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A55422 The life of the Right Reverend Father in God, Seth, Lord Bishop of Salisbury and chancellor of the most noble Order of the Garter with a brief account of Bishop Wilkins, Mr. Lawrence Rooke, Dr. Isaac Barrow, Dr. Turbervile, and others / written by Dr. Walter Pope ... Pope, Walter, d. 1714. 1697 (1697) Wing P2911; ESTC R4511 81,529 202

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which Toe was faulty nay I have seen the Surgeons handle and squeeze it without causing him to complain This Malady cost him many hundred pounds in Spirit of Wine totus ardens as the Chymists call it in dry and wet Baths Apothecaries and Surgeons who took his Money and laught at him in their sleeves I have often wisht him a smart fit of the Gout having known by the experience of others that it clears the Head and I doubt not but if he had arrivd to it it might have prolongd his Life They who are usd to this Distemper so frequent in the Western parts of England esteem every new access a renewing the Lease of their Lives I know a Gentleman who lived in the Close in Salisbury who told me I am not well nor ever shall be till I have a fit of the Gout and for want of it he in a little time died I have heard some of those Arthritic Persons say that the Gout it self is more tolerable than the distraction in their Thoughts and hypochondriacal Imaginations which succeed a Fit if the Gout does not return in a convenient time I have also heard that the Archbishop of Canterbury I mean Shelden did not only wish for the Gout but profferd a thousand pound to any Person who would help him to it looking upon it as the only remedy for the distemper in the Head which he feared might in time prove an Apoplexy as in fine it did and kild him In what I come from saying by the word Gout which is sometimes desirable I mean the acute Pain collected and fixd during the Fit in parts remote from the Head and Heart as in the Fingers Hands Legs and Toes The Bishop had an ill Memory even when he was in his best Health which he empaird by committing all things to writing and so found by experience the Italian Saying true Chi Scrive non ha Memoria That is Writing destroys the Memory If you would make a Servant good you must trust and employ him He having left off all Exercises as I said before his melancholy Distemper and decay of Memory gaind upon him sensibly of which I shall give you a few Instances At the Visitation of the Church of which I shall speak presently he askd several times for one of the Commissioners who sate next to him at Dinner which was taken notice of by all the Company When he took the Air in his Coach which he usd to do almost to the day of his death he has several times said to me Come bear me company once more for t will be the last time of my going abroad and perceiving me to smile what said he do you rejoyce to see me so Ill No my Lord I replied I should be very sorry if I had the same opinion of your Health as I perceive you have but I have heard these words so frequently and doubt not but I shall again that they put me not in fear When he has been upon the Plains he has imagind himself so weak that he could neither walk or stand upon his Legs then I have said my Lord you know not your strength pray be pleasd to light out of the Coach and try I have prevaild with him and he has walkd near half a mile He usd to be carried from one part of his Chamber to another in a Chair I once went down and left him reading and at my return observd several Books had been removd from one Table to another whereupon I askd him whether any body had been there since my departure He answerd no but why ask you that question Then I replied I congratulate your Strength for either you can go or these Folio's fly I left them percht upon that Table from whence they are removd But to draw to a Conclusion Some unkind usage which he thought he received from the Court which we have related in the thirteenth Chapter together with the bad prospect of the public Affairs all things tending to Popery and Confusion concurring with the unjust Faction in his Church raisd by the Dean and fomented by some of the Prebendaries joynd with his natural Distemper took away his Memory almost intirely so that for some Years before his death he was so alterd that he seemd only the shadow of himself I stile this Faction Unjust for it was judgd so by the Visitors who condemned the Dean to beg the Bishops pardon which I saw him do These Visitors were the Right Reverend Fathers in God Thomas Lord Bishop of Rochester my ancient Acquaintance Fellow Collegian and ever-honoured Friend and Dr. Lake then Lord Bishop of Chichester empowerd by a Commission from his Grace Dr. Sandcroft then Lord Archbishop of Canterbury to inspect and compose the Differences in that Church as I have mentioned in the additions to the Salisbury Canto Stanza 4. While the Bishop was in this declining condition I gave him a visit at Knightsbridge he being informd I was below sent for me and after saying he was glad to see me he askd me How does your Brother I replied whom does your Lordship mean He answerd Bishop Wilkins who had been dead near then fourteen Years He attempted to speak to me again beginning thus Were not you surprizd to hear to hear to hear but he could proceed no further having in that short time irrecoverably forgot what he intended to have spoke Thenceforward he continued for it cannot be properly said he livd almost void of Reason I have known at his return from taking the Air in a very hot Summers day the Nurse used this Argument to prevail with him to come out of the Coach My Lord there 's a very good Fire in your Chamber He did not then know his House or his Servants in a word he knew nothing I had him in my eye when I made the fifteenth Stanza of the WISH which begins thus To out-live my Senses may it not be my Fate He had also strange imaginations of things which never were and firmly believd them One Example whereof is too much that one of his Servants had got so much under him that he built a whole Street in London and married a rich Lady Poor Gentleman the Evil that he most feard and I may say even foresaw fell upon him He has often discoursd with me concerning some Persons whom we both knew and who were thus decayd and became the Properties of those who first seizd on them who kept them to their selves made their Wills and disposd of their Estates as they thought fit If you ever see me in such dangers said he pray give me warning but his decay was so precipitous that t was impossible to relieve him This sad Story would afford many useful Corollaries which I leave to the Reader to find out and apply To conclude he died Ianuary 6. Anno Dom. 168● knowing nothing of the Revolution that had happened He was carried from Knightsbridge to Salisbury and buried in the place which he
Man and a good Governour but in his latter time peevish and froward and had never any great stock of Learning When Oxford was a Garrison for King Charles the Martyr he would stand at the College Gate and observe what Persons came to walk in Trinity Grove for that was then the Oxford Hide-Park the Rendesyous of the Nobility and Gentry I say he took notice of all and usually had a Saying to every one of them which instead of vexing them made them laugh then would tell the next of the Fellows he chanc'd to see I met some Iack Lords going into my Grove but I think I have nettled them I gave them such entertainment they little look'd for At my first coming to the University of Oxford there were innumerable Bulls and Blunders father'd upon him as afterwards upon Dr. Boldero of Cambridge Upon Dr. Kettles death the Fellows proceeded to an Election of a President and it lay betwixt Mr. Chillingworth a Person justly of great Fame for his Learning and Dr. Potter Mr. Chillingworth had the majority of Votes but being then at a considerable distance from Oxford and not able to come suddenly and take Possession Dr. Potter laid hold upon this advantage and was admitted in a short time after when the University was Visited Dr. Potter was Ejected and Dr. Harris Rector of Hanwell in Oxfordshire put into his place This Dr. Harris was a very eminent Preacher his Hair rather white than gray his Speech Grave Natural and Pathetical I never heard any Sermons which became the Persons who pronounc'd them so well as his did him After Dr. Harris's decease the Fellows chose Mr. Hawes a Loyal Learned and Modest Person but of an infirm constitution of Health he enjoy'd this Headship but a little time and some days before his death resign'd it whereupon Dr. Ward to the great contentment and joy of the Moral Sober Party was elected President which he accepted and accordingly took possession of it He us'd great diligence and care to put all things in order and settle the troubled Affairs of it governing with great Prudence and Reputation but he continued in that Station a very little while only till 1660 that memorable Year for the happy Return of King Charles the Second when he resign'd it to Dr. Potter 't is true he left Trinity College and Oxford 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with an unwilling willingness for he was contented with his Condition and so pleas'd with a Collegial Life and the Charms of that sweet place that he would willingly have remain'd there the rest of his days and in order to that proffer'd Dr. Potter an Equivalent which was refus'd but yet had he resolv'd to have kept it he had not wanted sufficient ground to dispute the Title at Law for tho' it must be confess'd Dr. Potter was illegally turn'd out yet he never had a Statutable right to that place as is before made manifest But Dr. Ward not being willing to contend lest it and also resign'd his Savilian Professors Place and retir'd to London what he did there shall be the Subject of the next Chapter CHAP. VIII Of Dr. Wards being in London WE have observ'd before that all Disappointments which happened to Dr. Ward even since his first ejection out of Cambridge have prov'd to his advantage but this last of not retaining the Presidentship of Trinity College turn'd more notoriously not only to his private Emolument but to the public good also For had he kept that Headship I mean been buried alive in Trinity College hiding his glorious Light under that Bushel Exeter and Salisbury could not have boasted of so good a Bishop and Benefactor the Church of England had wanted such a Pillar and Asserter of its Rights and the Poor the Houses and Benefactions he has provided for them he might have publish'd more Treatises in Divinity and Mathematics but he could not possibly have done so much good On May the 29 th since made a perpetual Holiday by Act of Parliament King Charles return'd in Glory to his Kingdoms from which he had been unjustly Exil'd for many Years He was no sooner fix'd in his Throne but he resolv'd to settle the Church as by the Ancient Laws Establish'd to restore and to confirm it all its Lands Rights and Privileges of which it had been Sacrilegiously robb'd and despoil'd To this end several new Bishops were Consecrated who together with those who out liv'd the Storm of the Persecution were commission'd by the King to do it effectually Those Ministers who were ejected out of their Livings for adhering to the King's Cause were restor'd and notice was given to all who had any pretension to any Ecclesiastical Places or Dignities at or before such a day nominated to appear and enter their Claims for after that day the Commissioners intended to fill all the Vacancies in the Churches You may remember what I said in the Fourth Chapter that Bishop Brounrig had conferr'd the Precentorship of the Church of Exeter upon Dr. Ward many Years before And now that Title which had lain so long dormant and as to outward appearance dead awak'd reviv'd and took place and was accepted by the Commissioners by whose order he was admitted Precentor not long after he was chosen Dean and in the same Year consecrated Bishop of Exeter During these Transactions Dr. Ward had frequent occasion to ride betwixt London and Oxford which Journey he always perform'd in one day upon a high-mettled dancing I might say a run-away Mare for almost any body besides him would have found her so but he was indeed a good Horseman and valu'd himself upon it I have heard him say when he was a young Scholar in Cambridge and us'd to ride in company of others to London or elsewhere he frequently chang'd Horses with those who could not make theirs go and with those tir'd Jades lead the way but this is to be reckon'd amongst the least of his Accomplishments By so often taking this Journey in the heat of the Year he threw himself into a dangerous Fever and lay long sick of it in Gresham-College which not being well Cur'd by reason that Dr. Goddard his Fysician was then very full of Employment and could not give him due attendance I say it was not well Cur'd he having not Purg'd after it as it was necessary it left in him an ill constitution of Health during the rest of his Life and tho' he wrestled with it and bore up against it for many Years yet he could never subdue it Morbum tolerare potuit superare vero non potuit Upon the promotion of Dr. Reynolds to the Bishopric of Norwich the Church of St. Laurence Iewry became Vacant and it being in the Kings Gift was conferr'd upon Dr. Ward who kept it till he was nominated Bishop of Exeter and upon his resignation procur'd it for his Friend Dr. Wilkins who was at that time wholly destitute of all Employment and Preferment for upon the Kings
a hundred pound per annum should be settled for the maintenance of the Minister During his residence at Exeter he gain'd the love of all the Gentry and had particularly the help and countenance of the Duke of Albemarle who in all things shew'd himself most ready to assist him in the execution of his Jurisdiction The Bishop did not leave Exeter till he had made that Bishopric better than he found it which he did by procuring the Deanery of St. Burien near the Lands-end in Cornwal to be settled upon the Bishops of Exeter for ever by the Kings Letters Patents after the death of Dr. Weeks who then was the Incumbent he did not this to profit himself for he had no prospect of ever being the better for it 't was only for the pleasure of doing good It did not become void till Bishop Sparrows time who was Bishop Wards immediate Successor he first enjoy'd it and it does still and I hope ever will continue in the possession of the Bishops of Exeter and their Successors Dr. Thomas Wykes the last Dean of St. Burien was heretofore Chaplain to Archbishop Laud I have often seen his Name to the Licensing of Books particularly to Ovids Metamorfosis Translated by Mr. Sandys and Printed Anno Dom. 1640. He had Wit enouf but it was not in a wise Mans keeping as it often happens this appears by an Answer he gave to King Charles the First when he was in Cornwal in the time of the Civil Wars The Doctor being well mounted and near his Majesty the King spoke thus to him Doctor you have a pretty Nag under you I pray how Old is he To which he out of the abundance of the Quibbles of his heart return'd this Answer If it please your Majesty he is now in the Second Year of his Reign pleasing himself with the ambiguity of the sound of that word signifying either Kingship or Bridle The good King did not like this unmannerly Jest and gave him such an Answer as he deserv'd which was this Go you are a Fool. While the Bishop was at Exeter as he told me at my return from Italy he receiv'd a Letter from me dated at Rome when there were some of the Church and Citizens with him he craved leave to open and read it and when he had done put it up into his Pockets then some of the Company took occasion to ask him whence it came he replyed from Pope at Rome In a trice it was buzz'd abut the City that the Bishop was a Papist and held Correspondence with the Pope and this would have been believed and have past for current amongst those who rejoyce to hear ill of Bishops if he had not timely undeceiv'd them Upon the Exaltation of Bishop Sheldon to the See of Canterbury Doctor Henchman Bishop of Salisbury was translated to London and Dr. Alexander Hide a Kinsman of the Chancellor from being Dean of Salisbury was made Bishop thereof upon his death for he enjoy'd it but a small time The Bishop of Exeter by the Kings favour was made Bishop of Salisbury A. Dom. 1666. After the Ceremony of the Translation was over he set forward for Salisbury I waited on him at his first going thither as Bishop and spent much time with him there He was very acceptable to his Diocese innumerable Persons coming in throngs to meet him and striving who should be forwardest in shewing him Respect but what was more remarkable the tide of their Love and Affection for him was not then at the highest but still flow'd and encreas'd as long as he liv'd as we shall make appear in the next Chapter CHAP. X. Of his being Bishop of Salisbury AFter his public Entry and Reception which was as great as the place could afford the Mayor and Aldermen in their Formalities welcoming him the School-masters of the two Free Schools at the head of their Scholars Congratulating him two choice Boys pronouncing Latin Orations upon that Subject full of his Praises and declaring how happy they esteem'd their selves to have such a Bishop sent them as it were from Heaven His first care was to beautifie and repair the Cathedral tho' it did not want much reparation for to the eternal Honour of the Loyal Gentry of that Diocese whose Names I wish I knew that I might as much as in me lies Consecrate them to Posterity during the whole time of the Civil Wars and the Kings Exile when there was neither Bishop nor Dean to take care of it they employ'd Workmen to keep that Sacred and Magnificent Pile in repair I have been told by some who then liv'd in Salisbury that they have several times seen Men at Work sometimes on the inside of the Church and otherwhiles on the outside and asking them by whom they were set on Work receiv'd this Answer They who employ'd us will pay us trouble not your selves to inquire who they are whoever they are they do not desire to have their Names known There being therefore not much to be done as to the reparation he employ'd himself in the Decoration of the Cathedral First at his proper Charges Paving the Cloyster I mean that side of it which leads out of his Garden into the Church At his Exhortation and more than proportinable expence the Pavement of the Church was mended where it was faulty and the whole Quire laid with white and black Squares of Marble the Bishops Deans and all the Prebendaries Stalls made New and Magnificent and the whole Church was kept so clean that any one who had occasion for Dust to throw upon the Superscription of a Letter he would have a hard task to find it there I have seen many Metropolitan Churches but never any nay not that glorious Fabrique of St. Peters at Rome which exceeds the imagination of all those who have not beheld it was kept so neat as this in his time Nay the Sacrifice therein was as pure there might be heard excellent Preaching and Divine Service celebrated with exemplary Piety admirable Decency and Celestial Music. His next care was to repair I might almost say rebuild his Palace which was much ruin'd the Hall being pull'd down and the greatest part of the House converted to an Inn having a Passage open'd thro' the Close Wall to give Entrance to the Market People and other Travellers who came thro' Harnham from the Western parts what remain'd of the Palace was divided into small Tenements and let out to poor Handicraft-men This dilapidation and spoil was the work of one Van Ling a Dutch-man by Trade a Taylor who bought it of the Parliament when Bishops Lands were expos'd to Sale See Salisbury Canto Part 1. Stanza 20. His Expences in altering repairing and rebuilding amounted to above two Thousand Pounds there being little or nothing done in order to it by his Predecessors who had the Cream of the Bishopric While he was thus employ'd I remember he came to me one morning and desir'd me to take a turn in
knew or by the recommendation of others believ'd to be fit objects of his Charity these were next in succession and afterwards the Election was to be in the Dean and Chapter and the Bishop of Salisbury Alternis vicibus by turns This College of Matrons is a strong regular Building within the Close of Salisbury and a great Ornament to it It is fitted for the reception of Ten Women the Widows of Orthodox Ministers of the Diocese of Salisbury and in case there should not be found so many therein their vacancy is to be supplied out of the Bishopric of Exeter but I fear this will never happen They have each two Chambers and a little Garden peculiar to their selves To the maintenance thereof the Bishop settled more than two hundred pounds a year in Free Land which lies in the Neighbourhood over the Gate is written in Letters of Gold the Inscription following D' O' Mo. Collegium hoc Matronarum Humillime Dedicavit Sethus Episcopus Sarum Anno Domini MDCLXXXII That is To the Honour of Almighty God This College of Matrons Was most humbly Dedicated By Seth Bishop of Salisbury In the Year of our Lord 1682. Two Years after he built an Hospital at Buntingford in Hertford-shire the place of his Nativity for Ten poor aged Men allowing each of them Ten pound per annum which is also a Noble Structure and bears this Inscription Anno Domini 1684. This Hospital was Erected and Endowed By Seth Ward Doctor of Divinity Lord Bishop of Salisbury and Chancellor of the most Noble Order Of the Garter Who was Born in this Town within the Parish of Aspenden and Educated In the Free-School of Buntingford These poor Men are put in by Mr. Freeman and his Heirs for ever Besides this he augmented the Stipend of the Minister and the School-Master in that Town Tho' I am conscious that I have not ennumerated all his Benefactions yet I will conclude this Chapter with his Erecting of four Scholarships at Christs-College in Cambridge and endowing them with pound per Annum which in that University is a considerable Allowance the Scholarships there being generally inferiour to those at Oxford as the Fellowships better He had designd to have placd this his Benefaction at Sidney-College but upon some disgust altered his intention tho it is not improbable but that that College might refuse his proffer upon very good Reasons For at Oxford no College will accept a Benefaction which only increases the number of Fellows or Scholars for thereby the Society is rather injured than profited unless the Benefactor also builds Chambers for their reception for taking away so many Chambers takes away from the Fellows so many Pupils but on the contrary a Benefactor who will increase the Stipends of the Members of the Society will always be very gratefully embraced CHAP. XIII Of his Friends SHould I enumerate all his Friends whom I knew I must fill two or three Leaves with Names and Titles and this Chapter would look like a Money Act wherein the Commissioners were all particularly set down I shall not therefore use that dry way I will insert but few and those distributed into several Classes according to the laudable Custom of England giving Precedence to the Female Sex and placing them in the Van. Even from his unjust expulsion out of Cambridge which we have mentioned in its due place he never was destitute of Friends of the fair Sex till some few Years before his Death never without prossers of Wives much beyond his deserts as the Markets go in Smithfield to several of whom he to my knowledge recommended good Husbands and his recommendation was effectual of these I will mention but one for whom he also procured a good Parsonage and he shall be Mr. Gibson a Contemporary a Fellow-Collegian and Fellow-sufferer in the Common Cause he many Years after when his Children were like Olive Branches about his Table came from Hertford-shire to Salisbury to give the Bishop a Visit and accosted him in this manner My Lord I am come to wait upon your Lordship and to return my most humble and hearty Thanks for your many and great Kindnesses to me I owe all to you you have got me all that I have in this World except my Children The reason why he did not Marry then as I have received from himself was this he had not an Estate or Preferment sufficient to maintain a Wise suitable to the Fortunes which was prosserd with them And that he would not put it into the power of any Woman if they should happen to disagree as there are few very few if any Marriages without Dissentions those being the happiest where they are less frequent to upbraid him that she had made him a Man and that had it not been for what she brought he would not have been worth a Groat Being made a Bishop first of Exeter and afterwards of Salisbury and consequently become greater and richer 't is not to be imagin'd those proffers should diminish I am certain they increased I knew several Persons of great Quality and Estates who found ways to make it known to him that if he would address himself to them in the honorable way of Marriage he should not want a kind entertainment But at that time he was furnished with another reason to continue in Celebacy he thought it not unlawful but undecent for a Bishop to Marry perhaps he had in his eye the Fate of one of his Predecessors Bishop Iewell who married after he was Bishop of Salisbury and upon that account received so severe a Reprimand from his Brother the Archbishop of Canterbury and laid it so much to heart that it accelerated his death Upon these reasons he continued unmarried till his death But this rare Example has been followed by none of his Profession except only Dr. Barrow as we shall have occasion to shew hereafter 'T is time now to take my leave of the Ladies and proceed While Bp. Ward resided at Exeter George Duke of Albemarle began his Friendship with him which continued and augmented till his Graces death he did him many good Offices at Court and defended him against the Clamours and Calumnies of the Fanatics The Bishop also was serviceable to the Duke he instructed his Son in the Mathematics he also waited upon him frequently while he was in Health and was never absent from him in his Sickness he was with him in the last moments of his Life he gave him the Holy Sacrament closd his Eyes and preachd his Funeral Sermon which was printed both by it self and amongst his Works published by Iames Collins as above-mentioned To him I will add the Earl of Sandwich Vice-Admiral of England who was his Contemporary in Cambridge a great lover and very well skilld in the Mathematics but most famous for his skill in Maritime Affairs for his not only adventuring but sacrificing his Life for his Country The next shall be my Lord Chancellor Hide who had the Bishop
morto that is It will appear at his death whether he be or not Ovid not without reason enlarges the time in these words Dicique beatus Ante obitum nemo supremaque funera debet That is No Man ought to be accounted happy b●fore he is dead and buried So Petrarch Il Giorno la sera la vita loda il Fine That is Call not the day fair wherein it rains before Sun-set Nor that life happy which does not end well I should have accounted this Bishop of Salisbury invidiously happy had his Exit been answerable to his glorious Acting upon the Stage of the World Had he either died sooner or lived longer I mean had he died before that great I may say Total decay of his Senses and Reason befel him or livd with them intire Integra cum mente to have born his share and added one more to the number of those Faithful Bishops whose Imprisonment Tryal and Deliverance ought never to be forgotten had he livd to have seen those Clouds blown over the Church and Civil Rights of England restord and securd Iamque Opus exegi Altho I do not pretend to what follows quod nec Iovis Ira nec Ignis Nec poterit ferrum nec Edax abolere vetustas Yet I believe this Book will be longer livd than the Author and that I shall be consumd by Worms before the Moths shall have devoured it I have I say finisht the Task I imposd upon my Self as to the Performance the Readers will be Judges according to their Capacities and Inclinations but if they pronounce Sentence against me I have this to hold up my Spirits that I am certain No Man could have written this Life better or so well without my assistance Now one word to thee my little Book if the Fanatics rise up in Arms and assault thee Tu ne cede malis sed contra Audentior ito That is Let not thy noble Courage be cast down Fight it out to the last drop of Blood never yield never beg Quarter for they will give thee none for having spoken well of a Bishop Let this be thy comfort the more they rail against thee the more despitefully they use thee thou shalt be so much the more in my favour and I shall think it a sufficient reason to believe that there is something good in thee whereat they are so much offended And now I have no more to say of the Bishop of Salisbury and only this concerning my Self I thank God for prolonging my days till I have given the World this public Testimony of my Gratitude and here without begging the Reader to be Courteous or making Apologies for my Stile for my long frequent and as they will be thought by some impertinent Digressions I shall conclude with those Verses of Imperiale Meglio Amo Al mondo tutto Dicitor mal saggio E scarso d' Arte è d' alto Stil mendico Che à te solo parer non grato Amico Which may be thus Translated I had rather the whole World should say of me My Stile is flat and trivial there 's no Wit Nor one grain of good Sense in all I have writ Then seem ungrateful blessed Saint to thee Liberavi Animam meam Domine nunc dimittis I have disingaged my Soul I have paid my Debt to my deceased Friend I am I thank God arrivd to a good Old Age without Gout or Stone with my External Senses but little decayd and my Intellectuals tho none of the best yet as good as ever they were Lord now dismiss thy Servant in Peace according to thy Word FINIS Books Printed for W. Keblewhite at the Swan in St. Paul's Church-yard FIght Chirurgical Treatises on these following Heads 1. Of Tumours 2. Of Ulcers 3. Of Diseases of the Anus 4. Of the Kings-Evil 5. Of Wounds 6. Of Gunshot Wounds 7. Of Fractures and Luxations 8. Of the Lues Venerea By Richard Wiseman Serjeant-Chirurgeon to King Charles the Second The Third Edition Folio The Condemnation of Mons. Du Pin's History of Ecclesiastical Authors by the Archbishop of Paris Also his own Retractation from the French Quarto A Letter of Advice to a Friend upon the Modern Argument of the Lawfulness of Simple Fornication half Adultery and Poligamy Quarto An Enquiry into the Nature Necessity and Evidence of Christian Faith in several Essays Part I. Of Faith in General and of the belief of a Deity Part II. Of Faith with respect to Divine Providence By Iohn Cockburn D. D. Octavo Nomenclator Classicus sire Dictionariolum Trilingue By I. Ray Fellow of the Royal Society For the use of Schools Octavo A Discourse concerning the Inventions of Men in the Worship of God By the Right Reverend Dr. William King Lord Bishop of London-Derry Octavo his Admonition to the Dissenters of his Diocese Octavo Mr. Clutterbuck's Vindication of the Liturgy of the Church of England explaining the Terms Order and Usefulness of it Octavo Fifteen Sermons preached upon several Occasions and on various Subjects by Iohn Cockburn D. D. Octavo Dr. Lluellyn