he queen of Louis XV. is considered as a chef-d'oeuvre; nor was he much less esteemed in France as a writer. In Fontenay’s Dictionary of Artists, published in 1770, he
, a French engraver
and man of letters, was born at Paris in 1740, and became
the pupil of Le Bas, who taught him the arts of design and
engraving. Being early convinced of the importance of
learning in his profession, he devoted much of his time to
study, and became so celebrated for the productions of his
pen as well as his graver, that he was elected a member of
various literary societies both at home and abroad. As an
artist he succeeded principally in engraving portraits; and
his portrait of the queen of Louis XV. is considered as a
chef-d'oeuvre; nor was he much less esteemed in France
as a writer. In Fontenay’s Dictionary of Artists, published
in 1770, he wrote the articles concerning engravers, with
much candour, spirit, and discrimination. His other publications are, 1. “Observations sur le Costume Franchise,
”
in the “Journal des beaux arts,
” De l'orjgine et de la suppression des Cloches.
” 3. “Voyage au
Havre.
” 4. “Amour maternel,
” a successful dramatic
piece. 5. “Iconolo'gie, ou Traite complet des allegories
et emblemes,
” 4'vols. 8vo. 6. “Essai sur la gravure.
”
7. “Traite d‘anatomie a l’usage des artistes,
” fol. with fine
engravings. He is also said to have written *' Le Desaveu
des artistes," 1776, 8vo. He died at Paris Nov. 28, 1803.
gnitude of his work entitled “Causes Cé1ebres,” in twenty volumes duodecimo, than for any merit as a writer, was born at Lyons in 1673, of a noble family of the robe, and
, a French author, remarkable rather for the magnitude of his work entitled
“Causes Cé1ebres,
” in twenty volumes duodecimo, than
for any merit as a writer, was born at Lyons in 1673, of a
noble family of the robe, and was educated at Paris, but
seemed destined to fail in every walk of life. He began
by taking orders, and became an abbé; he then quitted
the church for the army, where he obtained no distinction,
and at the age of fifty, became an advocate. Not succeeding in this occupation, he applied himself diligently to
his pen; in which employment he rather proved his assiduity than his powers. His great work, though interesting in its subject, is rendered intolerable by the heaviness
and badness of the style, with the puerilities and bad
verses interspersed. It has been two or three times,
abridged. His other works are not more admired. They
are, 1. “An Account of the Campaigns of 1713 and
1714;
” a compilation from the Memoirs of Vilbart 2.
“The Art of adorning and improving the Mind,
” a foolish
collection of witticisms and 3. A compilation entitled
“Bibliotheque des Gens de Cour.
” He died in
, an eminent French writer of the last century, was born at Lausanne in 1727. His father,
, an eminent French
writer of the last century, was born at Lausanne in 1727.
His father, who was a protestant clergyman of that place,
took extraordinary pains in cultivating his mind, and at
the age of twelve years, young Gebelin could read German, Latin, Greek, and Hebrew; and at fifteen, he spoke
German and Latin with ease, as well as French in compliment to his parents, who were natives of France, but had
left it on account of their religion. His thirst of knowledge
was such as to prevent his hours of rest; and when his parents, in order to break him of the habit of studying at
night, would not allow him candles, he used to pore over
his books as well as he could by moon -light. In 1763,
after the death of his father, he came to Paris, bringing
with him nothing but a great stock of learning, and the
greatest simplicity of manners; and as the persons to whom
he had recommendations happened to be absent, he remained for some time alone and friendless in that great
metropolis. The first acquaintances he made were two ladies who lived opposite to him, and who lived together in
such harmony as to desire no other connections, but were
yet so pleased with Gebelin’s amiable manners, as to admit him into their friendship, and furnish him with every
assistance he could wish in carrying on his great work,
“Le monde primitif,
” in digesting the materials of which
he employed ten years. One of these ladies, mademoiselle Linot, learned engraving solely with the view of being useful to him in his labours, and actually engraved
some of the plates in his work; while the other, mademoiselle Fleury, contributed 5000 livres towards the expences
of the first volume of his work. After his -death they transferred their kindness to his relations, a sister and two
nieces whom he had sent for to reside at Paris, but to
whom he was not able to leave much.
n, a legislator, and a moralist. He even doubts whether he was the author of the Pentateuch; but the writer, whoever he might be, is one, he tells us, who upon all occasions
He arrived in London in the beginning of 1780, and was
soon invited to officiate as priest in the Imperial ambassador’s chapel, and preached occasionally at the chapel in
Duke-street, Lincoln’s Inn Fields, until the Easter
holidays, 1782, after which he voluntarily withdrew from every
stated ministerial function, and seldom officiated in any
chapel whatever. The principal reason was, that on his
arrival in London he was introduced to men of literature
of every class, obtained easy access to public libraries,
and in his design of translating the Bible, obtained the
patronage of lord Petre. This nobleman engaged to allow
him a salary of 200l. and took upon himself the entire
expence of whatever private library Dr. Geddes might judge
requisite to collect in the prosecution of his favourite object.
With such munificent encouragement, he published in
1780 his “Idea of a New Version of the Holy Bible, for
the use of the English Catholics.
” This was an imperfect
sketch, as he had not settled what versions to follow.
Among his encouragers, who then thought favourably of
him, were Dr. Kennicott, and bishop Lowth. To the
latter he presented, in 1785, his “Prospectus,
” who returned it with a polite note, in which he recommended him
to publish it, not only as an introduction to his work, bifC >
as a useful and edifying treatise for young students in divinity. He accordingly published it at Glasgow, and it
was very favourably received by biblical scholars in general.
Being thus encouraged, he first published “A Letter to
the right rev. the bishop of London, containing queries,
doubts, and difficulties, relative to a vernacular version of
the Holy Scriptures.
” This was designed as an appendix
to his Prospectus, and was accompanied with a success
equal to that of his former publication. After this he published several pamphlets on temporary topics, of wliich it
will be sufficient to give the titles in our list of his works.
In 1788 appeared his “Proposals for printing by subscription, a New Translation of the Bible, from corrected texts
of the original; with various readings, explanatory notes,
and critical observations.
” In this he solicited the opinion,
hints, &c. of literary characters, and received so many
that, in July 1790, he thought proper to publish “Dr.
Geddes’ general Answer to the queries, counsels, and criticisms that have been communicated to him since the publication of his Proposals for printing a New Translation of
the Bible.
” In this pamphlet, while he resists the generality of counsels and criticisms communicated to him,
from motives which he very candidly assigns, he yields
to several, and liberally expresses his obligations to the
correspondents who proposed them. It appears, however,
that his brethren of the catholic persuasion were already
suspicious, and that he lost whatever share of popularity
he formerly had 'within the pale of his own church. He
acknowledges that he received more encouragement from,
the established church and the protestant dissenters. His
subscribers amounted to 343, among which were very few
Roman catholics. In 1792 the first volume of the translation appeared, under the title of “The Holy Bible, or the
books accounted sacred by Jews and Christians; otherwise
called the Books of the Old and New Covenants, faithfully
translated from corrected texts of the originals, with various readings, explanatory notes, and critical remarks: Tr
and a second volume appeared in 1797. The manner in
which Dr. Geddes executed his translation, brought upon
him attacks from various quarters, but especially fromhis catholic brethren. The opposition and difficulties he
had, on this account, to encounter, were stated by him m
a An Address to the Public.
” Indeed, his orthodoxy having been questioned before his volume appeared, he wassummoned by those whom he admitted to be the organs of
legitimate authority. His three judges, however, were
either satisfied or silenced, much to the doctor’s satisfaction. Shortly after the first volume of his translation was
published, an ecclesiastical interdict, under the title of
“A Pastoral Letter,
” signed by Walmsley, Gibson, and
Douglas, as apostolic vicars of the western, northern, and
London districts, was published, in which Geddes’s work
was prohibited to the faithful. Against this prohibition
(whjch bishop Thomas Talbot refused to subscribe) the
doctor, first giving bishop Douglas notice, published a
remonstrance in a letter addressed to him; but notwithstanding this, he was suspended from all ecclesiastical
functions. In 1800 he published the first, and only volume he lived to finish, of “Critical Remarks on the Hebrew Scriptures; corresponding with a New Translation of
the Bible,
” 4to. How far Dr. Geddes merited the cen>sures bestowed upon him both by Roman catholics and
protestants, in his translation and Critical Remarks, the
reader may judge, when he is told that in this volume he
attacks the credit of Moses in every part of his character,
as an historian, a legislator, and a moralist. He even
doubts whether he was the author of the Pentateuch; but
the writer, whoever he might be, is one, he tells us, who
upon all occasions gives into the marvellous, adorns
hisnarration with fictions of the interference of the Deity,
when every thing happened in a natural way; and, at
other times, dresses up fable in the garb of true history.
The history of the creation is, according to him, a fabulous
cosmogony. The story of the fall a mythos, in which nothing but the mere imagination of the commentators, possessing more piety than judgment, could have discovered
either a seducing devil, or the promise of a Saviour. It is
a fable, he asserts, intended for the purpose of persuading
the vulgar, that knowledge is the root of all evil, and the
desire of it a crime. Moses was, it seems, a man of great
talents, as Numa and Lycurgus were. But like them, he
was a false pretender to personal intercourse with the
Deity, with whom he had no immediate communication.
He had the art to take the advantage of rare, but natural
occurrences, to persuade the Israelites that the immediate
power of God was exerted to accomplish his projects.
When a violent wind happened to lay dry the head of the
Guiph of Suez, he persuaded them that God had made a
passage for them through the sea; and the narrative of
their march is embellished with circumstances of mere
fiction. In the delivery of the ten commandments, he
took advantage of a thunder-storm to persuade the people
that Jehovah had descended upon mount Sinai; and he
counterfeited the voice of God, by a person^ in the height
of the storm, speaking through a trumpet, &c. &c. Without proceeding farther in accumulating the proofs of arrogance, ignorance, and impiety, with which this “Translation 11 and
” Critical Remarks“abound, we shall only add,
that even Dr. Priestley seemed to doubt
” if such a man as
Geddes, who believed so little, and who conceded so much,
could be a Christian."
, a French writer and classical scholar, was born at Orleans June 17, 1667, whence
, a French writer and classical
scholar, was born at Orleans June 17, 1667, whence he
v/ent to study at Paris, and was a Jesuit for ten years; but
returning back to the world, became one of the friends of
the celebrated Ninon de PEnclos, and figured as a man of
wit and letters, which, however, did not impede his
ecclesiastical career, as in 1701 he was appointed canon of thfe
holy chapel at Paris. In 1711 he was received into tho
academy of belles lettres; in 1719, into the French academy; and 1732, he was named to the abbey of Notredame de Beaugency. He died Aug. 10, 1744. He is
distinguished by two excellent French translations, of Quintilian, 4to, or 4 rols. 8vo, and Pausanias, 2 vols. 4to.
There were also published in 1745, “CEuvres diverses,
”
or a collection of little essays by him upon subjects of morality and literature, edited by the abbé Olivet, with a
life of the author, by Bachaumont. Gedoyn was besides
author of many ingenious dissertations in the memoirs of
the French academy.
, an eminent German poet and moral writer, was born at Haynichen, in Saxony, July 4, 1715. His father
,
an eminent German poet and moral writer, was born at
Haynichen, in Saxony, July 4, 1715. His father was a
clergyman of a small income, who had thirteen children.
Gellert was educated at home, where his poetical powers
first appeared in a poem on the birth-day of his father,
which was succeeded by many others, but all these in his
maturer years he committed to the flames. He was afterwards sent to school at Meissen r where he learned Greek
and Latin, and in 1734 he went to Leipsic, whence, after
studying four years, his father’s narrow income obliged
him to recall him. Gellert wished much to continue at
the university, but he submitted to necessity, and at home
had an opportunity of again turning his attention to those
poetical pursuits for which he had early displayed a predilection; and perhaps it is to his recall from the university
that we owe the beauty and simplicity of his fables. At
this time he occasion-ally composed sermons, which are in
general distinguished both for spirit and sound reasoning,
but they contain several indications of a taste not very
correct, and a judgment not arrived at maturity. In 1741
he again returned to the university of Leipsic, with a nephew of his own, of whose education he had the charge.
Here he met with some friends, from whose conversation
and directions he confesses that he derived very considerable advantage. About this time he published several
tales and fables in a periodical publication. In 1745 he
acquired the right of giving public lessons in the university, particularly on- morals. He had early received an
impression of the importance of Christian morality, and
thought that he could not pass over the subject in silence,
without neglecting one of the most essential duties of his
Situation. Soon after the commencement of his academical labours, he published his “Tales and Fables.
”
Amongst these, the manner in which the character of a
devotee was drawn, was much admired. This suggested
to Gellert the idea of his comedy of the “Devotee,
” which
was first published in the Bremen Magazine, but afterwards caused him much vexation. Many condemned it
because it appeared to them to have a mischievous tendency, by exposing piety and seriousness to ridicule.
But Gellert was not a man who could attempt to sap the
foundations of real religion and morality, though he wished
to expose hypocrisy and affectation to merited contempt.
Among the many flattering instances of public approbation
which the “Tales and Fables
” produced, Gellert was particularly pleased with that of a Saxon peasant. One day,
about the beginning of winter, he saw the man drive up to
his door a cart loaded with fire-wood. Having observed
Gellert, he asked him whether he was the gentleman who
wrote such fine tales? Being answered in the affirmative,
he begged pardon for the liberty which he took, and left
the contents of his cart, being the most valuable present
he could make. At this time the Germans had no original
romances of any merit. In order to give some celebrity
to this species of composition in his own country, he published the “Swedish Countess,
” a work of a melancholy
cast, and containing many indications of that depression
of spirits which embittered the latter days of Gellert. In
1747 he published a book entitled “Consolations for Valetudinarians,
” which was received with as much eagerness
as his other works, and translated into various languages.
It contains a melancholy representation of the sufferings
which he himself endured. Nothing, however, could
overcome his activity, and in 1748 the continuation of hisf
“Tales and Fables
” was published. About this time he
was deprived of the society of several friends who had
often dispersed the gloom that resulted from his disorder. The only intimate friend that remained was
Havener, who persuaded Gellert to give to the public
some of his letters. In 1754 he published his “Didactic
Poems,
” whicu were not so well received as his Tales and
Fables, and he himself seems to have been sensible that
they were not so agreeable, although useful and instructive. He bestowed particular care on some sacred songs,
which were received with great enthusiasm all over
Germany, both in the Roman catholic and protestant states.
About this time he was appointed professor extraordinary
in philosophy, and gave lectures on the Belles Lettres.
From this period Gellert suffered extremely from an hypochondriac affection. His days were spent in melancholy
reflections, and his rights in frightful dreams. But he
made prodigious efforts to resist this malady, and to continue to perform his academical duties; and these efforts
were often successful. The constant testimonies of the
approbation with which his works were received, and the
sympathy of his friends, were never-failing sources of consolation, and served to spread many cheerful moments over
the general languor of his life. The calamities of war
which desolated Germany after 1757, induced Gellert for
some time to quit Leipsic. While in the country, he was
attacked by a severe illness, from which, however, contrary
to all expectation, he recovered. In 1761 the chair of a
professor in ordinary was offered him, but he refused to
accept it, from a persuasion that the state of his health was
such as to render him incapable of discharging the duties
of the situation with that regularity and attention which he
thought necessary. In 1763-4, Gellert went to Carlsbad by
the advice of his physicians to drink the waters, which,
however, seem to have given him little relief. After a few
years more of almost constant suffering, GeHett died at
Leipsic, on the 13th of December. 1769. Some time before his death he revised and corrected his moral lessons,
which he published at the request of the elector of Saxony.
He was a man of the easiest and most conciliating manners; pleasing even to strangers; and of a disposition to
form and preserve the most valuable friendships. He was
open and enthusiastic in his attachments, ready at all times
to givtt his counsel, labour, and money, to serve his
friends. In himself, of a timid and hypochondriac habit,
and disposed to criticise both his own character and works
with a severity of which his friends could not acknowledge
the justice. He had a constitutional fear of death, which,
notwithstanding, receded as the hour of trial approached;
so that he died with calmness and fortitude. In this he is
thought to have resembled our Dr.Johnson, but in other
respects his character and habit seem to approach nearer
to those of Cowper. His works were published in ten vols.
8vo, in 1766; and after his death a more complete edition
at Leipsic, in eight rolumes, with engravings. Kutner
has celebrated his various excellencies; he says, “a century will perhaps elapse, before we have another poet capable of exciting the love and admiration of his contemporaries, in so eminent a degree as Gellert, and of exercising so powerful an influence on the taste and way of thinking of all ranks.
” Though not deserving all this, he was
an agreeable and fertile writer; the poet of religion and
virtue; an able reformer of public morals. His “Moral
Lessons
” were translated into English, and published by
Mrs. Douglas of Eduam house, 1805, 3 vols. 8vo, with an
excellent life of the author, to which this article is chiefly
indebted.
, an eminent Italian writer, and a man of extraordinary qualities, was born of mean parents
, an eminent Italian writer, and
a man of extraordinary qualities, was born of mean parents
at Florence in 1498, and was brought up a taylor. Such,
however, was his industry and capacity, that he acquired a
knowledge of languages, and made uncommon progress in
the belles lettres. Thuanus says, that he did not understand Latin, but this must be a mistake, as he translated,
from Latin into Italian, “The Life of Alphonsus duke of
Ferrara,
” by Paul Jovius, and a treatise of iion Porzio,
“De<OolQribus Oculorum,
” at the request of those writers.
His knowledge of Greek, however, was probably limited,
as he translated the “Hecuba
” of Euripides into Italian,
from the Latin version. His principal excellence was in
his native tongue, and he acquired the highest reputation,
by the works he published in it. He was acquainted with
all the wits and learned men of Florence; and his merit
was universally known. He was chosen a member of the
academy there,; and the city made him one of their burgesses. Yet he continued the exercise of his trade as a
taylor, to the end of his life; and he tells us, in a letter
lo F. Melchior, March 3, 1558, that he devoted workingdays to the careof his body, and Sundays and festivals to
the culture of his understanding. The same letter shews
his modesty, as hereproaches his friend for giving him
honourable titles, which did not agree with the lowness of
his condition. He died in 1563.
, a celebrated Benedictine, a zealous partizan of the league in France, and a writer for it, but also a learned writer in theology, was born at Riom
, a celebrated Benedictine, a zealous partizan of the league in France, and a writer for it, but also a learned writer in theology, was born at Riom in Auvergne, in 1537. He studied at Paris, and having acquired a profound knowledge of Hebrew, was professor of that language at the royal college for thirteen years. He was twice named for episcopacy, yet never obtained it, and at last died in a kind of exile at his priory of Semur in Burgundy, in consequence of the violence of his writings against Henry IV. As a polemic as well as a politician, he was a most violent and abusive writer, but is said to have been more prudent in his conduct than in his style. He died in 1597. The following verse, which was placed upon his tomb, served rather to prove the perishable nature of fame, than the merit of the man:
, an ecclesiastical writer, was a priest of Marseilles, but not a bishop, as some have
, an ecclesiastical writer, was a priest of
Marseilles, but not a bishop, as some have imagined and
died about the year 492 or 493. There are two works of
his remaining; one, “De Dogmatibus Ecclesiasticis,
”
which was falsely attributed to St. Augustin, and has been
printed in some editions of his works; another, “De IIlustribus Ecclesiae Scriptoribus,
” in St. Jerome’s Works,
Antwerp, 1639, fol. and Hamburgh, 1718, fol. Some
chapters of it appear to have been added by a more modern hand. Gennadius has been accused of adhering some
time to the errors of Pelagius; but, as is now agreed,
without any reasonable foundation.
, or, as styled in his Latin works, Antonius Genuensis, an Italian writer of much reputation on subjects of political ceconomy in Italy,
, or, as styled in his Latin works,
Antonius Genuensis, an Italian writer of much reputation
on subjects of political ceconomy in Italy, was born at Castelione, in November 1712. It not being probably the
custom to educate the. eldest sons of Italian families for the
church, his biographer, Fabroni, seems to complain of
this as an act of severity on the part of Genovesi’s father.
He received, however, a suitable education for this profession, and in due time was consecrated a priest; but
his views of preferment being obstructed, he attempted
the practice of the law, in which he was equally unsuccessful, and at length, when at Naples in 1741, was appointed professor of metaphysics. Some bold opinions
delivered in the course of his lectures created a clamour
against him, as advancing infidel principles, but he appears
to have been befriended by Galiani, who was superintendant of the universities of Naples, and removed him to the
professorship of ethics. In 1748 he was a candidate for
the professorship of theology, but his notions had given
such offence that he was rejected, which seems to have
induced him to turn his mind to subjects of political oeconomy, particularly agriculture, in which there was less
risk of offending either the principles or prejudices of his
countrymen. A professorship was now founded for political
ceconorny, and bestowed upon him with a handsome salary.
This he continued to hold with the greatest reputation until
his death in 1769. His private character appears to have
been very amiable, and his works, although little known,
and indeed little wanted in this country, were of essential
service in the schools of Italy, and directed the attention
of youth to subjects more connected with patriotism and
public spirit than those they had been accustomed to study.
They are, according to Fabroni, 1. “Disciplinarum metaphysicarum Elementa mathematicum in morem adornata,
” Elementorum artis
logico-criticte libri quinque,
” Naples, Discorso sopra alcuni trattati d'Agricoitura,
” ibid. Lettere Accademiche,
” ibid. Storia
del Commercio della Gran Brettagna,
” &c. Delle Lezioni di Commercio.
” 7. “Discorso sopra
rAgricoltura,
” with a translation of Tull’s Husbandry. 8.
“Discorso sul volgarizzamento del Saggio Francese’sulT
Economia de‘ grain,’,' Naples, 1765. 9.
” Meditazioni
Filosoficbe sulla religione e sulla morale,“ibid. 1766, a
work in which Fabroni says there is nothing new, or worthy
of the author. 10.
” Della Diceosina, o sia della filosofia
del giusto e dell' onesto,“1766 1776, 3 rols. 11.
” Universae Christiana Tbeologise elementa dogmatica, historica,
critica," a posthumous work, Venice, 1771, 2 vols. 4to,
on which the author had been employed from the year 1742,
but leaving it imperfect, it was completed by the editor,
with much trouble.
, a dramatic and poetical writer of the minor order, was born in Ireland, October 23, 1728, and
, a dramatic and poetical
writer of the minor order, was born in Ireland, October
23, 1728, and received his education at Dublin. At the
age of fifteen he obtained a commission in the same regiment with his father, who likewise belonged to the army;
but, making an exchange to a new-raised company, he was
dismissed the service on his regiment being reduced at the
conclusion of the war in 1748. On this event he indulged
his inclination for the stage, and appeared at Dublin in
the character of Aboan, in the play of Oroonoko. Notwithstanding an unconsequential figure, and uncommon
timidity, he says he succeeded beyond his most sanguine
expectations; but, having some property, and hearing
that a legacy had been left him by a relation, he determined to come to London, where it appears he dissipated
what little fortune he possessed. He then engaged to perform at the theatre in Bath, and remained there some
time. From thence he went to Edinburgh, and afterwards
belonged to several companies of actors at Manchester,
Liverpool, Chester, and other places. Growing tired of
a public -life, he settled at Malton, a market-town about
twenty miles from York, where he married, and had
some expectation of being provided for by the marquis of
Granby, to whom he was recommended by a gentleman
who had known his father. With this hope he removed
to London, but soon had the mortification to find all his
prospects clouded by the sudden death of his patron. In
1770 he performed at the Hay-market, under the management of Mr. Foote, and continued with him three seasons,
during which time, and afterwards, he wrote some of his
dramatic pieces and poems. He returned to his native
country probably about 1777, and struggled for the remainder of his life under sickness and want, from which
death at last relieved him Dec. 21, 1784. The editor of
the “Biographia Dramatica
” enumerates fifteen dramatic
pieces, either written or altered for the stage by him,
none of which are now remembered, or had originally
much success. He wrote also “Characters, an Epistle,
”
Royal Fables,
” Dramatic Censor,
”
, a famous writer in favour of Jansenism, was born at Saint Calais, in the French
, a famous writer in favour of
Jansenism, was born at Saint Calais, in the French province of Maine, in 1628, and was first of the oratory, and
then became a Benedictine in the congregation of St.
Maur, in 1649. He there taught theology for some years
with considerable success, but being too free in his opinions
in favour of the Jansenists, was ordered to be arrested by
Louis XIV. in 1682, at the abbey of Corbie. He contrived,
however, to escape into Holland, but the air of that country
disagreeing with him, he changed his situation for the Low
Countries. In 1703 he was taken into custody by the
bishop of Mechlin, and being condemned for errors on the
doctrine of grace, suffered imprisonment at Amiens, and
in the castle of Vincennes. No sufferings could shake his
zeal for what he thought the truth, and in 17 10 he was
given up to the superiors of his own order, who sent him
to the abbey of St. Denis, where he died in 1711. He
was author of many works on the subjects of controversy
then agitated, particularly a general History of Jansenism,
3 vols. 12mo, Amsterdam, 1703, for which he was called
a violent Jansenist. His other principal works were, edi->
tions of Marius Mercator, St. Anselm, and Baius; the
Apology of Rupert, abbot of Tuy, respecting the Eucharist, in Latin, 8vo; “Le veritable Penitent, ou Apologie
cte ja Penitence,
” 12mo, against P. Hazard, a Jesuit
“La verit6 Catholique victorieuse, sur la Predestination
et la Grace efficase
” “Traité historique sur la Grace
”
“Lettres a M. Bossuet, Eveque de Meaux
” “La confiance Chretienne
” “Le Chretien disabuse
”“” La Regie
des Moeurs contre les fausses Maximes de la Morale corrompue,“12mo;
” La Defense de l‘Eglise Romaine’.'
and “Avis salutaires de la Sainte Vierge a ses Devots indiscrets.
” This last is a translation of the “Monita Salutaria
” of Adam Windelfels, a German lawyer* Many others
are enumerated by Moreri.
appears to have passed in controversy. He was a man of unquestionable learning, and an elegant Latin writer, but not so much admired as a critic. He entered the lists of
, a celebrated Jesuit, was
born at Orleans June 17, 1663, and entered the society of
Jesuits in 1680. Much of his life appears to have passed
in controversy. He was a man of unquestionable learning,
and an elegant Latin writer, but not so much admired as a
critic. He entered the lists of controversy, with two men
of great abilities, Mabillon and Coustant, in consequence
of father Mabillon' s work on diplomas, in which he thought
he discovered that Mabillon had advanced some things on
the authority of forgeries. This produced Germon’s first
work, “De veteribus regum Francorum Diplomatibus, et
arte secernendi antiqua' diplomata vera a falsis,
” Paris,
Supplement a la Diplomatique,
” Traite Theologique
sur les 101 propositions enoncees dans le bulle Unigenitus,
” 2 vols. 4to, published by the cardinal de Bissy, as
his own. One of his most curious publications appears to
be “De Yeteribus Hsereticis Ecclesiasticorum codicum
corruptoribus,
” Paris,
ing this reputation, his contemporaries we*e unwilling to place him in any other rank than that of a writer of light, easy compositions, in which the higher attributes
Notwithstanding this reputation, his contemporaries we*e
unwilling to place him in any other rank than that of a
writer of light, easy compositions, in which the higher attributes of poetry are not to be found. Gesner, to conrince them of their mistake, produced his “Death of
Abel,
” in order to prove that he could soar to the sublime,
which, however, we think he has not reached; the sublimity of this work appearing to us to be mere turgidity and
affectation, more calculated to deprave taste than to gratify it.
, an Italian writer, born at Monza, in Milan, 1589, was educated by the Jesuits
, an Italian writer, born at Monza,
in Milan, 1589, was educated by the Jesuits at Milan, in
polite literature and philosophy. He went afterwards to
Parma, where he began to apply himself to the civil and
canon law; but was obliged to desist on account of ill
health. He returned home, and upon the death of his
father married; but, losing his wife, he became an ecclesiastic, and resumed the study of the canon law, of which
he was made doctor. He died in 1670, leaving several
works; the most considerable of which, and for which he
is at present chiefly known, is his “Theatro d'Huomini
Letterati.
” The first part of this was printed at Milan,
appreciate the excellence of their respective styles, he lost sight of every model when he became a writer of history, and formed a style peculiar to himself.
The leisure he could borrow from his more regular plan of study, was employed in perusing the works of the best English authors since the revolution, in hopes that the purity of his own language, corrupted by the long use of a foreign idiom, might be restored. Of Swift and Arldison, who were recommended by Mallet, he seems to fix the true value, praising Swift for his manly original vigour, and Addison for elegance and mildness. The perfect composition, the nervous language, and well-turned periods of Robertson, inflamed him with the ambitious hope that he might one day tread in his footsteps. But charmed as he was at this time with Swift and Addison, Robertson and Hume, and well as he knew how to appreciate the excellence of their respective styles, he lost sight of every model when he became a writer of history, and formed a style peculiar to himself.
ly adopted, had not been answered during a space of thirty years. It was the opinion of this learned writer, that the descent to hell is not a false, but a mimic scene
In 1767 he joined with Mr. Deyverdun, a Swiss gentleman then in England, and a man of taste and critical
knowledge, to whom he was much attached, in publishing
a literary Journal, in imitation of Dr. Maty’s “Journal
Britannique. 1 * They entitled it
” Memoires Literaires de
la Grand Bretagne.“Two volumes only of this work were
published, and met with very little encouragement. Mr.
Gibbon acknowledges having reviewed lord Lyttelton’s
History in the first volume. The materials of a third volume were almost completed, when he recommended his
coadjutor Deyverdun as travelling governor to sir Richard
Worsley, an appointment which terminated the
” Memoires
Literaires.“Mr. Gibbon’s next performance was an attack on Dr. Warburton, which he/ condemns for its severity and for its cowardice, while he brings the testimony
of some eminent scholars to prove that it was successful
and decisive. Warburton’s hypothesis on the descent of
yEneas to hell had long been applauded, and if not universally adopted, had not been answered during a space of
thirty years. It was the opinion of this learned writer,
that the descent to hell is not a false, but a mimic scene
which represents the initiation of Æneas, in the character
of a law-giver, to the Eleusinian mysteries. Mr. Gibbon,
on the contrary, in his
” Critical Observations on the Sixth
Book of the Æneid,“1770, endeavoured to prove, that
the ancient law-givers did not invent the mysteries, and
that Æneas never was invested with the office of law-giver
that there is not any argument, any circumstance, which
can melt a fable into allegory, or remove the scene from
the Lake Avernos to the temple of Ceres; that such a wild
supposition is equally injurious to the poet and the man;
that if Virgil was not initiated he could not, if he were,
be would not, reveal the secrets of the initiation; and that
the anathema of Horace (vetabo qui Cereris sacrum vulgarity &c.) at once attests his own ignorance and the iimocence
of his friend. All this might have been argued in decent
and respectful language, but Mr. Gibbon avows that his
hostility was against the person as well as the hypothesis of
” the dictator and tyrant of the world of literature," and with the acuteness of the critic, he therefore
determined to join the acrimony of the polemic. In his
more advanced years he affects to regret an unmanly
attack upon one who was no longer able to defend himself,
but he is unwilling to part with the reputation to which he
thought his pamphlet entitled, or to conceal the praise
which professor Heyne bestowed on it.
s evident, gave him most uneasiness, because he was able to repel but a few of the many charges that writer brought against him. In sound, manly reasoning, clear, perspicuous,
In addition to these antagonists, it may be mentioned that Dr. Priestley endeavoured to provoke Mr. Gibbon to a controversy. The letters which passed between them are republished in the Memoirs, and are interesting because highly characteristic of both parties. The literary world has seldom seen polemic turbulence and sceptical arrogance so ably contrasted. Of all Mr. Gibbon’s antagonists, he speaks with respect only of Dr. Watson. Davis, it is evident, gave him most uneasiness, because he was able to repel but a few of the many charges that writer brought against him. In sound, manly reasoning, clear, perspicuous, and well-founded, without an atom of controversial asperity, sir David Dalrymple’s Inquiry excels; and may perhaps be considered as completely proving, what it is of most importance to prove, that Mr. Gibbon’s attack on Christianity was unnecessary as to its connection with his history, and is* disingenuous as to the mode in which he conducted it. The controversy was upon the whole beneficial; the public was put upon its guard, and through the thin veil of lofty contempt, it is very evident that Mr. Gibbon repented that he had made a false estimate of the public opinion on the subject of religion.
n employment of a different nature, but for which his talents were thought preferable to that of any writer connected with administration. At the request of the ministers
The prosecution of his history was for some time checked
by an employment of a different nature, but for which his
talents were thought preferable to that of any writer connected with administration. At the request of the ministers
of state, he was induced to answer a manifesto which the
French court had issued against Great Britain, preparatory
to war. This Mr. Gibbon ably accomplished in a “Memoire Justificatif,
” composed in French, which was delivered as a state paper to the courts of Europe. For this
service he was appointed one of the lords commissioners
of trade and plantations, a place worth about 700l. or 800l.
a year, the duties of which were not very arduous. His
acceptance of this place, he informs us, provoked some of the
leaders of the opposition, with whom he had lived in habits
of intimacy, and he was unjustly accused of deserting a
party in which he had never enlisted. At the general
election, however, in 1780, he lost his seat in parliament, the
voters of Leskeard being disposed to favour an oppositioncandidate.
more important article of fidelity, he is certainly inferior to Robertson as much as he excels that writer in extent of knowledge, and in the comprehensive grasp of a
As a historian, the universal acknowledgment of the
literary world has placed him in the very highest rank; and
in that rank, had his taste been equal to his knowledge, if
his vast powers of intellect could have descended to simplicity of narrative, he would have stood without a rival.
But in all the varied charms of an interesting an-d pathetic
detail, and perhaps in the more important article of fidelity,
he is certainly inferior to Robertson as much as he excels
that writer in extent of knowledge, and in the comprehensive grasp of a penetrating mind. If he is likewise superior to Hume in these respect^ he falls short of what he
has himself so admirably characterised as “the careless,
inimitable beauties
” of that writer. Hume told him very
candidly and justly, that his study of the French writers led
him into a style more poetical and figurative, and more
highly coloured than our language seems to admit of in
historical composition. We find, in his correspondence,
that during his first residence abroad, he had ajmost entirely lost his native language, and although he recovered
it afterwards, during die twenty years he passed in England, yet his reading was so much confined to French
authors, that when he attempted English composition, he
every where discovered the turns of thought and expression by which his mind was imbued. It has been asserted
that his style has the appearance of labour, yet we know
not how to reconcile much effort with his declaration, that
the copy sent to the press was the only one he ever wrote.
His labour might be bestowed in revolving the subject hi
his mind; and as his memory was great, he might commit
it to paper, without the necessity of addition or correction.
By whatever means, he soon formed a style peculiar to
himself, a mixture of dignity and levity, which, although
difficult at first, probably became easy by practice, and
even habitual, for his Memoirs are written in the exact
manner of his History, and the most trivial events of his
life are related in the same stately periods with which he
embellishes the lives of heroes, and the fate of empires.
His epistolary correspondence is in general more free from
stiffness, and occasionally assumes the gaiety and familiarity
suited to this species of composition.
, an ancestor of the preceding, and a heraldic writer, was born November 3, 1629. He was son of Robert Gibbon, a
, an ancestor of the preceding, and a
heraldic writer, was born November 3, 1629. He was
son of Robert Gibbon, a woollen-draper in London, and
a member of the Cloth-workers’ company, by a daughter
of the Edgars of Suffolk. Having spent some time in Jersey, he was sent to Jesus college, Cambridge, but afterwards became a soldier, and went to the Netherlands, to
France, and in 1659 and 1660 was in Virginia. He procured the appointment of blue-mantle by the patronage of
sir William Dugdale, then norroy. His patent was given
only during pleasure, and he never received any other. Ab
his death, in 17 he was the oldest officer at arms, but
thought himself ill-treated in never having farther promotion. To assist in maintaining his family he kept a school.
He was a learned, but imprudent man, injuring his best
interests by an arrogant insolence to his superiors in the
college, filling the margins of the books belonging to the
library with severe reflections upon their conduct, couched
in quaint terms, and with silly calculations of his own nativity. He despised them for not having had so classical
an education as himself, and he supposed his destiny so
fixed by the stars which presided at his birth, that good or
ill behaviour could never alter it. These were weaknesses
which shaded his excellencies. His “Introductio ad Latinam Blazoniam, an essay towards a more correct Blazon
in Latin than formerly hath been used,
” was a work which
did him the highest credit: it was printed in octavo, in
1682. He wrote two small tracts also, in the French language, entitled, “Christian Valour encouraged,
” exhorting the king of France to join the Venetians in their design
upon the Morea, and to attack the Turks, and leave Germany alone. He likewise wrote “Day Fatality
” “Unio
Pissidentium
” “Prince-protecting Providences;
” “Edivardus Confessor redivivus.
” “Satan’s welcome,
” Flagellum Mercurii Antiducales.
” He also diligently
collected, out of various authors, a particular account of
the great and important services of heralds of former times,
which he styled “Heraldo Memoriale,
” the heads of which
came afterwards into the hands of Maitland, to be inserted
in his History of London.
The writer of his life, among many instances which he declares might be
The writer of his life, among many instances which he declares might be assigned of his making a proper use of that spiritual ministry he was honoured with, specifies some few of a more eminent kind. One was his occasional recommendation of several worthy and learned persons to the favour of the secular ministry, for preferments suited to their merits. Another, that of procuring an ample endowment from the crown, for the regular performance of divine service in the royal-chapel, at Whitehall, by a succession of ministers, selected out of both universities, with proper salaries, who are continued until this day, under the name of Whitehall preachers, in number twenty-four, who officiate each a fortnight. A third, that he constantly guarded against the repeated attempts to procure a repeal of the corporation and test acts. By baffling the attacks made on those fences of the church, he thought he secured the whole ecclesiastical institution; for, it was his fixed opinion, that it would be an unjustifiable piece of presumption to arm those hands with power, that might possibly employ it, as was done in the days of our fathers, against the ecclesiastical constitution itself. He was entirely persuaded, that there ought always to be a legal establishment of the church, to a conformity with which some peculiar advantages might be reasonably annexed: and at the same time, with great moderation and temper, he approved of a toleration of protestant dissenters; especially as long as they keep within the just limits of conscience, and attempt nothing that is highly prejudicial to, or destructive of, the rights of the establishment in the church. But he was as hearty an enemy to persecution, in matters of religion, as those that have most popularly declaimed against it.
, knt. lord chief baron of the exchequer, and an eminent law writer, was born Oct. 10, 1674. Of his family, education, or early
, knt. lord chief baron of the
exchequer, and an eminent law writer, was born Oct. 10,
1674. Of his family, education, or early life, it has been
found impossible to recover any information* Either in
1714, or 1715, for even this circumstance is not clearly
ascertained, he was appointed one of the judges of the
court of king’s bench in Ireland, and within a year was
promoted to the dignity of chief baron of the exchequer in
that kingdom, which office he held till the beginning of
1722, when he was recalled. During his residence there,
he was engaged in an arduous and delicate contest concerning the ultimate judicial tribunal to which the inhabitants were to resort, which was disputed between the
English house of lords and the Irish house of lords; and
he appears to have been taken into custody by the order of
the latter, for having enforced an order of the English
house in the case of Annesley versus Sherlock, “contrary
to the final judgment and determination of that house.
”
It appears by the style of this last order of the Irish house
of lords, that he was a privy counsellor of that kingdom;
and it is noticed in his epitaph, that a tender was made to
him of the great seal, which he declining, returned to
England. Here he was first called to the degree of an
English serjeant at law, preparatory, according to ancient usage, to his taking his seat as one of the barons of
the exchequer, in which he succeeded sir James Montague
in June 1722. Having remained in that station for three
years, he was in Jan. 1724 appointed one of the commissioners of the great seal in the room of lord Macclesfield, his
colleagues being sir Joseph Jekyll and sir Robert Raymoqd.
The great seal continued in commission till June 1, 1725,
when sir Peter King was constituted lord keeper, and on the
same day sir Jeffray Gilbert became, on the appointment of
sir Rpbert Eyre to the chief-justiceship of the commonpleas, lord chief baron, which office he filled until his
death, Oct. 14, 1726, at an age which may be called early,
if compared with the multitude and extent of his writings,
which were all left by him in manuscript.
, the first practical writer on medicine whom this country produced, is placed by Bale (who
, the first practical writer on
medicine whom this country produced, is placed by Bale
(who calls him Gilbertus Legleus, and says he was physician to Hubert, archbishop of Canterbury,) in the reign of
king John, about 1210; but Leland, without stating the
grounds of his opinion, makes him more modern, and Dr.
Freind thinks that he must have lived in the beginning of
the reign of Edward 1.; “for he quotes Averrhoes,
” Dr.
Freind remarks, “who reached the close of the twelfth
century; and whose works could not have been translated
so early, and indeed were not translated till the middle,
at least, of the thirteenth, as Bacon, a good voucher,
informs
” us: and the mention he makes of a book, * de Speculis,' which, without doubt, is that written by Bacon, and
what he transcribes from Theodorick, concerning a leprosy, evidently shews that he lived low in this century,
&c.“According to Leiand, he maintained a high character for his knowledge in philosophy and physic, which he
had acquired by great study and much travelling; and he
was very successful in his practice. His writings are principally compiled from those of the Arabian physicians,
like the works of his contemporaries in other nations;
sometimes, indeed, he transcribes whole chapters word
for word, especially from Rhazes. He is represented as
the first English physician who ventured to expose the
absurd practices of the superstitious monks, who at that
time engrossed much of the treatment of diseases, and is
said to have contrasted with them the methods recommended by the ancients. The principal work of Gilbert,
entitled
” Compendium Medicinse tain morborum universalium quam particularium,“was corrected by Michael Capella, and printed at Lyons in 1510; and afterwards at
Geneva, in 1608, under the title of
” Laurea Anglicana,
seu Compendium totius Medicinse.“His other treatises
were,
” De viribus Aquarum“”De Re Herbaria;“” Thesaurus Pauperum“and
” De tuenda valetudine."
, a dramatic and miscellaneous writer, was born at Gillingham, near Shaftesbury, in Dorsetshire, in
, a dramatic and miscellaneous writer, was born at Gillingham, near Shaftesbury, in Dorsetshire, in 1665. His parents and family were Roman catholics, and consequently endeavoured to instill the same principles into our author, but without success. His father was a member of the society of Gray’s-inn, and had suffered considerably in the royal cause. Mr. Gildon received the first rudiments of his education at Gillingham; but when twelve years of age, his parents sent him over to Doway, and entered him in the English college of secular priests there, with a view of bringing hi<m up likewise to the priesthood; but, during a progress of five years’ study he only found his inclinations more strongly confirmed for a quite different course of life.
, D. D. an eminent dissenting divine, and the most able and learned baptist writer of the last century, was born at Kettering in Northamptonshire,
, D. D. an eminent dissenting divine, and
the most able and learned baptist writer of the last century,
was born at Kettering in Northamptonshire, Nov. 23, 1697,
of parents in humble life. His father was a deacon of the
baptist meeting at Kettering; and having, from various
causes, some of which appear rather imaginary, a strong
impression on his mind that this son would become a
preacher, and an eminent character, exerted his utmost to
give him a suitable education. His first attempts were
crowned with such success as to confirm his father’s hopes.
Being sent to the grammar school, he soon exceeded his
equals in age, and even his seniors. At his eleventh year,
he had not only gone through the common school books,
but had read the principal Latin classics, and made considerable proficiency in the Greek language. Such was at
the same time his avidity of knowledge, that he constantly
frequented a bookseller’s shop (which was open only on market-days), where his acquirements became noticed by
some c.f the neighbouring clergy; and he repaired so regularly to this repository of books, that it became a sort of
asseveration, “such a thing is as sure as John Gill is in
the bookseller’s shop.
” Unfortunately, however, his progress at school was interrupted by an edict of the master,
requiring that all his scholars, without exception, should
attend prayers at the church on week-days. This, of
course, amounted to an expulsion of the children of dissenters, and of young Gill among the rest. His parents
not being able to send him to a distant school, some efforts
were made to get him upon one of the dissenting funds of
London, that he might be sent to one of their seminaries.
In order to procure this favour, his progress in literature
was probably stated as very extraordinary, and the application produced an answer fully as extraordinary namely,
“that he was too young and, should he continue, as it
might be supposed he would, to make such rapid advances
in his studies, he would go through the common circle of
learning before he could be capable of taking care of himself, or of being employed in any public service.
” Notwithstanding this illiberal and absurd repulse, young Gill
went on improving himself in Greek and Latin, by eagerly
studying such books in both languages as he could procure, and added to his stock a knowledge of logic, rhetoric, moral and natural philosophy. Without a master
also, he made such progress in the Hebrew as soon to be
able to read the Bible with facility; and ever after this
language was his favourite study. He read much in the
Latin tongue, and studied various systematic works Oh
divinity; but all this appears to have been done at such
hours as he could spare from assisting his father in his
business. In November 1716, he made a public profession of his religious sentiments before the baptist meeting,
and was baptised according to the usual forms; soon after
which he commenced preacher, and officiated first at
Higham Ferrars, where in 1718 he married; he also
preached occasionally at Kettering until the beginning of
1719, when he was invited to become pastor of the baptist
congregation at Horslydovrn, Southwark, and soon became
very popular in the metropolis.
is life and conversation.” His extensive learning and reading cannot be called in question, but as a writer he is in general too copious and diffuse.
When he first came to settle in London, in 1719, he
became intimately acquainted with Mr. John Skepp, author
of“The Divine Energy,
” and in on account of his
learned defence of the true sense of the holy scriptures
against deists and infidels.
” This diploma was decreed to
him in the handsomest manner, without his knowledge, and
the fees were remitted. His Exposition of the Old Testament was published afterwards in various years, forming,
along with the New, 9 vols. fol. which, becoming of late
years in much demand, and the price being greatly raised,
a new and very neat edition was published in 1810—12, in
10 vols. 4to, by Mr. Bagster, of the Strand. In 1767 Dr.
Gill published a “Dissertation on the Antiquities of the
Hebrew Language, Letters, Vowel-points, and Accents,
”
and in the same year collated the various passages of the
Old Testament quoted in the Mishna, in the Talmuds, both
Jerusalem and Babylonian, and in the Rabbath; and extracted the variations in them, from the modern printed
text, which he sent to Dr. Kennicott, who politely acknowledges the obligation in his “State of his Collation,
” published in Body of
doctrinal Divinity,
” 2 vols. 4to, and in 1770 a “Body of
practical Divinity.
” This was the last of his numerous
publications, in the preparation of which he liad spent
many years of his long life. He died at his house at Camberwell, Oct. 14, 1771; his wife had been dead some years
before, and his only surviving son died in 1804, aged
seventy-seven. Dr. Gill’s private character was so excellent, that the admirers of his writings have said that “his
learning and labours were exceeded only by the invariable
sanctity of his life and conversation.
” His extensive
learning and reading cannot be called in question, but as a
writer he is in general too copious and diffuse.
, a voluminous and useful French writer of the last century, was born at Paris, Nov. 17, 1726, and being
, a voluminous and useful
French writer of the last century, was born at Paris, Nov.
17, 1726, and being educated in the profession of the
law, became successively counsellor of the parliament of
Paris, and member of the grand council. He died in that
city in 1807. His countrymen owe to him various translations, which are held in high repute, particularly one of
Homer, first printed in 1784, 8vo, of which there were
afterwards two splendid editions printed by Didot; and
translations of Hesiod, Theocritus, Demosthenes, and
Goldsmith’s Vicar of Wakefield. His original works were,
1. “Traite de Peloquence de barreau,
” De la
” Religion, par un homme du monde,“1778, and
following years, 5 vols. 8vo. This work, though loaded
with a superabundance of quotations, which render it too
prolix, was well received. In 17 85 he published a judicious abridgment of it, under the title of
” Nouveaux Melanges de Philosophic et de la Litterature,“exhibiting in
a regular plan the fundamental principles of religion in
general, and the moral government of the Deity. 3.
” Les
vrais principes du Governement Francaise,“Geneva, 8vo,
Paris, 8vo, and 2 vols. 12mo. 4.
” Analyse raisonnée du
droit Français," Paris, 1782, 4to.
tted out by the pope against the Turks. The admiral, finding that he did not want genius, gave him a writer’s place which happened to be vacant; and Giordani, being obliged
, a skilful mathematician, was
born December 13, 1633, at Bitonto. He spent his youth
in idleness and debauchery, and married a young woman
without any fortune; and having killed one of his brothersin-law, who reproached him with his indolence and laziness, he entered as a soldier in a fleet fitted out by the
pope against the Turks. The admiral, finding that he did
not want genius, gave him a writer’s place which happened
to be vacant; and Giordani, being obliged in consequence
to learn arithmetic, eagerly studied that of Clavius, and
acquired a taste for mathematics. Returning to Rome, in
1659, he was made keeper of the castle of St. Angelo, and
devoted the leisure that office afforded him to mathematical
studies, in which he made so rapid a progress, that queen
Christina chose him for her mathematician during her stay
at Rome; and Louis XIV, appointed him to teach mathematics in the academy of painting and sculpture which he
had founded in that city, 1666. Giordani was made engineer to the castle of St. Angelo by pope Clement X., appointed mathematical professor at the college della Sapienza 1685, and admitted into the academy of the Arcadi,
May 5, 1691. He died November 3, 1711. His principal
works are, “Euclide restitute,
” foiio; “De componendis
gravium momentis,
” folio; “Fundamentum doctrines motus gravium,
” Ad Hyacinthum Christophorum Epistola,
”
, who calls him,” vir solide doctus, & in scribendo accuratus,“a man solidly learned and an accurate writer. Thuanus says, that” he was excellently skilled in the Greek
His works consist of seventeen productions, which were
first printed separately; but afterwards collected and published in 2 vols. folio, at Basil 15SO, and at Leyden 1696.
The most valued pieces among them are, “Historia de
Deis Gentium,
” <( Historian Poetarum tarn Grajcorum, quam Latinorum Dialogi decem,“and,
” Dialogi duo de Poetis nostrorum.“The first of these books is one of the last he composed, and full of profound erudition. The other two, which make up 'the history of the ancient and modern poets, are written with great exactness and judgment. Vossius speaks highly of this work, as the production of great judgment and learning, as well as industry, and observes, that though his professed design is to collect memoirs concerning their persons, characters, and writings in general, yet he has occasionally interspersed many
things, regarding the art of poetry, which may be useful
to those who intend to cultivate it. Joseph Scaliger, indeed, would persuade us, though not very consistently,
that nothing can be more contemptible than the judgment
be passes on the poets he treats of: for in another place he
allows all the works of Giraldus to be very good, and that
no man knew better how to temper learning with judgment.
There is a work also by Giraldus,
” De annis & mensibus, ciEterisque temporis partibus, una cum Kalendario
Romano & Grocco,“written with a view to the reformation
of the kalerular, which was afterwards effected by pope
Gregory XIII. about 1582. There are likewise among his
works a few poems, the principal of which is entitled,
” Epistola in qua agitur de incommodis, quse in direptione
Urbana passus est ubi item est quasi catalogus suorum,
umicorurn Poetarum, & deileaiur interitus Herculis Carclinalis Rangonis.“This poem is annexed to the Florentine
edition of th6 two dialogues concerning his contemporary
poets; and contains a curious literary history of that time.
To other praises bestowed upon Giraldus by authors of the
first name, we may add that of Casaubon, who calls him,
” vir solide doctus, & in scribendo accuratus,“a man
solidly learned and an accurate writer. Thuanus says,
that
” he was excellently skilled in the Greek and Latin
tongues, in polite literature, and in antiquity, which he
has illustrated in several works; and that, though highly
deserving a better fate, he struggled all his life with illhealth and ill-fortune." His books he bequeathed to his
relatives John Baptist Giraldi and Pasetius.
, an ingenious French writer, wa born at Clermont in Auvergne in 1678, and educated for the
, an ingenious French writer, wa
born at Clermont in Auvergne in 1678, and educated for
the church. In his youth he had a canonry in the collegiate church of Notre Dame de Monferrand, but resigned
it to one of his brothers, that he might be at liberty to go
to Paris and devote his time to literary pursuits. There
by the interest of some friends he was made almoner to the
duchess of Berri, daughter of the regent, and also obtained the place of king’s interpreter for the Sclavonian
and Russian languages. In 1744 he was admitted a member of the French academy. He died Feb. 4, 1748. The
work by which he is best known, and to which indeed he
chiefly owed his reputation in France, is his “Synonymes
Fransais,
” 12mo, of which a new edition, with some posthumous pieces by Girard, was published by M. Beauzee in
1769, 2 vols. 12mo. No grammatical work was ever more
popular in France, nor more useful in denning the precise
meaning of words apparently synonymous; and the elegance and moral tendency of the examples he produce*
have been much admired. The abbe“Roubaud has since
published
” Les Nouveaux Synonymes Francais,“1786,
4 vols. 8vo, which may be considered as a supplement to
Girard. Our author published also a grammar under the
title of
” Les vrais principes de la laugue Franc.ais," 2
vols. 12mp, far inferior in ingenuity to his former, and
full of metaphysical whims on the theory of language, not
unmixed with those infidel principles which were in his
time beginning to be propagated.
, a writer of the fourteenth century, was an English Minorite, or Franciscan,
, a writer of the fourteenth
century, was an English Minorite, or Franciscan, of the
family of the earls of Suffolk. He is said to have studied
at Oxford, Paris, and Rome, and to have been very familiar with the writings of Aristotle, Plato, and Pliny; from
which, with his own observations, he compiled his celebrated work “De Proprietatibus rernrn,
” a kind of general history of nature; divided into nineteen books, treating
of God, angels, and devils, the soul, the body, animals,
&c. In some copies there is an additional book, not of his
writing, on numbers, weights, measures, sounds, &c. Some
v “Sermons
” of his were printed at Strasburgh in De Proprietatibus*' appears to have been
the chief favourite, and was one of the first books on which
the art of printing was exercised, there being no fewer
than twelve editions, or translations, printed from 1479 to
1494. The English translation printed by Wynkyn de
Worde is the most magnificent publication that ever issued
from the press of that celebrated printer, but the date has
not been ascertained. A very copious and exact analysis
of this curious work is given by Mr. Dibdin in the second
Volume of his
” Typographical Antiquities."
, a distinguished writer, was born in 1636, at Plymouth in Devonshire, where he probably
, a distinguished writer, was born in 1636, at Plymouth in Devonshire, where he probably received the first rudiments of his education, and was entered at Exeter-college, Oxford, April 19, 1652. He was placed under Samuel Conant, an eminent tutor, and having made great proficiency in his studies, he proceeded B. A. Oct. II, 1655. The following year, he removed to Lincoln-college, probably upon some view of preferment. Taking the degree of M. A. June 29, 1658, he assumed the priestly office, according to the forms used by the sectaries at that time, and became chaplain to Francis Rouse, esq. then made provost of Eton-college, by Oliver Cromwell, and designed for one of his house of lords. Had tin* patron lived a little longer, Glanvil’s expectations would, no doubt, have been fully answered; since according to Wood, he entirely complied with the principles of the then prevailing party, to whom his very prompt pen must needs have been serviceable. But Rouse dying the same year, he returned to his college in Oxford, and pursued his studies there during the subsequent distractions in the state. About this time, he became acquainted with Mr. Richard Baxter, who entertained a great opinion of his genius, and continued his respect for him after the restoration; when they espoused different causes. The friendship was equally warm on Glanvil’s side, who, Sept. 15, 1661, addressed an epistle to his friend, professing himself to be an admirer of his preaching and writings; he v also offered to write something in his defence, but yielded to his advice, not to sacrifice his views of preferment to their friendship.
ned meed of this truly virtuous man, whose conduct was carefully marked, and narrowly watched by the writer of the foregoing hasty sketch, for his extraordinary qualities
His character was drawn up by the late Dr. Brocklesby
for the Gentleman’s Magazine, and as far as respects his
amiable disposition, was confirmed to us by Dr. VVarton,
who knew him well. “Through the whole of his life Mr.
Glover was by all good men revered, by the wise esteemed, by the great sometimes caressed and even flattered,
and now his death is sincerely lamented by all who had the
happiness to contemplate the integrity of his character.
Mr. Glover, for upwards of 50 years past through every
vicissitude of fortune, exhibited the most exemplary simplicity of manners; having early attained that perfect
equanimity, which philosophy often recommends in the
closet, but which in experience is too seldom exercised by
other men in the test of trial. In Mr. Glover were united
a wide compass of accurate information in all mercantile
concerns, with high intellectual powers of mind, joined to
a copious flow of eloquence as an orator in the house of
commons. Since Milton he was second to none of our
English poets, in his discriminating judicious acquaintance
with all ancient as well as modern literature witness his
Leon i das, Medea, Boadicea, and London for, having
formed his own character upon the best models of the
Greek writers, he lived as if he had been bred a disciple
of Socrates, or companion of Aristides. Hence his political turn of mind, hence his unwarped affection and active
zeal for the rights and liberties of his country. Hence his
heartfelt exultation whenever he had to paint the impious
designs of tyrants in ancient times frustrated, or in modern
defeated in their nefarious purposes to extirpate liberty, or
to trample on the unalienable rights of man, however remote in time or space from his immediate presence. In a
few words, for the extent of his various erudition, for his
unalloyed patriotism, and for his daily exercise and constant practice of Xenophou’s philosophy, in his private as
well as in public life, Mr. Glover has left none his equal
in the city, and some time, it is feared, may elapse before
such another citizen shall arise, with eloquence, with
character, and with poetry, like his, to assert their rights,
or to vindicate with equal powers the just claims of freeborn men. Suffice this testimony at present, as the wellearned meed of this truly virtuous man, whose conduct was
carefully marked, and narrowly watched by the writer of
the foregoing hasty sketch, for his extraordinary qualities
during the long period in human life of upwards of 40
years and now it is spontaneously offered as a voluntary
tribute, unsolicited and unpurchased but as it appears
justly due to the memory of so excellent a poet, statesman,
and true philosopher, in life and death the same.
”
, a herald and heraldic writer, was the son of Thomas Glover, of Ashford in Kent, the place
, a herald and heraldic writer, was
the son of Thomas Glover, of Ashford in Kent, the place
of his nativity. He was first made Portcullis Poursuivant,
and afterwards in 1571, Somerset herald. Queen Elizabeth permitted him to travel abroad for improvement. In
1582, he attended lord Willoughby with the order of the
garter, to Frederick II. of Denmark. In 1584, he waited
with Clarenceux on the earl of Derby, with that order to
the king of France. No one was a greater ornament to the
college than this gentleman; the suavity of his manners
was equal to his integrity and skill: he was a most excellent,
and very learned man, with a knowledge in his profession
which has never been exceeded, perhaps been paralleled;
to this, the best writers of his own and more recent time*
bear testimony. He left two treatises, one “I)e Nobilitate politica vel civili
” the other “A Catalogue of Honour
” both of which were published by his nephew, Mr.
Thomas Milles, the former in 1608, the latter in 1610,
both folio, to “revive the name and learned memory of
his deceased friend and uncle, whose private studies for the
public good deserved a remembrance beyond forgetful
time.
” His answer to the bishop of Ross’s book, in which
Mary queen of Scots’ claim to the crown was asserted, was
never published. He made great collections of what had
been written by preceding heralds, and left of his own
labours relative to arms, visitations of twenty-four counties,
and miscellaneous matters belonging to this science, all
written by himself. He assisted Camden in his pedigrees
for his Britannia; communicated to Dr. David Powell, a
copy of the history of Cambria, translated by H. Lloyd;
made a collection of the inscriptions upon the funeral
monuments in Kent; and, in 1584, drew up a most curious
survey of Herewood castle, in Yorkshire. Mr. Thoresby
had his collection of the county of York taken in 1584, and
his catalogue of northern gentry whose surnames ended
in son. He died in London, says Stow, April 14, (Lant and others, 10), 1588, aged only forty-five years, and was
buried in St. Giles’s church, Cripplegate. His loss was
severely felt by all our lovers of English antiquities. His
“Ordinary of Arms
” was augmented and improved by
Edmondson, who published it in the first volume of his
Body of Heraldry.
onclusion. Some place Glycas in the twelfth, and some in the fifteenth century. No ancient record or writer mentions even his name, and all that is known of him has been
, was one of the Byzantine historians, but biographers are not agreed as to the period when
he lived. Some years ago, professor Walchius published
in the Gottingen Transactions an inquiry into this subject,
but was obliged to confess that he could arrive at no probable conclusion. Some place Glycas in the twelfth, and
some in the fifteenth century. No ancient record or writer
mentions even his name, and all that is known of him has
been gleaned from his works. It appears that he was a
native of Constantinople; but passed a great part of his
life in Sicily. Some have thought he was a monk, but this
is uncertain, nor do we know whether he lived in public
life, or in retirement. His letters, however, show that he
was a grammarian, and was acquainted with theology, history sacred and profane, and other branches of knowledge; and such was his reputation that he was frequently
consulted by monks, bishops, and the most celebrated
doctors of his time. His “Annals,
” by which only he is
now known, contain an account of the patriarchs, kings,
and emperors, and, in a word, a sort of history of the
world as far as the emperor Alexis Comnenus, who died in
1118, including many remarks on divinity, philosophy,
physic, astronomy, &c. Leunclavius first translated this
work into Latin, and the whole was published by father
Labbe, Paris, 1660, fol. Some of his letters have been
published in the “Deliciae eruditorum,
” Florence,
, a learned French bishop and writer, was descended from a good family at Dreux, and born in 1605.
, a learned French bishop and
writer, was descended from a good family at Dreux, and
born in 1605. Being inclined to poetry from his youth,
he applied himself to it, and so cultivated his genius, that
he made his fortune by it. His first essay was a paraphrase
in verse of the Benedicite, which was much commended.
He was but twenty -four when he became a member of that
society which met at the house of Mr. Conrart, to confer upon subjects of polite learning, and to communicate
their performances. From this society cardinal Richlieu
took the hint, and formed the resolution, of establishing
the French academy for belles lettres; and our author in a
few years obtained the patronage of that powerful ecclesiastic. The bishopric of Grasse becoming vacant in 1636,
cardinal Richelieu recommended him to the king, who immediately conferred it upon him; and as soon as the ceremony of consecration was over, he repaired to his diocese,
and applied himself to the functions of his office. He held
several synods, composed a great number of pastoral instructions for the use of his clergy, and restored ecclesiastical discipline, which had been almost entirely
neglected. He obtained from pope Innocent X. a bull for
uniting the bishopric of Vence to that of Grasse, as his
predecessor William le Blore had before obtained from
Clement VIII. This arrangement, considering the propinquity of the two dioceses, and the small income of both
together (about 450l.) was not unreasonable; but when
Godeau found the people and clergy averse to it, he gave
up his pretensions, and contented himself with the bishopric
of Vence only. He assisted in several general assemblies
of the clergy, held in 1645 and 1655; in which he vigorously maintained the dignity of the episcopal order, and
the system of pure morality, against those who opposed
both. One of his best pieces upon this subject, was published in 1709, with the title of “Christian Morals for the
Instruction of the Clergy of the Diocese of Vence
” and
was afterwards translated into English, by Basil Kennet.
These necessary absences excepted, he constantly resided
upon his diocese, where he was perpetually employed in
visitations, preaching, reading, writing, or attending upon
the ecclesiastical or temporal affairs of his bishopric, till
Easter-day, April 17, 1671; when he was seized with a
fit of an apoplexy, of which he died the 21st.
, a learned English writer, and an excellent schoolmaster, was born in Somersetshire, in
, a learned English writer, and
an excellent schoolmaster, was born in Somersetshire, in
1587; and, after a suitable education in grammar-learning, was sent to Oxford. He was entered of Magdalenhall in 1602; and took the two degrees in arts 1606 and
1609. This last year he removed to Abingdon in Berkshire, having obtained the place of chief master of the freeschool there; and in this employ distinguished himself by
his industry and abilities so much, that he brought the
school into a very flourishing condition; and bred up many
youths who proved ornaments to their country, both in
church and state. To attain this commendable end he
wrote his “Roman Historiae Anthologia,
” an English
exposition of the Roman antiquities, &c. and printed it at
Oxford in 1613, 4to. The second edition was published
in 1623, with considerable additions. He also printed for
the use of his school, a “Florilegium Phrastcon, or a survey of the Latin Tongue.
” However, his inclinations
leading him to divinity, he entered into orders, and became chaplain to Montague bishop of Bath and Wells.
He proceeded B. D. in 1616, in which year he published
at Oxford, “Synopsis Antiquitatum Hebraicarum, &c.
” a
collection of Hebrew antiquities, in three books, 4to. Thi
he dedicated to his patron; and, obtaining some time after from him the rectory of Brightwell in Berkshire, he
resigned his school, the fatigue of which had long been too
great for him. Amidst his parochial duties, he prosecuted
the subject of the Jewish antiquities; and, in 1625, printed
in 4to, “Moses and Aaron, &c.
” which was long esteemed
an useful book for explaining the civil and ecclesiastical
rites of the Hebrews. He took his degree of D. D. in 1637,
but did not enjoy that honour many years; dying upon his
parsonage in 1642-3, and leaving a wife, whom he had
married while he taught school at Abingdon.
, a Portuguese writer of the sixteenth century, was born at Alanquar near Lisbon,
, a Portuguese writer of the sixteenth century, was born at Alanquar near Lisbon, of a
noble family, in 1501, and brought upas a domestic in,
the court of king Emanuel, where he was considered both
as a man of letters and of business. Having a strong passion for travelling, he contrived to get a public commission;
and travelled through almost all the countries of Europe,
contracting as he went an acquaintance with all the learned. At Dantzic he became intimate with the brothers
John and Olaus Magnus; and he spent five months at Friburg with Erasmus. He afterwards went to Padua, in
1534, where he resided four years, studying under Lazarus Bonamicus; not, however, without making frequent
excursions into different parts of Italy. Here he obtained
the esteem of Peter, afterwards cardinal Bembus, of Christopher Maclrucius, cardinal of Trent, and of James Sadolet. On his return to Lou vain in 1538, he had recourse
to Conrad Goclenius and Peter Nannius, whose instructions were of great use to him, and applied himself to
music and poetry; in the former of which he made so
happy a progress, that he was qualified to compose for the
churches. He married at Louvain, and his design was to
settle in this city, in order to enjoy a little repose after
fourteen years travelling; but a war breaking out between
Charles V. and Henry II. of France, Louvain was besieged
in 1542, and Goez, who has written the history of this
siege, put himself at the head of the soldiers, and contributed much to the defence of the town against the French,
when the other officers had abandoned it. When he was
old, John III. of Portugal, recalled him into his country,
in order to write the history of it; but as it became first
necessary to arrange the archives of the kingdom, which
he found in the greatest confusion, he had little leisure to
accomplish his work. The favours also which the king
bestowed upon him created him so much envy, that his
tranquillity was at an end, and he came to be accused;
and, though he cleared himself from all imputations, was
confined to the town of Lisbon. Here, it is said that he
was one day found dead in his own house; and in such a
manner as to make it doubted whether he was strangled by
his enemies, or died of an apoplexy; but other accounts
inform us, with more probability, that he fell into the fire
in a fit, and was dead before the accident was discovered.
This happened in 1560, and he was interred in the cburck
of Notre Dame, at Alanquar. Rewrote “Fides, Religio,
Moresque Æthiopum
” “De Imperio et Rebus Lusitanorum
” “Hispania;
” “Urbis OlissiponensisDescriptio;
”
“Chronica do Rey Dom Emanuel
” “Historia do Principe Dom Juao
” and other works, which have been often
printed, and are much esteemed. Antonio says, that,
though he is an exact writer, yet he has not written the
Portuguese language in its purity; which, however, is not
to be wondered at, considering how much time he spent
out of his own country.
, a divine and dramatic writer, was born in Essex, about 1592, and was educated at Westmin
, a divine and dramatic writer, was
born in Essex, about 1592, and was educated at Westminster-school, from which, at the age of eighteen, he
entered as a student of Christ Church college, Oxford.
Here he completed his studies, and, by dint of application and industry, became a very able scholar, obtained
the character of a good poet, and, being endowed with
the powers of oratory, was, after his taking orders, esteemed
an excellent preacher. He had the degree of B. D. conferred on him before he quitted the university, and, in
1623, was preferred to the living of East Clandon, in
Surrey. Here, notwithstanding that he had long been a
professed enemy to the female sex, and even by some
esteemed a woman-hater, he unfortunately tied himself to
a wife, the widow of his predecessor, who was aXantippe,
and he being naturally of a mild disposition, became at
last unable to cope with so turbulent a spirit, backed as
she. was by the children she had by her former husband. It
was believed by many, that the uneasiness he met with in
domestic life shortened his days. He died in July 1629,
being then only thirty -five years of age, and was buried on
the 27th of the same month *at his own parish church. He
wrote several pieces on different subjects, among which
are five tragedies; none of which were published till some
years after his death. Philips and Winstanley have ascribed a comedy to this author, called “Cupid’s Whirligig;
” but with no appearance of probability; since the
gravity of his temper was such, that he does not seem to
have been capable of a performance so ludicrous. In the
latter part of his life he forsook the stage for the pulpit,
and wrote sermons, some of which appeared the year he
died. With the quaintness common to the sermons of
James Ist’s time, they have a portion of fancy and vivacity
peculiar to himself. To these works may be added, his
“Latin Oration at the Funeral of sir Henry Savile,
” spoken and printed at Oxford in
, an ingenious French writer, was born at Paris in 1716, where his father was an advocate,
, an ingenious French writer, was born at Paris in 1716, where his father was an advocate, and himself became a counsellor to the parliament. By close study, and by great assiduity in his pursuits, he produced in 1758 a work that obtained a temporary reputation, and was translated into English, entitled c< Origine des Loix, des Arts, des Sciences, et de leur Progres chez les anciens Peuples," 3 vols. 4to; reprinted in 1778, in six volumes 12mo. This work treats of the origin and progress of human knowledge, from the creation to the age of Cyrus, but displays more genius than erudition, and is rather an agreeable than a profound work. He died of the small-pox, May 2, 1758, immediately after the publication of his work; leaving his Mss. and library to his friend, Alexander Conrad Fugere, who died only three days after him, in consequence of being deeply affected by the death of Goguet, who was a man of much personal worth. Goguet had begun another work on the origin and progress of the laws, arts, sciences, &c. in France, from the commencement of the monarchy, the loss of which the admirers of his first production much regretted.
, a laborious writer in civil law and history, was born at Bischoffsel in Switzerland,
, a laborious
writer in civil law and history, was born at Bischoffsel in
Switzerland, in 1576, and was a protestant of the confes-^
sion of Geneva. He studied the civil law at Altorf under
Conrade Rittershusius, with whom he boarded; and returned in 1598 to Bischoffsel, where for some time he had
no other subsistence but what he acquired by writing
books, of which, at the time of publication he used to send
copies to the magistrates and people of rank, from whom
he received something more than the real value; and some
of his friends imagined they did him service in promoting
this miserable traffic. In 1599 he lived at St. Gal, in the
house of a Mr. Schobinger, who declared himself his patron; but the same year he went to Geneva, and lived at
the house of professor Lectius, with the sons of Vassan,
whose preceptor he was. In 1602 he went to Lausanne,
from a notion that he could live cheaper there than at Geneva. His patron Schobinger, while he advised him to
this step, cautioned him at the same time from such frequent removals as made him suspected of an unsettled
temper. But, notwithstanding Schobinger’s caution, he
returned soon after to Geneva; and, upon the recommendation of Lectius, was appointed secretary to the duke of
Bouillon, which place he quitted with his usual precipitation, and was at Francfort in 1603, and had a settlement
at Forsteg in 1604. In 1605 he lived at Bischoffsel; where
he complained of not being safe on the score of his religion, which rendered him odious even to his relations. He
was at Francfort in 1606, where he married, and continued
till 1610, in very bad circumstances. Little more is known
of his history, unless that he lost his wife in 1630, and
died himself Aug. 11, 1635. He appears to have been
a man of capricious temper, and some have attributed to
him a want of integrity. The greatest part of the writings
published by Goldast are compilations arranged in form, or
published from Mss. in libraries; and by their number he
may be pronounced a man of indefatigable labour. Conringius says he has deserved so well of his country by publishing
the ancient monuments of Germany, that undoubtedly the
Athenians would have maintained him in the Prytaneum,
if he had lived in those times; and adds, that he neither
had, nor perhaps ever will have, an equal in illustrating
the affairs of Germany, and the public law of the empire.
The following are the most considerable among his various works: A collection of different tracts on civil and
ecclesiastical jurisdiction, entitled “Monarcbia Sancti Romani Imperii*
” &c. Alamaniae Scriptores,
” Scriptores
aliquot rerum Suevlearum,
” Commentarius
de Bohemise regno,
” 4to “Informatio de statu Bohemia3
quoad jus,
” 4to “Sybilla Francica,
” 4to which is a collection of pieces relating to the Maid of Orleans “Paraeneticorum veterum pars prima,
” Virorum clarissimorum ad Melchior Goldastum Epistolae,
” 4to, Francfort.
, an eminent poet and miscellaneous writer, was born on Nov. 29, 1728, at a place called Pallas, in the
, an eminent poet and miscellaneous writer, was born on Nov. 29, 1728, at a place
called Pallas, in the parish of Forney and county of Longford in Ireland. His father, the rev. Charles Goldsmith,
a native of the county of Roscommon, was a clergyman of
the established church, and had been educated at Dublin
college. He afterwards held the living of Kilkenny West
in the county of Westmeath. By his wife, Anne, the
daughter of the rev. Oliver Jones, master of the diocesan
school of Elphin, he had five sons, and two daughters.
His eldest son, Henry, went into the church, and is the
gentleman to whom our poet dedicated his “Traveller.
”
Oliver was the second son, and is supposed to have faithfully represented his father in the character of the Village
Preacher in the “Deserted Village.
” Oliver was originally intended for some mercantile employment, as his
father found his income too scanty for the expences of the
literary education which he had bestowed on his eldest son.
With this view he was instructed in reading, writing, and
arithmetic, at a common school, the master of which was an
old soldier, of a romantic turn, who entertained his pupil
with marvellous stories of his travels and feats, and is supposed to have imparted somewhat of that wandering and
unsettled turn which so much appeared in his pupil’s future life. It is certain that Oliver had not been long at
this humble school before he proved that he was “no vulgar boy.
” He made some attempts in poetry when he was
scarcely eight years old, and by the inequalities of his
temper and conduct, betrayed a disposition more favourable io the flights of genius than the regularity of business.
This after some time became so obvious, that his frfends,
who had at first pleaded for his being sent to the university, now determined to contribute towards the expence,
and by their assistance, he was placed at a school of reputation, where he might be qualified to enter the college
with the advantages of preparatory learning.
n he had.' Indeed, with all his defects (to conclude nearly in the words of that great critic), as a writer he was of the most distinguished abilities. Whatever he composed
“He was,
” adds his biographer, “generous in the extreme, and so strongly affected by compassion, that he has
been known at midnight to abandon his rest in order to
procure relief and an asylum for a poor dying object who
was left destitute in the streets. Nor was there ever a mind
whose general feelings were more benevolent and friendly.
He is, however, supposed to have been often soured by
jealousy or envy, and many little instances are mentioned
of this tendency in his character; but whatever appeared
of this kind was a mere momentary sensation, which he
knew not how like other men to conceal. It was never the
result of principle, or the suggestion of reflection; it never
embittered his heart, nor influenced his conduct. Nothingcould be more amiable than the general features of his
mind; those of his person were not perhaps so engaging.
His stature was under the middle size, his body strongly
built, and his limbs more sturdy than elegant; his complexion was pale, his forehead low, his face almost round,
and pitted with the small-pox; but marked with strong
lines of thinking. His first appearance was not captivating; but when he grew easy and cheerful in company,
he relaxed into.such a display of good-humour, as soon
removed every unfavourable impression. Yet it must be
acknowledged that in company he did not appear to so
much advantage as might have been expected from his
genius and talents. He was too apt to speak without reflection, and without a sufficient knowledge of the subject;
which made Johnson observe of him, * No man was more
foolish when he had not a pen in his hand, or more wise
when he had.' Indeed, with all his defects (to conclude nearly in the words of that great critic), as a writer he was
of the most distinguished abilities. Whatever he composed he did it better than any other man could. And
whether we consider him as a poet, as a comic writer, or
as an historian (so far as regards his powers of composition)
he was one of the first writers of his time, and will ever
stand in the foremost class.
”
ce looked upon as fictitious, are yearly found really existent, and of undoubted antiquity. A French writer compares him to Pliny the natural historian, who was thought
, a German antiquary, was born
at Venloo, in the duchy of Gueldres, in 1526. His father
was a painter, and he was himself bred up in this art,
learning the principles of it from Lambert Lombard; but
he seems to have quitted the pencil early in life, having a
particular turn to antiquity, and especially to the study of
medals, to which he entirely devoted himself. He considered medals as the very foundation of true history;
and travelled through France, Germany, and Italy, in
order to make collections, and to“draw from them what
lights he could. His reputation was so high in this respect,
that the cabinets of the curious were every where open to
him; and on the same account he was honoured with the
freedom of the city of Rome in Io67. He was the author
of several excellent works, in all which he applies medals
to the illustration of ancient history, and for the greater
accuracy, had them printed in his own house, and corrected them himself. He also engraved the plates for the
medals with his own hands. Accordingly, his books were
admired all over Europe, and thought an ornament to any
library; and succeeding antiquaries have bestowed the
highest praises upon them. Lipsius, speaking of the
” Fasti Consulares,“says, that
” he knows not which to
admire most, his diligence in seeking so many coins, his
happiness in finding, or his skill in engraving them."
Some, however, have said that although his works abound
with erudition, they must be read with some caution. The
fact seems to be, that all his works have many coins not yet
found in cabinets, because his own collection was unfortunately lost, yet the medals which he describes, and
which were once looked upon as fictitious, are yearly
found really existent, and of undoubted antiquity. A
French writer compares him to Pliny the natural historian,
who was thought to deal much in falsehood, till time drew
the truth out of the well; so that as knowledge advances,
most of his wonders acquire gradual confirmation. Yet it
is certain that he was often imposed upon, and the caution
above given is not unnecessary. His coins of the Roman
tyrants, for instance, are clearly false; for they bear Pren.
and Cog. on the exergue, which marks never occur on the
real coins. It has been also said that many errors of this
nature must be committed by a man, whose love and veneration for Roman antiquities was such, that he gave to all
his children Roman names, such as Julius, Marcellus, &c.
so that he might easily receive for antiques what were not
so, out of pure fondness for any thing of that kind. Upon
this principle, it is probable, that he took, for his second
wife, the widow of the antiquary Martini us Smetius; whom
he married more for the sake of Smetius 1 s medals and inscriptions than for any thing belonging to herself. She
was his second wife, and a shrew, who made his latter days
unhappy. He died at Bruges March 14, 1583.
, Sieurde, an ingenious French writer, was born at Chevreuse, in the diocese of Paris, or as some
, Sieurde, an ingenious French writer, was born at Chevreuse, in the diocese
of Paris, or as some say in Paris itself, in 1599. He was
early distinguished by some successful publications which
had given him a literary reputation, and made him be enrolled among the number assembled by cardinal Richelieu
for the purpose of founding the French academy in 1635.
His first publications were romances and works of a light
nature, but at the age of forty-five he formed the resolution of consecrating his pen to religion, and adopted a
penitentiary course of life, which some think was more
strict at the commencement than at the termination of it.
He died June 14, 1674. One of the most curious of his
works, “La doctrine des Mceurs, tiree de la philosophic
des Stoiques, representee en cent tableaux,
” and
” La jeune Alcidiane,“published in 1733 by
madame Gomez, who says that Gomberville left merely an
outline of it. His other works were, 1.
” Relation de la
riviere des Amazones,“1632, 2 vols. 12mo. 2.
” Memoires
de Louis de Gonzague, due de Nevers,“1665, 2 vols. fol.
3.
” Discours des vertus et des vices de Phistoire," 1620,
4to, and various pieces of sacred poetry, &c.
to London, and at first supported himself by teaching the languages, but afterwards commenced party writer, and was employed by the earl of Oxford in queen Anne’s time;
, a native of Scotland, and onc
distinguished by his party writings on political and religious
subjects, was born at Kircudbright in Galloway, about th
fend of the seventeenth century. He had an university
education, and went through the common course of aca*
demical studies; but whether at Aberdeen or St. Andrew’s
is uncertain. When a young man he came to London,
and at first supported himself by teaching the languages,
but afterwards commenced party writer, and was employed
by the earl of Oxford in queen Anne’s time; but we know
not in what capacity. He first distinguished himself in the
Bangorian controversy by two pamphlets in defence of
Hoadly, which recommended him to Mr. Tjrenchard, an
author of the same stamp, who took him into his house, at
first as his amanuensis, and afterwards into partnership, as
an author. In 1720, they began to publish, in conjunction, a series of letters, under the name of “Cato,
” upon
various and important subjects relating to the public.
About the same time they published another periodical
paper, under the title of “The Independent Whig,
” which
was continued some years after Trenchard’s death by Gordon alone. The same spirit which appears, with more
decent language, in Cato’s letters against the administration in the state, shews itself in this work in much more
glaring colours against the hierarchy in the church. It is,
in truth, a gross and indecent libel on the established religion, which, however, Gordon was admirably qualified
to write, as he had no religion of his own to check his intemperate sallies. After Trenchard’s death, the minister,
sir Robert Walpole, knowing his popular talents, took him
into pay to defend his measures, for which end he wrote
several pamphlets. At the time of his death, July 28, 1750,
he was first commissioner of the wine-licences, an office which he had enjoyed many years, and which diminished his patriotism surprisingly. He was twice married. His second wife was the widow of his friend Trenchard by whom he had children, and who survived him.
Two collections of his tracts have been preserved the
first entitled, “A Cordial for Low-spirits,
” in three volumes;
and the second, “The Pillars of Priestcraft and
Orthodoxy shaken,
” in two volumes. But these, like many other
posthumous pieces, had better have been suppressed. His
translations of Sallust and Tacitus, now, perhaps, contribute more to preserve his name, although without conferring much reputation on it. His Tacitus appeared in 2
vols. fol. in 1728, with discourses taken from foreign commentators and translators of that historian. Sir Robert
Walpole patronised a subscription for the work, which
was very successful; but no classic was perhaps ever so
miserably mangled. His style is extremely vulgar, yet
affected, and abounds with abrupt and inharmonious periods, totally destitute of any resemblance to the original,
while the translator fancied he was giving a correct imitation.
, a heraldic writer, was born of an ancient family at Alderton, in Wiltshire, in
, a heraldic writer, was born of an ancient family at Alderton, in Wiltshire, in 1631, and was
educated at Magdalen college, Oxford. Thence he went
to Lincoln’s-inn, but probably with no serious purpose to
study the law, as he retired afterwards to his patrimony at
Alderton. Here his property entitled him to the honour
of being appointed high sheriff of Wiltshire in 1680, at
which time some unjust aspersions on his character induced
him to write a defence entitled “Loyalty displayed, and
falsehood unmasked,
” &c. Lond. A Table shewing how
to blazon a coat ten several ways,
” Series Alphabetica, LatinoAnglica, Nomina Gentilitiorum, sive cognominum plurimarum familiarum, quse multos per annos in Anglia floruere,
” Oxon. Catalogus in certa capita, seu
Classes, alphabetico ordine concinnatusj, plerorumque omnium Authorum (tarn antiquorum quam recentiorum) qui
de re Heraldica, Latine, Gallice, Ital. Hisp. &c. scripserunt,
” Ox. 1C68, reprinted with enlargements, 1674. 4.
“Nomenclator geographicus,
” &c. Ox.
, an Italian poet and miscellaneous writer, was born at Rome in 1525, where he pursued his studies in the
, an Italian poet and miscellaneous
writer, was born at Rome in 1525, where he pursued his
studies in the house of the cardinal de Santa Fiora, but in
his seventeenth year was taken into the service of Ferdinand Gonzaga, then viceroy of Sicily, and governor of
Milan, to which city he accompanied that nobleman in
1546, and became his secretary. He was afterwards taken
to the court of Spain, where he obtained the esteem and
favour of Philip II. Under the duke of Albuquerque he
was imprisoned on a charge of conspiracy against the life
of John Baptist Monti, but vindicated his own cause, and
was not only released, but admitted to public employment
under the succeeding governors of Milan. He died Feb.
12, 1587, leaving behind him several works, that obtained
for him high reputation; of these the principal are, “The
Life of Ferdinand Gonzaga,
” Three Conspiracies,
” &c. Rime,
” or a collection of
poems, several times reprinted. “Discourses.
” “Letters,
” &c. and he translated into Italian a French work
entitled “A true account of things that have happened
in the Netherlands, since the arrival of Don Juan of
Austria.
”
, a protestant divine, and voluminous writer, was born at Senlis, Oct. 20, 1543, and studied divinity at
, a protestant divine, and voluminous writer, was born at Senlis, Oct. 20, 1543, and studied divinity at Geneva, where he was ordained in October 1566, and was appointed one of the ministers of that city, a situation which he filled for the long space of sixtytwo years. His residence at Geneva was never discontinued but on account of three journies he took to France, on matters relating to the protestant churches, the one in 1576, when he went to Forez; the second in 1582, to Champagne, and the third in 1600, to Grenoble. The rest of his life he devoted to his pastoral duties, and to his numerous works, which prove him one of the most indefatigable writers of his time. He died Feb. 3, 1628, in his eighty-fifth year, and in full possession of his faculties. He preached but seven days before his death. Scaliger, who had a great esteem for him, says he was an ingenious man, who learnt all he knew without the assistance of a master.
, a French writer of some note, was the son of Nicholas Goulu, royal professor
, a French writer of some note, was the
son of Nicholas Goulu, royal professor of Greek in the
university of Paris, in 1567, and author of a translation
from Greek into Latin of Gregentius’s dispute with the Jew
Herbanus, which De Noailles, the French ambassador, had
brought from Constantinople, and of other works, a collection of which was printed at Paris in 1580. His son
was born at Paris Aug. 25, 1576, and educated for the bar;
but, having failed in the first cause he pleaded, he felt the
disappointment so acutely as to relinquish the profession,
and retire into a convent. He chose the order of the
Feuillans, and entered amongst them in 1604. He was so
much esteemed in his order that he always enjoyed some
office in it, and was at last made general. The name he
took when he became a monk, was Dom John of St. Francis. As he understood the Greek tongue, he translated
into French Epictetus’s Manual, Arrian’s Dissertations,
some of St. Basil’s treatises, and the works of Dionysius
Areopagita; to which he added a vindication of this St.
Dionysius’s works. He also revised his father’s Latin
translation of St. Gregory Nyssen against Eunomius, and
published it. He also wrote a book against Du Moulin’s
treatise of the calling of pastors, “De la Vocation des
Pasteurs
” the Life of Francis de Sales, bishop of Geneva;
and a Funeral Oration on Nicholas le Fevre, preceptor to
Lewis XIII.; but it is said that he never delivered it. He
did not, however, gain so great reputation by all those
writings as by his angry controversy with Balzac, already
noticed in our account of that writer. Goulu died Jan.
5, 1629.
accusation is introduced that could tend to lessen Dr. Grainger in the eyes of the public, both as a writer and as a man. But the objections which Grainger took are by
But whatever truth may be in all this, the letter was an unwise and hasty production, written in the moment of the strongest irritation. The review appeared in December, and the letter in January. There was no time to cool, and perhaps no opportunity of consulting his friends, who could have told him that nothing was to be gained by an exchange of personalities with Smollett. The latter required no great length of time or consideration to prepare an answer, which appeared accordingly in the review for February, and in which every insinuation or accusation is introduced that could tend to lessen Dr. Grainger in the eyes of the public, both as a writer and as a man. But the objections which Grainger took are by no means satisfactorily answered, and the review is still liable to the suspicion of partiality. No reader of candour or of taste can peruse the Translation, without allowing that the author deserved praise, not only for the attempt, but for the elegant manner in which he has in general transmitted the tender sentiments of Tibullus into our language. But this the Reviewer has wholly overlooked, confining himself to the censure of a few defects, part of which he has not proved to be so, and part were typographical errors.
, a French historical writer, was born Feb. 6, 1653, at St. Lo, in Normandy. After studying
, a French historical writer, was
born Feb. 6, 1653, at St. Lo, in Normandy. After studying philosophy at Caen, he entered into the congregation
of the oratory in 1671, where he applied to the belles lettres
and theology, but quitted it in 1676, and went to Paris,
where he engaged in the education of two young men of
rank, the marquis de Vins, and the duke cTEstrees, and
at the same time applied himself to the study of history
under the direction of father Le Cointe, who formed a very
high opinion of him. He first appeared as a writer in 1688,
in “A History of the Divorce of Henry VIII. and Catharine of Arragon,
” in three vols. 12mo. The main object
of this work is to refute certain facts and arguments contained in the first two books of Burnet’s History of the Reformation. In 1685, when Burnet was at Paris, he had an
interview with Le Grand in the presence of Messrs. Thevenot and Auzout, in which the latter proposed his doubts,
and the former answered them, both preserving a tone of
elegance and mutual respect. The publication of the
above work, however, produced a controversy, in the
course of which, in 1691, Le Grand addressed three letters
to the bishop, to which he replied. How long the controversy might have continued is uncertain, as Le Grand was
necessarily diverted from it in 1692, when he received the
appointment of secretary to the abbe d'Estrees, in his embassy to Portugal. In this situation he continued till 1697.
The leisure which his diplomatic functions allowed was
employed in translations of voyages and travels from the
Portuguese. In 1702 he accompanied the same minister
in Spain, where he remained about two years as secretary.
Soon after this, the marquis de Torci, minister of state, took
him into his service, and employed his pen in drawing up
several memorials concerning the Spanish monarchy, and
other political topics, in which he acquitted himself with
great ability, but most of them were printed without his
name. He employed much of his time in writing a life of
Louis XL; but, although this was quite finished in 1728, it
still remains in manuscript. In that year, however, hepublished his translation of Lobo’s History of Abyssinia, with
many additions; and about the same time his treatise “De
la succession a la Couroune de France.
” He died of an
apoplectic stroke, April 30, 1733. He had been possessed
of church preferment, and had held, for a time, the office
of censor royal of books.
, an English divine and miscellaneous writer, was a younger son of Richard Graves, esq. of Mickleton, in
, an English divine and miscellaneous writer, was a younger son of Richard Graves, esq. of Mickleton, in Gloucestershire, where he was born in 1715. His father, who was an able antiquary, died in 1729. His son, Richard, was educated partly at home, under the rev. Mr.Smith, curate of the parish in which his father resided, and partly at a public school at Abingdon, in Berkshire, whence, at the age of sixteen, he was chosen a scholar of Pembroke college, Oxford. Soon after his arrival he joined a party of young men who met in the evening to read Epictetus, Theophrastus, and other Greek authors, seldom read at schools; and a short time after became the associate of his contemporaries, Shenstone the poet, and Anthony Whistler, who used to meet to read poetry, plays, and other light works. In 1736 he was elected a fellow of All Souls college, where he acquired the particular intimacy of sir William Blackstone; but instead of pursuing the study of divinity, according to his original intention, he now devoted his attention to physic, and attended in London two courses of anatomy. A severe illness, however, induced him to resume the study of divinity, and in 1740, after taking his master’s degree, he entered into holy orders. About the same time he removed with Mr. Fitzherbert, fatlier of lord St. Helen’s, to the estate of that gentleman at Tissington, in Derbyshire, where he remained three years enjoying in his house the highest pleasures of refined society. At the end of that period, he set off‘ to make the tour of the north, and while at Scarborough, accidentally met with a distant relation, Dr. Samuel Knight, archdeacon of Berkshire, and the author of the Lives of Colet and Erasmus, by whose recommendation he obtained a curacy near Oxford. This was particularly gratifying to Mr. Graves, who was then coming, by turn, into office in the college, and had been for some time desirous of procuring such a situation. He immediately took possession of his curacy, but as the parsonage-house was out of repair, he took a lodging with a gentleman -farmer in the neighbourhood. The attractions of the farmer’s youngest daughter made such a powerful impression on the heart of Mr. Graves that he resigned his fellowship and married her. After residing about two years on his curacy, he was presented by Mr. Skrine to the rectory of Claverton, where he went to reside in 1750, and till his death, was never absent from it a month at a time. As the narrowness of his circumstances obliged him to superintend in person the education of his children, he likewise -resolved to take other pupils under his tuition; and this practice he continued, with great credit to himself, upwards of thirty years. In 1763, through the interest of Ralph Allen, esq. of Prior-Park, he was presented to the living of Kilmersdon, in addition to tbat of Claverton, and that gentleman likewise procured him the appointment of chaplain to lady Chatham. His conversation was rendered highly agreeable by that epigrammatic turn which points his writings of the lighter kind. His constant good humour rendered him an acceptable companion in every society, his colloquial impromptus being frequently as happy as the jeux d’e^prit of his pen, while both were invariably the unmeditated effusions of a sportive fancy and guileless heart. He died at Claverton, Nov. 23, 1804, at the advanced age of ninety.
, St., or frequently called Geregius Florentius Gregorius, an eminent bishop and writer of the sixth century, descended from a noble family of AuTergne,
, St., or frequently called Geregius
Florentius Gregorius, an eminent bishop and writer of
the sixth century, descended from a noble family of AuTergne, was born about the year 544. He was educated
by his uncle Gallus, bishop of Clermont, and became so
eminent for learning and virtue, as to be appointed bishop
of Tours in the year 573. He assisted at the council held
at Paris in the year 577, respecting Pretextat, bishop of
Rouen, and strongly opposed the violence of some of the
members of that assembly, particularly Chilperic and Fredegonde. He went afterwards to visit the tomb of > the
apostles at Rome, where he formed a friendship with St.
Gregory the Great, and died Norember 27, 595. This
bishop wrote a “History of France,
” in ten books; eight
books of “The Miracles, or Lives of the Saints;
” and
other works, in the library of the fathers. The best edition-is that by Dom Ruinart, 1699, fol. His history is very
useful; for though the style is dry and coarse, and the
author extremely simple and credulous, yet an ingenious
critic may easily separate the truths contained in it from
the falsehoods. This work has been translated into French
by the abbeé de Marolles, 1668, 2 vols. 8vo.
As a writer, Gregory of St. Vincent was very diffuse and voluminous, but
As a writer, Gregory of St. Vincent was very diffuse and
voluminous, but he was an excellent geometrician. He
published, in Latin, three mathematical works, the principal of which was his “Opus Geometricum Quadratures
Circuli, et Sectionum Coni,
” Antwerp,
, D. D. a divine and miscellanebus writer, was descended from a family, originally from Scotland, but
, D. D. a divine and miscellanebus writer, was descended from a family, originally from Scotland, but a branch of which was settled in Ireland. His father, who had been educated in Trinity college, Dublin, held, at the time of his son’s birth, the living of Edernin, and a prebend in the cathedral of Ferns. Dr. Gregory was born April 14, 1754, and after his father’s death in 1766, was removed to Liverpool, where his mother fixed her residence. He passed some time under the tuition of an excellent schoolmaster of the name of Holder), by whom he was much distinguished for his proficiency in learning. As it was his mother’s desire that he should be brought up to commerce, he spent some years in mercantile employments; but a taste for literature, which continued to be his ruling propensity, produced a final determination in favour of a learned profession. Although the regular process of education for this purpose had been interrupted, the intervening variety of pursuit and observation proved the foundation of a great store of information relative to the arts and sciences, to commerce, manufactures, and political institutions, that was very useful in his subsequent compilations. When his destination was fixed, he passed an interval of study at the university of Edinburgh, and in 1776 entered into holy orders. He first officiated as a curate at Liverpool, where he distinguished himself as a preacher, and wrote some occasional pieces in the periodical journals and magazines, particularly against the slave trade, which he had the spirit to attack in the principal seat of that traffic. In 1782 he removed to London, and obtained the curacy of St. Giles’s Cripplegate, in which parish he became very popular, both in that capacity and afterwards as their morningpreacher. His other London preferments, if they may be so called, were the curacy and lectureship of St. Botolph’s, the lectureship of St. Lute’s, one of the weekly lectureships of St. Antholin’s, and a small prehend in St. Paul’s, which he relinquished for the rectory of Stapleford in Hertfordshire. He was also some time one of the evening preachers at the Foundling hospital. In 1804 he was presented by Mr. Addington, now lord Sidmbuth, to the valuable living of West Ham in Essex, where in a little time the powers of his constitution, although apparently a strong one, suddenly gave way, and he died, after a short confinement, March 12, 1808.
, lord Brooke, an ingenious writer, was the eldest son of sir Fulk Greville, of Beauchamp-court
, lord Brooke, an ingenious writer, was the eldest son of sir Fulk Greville, of Beauchamp-court (at Alcaster) in Warwickshire, and born there in 1554. It is conjectured, that he was educated at the school in Shrewsbury; whence he was removed to Cambridge, and admitted a fellow-commoner at Trinitycollege; and some time after, making a visit to Oxford, he became a member of that university, but of what college is not certain. Having completed his academical studies, he travelled abroad to finish his education and Upon his return, being well accomplished, was introduced to the court of queen Elizabeth by his uncle Robert Greville, where he was esteemed a most ingenious person, and particularly favoured by the lovers of arts and sciences. He was soon nominated to some beneficial employment in the court of marches of Wales by his kinsman, sir Henry Sidney, then lord-president of that court and principality.
, LL. D. an English divine, and miscellaneous writer, was of a Yorkshire family, originally from France. He was born
, LL. D. an English divine, and miscellaneous writer, was of a Yorkshire family, originally
from France. He was born in 1687, and was admitted a
pensioner in Jesus college, Cambridge, April 18, 1704,
but afterwards removed to Trinity-ball, where he was admitted scholar of the house, Jan. 6, 1706-7; LL. B. 1709
LL. D. 1720; and though he was never fellow of that
college, he was elected one of the trustees for Mr. Ayloffe’s benefaction to it. He was rector of Houghton
Conquest in Bedfordshire: and vicar of St. Peter’s and St.
Giles’s parishes in Cambridge, where he usually passed
the winter, and the rest of his time at Ampthill, the neighbouring market-town to his living. He died Nov. 25, 1766,
at Ampthill, and was buried at Houghton Conquest. Very
little of his history has descended to us. How he spent
his life will appear by a list of his works. He is said to
have been of a most amiable, sweet, and communicative
disposition; most friendly to his acquaintance, and never
better pleased than when performing acts of friendship
and benevolence. Being in the commission of the peace,
and a man of reputable character, he was much courted
for his interest in elections. He was not, however, very
active on those occasions, preferring literary retirement.
His works were, 1. “A Vindication of the Church of England, in answer to Mr. Pearce’s Vindication of the Dis^
senters; by a Presbyter of the Church of England.
” Presbyterian Prejudice displayed,
” A pair of clean Shoes and Boots for a Dirty Baronet;
or an answer to Sir Richard Cox,
” The
Knight of Dumbleton foiled at his own weapons, &c. In a
Letter to Sir Richard Cocks, knt. By a Gentleman and
no Knight,
” A Century of eminent Presbyterians: or a Collection of Choice Sayings, from the public sermons before the two houses, from Nov. 1641 to Jan.
31, 1648, the day after the king was beheaded. By a
Lover of Episcopacy,
” A Letter of Thanks to
Mr. Benjamin Bennet,
” A memorial of the Reformation,
” full of gross prejudices
against the established church, and “A defence of it.
”
7. “A Caveat against Mr. Benj. Bennet, a mere pretender to history and criticism. By a lover of history,
” A Defence of our ancient and modern Historians against the frivolous cavils of a late pretender to.
Critical History, in which the false quotations smd unjust
inferences of the anonymous author are confuted and exposed in the manner they deserve, la two parts,
” A Review of Dr. Zachary Grey’s Defence
of our ancient and modern historians. Wherein, instead
of dwelling upon his frivolous cavils, false quotations, unjust inferences, &c it is proved (to his glory be it spoken)
that there is not a book in the English tongue, which contains so many falsehoods in so many pages. Nori vitiosus
homo es, Zachary, sed vitium. By the author,
” &c. y. “An
Appendix by way of Answer to the Critical Historian’s
Review,
” 1725. 11.
” The Ministry of the
Dissenters proved to be null and void from Scripture and
antiquity,“1725. 12. In 1732 he wrote a preface to his
relation dean Moss’s sermons,
” by a learned hand.“Mr.
Masters in his history of C. C. C. C. ascribes this to Dr.
Snape, who might perhaps have been editor of the sermons, but it was written by Dr. Grey. 13.
” The spirit
of Infidelity detected, in answer to Barbeyrac, with a defence of Dr. Waterland,“1735, 8vo. 14.
” English Presbyterian eloquence. By an admirer of monarchy and episcopacy,“1736, 8vo. 15.
” Examination of Dr. Chandler’s
History of Persecution,“1736, 8vo. 16.
” The true picture
of Quakerism,“1736. 17.
” Caveat against the Dissenters,“1736, 8vo. 18.
” An impartial Examination of the
second volume of Mr. Daniel Neal’s History of the Puritans,“1736, 8vo. The first volume of Neal had been examined by Dr. Madox, assisted in some degree by Dr.
Grey, who published his examination of the third volume
in 1737, and that of the fourth in 1739. J 9.
” An examination of the fourteenth chapter of Sir Isaac Newton’s
Observations upon the prophecies of Daniel,“1736, 8vo.
This is in answer to sir Isaac’s notion of the rise of Saintworship. 20.
” An attempt towards the character of the
Royal Martyr, king Charles I.; from authentic vouchers,“1738. 21.
” Schismatics delineated from authentic vouchers, in reply to Neal, with Dowsing' s Journal, &c. By
Philalethes Cantabrigiensis,“1739, 8vo. 22.
” The Quakers and Methodists compared,“&c. 1740. 23.
” A Review of Mr. Daniel Neil’s History of the Puritans, with a
Postscript. In a letter to Mr. David Jennings;“a pamphlet, Cambridge, 174-4. 24.
” Hudibras with large annotations, and a prelate,“&c. 1744, 2 vols. 8vo. 2b.
” A
serious address to Lay Methodists: by a sincere Protestant,“1745, 8vo. 27.
” Popery in its proper colours, with a list
of Saints invocated in England before the Reformation,“17, 8vo. 28,
” Remarks upon a late edition of Shakspeare, with a long string of emendations borrowed by the
celebrated editor from the Oxford edition without acknowledgement. To which is prefixed, a Defence of the late
sir Thomas Hanmer, bart. addressed to the rev. Mr. Warburton, preacher of Lincoln’s-Inn,“8vo, no date, but
about 1745. 29.
” A word or two of Advice to William
Warburton, a dealer in many words; by a friend. With
an Appendix, containing a taste of William’s Spirit of Railing,“1746, 8vo. 30.
” A free and familiar Letter to that
great refiner of Pope and Shakspeare, the rev. William
Warburton, preacher at Lincoln’s-Inn. With Remarks
upon the epistle of friend W. E. (query if not T. E. i. e. Thomas Edwards). In which his unhandsome treatment of
this celebrated writer is exposed in the manner it deserves.
By a Country Curate,“1750, 8vo, 31.
” A Supplement
to Hudibras,“1752, 8vo. 32.
” Critical, historical, and
explanatory notes on Shakspeare, with emendations on the
text and metre,“1755, 2 vols. 8vo. 33.
” Chronological
account of Earthquakes,“1757, 8vo. In 1756 he assisted
iVIr. Whalley in his edition of Shakspeare; he had also contributed to Mr. Peck’s
” Desiderata,“and
” Life of Cromwell," and collected some materials for a Life of Baker,
the Cambridge antiquary, which were afterwards enlarged
and published by the rev. Robert Masters. Dr. Grey left
some other Mss. and a collection of letters, now in Mr.
Nichols’s possession.
stant ages. The merit of this example, therefore, is due to Grey, and is that on which his fame as a writer and literary antiquary will rest, long after his other publications,
The above attack by Warburton produced, from Dr. Grey,
the pamphlets mentioned above, No. 28, 29, and 30, in which
there is much of the grossness as well as the acuteness of
the controversial spirit. Warburton’s conduct, however,
appears wanton and unprovoked, for he not only was at
one time on good terms with Grey, and had himself some
thoughts of illustrating Hudibras, but had actually supplied
Grey with the result of his own inquiries, and was therefore a contributor to “so execrable an heap of nonsense;
”
for which Grey makes very grateful acknowledgment in his
preface. To account for Warburton’s contempt for a commentator whom he had thus assisted, and for a plan which
he meant to have executed (perhaps as he executed his plan on Shakspeare), we are inclined to prefer the
conjeeture of a gentleman whom extensive reading, reflection,
and taste have constituted an able umpire in literary quarrels. Mr. D'Israeli thinks that V/arburton’s motive was
jealousy, and that “though he had naif reluctantly yielded
the few notes he had prepared, his proud heart sickened
when he beheld the amazing subscription Grey obtained
for his first edition of Hudibras he received for that work
1500l. a proof that J;his publication was felt as a want by
the public.
” Grey, “however, may be entitled to a higher
merit than that of gratifying the public taste by his edition
of Hudibras. He was unquestionably the founder of that
species of commentary which has since been so successfully employed in illustrating Shakspeare, by bringing together all the information, the contemporary writing, and
the style, manners, prejudices, and peculiarities of the
age, however distant, in which the author to be explained
wrote. And although this example has been followed,
perhaps in some instances, to a degree of minuteness that
exposes the commentator to the ridicule of the wits, and
although it must be allowed that some of the Shakspeare
commentators have
” bestowed all their tediousness“upon
us with a too liberal hand, yet it cannot be controverted,
that they have pursued the only just and legitimate process
for elucidating the writings of distant ages. The merit of
this example, therefore, is due to Grey, and is that on
which his fame as a writer and literary antiquary will rest,
long after his other publications, with the exception perhaps of his Examinations of Neal, are forgotten. He had
also made some progress in an edition of Shakspeare upon
the plan of his Hudibras, which we presume his advanced
age prevented his completing. What he had collected,
however, appeared in his
” Critical, historical, and explanatory notes“above-mentioned. Of this work Dr.
Johnson says that
” what Dr. Grey undertook he has well
enough performed, but as he neither attempts judicial nor
emendatory criticism, he employs rather his memory than
his sagacity;“and he adds,
” It were to be wished that
all would endeavour to imitate his modesty, who have not
been able to surpass his knowledge?."
, a French writer of considerable reputation, was born October 9, 1698, at Moulins.
, a French writer of considerable
reputation, was born October 9, 1698, at Moulins. He
entered early among the Jesuits at Paris, was professor of
belles lettres in the college of Louis le Grand, and distinguished himself afterwards in the pulpit. On the dissolution of his order, he retired to Brussels, where he died of
a nephritic cholic, February 22, 1775. His works are, 1.
An edition of Daniel’s “History of France,
” Paris, Traité des differentes sortes de preuves qui servent à etablir la verite de
l'Histoire,
” Liege, Sermons,
” Liege, Anneé du Chretien,
”
Paris, Latin Poems,
” written
at college, of indifferent character. 6. An improved edition of‘ D’Avrigny’s Memoirs, 1757, 5 vols. 12mo. 7.
“Insuffisance de la religion naturelle,
” Liege, 2 vols.
12mo. 8. An enlarged edition of the “Delices des Pays
Bas,
” Liege,
, a lady once of some note a a writer of novels and plays, whose maiden name was Griffith, was of
, a lady once of some note a
a writer of novels and plays, whose maiden name was
Griffith, was of Welch descent, and early in life married
Richard Griffith, a gentleman of a good family, but reduced fortune, in Ireland. The first performance by which
she became known was entitled “The Letters of Henry
and Frances,
” which are said to contain the genuine correspondence between her and her husband before their marriage, and for some years after. They were published at
the particular request of Margaret countess of Cork, who
was one of her friends, and privy to her connexion with
Mr. Griffith, which was at first kept secret. From these
letters, a few particulars of the private history of the parties may be collected. Mr. Griffith appears to have received no regular education, although in his youth he had
evinced some talents for poetry; he introduced himself,
however, by degrees into “the genteelest and most reputable company;
” but tired of a city life, passed several
years with a relation in the country of Ireland, where he
read, learned French, and “studied husbandry philosophically.
” He then engaged in a farm and the linen manufacture; and about 1760 appears to have received a
place from the duke of Bedford, at that time lord lieutenant of Ireland. His acquaintance with Mrs. Griffith was
accidental, and commenced on his parr, to use his own
phrase, “as an act of gallantry
” but rinding “no probability of success,
” a strange declaration and being
enafrioured with her writings, conversation, and character, became, at last, a real and honourable lover, but declined
matrimony for several years, as she had no fortune, and his
expectations from his father were much larger than they
were likely to turn out. At length, however, they married,
about the year 1752; and their first publication was this
correspondence, published by subscription, and not very
successful with any class of readers, not even the sentimentalists, for whom it was chiefly calculated. Some of
the letters, however, are of a superior cast, and contain
many sensible remarks on books, men, and manners. Their
next publication, which was also written in conjunction,
was “Two Novels, in Letters, 4 vols. the first and second,
entitled Delicate Distress, by Frances the third and fourth,
entitled the Gordian Knot, by Henry,
” The Triumvirate; or the authentic Memoirs of A. B. and C.
” 2 vols. 12mo, a novel of so Joose a
kind, that even his wife could not venture to recommend it
to the fair sex, and yet adds her opinion that “every gentleman will read it with pleasure, and I trust without any
injury to his morals.
” Of Mr. Griffith’s performances we
hear no more, nor have been able to ascertain the time of
his death. Mrs. Griffith’s other novels were “Lady Barton,
” and “Juliana HarJey.
” She also wrote some dramas
which had various success, but none of them have preserved their station on the stage. One of her most agreeable publications svas “The Morality of Shakspeare’s
Drama illustrated,
” The Adventures of Pierre Viaud,
” and the
“Letters of Ninon de L'Enclos,
” c. She died Jan. 3,
1793, at Millecenr, in the county of Kildare. She was unquestionably a woman of considerable literary talents, but
does not appear to have found in her lover and husband
the judgment which could give them a proper direction.
Nor did he contribute much to bar happiness in his latter
days. He had long accustomed himself to the cant of sentiment, which is too frequently mistaken for genuine moral
feeling. When in his grand climacteric, he seduced a girl
of fortune and consequence, with whom he lived the reminder of his days. The libehine notions in his “
Triumvirate
” appear to have been more predominant
sense he affected to entertain of pure morals in his “Letters.
”
n TottelPs edition of lord Surrey’s Poems (reprinted in the late edition of the English poets). As a writer of verses in rhyme, Mr. Warton thinks that Grimbold yields to
, a poet of considerable rank in his time, was a native
of Huntingdonshire, and received the first part of his academical education at Christ’s college in Cambridge, where
he became B. A. in 1539 or 1540. Removing to Oxford
in 1542, he was elected fellow of Merton college; but,
about 1547, having opened a rhetorical lecture in the refectory of Christ church, then newly founded, he was
transplanted to that society, which gave the greatest encouragement to such students as were distinguished for their
proficiency in criticism and philology. The same year
he wrote a Latin tragedy, which probably was acted in the
college, entitled “Archipropheta, sive Joannes Baptista,
”
dedicated to the dean, Richard Cox, and printed Colon.
1548, 8vo. In 1548, he explained all the four books of
Virgil’s Georgics in a regular prose Latin paraphrase, in
the public hall of his college, which was printed at London in 1591, 8vo. He wrote also explanatory commentaries, or lectures, on the <c Andria“of Terence, the Epistles of Horace, and many pieces of Cicero, perhaps for the
same auditory. He translated Tully’s Offices into English,
which he dedicated to the learned Thirlby, bishop of Ely,
printed at London, 1553, 8vo, and reprinted in 1574 and
1596. He also made translations from some of the Greek
classics; but these, Mr. Warton thinks, were never published; among others was the
” Cyropaedia.“Bale mentions some plays and poems, but not with sufficient precision to enable us to know whether they were in Latin or
English. It is allowed, however, that he was the second
English poet after lord Surrey who wrote in blank verse,
and added to Surrey’s style new strength, elegance, and
modulation. In the disposition and conduct of his cadences, says our poetical historian, he often approaches to
the legitimate structure of the improved blank verse, although he is not quite free from those dissonancies and asperities, which in his time adhered to the general character
and state of English diction. Both Mr. Warton and Mr.
Ellis have given specimens of his poetry from
” The
Songes written by N. G.“annexed to the
” Songes and
Soanettes of uncertain Auctours“in TottelPs edition of
lord Surrey’s Poems (reprinted in the late edition of the English poets). As a writer of verses in rhyme, Mr. Warton thinks that Grimbold yields to none of his contemporaries, for a masterly choice of chaste expression, and the
concise elegancies of didactic versification; and adds that
some of the couplets in his
” Praise of Measure-keeping,“or moderation, have all the smartness which mark the modern style of sententious poetry, and would have done honour to Pope’s ethic epistles. It is supposed that he died
about 1563. Wood and Tanner, and after them, Warton,
are decidedly of opinion that he is the same person, called
by Strype
” one Grimbold," who was chaplain to bishop
Ridley, and who was employed by that prelate while in
prison, to translate into English Laurentius Valla’s book
against the fiction of Constantine’s Donation, with some
other popular Latin pieces against the papists. In Mary’s
reign, it is said that he was imprisoned for heresy, and
saved his life by recantation. This may be true of the
Grimbold mentioned by Strype, but we doubt whether he
be the same with our poet, who is mentioned in high terms
by Bale, on account of his zeal for the reformed doctrines,
without a syllable of his apostacy, which Bale must have
known, and would not have concealed.
, a French antiquary and polite writer, was born at Troyes Nov. 18, 1718, and was educated in the profession
, a French antiquary and polite writer, was born at Troyes Nov. 18, 1718, and was
educated in the profession of the law, but a decided turn
for literary pursuits interrupted his legal studies, and induced him, in search of knowledge, to travel twice into
Italy, twice into England, and once into Holland, besides
passing a considerable part of every year at Paris, where
he was received into the best company, but would never
settle. His disposition appears to have been amiable and
liberal, as when yet a youth he gave up a legacy of 40,000
livres in favour of his sister. At his own expence, too, he
undertook to embellish the saloon of the town house of his
native city, Troyes, with marble busts of the eminent
natives of that city, executed by Vasse, the king’s sculptor; and the first put up were those of Pithou, le Comte,
Passerat, Girardon, and Mignard. He died in that city,
Nov. 4, 1785, being then an associate of the academy of
inscriptions and belles lettres, and a member of our royal
society. His principal works are, 1. “Recherches pour
Fhistoire du Droit Francois,
” Paris, Vie de Pithou,
” ibid. Observations de deux gentil-hommes Stiedou
sur l'Italie,
” Londres,
” Essais historiques sur la
Champagne.
” 6. “Ephemerides Troyennes,
” continued
for several years, and containing papers relative to the
history of Troyes. He had also a part in the “Memoires
de Pacademie de Troyes,
” and in the last translation of
Davila; and was an useful contributor to the “Journal Encyclopedique,
” from Dictionnaire Historique.
” A Life, written by himself, and some
posthumous pieces, have been lately published,
upies twenty-five closely printed pages in quarto. It is thought Grosseteste was the most voluminous writer of any Englishman, at least wrote more tracts, and on a greater
For a list of his works, both published, which are but
few, and unpublished, we must necessarily refer to Dr.
Pegge-'s elaborate life of our prelate, where it occupies
twenty-five closely printed pages in quarto. It is thought
Grosseteste was the most voluminous writer of any
Englishman, at least wrote more tracts, and on a greater variety
of subjects, than any one. Archbishop Williams had once
an intention of collecting them for publication; but as Dr.
Pegge has very justly remarked, it is not much to be regretted that the design was not executed,when we consider the superior light and knowledge of our times, and
how much better every thing is understood. His style is
copious and verbose, and bordering frequently upon turgidity, abounding with uncouth words, which, though
formed analogically, are yet new, and not very pleasing to
a reader of the classics; but he expresses himself in general very intelligibly, particularly in his books “De
Sphaera
” and “De Cessatione Legalium.
” He proceeds
also in his compositions very methodically and perspicuously.
es he made to supply those of Cicero that were lost have been thought very happy ‘imitations of that writer’s style. In the midst of these profound studies, this extraordinary
Grotius, having chosen the law for his profession, had
taken an opportunity before he left France, to obtain a
doctor’s degree in that faculty; and upon his return he
attended the law-courts, and pleaded his first cause at
Delft with universal applause, though he was scarcely seventeen; and he maintained the same reputation as lung
as he continued at the bar. This employment, however,
not filling up his whole time, he found leisure to publish
the same year, 1599, another work, which discovered as
much knowledge of the abstract sciences in particular as
the former did of his learning in general. Stevin, mathematician to prince Maurice of Nassau, composed a small
treatise for the instruction of pilots in finding a ship’s place
at sea; in which he drew up a table of the variations of the
needle, according to the observations of Plancius, a celebrated geographer, and added directions how to use it.
Grotius translated into Latin this work, which prince Maurice had recommended to the college of admiralty, to be
studied by all officers of the navy; and, because it might
be equally useful to Venice, he dedicated his translation
to that republic. In 1600, he published his “of Aratus,
” which discovers a great knowledge in physics,
and especially astronomy. The corrections he made in
the Greek are esteemed very judicious: the notes shew
that he had reviewed several of the rabhies, and had some
knowledge of the Arabic tongue; and the verses he made
to supply those of Cicero that were lost have been thought
very happy ‘imitations of that writer’s style. In the midst
of these profound studies, this extraordinary young man
found time to cultivate the muses, and with such success,
that he was esteemed one of the best Latin poets in Europe.
The prosopopoeia, in which he makes the city of Ostend
speak, after having been three years besieged by the Spaniards, was reckoned a masterpiece, and was translated
intoJFrench by Du Vae’r, Rapin, Pasquier, and Malherbe;
and Casanbon turned it into Greek. Neither did Grotius
content himself with writing small pieces of verse; he rose
to tragedy, of which he produced three specimens; the
first, called “Adamus Exul,
” was printed in Leyden, in
Christus patiens,
” his
second tragedy, was printed at Leyden in Sophornphanceus,
” which, in the language of Egypt, signifies the
Saviour of the World; he finished this in 1633, and the
following year, at Hamburgh.
e of lord Bacon and Peiresc that he undertook this arduous task. “Few works,” says an elegant modern writer, “were more celebrated than that of Grotius in his own days,
It seems universally allowed that Grotius’s treatise “On
the Truth of Christianity
” is the most valuable of his theological writings. This has been translated into almost every
European, and into some of the Eastern languages, and is
still used at schools and universities as a text book. In
English we have at least five translations of it. But the
work on which his fame principally rests is his treatise “De
Jure Belli ac Pacis,
” in which he first reduced the law of
nations to a system. It wns by the advice of lord Bacon
and Peiresc that he undertook this arduous task. “Few
works,
” says an elegant modern writer, “were more celebrated than that of Grotius in his own days, and in the
age which succeeded. It has, however, been the fashion
of the last half century to depreciate his work as a shapeless
compilation, in which reason lies buried under a mass of
authorities and quotations. This fashion originated among
French wits and declaimers, and it has been, I know not
for what reason, adopted, though with far greater moderation and decency, by some respectable writers among ourselves. As to those who first used this language, the most
candid supposition that we can make with respect to them
is, that they never read the work; for, if they had not
been deterred from the perusal of it by such a formidable
display of Greek characters, they must soon have discovered that Grotius never quotes on any subject till he has
first appealed to some principles, and often, in my humble
opinion, though not always, to the soundest and most rational principles.
, a French writer who attained some share of reputation among the encyclopedists,
, a French
writer who attained some share of reputation among the
encyclopedists, was born at Paris June 6, 1738, in which
city he died Feb. 26, 1812. His countrymen have as yels
given us very little of his history, except that he was,
either by talents or interest, advanced to be a member of
the academies of Marseilles and Lyons, an associate of
the Frencij institute, and a member of that of Auxerre.
He was intimately connected with Beaumarehais, whom
he often assisted with his pen, and passed for his secretary.
In political sentiments he was a disciple of Rousseau, and
eagerly promoted those opinions which led to the revolution. Besides three tragedies of no great merit, he published, i. “Graves observations stir les bonnes moeurs,
”
in poetical tales, published under the name of Frere Prul,
Paris> 1777. 2. “Discours,
” likewise in verse, o h
abolition of slavery, Paris, 1781, in which he compli acnti
Henry IV. as
, an elegant French writer, was born in 1641, at Paris, and admitted advocate to the parliament
, an elegant French writer, was
born in 1641, at Paris, and admitted advocate to the parliament in that city, and although he seldom pleaded, was
much consulted as a chamber counsel, in which rank he
met with great success. He died April 22, 1688, at Paris.
His principal works are, 1. “Les sept Sages de la Grcce.
”
2. “Entretiens sur l'Eloquence de la Chaire et du Barreau.
” 3. “Le Parnassus reforme.
” 4. “La Guerre des
Auteurs.
” 5. “Le Journal du Palais,
” a well-digested
collection of the decrees of parliament, in the compilation
of which he was assisted by Claude Blondeau, 1755, 2 vols.
folio. 6. La Carte de'la Cour.“7.
” La Promenade
de St. Cloud, ou Dialogues sur les Auteurs,“a small work,
but elegantly written, and full of wit; which the abbe
”
Joly, chanter of the chapel aux Riches at Dijon, having
copied at the abbe L'Avocat’s house from the original
ms. published without the abbe’s knowledge in the “Mcnioires historiques de Bruys.
” M. Gueret published an
edition of “Le Prester,
” “Arrets notable du parlement,
”
with learned notes and additions, Memoire sur l'Immunite du
Clerge*,
” Sur les Refus des Sacremens,
”
Sur le Droit qu'ont les Cures de commettre leur Vicaires, et les Confesseurs, dans leur Paroisses,
”
, a Spanish writer, was born in the province of Alaba, towards the end of the fifteenth
, a Spanish writer, was born
in the province of Alaba, towards the end of the fifteenth
century, and was brought up at court. After the death
of Isabella, queen of Castile, he turned Franciscan monk,
but afterwards having made himself known at court, became preacher and historiographer to Charles V. He was
much admired for his politeness, eloquence, and great parts,
but his preaching and conversation proved very superior to
his writing. His style was found to be extravagantly figurative, and full of antitheses, but this was trifling, compared
with his notions of writing history, and the liberty he took to,
falsify whatever he pleased, and to advance as matter of fact
the inventions of his own brain, and when censured for it,
alleged by way of excuse, that no history, excepting the
Holy Scripture, is certain enough to be credited. Being
in the emperor’s retinue he had an opportunity of visiting a
great part of Europe, an4 was made bishop of Guadix, in
the kingdom of Granada, and then bishop of Mondonedo,
in Galicia. He died in 1544, or 1548. He was the author
of several works in Spanish, the most famous of which is
his “Dial of Princes, or Life of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus,
” which has been translated into all the languages of
Europe. Vossius says it “has nothing in it of Antoninus,
but is all a fiction, and the genuine offspring of Guevara
himself, who scandalously imposes upon the reader, plainly
against the duty of an honest man, but especially of a
bishop. In the mean time he has many things not unuseful nor unpleasant, especially to a prince, whence it is
entitled The Dial of Princes’.
” Those who may be supposed to have spoken of Guevara in the most indulgent
manner, have yet been forced to set him in a most scandalous light. “It deserves our pity rather than our censure,
” says Nicolas Antonio, “that a writer of such fame
should think himself at liberty to forge ancient facts, and
to play with the history of the world, as with Æsop’s Fables or Lucian’s Monstrous Stories.
” Among Guevara’s
works must be ranked his “Epistles,
” with which some
have been so charmed, that they have not scrupled to call
them Golden Epistles; but Montaigne says, “Whoever
gave them this title, had a very different opinion of them
from what I have, and perhaps saw more in them than I
do.
” Bayle had such a contempt for Guevara as an author, as to speak with surprize of “the eagerness of
foreigners in translating some of his works into several languages.
” Mr. Hay ley, however, remarks, that if we may
judge of his personal character from his “Letters,
” he appears to have been an amiable man. In one he reproves
a female relation, with good nature, for intemperate sorrow on the death of a little dog and in another he draws
the character of a true friend, with great energy of sentiment and expression. One of Guevara’s sayings, that
heaven is filled with those that have done good works, and
hell with those that have resolved to do them," has been,
under a different form of expression, ascribed to other
writers.
, a French writer on military affairs, was born at Montauban, Nov. 12, 1743. His
, a French
writer on military affairs, was born at Montauban, Nov.
12, 1743. His father, who was a very intelligent officer,
ook great pains in forming his son for the army, in which,
Design he so perfectly succeeded, that at the school at
which young Guibert was placed, his name was honourably quoted as an example to others, long after he left it.
At the age of thirteen he followed his father to the field,
and served six campaigns in the German war; three as a
captain in the regiment d'Auvergne, and the three other
upon the staff, where he gave frequent proofs of his judgment and spirit. After the peace in 1763, he assiduously
devoted himself to the study of the theory of his profession
till the expedition to Corsica took place, where he obtained
the rank of colonel for his services in the action of Ponte
Nuovo, and at the end of the campaign was rewarded with
the cross of St. Louis. In 1770, two years after his return to France, he published his celebrated “Essai general de Tactique,
” a work which though known and admired over all Europe, drew upon its author the envy too
often attendant on merit, which embittered a great part
of his days. But his pride disdaining to answer his enemies, as much as his mild spirit disliked controversy, he
therefore determined to travel, and leave his work to answer
for itself. So says his panegyrist, without informing us
that his unsparing censures and conceited style had proyoked the hostilities of those enemies.
anical chair at Padua, and died in 1587 or 1589. Haller characterizes him as a learned but desultory writer, an acrimonious critic, even of the excellent Conrad Gesner,
, a Prussian botanist, whose
proper name was Wieland, was born at Koenigsberg, and
after several extensive journeys into Palestine, Egypt,
Africa, and Greece, was carried prisoner into Barbary;
but being redeemed by the celebrated Fallopius, afterwards succeeded him in the botanical chair at Padua, and
died in 1587 or 1589. Haller characterizes him as a
learned but desultory writer, an acrimonious critic, even
of the excellent Conrad Gesner, but especially of Matthiolus, whom he violently hated. He had little or no merit
as a practical botanist, nor did he scarcely attempt to describe or define any plants. He published a learned essay
on the “Papyrus,
” in quarto, at Venice, in Synonyma Piantarum,
” one of the earliest works of its kind, appeared long
after his death, in 1608, at Franc fort, in octavo.
, a heraldic writer, was son of John Guillim of Westburg in Gloucestershire, but
, a heraldic writer, was son of John
Guillim of Westburg in Gloucestershire, but born in Herefordshire about 1565. He was sent to a grammar school
at Oxford, and apparently entered a student of Brazen*
nose college in 1581. Having completed his pursuit of literature in the university, he returned to Minsterworth in
Gloucestershire; and had been there only a short space,
when he was called to London, and made a member of the society of the college of arms, by the name of Portsmouth; and
hence promoted to the honours of rouge-croix pursuivant of
arms in ordinary in 1617 in which post he continued till his
death, which happened May 7, 1621. His claim to a place
in this work arises from the concern he had in a work entitled “The display of Heraldry,
” published by him in
, called Quintus Icilius, an able writer on military tactics, was born at Magdeburg, and studied at the
, called Quintus
Icilius, an able writer on military tactics, was born at
Magdeburg, and studied at the universities of Halle, Marpurg, and Leyden, where he applied to the classics, theology, and the oriental languages. He first carried arm*
in the service of the United Provinces, and while thus
einployed found leisure to prepare materials for his “Memoirs
Militaires sur les Grecs et les Remains,
” which induced
him to obtain permission to visit England, where he re^mained a year. The work was at length published, in two
volumes quarto, 1757, received with much approbation, and
went through five editions in France and Holland. In the
same year he entered as a volunteer in the allied army,
acquired the esteem of Ferdinand of Brunswick, and was
recommended to the notice of Frederic II. of Prussia, who
kept him near his person, often conversed with him on the
art of war, and on account of his great knowledge on this
subject, gave him the name of Quintus Icilius, the com*
mander of Caesar’s tenth legion, when he appointed him
to the command of a regiment formed out of the refuse of
all nations, during the heat of the war. At the general
peace he was one of the few persons whom his majesty admitted into his convivial parties at Potsdam, and to whom
he gave the freest access to his library and coins, which
latter Guise-hard increased so much, that he valued both
at the sum of a hundred thousand dollars. The king, however, in his latter days, treated him with much disrespect,
and took every opportunity to mortify him in the presence
of others. Giiiscliard died May 13, 1775. Frederic purchased his library of his heirs for the sum of 12,000 dollars.
Besides the work already mentioned, he was author of a
very useful work to military or classical students, entitled
“Memoires Critiques et Historiques sur plusieurs Points
d'Antiquites Militaires,
” in 4 vols. Hvo. Gibbon, who
read his “Military Memoirs
” with great attention, bestows
high encomiums on him, and considers him as very superior
to Folard, whom however Guischard affected too much to
undervalue.
, a miscellaneous writer and compiler, whose name is now chiefly preserved by a geographical
, a miscellaneous writer and compiler, whose name is now chiefly preserved by a geographical grammar, which it is said he did not write, was a
gentleman descended from an ancient family, being the
representative of the Guthries of Haukerton, in the county
of Angus, Scotland. He was born at Brichen in that
county in 1708, and educated at King’s college, Aberdeen,
where he took his degrees, and followed the profession of
a schoolmaster. He is said to have removed to London, in
consequence of a love-affair, which created some disturbance in his family; others report that having but a small
patrimony, and being an adherent of the unfortunate house
of Stuart, he could not accept of any office in the state;
he came therefore to London, and employed his talents
and learning as, what he himself calls, “an author by profession.
” His talents and learning were not of the inferior
kind, when he chose to employ them leisurely; but he
wrote hastily, and often in need, and seems to have cared
little for his reputation, by lending his name frequently
where he did not contribute with his pen. Among his first
employments was that of compiling the parliamentary debates for the Gentleman’s Magazine, before Dr, Johnson had
undertook that business; for this purpose Guthrie sometimes
attended the house, but more frequently had to depend on
very slight information. Connecting himself terwards
with the booksellers, he compiled a variety of work among
which are “A History of the English Peerage,
” “History of the World,
” 12 vols. 8vo, “A History of England,
”
“History of Scotland,
” 10 vols. 8vo, and the well-known
“Geographical Grammar,
” said to have been really compiled by Knox the bookseller. Besides these, he translated
“Quintilian,
” 3 vols. 8vo, “Cicero’s Offices,
” 8vo, and
“Cicero’s Epistles to Atticus,
” 2 vols. 12mo. Of his original compositions we have heard only of a beautiful poem,
“The Eagle and Robin Red-breast,
” in the collection of
poems called the “Union,
” where, however, it is said to
be written by Archibald Scott, before 1600; “The Friends,
a sentimental history,
” Remarks
on English Tragedy,
” a pamphlet. He was engaged, however, in many political papers and pamphlets, to which his
name did not appear; and in 1745-6, received a pension
of 200l. from government, for the services of his pen, which
was continued during his life. In 1762 he renewed the
offer of his services to the minister of the day, and they
probably were accepted. He had the pen of a ready writer,
and his periodical essays were perhaps his best. Much
was expected from his “Peerage,
” in which he was assisted
by Mr. Ralph Bigland, each individual article being submitted to the inspection of the representative of the noble
family treated of; yet, notwithstanding all this care, the
work abounds with errors, contradictions, and absurdities
His “History of England
” merits greater praise, and had
at least the honour of irritating Horace Wai pole to a gross
abuse of Guthrie, because he had anticipated some of
Walpole’s opinions concerning Richard III. Guthrie wrote
at that time in the Critical Review, and pointed out his
own discoveries. Boswell informs us, that Dr. Johnson
esteemed Guthrie enough to wish that his life should be
written. This, however, was neglected when the means
of information were attainable. He died March I', 177O,
and was interred in Marybone burial-ground, with a monument and inscription against the east wall.
, an agreeable French writer, was born at Marseilles in 1720, and became a merchant of d
, an agreeable French writer,
was born at Marseilles in 1720, and became a merchant of
distinguished probity. Having often had occasion to visit
Constantinople, Smyrna, &c. in the course of business, he
conceived the idea of comparing the ancient and modern
Greeks, and endeavouring to trace among the latter what
was yet to be found of the grandeur, spirit, and institutions
of their ancestors. For this purpose he made frequent excursions from Constantinople, where he lived under the
immediate protection of the king of France, into Greece,
with Homer in his hand; and how extensive and minute
his observations were, appeared in his “Voyage Litteraire
de la Grece,
” on which his fame chiefly rests, and which
was first published in 1771, 2 vols. 12mo; in 1783, 4 vols.
8vo. He was taking another voyage in order to correct
and enlarge a new edition of this work, when he died at
Zante in 1799. This work procured him a very considerable name in the literary wprld; but in whatever reputation it was held in Europe, he afforded such satisfaction to
the subjects of his inquiry) that the modern Greeks, to testify to him their gratitude for his having so well defended
them from their detractors, unanimously offered him the
diploma of citizen of Athens; reviving^ in his favour, an
ancient ceremony fallen into desuetude for a great many
centuries. Some years before, he had received a similar
compliment from a northern power. This true philosopher,
without ceasing to serve his country, knew how to extend
his beneficent views beyond the limits of his country. The
“Voyage Litteraire de la Grece,
” however, is the chief
work of C. Guys. His other pieces are, a “Relation Abrege*e de ses Voyages en Italic et dans le Nord;
” and a translation in verse of the elegies of Tibullus, an essay upon the
antiquities of Marseilles his native place, and the eloge of
Duguay-Trouin. A translation of his Journey was published
in English in 1772, 3 vols. 12mo, with the improper title
of a “Sentimental Journey.
”
d discipline, which certainly implies a change or intended change of opinion, unless we allow to the writer of his life in the Biographia Britannica, that “a true son of
About 1636 he wrote his tract on “Schism
” for the use
of his friend Chilling-worth, in which, as already noticed,
he expresses his sentiments on liturgies, forms of worship,
&c. in exact conformity with those who are for dispensing
with all obligations of the kind in established churches.
Being informed that archbishop Laud was displeased with
it, he drew up a vindication of himself in a letter addressed
to his grace, who in 1638 sent for him to Lambeth, and
after a conference of several hours, appears to have been
reconciled to him. Of this conference we have a curious
account by Dr. Heylin, in his “Cyprianus Anglicus,
”
some particulars of which have been eagerly contested by
Des Maizeaux, in his Life of Hales. What seems most
clear is, that Hales made some kind of declaration to the^
archbishop, purporting that he was a true son of the church
of England, both in doctrine and discipline, which certainly implies a change or intended change of opinion,
unless we allow to the writer of his life in the Biographia
Britannica, that “a true son of the church,
” or an “or* Such is the story given by all his 87 and 92, we shall see more reasor.
biographers; but if we consult his to think that he was influenced by the
Letters in the
” Golden Remains,“p. opinions of Martinius.
thodox son of the church,
” were phrases used, not in opn ^ition to heretics, but to puritans. In either way, the
archbishop appears to have been satisfied, and informed
Mr. liuies that he might have any preferment he pleased.
Hales at this time modestly declined the offer, but the
year following was presented by the archbishop at a public
dinner, with a canonry of Windsor, in which he was installed June 27, 1639. With respect to the letter above-r
ttientioned, which he wrote to the archbishop, it is said to
have been first published by Dr. Hare in the seventh edition of his pampnlet entitled “Difficulties and Discouragements which attend the study of the Scriptures in the way
of private judgment.
” Des Maizeaux says it was probably
found among the papers of archbishop Laud, which after
the restoration were taken from Prynne; but this conjecture
is erroneous; it was found in the house of Mrs. Powney,
where Mr. Hales died, and there are even some reasons for
doubting whether it was ever sent to the archbishop, although this is certainly not improbable. The original is at
Eton, and appeared in print before it fell into the hands
of Dr. Hare, the author of “Difficulties and Discouragements,
” if indeed Dr. Hare was that author, which has
been questioned.
ters seem agreed. Whatever his errors, he was esteemed a good man by those who knew him, and an able writer, as appears by the testimonies of lord Clarendon, lord Say and
He died May 19, 1656, aged seventy-two, and was buried, according to his own desire, in Eton church-yard,
where a monument was erected over his grave by Mr. Peter
Curwen. In person, he was of an ingenuous and open
countenance, sanguine, cheerful, and vivacious; his body
was well proportioned, and his motion quick and sprightly.
As to the excellence of his character, all writers seem
agreed. Whatever his errors, he was esteemed a good
man by those who knew him, and an able writer, as appears by the testimonies of lord Clarendon, lord Say and
Sele, Dr. Pearson, bishop of Chester, Dr. Heylin, Andrew Marvel, Wood, Sailing-fleet, and others, quoted by
sir David Dalrymple lord Hailes, in his fine edition of
Hales’s works, and in the Biographia Britannica. “They,
”
says lord Hailes, “who are acquainted with the literary
and political history of England, will perceive that the
leading men of all parties, however different and discordant,
have, with a wonderful unanimity, concurred in praise of
the virtues and abilities of the ever memorable Mr. John
Hales of Eton.
”
, a Roman catholic writer, was educated at Christ’s college, Cambridge, which his principles
, a Roman catholic writer, was educated at Christ’s college, Cambridge, which his principles
obliged him to leave about 1572. He then went to Doway,
and thence to Italy, where he resumed his studies and took
his degree of D. D. Returning afterwards to Doway, he
obtained a professorship and some preferment. He died
in 1604-. He wrote some books of controversy; but is
chiefly worthy of notice now, as the author of that “Life
of bishop Fisher
” which goes under the name of Bailey.
He left it in manuscript at his death, and it was long
preserved as a choice rarity in the library of the English Benedictines at Dieuward in Lorraine; but several transcripts
getting abroad, one fell into the hands of Thomas Bailey,
D. D. a son of Bailey, or Bayly, bishop of Bangor. This
Dr. Bailey, who was a Roman catholic, sold it to a bookseller, by whom it was printed at London in 1655, under
the editor’s name. In 1739 another edition was published
at London, 12mo, edited by Coxeter. It is valued as a
narrative of considerable interest and authenticity.
he celebration of the Lord’s Supper,” 1722. But the work which proves his ability as a controversial writer, and the great extent of his reading, although it is less known
, a pious Scotch divine, and
professor of divinity in the university of St. Andrew’s, was
born at Duplin in the parish of Aberdalgy, near Perth,
Dec. 25, 1674. His father had been minister of that
parish, from which he was ejected after the restoration, for
nonconformity. He died in 1682, and as the country was
still unsafe for those who professed the presbyterian religion, his mother went over to Holland with her son, then
about eight years old. During their stay there, he was
educated at Erasmus’s school, and made great proficiency
in classical literature. On his return to Scotland in 1687,
he resumed his studies, and was also sent to the university.
When he had finished his philosophical course there, he
entered upon the study of divinity; and being, in June
1699, licensed to preach, he was in May 1700, appointed
minister of the parish of Ceres, in which he performed the
part of a zealous and pious pastor; but his labours proving
too many for his health, the latter became gradually impaired. In April 1710, he was appointed by patent from
queen Anne, professor of divinity in the college of St.
Leonard at St. Andrew’s, through the mediation of the
synod of Fife. On this occasion he entered on his office
an inaugural oration, in qua, post exhibitam
rationem suscepti muneris, examinatur schedula nupera, cui
titulus ' Epistola Archimedis ad Regem Gelonem Albae
Graecae reperta anno serae Christianas 1688, A. Pitcarnio,
M. D. ut vulgo creditur, auctoreV Pitcairn’s reputation
as a deist was at that time very common in Scotland, however justly he may have deserved it; and Mr. Halyburton’s
attention had been much called to the subject of deism as
revived in the preceding century. He did not, however,
enjoy his professorship long, dying Sept. 23, 1712, aged
only thirty-eight. It does not appear that he published
any thing in his life-time; but soon after his death two
works were published, which still preserve his memory in
Scotland. 1. “The Great Concern of Salvation,
” Ten Sermons preached before and after the
celebration of the Lord’s Supper,
” Natural Religion insufficient; and
Revealed necessary to man’s happiness,
” Edinburgh, whosoever
carefully examines what this learned and pious author has
offered on these several heads, will find many excellent
things; though the narrowness of his notions in some points
has prejudiced some persons against his work, and hindered them from regarding and considering it so much as
it deserves.
”
, an eminent French writer on rural ceconomy and vegetable physiology, was born at Paris
, an eminent French writer on rural ceconomy and vegetable physiology, was born at Paris in 1700. Being a member of
the academy of sciences, he published in the memoirs of
that body in 1728, “his first ceconomical essay, on a kind of
parasitical fungus which infests the roots of the cultivated
saffron, and is fatal to them. In the same year he published in that work his first treatise on a much more important subject, the propagation of trees by grafting,
where he hazarded some physiological opinions, and entered on a course of experiment and observation, subsequently pursued to an extent which has been of great service to science, and has justly rendered his name famous.
He continued from time to time to communicate to the
academy various papers relative to these matters. In 1750
he began to publish in 12mo, his
” Traite de la Culture
des Terres,“which was continued in following years till
1761, when the sixth volume came out. Our English
writer Tull was his first guide, but he subsequently profited widely by the experience of himself and of various
other people, aided by his physiological sagacity, of which
he made a far more cautious use than is general with farming philosophers, and deserves to be reckoned the father
of intelligent agriculture in France. His
” Elements d'Agriculture," in 2 vols. 12mo, published in 1764, may be considered as a sequel to the preceding work. These two
volumes have been translated into German, Spanish, and
English. Du. Hamel wrote also on the cultivation and preparation of Madder, in 1757, 4to.
ent woods, intermixed with physiological remarks, as in the preceding performances of this excellent writer, who published also in 1764, upon the art of refining sugar,
In 1760 he published another valuable practical volume
in 4to, with plates, entitled “Des Semis et Plantations
des Arbres, et de leur Culture.
” This had an especial
view to the great national object of improving the forests
of the kingdom, highly important in a country where so
much wood is continually used for fuel, and so little, in
proportion to some other countries, naturally produced.
The author laudably takes advantage of the panic with
which his countrymen are every now and then seized, of
a scarcity of fuel, to excite their attention to the means he
would recommend for the prevention of so dreadful an
evil, and his book is a mine of practical information for
the woodman, the planter, and the gardener, of the first
authority and value. The same subject is followed up in
2 vols. 4to, published in 1764, under the title of “De
l'exploitation des Bois, ou moyen de tirer parti des taillis
demi futayes et hautes futayes;
” and in Du transport, de la conservation,
et de la force du Bois,
” full of practical information relative to the properties, qualities, and uses of different
woods, intermixed with physiological remarks, as in the
preceding performances of this excellent writer, who published also in 1764, upon the art of refining sugar, in folio,
and in 1765, on the preservation of grain, in 12mo. His
most splendid work was printed at Paris in 1768, in 2 vols.
4to, with fine coloured plates. Its title is “Traite des
Arbres fruitiers.
” In this the varieties of fruit-trees are elegantly distinguished by figures and descriptions, and their
treatment illustrated with the usual science of the author.
collection by all who knew him, Mr. Home (lord Kames) lived in the closest habits of friendship. The writer of these memoirs has heard him dwell with delight on the scenes
Among the revivers of his fame, professor Richardson,
and lord Woodhouslee, are entitled to the highest respect.
The latter, in his elaborate life of lord Kames, says, “With
the elegant and accomplished William Hamilton of Bangour, whose amiable manners were long remembered with
the tenderest recollection by all who knew him, Mr. Home
(lord Kames) lived in the closest habits of friendship. The
writer of these memoirs has heard him dwell with delight
on the scenes of their youthful days; and he has to regret,
that many an anecdote to which he listened with pleasure,
was not committed to a better record than a treacherous
memory. Hamilton’s mind is pictured in his verses. They
are the easy and careless effusions of an elegant, fancy and
a chastened taste; and the sentiments they convey are the
genuine feelings of a tender and susceptible heart, which
perpetually owned the dominion of some favourite mistress;
but whose passion generally evaporated in song, and made
no serious or permanent impression. His poems had an
additional charm to his contemporaries, from being commonly addressed to his familiar friends of either sex, by
name.
”
end, and the friends of Scottish genius, who have lately called the attention of the puhlic to this writer, have proved that he deserves a higher rank than has yet been
Some of Hamilton’s poems were first published at Glasgow in 1748, and afterwards reprinted, not only without
the author’s name, but without his consent, and even without his knowledge. He corrected, however, many errors
of that copy, and enlarged some of the poems, though he
did not live to make a new and complete publication. The
improvements he made were carefully inserted in the edition published at Edinburgh in 1760, with the addition of
many pieces taken from his original manuscripts. Since
that time, although they have been inserted in the new
edition of the English Poets, there has been no demand
for a separate edition. It would be of importance, but it
is seldom easy, to account for the various fates of poets.
Hamilton, if not of the first class, and in whom we find only
those secondary qualities which professor Richardson has
so ably pointed out in the “Lounger,
” surely excels some
whose works are better known and more current. The
neglect which he has experienced naay be partly attributed
to his political principles, and partly to the local interest
which his effusions excited, and to which they were long
confined. Verses of compliment and personal addresses
tnust have extraordinary merit, if they attract the notice of
distant strangers. Prejudice, however, is now at an end,
and the friends of Scottish genius, who have lately called
the attention of the puhlic to this writer, have proved that
he deserves a higher rank than has yet been assigned to
him. He is perhaps very unequal, and the blemishes in
his verse and diction to which professor Richardson has
alluded are frequent, yet it is no inconsiderable merit to
have been one of the first of his countrymen who cultivated the purity and harmony of the English language,
and exhibited a variety of composition and fertility of sentiment that are rarely to be found in the writings of those
whose poetical genius is of the second degree.
y a note in the last edition of the Letters of Winkelnian) were published in Naples in 1775; but the writer of this article has never been able to procure a sight of them,
We are informed in the abbe Winkelman’s Letters, that
the above-mentioned work was intended to be comprised
in four large folio volumes. Of these, the two former only
appeared at the stated time. The two latter volumes (as we are informed by a note in the last edition of the Letters of Winkelnian) were published in Naples in 1775; but the
writer of this article has never been able to procure a sight
of them, or even to gain the least information on the subject. The two former volumes were reduced to a smaller
size, and republished at Paris, by Mr. David, in 1787, in
five 8vo volumes. The adventurer D‘Hancarville, editor
of the work, as we are told by Winkelman, expected, by
that publication, to acquire a fortune of twenty thousand
pounds. It is not probable that he ever realized this expectation, but we know from D’Hancarville himself, that
Mr. Hamilton allowed him to reap the emolument which
might arise from the work. Of the particulars of which,
he himself says, that “long since Mr. Hamilton had taken
pleasure in collecting those precious monuments, and had
afterwards trusted them to him for publication, requiring
only some elegance in the execution; and the condition,
that the work should appear under the auspices of his Britannic majesty.
” “It answers no purpose to have of the
ancient vases that general and vague idea which is given
of them by the books of Caylus, or Montfaucon. There
are few antiquaries and scholars who have not entertained
a wish to see such a collection executed with care and
precision. They can now compare the present with that
of cardinal Gualtieri, reported by Montfaucon, and with
all the others which have hitherto appeared. Mr. Hamilton, justly apprehensive that the vases, already destined
for England, might be damaged in their way, has resolved
to have them engraved at Naples.
”
aving had another very honourable offer. The “Elegies” were published after his death; and while the writer’s name was remembered with fondness, they were read with a resolution
, well remembered as a man
esteemed and caressed by the elegant and great, was the
second son of Anthony Hammond mentioned above: he was
born about 1710, and educated at Westminster-school;
but it does not appear that he was of any university,
although Mr. Cole claims him for Cambridge, but without
specifying his college. When about eighteen, he was introduced to the earl of Chesterfield, and from a conformity of character, manners, and inclinations, soon became particularly attached to his lordship. He was equerry
to the prince of Wales, and seems to have come very early
into public notice, and to have been distinguished by those
whose patronage and friendship prejudiced mankind at that
time in favour of those on whom they were bestowed; for
he was the companion of Cobham, Lyttelton, and Chesterfield. He is said to have divided his life between pleasure
and books; in his retirement forgetting the town, and in
his gaiety losing the student. Of his literary hours all the
effects are exhibited in his memorable “Love Elegies,
”
which were written very early, and his “Prologue
” not
long before his death. In Elegies
” were
published after his death; and while the writer’s name was
remembered with fondness, they were read with a resolution to admire them. The recommendatory preface of the
editor, who was then believed, and is affirmed by Dr.
Maty, to be the earl of Chesterfield, raised strong prejudices in their favour; but Dr. Johnson is of opinion that
they have neither passion, nature, nor manners, and Dr.
Beattie was informed on very good authority that Hammond
was not in love when he wrote his “Elegies.
”
men in the nation, and a leading member in the long parliament. “The eyes of all men,” says the same writer, “were fixed upon him as their pater patrite, and the pilot
, of Hamden, in Buckinghamshire, a celebrated political character in the reign of Charles
I. was born at London in 1594. He was of as ancient
(Whitlocke says the ancientest) extraction as any gentleman in his county; and cousin-german to Oliver Cromwell, his father having married the protector’s aunt. In
1609 he was sent to Magdalen college in Oxford whence,
without taking any degree, be removed to the inns of
court, and made a considerable progress in the study of the
law. Sir Philip Warwick observes, that “he had great
knowledge both in scholarship and the law.
” In his entrance into the world, he is said to have indulged himself
in all the licence of sports, and exercises, and company,
such as were used by men of the most jovial conversation;
but afterwards to have retired to a more reserved and
austere society, preserving, however, his natural cheerfulness and vivacity. In the second parliament of king
Charles, which met at Westminster, February 1625-6, he
obtained a seat in the house of commons, as he also did in
two succeeding parliaments; but made no figure till 1636,
when he became universally known, by a solemn trial at
the king’s bench, on his refusing to pay the ship-money.
He carried himself, as Clarendon tells us, through this
whole suit with such singular temper and modesty, that he
obtained more credit and advantage by losing it, than the
king did service by gaining it. From this time he soon
grew to be one of the most popular men in the nation, and
a leading member in the long parliament. “The eyes of
all men,
” says the same writer, “were fixed upon him as
their pater patrite, and the pilot that must steer the vessel
through the tempests and rocks which threatened it.
”
After he had held the chief direction of his party in the
house of commons against the king, he took up arms in
the same cause, and was one of the first who opened the
war by an action at a place called Brill, a garrison of the
king’s, on the edge of Buckinghamshire, about five miles
from Oxford. He took the command of a regiment of foot
under the earl of Essex, and shewed such skill and bravery,
that, had he lived, he would; probably, soon have been
raised to the post of a general. But he was cut off early
by a mortal wound, which he received in a skirmish with
prince Rupert, at Chalgrove-field, in Oxfordshire, where,
it is generally reported, he was shot in the shoulder with a
brace of bullets, which broke the bone, June 18, 1643;
and, after suffering much pain and misery, he died the
24th, an event which affected his party nearly as much as
if their whole army had been defeated . “Many men
observed,
” says Clarendon, “that the field in which this
skirmish was, and upon which Hampden received his deathwound, namely, Chalgrove-field, was the same place in
which he had first executed the ordinance of the militia,
and engaged that county, in which his reputation was very
great, in this rebellion: and it was confessed by the prisoners that were taken that day, and acknowledged by all,
that upon the alarm that morning, after their quarters were
beaten up, he was exceeding solicitous to draw forces together to pursue the enemy; and, being a colonel of foot,
put himself amongst those horse as a volunteer, who were
first ready, and that, when the prince made a stand, all
the officers were of opinion to stay till their body came up,
and he alone persuaded and prevailed with them to advance: so violently did his fate carry him to pay the mulct
in the place where he had committed the transgression
about a year before. This was an observation made at that
time;
” but lord Clarendon does not adopt it as an opinion
of his own.
ductions of any artist. Every invention is clumsy in its beginning; and Shakspeare was not the first writer of plays, or Corelli the first composer of violin solos, sonatas,
As a composer, it would be affectation to attempt any
character of Handel after what Dr. Burney has given.
“That Handel was superior in the strength and boldness
of his style, the richness of his harmony, and complication
of parts, to every composer who has been most admired
for such excellencies, cannot be disputed; and while
fugue, contrivance, and a full score were more generallyreverenced than at present, he remained wholly unrivalled.
We know it has been said that Handel was not the original
3-nd immediate inventor of several species of music for which
his name has been celebrated; but with respect to originality, it is a term to which proper limits should be set
before it is applied to the productions of any artist. Every
invention is clumsy in its beginning; and Shakspeare was
not the first writer of plays, or Corelli the first composer
of violin solos, sonatas, and concertos, though those which
he produced were the best of his time; nor was Milton the
inventor of epic poetry. The scale, harmony, and cadence of music being settled, it is impossible for any composer to invent a genus of composition that is wholly and
rigorously new, any more than for a poet to form a language, idiom, and phraseology for himself. All that the
o-reatest and boldest musical inventor can do, is to avail
himself of the best effusions, combinations, and effects of
his predecessors; to arrange and apply them in a new
manner; and to add from his own source, whatever he can
draw, that is grand, graceful, gay, pathetic, or in any
other way pleasing. This Handel did in a most ample and
superior manner; being possessed in his middle age and
full vigour, of every refinement and perfection of his time;
uniting the depth and elaborate contrivance of his own
country with Italian elegance and facility; as he seems
while he resided south of the Alps, to have listened attentively in the church, theatre, and chamber, to the most
exquisite compositions and performers of every kind that
were then existing. We will not assert that his vocal meTodies were more polished and graceful than those of his
countryman and contemporary Hasse; or his recitatives or
musical declamation, superior to that of his rivals Buononcini and Porpora. But in his instrumental compositions
there is a vigour, a spirit, a variety, a learning, and invention,
superior to every other composer that can be named; and
in his organ fugues and organ playing, there is learning
always free from pedantry; and in his choruses a grandeur
and sublimity which we believe has never been equalled
since the invention of counterpoint.
”
, a distinguished statesman and polite writer, was born about 1676, and had his education at Westminster-school,
, a distinguished statesman and polite writer, was born about 1676, and had his education at Westminster-school, and Christ-church, Oxford. When he arrived at years of maturity, he was chosen knight of the shire for the county of Suffolk, and sat in parliament near thirty years, either as a representative for that county, or for Flintshire, or for the borough of Thetford. In this venerable assembly he was soon distinguished; and his powerful elocution and unbiassed integrity drew the attention of all parties. In 17 13 he was chosen speaker of the house of commons; which office, difficult at all times, but at that time more particularly, he discharged with becoming dignity. All other honours and emoluments he declined. Having withdrawn himself by degrees from public business, he spent the remainder of his life in an honourable retirement amongst his books and friends; and there prepared an elegant and correct edition of the works of Shakspeare. This he presented to the university of Oxford; and it was printed there 1744, in 6 vols. 4to, with elegant engravings, by Gravelot, at the expence of sir Thomas. He died at his seat in Suffolk, April 5, 1746.
itaph, given at length by Pits. He was undoubtedly a man of parts and learning, and not an inelegant writer. Humphrey, in his “Life of Jewel,” comparing himwith his adversary,
, a popish divine of considerable
note, and the antagonist of bishop Jewel, was born at
Comb-Martin in Devonshire, 1512. His school education
was first at Barhstaple, and afterwards at Winchester,
whence he was removed to New-college, Oxford, and after
two years’ probation, was chosen fellow there in 1536. In
1542, having completed his degrees in arts, he was chosen
Hebrew professor of the university by Henry VIII. and,
fcis religion probably kept pace with the king’s, but
Edward no sooner ascended the throne, than Harding became
a zealous protestant. He was afterwards chaplain to the
duke of Suffolk, father of Jane Grey, and had the honour
to instruct this young lady in the protestant religion; but,
on the accession of queen Mary, he immediately became
a confirmed papist, and was chaplain and confessor to Gardiner bishop of Winchester. There is a curious epistle
preserved by Fox, said to be written by lady Jane to Harding on his apostacy, which, Burnet observes, “is full of
Jife in the thought, and zeal in the expression.
” In 1554,
he proceeded D. D. at Oxford, and was the year after
made treasurer of the cathedral of Salisbury, as he had
been a little before prebendary of Winchester. When
Elizabeth came to the crown, being deprived of his preferment, he left the kingdom; and, having fixed his abode
at Louvain in Flanders, he became, says Wood, “the target of popery,
” in a warm controversy with bishop Jewel,
respecting ordination, against whom, between 1554 and
1567, he wrote seven pieces. He died at Louvain Sept.
16, 1572, and was buried in the church of St. Gertrude,
with an epitaph, given at length by Pits. He was undoubtedly a man of parts and learning, and not an inelegant writer. Humphrey, in his “Life of Jewel,
” comparing himwith his adversary, says, “in multis pares
sunt, & arnbo doctrinae & eloquentiae gloria praecellentes.
”
, a polite French writer, was born at Tours in 1686, and coming to Paris in 1704, devoted
, a polite French writer, was born
at Tours in 1686, and coming to Paris in 1704, devoted
his time to the study of the belles lettres, and at the same
time cultivated a critical knowledge of the Greek language
under Boivin and Massieu, professors in the royal college.
In 1711, he was admitted as a pupil into the academy of
inscriptions, became an associate in 1715, and a pensionary
in 172S. For their Memoirs he wrote a great many curious
and interesting papers, and his general knowledge and reputation procured him at length the office of keeper of the
library and antiquities in the royal cabinet. In 1730 he
was chosen a member of the French academy, and the
following year began his “Histoire de l'origine et des progres de la Rhetorique dans la Grece.
” He had published
twelve dissertations on this subject, when, in 1748, the king
honoured him with the appointment of preceptor in history
and geography to madame Victoire, one of the princesses,
and he afterwards taught other illustrious females of that
family. It was for their use that he wrote his “Histoire
Poetique,
” with two treatises, one on French poetry, and
the other on rhetoric, Paris, 1751, 3 vols. 12mo, and his
universal history, “Histoire Universelle,
” 18 vols. 12mo,
to which Linguet added two others. All his works are
valued for elegance of style and the accuracy of his researches, and his personal character was not less admired,
as a man of integrity whom a court-life had not spoiled,
and who preserved the dignity of the literary character
amidst the cabals arrd intrigues by which he was surrounded.
Hardion died at Paris in September 1766. His dissertations in the Memoirs of the academy of inscriptions display
a profound knowledge of classical antiquities.
, finding this piece likely to hinder preferment, he aimed to conceal his being the author. The same writer charges him with being strongly inclined to scepticism that
, an English bishop, was born in
London, and educated at Eton, whence he was admitted
of King’s college, Cambridge, in 1688, and took his degree of A. B. in 1692, and of A. M. 1696. He afterwards
became tutor in the college, and in that capacity superintended the education of the celebrated Anthony Collins,
who was fellow-commoner there. He had also the tuition
of the marquis of Blandford, only son of the illustrious
duke of Marlborough, who appointed him chaplain-general
to the army; but this promising young nobleman died in
1702, and was buried in King’s college chapel. The inscription on his monument is by our author. In 1708 Mr.
Hare took his degree of D. D. obtained the deanery of
Worcester, and in 1726 the deanery of St. Paul’s. In
Dec. 1727, he was consecrated bishop of St. Asaph, where
he sat about four years, and was translated, Nov. 25, 1731,
to the bishopric of Chichester, which he held with the
deanery of St. Paul’s to his death. He was dismissed from
being chaplain to George I. in 1718, by the strength of
party prejudices, in company with Dr. Moss and Dr. Sher-r
lock, persons of distinguished rank for parts and learning.
About the latter end of queen Anne’s reign he published
a remarkable pamphlet, entitled “The difficulties and
discouragements which attend the Study of the Scriptures,
in the way of private judgment;
” in order to shew, that
since such a study of the scriptures is an indispensable
duty, it concerns all Christian societies to remove, as much
as possible, those discouragements. This work was thought
to have such a direct tendency to promote scepticism, and
a loose way of thinking in matters of religious concern,
that the convocation judged it right to pass a severe censure
on it; and Whiston says, that, finding this piece likely to
hinder preferment, he aimed to conceal his being the author. The same writer charges him with being strongly
inclined to scepticism that he talked ludicrously of sacred
matters and that he would offer to lay wagers about the
fulfilling of scripture prophecies. The principal ground
for these invidious insinuations some suppose to be, that,
though he never denied the genuineness of the apostolical
constitutions (of which he procured for Whiston the collation of two Vienna Mss.), yet “he was not firm believer
enough, nor serious enough in Christianity, to hazard any
thing in this world for their reception.
” He published
many pieces against bishop Hoadly, in the Bangorian controversy; and also other learned works, which were collected after his death, and published in four volumes, 8yo.
2. An edition of “Terence,
” with notes, in 4to. 3. “The
Book of Psalms, in the Hebrew, put into the original poetical metre,
” 4to. In this last work he pretends to have
Discovered the Hebrew metre, which was supposed to be
irretrievably lost. But his hypothesis, though defended
by some, yet has been confuted by several learned men,
particularly by Dr. Lowth in his “Metrics Hareaue brevis
confutatio,
” annexed to his lectures “De Sacra Poesi Hebreeorum.
” He was yet more unfortunate in the abovementioned edition of Terence, which sunk under the reputation of that of Dr. Bentley, of whom he was once the
warm admirer, and afterwards the equally warm opponent.
During their friendship the emendations on Menander and
Philemon were transmitted through Hare, who was then
chaplain-general to the army, to Burman, in 1710; and
Bentley’s “Remarks on the Essay on Freethinking
” (supposed to be written by Collins) were inscribed to him in
1713. As soon as the first part of these were published,
Hare formally thanked Dr. Bentley by name for them, in
a most flattering letter called “The Clergyman’s Thanks
to Phileleutherus,
” printed the same year; but, in consequence of the rupture between them, not inserted in the
collection of Hare’s works. This rupture took place soon
after the above-mentioned date, and Bentley in the subsequent editions of his “Remarks
” withdrew the inscription. Hare was excessively piqued at the utter annihilation of his Terence and Phoedrus, the one soon after its
birth, the other before its birth, by Bentley’s edition of
both together in 1726, who never once names Hare.
te his “Muses Rivales” in compliment to Voltaire, and the year following an eloge on that celebrated writer, with whom he had been acquainted since 1765. He was not less
The reputation he had gained by his various prize essays and poems, and by his “Warwick,
” at length opened
the doors of the French academy, into which he was admitted in 1776. In 1779 he wrote his “Muses Rivales
”
in compliment to Voltaire, and the year following an eloge
on that celebrated writer, with whom he had been acquainted since 1765. He was not less a favourite, or
less connected with the encyclopedists, and was at this
time accounted an adept in that audacious philosophy
which infected France, and finally dissolved her morals.
, an eminent political writer, was born in January 1611, being the eldest son of sir Sapcote
, an eminent political writer,
was born in January 1611, being the eldest son of sir Sapcote Harrington, and Jane the daughter of sir William
Samuel of Upton, in Northamptonshire, the place of his
nativity. When he had made a progress in classical learning, he was admitted in 1629 a gentleman-commoner of
Trinity college, in Oxford, and placed under Mr. Chillingworth, who had lately been elected fellow of that college;
from whom he might possibly acquire some portion of that
spirit of reasoning and thinking for himself, which afterwards shone forth so conspicuously in his writings.
About three years after, his father died; upon which he
left the university, and commenced travelling, having previously furnished himself with the knowledge of several
foreign languages. His first step was into Holland, then
the principal school of martial discipline; and, what may
be supposed to have affected him more sensibly, a country
wonderfully flourishing, under the auspices of liberty,
commerce, strength, and grandeur. Here it is probable
that he began to make government the subject of his meditations; for, he was often heard to say, that, “before he
left England, he knew no more of anarchy, monarchy, aristocracy, democracy, oligarchy, or the like, than as hard
words, whose signification he found in his dictionary.
” On
coming into the Netherlands, he entered a volunteer, and
remained in that capacity some months, in lord Craven’s
regiment; during which time, being much at the Hague,
he had the farther opportunity of accomplishing himself in
two courts, those of the prince of Orange, and of the queen
of Bohemia, daughter of our James I. who was then a fugitive in Holland. He was taken into great favour by this
princess, and also by the prince elector, whom he attended
to Copenhagen, when his highness paid a visit to the king
of Denmark; and, after his return from travelling, was
entrusted by him with the affairs of the Palatinate, so far
as they were transacted at the British court.
held in high estimation, and has frequently quoted in his Hermes, the “Minerva” of Sanciius. To that writer he confessed himself indebted for abundance of, valuable information,
In July 1745 he was married to miss Elizabeth Clarke,
daughter and eventually heiress of John Clarke, esq of
Sandford, near Bridgewater, in the county of Somerset,
Five children were the issue of this marriage, of whom two
daughters, and a son, the present lord Malmsbury, sur->
vived their father. This change in his state of life by no
means withdrew his attention from those studies in which
he had been used to take so great delight, and which he
had cultivated with such advantage and reputation; for in
1751 he published another work, entitled “Hermes, or a
philosophical inquiry concerning Universal Grammar,
” 8vo.
Of this work, Dr. Lowth, the late bishop of London, says,
“Those who would enter deeply into the subject (of universal grammar) will find it fully and accurately handled,
with the greatest acuteness of investigation, perspicuity of
explication, and elegance of method, in a treatise entitled
Hermes, by James Harris, esq. the most beautiful example of analysis that has been exhibited since the days of
Aristotle.
” What first led Mr. Harris to a deep and accurate consideration of the principles of universal grammar,
was a book which he held in high estimation, and has frequently quoted in his Hermes, the “Minerva
” of Sanciius.
To that writer he confessed himself indebted for abundance of, valuable information, of which it appears that he
knew well how to profit, and to push his researches on the
subject of grammar to a much greater length, by the help
of his various and extensive erudition. Mr. Harris’s system in this work still maintains its ground in the estimation of most men of taste, notwithstanding the coarse attack made on it by Home Tooke.
rning. His profound knowledge of Greek, which he applied more successfully, perhaps, than any modern writer has done, to the study and explanation of ancient philosophy,
"The distinction by which he was most generally known, and by which he is likely to survive to posterity, is that of a Man of Learning. His profound knowledge of Greek, which he applied more successfully, perhaps, than any modern writer has done, to the study and explanation of ancient philosophy, arose from an early and intimate acquaintance with the excellent poets and historians in that language. They, and the best writers in the Augustan age, were his constant and never-failing recreation. By his familiarity with them, he was enabled to enliven and to illustrate his deeper and more abstruse speculations, as every page almost (of his works) will abundantly testify. But his attainments were not confined to ancient philosophy and classical learning. He possessed likewise a general knowledge of modern history, with a very distinguishing taste in the line arts, in one of which, as before observed, he was an eminent, proficient. His singular industry empowered him to make these various acquisitions, without neglecting any of the duties which he owed to his family, his friends, or his country. I am in possession of such proofs, besides those already given to the public, of my father’s laborious study and reflection, as I apprehend, are very rarely to be met with. Not only was he accustomed, through a long series of years, to make copious excts from the different books which he read, and to write critical remarks and conjectures on many of the passages extracted, but he was also in the habit of regularly cammuting to writing such reBections as arose out of his study, which evince a mind carefully disciplined, and anxiously bent on the attainment of self-knowledge and self-government. And yet, though habituated to deep thinking and laborious reading, he was generally cheerful even to playfulness. There was no pedantry in his manners or conversation, nor was he ever seen either to display his learning with ostentation, or to treat with slight or superciliousness those less informed than himself. He rather sought to make them appear partakers of what he knew, than to mortify tnern by a parade of his own superiority. Nor had he any of that miserable fastidiousness about him which too often disgraces men of learning, and prevents their being amused or interested, at least their choosing to appear so, by common performances and common events.
clergy. Besides the sermon above noticed, the only other occasion on which Dr. Harsnet appeared as a writer, was in writing some pamphlets to expose the impostures of one
, a learned English prelate, successively bishop of Chichester and Norwich, and archbishop
of York, the son of William Harsnet, a baker at Colchester,
was born in that town, and baptised June 20, 1561. He
was probably sent to the free-school of Colchester, but was
admitted Sept. 8, 1576, of King’s college, Cambridge,
whence he removed to Pembroke-hall, of which he became
a scholar, and was elected fellow Nov. 27, 1583. He took
his degree of B.A. in 1580, and that of M. A. in 15'84.
Three years after, in March 1586-7, he was elected master
of the free-school in Colchester, but, preferring the prosecution of his studies at Cambridge, he resigned this office
in November 1588, and returned to Pembrdke-hall, where
he studied divinity, in which indeed he had made great
progress before, and had been admitted into holy orders,
as appears by a sermon preached by him at St. Paul’s cross,
Oct. 27, 1584, on the subject of predestination. In 1592
he served the office of proctor, and five years after became
chaplain to Dr. Bancroft, bishop of London, by whose favour he obtained the rectory of St. Margaret Fish-street,
London, which he resigned in 1604; and the vicarage of
Chigwell in Essex, which he resigned in 1605, but continued to reside at Chigwell, where he had purchased a
house and estate, now the property and residence of his
descendant Mrs. Fisher. In 1598 he was collated to the
prebend of Mapesbury in St. Paul’s, and Jan. 1602 to the
archdeaconry of Essex, all in bishop Bancroft’s disposal.
In April 1604, sir Thomas Lucas of Colchester presented
him to the rectory of Shenfield in that county. The year
following, upon the resignation of bishop Andrews, he
was chosen master of Pembroke-hall, which he held until
1616, when he resigned in consequence of the society
having exhibited to the king an accusation branching into
fifty-seven articles. Many of these, Le Neve says, were
scandalous, and the proof evident; but, as Le Neve was
iiot able to procure a sight of tHem, we are not enabled to
judge. They do not, however, appear to have injured his
interest at court. He had been consecrated bishop of
Chichester in 1609, and was now, in 1619, three years
after he quitted Pembroke-hall, translated to Norwich, on
the death of Dr. Overall. In 1624 we find him again accused in the house of commons of “putting down preaching setting up images praying to the east;
” and other
articles which appear to have involved him with the
puritans of his diocese, but which he answered to the satisfaction of the parliament as well as of the court. On the
death of Dr. Montague, he was translated to the archbishopric of York in 1628, and in Nov. 1629, was sworn of
the privy council. These dignities, however, he did not
enjoy long, dying atMorton-on-the-marsh, Gloucestershire,
while on a journey, May 25, 1631. He was buried at
Chigwell church, agreeably to his own desire, where his
effigies is still to be seen fixed on the north side of the
chancel, against the wall. He left several charitable legacies and a year or two before his death founded and endowed a free school at Chigwell, and some alms-houses
the history of his school may be seen in Lysons’s “Environs.
” He bequeathed his library to the corporation of
Colchester for the use of the clergy. Besides the sermon above noticed, the only other occasion on which Dr.
Harsnet appeared as a writer, was in writing some pamphlets to expose the impostures of one John Darrell, who
pretended to have the power of casting out devils. Bishop
Harsnet’s character, from what we have related, appears to
be equivocal it is said he was equally an enemy to puritanism and to popery and, according to Fuller, was the
first who used the expression conformable puritans, i. e.
those who conformed out of policy, and yet dissented in
their judgments.
The time of our poet’s birth has not been settled. A writer in the Gentleman’s Magazine fixes it about 1707, but an earlier
The time of our poet’s birth has not been settled. A writer in the Gentleman’s Magazine fixes it about 1707, but an earlier date will correspond better with circumstances. If he was born in 1707, his lines to lady Hertford must have been written at eleven, which is highly improbable, yet there is some difficulty in adjusting the date of this poem. In Lintot’s edition, it is subscribed Sept. 30, 1725; but Francis, the late marquis of Hertford, was born in 1719, a year after his father’s marriage, and when Mr. Harte, according to the above account, could have been only eleven years of age. We have his own authority that all the poems published in this volume were written when he was under nineteen, consequently the date of 1725 must be an error, especially if Collins’s account of the Hertford family be correct But here, too, there is something that requires explanation, as the title of Beauchamp was not conferred on the family for many years after the publication of these poems.
a poet, and exhibited more taste than genius. His attachment to Pope led him to an imitation of that writer’s manner, particularly in the “Essay on Rear son,” and that
Harte’s poems, in general are entitled to considerable
praise, although it may probably be thought that he was a
better critic than a poet, and exhibited more taste than
genius. His attachment to Pope led him to an imitation
of that writer’s manner, particularly in the “Essay on Rear
son,
” and that on “Satire.
” His “Essay on Reason
” has
been somewhere called a fine philosophical poem. It might
with more propriety be called a fine Christian poem, as it
has more of religion than philosophy, and might be aptly
entitled An Essay on Revelation. The “Essay on Satire
”
has some elegant passages, but is desultory, and appears
to have been written as a compliment to the “Dunciad
” of
Pope, whose opinions he followed as far as they respected
the merits of the dunces whom Pope libelled.
, an ingenious writer on agriculture in the seventeenth century, was the son of a
, an ingenious writer on agriculture in the seventeenth century, was the son of a Polish merchant, who, when the Jesuits prevailed in that country, was obliged to remove himself into Prussia, where he settled and built the first house of credit at Elbing, and his grandfather, the deputy of the English company at Dantzick, brought the English company to Elbing; whence that town came by trade to the splendour and result which it afterwards attained. His family, indeed, was of a very ancient extraction in the German empire, there having been ten brothers of the name cf Hartlib. Some of them were privy-counsellors to the emperor, some to other inferior princes; some syndics of Ausperg and Norimberg.
Acts of Parliament, and the exposition thereof,” Lond. 1677, 8vo. Warton thinks he was the undoubted writer of “the fourth act in the tragedy of Tancred and Gismund,” which
Sir Christopher did not enjoy his high office above four
years, and died unmarried, Sept. 20, 1591, of a broken
heart, as usually reported, owing to the stern perseverance
with which Elizabeth had demanded an old debt which he
was unable to pay. Camden enumerates him among the
liberal patrons of learning, and as eminent for his piety
towards God, his fidelity to his country, his untainted
integrity, and unparalleled charity. In his opinions respecting matters of religion, he appears to have been
averse to persecution, which brought upon him the reproach of being secretly affected to popery, but of this we
have no proof. As chancellor of Oxford, which office he
held from 1588 to his death, he did much to reform the
education and discipline of that university. He was buried
under a stately monument in the choir of St. Paul’s. Wood
says he wrote several things pertaining to the law, none of
which are extant 2 but the following has been attributed to
him, “A Treatise concerning Statutes or Acts of Parliament, and the exposition thereof,
” Lond. the fourth act
in the tragedy of Tancred and Gismund,
” which bears at
the end composuit Ch. Hat. This play was the joint production of five students of the Inner Temple, and was
acted at that society before the queen in 1568, but not
printed till 1592. It is reprinted in the second edition of
Dodsley’s collection.
f romantic and allegoric fiction. The personifications are often happily sustained, and indicate the writer’s familiarity with the Provincial school: he also says that
Hawes’s principal work is his “Pastime of Pleasure,
”
first printed by Wynkyn de Worde in Hawes has
added new graces to Lvdgate’s manner.
” Mr. Ellis, however, seems to be of a different opinion, and thinks that
he has copied Lydgate’s worst manner; and that he is diffuse, fond of expletives and epithets which add nothing to
the sense. Hawes’s other works are, “The Temple of
Glass,
” in imitation of Chaucer’s “Temple of Fame;
”
“The Conversyon of Swerers,
” and one or two other rarities, described in our authorities.
dities and dangerous remedies recommended by that venerable and (on many other accounts) respectable writer were acutely exposed by a combination of irony and serious argument.
In 1780 was published, his third edition of an “Examination of the Reverend John Wesley’s Primitive Physick;
”
in which the absurdities and dangerous remedies recommended by that venerable and (on many other accounts)
respectable writer were acutely exposed by a combination
of irony and serious argument. In 1780, or 1731, he removed to Palsgrave-place, and commenced practice as a
physician; the degree of doctor of medicine having been
conferred upon him some time before.
ed, by four respectable physicians, to Dr. Richard Pearson, of Birmingham, and the silver medal to a writer whose paper wat signed Humanitas. Since that period similar
In 1781, Dr. Hawes published “An Address to the
Legislature, on the Importance of the Humane Society;
”
and, by his steady perseverance, and personal endeavours,
he lived to see most of his objects realized, as conducive
to the restoration of suspended animation. About the
same period, appeared his “Address to the King and
Parliament of Great Britain; with Observations on the General Bills of Mortality.
” These useful and interesting publications gradually raised the reputation of the author to
the notice of many learned, as well as benevolent, characters. In the same year, he was elected physician to the
Surrey Dispensary and about the same time, commenced
his medical lectures on suspended animation and was the
first, and perhaps the only, person that ever introduced
the subject as a part of medical education. These lectures were closed by a proposal of bestowing prize-medals,
suggested by the ardour of his mind, and founded by his
munificence; and in October 1782, the gold medal was
awarded, by four respectable physicians, to Dr. Richard
Pearson, of Birmingham, and the silver medal to a writer
whose paper wat signed Humanitas. Since that period
similar prize-medals, bestowed by the Medical Society,
have given rise to the invaluable works of Pearson, Goodwin, Coleman, Kite, and Fothergill.
, an elegant and ingenious English writer, was born either in 1715, or 1719, in London, and was, as some
, an elegant and ingenious
English writer, was born either in 1715, or 1719, in London, and was, as some report, brought up to the trade of a
watchmaker. Sir John Hawkins, however, informs us that
he was, when very young, a hired clerk to one Harwood,
an attorney in Grocers’-alley in the Poultry. His parents
were probably dissenters, as he was a member of the celebrated Mr. Bradbury’s meeting, from which, it is said, he
was expelled for some irregularities. It does not appear
that he followed any profession, but devoted himself to
study and literary employment. So early as 1744 he succeeded Dr. Johnson in compiling the parliamentary debates for the Gentleman’s Magazine, to which he afterwards contributed many of his earlier productions in verse.
In 1746, he wrote in that publication, under the' name of
Greville, the “Devil Painter, a tale;
” the “Chaise Percee,
”
from the French; “Epistle to the King of Prussia;
”
“Lines to the Rev. Mr. Layng
” (who was at this time a writer in the Magazine), and to the celebrated Warburton
“On a series of theological inquiries
” “A Thought from
Marcus Antoninus
” “The Smart.
” In- The Accident
” “Ants’ Philosophy
” “Death of
Arachne;
” “Chamontand Honorius
” “Origin of Doubt;
”
“Life,
” an ode “Lines to Hope
” “Winter,
” an ode“”The Experiment,“a tale. In 1748,
” The Midsummer
Wish“” Solitude“” The two Doves,“a fable
” Autumn“in 1749,
” Poverty insulted“”Region allotted
to Old Maids;“” The Nymph at her Toilet;“” God is
Love;“” Cloe’s Soliloquy." Some of these are signed
H. Greville. Whether he wrote any prose compositions is
doubtful. Mr. Duncombe, on whose authority the above
list is given, says nothing of prose.
ar from the following proof. We have already mentioned, that in 1744 he succeeded Dr. Johnson as the writer or compiler of the parliamentary debates in the Gentleman’s
In 1766, Dr. Hawkesworth was the editor of three additional volumes of Swift’s Letters, with notes and illustrations. In this publication he discovers an uncommon
warmth against infidel publications, and speaks of Bolingbroke and his editor Mallet with the utmost detestation: that
4 in this he was sincere, will appear from the following proof.
We have already mentioned, that in 1744 he succeeded
Dr. Johnson as the writer or compiler of the parliamentary debates in the Gentleman’s Magazine; in this office,
if it maybe so termed, he continued until 1760, when
the plan of the Magazine was improved by a Review of
New Publications. Mr. Owen Ruffhead was the first who
filled this department, and continued to do so about two
years, according to sir John Hawkins, when he was succeeded by Dr. Hawkesworth; but there must have been
an intermediate reviewer, if sir John be correct in the
time when Mr. Ruffhead ceased to write, as Dr. Hawkesworth’s first appearance as a critic 'is ascertained, upon
undoubted authority, to have been April 1765. In the
month of October of that year, there appeared in the Magazine an abstract of Voltaire’s “Philosophical Dictionary,
”
by a correspondent. Dr. Hawkesworth’s friends, to vyhom
it appears his connection with the Magazine was no secret,
were alarmed to see an elaborate account of so impious a
work; and one of them wrote to him on the subject. An
extract from his answer, now before us, and dated Nov.
8, 176:5, will perhaps fill up a chasm in his personal as well
as literary history.
, a recent English writer, the son of a man, who, though descended from the preceding
, a recent English writer,
the son of a man, who, though descended from the preceding sir John Hawkins, followed at first the occupation of a house-carpenter, which he afterwards exchanged for the profession of a surveyor and huijder. He
had married Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Gwatkin
of Tou nhope, co. Hereford, gentleman; and the issue of
this marriage were several children. Of these the present
object of this article was the youngest, and was born in the
city of London, on the 30th day of March, 1719. After
fcaving been sent first to one school, and afterwards to a
second, where he acquired a tolerable knowledge of Latin,
he was placed under the tuition of Mr. Hoppus, the author of a well-known and useful architectural compendium,
published in 1733, 8vo, and entitled “Proportional Architecture, or the Five Orders regulated by equal Farts.
”
Under this person he went through a regular course of architecture and perspective, in order to fit him for his
father’s profession of a surveyor, for which he was at first
intended; but his first cousin, Mr. Thomas Gwatkin, being
clerk to Mr. John Scott of Devonshire-street, Bishopsgate, an attorney and solicitor in full practice, persuaded
him *to alter his resolution, and embrace that of the law,
which he did, and was accordingly articled as a clerk to
Mr. Scott. In this situation his time was too fully employed in the actual dispatch of business, to permit him
without some extraordinary means to acquire the necessary knowledge of his profession by reading and study;
besides that, his master is said to have been more artxious
to render him a good copying-clerk, by scrupulous attention to his hand-writing, than to qualify him by instruction to conduct business. To remedy this inconvenience,
therefore, he abridged himself of his rest, and rising at
four in the morning, found opportunity of reading all the
necessary and most eminent law-writers, and the works
of our mos% celebrated authors. By these means, before the expiration of his clerkship, he had already
rendered himself a very able lawyer, and had possessed
himself of a taste for literature in general, but particularly for poetry and the polite arts; and the better to
facilitate his improvement, he from time to time furnished to “The Universal Spectator,
” “The Westminster Journal,
” The Gentleman’s Magazine,“and
other periodical publications of the time, essays and
disquisitions on several subjects. The first of these is
believed to have been an
” Essay on Swearing;“but the
exact time of its appearance, and the paper in which it
was inserted, are both equally unknown. It was, however,
re-published some years since (without his knowledge till he saw it in print) in one of the newspapers. His next
production was an
” Essay on Honesty," inserted in the
Gentleman’s Magazine for March, 1739; and which occasioned a controversy, continued through the magazines
for several succeeding months, between him and a Mr.
Calamy, a descendant of the celebrated Dr. Edmund Calamy, then a fellow-clerk with him.
, esq. an agreeable English writer, was born at Glenburne in Sussex, Aug. 21, 1695, and educated
, esq. an agreeable English writer, was born at Glenburne in Sussex, Aug. 21, 1695, and educated partly at Newick, near Lewes, and partly at Lewes. In 1712 he went to Oxford, which he left without a degree, and removed to the Temple. Here he studied the law until a defect in his sight from the small pox obliged him to relinquish it. In 1718 he travelled in England and Scotland, and in 1720 on the continent, where he was a very acute observer and inquirer. After his return he resided for some years at his house in Sussex.
advocate for Socinianism, was born in 1672, and became assay-master of the mint, and principal tally- writer of the exchequer. In defence of the independence and prerogatives
, a strenuous advocate for Socinianism, was born in 1672, and became assay-master of the
mint, and principal tally-writer of the exchequer. In
defence of the independence and prerogatives of his office,
he printed and privately dispersed a tract entitled “A
hriel enquiry relating to the right of his majesty’s Chapel
Royal, and the privileges of his servants within the Tower,
in a Memorial addressed to the rignt hon. the lord viscount
Lonsdale, constable of his majesty’s Tower of London,
”
The Scripture account of the attributes and
worship of God, and of the character and offices of Jesus
Christ, by a candid Enquirer after Truth.
” This he left
for the press, and it was accordingly printed by his son, in
obedience to his father’s injunctions, but probably against
his own inclinations, nor was it generally known as a publication until reprinted in 1790 by the late rev. Theophilus
Lindsey. Mr. Haynesdied November 19, 1749. His son
Samuel Haynes was educated at King’s college, Cambridge, where he took his degrees of A. B in 1723, A. M.
1727, and D. D. in 1748. He was tutor to the earl of
Salisbury, with whom he travelled, and who, in 1737,
presented him to the valuable rectory of Hatfield in Hertfordshire. In March 1743, he succeeded to a canonry of
Windsor; and in May 1747, he was presented by his
noble patron to the rectory of Clothal, which he held by
dispensation with Hatfield. He died June 9, 1752. He
published “A Collection of State-papers, relating to affairs in the reigns of Henry VIII. Edward VI. Mary and
Elizabeth, from 1542 to 1570,
” transcribed from the Cecil
Mss. in Hatfield-house, 1740, fol.
is natural abilities, however, appeared through this disadvantage, and his being a better reader and writer than could have been expected from his scanty opportunities,
, an eminent English antiquary,
and indefatigable collector and editor of books and manuscripts, was the son of George Hearne, parish-clerk of
White Waltham, Berkshire, by Edith, daughter of Thomas
Wise. He was born at Littlefteld-green in the above
parish, in 1678, and baptised July 11th of that year. He
appears to have been born with a taste for those researches
which formed afterwards the business of his life; and even
when he had but attained a knowledge of the alphabet,
was seen continually poring over the old tomb-stones in
the church-yard. As to education, he had very little. His
father, who kept a writing-school, and who, as parishclerk, was also a kind of amanuensis to the illiterate part of
his neighbours, could teach him English and writing, in
both which he made considerable proficiency; but he had
other children, and, instead of being able to place Thomas
at any superior school, was obliged to let him earn his
subsistence as a day-labourer. His natural abilities, however,
appeared through this disadvantage, and his being a better
reader and writer than could have been expected from his
scanty opportunities, recommended him to the kind attention of an early patron, whom he calls “that pious and
learned gentleman Francis Cherry, esq.
” By this gentleman, in whose house he was for some time a menial servant, he was placed at the free-school of Bray in Berkshire,
in the beginning of 1693, and rewarded his care by such
diligent application, as to acquire an accurate knowledge
of Greek and Latin. He was on this account much respected both by the master and his fellow-scholars, who
were accustomed to consult him in their little difficulties,
and used to listen to his information respecting English
history, which his original taste had led him to study as
he found opportunity.
, an ingenious English divine, and miscellaneous writer, descended of an ancient Derbyshire family, whose property was
, an ingenious English divine,
and miscellaneous writer, descended of an ancient Derbyshire family, whose property was injured during the civil wars,
was born Dec. 16, 1721, at Barrow upon Soar, in Leicestershire. His father was then curate of that place, but afterwards
had the vicarage of Sileby in that county, and the rectory
of Morton in Derbyshire. He died in 1765. His mother
was a daughter of Simon Ockley, Arabic professor at Cambridge. He passed the first fourteen years at home with
his father, who taught him Greek and Latin, but in April
1736, sent him to the public school of Chesterfield, where
he continued five years under the rev. William Burrow, a
learned man, and a very skilful teacher. In April 1741 r
he was admitted sizar of Jesus college, Cambridge, and in
Jan. 1745, took his degree of A. B. and soon after entered
intered into holy orders. In March 1748 he undertook the
cure of St. Margaret’s, Leicester, and the year after waspresented to the small vicarage of Barkby, in the
neighbourhood, which, with his curacy (worth 50l. yearly) he
says made him “well to live.
” In July 1748, he took his
master’s degree, and at the same time withdrew his name
from college, having in view a marriage with miss Margaret Mompesson, a Nottinghamshire la;iy of good family,
which tie accomplished in August 1750, and whose fortune,
in his estimation, made him independent. This lady died
April 12, 1790.
fy Mr. Jones’s language in his life of bishop Home. “A Mr. Heathcote, a very intemperate and unmanly writer, published a pamphlet against Dr. Patten, laying himself open,
On the appearance of lord Bolingbroke’s works, he published in 1755, “A Sketch of lord Bollngbroke’s philosophy,
” the object of which was to vindicate the moral attributes of the Deity. In the latter end of the same year,
came out, “The use of Reason asserted in matters of Religion, in answer to a Sermon preached by Dr Patten at
Oxford, July 13, 1755,
” whom he act used of being a
Hutchinsonian; and, the year after, a Defence of this
against Dr. Patten, who had replied. Dr. Home also, a
friend to Dr. Patten, animadverted on Mr. Ht athcote’s
pamphlet: but it seems not to have been long before all
their sentiments concurred; at least, the Hutchinsonians
could not blame Mr. Heathcote more than he blamed himself. “When,
” says he, “the heat of controversy was
over, I could not look into them (the pamphlets) myself,
without disgust and pain. The spleen of Middleton, and
the petulancy of Warburton, had too much infected me.
”
This candid acknowledgment, however, seems to justify
Mr. Jones’s language in his life of bishop Home. “A Mr.
Heathcote, a very intemperate and unmanly writer, published a pamphlet against Dr. Patten, laying himself open,
both in the matter and the manner of it, to the criticisms
of Dr. Patten, who will appear to have been greatly his
superior as a scholar and a divine, to any candid reader
who shall review that controversy. Dr. Patten could not
with any propriety be said to have written on the Hutchinsonian plan; but Mr. Heathcote found it convenient to
charge him with it, &c.
” Warburton, too, who had complimented Mr. Heathcote to his face, speaks of him in a
letter to Dr. Hurd (in 1757) as one whose “matter is rational, but superficial and thin spread.
” He adds, “he
will prove as great a scribbler as Comber. They are both
sensible, and both have reading. The difference is, that
the one has so much vivacity as to make him ridiculous;
the other so little as to be unentertaining. Comber’s excessive vanity may be matched by H.'s pride; which I
think is a much worse quality.
” In this censure the reader
may perceive somewhat that will recoil upon the writer,
but Heathcote, we see, lived to acknowledge what was
amiss, which Warburton did not.
tions, we may add his “Αντιθηριακα, an Essay on Mithridatium and Theriaca,” 1745, 3vo. He was also a writer in the “Athenian Letters,” and in his early life contributed
To this character, part of a sketch of his life prefixed to
his “Commentaries, published in 1802, much might be
added. No physician, indeed, was ever more highly or
more deservedly respected. His various and extensive
learning, his modesty in the use of it, his freedom from
jealousy or envy, his independent spirit, his simple yet
dignified manners, and his exemplary discharge of all the
relative duties, are topics on which all who knew him delight to dwell. Mr. Cole, who bestows very high praise
on him, an article in which that gentleman was in general
penurious, gives us the following anecdote of Dr. Heberden, which corresponds with the above account of his
reverence for religion.
” Understanding that Dr. Con.
Middleton had composed a book on the ‘ Inefficacy of
Prayer,’ he called upon his widow soon after the Dr.‘s
death, and asked her if she was not in possession of such
a tract? She answered that she was; he then asked her, if
any bookseller had been in treaty with her for it? She said
that a bookseller had offered her 50l. for it. He then demanded, if there was a duplicate ’ No' upon that he
requested to see it, and she immediately brgught it, and
put it into his hands. The Dr. holding it in one hand,
and giving it a slight perusal, threw it into the fire, and
with the other hand gave her a 50l. note.“This anecdote
Mr. Cole had from Dr. Newton, bishop of Bristol. It is
certain that Dr. Middleton’s widow bequeathed her husband’s remaining Mss. to Dr. Heberden, from which, in,
1761, he obliged the learned world with a curious tract,
entitled
” Dissertations de servili Medicorum conditione
Appendix,“&c. with a short but elegant advertisement
of his own. In 1763, a most valuable edition of the
” Supplices Mulieres“of Euripides, with the notes of Mr. Markland, was printed entirely at the expence of Dr. Heberden; and, in 1763, the same very learned commentator
presented his notes on the two Jphigenix,
” Doctissimo,
& quod longe prastantius est, humanissimo viro Wilhelmo
Heberden, M. D. arbitratu ejus vel cremandtE, vel in publicum emittendae post obiturn scriptoris,“&c. He wrote
the epitaph in Dorking church on Mr. Markland, who had
” bequeathed to him all his books and papers. One of these,
a copy of Mill’s Greek Testament in folio, the margin
filled with notes, was kindly lent by Dr. Heberden, “with
that liberal attention to promote the cause of virtue and
religion which was one of his many well-known excellences,
” to the publisher of the last edition of Mr. Bowyer’s
“Conjectures on the New Testament, 1782,
” 4to. To
Dr. Heberden Mr. Bowyer also bequeathed his “little,
cabinet of coins, a few books specifically, and any others,
which the doctor might chuse to accept.
” To Dr. H.'s
other publications, we may add his “Αντιθηριακα, an
Essay on Mithridatium and Theriaca,
” 1745, 3vo. He
was also a writer in the “Athenian Letters,
” and in his
early life contributed some notes to Grey’s “Hudibras,
” as
acknowledged by that editor in his preface.
r. He figured by turns as a grammarian, a classical scholar, a poet, an antiquary, a preacher, and a writer of romances; but he was most known by his book entitled “Pratique
, at first an advocate, afterwards
an ecclesiastic, and abbé of Auhignac and Meimac, was
born at Paris in 1604. Cardinal Richelieu, whose nephew
he educated, bestowed on him his two abbeys, and the
protection of that minister gave him consequence both as
a man of the world and as an author. He figured by turns
as a grammarian, a classical scholar, a poet, an antiquary,
a preacher, and a writer of romances; but he was most
known by his book entitled “Pratique du Theatre,
” and
by the quarrels in which his haughty and presumptuous
temper engaged him, with some of the most eminent
authors of his time. The great Corneille was one of these,
whose disgust first arose from the entire omission of his
name in the celebrated book above mentioned. He was
also embroiled, on different accounts, with madame Scuderi, Menage, and Richelet. The warmth of his temper
exceeded rhat of his imagination, which was considerable;
and yet he lived at court a good deal in the style of a philosopher, rising early to his studies, soliciting no favours,
and associating chiefly with a few friends, as unambitious
as himself, he describes himself as of a slender constitution, not capable of taking much exercise, or even of applying very intensely to study, without suffering from it in
his health; yet not attached to any kind of play. “It is,
”
ays he, “too fatiguing for the feebleness of my body, or
too indolent for the activity of my mind.
” The abbé
d'Aubignac lived to the age of seventy-two, and died at
xnours in 1676. His works are, 1. “Pratique du Theatre,
”
Amsterdam, Zenobie,
” a
tragedy, in prose, composed according to the rules laid
down in his “Pratique,
” and a complete proof of the total
inefficacy of rules to produce an interesting drama, being
the most dull and fatiguing performance that was ever represented. The prince of Condé said, on the subject of
this tragedy, “We give great credit to the abbé d'Aubignac for having so exactly followed the rules of Aristotle,
but owe no thanks to the rules of Aristotle for having made
the abbé produce so vile a tragedy.
” He wrote a few other
other tragedies also, which are worse, if possible, than
Zenobia. 3. “Macaride; or the Queen of the Fortunate
Islands,
” a novel, Paris, Conseils
d'Ariste à Celimene, 12mo. 5.
” Histoire da terns, ou Relation du Royaume de Coqueterie,“12mo, 6.
” Terence
justifié,“inserted in some editions of his
” Pratique.“7.
” Apologie de Spectacles," a work of no value. A curious
book on satyrs, brutes, and monsters, has been attributed
to him; but, though the author’s name was Hedelin, he
does not appear to have been the same.
cal labours should have been consigned to oblivion; but his subsequent works rank him as an original writer, and he might have acquired more fame had he been favoured with
Heister seems early to have had a taste for botany, and
to have collected plants, as Haller observes, in his various
journeys. This taste enabled him to (ill the botanical chair at Helmstad with credit and satisfaction, and he paid great attention to the garden there, which he much enriched. His first botanical publication, “De Coilectione Simplicium,
” was the inaugural dissertation. of one of his pupils named Rabe, printed in 1722; and had he written nothing else, his botanical labours should have been consigned to oblivion; but his subsequent works rank him as an original writer, and he might have acquired more fame had he been
favoured with leisure to look deeper, and not been warped
by preconceived ideas. In 1732 ha published a dissertation on the “Use of the Leaves
” in founding genera of
plants, preferring those parts for a natural arrangement,
on account of the obscurity and difficulty attending those
of the flower. In August 1741, our author came forth as
the professed adversary of Linnæus, in the inaugural dissertation of one of his pupils named Goeckel, entitled
tl Meditationes et Animadversiones in novum Systema Botanicum sexuale LinniEi;“but the arguments by which the
learned professor and his pupil attempt to prove the position they assume, that the
” method of Linnæus is extremely difficult, very doubtful, and uncertain,“are not
very cogent. Another dissertation of Heister’s, published
in Oct. 1741,
” de Nominum Piantarum Mutaiione utili
ac noxia,“is a more diffuse and elaborate attack on the
nomenclature of the great Swedish teacher, whom, however, he terms
” a most diligent and most valuable botanist.“Nor does it appear that he was instigated to these
attacks by any personal enmity, nor by any more extraordinary flow of bile than was usual among controversialists,
of that day at least. Whatever he pursued, he pursued
with ardour, and perhaps as he advanced in age, seated in
professional state, he grew more pertinacious in his opinions.
Hence his subsequent attacks on Linnæus are marked with
more vehemence, but proportionably, as usual, with less
reason. In 1748, notwithstanding his dislike to the Linnsean principles, he published a
” Systema Piantarum Generale ex fructificatione, cui annectuntur regulaj ejusdem,
de Nominibus Piantarum, a celeb. Linnaei longe diversae."
This system is allied to that of Boerhaave, and though it
takes into consideration many particulars of general habit
or structure, is not more natural than the professedly artificial system of Linnæus.
, by birth an Englishman, arrived at the singular distinction of being admired in France as a writer in the French language. He was born in Gloucestershire about
, by birth an Englishman, arrived at
the singular distinction of being admired in France as a
writer in the French language. He was born in Gloucestershire about 1740. He began his career in the army,
and served in Jamaica till the peace of 1763. A desire of
seeing the most remarkable parts of Europe, now carried
him into Italy, where he was so captivated with the beauty
of the climate, and the innumerable objects of liberal
curiosity which presented themselves, that he continued
there several years. About 1770, having satisfied his curiosity in Italy, he turned his thoughts to France, and went
to Paris. There also he studied the state of the arts, and
was particularly attentive to the theatre. At length he
began to write for the Italian comedy, which had principally attracted his notice, and wrote with considerable success. The pieces for that theatre are written chiefly in
French, with French titles, and only one or two characters
in Italian. He wrote, l. “Le Jugement de Midas,
” on
the contest between French and Italian music, which was
much applauded. But his 2. “Amant jaloux,
” had still
more success. 3. His third piece, “Les Evenemens imprevus,
” met with some exceptions, on which he modestly
withdrew it, and after making the corrections suggested,
brought it forward again, and had the pleasure to find it
much approved. The comedies of this writer, are full of
plot, the action lively and interesting: his versification is
not esteemed by the French to be of consummate perfection, nor his prose always pure; yet his dialogue constantly pleased, and was allowed to have the merit of nature and sound composition. Mr. Hele died at Paris, of a
consumptive disorder, in December 1750 and it may
possibly be long before another Englishman will be so
distinguished as a writer in the French language. We take
this account from French authors, who write his name
d'Hele, perhaps it was properly Hale or Dale.
and their causes, and also the knowledge of the properties of things. I inquired, I say, whether no writer had described the qualities, properties, applications, and proportions
"A wealthy canonry was promised me then, so that I might, if I pleased, turn myself to divinity but saint Bernard affrighted me from it, saying, that I should eat the sins of the people. 7 I begged therefore of the Lord Jesus, that he would vouchsafe to call me to that profession in which 1 might please him most. The Jesuits began at that time to teach philosophy at Louvain, and one of the professors expounded the disquisitions and secrets of magic. Both these lectures I greedily received; but instead of grain, I reaped only stubble, and fantastic conceits void of sense. In the mean time, lest an hour should pass without some benefit, I run through some writings of the stoics, those of Seneca, and especially of Epictetus, who pleased me exceedingly. I seemed, in moral philosophy, to have found the quintessence of truth, and did verily believe, that through stoicism I advanced in Christian perfection; but 1 discovered afterwards in a dream, that stoicism was an empty and swollen bubble, and that by this study, under the appearance of moderation, I became, indeed, most self-sufficient and haughty. Lastly, 1 turned over Mathiolus and Dioscorides; thinking with myself nothjng equally necessary for mortal man to know and admire, as the wisdom and goodness of God in vegetables; to the end that he might not only crop the fruit for food, but also minister of the same to his other necessities. My curiosity being now raised upon this branch of study, I inquired, whether there were any book, which delivered the maxims and rule of medicine for I then supposed, that medicine was not altogether a mere gift, but might ]be taught, and delivered by discipline, like other arts and sciences: at least I thought, if medicine was a good gift coming down from the Father of lights, that it might have, as an human science, its theorems and authors, into whom, as into Bazaleel and Aholiab, the spirit of the Lord had infused the knowledge of all diseases and their causes, and also the knowledge of the properties of things. I inquired, I say, whether no writer had described the qualities, properties, applications, and proportions of vegetables, from the hyssop even to the cedar of Libanus? A certain professor of medicine answered me, that none of these things were to be looked for either in Galen or Avicen. I was very ready to believe this, from the many fruitless searches I hau made in books for truth and knowledge before; however, following my natural bent, which lay to the study of nature, I read the institutions of Fuchsius and Fernelius; in whom I knew I had surveyed the whole science of medicine, as it were in an epitome. Is this, said I, smiling to myself, the knowledge of healing Is the whole history of natural properties thus shut up in elementary qualities Therefore I read the works of Galen twice of Hippocrates once, whose aphorisms I almost got by heart; all Avicen, as well as the Greeks, Arabians, and moderns, to the tune of 600 authors. I read them seriously and attentively through; and took down, as I went along, whatever seemed curious and worthy of attention; when at length, reading over my common-place book, I was grieved at the pains I had bestowed, and the years I had spent, in throwing together such a mass of stufc Therefore I straightway left off all books whatever, all formal discourses, and empty promises of the schools; firmly believing every good and perfect gift to come down from the Father of lights, more particularly that of medicine.
which had then appeared. He was a man of exemplary piety, and a neat, though not elegant, or natural writer.
, perhaps Elliot, properly, as he was of British extraction, was born in
Jan. 1660, and became in 1633 a religious of the order of
Picpus near Paris, which is a branch of that of St. Francis,
and was raised to several offices in his order. His fame is
founded on a large work, the toil of twenty -three years, in
eight volumes 4to, “A History of Monastic Orders, religious and military, and of secular congregations of both
sexes,
” &c. &c. which he began to print in
, an eminent French writer, and president in parliament, was born at Paris, Feb. 8, 1685.
, an eminent French
writer, and president in parliament, was born at Paris,
Feb. 8, 1685. His great grandfather, Remi Henault, used to
be of Lewis XIII.' s party at tennis, and that prince called
him “The Baron,
” because of a fief which he possessed
near Triel. He had three sons, officers of horse, who were
all killed at the siege of Casal. John Remi, his father, an
esquire, and lord of Moussy, counsellor to the king, and
secretary to the council, kept up the honour of the family,
and becoming farmer-general, made his fortune. He was
honoured with the confidence of the count de Pontchartrain; and, being of a poetical turn, had some share in
the criticisms which appeared against Racine’s tragedies.
He married the daughter of a rich merchant at Calais, and
one of her brothers being president of that town, entertained the queen of England on her landing there in 1689.
Another brother, counsellor in the parliament of Metz,
and secretary to the duke of Berry, was associated with
Mr. Crozat in the armaments, and, dying unmarried, left
a great fortune to his sister.
Young Renault early discovered a sprightly, benevolent
disposition, and his penetration and aptness soon distinguished itself by the success of his studies. Claude de
Lisle, father of the celebrated geographer, gave him the
same lessons in geography and history which he had before
given to the duke of Orleans, afterwards regent. These
instructions have been printed in seven volumes, under the
title of “Abridgment of Universal History.
”
, an eminent dissenting teacher, and a voluminous writer, was the son of the foregoing, and born in 1662. He continued
, an eminent dissenting teacher, and a voluminous writer, was the son of the foregoing, and born in 1662. He continued under his father’s eye and care till about eighteen; and had the greatest advantages of his education from him, both in divine and human literature. He was very expert in the learned languages, especially in the Hebrew, which had been made familiar to him from his childhood; and from first to last, the study of the scriptures was his most delightful employment. For further improvement, he was placed in 16SOat an academy at Islington. He was afterwards entered in Gray’s-inn, for the study of the law where he went on with his usual diligence, and became acquainted with the civil law, and the municipal law of his own country. His proficiency was soon observed; and it was the opinion of those who knew him, that his great industry, quick apprehension, tenacious memory, and ready utterance, would render him very eminent in that profession. But he adhered to his first resolution of making divinity his study and business, and attended the most celebrated preachers in town; and, as an instance of his judgment, was best pleased with Dr. Stillingfleet for his serious practical preaching; and with Dr. Tillotson for his admirable sermons against popery, at his lectures at St. Lawrence Jewry. In 1686, he returned into the country, and preached several times as a candidate for the ministry with such success and approbation, that the congregation at Chester invited him to be their pastor. To this place he was ordained in 1687, where he lived about twenty-five years. He had several calls from London, which he constantly declined but was at last prevailed ou to accept a very important and unanimous one from Hackney. He died in 1714, at Nantwich, of an apoplectic fit, upon a journey, and was interred in Trinity-church, in Chester.
, a miscellaneous writer, and an imitator of the periodical essays of queen Anne’s reign,
, a miscellaneous writer, and an
imitator of the periodical essays of queen Anne’s reign, was
born in Scotland in 1690, and in 1711 began a periodical paper called The Tatler, by Donald Macstaff of the North,“which extended to thirty numbers. They are evidently
the production of a man of vigorous native powers, and of
a, mind not meanly stored with ancient learning, and familiar with the best writings of the moderns; but they gave
much offence, by the description of known characters, and
by the personal satire which the author employed, with no
gentle or delicate hand, on some men of note, both in the
ecclesiastical and civil departments, among his countrymen.
Mr. Hepburn, who had studied the civil law in Holland,
became a member of the faculty of advocates at Edinburgh in 1712, and died soon after very young. Lord
Hailes justly termed him
” ingenii praecocis etpraefervidi.“In the concluding paper of his
” Tatler“he announced, as
then in the press, a translation of sir George Mackenzie’s
” Idea eloquentia? Forensis;“and in the Advocates’ library
is a small volume containing two treatises of his writing;
the one entitled
” Demonstratio quod Deus sit,“and the
ether, Dissertatio de Scriptis Pitcarnianis.
” The former of
these is neatly and methodically written; the latter is
somewhat jejune in point of matter, and too lavish of general panegyric.
, lord Herbert, of Cherbury in Shropshire, an eminent English writer, was descended from a very ancient family, and born 1581, at
, lord Herbert, of Cherbury in
Shropshire, an eminent English writer, was descended
from a very ancient family, and born 1581, at Montgomery-castle in Wales. At the age of fourteen he was entered as
a gentleman-commoner at University college, in Oxford,
where he laid, says Wood, the foundation of that admirable learning, of which he was afterwards a complete
master. In 1600 he came to London, and shortly after the
accession of James I. was created knight of the hath. He
served the office of high sheriff for the county of Montgomery, and divided his time between the country and the
court. In 1608, feeling wearied with the sameness of domestic scenes, he visited the continent, carrying with him
some romantic notions on the point of honour, which, in.
such an age, were likely to involve him in perpetual quarrels. His advantageous person and manners, and the reputation for courage which he acquired, gained him many
friends, among whom was the constable Montmorenci. As
a seat of this nobleman he passed several months practising horsemanship, and other manly exercises, in which
he became singularly expert. He returned to England in
1609, and in the following, year he quitted it again, in.
order that he might have the opportunity of serving with
the English forces sent to assist the prince of Orange at
the siege of Juliers. Here he signalised himself by his
valour, which, in some instances, was carried to the extreme of rashness. After the siege he visited Antwerp and
Brussels, and returned to London, where he was looked
now upon as one of the most conspicuous characters of the
time. An attempt was made to assassinate him, in revenge
for some liberties which he took, or was supposed to have
taken, with a married lady. In 1614 he went into the Low.
Countries to serve under the prince of Orange; after this
he engaged with the duke of Savoy, to conduct from France
a body of protestants to Piedmont for his service. In 1616
he was sent ambassador to Louis XIII. of France, to mediate for the relief of the protestants of that realm, but was
recalled in July 1621, on account of a dispute between
him and the constable de Luines. Camden says that he
had treated the constable irreverently; but Walton tells us
that “he could not subject himself to a compliance with
the humours of the duke de Luines, who was then the
great and powerful favourite at court: so that, upon a
complaint to our king, he was called back into England in
some displeasure; but at his return gave such an honourable
account of his employment, and so justified his comportment to the duke and all the court, that he was suddenly
sent back upon the same embassy.
”
Another writer relates this more particularly. Sir Edward, while he was in
Another writer relates this more particularly. Sir Edward, while he was in France, had private instructions from
England to mediate a peace for the protestants in France;
and, in case of a refusal, to use certain menaces. Accordingly, being referred to de Luines, he delivered to him
the message, reserving his threatenings till he saw how the
matter was relished. De Luines had concealed a gentleman of the reformed religion behind the curtain; who,
heing an ear-witness of what passed, might relate to his
friends what little expectations they ought to entertain of
the king of England’s intercession. De Luines was very
haughty, and asked what our king had to do in this affair.
Sir Edward replied, “It is not to you, to whom the king
my master owcth an account of his actions; and for me it
is enough that I obey him. In the mean time I must
maintain, that my master hath more reason to do what he
doth, than you to ask why he doth it. Nevertheless, if
you desire me in a gentle fashion, I shall acquaint you
farther.
” Upon this, de Luines bowing a little, said,
“Very well.
” The ambassador then gave him some reasons; to which de Luines said, “We will have none of
your advices.
” The ambassador replied, “that he took
that for an answer, and was sorry only, that the affection
and good-will of the king his master was not sufficiently
understood and that, since it was rejected ii> that manner,
he could do no less than say, that the king his master knew
well enough what to do.
” De Luines answered, “We are
not afraid of you.
” The ambassador smiling a little, replied, “If you had said you had not loved us, I should
have believed you, and given you another answer. In
the mean time, all that I will tell you more is, that we
know very well what we have to do.
” De Luines upon
this, rising from his chair with a fashion and countenance
a little discomposed, said, “By G, if you were not
monsieur the ambassador, I know very well how I would
use yon.
” Sir Edward Herbert rising also from his chair,
said, that “as he was the king of Great Britain’s ambassador,
so he was also a gentleman; and that his sword, whereon
he laid his hand, should give him satisfaction if he had
taken any offence.
” After which, de Luines making no
reply, the ambassador went on towards the door, and de
Luines seeming to accompany him, sir Edward told him,
that “there was no occasion to use such ceremony after
such language,
” and so departed, expecting to hear farther from him. But no message being brought from de
Luines, he had, in pursuance of his instructions, a more
civil audience from the king at Coignac; where the marshal
of St. Geran told him that tf he had offended the constable,
and was not in a place of security there:“to which he
answered, that
” he thought himself to be in a place of security wheresoever he had his sword by him." De Luines,
resenting the affront, procured Cadinet his brother, duke
of Chaun, with a train of officers, of whom there was not
one, as he told king James, but had killed his man, to go
as an ambassador extraordinary; who misrepresented the
affair so much to the disadvantage of sir Edward, that the
earl of Carlisle, who was sent to accommodate the misunderstanding which might arise between the two crowns, got
him recalled; until the gentleman who stood behind the
curtain, out of a regard to truth and honour, related all
the circumstances so as to make it appear, that though de
Luines gave the first affront, yet sir Edward had kept himself within the bounds of his instructions and honour. He
afterwards fell on his knees to king James, before the duke
of Buckingham, requesting that a trumpeter, if not an
herald, might be sent to de Luines, to tell him that he had
made a false relation of the whole affair; and that sir Edward Herbert would demand satisfaction of him sword in
hand. The king answered, that he would take it into consideration; but de Luines died soon after, and sir Edward
was sent again ambassador to France.
, A. M. an English controversial writer, was a native of Suffolk, and admitted pensioner of Corpus Christi
, A. M. an English controversial writer,
was a native of Suffolk, and admitted pensioner of Corpus
Christi college, Cambridge, under the tuition of Mr.
Fawcett, Oct. 29, 1711; he was made scholar of the house
next year, and proceeded A. B. in 1715. About this time
he was recommended to the duchess of Bedford, who took
him into her family, for the instruction of her sons, Wrotthesly, the third, and John, the fourth duke of Bedford;
and the year following he was made fellow of Merton college, Oxford, where he commenced M. A. in 1718. He
was a man of learning, virtue, and spirit, and continued a
batcheior and a layman till the time of his death, which
happened at Woburn about the year 1722. He published
“The False notion of a Christian priesthood, &c.
” in answer to Mr. Law, A Letter to the Prolocutor,
”
jjo answer to one from him to Dr. Tenison, A
Letter to the Rev. Dr. Tenison concerning Citations out of
Arch. Wake’s Preliminary Discourse to the Apostolic Fathers,
” Lond. Under this name he was one of the writers in the Bangorian controversy, of which he began in some measure the
history, by publishing an account of all the considerable
pamphlets to which it gave rise, with a continuation and
occasional observations, to the end of the year 1719, by
the name of Philonagnostes Criticus. He published also,
w An account of all the considerable books and pamphlets
written in the controversy concerning the Trinity,
” from
Vindication
of the Archbishop of Canterbury from being the author of
a Letter on the State of Religion in England, printed at
Zurich,
” Lond. Two letters to Dr. Mangey
on his Sermon upon Christ’s Divinity,
” published about
the same time.
, a political and poetical writer of considerable fame, was the eldest son of John first earl
, a political and poetical writer of considerable fame, was the
eldest son of John first earl of Bristol, by his second wife,
Elizabeth, sole daughter and heir to sir Thomas Felton of
Playford in the county of Suffolk, bart. He was born Oct.
15, 1696, and educated at Clare-hall, Cambridge, where
he took his master’s degree in 1715, previously to which,
on Nov. 7, 1714, he had been made gentleman of the
bed-chamber to the Prince of Wales. He came into parliament soon after the accession of George I. and was appointed vice-chamberlain to the king in 1730, and a privy
counsellor. In 1733 he was called up by writ to the house
of peers, as lord Hervey of Ickworth; and in 1740 was
constituted lord privy seal, from which post he was removed
in 1742. He died Aug. 5, 1743, in the forty-seventh year
of his age, a short period, but to which his life had been
protracted with the greatest care and difficulty. Having
early in life felt some attacks of the epilepsy, he entered
upon and persisted in a very strict regimen, which stopped
the progress of that dreadful disease, but prevented his
acquiring, or at least long enjoying, the blessing of sound
health. It is to this rigid abstemiousness that Pope malignantly alludes in the character he has given of lord Hervey,
under the name of Sporus, in the line “the mere white
curd of asses milk.
” But lord Hervey affords a memorable
instance of the caution with which we ou^ht to read the
characters drawn by Pope and his associates; nor can too
much praise be given to his late editors for the pains they
have taken to rescue some of them from the imputations
which proceeded from the irritable temper and malignity
of that admired satirist. In the character of Sporus, Dr.
Warton has justly observed, that language cannot afford
more glowing or more forcible terms to express the utmost
bitterness of contempt. Pope and his lordship were once
friends; but they quarrelled at a time when the poetical
world seemed to be up in arms, and perpetually contending
in a manner disgraceful to their characters. In the quarrel
between Pope and lord Hervey, it appears that Pope was
the aggressor, and that lord Hervey wrote some severe lines
in reply, and An Epistle from a Nobleman to a Doctor of
Divinity.“1733. (Dr. Sherwin). In answer to this, Pope
wrote the
” Letter to a Noble Lord, on occasion of some
libels written and propagated at court in the year 1732-3,“which is printed in his Works, and, as Warburton says,
” is
conducive to what he had most at heart, his moral character,“to which, after all, it conduced very little, as he
Violated every rule of truth and decency in his subsequent
attack on lord Hervey in the
” Prologue to the Satires,“under the character of Sporus, whic,h, we agree with
Mr. Coxe,
” cannot be read without disgust and horror
disgust at the indelicacy of the allusions, and horror at
the malignity of the poet, in laying the foundation of his
abuse on the lowest species of satire, personal invective;
and what is still worse, on sickness and debility."
He was a very voluminous writer, and although few of his works can be recommended to general
He was a very voluminous writer, and although few of
his works can be recommended to general perusal, there
are none perhaps of the whole series which may not be
consulted with advantage, by those who have leisure and
inclination to study the history of parties, in the distracted
period in which he lived. Many of his lesser pieces were
published together in 1681, in a folio volume, with a life
of the author by the rev. George Vernon, which having
given offence to his relations, a new life was published by
his son-in-law Dr. Barnard, 1682, 12mo. It is from a
comparison of both (Vernon’s has since been published in 12mo) that a proper judgment can be formed of Dr. Heylin. His other works of most note are, 1. “An Help to
English History,
” &c. Political Index
” may be considered as a continuation of this work. 2. “History of the Sabbath,
”
3636, 4to, intended to reconcile the public to that dreadful error in the conduct of the court, the “Book of Sports,
”
which did incalculable injury to the royal cause. 3. “Theologia Veterum; the Sum of the Christian Theology contained in the creed, according to the Greeks and Latins,
&c. Lond. 1654, fol. reprinted 1673. 4. Ecclesia Vindicata; or the Church of England justified, 1. In the way
and manner of her Reformation, &c. 2. In officiating by
a public Liturgy. 3. In prescribing a set form of Prayer
to be used by preachers before their sermons. 4. In her
right and patrimony of tithes. 5. In retaining the episcopal government, and therewithal the canonical ordination of priests and deacons,
” London Short View of the Life and Reign of King
Charles (the second monarch of Great Britain) from his
birth to his burial,
” London, Reliquiae sacrae Carolina,
” printed
at the Hague, Examen Historicum
or a discovery and examination of the mistakes and defects
in some modern histories, viz. 1. In the Church History
of Britain, by Tho. Fuller. To which is added, an Apology of Dr. Jo. Cosin, dean of Peterborough, in answer to
some passages in the Church History of Britain, in which
he finds himself concerned. 2. In the History of Mary
Queen of Scots, and of her son King James VI,; the
History of King James I. of Great Britain; and the History of
King Charles I. from his cradle to his grave, by Will.
Sanderson, esq. London, 1658, in a large 8vo. To this is
ndded, An Appendix in an answer to some passages in a
scurrilous pamphlet called A Post-haste Reply, &c. by
Will. Sanderson, esq.
” Soon after Dr. Thomas Fuller
published a thin folio, entitled “The Appeal for injured
Innocence,
” which was commonly bound up with the remaining copies of his Church History in quires; and Mr.
Sanderson wrote. a pamphlet, entitled “Peter pursued; or
Dr. Heylin overtaken, arrested, and arraigned upon his
three Appendixes: 1. Respondet Petrus. 2. Answer to
Post-Haste Reply. 3. Advertisements on three Histories.
viz. of Mary Queen of Scots, King James, and King
Charles,
” Historia QuinquArticularis: or a declaration of the Judgment of the Western Churches, and more particularly of the Church of
England, in the five controverted points, reproached in
these last times by the name of Arminianism. Collected
in the way of an Historicall Narration out of the public acts
and monuments, and most approved authors of those scverall churches,
” London, History of
the Reformation of the Church of England from the first
preparations to it made by King Henry VIII. until the legal
settling and establishing of it underQueen Elizabeth,*' &c.
London, 1661, 1670, and 1674, in folio. 9.
” Cyprianus
Anglicus r or the History of the Life and Death of William
(Laud) Archbishop of Canterbury,“&c. London, 1668 and
1671, fol. 10.
” Aerius Redivivus: or the History of the
Presbyterians. Containing the beginning, progress, and
successes of that sect. Their oppositions to monarchical
and episcopal government. Their innovations in the church;
and their inbroylments of the kingdoms and estates of
Christendom in the pursuit of their designes. From the year
1536 to the year 1647," London, 1670 and 1672, in folio.
, a voluminous female writer, was the daughter of a tradesman of London, of the name of Fowler,
, a voluminous female writer, was
the daughter of a tradesman of London, of the name of
Fowler, and was born about 1693. An unfortunate marriage reduced her *o the necessity of depending on her
pen, for the support of herself and two children, the eldest
of whom was then only seven years of age. Her genius
leading her to novel-writing, she took Mrs. Manley’s
“Atalantis
” for her model, and produced “The Court of
Arimania,
” “The New Utopia,
” with other pieces of a
like kind. The looseness of these works were the ostensible reason of Pope for putting her into his “Dunciad;
”
but it is most probable, that some provocation of a private
and personal nature was the real motive to it. She seemed,
however, to be convinced of her error; since, in the numerous volumes she published afterwards, she generally
appeared a votary of virtue, and preserved more purity
and delicacy of sentiment. Her latter writings are, 1.
“The Female Spectator,
” 4 vols; 2. “Epistles for the
Ladies,
” 2 vols. 3. “Fortunate Foundling,
” 1 vol. 4.
“Adventures of Nature,
” 1 vol. 5. “History of Betsey
Thoughtless,
” 4 vofs. 6. “Jenny and Jemmy Jessamy,
”
3 vols. 7. “Invisible Spy,
” 2 vols. 8. “Husband and
Wife,
” 2 vols. all in 12mo; and a pamphlet, entitled “A
Present for a Servant Maid.
”
, an actor, and a writer of plays, in the reigns of queen Elizabeth, James I. and Charles
, an actor, and a writer of plays,
in the reigns of queen Elizabeth, James I. and Charles I.
has not had the time of his birth and death recorded.
Winstanley says, he was one of the most voluminous writers
ef his age: and, in a preface to one of his plays, he tells
us, that it was one preserved out of 220; of which number only 24 now remain. He displayed much learning in
his “Actor’s Vindication;
” but what rank he held on the
stage none of his biographers have informed us. Langbaine observes of him, that he was a general scholar and
tolerable linguist, as his translations from Lucian, Erasmus,
and from other Latin as well as Italian authors, sufficiently
shew: the wits and poets, however, have always held him
cheap. Besides his “Actor’s Vindication,
” he wrote “A
Life of Merlin
” The Hierarchy of Angels“Life of
queen Elizabeth
” “The Lives of nine Worthies
” “The
Lives of nine Women Worthies;
” “A general History of
Women,
” &c. &c. Notices of some of these may be found
in our authorities.
, a half-crazy kind of writer, whose works may probably excite some curiosity respecting the
, a half-crazy kind of
writer, whose works may probably excite some curiosity
respecting the author, was born in 1630, in Essex, where
there was a considerable family of that name. He was first
a pensioner in St. John’s college, Cambridge; then, in
1650, junior bachelor of Gonvill and Caius college. He
was soon after a lieutenant in the English army in Scotland,
then a captain in general Fleetwood’s regiment, when he
was Swedish ambassador in England for Carolus Gustavus.
He afterwards went to Jamaica in some capacity, and on
his return, in 1660, published an account of it, called
“Jamaica viewed,
” 4to. two editions of which were printed
in He was a man,
” says Newcourt,
“though episcopally ordained (by bishop Sanderson), yet
publicly bade defiance to the prelacy, and that of his own
diocesan in particular: an impudent, violent, ignorant
fellow, very troublesome, as far as he could, to his right
reverend diocesan, and to all that lived near him.
” He
died Nov. 30, 1708, and was interred in the church of All
Saints, Colchester, with a long Latin epitaph, part of
which, “Reverendus admodum Dominus tarn Marte
quain Mercurio clarus, quippe qui terra marique militavit
non sine gloria, ingeniique vires scriptis multiplice argumento insignitis demonstravit, c.
” was afterwards effaced,
by order, as it was commonly reported at Colchester, of
bishop Compton. His tracts, which in point of style and
often of matter, are beneath criticism, were collected and
published by himself in a quarto vol. 1707. They include
his account of Jamaica the trial of the spiritual courts
general history of priestcraft; a satyr upon poverty; a
satyr against fame the survey of the earth and the writ
de excommunicato capiendo unmasked receipts to cure the
evil of this wicked world the art of contentment, a poem,
&c. &c. Mr. Malone has introduced him in his life of
Dryden, as the author of the “Mushroom, or a satyr against
libelHng tories and preiatical-tantivies, &c.
” He published
also a few occasional sermons, which are reprinted in a
Second edition of his works, 1716, 2 vols. 8vo.
y, &c. 1674“which was afterwards reprinted in 1684, under the title of” The judgment of an anonymous writer concerning these following particulars first, a law for disabling
The principal works of Dr. Hickes are the three following: 1. “Institutiones Grammaticse Anglo-Saxonicae &
Maeso-Gothicae. Grammatica Islandica Runolphi Jonas.
Catalogus librorum Septentrionalium. Accedit Edwardi
Bernardi Etymologicum Britannicum,
” Oxon. Antiquae literature
Septentrionalis libri duo: quorum primus G. Hickesu
S. T. P. Linguarum Veterum Septentrionalium thesaurum
grammatico-criticum & Archaeologicum, ejusdem de antique literatures Septentrionalis militate dissertationem
epistolarum, & Andreas Fountaine equitis aurati numismata
Saxonica& Dano-Saxonica, complectitur alter contn
Humfredi Wanleii librorum Veterum Septentnonaliiim, qui
in Ano-liae Bibiiothecis extant, c.ialogum histonco-cr im,
necmTn multorum veteruni codicum Septentrionalium alibi
extantiuro notitiam, cum totius operis sex mdicibus,
Oxon. 1705, 2 or sometimes 3 vols. folio. Foreigners as
well as Englishmen, who had any relish for antiquities,
have justly admired this splendid and laborious work, which
is now scarce and dear. It was originally published at
3l. 3s. the small, and 5l. 5s the large paper. The latter
now rarely appears, and the former is worth 15l. The
great duke of Tuscany' s envoy sent a copy of it to his
master, which his highness looking into, and finding full of
strange characters, called a council of the Dotti, and commanded them to peruse and give him an account of. They
did so, and reported it to be an excellent work, and that
they believed the author to be a man of a particular head;
for this was the envoy’s compliment to Hirkes, when he
went to him with a present from his master. 3. Two
volumes of Sermons, most of which were never before
printed, with a preface by Mr. Spinckes, 1713, 8vo. After
his death was published another volume of his Sermons,
with some pieces relating to schism, separation, &c. 4.
” A
Letter sent from beyond the seas to one of the chief ministers of the ndnconforming party, &c. 1674“which was
afterwards reprinted in 1684, under the title of
” The
judgment of an anonymous writer concerning these following particulars first, a law for disabling a papist to inherit
the crown secondly, the execution of penal laws against
protestant dissenters; thirdly, a bill of comprehension all
briefly discussed in a letter sent from beyond the seas to a
dissenter ten years ago.“This letter was in reality an
answer to his elder brother, Mr. John Hickes, a dissenting
minister, bred up in Cromwell’s time at the college of
Dublin; whom the doctor always endeavoured to convince
of his errors, but without success. John persisted in them
to his death, and at last suffered for his adherence to the
duke of Monrnouth; though, upon the doctor’s unwearied
application, the king would have granted him his.life,^ but
that he had been falsely informed that this Mr. Hickes was
the person who advised the duke of Monmouth to take upon
him the title of king. 5.
” Ravillac Redivivus, being a
narrative of the late trial of Mr. James Mitchel, a conventicle preacher, who was executed Jan. 18, 1677, for an
attempt on the person of the archbishop of St. Andrew’s,
&c.“6.
” The Spirit of Popery speaking out of the
mouths of fanatical Protestants; or, the last speeches of
Mr. John Kid and Mr. John King, two presbyterian ministers, who were executed for high treason at Edinburgh,
'ten Aug. 14, 1679.“These pieces were published in 1630,
and they were occasioned by his attendance on the duke of
Lauderdale in quality of chaplain. The spirit of faction
made them much read, and did the author considerable
service with several great personages, and even with the
king. 7.
” Jovian; or, an answer to Julian the apostate;“printed twice in 1683, 8vo. This is an ingenious and
learned tract in defence of passive obedience and nonresistance, against the celebrated Samuel Johnson, the
author of
” Julian.“8.
” The case of Infant Baptism,
1683;“printed in the second vol. of the
” London Cases,
168.5,“4to. 9.
” Speculum beatae Virginis, a discourse
on Luke i. 28. of the due praise and honour of the Virgin
Mary, by a true Catholic of the Church of England, 1686.“10.
” An apologetical Vindication of the Church of England, in answer to her adversaries, who reproach her with
the English heresies and schisms, 1686,“4to; reprinted,
with many additions, a large preface, and an appendix of
” Papers relating to the Schisms of the Church of Rome,“1706, 8vo. 11.
” The celebrated story of the Thebati
Legion no fable: in answer to the objections of Dr. Gilbert
Burners Preface to his Translation of Lactantius de mortibus persecutorum, with some remarks on his Discourse of
Persecution;“written in 1687, but not published till 1714,
for reasons given in the preface. 12.
” Reflections upon
a Letter out of the country to a member of this present
parliament, occasioned by a Letter to a member of the
house of commons, concerning the Bishops lately in the
Tower, and now under suspension, 1689.“The author of
the letter to which these reflections are an answer, was
generally presumed to be Dr. Bumet, though that notion
was afterwards contradicted, 13.
” A Letter to the author
of a late paper entitled A Vindication of the Divines of the
Church of England, &c. in defence of the history of passive
obedience, 16S9.“The author of the
” Vindication,“was
Dr. Fowler, bishop of Gloucester, though his name was not
to it. 14.
” A Word to the Wavering, in answer to Dr.
Gilbert Burnet’s Inquiry into the present state of aflairs,
1689.“15.
” An Apology for the new Separation, in a
letter to Dr. Sharp, archbishop of York, &c. 1691.“16.
” A Vindication of some among ourselves against the false
principles of Dr. Sherlock, &c. 1692.“17.
” Some Discourses on Dr. Burnet and Dr.Tillotson, occasioned by the
lute funeral sermon of the former upon the latter, 1695.“It is remarkable, that in this piece Hickes has not scrupled
to call Tiilotson an atheist. 18.
” The Pretences of the
Prince of Wales examined and rejected, &c. 1701.“19.
A letter in the
” Philosophical Transactions,* entitled,
“Epistola viri Rev. D G. Hickesii S. T. P ad D. Hans
Sloane, M. D. & S. R. Seer, de varia lectione inscriptions,
quse in statua Tagis exaratur per quatuor alphabeta Hetrusca
” 20. “Several Letters which passed between Dr.
G. Hickes and a Popish priest, &c. 1705.
” The person
on whose account this book was published, was the lady
Theophila Nelson, wife of Robert Nelson, esq. 21. “A
second collection of controversial Letters relating to the
church of England and the church of Rome, as they passed
between Dr. G. Hickes and an honourable lady, 1710.
”
This lady was the lady Gratiana Carew, of Hadcomb in
Devonshire. 22. “Two Treatises; one of the Christian
Priesthood, the other of the dignity of the episcopal order,
against a book entitled, The Rights of the Christian Church.
”
Trie third edition in A seasonable ana 1 modest apology in behalf of the
Rev. Dr. Hickes and other nonjurors, in a letter to Thomas
Wise, D. D. 1710.
” 24. “AVindication of Dr. Hickes,
and the author of the seasonable and modest apology, from
the reflections of Dr. Wise, &c. 1712.
” 25. “Two Letters to Robert Nelson, esq. relating to bishop Bull,
” published in Bull’s life. 26. “Some Queries proposed to
civil, canon, and common lawyers, 1712;
” printed, after
several editions, in Seasonable
Queries relating to the birth and birthright of a certain
person.
” Besides the works enumerated here, there are
many prefaces and recommendations written by him, at the
earnest request of others, either authors or editors.
, an English divine and writer, was, the son of Roger Hieron, a learned clergyman, vicar of
, an English divine and writer, was,
the son of Roger Hieron, a learned clergyman, vicar of
Epping, in Essex, who died in 1592. His son, who was
born in 1572, received his early education from his father,
who afterwards sent him to Eton school, whence he was
elected by the free choice of provost Goade, into a scholarship of King’s college, Cambridge. On the death of
his father, who probably left no great provision behind
him, he was much assisted in the prosecution of his studies
in the university by sir Francis Barrington, of Barringtonhall, in Essex, knt. While at Cambridge he studied divinity under Lawrence Chaderton, master of Emanuel
college, and made such progress that at his first preaching
at King’s, he was heard with the utmost approbation, seeming, as his biographer says, “rather a bachelor in divinity
than a bachelor in arts, and rather a divine of forty, than
only twenty-four years of age.
” On his appearance as a
preacher in London, he immediately became so popular
that many congregations, together with the inns of court,
desired to have him settled as their minister. But being
offered the living of Moclbury, in Devonshire, in the gift
of Eton college, he preferred that, and preached with
great success, both there and at other places, particularly
Plympton, where, by the means of sir Ferdinand Gorges,
and other gentlemen of the neighbourhood, a lecture was
established, of which he became one of the preachers. His
public and private character procured him the reverence
both of the poor and rich, and it appears by the dedications of his works that he had many friends of high rank.
He inclined to puritan principles, but with a strict adherence to the church of England; and was particularly
zealous against popery. He was long afflicted with a chronical distemper, but continued his public services and
private studies notwithstanding the apparent incapacity of
his weak body. This disorder, however, put an end to
his useful life in the forty-fifth year of his age, in 1617.
He was interred in Modbury church. His works, consisting principally of sermons and commentaries, printed often
separately, in 4to and 8vo, were collected by him and
published in 1614 in fol. and reprinted at London in 1620,
with an additional volume edited by Robert Hill, D. D.
rector of St. Bartholomew, Exchange. To this Dr. Hill
prefixed a life, from which the above particulars are taken.
, a polite writer in the seventeenth century, was born in 1580, at or near Alderton,
, a polite writer in the seventeenth century, was born in 1580, at or near Alderton,
Gloucestershire, and became a gentleman commoner of
Oriel college, Oxford, in 1595. He was soon, however,
removed to Corpus Christi, where his father William Higford, esq. and his grandfather sir John Higford, had both
studied, the latter under the celebrated bishop Jewell, and
both, as well as the subject of the present article, became
zealous puritans. At Corpus Christi, Mr. Higford was
placed under the tuition of Seb. Benefield, and was accounted an accomplished scholar and gentleman. After
taking a degree in arts, he went home, was admitted into
the commission of the peace, and was much respected by
the lord Chandois, and other persons of quality in his
country. He died at his house at Dixton, near Alderton,
April 6, 1657. He left behind him some things fit for the
press, but which were lost. A manuscript, however, was
preserved, entitled “Institution, or Advice to his Grandson,
” of which an abridgment was published by Barksdale, 1660, 12mo. This sensible volume is amply described in the “Censura Literaria.
” A descendant of the
author’s, the rev. Henry Higford, died at Dixton, aged
eighty-six, March 25, 1795.
th of fidelity which he swore to the emperor Louis, whenever he was reconciled to his children. As a writer he was the first who confounded St. Denys, or Dionysius, bishop
, is recorded as a celebrated abbot of St. Denys in France, in the ninth century, in the reigns of Louis le Debonnaire, and Lothaire his son. He became despicable by his attachment to the latter, and by frequently violating the oath of fidelity which he swore to the emperor Louis, whenever he was reconciled to his children. As a writer he was the first who confounded St. Denys, or Dionysius, bishop of Paris, with Dionysius the Areopagite, in his life of St. Dionysius entitled " Areopagitica, n Paris, 1565, 8vo, which is replete with fabulous absurdities.
, an English poet and dramatic writer of some celebrity in his day, was born in Beaufort-buildings
, an English poet and dramatic writer of
some celebrity in his day, was born in Beaufort-buildings
in the Strand, February 10, 1685. He was the eldest son
Of George Hill, esq. of Malmsbury-abbey in Wiltshire
and, in consequence of this descent, the legal heir to an,
entailed estate of about 2000l. per annum; but the misconduct of his father having, by a sale of the property,
which he had no right to execute, rendered it of no advanl
tage to the family, our author was left, together with Mr.
Hill’s other children, to the care of, and a dependence on,
his mother and grandmother; the latter of whom (Mrs. Anne Gregory) was more particularly anxious for his education and improvement. The first rudiments of learning
he received from Mr. Reyner, of Barnstaple in Devonshire^
to whom he was sent at nine years old, and, on his removal
from thence, was placed at Westminster-school, under the
care of the celebrated Dr. Knipe. After remaining here
until he was fourteen years of age, he formed a resolution
singular enough in one so young, of paying a visit to his
relation lord Paget, then ambassador at Constantinople;
and accordingly embarked for that place, March 2, 1700.
When he arrived, lord Paget received him with much surprise, as well as pleasure; wondering, that a person so
young should run the hazard of iuch a voyage, to visit a
relation whom he only knew by character. The ambassador immediately provided for him a very learned ecclesiastic in his own house; and, under his tuition, sent him to
travel, so that he had an opportunity of seeing Egypt, Palestine, and a great part of the East. With lord Paget he
returned home about 1703, and in his journey saw most of
the courts in Europe, and it is probable that his lordship
might have provided genteelly for him at his death, had
he not been dissuaded by the misrepresentations of a female about him, which in a great measure prevented his
good intentions. The young man’s well known merit,
however, soon recommended him to sir William Wentworth, a Yorkshire baronet, who being inclined to make
the tour of Europe, his relations engaged Mr. Hill to accompany him as a travelling tutor, which office he performed, for two or three years, to their entire satisfaction.
In 1709, he commenced author, by the publication of an
“History of the Ottoman Empire,
” compiled from tinmaterials 'which he had collected in the course of his di
rent travels, and during his residence at the Turkish conr:.
This work, though it met with success, Mr. Hill frequently
afterwards repented the having printed, and would himself,
at times, very severely criticize it; and indeed, to say
the truth, there are in it a great number of puerilities, which render it far inferior to the merit of his subsequent writings; in which correctness has ever been so
strong a characteristic, that his critics have even attributed
it to him as a fault; whereas, in this work, there at best
appears the labour of a juvenile genius, rather choosing to
give the full reign to fancy, and indulge the imagination
of the poet, than to aim at the plainness and perspicuity of
the historian. About the same year he published his first
poetical piece, entitled “Camillus,
” in vindication and
honour of the earl of Peterborough, who had been general
in. Spain. This poem was printed without any author’s
name; but lord Peterborough, having made it his business to find out to whom he was indebted, appointed Mr.
JHill his secretary; which post, however, he quitted the
year following, on occasion of his marriage.
As a writer, we cannot follow his panegyrists so far, as to allow him to
As a writer, we cannot follow his panegyrists so far, as
to allow him to stand in a very exalted rank of merit. The
rigid correctness with which he constantly re-perused his
works for alteration, the frequent use of compound epithets,
and an ordo verborum in great measure peculiar to himself,
have justly laid him open to the charge of being very generally turgid and obscure; yet he is not in some parts
without a portion of nervous power, and of intrinsic sterling sense. The sera of his fume, however, is gone by, and
although four volumes of his works, in 8vo, have been published since his death, they have never been in much favour with the public. His quarrel with Pope would have
scarcely been worth reviving in this place, if a recent publication had not thrown new light on Hill’s conduct. He
seems to have lived in perfect harmony with all the writers
of his time excepting Pope, with whom he had a short
paper war, occasioned by that gentleman’s introducing
him in the “Dunciad,
” as one of the competitors for the
prize offered by the goddess’ of Dulness, in the following
lines:
ng his peregrination in the North, entitled “The Progress of Wit, a Caveat for the use of an eminent writer,” which he begins with the following eight lines, in which Pope’s
This, though far the gentlest piece of satire in the whole
poem, and conveying at the same time a very elegant compliment, roused Hill to the taking some notice of it, which
he did by a poem, written during his peregrination in the
North, entitled “The Progress of Wit, a Caveat for the
use of an eminent writer,
” which he begins with the following eight lines, in which Pope’s too well-known disposition is elegantly, yet very severely characterized:
, an English writer, and most extraordinary character, was the son of a Mr. Theophilus
, an English writer, and most extraordinary character, was the son of a Mr. Theophilus Hill, a clergyman of Peterborough or Spalding, and born about the year 1716. He was bred an apothecary, and set up in St. Martin’s-lane, Westminster; but marrying early, and without a fortune on either side, he was obliged to look round for other resources than his profession. Having, therefore, in his apprenticeship, attended the botanical lectures which are periodically given under the patronage of the apothecary’s company, and being possessed of quick natural parts, he soon made himself acquainted with the theoretical as well as practical parts of botany; after which, being recommended to the duke of Richmond and lord Petre, he was by them employed in the inspection and arrangement of their botanic gardens. Assisted by the liberality of these noblemen, he executed a scheme of travelling over several part* of this kingdom, to gather some of the most rare and uncommon plants, accounts of which he afterwards published by subscription. But, after great researches, and the exertion of uncommon industry, which he possessed in a peculiar degree, this undertaking turned out by no means adequate either to his merits or expectations.
inary price for his copies, is, we believe, at least three times as much as ever was made by any one writer in the same period of time. But, had he written much less, his
But the disposition of Dr. Hill was greatly changed with
his circumstances: from being humble and diffident, he had
become vain and self-sufficient. There appeared in him a
pride, which was perpetually claiming a more than ordinary homage, and a vindictive spirit, which could never
forgive the refusal of it. Hence his writings abounded
with attacks on the understandings, morals, or peculiarities
of others, descending, even to personal abuse and scurrility.
This licence of his pen engaged him frequently in disputes
and quarrels; and an Irish gentleman of the name of
Browne, supposed to be ridiculed in an “Inspector,
” proceeded so far as to cane him in the public gardens at Ranelagh. He had a paper war with Woodward the comedian was engaged with Henry Fielding in the affair of
Elizabeth Canning and concerned in a contest with the
Royal Society, Of this, the origin and progress has been
thus detailed by one who had every opportunity of knowing
the circumstances. When Mr. Hill had started all at once
as before related, from a state of indigence and distress,
to taste the comforts of very considerable emoluments from
his labour, giddy with success, and elated beyond bounds
with the warm sunshine of prosperity, he seemed to be
seized with a kind of infatuation. Vanity took entire possession of his bosom, and banished from thence every
consideration but of self. His conversation turned on little
else, and even his very writings were tainted with perpetual details of every little occurrence that happened to him.
His raillery, both in company and in his writings, frequently turned on those who closely attached themselves to
philosophical investigations, especially in the branches of
natural philosophy. The common -place wit of abusing the
medal-scraper, the butterfly-hunter, the cockle-shell-merchant, &c. now appeared in some of his Magazines and
Inspectors, and in two or three places he even indulged
some distant glances of satire at the Royal Society. Notwithstanding which, however, when the Supplement to
“Chambers’s Dictionary
” was nearly finished, the proprietors of that work, very sensible of the weight of an
F. R. S. annexed to the author’s name, were very desirous
that Dr. Hill should have this addition as well as Mr. Scott,
his colleague in the work. In consequence of this design,
Dr. Hill procured Mr. Scott to propose him for election
into that honourable body; but the doctor’s conduct for
some time past having been such as had rendered him the
object of contempt to some, of disgust to others, and of
ridicule to almost all the rest of his former grave and philosophical acquaintances, he now stood but a very indifferent chance for carrying an election, where an opposition
pf one third was sufficient to reject the candidate; and as.
the failing in that attempt might have done our author
more essential prejudice than the succeeding in it could
even have brought him advantage, the late ingenious and
worthy president, Martin Folkes, esq. whose remembrance
must ever live in the highest estimation with all who ever
had the honour of knowing him, notwithstanding that Dr.
Hill had given him personal occasion of offence against him,
yet with the utmost generosity and candour, advised Mr.
Scott to dissuade his friend, for his own sake, against a
design which there appeared so little probability of his succeeding in. This advice, however, Dr. Hill, instead of
considering in the generous light it was meant, misinterpreted into a prejudiced opposition against his interest, am
would have persisted in his intention even in despite of it,
had net his being unable to obtain the subscription o
requisite number of members to his recommendation^
obliged him to lay it aside, from a conviction that he could
not expect to carry an election in a body composed of three
hundred members, of which he could not prevail on three
to set their names to the barely recommending him as a
candidate. Thus disappointed, his vanity piqued, and his
pride lowered, no relief was left him but railing and scurrility, for which purpose, declaring open war with the
society in general, he first published a pamphlet entitled
*' A Dissertation on Royal Societies,“in a letter from a
Sclavonian nobleman in London to his friend in Sclavonia;
which, besides the most ill-mannered and unjust abuse on
the whole learned body he had been just aiming, in vain,
to become a member of, is interlarded with the grossest
personal scurrility on the characters of Mr. Folkes and
Mr. Henry Baker, two gentlemen to whom Dr. Hill had
formerly been under the greatest obligations, and whose
respective reputations in both the moral and literary world
had long been too firmly established for the weak efforts
of a disappointed scribbler to shake or undermine. Not
contented with this, he proceeded to compile together a
large quarto volume entitled
” A Review of the Works of
the Royal Society,“in which, by the most unfair quotations,
mutilations, and misrepresentations, numbers of the papers
read in that illustrious assembly, and published under the
title of the
” Philosophical Transactions,“are endeavoured
to be rendered ridiculous. This work is ushered into the
world with a most abusive and infamous dedication to
Martin Folkes, esq. against whom and the afore-mentioned
Mr. Henry Baker the weight of this furious attack was
chiefly aimed but the whole recoiled upon himself; and
by such personal abuse, malignant altercation, proud and
insolent behaviour, together with the slovenliness and inaccuracy of careless and hasty productions, he wrote himself out of repute both with booksellers and the town;
and, after some time, sunk in the estimation of the public
nearly as fast as he had risen. He found, however, as
usual, resources in his own invention. He applied himself
to the preparation of certain simple medicines namely,
” the Essence of Water-dock; Tincture of Valerian Pectoral Balsam of Honey and Tincture of Bardana.“The
well-known simplicity of these preparations led the public
to judge favourably of their effects; they had a rapid sale,
and once more enabled the doctor to live in splendour.
Soon after the publication of the first of these medicines,
he obtained the patronage of the earl of Bute; under
which he published a very pompous and voluminous botanical work, entitled
” A System of Botany;“but is said to
have been a very considerable loser by this speculation.
His botanical works, however, had a favourable influence
in promoting the science in general. To wind up the
whole of so extraordinary a life, having a year or two
before his death presented an elegant set of his botanical
works to the king of Sweden, that monarch invested him
with one of the orders of his court, that of Vasa, in consequence of which he assumed the title of Sir John. He
died Nov. 22, 1775, of the gout, which he professed to cure
others. As to his literary character, and the rank of
merit in which his writings ought to stand, Hill’s greatest
enemies could not deny that he was master of considerable
abilities, and an amazing quickness of parts. The rapidity
of his pen was ever astonishing, and he has been known
to receive within one year, no less than 1500l. for the
works of his own single hand; which, as he was never in
such estimation as to be entitled to any extraordinary price
for his copies, is, we believe, at least three times as much
as ever was made by any one writer in the same period of
time. But, had he written much less, his works would
probably have been much more read. The vast variety of
subjects he handled, certainly required such a fund of
universal knowledge, and such a boundless genius, as were
never perhaps known to centre in any one man; and it is
not therefore to be wondered, if, in regard to some he
appears very inaccurate, in some very superficial, and in
others altogether inadequate to the task he had undertaken.
His works on philosophical subjects seemed most likely to
have procured him fame, had he allowed himself time to
digest the knowledge he possessed, or preserved that regard
to veracity which the relation of scientific facts so rigidly
demands. His novels, of which he has written many, such
as
” The History of Mr. Lovell,“(in which he had endeavoured to persuade the world he had given the detail of his own life),
” The Adventures of a Creole,“” The Life of
Lady Frail,“&c. have, in some parts of them, incidents
not disagreeably related, but the most of them are merely
narratives of private intrigues, containing throughout the
grossest calumnies, and endeavouring to blacken and
undermine the private characters of many worthy persons.
In his
” Essays,“which are by much the best of hia
writings, there is, in general, a liveliness of imagination,
and adroitness in the manner of extending, perhaps some
very trivial thought, which at first may by many be mistaken for wit; but, on a nearer examination, will be found
to lose much of its value. A continued use of smart short
periods, bold assertions, and bolder egotisms, produces a
transient effect, but seldom tempts the spectator to take a
second glance. The utmost that can be said of Hill is,
that he had talents, but that, in general, he either greatly
nisapplied them, or most miserably hackneyed them for
profit. As a dramatic writer he stands in no estimation^
nor has he been known in that view by any thing but three
very insignificant pieces: namely, 1.
” Orpheus,“an
opera, 1740. 2.
” The Critical Minute,“a farce, published in 1754, but not acted, 3.
” The Rout," a farce,
1754*. A large volume might be written on the life and!
adventures of this extraordinary man, as affording a complete history of literary quackery, every branch of which
he pursued with a greater contempt for character than
perhaps any man in our time.
two latter he received his information partly from Caesar’s own mouth, but he is a less perspicuous writer, although his style is good. He was made consul, together with
, was an officer under Julius Caisar, and wrote a supplementary part of the Commentaries published in his name, viz. the eighth of the Gallic war, and those of the Alexandrine and African wars. Of the two latter he received his information partly from Caesar’s own mouth, but he is a less perspicuous writer, although his style is good. He was made consul, together with Vibius Pansa, in the year B. C. 43, and was killed in a battle with Antony in the neighbourhood of Mutina.
As a writer, he possessed uncommon talents; his greatest defect was in his
As a writer, he possessed uncommon talents; his greatest defect was in his style, extending his periods to a disagreeable length, for which Pope has thus recorded him:
man, and an agreeable sprightly companion. In his profession he was learned and judicious; and, as a writer, has been long known in the theatrical world as the author of
* Archbishop Seeker one day, at be Christians, replied, “If they were,
his table, when the Monthly Reviewers it was certainly ‘secundum usum Winwt-re said, by one of the company, to ton’.
”
the list of persons to be created doctors of physic: but
either by chance or management, his name was not found
in the last list; and he had not his degree of M. D, till
about a month after, by a particular mandamus. He was
elected F. R. S. in 1726, when he was very young, and had
the honour of being made known to the learned world as a
philosopher, by “A Letter from the rev. Dr. Samuel
Clarke to Mr. Benjamin Hoadly, F. R. S. occasioned by
the present controversy among the mathematicians concerning the proportion of Velocity and Force in bodies in
motion.
” He was made registrar of Hereford while his
father filled that see; and was appointed physician to his
majesty’s household so early as June 9, 1742. Jt is remarkable, that he was for some years physician to both the
royal households; having been appointed to that of the
prince of Wales, Jan. 4, 1745-6, in the place of Dr. Lamotte, a Scotch physician, whom the prince had himself
ordered to be struck out of the list, on some imprudent
behaviour at the Smyrna coffee-house at the time of the
rebellion in 1745. The appointment was attended with
some circumstances of particular honour to Dr. Hoadly.
The prince himself, before the warrant could be finished,
ordered the style to be altered; and that he should be
called physician to the household, and not extraordinary,
as the other had been: observing, that this would secure
that place to him in case of a demise, and be a bar against
any one getting over him. Nay, not content with this,
his royal highness voluntarily wrote a letter to the bishop
with his own hand “that he was glad of this opportunity
of giving him a token of his gratitude for his services formerly to his family; and that he was his affectionate Frederic, P.
” Dr. Hoadly is said to have filled these posts
with singular honour. He married, 1. Elizabeth, daughter
of Henry Betts, esq. of Suffolk, counsellor at law, by whom
he had one son, Benjamin, that died an infant. 2 Anne,
daughter and co-heiress of the honourable general Armstrong, by whom he left no issue. He died in the lifetime of his father, Aug. 10, 1757, athishouM it Chelsea,
which he had built ten years before. He published, 1.
“Three Letters on the Organs of Respiration, read at the
royal college of physicians, London, A. D. 1737, being
the Gulstonian lectures for that year. To which is added,
an Appendix, containing remarks on some experiments of
Dr. Houston, published in the Transactions of the Royal
Society for the year 1736, by Benjamin Hoadly, M. B.
fellow of the college of physicians, and of the royal society,
London,
” 1740, 4to. 2. “Oratio anniversaria in Theatro
Coll. Medicor. Londinensium, ex Harveii instttuto habita
die 18 Oct. A. D. 1742, a Benj. Hoadly, M. D. Coll. Med.
& S. R. S.
” The Suspicious Husband, a Comedy.
” 4. “Observations on a Series of Electrical experiments, by Dr.
Hoadly and Mr. Wilson, F. R. S.
” The Suspicious Husband,
” which appeared
first in
, an eminent English philosopher and miscellaneous writer, was born at Malmsbury in Wiltshire, April 5, 1588, his father
, an eminent English
philosopher and miscellaneous writer, was born at Malmsbury in Wiltshire, April 5, 1588, his father being minister
of that town. The Spanish Armada was then upon the
coast of England; and his mother is said to have been so
alarmed on that occasion, that she was brought to bed of
him before her time. After having made a considerable
progress in the learned languages at school, he was sent, in
1603, to Magdalen hall, Oxford; and, in 1608, by the
recommendation of the principal, taken into the family of
the right honourable William Cavendish lord Hardwicke,
soon after created earl of Devonshire, as tutor to his son
William lord Cavendish. Hobbes ingratiated himself so
effectually with this young nobleman, and with the peer
his father, that he was sent abroad with him on his travels
in 16:0, and made the tour of France and Italy. Upon
his return with lord Cavendish, he became known to persons of the highest rank, and eminently distinguished for
their abilities and learning. The chancellor Bacon admitted him to a great degree of familiarity, and is said to
have made use of his pen for translating some of his works
into Latin. He was likewise much in favour with lord
Herbert of Cherbury; and the celebrated Ben Jonson had
such an esteem for him, that he revised the first work which
he published, viz. his “English Translation of the History
of Thucyciides.
” This Hobbes undertook, as he tells us
himself, “with an honest view of preventing, if possible,
those disturbances in which he was apprehensive his country would be involved, by shewing, in the history of the
Peloponnesian war, the fatal consequences of intestine
troubles.
” This has always been esteemed one of the best
translations that we have of any Greek writer, and the
author himself superintended the maps and indexes. But
while he meditated this design, his patron, the earl of
Devonshire, died in 1626; and in 1628, the year his work
was published, his son died also. This loss affected him
to such a degree, that he very willingly accepted an offer
of going abroad a second time with the son of sir Gervase
Clifton, whom he accordingly accompanied into France,
and staid there some time. But while he continued there
he was solicited to return to England, and to resume his
concern for the hopes of that family, to which he had
attached himself so early, and owed many and great
obligations.
0, and has been styled Chaucer’s disciple. He studied law at Chester’s Inn, in the Strand, and was a writer to the privy seal for above twenty years. When he quitted this
, an ancient English poet, who scarcely, however, deserves the name, was born probably about 1370, and has been styled Chaucer’s disciple. He studied law at Chester’s Inn, in the Strand, and was a writer to the privy seal for above twenty years. When he quitted this office, or what means of subsistence he afterwards had, cannot be easily determined. Pits seems wrong in asserting that he was provided for by Humphrey duke of Gloucester. Nor is Bale more correct in saying that he had imbibed the religious tenets of Wickliff. From his poems the following scanty particulars of his history have been communicated by a learned friend: " He dwelt in the office of the privy seal, a writer * unto the seal twenty-four years come Easter, and that is nigh.‘ The king granted him an annuity of twenty marks in the exchequer, which it appears he had much difficulty in getting paid. He expresses much doubt of obtaining it from * yere to yere:’ fears it may not be continued when he is no longer able to ‘ serve’ (i. e. as a writer in the privy seal office). Besides this annuity he has but six marks coming in yearly * in noo tide.‘ Speaks of dwelling at home in his ’ pore coote,' and that more than two parts of his life are spent he is ignorant of husbandry;
lle grett laboure,’ and contrasts very happily the life of an husbandman or artificer with that of a writer, adding that he has continued in writing twenty years and more.
* scarcely could skare away the kite;‘ can neither use plough or harrow, knows not * what land is good for what corn;’ unable to fill a cart or barrow from long use to writing; descants on the troubles and difficulties attending writing; says that ‘ hit is welle grett laboure,’ and contrasts very happily the life of an husbandman or artificer with that of a writer, adding that he has continued in writing twenty years and more. He ‘ whilom’ thought to have been a priest, but now is married, having long waited for a benefice; describes the corruption in his office, but that no share of the bribes come to the clerks. Name ‘ Okkleve’ acquainted with Chaucer has small knowledge of Latin and of French. He is advised to complain to the prince that he cannot get paid in the exchequer, and petition that his patent be removed into the haniper, but observes this cannot be done because of the ‘ ordinance,’ for
he died in the month of November, aged eighty-two. Frederick Hoffmann was an industrious and copious writer. Haller has occupied thirty-eight quarto pages in the enumeration
, the most eminent physician of his name, was born at Halle, in Saxony, Feb. 19,
1660. He received his early education in his native town,
and had made great progress in philosophy and the mathematics, when, at the age of fifteen, he lost his father and
mother during the prevalence of an epidemic disease. In
1679 he commenced the study of medicine at Jena, and in
the following year attended the chemical lectures of Gaspar Cramer, at Erfurth; and, on his return to Jena, received the degree of M. D. in February 168!. In 1682 he
published an excellent tract “De Cinnabari Antimonii,
”
which gained him great applause, and a crowd of pupils
to the chemical lectures, which he delivered there. He
was then induced to visit Minden, in Westphalia, op the
invitation of a relation, and practised there for two years
with considerable success. He then travelled into Holland
and thence to England, where he was received with distinction by men of science, and particularly by Paul Herman, the botanist, in the former, and Robert Boyle in the
latter. On his return to Minden, in 1685, he was made
physician to the garrison there, and in the following year
was honoured by Frederic William, elector of Brandenburg, with the appointments of physician to his own person, and to the whole principality of Minden. Yet he
quitted that city in 1688, in consequence of an invitation
to settle at Halberstadt, in Lower Saxony, as public physician. Here he published a treatise “De uisufficientia
acidi ct viscidi,
” by which he overthrew the system of
Cornelius Bontekce. In 1689 he married the only daughter of Andrew Herstel, an eminent apothecary, with whom
he had lived forty-eight years in perfect iniion, when she
died. About this time, Frederic III., afterwards first king
of Prussia, founded the university of Halle; and in
Hoffmann was appointed primary professor of medicine,
composed the statutes of that institution, and extended its
fame and elevated its character, while his own reputation
procured him admission into the scientific societies at Berlin, Petershurgh, and London, as well as the honour of
being consulted by persons of the highest rank. He was
called upon to visit many of the German courts in his capacity of physician, and received honours from several
princes; from whom some say that he received ample remuneration in proportion to the rank of his patients; while
others have asserted that he took no fees, but contented
himself with his stipends. Haller asserts that he acquired
great wealth by various chemical nostrums which he
vended. In 1704 he accompanied some of the Prussian ministers to the Caroline warm baths in Bohemia, on which
occasion he examined their nature, and published a dissertation concerning them. On subsequent visits, he became acquainted with the Sedlitz purging waters, which
he first introduced to public notice, having published a
treatise on them in 1717: and he afterwards extended his
inquiries to the other mineral waters of Germany. In 1 708
he was called to Berlin to take care of the declining health
of Frederic, and was honoured with the titles of archiater
and aulic counsellor, together with a liberal salary. After
three years residence at this court he returned to Halle,
and gladly resumed his academical functions. He continued also to labour in the composition of his writings;
and in 1718, at the age of 60, he began the publication
of his “Medicina Rationalis Systematica,
” which was reoeived with great applause by the faculty in various parts
of Europe, and the completion of which occupied him
nearly twenty years. He likewise published two volumes
of “Consultations,
” in which he distributed into three
“centuries,
” the most remarkable cases which had occurred to him; and also “Observationum Physico-Chemicarum Libri tres,
” preternatural affection of the nervous system,
”
rather than to the morbid derangements and qualities of
the fluids, first turned the attention of physicians from the
mere mechanical and chemical operations of the animal
body to those of the primary moving powers of the living
system. To Hoffmann Dr. Cullen acknowledges the obligations we are under for having first put us into the proper
train of investigation; although he himself did not apply
his fundamental doctrine so extensively as he might have
done, and every where mixed with it a humoral pathology
as incorrect and hypothetical as any other. Hoffmann pursued the study of practical chemistry with considerable
ardour, and improved the department of pharmacy by the
addition of some mineral preparations; but on the whole,
and especially in his latter years, his practice was cautious,
and even inert, and he trusted much to vegetable simples.
he never, without intention, delivered the very features of any identical person.” But this elegant writer, who may be said to have received his education in a court,
Mr. Walpole has remarked, that if our artist “indulged
his spirit of ridicule in personalities, it never proceeded
beyond sketches and drawings,
” and wonders “that he
never, without intention, delivered the very features of
any identical person.
” But this elegant writer, who may
be said to have received his education in a court, had perhaps few opportunities of acquaintance among the low
popular characters with which Hogarth occasionally peopled
his scenes. The friend who contributed this remark, was
assured by an ancient gentleman of unquestionable veracity
and acuteness of remark, that almost all the personages
who attended the levee of the Rake were undoubted portraits; and that in “Southvvark Fair,
” and the “Modern
Midnight Conversation,
” as many more were discoverable.
In the former plate he pointed out Essex the dancingmaster; and in the latter, as well as in the second plate to
the “Rake’s Progress,
” Figg the prize-fighter. He mentioned several others by name, from his immediate knowledge both of the painter’s design and the characters represented; but the rest of the particulars by which he
supported his assertions, have esca'ped the memory of our
informant. While Hogarth was painting the “Rake’s Progress,
” he had a summer reidence at Isleworth, and never
failed to question the company who came to see these pictures if they knew for whom one or another figure was
designed. When they guessed wrongly, he set them right.
wered by Mr. Wilkes in a severe ’ North Briton.‘ On this the painter exhibited the caricatura of the writer. Mr. Churchill, the poet, then engaged in the war, and wrote
About 1757, his brother-in-law, Mr. Thornhill, resigned
the place of king’s serjeant-painter in favour of Mr. Hogarth. “The last memorable event in our artist’s life,
” as
Mr. Walpole observes, " was his quarrel with Mr. Wilkes,
in which, if Mr. Hogarth did not commence direct hostilities on the latter, he at least obliquely gave the first offence, by an attack on the friends and party of that gentleman. This conduct was the more surprising, as he had
all his life avoided dipping his pencil in political contests,
and had early refused a very lucrative offer that was made,
to engage him in a set of prints against the head of a courtparty. Without entering into the merits of the cause, I
shall only state the fact. In September 1762, Mr. Hogarth
published his print of * The Times.‘ It was answered by
Mr. Wilkes in a severe ’ North Briton.‘ On this the painter
exhibited the caricatura of the writer. Mr. Churchill, the
poet, then engaged in the war, and wrote his ’ Epistle ta
Hogarth,‘ not the brightest’ of his works, and in which the
severest strokes fell on a defect that the painter had neither caused nor could amend his age; and which, however, was neither remarkable nor decrepit; much less had
it impaired his talents, as appeared by his having composed
but six months before, one of his most capital works, the
satire on the Methodists. In revenge for this epistle, Hogarth caricatured Churchill, under the form of a canonical
bear, with a club and a pot of porter So vituld tit dignus
& hie never did two angry men of their abilities throw
mud with less dexterity.
ht have been his real inducement for representing himself without such a particularity. Besides, the writer of Holbein’s life, at the end of the treatise by De Piles, mentions
It is observed by most authors, that Holbein always painted with his left hand; though Walpole objects against that tradition, (what he considers as a proof), that in a portrait of Holbein painted by himself, which was in the Arundelian collection, he is represented holding the pencil in the right hand. But that evidence cannot be sufficient to set aside so general a testimony of the most authentic writers on this subject; because, although habit and practice might enable him to handle the pencil familiarly with his left hand, yet, as it is so unusual, it must have had but an unseemly and awkward appearance in a picture; which probably might have been his real inducement for representing himself without such a particularity. Besides, the writer of Holbein’s life, at the end of the treatise by De Piles, mentions a print by Hollar, still extant, which describes Holbein drawing with his left hand. Nor is it so extraordinary or incredible a circumstance; for other artists, mentioned in this volume, are remarked for the very same habit; particularly Mozzo of Antwerp, who worked with the left; and Amico Aspertino, as well as Ludovico Cangiagio, who worked equally well with both hands. This great artist died of the plague at London in 1554; some think at his lodgings in Whitehall, where he had lived from the time that the king became his patron,' but Vertue rather thought at the duke of Norfolk’s house, in. the priory of Christ church near Aldgate, then called Uuke’s-place. Strype says that he was buried in St. Catherine Cree church; but this seems doubtful.
, a lawyer of considerable eminence, and law writer, flourished in the time of Charles I. but of his early history,
, a lawyer of considerable eminence, and law writer, flourished in the time of
Charles I. but of his early history, we have no account. In
1640 he was chosen representative for St. Michael in Cornwall in the Long-parliament, and on one occasion argued
for two hours in justification of the canons. In 1641 he
was Lent reader of Lincoln’s-inn, but soon after quitted the
parliament when he saw the extremities to which they were
proceeding. He had formerly given his advice against
ship-money, but was not prepared to overthrow the constitution entirely, and therefore went to Oxford, where, in
1643, he sat in the parliament assembled there by Charles
I. [[he]] was made the prince’s attorney, one of the privy council, and received the honour of knighthood. In 1644 he
was present at the treaty of Uxbridge, and afterwards at
that of the Isle of Wight. Returning to London, after these
ineffectual attempts to restore peace, he was forced to compound for his estate, and was not permitted to remain in
any of the inns of court. He died in 1647, and was interred in the crypt under Lincoln’s-inn chapel. His “Readings on the Statute of Treasons, 25 Edward III. c. 2.
” were
published in 1642, 4to, and in 1681. He was the author
also of “The Freeholder’s Grand Inquest touching our Sovereign Lord the King and his Parliament,
” which hears
the name of sir Robert Filmer, who reprinted it in 1679,
and 1680, 8vo, with observations upon forms of government. He left also some Mss.
, a dramatic and miscellaneous writer and translator, was born in Orange-court, Leicesterfields, Dec.
, a dramatic and miscellaneous
writer and translator, was born in Orange-court, Leicesterfields, Dec. 22, 1744. His father was in the humble occupation of a shoe-maker, and does not appear to have
given his son any education. The first employment mentioned, in which the latter was concerned, was as servant
to the hon. Mr. Vernon, of whose race-horses he had the
care, and became very expert in the art of horsemanship.
He is said also to have worked for many years at his father’s trade. He possessed, however, good natural abilities, and a thirst for knowledge, of which he accumulated
a considerable fund, and learned with facility and success
the French, German, and Italian languages. When about
his twenty-fifth year, he conceived a passion for the stage,
and his first performance was in Ireland. He had afterwards an engagement of the same kind in London, but
never attained any eminence as an actor, although he always might be seen to understand his part better than those
to whom nature was more liberal. He quitted the stage in
1781, after the performance of his first play, “Duplicity,
”
which was successful enough to encourage his perseverance
as a dramatic writer. From this time he contributed upwards of thirty pieces, which were either acted on the
London stages, or printed without having been performed.
Scarcely any of them, however, have obtained a permanent situation on the boards. He published also the following novels “Alwyn,
” Anna St. Ives,
” Hugh Trevor,
” Brian Perdue,
” The private Life of Voltaire,
” 12mo;
“Memoirs of Baron Trenck,
” 3 vols. 12mo; Mirabeau f $
“Secret History of the Court of Berlin,
” 2 vols. 8vo; madame de Genlis’s “Tales of the Castle,
” 5 vols. 12mo;
“The posthumous Works of Frederick II. of Prussia,
” 13
vols. 8vo; “An abridgment of Lavater’s Physiognomy,
” 3
vols. 8vo. Mr. Holcroft having imbibed the revolutionary
principles of France, had joined some societies in this
country, which brought him under suspicion of being concerned with Hardy, Tooke, and Thelwall, who were tried
for high treason in 1794, but they being acquitted, Mr.
Holcroft was discharged without being put upon his trial.
His last work was his “Travels,
” in Germany and France,
2 vols. 4to, which, like some other of his speculations, was
less advantageous to his bookseller than to himself. Iri
1782 he published a poem called “Huntan happiness, or
the Sceptic,
” which attracted little notice on the score of
poetical merit, but contained many of those loose sentiments on religion, which he was accustomed to deliver
with more dogmatism than became a man so little acquainted with the subject. In these, however, he persisted
almost to the last, when, on his death-bed, he is said to
have acknowledged his error. He died March 23, 1809.
, a miscellaneous writer of considerable merit, was born at Mottram in Cheshire in 1742,
, a miscellaneous writer of considerable
merit, was born at Mottram in Cheshire in 1742, and
educated with a view to the ministry among the dissenters;
but this pursuit he very early relinquished, in consequence
of becoming a member of the church of England. He
continued, however, to cultivate his mind by every opportunity within his power, although his circumstances in early
life were unfavourable to a liberal education. About the
year 1761 he removed to Walton in Lancashire, three miles
from Liverpool, where he commenced schoolmaster and
parish-clerk; the latter he resigned some years before his
death. Having married a very sensible and worthy woman,
he opened a boarding-school for young ladies, with the
assistance of his wife, and carried it on with great reputation. His time was for many years divided between the
cares of the school and the study of agriculture, which
had always in some measure engaged his mind. For his
scholars he compiled several useful manuals, particularly
the “Characters of the Kings and Queens of England,
”
An Essay on the Curie in Potatoes,'
”
for which he received the medal from the society of arts,
manufactures, and commerce. The many essays and memoirs which he drew up on such subjects having acquired
him the character of a minute and skilful observer, the
Board of agriculture appointed him surveyor of the county
of Lancaster, and the “Report
” which he returned, rich
in valuable matter, judiciously arranged, was the first that
was republished by the Board; and he had various premiums and other testimonies of approbation adjudged to
him. It appears to have been his utmost ambition to employ his time in what was useful, and no part of that time
was allowed to pass without adding something to his stock
of knowledge. He was at last employed in collecting
materials for a History of Liverpool, when a bilious disorder
carried him off, March 21, 1801, to the very great regret
of all who knew his amiable character. A portrait, and
some other particulars of his life, may be seen in our
authority.
phaniah Holwell, timber-merchant and citizen of London, and grandson of John Holwell, a mathematical writer of much fame in the seventeenth century. The father and grandfather
, a learned English
gentleman, well known in the history of British India,
was the son of Zephaniah Holwell, timber-merchant and
citizen of London, and grandson of John Holwell, a mathematical writer of much fame in the seventeenth century.
The father and grandfather of this John Holwell both fell
in support of the royal cause during the usurpation, and
the family estate of Holwell-hall, in Devonshire, was lost
to their descendants for ever; for although Mr. Holwell
applied to king Charles at the restoration, the only recompense he obtained was to be appointed royal astronomer and surveyor of the crown lands, and the advancement
of his wife to a place of some honour, but of little emolument, about the person of the queen. Some years after
he was appointed mathematical preceptor to the duke of
Monmouth, for whom he conceived a warm attachment,
and, believing him to be the legitimate sou of the king,
was induced to take a very active and imprudent part
against the succession of the duke of York, which in the
end proved his ruin. Having published in 1683 a small
Latin tract called “Catastrophe Mundi,
” which was soon
after translated, and is a severe attack on the popish party,
he was marked for destruction as soon as the duke of York
came to the throne. Accordingly, in 1685, it was contrived that, in quality of surveyor to the crown, he should
be sent to America, to survey and lay down a chart of the
town of New York; and at the same time secret orders
were sent to the government agents there, to take some
effectual means to prevent his return. In consequence of
this, it is said, that he had no sooner executed his commission, than he died suddenly, and his death was attributed,
at the time and on the spot, to the application of poison
administered to him in a dish of coffee. His son was father
to the subject of the present article.
had acquired from this Mr. Wingate, he was, about 1712, bound by indenture to attend the office of a writer of the signet in Edinburgh, as preparatory to the profession
With no other stock of learning than what he had acquired from this Mr. Wingate, he was, about 1712, bound
by indenture to attend the office of a writer of the signet
in Edinburgh, as preparatory to the profession of a writer
or solicitor before the supreme court; but circumstances
inspired him with the ambition of becoming an advocate;
and now being sensible of his defective education, he resumed the study of the Greek and Latin languages, to
which he added French and Italian, and likewise applied
himself to the study of mathematics, natural philosophy,
logic, ethics, and metaphysics. These pursuits, which he
followed at the same time with the study of the law, afforded, independently of their own value, a most agreeable variety of employment to his active mind. His attention appears to have been much turned to metaphysical
investigation, for which he all his life entertained a strong
predilection. About 1723, he carried on a correspondence with the celebrated Andrew Baxter, and Dr. Clarke,
upon subjects of that kind.
In January 1724, he was called to the bar, at a time
when bath the bench and bar were filled by men of uncommon eminence. As he did not possess in any great
degree the powers of an orator, he engaged for some time
but a moderate share of practice as a barrister. In 1728,
he published a folio volume of “Remarkable Decisions of
the Court of Session,
” executed with so much judgment,
that he began to be regarded as a young man of talents,
who had his profession at heart, and would spare no pains
to acquit himself, with honour, in the most intricate causes
in which he might be employed. His practice was quickly
increased; and after 1732, when he published a small volume, entitled “Essays upon several subjects in Law,
” he
was justly considered as a profound and scientific lawyer.
These essays afford an excellent example of the mode of
reasoning which he afterwards pursued in most of his jurisprudential writings, and, in the opinion of his biographer,
furnish an useful model for that species of investigation.
, a clergyman of the church of Scotland, but known only as a dramatic writer, was born in the vicinity of Ancrum in Roxburghshire, Scotland,
, a clergyman of the church of Scotland, but known only as a dramatic writer, was born in the vicinity of Ancrum in Roxburghshire, Scotland, in 1724, and was educated at the parish school, whence he went to the university of Edinburgh, and went through the usual academical course, as preparatory for his entering the church. Here his studies were for some time suspended by the rebellion in 1745. On the approach of the rebels, the citizens of Edinburgh assembled, and formed themselves into an association for the support of their sovereign, and the defence of their city. Mr. Home, having once taken up arms in this cause, was not to be deterred by danger, and inarched with a detachment of the royal army to Falkirk, where he was taken prisoner in the battle fought in that neighbourhood, and confined for some time in the castle of Donne. He contrived, however, to make his escape about the time that tranquillity was restored to the country by the battle of Culloclen; and having resumed his studies, was licensed to preach the gospel in 1747.
sweets of literary society, and who, in particular, had a paramount ambition to shine as a dramatic writer. His first tragedy was “Agis,”“with which it is said he went
Not long after, while on a visit in England, he was introduced to Collins, the poet, at Winchester, and Collins
addressed to him his “Ode on the Superstition of the
Highlanders.
” In Grave;
” but
such a situation could not be very agreeable to one who
had tasted the sweets of literary society, and who, in particular, had a paramount ambition to shine as a dramatic
writer. His first tragedy was “Agis,
”“with which it is
said he went to London, where the managers refused it,
and immediately returning home he wrote his
” Douglas,“which Garrick peremptorily refused. By such discouragement, however, the ardour of the author was not to be
suppressed. Being acquainted with the leading characters
in Scotland, a ready reception of his play was secured;
and accordingly
” Douglas" was performed at the theatre
in the Canongate, Edinburgh, in December 1756, Mr.
Home and several of his clerical brethren being present.
Such a departure from the decorum enjoined by the church
of Scotland could not be overlooked, and the author was
so threatened with ecclesiastical censures, and in reality became so obnoxious in the eyes of the people, that in the
following year he resigned his living, and with it all connexion with the church, wearing ever afterwards a lay habit. In the mean time the presbytery of Edinburgh published an admonition and exhortation against stage-plays,
which was ordered to be read in all the pulpits within their
bounds on a Sunday appointed, immediately after divine
service. In it there is no mention of Home or his play,
although the latter was probably the cause. It merely contains a recapitulation of what had formerly been done by
the church and the laws to discourage the theatres.
Waller, the writer of his life, has given the following character of him, which,
Waller, the writer of his life, has given the following
character of him, which, though not an amiable one, seems
to be drawn with candour and impartiality. He was in
person but a despicable figure; short of stature, very
crooked, pale, lean, and of a meagre aspect, with dark
brown hair, very long, and hanging over his face, uncut,
and lank. Suitable to this person, his temper was penurious, melancholy, mistrustful, and jealous; which qualities
increased upon him with his years. He set out in his youth
with a collegiate or rather a monastic recluseness, and
afterwards led the life of a cynical hermit; scarcely allowing himself necessaries, notwithstanding the great increase
of his fortunes after the fire in London . He declared
sometimes, that he had a great project in his head as to
the disposal of his estate, for the advancement of natural
knowledge, and to promote the ends and designs for which
the Royal Society was instituted; to build a handsome
fabric for the society’s use, with a library, repository, laboratory, and other conveniences for making experiments;
and to found and endow a physico-mechanic lecture like
that of sir John Cutler. But though he was often solicited
by his friends to put his designs down in writing, and
make his will as to the disposal of his estate, yet he could
never be prevailed on to do it, but died without any will
that could be found. In like manner, with respect to his
philosophical treasures, when he first became known to the
learned world, he was very communicative of his inventions
and discoveries, but afterwards grew close and reserved to
a fault; alleclging for an excuse, that some persons challenged his discoveries for their own, and took occasion from
his hints to perfect what he had not finished. For this
reason he would suggest nothing, till he had time to perfect
it himself; so that many things are lost which he affirmed
he knew, though he was not supposed to know every thing
which he affirmed. For instance, not many weeks before
his death, he told Mr. Waller and others, that he knew a
certain and infallible method of discovering the longitude
at sea; yet it is evident that his friends distrusted his
asseveration of this discovery; and how little credit was
then given to it in general, appears from Waller’s own
account. “Hooke,
” says he, “suffering this invention to
be undiscovered to the last, gave some persons cause to
question, whether he was ever the possessor of it; and to
doubt whether what in theory seemed very promising,
would answer when put in practice. Others indeed more
severely judged, that it was only a kind of boasting in him
to assert that which had not been performed though attempted by many.
” In the religious part of his character
he was so far exemplary, that he always expressed a great
veneration for the Deity, and seldom received any
remarkable benefit in life, or made any considerable discovery in
nature, or invented any useful contrivance, or found out
any difficult problem, without setting down his acknowledgment to God, as many places in his diary plainly shew.
He frequently studied the sacred writings in the originals;
for he vvas acquainted with the ancient languages, as well
as with all the parts of mathematics. “To conclude,
”
says Waller, “all Ins errors and blemishes were more than
made amends for by the greatness and extent of his natural
and acquired p-trts, and more than common if not wonderful sagacity, in diving into the most hidden secrets of
nature, and in contriving proper methods of forcing her to
confess the truth, by driving and pursuing the Proteus
through all her changes to her last and utmost recesses.
There needs no other proof of this, than the great number
of experiments he made, with the contrivances for them,
amounting to some hundreds; his new and useful instruments and inventions, which were numerous; his admirable
facility and clearness in explaining the phenomena of nature, and demonstrating his assertions; his happy talent
in adapting theories to the phenomena observed, and contriving easy and plain, not pompous and amusing, experiments to back and prove those theories; proceeding from
obsenations to theories, and from theories to farther trials,
which he asserted to be the most proper method to succeed
in the interpretation of nature. For these his happy qualifications he was much respected by the most learned philosophers at home and abroad; and as with all his failures
he may be reckoned among the great men of the last age,
so, had he been free from them, possibly he might have
stood in the front.
”
ve ever since been held in the highest veneration and esteem by all. An anecdote is preserved by the writer of his life, which, if true, shews that his fame was by no means
But whatever value Hooker himself might put upon his
books of “Ecclesiastical JPolity,
” he could not in that
respect exceed the estimate which has been formed by the
general judgment of mankind, with the exception only of
the enemies of our church establishment. This work has
ever been admired for soundness of reasoning, and prodigious extent of learning; and the author has universally
acquired from it the honourable titles of “the judicious,
”
and “the learned.
” When James I. ascended the throne
of England, he is said to have asked Whitgift for his friend
Mr. Hooker, from whose books of “Ecclesiastical Polity
”
he had so much profited; and being informed by the archbishop that he died a year before the queen, he expressed
the greatest disappointment, and the deepest concern.
Charles I. it is well known, earnestly recommended the
reading of Hooker’s books to his son; and they have ever
since been held in the highest veneration and esteem by
all. An anecdote is preserved by the writer of his life,
which, if true, shews that his fame was by no means confined to his own country, but reached even the ears of the
pope himself. Cardinal ALen and Dr. Stapleton, though
both in Italy when his books were published, were yet so
affected with the fame of them, that they contrived to have
them sent for; and after reading them, are said to have
told the pope, then Clement VIII. that “though his holiness had not yet met with an English book, as he was
pleased to say, whose writer deserved the name of an author, yet there now appeared a wonder to them, and so
they did not doubt it would appear to his holiness, if it
was in Latin; which was, that ‘a pure obscure English
priest had written four such books of law and church polity, in so majestic a style, and with such clear demonstrations of reason,’ that in all their readings they had not
met with any thing that exceeded him.
” This begetting
in the pope a desire tq know the contents, Stapleton read
to him the first book in Latin upon which the pope said,
“there is no learning that this man hath not searched into
nothing too hard for his understanding. This man indeed
deserves the name of an author. His books will get reverence by age; for there is in them such seeds of eternity, that if the rest be like this, they shall continue till
the last fire shall devour all learning;
” all which, whether
the pope said it or no, we take to be strictly true.
hich may be seen in Nichols’s “Select Collec-' tion;” and in 1695 he shewed his genius as a dramatic writer, by “Pyrrhus king of Egypt,” a tragedy, to which Congreve wrote
, son of the preceding, was born
at Exeter, in 1664; but his father being taken chaplain to
Ireland, he received the early part of his education at Trinity college, Dublin; and afterwards was a student at
Queen’s college, Cambridge, where he took the degree of
B. A. in 1688. The rebellion breaking out in Ireland in
that year, he returned thither, and exerted his early valour
in the cause of his country, religion, and liberty. When
public tranquillity was restored, he came again into
Elngland, and formed an acquaintance with gentlemen of wit,
whose age and genius were most agreeable to his own. In
1694 he published some “Epistolary Poems and Translations,
” which may be seen in Nichols’s “Select Collec-'
tion;
” and in Pyrrhus king of Egypt,
” a tragedy, to which
Congreve wrote the epilogue. He published also in that
year, “The History of Love,
” a connection of select fables
from. “Ovid’s Metamorphoses,
” Art of Love,
” which, Jacob says, “added to
his fame, and happily brought him acquainted with the
earl of Dorset, and other persons of distinction, who were
fond of his company, through the agreeableness of his
temper, and the pleasantry of his conversation. It was in
his power to have made his fortune in any scene of life;
but he was always more ready to serve others than mindful
of his own affairs; and by the excesses of hard drinking,
and too passionate an addiction to women, he died a martyr
to the cause in the thirty-sixth year of his age.
” Mr.
Nichols has preserved in his collection an admirable hymn,
“written about an hour before his death, when in great
pain.
” His “Court-Prospect,
” in which many of the principal nobility are very handsomely complimented, is called
by Jacob “an excellent piece;
” and of his other poems he
adds, “that they are all remarkable for the purity of their
diction, and the harmony of their numbers.
” Mr. Hopkins
was also the author of two other tragedies; “Boadicea
Queen of Britain,
” Friendship improved, or
the Female Warrior,
” with a humourous prologue, comparing a poet to a merchant, a comparison which will hold
in most particulars except that of accumulating wealth.
The author, who was at Londonderry when this tragedy
came out, inscribed it to Edward Coke of Norfolk, esq. in
a dedication remarkably modest and pathetic. It is dated
Nov. 1, 1699, and concludes, “I now begin to experience
how much the mind may be influenced by the body. My
Muse is confined, at present, to a weak and sickly tenement; and the winter season will go near to overbear her,
together with her household. There are storms and tempests to beat tier down, or frosts to bind her up and kill
her; and she has no friend on her side but youth to hear
her through; If that can sustain the attack, and hold out
till spring comes to relieve me, one use I shall make of
fa<ther life shall be to shew how much I am, sir, your most
devoted humble servant, C. Hopkins.
”
, an Arian writer, although belonging to the Church of England, was born at Monmouth
, an Arian writer, although belonging to the Church of England, was born at Monmouth
in 1706. He received the elements of a learned education at his native town, whence he was sent to All-Souls,
Oxford, in 1724. He was admitted to deacon’s orders in
1728, and in the following year undertook the curacy of
Waldron, in Sussex. In 1731 he was presented to the
vicarage of Bolney, in the same county. In 1753 he published anonymously, “An Appeal to the common sense
of all Christian people, more particularly the members of
the Church of England, with regard to an important point
of faith and practice, imposed upon their consciences.
”
This excited a controversy which was carried on many
years. In 1756 he was elected master of the grammar
school of Cuckfield; and in 1766, undertook the curacy of
Slaugham, and continued to officiate there many years,
and in his own parish of Bolney, making what alterations
he pleased in the service, at which the churchwardens were
pleased to connive. He supported the famous petition to
parliament for relief, in the matter of subscription to the
liturgy and thirty-nine articles of the church; and wrote
some pamphlets on the subject, but all anonymously. His
last work, in 1784, was “Exodus, a corrected translation,
with notes critical and explanatory,
” in which notes there
is little that can gratify the taste of curious and critical
readers, but so many severe reflections on the articles and
liturgy of the Church of England, that the Monthly Reviewer took for granted he had quitted it, although in the
title he called himself the vicar of Bolney. Immediately
after this publication, his health began to decline; and his
mental faculties were greatly impaired before his decease,
which happened in 1786, when he had attained to his
eightieth year.
r opinions on some points, he was undoubtedly a sincere and exemplary Christian; and as a scholar, a writer, and a preacher, a man of no ordinary qualifications. The cheerfulness
It cannot often fall to the lot of the biographer to record a man so blameless in character and conduct as bishop Home. Whatever might be his peculiar opinions on some points, he was undoubtedly a sincere and exemplary Christian; and as a scholar, a writer, and a preacher, a man of no ordinary qualifications. The cheerfulness of his disposition is often marked by the vivacity of his writings, and the sincerity of his heart is every where conspicuous in them. So far was he from any tincture of covetousness, that he laid up nothing from his preferments in the church. If he was no loser at the year’s end he was perfectly satisfied. What he gave away was bestowed with so much secrecy, that it was supposed by some persons to be little; but, after his death, when the pensioners, to whom he had been a constant benefactor, rose up to look about them for some other support, it began to be known who, and how many they were.
. Horsley that the most effectual preservative against the intended mischief would be to destroy the writer’s credit, and the authority of his name, which the fame of certain
Dr. Horsley was now about to enter on that controversy
with Dr. Priestley, in which he displayed his greatest learning and abilities, and on which his fame is irremoveably
founded. In the year 1782 (we use Dr. Horsley’s words),
an open and vehement attack was made by Dr. Priestley
upon the creeds and established discipline of every church
in Christendom, in a work in 2 vols. 8vo, entitled a “History of the Corruptions of Christianity.
” At the head of
these Dr. Priestley placed both the catholic doctrine of
our Lord’s divinity, and the Arian notion of his pre-existence in a nature far superior to the human, representing
the Socinian doctrine of his mere humanity, as the unanimous faith of the first Christians. It seemed to Dr. Horsley that the most effectual preservative against the intended mischief would be to destroy the writer’s credit,
and the authority of his name, which the fame of certain
lucky discoveries in the prosecution of physical experiments had set high in popular esteem, by a proof of his
incompetency in every branch of literature connected with
his present subject, of which the work itself afforded evident specimens in great abundance. For this declared
purpose, a review of the imperfections of his work in the
first part, relating to our Lord’s divinity, was made the
subject of Dr. Horsley’s Charge, delivered to the clergy of
the archdeaconry of St. Alban’s at a visitation held May 22,
1783, the spring next following Dr. Priestley’s publication.
The specimens alledged by Dr. Horsley of the imperfections of the work, and the incompetency of the author,
may be reduced to six general classes. 1. Instances of
reasoning in a circle. 2, Instances of quotations
misapplied through ignorance of the writer’s subject. 3. Instances of testimonies perverted by artful and forced constructions. 4. Instances of passages in the Greek Fathers
misinterpreted through ignorance of the Greek language.
5. Instances of passages misinterpreted through the same
ignorance, driven further out of the way by an ignorance
of the Platonic philosophy; and 6. Instances of ignorance
of the phraseology of the earliest ecclesiastical writers.
Dr. Horsley concludes this masterly and argumentative
Charge, by saying, “I feel no satisfaction in detecting the
weaknesses of this learned writer’s argument, but what
arises from a consciousness, that it is the discharge of some
part of the duty which I owe to the church of God.
” The
whole of this charge affords a characteristic specimen of
Dr. Horsley’s controversial style, with a mixture of temper leading him, perhaps, somewhat nearer the bounds of
irony then became the solemnity of an address of this kind.
After speaking of many things that may be perfectly obvious to the penetration of such a mind as Dr. Priestley’s,
how absurd and contradictory and improbable soever they
may appear to persons of plain sense and common understandings, unsubtilized by sophistry and metaphysics, and
not stimulated by the love of paradox, he observes, that, to
those who want the doctor’s sagacity, the “true meaning
of an inspired writer
” will not very readily be deemed “to
be toe reverse of the natural and obvious sense of the expressions which he employs.
”
pointed out, are few in number, tliey are too considerable in size to be incident to a well-informed writer; that they betray a want of such a general comprehension of
Dr. Priestley, however, felt none of the alarm with
which his admirers were affected. He promised an early
and satisfactory answer. He predicted that he should rise
more illustrious from his supposed defeat; he promised to
strengthen the evidence of his favourite opinion by the
very objections that had been raised against it; he seemed
to flatter himself that he should find a new convert in his
antagonist himself, and even hinted in print somewhat
concerning the shame and remorse with which he was confident his adversary must be penetrated. From all this it
soon became evident that Dr. Priestley, who could not
but feel personally what every unprejudiced man felt argumentatively, that Dr. Horsley was an antagonist of no
mean stamp, did not profit by this conviction so far as to
take sufficient leisure to revise his own writings, but immediately repeated his former assertions respecting the
doctrine of the Trinity not having been maintained by the
Christian church in the first three centuries, in a publication entitled “Letters to Dr. Horsley, in answer to his
animadversions on the ‘ History of the Corruptions of
Christianity:’ with an additional evidence that the primitive Christian church was Unitarian,
” Letters from the archdeacon of St. Alban’s in Reply
to Dr. Priestley, with an Appendix, containing short strictures on Dr. Priestley’s Letters, by an unknown hand,
”
As a preacher, or rather as a writer of sermons, Dr. Horsley might be allowed to stand in the first
As a preacher, or rather as a writer of sermons, Dr.
Horsley might be allowed to stand in the first class, if we
knew with whom of that class we can compare him. Some
comparisons we have seen, the justice of which we do not
think quite obvious. In force, profundity, and erudition,
in precision and distinctness of ideas, in“aptitude and felicity of expression, and above all, in selection of 'subjects
and original powers of thinking, Dr. Horsley’s Sermons
have been very justly termed
” compositions sui generis"
Upon most of these accounts, or ^rather upon all in the
aggregate, they remove him from a comparison with those
who may have acquired‘ very just fame as popular preachers. Bishop Horsley ’everywhere addresses himself to
scholars, philosophers, and biblical' critics. By these he
was heard with delight, and by these his works will continue to be appreciated as the component parts of every
theological library, although they may not assent to all his
doctrines.
, was a philologer, a writer of verses, and a historian. His real name is unknown; he took
, was a philologer, a writer
of verses, and a historian. His real name is unknown; he
took that of Hortensius, either because his father was a
gardener, or because his family name signified gardener.
He was born at Montfort, in the territory of Utrecht, in
1501, and studied at Louvain. Hortensius was for several
years rector of the school at Naarden, and when that city
was taken in 1572, he would have fallen a sacrifice to the
military fury, had he not been preserved by the gratitude
of' one who had been his pupil. His death happened at
Naarden, in 1577. There are extant by him, besides satires, epithalamia, and other Latin poems, the following
works: 1. Seven books, “De Bello Germanico,
” under
Charles V. 8vo. 2. “De Tumultu Anabaptistarum,
” fol.
3. “De Secessionibus Ultrajectinis,
” fol. 4. Commentaries on the six first books of the Æneid, and on Lucan.
5. Notes on four Comedies of Aristophanes.
, in the opening of his celebrated treatise on orators entitled Brutus.” I considered him,“says that writer,” not, as many supposed, in the light of an adversary, or one
, a Roman orator, was the contemporary and rival of Cicero, and so far his senior, that he
was an established pleader some time before the appearance of the latter. He pleaded his first cause at the age of
nineteen, in the consulship of L. Licinius Crassus, and Q.
Mutius Scevola, ninety-four years before the Christian
aera, Cicero being then in his twelfth year. This early
effort was crowned with great success, and he continued
throughout his life a very favourite orator. His enemies,
however, represented his action as extravagant, and gave
him the name of Hortensia, from a celebrated dancer of
that time. He proceeded also in the line of public honours, was military tribune, praetor, and in the year 68
B. C. consul, together with Q. Caecilius Metellus. He
was an eminent member of the college of augurs, and was
the person who elected Cicero into that body, being sworn
to present a man of proper dignity. By him also Cicero
was there inaugurated, for which reason, says that author,
“it was my duty to regard him as a parent.
” He died in
the year 49 B. C.“; and Cicero, to whom the news of that
event was brought when he was at Rhodes, in his return
from Ciiicia, has left a most eloquent eulogy and lamentation upon him, in the opening of his celebrated treatise
on orators entitled Brutus.
” I considered him,“says that
writer,
” not, as many supposed, in the light of an adversary, or one who robbed me of any praise, but as a
companion and sharer in my glorious labour. It was much
more honourable to have such an opponent, than to stand
unrivalled; more especially as neither his career was impeded by me, nor mine by him, but each, on the contrary,
was always ready to assist the other by communication,
advice, and kindness." If, however, Cicero was sincere
in his attachment, it was surmised that Hortensius was not,
and this is even insinuated in one of the epistles of Cicero.
Hortensius amassed great wealth, but lived at the same
time in a splendid and liberal manner; and it is said that
at his death his cellars were found stocked with 10,000
hogsheads of wine. His orations have all perished; but
it was the opinion of Quintillian, that they did not in perusal answer to the fame he obtained by speaking them.
Hortensius must have been si^ty-four at the time of his
death.
, a learned Swiss writer, who rendered important service to the Protestant cause, was
, a learned Swiss writer, who
rendered important service to the Protestant cause, was
born at Altdorf near Zurich, where his father was minister,
in 1547. He began his studies with great diligence and
success at Zurich, under the direction of Woltius, his
uncle by his mother’s side; and losing his father in 1563,
found an affectionate patron in his godfather Rodolphus
Gualterus. He left Zurich in 1565, in order to visit the
other universities and spent some time in Marpurg and
Heidelberg. He was afterwardsrecalled, and received
into the ministry in 1568; the year following he obtained
the freedom of the city; and was made provisor of the
abbey school in 1571. Though his school and his cure
engrossed much of his time, he had the courage to undertake a noble work of vast extent, “An History of the Errors of Popery.
” He considered, that the Papists, when
defeated by the Holy Scriptures, had recourse to tradition;
were for ever boasting of their antiquity, and despised the
protestants for being modern. To deprive them of this
plea, he determined to search into the rise and progress of
the Popish rites and ceremonies; and to examine by what
gradations the truth, taught by Christ and his apostles,
had been corrupted by innovations. He could not, however, complete his work, agreeably to the plan he had
drawn out; but he published some considerable parts of
it, as, 1. “De Templis: hoc est, de origine, progressu,
usu, & abusu Templorum, ac omnino rerum omnium ad
Templa pertinentium,
” De Monachis:
seu de origine & progressu monachatus & ordinum
monasticorum,
” De Festis Judaeorum,
et Ethnicorum: hoc est, de origine, progressu, ceremoiiiis, et ritibus festorum dierum Judaeorum, Graecorum,
Romanorum, Turcarum, & Indianorum,
” Festa Christianorum,
” &c. Historia
Sacramentaria hoc est, libri quinque Je Ccsnae Dominicae
prima institutione, ejusque vero usu & abusu, in primaeva
ecclesia necnon de origine, progressu, ceremoniis, & ritibus Missas, Transubstantiationis, & aliorum pene infinitorum errorum, quibus Ccenx prima institutio horribiliter
in papatu polluta & profanata est,
” Pars
altera: de origine et progressu controversies sacramentarias
de Coena Domini inter Lutheranos, Ubiquistas, & Orthodoxos, quos Zuinglianos seu Calvinistas vocant, exortae ab
anno 1517 usque ad 16,02 deducta, 1602,
” folio. These
are all of them parts of his great work, which he enlarged
in succeeding editions, and added confutations of the arguments of Bellarmin, Baronius, and Gretser. What he
published on the Eucharist, and another work entitled
“Concordia Discors,
” &c. printed in Historia Jesuitica
hoc est, de origine, regulis, constitutionibus, privileges,
incrementis, progressu, & propagatione ordinis Jesuitarum.
Item, de eorum dolis, fraudibus, imposturis, nefariis faci- noribus, cruentis consiliis, falsa quoque, seditiosa, & sanguinolenta doctrina,
”
, a very learned writer, and famous for his skill in the oriental languages, was born
, a very learned writer, and famous for his skill in the oriental languages, was born at Zurich in Switzerland, in 1620. He had a particular talent for learning languages; and the progress he made in his first studies gave such promising hopes, that it was resolved he should be sent to study in foreign countries, at the public expence. He began his travels in 1638, and went to Geneva, where he studied two months under Fr. Spanheim. Then he went into France, and thence into Holland; and fixed at Groningen, where he studied divinity under Gomarus and Alting, and Arabic under Pasor. Here he intended to have remained; but being very desirous of improving himself in the oriental languages, he went in 1639 to Leyden, to be tutor to the children of Golius, who was the best skilled in those languages of any man of that age. By the instructions of Golius, he improved greatly in the knowledge of Arabic, and also by the assistance of a Turk, who happened to be at Leyden. Besides these advantages, Golius had a fine collection of Arabic books and Mss. from which Hottinger was suffered to copy what he pleased, during the fourteen months he staid at Leyden. In 1641, he was offered, at the recommendation of Golius, the place of chaplain to the ambassador of the States-general to Constantinople; and he would gladly have attended him, as such a journey would have co-operated wonderfully with his grand design of perfecting himself in the eastern languages: but the magistrates of Zurich did not consent to it: they chose rather to recall him, in order to employ him for the advantage of their public schools. They permitted him first, however, to visit England; and the instant he returned from that country, they appointed him professor of ecclesiastical history; and a year after, in 1643, gave him two professorships, that of catechetical divinity, and that of the oriental tongues.
Strutt estimates his general merits more minutely. Houbraken’s great excellence, says that ingenious writer, consisted in the portrait line of engraving. We admire the
The persons who undertook and brought to conclusion this great national work, were the two Knaptons, booksellers, encouraged by the vast success of Rapin’s History of England. They employed both Vertue and Houbraken, but chiefly the latter, and the publication began in numbers in 1744. The rirst volume was completed in 1747, and the second in 1152. It was accompanied with short lives of the personages, written by Dr. Birch. Lord Orford observes, that some of Houbraken’s beads were carelessly done, especially those of the moderns; and the engraver living in Holland, ignorant of our history, uninquisitive into the authenticity of what was transmitted to him, engraved whatever was sent. His lordship mentions two instances, the heads of Carr earl of Somerset, and secretary Thurlow, which are not only not genuine, but have not the least resemblance to the persons they pretend to represent. Mr. Gilpin, in his Essay on Prints, says, "Houbraken is a genius, and has given us in his collection of English portraits, some pieces of engraving at least equal to any thing of the kind. Such are the heads of Hampden, Schomberg, the earl of Bedford, and the duke of Richmond particularly, aud some others. At the same time, we must own that he has intermixed among his works a great numbe/ of bad prints. In his best, there is a wonderful union of softness and freedom. A more elegant and flowing line no artist ever employed.]' Mr. Strutt estimates his general merits more minutely. Houbraken’s great excellence, says that ingenious writer, consisted in the portrait line of engraving. We admire the softness and delicacy of execution, which appear in his works, joined with good drawing, and a fine taste. If his best performances have ever been surpassed, it is in the masterly determination of the features which we find in the works of Nanteuil, Edelink, and Drevet this gives an animation to the countenance, more easily to be felt than described. From his solicitude to avoid the appearance of an outline, he seems frequently to have neglected the little sharpnesses of light and shadow, which not only appear in nature, but, like the accidental semitones in music, raise a pleasing sensation in the mind, in proportion as the variation is judiciously managed. For want of attention to this essential beauty, many of his celebrated productions have a misty appearance, and do not strike the eye with the force we might expect, when we consider the excellence of the engraving. The Sacrifice of Manoah, from Rembrandt, for the collection of prints from the pictures in the Dresden gallery, is the only attempt he made in historical engraving; but in it he by no means succeeded so well. Of his private life, family, or character, nothing is known. He lived to a good old age, and died at Amsterdam, in 1780.
raldine, and maintain her beauty at Florence. None of the portraits of Surrey, as far as the present writer has been able to ascertain, mention his age, except that in
The birth of lord Surrey may be conjectured to have
taken place some time between 1515 and 1520, probably
the former, or at least earlier than 1520. He was, it is,
universally agreed, the school companion of the duke of
Richmond, who died in 1536, in his seventeenth year, and
if we allow that Surrey was two or three years older, it will
not much affect the high probability that he was a very
young man at the time when his biographers made him fall
in love with Geraldine, and maintain her beauty at Florence. None of the portraits of Surrey, as far as the present writer has been able to ascertain, mention his age, except that in the picture gallery at Oxford, on which is
inscribed, that he was beheaded in “1547, set. 27.
” The
inscription, indeed, is in a hand posterior to the date of
the picture (supposed to be by Holbein), but it may have
been the hand of some successful inquirer. None of the
books of peerage notice his birth or age, nor are these circumstances inserted on his monument at Framlingham.
Conjecture, it has been already observed, supposes him to
have been born some time between 1515 and 1520. If
we take the earliest of these dates, it will still remain that
his biographers have either crowded more events into his
life than it was capable of holding, or that they have delayed his principal adventures until they become undeserving of credit, and inconsistent with his character.
to his edition of Surrey’s Poems, asserts the same; tut little credit is due to the assertion -of a writer who at the same time fixes Surrey’s birth in 1520, seven years
If it be said that Surrey’s age is not exactly known, and
therefore allowing 1536, the date of his travels, to be erroneous, it is possible that he might have been enamoured
of Geraldine long before this, and it is possible that his
travels might have commenced in 1526, or any other period founded on this new conjecture. This, however, is
as improbable as all the rest of the story, for it can be decidedly proved that there was no time for Surrey’s gallantries towards Geraldine, except the period which his
biographers, however absurdly, have assigned, namely,
when he was a married man. The father of lady Elizabeth, the supposed Geraldine, married in 1519, one of
the daughters of Thomas Grey, marquis of Dorset, and
by her had five children, of whom Elizabeth was the
fourth, and therefore probably not born before 1523 or
1524. If Surrey’s courtship, therefore, must be carried
farther back, it must be carried to the nursery; for even
in 1536, when we are told he was her knight-errant, she
could not have been more than eleven or twelve years old.
Let us add to this a few particulars respecting Geraldine’s
husband. She married Edward lord C'linton. He was
born in 1512, was educated in the court, and passed his
youth in those magnificent and romantic amusements which
distinguished the beginning of Henry VIII.'s reign, but
did not appear as a public character until 1544, when he
was thirty-two years of age, Geraldine about twenty-four,
and Surrey within two years of his death, and most probably a widower. This earl of Lincoln had three wives;
the date of his marriage with any of them is not known,
nor how long they lived, but Geraldine was the third, the
only one by whom he had no children, and who survived
his death, which took place in 1584, thirty-eight years
after the death of Surrey. Mr. Warton, in his earnest
desire to connect her with Surrey, insinuates that she might
have been either cruel, or that her “ambition prevailed
so far over her gratitude as to tempt her to prefer the
solid glories of a more splendid title and ample fortune,
to the challenges and the compliments of so magnanimous,
so faithful, and so eloquent a lover.
” On this it is only
necessary to remark, that the lady’s ambition might have
been as highly gratified by marrying the accomplished and
gallant Surrey, the heir of the duke of Norfolk, as by allying herself to a nobleman of inferior talents and rank.
But of his two conjectures, Mr. Warton seems most to
adhere to that of cruelty^ for he adds, that “Surrey himgelf outlived his amorous vows, and married the daughter
of the earl of Oxford.
” This, however, is as little deserving of serious examination, as the ridiculous story of
Cornelius Agrippa showing Geraldine in a glass, which
Anthony Wood found in Drayton’s “Heroical Epistle,
”
or probably, as Mr. Park thinks, took it from Nash’s
fanciful “Life of Jack Wilton,
” published in Heroical Epistle
” which led Mr.
Warton into so egregious a blunder as that of our poet
being present at Flodden-field, in 1513. Dr. Sewell, indeed, in the short memoirs prefixed to his edition of Surrey’s Poems, asserts the same; tut little credit is due to
the assertion -of a writer who at the same time fixes Surrey’s birth in 1520, seven years after that memorable
battle was fought.
terviews with her at Hunsdon. Whatever credit may be given to this conjecture, for which the present writer is by no means anxious, it is certain that if we reject it,
It is now time to inquire whether the accounts hitherto
given can be confirmed by internal evidence. It has been
so common to consider Geraldine as the mistress of Surrey,
that all his love-poems are supposed to have a reference
to his attachment to that lady. Mr. Warton begins his
narrative by observing, that “Surrey’s life throws so much
light on the character and subjects of his poetry, that it is
almost impossible to consider the one without exhibiting a
few anecdtes of the other.
” We have already seen what
those anecdotes are, how totally* irreconcileable with probability, and how amply refuted by the dates which hi
biographers, unfortunately for their story, have uniformly
furnished. When we look into the poems, we find the
celebrated sonnet to Geraldine, the only specious foundation for his romantic attachment; but as that attachment
and its consequences cannot be supported without a continual violation of probability, and in opposition to the
very dates which are brought to confirm it, it seems more
safe to conjecture that this sonnet was one of our author’s
earliest productions, addressed to Geraldine, a mere child,
by one who was only not a child, as an effort of youthful
gallantry, in one of his interviews with her at Hunsdon.
Whatever credit may be given to this conjecture, for
which the present writer is by no means anxious, it is certain that if we reject it, or some conjecture of the same
import, and adopt the accounts given by his biographers,
we cannot proceed a single step without being opposed by
invincible difficulties. There is no other poem in Surrey’s
collection that can be proved to have any reference to
Geraldine, but there are two with the same title, viz. “The
Complaint of the absence of her lover being upon the sea,
”
which are evidently written in the character of a wife, lamenting the absence of her husband, and tenderly alluding
to “his faire litle Sonne.
” Mr. Wanon, indeed, finds
Geraldine in the beautiful lines beginning “Give place,
ye lovers, here before,
” and from the lines “Spite drave
me into Boreas reign,
” infers that her anger “drave him
into a colder climate,
” with what truth may now be left to
the reader. But another of his conjectures cannot be
passed over. “In 1544,
” he says, “lord Surrey was fieldmarshal of the English army in the expedition to Boulogne,
which he took. In that age, love and arms constantly
went together; and it was amid the fatigues of this protracted campaign, that he composed his last sonnet, called
* The Fansie of a Wearied Lover.
” But this is a mere
supposition. The poems of Surrey are without dates, and
were arranged by their first editor without any attention
to a matter of so much importance. The few allusions
made to his personal history in these poems are very dark,
but in some of them there is a train of reflection which
seems to indicate that misfortunes and disappointments
had dissipated his Quixotism, and reduced him to the sober and serious tone of a man whose days had been “fevr
and evil.
” Although he names his productions songs and
sonnets, they have less of the properties of either than of
the elegiac strain. His scripture- translations appear to be
characteristic of his mind and situation in his latter days.
What unless a heart almost broken by the unnatural conduct of his friends and family, could have induced the
gay and gallant Surrey, the accomplished courtier and
soldier, to console himself by translating those passages
from Ecclesiastes which treat of the shortness and uncertainty of all human enjoyments, or those Psalms which
direct the penitent and the forsaken to the throne of almighty power and grace? Mr. Warton remarks that these
translations of Scripture “show him to have been a friend
to the reformation;
” and this, which is highly probable,
may have been one reason why his sufferings were embittered by the neglect, if not the direct hostility of his
bigotted father and sister. The translation of the Scriptures
into prose was but just tolerated in his time, and to familiarize them by the graces of poetry must have appeared
yet more obnoxious to the enemies of the reformation.
Although the present writer has taken some liberties with the Historian of English poetry,
Although the present writer has taken some liberties with
the Historian of English poetry, in his account of Surrey’s
life, he has not the presumption to omit Mr. Warton’s elegant and just criticism on his poems. “Surrey for justness of thought, correctness of style, and purity of expression, may justly be pronounced the first English classical poet. He unquestionably is the first polite writer of
love-verses in our language, although it must be allowed that
there is a striking native beauty in some of our love-verse,
written much earlier than Surrey’s.
” It is also worthy of
notice, that while all his biographers send him to Italy to
study its poetry, Mr. Warton finds nothing in his works of
that metaphysical cast which marks the Italian poets his
supposed masters, especially Petrarch. “Surrey’s sentiments are for the most part natural and unaffected; arising
from his own feelings, and dictated by the present circumstances. His poetry is alike unembarrassed by learned allusions, or elaborate conceits. If our author copies Petrarch, it is Petrarch’s better manner; when he descends
from his Platonic abstractions, his refinements of passion,
his exaggerated compliments, and his play upon opposite
sentiments, into a track of tenderness, simplicity, and nature. Petrarch would have been a better poet had he been.
a worse scholar. Our author’s mind was not too much
over-laid by learning.
”
and mysterious, and far from possessing masterly abilities. It causes astonishment, says the elegant writer to whom we are indebted for this article, “when we reflect that
, earl of Northampton, second
son of the preceding, but unworthy of such a father, was
born at Shottisham in Norfolk about 1539. He was educated at King’s college, and afterwards at Trinity-hall,
Cambridge, where he took the degree of A. M. to which
he was also admitted at Oxford, in 1568. Bishop Godwin
says, his reputation for literature was so great in the unU
versity, that he was esteemed“the learnedest among the
nobility; and the most noble among the learned.
” He
was at first, probably, very slenderly provided for, being
often obliged, as Lloyd records, “to dine with the chair
of duke Humphrey.
” He contrived, however, to spend
some years in travel; but on his return could obtain no
favour at court, at least till the latter end of queen Elizabeth’s reign, which was probably owing to his connections.
In 1597, it seems as if he was in some power (perhaps, however, only through the influence of his friend lord Essex), because Rowland White applied to him concerning
sir Robert Sydney’s suits at court. He was the grossest of
flatterers, as appears by his letters to his patron and friend
lord Essex; but while he professed the most unbounded
friendship for Essex, he yet paid his suit to the lord treasurer Burleigh. On the fall of Essex, he insinuated himself so far into the confidence of his mortal enemy, secretary Cecil, as to become the instrument of the secretary’s
correspondence with the king of Scotland, which passed
through his hands, and has been since published by sit
David Dalrymple. It is not wonderful, therefore, that a
man of his intriguing spirit, was immediately on king
James’s accession, received into favour. In May 1603,
he was made a privy-counsellor; in January following,
lord warden of the Cinque Ports; in March, baron of
Marnhill, and earl of Northampton; in April 1608, lord
privy seal; and honoured with the garter. In 1609, he
succeeded John lord Lumley, as high steward of Oxford;
and in 1612, Robert, earl of Salisbury, as chancellor of
Cambridge. Soon after he became the principal instrument in the infamous intrigue of his great niece the countess of Essex with Carr viscount Rochester. The wretch
acted as pander to the countess, for the purpose of conciliating die rising favourite and it is impossible to doubt
his deep criminality in the murder of Overbury. About
nine months afterwards, June 15, 1614, he died, luckily
for himself, before this atrocious affair became the subject
of public investigation. He was a learned man, but a
pedant dark and mysterious, and far from possessing masterly abilities. It causes astonishment, says the elegant
writer to whom we are indebted for this article, “when
we reflect that this despicable and wicked wretch was the
sou of the generous and accomplished earl of Surrey.
”
One of his biographers remarks, that “his lordship very
prudently died a papist; he stood no chance for heaven in
any other religion.
”
, an English writer of some abilities and learning, born Jan. 1626, was a younger
, an English writer of some
abilities and learning, born Jan. 1626, was a younger son
of Thomas earl of Berkshire, and educated at Magdalen
college, Cambridge. During the civil war he suffered with
his family, who adhered to Charles I. but at the Restoration was made a knight, and chosen for Stockbridge in
Hampshire, to serve in the parliament which began in
May 1661. He was afterwards made auditor of the exchequer, and was reckoned a creature of Charles II. whom
the monarch advanced on account of his faithful services,
in cajoling the parliament for money. In 1679 he was
chosen to serve in parliament for Castle Rising in Norfolk;
and re-elected for the same place in 1688. He was a
strong advocate for the Revolution, and became so passionate an abhorrer of the nonjurors, that he disclaimed all
manner of conversation and intercourse with persons of
that description. His obstinacy and pride procured him
many enemies, and among them the duke of Buckingham;
who intended to have exposed him under the name of
Bilboa in the “Rehearsal,
” but afterwards altered his
resolution, and levelled his ridicule at a much greater
name, under that of Bayes. He was so extremely positive, and so sure of being in the right upon every subject,
that Shadwell the poet, though a man of the same principles, could not help ridiculing him in his comedy of the
“Sullen Lovers,
” under the character of Sir Positive At-all.
Jn the same play there is a lady Vaine, a courtezan which
the wits then understood to be the mistress of sir Robert,
whom he afterwards married. He died Sept. 3, 1698. He
published, 1. “Poems and Plays.
” 2. “The History of
the Reigns of Edward and Richard II. with reflections and
characters of their chief ministers and favourites; also a
comparison of these princes with Edward I. and III.
” 1690,
8vo. 3. “A letter to Mr. Samuel Johnson, occasioned by
a scurrilous pamphlet, entitled Animadversions on Mr.
Johnson’s answer to Jovian,
” The History
of Religion,
” The fourth book of Virgil
translated,
” Statius’s Achilleis translated,
”
, a voluminous English writer, the son of Thomas Howell, minister of Abernant in Caermarthenshire,
, a voluminous English writer, the
son of Thomas Howell, minister of Abernant in Caermarthenshire, was born about 1594, and, to use his own
words, “his ascendant was that hot constellation of cancer
about the midst of the dog-days.
” He was sent to the freeschool at Hereford -, and entered of Jesus-college, Oxford,
in 1610. His elder brother Thomas Howell was already a
fellow of that society, afterwards king’s chaplain, and was
nominated in 1644 to the see of Bristol. James Howell,
having taken the degree of B. A. in 1613, left college, and
removed to London; for being, says Wood, “a pure
cadet, a true cosmopolite, not born to land, lease, house,
or office, he had his fortune to make; and being withal not
so much inclined to a sedentary as an active life, this situation pleased him best, as most likely to answer his views.
”
The first employment he obtained was that of steward to a
glass-house in Broad-street, which was procured for him
by sir Robert Mansel, who was principally concerned in it.
The proprietors of this work, intent upon improving the
manufactory, came to a resolution to send an agent abroad,
who should procure the best materials and workmen; and
they made choice of Howell for this purpose, who, setting
off in 1619, visited several of the principal places in Holland, Flanders, France, Spain, and Italy. In Dec. 1621,
he returned to London; having executed the purpose of
his mission very well, and particularly having acquired a
masterly knowledge in the modern languages, which afforded him a singular cause for gratitude. “Thank God,
”
he says, “I have this fruit of my foreign travels, that I
can pray unto him every day of the week in a separate
language, and upon Sunday in seven.
”
st those puritans who opposed the discipline and ceremonies, but was afterwards a more distinguished writer and preacher against popery. He appears to have entered the
, successively bishop of Oxford and
Durham, was born in St. Bride’s parish, London, in 1556,
and educated at St. Paul’s school, whence he became student of Christ church, Oxford, in 1577. After taking his
degrees in arts, and entering into holy orders, he was vicar
of Bampton in Oxfordshire, rector of Brightwell in Berkshire, a fellow of Chelsea college, and canon of Hereford.
When vice-chancellor of Oxford he exerted himself against
those puritans who opposed the discipline and ceremonies,
but was afterwards a more distinguished writer and preacher
against popery. He appears to have entered the lists
against Bellarmine and his friends with determined resolution, declaring “that he'd loosen the pope from his
chair, though he were fastened thereto with a tenpenny
nail.
” King James commanded his polemical discourses,
which are the most considerable of his works, to be printed,
in 1622, 4to. They are all in the form of sermons.
, a late dramatic and miscellaneous writer, and an actor, was born in the Strand, London, in 1728, where
, a late dramatic and miscellaneous
writer, and an actor, was born in the Strand, London, in
1728, where his father was in considerable practice as an
apothecary. He was educated at the Charter-house, with
a view to the church, but afterwards embraced his father’s
profession, which, however, he was obliged to relinquish
after an unsuccessful trial. What induced him to go on
the stage we know not, as nature had not been very bountiful to him in essential requisites. He performed, however, for some time in the provincial theatres, and in 1759
obtained an engagement at Covent-garden theatre, which
he never quitted, unless for summer engagements. In
one of these he became acquainted with Shenstone the
poet, who, observing his irreproachable moral conduct, so
different from that of his brethren on the stage, patronized
him as far as he was able, and assisted him in writing his
tragedy of “Henry II.
” and “Rosamund.
” It was indeed Mr. Hull’s moral character which did every thing for
him. No man could speak seriously of him as an actor,
but all spoke affectionately of his amiable manners and undeviating integrity. He was also a man of some learning,
critically skilled in the dramatic art, and the correspondent
of some of the more eminent literary men of his time. His
poetical talents were often employed, and always in the
cause of humanity and virtue, but he seldom soared above
the level of easy and correct versification. In prose, perhaps, he is entitled to higher praise, but none of his works
have had more than temporary success. He died at his
house at Westminster, April 22, 1808. For the stage he
altered, or wrote entirely, nineteen pieces, of which a list
may be seen in our authority. His other works were, I.
“The History of sir William Harrington,
” a novel, Genuine Letters from a gentleman to a young
lady his pupil,
” Richard Plantagenet,
”
a legendary tale, Select Letters between
the late duchess of Somerset, lady Luxborough, miss Dolman, Mr. Whistler, Mr. Dodsley, Shenstone, and others,
”
Moral Tales in verse,
”
It is, indeed, as an historian, or perhaps occasionally as a political writer, that Hume will probahly be best known to posterity; and it
It is, indeed, as an historian, or perhaps occasionally as
a political writer, that Hume will probahly be best known
to posterity; and it is in these capacities that he can be
read with the greatest pleasure and advantage by the
friends of sound morals and religion. Yet even as an historian, he has many faults; he does not scruple to disguise facts from party motives, and he never loses an opportunity of throwing out his cool sceptical sneer at Christianity, under the names of fanaticism and superstition.
“When Mr. Hume rears the standard of infidelity,
” says
Gilpin, “he acts openly and honestly; but when he scatters
his careless insinuations, as he traverses the paths of history, we characterize him as a dark, insidious enemy.
”
, a learned English writer, was born at Newport Pagnell in Buckinghamshire, about 1527,
, a learned English writer, was
born at Newport Pagnell in Buckinghamshire, about 1527,
and had his school education at Cambridge; after which
he became first a demy, then a fellow, of Magdalen-college
in Oxford. He took the degree of M. A. in 1552, and
about that time was made Greek reader of his college, and
entered into orders. In June 1555 he had leave from his
college to travel into foreign countries; he went to Zurich,
and associated himself with the English there, who had
fled from their country on account of their religion. After
the death of queen Mary he returned to England, and was
restored to his fellowship in Magdalen college, from which
he had been expelled because he did not return within the
space of a year, which was one condition on which he was
permitted to travel; another was, that he should refrain
from all heretical company. In 1560 he was appointed
the queen’s professor of divinity at Oxford; and the year
after elected president of his college. In 1562 he took
both the degrees in divinity; and, in 1570, was made
dean of Gloucester. In 1580 he was removed to the
deanery of Winchester; and had probably been promoted
to a bishopric if he had not been disaffected to the church
of England. For Wood tells us, that from the city of
Zurich, where the preaching of Zuinglius had fashioned
people’s notions, and from the correspondence he had at
Geneva, he brought back with him so much of the Calvinist both in doctrine and discipline, that the best which
could be said of him was, that he was a moderate and conscientious nonconformist. This was at least the opinion
of several divines, who used to call him and Dr. Fulke of
Cambridge, standard-bearers among the nonconformists;
though others thought they grew more conformable in the
end. Be this as it will, “sure it is,
” says Wood, that
“Humphrey was a great and general scholar, an able
linguist, a deep divine and for his excellency of style,
exactness of method, and substance of matter in his writings, went beyond most of our theologists .
” He died in
Feb. 1590, N. S. leaving a wife, by whom he had twelve
children. His writings are, 1 “Epistola de Graecis literis,
et Homeri lectione et imitatione;
” printed before a book
of Hadrian Junius, entitled “Cornucopias,
” at Basil, De Religionis conservatione et reformatione, deque
primatu regum, Bas. 1559.
” 3. “De ratione interpretandi auctores, Bas. 1559.
” 4. “Optimates: sive de nobilitate, ejusque autiqua origine, &c.
” Bas. Joannis Juelli Angli, Episcopi Sarisburiensis, vita et
mors, ejusque verae doctrinae defensio, &c. Lond. 1573.
”
6. “Two Latin orations spoken before queen Elizabeth;
one in 1572, another in 1575.
” 7. “Sermons;
” and 8.
“Some Latin pieces against the Papists, Campian in particular.
” Wood quotes Tobias Matthew, an eminent archbishop, who knew him well, as declaring, that “Dr.
Humphrey had read more fathers than Campian the Jesuit
ever saw; devoured more than he ever tasted; and taught
more in the university of Oxford, than he had either
learned or heard.
”
, a popular preacher and writer, was born at Culross, in Perthshire, in 1741. He had the best
, a popular preacher and writer, was
born at Culross, in Perthshire, in 1741. He had the best
education that the circumstances of his parents would permit, and at the age of thirteen was sent to the university
of Edinburgh, where, by his talents and proficiency, he
attracted the notice of the professors, and when he left
Edinburgh he accepted the office of tutor to lord Dundonald’s sons at Culross abbey. In 1764 he was licensed
to preach, having passed the several trials with great applause: and very quickly became much followed on account of his popular talents. He was ordained in 1766,
and was appointed minister of South Leith. On a visit to
London in 1769, he preached in most of the Scotch meeting-houses with great acceptance, and soon after his return he received an invitation to become pastor of the Scotch
church in Swallow-street, which he declined; but in 1771
he removed to London, and undertook the pastoral office
in the Scotch church at London-wall. He appeared first
as an author in 1783, by the commencement of his “Sacred Biography,
” which was at length extended to seven
volumes octavo. While this work was in the course of publication, he engaged in the translation of Lavater’s “Essays
on Physiognomy,
” and in order to render his work as complete as possible, he took a journey into Swisserland, for
the purpose of procuring information from Lavater himself.
He attained, in some measure, his object, though the author did not receive him with the cordiality which he expected, suspecting that the English version must injure the
sale of the French translation. The first number of this
work was published in 1789, and it was finished in a style
worthy the improved state of the arts. From this period
Dr. Hunter spent much of his time in translating different
works from the French language. In 1790 he was elected
secretary to the corresponding board of the “Society for
propagating Christian Knowledge in the Highlands and
Islands of Scotland.
” He was likewise chaplain to the
“Scotch Corporation;
” and both these institutions Were
much benefited by his zealous exertions in their behalf.
In 1795, he published two volumes of Sermons; and in
1798 he gave the world eight “Lectures on the Evidences
of Christianity,
” being the completion of a plan begun by
Mr. Fell. The whole contains a popular and useful elucidation of the proofs in favour of the Christian religion,
arising from its internal evidence, its beneficial influence,
and the superior value of the information which it conveys
with respect to futurity. During the latter years of his
life, Dr. Hunter’s constitution suffered the severest shocks
from the loss of three children, which, with other causes,
contributed to render him unable to withstand the attacks
of disease. He died at the Hot-Wells, Bristol, on the
27th of October, 1802, in the 62d year of his age. Dr.
Hunter was a man of learning: his writings are eloquent,
and shew how well he had studied human nature. In the
pulpit his manner was unaffected, solemn, and impressive.
He indulged his liberal and friendly heart in the exercise
of hospitality, charity, and the pleasures of social intercourse, but the latter frequently beyond the limits which a
regard to prudence and economy should have prescribed.
He was the translator of “Letters of Euler to a German
Princess, on different subjects in Physics and Philosophy
”
“The Studies of Nature by St. Pierre
” “Saurin’s Sermons;
” “Sonnini’s Travels.
” Miscellaneous pieces and
sermons of his own have been published since his death, to
which are prefixed memoirs: from these the foregoing particulars have been taken. Dr. Hunter, about 1796 or 7,
began “A History of London and its Environs,
” which
came out in parts, but did little credit to him, as he evidently had no talents or research for a work of this description.
s eighty-eighth year. He was buried in Hartlebury church-yard, according to his own directions. As a writer, Dr. Hurd’s taste, learning, and genius, have been universally
In 1795 the life of bishop Warburton appeared under
the title of “A Discourse, by way of general preface to
the quarto edition of bishop Warburton’s works; containing some account of the life, writings, and character of
the author.
” Of this work, which excited no common
portion of curiosity/ the style is peculiarly elegant and
pure, but the whole is too uniform in panegyric not to
render the author liable to the suspicion of long-confirmed
prejudices. Even the admirers both of Warburton and
Hurd would have been content with less effort to magnify
the former at the expence of all his contemporaries; and
conscious that imperfection is the lot of all, expected that
age and reflection would have abated, if not wholly extinguished, the unscholarlike animosities of former times.
But in this all were disappointed; and it was with regret
they saw the worst characteristics of Warburton, his inveterate dislikes, his strong contempt, and sneering rancour,
still employed to perpetuate his personal antipathies; and
employed, too, against such men as Lowth and Seeker. If
these were the feelings of the friends who venerated Warburton, and who loved Hurd, others who never had much
attachment to Warburton, or his school, found little difficulty in accumulating charges of gross partiality, and illiberal language, against his biographer. This much may be
sufficient in noticing this life as the production of Dr. Hurd.
It will come hereafter to be more particularly noticed as
regarding Warburton.
The remainder of bishop Kurd’s life appears to have
been spent in the discharge of his episcopal duties, as far
as his increasing infirmities would permit; in studious retirement; and often in lamenting the loss of old and tried
friends. So late as the first Sunday in February before his
death, though then declining in health and strength, he
was able to attend his parish church, and to receive the
sacrament. Free from any painful or acute disorder, he
gradually became weaker, but his faculties continued perfect. After a few days’ confinement to his bed, he expired in his sleep, on Saturday morning, May 28, 1808,
having completed four months beyond his eighty-eighth
year. He was buried in Hartlebury church-yard, according to his own directions. As a writer, Dr. Hurd’s taste,
learning, and genius, have been universally acknowledged,
and although a full acquiescence has not been given in all
his opinions, he must be allowed to be every where shrewd,
ingenious, and original. Even in his sermons and charges,
while he is sound in the doctrines of the church, his arguments and elucidations have many features of novelty, and
are conveyed in that simple, yet elegant style, which renders them easily intelligible to common capacities. Dr.
Hurd’s private character was in all respects amiable.
With his friends and connexions he obtained the best eulogium, their constant and warm attachment; and with the
world in general, a kind of veneration, which could neither
be acquired nor preserved, but by the exercise of great
virtues. One of his last employments was to draw up a
series of the dates of his progress through life. It is to be
lamented he did not fill up this sketch. Few men were
more deeply acquainted with the literary history of his
time, or could have furnished a more interesting narrative. Much of him, however, may be seen in his Life of
Warburton, and perhaps more in the collection of Warburton’s “Letters
” to himself, which he ordered to be
published after his death, for the benefit of the Worcester
Infirmary. Of this only 250 copies were printed, to correspond with the 4to edition of Warburton’s works, but it
has since been reprinted in 8vo.
career was however interrupted by his engaging, at the request of his friends, as an apprentice to a writer to the signet. But instead of copying writs and deeds, or studying
, an ingenious philosopher of the sceptical class, was the son of Mr. William Hutton, merchant in Edinburgh, and born in that city on the 3d of June, 1726. He entered the university as a student of humanity, in Nov. 1740. He studied afterwards under the celebrated Maclaurin, but did not prosecute the mathematical sciences to any great extent. The origin of his attachment to the study of chemistry is traced to the accidental mention of a chemical fact by professor Stevenson, in his prelections on logic. The fact was, that aqua regia is the only solvent of gold which requires the united action of two acids, each of which singly is capable of dissolving any of the baser metals. This important phenomenon drew him, as if by a kind of electric attraction, to the study of chemistry, with a force that could never afterwards be overcome. His philosophical career was however interrupted by his engaging, at the request of his friends, as an apprentice to a writer to the signet. But instead of copying writs and deeds, or studying th,e forms of legal proceedings, it was found that his favourite object of pursuit was the experiments of the crucible and retort. He was accordingly released from his engagement as an apprentice, and permitted to direct his attention to studies more congenial to his inclinations. He applied himself to the study of medicine as being the most closely connected with chemistry, and after attending the lectures in the university for some years, repaired, as was then customary, to the continent, to finish his course of study. He took the degree of M. D. at Leyden, in 1749.
n objected that his periods are long; but it seems scarcely worth while to enlarge on the style of a writer who lived at a time when style was so little cultivated, so
It is as a historian that lord Clarendon will be longest
remembered, and if compared with those who preceded,
or were contemporaries with him, his superiority must in
every respect be acknowledged. He knew more and has
told more of the histories of his times than any other man,
and that with an impartiality which gives us an equally
favourable opinion of his head as of his heart. It may be
every where seen that he cannot disguise the truth even
when it makes against the cause he supports; and where
there is any appearance of partiality, it may easily be
traced to a warmth of loyalty and friendship, for which
every honourable man will find an apology in his own
breast. The republicans of his time had much to allege
against him, and those of more modern times will never
forgive a loyalty which they cannot comprehend, a steadiness of principle which ill accords with their versatile
schemes of innovation, and a species of patriotism which
would preserve the balance between liberty and licentiousness. “Like justice itself,
” says lord Orford, in a character of our author, by no means very favourable, “he
held the balance between the necessary power of the supreme magistrate and the interests of the people. This
never-dying obligation his contemporaries were taught to
overlook and to clamour against, till they removed the only
man, who, if he could, would have corrected his master’s
evil government.
” Such was Clarendon’s n^-erit in the
corrupt court of Charles II. when, “if he had sought
nothing but power, his power |iad never ceased.
” The
fact was, that Clarendon, in his History, not then
published, but certainly written, had traced the misfortunes of
the preceding reign to their true source, and was the only
man at court who wished to profit by his experience. As
to his style, as a historian, it has chiefly been objected that
his periods are long; but it seems scarcely worth while to
enlarge on the style of a writer who lived at a time when
style was so little cultivated, so imperfectly known. His
excellencies are his comprehensive knowledge of mankind,
which enabled htm to draw those exact portraits of the
leading characters of:his time, which have scarcely been
equalled, and probably can never be excelled. No man
brings us nearer to the personages with whom we wish to
be familiar. He is, says Granger, in this particular as
unrivalled among the moderns as Tacitus among the ancients. He paints himself in drawing the portraits of others;
and we every where see the clear and exact comprehension, the uncommon learning, the dignity and equity of
the lord chancellor, in his character as a writer.
d. “This diary,” says the editor, “presents us with a picture of the manners of the age in which the writer lived. We may learn from it, that at the close of the seventeenth
His State Letters, during his government of Ireland,
and his Diary for the years 1687, 1688, 1689, and 169O,
were published in 2 vols. 4to, 1763, from the Clarendon
press in Oxford. “This diary,
” says the editor, “presents us with a picture of the manners of the age in which
the writer lived. We may learn from it, that at the close
of the seventeenth century, a man of the first quality made
it his constant practice to go to church, and could spend
the day in society with his family and friends, without
shaking his arm at a gaming-table, associating with jockies
at Newmarket, or murdering time by a constant round of
giddy dissipation, if not of criminal indulgence.
” Besides
the above, lord Clarendon drew up “Some account of the
tombs and monuments in the cathedral church of Winchester, Feb. 1683,
” which was continued and printed with
Gale’s history of that church; and there are three tracts
attributed to him, printed in Gutch’s “Collectanea.
”
’s edition of Swift’s works; and it is a monument, says that editor, that will do more honour to the writer’s memory than all that mere wit or valour has achieved since
, Lord Hyde and Cornbury, eldest
son to Henry earl of Clarendon and Rochester, was the
author of a few pamphlets published without his name: of
some tragedies still in manuscript, and of a comedy called
“The Mistakes or, The Happy Resentment,
” printed in
disdain whatever Cornbury disdained.
” “He was,
” says
lord Orford, “upright, calm, steady his virtues were of
the gentlest complexion, yet of the firmest texture vice
could not bend him, nor party warp him even his own
talents could not mislead him. Though a master of eloquence, he preferred justice and the love of his country
to all the applause which the violence of the times in which,
he lived was so prodigal of bestowing on orators who distinguish themselves in any faction; but the tinsel of popularity and the intrinsic of corruption were equally his
contempt. He spoke, nor wrote, nor acted, for fame.
”
He wrote the paper dated Feb. 12, 1737, in the periodical
paper entitled “Common Sense,
” and “A Letter to the
vice-chancellor of Oxford.
” Letter to his Lordship,
” from several
members of the university, acknowledging his merits. He
was succeeded by sir Roger Newdigate. But of all his
compositions, that which did his lordship most credit, was
his “Letter to David Mallet, on the intended publication
of lord Bolingbroke’s Manuscripts,
” which was printed in
Dr. Havvkes worth’s edition of Swift’s works; and it is a
monument, says that editor, that will do more honour to
the writer’s memory than all that mere wit or valour has
achieved since the word began. Mallet, it is well known,
did not profit as he ought to have done by this advice.
Pope’s allusion of “disdain,
” &c. is said, by Ruffhead, to
have arisen from the following circumstance: when lord
Cornbury returned from his travels, the earl of Essex, his
brother-in-law, told him he had got a handsome pension
for him; to which lord Cornbury answered with a composed dignity, “How could you tell, my lord, that I was
to be sold; or, at least, how came you to know my price
so exactly?
”
, a very learned writer, was son of Mr. Ralph Hyde, minister of Billingsley near Bridgenorth
, a very learned writer, was son
of Mr. Ralph Hyde, minister of Billingsley near Bridgenorth in Shropshire, and born there June 2i), 1636. Having
a strong inclination for the Oriental languages from his
youth, he studied them first under his father; and afterwards, in 1652, being admitted of King’s college, Cambridge, he became acquainted with Mr. Abraham Wheelock, an admirable linguist, who encouraged him to prosecute his study of them in that place. By him, Hyde,
when he had been at Cambridge little more than a year,
was sent to London, and recommended to Walton, afterwards bishop of Chester, as a person very capable of assisting him in the Polyglott Bible, in which work he was
then engaged. Hyde rendered him great services; for,
besides his attendance in the correction of it, he transcribed
the Pentateuch out of the Hebrew characters, in which it
was first printed at Constantinople, into the proper Persian
characters; which by archbishop Usher was then judged
impossible to have been done by a native Persian, because
one Hebrew letter frequently answered to several Persian
letters, which were difficult to be known. He translated
it likewise into Latin. What he did farther in the Polyglott, is specified by the editor in these words: “Nee
praetereundus est D. Thomas Hyde, summae spei juvenis,
cjui in linguis Orientalibus supra aetatem magnos progressuB
fecit, quorum specimina dedit turn in Arabibus, Syriacis,
Persicis, &c. corrigendis, turn in Pentateucho Persico
characteribus Persicis describendo, quia antea soils Hebraicis extitit, ejusque versionem Latinam concinnando.
”
, was an ancient Latin writer, who flourished in the time of Augustus. Suetonius, in. his
, was an ancient Latin writer,
who flourished in the time of Augustus. Suetonius, in. his
book “De illustribus Grammaticis,
” says that he was a
freedman of Augustus, and by nation a Spaniard; though
some think that he was an Alexandrian, and brought by
Caesar to Rome when Alexandria was taken. He was a
diligent follower and imitator of Cornelius Alexander, a
celebrated Greek grammarian; and was also himself a
teacher at Rome. He was made keeper of the Palatine
library; was very intimate with the poet Ovid, and with
Caius Licmius, a man of consular dignity and an historian,
who has taken occasion to inform us, that he died very
poor, and, while he lived, was supported chiefly by his
generosity; but Vossius thinks that the person here named
the consular historian Caius Licinius, should be Caius Asinius, who wrote a history of the civil war, and was consul
with Cneius Domitius Calvinus, U. C. 723.
, an Italian writer, was born at Florence, in 1466, and was the disciple of Marsiiius
,
an Italian writer, was born at Florence, in 1466, and was
the disciple of Marsiiius Ficinus, under whom he studied
the- Platonic philosophy, and became a great master of
it. He was also a good orator, and succeeding Ficinus in
his professorship, held it till his death, which happened in
1522. There is extant by him, “A Treatise of Beauty,
”
and another of “Love,
” according to the doctrine of Plato,
besides several others, which were all printed together at
Basil in 1563.
enge himself upon his old antagonist Warburton. At the same time he exposed the young and incautious writer to the resentment of that veteran, who did not fail to shew
In 1742, he had an epistolary debate with his friend William Whiston, concerning the order and times of the high
priests. In 1744, he published “An Address to the Deists,
&c.
” in answer to Morgan’s “Resurrection of Jesus considered by a Moral Philosopher;
” and, in The Belief of a Future State
proved to be a fundamental article of the religion of the
Hebrews, and held by the philosophers, &c.
” and two or
three polemic pieces with Warburton were the consequence
of this. His next work was, “Remarks upon Middleton’s
Free Inquiry into the Miraculous Powers, &c.
” and, after
this, he does not appear to have published any thing till
1752, except that, in 1751, he communicated to Mr. John
Gilbert Cooper, for the use of his “Life of Socrates,
”
some learned notes; in which he contrived to avenge himself upon his old antagonist Warburton. At the same time
he exposed the young and incautious writer to the resentment of that veteran, who did not fail to shew it in one of
his notes upon Pope. In 1752, came out his last and best
work, “Chronological Antiquities,
” in 3 vols. 4to. He
afterwards made many collections and preparations for an
edition of the New Testament in Greek, with Scholia in
the same language; and would have inserted all the various
readings, had not the growing infirmities of age prevented
him. An account of the materials of this intended edition,
with notes containing alterations, corrections, additions to
his “Chronology,
” are inserted in an appendix to “Memoirs
” of him printed in
acts of Mi;. Home, which are now remaining, shew how much information he derived from this excellent writer, who deserves to be numbered with the English fathers of the
, a learned English divine, was
born at Willowing, in the bishopric of Durham, 1579.
Many of his relations being merchants in Newcastle, he
was designed to have been bred in that profession; but his
great inclination to learning being observed, he was sent
to Oxford, and admitted into Queen’s college in 1595,
and removed to Corpus- Christi the year after. He took
his degrees in arts at the stated times; and May 10, 1606,
became probationer-fellow, being then well-grounded in
arithmetic, grammar, philology, geometry, rhetoric, logic,
philosophy, the oriental languages, history, &c. with an
insight into heraldry and hieroglyphics. But he made all
his knowledge subservient to the study of divinity, to which
he applied with great vigour, and became so distinguished
in it, that he not only read a divinity-lecture in his college
every Sunday morning, but another on the week-day at
Pembroke college (then newly founded) at the request of
the master and fellows. He was al|p chosen vice-president
of his college for many years successively, by virtue of
which office he moderated at the divinity disputations, with
remarkable learning, and no less candour and modesty. He
commenced D. D. in 1622, and quitted the college two
years afterwards, being preferred to a living in his nativfc
county, and soon after to the vicarage of Newcastle. In
that large and laborious cure, he performed all the duties
of an excellent parish-priest, and was particularly admired
for his discourses from the pulpit. At this time he was a
rigid Calvinist, but yielded the point of absolute predestination to the persuasions of Dr. Richard Neile, bishop of
Durham, who took him for his chaplain, and joined with
Dr. Laud in bringing him back to his college, where he
was elected president by their interest, in 1630. Upon
this promotion he resigned the vicarage of Newcastle; and,
in 1635, was collated to a prebend of Winchester, having
been made king’s chaplain some time before. Dr. Towers
being advanced to the bishopric of Peterborough, Dr.
Jackson succeeded him in the deanery in 1638; but he
did not enjoy this dignity quite two years, being taken
from it by death, in 1640. He was interred in the inner
chapel of Corpus-Christi college. He was a man of a blameless life, studious, humble, courteous, and remarkably charitable, pious, exemplary in his private and public conversation; so that he was respected and beloved by the most
considerable persons in the nation; and indeed the greatest
esteem was no more than his due, on account of his learning, for he was well skilled in all the learned languages,
arts, sciences, and physics. As an instance of his charitable disposition, we are told, that while he was vicar of
Newcastle, whenever he went out, he usually gave what
money he had about him to the poor, who at length so
flocked about him, that his servant took care he should not
have too much in his pocket. Dr. Jackson was profoundly
read in the fathers, and endued with an uncommon depth
of judgment. His works are very numerous, printed at
different times, but were all collected and published in.
1672 and 1673, in three volumes, folio, consisting chiefly
of sermons, besides his “Commentaries on the Apostles’
Creed,
” which are his principal work. His writings were
much admired and studied by the late bishop Home, in
the account of whose life his merits are thus displayed by
the biographer. “Dr. Jackson is a magazine of theological knowledge, every inhere penned with great elegance
and dignity, so that his style is a pattern of perfection.
His writings, once thought inestimable by every body but
the Calvinists, had been greatly neglected, and would probably have continued so, but for the praises bestowed upon
them by the celebrated Mr. Merrick, of Trinity college,
Oxford, who brought them once more into repute with
many learned readers. The early extracts of Mi;. Home,
which are now remaining, shew how much information he
derived from this excellent writer, who deserves to be
numbered with the English fathers of the church.
”
, a poetical and dramatic writer, was the son of a considerable maltster of Romsey, in the county
, a poetical and dramatic writer, was
the son of a considerable maltster of Romsey, in the
county of Southampton, at which place he was born in
1686. He was bred to the Jaw under an eminent attorney,
and was afterwards steward and secretary to the Hon. William Blathwayt, esq. a celebrated courtier in the reign of
king William, and who enjoyed great preferments in that
and the subsequent reign. These are the only particulars
of his life which have been handed down, and are what he
inserted in his “Poetical Register,
” where he also informs
us that he was a great admirer of poets. He died May 8,
1744. His admiration of poetry, although it could not
make him a poet, led him to inquire into poetical history,
and gradually produced his “Poetical Register, or Lives
and Characters of the English dramatic poets,
” and
” The Soldier’s Last Stake,“that,
according to Whincop, Dr. Sewel, who was by no means
remarkable for ill-nature, on reading his
” Love in a Wood,"
wrote the following very severe lines in the title-page:
Miscellany,” “Essays relating to the conduct of Life,” and “An Essay on Criticism, &c.” But as a law- writer, few men have left more ample testimonies of industry, and one
He also published several poems: “A Journey to Bath
and Bristol,
” “The Lover’s Miscellany,
” “Essays relating
to the conduct of Life,
” and “An Essay on Criticism,
&c.
” But as a law-writer, few men have left more ample
testimonies of industry, and one at least of his productions
still preserves his name. He published, 1. “The Accomplished Conveyancer,
” The Clerk’s Remembrancer.
” The Grand Precedent,
” A Catalogue of all Writs and Processes of the Courts
at Westminster,
” Lex Mercatoria, or the
merchants’ companion,
” The Laws of Appeals and Murder,
” from the Mss. of
Mr. Gale, an eminent practiser, 1719, 8vo. 7. “Lex
Constitutions, or the gentleman’s law,
” The Modern- Justice, containing the
business of a justice of peace, with precedents,
” Review of the Statutes,
”
3720, and again the same year. 10. “A Treatise of the
Laws, or a general introduction to the common, civil, and
canon law,
” The complete Court Keeper,
or lord steward’s assistant,
” The Student’s Companion,
or reason of the law,
” The Common Law common-placed/' 1726, 8vo,
reprinted in fol. 1733. 14.
” The new Law Dictionary,“1729, reprinted in 1733, and often since, with the valuable improvements of Ruffhead, Morgan, and lastly of Sir
Thomas Edlyne Tomlyns, in 1797: an abridgment of
it was published in 1743. 15.
” The complete Chancery
Practitioner,“1730, 2 vols. 8vo. 16.
” Tables to the
Law,“1736, fol. 17.
” The complete. Attorney’s Practice,“1737, 2 vols. 8vo. 18.
” City Libertie,“1732,
and with a new title only, 1737. 19.
” General Law of
Estates,“1740, 8vo. 20.
” Game Law,“1740, 12mo.
the seventh edition. 21.
” New complete Conveyancer,“1744, 8vo. 22.
” The Statute Law common-placed,“1748, 8vo, fifth edition, 23. Law Grammar,
” 1749
and 1754, 12mo. and again in folio, to bind up with the
author’s Law Dictionary.
n,” which bishop Percy has reprinted in his “Reliques,” and declares that it would not dishonour any writer of that time. Both as a man of learning, and as a patron of
No circumstance, however, in James’s reign was more
unpopular than his treatment of the celebrated sir Walter
Raleigh, after the detection of a conspiracy with lord
Grey, and lord Cobham, to set aside the succession in favour of Arabella Stuart: he was tried and capitally convicted, but being reprieved, he was kept thirteen years in
prison. In 1615 he obtained by bribery his release from
prison, but the king would not grant him a pardon. He
went out on an expedition with the sentence of death hanging over his head; he was unsuccessful in his object, and
on his return the king ordered him to be executed on
his former sentence. James is supposed to have been
more influenced to this deed by the court of Spain than by
any regard to justice. The influence of that court on James
appeared soon after in his negociations for marrying his
son prince Charles to the infanta. The object was, however, not attained, and he afterwards married him to the
French princess Henrietta, with the disgraceful stipulation,
that the children of that marriage should be educated by
their mother, a bigoted papist, till they were thirteen years
of age. As he aavanced in years he was disquieted by a
concurrence of untoward circumstances. The dissentions
of his parliament were very violent, and the affairs of his
son-in-law, the elector palatine, now king of Hungary,
also were in a very disastrous state. He had undertaken
the cause of the protestants of Germany, but instead of
being the arbiter in the cause of others, he was stripped of
his own dominions. In his defence, James declared war
against the king of Spain and the emperor, and sent troops
over to Holland to act in conjunction with prince Maurice
for the recovery of the palatinate; but from mismanagement, the greater part of them perished by sickness, and
the whole enterprise was defeated. Oppressed with grief
for the failure of his plans, the king was seized with an
intermitting fever, of which he died in March 1625. It
would be difficult, says Hume, to find a reign less illustrious, yet more unspotted and unblemished, than that of
James in both kingdoms. James possessed many virtues,
but scarcely any of them pure or free from the contagion
of neighbouring vices. His learning degenerated into
pedantry and prejudice, his generosity into profusion, his
good nature into pliability and unmanly fondness, his love
of peace into pusillanimity, and his wisdom into cunning.
His intentions were just, but more adapted to the conduct
of private life than to the government of kingdoms. He
was an encourager of learning, and was himself an author
of no mean genius, considering the times in which he
lived. His chief works were, “Basilicon Doron
” and
“The true Law of free Monarchies
” but he is more
known for his adherence to witchcraft and demoniacal possessions in his “Demonology,
” and for his “Counterblast
to Tobacco.
” He was also a poet, and specimens of his
talent, such as it was, are to be found in many of our miscellanies. He also wrote some rules and cautels t for the
use of professors of the art, which, says Mr. Ellis, have
been long, and perhaps deservedly disregarded. The best
specimen of his poetical powers is his “Basilicon Doron,
”
which bishop Percy has reprinted in his “Reliques,
” and
declares that it would not dishonour any writer of that time.
Both as a man of learning, and as a patron of learned men,
sufficient justice, in our opinion, has never been done to
the character of James I.; and although a discussion on the
subject would extend this article too far, it would not be
difficult to prove that in both respects he was entitled to a
considerable degree of veneration.
od informs us, that he left behind him the character of being the most industrious and indefatigable writer against the papists, that had been educated in Oxford since
He had made good progress in this undertaking, and no
doubt would have proceeded much farther towards completing his design, had not he been prevented by death.
This happened August 1629. He was buried towards the
upper end of New college chapel at Oxford. Wood informs us, that he left behind him the character of being
the most industrious and indefatigable writer against the
papists, that had been educated in Oxford since the reformation; and in reality his designs were so great, and so
well known to be for the public benefit of learning and the
church of England, that Camden, speaking of him in his
ife-time, calls him “a learned man and a true lover of
books, wholly dedicated to learning; who is now laboriously searching the libraries of England, and proposeth
that for the public good which will be for the great benefit
of England.
”
hurch, Aberdeen. Though Jameson was little known in England, and has not been noticed by any English writer on the arts, except lord Orford, his character, as well as his
Mr. Jameson died at Edinburgh in 1644, and was interred in the churchyard of the Grey Friars, but without, any monument. By his will, written witli his own hand in 1641, and breathing a spirit of much piety and benevolence, he provides kindly for his wife and children, and leaves many legacies to his relations and friends. Of his family, his daughter Mary was thrice married: first to Mr. Burnett, of EIrick, in the county of Aberdeen; afterwards to James Gregory, the celebrated mathematician; and lastly to Mr. Eddie, one of the magistrates of Aberdeen. By all these gentlemen she had children, and many of the descendants of the two first have numerous families in the county of Aberdeen. Mary seems to have inherited a portion of her father’s genius. Several specimens of her needle-work remain, particularly Jephtha’s rash vow; Susannah and the Elders, &c. probably from a design of her father’s; these now adorn the East end of St. Nicholas church, Aberdeen. Though Jameson was little known in England, and has not been noticed by any English writer on the arts, except lord Orford, his character, as well as his works, were highly esteemed in his own country. Arthur Johnston, the poet, addressed to him an elegant Latin epigram, on the picture of the marchioness of Huntley, which may be seen in the works of that author, printed at Middleburgh in 1642.
, a political writer of some note, was born at Paris in 1674, the son of a Protestant,
, a political writer of
some note, was born at Paris in 1674, the son of a Protestant, and sent early into Holland for education. For a
time he quitted his studies for the army, but at the peace
of Ryswick he resumed his literary labours, and became
concerned in the gazettes of Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and
Utrecht. A simple and historical style, with a clear head,
and much political sagacity, seemed to promise great
success to these labours; but his press being silenced, on
account of a political tract (in which, however, he had no concern), he retired to the Hague, and became agent to
the landgrave of Hesse. He died of an apoplexy in 1730,
at the age of fifty-six. Of his works there are, 1. His
*' Gazettes,“written in a good style, and with sound political knowledge, t. A translation of Steele’s
” Ladies’
Library,“published in 1717 and 1719, in 2 -vols. duodecimo. 3. A translation of an indifferent satire against
monks and priests, written originally by Antony Gavin, and
printed in 1724, in 4 vols. 12mo. 4.
” The present State
of the Republic of the United Provinces, and their dependencies," published in 1729, in 2 vols. 12mo. This is
the most correct work that is extant, though it has been
considered by Niceron as not altogether devoid of faults.
sses the sense of the author. It was printed at Gotha in 1710, 4to. There are several things in this writer that may be alleged against the Jews with great advantage. If,
, otherwise Raschi and Isaaki, a famous rabbi, was born in 1104, at Troyes in
Champagne in France. Having acquired a good stock of
Jewish learning at home, he travelled at thirty years of
age visiting Italy, Greece, Jerusalem, Palestine, and
Egypt, where he met with Maimonides. From Egypt he
passed to Persia, and thence to Tartary and Muscovy; and
last of all, passing through Germany, he arrived in his
native country, after he had spent six years abroad. After
his return to Europe, he visited all the academies, and
disputed against the professors upon any questions proposed by them. He was a perfect master of the Talmud
and Gemara, but filled the postils of the Bible with so
many Talmudical reveries, as totally extinguished both the
literal and moral sense of it. Many of his commentaries
are printed in Hebrew, and some have been translated into
Latin by the Christians, among which is his “Commentary
upon Joel,
” by Genebrard; those upon Obadiah, Jonah,
and Zephaniah, by Pontac; that upon Esther, by Philip
JDaquin. But the completest of these translations is that
of his Commentaries on the Pentateuch, and some other
books, by Fred. Breithaupt, who has added learned notes.
The style of Jarchi is so concise, that it is no easy thing to
understand him in several places, without the help of other
Jewish interpreters. Besides, when he mentions the traditions of the Jews recorded in their writings, he never
quotes the chapter nor the page; which gives no small
trouble to a translator. He introduces also several French
words of that century, which have been very much corrupted, and cannot be easily understood. M. Breithaupt
has overcome all those difficulties. The style of his translation is not very elegant: but it is clear, and fully expresses the sense of the author. It was printed at Gotha
in 1710, 4to. There are several things in this writer that
may be alleged against the Jews with great advantage.
If, for instance, the modern Jews deny that the Messias is
to be understood by the word Shiloh, Gen. xlix. 10, they
may be confuted by the authority of this interpreter, who
agrees with the Christians in his explication of that word.
M. Reland looks upon rabbi Jarchi as one of the best
interpreters we have and tells us in his preface to the
“Analecta Rabbinica,
” that when htf met with any difficulty in the Hebrew text of the Bible, the explications of
that Jewish doctor appeared to him more satisfactory than
those of the great critics, or any other commentator.
iaments and universal suffrage (those pernicious engines for destroying the British constitution), a writer in newspapers, and a speaker in public meetings. So many eager
Amidst the cares of his new profession, he did not decline his attention to theological study, nor to what he
considered as the cause of true liberty. He was, as he
had been for many years, zealous for the abolition of subscription, a warm friend to the cause of America against
England, an incessant advocate for annual parliaments and
universal suffrage (those pernicious engines for destroying the British constitution), a writer in newspapers, and a
speaker in public meetings. So many eager pursuits seem
to have exhausted his constitution, and he died, apparently
of a decline, in March 1786.
Dr. John Jebb was a man of various and extensive learning, master of many languages, among which were Hebrew and Arabic; and during his last illness, he studied
the Saxon, with the Anglo-Saxon laws and antiquities.
He was twice a candidate for the professorship of Arabic at
Cambridge. Besides his theological and medical knowledge, he was not a little versed in the science of law,
which he once thought of making his profession, even after
he had studied physic. He was also a mathematician and
philosopher, and was concerned with two friends in publishing at Cambridge a small quarto, entitled “Excerpta
quaedam e Newtonii principiis Philosophise naturalis, cum
notis variorum;
” which was received as a standard book of
education in that university. His other works have been
collected into 3 vols. 8vo, published in 17S7 by Dr. Disney, and contain chiefly, (besides the plan of his lectures, and harmony of the gospels, six sermons, and a medical treatise on paralysis,) controversial tracts and letters, on
his intended improvements at Cambridge, on subscription,
on parliamentary reform, &c. He seems to have been an
active, enterprising, and rather turbulent, but a sincere
man.
of Britain, excellently skilled in the British tongue, and besides (considering the time) an elegant writer, both in verse and prose; and to him he recommended the task.
Leland, Bale, and Pits inform us, that Walter Mapreus,
or Mapes, alias Calenius, who was at this time archdeacon
of Oxford, and of whom Henry of Huntingdon, and other
historians, as well as Jeffery himself, make honourable
mention, as a man very curious in the study of antiquity,
and a diligent searcher into ancient libraries, and especially
after the works of ancient authors, happened while he was
in Armorica to meet with a history of Britain, written in
the British tongue, and carrying marks of great antiquity.
Being overjoyed at his discovery, he in a short time came
over to England, where inquiring for a proper person to
translate this curious but hitherto unknown book, he very
opportunely met with Jeffery of Monmouth, a man profoundly versed in the history and antiquities of Britain,
excellently skilled in the British tongue, and besides (considering the time) an elegant writer, both in verse and
prose; and to him he recommended the task. Jeffery accordingly undertook to translate it into Latin; which he
performed with great diligence, approving himself, according to Matthew Paris, a faithful translator. At first he
divided it into four books, written in a plain simple style,
a copy of which is said to be at Bene't-college, Cambridge,
which was never yet published; but afterwards made some
alterations, and divided it into eight books, to which he
added the book of “Merlin’s Prophecies,
” which he had
also translated from British verse into Latin prose. A great
many fabulous and trifling stories are inserted in the history,
upon which account Jeffery’s integrity has been called in
question and many authors, Polydore Vevgil, Buchanan,
and some others, treat the whole as fiction and forgery.
On the other hand, he is defended by very learned men,
such as Usher, Leland, Sheringham, sir John Rice, and
many more. His advocates do not deny, that there are
several absurd and incredible stories inserted in this book;
but, as he translated or borrowed them from others, the
truth of the history ought not to be rejected in the gross,
though the credulity of the historian may deserve censure.
Canulen alleges, that his relation of Brutus, and his successors in those ancient times, ought to be entirely disregarded, and would have our history commence with Caesar’s
attempt upon the island, which advice has since been followed by the generality of our historians. But Milton pursues the old beaten tract, and alleges thai we cannot be
easily discharged of Brutus and his line, with the whole
progeny of kings to the entrance of Julius Ca-sar; since it
is a story supported by descents of ancestry, and long continued laws and exploits, which have no appearance of
being borrowed or devised. Cainden, indeed, would insinuate, that the name of Brutus was unknown to the ancient Britons, and that Jeffery was the first person who
feigned him founder of their race. But Henry of Huntingdon had published, in the beginning of his history, a
short account of Brutus, and made the Britons the descendants of the Trojans, before he knew any thing of
Jeffery’s British history: and he professes to have had this
account from various authors. Sigibertus Gemblacensis,
a French author, somewhat more early than Jeffery, or
Henry of Huntingdon (for he died, according to Beilarmine, in 1112) gives an account of the passage of Brutus,
grandson of Ascanius, from Greece to Albion, at the head
of the exiled Trojans and teljs us, that he called the
people and country after his own name, and at last left
three sons to succeed him, after he had reigned twentyfour years. Hence he passes summarily over the affairs of
the Britons, agreeably to the British history, till they were
driven into Wales by the Saxons.
, a pious English divine and writer, was born in 1646, and was descended from an ancient family
, a pious English divine and writer,
was born in 1646, and was descended from an ancient family at Eaton under Heywood, in Shropshire. He was
related to bishop Williams, of Chichester, to whom he dedicated his book of “Prayers.
” Where he was educated
we are not told, nor is it discoverable that he was at either
university. He appears, however, when admitted into
orders, to have been for some time curate of Harlay, in
Shropshire. On the death of his rector, Richard earl of
Bradford, the patron of the living, hearing Mr. Jenks
spoken of respectfully by the parishioners, went one Sunday, in private, to hear him preach; and was so much
pleased with the discourse, that he presented him to the
living in 1668, and made him his chaplain. Mr. Jenks
had also the living of Kenley, a small village about two
miles from Harlay, at both which churches he officiated
alternately, and kept no curate until old age and infirmities made assistance necessary. He died at Harlay on
May 10, 1724, and was buried in the chancel of that
church, where there is a monument to his memory. The
work by which Mr. Jenks is best known is his “Prayers
and offices of Devotion,
” of which the 27th edition was
published in 1810 by the Rev. Charles Simeon, fellow of
King’s college, Cambridge, with alterations and amendments in style. Mr. Jenks also was the author of “Meditations upon various important subjects,
” of which a second edition was published in Meditations
” is upon his coffin, which he kept by
him for many years, and in which were two sculls, one of
them that of a near relation.