Henry Wotton. Nicholas Ferrar. Bishop Hall. Henry Hammond. Bishop Sanderson. Richard BaxterF. C. and J. Rivington, No. 62, St. Paul's Church-yard, 1810 |
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Página 17
... Venice , and Florence , he became acquainted with the most eminent men for learning , and all manner of arts ; as picture , sculpture , chemistry , architecture , and other man- ual arts , even arts of inferior nature ; of all which ...
... Venice , and Florence , he became acquainted with the most eminent men for learning , and all manner of arts ; as picture , sculpture , chemistry , architecture , and other man- ual arts , even arts of inferior nature ; of all which ...
Página 19
... Venice , and then taken to be secretary to the great duke of Tuscany . After some stay in Florence , he went the fourth time to visit Rome , where in the English College he had very many friends ( their humanity made them really so ...
... Venice , and then taken to be secretary to the great duke of Tuscany . After some stay in Florence , he went the fourth time to visit Rome , where in the English College he had very many friends ( their humanity made them really so ...
Página 22
... Venice , or Florence ; but by late letters from thence , he understood he would suddenly be at Paris . " Send for him , " said the king , " and when he shall come into England , bid him repair privately to me . " The lord Wotton after a ...
... Venice , or Florence ; but by late letters from thence , he understood he would suddenly be at Paris . " Send for him , " said the king , " and when he shall come into England , bid him repair privately to me . " The lord Wotton after a ...
Página 23
... Venice , and to that end to send ambassadors to those several places , did propose the choice of these employments to sir Henry Wotton ; who considering the small- ness of his own estate ( which he never took care to augment ) and ...
... Venice , and to that end to send ambassadors to those several places , did propose the choice of these employments to sir Henry Wotton ; who considering the small- ness of his own estate ( which he never took care to augment ) and ...
Página 25
... Venice , this says now , And has for nature what you have for task : To swear much love ; nor to be changed before Honour alone will to your fortune fit ; Nor shall I then honour your fortune more , Than I have done your honour ...
... Venice , this says now , And has for nature what you have for task : To swear much love ; nor to be changed before Honour alone will to your fortune fit ; Nor shall I then honour your fortune more , Than I have done your honour ...
Términos y frases comunes
acquaint Albertus Morton answer archbishop archbishop of Canterbury Arminian attend bishop bishop of Lincoln blessed books of Kings called Canterbury charity Christ christian church Church of England command concerning conscience covenanters death desired diligence discourse divers divine doctor doctrine earl employment England Eton College excellent father favour gave Gidding give God's Gondomar grace Hammond hand happy hath heaven holy honour hope judgment king king's knew late learned letter Little Gidding live London lord majesty master ment mercy mind never Nicholas Ferrar Nicholas Wotton observed occasion Oxford parliament persons piety pleased pray prayers preached present prince profession reader reason religion Sanderson sent sermon shewed sir Henry Wotton soul thing thou thought tion told took truth unto Venice Virginia company virtue wherein whereof words worthy write
Pasajes populares
Página 253 - He that turneth away his ear from hearing the law, even his prayer shall be abomination.
Página 331 - Greenyard* pulpit, and the service books and singing books that could be had, were carried to the fire in the public market-place ; a lewd wretch walking before the train, in his cope trailing in the dirt, with a service book in his hand, imitating in an impious scorn the tune and usurping the words of the Litany used formerly in the Church...
Página 38 - ... and that a college was the fittest place to nourish holy thoughts, and to afford rest both to his body and mind, which his age, being now almost threescore years, seemed to require, did therefore use his own and the interest of all his friends to procure that place.
Página 575 - I less admire gifts of utterance and bare profession of religion than I once did ; and have much more charity for many, who by the want of gifts, do make an obscurer profession than they.
Página 51 - May it please Your most Gracious Majesty, Having been informed that certain persons have, by the good wishes of the Archbishop of Armagh, been directed hither, with a most humble petition unto your Majesty, that you will be pleased to make Mr. William...
Página 573 - Heretofore I knew much less than now ; and yet was not half so much acquainted with my ignorance. I had a great delight in the daily new discoveries which I made, and of the light which shined in upon me (like a man that cometh into a country where he never was before) ; but I little knew either how imperfectly I understood those very points whose discovery so much delighted me, nor how...
Página 513 - I met him accidentally in London in sad-coloured clothes, and God knows, far from being costly : the place of our meeting was near to little Britain, where he had been to buy a Book, which he then had in his hand...
Página 477 - And when the month and he did return, the good King was never absent from his sermons, and would usually say, ' I carry my ears to hear other preachers ; but I carry my conscience to hear Mr. Sanderson, and to act accordingly.
Página 575 - ... had been saints. But experience hath opened to me what odious crimes may consist with high profession; and I have met with divers obscure persons, not noted for any extraordinary profession or forwardness in religion, but only to live a quiet, blameless life, whom I have after found to have long lived, as far as I could discern, a truly godly and sanctified life, only their prayers and duties were by accident kept secret from other men's observation.
Página 43 - Having at his being in Rome made acquaintance with a pleasant Priest, who invited him one evening to hear their Vesper music at Church ; the Priest seeing Sir Henry stand obscurely in a corner, sends to him by a boy of the Choir this question, writ in a small piece of paper ; " Where was your religion to be found before Luther ?" To which question Sir Henry presently underwrit, " My Religion was to be found then, where yours is not to be found now, in the written word of God.