith’s indolence kept him from writing the
dedication, till Lintot, after fruitless importunity, gave
notice that he would publish the play without it. Now,
therefore, it was written; and Halifax expected the author
with his book, and had prepared to reward him with a
place of three hundred pounds a year. Smith, by pride,
or caprice, or indolence, or bashful ness, neglected to attend him, though doubtless warned and pressed by his
friends, and at last missed his reward by not going to solicit it. In 1709, a year after the exhibition of Phaedra,
died John Philips, the friend and fellow-collegian of Smith,
who, on that occasion, wrote a poem, which justice must
place among the best elegies which our language can shew,
an elegant mixture of fondness and admiration, of dignity
and softness. There are some passages too ludicrous; but
every human performance has its faults. This elegy it was
the mode among his friends to purchase fora guinea-, and,
as his acquaintance was numerous, it was a very profitable
poem. Of his ‘ Pindar,’ mentioned by Oldisworth, I have
never otherwise heard. His ‘ Longinus’ he intended to
accompany with some illustrations, and had selected his
instances of * the false Sublime,’ from the works of Blackmore. He resolved to try again the fortune of the stage,
with the story of * Lady Jane Grey.' It is not unlikely
that his experience of the inefficacy and incredibility of
a mythological tale might determine him to choose an action from English history, at no great distance from our
own times, which was to end in a real event, produced by
the operation of known characters. Having formed his
plan, and collected materials, he declared that a few
months would complete his design; and, that he might
pursue his work with fewer avocations, he was, in June,
1710, invited by Mr. George Ducket, to his house at
Hartham in Wiltshire. Here he found such opportunities
of indulgence as did not much forward his studies, and
particularly some strong ale, too delicious to be resisted.
He ate and drank till he found himself plethoric: and
then, resolving to ease himself by evacuation, he wrote to
an apothecary in the neighbourhood a prescription of a
purge so forcible, that the apothecary thought it his duty
to delay it till he had given notice of its danger. Smith,
not pleased with the contradiction of a shopman, and
boastful of his own knowledge, treated the notice with rude
contempt, and swallowed his own medicine, which, in
July 1710, brought him to the grave. He was buried at
Hartham. Many years afterwards, Ducket communicated
to Oldmixon, the historian, an account, pretended to have
been received from Smith, that Clarendon’s History was,
in its publication, corrupted by Aldrich, Smalridge, and
Atterbury; and that Smith was employed to forge and insert the alterations. This story was published triumphantly
by Oldmixon, and may be supposed to have been eagerly
received: but its progress was soon checked for, finding
its way into the journal of Trevoux, it fell under the eye
of Atterbury, then an exile in France, who immediately
denied the charge, with this remarkable particular, that he
never in his whole life had once spoken to Smith; hrs
company being, as must be inferred, not accepted by those
who attended to their characters. The charge was afterwards very diligently refuted by Dr< Burton of Eton a
man eminent for literature, and, though not of the same
party with Aldrich and Atterbury, too studious of truth to
leave them burthened with a false charge. The testimonies which he has collected have convinced mankind that
either Smith or Ducket were guilty of wilful and malicious
falsehood. This controversy brought into view those parts
of Smith’s life which with more honour to his name might
have been concealed. Of Smith I can yet say a little more.
He was a man of such estimation among his companions,
that the casual censures or praises which he dropped in
conversation were considered, like those of Scaliger, as
worthy of preservation. He had great readiness and exactness of criticism, and by a cursory glance over a new
composition would exactly tell all its faults and beauties.
He was remarkable for the power of reading with great rapidity, and of retaining with great fidelity what he so
easily collected. He therefore always knew what the present question required; and, when his friends expressed
their wonder at his acquisitions, made in a state of apparent
negligence and drunkenness, he never discovered his hours
of reading or method of study, but involved himself in
affected silence, and fed his own vanity with their admiration and conjectures. One practice he had, which was
easily observed: if any thought or image was presented to
his mind that he could use or improve, he did not suffer
it to be lost; but, amidst the jollity of a tavern, or in the
warmth of conversation, very diligently committed to paper.
Thus it was that he had gathered two quires of hints for
his new tragedy; of which Howe, when they were put into
his hands, could make, as he says, very little use, but
which the collector considered as a valuable stock of materials. When he came to London, his way of life connected
him with the licentious and dissolute; and he affected the
airs and gaiety of a man of pleasure; but his dress was
always deficient: scholastic cloudiness still hung about
him, and his merriment was sure to produce the scorn of
his companions. With all his carelessness, and all his
vices, he was one of the murmurers at form tie; and wondered why he was suffered to be poor, when Addison was
caressed and preferred: nor would a very little have contented him; for he estimated his wants at six hundred
pounds a year. In his course of reading it was particular,
that he had diligently perused, and accurately remembered,
the old romances of knight-errantry. He had a high opinion of his own merit, and something contemptuous in his
treatment of those whom he considered as not qualified to
oppose or contradict him. He had many frailties; yet it
cannot but be supposed that he had great merit, who could
obtain to the same play a prologue from Addison, and an
epilogue from Prior; and who could have at once the patronage of Halifax, and the praise of Oldisworth.
”
of the rev. Francis Woodman, one of the minor canons of Durham, an excellent classical scholar. The dean also, Dr. Dennis Granville, invited him to his house, and took
, younger brother of the preceding Dr. John Smith, and the munificent provost of Queen’s college, Oxford, was born at Lowther, Oct. 10, 1670. His father dying when he was five years old, his mother removed with her family to Guisborough in Yorkshire, where he was educated for some time, until his brother placed him under his own eye at the public school at Durham, under Mr. Thomas Battersby, a very diligent master, who qualified him for the university at the age of fifteen. He was not, however, sent thither immediately, but put under the tuition of the rev. Francis Woodman, one of the minor canons of Durham, an excellent classical scholar. The dean also, Dr. Dennis Granville, invited him to his house, and took a lively interest in his education. Here he continued until the revolution, when Dr. Granville, who could not be reconciled to the new government, determined to follow his master, king James, to France, and much solicited young Smith to embark in the same cause, which his party did not think at that time hopeless. But Smith being very eager to commence his university education, and hearing of the arrival of his uncle, Dr. John, from Madrid, preferred going to London to meet and advise with him. This had another happy effect, for he now found a generous patron in his godfather, sir Joseph Williamson, who received him very kindly, and gave him recommendatory letters to Oxford, where he was admitted, May 10, 1689, to a scholarship in Queen’s college. Here he had Mr. William Lancaster for his tutor, and pursued his studies with such zeal and success as to become an honour to the society. Among his contemporaries were, the afterwards well known and highly respected prelates Tanner and Gibson, with both of whom now began an intimacy which subsisted all the-ir lives. In 1693, being chosen a taberder, he took his first degree in arts, and was advancing in his studies, when sir Joseph Williamson removed him from college, by appointing him his deputy keeper of the paper-office at Whitehall; and sir Joseph being soon after one of the plenipotentiaries at Ryswick, took Mr. Smith with him as his secretary.
he lived. But he not only lost this patron by death, but another, William Henry Granviile, nephew to dean Granville, and the last earl of Bath of that family, who had
These promotions requiring a residence in London, Mr. Smith was soon after appointed chaplain to Edward Villiers, earl of Jersey, then lord chamberlain, whom he had known at Ryswick, where his lordship was one of the plenipotentiaries. Lord Jersey now introduced him at court, and he preached several times before the' queen, and would have been otherwise promoted by his lordship’s interest had he lived. But he not only lost this patron by death, but another, William Henry Granviile, nephew to dean Granville, and the last earl of Bath of that family, who had a very high esteem for him.
ation. The duke appointed him his master of requests, steward of the stannenes, provost oi Eton, and dean of Carlisl Strype says that he “was at least in deacon’s orders,”
Strype lias computed the value of Dr. Smith’s preferments
at this time; according to which, his professorship of civil
law brought him in 40l.; the chancellorship of Ely was worth
50l. and a benefice which he had in Cambridgeshire was
worth 36l. so that the whole of his preferments amounted
to 126l. a year. “And this,
” says Strype, “was the port
he lived in before his leaving Cambridge. He kept three
servants, and three gun-;, and three winter geldings. And
this stood him in 3o/. per annum, together with his own
board.
” A man of his talents and reputation, however,
was not destined to continue in a college life. On the accession of Edward \ I. when he could avow his sentiments
with freedom, he was invited into the family of the protector
duke of Somerset, by whom he was employed in atiairs of
state, probably such as concerned the reformation. The
duke appointed him his master of requests, steward of the
stannenes, provost oi Eton, and dean of Carlisl Strype
says that he “was at least in deacon’s orders,
” but of this
fact we have no evidence, and Strype, in Granger’s
opinion, seems to have hazarded the conjecture because he
could not otherwise account for the spiritual preferments he
enjoyed. We have just mentioned that he had a benefice
in Cambridgeshire, which was the rectory of Leverington,
and this was conferred on him in the time of Henry VIII.;
but a rectory might have been held by any one who was a
clerk at large; for though the law of the church was, that
in such a case, he should take the order of priesthood within one year after his institution, yet that was frequently
dispensed with.
nnot be discovered, but it must have, been subsequent to July 28, 1480, when Henry Sharpe- occurs as dean. While, in this office he resided in Canon-row, and was honoured
A few years after his being made clerk of the hanaper, he was promoted to the deanery of St. Stephen’s, Westminster, a dignity usually conferred on some favourite chaplain whom the king wished to have near his person. The precise time of his arriving at this preferment cannot be discovered, but it must have, been subsequent to July 28, 1480, when Henry Sharpe- occurs as dean. While, in this office he resided in Canon-row, and was honoured by his i?oyal master with a seat in the privy-council. From these preferments it may be inferred that Smyth’s talents and address had justified the hopes of his family and patrons. He must certainly have been a favourite with the king, and not less so with his mother, the countess of Richmond, who on June 14, 1492, presented him to the rectory of Cheshunt, which he quitted in 1494 for higher preferment. She conferred upon him another mark of her confidence, in appointing him one of the feoffees of those manors and estates, which were to answer the munificent purposes of her will. As to the reports of his former biographers, that he held, at one time, the archdeaconry of Surrey, and the prepositure of Wells, Mr. Churton has clearly proved that they have no foundation.
Dec. 30, 1490, the king bestowed it on Smyth, by the style of “Our beloved and faithful Counsellor, Dean of our free chapel within our own palace at Westminster.” The
When the see of Lichfield and Coventry became vacant
by the death of bishop Hales, Dec. 30, 1490, the king
bestowed it on Smyth, by the style of “Our beloved and
faithful Counsellor, Dean of our free chapel within our
own palace at Westminster.
” The time neither of his
election nor consecration is upon record, but the latter
is supposed to have taken place between the 12th and
29th of January 1492-3. The cause of so considerable an
interval from the death of his predecessor must probably
be sought in the capricious proceedings of the court of
Rome on such occasions. His final settlement in this see
was followed by a visitation of the clergy under his controul,
and the performance of those other duties incumbent on
his new station. His usual residences were at Beaudesert,
and at Pipe, both near Lichfield, or at his palace in London, which stood on the site of Somerset-house.
o, very elegantly written. In 1791, appeared “The Poetic Works of the rev. William Smith, D. D. late dean of Chester; with some account of the life and writings of the
, a learned English divine and translator, was the son of the rev. Richard Smith, rector of AllSaints, and minister of St. Andrew, both in Worcester,
who died in 1726. He was born at Worcester in 1711,
and educated at the grammar-school of that city. In 1728
he was admitted of New-college, Oxford, where he proceeded B. A. in 1732, M. A. in 1737, and D. D. in 1758.
In 1735 he was presented by his patron, James earl of
Derby, in whose family he was reader, to the rectory of
Trinity-church, Chester, and by his son and successor’s
interest, whose chaplain he was, to the deanery of Chester
in 1753. He held the mastership of Brentwood-school in
Essex for one year, 1748; and in 1753 was nominated by
the corporation of Liverpool one of the ministers of St.
George’s church there, which he resigned in 1767. With
his deanery he held the parish churches of Handley and
Trinity, but in 1780 resigned the last for the rectory of
West Kirkby. He died Jan. 12, 1787. His character is
thus briefly drawn by his biographer: “He was tall and
genteel; his voice was strong, clear, and melodious; he
spoke Latin fluently, and was complete master not only of
the Greek but Hebrew language; his mind was so replete
with knowledge, that he was a living library; his manner of
address was graceful, engaging, and delightful; his sermons
were pleasing, informing, convincing; his memory, even in
age, was wonderfully retentive, and his conversation was polite, affable, and in the highest degree improving.
” He is
known in the learned world, chiefly by his valuable translations of “Longinus on the Sublime,
” Thucydides,
” Xenophon’s History of the Affairs of Greece,
” Nine Sermons on the Beatitudes,
”
8vo, very elegantly written. In The
Poetic Works of the rev. William Smith, D. D. late dean
of Chester; with some account of the life and writings of
the Author. By Thomas Crane, minister of the parish
church of St. Olave in Chester, &c.
” This work we have
not seen, and for the account of Dr. Smith’s life we are
indebted to a review of it in the Gent. Mag.
ls. 8vo. of his “Sermons” were published by Drs. Berriman and Chapman. He had himself been editor of Dean Moss’s Sermons, and gave that divine a character which was thought
In 1713, he had been installed a canon of Windsor, and
on Feb. 21, 1719, was elected provost of King’s college,
although the court-interest was in favour of Dr. Waddington. In 1723 he served the office of vice-chancellor of the
university, and gave every satisfaction in discharging the
duties of both offices. The revenues of the college were
greatly augmented in his time, by the assistance of some
fellows of the college, his particular friends. It was said
that in 1722 he drew up the address to his majesty, George
II. upon the institution of Whitehall preachers, “an address,
” says Dr. Zachary Grey, “worthy of the imitation
of both universities on all occasions of the like kind, as it
was thought to have nothing redundant or defective in it.
”
He was for a short time rector of Knebworth in Hertfordshire, and afterwards, in 1737, of West-Ildesley in Berkshire. This last he retained till his death, which happened
at his lodgings at Windsor castle, Dec, 30, 1742. He was
buried at the east end of the south aile of the choir of the
chapel, near his wife, who died in 1731. She was, when
he married her, the opulent widow of sir Joshua Sharpe,
knt. and alderman of London. It remains yet to be added
to his preferments that he was several years head master of
Eton school. He was a man of great learning and acuteness, and of an amiable temper. His zeal for the principles of the church of England was warm and honest, for it
procured him many enemies, and probably obstructed his
promotron. In 17 15, '3 vols. 8vo. of his “Sermons
” were
published by Drs. Berriman and Chapman. He had
himself been editor of Dean Moss’s Sermons, and gave that
divine a character which was thought to resemble his own.
Although we seldom notice such matters, it may be worth
while to add that there was a 4to mezzotinto print of him,
which, after he was out of fashion, the print-sellers imposed
on the public as the portrait of orator Henley.
ing through the hands of lord Shaftesbury and sir William Temple, are said to have been published by dean Swift. That this work was the sportive production of Mr. Somers,”
fora g'iceque. Nor did any ri:aii-ever exactness in his family.“
Many are the encomiums which have been bestowed
upon this noble and illustrious person. Burnet tells us
that
” he was very learned in his own profession, with a
great deal more learning in other professions; in divinity,
philosophy, and history. He had a great capacity for
business, with an extraordinary temper; for he was fair
and gentle, perhaps to a fault, considering his post: so
that he ru:d all the patience and softness, as well as the
justice and equity, becoming a great magistrate.“Lord
Orford calls him
” one of those divine men, who, like a
chapel in a palace, remain unprofaned, while all the rest i
tyranny, corruption, and folly. All the traditional accounts of him, the historians of the last age, and its best
authors, represent him as the most incorrupt lawyer, and
the honestest statesman, as a master-orator, a genius of the
finest taste, and as a patriot of the noblest and most extensive views; as a man who dispensed blessings by his
life, and planned them for posterity.“He was a very great
patron of men of parts and learning, and particularly of Mr.
Addison, who has drawn his character at large in one of
his
” Freeholders,“in that of May 4, 1716, where he has
chosen -his lordship’s motto for that of his paper,
” Prodesse quam conspici.“Lord Somers was one of those
who first redeemed Milton’s
” Paradise Lost“from that
obscurity in which party-prejudice and hatred had suffered it long to lie neglected, and who pointed out the
merits of that noble poem. The most unfavourable character of lord Somers is that drawn by Swift, once his
friend, as appears by the dedication of the
” Tale of a Tub,“if that be Swift’s; and here we may notice that lord Somers’s biographer, Mr. Cooksey, offers some arguments, and
combines some facts, to prove that this satire was the production of his lordship, and of his gay young friend lord
Shrewsbury. The characters of Peter, Jack, and Martin,
are said to have been sketched from living persons, and
these sketches of character, after many years remaining in
ms. and passing through the hands of lord Shaftesbury
and sir William Temple, are said to have been published
by dean Swift. That this work was the sportive production of Mr. Somers,
” I have no doubt,“says Mr. Cooksey,
” from the private tradition of the family, and drawn by him
from real life, and originals within his own observation.“Blurton, the uncle of Mr. Somers, a good and pious man,
furnished, it is said, the portrait of the church of England
man. The character of Jack, the Calvinist, exhibited that
of his grandfather, Somers, who was so devoted an admirer of Richard Baxter, of presbyterian memory, as to be
induced to spend most of his latter days with him at Kidderminster, and to direct his remains to be deposited under
a cross in the church-yard there, as he supposed the
ground hallowed by die sanctity of Baxter. Peter had his
lineaments from father Petre, the Jesuit. Lord Somers’s
later biographer, Mr. Maddock, after examining the probability of this story, discredits it, and leaves the
” Tale of
a Tub" the property of its generally reputed author, dean
Swift; and most readers, we apprehend, will be more inclined to acquiesce in the opinion of Mr. Maddock than in
that of Mr. Cooksey.
he Saxon Dictionary.” Somner’s many well-selected books and choice manuscripts were purchased by the dean and chapter of Canterbury for the library of that church, where
Somner died March 30, 1669, after having been twice
married, and was buried in the north aile of St. iMargaret’s
church, Canterbury, where is an inscription to his memory.
Dr. Kennet tells us, that “he was courteous, without design wise, without a trick faithful, without a reward
humble and compassionate moderate and equal; never
fretted by his afflictions, nor elated by the favours of heaven and good men.
” Of his “Saxon Dictionary
” he says,
“For this, indeed, is a farther honour to the work, and the
author of it, that it was done in the days of anarchy and
confusion, of ignorance and tyranny, when all the professors
of true religion and good literature were silenced and oppressed. And yet Providence so ordered, that the loyal
suffering party did all that was done for the improvement
of letters, and the honour of the nation. Those that intruded into the places of power and profit did nothing but
defile the press with lying new and fast sermons, while the
poor ejected churchmen did works of which the world was
not worthy.
” This opinion, which is not strictly just, is
yet considerably strengthened by an appeal which Dr.
Kennet makes to the “Monasticon, the Decem Scriptores, the Polyglot Bible, the London Critics, the Council
of Florence, and the Saxon Dictionary.
” Somner’s many
well-selected books and choice manuscripts were purchased by the dean and chapter of Canterbury for the library of that church, where they now remain. A catalogue
of his manuscripts is subjoined to the life abovementioned.
He was a man “antiquis moribus,
” of great integrity and
simplicity of manners. He adhered to king Charles, in
the time of his troubles; and, when he saw him brought
to the block, his zeal could no longer contain itself, but
broke out into a passionate elegy, entitled “The insecurity of princes, considered in an occasional meditation upon
the king’s late sufferings and death,
” The frontispiece of the king’s
book opened, with a poem annexed, ‘ The Insecurity of
Princes,’ &c.
” 4to.
iling over the independents,South sided with them. He began to contemn, and in a manner to defy, the dean of his college. Dr. Owen, who was reckoned the head of the independent
, an English divine of great parts and
learning, but of very inconsistent character, was the son of
a merchant in London, and born at Hackney, in Middlesex, 1633. He was educated in Westminster-school, under
Dr. Busby, where he acquired an uncommon share of grammatical and philological learning. In 1648 he made himself remarkable by reading the Latin prayers in the school,
on the day in which king Charles was beheaded, and praying for that prince by name. He continued four years at
Westminster, and in 1651 was elected thence student of
Christchurch, Oxford. He took a bachelor of arts degree
in 1654; and the same year wrote a copy of Latin verses,
to congratulate the protector Cromwell upon the peace
concluded with the Dutch. They were published in a collection of poems by the university. The year after, he
published another Latin poem, entitled “Musica Incantans; sive Poema exprimens Musicse vires juvenem in insaniam abigentis, et?lusici hide periculum.
” This was at
that time highly appLuded for the beauty of the language,
and was printed at the request of Dr. Fell; but it is said
that Dr. South, to his dying day, regretted the publication
of it, as a juvenile and trifling performance. He commenced M. A. in June 1657, alter performing all the preparatory exercises for it with the highest applause, and
such wit and humour, as justly entitled him to represent the
Terra: F'dius, in which character he spoke the usual speech
at the celebration of the act the same year. He preached
frequently, and (as Wood thinks) without any orders. He
appeared, at St. Mary’s, the great champion for Calvinism
against Sociniuuism and Arminianisir; and his behaviour
was such, and his talents esteemed so exceedingly useful
and serviceable, that the heads of that party were considering how to give proper encouragement and proportionable preferment to so hopeful a convert. In the mean
time the protector Cromwell died and then, the presbyterians prevailing over the independents,South sided with
them. He began to contemn, and in a manner to defy,
the dean of his college. Dr. Owen, who was reckoned the
head of the independent party; upon which the doctor
plainly told him, that he was one who “sate in the seat of
the scornful.
” The author of the memoirs of South’s life
tells us, that he was admitted into holy orders according to
the rites and ceremonies of the church or England, in 1658.
In July 1659, he preached the assize-sermon at Oxford, in
which he inveighed vehemently against the independents;
and by this greatly pleased the presbyterians, who made
him their acknowledgments. The same year, when it was
visible that the king would be restored, he appeared someuhat irresolute, yet was still reckoned a member of “the fanatic ordinary,
” as Wood expresses it; but, as his majesty’s
restoration approached, he began to exercise his pulpittalents, which were very great, as much against the presbyterians, as he had done before against the independents.
Such was the conduct and behaviour of this celebrated divine in the earlier part of his life, as it is described by his
contemporary in the university, Mr. Anthony Wood; and
if Wood was not unreasonably prejudiced against him, he
is, doubtless, to be classed among those time-servers, who
know no better use of the great abilities God has given
them, than to obtain the favour of those who can reward
them best .
to be canon of Christcburch, as belonging to that office; but was kept back by the endeavours of the dean. This was a great discontent to him; and not being able to conceal
He seems to have proceeded as he had begun; that is,
he pushed himself on by an extraordinary zeal for the
powers that were; and he did not succeed amiss. On
Aug. 10, 1660, he was chosen public orator of the
university , and at the same time “tugged bird,
” says Wood,
“such was the high conceit of his worth, to be canon of
Christcburch, as belonging to that office; but was kept
back by the endeavours of the dean. This was a great discontent to him; and not being able to conceal it, he clamoured at it, and shewed much passion in his sermons till
he could get preferment, which made them therefore frequented by the generality, though shunned by some. This
person, though he was a junior master, and h;id never suffered for the royal cause, yet so great was his conceit, or
so blinded he was with ambition, that he thought he could
never be enough loaded with preferment; while others,
who had suffered much, and had been reduced to a bit of
bread for his majesty’s cause, could get nothing.
” South’s
talents, however, might be of use, and were not to be
neglected; and these, together with his ardent zeal, which
he was ever ready to exert on all occasions, recommended
him effectually to notice and preferment. In 1661 he became domestic chaplain to lord Clarendon, chancellor of
England, and of the university of Oxford; and, in March
1663, was installed prebendary of Westminster. On October the 1st following, he was admitted to the degree of
D. D.; but this, as Wood relates, not without some commotion in the university. “Letters were sent by lord Clarendon, in behalf of his chaplain South, who was therein
recommended to the doctorate: but some were so offended,
on account of certain prejudices against South, whom they
looked upon as a mere time-server, that they stiffly denied
the passing of these letters in convocation.
” A tumult
arose, and they proceeded to a scrutiny; after which the
senior proctor, Nathaniel Crew, fellow of Lincoln-college,
and afterwards bishop of Durham, did “according to his
usual perfidy, which,
” says Wood, “he frequently exercised
in his office; for he was born and bred a presbyterian
”)
pronounce him passed by the major part of the house; in
consequence of which, by the double presentation of Dr.
John Wallis, Savilian professor of geometry, he was first
admitted bachelor, then doctor of divinity.
16th of Dec. 1677; which is printed in the “Memoirs of his Life.” In 167S, iie was nominated by the dean and chapter of Westminster to the rectory of Islip in Oxfordshire;
Afterwards he had a sinecure in Wales bestowed upon
him by his patron the earl of Clarendon and, at that earl’s
retirement into France in 1G67, became chaplain to James
duke of York. In 1670, he was made canon of Christ
church, Oxibrd. In 1676, he attended as chaplain Laurence Hyde, esq. ambassador extraordinary to the king of
Poland; of which journey he gave an account, in a letter
to Dr. Edward Pocock, dated from Dantzick the 16th of
Dec. 1677; which is printed in the “Memoirs of his Life.
”
In 167S, iie was nominated by the dean and chapter of
Westminster to the rectory of Islip in Oxfordshire; and, in
16SO, rebuilt the chancel of that church, as he did afterwards the rectory-house. He also allowed an hundred
pounds per annum to his curate, and expended the rest in
educating and apprenticing the poorer children of the parish. Jn I6bl he exhibited a remarkable example of accommodating his principles to those of the times. Being
now one of the king’s chaplains in ordinary, he preached
before his majesty upon these words, “The lot is cast into
the lap, but the disposing of it is of the Lord.
” In this
sermon he introduced three remarkable instances of unexpected advancements, those of Agathocles, Massaniello,
and Oliver Cromwell. Of the latter he says, “And who
that had beheld such a bankrupt beggarly fellow as Cromwell, first entering the parliament house with a threadbare
torn cloak, greasy hat (perhaps neither of them paid for),
could have suspected that in the space of so few years, he
should, by the murder of one king, and the banishment of
another, ascend the throne r
” At this, the king is said to
have fallen into a violent tit of laughter, and turning to Dr.
South’s patron, Mr. Laurence Hyde, now created lord Rochester, said, “Odds fish, Lory, your chaplain must be a
bishop, therefore put me in mind of him at the next
death!
”
go through a dispute that required the greatest attention and calmness: upon which Dr. Patrick, then dean of Peterborough, and minister of St. Paul’s, Covent garden,
Wood observes, that Dr. South, notwithstanding his various preferments, lived upon none of them; but upon his temporal estate at Caversham near Reading, and, as the people of Oxford imagined, in a discontented and clamorous condition for want of more. They were mistaken, however, if the author of the Memoirs of his Life is to be depended on, who tells us, that he refused several offers of bishoprics, as likewise that of an archbishopric in Ireland, which was made him in James the Second’s reign, by his patron the earl of Rochester, then lord lieutenant of that kingdom. But this was only rumour; and there is little reason to suppose that it had any foundation. South’s nature and temper were violent, domineering, and intractable to the last degree; and it is more than probable, that his patrons might not think it expedient to raise him higher, and by that means invest him with more power than he was likely to use with discretion. There is a particular recorded, which shews, that they were no strangers to his nature. The earl of Rochester, being solicited by James II. to change his religion, agreed to be present at a dispute between two divines of the church of England, and two of the church of Rome; and to abide by the result of it. The king nominated two for the Popish side, the earl two for the Protestant, one of whom was South; to whom the king objected, saying, that he could not agree to the choice of South, who instead of arguments would bring railing accusations, and had not temper to go through a dispute that required the greatest attention and calmness: upon which Dr. Patrick, then dean of Peterborough, and minister of St. Paul’s, Covent garden, was chosen in his stead.
ed to St. Stephen’s Waibrook, London, where he continued two years, curate and lecturer. In 1685 the dean and chapter of Peterborough conferred on him the rectory of
, an eminent nonjuving divine,
was the son of the rev. Edward, or Edmund Spinckes, rector of Castor, Northamptonshire, and was born there in
1653 or 1654. His father came from New Kngland with
Dr. Patrick, afterwards bishop of Ely, and, being a nonconformist, had been ejected from Castor and from Overton Longviil in Huntingdonshire. His mother, Martha,
was daughter of Thomas Elmes, of Lilford in Huntingdonshire. After being initiated in classical learning under Mr.
Samuel Morton, rector of Haddon, he was admitted of
Trinity-college, Cambridge, under Mr. Bainbrigg, March
22, 1670; and matriculated on July 9, the same year. In
the following year, by the death of his father, he obtained
a plentiful fortune, and a valuable library; and, on the
12th of October, 1672, tempted by the prospect of a Rustat
scholarship, he entered himself of Jesus- college, where,
in nine days, he was admitted a probationer, and May 20,
1673, sworn a scholar on the Iiustat foundation. “This,
”
Mr. T. Baker observes in the registers, “was for his
honour; for the scholars of that foundation undergo a very
strict examination, and afterwards are probationers for a
year. And as these scholarships are the best, so the scholars are commonly the best in college, and so reputed.
”
He became B. A. early in 1674; was ordained deacon May
21, 1676; was M. A. in 1677; and admitted into priest’s
orders Dec. 22, 1678. After residing some time in Devonshire, as chaplain to sir Richard Edgcomb, he removed to
Petersham, where, in 1681, he was associated with Dr.
Hickes, as chaplain to the duke of Lauderdale. On the
duke’s death, in 1683, he removed to St. Stephen’s Waibrook, London, where he continued two years, curate and
lecturer. In 1685 the dean and chapter of Peterborough
conferred on him the rectory of Peakirk or Peaking cum
Glynton, in Northamptonshire, where he married Dorothy,
daughter of Thomas Rutland, citizen of London. On
July 21, 1687, he was made a prebendary of Salisbury;
in the same year, Sept. 24, instituted to the rectory of St.
Mary, in that town; and three days after, was licensed to
preach at Stratford subter Castrum, or Mid en -castle, in
Wilts, for which he had an annual stipend of 80l. Being
decided in his attachment to the Stuart family, he was deprived of all his preferments in 1690, for refusing to take
the oaths to William and Mary. He was, after this period,
in low circumstances, but was supported by the benefactions of the more wealthy ftonjurors; and on the third of
June, 1713, he was consecrated one of their bishops, receiving that title from the hands of Dr. Hickes. He died
July 28, 1727, and was buried in the cemetery of the
parish of St. Faith, on the north side of St. Paul’s, London,
where an inscription is engraven on a white marble stone.
By his wife, who lived but seven days after him, he had
many children, of whom two survived their parents: William Spinckes, esq. who, by industry and abilities, acquired a plentiful fortune; and Anne, married to Anthony
Cope, esq. Mr. Nelson was the particular friend of Mr.
Spinckes, who was a proficient in the Greek, Saxon, and
French languages, and had made some progress in the
oriental. He is said to have been “low of stature, venerable of aspect, and exalted in character. He had no
wealth, few enemies, many friends. He was orthodox in
the faith: his enemies being judges. He had uncommon
learning and superior judgment; and his exemplary life
was concluded with a happy death. His patience was
great; his self-denial greater; his charity still greater;
though his temper seemed his cardinal virtue (a happy conjunction of constitution and grace), having never been observed to fail him in a stage of thirty-nine years.
”. He
assisted in the publication of Grabe’s Septuagint, Newcourt’s Repertorium, Howell’s Canons, Potter’s Clemens
Alexandrinus, and Walker’s “Sufferings of the Clergy.
”
His own works were chiefly controversial, as, 1. An answer
to “The Essay towards a proposal for Catholic Communion, &c.
” The new Pretenders to Prophecy
re-examined, &c.
” Measures of Submission,
” The Case stated between the church of
Rome and the church of England,
” as to supremacy, Restoring the
prayers and directions of Edward Vlth’s Liturgy,
” The Sick Man
visited, &c.
”
s the church o*f St. Margaret, adjoining to the abbey. He was in 1680 made canon of Windsor, in 1683 dean of Westminster, and in 1684 bishop of Rochester. The court having
, a learned English prelate, was born
in 1636, at Tallaton in Devonshire, the son of a clergyman; and having been educated, as he tells of himself, not
at Westminster or Eton, but at a little school by the
church-yard side, became a commoner of Wadham college,
in Oxford, in 1651; and, being chosen scholar next year,
proceeded through the usual academical course, and in
1657 became M. A. He obtained a fellowship, and commenced poet. In 1659, his poem on the death of Oliver
was published, with those of Dryden and Waller. In his
dedication to Dr. Wilkins he appears a very willing and
liberal encomiast, both of the living and the dead. He
implores his patron’s excuse of his verses, both as falling
so “infinitely below the full and sublime genius of that
excellent poet who made this way of writing free of our
nation,
” and being “so little equal and proportioned to
the renown of the prince on whom they were written; such
great actions and lives deserving to be the subject of the
noblest pens and most divine phansies.
” He proceeds
“Having so long experienced your care and indulgence, and
been formed, as it were, by your own hands, not to entitle
you to any thing which my meanness produces, would be not
only injustice but sacrilege.
” He published the same year a
poem on the “Plague of Athens;
” a subject recommended
to him doubtless by the great success of Lucretius in describing the same event. To these he added afterwards a
poem on Cowley’s death. After the Restoration he took
orders, and by Cowley’s recommendation was made chaplain to the witty and profligate duke of Buckingham, whom
he is said to have helped in writing “The Rehearsal,
”
and who is said to have submitted all his works to his perusal . He was likewise chaplain to the king. As he was
the favourite of Wilkins, at whose house began those philosophical conferences and inquiries which in time produced
the royal society, he was consequently engaged in the
same studies, and became one of the fellows and when,
after their incorporation, something seemed necessary to
reconcile the public to the new institution, he undertook to
write its history, which he published in 1667. This is one
of the few books which selection of sentiment and elegance
of diction have been able to preserve, though written upon
a subject flux and transitory *. The “History of the Royal
Society
” is now read, not with the wish to know what they
were then doing, but how their transactions are exhibited
by Sprat. They have certainly been since exhibited far
better by Dr. Birch, and more recently by Dr. Thomson.
In the next year he published “Observations on Sorbiere’s
Voyage into England, in a letter to Mr. Wren.
” This is a
work not ill performed; but was rewarded with at least its
full proportion of praise. In 1668 he published Cowley’s
Latin poems, and prefixed in Latin the life of the author,
which he afterwards amplified, and placed before Cowley’s
English works, which were by will committed to his care.
Ecclesiastical dignities now fell fast upon him. In 166S
he became a prebendary of Westminster, and had afterwords the church o*f St. Margaret, adjoining to the abbey.
He was in 1680 made canon of Windsor, in 1683 dean of
Westminster, and in 1684 bishop of Rochester. The court
having thus a claim to his diligence and gratitude, he was
required to write the “History of the Rye-house Plot;
”
and in A true account and declaration of
the horrid Conspiracy against the late King, his present
Majesty, and the present Government;
” a performance
which he thought convenient, after the revolution, to ex* This work was attacked by Mr. ing betwixt H. and Dr. Merret;"
quarrel dependtenuate and excuse. The same year, being clerk of the closet to the king, he was made dean of the chapel-royal; and the year afterwards received the last
royal society, and an apology against More relating unto Henry Sttibbe, physome of their cavils. With- a post- sician at Warwick.“script concerning the quarrel
dependtenuate and excuse. The same year, being clerk of the
closet to the king, he was made dean of the chapel-royal;
and the year afterwards received the last proof of his master’s confidence, by being appointed one of the commissioners for ecclesiastical affairs. On the critical day, when
the Declaration distinguished the true sons of the church
of England, he stood neuter, and permitted it to be read
at Westminster, but pressed none to violate his conscience;
and, when the bishop of London was brought before them,
gave his voice in his favour. Thus far he suffered interest
or obedience to carry him; but farther he refused to go.
When he found that the powers of the ecclesiastical commission were to be exercised against those who had refused
the Declaration, he wrote to the lords, and other commissioners, a formal profession of his unwillingness to exercise
that authority any longer, and withdrew himself from them.
After they had read his letter, they adjourned for six
months, and scarcely ever met afterwards. When king
James was frighted away, and a new government was to
be settled, Sprat was otxe of those who considered, in a
conference, the great question, whether the crown was
vacant, and manfully spoke in favour of his old master.
He complied, however, with the new establishment, and
was left unmolested; but, in 1692, a strange attack was
made upon him by one Robert Young and Stephen Blackhead, both men convicted of infamous crimes, and both,
when the scheme was laul, prisoners in Newgate. These
men drew up an Association, in which they whose names
were subscribed, declared their resolution to restore king
James; to seize the princess of Orange, dead or alive; and
to be ready with thirty thousand men to meet kingJam.es
when he should land. To this they put the name of Sancroft, Sprat, Marlborough, Salisbury, and others. The
copy of Dr. Sprat’s name was obtained by a fictitious request, to which an answer
” in his own hand“was desired.
His hand was copied so well, that he confessed it might
have deceived himself. Blackhead, who had carried the
letter, being sent again with a plausible message, was very
curious to see the house, and particularly importunate to
be let into the study; where, as is supposed, he designed
to leave the Association. This, however, was denied him,
and he dropt it in a flower-pot in the parlour. Young
now laid an information before the privy-council; an.d
May 7, 16.92, the bishop was arrested, and kept at a 01
essenger’s, under a strict guard, eleven days. His house was
searched, and directions were given that the flower-pots
should he inspected. The messengers, however, missed
the room in which the paper was left. Blackhead went
therefore a third time; and, rinding his paper where he
had left it, brought it away. The bishop, having been
enlarged, was, on June the 10th and I 3th, examined again
before the privy-council, and confronted with his accusers.
Young persisted with the most obdurate impudence, against
the strongest evidence; but the resolution of Blackhead bydegrees gave way. There remained at last no doubt of
the bishop’s innocence, who, with great prudence and
diligence, traced the progress, and detected the characters
of the two informers, and published an account of his own
examination and deliverance; which made such an impression upon him, that he commemorated it through lii'e by
a yearly day or thanksgiving. With what hope, or what
interest, the villains had contrived an accusation which they
must know themselves utterly unable to prove, was never
discovered. After this, the bishop passed his days in the
quiet exercise of his function. When the cause of Sacheverell put the public in commotion, he honestly appeared
among the friends of the church. He lived to his seventyninth year, and died May 20, 1713. Burnet is not very
favourable to his memory; but he and Burnet were old
rivals. On some public occasion they both preached before
the House of Commons. There prevailed in those days an
indecent custom: when the preacher touched any favourite
topic in a manner that delighted his audience, their approbation was expressed by a loud hum, continued in proportion to their zeal or pleasure. When Burnet preached,
part of his congregation hummed so loudly and so long,
that he sat down to enjoy it, and rubbed his face with his
handkerchief. When Sprat preached, he likewise was honoured with the like animating hum but he stretched out
his hand to the congregation, and cried,
” Peacf, peace,
I pray you, pet;ci -.“” This,“says Dr. Johnson,
” I was
told in my youth by an old man, who had been no careless
observer of the passages of those times.“”Burnet’s sermon,“says Salmon,
” was remarkable for sedition, and
Sprat’s for loyalty. Burnet had the thanks of the house;
Sprat had no thanks, but a good living from the King;
which,“he said,
” was of as much value as the thanks of
the Commons.“Sprat was much admired in his day for
the elegance of his prose style, but that is not to be measured by the standard of modern times. In his political
sentiments he changed so often, and so easily accommodated himself to the varied circumstances of the times in
which he lived, that the praise of consistency cannot be
given. Yet we have seen that on some occasions he stood
almost alone in vindication of conduct which did him honour. The works of Sprat, besides his few poems, are,
2.
” The History of the Royal Society.“3.
” The Life of
Cowley.“4.
” The Answer to Sorbiere.“5.
” The History of the Rye-house Plot.“6.
” The relation of his own
Examination.“And, 7. a volume of
” Sermons.“Dr.
Johnson says,
” I have heard it observed, with great justness, that every book is of a different kind, and that each
has its distinct and characteristical excellence.“In his
poems he considered Cowley as a model; and supposed
that as he was imitated, perfection was approached. Nothing therefore but Pindaric liberty was to be expected.
There is in his few productions no want of such conceits as
he thought excellent; and of those our judgment may be
settled by the first that appears in his praise of Cromwell,
where he says that Cromwell’s
” fame, like man, will grow
white as it grows old.“According to Spence, in his Anecdotes, Pope used to call Sprat
” a worse Cowley."
, dean of Canterbury, a divine of eminent talents and personal worth,
, dean of Canterbury, a divine of eminent talents and personal worth, was born March 5, 1660, at Hertishorn in the county of Derby. Of this parish his father, the rev. Thomas Stanhope, was rector, as well as vicar of St. Margaret in the town of Leicester, and chaplain to the earls of Chesterfield and Clare. His mother, whose name was Allestree, was of an ancient family in Derbyshire. His grandfather, Dr. George Stanhope, precentor of York, and rector of Wheldrake in that county, was one of those persecuted ecclesiastics who, for their loyalty to Charles I. experienced the greatest distress; he was dispossessed of his preferments, and (as dean Stanhope told Mr. Walker himself) was driven to the doors with eleven children, and died in 1644.
ontroversy with the prolocutor himself. In the following year a correspondence commenced between the dean and his diocesan bishop Atterbury, on the increasing neglect
At the convocation of the clergy in October 1705, he
preached the Latin sermon in St. Paul’s cathedral, and was
at the same time proposed, with Dr. Binckes, to fill the
prolocutor’s chair; but the majority declared for the latter.
In Feb. 1713-14, however, he was elected to that office,
and was twice afterwards re-chosen. In 1717, when the
fierce spirit of controversy raged in the convocation, he
checked the Bangorian champion, archdeacon Edward
Tenison, in his observations, by reading the schedule of
prorogation. The archdeacon, however, not content only
to protest against the proceedings of the House, entered
into a controversy with the prolocutor himself. In the following year a correspondence commenced between the
dean and his diocesan bishop Atterbury, on the increasing
neglect of public baptisms; from which it appears, that
Stanhope had “long discouraged private baptisms,
” and
that the prelate expressed himself obliged to him for his
attention in this respect, as also for his constant choice of
worthy curates. After having lived an example, even from
his youth upwards, of cheerful and unaffected piety, he
died, universally lamented, at Bath, March 18, 1728, aged
sixty-eight.
The mild and friendly temper of dean Stanhope rendered him the delight of all. To the misfortunes
The mild and friendly temper of dean Stanhope rendered him the delight of all. To the misfortunes of others he
was remarkably attentive, and that concern which he expressed, conveyed at once consolation to the heart, and
improvement to the understanding. His care as a parish
priest, and as a dean, was exemplary. That advice which
he gave to others, was the rule of his own practice. In an
excellent letter from him to a young clergyman, printed in
the Gent. Mag. 1792, he says, “You will do well to demean yourself in all the offices of your function, that people may think you are in very good earnest, and so to order
your whole conversation *, that they may be sure you are
so.
” While he benefited mankind, as a writer, he was no
less edifying as a preacher. To a plain and clear style he
added the most becoming action, and his manner was peculiarly his own. In his will, among other benevolent legacies, he left the sum of 250l. to found an exhibition for
a king’s scholar of Canterbury school. He had been twice
married, first to Olivia, daughter of Charles Cotton of Beresford in Staffordshire, esq. by whom he had one sun and
five daughters; and secondly to Miss Parker, half-sister of
sir Charles Wager, who survived him, dying in 1730, aged
about fifty-four. He was buried in the church of Lewisham, where is a memorial on a grave-stone, within the rails
of the communion-table.
Dean Stanhope’s literary labours succeeded each other in the following
Dean Stanhope’s literary labours succeeded each other
in the following order: 1. His translation of“Thomas a
Kempis De Imitatione Christi,
”
been averse to the serin mixta jocis the worthy dean took occasion to tell
been averse to the serin mixta jocis the worthy dean took occasion to tell
* The dean, however, thought it upon Pope’s Works, " that so orthodox
* The dean, however, thought it upon Pope’s Works, " that so orthodox
m appear in the third volume of Dodsley’s collection, and proceeded from the pen of Philip Fletcher, dean of Kildare. Applause was his favourite object, and few men have
These letters appeared in two vols. 4to. in 1774. His
“Miscellaneous works,
” also in two vols. 4to. were published in Common Sense,
”
and “The World;
” all evincing considerable vivacity and
skill in writing. Some of his speeches, and other state
papers, conclude the first volume. The second contains
an ample collection of his Letters, digested into three
books. Many of these are written in French, of which language he was, for a foreigner, a very complete master.
In 1778 a third volume of “Miscellaneous works
” was
published, but, as the former had not been eminently successful, this, which appeared in a dubious shape, attracted
very little attention, and few copies are supposed to have
got abroad. Lord Chesterfield’s entrance into the world,
says lord Orford, was announced by his bon-mots, and his
closing lips dropped repartees that sparkled with his juvenile fire. Of these witticisms, several are currently repeated in conversation, though on what authority is now
uncertain. He appears, by a few specimens, to have possessed considerable talents for the lighter kinds of poetry;
some proofs of which appear in the first volume of Dodsley’s collection; but it has been said that he often assumed
to himself the credit of verses not his own. As a patron
he was distinguished by his steady protection of the elegant, but unfortunate, Hammond; whose poems he published after the author’s death, in 1743, with a preface,
but without an avowal of himself as the editor. Encomiums
upon him, as the friend of merit and letters, may be found
in the writings of this poet, of Pope, and many others;
but some of the most elegant compliments to him appear
in the third volume of Dodsley’s collection, and proceeded
from the pen of Philip Fletcher, dean of Kildare. Applause was his favourite object, and few men have enjoyed
it in a greater abundance.
eter cathedral, was erected by the rector and fellows of Exeter college. Among the mu,niments of the dean and chapter of Exeter, there is an account of the administration
All the steps of his political life were marked with honours. He was chosen one of the privy-council to Edward II. appointed lord treasurer, and employed in embassies, and other weighty affairs of state, in which his abilities and integrity would have been acknowledged, had he not lived in a period of remarkable turbulence and injustice. In 1325 he accompanied the queen to France in order to negociate a peace, but her intentions to depose her husband were no longer to be concealed, and the bishop, whose integrity her machinations could not corrupt, continued to attach himself to the cause of his unfortunate sovereign, and fell an early sacrifice to popular fury. In 1326 he was appointed guardian of the city of London during the king’s absence in the west, and while he was taking measures to preserve the loyalty of the metropolis, the populace attacked him, Oct. 15, as he was walking the streets, and beheaded him near the north door of St. Paul’s, together with sir Richard Stapledon, his brother. Godwin informs us that they buried the bishop in a heap of sand at the back of his house, without Temple-l>ar. Walsingham says they threw it into the river; but the former account seems most consistent with popular malevolence and contempt. Exeter house was founded by him as a town residence for the bishops of the diocese, and is said to have been very magnificent. It was afterwards alienated from the see, and by a change of owners, became first Leicester, and then Essex house, a name which the scite still retains. It appears that the queen soon after ordered the body of the murdered bishop to be removed and interred, with that of his brother, in Exeter cathedral. In the 3d Edward III. 1330, a synod was held at London before Simon, archbishop of Canterbury, to make inquiry into bishop Stapledon’s death; and his murderers, and all who were any way privy or consenting to the crime, were executed. His monument, in the north aile of Exeter cathedral, was erected by the rector and fellows of Exeter college. Among the mu,niments of the dean and chapter of Exeter, there is an account of the administration of his goods, by Richard Braylegh, dean of Exeter, and one of his executors; by which it appears that he left a great many legacies to poor scholars, and several sums of money, from twenty to sixty shillings, for the repairing of bridges in the county, and towards building Pilton churc.i, &c.
, and Barnstaple, four of the archdeaconry of Cornwall, and one, a priest, might be nominated by the dean and chapter of Exeter from any other part of the kingdom. In
Walter de Stapledon was not more eminent for the judgment and firmness which he displayed as a statesman, in times of peculiar difficulty, than for his love of learnia<r. After he had engaged Hart, or Hart-hall, for the accommodation of his scholars, he purchased a tenement on the scite of the present college, called St. Stephen’s hall, in 1315, and having purchased also some additional premises, known then by the names of Scot-hall, Leding- Park-Hall, and Baltaye-Hall, he removed the rector and scholars of Stapledon, or Hart-hall to this place, in pursuance of the same foundation charter which he had obtained of the king for founding that hall in the preceding year. According to the statutes which he gave to this society, the number of persons to be maintained appears to have been thirteen, one to be instructed in theology or canon law, the rest in philosophy. Eight of them were to be of the archdeaconries of Exeter, Totness, and Barnstaple, four of the archdeaconry of Cornwall, and one, a priest, might be nominated by the dean and chapter of Exeter from any other part of the kingdom. In 1404, Edmund Stafford, bishop of Exeter, a great benefactor, changed the name from Stapledon to Exeter Hall, but it did not rise to the consequence of a corporate body until the time of sir William Petre, who, in 1565, procured a new body of statutes, and a regular deed of incorporation, increasing also the number of fellowships, &c.
nd returning to Louvain, was appointed regius professor in divinity there, canon of St. Peter’s, and dean of Hillerbeck. He died in 1598, and was buried in the church
, a celebrated controversialist on the side of the papists, was born at Henfield, in Sussex, in 1535, of a genteel family from Yorkshire. Having been educated at Canterbury and Winchester, he was removed to New college, Oxford, where he obtained a perpetual fellowship in 1554. In the same reign, which was that of Mary, he was made prebendary of Chichester; but on the accession of Elizabeth, left the kingdom, vith his father and other relations, and settled at Louvain, where he distinguished himself by his controversial writings against Jewel, Home, Whitaker, and other eminent divines of the English church. He also visited Paris and Rome, but returned to Louvain, where he translated Bede’s Church History into English. He then became regius professor of divinity in the new university of Douay, and canon in the church of St. Amoiue. He became a Jesuit, but again relinquished the order, and returning to Louvain, was appointed regius professor in divinity there, canon of St. Peter’s, and dean of Hillerbeck. He died in 1598, and was buried in the church of St. Peter at Louvain. Clement VIII. had invited him to Rome, but he did not choose to go. This pope, it is said, intended to bestow upon him a cardinal’s hat, and that this honour was prevented by his death. He was, however, so great an admirer of Stapleton’s writings, that he ordered them to be read publicly at his table. Cardinal Perron, who was an eminent author himself, esteemed him, both for learning and acuteness, the first polemical divine of his age; and Whitaker himself, seems to allow no less.
was educated by him in Trinitycollege, Dublin, and became successively vicar of Trim, chancellor and dean of St. Patrick’s, bishop of Dromore in 1713, and of Clogher
Dr. Sterne’s son, John, was educated by him in Trinitycollege, Dublin, and became successively vicar of Trim,
chancellor and dean of St. Patrick’s, bishop of Dromore in
1713, and of Clogher in 1717, and vice-chancellor of the
university of Dublin. Being a single man, he laid out immense sums on his episcopal palaces, and on the college of
Dublin, where he built the printing-house, and founded
exhibitions. Most of these were gifts in his life-time, and
at his death (June 1745) he bequeathed the bulk of his
fortune, about 30,000l. to public institutions, principally
of the charitable kind. His only publications were, a
“Concio ad clerum,
” and “Tractates de visitatione infirmorum,
” for the use of the junior clergy, printed at
Dublin in 1697, 12mo. Dean Swift appears to have corresponded with bishop Sterne for many years on the most
intimate and friendly terms, but at length, in 1733, the
dean sent him a letter full of bitter sarcasm and reproach,
to which the bishop returned an answer that marks a superior command of temper; but it appears from the life of
the rev. Philip Skelton, that his lordship deserved much of
what Swift had imputed to him.
em to justify this character. Five other Psalms were translated by William Whitting-ham, the puritan dean of Durham, and he also versified the decalogue, the prayer immediately
Sternhold’s principal successor in carrying on the translation of the Psalms was John Hopkins, who was admitted
A. B. at Oxford in 1544, and is supposed to have been
afterwards a clergyman of Suffolk. He was living in 1556.
Warton pronounces him a raiher better poet than Sternhold. He versified fifty-eight of the Psaims, which are
distinguished by his initials. Bishop Tanner styles him
“poeta, ut ea ferebant tempora, eximius
” ajid Bale,
“Britanuicorum poetarum sui temporis non infimus;
”
and, at the end of the Latin commendatory verses prefixed
ix’s “Acts and Monuments,
” are some stanzas of his
h seem to justify this character. Five other Psalms
were translated by William Whitting-ham, the puritan dean
of Durham, and he also versified the decalogue, the prayer
immediately after it, and very probably the Lord’s prayer,
the creed, and the hymn “Veni Creator;
” all which follow the singing-psalms in our version. Thomas Norton
(See Norton) translated twenty-seven more of the psalms;
Robert Wisdome the twenty-fifth, and also wrote that once
very popular prayer at the end of the version, “Preserve
us, Lord, by thy dear word,
” &.c. which is a literal translation of Luther’s hymn upon the same occasion. Eight
psalms, which complete the whole series, have the initials
W. K. and T. C. but we have no account of either of these
authors.
s bishop Home always expressed the highest respect. The works of bishops Andrews, Jeremy Taylor, and dean Hickes, were quite familiar to Mr. Stevens; and there was hardiy
His leisure time, during the whole of his life, he dedicated to study, to intercourse with learned men, and to
the duties of benevolence and devotion. His reading was
extensive, and his taste may be understood from the plan
of his studies. He was well versed in the writings of the
fathers of the church of the first three centuries, generally
called the Apostolic fathers; he had twice read through
Dr. Thomas Jackson’s Body of Divinity, in three large folios; a divine for whose writings bishop Home always expressed the highest respect. The works of bishops Andrews, Jeremy Taylor, and dean Hickes, were quite familiar to Mr. Stevens; and there was hardiy a writer of modern days, at all celebrated for orthodox opinions, who was
unknown to him. Such was the esteem in which he was
held, as a theologian, that Dr. Douglas, bishop of Salisbury,
once said of him, “Here is a man, who, though not a bishop,
yet would have been thought worthy of that character in
the first and purest ages of the Christian church;
” and the
late bishop Horsley, who was not given to flattery, when on
one occasion Mr. Stevens paid him a compliment on account of his sermon, said, “Mr. Stevens, a compliment
from you upon such a subject is of no inconsiderable value.
” Mr. Stevens was also, like bishop Home, a great
admirer of the works of Mr. John Hutchinson.
inity college in 1577. In 1588 he was chosen prolocutor of the convocation, by the recommendation of dean Nowell, and preached the Latin sermon. Two years after the death
, bishop of Bath and Wells, was born in
1543, and was the son of William Still, of Grantham in
Lincolnshire. He was admitted at Christ’s college, Cambridge, where he took the degree of M. A. In 1570 he
was Margaret professor at Cambridge; in 1571 became rector of Hadleigh, in the county of Suffolk, and archdeacon
of Sudbury, and in 1573 was collated to the vicarage of
Eastmarham, in Yorkshire. He was also elected master of
St. John’s in 1574, and of Trinity college in 1577. In
1588 he was chosen prolocutor of the convocation, by the
recommendation of dean Nowell, and preached the Latin
sermon. Two years after the death of bishop Godwin, he
was appointed to the vacant see of Bath and Wells, in
which he continued till his decease, which happened Feb.
26, 1607. Sir John Harrington describes him as a man
“to whom he never came, but he grew more religious
from whom he never went, but he parted better instructed.
”
Archbishop Parker had a high opinion of him, and not only
gave him a prebend of Westminster, but recommended
him very strongly to be appointed dean of Norwich, in
which, however, he did not succeed. He had been one
of his grace’s chaplains. The bishopric of Bath and Wells
having been in his time enriched by some lead mines in
Mendip hills, he is said to have left a considerable fortune
to his family, and endowed an alms-house in the city of
Wells.
re. He was aiso in 1670 made prebendary of Leicester St. Margaret in the church of Lincoln; in 1673, dean of St. Asaph, at which time he took his degree of D. D. and
, a pious and learned bishop
of Chester, was born at Hemel-Hempstead in Hertfordshire, in 1633, and admitted scholar of Trinity college,
Oxford, in June 1652, where in 1656 he became fellow
and master of arts. After taking orders, he married a relation of Dr. Dolben, bishop of Rochester, and by his interest was made warden of Manchester college in Lancashire.
He was aiso in 1670 made prebendary of Leicester St.
Margaret in the church of Lincoln; in 1673, dean of St.
Asaph, at which time he took his degree of D. D. and was
appointed chaplain in ordinary to his majesty. In 1683 y he was presented to the rectory of St. Mary Aldermanbury,
London, and the following year resigned the wardenship
of Manchester college. In 1689, he was consecrated
bishop of Chester, over which he presided, in constant residence, and with the most anxious cave for its interests,
both spiritual and temporal, for eighteen years. He died
Feb. 12, 1707, and was interred in his cathedral, where a
long Latin inscription records his character, without exaggeration. Besides some occasional sermons, and a charge
to his clergy, his works were chiefly levelled at the doctrines of popery, in which controversy, he published, 1.
“Discourse concerning the necessity of Reformation, \
respect to the errors and corruptions of the church of
Rome,
” Lond. Discourse on the Pope’s Supremacy,
” in answer to
Dr. Godden, ibid. 1.688, 4to. 3. “The people’s right to
read the Holy Scriptures asserted,
” ibid. The lay-Christian’s obligation to read the Holy Scriptures,
” ibid. Examination
” of Bellarmin’s fourteenth note concerning the unhappy end of
the church’s enemies," &c. &c.
s first set on foot in that city by those of the established church: they were happy in a bishop and dean, that had the interests of practical religion very much at heart,
Bishop Stratford was one of the first and most zealous
promoters of the Societies, established in the beginning
of the last century for the “Reformation of manners.
” In
the “Memoirs of Matthew Henry,
” we read that “this
good work was first set on foot in that city by those of
the established church: they were happy in a bishop and
dean, that had the interests of practical religion very much
at heart, Dr. Stratford and Dr. Fog, men of great learning
and true piety, both excellent preachers, and greatly
grieved at the open and scandalous wickedness that
abounded in that city, and every where throughout the
nation.
” It appears that a monthly lecture was established
at the cathedral for this purpose, and the bishop preached
the first sermon.
he tide, &c. In 1737 he lost his wife and in 1738, married Elizabeth, the only daughter of Dr. Gale, dean of York, and sister to his intimate friends Roger and Samuel
, an antiquary of much celebrity,
descended from an antient family in Lincolnshire, was born
at Holbech in that county, November 7, 1687. After having had the first part of his education at the free-school of
that place, under the care of Mr. Edward Kelsal, he was
admitted into Bene't-college in Cambridge, Nov. 7, 1703,
under the tuition of Mr. Thomas Favvcett, and chosen a
scholar there in April following. While an under-graduate,
he often indulged a strong propensity for drawing and designing; and began to form a collection of antiquarian
books. He made physic, however, his principal study, and
with that view took frequent perambulations through the
neighbouring country, with the famous Dr. Hales, Dr. John
Gray of Canterbury, and others, in search of plants; and
made great additions to Ray’s “Catalogus Plantarum circa
Cantabrigiam;
” which, with a map of the county, he was
solicited to print; but his father’s death, and various domestic avocations, prevented it. He studied anatomy under
Mr. Rolfe the surgeon attended the chemical lectures of
signor Vigani and taking the degree of M. B. in 1709,
made himself acquainted with the practical part of medicine
under the great Dr. Mead at St. Thomas’s hospital. He
first began to practise at Boston in his native county, where
he strongly recommended the chalybeate waters of Stanfield
near Folkingham. In 1717 he removed to London, where,
on the recommendation of his friend Dr. Mead, he was soon
after elected F. R. S. and was one of the first who revived
that of the Antiquaries in 1718, to which last he was secretary for many years during his residence in town. He was
also one of the earliest members of the Spalding society.
He took the degree of M. D. at Cambridge in 1719, and
was admitted a fellow of the College of Physicians in the
year following, about which time (1720) he published an
account of “Arthur’s Oon
” in Scotland, and of “Graham’s
dyke,
” with plates, 4to. In the year Itinerarium Curiosum; or, an Account of the Antiquities and Curiosities in his Travels
through Great Britain, Centuria I.
” adorned with one hundred copper-plates, and published in folio, London, 1724.
This was reprinted after his death, in 1776, with two additional plates; as was also published the second volume,
(consisting of his description of the Brill, or Caesar’s camp at Pancras,“IterBoreale,
” A Treatise on the Cause
and Cure of the Gout, from a new Rationale;
” which, with
an abstract of it, has passed through several editions. He
collected some remarkable particulars at Stamford in relation
to his predecessor bishop Cumberland; and, in 1736, printed
an explanation, with an engraving, of a curious silver plate
of Roman workmanship in basso relievo, found underground
at Risley Park in Derbyshire; wherein he traces its journey thither, from the church of Bourges, to which it had
been given by Exsuperius, called St. Swithin, bishop of
Toulouse, about the year 205. He published also the
same yea.- his “Palæographia Sacra, No. I. or, Discourses
on the Monuments of Antiquity that relate to Sacred History,
” in 4to, which he dedicated to sir Richard Kllys, bart.
“from whom he had received many favours.
” In this
work (uhich was to have been continued in succeeding numbers) he undertakes to shew, how Heathen Mythology
is derived from Sacred History, and that the Bacchus in the
Poets is no other than the Jehovah in the Scripture, the
conductor of the Israelites through the wilderness. In his
country retirement he disposed his collection of Greek and
Roman coins according to the order of the Scripture History; and cut out a machine in wood (on the plan of an Orrery), which shews the motion of the heavenly bodies,
the course of the tide, &c. In 1737 he lost his wife and
in 1738, married Elizabeth, the only daughter of Dr. Gale,
dean of York, and sister to his intimate friends Roger
and Samuel Gale, esquires; and from this time he often
spent his winters in London. In 1740, he published an
account of Stonehenge, dedicated to the duke of Ancaster,
who had made him one of his chaplains, and given him the
living of Somerby near Grantham the year before. In
1741, he preached the Thirtieth of January Sermon before
the House of Commons; and in that year became one of
the founders of the Egyptian society, composed of gentlemen who had visited Egypt. In 1743 he printed an account
of lady Roisia’s sepulchral cell, lately discovered at Royston, in a tract, entitled “Palseographia Britannica, No. I.
”
to which an answer was published by Mr. Charles Parkin,
in 1744. The doctor replied in “Palasographia Britannica,
No. II.
” 1746, giving an account of the origin of the universities of Cambridge and Stamford, both from Croylandabbey; of the Roman city Granta, on the north-side of
the river, of the beginning of Cardike near Waterbeach,
&c. To this Mr. Parkin again replied in 1748; but it
does not appear that the doctor took any further notice of
him. In 1747, the benevolent duke of Montagu (with whom he had become acquainted at the Egyptian society)
prevailed on him to vacate his preferments in the country,
by giving him the rectory of St. George, Queen-square,
whence he frequently retired to Kentish-town, where the
following inscription was placed over his door: