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A54939 A letter from Moses Pitt, to the authour of a book, intituled, some discourses upon Dr. Burnet, now Ld. Bp. of Salisbury and Dr. Tillotson, late Ld. A.B. of Canterbury occasioned by the late funeral sermon of the former upon the latter. Pitt, Moses, fl. 1654-1696.; Hickes, George, 1642-1715.; Tillotson, John, 1630-1694. 1695 (1695) Wing P2307; ESTC R7270 27,662 34

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Heroick Piety and Vertue Do you not think Sir but the Lives of our Cooks Crooks and Rolles would not be very useful and acceptable to our Lawyers and also the Lives of our Harveys Willis and Lowers to our Physicians and our Bacons Hales and Boyles to our Philosophers I appeal how acceptable the Life of Sir Matthew Hales written by our present Bishop of Salisbury has been to this Nation I must beg the Bishop's Pardon for inserting one Expression here of that good Man Sir Matthew Hales which I believe he has not in his Life I have living Authority for it unto whom he said it That when he published the Life of Pomponius Atticus he did suspect that the World would believe that he therein wrote his own And now Sir I cannot forbear telling you what I lately Read as I remember in Diogenes Laertius who giving an Account of the Life of one of his Philosophers That as for natural Philosophy he had no Esteem of and altogether neglected it but he was so intent on and studious of moral Philosophy that he did not allow himself time to comb his Head nor pair his Nails Sir I am of opinion that either of our three great Philosophers were as eminent for moral Philosophy as Diogenes Laertius his Philosopher ever was as is evident by my Lord Bacons Essays Moral and Divine my Lord Chief Justice Hale's Contemplations Divine and Moral and Mr. Boyle's Occasional Meditations c. yet they were not such Slovens as to neglect combing their Heads or pairing their Nails neither were they such Cinicks as to neglect Natural no nor Experimental Philosophy as their Learned Works published to the World demonstrate Thus I end this Subject As for the late Lord Archbishop of Canterbury Dr. John Tillotjon you have not called me to give my Testimony of him therefore I leave it to his Learned and Pious VVorks which are already published to the VVorld and also to his intimate Friends to vindicate him which I believe they will readily do And Sir I hope you will pardon me for telling you now and then a Truth which is to the Purpose and the Matter we are speaking of when I first came to live at my House in Dukestreet Westminster I was several times robb'd at last I discovered the Felon whose Name was Benson he was one of my Laborers he had not only stolen Lead but had also gotten into my House which was the same House I afterwards let to the then Lord Chancellor Jefferies and when he was in he broke the Handle of a Pick-Ax by his endeavouring to break open one of the Inner-doors but could not which Handle of the Pick-Ax we found the next Morning but he opened a Trunk or Trunks c. and stole Cloaths Linnen and Plate c. as soon as I discovered him he fled for it but some days after he was taken by some of my Workmen and brought to me as soon as he saw me he fell on his Knees and confest the Fact and his Confederate and begging me pardon Multitudes of People being by as it 's usual upon such Occasions urged me to send for a Constable and carry him before a Justice of Pcace that so he might be sent to Goal I told the People I would not do that for if I did he might be hanged and I would not have my Hand in the Blood of any Man except for Murther for it was my Opinion that nothing but Blood did require Blood and therefore said I Benson I freely forgive thee but take care be never guilty more of the like Crimes lest thou shouldest not fall into the Hands of so merciful a Man as I am Not long after this for some other Crime he was hanged out of the Martial-Sea-Prison in Southwark This Story I do not tell any way to reflect on you but for Caution to some that read this my Letter and also my own Opinion that if a Law against Thest as also Perjury and Forgery were made correspondent to God's own judicial Law to his People of Israel of making sour-fold Restitution it would be a greater Terror to this sort of miserable People than hanging or standing in the Pillory I have many Arguments to prove this my Assertion but I forbear and leave it to our Parliament now assembling Sir I would have you weigh and consider that Place of Scripture you quote in the 45 Page of your own Book it 's 1 Tim. 1.9 10. And whereas you say But the House by the Interest of the Duke's Friends who increased much upon that Discovery In Answer to this I must tell you good Men are apt to be mistaken and wicked Men are given up to believe Lyes for the Truth of which I could besides the Instances mentioned in Scripture tell you of some Modern Examples to this purpose the Consequences of which have been very mischievous I could mention a Passage which I can prove by living Witnesses of a National Concern but I forbear till it 's proper Season And further you go on and say made him testifie what he since saith created Horrour in him What Horrour this Created in the Bishop he can best tell but I will assure you Sir if this Case had been mine I should father have rejoyced by reason the Story of suppressing the Dedication was falfe so far as I know believe or can remember Now Sir I have given you my Testimony as to this Passage in your Book which concerns the Bishop of Salisbury's suppressing his Dedication to his Book call'd his Vindication of the Authority c. of the Laws of Scotland And I have done it with Integrity and Simplicity and as near to Truth as in Words I could express it And this I have done as I believe I must answer it before our Great God who is a God of Truth and knows the Hearts not only of the Bishop and You and my Self but of all Men. As for all other Passages in your Book I have nothing to say to them I leave them to the Bishop who is of Age and very well able to answer for himself And now Sir give me leave before I conclude this my Letter to tell you something of the now Lord Archbishop of Canterbury I tell it you on my own Knowledge and I have also other living Witnesses to prove it And I farther declare I publish it without his or any of his Friends approbation or knowledge and when he did this great Work of Charity he then obliged me to secrecy as to the Persons that had the Benefit of it and therefore I shall not now name him by that Denomination you have given him in the 2 d. Pag. of your Preface I will give it you in your own words which are The Remarks on the late Funeral-Sermons c. The Letter to the Authour of the Funeral-Sermon at VVestminster Abby These Discourses not to mention others long since Printed will let Posterity see what kind of Man our Preacher and his Heroe
A LETTER FROM Moses Pitt TO THE AUTHOUR of a Book INTITULED Some Discourses upon Dr. Burnet now L d. B p. of Salisbury and Dr. Tillotson late L d. A.B. of Canterbury Occasioned by the Late Funeral Sermon of the former upon the latter Deuteronomy Chap. 19. V. 16 17. V. 16. If a false Witness rise up against a Man to testifie against him that which is wrong V. 17. Then both the Men between whom the Controversie is shall stand before the Lord before the Priests and the Judges which shall be in those Days LONDON Printed for Moses Pitt and Sold by the Booksellers of London and Westminster MDCXCV A LETTER from Moses Pitt To the Authour of a Book Intituled Some Discourses upon Dr. Burnet and Dr. Tillotson occasioned by the late Funeral-Sermon of the former on the latter SIR LAtely walking the Streets of London a Citizen of my Acquaintance calls me into his Shop and tells me that he was glad to see me and that he desired me to tell him the Truth of what he should ask me I told him I would as near as I could upon that he proceeds in his Discourse and said that he had seen a Book lately come forth against Dr. Burnet the now Bishop of Salisbury which saith he if the things are true therein related of him he is a very ill Man or Words to that effect and you are quoted to justifie one of the Passages mentioned in the said Book about Dr. Burnet's dedicating a Book to Duke Lauderdale I replied I could not answer him till I saw the Book and passage there in mentioned wherein I was quored for Authority upon which I made it my business to get one of your Books which with much difficulty I did and in Reading of it in Page the 18th and 19th I found this Passage in relation to the present Bishop of Sabisbury which I have here set down Verbatim by reason your Book is not easily by every Reader to be got which is as followeth I shall now proceed to things of something of a different Nature but which will shew no less what little Credit to be given to him and how unsafe it is to rely upon his Authority He dedicated his Vindication of the Authority c. of the Laws of Scotland to the Duke of Lauderdale then High Commissioner of Scotland In that Dedication he tells the Duke How worthily he bore that noble Character with the more lasting and noble Characters of a Princely mind and praises him for the long uninterrupted Tranquility that Kingdom had enjoyed under his wise and happy Conduct and saith That he was a Prince greater in his Mind than Fortune and that there was something inward to him which commanded all the Respect that could be paid by all such that had the Honour to know him as well as he did He acknowledges also the particular Engagement by which he was obliged to him and saith That it was not fit for him to express the Sense he had of them and of the vast Endowments of his Mind for fear he should seem to flatter him Then he instances in the profoundness of his Understanding and well-ballanced Judgment for which he might deservedly pass for a Master in all Learning And in the Conclusion tells him That from him they expected an happy Settlement and wished that Success Blessings might attend his Endeavours Not long after the printing of this Book at Glascow he brought a great Part of the Impression to London where he sold it to Mr. Moses Pitt and not long after that again he came to him to desire him with great Earnestness to sell the Copies of it without the Dedication For by this time the Duke had fallen out with him and discarded him for some Arts and Qualities he had observed in him which I need not name Mr. Pitt gave him very good Reasons why he ought not to do so and particularly told him he could not honestly sell an imperfect for a perfect Copy Upon which he was angry and threatened him with the loss of all the Favours he intended to do him in his Trade This Mr. Pitt can testifie if he is living but if he is not it can be attested by an honourable Person who heard him solicite Mr. Pitt to this base unworthy Practice But though Mr. Pitt would not consent to sell the Book without the Dedication yet he was content to let him have them again and then they came abroad without it And so hard it was till it was privately Reprinted to get one single Copy with it that I profess I could never get such a one till a Gentleman presented me with one out of his private Study And when he delated his Patron to the House of Commons Sir A. Forrester his Grace's Secretary told me That after the utmost diligence he could get but one single Copy with the Dedication though he would have purchased more at any Rate to shew the Gentlemen of the honourable House what kind of Man his Evidencer was that would publish such things in the Commendation of the Duke after he knew (a) See his Vindication in his xvi●j Papers as he pretended he had a Design of bringing in an Army out of Scotland for the spoiling and subduing of England This discovery of the Dedication and his suppressing of it coming to be known made all the House curious to see it and he foreseeing what use would be made of it against him was willing to decline his noble Undertaking But the House by the Interest of the Duke's Friends who increased much upon that Discovery made him restifie what he since saith created Horrour in him and how much Reputation he got by it I need not now tell the World I am sure many of the Duke's greatest Enemies looked upon it as an horrible Lye not thinking the Design or the Discovery of it if he had designed it consistent with so much Wisdom as he was Master of above most great Men of his Time Now Sir after I had read not only this Passage but the whole Book over I consider'd with my self what Person or Persons were alive at that time when I printed for Dr. Burnet now Lord Bishop of Salisbury for it s now above 20 Years past that could any ways help my Memory that so I might declare to you and the World the Truth the whole Truth and nothing but the Truth in this Matter or Passage you call me if living to testisie Sir you must know that I am of the Cobler's Mind that lived in Holborn in King James the 1st's Time when Goundemore the Spanish Ambassadour was passing by in his Chair the Sedan-men happening to stumble and fall and the Ambassadour being on the Ground Multitudes of People came running at this Accident one of which cries to the Cobler to come out of his Stall and help up the Ambassadour The Cobler replies not he for he would not meddle with State-matters But considering with my self that two
mighty Things are concerned in this Passage of yours that is Truth and a Good-name the latter of which Solcmon tells us is better than precious Ointment And for the former Truth it 's an Attribute of our great and good God and it 's the Duty of all Men to imitate God in this Attribute and That Man is worse than the Beasts that perished that is not a Man of Truth and Truth makes a Man as bold as a Lion Ask the Lawyers what plead for they will tell you for Truth Ask the Ministers of all perswasions what they preach and they will tell you Truth Ask all Writers of Books in all Arts and Sciences what they have written and they will tell you Truth You your self say in this your Book speaking against Dr. Burnet You say you could produce more Instances out of Beedle's Life to shew how apt he was to write his own Inventions for true History and thereby impose upon the World and you believe you have brought enough for that purpose and hope you have thereby convinced all Lovers of Truth more than of Men's Persons how unsase it is to take things upon Trust from him page 33 and Sir I find you your felf so much a Lover of Truth as you pretend at least that I hope you will not be angry with me for declaring the Truth in this Passage you your self appeal to me in between the late Duke of Lauderdale and the now Lord. Bishop of Salisbury mentioned in the 18th and 19th Pages of your said Bock And Sir I shall speak the Truth so as you are pleased to express it in the 1st and 2d Pages of your Presace to your said Book So as it may serve to inform and entertain inquisitive Searchers after Truth And then you go on and say speaking of Dr. Jo. Tillot son late Lord Archbishop of Canterbury and Dr. Gilbert Burnet now Lord Bishop of Salisbury Against whom you say you have been provoked to draw up two several Charges or Informations which somewhat blomish their Honour so you hope you have proved them in every part by very good Evidence And as some Trials are longer than others according to the Number and Length of Depositions so if this Book of mine which contains as it were so many Depositions against them hath proved longer than I would have had it that is none of my Fault And you farther say you know very well it will be called a Libel and a Defamatory Libel but you care not for that since many excellent Books were so miscalled in the Times of our former Usurpations which detected the ill Men of those Times and their Hypocrisies and Imquities to the World The same thing have I done lately in a Book called The Cry of the Oppressed printed 1691. Wherein I have detected many Men by Name now hving some of them in great splendor of Oppression Extortion Bribery Perjury Blusphemy and several other the like Crimes and there has not to this Day Nav. 1695. any one of the Passages therein mentioned been contradicted and I still challenge any one therein accused to clear himself from those Villanies I therein charge him with for I am still ready to prove on them all the Matters of Fact I have therein related thus hold is Truth And then you go on and say and I agree with you and so I believe will all good Men. And besides to speak properly and justly of the Nature of a Libel all Books onght not to be so called which expose Men's Reputations but such only as expose them falsly injuriously and out of pure Malice But this Book though in some things it blemishes the Fame and Reputation of these Men yet it doth it truly justly and deservedly and so far am I from bearing the Person of the one or the Memory of the other any Malice that had I been acted by that evil Passion I could have written against them both much sooner and have been better provided to write against them now Men that do ill things openly and with an high hand though under never so splendid Pretences ought to hear of them especially when they go about to make Saints and Heroes of one another with a Design to cover their own Iniquities and deceive the People When this happens to be the Case Charity to the People's Souls and the Love of the Publick obliges all Lovers of Truth and Righteousness to unvizard such Men and expose them in their true Appearance before their credulous and deluded Admirers As to this last Paragraph so far all good Men will agree with you but how far the World will believe you as to these two popular Divines as you are pleased to call them when I have told my Matters or given my Deposition as you your self are pleased to term it I leave it to judgment And as I have endeavoured in the following Discourses to do so by these two popular Divines so I assure the Reader I have done it purely upon these generous Motives wishing with all my Heart that neither of them had given so many and publick Provocations to undeceive any part of the World by writing such severe Truths So much I have taken out of your own Preface and now Sir I will go on and give you the Truth of this Matter you mention in Page the 18th and 19th of your Book as touching that Passage of the Dedication of Dr. Gilbert Burnet's Vindication of the Authority c. of the Laws of Scotland to the Duke of Lauderdale as far as I know or can any way call to my Remembrance And this I do as in the Presence of the Great God who is the God of Truth and the True God and of Angels and of Men and that without any Respect to the Person of the now Lord Bishop of Salisbury Dr. Gilbert Burnet with whom I have had no Conversation neither by word of mouth not by writing or otherwise since he lest England in King James's Days otherwise than that very soon after I printed my Cry of the Oppressed which was in 1691 or before I believe I might send him as I did several other of the Bishops and Judges c. a Letter with one of my said Books but I never received any Answer from him neither directly nor indirectly only Mr. Richard Chiswel the last Time but one that I saw him told me that the Bishop ask'd him how I did and that he was sorry for my Misfortunes but whether Mr. Chiswell did this in a Complement I know not neither did it affect me neither doth the Bishop know of what I now write neither have I or any Person for me any way applied my self to him about this or any other Matter although very much urged to it by some of my Friends since he came into England with King William Neither has he the said Bishop applied himself to me neither by himself or any Friend that I know of to declare my Knowledge in this Matter neither is
and thereby I should have saved the Charges of composing so many of the last Sheets but I was disappointed in my Expectation and so I was forced to make wast Paper of all them supernumerary Sheets So by this misunderstanding between Mr. Angus and my Self I lost my Authour the now Lord Bishop of Salisbury for which I cannot in the least blame Dr. Burnet as you call him what I have here wrote as far as Mr. Adam Angus is concerned in this Paragraph is Truth And now Sir I have done what I can to refresh my Memory I will own what is Truth and disown what is not so far as you appeal to me in your Book page 18 and 19. for I find you lay a great stress on this Book of Dr. Burnet's Vindication of the Authority Constitution and Laws of Scotland For except Terent. in Prolog ante Eunuchum it 's the only Authour or Book you quote in the very Title Page of your Discourses and you quote Page the 4th of the Doctour's said Book the Words are as followeth Remember how severely he that was Meekness it self treated the Scribes and Pharisees and he having charged his Followers to beware of their Leaven it is obedience to his Command to search out that Leaven that it may leaven us no more And when any of a Party are so exalted in their own Conceit as to despise and disparage all others the Love the Ministers of the Gospel owe the Souls of their Flocks obligeth them to Unmask them Sir this Quotation of yours is True for I have compared it only you have a The between Love and Ministers more than is in the Doctour's Book but that 's not material the Reason why I am so critical is because I write as if I made an Affidavit before a Master in Chancery For Livy the Famous Roman Historian saith if my Memory fails me not That he that writes a Lye for Truth is the greatest of perjured Persons and he gives a good Reason for it because he imposeth upon Generations to come But I believe your chief Reason for quoting this Book more than any other of the Bishop's Works except his Funeral-Sermon on the Late Archbishop Tillerson is upon the Account of the Dedication to Duke Landerdale Now you say Sir Not long after the printing this Book at Glasgow this is true that this Book was printed at Glasgow and that in the Year 1673 and that it was dedicated to the Duke of Landerdale then High Commissioner of Scotland that the Dedication is in substance what you have printed though not printed exactly word for word For in your first Paragraph you say that he tells the Duke How worthily he bore that Noble Character with the more lasting and noble Characters of a Princely Mind in the Dedication it is inward Character and so likewise you say and praises him for the long uninterrupted Tranquility that Kingdom had enjoyed under his wise and happy Conduct whereas in the Dedication it is and under whose wise and happy Conduct we have enjoyned so long a Tract of uninterrupted Tranquility This I now say I find true by the said Book which I have now in my Hand at the writing of this Passage but what have I to do with the Dedication as to the difference of the Expressions Let the present Bishop of Salisbury look to that he being most immediately concerned I go on then you say He that is you mean as I take it the present Lord Bishop of Salisbury brought a great part of the Impression to London where he sold it to Mr. Moses Pitt Indeed Sir if you remember this Passage so well you have a good Memory and you must have been a very familiar Acquaintance of mine at that time that you should know my Transactions and Dealings for indeed I do not remember that the Present Lord Bishop of Salisbury Dr Gilbert Burnet did bring a great part of the Impression of his said Book Entituled A Vindication of the Authority c. to London Neither do I remember he sold it as you say to me Moses Pitt that I had some of them I believe but of whom I do not at this great distance of Time remember and therefore in this particular must refer my self to Mr. Angus who tells me that I had them from some Bookseller out of Scotland in Barter for some other Books and then you go on and say And not long after that again He I presume you mean the present Lord Bishop of Salisbury came to him that is as I understand it to me Moses Pitt to desire him with great earnestness to sell the Copies of it without the Dedication Sir I assure you I do not remember any thing of this Paragraph but do believe the contrary that the now Lord Bishop of Salisbury did ever come to me to desire me with great Earnestness or otherwise to sell the Copies of it without the Dedication neither do I remember I ever sold one Copy without the Dedication to any Person whatsoever as to what you say For by this time the Duke had fallen out with him and discarded him for some Arts and Qualities he had observed in him Indeed Sir I have heard that as you and others might likewise hear that the Duke and the present Lord Bishop of Salisbury did fall out but what the Ground of their Quarrel was I was not privy to neither can I tell for what Arts and Qualities the Duke discarded him he can I presume if he he pleases give you the best Account of this Transaction and therefore to the Bishop I leave it and proceed You say Mr. Pitt gave him very good Reasons why he ought not to do so and particularly told him he could not honestly sell an imperfect for a perfect Copy Sir if this Story of yours had been true I should have I hope acted the honest Part as you here relate but Sir though my Oppressions on me have been and are great by reason of false Oaths by which I have lost my Estate of about 1500 l. per Annum c. an Account of which you will find in my Book called The Cry of the Oppressed and have been a Prisoner ever since the 18th Day of April 1689. which was but a Week after King William and his late Queen Mary was Crowned and have Multitudes of Enemies upon the Account of contending against my own Oppressors and the Oppressors of the Creditors of Benjamin Hinton late of London Goldsmith Banker and Bankrupt there being now at this time a Bill of 349 Sheets pending in Chancery against fifty Defendants for the Discovery of the said Bankrupt's Estate which is unjustly kept from the Creditors which I hope will be proved and as we have laid it in our Bill to the Value of One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Pound or some such great Summ And now Sir I have cause to suspect that by reason of declaring the Truth in this Matter as you your self own I can
Terror of the Wicked and Rejoycing of the Righteous And although you so much despise the present Lord Bishop of Salisbury and tell the World how apt he is to write Lives I will give it you in your own VVords as in Page the 10th of your Preface you say And when I consider how apt he is to write Lives and to write his own Imaginations and Opinions in them I could not but bewail the Fate of the late Honourable Mr. Boyle after that of Bishop Bedel should he also write his Life as Report saith he designs to do And I cannot but wish for the Honour of that great Man's Memory that his Honourable Relations would oblige some Person of unblemished Reputation to write it whom the World hath no reason to suspect even when he writes Truth Sir As to this Point of writing of the late Honourable Mr. Robert Boyle's Life I will give you the following Account Some time before I knew or heard of the publishing your Book I met as I was passing through the Temple with Mr. John Warr who was Steward to Mr. Robert Boyle many Years and so continued to Mr. Boyle's Death and Mr. Boyle had that Esteem for him that he made him one of his Executors in his last Will after some Discourse we had about Mr. Boyle's putting 500 l. into Benj. Hinton's Hands which is a Loss to his Estate to this Day I ask'd Mr. Warr what was the reason Mr. Boyle's Life was not all this time published to the World he gave me this for Answer That the Bishop of Salisbury and others I think he said and others but I am not certain I would keep to Truth as near as in words I could had desired him to get Materials ready for that Work but he said the Labour was so great and his Expectations of Reward not considerable and also he having Business of his own on his Hands that he could not well spare his Time for to do it and then also the Fatigue would be great for that to do it well he must look over Hundreds of Books Papers and Letters which he could not well spare Time to do this was his Excuse to me that Mr. Boyl's Life was not to this Day published to the VVorld Now Sir do you not think but if the Bishop of Salisbury had published the Life of Mr. Boyle it would not have been very acceptable to the World especially he having made use of Mr. Boyle's Steward for so many Years to search Books Papers and Letters which are in the Nature of Records in this Affair of writing Lives and who can be presumed to know Mr. Boyle's private Transactions better than him and Mr. Boyle himself demonstrated the Esteem he had for him by making him one of his Executors and therefore the VVorld could not blame the Bishop for using of him and trusting to him in this Affair of bringing him Materials for so good a VVork and I doubt not but the Bishop would have very Honourably rewarded Mr. Warr for his great Fatigue in this Affair For I hear a very great Character of the Bishop's Generosity and also Charity from one I presume should know as well as any whatever I will give it you in his own VVords to me That the Bishop is No covetous Man no lover of Money for said he if the Bishop had 20000 l. per Annum he would dispose of it and give it away honourably and charitably I do not write this to flatter his Lordship for I abhor and scorn Flattery for I never had any other Advantage or Benefit from the Bishop than what I have had in way of Trade and the same for ought I know I might have had from you for I have reason to believe you have been a familiar Acquaintance of mine by your Quotation And Sir I am of the Opinion that when any Man especially a Peer of the Realm is scandalized in his Reputation it behoves all Men to vidicate them and their Reputation so far as Truth is on their Side Although I am also of your Opinion that if any Man much more great Men do ill and base Actions they ought to be told of it and that publickly for it 's no Fault in the Relator but the Fault is his that did the ill Action I remember I was at a Coffee-House and I think it was before this last Revolution where I heard that most Learned Mr Dodwel who indeed is a great Example of Heroick Piety and Vertue as you your self own in the 53 Page of your Book tell a Learned Knight well known in this Nation I name him not because I would not give Offence to any Man or Party of Men in express words that he was a Roman Catholick the Knight answered Mr. Dodwel I am no Roman Catholick Mr. Dodwel replies Sir I will not believe you the Knight answered again Sir I am a Gentleman why will you not believe me on my Word no Sir saith Mr. Dodwel I will not believe your Words but I will believe your VVritings for your Books denotes you a Roman Catholick So I say it 's not your Sayings no nor VVritings that can make the Bishop of Salisbury an ill Man but it must be his own VVritings and VVorks that must make him an ill or a good Man let his Lordship look to that I have told Matter of Fact and leave it to the VVorld to judge between the Bishop and your Self it 's You and not the Bishop has called on me to write what I have written and it's Truth And now Sir I am upon this great Subject of writing Lives let me also give my Opinion which is that if the Lives of great and good Men were wrote by their most intimate Friends that were Persons of Unblemished Reputation that would not write their own Fancies and Inventions for Truth but would take on them the Fatigue of searching of Books Papers and Letters which concerns the Person whose Life they intend to write and report Matters of Fact faithfully it would be a very useful and acceptable Work for Examples of Heroick Piety and Vertue are more pleasant and prevalent with Mankind than just Precepts and Commands And although it be a Truth Sir you assert in the 72 Page of your Book that our Hookers Sandersons and Hamomnds c. have asserted the great Truths of Religion as zealously as his Heroe did but Sir what need of these Comparisons and that in so much heat had we not also the Ushers the Pearsons which have done the like And we have the four first of these great and good Men's Lives written and we are beholding to the Writers of them and why should we not also covet the Lives of the Pearsons the Wilkins and the Tillotsons they being also the great Assertors of the great Truths of the Christian Religion its not to be doubted but their Lives would be very acceptable to all good Men but especially to the Clergy that so they might imitate their