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HANDBOLND 
AT  THE 


UNIVERSITY  OF 
TORONTO  PRESS 


THE 


LIVES 


O    F 


Sir  MATTHEW  HALE,  Knt. 

Lord  Chief  Juilice  of  England; 

WILMOT,  Earl  of  Rochefter; 


AND 

Queen     MARY. 

Written   by  Bifhop  BirRNETTa 

To  this  Edition  are  a<«Jed, 

Richard    Baxter's    Additional    Notes    to 
.    the  Life  of  Sir  MATTHEW   HALE. 

A    N    O 

A   Sermon   Preached  at  the  Funeral  of  the  Earl 
of  Rochefter,  by  the  Rev.  Mr.  Parsons, 


O  N  D  O  Ns  ^^^'■^,    ^  ' 


Printed    for    T.    DA  VIES,    in    RufTel -Str-et,    Covenl: -Giiden 


M.DCC.LXXIY, 


H  - 1  "S  B  2 


THE 


PREFACE 


"hT  0  part  of  hljiory  is  more  injiru5five  and 
■^  delighting,  than  the  lives  of  great  ajtd 
worthy  men  :  the  fhortnefs  of  them  invites  many 
readers,  and  there  are  fuch  little  and  yet  remark- 
able paffages  in  them,  too  inconfiderahle  to  be  put 
in  a  general  hijtory  of  the  age  in  which  they 
lived,  that  all  people  are  very  dejirous  to  knoio 
them.  This  makes  PlutarcJfs  lives  to  be  more 
generally  read  than  any  of  all  the  books  vohich 
the  ancient  Greeks  or  Romans  zvrit. 

Bui  the  lives  of  heroes  and  princes  are  com- 
monly filled  with  the  account  of  the  great  things 
done  by  them,  which  do  rather  belong  to  a  gene- 
ral, than  a  particular  hifiory ;  and  do  rather 
amufe  the  readers  fancy  with  a  fplendid  floew  of 
greatnefs,  than  offer  him  tvhat  is  really  fo  ufeful 
to  himfelf :  and  indeed  the  lives  of  princes  are 

either 


The    PREFACE. 

tither  writ  with  fo  much  flattery^  by  thofe  who 
intended  to  merit  by  it  at  their  own  hands,  or 
others  concerned  in  them  •,  or  with  fo  much  fpite^ 
by  thofe  who  being  ill  ufed  by   them  have  re- 
venged  themfelves  on  their  memory,  that  there  is 
not  much  to  be  built  on  them  j    and  though  the 
ill  nature  of  many  makes  what  is  fatyrically  writ 
to  be  generally  more  read  and  believed,  than 
when  the  flattery  is  viftble  and  coarfe,  yet  cer- 
tainly refentment  may  make  the  writer  corrupt 
the  truth  of    hifiory,    as    much   as    intereft  -, 
and  fince  all  men  have  their  blind  fides,  and 
commit  errors,  he  that  will  indiiftrioufly  lay  thefe 
together,  leaving  out,  or  but  Jlightly  touching, 
what  fhould  be  fet  againfi  them  to  balance  than, 
may  make  a  very  good  man  appear  in  very  bad 
colours  :  fo  upon  the  whole  matter,  there  is  not 
that  reafon  to  expeiJ  either  much  truth,  or  great 
infiru5iion,  from  what  is  written  concerning 
heroes  or  princes  -,  for  few  have  been  able  tQ 
imitate  the  patterns  Suetonius  fet  the  world  in 
writing  the  lives  of  the  Roman  emperors,  with 
the  fame  freedom  that  they  had  led  them  :    but 
the  lives   of  private  men,   though  they  feldom 
entertain  the  reader  with  fuch  a  variety  of  paf- 
fagcs  as  the  other  do  -,  yet  certainly  they  offer 
bim  things  that  are  more  imitable,  and  do  pre- 

fent 


rhe    PREFACE. 

fent   wifdcm  and  'virtue  to  hm^  not  only  in  a 
fair  idea^  which  is  often  look'd  on  as  a  piece  of 
the  invention  or  fancy  of  the  'writer^  but  in  fuch 
plain  and  familiar  injlances,  as  do  both  direct 
hirit  better,  and  perfuade  him  more  ;  and  there 
are  not  fuch  temptations  to  hiafs  thofe  who  writ 
them,  fo  that  we  may  generally  depend  more  on 
the  truth  of  fuch  relations  as  are  given  in  them. 
In   the  age  in  which  we  live,  religion  and 
virtue  have  been  propofed  and  defended  with 
fuch  advantages,  with  that  great  force  of  rea- 
fon,  and  thofe  perfuaftons,  that  they  can  hardly 
be  matched  in  former  times  ;  yet  after  all  this, 
there  are  but  fezv  much  wrought  on  by  them, 
which  perhaps  flows  from  this,    among  other 
reafons,   that  there  are  not  fo  many  excellent 
patterns  fet  out,  as  might  both  in  a  fhorter  and 
more  effectual  manner  recommend  that  to   the 
world,  which  difcourfes  do  but  coldly  -,  the  wit 
and  file  of  the  writer  being  more  conjidered 
than  the  argument   which   they   handle,    and 
therefore  the  propofing  virtue  and  religion  in 
fuch  a  model,  may  perhaps  operate  more  than 
the  perfpecfive  of  it  can  do  ;  and  for  the  hijlory 
of  learning,  nothing  does  fo  preferve  and  im- 
prove it,  as  the  writing  the  lives  of  thofe  who 
have  been  eminent  in  it. 

There 


"The    PREFACE. 

^hen  is  no  hook  the  ancients  have  left  tis^ 
which  might  have  informed  us  more  than  Dio- 
genes Laertius  his  lives  of  the  philofophers,  if 
he  had  had  the  art  of  writing  equal  to  that 
great  fuhje^  which  he  under tooky  for  if  he  had 
given  the  world  fuch  account  of  them^  as  Gaf- 
fendus  has  done  of  Peirejky  how  great  a  flock 
of  knowledge  might  we  have  had,  which  l>y  his 
unjkilfulnefs  is  in  a  great  meafure  lofi  \  fince  we 
mufi  now  depend  only  on  him,  becaufe  we  have 
-no  other ^  or  better  author,  that  has  written  on 
that  argument. 

For  many  ages  there  were  no  lives  writ  hut 
hy  monks,  through  whofe  writings  there  runs 
fuch  an  incureahle  humour  of  telling  incredible 
and  inimitable  pa[fages,  that  little  in  them  can 
he  believed  or  propofed  as  a  pattern.  Sulpitius 
Severus  and  Jerom  fhewed  too  much  credulity 
in  the  lives  they  writ,  and  raifed  Martin  and 
Hilarion  beyond  what  can  be  reafonable  believed: 
after  them,  Socrates,  Theodoret,  Sozomen,  and 
Palladius,  took  a  pleafure  to  tell  uncouth  flories 
ef  the  monks  of  Thebais,  and  Nitra  •,  and  ihofe 
who  came  after  them,  fccrned  to  fall  fljcrt  of 
them,  but  raifed  their  faints  above  thofe  of  for- 
mer ages,  fo  that  one  would  have  thought  that 
tmdecent  way  of  writing  could  raife  no  higher  -, 

and 


rhe    P  R  E  F  A  C  E. 

£nd  this  humour  infeuied  even  thofe  who  had 
otherwife  a  good  fenfe  of  things,   and  a  juji 
apprehenjion  of  mankind,   as  may  appear  in 
Matthew  Paris,  who  though  he  was  a  writer 
vf  great  judgment  and  fidelity,  yet  he  has  cor- 
rupted his  hiflory  with  much  of  that  alloy  :  hut 
when  emulation  and  envy  rofe  among  the  fever  at 
orders  or  houfes,  then  they  improved  in  that 
art  of  making  romances,    infiead  of   writing 
lives,  to  that  pitch,  that  the  world  became  ge- 
nerally much  fcandalized  with  them.  The  Fran- 
cifcans  and  Dominicans  tried  who  could  fay  the 
mofl   extravagant   things  of  the  founders,    or 
other  faints  of  their  orders,  and  the  Benedic- 
tines,    who  thought  thcmf elves  po[fefi  of   the 
belief  of  the  world,  as  well  as  of  its  wealth, 
endeavoured  all  that  was  poffible  fill  to  keep  up 
the  dignity  of  their  order,  by  out -lying  the  ethers 
all  they  could;  and  whereas  here  or  there,  a 
miracle,  a  vifion,  or  trance,  might  have  occured 
in  the  lives  of  former  faints,  now  every  page 
was  full  of  thofe  wonderful  things. 

J^or  has  the  humour  of  writing  in  fuch  a 
manner,  been  quite  laid  down  in  this  age,  though 
more  awakened  and  better  enlightened,  as  ap- 
pears in  the  life  of  Philip  Nerius,  and  a  great 
many  more  :    and  the  jcfuits  at  Antwerp,  are 

nozv 


<The    PREFACE. 

now  taking  care  to  load  the  world  with  a  vaji 
and  voluminous  colle5fion  of  all  thofe  lives  that 
has  already  /welled  to  eleven  volumes  in  folio^ 
in  a  fmall  prints  and  yet  being  digejled  accord- 
ing to  the  calender,  they  have  yet  hut  ended  the 
month  of  April.  The  life  of  mo^/lear  Renty  is 
writ  in  another  manner,  where  there  are  fo 
many  excellent  pajfages,  that  he  is  jtijlly  to  be 
reckoned  amongfl  the  greated  patterns  that 
France  has  afforded  in  this  age. 

But  while  fome  have  nourifhed  infidelity,  and 
a  f corn  of  all f acred  things,  by  writing  of  thofe 
good  men  in  fuch  a  ftrain,  as  makes  not  only 
what  is  fo  related  to  be  difhelieved,  but  creates 
a  diftrujl  of  the  authentical  writings  of  our 
moji  holy  faith  ;  others  have  fallen  into  another 
extream,  in  writing  lives  too  jejunely,  fwelling 
ihem  up  with  trifling  accounts  of  the  childhood 
and  education,  and  the  domeftick  and  private 
affairs  of  thofe  perfons  of  whom  they  writ,  in 
which  the  world  is  little  concerned;  by  thefe 
they  become  fo  flat  ^  that  few  care  to  read  them-, 
for  certainly  thofe  tranfa^ions  are  only  fit  to  be 
delivered  to  poflerity,  that  may  carry  with  them 
fome  ufeful  piece  of  knowledge  to  after-times. 

I  have 


■<I%e     PREFACE. 

/  have  now  an  argument  before  me^  which 
will  afford  indeed  only  a  Jhort  hiftory^  hut  will 
xontain  in  it  as  great  a  character  as  perhaps  can 
he  given  of  any  in  this  age  ;  ftnce  there  are  few 
injiances  of  more  knowledge  and  greater  virtues 
meeting  is  one  perfon.     I  am  upon  one  account 
(bejidts  many  more)  unfit  to  undertake  it^  he- 
caufe  I  was  not  at  all  known  to  him,  fo  I  can 
fay  nothing  from  my  vvm  ohfervation ;  hut  upon 
fecond  thoughts  I  do  not  know  whether  this  may 
not  qualify  me  to  write  more  impartially,  though 
perhaps  more  defe5lively,  for  the  knowledge  of 
extraordinary  perfons  does  mojl  commonly  biafs 
thofe  who  were   much  wrought  on  by  the  ten- 
dernefs  of  their friendfhip  for  them,  to  raife  their 
flile  a  little  too  high  when  they  write  concerning 
them  :    I  confefs  I  knew  him  as  much  as  the 
looking  often  upon  hifn  could  amount  to.      The 
lafi  year  ■of  his  heing  in  London,  he  came  always 
on  Sundays  (when  he  could  go  abroad)  to  the 
chapel  of  the  Rolls,    where  I  then  preached: 
in  my  life  I  never  f aw  fo  7nuch  gravity^  tempered 
-with  that  fweetnefs,  and  fet  off  with  fo  much 
vivacity,  as  appeared  in  his  looks  and  behaviour, 
which  difpofed  me   to    a    veneration  for  him, 
which  I  never  had  for  any,  with  whom  I  was 
not  acquainted:  I  was  feeking  an  opportunity 

of 


ne    PREFACE. 

cf  being  admitted  to  bis  converfation\  hut  I 
underfiood  that  between  a  great  want  of  healthy 
and  a  multiplicity  of  bufinefs^  which  his  employ- 
went  brought  upon  him^  he  was  majler  of  fo 
little  of  his  time,  that  IJf.ood  in  doubt  whether 
I  might  prefume  to  rob  him  of  any  of  it,  and  fo 
he  left  the  town  before  I  could  refolve  on  dejir- 
ing  to  be  known  to  him. 

My  ignorance  of  the  law  of  England,  made 
me  alfo  unfit  to  write  of  a  man,  a  great  part 
of  whofe  character,  as  to  his  learning,  is  to  be 
taken  from  his  /kill  in  the  Common  Law,  and  his 
performance  in  that.  But  Ifhall  leave  that  to 
thofe  of  the  fame  robe  \Jince  if  I  engaged  much 
in  it,  I  mufi  needs  commit  many  errors,  writing 
cf  a  fubje^  that  is  foreign  to  m^^ 

1'he  occafion  of  my  undertaking  this,  was 
given  me  fir  ft  by  the  earneji  defires  of  fame  that 
have  great  power  over  me,  who  having  been 
much  obliged  by  him,  and  holding  his  memory 
in  high  eflimation,  thought  I  might  do  it  fome 
right  by  writing  his  life  ;  I  was  then  engaged 
in  the  hifiory  of  the  reformation,  fo  I  promifed 
that  as  foon  as  that  was  over,  I  Jhculd  make 
the  hefl  ufe  I  could  of  fuch  informations  and 
memorials  as  (Ijould  be  brought  me. 

This 


ne    P  R  E  F  A  C  E. 

^his  I  have  nczu  fcrfonred  in  the  bejl  mtin- 
ner  I  could,  and  have  brought  into  method  alt 
the  parcels  of  his  life,    or  the  branches  of  his 
character,  ivhich  I  could  either  gather  fro7n  the 
informations  that  were  brought  me,  or  from 
thofe  that  were  familiarly  acquainted  with  him^ 
or  from  his  writings.    I  have  not  applied  any 
of  the  falfe  colours  with  which  art,  or  foms 
forced  eloquence,  might  furniflj  me  in  writing 
concerning  him  -,   but  have  endeavoured  to  fet 
him  out  in  the  fame  fimpli city  in  which  he  lived. 
I  have  faid  little  of  his  dome/lick  concerns,  fince 
though  in  thefe  he  was  a  great  example,  yet  it 
Jignifies  nothing  to  the  world,  to  know  any  par^ 
ticular  exercifes,  that  might  be  given  to  his 
patience  ;    and  therefore  I  fhall  draw  a  veil 
over  all  thefe,  and  fhall  avoid  faying  any  thing 
of  him,  but  what  may  offord  the  reader  feme  pro- 
fitable inflruolion.  I  am  under  no  tempt atic?is  of 
faying  any  thing,  but  what  I  am  perfuaded  i$^ 
exactly  true,  for  where  there  is  fo  much  excellent 
truth  to  be  told,  it  were  an  inexcufable  fault 
to  corrupt  that,  or  prejudice  the  reader  againji 
it,  by  the  mixture  of  falfhoods  with  it. 

In  fhort,  as  he  was  a  great  example  while  he; 
lived,,  fo  I  wijh  the  fet  ting  him  thus  out  to  pcjle- 

riiy^ 


'J'he    P  R  E  F  A  C  E. 

r//y,  in  his  own  true  and  native  colours^  may 
have  its  due  influence  on  all  perfonSy  but  more 
particularly  on  thofe  of  that  profeffion,  whom 
it  more  immediately  concerns,  whether  on  the 
hetich  or  at  the  bar. 


THE 


^'  w*'0.  -^-^^  x^x  -^'""^  ;<^:*M  9 
o;  ;^;*M  ^°-'$«  x^>-  ^««.:^  .jg:;*)s<  .^: 


THE 

LIFE    AND    DEATH 

O  F 

Sir   MATTHEW    HALE,    Knt. 

LATE 

Lord  Chief  Juftice  of  England. 

MATTHEW  HALE,  was  born  at 
Alderly  in  Glocefterftiire,  Nov.  i,  1609. 
His  grandfather  was  Robert  Hale,  an 
eminent  clothier  in  VVotton-under-edge,  in  that 
county,  where  he  and  his  anceftors  had  lived  for 
many  defcents  ;  and  they  had  given  feveral  parcels 
of  land  for  the  ufe  of  the  poor,  which  were  enjoyed 
by  them  to  this  day.  This  Robert  acquired  an 
eftate  of  ten  thoufand  pounds,  which  he  divided 
almoft  equally  amongft  his  five  fons  ;  befides  the 
portions  he  gave  his  daughters,  from  whom  a  nu- 
merous pofterity  has  fprung.  His  fecond  fon  was 
Robert  Hale,  a  Barrifter  of  Lincoln's-Inn  ;  he 
married  Joan,  the  daughter  of  Matthew  Poyntz,  of 

B  Alderly, 


2  The  Life  and  Death  of 

AUerly,  Efquire,    who  was  defcended   from  thfag 
noble  family  of  the  Poyntz's  of  Afton  :  of  this  mar- 
riage there  was  no  other  iflue  but  this  one  fon.    His- 
Grandfather  by  his  mother  was  his  godfather,  and 
gave  him  his  own  name  at  his  baptifm.    His  father 
was  a  man  of  that  ftri£tnefs  of  confcience,  that  he 
gave  over  the  pra6llce  of  the  law,  becaufe  he  could 
not  underftand  the  rcafon  of  giving  colour  in  plead-* 
ings,  which  as  he  thought  was  to  tell  a  lye,  and 
that,  with  fome  other  things  commonly  pra^llfed,, 
feemed  to  him  contrary  to  that  exadtnefs  of  truth 
and  juftiee  which  became  a  chriftian,  fo  that  he 
withdrew  himfelf  from  thelnnaof  Court  to  live  on 
his  eftate  in  the  country.    Of  this  I  was  informed 
by  an  ancient  gentleman,  that  lived  in  a  friendftiip 
with  his  fon  for  fifty  years,  and   he  heard  Judge 
Jones,  that  was  Mr.  Hale's  contemporary,  declare 
this  in  the  King's-bench.     But  as  the  care  he  had 
to  fave  his  foul,  made  him  abandon  a  profefEon  in 
which  he  might  have  laifed  his  family  much  higher^, 
fo  his  charity  to  his  poor  neighbours  made  him  not 
only  deal  his  alms  largely  among  them  while  he 
lived,  but  at  his  death  he  left  (out  of  his  fmall 
eftate  which  was  but  lool.  a  year)  20 1.  a  year 
to  the  poor  of  Wotton,  which  his  fon  confirmed 
to  them,  with  fome  addition,  and  with  this  regu-^ 
lation,  that  it  fliould  be  diftributed  among  fucb 
poor  houfe-keepers,  as  did  not  receive  the  alms  of 
the  parifh  ;  for  to  give  it  to  thofe,  was  only,  as  he 
iifed  to  fay,  to  fave  fo  much  money  to  the  rich,  who 
by  law  were  bound  to  relieve  the  poor  of  the  parifti. 

Thus 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.         3 

'  Thus  he  was  defcended  rather  from  a  good,  than 
a  noble  family,  and  yet  what  was  wanting  in  the 
infignificant  titles  of  high  birth,  and  noble  blood, 
was  more  than  made  up  in  the  true  worth  of  his 
anceflors.  But  he  was  foon  deprived  of  the  hap- 
pinefs  of  his  father's  care  and  inftrudion,  for  as 
he  loft  his  mother  before  he  was  three  years  old, 
fo  his  father  died  before  he  was  five  ;  fo  early  was 
he  caft  on  the  providence  of  God.  But  that  un- 
happinefs  was  in  a  great  meafure  made  up  to  him  : 
for  after  fome  oppofition  made  by  Mr.  Thomas 
Poyntz,  his  uncle  by  his  mother,  he  was  com- 
mitted to  the  care  of  Anthony  Kingfcot,  of  King- 
fcot,  Efquire,  who  was  his  next  ktnfman,  after  his 
uncles,  by  his  mother. 

Great  care  was  taken  of  his  education,  and  his 
guardian  intended  to  breed  him  to  be  a  divine, 
and  being  inclined  to  the  way  of  thofe  then  called 
Puritans,  put  him  to  fome  fchools  that  were  taught 
by  thofe  of  that  party,  and  in  the  feventeenth  year 
of  his  age,  fent  him  to  Magdalen-Hall  in  Oxford, 
where  Obadiah  Sedgwick  was  his  tutor.  He  was 
an  extraordinary  proficient  at  fchool,  and  for  fome 
time  at  Oxford.  But  the  Stage-players  coming 
thither,  he  was  fo  much  corrupted  by  feeing  many 
plays,  that  he  almoft  wholly  forfook  his  ftudies. 
By  this  he  not  only  loft  much  time,  but  found 
that  his  head  came  to  be  thereby  filled  with  fuch 
vain  images  of  things,  that  they  were  at  beft  un- 
profitable, if  not  hurtful  to  him  ;  and  being  after- 
wards fejifible  of  the  mifchief  of  this,  he  refolved 

B  2  upon 


4  1"he  Life  and  Death  of 

upon  his  coming  to  London,  (where  he  knew  the 
opportunities  of  fuch  fights  would  be  more  fre- 
quent and  inviting)  never  to  fee  a  play  again,  to 
which  he  conftantly  adhered. 

The  corruption  of  a  young  man's  mind,  in  one 
particular,    generally  draws  on  a  great  many  more 
after  it,  fo  he  being  now  taken  off  from  following 
his  ftudies,  and  from  the  gravity  of  his  deportment> 
that  was  formerly  eminent  in  him,  far  beyond  his 
years,  fet  himfelf  to  many  of  the  vanities  incident 
to  youth,  but  ftill  preferved  his  purity,  and  a  great 
probity  of  mind.     He  loved  fine  clothes,  and  de- 
lighted much  in  company  :    and  being  of  a  ftrong 
robuft  body,  he  was   a  great  mafter  of  all  thofe 
exercifes    that  required   much   ftrength.     He  alfo 
learned  to  fence,  and  handle  his  weapons,  in  which 
he  became  fo  expert,  that  he  worfted  many  of  the 
mafters  of  thofe  arts :  but  as  he  was  exercifmg  him- 
felf in  them,   an  inftance  appeared,  that  fhewed  a 
good  judgment,    and   gave   fome  hopes  of  better 
things.    One  of  his   mafters  told  hrm,    he  could 
teach  him  no  more,  for  he  was  now  better  at  his 
own   trade    than  himfelf  was.      This  Mr.   Hale 
look'd  on  as  flattery  ;  fo  to  make  the  mafter  difcover 
himfelf,  he  promifed   him  the  houfe  he  lived  in, 
for  he  was  his  tenant,  if  he  could  hit  him  a  blow 
on  the  head  :    and  bad  him  do  his  beft,  for  he 
would  be  as  good  as  his  word.     So  after  a  little 
engagement,  his  mafter  being  really  fuperiour  to 
him,  hit  him  on  the  head,  and  he  performed  his 
promife  \   for  he  gave  him  the  houfe  freely  :    and 

was 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.         5 

was  not  unwilling  at  that  rate  to  learn  fo  early,  to 
diftinguifh  flattery  from  plain  and  fimple  truth. 

He  was  now  fo  taken  up  with  martial  matters, 
that  inftead  of  going  on  in  his  defign  of  being  a 
fcholar,   or  a  divine,  he   refolved  to  be  a  foldier : 
and  his  tutor  Sedgwick  going  into  the  Low-coun- 
tries,   chaplain  to   the  renowned  Lord  Vere,   he 
refolved   to  go  along  with  him,   and  to  trail  a  pike 
in  the  prince  of  Orange's  army  ;    but  a  happy  ftop 
was  put  to  this  refolution,  which  might  have  proved 
fo  fatal  to  himfelf,  and  have  deprived  the  age  of 
the  great  example  he  gave,  and  the  ufeful  fervices 
he  afterwards  did  his  country.     He  was  engaged 
in  a  fuit  of  law  with  Sir  William  Whitmore,  who 
laid  claim  to  fome  part  of  his  eftate,  and  his  guar- 
dian being  a  man  of  a  retired   temper,   and  not 
made  for  bufmefs,  he  was  forced  to  leave  the  uni- 
verfity,  after  he  had  been  three  years  in  it,  and  go 
to  London    to  follicit    his    own  bufmefs.     Being 
recommended  to  ferjeant  Glanvill  for  his  councel- 
lor,  and  he  obferving  in  him  a  clear  apprehenfion 
of  things,  and  a  folid  judgment,  and  a  great  fitnefs 
for  the  ftudy  of  the  law,   took  pains  upon  him  to 
perfuade  him  to   forfake  his  thoughts   of  being  a 
foldier,  and   to  apply  himfelf  to  the  ftudy  of  the 
law :  and  this  had  fo  good  an  effefi  on  him,  that 
on  the  8th  of  November,  1629,  when  he  was  paft 
the  twentieth  year  of  his  age,  he  was  admitted  into 
Lincoln's-Inn  :  and  being  then  deeply  fenfible  how 
much  time  he  had  loft,    and   that  idle  and  vain 
things  had  over -run  and  almoft  corrupted  his  mind, 

^  Z  he 


6  1'he  Life  and  Death  of 

he  refolved  to  redeem  the  time  he  had  loft,  and 
followed  his  ftudies  with  a  diligence  that  could 
fcarce  be  believed,  if  the  fignal  effects  of  it  did 
not  gain  it  credit.  He  ftudied  for  many  years  at 
the  rate  of  fixteen  hours  a  day :  he  threw  afide 
all  fine  clothes,  and  betook  himfelf  to  a  plain  fa- 
ihion,  which  he  continued  to  ufe  in  many  points 
to  his  dying  day. 

But,  fmce  the  honour  of  reclaiming  him  from 
the  idlenefs  of  his  former  courfe  of  life,  is  due  to 
the  memory  of  that  eminent  lawer,  ferjeant  Glan- 
vill,  and  fince  my  defign  in  writing  is  to  propofe  a 
pattern  of  heroic  virtue  to  the  world,  I  fliall  men- 
tion one  paflage  of  the  ferjeant  which  ought  never 
to  be  forgotten.  His  father  had  a  fair  eftate,  which 
he  intented  to  fettle  on  his  elder  brother,  but  he 
heing  a  vicious  young  man,  and  there  appearing 
no  hopes  of  his  recovery,  he  fettled  it  on  him, 
that  was  his  fecond  fon.  Upon  his  death,  his 
cldeft  fon  finding  that  what  he  had  before  looked 
on,  as  the  threatnings  of  an  angry  father,  was 
now  but  too  certain,  became  melancholy,  and  that 
by  degrees  wrought  fo  great  a  change  on  him, 
that  what  his  father  could  not  prevail  in  while  he 
lived,  was  now  effc6led  by  the  feverity  of  )iis  lafl: 
ivill,  fo  that  it  was  now  too  late  for  him  to  change 
in  hopes  of  an  eftate  that  was  gone  from  him. 
But  his  brother  obferving  the  reality  of  the  change, 
refolved  within  himfelf  what  to  do  :  fo  he  called 
him,  with  many  of  his  friends  together  to  a  feaft, 
^nd  after  other  difhes  had  been  ferved  up  to  the 

*  dinner^ 


Str  MATTHEW  HALE.        7 

tlinner,  he  ordered  one  that  was  covered  to  be  fet 
before  his  brother,  and  defired  him  to  uncover  it ; 
which  he  doing,  the  company  vv^as  furprized  to  find 
it  full  of  writings.  So  he  to3<i  them,  that  he 
was  now  to  do  what  he  was  fare  his  father  would 
have  done,  if  he  had  lived  to  fee  that  happy 
change,  which  they  now  all  faw  in  his  brother : 
and  therefore  he  freely  reftored  to  him  the  whole 
eftate.  This  is  fo  great  an  inftance  of  a  generous 
and  juft  difpofition,  that  I  hope  the  reader  will 
eafily  pardon  this  digreffion,  and  that  the  rather, 
fmce  that  worthy  ferjeant  was  fo  inftrumental  in 
the  happy  change  that  followed  in  the  courfe  of 
Mr.  Hale's  life. 

Yet  he  did  not  at  firft  break  off  from  keeping 
too  much  company  with  fome  vain  people,  till  a 
fad  accident  drove  him  from  it,  for  he,  with  fome 
^ther  young  ftudents,  being  invited  to  be  merry 
Ottt  of  town,  one  of  the  company  called    for  fd 
anuch  wine,    that,    notwithftanding  all   that   Mr. 
•Hale  could  do  to  prevent  it,  he  wenj  on  in  his  ex- 
"cefs  till  he  fell  down  as  dead  before  them,    fo  that 
all  that  were  prefent,  were  not   a  little  affrighted 
at  it,    who  did  what  they  could  to  bring  him  to 
himfelf   again.     This  did  particularly  affedl  Mr. 
Hale,  who    thereupon  went   into  another    room, 
and   fhutting    the  door,    fell  on   his  knees,    and 
prayed  earneftly  to  God,  both  for  his  friend,  that 
he  might  be  reftored  to  life  again  ;  and  that  him- 
felf might  be  forgiven  for  giving  fuch  countenance 
to  fo  much  excefs ;   and  he  vowed  to  God,  that 

B  4  he 


•;S  ^he  Life  and  Death  of 

he  would  never  again  keep  company  in  that  man- 
ner, nor  drink  a  health  while  he  lived.  His  friend 
recovered,  and  he  moft  religioufly  obferved  his 
vow,  till  his  dying  day.  And  though  he  was 
afterwards  preft  to  drink  healths,  particularly  the 
king's,  which  was  fet  up  by  too  many  as  a  diftin- 
guifliing  mark  of  loyalty,  and  drew  many  into 
great  excefs  after  his  Majefty's  happy  reftoration  ; 
but  he  would  never  difpenfe  with  his  vow,  though 
he  was  fometimes  roughly  treated  for  this,  which 
fome  hot  and  indifcreet  men  called  obftinacy. 

This  wrought  an  entire  change  on  him  :  now 
he  forfook  all  vain  company,  and  divided"  himfelf 
between  the  duties  of  religion,  and  the  ftudies  of 
his  profeflion.  In  the  former  he  was  fo  regular, 
that  for  fix  and  thirty  years  time  he  never  once 
failed  going  to  church  on  the  Lord's  day  j  this 
obfervation  he  made  when  an  ague  firft  interrupted 
that  conftant  courfe,  and  he  reflefted  on  it  as  an 
acknowledgment  of  God's  great  goodnefs  to  him, 
in  fo  long  a  continuance  of  his  health. 

He  took  a  ftri6l  account  of  his  time,  of  which 
the  reader  will  beft  judge,  by  the  fcheme  he  drew 
for  a  diary,  which  I  fhall  infert  copied  from  the 
original,  but  I  am  not  certain  when  he  made  it ;  it 
is  fet  down  in  the  fame  fimplicity  in  which  he  writ 
it  for  his  own  private  ufe. 

Morning. 
I.  To  lift  up  the  heart  to  God  in  thankfulnefs 

for  renewing  my  life. 

II.  To 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.        9 

5'"II.To  renew  my  covenant  with  God  in  Chrift. 

I.  By  renewed  a£ts  of  faith  receiving  Chrift,  and 

rejoycing  in  the  height  of  that  relation.     2.  Re- 

folution  of  being  one  of  his  people,    doing  him 

allegiance. 

•    III.   Adoration  and  prayer. 

IV.  Setting  a  watch  over  my  own  infirmities 
and  paflions,  over  the  fnares  laid  in  our  way. 
Perimus  Jicitis. 

Day  Employment. 

There  muft  be  an  employment,  two  kinds. 

I.  Our  ordinary  calling,  to  ferve  God  in  it.  It 
-is  a  fervice  to  Chrift  though  never  fo  mean.  Colof. 

3.  Here  faithfulnefs,  diligence,  chearfulnefs. 
Not  to  overlay  myfelf  with  more  bufinefs  than  I 
can  bear. 

II.  Our  fpiritual  employments  :  mingle  fonie- 
^hat  of  God's  immediate  fervice  in  this  day. 

Refrefliments. 

T.  Meat  and  drink,  moderation  feafoned  witTi 
fomewhat  of  God. 

II.  Recreations,  i.  Not  our  bufinefs.  2.  Suit- 
able. No  games,  if  given  to  covetoufnefs  or 
paffion. 

If  alone. 

I.  Beware  of  wandering  vain  luftful  thoughts ;  fly 
from  thyfelf  rather  than  entertain  thefe. 

II.  Let  thy  folitary  thoughts  be  profitable,  view 
the  evidences  of  thy  falvation,  the  llace  of  thy  foul, 

the 


lo  The  Life  and  Death  of 

the  coming  of  Chrift,  thy  own  mortality,  it  will 
make  thee  humble  and  watchful. 

Company, 

Do  good  to  them,  Ufe  God's  name  reverently. 
Beware  of  leaving  an  ill  impreffion  of  ill  example. 
Receive  good  from  them,  if  more  knowings 

Evening. 

Caft  up  the  accompts  of  the  day.  If  ought 
amifs,  beg  pardon.  Gather  refolution  of  more 
vigilance.  If  well,  blefs  the  mercy  and  grace  of 
God  that  hath  fupported  thee. 

Thefe  notes  have  an  imperfeilion  in  the  word- 
ing of  them,  which  fhews  they  were  only  intended 
for  his  privacies.  No  wonder,  a  man  who  fet 
fuch  rules  to  himfelf,  became  quickly  very  emi- 
nent and  remarkable. 

Noy,  the  attorney-general,  being  then  one  of  the 
greateft  men  of  the  profeffion,  took  early  notice 
of  him,  and  called  often  for  him,  and  dire61:e4 
him  in  his  ftudy,  and  grew  to  have  fuch  friend- 
ship for  him,  that  he  came  to  be  called  Young 
J^oy.  He  paffing  from  the  extreme  of  vanity  in  his 
apparel,  to  that  of  negle6ling  himfelf  too  much, 
was  once  taken  when  there  was  a  prefs  for  the 
king's  fervicc,  as  a  fit  perfon  for  it ;  for  he  was 
a  ftrong  and  well-built  man :  but  fome  that  knew 
him  coming  by,  and  giving  notice  who  he  was, 
the  prefs-men  let  him  go.  This  made  him  return 
to  more  decency  in  his  clothes,  but  never  to  any 
fuperfluity  or  vanity  in  them.  Once 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.        n 

Once  as  he  was  buying  fome  cloth  for  a  new 
-fuit,  the  draper,  with  whom  he  difFered  about 
the  price,  told  him  he  fhould  have  it  for  nothing, 
if  he  would  promife  him  an  hundred  pounds  when 
he  came  to  be  Lord  Chief  Juftice  of  England  ;  to 
which  he  anfwered,  that  he  could  not  with  a 
good  confcience  wear  any  man's  cloth,  unlefs  he 
payed  for  it  j  fo  he  fatisfied  the  draper,  and  carried 
away  the  cloth.  Yet  that  fame  d.aper  lived  to 
fee  him  advanced  to  that  fame  dignity. 

While  he  was  thus  improving  himfelf  In  the 
ftudy  of  the  law,  he  not  only  kept  the  hours  of 
the  hall  constantly  in  term-time,  but  feldom  put 
himfelf  out  of  commons  in  vacation  time,  and 
continued  then  to  follow  his  ftudjes  with  an  un- 
wearied diligence ;  and  not  being  fatisfied  with 
the  books  wrote  about  it,  or  to  take  things  upon 
truft,  was  very  diligent  in  fearching  all  records. 
Then  did  he  make  divers  colle6tions  out  of  the 
books  he  had  read,  and  mixing  them  with  his 
own  obfervations,  digefted  them  into  a  common- 
place book ;  which  he  did  with  fo  much  induftry 
and  judgment,  that  an  eminent  judge  of  the 
King's-bench  borrowed  it  of  him  when  he  was 
Lord  Chief  Baron:  He  unwillingly  lent  it,  becaufe 
it  had  been  writ  by  him  before  he  was  called  to 
the  bar,  and  had  never  been  thoroughly  revifed  by 
him  fmce  that  time,  only  what  alterations  had 
been  made  in  the  law  by  fubfequent  ftatutes,  and 
judgments,  were  added  by  him  as  they  had  hap- 
pened :  but  the  judge,  having  perufed  it,  faid,  that 

though 


12  ^he  Life  and  Death  of 

though  it  was  compofed  by  him  fo  early,  he  did 
not  think  any  lawyer  in  England  could  do  it  bet- 
ter, except  he  himfelf  would  again  fet  about  It. 

He  was  foon  found  out  by  that  great  and  learned 
antiquary,  Mr.  Selden,  who  though  much  fupe- 
rlour  to  him  in  years,  yet  came  to  have  fuch  a 
liking  of  him,  and  of  Mr.  Vaughan,  who  was 
afterwards  Lord  Chief  Juftice  of  the  Common- 
pleas,  that  as  he  continued  in  a  clofe  friendfhip 
with  them  while  he  lived,  fo  he  left  them  at  his 
death  two  of  his  four  executors. 

It  was  this  acquaintance  that  firft  fet  Mr.  Hale 
on  a  more  enlarged  purfult  of  learning,  which  he 
had  before  confined  to  his  own  profeflion,  but 
becoming  as  great  a  mafter  In  it,  as  ever  any 
was,  very  foon,  he  who  could  never  let  any  of 
his  time  go  away  unprofitably,  found  leifure  to 
attain  to  as  great  a  variety  of  knowledge,  in  as 
comprehenfive  a  manner  as  moft  men  have  done 
in  any  age. 

He  fet  himfelf  much  to  the  ftudy  of  the  Roman 
law,  and  though  he  liked  the  way  of  judicature  in 
England  by  juries  much  better  than  that  of  the  civil 
law,  where  fo  much  was  trufted  to  the  judge; 
yet  he  often  fald,  that  the  true  grounds  and  reafons 
of  law  were  fo  well  delivered  In  the  Digefts,  that 
a  man  could  never  underftand  law  as  a  fcience  fo 
well  as  by  feeking  it  there,  and  theiefore  lamented 
much  that  it  was  fo  little  ftudied  in  England. 

He  looked  on  readinefs  in  arithmetick  as  a  thing 
which  might  be  ufeful  to  him  in  his  own  employ- 
ment. 


5fr  MATTHEW   HALE.        13 

merit,  and  acquired  it  to  fuch  a  degree,  that  he 
would  often  on  the  fudden,  and  afterwards  on  the 
bench,    refolve  very  hard   queftions,     which   had 
puzled  the  beft  accomptants  about  town.   He  reftcil 
not  here,    but   ftudied    the  algebra,    both  fpedoja 
and  nwncrofa^  and  went  through  all  the  other  ma- 
thematical fciences,  and  made  a  great  colledlion  of 
very  excellent  inftruments,  fparing  no  coft  to  have 
them  as  exadt  as   art  could  make  them.     He  was 
alfo  very  converfant  in  philofoi>hical  learning,  and. 
in  all  the  curious  experiments,  and  rare  difcoveries 
of  this  age ;    and  had  the  new  books,  written  on 
ihofe  fubje6ls,  fent  him  from  all  parts,   which   he 
both  read    and  examined  fo   critically,  that  if  tlie 
principles  and  hypothefes,   which  he  took  firft  up^ 
did   any  way  prepoflefs  him,  vet  thofe,  who  have 
dift'ered  mod  from  him,  have  acknowledged,  thai 
in   what  he  has   writ  concerning  the  Torricellian 
experiment,   and   of  the  rarefadtion   and   conden- 
fation   of  the  air,  he  ftiews  as.  great    an   exatSlneli, 
and  as  much  fubtilty   in   the   reafoning  he  builds 
on  them,  as  thefe  principles  to  which   he   adhered 
could  bear.     But  indeed,  it   will  feem  fcarce   cre- 
dible, that  a  man   fo  much   employed,  and  of  {o 
fevere  a  temper  of  mind,  could  find  leikire  to  read, 
obferve,  and  wiite  fo  much  of  thefe  fiibje<?l3  as  he 
did.     He  called  them  his  diverfions,  for   he  often 
faid  when  he  was  weary  with  the  ftudy  of  the  law, 
or  divinity,  he  ufed  to  recreate  himfelf  with  philo- 
fophy,  or  the  mathematicks  ;    to  thele  he   added 
great  fkill   in  phyfick,  anatomy,  and  chyrurgerv  : 

and 


*14  ^^^  Life  and  Death  of 

and  he  ufed  to  fay^  "  No  man  could  be  abfolutely 
*'  a  mafter  in  any  profeiHon,  without  having  fome 
'*  fkill  in  other  faiences  :  "  for,  befides  the  fatis- 
fa6tion  he  had  in  the  knov/Iedge  of  thefe  things,  he 
made  ufe  of  them  often  in  his  employments.  In 
fome  examinations  he  would  put  fuch  queftions  to 
phyficians,  or  furgeons,  that  they  have  profefled 
the  college  of  phyficians  could  not  do  it  more  ex- 
a6lly  ;  by  which  he  difcovered  great  judgment,  as 
well  as  much  knowledge,  in  thefe  things  :  and  in 
his  ficknefs  he  ufed  to  argue  with  his  doclors  about 
his  diftempers,  and  the  methods  they  took  with 
them,  like  one  of  their  own  profeffion ;  which 
one  of  them  told  me,  he  underftood  as  far  as  fpe- 
culation  without  practice  could  carry  him. 

To  this  he  added  great  fearches  into  ancient 
hiftory,  and  particularly  into  the  rougheft  and  leaft 
delightful  part  of  it,  chronology.  He  was  well  ac- 
quainted with  the  ancient  Greek  philofophers,  but 
want  of  occafion  to  ufe  it,  wore  out  his  knowledge 
of  the  Greek  tongue  j  and  though  he  never  ftudied 
the  Hebrew  tongue,  yet  by  his  great  converfation 
with  Selden,  he  underftood  the  moft  curious  things 
in  the  Rabinical  learning. 

But  above  all  thefe,  he  feemed  to  have  made 
the  ftudy  of  divinity  the  chief  of  all  others,  to 
which  he  not  only  diredled  every  thing  elfe,  but 
alfo  arrived  at  that  pitch  in  it,  that  thofe,  who 
have  read  what  he  has  written  on  thefe  fubjedts, 
will  think,  they  muft  have  had  moft  of  his  time 
and  thoughts.    It  may  feem  extravagant,  and  al- 

moft 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.       15 

inoft  incredible,  that  one  man,  in  no  great  compafs 
of  years,  fhould  have  acquired  fuch  a  variety  of 
knov^^ledge,  and  that  in  fciences  that  require  much 
leifure  and  application.  But  as  his  parts  were 
quick,  and  his  apprehenfions  lively,  his  memory 
great,  and  his  judgment  flrong ;  fo  his  induftry 
was  almoft  indefatigable.  He  rofe  always  betimei 
in  the  morning,  was  never  idle,  fcarce  ever  held 
any  difcourfe  about  news,  except  with  fome  fev»^ 
in  whom  be  confided  entirely.  He  entered  into  no 
eorrefpondence  by  letters,  except  about  necefTary 
bufinefs,  or  matters  of  learning,  and  fpent  very  little 
time  in  eating  or  drinking  ;  for  as  h«  never  went 
to  public  feafts,  fo  he  gave  no  entertainments  but 
to  the  poor  j  for  he  followed  our  Saviour's  direction 
(of  feafting  none  but  thefe)  literally  :  and  in 
eating  and  drinking  he  obl'erved  not  only  great 
plainnefs  and  moderation,  but  lived  fo  philofophi- 
cally,  that  he  always  ended  his  meal  with  an  ap- 
petite :  fo  that  he  loft  little  time  at  it,  (that  being 
the  only  portion  which  he  grudged  himfelf )  and 
was  difpofed  to  any  exercife  of  his  mind,  to  which 
he  thought  fit  to  apply  himfelf  immediately  after 
he  had  dined ;  by  thefe  means  he  gained  much  time, 
that  is  otherwife  unprofitably  wafted. 

He  had  alfo  an  admirable  equality  in  the  temper 
of  his  mind,  which  difpofed  him  for  what  ever 
ftudies  he  thought  fit  to  turn  himfelf  to  j  and  fome 
very  uneafy  things,  which  he  lay  under  for  many 
years,  did  rather  engage  him  to,  than  diftradt  him 

from»  his  ftudies, 

When 


i6  *The  Life  and  Death  of 

When  he  was  called  to  the  bar,  and  began  to 
make  a  figure  in  the  world,  the  late  unhappy  wars 
broke  out,  in  which  it  was  no  eafy  thing  for  a  man 
to  preferve  his  integrity,  and  to  live  fecurely,  free 
from  great  danger  and  trouble.  He  had  read  the 
life  of  Pomponius  Atticus,  wrote  by  Nepos,  and 
having  obferved,  that  he  had  pafled  through  a  time 
of  as  much  diftradtion,  as  ever  was  in  any  age  or 
ftate,  from  the  wars  of  Marius  and  Scilla,  to  the 
beginnings  of  Auguftus  his  reign,  without  the 
leaft  blemifh  on  his  reputation,  and  free  from  any 
confiderable  danger,  being  held  in  great  efteem  by 
all  parties,  and  courted  and  favoured  by  them ; 
he  fet  him  as  a  pattern  to  himfelf,  and  obferving 
that  befides  thofe  virtues  which  are  neceflary  to  all 
men,  and  at  all  times,  there  were  two  things  that 
chiefly  preferved  Atticus,  the  one  was  his  engaging 
in  no  faction,  and  medling  in  no  'public  bufi- 
nefs  ;  the  other  was  his  conftant  favouring  and 
relieving  thofe  that  were  lowefl,  which  was  afcrib- 
ed  by  fuch  as  prevailed  to  the  generofity  of  his 
temper,  and  procured  him  much  kindnefs  from 
thofe  on  whom  he  had  exercifed  his  bounty, 
when  it  came  to  their  turn  to  govern  :  He  refolv- 
ed  to  guide  himfelf  by  thofe  rules  as  much  as  was 
pofiible  for  him  to  do. 

He  not  only  avoided  all  public  employment, 
but  the  very  talking  of  news;  and  was  always  both 
favourable  and  charitable  to  thofe  who  were  de- 
prefied,  and  was  fure  never  to  provoke  any  in 
particular,  by  cenfuring  or  reflecting  on  their  adi- 

onsi 


Sir    MATTHEW    HALE.       17 

ons }  for  many  that  have  converfed  much  with 
him,  have  told  me,  they  never  heard  him  once 
fpeak  ill  of  any  perfon. 

He  WZLS  employed  in  his  praclice  by  all  the  Icing's 
party.  He  was  afligned  council  to  the  earl  of 
Strafford,  and  archbifiiop  Laud,  and  afterwards 
to  the  blefl'ed  king  himfelf,  when  brought  to  the 
infamous  pageantry  of  a  mock-trial,  and  offered  to 
plead  for  him  with  all  the  courage,  that  fo  glorious 
3  caufe  ought  to  have  infpired  him  with,  but  was 
not  fuffered  to  appear,  becaufe  the  king  refufing, 
as  he  had  good  reafon,  to  fubmit  to  the  court,  it 
was  pretended,  none  could  be  admitted  to  fpeak 
for  him.  He  was  alfo  council  for  the  duke  of  Ha- 
milton, the  earl  of  Holland,  and  the  lord  Cape! : 
his  plea  for  the  former  of  thefe  I  have  publifhed 
in  the  memoirs  of  that  duke's  life.  Afterwards 
alfo,  being  council  for  the  lord  Craven,  he  pleaded 
with  that  force  of  argument,  that  the  then  attor- 
ney-general threatened  him  for  appearing  againft 
the  governnient;  to  whom  heanfwered,  "  he  was 
"  pleading  in  defence  of  thofe  laws,  wliich  they 
*'  declared  they  would  maintain  and  prcferve ; 
*'  and  he  was  doing  his  duty  to  his  clienc,  fo  that 
**  he  was  not  to  be  daunted  with  threatciiings." 

Upon  all  thefe  occafions  he  had  difcharged  him-" 
felf  with  fo  much  learning,  fidelity,  and  courage, 
that  he  came  to  be  generally  employed  for  all  that 
party  j  nor  was  he  fatisfied  to  appear  for  their  juft 
defence  ia  the  way  of  his  profeffion,  but  he  alfo 
Relieved  them  often  in  their  neceffities  ;    which  he 

C  did 


iS  ^he  Life  and  Death  of 

did  in  a  Way  that  was  no  lefs  prudent  than  cha- 
ritable, confldering  the  dangers  of  that  time  :  for 
he  did  often  depofit  confiderable  fums  in  the 
hands-  of  a  worthy  gentleman  of  the  king's  party, 
who  knew  their  neceflitics  well,  and  was  to  diftri- 
bute  his  charity  according  to  his  own  difcretion,^ 
without  either  letting  them  know  from  whence 
it  came,  or  giving  hinifelf  any  account  to  whom, 
he  had  given  it. 

Cromwell,  feeing  him  pofieffed  of  fo  much  prac- 
tice, and  he  being  one  of  the  eminenteft  men  of  the 
law,  who  was  not  at  all  afraid  of  doing  his  duty 
in  thofe  critical  times,  refolved  to  take  him  off 
from  it,  and  raife  him  to  the  bench, 

Mr.  Hale  faw  well  enough  the  fnare  laid  for 
him,  and  though  he  did  not  much  confider  the 
prejudice  it  v/ould  be  to  himfelf,  to  exchange  the 
eafy  and  fafer  profits  he  had  by  his  pra6ti.ce,  for  a 
judge's  place  in  the  Common-pleas,  which  he  was 
required  to  accept  of,  yet  he  did  deliberate  more 
on  the  lavvfulnefs  of  taking  a  commiffion  from 
ufurpers  j  but  having  confidered  well  of  this,  he 
came  to  be  of  opinion,  "  that  It  being  abfolutely 
*'  necefiary,  to  have  juftice  and  property  kept  up 
"  at  all  times,  it  was  no  fin  tg  take  a  commiflioa 
"  from  ufurpers,  if  he  made  no  declaration  of  his 
"•  acknowledging  their  authority,"  which  he  never 
did.  He  was  much  urged  to  accept  of  it  by 
fome  eminent  men  of  his  own  profeffion,  who 
were  of  the  king's  party,  as  fir  O  lando  Bridgemanj. 
and  fir  Geoftery  Palmer  i    and  was.  alfo  fati§fied 

coa- 


sir   MATTHEW   HALE.       19 

concerning  the  lawful nefs^  of  it,  by  the  refolution 
of  fome  famous  divines,  irt  particular  Dr.  Sheldon, 
and  Dr.  Henchman,  who  were  afterwards  promoted 
to  the  fees  of  Canterbury  and  London. 

To  thefe  were  added  the  importunities  of  all 
his  friends,  who  thought  that  in  a  time  of  fo 
much  danger  and  oppreffion,  it  might  be  no  fmall 
fecurity  to  the  nation,  to  have  a  man  of  his  inte- 
grity and  abilities  on  the  bench  :  and  the  ufurpers 
themfelves  held  him  in  that  eftimation,  that  they 
were  glad  to  have  him  give  a  countenance  to  their 
courts,  and  by  promoting  one  that  was  known 
to  have  different  principles  from  them,  affedted 
the  reputation  of  honouring  and  trufting  men  of 
eminent  virtues,  of  what  perfuafion  foever  they 
might  be,  in  relation  to  public  matters. 

But  he  had  greater  fcruples  concerning  the  pro- 
ceeding againft  felons,    and   putting  offenders  to 
death  by  that  commiffion,    fmce  he  thought  the 
fword   of  juftice  belonging  only  by    right   to   the 
lawful  prince,  it  feemed  not  warrantable  to  proceed 
to  a  capital   fentence  by  an  authority  derived  from 
lifurpers ;  yet  at  firft   he  made  diftinclion  between 
common  and  ordinary  felonies,  and  offences  againft 
the  ftate ;  for  the  laft  he  would  never  meddle  in 
them,    for  he  thought  thefe  might  be  often  legal 
and  warrantable  anions,  and  that  the  putting  men 
to  death  on  that  account  was  murder  j    but  for  the 
ordinary  felonies,  he   at  firff  was  of  opinion,    that 
it  was  as  neceffary,    even  in  times   of  ufurnation, 
r©   execute  juftice  in  thofe  cafes,    as  in    matters 

C  2  of 


20  'The  Life  and  Death  of 

of  property  j  but  after  the  king  was  murdered,  h? 
laid  by  all  his  colletStionsipf  the  pleas  of  the  crown, 
and  that  they  might  not  fall  into  ill  hands,  he 
hid  them  behind  the  wainfcotting  of  his  ftudy,  for 
he  faid,  *'  there  was  no  more  occafion  to  vjfe 
"  them,  tin  the  king  fliould  be  again  reftored  to 
'*  his  right,"  and  fo  upon  his  Majelly's  reftora- 
tion  he  took  them  out,  and  went  on  in  his  defiga 
to  perfe6c  that  great  work. 

Yet,  for  fomc  time  after  he  was  made  a  juJge, 
when  he  went  the  circuit,  he  did  fit  on  the  crown- 
fide,  and  judged  criminals  :  but,  having  confi- 
dered  farther  of  it,  he  came  to  think,  that  it 
was  at  leaft  better  not  to  do  it ;  and  fo  after  the 
fecond  or  third  circuit,  he  refufed  to  fit  any  more 
on  the  crown- fide,  and  told  plainly  the  reafon, 
for  in  matters  of  blood,  he  was  always  to  choofe 
the  fafer  fide.  And  indeed  he  had  fo  carried  him- 
fe'if  in  fome  trial?,  that  they  v^ere  not  unv/illing 
he  fhould  withdraw  from  medling  farther  in  them, 
of  which  I  ihall  give  fome  inftances, 

Npt  long  after  he  was  made  a  judge,  which  was 
in  the  year  1653,  when  he  went  the  circuit,  a 
trial  was  brought  before  him  at  Lincoln,  con- 
cerning the  murder  of  one  of  the  townfmen, 
who  had  been  of  the  king's  party,  and  was  killed 
by  a  foldier  of  the  garrlfon  there.  He  was  in 
the  fields  with  a  fowling  piece  on  his  Ihoulder, 
which  the  foldier  feeing,  he  came  to  him  and  faid, 
it  was  contrary  to  an  order  which  the  Protestor 
had  mgde,  "  Tk^t  none  who  had  been  of  the 

"  king'* 


sir   MATTHEW   HALE.       21 

''=  king's  party  fhould  carry  arms;"  and  fo  he 
would  have  forced  it  from  him  ;  but  as  the  other 
did  not  regard  the  order,  fo  being  ftronger  than 
the  foldier,  he  threw  him  down,  and  having  beat 
him,  he  left  him.  The  foldier  went  into  the  town, 
and  told  one  of  his  fellow-foldicrs  how  he  had 
been  ufed,  and  got  him  to  go  with  him,  and  lie  in 
wait  for  the  man  that  he  might  be  revenged  on 
him.  They  both  watched  his  coming  to  town, 
and  one  of  them  went  to  him  to  demand  his  gun, 
which  he  refufmg,  the  foldier  ftruck  at  him,  and 
as  they  were  ftruggling,  the  other  came  behind, 
and  ran  his  fvvord  into  his  body,  of  which  he 
prefcntly  died.  It  was  in  the  time  of  the  affizes, 
fo  they  were  both  tried  :  againft  the  one  there  was 
no  evidence  of  forethought  felony,  fo  he  was  only 
found  guilty  cf  man-flaughter,  and  burnt  on  the 
hand  ;  but  the  other  was  found  guilty  of  murder  : 
and  though  colonel  Whiley,  that  commanded  the 
garrifon,  came  into  the  court  and  urged,  that  the 
man  was  killed  only  for  difobeying  the  Protedlor's 
orders,  and  that  the  foldier  was  but  doing  his  duty; 
yet  the  judge  regarded  both  his  reafons  and 
threatenings  very  little,  ?.nd  therefore  he  not  only 
save  fentence  a<?;ainft  him,  but  ordered  the  execu- 
tion  to  be  fo  fuddenly  done,  that  it  might  not  be, 
poflible  to  procure  a  reprieve,  which  he  believed 
would  have  been  obtained,  if  there  had  been  time 
enough  granted  for  it. 

Another  occafion  was   given    him   o-f    (hewing 
llQtb  his  juftice  and  coirage,  when  he  was  in  an- 

C  3  other 


22  *ithe  Life  and  Death  of 

other  circuit.  He  underftood  that  the  Protestor 
had  ordered  a  jury  to  be  returned  for  a  trial  in 
which  he  was  more  than  ordinarily  concerned  : 
upon  this  information,  he  examined  the  fherifF 
about  it,  who  knew  nothing  of  it,  for  he  faid  he 
referred  all  fuch  things  to  the  undcr-flierifF ;  and 
having  next  a(ked  the  under-fhcriff  concerning  it, 
he  found  the  jury  had  been  returned  by  order  from 
Cromwell  ;  upon  which  he  fhewed  the  flatute, 
that  all  juries  ought  to  be  returned  by  the  flierifl:', 
or  his  lawful  officer;  and  this  not  being  done  ac- 
cording to  law,  he  difmillcd  the  jury,  and  would 
not  try  the  caufe  :  upon  which  the  Prote6lor  was 
highly  difpleafed  with  him,  and  at  his  return  from 
the  circuit,  he  told  him  in  anger,  hfe  was  not  fit 
to  be  a  judge  ;  to  which  all  the  anfwer  he  made 
was,   that  it  was  very  true. 

Another  thing  met  him  in  the  circuit,  upon  which 
he  refolved  to  have  proceeded  feverely.  Some 
Anabaptifts  had  rufhed  into  a  church,  and  had 
difturbed  a  congregation,  while  they  were  receiv- 
ing the  facrament,  not  without  fome  violence  ;  at 
this  he  was  higldy  offended,  for  he  faid,  it  was 
intolerable  for  men,  v/ho  pretended  fo  highly  to 
liberty  of  confcience,  to  go  and  difturb  others  ; 
lefpecially  thofe  who  had  the  encouragement  of  the 
law  on  their  fide  :  but  thcfe  were  fo  fupported  by 
fome  great  magiftrates  and  officers,  that  a  flop  was 
put  to  his  proceedings;  upon  which  he  declared, 
he  would  meddle  no  more  with  the  trials  on  the 
crown-fide. 

When 


»5'/r  MATTHEW   HALE.       23 

When  Penruddock's  trial  was  brought  on,  there 
was  a  fpecial  nieiTenger  fent  to  him,  requiring  him 
to  affift  at  it.  It  was  in  vacation  time,  and  he 
was  at  his  country-houfe  at  ^Iderly  :  he  plainly 
4:efufed  to  go,  and  faid,  the  four  terms,  and  two 
circuits,  were  enough,  and  the  little  interval  til  at 
was  between,  was  Httle  enough  for  his  private 
affairs,  and  fo  he  excufed  himfelf :  he  thought  it 
■was  not  neccffary  to  fpeak  more  clearly,  but  if  he 
had  been  urged  to  it,  he  would  not  have  been 
afraid  of  doing  it. 

He  was  at  that  lime  chofcn  n  parliament-man,  (for 
there  being  then  no  houfc  of  lords,  judges  might 
have  been  chofen  to  fit  in  the  houfe  of  commons) 
and  he  went  to  il,  on  defign  to  obfiru61:  the  ma<i 
and  wicked  projects  then  on  foot,  by  two  parties, 
that  had  very  different  principles  and  ends. 

On  the  one  hand,  fome  that  were  perhaps  more 
-fmcere,  yet  were  really  brain-fick,  defigned  they 
knew  not  what,  being  rcfolvcd  to  pull  down  a 
ilanding  miniftry,  the  law,  and  property  of  Eng- 
land, and  all  the  antient  rules  of  this  government, 
and  fet  ud  in  its  room  an  indi^-efted  cnthufiatlical 

1  O 

fchcme,  which  they  called  the  kingdom  of  Chrifl, 
or  of  his  faints;  many  of  them  being  really  in  ex- 
pectation, that  one  day  or  other  Chrifl  would 
come  down,  and  fit  among  them,  and  at  leaft  they 
thought  to  begin  the  glorious  thoufand  years 
mentioned  in  the  Revelation. 

Others  at  the  fame  timcy  taking  advantages  from 
-the  fears  and  apprehcnfions,  that  all  the  fober  men 

C  4  of 


24  The  Life  and  Death  of 

of  the  nation  were  in,  leaft  they  fhould  fall  under 
the  tyranny  oi  a  difl-ra6i:ed  fort  of  people,  who,  to 
all  their  other  ill  principles,  added  great  cruelty, 
which  they  had  copied  from  thofe  at  Munfter  in 
the  former  age,  intended  to  improve  that  opportu- 
nity to  raife  their  own  fortunes  and  families.  A- 
midft  thefe,  judge  Hale  fleered  a  middle  courfe  ; 
for  as  he  would  engage  for  neither  fide,  fo  he,  with 
a  great  many  more  worthy  men,  came  to  parlia- 
ment, more  out  of  a  defign  to  hinder  mifchief, 
than  to  do  much  good  ;  wifely  forefeeing,  that  the 
inclinations  for  the  royal  family  were  daily  grow- 
ing fo  much,  that  in  time  the  diforders,  then  in 
agitation,  would  ferment  to  that  happy  refolution 
in  which  they  determined  in  May  1660.  And 
therefore  all  that  could  be  then  done,  was  to  op- 
pofe  the  ill  defigns  of  both  parties,  the  enthufiafts 
as  well  as  the  ufurpers.  Among  the  other  extra- 
vagant motions  made  in  this  parliament,  one  was, 
to  deflroy  all  the  records  in  the  Tower,  and  to 
fettle  the  nation  on  a  new  foundation  ;  fo  he  took 
this  province  to  himfelf,  to  flicw  the  madnefs  of 
this  propofition,  the  injullice  of  it,  and  the  mifchiefs 
that  would  follow  on  it  ;  and  did  it  with  fuch 
clearnefs,  and  ftrength  of  reafon,  as  not  only 
fatisficd  all  fober  peifons,  (for  it  may  be  fuppofed 
that  was  foon  done)  but  Hopt  even  the  mouths  of 
the  frantic  people  thcmfelves. 

Thus  he  continued  adminiftering  juftice  till  the 
Proteilor  died,  but  then  he  both  refufed  the 
mournings  that  were  fent  to  him  and  his  fervants 

for 


5"/V  MATTHEW    HALE.  J  25 

for  the  funeral,  and  likcwife  to  accept  of  the  new 
commiiTion  that  was  oftcred  him  by  Richard,  and 
when  the  reft  of  thfe  judges  urged  it  upon  hiirj,  and 
employed  others  to  prcfs  him  to  accept  of  it,  he 
rejeded  all  their  importunities,  and  faid,  he  could 
ad:  no  longer  under  fuch  authority. 

He  lived  a  private  man  till  the  parliament  met 
that  called  home  the  king,    to  which  he  was  i-c- 
turned   knight  of  the   fl^ire   from   the    county   of 
Gloucefter.     It  appeared  at  that  time   how   much 
he  was  beloved  and  efteemed  in  his  neighbourhood, 
for  though  another,  who  ftood  in  competition  with 
him,  had  fpent  near  a  thoufand  pounds  to  procure 
voices,  (a  great  fum  to  be  employed    that  way  in 
thofe  days)  and  he  had  been  at  no  coft,  and  was 
fo  far  from  foliciting  it,   that  he  had  ftood  out  long 
againft  thofe  whoprefs'd  him  to  appear,  and  he  did 
not   promiie  to  appear  till   three   days   before  the 
eledion,  yet  he  was  preferred.    He  was  brought  thi- 
ther almoft  by  violence,  by  the  lord    (now  earl  of) 
Berkeley,  v^ho  bore  all  the   charge  of  the  enten- 
tainments  on  the  day-  of  his  election,    which  was 
confiderable,  and  had  engaged  all  his   friends  and 
intereft  for  him  :     and   whereas    by  the  writ,  the 
knight  of   the   fnire  muft  be  miles  ghidlo  c'lntha^ 
and  he  had  no  fword,   that  noble   lord  girt  him 
with  his  own  fword  during  the  eIc<Stion  ;     b>:t  he 
was  foon  weary  of  it,  for  the  embroidery  of  the 
belt    did  not  fuit  well  v/Ith  the  plainnefs  of  his 
cloaths:  and  indeed  the  election  did  not  hold  long, 
for  us  foon  as  ever  he  came  into  the  field,    he  was 

ckofen 


5.6  The  Lite  and  D£ath  of 

chofen  by  much  the  greater  number,  though  the 
poll  continued  for  three  or  four  days. 

In  that  parliament  he  bore  his  fhare  in  the 
happy  period  then  put  to  the  confufions  that 
threatened  the  utter  ruin  of  the  nation,  which,  con- 
trary to  the  expedations  of  the  moft  fanguine, 
fettled  in  fo  ferene  and  quiet  a  manner,  that  thofe 
■who  had  formerly  built  fo  much  on  their  fuccefs, 
calling  it  an  anfwer  from  heaven  to  their  folemn 
appeals  to  the  providence  of  God,  were  now  not 
a  little  confounded,  to  fee  all  this  turned  a^ainft 
themfelves,  in  an  inftancemuch  more  extraordinary 
than  any  of  thofe  were,  upon  which  they  had 
built  fo  much.  His  great  prudence  and  excellent 
temper  led  him  to  think,  that  the  fooner  an  adt  of 
indemnity  were  paffed,  and  the  fuller  it  were  of 
graces  and  favours,  it  would  fooner  fettle  the  na- 
tion, and  quiet  the  minds  of  the  people  ;  and 
therefore  he  applied  himfelf  with  a  particular  care 
to  the  framing  and  carrying  it  on,  in  which  it 
was  vifible  he  had  no  concern  of  his  own,  but 
■merely  his  love  of  the  public  that  fet  him  on  to  it. 

Soon  after  this,  when  the  courts  in  Weftmin- 
fter-hall  came  to  be  fettled,  he  was  made  lord  chief 
baron  ;  and  when  the  earl  of  Clarendon  (then  lord 
chancellor)  delivered  him  his  commiffion,  in  the 
fpeech  he  made  according  to  the  cuftom  on  fuch 
occafions,  he  exprefled  his  efteem  of  him  in  a 
very  fmgular  manner,  telling  him  among  other 
things,  *'  that  if  the  king  could  have  found  out 
"  an  honefler  and  fitter  man  for  that  employment, 

*'  he 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.         27 

.<«  he  would  not  have  advanced  him   to  It;    and 

■«'  that  he  had  theiefore  preferred  him,  becaufe  he 

*«  knew  none  that  deferved  it  (o  well."     It  is  or- 

<iinary  for  pcrfons  fo  promoted  to  be  knighted,  but 

he  defired   to  avoid  having  that  honour  done  him, 

and  therefore  for  a  confiderable  time  declined   all 

.opportunities  of  waiting  on  the  king,  which  the 

lord  chancellor  obferving,  fent  for  him  upon  bufi- 

jnefs  one  day,  when  the  king  was  at  his  houfe,  and 

told  his  I\'iajefty  there  was  his  modelt  chief  baron, 

upon  which  he  v/as  unexpe2:edly  knighted. 

He  continued   eleven   years   in  that  place,  ma- 
naging the  court,  and  all  proceedings   in  it,  with 
fingular  juftice.     It  was   obferved  by  the  whole 
nation,  how  much  he  raifed   the   reputation  and 
pra^lice  of  it :  and  thofe  who  held  places   and  of- 
.  ficcs  in  it,  can  all  declare,  not  only  the  impartia- 
lity of  his  juftice,  for  that  is  but  a  common  virtue, 
but  his  generofity,  his  vaft  diligence,  and  his  great- 
exadlnefs  in  trials.   This  gave  occafion  to  the  only 
complaint  that  ever  was  made  of  him,   that  he  did 
not  difpatch  matters  quick  enough;    but  the  great 
care  he  ufed,  to  put  fuits  to  a  final  end,  as  it  mad^ 
him  flower  in  deciding  them  ;    fo  it  had  this  good 
efledt,  that  caufes,  tried  before  him,  were  feldom, 
if  ever,  tried  again. 

Nor  did  his  adminiflration  of  juftice  lie  only  m 
that  court:  he  was  one  of  the  principal  judges 
that  fat  in  Cliffbrd's-Inn,  about  fettling  the  diffe- 
rence between  landlord  and  tenant,  after  the 
d^rcadful  fire  of  London.     He  being  the  firft  that 

offered 


^S'  Th'i  Life  and  D£ATif  of 

offered  his  fervice  to  the  city,  for  accommodating 
all  the  differences  that  might  have  arifen  about  the 
rebuilding  it,  in  which  he  behaved  himfeJf  to  the 
fatisfaclion  of  all  perfons  concerned  :  fo  that  the 
fudden  and  quiet  building  of  the  city,  which  is  juftJy 
to  be  reckoned  one  of  the  v^onders  of  the  age,  is  in 
no  fmall  meafure  due  to  the  great  care,  which  he 
and  fir  Orland  Bridgernan,  (then  lord  chief  juftice 
of  the  Ccmmon-pleas,  afterwards  lord  keeper  of  the 
great  feal  of  England)  ufed,  and  to  the  judgment 
they  iliewcd  in  that  affair :  fince  without  the  rules 
then  laid  down,  there  might  have  otherwife  fol- 
lowed fuch  an  endlefs  train  of  vexatious  fuits,  as 
might  have  been  little  lefs  chargeable  than  the  fire 
itfelf  had  been.  But,  v/ithout  detraining  from  the 
labours  of  the  other  judges,  it  muft  be  acknow- 
ledged, that  he  was  the  moft  inffrumental  in  that 
great  work  ;  for  he  firll,  by  way  of  fchcme,  contri- 
ved the  rules  upon  which  he  and  the  reft  proceeded 
afterwards,  in  which  his  readinefs  at  arithmetic, 
and  his  fkili  in  architecSture,  were  of  great  ufe  to 
him. 

But  It  will  not  feem  ftrange  that  a  judge  behav- 
ed himfelf  as  he  did,  who,  at  the  enti-y  into  his 
employment,  fet  fuch  excellent  rules  to  himfelf, 
which  will  appear  in  the  following  paper  copied 
from  the  original  under  hk  own  hand. 

Things 


Sir   MATTHEW   HALE.       29 

Things  necelTary  to  be  continually  had  in 
remembrance. 

I.  That  in  the  adminiftration  of  juftice,  I  am 
intrufted  for  God,  the  king  and  country ;  and 
therefore, 

II.  That  it  be  done,  i.  uprightly;  2.  delibe- 
rately;   3.  refolutely. 

IIL  That  I  reft  not  upon  my  own  underftand- 
ing  or  ftrength,  but  implore  and  reft  upon  the 
diredlion  and  ftrength  of  God. 

IV.  That  in  the  execution  of  juftice  I  care^- 
fully  lay  afide  my  own  paiTions,  and  not  give  way 
to  them,  however  provoked. 

V.  That  I  be  wholly  intent  upon  the  bufmefs  I 
am  about,  remitting  all  other  cares  and  thoughts, 
as  unfeafonable  and  interruptions. 

VI.  That  I  fuffer  not  myfelf  to  be  prepoffefied 
with  any  judgment  at  all,  till  the  whole  bufiriefs 
and  both  parties  be  heard. 

VII.  That  I-  never  engage  myfelf  in  the  begin- 
ning of  any  caufe,  but  referve  myfelf  unprejudiced 
till  the  whole  be  heard. 

VIII.  That  in  bufinefs  capital,  though  my  na- 
ture prompt  me  to  pity  ;  yet  to  confxder,  that 
there  is  alfo  a  pity  dye  to  the  country. 

IX.  That  I  be  not  too  rigid  in  matters  purely 
confcientious,  where  all  the  harm  is  diveifity  oi 
judgment. 

X.  Thit 


^o  The  Life  and  Death  of 

X.  That  I  be  not  biafled  with  compalBon  to 
the  poor,  or  favour  to  the  rich,  in  point  of 
juftice. 

XI.  That  popular,  or  court  applaufe,  or  dif- 
tafte,  have  no  influence  in  any  thing  I  do  in 
point  of  diftribution  of  juftice. 

XII.  Not  to  be  folJcitous  what  men  will  fay  or 
tbinic,  fo  long  as  I  keep  myfelf  exactly  according 
to  the  rule  of  juftice. 

XHI.  If  in  criminals  it  be  a  meafuring  caft,  to 
incline  to  mercy  and  acquittal, 

XIV.  lii  criminals  that  confift  merely  in  words* 
•when  no  more  harm  enfues,  moderation  is  no 
Injuftice. 

XV.  In  criminals  of  blood,  if  the  fatSl  be  evw 
dent,  fever ity  is  juftice. 

XVI.  To  abhor  all  private  falicittations,  of 
what  kind  foever,  and  by  whom  foever,  in  matters 
depending. 

XVII.  To  charge  my  fervants,  i,  not  to  in- 
terpofe  in  any  bufinefs  whatfoever  j  2.  not  to  take 
more  than  their  known  fees ;  3.  not  to  give  any 
undue  precedence  to  caufes  j  4.  not  to  recom- 
mend councir. 

XVIII.  To  be  fhort  and  fparing  at  meals,  that; 
I  may  be  the  fitter  for  bufmefs. 

He  v^ould  never  receive  private  addrefles  or  re- 
commendations from  the  greateft  perfons  in  any 
matter,  in  which  juftice  was  concerned.     One  of 
the  firft  peers  of  England  yy'Piit  vncQ  to  his  cham- 
ber 


Sir   MATTHEW   HALE.       ji 

ber  and  told  him,  ''  that  having  a  fuit  In  law  to 
'*  be  tried  before  him,  he  was  then  to  acquaint 
**  him  with  it,  that  he  might  the  better  underftand 
'*  it,  when  it  fhould  come  to  be  heard  in  court.'* 
Upon  which  the  lord  chief  baron  interrupted 
him,  and  faid,  **  he  did  not  deal  fairly  to  come  to 
"  his  chamber  about  fuch  affairs,  for  he  never 
*'  received  any  information  of  caufes  but  in  open 
"  -court,  where  both  parties  were  tp  be  heard 
"  alike  j"  fo  he  would  not  fuffer  him  to  go  on : 
whereupon  his  grace  (for  he  was  a  duke)  went 
away  not  a  little  diflatisfied,  and  complained  of  it 
to  the  kins,  as  a  rudenefs  that  w^s  not  to  be  en- 
dured.  But  his  Majefly  bid  him  content  himfelf 
that  he  was  no  worfe  ufed,  and  faid,  "  he  verily 
"  believed  he  would  have  ufed  himfelf  no  better, 
*'  if  he  had  gone  to  folicit  him  in  any  0/  his  ow» 
<'  caufes," 

Another  pafTage  fell  out  in  one  of  his  circuits, 
which  was  fomewhat  cenfurcd  as  an  affetftation  of 
an  unreafonablc  ftridncfs,  but  it  flowed  from  his 
exadlnefs  to  the  rules  he  had  kt  himfplf.  A  genr 
tleman  had  fent  him  a  buck  fo;-  his  table,  that  had 
a  trial  at  the  aflizes  j  fo  when  he  heard  his  name, 
he  aiked,  "  if  he  was  not  the  fame  perfon  that, 
"  had  fent  him  venifon,"  and  finding  he  was  the 
fame,  he  told  him,  **  he  could  not  (uS'qx  the  trial 
"  to  go  on,  till  he  had  paid  him  for  his  buck  i*' 
to  which  the  gentleman  anfwered,  "  that  he  never 
*'  fold  his  venifon,  and  that  he  had  done  nothing 
*'  to  him,  which  be  did  not  dp  to  every  judge  that 

"  hal 


3 2  The  Life  and  Dhath  of 

''  had  gone  that  circuit,"  which  was  confirmed  by 
feveral  gentlemen  then  prefent :  but  all  would  not 
do,  for  the  lord  chief  baron  had  learned  from  So- 
lomon, that  a  gift  pervcrteth  the  ways  of  judg- 
ment, and  therefore  he  would  not  fuffer  the  trial  to 
go  on,  till  he  had  paid  for  the  prefent ;  upon  which 
the  gentleman  withdrew  the  record  :  and  at  Salif- 
bury  the  dean  and  chapter  having,  according  to  the 
cullom,  prefentcd  him  with  fi?c  fugar  loaves. in  his 
circuit,  he  m;ide  his  fervants  pay  for  the  fugar  be- 
fore he  would  try  their  caufe. 

\t  was  not  fo  eafy  for  him  to  throw  off  the  im- 
portunities of  the  poor,  for  whom  his  comnaflion 
•wrought  more  powerfully  than  his  regard  to 
wealth  and  greatnefs ;  yet  when  juftice  was  con- 
cemed,  even  that  did  not  turn  him  out  of  the 
way.  There  was  one  that  had  been  put  out  of  a 
place  for  fome  ill  behaviour,  who  urged  the  lord 
chief  baron  to  fet  his  hand  to  a  certificate,  to 
reftore  him  to  it,  or  provide  him  with  another  ; 
but  he  told  him  plainly,  his  fault  was  fuch  that  he 
could  not  do  it ;  the  other  prefTed  him  vehemently, 
and  fell  down  on  his  knees,  and  begged  it  of  him 
with  many  tears  ;  but  finding  that  could  not  pro- 
vail,  he  faid  he  fhould  be  utterly  ruined  if  he  did 
it  not ;  and  he  fhould  curfe  him  for  it  every  day. 
But  that  having  no  effeci,  he  then  fell  out  in  all 
the  reproachful  words,  that  paflion  and  defpair 
could  infpire  him  with,  to  which  all  the  anfwer 
the  lord  chief  baron  made,  was,  "  that  he  could 
'*  very  well  bear  all  his  reproaches,  but  he  could 

"•   npt 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.       33 

''  not  for  all  that  fet  his  hand  to  his  certificate." 
He  faw  he  was  poor,  fo  he  gave  him  a  large  cha- 
rity and  fent  him  away. 

But  now  he  was  to  go  on  after  his  pattern, 
Pomponius  Atticus,  ftill  to  favour  and  relieve  them 
that  were  loweft ;  fo  befides  great  charities  to  the 
ncnconformifts,  who  were  then  as  he  thought  too 
hardly  ufed,  he  took  great  care  to  cover  them  all 
he  could,  from  the  feveritics  fome  defigned  againft 
them,  and  difcouraged  thofe  who  were  inclined  to 
ftretch  the  laws  too  much  againft  them.  He  la- 
mented the  differences  that  were  raifed  in  this 
church  very  much,  and  according  to  the  impartia- 
litv  of  his  juftice,  he  blamed  fome  things  on  both 
fides,  which!  fhall  fet  down  with  the  fame  free- 
dom that  he  fpake  them.  He  thought  many  of 
the  nonconformirts,  had  merited  highly  in  the 
bufmefs  of  the  king's  reftoration,  and  at  leaft  de- 
ferved  that  the  terms  of  conformity  fhould  not 
have  been  made  fl;ri(3:er,  than  they  were  before  the 
war.  There  was  not  then  that  dreadful  profpe£l 
of  popery,  that  has  appeared  fmce:  but  that  which 
affli'iled  him  moft  was,  that  he  faw  the  heats  and 
contentions  which  followed  upon  thofe  different 
parties  and  interefts,  did  take  people  off  from  the 
indifpenfable  things  of  religion,  and  flackened  the 
zeal  of  cihcrways  good  men  for  the  fubftance 
of  it,  fo  much  being  fpent  about  external  and 
indifferent  things.  It  alfo  gave  advantages  to 
atheifts,  to  treat  the  moft  facred  points  of  our 
hgly  faith  as  ridiculous,  when  they  faw  the  pro- 
•  D  ftffors 


54  ^'^^  Life  md  Death  of 

fefibrs  of  it  contend,  fo  fiercely,  and  "with  fuch 
bitternefs,  about  lefler  matters.  He  was  much 
ofi-ended  at  all  thofe  books  that  were  written  to 
expofe  the  contrary  feft  to  the  fcorn  and  contempt 
of  the  age  in  a  wanton  and  petulant  ftile ;  he 
thought  fuch  writers  wounded  the  chriftian  reli- 
gion, through  the  fides  of  thofe  who  differed  fron> 
them  :  while  a  fort  of  lewd  people,  who  having 
affumed  to  tbemfelves  the  title  of  wits  (though  but 
very  hw  of  them  have  a  right  to  it)  took,  up  from 
both  hands,  what  they  bad  faid,  to  make  one  an- 
other fliew  ridiculous,  and  from  thence  perfuaded 
the  world  to  laugh  at  both,  and  at  all  religion 
for  their  fakes.  And  therefore  he  often  wiftied 
there  might  be  fome  law,  to  make  all  fcurrillty  or 
bitternefs  in  difputes  about  religion  punifhable,. 
But  as  he  lamented  the  proceedings  too  rigouroufly 
againft  the  nonv.onformifts,  fo  he  declared  himfelf 
always  of  the  fide  of  the  church  of  England,  and 
faid  thofe  of  the  feparation  were  good  men,  but 
they  had  narrow  fouls,  who  would  break  the  peace 
of  the  church,  about  fuch  inconfiderable  matters, 
as  the  points  in  difference  were. 

He  fcarce  ever  medled  in  flate  intrigues,  yet 
upon  a  propofition  that  was  fet  on  foot  by  the  lord 
keeper  Bridgeman,  for  a  comprehenfion  of  the 
more  moderate  diffenters,  and  a  limited  indulgence 
towards  fuch  as  could  not  be  brought  within  the 
comprehenfion,  he  difpenfed  with  his  maxim,  of 
avoiding  to  engage  in  matters  of  ftate.  There 
were  feveral  ui^eiings  upon  that  occalioij.     The 

diviiie 


Sir  MATTHEW  HALE.         35 

divine  of  the  church  of  Engknd  that  a;  pearcd 
moft  confiderable  for  it,  was  uo£lor  Wllkrns,  af- 
terwards promoted  to  the  bifliopricl;  of  C'leHcM",  a 
man  of  as  great  a  mind,  as  true  z  judgment,  as 
eminent  virtues,  and  of  as  gooJ  .:  fou',  as  »;ny  I 
ever  knew.  He  being  cetermined,  r.3  weH  by  his 
excellent  temper,  as  by  his  forefight  and  ^,iu:'exice, 
by  which  he  early  perceived  tlie  great  p^cjivJic^s 
that  religion  received,  and  (he  vaft  dangers  ihe  re- 
formation was  like  to  fall  under  by  thofe  d'^v-ifions, 
fet  about  that  project  with  the  magnanimhy  that 
was  indeed  peculiar  to  himfelf  j  for  though  he  was 
much  cenfured  by  many  of  his  own  fide,  and  fe- 
conded  by  very  few,  yet  he  puflied  it'  as  far  as  he 
could.  After  feveral  conferences  with  two  of  the 
eminenteft  of  the  prefbyterian  divines,  heads  were 
agreed  on,  fome  abatements  were  to  be  made,  and 
explanations  were  to  be  accepted  of.  The  par- 
ticulars of  that  projedl  being  thus  concerted, 
they  were  brought  to  the  lord  chief  baron,  who 
put  them  in  form  of  a  bill,  to  be  prefented  to  the 
next  fefllons  of  parliament. 

But  two  parties  appeared  vigoroufly  agamft  this 
defign,  the  one  was  of  fome  zealous  clergymen, 
who  thought  it  below  the  dignity  of  the  church  to 
alter  laws,  and  change  fettlements  for  the  fake  of 
fome  whom  they  efteemed  fchifmaiics  ;  they  alfo 
believed,  it  was  better  to  keep  them  out  of  the 
church,  than  bring  them  into  it,  fince  a  fa£licn 
upon  that  would  arife  in  the  church,  which  they 
thought  might  be  more  dani^crous  than  the  fchifm 
•  D  i  itrelf 


3^  The  Life  and  Death  of 

itfelf  was.  Befides  they  faid,  if  fome  things  were 
now  to  be  changed  in  compliance  with  the  humour 
of  a  party,  as  foon  as  that  was  done,  another 
party  might  demand  other  conceflions,  and  there 
might  be  as  good  reafons  invented  for  thefe  as  for 
thofe  :  many  fuch  conceflions  might  alfo  fhake 
thofe  of  our  own  communion,  and  tempt  them  to 
forfiike  us,  and  go  over  to  the  church  of  Rome, 
pretending  that  we  changed  fo  often,  that  they 
were  thereby  iiKlined  to  be  of  a  church  that  was 
conflant  and  true  to  herfelf.  Thefe  were  the  rea- 
fons brought,  and  chiefly  inflfted  on,  againfl:  all 
comprehenfion ;  and  they  wrought  upon  the  greater 
part  of  the  houle  of  conunons,  fo  that  they  pafled 
a  vote  againft  the  receiving  of  any  bill  for  that 
efFecSf. 

There  were  others  that  oppofed  it  upon  diffe- 
rent ends  :  they  defigned  to  fhelter  the  papifl:s  from 
the  execution  of  the  law,  and  faw  clearly  that  no- 
thing could  bring  in  popery  fo  well  as  a  toleration. 
But  to  tolerate  popery  bare- faced,  would  have 
ftartlcd  the  nation  too  much  ;  fo  it  was  neceflary 
to  hinder  all  the  proportions  for  union,  fmce  the 
keeping  up  the  differences  was  the  beft  colour  they 
could  find,  for  getting  the  toleration  to  pafs  only 
as  a  flackening  the  laws  againft  dilTenters,  whofQ 
numbers  and  wealth  made  it  advifeable  to  have 
fome  "regard  to  thf  m  ;  and  under  this  pretence  po- 
pery might  have  crept  in  more  covered,  and  lefs 
legarded  :  fo  thefe  councils  being  more  acceptable 
to  fome  concealed  papiils  then  in  gieat  power,  as 

has 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.       37 

lias  fince  appeared  but  too  evidently,  the  whole 
projeft  for  comprehenfion  was  let  fall,  and  thofe 
who  had  fet  it  on  foot,  came  to  be  looked  on  with 
an  ill  eye,  as  fecret  favourers  of  the  diilenters, 
underminers  of  the  church,  and  every  thing  elfe 
that  jealoufy  and  drftafte  could  call  on  them. 

But  upon  this  occafion  the  lord  chief  baron,  and 
Dr.  Wilkins,  came  to  contratSl:  a  firm  and  familiar 
frlendfliip  ;  and  the  lord  chief  baron  having  much 
bufinefs,  and  little  time  to  fpare,  did,  to  enjoy  the 
other  the  more,  what  he  had  fcarce  ever  done 
"before,  he  went  fometimes  to  dine  with  him.  And 
though  he  lived  in  great  friendfliip  with  fome  other 
eminent  clergymen,  as  Dr.  Ward,  bifhop  of  Salif- 
bury  ;  Dr.  Barlow,  bifhop  of  Lincoln  ;  Dr. 
Barrow,  late  mafler  of  Trinity  college  ;  Dr. 
Tillotfon,  dean  of  Canterbury ;  and  Dr.  Stil- 
lingflect,  dean  of  St.  Paul's,  (men  fo  well  known 
and  fo  much  ef^emed,  that  as  it  was  rto  wonder 
the  lord  chief  baron  valued  their  converfation 
highly,  fo  thofe  of  them  that  are  yet  alive  will 
think  it  no  leffening  of  the  character  they  arc  fo 
defervedly  in,  that  they  are  reckoned  among  judge 
Hale's  friends)  yet  there  was  jIn  intimacy  and  free- 
dom in  his  converfe  with  bifliop  Wilkins,  that 
w-as  fmgular  to  him  alone.  He  had  durinG:  the 
late  wars  lived  in  a  long  and  intire  frieiidfhip  with 
the  .apoftolical  primate  of  Ireland  bifliop  Uflitr  : 
their  curious  fearchcs  into  antiquity,  and  the  Sym- 
pathy of  both  their  tempers,  led  them  to  a  great 
agreement   almofl  in  every  thing.     He  held   alfo 

D  3  great 


38  The  Life  and  Death  cf 

great  converfatlon  wUIi  Mr.  L-axter,  who  was  his 
neighbour  at  Afli-'n,  on  whom  he  looked  as  a 
perfon  of  great  devotion  and  [nety,  and  of  a  very 
fubtile  i:nd  quid:  rpprehenilon  :  their  converfatlon 
lay  mofl  in  metaphyfical  and  abftra<3:ed  ideas  and 
fchcmes. 

He  looked  with  great  forrow  on  the  Impiety  and 
atheifm  of  the  age,  and  fo  he  fet  himfelf  to  oppofe 
it,  not  only  by  the  fhining  example  of  his  own 
life,  but  by  engaging  in  a  caufe,  that  indeed  could 
hardly  fall  into  better  hands  :  and  as  he  could  not 
find  a  fubjeil  more  worthy  of  himfelf,  fo  there 
were  few  in  the  age  that  underftood  it  fo  well,  and 
could  manage  it  more  fkilfully.  The  occafion 
that  firll  led  him  to  write  about  it  was  this.  He 
was  a  ftriiSl  cbferver  of  the  Lord's  day,  in  which, 
befides  his  conftancy  in  the  public  wor/hip  of  God, 
he  ufcd  to  call  all  his  family  together,  and  repeat 
to  them  the  heads  of  the  fermons,  with  fome  ad- 
ditions of  his  own,  which  he  fitted  for  their  capa- 
cities and  circumftances,  and  that  being  done, 
he  had  a  cuftom  of  fliutting  himfelf  up  for  two  or 
three  hours,  which  he  either  fpent  in  his  fecret 
devoiions,  or  on  fuch  profitable  meditations  as 
did  then  occur  to  his  thoughts*  He  writ  them 
with  the  fame  fimplicity  that  he  formed  them  in 
his  mind,  without  any  art,  or  fo  much  as  a  thought 
to  let  them  be  publiflie:! ;  he  never  corrected  them, 
but  laid  di.em  by,  when  he  had  finifhed  them, 
having  intended  only  to  fix  and  prefervc  his  own 
reflections  ia  them  j  fo  that  he  ufed  no  fort  of  care 

to 


^/V  MATTHEW  HALE.       59 

£0  polifh  them,  or  make  the  firft  draught  perfe£ler 
than  when  they  fell  from  his  pen.  Thefe  fell  into 
the  hands  of  a  worthy  perfon,  and  he  judging,  as 
well  he  might,  that  the  communicating  them  to 
the  world,  might  be  a  public  fervice,  printed  two 
volumes  of  them  in  oftavo  a  little  before  th-^  au- 
thor's death,  containing  his 

CONTEMPLATIONS, 

I.  Of  our  latter  en:1. 

II.  Of  wifdom,  and  the  fear  of  God. 

III.  or  the  knowledge  of  Chrift  crucifisd. 

IV.  The  vidory  of  faiih  over  the  world, 
y.  Of  humility. 

VI.  Jacob's  vow. 

VII.  Of  contentation. 

VIII.  Of  affliaions. 

IX.  A  good  method  to  entertain  unliable  and 
troublefome  times, 

X.  Changes  and  troubles,  a  poem. 
XL  Of  the  redemption  of  time. 

XII.  The  great  audit. 

XIII.  Diredions   touching  keeping  the  Lord's 
^ay,  in  a  letter  to  his  children. 

XIV-  ?oems  written  u;ion  Chriftmas-day. 

In  the  2d  Volume. 

I.  An  enquiry  touching  happinefs. 

II.  Of  the  chief  end  of  man. 

D  4  ni. 


40  T'he  Life  and  Death  of 

III.  Upon  Eclef.  xii.  I.  Remember  thy  Creator .*. 

IV.  Upon  thePfal.li.  lo.  Create  a  clean  heart 
in  me  j    with  a  poem. 

V.  The   folly  and  mifchlef  of  fni. 

VI.  Of  felf-clenial. 

VII.  Motives  to  watchful  nefs,  in  reference  to 
the  good  and  evil  angels. 

VIII.  Of  Moderation  of  the  affe<5lions. 

IX.  Of  worldly  hope  and  expettarion. 

X.  Upon  Heb.  xiii.  14.  We  have  here  no  con- 
tinuing city. 

XI.  Of  contentednefs  and  patience, 

XII.  Of  moderation  of  anger. 

XIII.  A  preparative  againft  affliiSlion. 

XIV.  Of  fubmiflion,  prayer,  and  thankfgiving.  - 

XV.  Of  prayer  and  thankfgiving  on  Pf.  cxvi.  12. 

XVI.  Meditations  on  the  Lord's  prayer,  with  a 
paraphrafe  upon  it. 

In  them  there  appears  a  generous  and  true  fpi- 
rit  of  religion,  mix'd  with  a  moft  fcrious  and 
fervent  devotion,  and  perhaps  with  the  more  ad- 
vantage, that  the  ftile  wants  fome  corre6lion,  which 
fhews  they  were  the  genuine  produdlions  of  an 
excellent  mind,  entertaining  itfelf  in  fecret  with 
fuch  contemplations.  The  ftile  is  clear  and  mafcu- 
line,  in  a  due  temper  between  flatnefs  and  affec- 
tation, in  which  he  exprefTes  his  thoughts  both 
eafily  and  decently.  In  writing  thefc  difcourfes, 
having  run  over  moft  of  the  fubjeds  that  his  own 
circumftances  led  him  chiefiv  to  confider,  he  began 

to 


.^Vr  MATTI-IEW    HALE.       41 

to  be  ia  fome  pain  to  chuic  nevv  arguments,  and 
therefore  refolved  to  fix  on  a  tbcme  that  llioulil 
hold  him  loirger. 

He  was  foon  determuied  ia  his  choice,  by  the 
immoral  and  irreligious  principles  and  pra(2:ic^, 
that  had  fo  long  vexed  his  righteous  foul :  and 
therefore  betraa  a  o;reat  deri2,n  againft  atheifm  ;  the 
Jirft  part  of  which  is  only  printed,  of  the  origi- 
nation of  mankind,  dcfigned  to  prove  the  creation 
of  the  world,  and  the  truth  of  the  Mofaical  hif- 
tory. 

The  fecond  part  was  of  the  nature  of  the  foul, 
and  of  a  future  Hate. 

The  third  part  was  concerning  the  attributes  of 
God,  both  from  the  abflrraded  ideas  of  him,  and 
the  light  of  nature ;  the  evidence  of  providence, 
the  notions  of  morality,  and  the  voice  of  con- 
fcience. 

And  the  fourth  part  was  conceining  the  truth 
and .  authority  of  the  fcriptures,  with  anfwers  to 
the  objCvSlions  againft  them.  On  wiiting  thefe  he 
fpent  kven  years.  He  wrote  them  with  fo  much 
confidcration,  that  one  vi'ho  perufed  the  original 
under  his  own  hand,  which  was  the  firft  draught 
of  it,  told  me,  he  did  not  remember  any  confider- 
able  alteration,  perhaps  not  of  twenty  words  in 
the  whole  work. 

The  way  of  his  writing  them  (only  on  the 
evenings  of  the  Lord's  day,  when  he  v/as  in  town, 
and  not  much  oftener  when  he  was  in  the  coun- 
try) made,  that  they  are  not  fo  contracted,  as  it  is 

very 


42  The  Life  afid  Death  of 

very  likely  he  would  have  writ  them,  if  he  had 
been  more  at  leifure  to  have  brought  his  thoughts 
into  a  narrower  compafs,  anJ  fewer  words. 

But  making  fome  allov^ance  for  the  largenefs  of 
the  flile,  that  volume  that  is  printed,  is  generally 
acknowledged  to  be  one  of  the  perfecleft  pieces 
both  of  learning  and  reafoning  that  has  been  writ 
on  that  fubje£t  j  and  he  who  read  a  great  part  of 
the  other  volumes  told  me,  they  were  all  of  i 
piece  with  the  firft. 

When  he  had  jRnlfhed  this  work,  he  fent  it  b;^ 
an  unknown  hand  to  biftiop  Wilklns,  to  deiir6 
his  judgment  of  it ;  but  he  that  brought  it,  would 
give  no  other  account  of  the  author,  but  that  he 
was  not  a  clergyman.  The  bifliop  and  his  worthy 
friend  Dr.  Tillotfon,  read  a  great  deal  of  it  with 
inuch  pleafure,  but  could  not  imagine  who  could 
be  the  author,  and  how  a  man  that  was  mafter  of 
fo  much  reafon,  and  fo  great  a  variety  of  know- 
ledge, fhould  be  fo  unknown  to  them,  that  they 
could  not  find  him  out,  by  thofe  charadters  which 
are  fo  little  common.  At  laft  Dr.  Tillotfon  guef- 
fed  it  muft  be  the  lord  chief  baron,  to  which  the 
other  prefently  agreed,  wondering  he  had  been  fc? 
long  in  finding  it  out.  So  they  went  immediately 
to  him,  and  the  bl/hop  thanking  him  for  the  en- 
tertainment he  had  received  from  his  works,  h6 
blulhed  extremely,  not  without  fome  c'ifpleafure, 
apprehending  thit  the  perfon  he  had  trufted  had 
difcovered  him.  But  the  bifliop  foon  cleared  that, 
and  told  him,  "  he  had  difcovered  himfelf,  for  the 

*'  learning 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.        4^ 

•*  learning  of  that  book  was  fo  various,  that 
*<  none  but  he  coulJ  be  the  author  of  it."  And 
that  bifbop  having  a  freedom  in  dcH/ering  his  opi- 
nion of  thiniis  and  perfons,  which  perhaps  few 
ever  managed  both  with  fo  much  plainnefs  and 
prudence,  told  him,  "  there  was  nothing  could 
*'  be  better  faid  on  thefe  arguments,  if  he  could 
'*  bring  it  intr)  a  lefs  compafs,  but  if  he  had  not 
*'  leifure  for  that,  he  thought  it  much  better  to  hav6 
**  it  come  out,  though  a  little  too  l^irge,  than  that 
*'  the  world  fliould  be  deprived  of  the  good  which 
*'  it  muft  needs  do."  IJut  our  judge  had  never 
the  opportunity  of  revifmg  it,  fo  a  little  before 
his  death  he  fent  the  firft  part  of  it  to  the  prcfs. 

In  the  beginning  of  it,  he  gives  an  efiay  of  his 
excellent  way  of  methodizing  things,  in  which  he 
was  fo  great  a  mafter,  that  whatever  he  under- 
took, he  would  prefent^y  Caft  into  fo  perfect  a 
fcheme,  that  he  could  never  afterwards  corredl  it. 
He  runs  out  copioufly  upon  the  argument  of  the 
impoflibility  of  an  eternal  fucceilion  of  time,  td 
(hew  that  time  and  eternity  are  inconfiitent  one 
with  another;  and  that  therefore  all  duration  that 
was  paft,  and  defined  by  time,  could  not  be  from 
eternity  j  and  he  fhews  the  difference  between 
fucceflive  eternity  already  paft,  and  one  to  come: 
fo  that  though  the  latter  is  poiTible,  the  former  is 
not  fo ;  for  all  the  parts  of  the  former  have  a£lually 
been,  and  therefore  being  defined  by  time,  cannot 
be  eternal ;  whereas  the  other  are  ftill  future  to  all 
eternity,  fo  that  this  reafoning  cannot  be  turned 

to 


44  *^^^  Life  and  Death  Gf 

to  prove  the  poffibility  of  eternal  fuccefiions,  that 
have  been,  as  well  as  eternal  fucceffions  that  fhall 
be.  This  he  follows  with  a  ftrength  I  never 
jnet  with  in  any  that  managed  it  before  him. 

He  brings  next  all  thofe  moral  arguments,  to 
prove  that  the  wocld  had  a  beginning ;  agreeing 
to  the  account  Mofes  gives  of  it,  as  that  no 
hiflory  rifes  higher,  than  near  the  time  of  the  de- 
luge ;  and  that  the  firft  foundation  of  kingdoms, 
the  invention  of  arts,  the  beginnings  of  all  reli- 
gions, the  gradual  plantation  of  the  world,  and  in- 
creafc  of  mankind,  and  the  confent  of  nations  d6 
Jigree  with  it.  In  managing  thefe,  as  he  (hews 
profound  fkill  both  in  hiftorical  and  philofophical 
learning,  fo  he  gives  a  noble  difcovery  of  his  great 
candour  and  probity,  that  he  would  not  impofe  on 
the  reader  with  a  falfe  fhew  of  reafoning  by  argu- 
ments that  he  knew  had  flaws  in  them ;  and, 
therefore,  upon  every  one  of  thefe  he  adds  fuch 
si  lays,  as  in  a  great  meafure  leflened  and  took  off 
their  force,  with  as  much  exa6tnefs  of  judgment, 
dnd  ftriilnefs  of  cenfure,  as  if  he  had  been  fet  to 
plead  for  the  other  fide  :  and  indeed  fums  up  the 
wliole  evidence  for  religion,  as  impartially  as  ever 
be  did  in  a  trial  for  life  or  death  to  the  jury, 
which,  how  equally  and  judiciouHy  he  always  did, 
the  whole  nation  well  know%. 

After  that,  he  examines  the  ancient  opinions  of 
the  philofophers,  and  enlarges  with  a  great  varie- 
ty of  curious  reflections  in  anfwering  that  only 
argument,  that  has  any  appearance  of  ftrength  for 

the 


Str  MATTHEW   HALE.      45 

the  cafual  produdlion  of  man,  from  the  origination 
of  infe<5ls  out  of  putrified  matter,  as  is  commonly 
fuppofed  ;  and  he  concluded  the  book,  fhewing 
how  rational  and  philofophical  the  account  which 
Mofes  gives  of  it  is.  There  is  in  it  all  a  fagacity 
and  quicknefs  of  thought,  mixed  with  great  and 
curious  learning,  that  t  confefs  I  never  met  to- 
gether in  any  other  book  on  that  fubjedl.  AmoJi 
other  conjedlures,  one  he  gives  concerning  the  de- 
luge is,  "  that  he  did  not  think  the  face  of  the 
"  earth  and  the  waters  were  altogether  the  fam^ 
"  before  the  univerfal  deluge,  and  after  j  but  pof- 
"  fibly  the  face  of  the  earth  was  more  even  thaa 
*'  now  it  is  ;  the  feas  poffibly  more  dilated  and' 
"  extended,  and  not  fo  deep  as  now."  And  a  little 
after,  "  poffibly  the  feas  have  undermined  much' 
**  of  the  appearing  continent  of  earth."  This  I 
the  rather  take  notice  pf,  becaufe  it  hath  been, 
fmce  his  death  made  out  in  a  moll  ingenious  and 
moft  elegantly  written  book  by  Mr.  Burnet,  of 
Chrifl's  college  in  Cambridge,  who  has  given 
fuch  an  eflay  towards  the  proving  the  poiTibility 
of  an  univerfal  deluge,  ajnd  from  thence  has  col- 
lefted  with  great  fagacity  what  patadife  was  be- 
fore it,  as  has  not  been  oft'ered  by  any  philofopher 
before  him. 

While  the  judge  was  thus  employing  his  time, 
the  lord  chief  juftiqe  Keyling  dying,  he  vy^as  on 
the  J  8th  of  May  1671,  promoted  to  be  lord  chief 
juftice  of  England.  He  had  made  the  pleas  of  the 
«rown  cn.e  of  his  cl\ief  Itudie?,  ancl  by  much 
.     "  '  fearch. 


H/S  ^he  Life  and  Death  cf 

fearch,  and  long  obfervatlon,  had  compofed   that 
great  work  concerning  them,  foimerly  mentioned. 
He  that  holds  the  high  office  of  jufticiary  in   that 
court,  being  the  chief  truftee,  and  aflertor  of  the 
liberties  of  his  country,   all  people  a;  plauded  thij 
choice,  and  thought  their  liberties   could   not  be 
better  depofited   than  in  the  hands  of  one,  that  as 
be  underftood  them  well,  fo  he  had  all  the  juftice 
and  courage  that  fo  facred  a  traft  required.    One 
thing  was  much  obferved  and  commended  in  him, 
that  when   there  was    a   great  inequality   in   th$ 
ability  and  learning  of  the  councellors  that  were 
to  plead  one  againft  another,  he  thought  it  became 
him,  as   the  judge,  to  fupply  that ;    fo  he  wouFd 
enforce  what  the  weaker  council  managed  but  in- 
differently, and  not  fufter  the  more  learned  to  carry 
the  bufinefs  by  the  advantage  they  had  over  th« 
others  in  their  quicknefs    and  (kill  in  law,  and 
readinefs  in  pleading,  till  all  things  were  cleared 
in  which  the  merits  and  ftrengthof  the  ill-defended 
caufe  lay.     He  was  not  fatisfied   barely  to  give  his 
judgment  in  caufes,  but  did,  efpecially  in  all  intri- 
cate ones,    give  fuch  an  account  of  the  reafons 
that  prevailed  with  him,    that  the  council  did  not 
only  acquiefce  in  his  authority,  but  were  fo  con-s 
tinced  by  his  reafons,    that  I  have  heard  many 
profcfs  that  he  brought  them  often  to  change  their 
opinions  5  fp  that  his  giving  of  judgment  was  really 
a   learned   le(5ture  upon  that  point  of  law ;    and 
which  was  yet  more,  the  parties  themfelves,  though 
Intereft  does  too  commonly  corrupt  the  judgment, 

were 


Sir  MATTHEW  HALE.      47 

were  generally  fatisfied  with  the  juftice  of  his  de- 
cifions,  even  when  they  were  made  againft  them. 
His  impartial  juftice,   and   great  diligence,    drew 
the  chief  practice  after  him,  into  whatfoever  court 
he  came  :    fince,  though  the  courts  of  the  Com- 
mon pleas,  the  Exchequer  ami  the  King's-bench, 
are  appointed  for  the  trial  of  caufes  of  diiTerenC 
natures,  yet  it  is  eafy  to  bring  moft  caufes  intQ 
any  of  them,  as  the  council  or  attornies  pleafej 
fo  as  he  had  drawn  the  bufinefs  much  after  him, 
both  into  the  Common-pleas,  and  the  Exchequer, 
it  now  followed  him  into  the  king's-bench,  and 
many  caufes  that  were  depending  in  the  Exchequer 
and   not   determined,    were   let  faU   there,    and 
brought  again  before  him   in  the  court  to  whicU 
he  was  now  removed.     And  here  did  he  fpend  the 
reft  pf   his  publLck   lift  and  employment  i    but 
about  four  years  and  a  half  after  this  advance- 
ment, he,  who  bad  hitherto  enjoyed  a  firm  and 
vigorous  health,  to  which   his  great  temperance^ 
and  the  equality  of  his  mind,  did  not  a  little  con- 
duce, was  on  ^  fudden  brought  very  low  by  an 
inflammation  in   his  roidrift",  which  In  two, days 
time  broke  the  cpaftitution  of  Lis  health  to  fuch,  a 
degree  that  he  never  recovered  it ;    he  becyame  fo 
;ifthmatical,    that   with   great  difficulty  he  could 
fetch  his  breath  ;    ^hat  determineu  in  a  dropfy,  of 
which  he  afterwards  disd.     He  uuderftood  phyfick 
fo  well,  that;  confidering  his  age,  he  concluded 
bis  diftemper  muft  carry  him  ofF  in  a  little  time  ; 
and  therefore  he  r^folved  ty  b3,ve  fome  of  the  lull 

snonths 


4^  '^he  Life  and  Death  of 

months  of  his  life  referved  to  himfelf,  that,  being 
freed  of  all  worldly  cares,  he  might  be  preparing 
for  his  change.  Ke  was  alfo  fo  much  difablcd  in 
his  body,  that  he  could  hardly,  though  fupported. 
by  his  fervants,  walk  through  Weftminfter-hall, 
or  endure  the  toil  of  hufmefs.  He  had  been  a  long 
time  wearied  with  the  diflraclions  that  his  em- 
ployment had  brought  on  him,  and  his  profeflion' 
was  become  ungrateful  to  him  ;  he  loved  to  apply 
himfelf  wholly  to  better  purpofes,  as  will  appear 
hy  a  paper  that  he  wrote  on  this  fubjed:,  which  I 
fball  here  infert :  - 

"  Firft,  if  I  confider  the  bufinefs  of  my  pro- 
*'  feffion,  whether  as  an  advocate  or  as  a  judge,  it 
is  true  I  do  acknowledge  by  the  inftitution  of 
Almighty  God,  and  the  difpenfatlon  of  his  pro- 
•'  vidence,  I  ain  bound  to  induftry  and  fidelity  in 
**  i-t :  and  as  it  is  an  a£l  of  obedience  unto  his 
"  will,  it  carries  with  it  fome  things  of  religious 
*'  duty,  and  I  may  and  do  take  comfort  in  it,  and 
"  expedt  a  reward  of  my  obedience  to  him,  and 
*'  the  good  that  I  do  to  mankind  therein,  from  the 
'*  bounty  and  beneficence  and  promife  of  Almighty 
"  God  :  and  it  is  true  alfo  that  without  fuch  em- 
ployments civil  focictics  cannot  be  fupported, 
and  great  good  redounds  to  mankind  from  them, 
and  in  thefe  refpefts  the  confcience  of  my  own 
induftry,  fidelity  and  integrity  in  th^m,  is  a 
great  comfort  and  faLisfa6lion  to  me.  But  yet 
this  I  muft  fay  concerning  thefe  employments, 
confidered  fimply  in  themjelyes,  that  they  are 

"•  very 


(C 


Sir   MATTHEW   HALE.       ^g 

**  very  full  of  care^,  and  anxieties  and  perturba- 
"  tions. 

*'  Secondly,  That  though  they  are  beneficial  to 
"  others,  yet  they  are  of  the  leaft  benefit  to  the 
"  perfon  employed  in  them. 

*'  Thirdly,  That  they  do  neceflarily  involve  the 
*'  party,  whofe  office  it  is,  in  great  dangers,  dif- 
*'  ficulties,  and  calumnies. 

•*  Fourthly,  That  they  only  ferve  for  the  meri- 
"  dian  of  this  life,  which  is  fhort  and  uncertain. 
"  Fifthly,  That  tho'  it  be  my  duty  faithfully  to 
"  (e.\-\'t  in  them,  while  I  am  called  to  them,  and 
"  till  I  am  duly  called  from  them,  yet  they  are  great 
"  confumers  of  that  little  time  we  have  here,  which, 
**  as  it  feems  to  me,  might  be  better  fpent  in  a 
**  pious  contemplative  life,  and  a  due  provifion  for 
'•*  eternity.  I  do  not  know  a  better  temporal  em- 
ployment than  Martha  had,  in  teftifying  her 
love  and  duty  to  our  Sayiour,  by  making  pro- 
villon  for  him  ;  yet  our  Lord  tells  her,  that 
though  fhe  was  troubled  about  many  things, 
there  was  only  one  thing  necefTary,  and  Mary 


«( 
<c 

'*  had  chofen  the  better  part." 

By  this  the  reader  will  fee  that  he  continued 
;n  bis  ftation  upon  no  other  confideration,  but 
that  being  fet  in  it  by  the  providence  of  God,  he 
judged  he  could  not  abandon  that  poll  which 
was  aifigned  him,  without  preferring  his  own  pri- 
vate inclination  to  the  choice  God  had  made  for 
him  ;  but  now  that  fame  providence  having  by 
this  great  diftcmper  difsJigaged  hjm  from  the  obli-" 

i.  gationk 


^o  'The  Life  and  Death  of 

gatlon  of  holding  a  place,  which  he  was  no  longei? 
able  to  difcharge,  he  refolved  to  refign  it.  This 
was  no  fooner  furmifed  abroad,  than  it  drew  upon 
him  the  importunities  of  all  his  friends,  and  the 
clamour  of  the  whole  town  to  divert  him  from  ir, 
but  all  was  to  no  purpofe  j  there  was  but  one  ar- 
gument that  could  move  him,  which  was,  that 
he  was  obliged  to  continue  in  the  employment 
God  had  put  him  in  for  the  good  of  the  public  ; 
but  to  this  he  had  fuch  an  anfwer,  that  ev«n  thcvfe 
who  were  moft  concerned  in  his  withdrawing^ 
could  not  but  fee,  that  the  reafons  inducing  him 
to  it,  were  but  too  ftrong  ;  fo  he  made  application 
to  his  majefty  for  his  writ  of  eafe,  which  the  king 
was  very  unwilling  to  grant  him,  and  offered  to 
let  him  hold  his  place  ftill,  he  doing  what  bufmefs 
he  could  in  his  chamber ;  but  he  faid,  "  he  could 
*'  not  with  a  good  confeience  continue  in  it, 
*'  fmce  he  was  no  longer  able  to  diftharge  the 
"  duty  belonging  to  it." 

But  yet  fuch  was  the  general  fati^fa^Slion  which 
all  the  kingdom  received  by  his  excellent  adraini- 
flration  of  juftice,  that  the  king,  though  he  could 
x\pt  well  deny  his  rexjueft,  yet  he  deferred  the 
granting  of  it  as  long  as  wa^  poflible  :  nor  could 
the  lord  chancellor  be  prevailed  with  to  move  the 
king  to  haften  his  difcharge^,  though  the  chiaf 
juftice  often  prefled  him  to  it. 

At  lafi:  having  wearied  himfelf,  aixd  all  his 
friends,  with  his  importunate  defires,  and  growiiig 
ienfibly  weaker  iti  b^dy,  he  did  upeii  tlie  twerity- 


Sir  MATTHEW    HALE.      51 

firft  day  of  February,  28.  Car.  An.  Dom.  167-I, 
go  before  a  mafter  of  chancery,  with  a  little  parch- 
rhcnt  deed,  drawn  by  himfelf,  and  written  all  with 
his  own  hand,  and  there  fealed  and  delivered  it, 
and  acknowledged  it  to  be  enrolled,  and  afterwards 
he  brought  the  original  deed  to  the  lord  chancel- 
Tor,  and  did  formally  furreuder  his  office  in  thefe 
words 

*'  Omnibus  Chrifti  fidelibus   ad    quos  praefens 
**  fcriptura    pervenerit,    Matheus  Hale,  miles  ca- 
*'  pitalis  jufticiarius  domini  regis  ad  placita-coram 
"  ipfo  rege  tenenda  affignatus  falutem   in  domino 
*'  fempiternam,  noveritis  me  prsefatum  Matheum 
**  Hale,  militcm  jam  fenem  fadtum  &  variis  cor- 
"  poris   mei  fenilis   morbis   &   infirmitatibus   dire 
^*  iaborantem    &    adliuc    detentum.     Hac    chart* 
"  mea  refignare  &  furfum  reddere  fereniffimo  do- 
"  mino  noftro  Carolo  fecundo,  Dei  gratia  Angliae 
"  Scotiae  Franciae  &  Hibernire,  regi,  fidei  defen- 
**  fori,  &c.    Prediilum  officium  capital  is  jufticiarii 
"  ad  placita  coram  ipfo  reg&  tenenda,  humillime 
"  petens  quod  hoc  fcriptum  irrotaletur  de  recordo. 
**  In   cujus    rei    teftlmonium    huic   chartai    me« 
'*  refignationis  figillum  meura  oppofui,   dat  vicefi- 
*'  mo  primo  die  Februarii  anno  regni  di£l.  d<jm* 
'*  regis  nunc  vicefimo  odavo.'^ 

He  made  this  inftrument,  ^s  he  told  the  lord 
chancellor,  for  two  ends  j  the  one  was  to  fhew  the 
wptld  his  own  Uz^  cojicurrenfc  tp  his  removal  : 

E  2  s^nother 


52  T^  Life  and  IDeath  of 

another  was  to  obviate  an  objeclloa  heretofore 
made,  that  a  chief  juflice  being  placed  by  writ, 
was  not  rcmoveable  at  pleafure,  as  judges  by  pa- 
tent were  ;  which  opinion,  as  he  faid,  was  once 
held  by  his  predeceflbr  the  lord  chief  juftice  Key- 
ling,  and  though  he  himfelf  was  always  of  an- 
other opinion,  yet  he  thought  it  reafonable  to 
prevent  fuch  a  fcruple. 

He  had  the  day  before  furrendered  to  the  king, 
in  perfon,  who  parted  from  him  with  great  grace, 
wilhing  him  moft  heartily  the  return  of  his  health,, 
and  aflluing  him,  *'  that  he  would  Hill  look  upon 
"  him  as  one  of  his  judges,  and  have  recourfe 
''  to  his-  advice  when  his  health  would  permit^,. 
"  and  in  the  mean  time  would  continue  his  pen- 
*'  fion  during  his  life." 

The  good  man  thought  this  bounty  too  great, 
and  an  ill  precedent  for  the  king,  and  therefore 
writ  a  letter  to  the  lord  treafurer,  earneftly  dcfiring 
that  his  penfion  might  be  only  during  pleafure  j. 
but  the  king  would  grant  it  for  life,  and  make  it 
payable  quarterb^. 

And  yet  for  a  whole  month  together,  he  would 
not  fuft'er  his  fervant  to  fue  out  his  patent  for  his 
penfionj  and  when  the  firft  payment  was  received, 
he  ordered  a  great  part  of  it  to  charitable  ufes,  and 
iaid,  he  intended  moft  of  it  fhould  be  fo  employed 
as  long  as  it  was  paid  him. 

At  laft  he  happened  to  die  upon  the  quarter  day^ 
which  was  Chriftmas  day ;  and  though  this  might 
have  jJiven  fome  Qccafton  t«  a  dilpute  whether  the 

^enfion 


Sir  MATTHEW  HALE,  5^ 
pendon  for  that  quarter  were  recoverable,  yet  the 
king  was  pleafed  to  decide  that  matter  againft 
himfelf,  and  ordered  the  penfion  to  be  paid  ;:o  his 
executors. 

As  foon  as  he  was  difchargcd  from  his  great 
place,  he  returned  home  with  as  much  chearful- 
tiefs  as  his  want  of  health  would  admit  of,  being 
now  eafed  of  a  burthen  he  had  been  of  late  groan- 
ing under,  and  fo  made  more  capable  of  enjoyincj 
that  which  he  had  much  wifhed  for,  accordins  to 
his  elegant  tranflation  of,  or  rather  paraphrafe 
upon,  thofe  excellent  lines  In  Senega's  Thyeftes, 

Aa.  2. 

Sh't  qulciinque  vclet  potens, 
AuliS  ciihnlne  lubrico  : 
Me  dulc'ts  faturet  qnies, 
Obfcuro  pofitus  loco, 
Leni  perfruar  otro  : 
Uullis  nota  quiritibuSy 
/Etas  per  iacitum  Jluat. 
Sic  cum  tranfierint  meiy 
KiiUo  cumjircpitu  dies, 
Ph'hciiis  mortar  fcriex. 
Illi  mors  grams  hicubat, 
^ui  mtus  nij?}is  amriibmy 
Jgmtiis  morhur  fibi. 


"  Let  him,  that  will  afcend   the  tottering  feat 
"  .Of  courtly  grandeur,  and  become  as  great 
"  As  are  his  mounting  wiflies  :  as  for  me, 
*'  Let  fweet  repofe  and  reft  my  portion  be  ; 

E  3  '"  Giif 


54  '^^^  Life  and  Death  of 

*'  Give  me  fome  mean  obfcure  recefs,  a  fphere 
**  Out  of  the  road  of  bufinefs,  or  the  fear 
*'  Of  falling  lower  j  where  I  fweetly  may 
"  Myfelf  and  dear  retirement  ftill  enjoy. 
*'  Let  not  my  life  or  name  be  known  unto 
*'  The  grandees  of  the  time,  tofl  to  and  fro 
*'  By  cenfures  or  applaufc ;  but  let  my  age 
*'  Slide  gently  by,  not  overthwart  the  ftage 
"  Of  public  adlion  ;  unheard,  unfeen, 
"  And  unconcern'd,  as  if  I  ne'er  had  been. 
f  And  thus,  while  I  ftiall  pafs  my  filent  day^ 
*'  In  fhady  privacy,  free  from  the  noife 
**  And  buftles  of  the  mad  world,  then  fhall  I 
"  A  good  old  innocent  plebeian  die. 
*'  Death  is  a  mere  furprife,  a  very  fnare 

To  him,  that  makes  it  his  life's  greateft  care 
To  be  a  public  pagent,  known  to  all. 
But  unacquainted  with  himfelf,  doth  fall. 


(( 


<( 


Having  noiw  attained  to  that  privacy,  which  he 
had  no  lefs  fcrioufly  than  pioufly  wiflied  for,  he 
called  all  his  fervants  that  had  belonged  to  his 
office  together,  and  told  them,  he  had  now  laid 
down  his  place,  and  fo  their  employments  were 
determined  ;  upon  that,  he  advifed  them  to  fee  for 
themfelves,  and  gave  to  fome  of  them  very  con- 
fiderable  prefents,  and  to  every  one  of  them  a 
token,  and  fo  difmifled  all  thofe  that  were  not  his 
domefticks.  He  was  difchargcd  the  15th  of  Fe- 
bruary 1675-6,  and  lived  till  the  Chriftmas  foU 
lowing,  but  all  the  while  was  in  fo  ill  a  ftate  of 

health. 


Sir   MATTHEW   HALE.       55 

health,  that  there  was  no  hopes  of  his  recovery. 
He  continued  ftill  to  retire  often,  both  for  his  dcvo- , 
tions  and  ftudies,  and  as  long  as  he  could  go,  went 
conftantly  to  his  clofet  j  and  when  his  infirmities 
encreafed  on  him,  fo  that  he  was  not  able  to  go 
thither  himfelf,  he  made  his  fervants  carry  him 
thither  in  a  chair.  At  laft,  as  the  winter  came  on, 
he  faw  Mnth  great  joy  his  deliverance  approaching, 
for  befides  his  being  weary  of  the  world,  and 
his  longings  for  the  blefTednefs  of  another  ftate,  his 
pains  encreafed  fo  on  him,  that  ko  patience  infe- 
rior to  his  ,could  have  borne  them  without  a  great 
liijeafinefs  of  mind  ;  yet  he  exprefled  to  the  Jail: 
.4uch  fubmifHon  to  the  will  of  God,  and  fo  equal  a 
temper  under  them,  that  it  was  vifible  then  what 
jnighty  effefls  his  philofophy  and  chrillianity  had 
on  him,  in  fupporting  him  under  fuch  a  heavy 
Joad. 

He  could  not  lie  down  in  bed  above  a  year  be- 
fore his   death,  by   reafon  oi  the  afthma,  but  fat. 
rather  than  lay  in  it. 

He  was  attented  on  in  his  ficknefs  by  a  pious 
and  worthy  divine,  Mr.  Evan  Griffith,  minifter  oi 
thg  parifli  ;  and  it  was  obferved,  that  in  all  the 
jCXtremities  of  his  pain,  whenever  he  prayed  by 
him,  he  forbore  all  complaints  or  groans,  but  with 
his  hands  and  eyes  lifted  up,  was  fixed  in  his  de- 
votions. Not  long  before  his  death,  the  minifter 
told  him,  "  There  was  to  be  a  facrament  next 
."  Sunday  »t  church,  but  he  believed  he  could  not 
'5  come  an^i  partake  with  the  reft,  therefore  he 

E  4  ''  would 


56  Ithe  Life  and  Death  of 

*'  would  give  it  him  in  his  own  houfe  :  "    But   he 
anfwered,  *'  No ;    his  heavenly    father    had   pre- 
*'  pared  a  feaft  for  him,  and  he  would   go  to  his 
"  father's  houfe   to  partake  of  it :  "    So  he  made 
himfelf  be  carried   thither  in   his  chair,  where  he 
received   the  facrament   on  his  knees,  with   great 
devotion,    which,  it  may    be    fuppofed,    was    the 
greater,  becaufe   he   apprehended  it  was  to  be  his 
laft,  and  fo  took  it   as  his  viaticum  and   provifion 
for  his  journey.   He  had  fome  fecret  unaccountable 
prefages  of  his  death,  for  he  faid,    "  that,  if  he 
*'  did  not  die  on  fuch   a  day,"  (which   fell   to  be 
the  25th   of  November)  *'  he  b«licved   he  fliould 
**  Jive  a  month  longer,"  and  he  died  that  very  day 
month.     He  continued  to  enjoy  the  free  ufe  of  his 
reafon   and  fenfe  to  the   laft  moment,  which  he 
had  often  and  earneftly  prayed  for  during  his  ficknefs. 
And  when  his  voice  was   fo  funk  that  he  could 
rot  be  heard,  they  perceived  by  the  almoft  conftant 
lifting  up  of  his  eyes  and  hands,  that  he  was  ffcill 
afpiring  towards  that  blcfled  ftate,  of  which  he  wag 
now  fpeedily  to  be  poffeffed. 

He  had  for  many  }«ears  a  particular  devotion  for 
Chriftmas-day,  and  after  he  had  received  the  facra- 
ment, and  been  in  the  performance  of  the  publick 
worfhip  of  that  day,  he  commonly  wrote  a  copy 
of  verfes  on  the  honour  of  his  Saviour,  as  a  fit 
cxpreflion  of  the  joy  he  felt  in  his  foul,  at  the  re- 
turn of  that  glorious  anniverfary.  There  are  fe- 
venteen  of  thofc  copies  printed,  which  he  wrote 
op  feventeen  feveral  Chriftmas  days,  by  which  the 

world 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.      57 

world  has  a  tafle  of  his  poetical  genius,  in  which, 
if  he  "had  thought  it  worth  his  time  to  have  ex- 
celled, he  might  have  been  eminent  as  well  as  in 
other  things ;  but  he  wrote  them  rather  to  enter- 
tain himlelf,  than  to  merit  the  laurel. 

I  ftiall  here  add  one  which  has  not  been  yet 
printed,  and  it  is  nor  unlikely  it  was  the  laft  he 
writ  J  it  is  a  paraphral'e  on  Simeon's  fong  ;  I  take 
it  from  his  blotted  copy  not  at  all  finiflied,  fo  the 
reader  is  to  make  allowance  for  any  imperfection 
he  may  find  in  it. 

*'  Blefled  Creator,  who  before  the  birth 
*'  Of  time,  or  e'er  the  pillars  of  the  earth 
*'  Woe  fix't  or  form'd,  did'ft  lay  that  great  delign 
**  Of  man's  redemption,  and  did'fl  define 
*'  In  thine  eternal  councils  all  the  fccne 
**  Of  that  ftupcndious  bufincfs,  and  when 

It  fliould  appear,  and  though  the  very  day 

Of  its  epiphany,  concealed  lay 

Within  thy  mind,  yet  thou  wert  pleas'd  to  fhow 

Some  gllmpfes  of  it,  unto  men  below, 
"  In  vifions,  types,  and  prophcfies,  as  we 
"  Things  at  a  diilance  in  perfpe<Slive  fee  : 
*'  But  thou  wert  pleas'd  to  let  thy  fervant  knowr 
"  That  thatbleft  hour,  that  feem'd  to  move  foflow 
"  Through  former  ag-es,  fhould  at  laft  attain 
"  Its  time,  e'er  my  few  fands,  that  yet  remain, 
"  Are  fpent  j  and  that  thefe  aged  eyes 
"  Should  fee  the  day,  when  Jacob's  ftar  (liould  rife. 

"  And 


it 

u 


5?  ^he  Life  andt  Death  of 

«  And  now  thou  haft  fulfill'd  it,  blelTed  Lord^ 

*'  Difmifs  me  now,  according  to  thy  word  i 

**  And  let  my  aged  body  now  return 

**  To  reft,  and  duft,  and  drop  into  an  urn ; 

*'  For  I  have  liv'd  enough,  mine  eyes  have  i^tn 

*^  l^y  much  defired  falvation,  that  hath  been 

*<  So  long,  fo  dearly  wifh'd,  the  joy,  the  hope 

**  Of  all  the  ancient  patriarchs,  the  (cope 

"  Of  all  the  prophefies,  and  myfteries, 

**  Of  all  the  types  unveil'd,  the  hiftories 

*'  Of  Jewifh  church  unriddl'd,  and  the  bright 

*'  And  orient  ^an  arifen  to  give  light 

*'  To  Gentiles,  and  the  joy  of  Ifrael, 

"  The  worlds  redeemer,  bleft  Emanuel. 

**  Let  this  fight  clofe  mine  eyes,  'tis  lofs  to  fee, 

*'  After  this  vifion,  any  fight  but  thee. 

Thus  he  ufed  to  fing  on  the  former  Chriftmas- 
days,  but  now  he  was  to  be  admitted  to  bear  his 
part  in  the  new  fon^gs  above  ;  fo  that  day  which 
tie  had  fpent  in  fo  much  fpiritual  joy,  proved  to 
be  indeed  the  day  of  his  jubilee  and  deliverance; 
for  between  two  and  three  in  the  afternoon,  he 
breathed  out  his  righteous  and  pious  foul.  His 
^nd  was  peace,  he  had  no  ftrugglings,  nor  feemed 
■to  be  in  any  pangs  in  his  laft  moments.  He  was 
buried  on  the  4th  of  January,  Mr.  Griffith  preachr 
ing  the  funeral  fermon,  his  text  was  Ifa.  Iv^i.  r« 
^'  The  righteous  periflieth,  and  no  man  layeth  it 
*'  to  heart ;  and  merciful  men  are  taken  away, 
^*  none  confidering   that  the   righteous   is  taken 

"  away 


Sir  MATTHEW  HALE.        g^ 

**  away  from  the  evil  to  come."  Which  how  fitly 
it  was  applicable  upon  this  occafion,  all  that  con- 
fider  the  courfe  of  his  life,  will  eafily  conclud.e. 
He  was  interred  in  the  church-yard  of  Alderly,  a- 
mong  his  anceftors  ;  he  did  not  much  approve  of 
burying  in  churches,  and  ufed  to  fay,  "  tlie 
"  churches  wei^e  far  the  living,  and  the  church- 
*'  yards  for  the  dead."  His  monument  was  like 
bimfelf,  decent  and  plain  ;  the  tomb-ilone  was 
black  marble,  and  the  fides  were  black  and  white 
marble,  upon  which  he  himfelf  had  ordered  this 
bare  and  humble  infcription  to  be  made, 

HTC    INHUMATUR    CORPUS 

MATTHEl    HALE,    MILITIS; 

ROBERTI    HALE,     ET   JOANNA, 

UXORIS    EJUS,    FILII   UNICL 

NATI   IN   HAC    PAROCHIA   DE   AL- 

DERLY,  PRIMO  DIE  NOVEMBRIS, 

ANNO    DOM.     1609. 

DENATl  VERO  IBIDEM  VICESIMO 

QUINTO   DIE    DECEMBRIS,    AN- 
NO  DOM.     1676. 

./ETATIS   SU^,    LXVIL 

Haying  thus  given  an  account  of  the  moft  rc- 
inarkable  things  of  his  life,  i  am  now  to  prefent 
the  reader  with  fuch  a  character  of  him,  as  the 
la)ing  his  fcveral  virtues  together  will  amount  to  : 
in  which  I  know  how  dilHcuk  a  talk  I  undertake; 
for  to  write  defe£lively  of  him,  were  to  injui-e  him, 

and 


€o  The  Life  and  Death  of 

and  leffeii  the  memory  of  one  to  whom  I  intend 
to  do  all  the  right  that  is  in  my  power.  On  the 
other  hand,  there  is  fo  much  here  to  be  commen- 
ded, and  propofed  for  the  imitation  of  others,  that 
I  am  afraid  fome  may  imagine,  I  am  rather  making 
a  pi£lure  of  him,  from  an  abflra6led  idea  of  great 
virtues  and  perfe£lions,  than  fetting  him  out,  as 
he  truly  was:  but  there  is  great  encouragement 
in  this,  that  I  write  concerning  a  man  fo  frefh  in 
all  peoples  rememberance,  that  is  fo  lately  dead, 
and  was  fo  much  and  fo  well  known,  that  I  Ihall 
have  many  vouchers,  who  will  be  ready  to  juflify 
me  tn  all  that  I  am  to  relate,  and  to  add  a  great 
^eal  to  what  I  can  fay. 

It  has  appeared  in  the  account  of  his  various 
learning,  how  great  his  capacities  were,  and  how 
much  they  were  improved  by  conftant  ftudy.  He 
Tofe  always  early  in  the  morning,  he  loved  to  walk 
much  abroad,  not  only  for  his  health,  but  he 
thought  it  Opened  his  mind,  and  enlarged  his 
thoughts  to  have  the  creation  of  God  before  his 
eyes.  When  he  fet  himfelf  to  any  ftudy,  he  ufed 
to  caft  his  defign  into  a  fcheme,  which  he  did  with 
a  great  exa£lnefs  of  method  ;  he  took  nothing  on 
truft,  but  perfued  his  enquires  as  far  as  they  could 
«:o,  and  as  he  was  humble  enough  to  confefs  his 
ignorance,  and  fubmit  to  myfteries  which  he  could 
not  comprehend,  fo  he  was  not  eafily  impofed  on, 
by  any  fliews  of  reafon,  or  the  bugbears  of  vulgar 
opinions.  He  brought  all  his  knowledge  as  much 
to   fcientifical    principles,    as   he   poflibly  could, 

which 


5/r  MATTHEW   HALE.       6i 

■which  made  him  neglecSl  the  ftudy  Of  tongues,  for 
the  "bent  of  his  mind  lay  another  w^y.     Difcour- 
fing  once  of  this  to  fome,  they  faid,  "  they  looked 
*'  on  th^  common  law,  as  a  ftudy  that  could  not 
"  be  brought  into  a  icheme,  nor   formed  into  a 
"  rational  fcience,  by  reafon  of  the  indigeftednefs 
"  of  it,  and   the   multiplicity  of  the  cafes   in  it, 
"  which  rendered  it  very  hard  to  be  underftood, 
*'  or  reduced  into  a  method  ;"  hut  he  faid,  "  he 
*'  was  not  of  their  mind,"    and  fo  quickly  after," 
he   drew    with    his    own  hand,  a  fcheme  of  the 
whole  order  and  parts  of  it,  in  a  large  ftieet  of 
paper,  to  the  great  fatisfadtion  of  thofe  to  whom 
he  fent  it.     Upon  this  hint,  fome  preffed  him  to 
compile    a   body  of  the   Engliih    law.      It    cou]4 
hardly  ever  be  done  by  a  man  who  knew  it  better, 
and  would  with  more  judgment  and  induftry  have 
put  it  into  method  j  but  he  faid,  "  as  it  was  a  great 
*'  and  noble  defign,  whicli  would   be  of  vaft  ad- 
"  vantage  to  the  nation  ;  fo  it  was  too  much  for 
**  a  private  man  to  undertake  :  it  was  not  to  b^ 
''  entered  upon,  but  by  the  commarid  of  aprmce, 
**  and  with  the  communicated  endeavours  of  fooit 
'*  of  the  moft  eminent  of  the  profefllon.'' 

He  had  great  vivacity  in  his  fancy,  as  may  ap- 
pe?ir  by  his  inclination  to  poetry,  and  the  lively 
illuftratious,  and  many  tender  drains  in  his  con- 
templations ;  but  he  look'd  on  eloquence  and  wit, 
-as. things  to  be  ufed  very  ghaftly,  in  ferious  mat- 
ters, which  Ihould  come  under  a  feverer  enquiry  ; 
therefore  he  was  both,  when  at  the  bar,  and  on 

the 


62  Tke  Life  mid  Death   cf 

the  bench,  a  great  enemy  to  all  eloqneiice  or  rhe- 
toric in  pleading  :   he  faid,  "  If  the  judge  or  jury" 
•'  had  a  right  underftanding,  it  fignificd  nothing, 
**  but  a  wafte  of  time,  and  lofs  of  words  ;  and  if 
*'  they  were  weak,  and  eafily  wrought  on,  it  was 
••  a  more    decerit    way    of  corrupting    them,    by 
*'  bribing  their  fancies,  and  byafuig  their   afFe£li- 
"  ons  i"  and  wojidered  much  at  that  afFctStation' 
of  the  Fiench   lawyers   in   imitating    the   RortnaiV 
orators  in  their  pleadings.     For  the  oratory  of  the' 
Romans,  was  occafioned  by  their  popular  govern- 
ment, and  the   factions  of  the  city,  fo   that  thofe 
■who  intended  to  excel!  in  the  pleading  of  caufes, 
were  trained  up  in  the  fchools  of  the  Rhetors,  till 
chey  became  ready  and  expert  in  that  lufcious  w^y 
of  drfcourfe.     It  is  true,  the  compofures  of  fuch 
a  man  as  Tully  was,  who  mixed  an  extraordinary 
quicknefs,  an  exa6t  judgment,  and  a  juft  decorum 
with  his  (kill  in  rhetoric,  do  (till  entertain  the  rea- 
ders of  them  with  great  pleafure :  but  at  the  fame 
time  it  mvift  be   acknowledged,  that  there  is  not 
that  chaftity  of  flile,  that  clofenefs  of  reafoning, 
jior  that  juitnefs  of  figures  in  his  orations,    that 
i«  in  his  other  writings  j  fo  that  a  great  deal  was 
faid  by  him,  rather  becaufe  he  knew  it  would  be 
acceptable  to  his  auditors,  than   that  it'  was  ap- 
proved of  by  himfelf ;  and  all  who  read  them,  will 
acknowledge,   they    are  better  pleafcd  with   them 
as  eflays  of  v/it  and  ftile,    than   as  pleadings,    by 
which  fuch  a  judge  as   ours   was,   would  not  be 
i*iuch  wrouglit  on.     A.iul  it  there  are  fuch  gcounds 

w 


^/>   MATTHEW   HALE.         ^^ 

to  cenfure  the  performances  of  the  greatcft  mafter 
in  eloquence^  we  may  eafily  infer  what  naufcous 
diicourfes  the  other  orators  made,  fince  in  oratory^ 
as  well  as  in  poetry,  none  can  do  indifferently.  So 
our  judge  wondered  to  find  the  French,  that  livd 
under  a  monarchy,  fo  fond  of  imitating  that  which 
was  an  ill  efFe6t  of  the  popular  government  of  Rome. 
He  therefore  pleaded  himfelf  always  in  few  words^ 
and  home  to  the  point:  and  when  he  was  a  judge, 
he  held  thofe  that  pleaded  before  him,  to  be  the 
main  hinge  of  the  bufmefs,  and  cut  them  ihon; 
when  they  made  excurfions  about  circumftances  of 
no  moment,  by  which  he  faved  much  time,  andl 
made  the  chief  difficulties  be  well  ftated  and,- 
icl  eared. 

There  was  another  cufl:on%  among  the  R.omans„ 
which  he  as   much  admired,  as  he  defpifed  their 
rhetoric,  which  was,  that  the  juiis-confults  were 
the  men  of    the  highcft  quality,  who  were  bred 
to  be  capable  of  the  chief  cmplo)ment  in  the  ilate^ 
and  became  the  great  mailers  of  their   law  ;    thefs' 
gave  their  opinions  o-f  all  cafes  that   were  put  to 
them  freely,   judging  it  below  them  to  tak.e  ciny 
prefcnt  for  it  j  and  indeed  they  were  the  ordy  true,. 
lawyers  among  them,  whofe  refoluUQn.s  were  of 
that  authority,  that  they  mad^J  one  claflis  of  tiiofe;) 
materials  out  of  which  TrchQnian  compiled  the 
digefts  under  JulKnian;  for  the  or'atqrs  or  caulidiv.i 
that  pleaded  caufes,  knew  littU  of  the  law,  and 
only  employed  thejr  mercenary  tangues,  to  wo.ik 
Qii  the  aS'edlions- of  the  people,  ^n4  f'^fJ'i't-  <^''  ^^^^ 

yretvrb,: 


64  5"^^  Life  and  Death  of 

^retars  :  even  in  moft  of  Tully's  orations  there  is 
little  of  law,  and  that  little  which  they  might 
iprinkle  in  their  declamations,  they  had  not  from 
their  own  knowledge,  but  the  refolution  of  fome- 
juris-confult :  according  to  that  famous  ftory  of 
Servius  Sulpitius,  who  was  a  celebrated  orator,  and 
beino;  to  receive  the  refolution  of  one  of  thofe 
that  were  learned  in  the  law,  was  fo  ignorant, 
tibat  he  could  not  underhand  it  ;  upon  which  the 
juris-confult  reproached  him,  and  faid,  "  it  was 
*'  a  fliame  for  him  that  was  a  nobleman,  a  fena- 
*'  tor,  and  a  pleader  of  caufes,  to  be  thus  ignorant 
**  of  law  :"  this  touched  him  fo  fenfibiy,  that  he 
fet  about  the  fludy  of  it,  and  became  one  of  the, 
moft  eminent  juris-confults  that  ever  were  at 
Rome.  Our  judge  thought  it  might  become  the 
greatnefs  of  a  prince,  to  encourage  fuch  fort  of 
men,  and  of  fludies  ;  in  which,  none  in  the  age 
he  lived  in  was  equal  to  the  great  Selden,  who 
was  truly  in  our  Englifh  lav.',  what  the  old  Roman 
juris-confults  were  in  theirs. 

But  where  a  decent  eloquence  was  allowable, 
judge  Hale  knew  how  to  have  excelled  as  much 
as  any,  either  in  illuftrating  his  reafonings,  by 
proper  and  well  purfued  fimilies,  or  by  fuch  tender- 
expreffions,  as  might  work  mofl  on  the  affeilions, 
fo  that  the  prefent  lord  chancellor,  has  often  faid 
of  him  fuice  his  death,  that  he  was  the  greateft 
orator  he  had  knov/n  ;  for  though  his  words  came 
not  fluently  Irom  him,  yet  when  they  were  out, 
they   were   the   mo-ll  fignificajit,    and  expreilive, 

that 


Sir  MATTFIEW   HALE.         65 

that  the  matter  could  bear  ;  of  this  fort  there  are 
many  in  his  contemphitions  made  to  quicken  his 
own  devotion,  which  have  a  life  in  them  becom- 
ing him  that  ufed  them,  and  a  foftnefs  fit  to  melt 
even  the  harfheft  tempers,  accommodated  to  the 
gravity  of  the  fubje^t,  and  apt  to  excite  warm 
thoughts  in  the  readers,  that  as  they  fhew  his  ex- 
cellent temper  that  brought  them  out,  and  applied 
them  to  himfelf,  fo  they  are  of  great  ufe  to  all, 
who  would  both  inform  and  quicken  their  minds. 
Of  his  illuftrations  of  things  by  proper  fimilies, 
I  fhall  give  a  large  inftance  out  of  his  book  of 
the  origination  of  mankind,  defigned  to  expofe 
the  feveral  different  hypothefes  the  philofophers 
fell  on,  concerning  the  eternity  and  original  of 
the  univerfe,  and  to  prefer  the  account  given  by 
Mofes,  to  all  their  conjedlures ;  in  which,  if  my 
tafte  does  not  mifguide  me,  the  reader  will  find  a 
rare  and  very  agreeable  mixture,  both  of  fine  wit, 
and  folid  learning  and  judgment. 

[  "  That  which  may  illuftrate  my  meaning,  in 
this  preference  of  the  revealed  light  of  the  holy 
fcriptures,  touching  this  matter,  above  the  efTays 
of  a  philofophical  imagination,  may  be  this.  Sup- 
pofe  that  Greece  being  unacquainted  with  the 
curiofity  of  mechanical  engines,  though  known  in 
fome  remote  region  of  the  world,  and  that  an 
excellent  artifl;  had  fecretly  brought  and  depofited 
in  fome  field  or  foreft,  fome  excellent  watch  or 
clock,  which  had  been  fo  formed,  that  the  origi- 
jial   of  its   motion   were  hidden,  and   involved   in 

F  fome 


66  The  Life  and  Death  of 

ibme  clofe  contrived  piece  of  mechanifm,  that  this 
watch    v/as   (o    franiei,    that  the  motion    thereot 
might  have  laflred  a  year,  or  fome  fucli  time   as- 
Kiight  give  a  reafonable  period*  far  their  pbilofophi- 
cal  difcanting  concerning  it,  and  that  in  the  plaiiv 
table  there   had  been  not   only  the   defcription  and 
indication  of   hours,    but  the  configurations  and 
indications  of  the  various  phafes  of  the  moon,  the 
motion  and  place  of  the  fun   in*  the  ecliptic,  and 
divers   other   curious   indications   of  celeftial    mo- 
tions, and   that  the  fcholars  of  the  feveral  fchools 
of  Epicurus,  of  Ariftotle,  of  Plato,    and  the   rcfi 
of  thofe  philofophical  fedls,,  had  cafually  in  their 
walk,  found  this  admirable  automaton  ;  what  kind 
of  work   would  there  have  been   made  by  every 
feft,  in  giving   an  account  of  this  phenomenon  ^ 
We  lliould  have  had  the  Ej.icureaa  feci  have  told 
the    byftanders,,   according  to   their    prcconcei\'ed 
hypothcfis,,  that  this  was  nothing  elfe  but  an  acci- 
dental concretion  of   atoms,,   that  happily   falling, 
together  had  made  up  the  index,  the   wheels,  and: 
the  ballancey  and    that    being  happiJy  fallen   into 
this  pofture,  they  were  put  into  motion.     Theru 
the  Cartefian  falls  in  with  him,  as  to  the  main  of 
their   fuppofition,  bat  tells  him,  that  he  doth  not 
fufficiently  explicate  how   the  engine  is   put  into 
Miotion,  and  therefore  to  furnifh  this  motion,  there 
13  a  certain,  materia  fubtilis  that  pervades  this  en- 
gine, and  the  moveable  parts,  confilling  of  certaia 
plobular   atoms  apt  for  motion,  they   are  thereby^, 
and  by  the  mobility  of  the  globular  atoms  put  into- 

raotioii. 


Sir  MATTHEW  HALE.        67 

motion.     A  third   finding  fault  with  the  two  for- 
mer, becaufe  thofe  motions  are  fo  regular,  and  do 
exprefs  the  vai  ious   phenomena  of  the  diftribution 
of  time,  and  of  the  heavenly  motions ;  therefore 
it  feems  to  him,  that  this  engine  and  motion  alfo, 
fo  analogical  to  the  motions   of  the  heavens,  was 
wrought   by   fome   admirable   conjun6lion  of   the 
heavenly  bodies,  which  formed  this  inftrument  and 
its  motions,  in  fuch  an  admirable  correfpondency 
to  its  own  exiftence.     A  fourth,  difliking  the  fup- 
pofitions  of  the  three  former,    tells  the  reft,  that 
he  hath  a  more  plain  and  evident  folution  of  the 
phenomenon,    namely,   the  univerfal  foul  of  the 
world,  or   fpirit  of  nature,  that  formed   fo  many- 
forts  of    infetfls  with  fo  many  organs,   faculties, 
and    fuch  congruity  of  their  whole  compofition, 
and  fuch   curious  and  various  motions  as  we  may 
obferve  in  them,  hath  formed  and  fet  into  motion 
this   admirable  automaton,  and  regulated   and  or- 
dered it,  with  all  thefe  congruities  we  fee  in   it. 
Then  fteps   in  an  Ariftotelian,    and    being  diiTa- 
tisfied   with  all  the  former  folutions,  tells   them, 
gentlemen,   you  are  all   miftaken,  your  folutions 
are  inexplicable  and  unfatisfadlory,  you  have  taken 
up  certain   precarious  hypothefes,  and   being   pre- 
poftefled  with  thefe  creatures  of  your  own  fancies, 
and  in  love  with  them,  right  or  wrong,  you  form 
all  your  conceptions  of  things   according  to  thofe 
fancied  and  preconceived  imaginations.    The  fhort 
of  the  bufinefs-is,  this  machina  is  eternal,  and   fo 
are  all  the   motions  of  it,  and  in  as   much  as  a 

Y  2  circular 


63  ^he  Life  and  Death  of 

circular  motion  hath  no  beginning  or  end,  thi'3 
motion  that  you  fee  both  in  the  wheels  and  index, 
and  the  lucceffive  indications  of  the  celeflial  mo-' 
tions,  is  eternal,  and  without  beginning.  And 
this  is  a  ready  and  expedite  way  of  folving  the 
phenomena,  without  fo  much  ado  as  you  have 
made  about  it. 

And  whilft  all  the  mafters  were  thus  contrivirig 
the  folution  of  the  phenomenon,    in  the  hearing 
of  the  artift  that  made  it,  and  when  they   had  all 
fpent  their  philofophizing  upon   it,  the  artift   that 
made  this  engine,  and  all  this  while  liftened  to  their 
admirable    fancies,    tells    them,     gentlemen,    you 
have  difcovered  very  much  excellency  of  invention 
touching  this  piece  of  work  that  is   before  you, 
but  you  are  all  miferably  miftaken :  for   it  was  I 
that  made  this  watch,  and  brought  it  hither,  and 
I  will  fhew  you  how  I  made  it.     Firft,  I  wrought 
the  fpring,  and  the  fufee,  and  the  wheels,  and  the 
ballance,  and  the  cafe,  aJid   table  ;    I  fitted  them 
one  to  another,  and  placed  thefe  feveral   axes  that 
are  to  direct  the  motions  of  the  index  to  difcover 
the  hour  of  the  day,  of  the  figure  that  difcovers 
the  phafes  of   the  moon,    and  the  other  various 
motions  that  ypu  fee  j  and  then  I  put  it  together, 
and  wound  up  the  fpring,  which  hath  given   all 
thefe  motions,  that  you  fee  in  this  curious  piece  of 
work,  and  that  you  may  be  fure  I  tell  you  true, 
I  will  tell  you  the  whole  order  and  progrefs  of  my 
making,  difpofing,  and  ordering  of  this  piece  of 
work  i   the  feveral  materials  of  it,  the  manner  of 

the 


^;>   MATTHEW  HALE.      69 

the  forming  of  every  ind!\'idual  part  of  it,  and 
how  long  I  was  about  it.  This  plain  and  evident 
difcovery  renders  all  thefe  excogitated  hypothefes 
of  thofe  philofophical  enthufiafts  vain  and  ridicu- 
lous, without  any  great  help  of  rhetorical  flourifties, 
or  logical  confutations.  And  much  of  the  fame 
nature  is  that  difparity  of  the  hypothefes  of  the 
•learned  philofophers  in  relation  to  the  origination 
of  the  world  and  man,  after  a  great  deal  of  duft 
raifed,  and  fanciful  explications  and  unintelligible 
hypothefes.  The  plain,  but  divine  narrative,  by 
the  hand  of  Mofes,  full  of  fenfe,  and  congruity, 
and  clearnefs,  and  rcafonablenefs  in  itfelf,  does  at 
the  fame  moment  give  us  a  true  and  clear  difco- 
very  of  this  great  miftery,  and  renders  all  the 
efTays  of  the  generality  of  the  heathen  philofophers 
to  be  vain,  inevident,  and  indeed  inexplicable 
theories,  the  creatures  of  phantafy,  and  imagina-f 
tion,  and  nothing  elf?."  ] 

As  for  his  virtues,  they  have  appeared  fo  con-r 
fpicuous  in  all  the  feveral  tranfadions  and  turns  of 
his  life,  that  it  may  fcem  needlefs  to  add  any  more 
of  them,  than  has  been  already  related;  but  there 
are  many  particular  inftances  which  I  knew  not 
how  to  fit  to  the  feveral  years  of  his  life,  which 
will  give  us  a  clearer  and  better  view  of  hirn. 

He  was  a  devout  chriftian,  a  finccrc  proteflant, 
and  a  true  fon  of  the  church  of  England  ;  mode- 
rate towards  diffenters,  and  juft  even  to  thofe  from 
whom  he  differed  moft  j  which  appeared  figually 
in   the  care   he   took  of   preferving  the  quakcrs 

F  3  from 


70  ^he  Life  and  Death  of 

from  that  mifchief  that  was  like  to  fall  on  theirt, 
by  declaring  their  marriages  void,  and  fo  baflard- 
ing  their  children)  but  he  confidered  marriage  and 
fucceffion  as  a  right  of  nature,  from  which  none 
ought  to  be  barred,  what  miflake  foever  they 
might  be  under,  in  the  points  of  revealed  reli- 
gion. 

And  therefore  in  a  trial  that  was  before  him, 
when  a  quaker  was  fued  for  fome  debts  owing  by 
his  wife  before  he  married  her,  and  the  quaker's 
council  pretended,  that  it  was  no  marriage  that 
had  pail  between  them,  fince  it  was  not  folemnized 
according  to  the  rules  of  the  church  of  England  ; 
he  declared,  that  he  was  not  willing  on  his  own 
opinion  to  make  their  children  baflards,  and  gave 
diredions  to  the  jury  to  find  it  fpecial.  It  was  a 
refleilion  on  the  whole  party,  that  one  of  them  to 
avoid  an  inconvenience  he  had  fallen  in,  thought 
to  have  preferved  himfelf  by  a  defence,  that  if  it 
had  been  allowed  in  law,  muft  have  made  their 
whole  iflue  baftards,  and  incapable  of  fucceffion, 
and  for  all  their  pretended  friendfhip  to  one  an- 
other, if  this  judge  had  not  been  more  their  friend, 
than  one  of  thofe  they  fo  called,  their  pofterity 
had  been  little  beholding  to  them.  But  he  go- 
verned himfelf  indeed  by  the  law  of  the  gofpel,  of 
doing  to  others,  what  he  would  have  others  do  to 
him  ;  and  therefore  becaufe  he  would  have  thought 
it  a  hardfhip  not  without  cruelty,  if  amongft 
papifts  all  marriages  were  nulled  which  had  not 
been  made  with  all  the  ceremonies  in  the  roman 

rituiil, 


J/r  MATTHEW    HALE.         ^i 

ritual,  fo  he  applying  this  to  the  cafe  of  ihe  fec- 
taries,  he  thought  all  marriages  made  according 
to  the  feveral  perfuafions  of  men,  ought  to  have 
tlieir  effeils  in  law. 

He  ufed  conftantly  to  worfhlp  God  in  his  fa- 
mily, performing  it  always  himfelf,  if  there  was 
rso  clergymen  prefent  :  but  as  to  his  private  exer- 
cifes  in  devotion,  he  took  that  extraordinary  care 
to  keep  what  he  did  fccret,  that  this  part  of  his 
character  muft  be  defective,  except  it  be  acknow- 
ledged that  his  humility  in  covering  it,  commends 
him  much  more  than  the  higheft  expreflions  of 
xlevotion  could  have  cone. 

From  the  foft  time  that  the  imprcflions  of  reli- 
gion fettled  deeply  in  his  mind,  he  ufcd  great 
caution  to  conceal  it :  not  only  in  obedience  to 
the  rules  given  by  our  Sav-iour,  of  fading,  praying, 
^and  giving  alms  in  fecret ;  but  from  a  particular 
<lillrufl:  he  had  of  himfclf,  for  he  faid  he  v/a^; 
afraid,  he  fliould  at  fome  time  or  other^  do  fonie 
enormous  thing,  which  if  he  were  look'd  oa  as  a 
very  religious  man,  might  cafi  a  reproach  oi;  the 
profefiio!!  of  ir,  and  give  great  advantages  to  im- 
pious men  to  blaf[)heme  the  -name  of  God  :  but  a 
tree  Is  known  by  its  fruits,  and  he  lived  not  only 
free  of  hlemiflies,  or  fcandal,  but  fliined  in  all  the 
parts  of  his  convcrfation  :  and  perhaps  the  difirufl: 
he  was  in  of  himfelf,  contributed  not  a  little  to 
the  purity  of  his  life,  for  he  being  thereby  obliged 
to  be  more  watchful  over  himfelf,  and  to  depend 
jnore  on   the  aids   of  the  Spirit  of  God,  no  won- 

F  4  dsr 


72  ^he  Life  and  Death  of 

der  if  that  humble  temper  produced  thofe  excellent 
effects  in  him. 

He  had  a  foul  enlarged  and  raifed  above  that 
mean  appetite  of  loving  money,  which  is  generally 
the  root  of  all  evil.  He  did  not  take  the  profits 
that  he  might  have  had  by  his  pradlice  :  for  in 
common  cafes,  when  thofe  who  came  to  afk  his 
council  gave  him  a  piece,  he  ufed  to  give  back  the 
half,  and  fo  made  ten  (hillings  his  fee,,  in  ordinary 
matters  that  did  not  require  much  time  or  ftudy. 
If  he  faw  a  caufe  was  unjuft,  he  for  a  great  while 
would  not  meddle  farther  in  it,  but  to  give  his 
advice  that  it  was  fo  i  if  the  parties  after  that, 
would  go  on,  they  were  to  feejc  another  councel- 
lor,  for  he  would  aflift  none  in  a6ls  of  injuftice. 
If  he  found  the  caufe  doubtful  or  weak  in  point  of 
law,  he  always  advifed  his  clients  to  agree  their 
bufmefs :  yet  afterwards  he  abated  much  of  the 
jfcrupulofity  he  had  about  caufes  that  appeared  at 
firfl  view  unjuft,  upon  this  occafion.  There  were 
two  caufes  brought  to  him,  which  by  the  igno- 
lance  of  the  party  or  their  attorney,  were  fo  ill 
reprefented  to  him,  that  they  feemed  to  be  very 
bad,  but  he  enquiring  more  narrowly  into  them, 
found  they  were  really  very  good  and  juft:  fo  after 
this  he  flackened  rnuch  of  his  former  ftriclnefs,  of 
refufing  to  meddle  in  caufes  upon  the  ill  circuin- 
flances  that  appeared  in  them  at  firft. 

In  his  pleading  he  abhorred  thofe  too  common 
faults  of  mif-reciting  evidences,  quoting  precedents, 
or  books  falfly,   or  aflerting  things  confidently ; 

by 


sir  MATTHEW   IIAI.E.       73 

by  which  ignorant  juries,  or  weak  judges,  are'too 
Oiteix  wrought  on.  He  pleaded  with  the  fame 
finccrity  that  he  ufed  in  the  other  parts  of  his  life^ 
and  ufed  to  fay,  "  it  was  as  great  a  difhonour  as 
*'  a  man  was  capable  of,  that  for  a  little  money 
"  he  was  to  be  hired  to  fay  or  do  othervvife  than 
**  as  he  thousfht  :"  all  this  he  afcribed  to  the  un- 
meafurable  defire  of  heaping  up  wealth,  which 
corrupted  the  fouls  of  fome  that  feenied  otherwifc 
jborn  and  made  for  great  things, 

When  he  was  a  pra61;itioner,  differences  were 
often  referred  to  him,  which  he  fettled,  but  would 
accept  of  no  reward  for  his  pains,  though  oftered 
by  both  parties  together,  after  the  agreement  was 
made  ;  for  he  faid,  *'  in  thofc  cafes  he  was  made 
*'  a  judge,  and  a  juc'ge  ought  to  take  no  money." 
If  they  told  him,  he  loll:  much  of  his  time  in  con- 
fidering  their  bufinefs,  and  fo  ought  to  be  acknow- 
ledged for  it ;  his  anfwer  was,  (as  one  that  heard 
It  told  me,)  "  can  I  fpend  my  time  better,  than 
"  to  make  people  friends  ?  mull  I  have  no  time 
^*  allowed  me  to  do  good  in  ?  " 

He  was  naturally  a  quick  man,  yet  by  much 
prailice  on  himfelf,  he  fubdued  that  to  fuch  a  de- 
gree, that  he  would  never  run  fuddenly  into  any 
conclufion  concerning  any  matter  of  importance. 
Feftina  lente  was  his  beloved  motto,  which  he 
ordered  to  be  engraven  on  the  head  of  his  ftaff, 
and  was  often  heard  to  fay,  "  that  he  had  obferved 
*'  many  witty  men  run  into  great  errors,  becaufe 
'*  they  did  not  give  themfclves  lime  to  think,  but 

"  the 


^4  ^^^  Life  and  Death  of 

**  the  heat  of  ii"nag;inadon  makino;  fome  notions 
*'  appear  in  good  colours  to  them,  they  without 
*'  ftaying  till  that  cooled,  were  violently  led  by 
*'  the  impulfes  it  made  on  them  ;  v/hereas  calm  and 
•'  flow  men,  who  pa'*s  for  dull  in  the  common 
*'  eftimation,  could  fearch  after  truth  and  find  it 
*'  out,  as  with  more  deliberation,  fo  with  greater 
*'  certainty." 

He  laid  afide  the  tenth  penny  of  all  he  got   for 
the  poor,  and  took  gicat  care  to  be  well  informed 
of  proper   obje(3;s  for  his  charities  ;    and   after  he 
%vas  a  judge,  many  of  the  perquefites  of  his  place, 
as  his  dividend  of  the  rule  and  box  money,  were 
fcnt  by  him  to  the  jails  to  difcharge  poor  prifoners, 
who   never  knew   from  whofe  hands  their   relief 
came.     It  is  alfo  a  cuftom  for  the  marfhall   of  the 
king's-bench,  to"prefent  the  judges   of  that  court 
with  a  piece  of  plate  for  a  new-year's  gift,  that  for 
chief  juftice   being  larger  than   the  reft  :  this  he 
intended  to  have  refufcd,  but  the  other  judges  told 
hlfti  it  belonged    to  his  office,  and   the  refufing  it 
would  be  a  prejudice  to  his  fuccefibrs,  fo   he  was 
perfuaded    to  take  it,    but  he   fent  word  to    the 
marflial,    that  inftead   of  plate,    he   fhould  bring 
him  the  value  of  it  in  money,    and  when  he  re- 
ceived it,  he  immediately  fent  it  to  the  prifons,  for 
the   relief  and  difcharge   of  the  poor  there.     He 
ufually  invited   his   poor  neighbours  to  dine   with 
him,  and   made  them  fet  at  table  with  himfelf  j 
and  if  any   of  them  were  fick,  fo  that  they  could 
not  come,  he  would  fend  meat  warm  to  them 


Sir  MATTHEW    HALE.       -j^ 

.!frbm  h;is  table  :    and   he  did  not  only  relieve  the 

poioT  in  his  own    parifh,  but   fent  rupplies  to   the 

.iicighbouring  pariflies,  as   there  was  occafioft   for 

it :  and   he  treated  them   all   with  the  tendernefs 

ahd   familiarity  that  became  one,  who  oonfidered 

■ihey  were   of  the   fame  nature  with  himfelf,  and 

!were  reduced  to  no  other  nccefficies  but  fuch  as  he 

himfelf  might  be  brought  to  :    but   for   common 

bccjorars,  if  any  of  thefe  came  to  him,  as   he  was 

■in  his  walks,   when   he  lived   in  the  country,  he 

would  a(k  fuch   as  were  capable  of  working,  why 

they  went  about  fo  idly  ;  if  they  anfwered,  it  was 

becaufe  they  could   find  no  work,  he  often  fent 

them  to  fome  field,  to  gather  all  the  ftones   in  it, 

and  lay  them  on  fi  heap,  and  then  would  pay  them 

liberally  for  their  pains  :  this  being  done,  he  ufed 

to  fend  his  carts,  and  caufed  them  to  be  carried  to 

fuch  places  of  the  highway  as  needed  mending. 

But  when  he  was  in  town,  he  dealt  his  charities 
very  liberally,  even  among  the  ftreet  beggars,  and 
when  fome  told  him,  that  he  thereby  encouraged 
idlenefs,  and  that  moft  of  thefe  were  notorious 
cheats,  he  ufed  to  anfwer,  "  that  he  believed  moft 
"  of  them  were  fuch,  but  among  them  there  were 
"  fome  that  were  great  objc6ls  of  charity,  and 
*'  prefled  with  grievous  neceiHties  :  and  that  he  had 
"  rather  give  his  alms  to  twenty  who  m.ight  be 
*'  perhaps  rogues,  than  that  one  of  the  other  fort 
fliould    perifh   for   want   of    that    fmall    relief 


a 


•'  which  he  gave  them." 


He 


:fS  'The  Life  and  Death  of 

He  loved  building  much,  which  he  affe(^ed 
chiefly  becaufe  it  employed  many  poor  people  : 
but  one  thing  was  obferved  in  all  his  buildings, 
that  the  changes  he  made  in  his  houfes,  was  al- 
ways from  magnificence  to  ufefulnefs,  for  be 
avoided  every  thing  that  looked  like  pomp  or 
vanity,  even  in  the  walls  of  his  houfes  :  he  had 
good  judgment  in  archite6lure,  and  an  excellent 
faculty  in  contriving  well. 

He  was  a  gentle  landlord  to  all  his  tenants,  and 
was  ever  ready  upon  any  reafonable  complaints, 
to  make  abatements,  for  he  was  merciful  as  well 
as  righteous.  One  inftance  of  this  was,  of  a  wi- 
dow that  lived  in  London,  and  had  a  fmall  eftate 
near  his  houfe  in  the  country  ;  from  which  her 
rents  were  ill  returned  to  her,  and  at  a  coft  which 
Ihe  could  not  well  bear  :  fo  fhe  bemoaned  herfelf 
to  him,  and  he  according  to  his  readinefs  to  affilt 
all  poor  people,  told  her,  he  would  order  his 
ilpward  to  take  up  her  rents,  and  the  returning 
them  Ihould  coft  her  nothing.  But  after  that, 
when  there  was  a  falling  of  rents  in  that  country, 
fo  that  it  was  neceflary  to  make  abatements  to  the 
tenant ;  yet  he  would  have  it  lie  on  himfelf,  and 
made  the  widow  be  paid  her  rent  as  formerly. 

Another  remarkable  inftance  of  his  juftice  an^ 
goodnefs  v/as,  that  when  he  found  ill  money  had 
been  put  into  his  hands,  he  would  never  fuffer  it 
to  be  vented  again ;  for  he  thought  it  was  no 
excufe  for  him  to  put  falfe  money  in  other  peoples 
hands,  becaufe  fome  had  put  it  in  his  :    a  great 

heap^ 


Sir   MATTHEW    HALE.      77 

heap  of  this  he  had  gathered  together,  for  many 
had  fo  far  abufed  his  goodnefs,  as  to  mix  bafe 
money  among  the  fees  that  were  given  him  :  it  is 
like  he  intended  to  have  deftroyed  it,  but  fome 
thieves  who  had  obferved  it,  broke  into  his  cham- 
ber and  Hole  it,  thinking  they  had  got  a  prize  ; 
which  he  ufed  to  tell  with  fome  pleafure,  imagi- 
ning how  they  found  themfelves  deceived,  when 
they  perceived  what  fort  of  booty  they  had  fallen 
on. 

After  he  was  made  a  judge,  he  would  needs  pay 
more  for  every  purchafe  he  made  than  it  was 
worth  ;  if  it  had  been  a  horfe  he  was  to  buy,  he 
would  have  out-bid  the  price  :  and  when  fome  re- 
prefented  to  him,  that  he  made  ill  bargains,  he 
faid,  "  it  became  judges  to  pay  more  for  what 
**  they  bought,  than  the  true  value  ;  that  fo  thofe 
*'  with  whom  they  dealt,  might  not  think  thev 
**  had  any  right  to  their  favour,  by  having  fold 
*'  fuch  things  to  them  at  an  eafy  rate  ;"  and  faid 
it  was  fui table  to  the  reputation,  which  a  judge 
ought  to  preferve,  to  make  fuch  bargains,  that  the 
world  might  fee  they  were  not  too  well  ufed  upon 
fome  fecret  account. 

In  fum,  his  eftate  did  fhevv  how  little  he  had 
minded  the  raifmg  a  great  fortune,  for  from  a  hun- 
dred pounds  a  year,  he  raifed  it  not  quite  to  nine 
hundred,  and  of  this  a  very  confiderable  part 
came  in  by  his  Ihare  of  Mr.  Selden's  eftate ;  yet 
this,  confidering  his  great  pradice  while  a  coun- 
fellor,    and    his     conftant,    frugal,    and    modeft 

W.'.V 


7^  The  Life  and  Death   of 

VfAy  of  living,    was  but  a  fmall  fortune.     In   the 
ihare   that  fell  to  him   by  Mr.   Selden's  will,  one 
memorable  thing  was  done  by  him,  with  the  other 
executors,  by  which  they  both  fhewed  their  regard 
to  their  dead  friend,  and  their  love  of  the  public. 
His  library  was  valued  at  fome  thoufands  of  pounds> 
and  was  believed  to  be  one  of  the  curioufeft  col- 
lections in  Europe ;  fo  they  refolved   to  keep  this 
intire,  for  the  honour  of  Selden's   memory,    and 
gave  it  to  the  univerfity  of  Oxford,  where  a  nobI« 
room  was  added  to  the  former  library  for  its   re- 
ception, and  all  di-e  refpeds  have  been  fmce  (hew- 
ed by  that  great  and  learned  body,  to  thofe  their 
worthy    benefa(Sfors,    who     not     only    parted    fo 
generoufly   with   this   great  treafure,    but  were  a 
little  put  to  it  how  to  oblige  them,  without  crof- 
ling  the  will   of  their  dead   friend.     Mr.    Selden 
had    once    intended    to  give    his    library    to   that 
univerfity,  and  had  left  it  fo  by  his  will ;  but  hav- 
ing occafion  for  a  manufcript,  which  belonged  to 
their  library,  they  afked  of  him  a  bond  of  a  thou- 
sand pounds  for  its  reftitution  ;  this  he  took  fo  ill 
at  their  hands,  that  he  ftruck  out  that  part   of  his 
will  by  which  h-e  had  given  them  his  library,  and 
with  fome  paffion  declared  they  fhould  never  have 
it.     The  executors  ftuck  at  this  a  little,  but  hav- 
ing confidered  better  of  it,  came  to  this  refolution, 
that  they  were  to  be  the  executors  cf  Mr.  Selden's 
will,  and   not  of  his  paffion  ;  fo  they  m.ide   good 
what  he  had  intended  in  cold  blood,  and  paft  over 
what  his  paffioo  had  fuegefled  to  him. 

The 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.      79 

The  parting  with  fo  many  excellent  books, 
would  have  been  as  uneafy  to  our  judge,  as  any 
thing  of  that  nature  could  be,  if  a  pious  regard  to 
his  friend's  memory  had  not  prevailed  over  him  j 
for  he  valued  books  and  manufcripts  above  al. 
tilings  in  the  v/orld.  He  himfelf  had  made  a  great 
and  rare  collection  of  manufcripts  belonging  to 
the  lav7  of  England  j  he  was  forty  years  in  ga- 
thering it :  he  himfelf  faid  it  coft  him-  above 
fifteen  hundred  pounds,  and  calls  it  in  his  will, 
a  treafure  worth  having  and  keeping,  and  not  fit 
for  every  man's  view;  thefe  all  he  left  toLincoln's« 
Inn,  and  for  the  information  of  thofe  who  are 
curious  to  fearch  into  fuch  things,  there  fliall  be 
a  catalogue  of  them  added  at  the  end  of  this 
book. 

By  all  thefe  inftances  it  does  appear,  how 
much  he  was  raifed  above  the  world,  or  the 
love  of  it.  But  having  thus  maftered  things  with- 
out him,  his  next  ftudy  was  to  overcome  his 
own  inclinations.  Ke  was  as  he  faid  himfelf  na- 
turally pafiionate  ;  I  add,  as  he  faid  himfelf,  for 
that  appeared  by  no  other  evidence,  lave  that 
fbmetimes  his  colour  v;ouid  life  a  little;  but  he 
fo  governed  himfelf,  that  thofe  who  lived  long 
about  him,  have  told  me  they  never  faw  him  dif- 
ordered  with  anper,  though  he  met  with  fome 
trials,  that  the  nature  of  man  is  as  little  able  to 
bear,  as  any  whatfoever.  There  was  one  who  did 
him  a  great  injury,  which  it  is  not  neceflary  to 
pxentionj  who  coming  afterwaids  to  him  for  his 

advice 


8o  ^he  Life  and  Death  of 

advice  In  the  fettlement  of  his  eftate,  he  gave  it 
very  frankly  to  him,  but  would  accept  of  no  fee 
for  it,  and  therefore  fhewed  both  that  he  could 
forgive  as  a  chiiftian,  and  that  he  had  the  foul  of 
a  gentleman  in  him,  not  to  take  money  of  one 
that  had  wronged  him  fo  hcinoufly.  And  when 
he  was  afked  by  one,  how  he  could  ufe  a  man  fo 
kindly,  that  had  wro2iged  him  fo  much,  his  an- 
fwer  was,  *'  he  thanked  God  he  had  learned  to 
*'  forget  injuries."  And  befides  the  great  temper 
he  expreffed  in  all  his  public  employments,  in  his 
family  he  was  a  gentle  mailer  :  he  was  tender  of 
all  his  fervants,  he  never  turned  any  away,  ex- 
cept they  were  fo  faulty,  that  there  was  no  hope 
of  reclaiming  them  :  when  any  of  them  had  been 
long  out  of  the  way,  or  had  neglected  any  part 
of  their  duty  ;  he  would  not  fee  them  at  their 
llrft:  coming  home,  and  fometimes  not  till  the  next 
day,  leaft  when  his  difpleafure  was  quick  upon 
him,  he  might  have  chid  them  indecently  ;  and 
when  he  did  reprove  them,  he  did  it  with  that 
fweetnefs  and  gravity,  that  it  appeared  he  was 
more  concerned  for  their  having  done  a  fault,  than 
for  the  offence  given  by  it  to  himfelf :  but  if  they 
became  immoral  or  unruly,  then  he  turned  them 
away,  for  he  faid,  ''  he  that  by  his  place  ought 
"  to  punifli  diforders  in  other  people,  mult  by  no 
"  means  fufFer  them  in  his  own  houfe."  He  ad- 
vanced his  fervants  according  to  the  time  they  had 
been  about  him,  and  would  never  give  occafion 
to    envy    among    them,    by    railing    the   younger 

clerks 


Sir  MATTHEW    HALE.      8r 

clerks  above  thofe  who  had  been  longer  with  him. 
He  treated  them  all  with  great  affection,  rather  as 
a  friend,  than  a  mafler,  giving  them  often  good 
advice  and  inftruclion.  He  made  thofe  who  had 
good- places  under  him,  give  fome  of  their  profits 
to  the  other  fervants  who  had  nothing  but  their 
wa2;es.  When  he  made  his  will,  he  left  legacies 
to  every  one  of  them  ;  but  he  exprefled  a  more 
particular  kindnefs  for  one  of  them  Robert  Gibbon, 
of  t|ie  Middle  Temple,  Efq;  in  whom  he  had  that 
confidence,  that  he  left  him  one  of  his  executors, 
I  the  rather  mention  him,  becaufe  of  his  noble 
gratitude  to  his  worthy  benefactor  and  mafter,  for 
he  has  been  fo  careful  to  preferve  his  memory,  that 
as  he  fet  thofe  on  me,  at  whofe  defire  I  undertook 
to  write  his  life  ;  fo  he  has  procured  for  me  a  great 
part  of  thofe  memorials,  and  informations,  out  of 
which  I  have  compofed  it. 

The  judge  was  of  a  moft  tender  and  compafli- 
onate  nature.  This  did  eminently  appear  in  his 
trying  and  giving  fentence  upon  criminals,  in 
which  he  was  ftridly  careful,  that  not  a  circum- 
ftance  ftiould  be  neglecSled,  which  might  any  way 
clear  the  fa£t.  He  behaved  himfelf  with  that  re- 
gard to  the  prifoners,  which  became  both  the 
gravity  of  a  judge,  and  the  piety  that  was  due  to 
men,  whofe  lives  lay  at  flake,  fo  that  nothing  of 
jeering  or  unreafonable  feverity  ever  fell  from  hira. 
He  alio  examined  the  witnefles  in  the  fofteft  manner, 
taking  care  that  they  fhould  be  put  under  no  cofi- 
fufion,  which  might  diforder  their  memory  :  and 

Q  he 


Si  ^'he  Life  and'  "Death  of 

he  fummed  all  the  evidence  fo  equally  when  he 
charged  the  jury,  that  the  criminals  themfelves 
never  complained  of  him.  When  it  came  to 
him  to  give  fentence,  he  did  it  with  that  com- 
pofednefs  and  decency,  and  his  fpeeches  to  the 
prifoners,  directing  them  to  prepare  for  death, 
were  fo  Vv'eighty,  lb  free  of  all  afFe6lation,  and  fo- 
ferious  and  devout,  that  many  loved  to  go  to  the 
trials,  when  he  fat  judge,  to  be  edified  by  his- 
fpeeches,  and  behaviour  in  them,  and  ufed  to  fay,, 
they  heard  very  few  fuch  fermons. 

But  though  the  pronouncing  the  fentence  of 
death  was  a  piece  of  his  employment,  that  went 
moft  againft  the  grain  with  him  ;  yet  in  that,  he 
could  never  be  mollified  to  any  tendernefs  which 
hindered  juftice.  When  he  was  once  prefled  to 
recommend  fome  (whom  he  had  condemned)  to 
his  majefty's  mercy  and  pardon  j  he  anfwered,  he 
could  not  think  they  deferved  a  pardon,  whom  he 
himfelf  had  adjudged  to  die  :  fo  that  all  he  would 
do  in  that  kind,  was  to  give  the  king  a  true  ac- 
count of  the  circumftances  of  the  fa6l,  after  which,, 
his  majcfty  was  to  confider  whether  he  would 
interpofe  his  mercy,  or  let  juftice  take  place. 

His  mercifulnefs  extended  even  to  his  beafts,, 
for  when  the  horfes  that  he  had  kept  long,  grew 
old,  he  would  not  fuffer  them  to  be  fold,  or  much 
•wrought,  but  ordered  his  men  to  turn  them  loofe  on 
his  grounds,  and  put  them  only  to  eafy  work,  fuch 
as  going  to  market  and  the  like  ;  he  ufed  old  dogs 
alfo  with  the  fame  care  :   his  fliepherd  having  one 

that 


Sir  MATTHEW  HALE.         83 

'  that  was  become  blind  with  age,  he  intended  to 
have  killed  or  loft  him,  but  the  judge  coming  to 
hear  of  it,  made  one  of  his  lervants  bring  him 
home  and  feed  him  till  he  died  :  and  he  was  fcarce 
ever  feen  more  angry  than  with  one  of  his  fervants 
for  ncgle£ling  a  bird,  that  he  kept,  fo  that  it  died 

for  want  of  food. 

He  was  a  great  encourager  of  all  young  perfons, 
that  he  faw  followed  their  books  diligently,  to 
whom  he  ufed  to  give  dire6lions  concerning  the 
method  of  their  ftudy,  with  a  humanity  and  fweet- 
ncfs,  that  wrought  much  on  all  that  came  near 
him  ;  and  in  a  fmiling  pleafant  way,  he  would 
admonifh  them,  if  he  faw  any  thing  amifs  in  them: 
particularly  if  they  went  too  fine  in  their  clothes, 
he  would  tell  them,  it  did  not  become  their  pro- 
fefllon.  He  was  not  pleafed  to  fee  ftudents  wear 
long  perriwigs,  or  attomies  go  with  fwords  ;  fo 
that  fuch  young  men  as  would  not  be  perfuaded 
to  part  with  thofe  vanities,  when  they  went  to  him 
laid  them  afide,  and  went  as  plain  as  they  could, 
to  avoid  the  reproof  which  they  knew  they  might 
otherwife  expert.  ^'"  ^'' 

He  was  very  free  and  communicative  in  his  dif- 
courfe,  which  he  moft  commonly  fixed  on  fome 
good  and  ufeful  fubje£i:,  and  loved  for  an  hour  or 
two  at  night,  to  be  vifited  by  fome  of  his  friends. 
He  neither  faid  nor  did  any  thing  with  affe6lation, 
but  ufed  a  fimplicity  that  was  both  natural  to 
himfclf,  and  very  eafy  to  others  :  and  though  he 
jpever  fludied  the  modes  of  civility  pr  court  breed- 

G  2  ing, 


$4-  5"^^  Life  and  Death  of 

ing,  yet  he  knew  not  what  it  was  to  be  rude  or 
harfli  with  any^  except  he  were  impertinenilv  ad- 
dreffed  to  in  mattery  of  juftice,  then  he  woiJ.l  i:\lCe 
his  voice  a  little,  and fo  (hake  off  thofe  importunities. 

In  bis  furniture,  and  the  fervice  of  his  table, 
and  way  of  living,  he  liked  the  old  plainnefs  fo 
well,  that  as  he  would  fet  up  none  of  the  new 
fafhions,  fo  he  rather  affe6led'  a  coarfenefs  in  the 
ufe  of  the  old  ones  ;  which  was  more  the  effedl  of 
his  philofophy  than  difpcfition,  for  he  loved  fiue 
things  too  much  at  fir  ft.  He  v/as  always  of  an 
equal  temper,  rather  ch earful  than  merry  ^  many 
wondered  to  fee  the  evennefs  of  his  deportment, 
in  fome  very  fad  paflages  of  his  life. 

Having  loft  one  of  his  fons,  the  manner  of 
whofe  death  had  grievous  circumftances  in  it;  one 
coming  to  fee  him  and  condole,  he  faid  to  bim, 
"  thofe  were  the  effects  of  living  long,  fuch  muft 
"  look  to  fee  many  fad  and  unacceptable  things  ;" 
and  having  faid  that,  he  went  to  other  difcourfes, 
with  his  ordinary  freedom  of  mind  ;  for  though 
he  had  a  temper  fo  tender,  that  fad  things  were 
apt  enough  to  make  deep  impreffion  upon  him,  yet 
the  regard  he  bad  to  the  wifdom  and  providence 
oi  God,  and  the  juft  eftimate  he  made  of  external 
things,  did  to  admiration  maintain  the  tranquility 
pf  his  mind,  and  he  gave  no  occafion  by  idlenefs 
to  melancholly  to  corrupt  bis  fpiiit,  but  by  the 
perpetual  bent  of  bis  thoughts,  be  knew  well  bow 
to  divert  them  from  being  opprefied  with  the  ex- 
cclles  of  forrowi 

He 


^'/r   MATTHEW    HALE.       85 

He  had  a  generous  and  noble  idea  of  God  in  his 
mind,  and  this  he  found  did  above  all  other  confi- 
derations  preferve  his  quiet  :  and  indeed  that  was 
fo  well  eftablifhed  in  him,  that  no  accidents,  how 
fudden  foever,  were  obferved  to  difcompofe  him. 
Of  which  an  eminent  man  of  that  profeffion,  gave 
me  this  inftance  :  in  the  year  16&6,  an  opinion 
tlic)  run  through  the  nation,  that  the  end  of  the 
world  wojild  come  that  year.  This,  whether  fet 
on  by  aftrologers,  or  advanced  by  thofe  who 
thought  it  inight  have  fome  relation  to  the  number 
of  the  beaft'  In  the  Revelation,  or  promoted  by 
men  of  ill  defigns,  to  difturb  the  public  peace, 
had  fpread  mightily  among  the  people  ;  and  judge 
Hale  going  that  year  the  weftern  circuit,  it  hap- 
pened, that  as  he  was  on  the  bench  at  the  aflizes, 
a  moft  terrible  florm  fell  out  very  unexpectedly, 
accompanied  with  fuch  fiaflies  of  lightning,  and 
claps  of  thunder,  that  the  like  will  hardly  fall  out 
•in  an  age;  upon  which  a  whifpor  or  rumour  run 
through  the  croud,  that  now  the  world  was  to 
end,  and  the  day  of  judgment  to  begin  ;  and  at 
this  there  followed  a  general  conflernation  m  the 
whole  aflembly,  and  all  men  forgot  the  bufinefs 
they  were  met  about,  and  betook  themfelves  to 
their  prayers  :  this  added  to  the  horror  raifed  by  the 
florm  looked  very  difmally  ;  in  fo  much  that  mv 
author,  a  man  of  no  ordinary  refolution,  and 
fumnefs  of  mind,  confefTed  it  made  a  great  impref- 
fion  on  himfelf.  But  he  told  mc,  that  he  did  obfervc 
the  judge  was  not  a  whit  afFeded,   and  was  going 

G  z  on 


S6  The  Lite  and  Death  of 

on  with  the  bufinefs  of  the  court  in  his  ordinary 
manner  J  from  which  he  made  this  conclufion, 
that  his  thoughts  were  fo  well  fixed,  that  he 
believed  if  the  world  had  been  really  to  end,  it 
would  have  given  him  no  confidcrable  difturbance. 
But  I  fiiall  now  conclude  all  that  I  fhall  fay 
concerning  him,  with  what  one  of  the  greateft 
men  of  the  profeffion  of  the  law,  fent  me  as  an 
abftra<Sl  of  the  character  he  had  made  of  him, 
upon  long  obfervation,  and  much  convcrfe  wiih 
him  :  it  was  fent  me,  that  from  thence,  with  the 
other  materials,  I  might  make  fuch  a  reprefentation 
of  him  to  the  world,  as  he  indeed  deferved  ;  but  I 
jefolved  not  to  fhred  it  out  in  parcels,  but  to  fel  it 
down  intirely  as  it  was  fent  me,  hoping  that  as 
the  reader  will  be  much  delighted  with  it,  fo  the 
noble  perfon  that  fent  it,  will  not  be  offended  with 
me  for  keeping  it  intire,  and  fetting  it  in  the  beft 
light  I  could.  It  begins  abruptly,  being  defigned 
to  fupply  the  defe£is  of  others,  from  whom  I  had 
earlier  and  more  copious  informations. 

"  He  would  never  be  brought  to  difcouife  of 
public  matters  in  private  converfation,  but  in 
queftions  of  law,  when  any  young  lav/yer  put  a 
cafe  to  him  he  was  very  communicative,  efpecially 
while  he  was  at  the  bar  :  but  when  he  came  to 
the  bench,  he  grew  more  rcferv'd,  and  would 
never  fuffer  his  opinion  in  any  cafe  to  be  knou^n, 
till  he  w'as  obliged  to  declare  it  judicially  :  and 
he  concealed  his  opinion  in  great  cafes  fo  carefully, 
that  the  refl  of  the  judges  in  the  fame  court  could 

never 


Sir   MATTHEW   HALE.         87 

never   perceive  it  j    his  reafon  was,  becaufe  every 
judge  ought  to  give  fentence  according  to  his  own 
perfuafion  and  confcience,  and  not   to  be  fwayed 
by  any   refped:  or  difference  to  another  man's  opi- 
4iion  :  and  by  this  means  it  hath  happened  iome 
times,  that  when  all  the  barons  of  the  exchequer 
had  delivered  their  opinions,  and  agreed  in  their 
reafons   and   arguments ;    yet  he  coming  to  fpeak 
lafl,   and    differing  in  judgment   from  them,   hath 
.«xpreffed  himfelf  with  (o  much  weight  and  folidity, 
that   the  barons  have  immediately  retraciied   their 
votes  and  concurred  with  him;     He  hath  fet  as  a 
judge  in  all  the  courts  of  law,  and  in  two  of  them 
as  chief;  but  ftill  wherever  he  fat,  all  bufmefs   oi 
confequence  followed  him,  and  no  man  was  con- 
tent  to  fit  down  by   the  judgment  of  any   other 
■court,  till  the  cafe  were  brought  before  him,  to  fee 
whether  he  were  of  the  fame  mind  :    and   his  opi- 
nion being  once  known,  men  did  readily  acquiefce 
in  it;    and  it  was  very  rarely  feen,  that  any   man 
attempted  to  bring  it  about  again,  and  he  that  did 
So,  did  it  upon  great  difadvantages,  and  was  always 
looked  upon  as  a  very  t:ontentious  perfon  :  fo  that 
what  Cicero  fays  of  Brutus,  did  very  often  happen 
to  him,    ctiam   quos  contra  Jiatti'it  aquos  phcatofque 

dinnfit. 

"  Nor  did    men   reverence  his  judgment   and 

opinion  in  courts  of  law  only,     but  his  authority 

.was   as  great  in   courts   of   equity,  and  the  fame 

jefpecl  and  fubmiflion  was  paid  to  him  tliere  too  ;  ' 

and  this  appeared  not  only  in  his  own  court  of 

G  4  equity 


88  The  Life  and  Death  of 

equity  In  the  exchequer  chamber,  but  in  the  chan-? 
eery  too,  for  thither  he  was  often  called  to  advife 
and  affift  the  lord  chancellor,  or  lord  keeper  for 
the  time  being  ;  and  if  the  caufe  were  of  difficult 
examination,    or    intricated    arid    entangled    with 
variety  of  fettlements,  no  m^n  ever  fhewed  a  more 
clear  and  difcerning  judgment :  if  it  were  of  great  . 
value,,  and  great  perfons  interefted  in   it,  no   man 
ever  fhewed  greater  courage  and  integrity  in  laying 
afide   all  refpe^t  of  perfons  :  when  he  came  to  de- 
liver his  opinion,    he  always  put  his  difcourfc  into 
fuch  a  method,  that  one  part  ga,ve  light  to   the 
other,    and    where    the  proceedings    of    (^hancery 
might  prove  inconvenient  to  the  fubjeil,  he  never 
fpared  to   obferve  and  reprove  them,  and  from  his 
obfervations    and    difcourfes,    the    chancery    hath 
taken   occafion  to   eftablifh   many  of   thofe  rules 
by  which  it  governs  itfelf  at  this  day. 

*'  He  did  look  upon  equity  as  a  part  of  the 
common  law?  imd  one  of  the  grounds  of  it ;  and 
therefore  as  near  as  he  could,  he  did  always  reduce 
it  to  certain  rules  and  principles,  tiiat  men  might 
ftudy  it  as  a  fcience,  and  not  think  the  adminiftra- 
tion  of  it  had  any  thing  arbitrary  in  it.  Thus 
eminent  was  this  man  in  every  ftation,  and  into 
•what  court  foever  he  was  called,  he  quickly  made 
it  appear,  that  he  deferved  the  chief  feat  there. 

*'  As  great  a  lawyer  as  he  was,  he  would  never 
fuffer  the  ftricStnefs  of  law  to  prevail  againft  con- 
fcience;  as  great  a  chancellor  as  he  was,  he  would 
make  ufe  of  all  the  niceties  and  fubtilties  in  law, 

when 


.^/r  MATTHEW   HALE.        89 

when  it  tended  to  fupport  right  and  equity.  But 
nothing  was  more  admirable  in  him,  than  his  pa- 
tience: he  did  not  afFe<5l  the  reputation  of  quicknefs 
and  difpatch,  by  a  hafty  and  captious  hearing  of 
the  councel  :  he  would  bear  with  the  meaneft,  and 
gave  every  man  his  full  fcope,  thinking  it  much 
better  to  loofe  time  than  patience.  In  fumming 
up  of  an  evidence  to  a  jury,  he  would  always  re-r 
quire  the  bar  to  interrupt  him  if  he  did  miftake, 
and  to  put  him  in  mind  of  it,  if  he  did  forget  the 
leaft  circumftance ;  fome  judges  have  been  difturbed 
at  this  as  a  rudenefs,  which  he  always  looked  upon 
as  a  fervice  and  refpe(2  done  to  him. 

*'  His  whole  life  was  nothing  elfe  but  a  conti- 
nual courfe  of  labour  and  induiby,  and   when  he 
could  borrow  any  time  from  the  public  fervice,  it 
was  wholly  employed  either  in  philofophical  or  di- 
vine meditations,  and  even  that  was  a  public  fervice 
too  as  it  hath  proved;  for  they  have  occafioned  his 
writing  of  fuch  treatifes,  as  are  become  the  choiceft 
entertainments   of   wife  and  good   men,    and  the 
world  hath  reafon  to  wifh  that  more  of  them  were 
printed.     He  that  confiders  the  a6live  part  of  his 
life,  and  with  v/hat  unwearied  diligence  and  appli- 
cation  of  mind,     he  difpatched  all   mens  bufmefs 
which  came  under  his  care,  will  wonder  how  he 
could  find  any   time  for  contemplation  ;    he  that 
confiders  again  the  various  ftudies  he  pail  through, 
and  the  many  colledtions  and  obfervations  he  hath 
made,   may   as  juftly   wonder   how  he  could   find 
axiy  time  for  .adion ;  but  no  man  can  wonder  at 

ihe 


90         ^he  Life  and  Death  of 

the  exemplary  piety  and  innocence  of  fuch  a  life 
{o  fpent  as  this  was,  wherein  as  he  was  careful  to 
avoid  every  idle  word,  fo  'tis  manifeft  he  never 
fpent  an  idle  day.  They  who  come  far  fliort  of 
this  great  man,  will  be  apt  enough  to  think  that 
this  is  a  panegyric,  which  indeed  is  a  hiftory,  and 
but  a  little  part  of  that  hiftory  which  was  with 
great  truth  to  be  related  of  him  :  men  who  defpair 
of  attaining  fuch  perfeition,  are  not  willing  to 
believe  that  any  man  elfe  did  ever  arrive  at  fuch  a 
height. 

"  He  was  the  greateft  lawyer  of  the  age,  and 
might  have  had  what  pra6lice  he  plcafed  ;  but 
though  he  did  moft  confcientioudy  affe6l  the  la- 
bours of  his  profeffion,  yet  at  the  fame  time  he 
dcfpifed  the  gain  of  itj  and  of  thofe  profits  which 
he  would  allow  himfelf  to  receive,  he  always  fet 
apart  a  tenth  penny  for  the  poor,  which  he  ever 
difpenfed  with  that  fecrecy,  that  they  who  were 
relieved,  feldom  or  never  knew  their  benefactor. 
He  took  more  pains  to  avoid  the  honours  and  pre- 
ferments of  the  gown,  than  others  do  to  compafd 
them.  His  modefty  was  beyond  all  example,  for 
"where  fome  men,  who  never  attained  to  half  his. 
knowledge,  have  been  puffed  up  with  a  high  con- 
ceit of  themfelves,  and  have  affetSled  all  occafions  of 
raihng  their  own  efteem  by  depreciating  other  men, 
he  on  the  contrary  was  the  moft  obliging  man  that 
ever  pra6lifed  :  if  a  young  gentleman  happened  to 
be  retained  to  argue  a  point  in  law,  where  he  was 
«n  the  contrary  fide,  he  would   very  often  mend 

the 


Sir   MATTHEW    HALE.       91 

the  obje6lIons  when  he  came  to  repeat  them,  and 
always  commend  the  gentleman  if  there  were  any 
room  fcr  it,  and  one  good  word  of  his  was  of 
more  advantage  to  a  young  man,  than  all  the  fa- 
vour of  a  court  could  be." 

Having  thus  far  perfuedhis  hiflory  and  charafler, 
in  the  public  and  exemplary  parts  of  his  life, 
ivithout  interrupting,  the  thread  of  the  relation, 
with  what  was  private  and  domeftic,  I  fhall  con- 
clude with  a  fhort  account  of  thefe. 

He  was  twice  married,  his  firft  wife  was  Ana 
daughter  of  fir  Henry  Moore  of  Faly  in  Berkfhire, 
grandchild  to  fir  Francis  Moore,  ferjeant  at  law ;  by 
her  he  had  ten  children,  the  four  firft  died  }'oung, 
the  other  fix  lived  to  be  all  married  ;  and  he  out- 
lived  them  all,  except  his  eldefl  daughter,  and  his 
youngeft  fon,  who  are  yet  alive. 

His  eldeft  fon  Robert  married  Frances  the 
daughter  of  fir  Francis  Chock,  of  Avington  in 
Berkfhire,  and  they  both  dying  in  a  little  time  one 
after  another  left  five  children,  two  fons  Matthew 
and  Gabriel,  and  three  daughters,  Ann,  Mary, 
and  Frances,  and  by  the  judge's  advice,  they  both 
made  him  their  executor,  fo  he  took  his  grand- 
children into  his  own  care,  and  among  them  fae 
left  his  eftate. 

His  fecond  fon  Matthew,  married  Ann  the 
daughter  qf  Mr.  Matthew  Simmonds,  of  Hilfley, 
in  Glouceflcifliire,  who  died  foon  after,  and  left 
one  fon  behind  him  named  Matthew. 


Hii 


92  The  Life  afid  Death  of 

His  third  fon  Thomas,  married  Rebekah  the 
daughter  of  Chriftian  Le  Brune,  a  Dutch  mer- 
chant, and  died  v/ithout  ifiue. 

His  fourth  fon  Edward,  married  Mary  the 
daughter  of  Edmond  Goodyere,  Efqj  of  Heythorp, 
in  Oxfordfliire,  and  Rill  lives  ]  he  has  two  fons, 
and  three  daughters. 

.  His  eldeft  daughter  Mary,  was  married  to  Ed- 
ward Alderly,  fon  of  Edward  Alderly,  of  Inni- 
fliannon,  in  the-  county  of  Cork  in  Ireland,  who 
dying,  left  her  with  two  fons  and  three  daughters  ; 
flie  is  fmce  married  to  Edward  Stephens,  fon  to 
Edward  Stephens,  Efq;  of  Cherington  in  Glou- 
cefterfliire.  Kis  youngeft  daughter  Elizabeth, 
was  married  to  Edward  Webb,  Efqj  barrifter  at 
law,  {he  died,  leaving  two  children,  a  fon  and  a 
daughter. 

His  fccond  wife  was  Ann,  the  daughter  of  Mr. 
Jofeph  Bifhop,  of  Faly  in  Berkfliire,  by  whom  he 
had  no  children  ;  he  gives  her  a  great  chara6ler 
in  his  will,  as  a  mofl  dutiful,  faithful,  and  loving 
wife,  and  therefore  truftcd  the  breeding  of  his 
grand-children  to  her  care,  and  left  her  one  of 
his  executors,  to  whom  he  joined  fir  Robert  Jenr 
kinfon,  and  Mr.  Gibbon.  .So  much  may  fuffice 
of  thofe  defcended  frorii  him. 

In  after  times,  it  is  not  be  dotrbtcd,  but  it  will 
be  reckoned  no  fmall  honour  to  derive  from  him ; 
and  this  has  made  me  more  particular  in  reckon- 
ing up  his  ifl'ue.  I  fhall  next  give  an  account  of 
the  iflues  of  his  mind,  his  books,  that  are  either 

printed. 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.      93 

printed,    or   remain  in  manufcript ;  for  the  laft  ot 
thefe  by  his    will,    he   has   forbid  the  printing  ot 
any  of  them   after  his   death,    except  fuch  as  he 
fliould  give  order  for  in  his  life  :  but  he  feems  to 
have  changed  his  mind  afterwards,  and  to  have  left 
it   to  the    difcretion  of   his    executors,    which  of 
them  might  be   printctl  :  for  though  he  does   not 
exprefs  that,  yet  he  ordered  by  a  codicil,  "  that  if 
*'  any  book  of  his  writing,  as  well   touching  the 
*'  common  law,  as  other  fubje£ls,  (hould  be  prin-- 
"  ted,    than  what    ihould  be  given  for  the  confi- 
"  deration   of  the   copy,    fhould   be  divided   into 
"  ten  fhares,  of  which    he  appointed  fevcn  to  go 
*'  among  his  fcrvants,  and  three  to  thofe  who  had 
"  copied  them   out,  and  were  to  look   after   the 
**  impreflion."     The  rcafcn,  as  1  have  underflood 
it,   that  made  him  fo  unwilling  to  have  any  of  his 
works    printed    after    his    death,    was,     that    he 
apprehended  in  the  liccnfing  them,    (which   was 
necefTary  before  any  book  could  be  lawfully  prin- 
ted, by  a  law   then  in   force,  but   fince  his   death 
determined)   fome  things  might   have  been   ftruck 
out  or  altered  j  which  he  had  obferved  not  without 
fome  indignation,  had  been  done  to  a  part  of  the 
reports,  of  one  whom  he  had  much  eftcemed. 

This  in  matters  of  law,  he  faid,  might  prove  to 
be  of  fuch  mifchievous  confequences,  that  he 
thereupon  refolved  none  of  his  writings  fhould 
be  at  the  mercy  of  licenfers  j  and  therefore, 
bccaufe  he  was  not  fure,  that  they  fhould  be  pub- 
iiiited  without  expurgations  or  interpolatiuns,    he 

forbade 


54  ^^^  Life  and  Death  of 

forbade  the  printing  any  of  them  ;  in  which  he 
afterwards  made  fome  alteration,  at  leaft  he  gave 
occafion  by  his  codicil,  to  infer  that  he  had  altered 
bis  mind. 

This  I  have  the  more  fully  explained,  that  his 
laft  will  may  be  no  way  mifunderftood,  and  that 
his  worthy  executors,  and  his  hopeful  grand-child- 
len,  may  not  conclude  themfelves  to  be  under  an 
indifpenfible  obligation  of  depriving  the  public  of 
his  excellent  writings.  " 

A  Catalogue   of  all  his  Printed  Books. 

I.   fT^HE    primitive    origination    of    mankind^ 
A.     confidered  and  examined  according  to  the 
liaht  of  nature.  Folio 

2.  Contemplations  moral  and  divine,  part  i.  8vo, 

3.  Contemplations  moral  and  divine,  part  2.  8vo. 

4.  Difficiles  Nugse,  or  obfervations  touching  the 
Torricellian  experiment,  and  the  various  fotutions 
of  the  fame,  efpecially  touching  the  weight  and 
elafticity  of  the  air.   8vo* 

5.  An  ellay  touching  the  gravitation,  or  non- 
gravitation  of  fluid  bodies,  and  the  reafons  thereof, 
Hvo. 

6.'  Obfervations  touching  the  principles  of  na- 
tural m.otions,  and  efpecially  touching  rarefaction, 
and  condenfation  ;  together  with  a  reply  to  certain 
remarks,  touching  the  gravitation  of  fluids.   8vo. 

7.  The  life  and  death  of  Pomponius  Atticus, 
written    by    his    contemporary    and    acquaintance 

Cor- 


Sir   MATTHEW   HALE.      95 

Cornelius  Nepos,  tranflated  out  of  his  fragments ; 
together  with  obf3rvations,  political  and  moral, 
thereupon.  8vo. 

8.  Pleas  of  the  crown,  or  a  methodical  fummary 
<?f  the  principal  matters  relating  to  that  fubjed.  8vo» 

Manuscripts  not  yet  publifhed. 

I,   /CONCERNING  the  fecondary  origination 
V->l  of  mankind.    Fol. 

2.  Concerning  religion,  5  vol.  in  Fol.  viz.  r. 
De  deo.  Vox  metaphyficaj.  pars  i  &  2.  2. 
Pars  3.  Vox  naturse,  providentix,  ethicae,  con- 
fcientiae.  3.  Liber  fextus,  feptimus,  o£lavus. 
4.  Pars  9.  Concerning  the  holy  fcriptures,  their 
evidence  and  authority.  5.  Concerning  the 
truth  of  the  holy  fcriptures,  and  the  evidences 
thereof. 

3.  Of  policy  in  matters  of  religion.  Fol. 

4.  De  anima,  to  Mr.  B.  Fol. 

5.  De  anima,  tranfadions  between  him  and  Mtt 

B.  Fol. 

6.  Tentamina,  de  ortu,  natufa  &  imniortalltate 

animae.  Fol. 

7.  Magnetifmus  magneticus.  Fol. 
■    8.  Magnetifmus  phyficus.  Fol. 

9.  Magnetifmus  divinus. 

10.  De  generatione  animalium  Sc  vegctabilium. 
Fol.  lat. 

11.  Of  the  law  of  nature.  Fol. 

12.  A  letter  of  advice  to  his  grand-children.  4to, 

13.  Placita  coron^e,  7  vol.  Fol. 

13.  Pre- 


gS  i'he  Life  and  Death  of 

14.  Preparatory  notes    concerning  the  right  of 
the  crown.  Fol. 

15.  Incepta  de  juribus  coronae.  Fol.  ■ 

16.  De  prerogativa  regis.  Fol. 

17.  Preparatory    notes    touching    parliarnentary 
proceedings,  2  vol.  4to. 

J  8.  Of  the  jurifdi6tion  of  the  houfe  of  lords,  4to. 

19.  Of  the  jurifdidiion  of  the  admiralty. 

20.  Touching  ports  and  cufloms.  Fol. 

21.  Of    the    right   of   the    fea    and    the   arms 
thereof,  and  cuftoms.  Fol. 

22.  Concerning  the  advancement  of  trade.  4to« 

23.  Of  fiierifFs  account.  Foi. 

24.  Copies  of  evidences.  Fol. 

25.  Mr.  Selden's  difcourfes.  8vo, 

26.  Excerpta  ex  fchedis  Seldenianis. 

27.  Journal  of  the  18  and  21  Jacobi  regis.  4to, 

28.  Great  common   place  book   of  reports  or 
cafes  in  the  law,  in  law  French.  Fol. 

In   Bundles. 

ON  quod  tlbi  fier'i^  &c.  Matth.  vii.  12. 
Touching  punifliments,  in   relation  to  tke 
Socinian  controverfy. 

Policies  of  the  church  of  Rome. 
Concerning  the  laws  of  England. 
Of  the  amendment  of  the  laws  of  England, 
Touching  provifion  for  the  poor. 
Upon  Mr.  Hobbs's  manufcript. 
Concerning    the    time   of   the  abolition  of  the 
Jewifh  laws. 

In 


Sir  MATTHEW    HALE.         ^j 
In  Quarto. 

^md  fit  deus. 

Of  the  ftate  and  condition  of  the  foul  and  body 
after  death. 

Notes  concernino;  matters  of  law. 


o 


To  thefe  I  Ihall  add  the  Catalogue  of  the 
Manuscripts  which  he  left  to  the  Hon. 
Society  of  LincolnVInn,  with  that  part  of 
his  Will  that  concerns  them. 

ITEM,  00  a  tcffimoncp  of  mj)  Ijonouj:  ano 
rcfpcrt  CO  t!)e  _focietp  of  JLincoln'^^SInit, 
Mjzu  3.  Ija5  tlje  grcatett  part  of  mp  education, 
35  gti)^  ano  ijftiucatlj  to  t!;at  Ijouourable  foci^: 
^tj)  tljc  federal  manufcrtpt  IjooHs  coutaineD  \\x 
a  fclj^mttc  aiiue]cen  to  mp  toiil :  tljep  arc  a 
trcafure  tport^  ijabiug;  aim  kccpiuo;,  toijic!)  3| 
i;avie  hzzw  near  fortp  j)ear0  in  gatljcring;,  tuitlj 
ucrp  great  iuiiuarp  ann  erpence.  ^p  uefire  i>, 
ti)at  tljep  Ije  kept  fafe,  auD  all  togetljer,  in 
remembrance  of  me ;  tbep  Uuere  fit  to  be  botinn 
ill  leatijer  ann  djainen,  anu  kept  in  arcljiije^" : 
31  Defire  tljcp  map  not  be  lent  out,  or  nifpofeo 
of  t  bnlp  if  31  Ijappen  Ijereafter  to  l;abe  anp  of 
mp  poflcritp  of  tljat  foeietp,  tbat  oeCreg  to 
tranfccibe  anp  book,  ann  giije  tjerp  pon  cau^ 
tion  to  reftore  it  again  ixi  a  prefireD  time, 
fuel;  a?  t{;e  beucl;eri3  of  tljat  locietv  \\\  coun^ 

H  ^  til 


98  The  Life  and  Death  of 

t\\  (Ijall  appvoUe  of  5  tljeu,  anu  not  otljci'twlifc-, 
onlp  one  l)ook  at  one  tintc  map  lie  lent  out  to 
tfjem  tip  tlje  focictp;  To  tijat  tljeue  lie  no 
more  l)ut  one  l)oah  of  tljcfe  I'ccks  abroau  out 
of  ti;e  librarp  atone  time.  SCljep  are  a  ti-eafure 
tijat  are  not  fit  for  everp  man'0  Uielu  x  nor  is 
cberp  man  capable  of  making  ufe  of  tljem :  onlp 
31  iMoulD  lja\je  notljiuo;  of  tljefe  ibochs  pcintcn* 
hut  intirelp  preferlicD  togetljcr,  for  tlje  ufe 
of  tlje  innu^iiou^  Icarneo  memiierss  of  tljat 
Metp, 

A  Catalogue  of  die  Books  given  by  him 
to  Lincoln's-Inn,  according  to  the  fchedula. 
annexed  to  his  wilJ. 

PLacita  de  teiTJ-pore  regis  Johannis,  i  vol.  ftitcht,. 
Placita  coram  regeE.  i.     2  vol, 

Placita  coram  rege  E.  2.     3  vol. 

Placita  coram  rege  E.  3,  3  vol. 

Placita  coram  rege  R.  2.     i  vol. 

Placita  coram  rege  H.  4.  H  5.      i  vol; 

^acita  de  banco,  E.  i.  ab  amio  i,  ad   annum* 
21..     I  vol. 

ITranfcripts  of  many  pleas,  coram  rege  5c  dc 
banco  E.   i.     i  vol. 

The  pleas  in  the  exchequer,  ftiled  communia, 
from  1  E.  3.  to  46  E.  3.     5  vol. 

Glofe  rolls  of  king  John,  verbatim,  of  the  moll 
material  things,   i  vol. 

The  principal  matters  in  the  clofc  and  patent 

rolls,. 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.       99 

rolls,  of  fJ.  3.  tranfcribed   verbatim,  from  9  H.  3. 
to  56  H.  3.  5  vol.  velum,    marked  K.  L. 

The  principal  matters  in  the  clofe  and  patent 
rolls,  E.  I.  with  feveral  copies  and  abftrads  of 
records,   i  vol.  marked  F. 

A  long  book  of  abftradls  of  records,  by  me. 

Clofe  and  patent  rolls,  from  i  to  10  E,  3,  and 
other  records  of  the  time  of  H.  3.  i  vol.  marked  W. 

Clofe  rolls  of  15  E.  3.  v^^ith  other  records,  i 
▼ol.  marked  N. 

Clofe  rolls  from  17  to  38  E.  3.     2  vol. 

Clofe  and  patent  rolls  from  40  E.  3  to  50  E. 
3.  I  vol.  marked  B. 

Clofe  rolls  of  E.  2.  with  other  records,  i  vol.  R. 

Clofe  and  patent  rolls,  and  charter  rolls  in  the 
lime  of  king  John  for  the  clergy,  i  vol. 

A  great  volume  of  records  of  feveral  natures,  G. 

The  leagues  of  the  kings  of  England,  tempore 
E.  I.  E.  2.  E.  3.     I  vol. 

A  book  of  ancient  leagues  and  military  provifi- 
ons,  I  vol. 

The  reports  of  Iters  of  Derby,  Nottingham,  and 
Bedford,  tranfcribed,   i  vol. 

Itinera  foreft  de  Pickering  &  Lancafter,  tran- 
fcrlpt  ex  original!,   i  vol. 

An  ancient  reading,  very  large,  upon  charta  de 
forcftae,  and  of  the  foreft  laws. 

The  tranfcript  of  the  iter  forefta  de  Dean,  i  vol. 

Quo  warranto  and  liberties  of  the  county  of 
Gloixefter,  with  the  pleas  of  the  chace  of  Kingf- 
wood,  I  vol, 

H  2  Tran^ 


loo  ^hs  Life  and  Death  of 

Tranfcript  of  the  black  book  of  the  admiralty, 
laws  of  the  arniy,  impofitions  and  feveral  honours, 
I  volv 

Records  of  patents,  inquifitions,  &c.  of  the 
county  of  Leicefter,    i  vol. 

Mufter  and  military  provifions  of  all  forts,  ex- 
tracted from  the  records,   i  vol. 

Gervafius  Tilburienfis,  or  the  black  book  of  the 
exchequer,   i  vol. 

The  king's  title  to  the  pre-emption  of  tin,  a 
ihin  vol. 

Calender  of  the  records  in  the  tov^^er,  a  fmall  vol. 

A  mifccllany  of  divers  records,  orders,  and  other 
things   of  various  natures,  marked  E.      i  vol. 

Another  of  the  like  nature  in  leather  cover,  i  vol, 

A  book  of  divers  records  and  things  relating  to 
the  chancery,   r  vol. 

Titles  of  honour  and  pedigrees,  efpecially 
touching  Clifford,   i  vol. 

Hiftory  of  the  marches  of  Wales  colleded  by 
me,  I  vol. 

Certain  collections  touching  titles  of  honour,  i  vol. 

Copies  of  feveral  records  touching  premunire, 
1  vol. 

Extradl  of  commifHons  tempore  H.  7.  H.  8. 
R,  and  the  proceedings  in  the  court  military,  be- 
tween Ray  and  Ramfey,   i  vol. 

Petitions  in  parliament  tempore  E.  i.  E.  2, 
E.   3.  H.  4.     3  vols. 

Summons  of  parliament,  fr»?m  49  H.  3.  to  22 
E,  4.     3  vol. 

The 


Sir  MATTHEW  HALE.      loi 

The  parliament  rolls  from  the  beginning  of  E!, 
I.  to  the  end  of  R.  3.  in  19  volumes,  viz.  i  of 
E.  I.  I  of  E.  2.  vi'ith  the  ordinations.  2  of  E.  3. 
3  of  R.  2.  2  of  H.  4.  2  of  H.  5.  4  of  H.  6. 
3  of  E.  4.     I  of  R.  3.    all  tranfcribcd  at  large. 

Mr.  Elfing's  book  touching  proceedings  in  par- 
liament, I  vol. 

Noye's  collection  touching  the  king's  fupplies, 
I  vol.   ftitcht. 

A  book  of  various  coIleiSllons  out  of  records  and 
regifter  of  Canterbury,  and  claims  at  the  coro- 
nation of  R.  2.     I  vol. 

Tranfcript  of  bifliop  Ufher's  notes,  principally 
concerning  chronology,  3  large  vol. 

A  tranfcript  out  of  dooms-day  book  of  Glou- 
cefterfliire  and  Heiefordfhire,  and  of  fome  pipe-rolls, 
and  old  accompts  of  the  cuftoms,   i  vol. 

Extrads  and  colledlions  out  of  records  touchin-:; 
titles  of  honour,   i  vol. 

Extracts  of  pleas,  patents  and  clofe- rolls,  tem- 
pore H.  3.  E.  1,  E.  2.  E.  3.  and  Ibme  old 
antiquities  of  England,    i  vol. 

ColleClions  and  memorials  of  many  records  and 
antiquities,   i  vol.   Seldeni. 

Calender  of  charters,  and  records  in  the  tower, 
touching  Gloucefterfhire. 

ColleiStion  of  notes  and  records  of  various  na- 
tures, marked  M.  i  vol.  Seldeni. 

Tranfcript  of  the  iters  of  London,  Kent, 
Cornvyall,  i  vol. 

H  3  Ex^. 


102         The  Life  and  Death  of 

Extracts  out  of  the  leiger-books  of  Battell,  Eve- 
fham,  Winton,  &c.    i  vol.  Seldeni. 

Copies  of  the  principal  records  in  the  red  book, 
in  the  exchequer,   i  vol. 

Extracts  of  records  and  treaties,  relating  to  fea 
affairs,   i  vol. 

Records   touching  cuftoms,    ports,   partition  of 
the  lands  of  Gi.  de  Clare,  &c. 

Extra61:  of   pleas  in  the  time  of   R.    i.     king 
John,  E.  1.  he.     i  vol. 

Cartae  antiquae  in  the  tower,  tranfcribed,  in  2 
vol. 

Chronological    remembrances,    extra(£led  out  of 
the  notes  of  bifliop  Ulher,   i  vol.  Hitched. 
Inquifitiones  de  legibus  Walliae,   i  vol. 
Colle61:ions  or  records  touching  knighthood. 
Titles  of  honour.    Seldeni.   i  vol, 
Mathematicks  arid  fortifications,   i  vol, 
ProceiTus  curia  militaris,    i  vol. 
A  book  of  honour  ftitched,   i   vol. 
Extrafls  out  of  the  regiftry  of  Canterbury. 
Copies  of  ftveral   records  touching  proceedings 
in  the  military  court,  i  vol. 

AblhacSls  of  fummons  and  rolls  of  parliament, 
out  of  the  book  Dunelm,  and  fome  records  alpha- 
betically digefted,   I  vol. 

Abftrails  of  divers  records  in  tlie  office  of  firft 
fruits,   I  vol.  flitched. 

Mathematical  and  aftrological  calculations,  i  vol. 
A  book  of  divinity. 

Two 


>3 


Sir  MATTHEW  HALE.     lo: 
Two  large  repofitories  of  records,  marked  A. 

and  B. 

[  All  thofe  above  arc  in  folio.  ] 

The  proceedings  of  the    forefts   of   Windfor, 
Dean,  and  Eflex,  in  4to.   I  vol. 
[  Thofe  that  follow  are  nioft  of  thern   in  vellum 
or  parchment.  ] 

Two  books  of  old  ftatutes,   one   ending  H.  j. 
.the  other  2  H.  5.    with  the  fums,  2  vol. 

Five  laft  years  of  E.   2.      i  vol. 

Reports  tempore  E.  2.     I  vol. 

The  year  book  of  R.  2.  and  fome  others,  i  vol. 

An  old  chronicle  from  the  creation  to  E.  3,   i  vol. 

A   mathematical  book,    efpccially    of  optiouesj 
I  vol. 

A  Dutch  book  of  .geometry  and  fortification. 

Murti  Benevenlani  geometrica,   i  vol. 

Reports  tempore  E.    i.   under  titles,    i  vol. 

An  old  regifter  and  fome  pleas,   1  vol. 

Bernardi  Bratrack  peregrinatio,   I  vol. 

Iter    Cantii    and    London,    and    fome    reports, 
■^tempore  E.  2.    i  vol. 

Reports  tempore  E.  i.  and  E.  2.    I  vol, 

Leicer  book,   Abbatiae  dc  bello. 

Ifidori  opera. 

Liber   altercaticnis,    &  chriftiani:^  philofophae, 
,Contra  paganos. 

Hiftoria  Petri  manducatorii. 

Hornii  aftronomica, 

Hiftoria  ecclefice  Dunelmenfis, 

Holandi  chymica. 

H  4.  D€ 


104  ^he  Life  and  Death  of 

De  alchymije  fcriptoribus. 

The  black  book  of  the  new  law,  collefSlcd  by 
me,  and  digefted  into  alphabetical  titles,  written 
with  my  own  hand,    which  is  the  original  copy, 

MATTHEW    HALE. 
The  Conclusion. 

THUS  lived  and  died  fir  Matthew  Hale,  the 
renowned  lord  chief  juftice  of  England.   He 
had   one  of  the  blellings  of  virtue  in   the   higheft 
i-neafure  of  any  of  the   age,    that  does    not  always 
follow  it,     which   was,    that    he   was    univerfally 
much  valued  and  admired  by  men  of  all  fides  and 
perfuafions.     For  as  none  could  hate  him  but  for 
his   juftice  and  virtues,   fo  the  rrreat   eftimation  he 
was  generally  in,    made,    that  few  durft  undertake 
to  defend   fo   ungrateful  a  paradox,   as   any  thing 
faid  to  leflen  him  would  have  appeared  to  be.     His 
name  is    fcarce   ever   mentioned   fince  his    death, 
without  particular  accents  of  fingular  refue6l.  His 
opinion   in   points    of   law  generally  pafles  as  ^n 
uncontroulable  authority,    and  is  often    pleaded  in 
all   the  courts  of  juftice  :    and  all   that  knew  him 
well,  do  ftiil  fpeak  of  him  as  one  of  the  peifcdleft 
patterns  of  religion  and  virtue  they  ever  faw. 

The  comm.endations  given  him  by  all  forts   of 
people  are  fuch,  that  I  can  hardly  come  under  the 
cenfures  of  this  age,  for  any  thing  I  have  faid  con-: 
cerning  him  ;   yet  if  this  book  lives  to  after  times, 
}t  will  be  looked  on  perhaps  as  a  picture,  drawn 

more 


Sir  MATTHEW    HALE.      105 

rtiore  according  to  fancy  and  invention,  than  after  the 
life  ;  if  it  were  not  that  thofe  who  knew  him  well, 
pftablifhing  its  credit  in  the  prefent  age,  will  make 
it  pafs  down  to  the  next  with  a  clearer  authority. 
I  fhall  perfue  his  praife  no  further  in  my  own 
words,  but  fhall  add  what  the  prefent  lord  chan- 
cellor of  England  faid  concerning  him,  when  he 
flelivered  the  commiflion  to  the  lord  chief  juftlce 
Rainsford,  who  fucceeded  him  in  that  office, 
which  he  began  in  this  manner. 

"  The  vacancy  of  the  feat  of  the  chief  juftice 

**  of  this  court,  and  that  by  a  way  and  means  fo 

*'  unufual,  as  the   refignation  of  him,  that  lately 

*'  held  it,  and  this  too  proceeding  from  fo  deplorable 

"  a  caufe,    as  the  infirmities  of  that  body.,  which 

"  began   to  forfake  the  ableft  mind  that  ever  pre- 

*'.  fided  here,  hath  filled  the  kino-dom  with  lamen- 

*'  tations,  and  given  the  king  many  and  penfivc 

*'  thoughts,  how  to  fupply  that  vacancy   again." 

And  a  little  after  fpeaking  to  his  fuccefibr,  he  faid, 

*'  The  very  labours  of  the  place,    and  that  weight 

"  and  fatigue  of  bufinefs  which  attends  it,   are  no 

*'  fmall  difcouragements  ;  for  what  fhoulders  may 

.*'  not  juftly  fear  the    burthen  which  made  him. 

•"  ftoop  that  went  before  you  ?     Yet  I  confefs  you 

"  have   a  greater    difcouragement  than   the  meer 

*'  burthen  of  your  place,  ajid  that  is  the  unimitablii 

'  example   of  your  laft  predeceflbr  :    onerofum   ejl 

"  fuccedere    bom  principle     v/as    the  faying  of  him 

*'  in  the  panegyrick  ;    and  you  will  find  it   fo  too 

*'  that  are  to  fucceed  fuch  a  chief  juflice,  of  fo 

"  inde- 


<. 


so6  The  LiFj;  and  Death  of 

*'  indefatigable  an  induftiy,  fo  invincible  a  pati- 
"  ence,  fo  exemplary  an  integrity,  and  fo  magna- 
"  nimous  a  contempt  of  worldly  things,    without 
"  which  no  man  can  be  truly  great ;    and  to  all 
*'  this  a  man  that  was  fo  abfolute  a  mafter  of  the 
*'  fcience  of  the  law,   and  evert  of  the  moft   ab- 
■''  ftrufe  and   hidden   parts   of   it,   that    one   may 
*'  truly  fay  of  his  k.nov.'ledge  in  the  law,  what  St. 
'^^  Aufiin  faid  of  St.  Hierom's  knowledge    in  divi- 
*'  nity,    quod  H:erom?mis  nefcivit,    nullus  inortoUian 
*'  unqiiam  fcivit.     And  therefore  the  king  would 
'*  not  fuffer  himfelf  to  part  with  fo  great  a  man, 
*'  till  he  had  placed  upon  him  all  the  marks  o.f 
**  bounty  and  eilieem,  which  his  retired  and  weak 
"'^  condition  was  capable  of." 

To  this  high  character,  in  which  the  expreflions, 
as  they  well  become  the  eloquence  of  him  who 
pronounced  them,  fo  they  do  agree  exadlly  to  the 
fubject,  without  the  abatements  that  are  often  to 
"be  made  for  rhetoric  ;  I  fhall  add  that  part  of  the 
lord  chief  juftice's  jinfwer,  in  which  he  fpeaks  of 
his  predeceffor. 

"  — —  A  perfon  in  whom  his  eminent  virtues^ 
*'  and  deep  learning,  have  long  managed  a  conteft 
*'  for  the  fuperiority,  which  is  not  decided  to  this 
**  day,  nor  will  it  ever  be  determined,  I  fuppofe, 
"  which  fhall  get  the  upper  hand.  A  perfon  that 
"  has  fat  in  this  court  thefe  many  years,  of  whofe 
*'  adlions  there  I  have  been  an  eye  and  an  ear 
**  witnefs,  that  by  the  greatnefs  of  his  learning 
*'  always  charmed  his  auditors  to  reverence  and 

"  atten- 


(( 

(C 


.9/r  MATTHEW   HALE.      107 

f'  attention  :    a  perfon,  of  whom   I   think  I  may 
'«  boldly   fay,    that  as   former  times  cannot  fliew 
*'  any  fuperiour  to  him,  fo  I  am  confident  fuc- 
*'  ceeding   and   future  time  will   never  fliew  any 
'*■  equal  :  thefe  confiderations  hightened  by  what  I 
^'  liave  heard  from  your  lordfliip  concerning  him, 
"  made  me  anxious  and  doubtful,    and  put  me  to 
,*'  a  ftand,   how  I  fhould  fucceed  fo  able,   fo  good, 
*'  and  fo  great  a  man  :    it  doth  very  much  trouble 
*'  me,   that  I   who  in  comparifon  of  liim  am  but 
like  a  candle  lighted  in  the  fun-fiiine,    or  like  a 
glow-worm  at  mid-day,  fliould  fucceed  fo  great 
.*'  a  perfon,  that  is  and  will  be  fo  eminently   fa- 
*'  mous  to  all  pofterity,  and  I  muft  ever  wear  this 
"  motto   in  my  breaft  to  comfort  me,  and  in  my 
*'  actions  to  excnfe  me, 

''  Si^quhur.^  quamvh  non  pq/Jlous  isqius."" 
Thus  were  panegyricks  made  upon  him  while 
yet  alive,  in  that  fame  court  of  juftice  which  he 
had  fo  worthily  governed.  As  he  was  honoured 
while  he  lived,  fo  he  was  much  lamented  when  he 
died  :  and  this  will  ftil!  be  acknowledged  as  ajuft 
infciiption  for  his  memory,  though  his  modciiy 
forbid  any  fuch  to  be  put  on  his  tomb-ftone. 

THAT  HE  WAS  ONE  OF  THE  GREATEST 
PATTERNS  THIS  AGE  HAS  AFFOPvDED, 
WHETHER  IN  HIS  PRIVATE  DEPORT- 
MENT AS  A  CHRISTIAN,  OR  IN  HIS 
PUBLIC      EMPLOYMENTS,       EITHER      AT 

THE  BAR  OR   ON   THE  BENCH, 
■       •     ,  ADDI- 


[     io8     ] 
ADDITIONAL    NOTES 

OF    THE 

LIFE    AND    DEATH 

O  F 

Sir  MATTHEW  HALE,  Knt. 

Written  by   Richard   Baxter, 

At  the  Requeft  of  Edward  Stephens,   Efq;    Publifher 
of  his  Contemplations,  and  his  familial  Friend^  , 


To     the    READER. 

SINCE  the  hiflory  of  judge  Hale's  life  is 
publifhed  (written  by  Dr.  Burnet  very  well) 
fome  men  have  thought,  that  becaufe  my  familiari- 
ty with  him  was  known,  and  the  laft  time  of  a  man's 
life  is  fuppofed  to  contain  his  matureft  judgment, 
time,  ftudy,  and  experience  correfling  former  over- 
fights;  and  this  great  man  who  was  moft  diligently 
and  thijftily  learning  to  the  laft,  was  like  to  be 
flill  wifcr,  the  ^notice  that  I  had  of  him  in  the 
latter  years  of  his  life  fhould  not  be  omitted. 

1  was 


tx»  the  R  E  A  D  E  Ro  109 

I  was  never  acquainted  with  him  till  1667,  and 
ttierefor€  have  nothing  to  fay  of  the  former  part 
of  his  life  j    nor  of   the  latter,    as  to  any  public 
affairs,    but  only  of    what  our  familiar  converfe 
acquainted  me  :    but  the  vifible  effects  made  mc 
wonder  at  the  induftry  and  unwearied  labours  of 
his  former  life.     Befides  the  four  volumes   againft 
atheifm    and    infidelity,    in    folio,    which    I   after 
mention,  when  I  was  dcfued  to  borrow  a  manu- 
fcript  of  his  law  colledions,  he  fhewed  me,  as  I 
remember,  about  two  and   thirty  folios,   and  told 
me,   he  had  no  other  on  that  fubjecl,  (colledions 
out  of  the  tower  records,  &c.)  and  that  the  ama- 
nuenfis  work  that  wrote  them,  coit  him  a  thoufand 
pound.     He  was  fo  fet  on  iludy,  that  herefolvedly 
avoided  all  necefTary  diverfions,  and  fo  little  valued 
eithergrandeur,  wealth,  or  any  worldly  vanity,  that  he 
avoided  them  to  that  notable  degree,  which  incom- 
petent judges  took  to  be  an  excefs.    His  habit  was 
lo  coarfe  and  plain,  that  I,  who  am  thought  guilty 
of  a  culpable  negle6l  therein,  have  been  bold  to 
defire  him  to  lay  by  fome  things  which  feemed  too 
homely.     T'he  houfe  which  I  furrendered  to  him, 
and  wherein  he  lived   at  A6lon,  was   indeed  well 
fituate  but  very  fmall,  and  fo  far  below  the  ordi- 
nary dwellings  of  men  of  his  rank,   as  that  divers 
farmers  thereabout  had  better  ;    but  it  pleafed  him. 
Many  cenfurcd  him  for  chufmg  his  laft  wife  be- 
low his  quality  :    but  the  good  man  more  regarded 
his  own  daily  comfort,  than   men's  thoughts   and 
talk.     As  far  as  I  could  difgern,  he  choft  one  very 

f'iitabis 


no  'To  the  READER. 

fuitable  to  his  ends;  one  of  his  own  judgrneiit  and 
temper,  prudent  and   loving  and  -fit  to  pleafe  him  ; 
and  that  would  not  draw  on   him  the   trouble   of 
much  acquaintance  and  relations.  His  houfckeeping 
■was  according  to  the  refl:,  like  his  cftate  and  mind, 
but  not  like  his  place  and  honour:  for  he  refolved 
never   to  grafp  at  riches,  nor  take   great  fees,  but 
would  rcfufe  what  many  others  thought  too  little. 
1  wondered  when  he  told  me  how  fmall  his  eftate 
was,    after   fuch  ways   of  getting  as  were  before 
him  :    but  as  he  had  little,  and  dcfired  little,  fo  he- 
was   content  with  little,   and  fuited  his  dwelling, 
table,  and  retinue  thereto.    He  greatly  fhunned  the 
vifits  of  many,  or  gVeat  perfons,  that  came  not  to 
him  on '  neccli'ary  bufmefs,   becaufe  all   his  hours 
were  precious  to  him,  and  therefore  he   contrived 
the  avoiding  of  them,  and  the  free  enjoyment   of 
liis  beloved  privacy. 

I  muft  with  a  glad  remembrance  acknowledge, 
that  while  wc  were  fo  unfuitable  in  places  and 
worth,  yet  feme  fuitablenefs  of  judgn^ent  and  dil- 
pofuion  made  our  frequent  converfe  pleafmg  to  us 
both.  The  laft  time  fave  one,  that  I  was  at 'his 
houfe,  he  made  me  lodge  there,  and  in  the  morn- 
ing inviting  me  to  more  frequent  vifits  faid,  no 
man  (hall  be  more  welcome  ;  and  he  was  no  dif- 
iembler.  To  fignify  his  love,  he  put  my  name 
as  a  legatee  in  his  will,  bequeathing  me  forty  fliil- 
lings.  Mr.  Stephens  gave  me  two  manufcripts, 
as  appointed  by  him  for  me,  declaring  his  judgment 
of  our  church  contentions  and  their  cure  (after 

men- 


ro   the  READER.  m 

mentioned).     Though  they  are  imperfe£l  as  writ- 
ten on  the  fame  queftion  at  feveral  times,  I  had  a 
great   mhid    to  print    them,    to   try   whether  the 
common  reverence  of  the  author  would  cool  any 
of  our  contentious  clergy  :    but  hearing  that  there 
was  a  reftraint  in  his  will,  I  took  out  part  of  a> 
copy  in  which  I  find  thefe  words,  "  I  do  exprefsly 
"  declare,  that  I  will  have  nothing  of  my  writings 
"  printed  after  my  death,  but  only  fuch  as  I  fhall 
"  in  my  life-time  deliver  out  to  be  printed."    And 
not  having  received  this  in  his  life-time,    nor  to  be 
printed   in  exprefs   terms,  I   am  afraid  of  croffing 
the  will  of  the  dead,  though  he  ordered  them  for 
me. 

It  {hewed  his  mean  eflate  as  to  riches,   that  in 
his  will  he  is  put  to  diftribute  the  profits  of  a  book 
or    two    when    printed,     among    his   friends    and 
fervants.     Alas  !     we    that   are   great   loofers    by 
printing,    know  that  it  muft  be  a  fmall  gain  that 
muft  thus  accrue  to  them.     Doubtlefs,  if  the  lord 
chief  juflice  Hale   hs.d  gathered  money  as  other 
lawyers   do  that  had  lefs  advantage,  as  he  wanted 
not  will,  fo  he  would  not  have  wanted  power  to 
have  left  them  far  greater  legacies.     But  the  fer- 
vants of  a  felf-dcnying  mortified  mafter,  muft  be 
content  to  fuffer  by  his  virtues,  which  yet  if  they- 
imitate  him,    will  turn  to  their  final  gain. 

God  made  him   a  public    good,    whicli  is  more 
than  to  get  riches.   His  great  judgment  and  known, 
integrity,     commanded    refpedt    from    thofe    that, 
knew  him  j    fo  tloat  I  verily  think,   that  no  qwq 


tii  To   the   READER. 

fubje£l  fince  the  days  that  hiftory  hath  notified  the 
affairs  of  England  to  us,  went  off  the  flage  with 
greater  and  more  univerfal  love  and  honour ; 
(and  what  honour  without  love  is,  I  undeiffand 
riOt.)  I  remember  when  his  fucceffor,  the  lord 
chief  juftice  Rainsford,  falling  into  fome  melan- 
cholly,  came  and  fcnt  to  me  for  fome  advice,  he 
did  it  as  he  faid,  becaufe  judge  Flale  defired  him  fo 
to  do;  and  expreffed  fo  great  rcfpedl  to  his  judg- 
ment and  writings,  as  I  percei\'ed  much  prevailed 
with  him.  And  many  have  profited  by  his  con- 
templations, who  would  never  have  read  them^ 
Tiad  they  been  written  by  fuch  a  one  as  I.  Yet 
among  all  his  books  and  difcourfes,  I  never  knew 
of  thefe  until  he  was  dead. 

His  refolution  for  juftice  was  fo  great,  that  I  am 
perfuaded,  that  no  wealth  nor  honour  would  have 
hired  him  knowingly  to  do  one  unjuft  a^ft. 

And  though  he  left  us  in  forrow,  I  cannot  but 
acknowledge  it  a  great  mercy  to  him,  to  be  taken 
away  when  he  was.  Alas !  what  would  the  good 
itian  have  done,  if  he  had  been  put  by  plotters, 
and  traitors,  and  fwearers,  and  forfwearers,  upon, 
all  that  his  fucceffors  have  been  put  to  ?  In  like- 
lihood, even  all  his  great  wifdom  and  fincerity,- 
could  never  have  got  him  through  fuch  a  wilder- 
nefs  of  throns,  and  briars,  and  wild  beafts,  with- 
-out  tearing  in  pieces  his  entire  reputation,  if  he  had 
never  fo  well  fecured  his  confcicnce.  O  !  how  fea- 
ibnably  did  he  avoid  the  tempell  and  go  to  Chrifl. 

And 


To   the   READER.  113 

And  fo  have  fo  many  excellent  perfons  fince 
then,  and  efpecially  within  the  fpace  of  one  year, 
as  may  well  make  England  tremble  at  the  prog- 
noftick,  that  the  righteous  are  taken  as  from  the 
evil  to  come.  And  alas  !  what  an  evil  is  it  like  to 
be  ?  We  feel  our  lofs.  We  fear  the  common 
danger.  But  what  believer  can  chufe  but  acknow- 
ledge God's  mercy  to  them,  in  taking  them  up  to 
the  world  of  light,  love,  peace  and  otder,  when 
confufion  is  coming  upon  this  world,  by  darknefs, 
malignity,  perfidioufnefs  and  cruelty.  Some  think 
that  the  lad  conflagration  fhall  turn  this  earth 
into  htll.  If  fo  who  would  not  firft  be  taken  from 
it  ?  And  when  it  is  fo  like  to  hell  already,  who 
would  not  rather  be  in  heaven  ? 

Though  fome  miftook  this  man  for  a  meer  phi- 
lofopher  or  humanift,  that  knew  him  not  within  ; 
yet  his  moft  feiious  defcription  of  the  fufferings  of 
Chrift,  and  his  copious  volumes  to  prove  the  truth 
of  the  fcripture,  chriftianity,  our  immortality,  and 
the  Deity,  do  prove  fo  much  reality  in  his  faith 
and  devotion,  as  makes  us  paft  doubt  of  the  reali- 
ty of  his  reward  and  glory. 

When  he  found  his  belly  fwell,  his  breath  and 
ftrenglh  much  abate,  and  his  face  and  fiefh  decay, 
he  chearfully  received  the  fentence  of  death  :  and 
though  Dr.  Gliflbn  by  meer  oximel  fquilliticum, 
feemed  a  while  to  cafe  him,  yet  that  alfo  foon  failed 
him  ;  and  he  told  me,  he  was  prepared  and  con- 
tented comfortably  to  receive  his  change.  And 
accordingly  he  left  us,  and  went  into  his  native 

X  country 


ir4  To  the  READER. 

country  of  Gloucefterfliiie   to  die,  as   the  hlftory 
tells  yoir, 

Mr*  Edward  Stephens  being  moft  familiar  with 
hiin,  told  me  his  purpofe  to  write  his  life  :  and 
cltifired  me  to  draw  up  the  meer  narrative  of  my 
fhort  familiarity  with  him  ;  which  I  did  as  follow- 
eth  :  by  hearing  no  more  of  hira.  caft  it  by  ;  but 
others  dehring  it,  upon  the  fight  of  the  publifhed 
hiftory  of  bis  life  by  Dr.  Burnet,  I  have  left  it  to 
the  difcretion  of  forae  of  them^  to  do  with  it 
what  they  will. 

And  being  half  dead  already  In  thofe  deareft 
friends  who  were  half  myfelf,  am  much  the  more 
willing  to  leave  this  mole-hill  and  prifon  of  earth, 
to  be  with  that  wife  and  bleffed  fociety,  who  being 
united  to  their  head  in  glory,  do  not  envy,  hate, 
or  perfecute  each  other,  nor  forfake  God,  nor 
Ihall  ever  be  forfaken  by  him. 

K..  6^. 

Note,  That  this  narrative  was  written  two  years 
before  Dr.  Burnet's;  and  It's  not  to  be  doubt- 
ed, but  that  he  had  better  information  of 
his  manufcripts^  and  fome  other  circumftances, 
than  I.  But  of  thofe  manufcripts  direcSled  to 
me,  about  the  foul's  immortality,  of  which  I 
have  the  originals  under  his  hand,  and  alfo 
of  his  thoughts  of  the  fubjedls  mentioned 
by  me,  from  167 1,  till  he  went  to  die  in 
Gloucefterfiiire,  1  had  the  fulleft  notice. 

ADDI- 


[     1^5    ] 
ADDITIONAL    NOTES 

On   the  Life   and  Death  of 

Sir    MATTHEW    HALE,     Knt. 


To  my  Worthy  Friend  Mr.  Stephens, 
the  Publilher  of  Judge  Hale's  Con- 
templations. 

SIR, 

YOU  defired  me  to  give  you  notice  of  what 
I  knew  in  my  perfonal  convcrfe,  of  the 
great  lord  chief  juftice  of  England,  fir  Mat- 
thew Hale.  You  have  partly  made  any  thing  of 
mine  unmeet  for  the  fight  of  any  but  yourfelf  and 
his  private  friends  (to  whom  it  is  ufelefs)  by  your 
divulging  thofe  words  of  his  extraordinary  favour 
to  me,  which  will  make  it  thought,  that  I  am  par- 
tial in  his  praifes.  And  indeed  that  exceffive  efteem 
of  his,  which  you  have  told  men  of,  is  a  divulgino- 
of  his  imperfeclion,  who  did  over-value  fo  unwor- 
thy a  perfon  as  I  know  myfelf  to  be. 

I  will  promife  you  to  fay  nothing  but  the  truth ; 
and  judge  gf  it  and  ufe  it  as  you  pleafe. 

I  2  My 


ii6       Mditional Notes  on  the  Life  of 

My  acquaintance  with  him  was  not  lono;  :  and 
I  look'd  on  him  as  an  excellent  peifon  ftudied  in 
his  own  wa}r,  which  I  hoped  I  fliould  never  have 
cccafion  to  make  much  ufe  of;  but  I  thouoht  not 
fo  verfed  in  our  matters  as  ourfelves.  I  was  con- 
firmed in  this  conceit  by  the  firft  report  I  had  from 
him,  which  was  his  wifii,  that  Dr.  Reignolds^ 
Mr.  Calamy,  and  I,  would  have  taken  biflio|,ricks, 
when  they  were  ofFered  us  by  the  lord  chancellor, 
as  from  the  king,  in  1660,  (as  one  did).  I  thought 
he  underftood  not  our  cafe,  or  the  true  ftate  of 
Englifh  prelacy.  Many  years  after  when  I  lived 
at  A6ton,  he  being  lord  chief  baron  of  the  exche- 
quer, fuddenly  took  a  houfe  in  the  village.  We 
fat  next  feats  together  at  church  for  many  weeks, 
but  neither  did  he  ever  fpeak  to  me  or  1  to  him. 
At  lafl-,  my  extraordinary  friend  (to  whom  I  was 
more  beholding  than  I  muft  here  exprefs,)  ferjeant 
Fountain,  afked  me,  why  I  did  not  vifit  the  lord 
chief  baron  ?  I  told  him,  becaufe  I  had  no  reafon 
for  it,  being  a  ftranger  to  him  ;  and  had  fome 
againft  it,  viz.  that  a  judge,  whofe  reputation  was 
necefiary  to  the  ends  of  his  office,  fhould  not  be 
brought  under  court  fufpicron,  or  difgrace,  by  his 
familiarity  with  a  petfon,  whom  the  intereft  and 
diligence  of  fome  prelates  had  rendered  fo  odious, 
as  I  knev/  myfelf  to  be  with  fuch,  I  durft  not  be 
fo  injurious  to  him.  The  ferjeant  anfwered,  it  is 
not  meet  for  him  to  come  firft  to  you  ;  I  know 
why  I  fpeak  it :  let  me  in  treat  you  to  go  firft  to 
him.     In  obedience  to  which  requcft  I  did  it  j  and 

fa 


^/>   MATTHEW   HALE,       117 

^  we  entered  into  neighbourly  familrarSty.  I  lived 
then  in  a  fmall  houfe,  but  it  had  a  pleafant  gardeii 
and  backfide,  which  the  (honeft)  landlord  had  a 
defire  to  fell.  The  judge  had  a  mind  to  the  houfe; 
but  he  would  not  meddle  with  it,  till  he  got  a 
flranger  to  me,  to  come  and  enquire  of  me  whe- 
ther I  was  willing  to  leave  it  ?  I  told  him,  I  vv'as 
not  only  willing  but  defirous,  not  for  my  owri 
ends,  but  for  my  landlord's  fake,  who  muft  needs 
fell  it :  and  fo  he  bought  it,  and  lived  in  that  poor 
houfe,  till  his  mortal  ficknefs  fent  him  to  the  place 
©f  his  interment. 

I  will  truly  tell  you  the  matter  and  the  manner 
of  our  converfe.  We  were  oft  together,  and  al- 
moft  all  our  difcourfe  was  philofophical,  and  efpe- 
cially  about  the  nature  of  fpirits  and  fuperiour 
regions  ;  and  the  nature,  operations,  and  immor- 
tality of  man's  foul.  And  our  difpofition  and 
courfe  of  thoughts,  were  in  fuch  things  fo  like, 
that  I  did  not  much  crofs  the  bent  of  bis  confe- 
fence.  He  firudied  phyficks,  and  got  all  new  or  old 
books  of  philofophy  that  he  could  meet  with,  as 
eagerly  as  if  he  had  been  a  boy  at  the  univcrfitj-, 
Moufnerius,  and  Honoratus  Faber,  he  defervedly 
much  efleemed  ;  but  yet  took  not  the  latter  to  be 
without  fome  miftakes.  Mathematicks  he  ftudied 
more  than  I  did,  it  being  a  knowledge  which  he 
much  more  efleemed  than  I  did  ;  who  valued  all 
knowledge  by  the  greatnefs  of  the  benefit,  and 
necciTity  of  the  ufe;  and  my  unfldlfulncfs  in  them.« 
1  ackncvvledgc  my  great  dekii,  in  which  he  much 

I  3  excelled. 


1 1 8       Additional  Notes  on  the  Life  of 

excelled.     But  we  were  both  much   addid^ed    to 
know  and  read  all   the  pretenders  to  more  than 
ordinary  in  phyficks ;    the  Platonifts,  the   Peripa- 
teticks,  the  Epicureans  (and  efpecially  their   Gaf- 
fendus,)  Teleius,  Campanella,  Patricius,  Lullius, 
White,  and  every  feet  that  made  us  any  encourg- 
ing   promife.     We  neither  of  us   approved  of  all 
in  Ariftotle  ;    but  he  valued  him  more  than  I  did. 
We  both  greatly  difliked  the  principles  of  Cartefius 
and  Gaffendus  (much  more  of  the  Bruitifls,  Hobbs 
and  Spinofa  j  ;  efpecially  their  do6lorine  de  motu, 
and  their  obfcuring,  or  denying  nature  itfelf,  even 
the  principia  motus,    the  virtutes  form.ales,  which 
are  the  caufes  of  operations^ 

Whenever  we  were  together,  he  was  the  fpring 
of  our  difcourfe  (as  chufmg  the  fubjed) :  and  moil 
of  it  ftill  was  of  the  nature  of  fpirits,    and   the 
immortality,    ftate,     and    operations    of  feparated 
fouls.  We  both  were  confcious  of  human  darknefs, 
and  how  much  of  our  underftandings,    quiet  in 
fuch  matters,    mull  be  fetcht  from    our   implicit 
truft  in  the  goodnefs   and  promifes  of  God,  rather 
than  from  a  clear  and  fatisfying  conception  of  the 
mode  of  feparated   fouls    operations  ;      and    how 
great  ufe  we  have  herein   of  our  faith  in   Jefus 
Chrift,    as  he   is    the  undertaker,    mediator,   the 
Lord  and  lover  of  fouls,  and  the  actual  poiTcffor  of 
that  glory.     But  yet  we  thought,  that  it  greatly 
concerned  us,  to  fearch  as  far  as  God  allowed  us, 
into  a  matter  of  fo  great  moment ;  and  that  even 
little  and  obfcure  profpe6ts  into  the  heavenly  ftate, 

are 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.       119 

are   more    excellent    than    much    and    applauded 
knowledge  of  tranfitory  things. 

He  was  much  in  urging  difficulties  and  objedti- 
ons  j  but  you  could  not  tell  by  them  what  was  his 
own  judgment :  for  when  he  was  able  to  anfwer 
them  himfelfj  he  v/ould  draw  out  anothers  anfwer. 

He  was  but  of  a  flow  fpeech,  and  fometimes  fo 
hefitating,  that  a  ftranger  would  have  thought 
bim  a  m-an  of  low  parts,  that  kjiew  not  readily 
what  to  fay  (though  ready  at  ether  times).  But 
I  never  faw  Cicero's  dodlrine  de  Oratore,  more 
verified  in  any  man,  that  furnifhing  the  mind  with 
all  forts  of  knowledge,  is  the  chief  thing  to  make 
an  excellent  orator  :  for  when  there  is  abundance 
and  clearnefs  of  knowledge  in  the  mind,  it  will 
furnifh  even  a  flow  tongue  to  fpeak  that  which 
by  its  congruence  and  verity  fhall  prevail.  Such 
a  one  never  wants  moving  raatterj  iiox  an  anfwer 
to  vain  objecflors. 

The  manner  of  our  converfe  was  as  fuitable  to 
my  inclination  as  the  matter.  For  wliereas  many 
bred  in  univerfitics,  and  called  fcholars,  have  not 
the  wit,  manners,  or  patience,  to  hear  thofe  that 
they  difcourfe  with  fpeak  to  the  end,  but  through 
lift  and  impotency  cannot  hold,  but  cut  off  a 
man's  fpeech  when  they  hear  any  thing  that  urgeth 
them,  before  the  latter  fart  make  the  former  intel- 
ligible or  ftrong  (when  oft  the  proof  and  ufe  is 
referved  to  the  end).  Ulcer  fcolds  than  fcholars;  as 
if  they  commanded  filence  at  the  end  of  each 
ieutence  to  him  that  fpcakcih,  or  clfe  would   have 

i-  4  two 


120       Additional  Notes  on  the  Life   0/ 

two  talk  at  once.  I  do  not  remember,  that  ever 
he  and  I  did  interrupt  each  other  in  any  difcourfe. 
Plis  wifdom  and  accuftomed  patience  caufed  him 
ftili  to  ftay  for  the  end.  And  though  my  difpofition 
have  too  much  forw^ardnefs  to  fpeak,  1  had  not  fo 
little  Vv'it  or  manners,  as  to  interrupt  him;  whereby 
we  far  better  underftood  each  other,  than  we  could 
have  done  in  chopping  and    maimed  difcourfe. 

He  was  muc^  for  coming  to  philofophical 
knowledge  by  the  help  of  experiments  :  but  he 
thought,  that  our  new  philofophers,  as  fome  call 
the  Cartefians,  had  taken  up  many  fallacies 
as  experiments,  and  had  made  as  unhappy  a  ufe 
of  their  trials,  as  many  empericks  and  mounte- 
banks do  in  medicine  :  and  that  Ariftotle  was  a 
man  of  far  greater  experience,  as  well  as  fludy, 
than  they.  He  was  wont  to  Hiy,  that  lads  at  the 
univerfities  had  found  it  a  way  to  be  thought  wifer 
than  others,  to  join  with  boaflers  that  cried  down 
the  ancients  before  they  underftood  them  :  for  he 
thought  that  few  of  thefe  contemners  of  Ariftotle, 
had  ever  fo  far  ftudied  him,  as  to  know  his  doc- 
trine, but  fpoke  againft  they  knew  not  what ;  even 
as  fome  fecular  theologues  take  it  to  be  the  way  to 
be  thought  wife  men  and  orthodox,  to  cant  againft 
fome  party  or  fe6l  which  they  have  advantage  to 
contemn.  It  muft  coft  a  man  many  years  ftudy  to 
know  what  Ariftotle  held.  But  to  read  over  Ma~ 
girus  (and  perhaps  the  Conimbricenfes  or  Zaba- 
roll),  and  then  prate  againft  Ariftotle,  requireth 
but  a  little  time  and  labgur.     He  could  well  be?,? 


S:T   MATTHEW    HALE.       121 

its  when  one  that  had  thoroughly  ftudied  Arlftotle, 
difTcnted  froni-  him  in  any  particular  upon  reafon ; 
but  he  loathed  it  in  ignorant  men,  that  were  car- 
ried to  it  by  fiiameful  vanity  of  mind. 

His  many  hard  queftions,  doubts  and  objections 
to  me,  occafioned  me  to  draw  up  a  fmail  trail  of 
the  nature  and  immortality  of  man's  foul,  as  pro- 
ved by  natural  light  alone  (by  way  of  queftions 
and  anfwers)  :  in  which  I  had  not  baulked  the 
hardeft  objeilicns  and  difficulties  that  I  could  think 
of  (conceiving  that  atheifts  and  fadduces  are  fo 
unhappily  witty,  and  fatan  fuch  a  tutor,  that  they 
are  as  like  to  think  of  them  as  I).  But  the  good 
man,  when  I  fent  it  to  him,  was  wiferthan  I,  and 
fent  me  word  in  his  return,  that  he  would  not 
have  me  publifli  it  in  Englifti  (nor  without  fome 
alterations  of  the  method)  ;  bccaufe  though  he 
thought  I  had  fufficiently  anfwered  all  the  objecti- 
ons, yet  ordinary  readers  would  take  deeper  into 
their  minds  fuch  hard  objections  as  they  never 
heard  before,  than  the  anfwer  (how  full  foever) 
would  be  able  to  overcome :  whereupon,  not 
having  leifure  to  tranflate  and  alter  it,  I  cafl 
it   by. 

He  fcemed  to  reverence  and  believe  the  opinion 
of  Dr.  Willis,  and  fuch  olhers,  ck  ammis  hrutorwn^ 
as  being  not  fpiritual  fubftances.  But  v/hen  I  fent 
him  a  confutation  of  them,  he  feemcd  to  acquiefce, 
and  as  far  as  I  could  judge,  did  change  his  mind; 
and  had  higher  thoughts  of  fenfitive  natures,  than 
they  that  take  them  to  be  fome  evanid  qualities, 

proceed- 


122      Additional  Notes  on  the 'Lite  of 

proceeding  from  contexture,    aLLemperation,    and 
motion. 

Yet  he  and  I  did  think,  that  the  notion  of  im- 
materiality,   had    little    fatisfadory  to  acquaint  us 
with    the  natuie  of   a  fplrit  (not    telling  us    any 
thing  what  it  is,  but   what  it  is  not).     And  we 
thought,    that  the  old  Greek  and    Latin   dodors 
(cited   by    Fauftus    Rhegiculis,    whom  Mamertus 
anfwereth),   did   mean  by   a  body  or    matter    (of 
which  they  faid  fpirits  did  confift),  the  fame  thing 
as  we  now  mean  by  the  fubflance  of  fpirits,  dlftin- 
guifliing    them   from    meer  accidents.       And    we 
thought  it  a  matter  of  feme  moment,  and  no  fmall 
difficulty,  to  tell  what  men  me:.n  here  by  the  word 
[fubllance],    if   it   be   but  a  relative   notion,    be- 
caufc  it  doth  fubj?are  accident'ibus  ^  fnhfi/lere  per  fe^ 
relation  is  not   proper  fubftance.     It  is  fubflance 
that  doth  fo  fubfift  :  it  is  fcmeuhat,  and  not  no- 
thing, nor  ah  accident.     Therefore  if  more  than 
relation  mufl:  be  meant,   it  will  prove  hard  to  dif- 
tinguifli  fubftance  from  fubftance  by  the  notion  of 
immateriality.     Souls   have  no  fhadows  :  they  are 
not  palpable  and  grofs  ;  but  they  are  SUBSTAN- 
TIAL LIFE,  as  V^IRTUES.     And  it  is  hard  to 
conceive,  how  a  created  vis  vd  virtus  fhould  be  the 
adequate  conceptus  of  a  fpirit,   and    not   rather  an 
inadequate,  fuppofmg  the  concepius  oi fuhflantia  fun- 
damentalis  (as  Dr.  GliiTon  calls  it  de  vita  natura)y 
feeing  07nnis  virtus  cjl  rei  alieni  virtus. 

Yet  he  yielded  to  mc,    that  virtus  feu  vis  vitalisy 
is    not  annua   accidens,    but    the  conceptus  forrnalis 

fpiritus^ 


Sir   MATTHEW   HALE.       123 

fpiritus^  fuppofing  fuli/Iantia  to  be  the  conceptus  fun- 
damentalis  :  and  both  together  exprefs  the  eflence 
of  a  fpirit. 

Every  created  being  is  pafilve  ;  for  reciplt  in 
Jluxum  caufce  prima.  God  tranfcendeth  our  defin- 
ing Ikill  :  but  where  there  is  receptivity,  many 
ancients  thought  there  vvere  fome  pure  fort  of 
materiality ;  and  we  fay,  there  is  receptive  fub- 
ftantiality  :  and  who  can  defcribe  the  difference 
(laying  afide  the  formal  virtues  that  difference 
things)  between  the  higheft  material  fubftance,  and 
the  loweft  fubftance,  called  immaterial. 

We  were  neither  of  us  fatisfied  with  the  notions 
of  penetrability  and  indivifibilityj  as  fufficient 
differences.  But  the  virtutes  Jpeaficcs  plainly  dif- 
ference. 

What  latfer  thoughts,  a  year  before  he  died,  hs 
had  of  thcfe  things,  I  know  not:  but  fome  fay, 
that  a  treatife  of  this  fubje£l,  the  foul's  immorta- 
lity, was  his  laft  finifhed  work  (promifed  in  the 
end  of  his  treatife  of  man's  origination)  ;  and  if 
we  have  the  fight  of  that,  it  Vv'ill  fuller  tell  us 
his  judgment. 

One  thing  I  muft  notify  to  you,  and  to  thofc 
that  have  his  manufcripts,  that  when  I  fent  him  a 
fcheme,  with  fome  elucidations,  he  wrote  me  on 
that  and  my  treatife  of  the  foul,  almoft  a  quire 
of  paper  of  animadverfions  \  by  v/hich  you  muft 
rot  conclude  at  all  of  his  own  judgment :  for  he 
profcffed  to  me,  that  he  wrote  them  to  me,  not  as 
his  judgment,  but  (as  his  way  was)  as  the  hardeft 

objeclioiis 


124       Additional  Notes  on  the  "Lite  of 

objeillons  which  he  would  have  fatlsfadlion  in. 
And  when  I  had  written  him  a  full  anfwer  to  all, 
and  have  been  oft  fince  with  him,  he  feemed  fatis- 
iied.  You  will  wrong  him  therefore,  if  you 
fiiould  print  that  written  to  me  as  his  judgment. 

As  to  his  judgment  about  religion ;  our  difcourfe 
was  very  {jjaring  about  controverfies.  He  thought 
not  fit  to  begin  v/ith  me  about  them,  nor  I  with 
him  :  and  as  it  was  in  me,  fo  It  feemed  to  be  in 
him,  from  a  conceit,  that  we  were  not  fit  to  pre- 
tend to  add  much  to  one  another. 

About  matters  of  conformity,  I  could  gladly 
have  known  his  mind  more  fully  :  but  I  thought 
it  unmeet  to  put  fuch  queftions  to  a  judge,  who 
muil  not  fpesk  againft  the  laws  ;  and  he  never 
offered  his  judgment  to  me.  And  I  knew,  that  as 
I  was  to  revereiice  him  in  his  own  profeflion,  fo 
imnatters  of  my  profeflion  and  concernment,  he 
expelled  not,  that  I  fhould  think  as  he,  beyond 
the  reafons  which  he  gave. 

I  muft  fay,-  that  he  was  of  opinion,  that  the 
wealth  and  honour  of  the  biiliops  was  convenient, 
to  enable  them  the  better  to  relieve  the  poor,  and 
refcue  the  inferiour  clergy  from  oppreflion,  and  to 
keep  up  the  honour  of  religion  in  the  world.  But 
all  this  on  fuppofition,  that  it  would  be  in  the  hands 
of  wife  and  good  men,  or  elfc  it  would  do  as 
much  harm.  But  when  I  afkcd  him,  whether  great 
v/ealth  nnd  honour  would  not  be  moft  earneilly 
defired  and  fought  by  the  worf't  of  men,  while 
good  men  would  not  feek  them  r     And   whether 

he 


Sir   MATTHEW    HALE.        125 

he  that  was  the  only  fervent  feeker,  was  not 
likelieft  to  obtain  (except  under  fome  rare  extra- 
ordinary prince)  ?  And  fo  whether  it  was  not  like 
to  entail  the  office  on  the  worft,  and  to  arm 
Chiift's  enemies  againft  him  to  the  end  of  the 
world  (which  a  provifion  that  had  neither  alluring 
nor  much  difcouraging  temptation,  might  prevent), 
he  gave  me  no  anfv/er.  I  have  heard  fome  fay,  if  the 
pope  were  a  good  man,  what  a  deal  of  good  might 
he  do  ?  But  have  popes  therefore  bleft  the  world. 

I  can  truly  fay,  that  he  greatly  lamented  the 
negligence,  and  ill  lives,  and  violence  of  fome  of 
the  clergy ;  and  would  oft  fay,  what  have  they 
their  calling,  honour  and  maintenance  for,  but  to 
feek  the  inflrucling  and  faving  of  men's  fouls  ? 

He  much  lamented,  that  fo  many  worthy  mini- 
flers  v/ere  filenced,  the  church  weakened,  papifts 
ftrengthened,  the  caufe  of  love  and  piety  greatly 
wronged  and  hindered  by  the  prefent  dilTerences 
about  conformity.  And  he  hath  told  me  his  judg- 
ment, that  the  only  means  to  heal  us  was,  a 
new  aft  of  uniformity,  which  {hould  neither 
leave  all  at  liberty,  nor  impofe  any  thing  but 
neceffary. 

I  had  once  a  full  opportunity  to  try  his  judg- 
naent  far  in  this.  It  pleafed  the  lord  keeper  Bridg- 
man  to  invite  Dr.  Manton  and  myfelf  (to  whom 
Dr.  Bates  at  our  defire  was  added),  to  treat  with 
Dr.  Wilkins  and  Dr.  Burton  about  the  terms  of 
our  reconciliation  and  reftoration  to  our  miniflerial 
liberty.     After  fome  days  conference,  we  came  to 

agree- 


126     Additional  Notes  on  the  Lite  of 

agreement  in  all  things,  as  to  the  neceflary  terms* 
And  becaufe  Dr.  Wilkins  and  I  had  fpecial  inti^ 
macy  with  judge  Hale,  we  defired  him  to  draw  it 
up  in  the  form  of  an  acSl,  which  he  willingly  did, 
and  we  agreed  to  every  word.  But  it  pleafcd  the 
houfe  of  commons,  hearing  of  it,  to  begin  their 
next  feffion  with  a  vote,  that  no  fuch  bill  Ihould 
be  brought  in  j  and  fo  it  died. 

Qiiery  i.  Whether  after  this  and  other  fuch 
agreement,  it  be  ingenuity,  or  fomewhat  elfe,  that 
hath  ever  fmce  faid,  we  know  not  what  they  woukl 
have  ?  And  that  at  once  call  out  to  us,  and  yet 
firidlly  forbid  us  to  tell  them  what  it  is  we  take 
for  fm,  and  what  we  defire. 

2.  Whether  it  be  likely,  that  fuch  men  as 
bifhop  Wilkins,  and  Dr.  Burton,  and  judge  Hale, 
would  confent  to  fuch  terms  of  our  concord,  as 
fhould  be  worfe  than  our  prefent  condition  of  divi- 
lion  and  convulfion  is  ?  And  whether  the  main- 
tainers  of  our  dividing  impofitions,  be  all  wifer 
and  better  men  than  this  judge  and  that  bifhop 
were  ? 

3.  And  whether  it  be  any  diflance  of  opinion, 
or  difficulty  of  bringing  us  to  agreement,  that 
keepeth  England  in  its  fad  divifions,  or  rather 
fome  mens  opinion,  that  our  unity  itfelf  is  not  de- 
firable,  left  it  ftrengthen  us  ?    The  cafe  is  plain. 

His  behaviour  in  the  church   was  conformable, 

-but  prudent.     He  conftantly  heard  a   Curate,  too 

low  for  fuch  an   auditor.     In  common-prayer  he 

behaved  himfelf  as  others,  faying  that,   to  avoid 

the 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.         127 

the  diiFerencing  of  the  gofpels  from  the  epiflles, 
and  the  bowing  at  the  name  of  Jefus,  from  the 
nanies,  Chrift,  Saviour,  God,  &c.  He  would 
ufe  fome  equality  in  his  geftures,  and  fland  up  at 
the  reading  of  all  God's  word  alike. 

I  had  but  one  fear  or  fufpicion  concerning  him, 
■which  fmce  I  am  allured  was  groundlefs  :  I  was 
afraid  leaft  he  had  been  too  little  for  the  pradlical 
part  of  religion,  as  to  the  working  of  the  foul  to- 
wards God,  in  prayer,  meditation,  &c.  becaufe 
he  feldom  fpake  to  me  of  fuch  fubjefts,  nor  of 
practical  books,  or  fermons  3  but  was  ftill  fpeaking 
of  philofophy,  or  of  fplrits,  fouls,  the  future  ftate, 
and  the  nature  of  God.  But  at  laft  I  underftood, 
that  his  averfenefs  to  hypocrify  made  him  purpofely 
conceal  the  moR:  of  fuch  his  pra6lical  thoughts  and 
works,  as  the  world  now  findeth  by  his  contem- 
plations and  other  writings. 

He  told  me  once,  how  God  broiight  him  to  a 
fixed  honour  and  obfervation  of  the  Lord's  day  ; 
that  when  he  was  youn^  being  in  the  weft,  the 
ficknefs  or  death  of  fome  relation  at  London,  made 
fome  matter  of  eftate  to  become  his  concernment  j 
which  required  his  hallening  to  London  from  the 
weft  :  and  he  was  commanded  to  travel  on  the 
Lord's  day :  but  I  cannot  well  remember  how 
many  crofs  accidents  befel  him  in  his  journey  ; 
one  horfe  fell  lame,  another  died,  and  much  more; 
which  ftruck  him  with  fuch  knk  of  divine  rebuke. 


as  he  never  forgot. 


V/hen 


128       Additional  Notes  on  the  hi? "e  of 

When  I  went  out  of  the  houfe,  in  which  he 
fucceeded  me,  I  went  into  a  greater,  over-againll 
the  church-  door.  The  town  having  great  need 
of  help  for  their  fouls,  I  preached  between  the 
public  fermcns  in  my  houfe,  taking  the  people 
with  me  to  the  church  (to  common- prayer  and 
fermon)  morning  and  evening.  The  judge  told 
me,  that  he  thought  my  courf*;;  did  the  ch'.u'ch 
much  fervice  ;  and  would  carry  it  fo  refpe6lfuily  to 
me  at  my  door,  that  all  the  people  might  perceive 
his  approbation.  But  Dr.-  Reeves  could  not  bear 
it,  but  complained  againfl:  me  ;  and  the  bifhop  of 
London  caufed  one  Mr.  Rofle  of  Erainford,  and 
Mr.  Philips,  two  jufticcs  of  the  peace,  to  fend 
their  warrants  to  apprehend  me.  I  told  the  judge 
of  the  warrant,  but  afked  him  no  council,  nor  he 
gave  me  none  ;  but  with  tears  fliewed  his  forrow  : 
(the  only  time  that  ever  I  faw  him  weep).  So  I 
was  fent  to  the  common  goal  for  fix  months,  by 
thefe  two  juftices,  by  the  procurement  of  the  faid 
Dr.  Reeves  (hrs  majeflry's  chaplain,  dean  of  Wind- 
for,  dean  of  Wolverhampton,  parfon  of  Horfeley, 
parfon  of  Aiton).  When  I  came  to  move  for  my 
releafe  upon  a  habeas  corpus  (by  the  council  of 
my  great  friend  ferjeant  Fountain),  I  found,  that 
the  chara6ler  which  judge  Hale  had  given  of 
me,  flood  me  in  fome  Itead  ;  and  every  one  of  the 
four  judges  of  the  common-pleas,  did  not  only 
acquit  me,  but  faid  more  for  mc  than  my  council, 
(viz.  judge  Wild,  judge  Archer,  judge  Tyrel,  and 
the  lord  chief  juftice  Vaughan)  ;  and   made  me 

fenfible 


Sir  MATTHEW   HALE.       129 

fenfible,  how  great  a  part  of  the  honour  of  his 
majefty's  government,  and  the  peace  of  the  king- 
dom, confided  in  the  juftice  of  the  judges. 

And  indeed  judge  Hale  would  tell  me,  that 
bifhop  Ulher  was  much  prejudiced  againft  lawyers, 
becaufe  the  worft  caufes  find  their  advocates  :  but 
that  he  and  Mr.  Selden  had  convinced  him  of  the 
reafons  of  it,  to  his  fatisfa6lion  :  and  that  he  did 
by  acquaintance  with  them,  believe  that  there 
were  as  many  honeft  men  among  lawyers,  propor- 
tionably,  as  among  any  profeflion  of  men  in 
England  (not  excepting  bifhops  or  divines). 

And  I  muft  needs  fay,  that  the  improvement  of 
reafon,  the  diverting  men  from  fenfuality  and 
idlenefs,  the  maintaining  of  propriety  and  juftice, 
and  confequently  the  peace  and  welfare  of  the 
kingdom,  is  very  much  to  be  afcribed  to  the  judges, 
and  lawyers. 

BuC  this  imprifonment  brought  me  the  great 
lofs  of  converfe  with  judge  Hale  :  for  the  parlia- 
ment in  the  next  adl  againft  conventicles,  put  into 
it  diverfe  claufes,  fuited  to  my  cafe  ;  by  which  I 
was  obliged  to  go  dwell  in  another  county,  and  to 
forfake  both  London  and  my  former  habitation  ;  and 
yet  the  juftices  of  another  county  were  partly 
enabled  to  perfue  me. 

Before  I  went,  the  judge  had  put  into  my  hand 
four  volumes  (in  folio),  which  he  had  written,  to 
prove  the  being  and  providence  of  God,  the  im- 
mortality of  the  foul,  and  life  to  come,  the  truth 
©f  chriftianity,  and  of  every  book  of  the  fcripture 

K  by 


130       Additional  Notes  on  the  Life  of 

by  itfelf,  befides  the  common  proofs  of  the  whole. 
Three  of  the  four  volumes  I  had  read  over,  and 
was  fent  to  the  goal  before  I  read  the  fourth.  I 
turned  down  a  few  leaves  for  fome  fmall  animad- 
verfions,  but  had  no  time  to  give  them  him.  I 
coiild  not  then  perfuade  him  to  review  them  for  the 
prefs.  The  only  fault  I  found  with  them  of  anr 
moment,  was  that  great  copioufnefs,  the  effe£l  of 
his  fulnefs  and  patience,  which  will  be  called 
tedioufncfs  by  impatient  readers. 

When  v/e  were  fcparated,  he  (that  would  re- 
ceive no  letters  from  any  man,  about  any  matters 
which  he  was  to  judge)  was  defirous  of  letter- 
<!t)nverfe  about  our  philofophical  and  fpiritual  fub- 
j^Sti.  I  having  then  begun  a  Latin  methodus 
theologise,  fent  him  one  of  the  fchemes  (before 
mentioned),  containing  the  generals  of  the  philo- 
sophical part,  with  fome  notes  upon  itj  which  he 
fo  over-valued,  that  he  urged  me  to  proceed  in  the 
iame  way.  I  objedled  againft  putting  fo  much  phi- 
lofophy  (though  moftly  but  de  homine)  in  a  me- 
thod of  theology  :  but  he  rejected  my  objections, 
and  refolved  me  to  go  on. 

At  laft  it  plcafed  God  to  vifit  him  with  his 
mortal  ficknefs.  Having  had  the  ftone  before 
(which  he  found  thick  pond-water  better  eafe  him 
of,  than  the  grav^el  fpring-water),  in  a  cold  jour- 
ney, an  extraordinary  flux  of  urine  took  him  firft, 
and  then  fuch  a  pain  in  his  fide,  as  forced  him  to 
let  much  blood,  more  than  once,  to  fave  him  from 
fudden  fuffocaiion  or  oppreflion.    Ever  after  which 

he 


Sir   MATTHEW   HALE.       131 

he  had  death  in  his  lapfed  countenance,  flefh  and 
ftrength,  with  fhortnefs  of  breath.  Dr.  Willis, 
in  his  life-time,  wrote  his  cafe  without  his  name, 
in  an  obfervation  in  his  pharmaceut,  &c.  which 
was  fhortly  printed  after  his  own  death,  and  before 
his  patient's  :  but  I  dare  fay  it  fo  crudely,  as  is  no 
honour  to  that  book. 

When  he  had  ftriven  a  while  under  his  difeafe, 
he  gave  up  his  place,  not  fo  much  from  the  ap- 
prehenfion  of  the  nearnefs  of  his  death  (for  he 
could  have  died  comfortably  in  his  public  work), 
but  from  the  fenfe  of  his  difability  to  difcharge  his 
part :  but  he  ceafed  not  his  ftudies,  and  that  upon 
points  which  I  could  have  wiflied  him  to  let 
go  (being  confident,  that  he  was  not  far  from  his 

end). 

I  fent  him  a  book  which  I  newly  publlfhed,  for 
reconciling  the  controverfies  about  predeftination, 
redemption,  grace,  free-will,  but  defired  him  not  to 
beftow  too  much  of  his  precious  time  upon  it :  but 
(before  he  left  his  place)  I  found  him  at  it  fo  oft,  that 
1  took  the  boldnefs  to  tell  him,  that  I  thought  more 
praftical  writings  were  mofl  fuitable  to  his  cafe, 
who  was  going  from  this  contentious  world.  He 
gave  me  but  little  anfwer  ;  but  I  after  found,  that 
he  plied  pra<Slicals  and  contemplatives  in  their  fea- 
fon  i  which  he  never  thought  meet  to  give  me  any 
account  of.  Only  in  general  he  oft  told  me,  that 
the  reafon  and  feafon  of  his  writings  (againft 
atheifm,  &c,  aforefaid)  were,  both  in  his  circuit 
and  at  home,  he  ufed  to  fet  apart  fome  time  for 

K  2  meditation. 


1^1        Additional  Notes  on  the  'Lite  of 

meditation,  efpeclally  after  the  evening  public  wor- 
fhlp  every  Lord's  day  ;  and  that  he  could  not  fo 
profitable  keep  his  thoughts  in  connedlion  and  me- 
thod, otherv/ife,  as  by  writing  them  down  j  and 
withal,  that  if  there  were  any  thing  in  them  ufeful 
it  was  the  way  to  keep  it  for  after  ufe  r  and  there- 
fore for  the  better  management,  for  the  account- 
ablenefs  and  the  after  ufe,  he  had  long  accuftomed 
to  pen  his  meditations ;  which  gave  us  all  of  tha;t 
nature  that  he  hath  left  us. 

Notwithftanding  his  own  great  furniture  of 
knowledge,  and  he  was  accounted  by  fome,  fome- 
what  tenacious  of  his  conceptions  (for  tnen  that 
know  much,  cannot  eafily  yield  to  the  expectations 
of  lefs  knowing  men),  yet  I  muft  fay,  that  I 
remember  not  that  ever  I  converfed  with  a  man 
that  was  readier  to  receive  and  learn.  He  would 
hear  as  patiently,  and  recolle£l  all  fo  diftinClly,  and 
then  try  it  fo  judicioufly  (not  difdaining  to  learn 
of  an  inferiour  in  fome  things,  who  in  more  had 
need  to  learn  of  him),  that  he  would  prcfently 
take  what  fome  ftand  wrangling  againft  many 
years.  I  never  more  ferceived  in  any  man,  how 
much  great  knowledge  and  wifdom  facilitate  ad- 
ditions, and  the  reception  of  any  thing  not  before 
known.  Such  a  one  prefently  j.erceiveth  that  evi- 
dence which  another  is  incapable  of. 

For  inftance,  the  lafl  time,  fave  one,  that  I  faw 

him  (in  his  weakncfs  at  Adlon),  he  engaged  me 

.to   explicate   the  doftrine  of  divine   governoicnt 

(and  decree),  a.^  confident  with  xbe  fm  of  man. 

And 


^'/V  MATTHEW   HALE.      133 

And  when  I  had  diflindlh/  told  him,  1.  What  God 
did,  as  the  author  of  nature,  phyfically.     2.  What 
he  did,  as  legiflator,  morally.     And  3.  What  he 
did,  as  benefa6lor,  and  by  fpecial  grace.     4.  And 
where  permiflion  came  in,  and  where  acStual  opera- 
tion.    5.  And  fo,  how  certainly  God  might  caufe 
the  effe6ls,  and  not  caufe  the  volitions,  as  deter- 
minate  to    evil,    [though   the  volition  and   effeS: 
being  called  by  one  name  (as  theft,   murder,  adul- 
tery, lying,  &c.)  oft  deceive  men]  :     he  took,  up 
all  that  I  had  faid   in  order,  and  diftinftly   twice 
over  repeated  each   part  in  its   proper  place,   and 
with  its  reafon  :  and  when  he  had  done,  faid,  that 
I  had  given  him  fatisfadion. 

Before  I  knew  what  he  did  himfelf  in  contem- 
plations, I  took  it  not  well,  that  he  more  than 
once  told  me,  *'  Mr.  Baxter,  I  am  more  beholden 
"  to  you  than  you  are  aware  of  ^  and  I  thank  you 
*'  for  all,  but  efpecially  for  your  fcheme,  and  your 
*'  catholic  theology."  For  I  was  forry,  that  a  man 
(that  I  thought)  fo  near  death,  fliould  fpend  much 
of  his  time  on  fuch  controverfies  (though  tending 
to  end  them).  But  he  continued  after,  near  a 
year,  and  had  leifure  for  contemplations  which  I 
knew  not  of. 

When  I  parted  with  him,  I  doubted  which  of 
us  would  be  lirft  at  heaven  :  but  he  is  gone  before, 
and  I  am  at  the  door,  and  fomewhat  the  willinger 
to  go,  when  I  think  fuch  fouls  as  his  are  there. 

When  he  was  gone  to  Gloucefterfliire,  and  his 
contemplations  were  publifhed  by   you,  I  fent  him 

K  3  the 


134       Additional  Notes  on  the  Life  <?/ 

the  confeflion  of  my  cenfurcs  of  him,  how  I  had 
feared  that  he  had  allowed  too  great  a  fliare  of  his 
time  and  thoughts  to  fpeculation,  and  too  little  to 
pradicals  j  but  rejoiced  to  fee  the  conviction  of 
my  error  :  and  he  returned  me  a  very  kind  letter, 
which  was  the  laft. 

Some  ccnfured  him  for  living  under  fuch  a  curate 
at   AcTion,  thinking  it  was  in  his   power    to  have 
got  Dr.  Reeves,  the   parfon,  to  provide  a   better. 
Of  which  I  can  fay,  that  I  once  took  the   liberty 
to  tell  him,  that  I  feared  too  much  tepidity  in  him, 
by  reafon  of  that  thing  ;  not  that  he  needed  him- 
felf  a  better  teacher,  who  knew  more,   and  could 
ovei'-look  fcandals  ;  but  for  the   fake  of  the   poor 
ignorant  people,  who  greatly   needed  better  help. 
He  anfvvered  me,  that  if  money  would   do  it,  he 
would  willingly  have  done  it ;  but  the  Dr.   was  a 
man,  not  to  be  dealt  with  ;   which  was  the  hardefl: 
word   that  I   remember  I  ever    heard   him  ufe  of 
any.     For  I  never  knew  any  man  more  free  from 
^peaking  evil  of  others  behind  their  backs.    When- 
ever the  difcourfe  came  up  to  the  faultinefs  of  any 
individuals,    he  would  be  filcnt :    but  the  forts  of 
faulty  perfons  he  would  blame  with  cautelous  free- 
dom, efpecially  idle,  proud,  fcandalous,   contenti- 
ous, and  factious  clergymen.     We  agreed   in  no- 
thing more  than  that  which  he  oft  repeateth  in  the 
papers  which  you  gave  me,  and  which  he  oft  ex- 
.  preiTcd,  viz.  that  true  religion  confiflcth  in  grcat,plain, 
necefTary  things,  the   life  of  faith   and   hope,  the 
Ipvc   of  God   and   man,    an    humble  felf-denying 

mind. 


S-Zr  MATTHEW    HALE.       135 

mind,  with  mortification  of  worldly  tiffe£lion,  car- 
nal luft,  &c.  And  that  the  calamity  of  the  church, 
and  withering  of  religion,  hath  come  from  proud 
and  bufy  men's  additions,  that  cannot  give  peace 
to  themfelv€5  and  others,  by  living  in  love  and 
quietnefs  on  this  chriftian  fimplicity  of  faith  and 
practice,  but  vex  and  turmoil  the  church  with  thefe 
needlefs  and  hurtful  fuperfluities  ;  fome  by  their 
decifions  of  words,  or  unnecelFary  controverfies  ; 
and  fome  by  their  reftlefs  reaching  after  their  own 
worldly  intereft,  and  corrupting  the  church.  Oil 
pretence  of  raifing  and  defending  jt  j  fome  by 
their  needlefs  ceremonies,  ?ind  fome  by  their  fupcr- 
ftitious  and  caufelefs  fcruplcs.  But  he  was  efpeci- 
ally  angry  at  them  that  would  fo  manage  their 
differences  about  fuch  things,  as  to  fhew,  that 
they  had  a  greater  zeal  for  their  owi>  additions, 
than  for  the  common  faving  truths  and  duties 
which  we  were  all  agreed  in  ;  and  that  did  fo 
manage  their  feveral  little  and  felfifli  caufes,  as 
wounded  or  injured  the  common  caufe  of  the  chri- 
ftian  and  reformed  churches.  He  had  a  great 
diftafte  of  the  bocks  called,  a  friendly  debate,  &c. 
and  ecclefiaftical  polity,  as  from  an  evil  fpirit,  injur- 
ing fcripture  phrafe,  and  tempting  the  atheifts  to 
contemn  all  religion,  fo  they  might  but  vent  their 
fpleen,  and  be  thought  to  have  the  better  of  their 
adverfaries  ;  and  would  fay,  how  eafy  is  it  to  re- 
quite fuch  men,  and  all  parties  to  cxpofe  each 
other  to  contempt  ?  (Indeed,  how  many  paiifhes 
in  England  afford  too  plenteous  matter  of  reply 

K  4  tq 


13^      Additional  Notes  on  the  Life  of 

to  one  that  took  that  for  his  part  j  and  of  tears  to 
ferious  obfervers)  ? 

His  main  defirc  was,   that  as  men  fhould  not  be 
pevifhly  quarrelfom  againft  any  lawful  circumftan- 
ces,  forms  or  orders  in  religion,  much  Icfs   think 
themfelves  godly  men,  becaufe  they  can  fly  from 
Other  mens  circumfl:ances,  or  fettled  lawful  orders 
as  fin  J    fo  efpecially,    that  no  human  additions  of 
opinion,  order,  modes,  ceremonies,  profeffions,  or 
promifes,   fhould  ever  be  managed  to  the  hindering 
of  chriftian  love  and  peace,  nor   of  the  preaching 
of  the  gofpel,  nor  the  wrong  of  our  common  caufe, 
or   the  ftrengthening   of  atheifm,    infidelity,   pro- 
phanenefs  or  popery  ;  but  that  chriftian  verity  and 
piety,  the  love  of  God  and  man,  and  a  good   life, 
and  our  common   peace  in   thefc,  might  be  firft 
refoved    on   and    fecured,    and    all    our    additions 
might  be  ufed,  but  in  due  fubordination  to  thefe, 
and  not  to  any  injury  of  any  of  them  ;  nor  fefts, 
parties,  or  narrow  interefts  be  fet  np  againfl   the 
common  duty,  and  the  public  intereft  and  peace. 

I  know  you  are  acquainted,  how  greatly  he  va- 
lued Mr.  Selden,  being  one  of  his  executors  ;  his 
books  and  pi6lure  being  ftill  near  himt  I  think  it 
meet  therefore  to  remember,  that  becaufe  many 
Hobbills  do  report,  that  Mr.  Selden  was  at  the 
heart  an  infidel,  and  inclined  to  the  opinions  of 
Hobbs,  I  defired  him  to  tell  me  the  truth  herein  : 
and  he  oft  profefled  to  me,  that  Mr.  Selden  was 
a  refolved  ferious  chriftian ;  and  that  he  was  a  great 
adverfary  to  Hobbs's  errors  3  and  that  he  had  feen 

him 


Sir  MATTHEW  HALE.      137 

him  openly  oppofe  him   (o  earneftly,  as  either  to 
depart  from  him,  or  drive  him  out  of  the  room. 
And  as  Mr.  Selden  was  one  of  thofe  called  Erafti- 
ans  (as  his  book  de  Synedriis,  and  others  fliew), 
yet  owned  the  office  properly  minifterial.    So  moft 
lawyers  that  ever  I  was   acquainted  with,  taking 
the  word  jurifdiclion,   to  fignify   fomething  more 
than  the  meer  doiSloral,  prieftly  power,  and  power 
over    their    own    facramental   communion    in   the 
church  which  they  guide,  do  ufe  to  fay,  that   it  is 
primarily  in  the  magiftrate  (as  no  doubt  all    power 
of  corporal  coercion,  by  mulcts  and   penalties   is). 
And  as  to  the  accidentals  to  the  proper  power  of 
priefthood,  or  the  keys,  they  truly  fay   with   Dr. 
Stillingfleet,    that  God  hath  fettled  no  one  form. 

Indeed,  the  lord  chief  juflice  thought,  that  the 
power  of  the  word  and  facraments  in  the  miniftc-' 
rial  office,  was  of  God's  inftitution ;  and  that  they 
were  the  proper  judges  appointed  by  Chrift,  to 
whom  they  themfelves  fhould  apply  facraments, 
and  to  whom  they  fliould  deny  them.  But  that 
the  power  of  chancellors  courts,  and  many  modal 
additions,  which  are  not  of  the  eflcnce  of  the 
prieftly  office,  floweth  from  the  king,  and  may  be 
fitted  to  the  ftate  of  the  kingdom.  Which  is  true, 
if  it  be  limited  by  God's  laws,  and  exercifcd  on 
things  only  allowed  them  to  deal  in,  and  contradi6t 
not  the  orders  and  powers  fettled  by  ChriH:  and  his 
apoftles. 

On  this  account  he  thought  well  of  the  form  of 
government  in  the  church  of  Enghuid  ;  (lamcrnt- 


iiig 


138       Additional  Notes  on  the  Life  of 

ing  the  mifcarriages  of  many  perfons),  and  the 
want  of  parochial  reformation  :  but  he  was  greatly 
for  uniting  in  love  and  peace,  upon  fo  much  as 
is  necefiary  to  falvation,  with  all  good,  fober, 
peaceable  men. 

And  he  was  much  againfi:  the  corrupting  of  the 
chriftian  religion  (whofe  fimplicity  and  purity  he 
juflly  took  to  be  much  of  its  excellency),  by  mens 
bufy  additions,  by  v/it,  poHcy,  ambition,  or  any 
thing  elfe  which  fophlilicateth  it,  and  rnaketh  it  an- 
other thing,  and  caufeth  the  lamentable  contentions 
of  the  world. 

What  he  was  as  a  lawyer,  a  jiidge,  a  chriftian, 
-is  fo  well  known,  that  I  think  for  me  to  pretend 
that  my  tefcimony  is  of  any  ufe,  were  vain.  I 
will  only  tell  you  what  I  have  v/ritten  by  his  pic- 
ture, in  the  front  of  the  great  bible  which  I  bought 
with  his  legacy,  in  memory  of  hij  love  and  name, 
viz.  "  Sir  Matthew  Hale,  that  unwearied  ftudent, 
that  prudent  man,  that  folid  philofopher,  that  far 
mous  lawyer,  that  pillar  and  bafis  of  juftice  (who 
would  not  have  done  an  unjuft  a6l  for  any  worldly 
price  or  motive),  the  ornament  of  his  majelly's 
government,  and  honour  of  Eng'and  j  the  higheft 
faculty  of  the  foul  of  Weflminller-hall,  and  pat- 
tern to  all  the  reverend  and  honourable  judges;  that 
godly,  fcrious,  pra<5tical  chriHian,  the  lover  of 
goodncfs  and  all  good  men  ;  a  lamenter  of  the 
clergy's  felfifhncfs,  and  unfaithfulnefs,  and  difcord, 
and  of  the  fad  divifions  following  hereupon  ;  an 
carneft  defire  of  their   reformation,   concord,  and 

the 


Sir   MATTHEW   HALE.       139 

the  church's  peace,  and  of  a  reformed  ad  of  uni- 
formity, as  the  heft  and  neceflary  means  thereto ; 
that  great  contemner  of  the  riches,  pomp  and 
vanity  of  the  world  ;  that  pattern  of  honeft  plain- 
nefs  and  humility,  who  while  he  fled  from  the 
honours  that  peifued  him,  was  yet  lord  chief  juftice 
of  the  kind's  bench,  after  his  being;  Ions;  lord  chief 
baron  of  the  exchequer  ;  living  and  dying,  enter- 
ing on,  ufing,  and  voluntarily  furrendering  his 
place  of  judicature,  with  the  moft  univerfal  love, 
and  honour,  and  praife,  that  ever  did  Englifh 
fubje£l  in  this  age,  or  any  that  juft  hiftory  doth 
acquaint  us  with,  &c.  &c.  &c.  This  man  fo  wife, 
fo  good,  fo  great,  bequeathing  me  in  his  teftament 
the  legacy  of  forty  {hillings,  meerly  as  a  teltimony 
of  his  refpe£l:  and  love,  I  thought  this  book,  the 
teftament  of  Chrift,  the  meeteft  purchafe  by  that 
price,  to  remain  in  memorial  of  the  faithful 
love,  which  he  bare  and  long  expreffed  to  his  infe- 
riour  and  unworthy,  but  honouring  friend,  who 
thought  to  have  been  with  Chrift  before  him,  and 
waiteth  for  the  day  of  his  perfeil  conjun6lion  with 
the  fpirits  of  the  juft  made  perfed." 

RICHARD  BAXTER. 


SOME 

PASSAGES' 

OF      THE 

LIFE    AND    DEATH 

Of  the  Right  Honourable 

JOHN  Earl  of  Rochefter, 

Who   died   July   26,    1680. 
Written  by  his  own  diredlton  on  his  death  bed. 

By    GILBERT    BURNET,    D.  D. 

Late  Lord  Biftiop  of  S  ar u m. 


THE 

PREFACE. 


THE    celebrating   the  praifes    of  the  dead,    is  an 
argmnent  jo  vjorn  out  by  long  and  frequent  ufe^ 
and  now  become  fo  naufeous,  by  the  flattery  that  ufually 
attends  it,  that  it  is  no  wonder  if  funeral  orations,  or 
panegyricks,  are  more  confidercd  for  the  elegancy  ofjlyle, 
andfinenefs  of  wit,  than  for  the  authority  they  carry  zvilh 
them  as  to  the  truth  of  matters  offaSi.     And  yet  I  a?n 
not  hereby  deterred  front  meddling  with  this  kind  of  ar- 
gument, nor  from  handling  it  tvith  all  the  plainnefs  I 
can  ;  delivering   only   tuhat   I  77iyfelf  heard  and  faw, 
without  any  borrowed  ornament.     I  do  eafily  forefee  how 
?nany  will  be  engaged  for  the  fupport  of  their   impious 
maxims  and  itnmoral  praoiices,  to  difparage  zuhat  I  am 
to  write.     Others  ivill  cenfire  it,  becaufe  it  comes  from 
one  of  my  profejfion  \  too  many  fuppofing  its  to  be  induced 
to  frame  fuchdifcourfes  for  carrying  on   what  they  are 
pleafed  to  call  our  trade.      Some  will  think  I  drefs  it 
up  too  artificially,  a-nd  others,  that  I  prefent  it  too  plain 
and  naked. 

But  being  refohed  to  govern  myfelf  by  the  exa5i  rules 
cf  truth,  IJl)all  be  lefs  concer'ued  in  the  ccnfures  I  may  fall 
under.  It  mayfeem  liable  to  great  exception,  that  IJhoidd 
difclofe  fo  many  things,  that  were  difcovered  to  me,  if 
not  under  the  feal  cf  confeffion,  yet  U7idcr  the  confidence 
offriendjhip.  But  this  noble  lord  hi?nfelfnot  only  releafcd 
me  from  all  obligation  of  this  kind,  when  Ixvait^d  en 
him  in  his  lajl  ficknefs,  a  few  days  before  he  died  ;  but 
gave  it  me  in  charge  not  to  fpare  him  in  any  thifig  which 
I  thought  might  be  of  ufe  to  the  living  ;  and  ives  not  ill 
pleafed  to  be  laid  open,  as  will  in  the  xvorft,  as  in  the 

bejl 


The    PREFACE. 

hejl  and  lajl  part  of  hh  life,  being  fo  fmcere  In  his  re" 
pentame,  that  he  tvas  not  unwilling  to  take  JJiame  to  him- 
Jelf  by  fuffering  his  faults  to  be  expofed  for  the  benefit 
of  others. 

I  write  with  one  great  difadvantage,  that  I  cannot  reach 
his  chief  defign  %vithout  mentioning  fame  of  his  faults  : 
hut  I  have  touched  thcjn  as  tenderly  as  occafion  would 
hear  ;  and  I  a?n  fure  with  much  jnore  foftnefs  than  he 
dcfired,  or  would  have  confeyited  unto,  had  I  told  him  how 
J  intended  to  manage  this  part.  I  have  related  nothmg 
ivith  perfonal  refe£lions  on  any  others  concerned  with  hi?n, 
wijhing  rather  that  they  themfelves  refcSiing  on  the  fenfe 
he  had  oj  his  former  diforders,  maybe  thereby  led  to  for  fake 
their  oivn,  than  that  they  Jlmdd  be  any  ways  reproached 
by  tvhat  I  write  :  and  there f  re,  though  he  ufed  very 
few  referves  zvith  me,  as  to  his  courfe  of  life,  yet  fince 
others  had  a  /hare  in  mofi  parts  of  it,  I  fliall  relate  7io-' 
thing  but  what  more  ijnmediately  concerned  himfelf;  and 
I /l)all  fay  no  more  of  his  faults,  than  is  neceffary  to  illu- 
[Irate  his  repentance. 

'The  occafion  that  led  me  into  fo  particular  a  knowledge 
of  him,  tuas  ari  intimation  given  me  by  a  gentle?nan  of 
his  acquaintance,  of  his  dcf.re  to  fee  me.  This  wasfome 
ti?ne  in  OSlober,  1679,  when  he  was  fowly  recovering 
cut  of  a  great  difcafe.  He  had  underjhod  that  I  often 
attended  on  one  tvell  known  to  him,  that  died  the  fummer 
before  ;  he  zvas  alfo  then  ente7-taining  himjclf  in  that 
/late  of  his  health,  tvith  the  firfl  part  of  the  hiftoryof  the 
reformation,  then  newly  cotne  out,  with  which  hefeemed 
?iot  ill  pleafed :  and  we  had  accidently  ?net  in  two  or  three 
places  fome  time  before.  Theje  were  the  motives  that 
led  hi?n  to  call  for  7ny  company,  ^fter  I  had  waited  on 
hi?n  once  or  tivice  he  grezv  into  that  freedom  with  me,  as 
to  open  to  fne  all  his  thoughts,  both  of  religion  and  mo- 
rality :  and  to  give  me  a  full  view  of  his  paji  life  ;  and 
feemsd  not  uneafy  at  my  frequent  vifits.     So  till  he  went 

from 


^^/  P  R  E  F  A  C  E. 

■fi-om  London^  zvhich  was  in  the  beginning  of  Jpril.^  I 
waited  on  him  often.  As  foon  as  I  heard  hovo  ill  he  if  ^x, 
and  how  ?nnch  he  was  touched  tvith  a  ferfe  of  his  former 
life^  I  writ  to  hijn,  and  received  from  him  an  anfwer, 
that^  without  my  hiowledge^  was  printed fiJice  his  death, 
from  a  copy  which  one  of  his  fervants  cotjveyed  to  the 
prefs.  In  it  there  is  fo  undeferved  a  value  put  on  mcy 
that  it  had  been  very  indecent  for  me  to  have  publifhed  it  : 
yet  that  muft  be  attributed  to  his  civility  and  way  of 
breeding  :  and  indeed  hs  "was  particularly  known  to  fo 
few  of  the  clergy,  that  the  good  opinion  he  had  of  me,  is 
to  be  imputed  only  to  his  unacquamtance  with  others. 

My  end  in  writing  is  fo  to  dif charge  the  lafi  commancfs 
this  lord  left  on  me,  as  that  it  may  be  effe^ual  to  awaken 
thofe  who  run  on  to  all  the  excejjes  of  riot  ;  and  that  ift 
the  midft  of  thofe  heats  which  their  lufis  and  paffions 
raife  in  them,  they  may  be  a  little  wrought  on  by  jo  great 
an  inflame  of  one  ivho  had  run  round  the  tuhole  circle  of 
luxury;  and,  as  Solomon  fays  of  himfelf,  Whatfoever 
his  eyes  defired,  he  kept  it  not  from  them  ;  and 
withheld  his  heart  from  no  joy.  Butivhen  he  looked 
back  on  all  that  on  which  he  had  xvajled  his  time  and 
Jlrength,  he  ejieemed  it  vanity  and  vexation  of  fpirit  : 
though  he  had  both  as  much  natural  wit,  and  as  much 
acquired  by  learning,  and  both  as  much  i?nproved  with 
thinking  andfludy,  as  perhaps  any  libertine  of  the  age  ; 
yet  when  he  refeSied  on  all  his  former  courfes,  even  be- 
fore his  mind  was  illuminated  with  better  thoughts,  /><? 
counted  them  fnadnefs  and  folly.  But  when  the  powers 
of  religion  came  to  operate  on  him,  then  he  added  a 
deteflation  to  the  contempt  he  forrnerly  had  of  them,  fuit- 
able  to  what  became  a  fincere  penitent,  and  exprefjid 
himfelf  in  fo  clear  and  fo  calm  a  manner,  fo  fenfihle  of 
his  failings  toivards  his  Maker  and  his  Redeemer,  that  as 
it  wrought  not  a  little  on  thofe  that  were  about  hi?n  ;  fo^ 
J  hope,  the  making  it  public  may  have  a  more  general 

A  infuencfy 


ne    F  R  E  F  A  C  E. 

tnjlueme,  ch'iejly  on  thofcon  whom  his  former  convcrfa^ 
tion  tnight  have  had  ill  effeils. 

I  ha-ve  endeavoured  to  give  his  eharaulcr  as  fully  as  I 
could  take  it  :  for  J  who  faw  hijn  only  in  one  light,  in  a 
fcdate  and  quid  tc/ti-per,  when  he  was  under  a  great  de- 
cay ofjlrcngth  and  lofs  offpirits^  cannot  give  his  picture- 
xvitl)  that  life  arid  advantage  that  others  inay,  vjho> 
knew  him  when  his  parts  were  more  bright  and  lively  r 
'i£t  the  cojnpofure  he  was  then  in,  7nay  perhaps  beftippcfcd 
to  balance  any  ahatemeyit  of  his  ifiial  vigour,  tvhich  the 
declination  of  his  health  brought  him  under.  I  have 
written  this  difcoiofe  zvith  as  ?nuch  care,  and  have  con-- 
fidcred  it  as  narrowly  as  I  could,  I  am  fure  I  have 
faid  nothing  but  truth  ;  /  have  done  it  fotuly,  and  often 
nfed  7ny  fccond  thoughts  in  it,  not  being  fo  much  concerned 
in  the  cenfures  ivhich  7night  fall  oyi  myjclf,  as  cautious  thai; 
nothing  Jhould  pafs  that  rnight  obJJruSi  ?ny  only  defign  of 
writings  which  is  the  doing  ivhat  I  can  totvards  the 
refoTjyiing  a  loofe  and  lezvd  age.  And  iffuch  a  fignal 
injiance  concurring  with  all  the  evidence  that  lue  have- 
for  our  mofl  holy  faith,  has  no  effe^  on  thofe  who  are 
running  the  fame  courfe,  it  is  much  to  be  feared  they  are 
given  up  to  a  reprobate  fenfe. 


SOME 


M    .  .      ,  ■ " .  ■  M 

0^  "a-^-n-n--^-  >(c«o^^o«.'x'  ^-'i-^-;!?-.^-  '^ 

0.  4- **«**•*•  X  •T-H-- X  4-*V*-^  M 

"0.  -3?-«"^--^-J5-  XoccoO|(,oo«X;(  -ii-w-a-n-^  ■<3>' 

¥  '  "  '  '  '  '  "sC 


SOME 

PASSAGES 

Of  the  Life  and  Death  of 

JOHN    Earl  of  Roc  h  e  s  t  er. 

JOHN  WILMOT,  earlofRochefter,  was 
born  in  April,  Anno  Dom.  1648.  His  Fa- 
ther was  Henry  earl  of  Rochefter,  but  bed 
known  by  the  title  of  the  lord  Wilmot,  who  bore 
fo  great  a  part  in  all  the  late  wars,  that  mention 
is  often  made  of  him  in  the  hiftory  j  and  had  the 
chief  (hare  in  the  honour  of  the  preiervation  of  his 
majefty  that  now  reigns,  after  Worcefter  fight, 
and  the  conveying  him  from  place  to  place,  till  he 
happily  efcaped  into  France  :  but  dying  before  the 
king's  return,  he  left  his  fon  little  other  inheritance 
but  the  honour  and  title  derived  to  him,  with  the  pre- 
tenfions  fuch  eminent  fervices  gave  him  to  the  king's 
favour  :  thcfe  were  carefully  managed  by  the  great 

A  2  prudeuQ© 


4  "The  Life  and  Death  of 

prudence  and  difcretion  of  his  mother,  a  daughter 
of  that  noble  and  antient  family  of  the  St.  John's 
of  Wiltfhlre,  fo  that  his  education  was  carried 
on  in  all  things  fuitably  to  his  quality. 

When  he  was  atfchool,  he  was  an  extraordinary 
proficient  at  his  book ;  and  thofe  ftiining  parts, 
which  have  fince  appeared  with  fo  much  luftre,  be- 
gan then  to  fhew  themfelves  :  he  acquired  the  Latin 
to  fuch  perfedion,  that  to  his  dying  day  he  retained 
a  great  relifh  of  the  finenefs  and  beauty  of  that 
tongue,  and  was  exa£lty  verfed  in  the  incompara- 
ble authors  that  writ  about  Auguftus's  time,  whom 
he  read  often  with  that  peculiar  delight  which  the 
greateft  wits  have  ever  found  in  thofe  ftudies. 

When  he  went  to  the  univerfity,  the  general 
joy  which  over  ran  the  whole  nation  upon  his  ma- 
jefty's  reflauration,  but  was  not  regulated  with 
that  fobriety  and  temperance,  that  became  a  ferious 
gratitude  to  God  for  fo  great  a  blefling,  produced 
fome  of  its  ill  effects  on  him  :  he  began  to  love 
thefe  diforders  too  much  ;  his  tutor  was  that  emi- 
nent and  pious  divine  Dr.  Blandford,  afterwards 
promoted  to  the  fees  of  Oxford  and  Worcefter  ; 
and  under  his  infpcdlion  he  was  committed  to  the 
more  immediate  care  of  Mr.  Phineas  Berry,  a  fel- 
low of  Wadham  College,  a  very  learned  and  good- 
natured  man  j  whom  he  afterwards  ever  ufed  with, 
much  refpe£l,  and  rewarded  him  as  became  a  great 
man.  But  the  humour  of  that  time  wrought  fo 
much  on  him,  that  he  broke  ofF  the  courfe  of  his 
iludies,  to  which  no  means  could  ever  efFedually 

recall 


JOHN  Earl  of  Roche st:er.         5 

recall  him  ;  till  when  he  was  in  Italy  his  governour 
Dr.  Balfour,  a  learned  and  worthy  man,  nov/  a 
celebrated  phyfician  in  Scotland,  his  native  coun- 
try, drew  him  to  read  fuch  books  as  were  moft 
likely  to  bring  him  back  to  love  learning  and  ftudy ; 
and  he  often  acknowledged  to  me,  in  particular 
three  days  before  his  death,  how  much  he  was  obli- 
ged to  love  and  honour  this  his  governour,  to  whom 
he  thought  he  owed  more  than  to  all  the  world,  next 
after  his  parents,  for  his  great  fidelity  and  care  of 
him  while  he  was  under  his  trufl.  But  no  part  of  it 
affcvSled  him  more  fenfibly,  than  that  he  engaged  him 
by  many  tricks  (fohe  exprefTed  it)  to  delighii  in  books 
and  reading  j  fo  that  ever  after  he  took  occalion 
in  the  intervals  of  thofe  woeful  extravagancies  that 
confumed  moft  of  his  time,  to  read  much;  and 
though  the  time  was  generally  but  indifferently  em- 
ployed, for  the  choice  of  the  fubje«5ls  of  his  ftudies 
was  not  always  good,  yet  the  habitual  love  of 
knowledge,  together  with  thefe  fits  of  ftudy,  had 
much  awakened  his  underftanding,  and  prepared 
him  for  better  things,  when  his  mind  fhould  be  fa 
far  changed  as  to  relifti  them. 

He  came  from  his  travels  in  the  eighteenth  year 
of  his  age,  and  appeared  at  court  with  as  great 
advantages  as  moft  ever  had.  He  was  a  graceful 
and  well-fhaped  perfon,  tall,  and  well  made,  if  not 
a  little  too  flender  :  lie  was  exadly  well  bred,  and 
what  by  a  modeft  behaviour  natural  to  him,  what 
by  a  civility  became  almoft  as  natural,  his  con- 
Vfiffation  was  eafy  and  obliging.     He  had  aftrange 

A  3  A'ivacity 


6  The  Life  and  Death  of 

vivacity  of  tlioxight,  and  vigour  of  e^preflion  :  his 
jlvit  had  a  fubtilty  and  fublimity  both,  that  it  was 
fcarce  imitable.  His  ftyle  was  clear  and  ftrong  j 
when  he  ufed  figures,  they  were  very  lively,  and 
et  far  enough  out  of  the  common  road :  he  had 
ade  himfeif  mafter  of  the  antient  and  modern  wit, 
nd  of  the  modern  French  and  Italian,  as  well  as 
Jthe  Englifh.  He  loved  to  talk  and  write  of  fpecu- 
liative  matters,  and  did  it  with  fo  fine  a  thread,  that 
leven  thofe  who  hated  the  fubje<5ls  that  his  fancy  ran 
jupon,  yet  could  not  but  be  charmed  with  his  way 
|of  treating  of  them,  Boileau  among  the  French, 
/and  Cowley  among  the  Englifli  wits,  were  thofe  he 
1  admired  moft.  Sometimes  other  men's  thoucrhts 
mixed  with  his  compofures  j  but  that  flowed  rather 
from  the  impreilions  they  made  on  him  when  he 
read  them,  by  which  they  came  to  return  upori 
him  as  his  own  thoughts,  than  that  he  fervilely 
copied  from  any  ;  for  few  pieii  had  a  bolder  flight 
.  of  fancy,  more  fteadily  governed  by  judgment  than 
he  had.  No  wonder  a  young  man  fo  made,  and 
fo  improved,  was  very  acceptable  in  a  court. 

Soon  after  his  coming  thither,  he  laid  hold  04 
the  firft  occafion  that  offered  to  fliew  his  readinefs 
to  hazard  his  life  in  the  defence  and  fervice  of  his 
country.  In  Winter  1665,  he  went  with  the  earl 
of  Sandwich  to  fea,  when  he  was  fent  to  lye  for  a 
Dutch  Eaft-India  fleet ;  and  was  in  the  Revenge, 
commanded  by  Sir  Thomas  Tiddiman,  when  the 
attack  was  mas  made  on  the  port  of  Bergen  in  Nor- 
way, the  Dutch  fhips  having  got  into  that  port. 

It 


aieft  I 
ndedy 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.  7 

It  was  as  defperatc  an  attempt  as   ever  was  made ; 
during   the    whole  adlion,  the   earl  of  Rochefter 
fhewed  as  brave  and  as  refolute  a  courage   as  was 
polTible  :  a  perlbn  of  honour  told  me  he  heard  the 
iord  Cliffard,  who  was  in  the  fam-cfhip,  often  magify 
his  courage  at  that  time  very  highly.     Ncrdid  the 
rigours  of  the  feafon,  the  hardnefs  of  the  voyage, 
and  the  extreme  danger  he  had  been  in,  deter  him 
from  running  the  like  on  the  ^ery  next  occafion 
for  the  fummer  following  he  went  to  Tea  again, 
without  communicating  his  defign  to  his  neai 
relations.     He  went  aboard   the  fhip  comman 
by  Sir  Edward  Spragge,  the  day  before  the  great 
iea  fight  of  that  year  :  almoft  all  the  volunteers  that 
were  in   the  fame  fhip  were  killed.     Mr.  Middle- 
ton  (brother  to  Sir  Hugh  Middleton)  was  fhot  in  his 
arms :  durii^g  the  adion^  Sir  Edward  Spragge,  no-t 
i)eing  fatisiied  with  the  behaviour  of  one  of  the 
•captains,  could  not  eafily  find  a  perfon  that  would 
chearfully  venture  through  fo  much  danger,  to  carry 
iiis  commands  to  that  captain.     This  lord  offered 
iiimfelf  to  the  fervice  ;  and  went   in  a   little  boat^ 
through  all  the  (kot,  and  delivered  his  meflage,  and 
returned  back  to  Sir  Edv/ard,  which  was  much  com- 
mended by  all  that  faw  it.     He  thought  it  neceflary 
to  begin  his  life  with   thefc  dcmonftrations   of  his 
courage,  in  an  element  and  way  of  fighting,  which 
4S   acknowledged   to  be  the  greateft  trial   of  clear 
iind  undaunted  valour. 

He  had  fo  entirely  laid  down  tiie  intemperance 
ihat  was  growing  on  him  before  his  travels,  that 
at  his  return  he  hatc.l  nothinc:  more.     But  falllnT^ 

A  4  into 


S  ^he  Life  and  Death  0/ 

into  company  that  loved  thefe  excefies,  he  was, 
^  though  not  without  difficulty,  and  by  many  fteps, 
V  brought  back  to  it  again.  And  the  natural  heat  of 
his  fancy,  being  inflamed  by  wine,  made  him  fo 
extravagantly  pleafant,  that  many  to  be  more  di- 
verted by  that  humour,  ftudied  to  engage  him 
deeper  and  deeper  in  intemperance  ;  which  at  length 
did  fo  entirely  fubduc  him,  that,  as  he  told  me,  for 
five  years  together  he  was  continually  drunk  ;  not 
)  all  the  while  under  the  vifible  efl^cds  of  it,  but  his 
:  blood  was  fo  inflamed,  that  he  was  not  in  all  that 
time  cool  eno\{gh  to  be  perfedly  mafter  of  himfelf. 
This  led  him  to  fay  and  do  many  wild  and  unac- 
countable things  :  by  this,  he  faid,  he  had  broke 
the  firm  conftitution  of  his  health,  that  feemed  fo 
ftrong,  that  nothing  was  too  hard  for  it  i  and 
he  had  fufFered  fo  much  in  his  reputation,  that 
he  almoft  defpalred  to  recover  it.  There  were  two 
principles  in  his  natural  temper,  that  being  height- 
ened by  that  heat,  carried  him  to  great  excefles  : 
a  violent  love  of  pleafure,  and  a  difpofition  to  ex- 
travagant mirth.  The  one  involved  him  in  great  (cn-^ 
fuality  ;  the  other  led  him  to  many  odd  adventures 
and  frolics,  in  which  he  was  oft  in  haf,ard  of 
his  life.  The  one  being  the  fame  irregular  appe- 
tite in  his  mind,  that  the  other  was  in  his  body, 
which  made  him  think  nothing  diverting  that  was 
not  extravagant.  And  though  in  cold  blood  he  was 
a  generous  and  good  natured  man,  yet  he  would 
go  far  in  his  heats,  after  any  thing  that  might  turn 
to  a  jeft,  or  matter  of  diverfion,   He  faid  to  me,  he 

never 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.         9 

never  improved  his  intereft  at  court,  to  do  a  preme- 
ditate mifcliief  to  other  perfons.  Yet  he  laid  out 
his  wit  very  freely  in  libels  and  fatires,  in  which  he 
had  a  peculiar  talent  of  mixing  his  wit  with  his  ma-  j 
lice,  and  fitting  both  with  fuch  apt  words,  that  I 
men  were  tempted  to  be  pleafed  with  them  :  from 
thence  his  compofures  came  to  be  eafily  known, 
for  few  had  fuch  a  way  of  tempering  thefe  together 
as  he  had  :  fo  that  v/hen  any  thing  extraordinary 
that  way  came  out,  as  a  child  is  fathered  fometimes 
by  its  refemblance,  fo  was  it  laid  at  his  door  as  its 
parent  and  author. 

Thefe  exercifes  in  the  courfe  of  his  life  were  not 
always  equally  pleafant  to  him  ;  he  had  often  fad  f 
intervals,  and  fevere  refleilions  on  them :  and 
though  then  he  had  not  thefe  awakened  in  "him 
from  any  deep  principle  of  religion,  yet  the  horror 
that  nature  raifed  in  him,  efpecially  in  fome  fick- 
neifes,  made  him  too  eafy  to  receive  fome  ill  prin- 
ciples, which  others  endeavoured  to  poflefs  him 
with  ;  fo  that  he  was  too  foon  brought  to  fet  himfelf 
to  fccure  and  fortify  his  mind  againft  that,  by  dif- 
poflefling  it  all  he  could  of  the  belief  or  apprehen- 
fions  of  religion.  The  licentioufnefs  of  his  temper, 
with  the  brifknefs  of  his  wit,  difpofed  him  to  love 
the  converfation  of  thofe  who  divided  their  time 
between  lewd  actions  and  irregular  mirth.  And 
fo  he  came  to  bend  his  wit,  and  dire6l  his  ftudies 
and  endeavours  to  fupport  and  ftrengthen  thefe  ill 
principles  both  in  himfelf  and  others.- 

Aa 


lo  ^he  Life  mid  Death  of 

An  accident  fell  out  after  this,  which  confirmed 
h\m  more  in  thefe  courfes  j  when  he  went  to  fea 
in  the  year  1665,  there  happened  to  be  in  the  fame 
fliip  with  him  Mr.  Montague,  and  another  gen- 
tleman of  quah'ty ;  thefe  tv/o,  the  former  efpecially, 
feemed  perfuaded  that  they  fhould  never  return 
into  England.  Mr.  Montague,  faid,  he  was  fure 
of  it ;  the  other  was  not  fo  pofitive.  The  earl  of 
Rochefter,  and  the  lafl:  of  thefe  entered  into  a  for- 
mal engagement,  not  without  ceremonies  of  reli- 
gion, that  if  either  of  them  died,  he  fliould  appear 
and  give  the  other  notice  of  the  future  ftate,  if 
there  was  any.  But  Mr.  Montague  would  not 
enter  into  the  bond.  When  the  day  came 
that  they  thought  to  have  taken  the  Dutch  fleet 
in  the  port  of  Bergen,  Mr.  Montague,  though 
he  had  fuch  a  ilrong  prefage  in  his  mind  of  his  ap- 
proaching death,  yet  he  generouiJy  flaid  all  the 
while  in  the  place  of  greateft  danger  :  the  other 
gentleman  fignalized  his  courage  in  a  moft  un- 
daunted manner,  till  the  end  of  the  action  ;  when 
he  fell  on  a  fudden  into  fuch  a  trembling  that  he 
could  fcarce  (land  ;  and  Mr.  Montague  going  to 
him  to  hold  him  up,  as  they  were  in  each  others 
(arms,  a  cannon  ball  killed  him  outright,  and  car- 
ried away  Mr.  Montague's  belly,  fo  that  he  died 
within  an  hour  after.  The  earl  of  Rochefter 
told  me  that  that  thefe  prefages  they  had  in  their 
minds  made  fome  imprefllon  on  him,  that  there 
were  feparatcd  beings ;  and  that  the  foul  either  by 
a.ijatural  fagacity^  or  fome  fecrct  notice  communi- 
cated 


JOHN  Ec^rl  of  Rochester.         ii 

catcd  to  it,  had  a  fort  of  divination  :  but  that  gen- 
tleman's never  appearing  was  a  great  fnare  to  him 
during  the  reft  of  his  life.  Though  when  he  told 
me  this  he  could  not  but  acknowledge,  it  was  an 
unreafonable  thing  for  him  to  think,  that  beings  ia 
another  ftate  were  not  under  fuch  laws  and  limits, 
that  they  could  not  command  their  own  motions,  J 
but  as  the  Supreme  Pov/erfhould  order  them  ;  and 
that  one  who  had  fo  corrupted  the  natural  princi- 
ples of  truth,  as  he  had,  had  no  reafon  to  expeS 
that  fuch  an  extraordinary  thing  fhould  be  done  for 
his  con vi 61  ion. 

He  told  me  of  another  odd  prefage  that  one  had 
of  his .  approaching  death  in  the  lady  Warre,  his 
mother-iri-law's   houfe  :  the  chaplain  had   dreamt 
that  fuch  a  day  he  (hould  die,  but  being  by  all  the 
family  put  out  of  the  belief  of  it,  he  had  almoft  forgot 
it ;  till  the  evening  before  at  fupper,  there  being 
thirteen   at  table,  according  to  a  fond  conceit  that 
one  of  thefe  muft  foon  die,  one  of  the  young  ladies 
pointed  to  him,  that  he  was  to  die.     He  remember- 
ing his  dream  fell  into  fome  diforder,  and  the  lady 
Warre  reproving  him  for  his  fuperftition,  he  faid, 
he  was  confident  he  was  to  die  before  morning, 
but  he  being  in  perfedl  health,  it  was  not  much 
minded.     It  was  Saturday  night,  and  he  was  to 
preach  next  day.     He  went  to  his  chamber  and  fat 
up  late,  as  appeared  by  the  burning  of  his  candle, 
^\nd  he  had  been  preparing  his  notes  for  his  fermon, 
but  was  found  dead  in  his  bed  the  next  morning : 

thcie  thin2;s  he  faid  made  him  inclined  to  believe,  the 

foiil 


12  ^he  Life  and  Death  of 

.  foul  was  a  Tubflance  diflind  from  matter  j  and  thijj 
•  often  returned  into  his  thoughts.  But  that  which 
perfcded  his  perfuafwn  about  it,  was,  that  in  the 
ixcknefs  which  brought  him  fo  near  death  before  I 
firft  knew  him,  when  his  fpirits  were  fo  low  and 
fpent  that  he  could  not  move  nor  ftir,  and  he  did  not 
think  to  live  an  hour  j  he  faid  his  reafon  and  judg- 
ment were  fo  clear  and  ftrong,  that  from  thence  he 
yras  fully  perfuaded  that  death  was  not  the  fpend- 
ingor  diflblution  of  the  foul,  but  only  the  fepa- 
I  ration  of  it  from  matter.  He  had  in  that  ficknefs 
great  remorfes  for  his  paft  life,  but  he  afterwards 
told  me,  they  were  rather  genera[  and  dark  horrors, 
than  any  convidlions  of  fmning  againft  God.  He 
was  forry  he  had  lived  fo  as  to  wafte  his  ftrength  fo 
foon,  or  that  he  had  brought  fuch  an  ill  name  up- 
on himfelf,  and  had  an  agony  in  his  mind  about 
it,  which  he  knew  not  well  how  to  exprefs  :  but 
at  fuch  times,  though  he  complied  with  his  friends 
in  fuffering  divines  to  be  fent  for,  he  faid,  he  had 
no  great  mind  to  it  j  and  that  it  was  but  a  piece 
of  his  breeding,  to  defire  them  to  pray  by  him,  in 
which  he  joined  little  himfelf. 

As  to  the  Supreme  Being,  he  had  always  fome  im- 
preflion  of  one  ;  and  profefled  often  to  me,  that  he 
j  had  never  known  an  entire  atheift,  who  fully  be- 
'  lieved  there  was  no  God.  Yet  when  he  explained 
his  notion  of  this  being,  it  amounted  to  no  more 
than  a  vaft  power,  that  had  none  of  the  attributes 
df  goodnefs  or  juftice,  we  afcribe  to  the  deity  ; 
tbefe  were  his  thoughts  about  religion,  as  himfelf 

told 


r 

1 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.        13 

told  me.  For  morality,  he  freely  owned  to  me, 
that  though  he  talked  of  it,  as  a  fine  thing,  yet 
this  was  only  becaufe  he  thought  it  a  decent  way 
of  fpeaking  j  and  that  as  they  went  always  in 
cloaths,  though  in  their  frolicks  they  would  have 
chofen  fometimes  to  have  gone  naked,  if  they  had 
not  feared  the  people  ;  fo  fome  of  them  found  it  ne- 
ceflary  for  human  life  to  talk  of  morality,  yet  he  [ 
confefled  they  cared  not  for  it,  further  than  the 
reputation  of  it  was  neceflary  for  their  credit  and 
affairs ;  of  which  he  gave  me  many  inftances,  as 
their  profefHng  and  fwearing  friendfiiip,  where  they 
hated  mortally  ;  their  oaths  and  imprecations  oa 
their  addrefies  to  women,  which  they  intended  ne- 
ver to  make  good ;  the  pleafure  they  took  in  de- 
faming innocent  perfons,  and  fpreading  falfe  reports 
of  fome  perhaps  in  revenge,  becaufe  they  could  not 
engage  them  to  comply  with  their  ill  defigns  j  the 
delight  they  had  in  making  people  quarrel  ;  their 
unjuft  ufage  of  their  creditors,  and  putting  them 
off  by  any  deceitful  promife  they  could  invent,  that 
might  deliver  them  from  prefent  importunity.  So 
that  in  deteftation  of  thefe  courfes  he  would  often 
break  forth  into  fuch  hard  expreffions  concerning 
himfelf,  as  would  be  indecent  for  another  to  repeat. 
•  Such  had  been  his  principles  and  pratSlices  in  a 
courfe  of  many  years,  which  had  almoil  quite  ex- 
tinguifhed  the  natural  propenfities  in  him  tojuftice 
and  virtue.  He  would  often  go  into  the  country, 
and  be  for  fome  months  wholly  employed  in  ftudy, 
or  the  failics  of  his  wit,  which  he  came  to  direct 

chiefly 


fff- 


14  'I'hs  Life  avd  Death  of 

chiefly  to  fatire.     And   this   he  often  defended   to^ 
nie  ;  by  faying  there  was  fome   people  that  could 
not  be  kept  in   order,  or  admonifhed  but  in  this 
way.     I  replied,  that  it  might  be  granted   that   a 
grave  way  of  fatire  was  fometimes  no  improfitable 
wayof  reproof  J  yet  they  who  ufed  it  only  out  of  fpite, 
and  niixed  lies  with   truth,  fparing  nothing  that 
might  adorn  their  poems,  or  gratify  their  revenge, 
could  not  excufe  that  way  of  reproach,  by  which 
the  innocent  often  fufFer  ;  fince  the  moft  malicious 
things  if  wittily  expreffed,  might  flick  to  and  ble- 
mifh  the  beft  men  in  the  world,  and  the  malice  of 
a  libel  could  hardly  confift  with  the  charity  of  an 
admonition.      To  this,    he  anfwercd,  a  man  could 
•^  not  write  with  life,  unlefs  he  were  heated  by  revenge: 
for  to  make  a  fatire  without  refentments,  upon  the 
cold  notions  of  philofophy,  was  as  if  a  man  would 
iri  cold  blood  cut  mens  throats  who  had  never  offend- 
ed him  :  and  he  faid,  the  lies  in  thefe  libels  came 
often  in  as  ornaments  that  could  not  be  fpared  with- 
out fpoiling  the  beauty  of  the  poem. 

For  his  other  ftudies,  they  were  divided  between 
the  comical  and  witty  writings  of  the  antients  and 
moderns,  the  Roman  authors  and  books  of  phyfic  ; 
which  the  ill  Hate  of  health  he  was  fallen  into, 
made  more  neceffary  to  himfelf,  and  which  qua- 
lified him  for  an  odd  adventure,  which  I  fhall  but 
juft  mention.  Being  under  an  unlucky  accident, 
which  obliged  him  to  keep  out  of  the  way,  he  dif- 
euifed  himfelf,  fo  that  his  neareft  friends  could  not 
have  known  him,  and  fet  up  in  Tower-flreet  for 

an 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.        15 

an  Italian  mountebank,  where  he  pradlifed  phyfic  for 
fome  weeks  not  without  fuccefs.  In  his  latter 
years  he  read  books  of  hiftory  more.  He  took 
pleafure  to  difguife  himfelf  as  a  porter,  or  as  a  beg- 
gar V  fometiraes  to  follow  fome  mean  amours, 
which  for  the  variety  of  them,  he  affe£led.  At 
other  times,  merely  for  diverfion,  he  would  go  a- 
feout  in  odd  fhapes,  in-  which  he  a<Sl:ed  his  part  fo 
naturally,  that  even  thofe  who  were  in  the  fecrer, 
and  faw  Km  in  thefe  fhapes,  could  perceive  no- 
thing by  which  he  might  be  difcovered, 

I  have  now  made  the  defcription  of  his  former 
fife  and  principles,   as  fully  as  I  thought  neceflary 
to  anfwer  my  end  in  writing  ;  and  yet  with-  thofe 
referves  that  I  hope  I  have  given  no  juft  caufe  of 
offence  to  any.     I   have  faid  nothing  but  what  I 
had  from  his  own  mouth,  and   have  avoided  the 
mentioning  of  the  more  particular  paiTages  of  his 
life,  of  which  he  told  me  not  a  few  :  but  fmce 
others  were  concerned  in  them,  v»'^hofe  good  only  I 
defign,  1  will  fay  nothing  that  may  either  provoke 
or  blemifh  them.     It  is  their  reformation,  and  not 
their  difgrace,  I  defire  ;  this  tender  confideration  of 
ethers   has    made    me    fupprefs  many    remarkable 
and  wfeful   things  he  told  me  ;    but  finding  th,^»t 
though  I  fliould  name  none,  yet  I  muft  at  kalt  re- 
late fuch  clrcumftunces,  as  would  give  top  great 
occafion  for  the  reader  to  conjeiSlure  eoncernin^; 
the  perfons  intended  riglvt  or  wrong,  eirhef  of  which. 
were  inconvenient  enough,  I  have  chofen  to  pafs 
them  quite  over.     Buti  hope  thofe  ihat  kjiov.'  lio\v 

much 


i6  ^he  Life  and  Death  of 

much  they  were  engaged  with  him  in  his  ill  courfes, 
will  be  fomewhat  touched  with  this  tendernefs  I  ex- 
prefs  towards  them,  and  be  thereby  the  rather 
induced  to  reflc£l  on  their  ways,  and  to  confider 
without  prejudice  or  paflion  what  fenfe  this' noble 
lord  had  of  their  cafe,  when  he  came  at  laft  feri- 
oully  to  refled  upon  his  own. 

I  now  turn  to  thofe  parts  of  this  narrative,  where- 
in I  myfelf  bore  fome  fhare,  and  which  I  am  to 
deliver  upon  the  obfervations  I  made,  afer  a  long 
and  free  converfation  with  him  for  fome  months. 
I  was  not  long  in  his  company,  when  he  told  me, 
he  ftiould  treat  me  with  more  freedom  than  he  had" 
ever  ufed  to  men  of  my  profeflion.     He  would  con- 
ceal none  of  his  principles  from  me,  but  lay  his 
thoughts  open  without  any  difguife  ;  nor  would 
he  do  it  to  maintain  debate,  or  fhew  his  wit,  but 
plainly  tell  me  what  ftuck  with  him  ;  and  protefted 
to  me,  that  he  was  not  fo  engaged  to  his  old  max- 
ims, as  to  refolve  not  to  change,  but  that  if  he 
could  be  convinced,  he  would  chufe  rather  to  be 
of  another  mind  :  he  faid,  he  would   impartially 
weigh  what  I  fhould  lay  before  him,  and  tell  me 
freely  when  it  did  convince,  and  when  it  did  not. 
He  exprefied  this  difpofition  of  mind  to  me  in  x 
manner  fo  frank,  that  I  could  not  but  believe  him, 
and  be    much  taken   with   his   way  of  difcourfe : 
fo  we  entered  into  almolt  all  the  parts  of  natural 
and    revealed     religion,    and    of    morality.     He 
feemed  pleafed,  and  in  a  great  meafure  fatisfied, 
with  what  I  faid   upon  many  of  thefe  heads ;  and 

though 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.        17 

though  our  freeft  converfation  was  when  we  were 
alone,  yet   upon  feveral  occafions,    other   pcrfons 
were  witnefTes  to  it.     I  unclerftood  from  many  hands 
that  my   company  was  not  diftafteful  to  him,  and 
that  the  fubjefts  about  which  we  talked  mod  were 
not  unacceptable  :   and  he  exprefTed  himfelf  often 
not  ill  pleafed  with  many  things  I  faid  to  him,  and 
particularly  when  I  vifited  him  in  his  laft  ficknefs  ; 
fo  that  1  hope  it   may  not  be  altogether  unprofit- 
able to  publifli  the  fubftance  of  thofe  matters  about 
which  we  argued   fo   freely,  with    our  reafoning 
upon  them  :  and  perhaps  what  had  fome  efFecls  on 
him,  may  be  not  altogether  inefFe<?t:ual  upon  others. 
I  followed  him  with  fuch  arguments  as  I  faw  were 
moft  likely  to  prevail  with  him:  and  my  not  urging 
other  reafons  proceeded  not  from  any  diftruft  I  had 
of  their    force,    but   from  the    neceflity  of  ufing 
thofe   that  were   moft  proper   for    him.     He  was 
then  in  a  low  ftate  of  health,  and  feemed  to  be 
flowly    recovering    of   a    great   difeafe.     He    was 
in  the  milk  diet,  and  apt  to  fall  into  heclical  fits  ; 
any  accident  weakened  him  j  fo  that   he  thought 
he  could  not  live  long  ;    and  v/hen   he  went  from 
London,  he  faid,  he  believed  he  fhould  never  come 
to  tov/n  more.     Yet   during    his   being  in    town 
he  was   fo  well,  that  he  went  often  abroad,  and 
had  great  vivacity  of  fpirit.     So  that  he  was  under 
no  fuch  decay,  as  either  darkened  or  weakened  his 
underftanding  ;   nor  was  he  any  way  troubled  with  1 
the  fpleen,  or  vapours,  or  under  the  power  of  me- 
lancholly.     What  he  was  then  compared  to  what 
he  had  been  formerly,  I  could  not  fo  well  judge, 

B  who 


1 8  1'he  Life  and  Death  of 

who  had  feen  him  but  twice  before.     Others  have 
toid  me  they  perceived  no  difference  in  his  parts. 
This  1  mention  more  particularly,  that  it  may  not 
•  be  thought  that  melancholly,  or  the  want  of  fpirits, 
made  him  more  inclined  to  receive  any  impreffions  : 
for  indeed  I  never  difcovered  any  fuch  thing  in  him» 
Having  thus  opened  the  way  to  the  heads  of  our 
/'difcourfe,  I  fliall  next  mention  them.     The  three 
J  chief  things  we  talked  about,  were  morality,  na- 
(  tural  religion,  and  revealed  religion,  chriftianity  in 
particular.     For  morality,  he  confeffed,  he  faw  the 
iieceflity   of  it,    both   for   the  government  of  the 
world,  and  for  the  prefervation  of  health,  life  and 
friendfhip  ;  and  was  very  much  afhamed  of  his  for- 
mer prailices,^  rather  becaufe  he  had  made  himfelf 
a  beaft,  and  had  brought  pain  and  ficknefs  on   hjs 
body,   and  had  fuffered  much   in  his  reputation, 
than  from  any  deep  fenfe  of  a  Supreme  Being,  or 
another  flate  :  but  fo  far  this  went  with  him,  that 
he  refolved  firmly  to  change  the  courfe  of  his  life  ; 
which  he  thought  he  fhould  efTeit  by  the  fludy  of 
philofophy,  and  had  not  a  few  no  lefs  foHd   tha» 
pleafant  notions  concerning  the  folly  and  madnefs 
of  vice  :  but  he  confefTed   he  had   no  remorfe   for 
his  pafl  a£lion?,  as  offences  againft  God,  but  only 
as  injuries  to  himfelf  and  to  mankind. 

Upon  this  fubjedt  I  Ihewed  him  the  defeats  of 
philofophy,  for  reforming  the  world :  that  it  was 
a  matter  of  fj^eculation,  which  but  few  either  had 
the  leifure,  or  the  capacity  to  enquire  into.  But 
the  principle  that  muft  reform  mankind,  mufl  be 

obvious 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester  19 

obvious  to  every  mans  underftanding.  That  phi- 
lofophy  in  matters  of  morality,  beyond  the  great 
lines  of  our  duty,  had  no  very  certain  fixed  rule  ; 
but  in  the  lefTer  offices  and  inftances  of  our  dutv, 
went  much  by  the  fancies  of  men  and  cuftoms  of 
nations ;  and  confequently  could  not  have  authority 
enough  to  bear  down  the  propenfities  of  nature, 
appetite  or  paffion  :  for  which  I  inftanced  in  thefe 
two  points ;  the  one  was,  about  that  maxim  of 
the  fto^cs,  to  extirpate  all  fort  of  paflion  and  con- 
cern for  any  thing.  That,  take  it  by  one  hand, 
feemed  defireable,  becaufe  if  it  could  be  accompli- 
fhed,  it  would  make  all  the  accidents  of  life  eafy  ; 
but  I  think  it  cannot,  becaufe  nature,  after  all  our  \ 
ftriving  againft  it,  will  ftill  return  to  itfelf :  yet  on  ' 
the  other  hand  it  diflblved  the  bonds  of  nature  and. 
friendftiip^  and  flackened  induftry,  which  will  move 
but  dully,  without  an  inward  heat :  and  if  it  de- 
livered a  man  from  any  troubles,  it  deprived  him 
of  the  chief  pleafures  of  life,  which  arife  from 
friendfhip.  The  other  was  concerning  the  reflraint 
of  pleafure,  how  far  that  was  to  go.  Upon  this 
he  told  me  the  two  maxims  of  his  morality  then 
were,  that  he  fliould  do  nothing  to  the  hurt  of  any 
other,  or  that  might  prejudice  his  own  health  ; 
and  he  thought  that  all  pleafure,  when  it  did  not 
interfere  with  thefe,  was  to  be  indulged  as  the 
gratification  of  our  natural  appetites.  It  k^int^ 
unreafonable  to  Imagine  thefe  were  put  into  a  man 
only  to  be  reftrained,  or  curbed  to  fuch  a  narrow-* 

B  2  nefs; 


/)p 


20  The  Life  and  Death  cf 

nefs :  this  he  applied  to  the  free   ufe  of  wine  and 
women. 

To  this  I  anfwered,  that  if  appetites  being  natu- 
ral,  was  an  argument  for  the  indulging  them,  then 
the  revengeful  might  as  well  alledge  it  for  murder, 
and  the  covetous  for  flealing  ;  whofe  appetites   are 
no  lefs  keen  on    thofe   objects  j  and   yet   it  is  ac- 
knowledged that  thefe  appetites  ought  to  be  curb'd. 
If  the  difFerence  is  urged  from  the  injury  that  an- 
other  perfon  receives,  the  injury  is  as  great  if  a 
man's  wife  is  defiled,  or  his  daughter  corrupted: 
and  it  is  impoilible  for  a  man  to  let  his  appetites 
loofe  to  vagrant  lufts,  and  not  to  tranfgrefs  in  thefe 
particulars  :   fo  there  was  no  curing  the  diforders 
that    muft  arife  from    thence,    but  by  tegulating 
thefe  appetites  ;    and  why  fliould  we  not  as  well 
» think  that  God   intended  our  brutifh   and   fenfual 
'  appetites  fliould  be  governed  by   our    reafon,   as 
that  the  fiercenefs  of  beafts  fhould  be  managed  and 
tamed  by  the  wifdom,  and    for  the  ufe  of  man  ? 
So  that  it  is  ho  real  abfurdity  to  grant,  that  appetites 
were  put  into  men,  on  purpofe   to  exercife  their 
reafon   in  the  reftraint  and  government  of  them, 
which  to  be   able  to  do,  miniilers  a  higher    and 
;5^  more  lafting  pleafure  to  a  man,   than  to  give  them 
their  full  fcope  and  range.     And  if  other  rules  of 
philofophy  be  obferved,  fuch  as  the  avoiding  thofe 
obje6ls  that  ftir  pafilon,  nothing  raifes  higher  paf- 
'  fions  than  ungoverned  luft,  nothing  darkens  the 
vinderftanding  and  deprefles  a  man's  mind  more,  nor 
is  any  thing  managed  with  more  frequent  returns 

of 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.         21 

of  other  immoralities,  fuch  as  oaths  and  impre- 
cations, which  are  only  intended  to  compafs  what 
is  defired  :  the  expence  that  h  neceffary  to  main- 
tain thefe  irregulaiities,  makes  a  man  falfe  in  his 
other  dealings.  All  this  he  freely  confelTed  was 
true  :  upon  which  I  urged,  that  if  it  was  reafon- 
able  for  a  man  to  regulate  his  appetite  in  things 
which  he  knew  were  hurtful  to  him  ;  v/as  it  not, 
as  reafonabk  for  God  to  prefcribe  a  regulation  of 
thofe  appetites,  whcfe  unreilraihed  courfe  did  pro- 
duce fuch  mifchievous  ^ffecSts  ?  That  it  could  not 
be  denied,  but  doing  to  others  v/hat  we  would 
have  others  do  unto  us,  was  a  juil  rule.  Thofe 
men  then  that  knew  how  extreme  fenfible  they 
themfelves  would  be  of  the  difhonour  of  thei.r  fa- 
milies in  the  cafe  of  their  wives  or  daughters,  muft 
needs  condemn  themfcves  for  doing:  that  which 
they  could  not  bear  from  another  :  and  if  the  peace 
of  mankind,  and  the  intire  fatisfadlion  of  our 
whole  life,  ought  to  be  one  of  the  chief  meafures 
of  our  actions,  then  kt  all  the  world  judge, 
whether  a  man  that  confines  his  appetite,  and 
lives  contented  at  home,  is  not  much  happier  thaii 
thofe  that  let  their  defires  run  after  forbidden  ob- 
jedls.  The  thing  being  granted  to  be  better  in 
itfelf,  then  the  queftion  falls  between  the  reftraint 
of  appetite  in  fome  inftances,  and  the  freedom  of 
a  man's  thoughts,  the  foundnefs  of  his  health,  hi? 
application  to  affairs,  with  the  eafmefs  of  his  whole 
life.  Whether  the  one  is  not  to  be  done  before 
th£  other  ?     As  to  the  difficulty  of  fuch  a  reftraint, 

B  3  though 


22  The  Life  njid  Death  of 

though   it  is    not  eafy  to  be  done,  when  a  man 
allows  himfelf  many  liberties,  in  which  it  is  not 
pofTible  to  flop  ;  yet  thofe  who  avoid  the  occafions 
that   may    kindle   thefe   impure   flames,   and   keep 
thernfelves  well  imployed,  find  the  victory  and  do- 
minion over  them  no  fuch  impoflible,  or  hat  d  mat- 
ter, as  may  feem  at  firfl  view.    So  that  though  the 
philofophy  and  morality  of  this  point   were  plain, 
yet  there  is  not  {Irength  enough  in  that   principle 
to  fubdue  nature,  and  appetite.    Upon  this  I  urged, 
that  ruorality  could  not  be  a  ftrong  thing,  unlefs  a 
man  were  deLermincd  by  a  law  within  himfelf;  for  if 
he  orily  meafured  hiiiifelf  by  decency,  or  the  Jaws 
of  the  land,  tius  wcuid  teach  him  only  to  ufe  fuch 
cautions  in  his  ill  practices,  that  they  Ihould  not 
break  out  too  vifibly  ;  but  would  never  carry  him 
to  an  inward  and  univerfal  probity.     That  virtue 
was  of  {o  complicated  a  nature,  that  unlefs  a  man 
came  intirely  within   its  difcipline,  he  could  not 
adhere  fteadfaftly  to  any  one  precept ;  for  vices  are 
often    made    ncceflary    fupports    to    one     another. 
That  this  cannot  be  done,  either  fteadily,  or  with 
any  fatisfaftion,    unlefs   the    mind  does   inwardly 
comply  withj  and  delight  in  the  ditflates  of  virtue  ; 
and  that  could   not  be  efFedled,  except  a    man's 
nature  were  internally  regenerated,    and  changed 
by  a  higher  principle  :   till  that  came  about,  cor- 
rupt nature  would  be  ftrong,  and   philofophy  but 
feeble;  efpecially  when  it  ftruggled  with  fuch  appe- 
tites or  pailions  as  were  much  kindled,  or  deeply 
rooted  in  the  conftitution  of  ones  body.     This, 

he 


JOHN  Earl  6/ Rochester.  23 
he  faid,  founded  to  him  like  enthufiafm,  or  cant- 
ins:  :  he  had  no  notion  of  it,  and  fo  could  not  wn- 
derftand  it.  He  comprehended  the  dictates  ofreafon 
and  philofophy,  in  which  as  the  mind  became 
much  converfant,  there  would  foon  follow,  as  he 
believed,  a  greater  eailnefs  in  obeying  its  precepts. 
I  told  him  on  the  other  hand,  that  all  his  fpecu- 
lations  of  philofophy  would  not  ferve  him  in  any 
-ftead  to  the  reforming  of  his  nature  and  life,  till 
he  applied  himfelf  to  God  for  inward  afliftances. 
It  was  certain,  that  the  imprefllons  made  in  his 
reafon  governed  him,  as  they  were  lively  prefentcd 
•to  him  i  but  thefe  are  fo  apt  to  flip  out  of  our  memo- 
ry, and  we  fo  apt  to  turn  our  thoughts  from  them, 
and  at  fomq»  times  the  contrary  impreflions  are  fo 
ftrong,  that  let  a  man  fet  up  a  reafoning  in  his 
mind  againft  them,  he  finds  that  celebrated  faying 
of  the  poet, 

Vido  meliora  prorogue,  deterlora  fequor^ 

**  I   fee  what  is  better  and  approve  it,  but  folf 
low  what  is  worfe," 

to  be  all  that  philofophy  will  amount  to.  Where- 
as thofe  who  upon  fuch  occafions  apply  them- 
felves  to  God,  by  earnefl:  prayer,  feel  a  difengage- 
ment  from  fuch  impreffions,  and  themfelves  endued 
with  a  power  to  refill  them ;  fo  that  thofe  bonds 
which  formerly  held  them  fall  off. 

This  he  faid  mufi:  be  the  effeil  of  a  heat  in  na- 
ture :    it   was    only    the    ftrong    diverfion  of   the  I 
thoughts,  that  gave  the  feeming  viilory,  and  he 

B  4  4id 


24  The  Life  and  Death  of 

did  not  doubt  but  if  one  could  turn  to  a  problem 
in  Euclid,  or  to  write  a   copy  of  verfes,   it  would 
have  the  fame  efFe6l,     To  this  I  anfwered,  that  if 
fuch  methods  did  only  divert  the  thoughts,  there 
might  be  fome  force  in  what  he  faid  :  but  if  they 
not  only  drove  out  fuch   inclinations,   but   begat 
impreffions   contrary   to  them,    and   brought  men 
into  a  new  difpofition  and   habit   of  mind  ;  then 
he  mufl  confefs   there  was  fomewhat  more  than 
a  diverfion  in   thefe  changes,  which  were  brouo^ht 
on  our  minds  by  true  devotion.     I  added  that  rea- 
fcn  and  experience  were  the  things  that  determi- 
ned our  perfuafions:  that  experience  without  reafon 
may  be  thought  the  delufion  of  our  fancy,  fo  rea- 
fon without  expeiience  had  not  fo  convincing  ari 
operation  ;  but  thefe  tv/o   meeting  together,  mufl 
needs  give  a  man  all  the  fatisfa6lion  he  can  defire. 
He  could  not  fay,  it  was  unreafonable  to  believe 
that  the  Supreme  Being  might  make  fome  thoughts 
ftir  in   our  minds   v^^ith  more   or   lefs  force,  as  it 
pleafed  :    efpecially    the    force    of   thefe    motions, 
being,  for  moft  part,   according  to  the   impreiTion 
that  was  made  on  our  brains :  which  that  power 
that      direded     the      whole     frame     of     nature, 
could    make  grow  deeper    as    it    pleafed  :    it   was 
alfo  reafonable   to  fuppofe   God  a  being  of  fuch 
goodnefs  that  he  would  give  his  affifliince   to  fuch 
as  defired  it :    for  though    he   might    upon    fome 
greater  occafions  in  an  extraordinary  manner  turn 
fome    peoples    minds,     yet   fnice  he    had   endued 
man  with  a  faculty  of  reafon,  it  is  fit  than  men 

Ihould 


JOHN  £^r/ c/ Rochester.         25 

fliould  employ  that  as  far  as  they  could,  and  beg 
his  afliftance  ;  which  certainly  they  can  do.  All 
this  feemed  reafonable,  and  at  laft  probable.  Now 
good  men  who  felt  upon  their  frequent  applications 
to  God  in  prayer,  a  freedom  from  thofe  ill  impref- 
fions,  that  formerly  fubdued  them,  and  inward 
love  to  virtue  and  true  goodnefs,  an  eafmefs  and 
delight  in  all  the  parts  of  holinefs,  which  was  fed 
and  cherifhed  in  them  by  a  ferioufnefs  in  prayer, 
and  did  languifti  as  that  went  ofF,  had  as  real  a 
perception  of  an  inward  ftrength  in  their  minds, 
that  did  rife  and  fall  with  true  devotion,  as  they  per- 
ceived the  ftrength  of  their  bodies  increafed  or  abated, 
according  as  they  had  or  wanted  good  nourilh- 
nient. 

After  many  difcourfes  upon  this  fubjeft,  he  ftill 
continued  to  think  all  was  the  effeil  of  fancy  :  He 
faid,  that  he  underflood  nothing  of  it,  but  acknow- ^ 
ledged  that  he  thought  they  were  happy  whofe  fan- 
cies were  under  the  power  of  fuch  imprefiions  j 
fince  they  had  fomewhat  on  which  their  thoughts 
refted  and  centered  ;  but  when  I  faw  him  in  his 
laft  ficknefs,  he  then  told  me,  he  had  another  fenfe 
of  what  we  had  talked  concerning  prayer  and  in- 
ward afliftances.  This  fubjeit  led  us  to  difcourfe 
of  God,  and  of  the  notion  of  religion  in  general. 
tie  believed  there  was  a  Supreme  Being  :  he  could^  1^ 
not  think  the  world  was  made  by  chance,  and  the 
rtgular  courfe  of  nature  feemed  to  demonftrate  the 
eternal  power  of  its  author.  This,  he  faid,  he 
could  jiever  ft)ake  off^  j  but  when  he  came  to  ex- 
plain 


2  6  ^he  Life  a7id  Death  of 

plain  his  notion  of  the  deity,  he  faid,  he  looked  on 

k  as  a  vaft  power  that  wrought  every  thing  by  the 

ncceflity  of  its  nature  :  and  thought  that  God  had 

jTlone  of  thofe  affe£lions  of  love  or  hatred,  which 

bred  perturbation  in  us,  and  by  confequence   he 

could  not  fee  that  there  was  to  be  either  reward  or 

punifliment.     He  thought  our  conceptions  of  God 

i  were  fo  low,  that  we  had  better  not  think  much  of 

him :  and  to  love  God  feemed  to  him  a  prefumptuous 

thing,  and  t!>e  heat  of  fanciful  men.     Therefore 

lie  believed  there  fhould  be  no  other  religious  wor- 

£hip,   but  a  general  celebration  of  that  being,  in 

fome  fhort  hymn  :  all  the  other  parts  of  worlhip  he 

efteemed   the   inventions   of  prfefts,  to  make    the 

world  believe  they  had  a  fecret  of  incenling  and  ap- 

'  peafing  God  as  they  pleafed.     In  a  Word,  he  was 

neither  perfuaded  that  there  was  a  fpecial  providence 

about  human  affairs  ;    nor  that  prayers  were  of 

much  ufe,  fince  that  was  to  look  on  God  as  a  weak 

being,  that  would  be  overcome  with  importunities. 

And   for  the  ftate  after  death,  though  he  thought 

/  the  foul  did  not  difiblve  at  death,  yet  he  doubted 

xmuch   of  rewards    or   punifliments  ;    the  one  he 

t  thought  too  high  for  us  to  attain  by  our  flight  fer- 

/  vices  J  and  the  other  was  too  extreme  to  be  infliilcd 

I   for  fm«     This  was  the  fubftance  of  his  fpeculations 

\about  God  and  religion. 

I  told  him  his  notions  of  God  was  fo  low,  that 
the  Supreme  Beingfeemed  to  be  nothing  but  nature. 
For  if  that  being  had  no  freedom  or  choice  of  its 
own  actions,  nor  operated  by  wifdom  or  goodnefs, 
all  thofe  reafons  which  led  him  to  acknowledge  a 

God, 


JOHN  £^r/ ^/ Rochester."         27 

God,  were  contrary  to  this  conceit;  for,  if  the  order 
of  the  univerfe  perfuaded  him  to  think  there  was  a 
God,  he  muft  at  the  fame  time  conceive  him  to  be 
both  wife   and  good,  as   well  as   powerful,   fmce 
thefe  all  appeared  equally  in  the  creation  ;  though  his 
wifdom  and  goodnefs  had  ways  of  exerting  them- 
felves,  that  were  far  beyond  our  notions  or  mea- 
fures.     If  God  was  wife  and  good,  he  would  na- 
turally love,    and    be  pleafed  with   thofe   that  re- 
femble  him  in  thefe  perfe6lions,  and  diflilce    thofe 
that  were   oppofite  to  him.     Every  rational  being 
naturally  loves  itfelf,  and  is  delighted  in  others  like    "  N^ 
itfelf,  and  is  averfe  from  what  is  not  fo.     Truth  is 
a  rational  nature's  ailing  in  conformity  to  itfelf  in 
all  things,  and  goodnefs  is  an  inclination  to  pro- 
mote the  happinefs  of  other  beings  :  fo  truth  and 
goodnefs    were    the  eflential   perfections  of  every 
reafonable  being,  and  certainly  moft  eminently  in 
the  Deity  :  nor  does  his  mercy  or  love  raife  paflion 
or   perturbation   in   him ;  for  we  feel  that  to  be  a 
weaknefs  in  ourfelves,  which  indeed  only  flows  from 
our  want  of  pov/er  or  fkill  to  do  what  we  wifli  or 
dellre  :  it  is  alfo  reafonable  to  believe  God  would 
affift  the  endeavours  of  the  good,  with  fome  helps 
fuitable  to  their  nature.     And  that  it  could  not  be 
imagined,  that  thofe  who  imitated  him,  fhould  not 
be  fpecially  favoured  by  him  ;  and  therefore  fmce 
this  did  not  appear  in  this  ftate,  it  was  moft  reafon* 
able  to  think  it  fhould   be  in  another,  where  the 
rewards  fhall  be  an  admiiiion  to  a  more  perfe£l  ftatc 
of  conformity  to  God,   with  the  felicity  that  fol- 
ioW8  it,  and  the  puniftiments  fliould    be  a  total 

cxclufion 


iS  The  Life  and  Death  of 

exclufion  from  him,  with  all  the  horror  and  dark- 
nefs  that  muft  follow  that.  Thefe  feemed  to  be  the 
natural  refults  of  fuch  feveral  courfes  of  life,  as  well 
as  the  efFedls  of  divine  juftice,  rewarding  or  punifli- 
ing.  For  fmce  he  believed  the  foul  had  a  diftinfl 
fubfiftance,  feparated  from  the  body,  upon  its  dif- 
folution,  there  was  no  reafon  to  think  it  pafled  into 
a  ftate  of  utter  oblivion,  of  what  it  had  been  in 
formerly  :  but  that  as  the  rePicftions  on  the  good 
or  evil  it  had  done,  muft  raife  joy  or  horror  in  it  ; 
fo  thofc  good  or  ill  difpofitions  accompanying  the 
departed  fouls,  they  muft  either  rife  up  to  a  high- 
er perfe£lion,  or  fmk  to  a  more  depraved  and  mi- 
ferable  ftate.  In  this  life  variety  of  affairs  and 
obje61s  do  much  cool  and  divert  our  minds  ;  and 
are  on  the  one  hand  often  great  temptations  to  the 
good,  and  give  the  bad  fome  eafe  in  their  trouble  ; 
but  in  a  ftate  v/herein  the  foul  fhall  be  feparated 
from  fenfible  things,  and  employed  in  a  more 
quick  and  fublime  way  of  operation,  this  muft  very 
much  exalt  the  joys  and  improvements  of  the  good, 
and  as  much  heighten  the  horror  and  rage  of  the 
wicked,  fo  that  it  feemed  a  vain  thing  to  pretend  to 
believe  a  Supreme  Being,  that  is  wife  and  good,  as 
v/ell  as  great,  and  not  to  think  a  difcrimination  will 
be  made  between  the  good  and  the  bad,  which,  it 
is  manifeft',  is  not  fully  done  in  this  life. 

As  for  the  government  of  the  world,  if  we  be- 
lieve the  fupreme  power  made  It,  there  is  no  reafon 
to  think  he  does  not  govern  it  ;  for  all  that  we  can 
fancy  againft  it,  is  the  diftra^ion  v^'hich  that  infinite 

iVariety 


JOHN  £^r/ (?/ Rochester.  29 

variety  of  fecond  caufes,  and  the  care  of  their 
concernments,  muft  give  to  the  firft,  if  it  infpedls 
them  all.  But  as  among  men,  thofe  of  weaker 
capacities  are  v^^holly  taken  up  with  feme  one  thing, 
whereas  thofe  of  more  inlarged  powers,  can  without 
diftrailion,  have  many  things  within  their  care;  as 
the  eye  can  at  one  view  receive  a  great  variety  of 
objedts  inthatnarrow  compafs  without  confufion,  fo 
if  we  conceive  the  divine  underllandincr  to  be  as  far 
above  ours,  as  his  power  of  creating  and  framing 
the  whole  univerfe,  is  above  our  limited  activity; 
we  will  no  more  think  the  o;overnment  of  the  world 
a  diftradlion  to  him  ;  and  if  we  have  once  over- 
come this  prejudice,  we  fhall  be  ready  to  acknow- 
ledge a  providence  dire<Sting  all  affairs,  a  care  well 
becoming  the  Great  Creator. 

As  for  worfniping  him,  If  we  imagine  our  wor- 
fhip  is  a  thing  that  adds  to  his  happinefs,  or  gives 
him  fuch  a   fond  pleafure  as  weak  people   have  to 
hear  themfelves  commended  ;  or  that  our  repeiilcJ 
addrefles  do  overcome  him  through  our  mere  impor- 
tunity,, we  have  certainly  very  unworthy  ihouglits 
of  him.     The  true  ends  of  worfhip  came  witliin 
.  another  confideration,  which  is  this,  a  man  is  ne- 
ver entirely  reformed  till  a  new  principle  governs 
his  thoughts ;   nothing    makes    that    principle-    (o 
Itrong,  as  deep  and  frequent  meditations  of  God  ; 
.  wliofe   nature  though  it  be  far  above  our  compie- 
.  henfion,  yet  his    goodnefs    and    wifdom   are  fuch 
perfedions  as  fall  within  our  imagination  :  asid  be 
that  rhinks  often  of  God,  and  c«»ariders  him  as  go- 
verning 


^o  The  Life  and  Death  of 

verning  the  world,  and  as  ever  obferving  all  his 
aftions,  will  feel  a  very  fenfible  effedl  of  fuch  me- 
ditations, as  they  grow  more  lively  and  frequent 
with  him  ;  fo  the  end  of  religious  worfhip,  either 
public  or  private,  is  to  make  the  apprehenfions  of 
God  have  a  deeper  root  and  a  flironger  influence  on 
us.  The  frequent  returns  of  thefe  are  neceflary, 
left  if  we  allow  too  long  intervals  between  them, 
thefe  impreffions  may  grow  feebler,  and  other  fug- 
geftions  may  come  in  their  room  ;  and  the  returns 
of  prayer  are  not  to  be  confidered  as  favours  extort- 
ed by  mere  importunity,  but  as  rewards  conferred 
on  men  fo  well  difpofed  and  prepared  for  them, 
according  to  the  promifes  that  God  has  made  for 
anfwering  our  prayers  ;  thereby  to  engage  and  nou- 
rifli  a  devout  temper  in  us,  which  is  the  chief  root 
of  all  true  holinefs  and  virtue. 

It  is  true,  we  cannot  have  fuitable  notions  of  the 
divine  eflence ;  as  indeed  we  have  no  juft  Idea  of 
any  eflence  whatfoever,  fmce  we  commonly  con- 
fider  all  things,  either  by  their  outward  figure,  or 
by  their  effeils,  and  from  thence  make  inferences 
what  their  nature  muft  be  :  fo  though  we  cannot 
frame  any  perfe£l:  image  in  our  minds  of  the  divi- 
nity, yet  we  may  from  the  difcoveries  God  has 
made  of  himfelf,form  fuch  conceptions  of  him,  as  may 
poflTefs  our  minds  with  great  reverence  for  him,  and 
beget  in  us  fuch  a  love  of  thofe  perfedlions  as  to  en- 
gage us  to  imitate  them.  For  when  we  fay  we  love 
God,  the  meaning  is,  we  love  that  being  that  is 
Ijoly,  juft:,  good,  wife,  and  infinitely  perfect :  and 

loving 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.         gt 

loving  thefe  attributes  in  that  objeft,  will  certainly 
carry  us  to  defire  them  in  ourfelves.  For  whatever 
we  love  in  another,  we  naturally,  according  to  the 
degree  of  our  love,  endeavour  to  refemble  it.  In 
fum,  the  loving  and  worfhipping  God,  though  they 
are  juft  and  reafonable  returns  and  exprelfions  of 
the  fenfe  we  have  of  bis  goodnefs  to  us  ;  yet  they 
are  exadled  of  us  not  only  as  a  tribute  to  God,^  but 
as  a  mean  to  beget  in  us  a  conformity  to  his  na- 
ture, which  is  the  chief  end  of  pure  and  undefiled 
religion. 

If  fome  men  have  at  feveral  times  found  out  in- 
ventions to  corrupt  this,  and  cheat  the  world  ; 
It  is  nothing  but  what  occurs  in  every  fort  of  em- 
ployment, to  which  men  betake  themfelves;  mounte- 
banks corrupt  phyfic,  petty-foggers  have  entangled 
the  matters  of  property,  and  all  profeffians  have 
been  vitiated  by  the  knaveries  of  a  number  of  their 
calling. 

With  all  thefe  difcourfes  he  was  not  equally 
fatisfied  :  he  feemed  convinced  that  the  impreffions 
of  God  being  much  in  mens  minds,  would  be  a 
powerful  means  to  reform  the  world  j  and  did  ncM: 
feem  determined  againft  providence.  But  for  the 
next  flate,  he  thought  it  more  likely  that  the  foul 
began  anew,  and  that  her  fenfe  of  what  flie  had 
done  in  this  body,  lying  in  the  figures  that  are 
made  in  the  brain,  as  foon  as  (he  diilodged,  all 
thefe  periflied,  and  that  the  foul  went  into  fome 
other  ftate  to  begin  a  new  courfe.  But  I  faid  oa 
this  head,  that  this  was  at  beft  a  conjecture,  raifed 

in 


32  ^he  Life  and  Death  of 

in  him  by  his  fancy ;  for  he  could  give  no  reafan 
to  prove  it  true  :  nor  was  all  the  remembrance  our 
fouls  had  of  paft   things   feated  in  fome  material 
figures   lodged  in  the  brain  :  though  it  could   not 
be  denied  but  a  great   deal  of  it  lay.  in   the  brain. 
That  we  have  many  abftradled   notions  and  ideas 
of  immaterial  things  which  depend  not   on   bodily 
figures  :  fome  fins,  fuch  as  falfliood,  and  ill  nature, 
were  feated  in  the  mind,  as  luft  and  appetite  were 
in  the  body  ;  and  as  the  whole  body  was  the  re- 
cepticle  of  the  foul,  and  the  eyes  and  ears  were 
the  organs  of  feeing  and  hearing,  fo  was  the  brain 
the    feat  of    memory  :  yet  t  he  power  and   facul- 
ty of  memory,    as  well  as  of  feeing  and   hearing, 
lay  in  the  mind  ;  and  fo  it  was  no  unconceiveable 
thing  that  either  the  foul  by   its  own  ftrength,  or 
by    the   means    of    fome    fubtiler    organs,    which 
miffht  be  fitted  for  it  in  another  fi:ate,  fliould   ftill 
remember  as  well  as  think.     But  indeed  we  know 
fo  little  of  the  nature   of  our  fouls,  that  it  is  a 
vain  thing  for  us  to  raife  an  hypothefis  out  of  the 
conjedlures   wc  have  about  it,    or  to  rejeiSl   one, 
becaufe  of  fome  difficulties  that  occur  to  us;  fince 
it    is    as   hard  to  underftand    how    we   remember 
thino-s  now,  as  how  we  (hall  do  it  in  another  ftate : 
only  we  are  fure  we  do   it  now,  and  fo  we  fhall 
be  then,  when  we  do  it. 

When  I  prefied  him  with  the  fecret  joys  that  a 
good  man  felt,  particularly  as  he  drew  near  death, 
and  the  horrors  of  ill  men  efpecially  at  jhat  time  ; 
he  was  willing  to  afcribe  it  to  the  impreflions  they 

had 


JOHN  £^r/ ^/ RocHESTEk  33 

had  from  their  eJucation  :  but  he  often  confefTed, 
that  whether  the  bufinefs   of  religion   was  true  or 
not,  he  thought  thofe  who  had  the  perfuafions  of 
iff  and  lived  fo  that  they  had  quiet  in   their  con- 
fciences,   and  believed   God  governed   the  world, 
and  acquiefced  in  his  providence,  and  had  the  hope 
of  an  endlefs  bleffedncfs  in  aother  ftatd,  the  happi- 
eft   men  in   the  world  ;   and  faid,  he   would   give 
all  that   he  was  mafter  6f,    to  be   under  thofe  per- 
fuafions, and   to  have  the  fupports  and  joys  that 
muil  needs  flow  from  them.     I  told  him  the  maia 
root   of  all    corruptions    in    mens  .principles   was 
their  ill  life ;  which,  as  it  darkened   their  minds, 
and  difabled  them  from  difcerning  better  things  ; 
fo  it  made  it   neceffary  for  them   to  feek  out  fuch 
opinions  as  might   give  them  eafe  from  thofe  cla- 
mours, that  would  otherwifehave  been  raifed  within 
them.    He  did  not  deny,  but  that  after  the  doing  of 
fome  things  he  felt  great  and  fevere  challenges  with- 
in himfelf;    but  he   faid,    he  felt  not  thefe  after 
fome  others  which  I  would  perhaps  call  far  greater 
fins,  than  thofe   that  afFe(5led  him  more  fenfibly. 
This  I  faid,  might  flow  from  the  diforders  he  had 
caft  himfelf  into,  which  had  corrupted  his   judg- 
ment, and  vitiated  his  tafte  of  things  ;  and  by  his 
long  continuance  in,    and   frequent    repeating  of 
fome  immoralities,  he  had  made  them  fo  familiar 
to  him,  that  they  were  become  as  it  were  natural  ; 
and  then  it  was  no  wonder  if  he  had   not  fo  ex- 
ait  a^fenfe  of  what  was  good  or  evil  ;  as  a  feverifh 
man  cannot  judge  of  taftes. 

C  He 


34  ^^^  Life  and  Death  of 

He  did  acknowledge,  the  whole  fyflem  of  reli- 
gion, if  believed,  was  a  greater  foundation  of  quiet 
than  any  other  thing  whatfoever  ;  for  all  the  quiet 
he  had  in  his  mind,   wa?,  that  he  could  not   think 
fo  good  a   being  as   the   Deity   would   make   him 
mifcrable.     1  afked,  .if  when  by  the  ill  courfe  of 
his   life  he  had  brought  fo   many    difeafes  on  his 
body,  he  could  blame  God  for  it  ;  or  expe6t   that 
he  fhould   deliver  him  from    them   by  a  miracle. 
He  confeiTed  there  was  no  reafon  for  that.     I  chen 
urged,  that  if  fin  (hould  caft  the  mind,  by  a  natural 
efteiSl,    into  endlefs    horrors  and    agonies,    which 
being  feated  in  a  being  not  fubjc6l  to  death,  muft. 
laft  for  ever,  unlefo  fome  miraculous  power  inter- 
pofed,  cou.ld  he  accufe  God  for  that  which  was  the 
efFe6l  of  his  own  choice  and  ill  life  ? 

He  faid,  they  were  happy  that  believed  ;  for  it 
was  not  in  every  man's  power. 
j^v         And  upon  this  we  difcourfed  long  about  revealed 
religion.     He  faid,  he  did  not  underftand  the  bufi- 
ncfs  of  infpiration  ;  he  believed  the  penmen  of  the 
fcriptures  had  heats  and  honefty,  and  fo  writ ;  but 
eould  not  comprehend  how  God  fliould  reveal  his 
fecrets  to  mankind.     Why  was  not  man  made  a. 
creature   more  difpofed   for    religion,    and     better 
illuminated  ?     He  could  not  apprehend  how  there- 
ihculd  be  any  corruption  in  the  nature  of  man,  oc 
a  lapfe  derived  from  Adam.     God's   communica- 
ting his  mind  to  one  man,  \yas  the   putting  it  in. 
his  power  to  cheat  the  World  :  for  prophefies   and 
miraclesj  the  world  had  been  always  full  of  ftrange 

ftories  j 


JOHN  ^^r/ c/ Rochester.       35 

ftories ;  for  the  boldnefs  and  cunning  of  contrivers 
meeting  with  the  fimplicity  and  credulity  of  the 
people,  things  were  eafily  received ;  and  being 
once  received  J  paiTed  down  vi'itbout  contradidlion. 
The  incoherences  of  flile  in  the  fcriptures,  the 
odd  tranfitions,  the  feemingcontradi(5lion3,  chiefly 
about  the  order  of  time,  the  cruelties  enjoined  the 
Ifrealities  in  deflroying  the  Canaanitcs,  circumci- 
fion,  and  many  other  rites  of  the  Jewifh  vvorfhip  ; 
feemed  to  him  unfuitable  to  the  divine  nature  :  and 
the  firft  three  chapters  of  Genefis  he  thought 
could  not  be  true,  unlefs  they  were  parables.  This 
was  the  fubftance  of  what  he  excepted  to  revealed 
religion  in  general,  and  to  the  old  teitament  in 
particular.    >^;__ 

I  anfwered  to  all  this,  that  believing  a  thing 
upon  the  teltimony  of  another,  in  other  m.atters 
where  there  was  no  reafon  to  fufpe(?t  the  teilimony, 
chiefly  where  it  was  confirmed  by  other  circum- 
ftances,  was  not  only  a  reafonablc  thing,  but  it 
was  the  hinge  on  which  all  the  government  and 
juftice  in  the  world  depended  :  fince  all  the  courts 
of  juftice  proceed  upon  the  evidence  given  by  wit- 
neffes;  for  the  ufe  of  writings,  is  but  a  thing  more 
lately  brought  into  the  world.  So  then  if  the 
credibility  of  the  thing,  the  innocence  and  difm- 
tereftednefs  of  the  witneil'es,  the  number  of  them, 
and  the  publickefl  confirmations  that  could  poflibly 
be  given,  do  concur  to  pcrfuadc  us  of  any  matter 
of  fadt,  it  is  a  vain  thing  to  fay,  becaufe  it  is  pof- 
flble  for  fo  many  men  to  agree  in  a  lye,  that  thcre- 

C  2  fore 


36  *The  Life  and  Death  of 

fore  thefe  have  done  it.     In  all  other  things  a  maa 
gives  his  afl'ent  when  the  credibility   is  ftrong    on 
the  one  fide,   and  there  appears  nothing   on  the 
other  fide  to  balance  it.     So   fuch  numbers  agree- 
ing in  their  teflimony  to   thefe  miracles  j  for  in- 
ftance,  of  our  Saviour's  calling  Lazarus  out  of  the 
grave  the  fourth  day  after  he  was  buried,  and  his 
own  rifing  again  after  he  was  certainly   dead  ;    if 
there  had  h^n  never  fo  many  impoftures  in   the 
world,    no  man  can   with   any  reafonable  colour 
pretend  this  was  one.  We  find  both  by  the  Jevvifh 
and   Roman   writers    that  lived  in  that  time,  that 
our  Saviour  was  crucified,  and  that  all  his  difciples 
and  followers    believed    certainly   that    he    arofe 
again.     They  believed  this  upon  the  teftimony  of 
the  apoftles,  and  many  hundreds  who  faw  it,  and 
died  confirming  it.     They  went  about  to  perfuade 
the  world  of  it  with  great  zeal,   though  the  Icnevir 
they  were  to  get  nothing  by  it,  but  reproach  and. 
fufferings  :    and   by    many    wonders    which    they 
■Wrought  they  confirmed  their  teftimony.     Now  to 
avoid  all   this,  by  faying  it  is   poflible  this  might 
be  a  contrivance^  and  to  give  no  prefumption  to 
make  it  fo  nnich  as  probable,:  that  it  was  fo,  is  in 
plain  Englifli  to  fay,  "  we  are  refolved,.  let  the  evl- 
*'  dence  be  what  it  will,  we  will  not  believe  it." 
/    He  faid,  if  a  man  fays  he  cannot  believe,   what 
/help  is  there  ?    for  he  was  not  mafter  of  his  own 
i  belief,  and  believing  was  at  higheft  but  a  probable 
opinion.     To  this  I  aafwered,  that  if  a  man  will 
let  a  wanton  conceit  poflefs  his  fancy  againft  thefe 

things,. 


JOHN  Earl  cf  Rochester.         37 

things,  and  never  con fidcr  the  evidence  for  religion 
on  the  other  hand,  but  rcjeft  it  upon  a  flight  view 
of  it,  he  ought  not  to  fay  he  cannot,  but  he  wil 
not  believe  :  and  while  a  man   lives   an  ill  courfc 
of  life,   he  is  not  fitly  qualifted   to   examine  the 
matter  aright.     Let  him  grov\r  calm  and  virtuous, 
and   upon  due  application  examine   things  fiiirly, 
and  then  let  him  prenounce  according  to  his  con- 
fcience,  if  to  take  ^t  at  its  ^oweft,  the  rcafons  on 
the  one  band  are  not  much  ftronger  than  they  are 
on  the  other.     For  I  found  he  was  -fo  poffeiTed  with 
the  general  conceit,  that  a  mixture  of  knaves  and 
fools  had  made  all  extraordinary  things   be  cafily 
believed,  that    it  carried   him  away  to  determine 
tbe  matter,  without  fo  much  as  looking  on   the 
biftorical   evidence   for    the   truth   of   chriftianity, 
which  he  had  not  enquired  into,  but  had  bent  all 
his  wit  and  ftudy  to  the  fupport  of  the  other  fide. 
As  for  that,  that  believing  is  at  beft  but  an  opini- 
on i  i,f  the  evideiice  be  but  probable,  it  ^s  fo  ;  but 
if  it  be  fuch  that  it  cannot  be  queftioned,  it  grows 
as  certain  as  knowledge  :  for  we  are  nolefs  certain 
that  there  is  a   great  town   called  Conftantinople, 
the  feat  of  the   Ottoman  empire,  than    that   there 
is  -another   called    Jvondon.     We    as    little   doubt 
that  queen  Elizabeth  once   reigned,  as   that  king 
Charles  now  reigns  in  England.     So  that  beliving 
may  be  as  certain,  and  as  little  fubje6l  to  doubting^ 
as  fee/ng  or  knowing. 

There  are  two  forjts  of  bplieving  diyaDje  matters; 
ihc  one  is  wrought  in  us  by  our  comparing  all  the 

C  3  evidences 


38  *l!loe  Life  ani  Death  of 

evidences  of  matter  of  facSt,  for  the  confirmation 
of  revealed  religion,  with  the  prophecies  in  the 
fcripture;  where  things  were  pun£lually  predided, 
fome  ages  before  their  completion  ;  not  in  dark  and 
doubtful  words  uttered  like  oracles,  which  might 
bend  to  any  event  j  but  in  plain  term-,  as  the  fore- 
telling that  Cyrus  by  name  fnould  fend  the  Jews  back 
horn  the  captivity,  after  the  fixed  period  of  feventy 
years :  the  hiftory  of  the  Syrian  and  Egyptian  kings, 
fo  punclually  foretold  by  Daniel,  and  the  predidion 
of  the  deftruction  of  Jerufalem,  with  many  circum- 
ftanccs  lelating  to  it,  made  by  our  Saviour  5  join- 
ing thcfe  to  the  excellent  rule  and  dcfign  of  the 
fcripture  in  matters  of  morality,  it  is  at  leafl  as 
reafonable  to  believe  this  as  any  thing  elfe  in  the 
world.  Yet  fuch  a  believing  as  this,  is  only  a 
general  perfuafion  in  the  mind,  which  has  not  that 
effecfl,  till  a  man  applying  hinifelf  to  the  directions 
fet  down  in  the  fcriptures  (which  upon  fuch  evi- 
dence cannot  be  denied  to  be  as  reafonable,  as  for 
a  man  to  follow  the  prefcriptions  o{  a  learned  phy- 
fician,  and  when  the  rules  are  both  good  and  eafy, 
to  fubmit  to  them  for  the  recovery  of  his  health) 
and  by  following  thefe,  finds  a  power  entering 
within  him,  that  frees  him  from  the  Jlavery  of  his 
appetites  and  paffions,  that  exalts  his  mind  above 
the  accidents  of  life,  and  fpreads  an  inward  purity 
in  his  heart,  from  which  a  ferene  and  calm  joy  a- 
rifes  v/ithin  him  :  and  good  men,  by  the  efficacy 
thefe  methods  have  upon  them,  and  from  the  re- 
turns of  their  prayers,  and  other  endeavours,  grow 

allured 


I 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.        '39 

■^ilufed  that  thefe  things  are  true,  and  anrwcrable 
to  the  promifes   they  find    regiflered   in   fcripture, 

I  All  this,  he  faid,  might  be  fiincy  ;  but  to  this  I  an^- 
fvvered,  that  as  it  were  unreafonable  to  tell  a  man 
that  is  abroad,  and  knows  he  is  awake,  that  per- 
haps he  is  in  a  dream,  and  in  his  bed,  and  only 
thinks  he  is  abroad,  or  that  as  fome  go  about  in 
their  fleep,  fo  he  may  be  afleep  ftill  ;  fo  good  and 
religious  men  know,  though  others  might  be  abu- 
fed  by  their  fancies,  that  they  are  under  no  fuch 
deception  \  and  find  they  are  neither  hot  nor  enthu- 
fiafiical,  but  under  the  power  of  calm  and  clear 
prii-iciples.  All  this  he  faid  he  did  not  undcrftanJ, 
and  that  it  was  to  affcrt  or  beg  the  thing  in  quef- 
tion,  which  he  could  not  comprehend. 

As  for  the  poiTibility  of  revelation,  it  was  a  vain 
thing  to  deny  it ;  for  as  God  gives  us  the  fenfe 
of  feeing  material  objeils  by  our  eyes,  and 
opened  in  fome  a  capacity  o-f  apprehending  hi2;h 
and  fublime  things,  of  which  other  men  fecmed 
utterly  incapable  5  fo  it  was  a  weak  afTcrtion  that 
God  cannot  avv-aken  a  power  in  fome  mens  minds, 
to  apprehend  and  know  fome  things,  in  fuch  a 
manner  that  others  are  not  capable  of  it.  This  is 
not  half  fo  incredible  to  us  as  fi^ht  is  to  a  blind  maiK 
whoyet  may  be  convinced  there  is  a  ftrange  power 

,ot  feeing  that  governs  men,  of  which  he  finds  him- 
felf  deprived.  As  for  the  capacity  put  into  fuch 
mens  hands  to  deceive  the  worl-d,we  are  at  the  fame 
time  to  confider,  that  befides  the  probity  of  their 
tempers,  it  cannot  be  tbought  but  God  can  fo  forci- 

C  4.  biy 


40  y^^  Life  and  Death  of" 

%\y  blind  up  a  man  in  fome  things   that    it  fhould 
not  be  in  his  power  to  deliver  them,  otherwife  than 
3S  he  gives  him  in  commiflion  :  befides,  the   confir- 
mation of  miracles  are  a  divine  credential  to  warrant 
fuch   perfons   in  what  they  deliver  to  the   world, 
which  cannot  be  imagined  can  be  joined  to  a  lye, 
fmce  this  were  to  put  the  omnipotence    of  God  to 
atteft  that  which  no  honeft  man  wpuld  do.     For 
the  bufmefs  of  the  fall  of  man,  and  other  things, 
of  which  we  cannot  perhaps  give  ourfelves  a  per- 
fect account ;  we  who  cannot  fathoip  the  fecrets  of 
the  council  oi  God,  do  very  unreafouably  to  take 
on    us   to  reject  an   excellent   fyftem   of  good  and 
holy    rules,   becaufe    we    cannot  fatisfy    ourfelves 
about  fome  difficulties  in  them.     Common  expe- 
rience  tells  us,   tl|ere  is  a  great  diforder  in  our 
natures,  which  is  not  eafily  rciSlified  ;  all  philofo- 
phers  were  fe^fible  of  it,  and  every  man  that  dc- 
Tio^ns  to  govern  himfelf  by  rcafon,  feels  the  Itruggle 
between  it  and  nature  ;  fo  that  it  is  plain,  there  is  a 
lapfe  of  the  high  powers  of  the  foul. 
(      But  why,  faid  he,  could  not  this  be  redified  by 
fome    plaip    rules   given  j    but    men  muft   come 
and  fiiew    a    trick    to    perfuadc    the    world    they 
fpeak  to  them  in  the  name  of  God  ?  I  anfwered, 
that  religion  being  a  defign  to  recover  and  fave  man- 
kind, was  to  be  fo  opened,  as  to  axyaken  and  work 
upon  all   forts  of  people  ;  and   generally  men  of  a 
fimplicity  of  mind,  were  thofe  that  were  the  fittefl 
objeds  for  God  to  ihew  his  favour  to  ;  therefore  it 
was   necefTary  that   meflengers    fent  from  hpaven 

(hould 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.        41 

Ihould  appear  with  fuch  alarming  evidence  as  might 
awaken  the  world,  and  prepare  them  by  fome  af-  ;, 
tonifhing  figns,  to  liften  to  the  doftrine  they  were 
to  deliver,  Philofophy,  that  was  only  a  matter  of 
fine  fpeculation,  had  few  votaries ;  and  as  there  was 
no  authority  in  it  to  bind  the  world  to  believe  its 
dictates,  fo  they  were  only  received  by  fome  of 
nobler  and  refined  natures,  who  could  apply  them- 
felves  to  and  delight  in  fuch  notions.  But  true 
religion  was  to  be  built  on  a  foundation,  that  fhould 
carry  more  weight  on  it,  and  to  have  fuch  convic- 
tions, as  might  not  only  reach  thofe  who  were 
already  difpoled  to  receive  them,  but  roufe  up  fuch 
as  without  great  and  fenfible  excitation  woul4 
have  otherwife  flept  on  in  their  ill  courfes. 

Upon  this,  and  fome  fuch  occafions,  I  told  him, 

I  faw  the  ill  ufe  he  made  of  his  wit,  by  which  he 

(      flurred  the  graveft  things   with  a  flight  dafli  of  his 

I     fancy  •,  and  the  pleafure  he  found  in  fuch  wanton 

\     expreflions,  as  calling  the  doing  of  miracles    the 

\   fhewing  of  a  trick,  did  really  keep  him  from  ex- 

I  amining  them  with  that  care   which   fuch  things 

required. 

P'or  the  old4eftament,  we  are  fo  remote  from 
that  time,  we  have  fo  little  knowledge  of  the  lan- 
guage in  which  it  was  writ,  have  fo  imperfedl  an 
account  of  the  hiftory  of  thofe  ages,  know  nothing 
of  their  cuftoms,  forms  of  fpecch,  and  the  feverai 
periods'they  might  have,  by  which  they  reckon  their 
time,  that  it  is  rather  a  wonder  we  fliould  under- 
stand  fo  much  of  it,  than  that  many  paflagcs  in  it 

fliould 


42  The  Life  and  Death  of 

fliould  be  io  dark  to  us.  The  chief  ufe  of  it  as  to 
us  chriftians,  is,  thr*t  from  writings  which  the  Jews 
acknowledged  to  be  divinely  infpired,  it  is  ma- 
nifefl  the  iXlefiiah  was  promifed  before  the  deftruc- 
tion  of  their  teniple  ;  which  being  done  long  ago, 
and  thefe  prophecies  agreeing  to  our  Saviour,  and 
to  no  other,  here  is  a  great  confirmation  given  to 
the  gof[Tel.  But  though  many  things  in  thefe 
books  could  not  be  underftood  by  us  who  live  above 
•3000  years  after  the  chief  of  them  were  writien» 
it  is  no  fuch  extraordinary  matter. 

For  that  of  the  deflruction  of  the  Canaanites  by 
the  Ifraelites,  it  is  to  be  confidered,  that  if  God 
had  fent  a  plague  among  them  ail,  that  could  not 
Iiave  been  found  fault  with.  If  then  God  had  a 
right  to  take  away  their  lives  without  injuflice  or 
cruelty,  he  had  a  right  to  appoint  others  to  do  it, 
as  well  to  execute  it  by  a  more  immediate  way  j 
and  the  taking  away  people  by  the  fword  is  a  much 
gentler  v/ay  of  dying,  than  to  be  fmitten  with  a 
plague  or  a  famine.  And  for  the  children  that 
were  innocent  of  their  fathers  faults,  God  could  in 
another  ftate  make  that  up  to  them.  So  all  the 
difEculty  is,  why  were  the  Ifraelites  commanded  to 
execute  a  thing  of  fuch  barbarity  ?  But  this  will 
not  feem  fohard,  if  we  confider  that  this  was  to  be 
no  precedent  for  future  times  j  fince  they  did  not 
do  it  but  upon  fpecial  warrant  and  commifiion  from 
heaven,  evidenced  to  all  the  world  by  fuch  mighty 
miracles  as  did  plainly  fliew,  that  they  were  parti- 
cularly defigned  by  God  to  be  the  executioners  of 

his 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.        45 

!iis  juflice  ;  and  God  by  impioying  them  in  f® 
fevere  a  fervice,  intended  to  poflefs  them  with  great 
horror  of  idolatry,  which  was  puniflied  in  fo  ex- 
treme a  manner. 

For  the  rites  of  their  religion,  we  can  ill  judge 
of  them,  except  we  perfetlly  underilood  the  ido- 
Jatries  round  about  them,  to  which  we  find  they 
were  much  inclined  ;  fo  they  were  to  be  bent  by 
other  rites  to  an  extreme  averfion  from  them  :  and 
yet  by  the  pomp  of  many  of  their  ceremonies  and 
facrifices,  great  indulgences  were  given  to  a  people 
naturally  fond  of  a  vifible  fplendor  in  religious  wor- 
fhip.  In  all  which,  if  we  cannot  defcend  to  fuch 
fatisfa£lory  anfwers  in  every  particular,  as  a  curious 
msn  would  defire,  it  is  no  wonder.  I'he  long  in- 
terval of  time,  and  other  accidents,  have  v/orn  out 
thofe  things  which  v/ere  necefiary  to  give  us  a 
clearerer  light  into  the  meaning  of  them.  And  for 
the  ftory  of  the  creation,  hovv'  hr  fom..  ^hiivi;s  in  it 
may  be  parabolical,  and  hovv  far  hiitorical,  has 
been  difputed  j-f there  is  nothing  in  it  that  may  not 
be  hiftorically  true.  For  if  it  be  acknowledged  that 
fpirits  can  form  voices  in  the  air,  for  which  we  have 
as  good  authority  as  for  any  thing  \\\  iuilory,  then 
it  is  no  wonder  that  Eve,  being  fo  lately  created, 
jnight  be  deceived,  and  think  a  ferpent  fpake  to  her, 
when  the  evil  fpirit  framed  the  voice. 

But  in  all  thefe  things  I  told  him  he  was  in  the 
wrong  way,  when  he  examined  the  buhneis  of  re- 
Jigion  by  fome  dark  parts  «f  Icripcure  ;  therefore 
I  defircJ   him  to  confider  the  whole  contexture  of 

the 


44  ^^(!  Li^E  and  Death  of 

■Gie  chriftian    religion,  the  rules  it  gives,  and  the 
methods  it  prefcribes.     Nothing  can  conduce  more 
to  the  peace,   order,  and  happinefs   of  the  world, 
than  to  be  governed  by  its  rules.     Nothing  is  more 
for  the  intereft  of  every  man  in  particular  :  the 
rules    of  fobriety,    temperance,   and  moderation, 
were  the  bcft  prefervers   of  life,  and   which  was 
perhaps  more  of  health,  humility,  contempt  of  the 
vanities  of  the  world,  and  the  being  well  employ- 
ed, raifes  a  man's    mind  to  a  freedom  from  the 
follies  and  temptations  that  haunted  the   greateft 
part.     Nothing  was  (o  generous  and  great,  as  to 
ftipply  the  neceflities  of  the  poor,  and  to  forgive 
injuries,  nothing  raifed  and  maintained   a    man's 
reputation   fo  much,   as   to    be    exadly  juft    and 
merciful,    kind,    charitable,    and     compaflionate, 
nothing  opened  the  powers  of  a  man's  foul  fo  much 
as  a  calm  temper,  a  ferene  mind,    free  of  paflion 
and  diforder,  nothing  made  focieties,  families,  and 
neighbourhoods    fo    happy   as    when    thefe    rules» 
which  the  gofpel  prefcribes,  took  place,  of  doing 
as  we  would  have  others  do  to  us,  and  loving  our 
neighbours  as  ourfelves. 

The  chriftian  worfhip  was  alfo  plain  and  fimpie,. 
fuitable  to  fo  pure  a  do<Slrine.  The  ceremonies 
of  it  were  few  and  figniiicant,  as  the  admiflion  to 
it  by  a  wafhing  with  water,  and  the  memorial 
of  our  Saviour's  death  in  bread  and  wine  i  the 
motives  in  it  to  perfuade  to  this  purity  were  ftrong  : 
that  God  fees  us,  and  will  judge  us  for  all  our 
aaions :  that  wc  fhall  be  for  ever  happy  or  mifej-- 

abK', 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.         45 

able,  as  we  pafs  our  lives  here  :  the  example  of 
our  Savour's  life,  and  the  great  expreflions  of  his 
Jove  in  dying  for  us,  are  mighty  engagements  to 
obey  and  imitate  him.  The  plain  way  of  expreC- 
fion  ufed  by  our  Saviour  and  his  apoftles,  fhews 
there  was  no  artifice,  where  there  was  fo  much, 
iimplicity  ufed  :  there  were  no  fecrets  kept  only 
amtong  the  priefts,  but  every  thing  was  open  to  all 
Chriftians  .  the  rewards  of  holinefs  are  not  en- 
tirely put  over  to  another  ftate,  but  good  men 
are  fpecially  blefi  with  peace  in  their  confciencies, 
great  joy  in  the  confidence  they  have  of  the  love 
of  God,  and  of  feeing  him  for  ever,  and  often  a 
fignal  courfe  of  bleflings'  follows  them  in  their 
whole  lives;  but  if  at  other  times  calamities  fell 
on  them,  thefe  were  fo  much  mitigated  by  the  pa- 
tience they  were  taught,  and  the  inward  afliftances 
with  which  they  were  furnifhed,  that  even  thofb 
crofTes  were  converted  to  bleflina;s. 

I  defired  he  would  lay  all  thefe  things  to- 
gether, and  fee  what  he  could  except  to  them^ 
to  make  him  think  this  was  a  contrivance.  Inter- 
eft  appears  in  all  human  contrivances  ;  our  Sa- 
viour plainly  had  none  ;  he  avoided  applaufe, 
withdrew  himfelf  from  the  offers  of  a  crown  ;  he 
fubmitted  to  poverty  and  reproach,  and  much  con- 
tradidlion  in  his  life,  and  to  a  moft  ignominious- 
and  painful  death.  His  apoftles  had  none  neither  ^ 
they  did  not  pretend  either  to  power  or  wealth  j 
but  delivered  a  doctrine  that  muft  needs  condemn 
^em,  if  they  ever  made  fuch  ufc  of  it;  they  declared 

their 


4^  ^he  Life  and  Death  of 

their  commiffion  fislly  without  rcferves  til]  other 
times  j  they  recorded  their  own  weaknefs  ;  fome 
of  them  wrought  Vv'ith  their  own  hands,  and  when 
they  received  the  charities  of  their  converts,  it  was 
not  fo  much  to  fupply  their  own  neceffitlcs,  as  to 
diftribute  to  others  :  they  icnew  they  were  to  fuffer 
much  for  giving  their  tcftimonies  to  what  they 
had  feen  and  heard  ;  in  which  fo  many,  in  a  thing 
fo  vifxble,  as  Chrift's  refurredtion  and  afcenfion,  and 
the  efFufion  of  the  Holy  Ghoft  which  he  had  pro- 
mifed,  could  not  be  deceived  ;  and  they  gave  fucb 
public  confirmations  of  it,  by  the  wonders  they 
themfelves  wrought,  that  great  multitudes  were 
coiiverted  to  a  do6lrIne,  which,  bcfides  the  oppo- 
fition  it  gave  to  luft  and  paflion,  was  borne  down 
and  perfecuted  for  three  hundred  years,  and  yet  its 
force  was  fuch,  that  it  not  only  v/eathered  out  all 
thofc  florms,  but  even  grew  and  fpread  vaflly  un- 
derthem.  Pliny,  about  threefcore years  after,  found 
their  numbers  great,  and  their  lives  innocent  :  and 
even  Luciap,  amidft  all  his  railJery,  give  a  high 
teftimony  to  their  charity  and  contempt  of  life,  and 
the  other  virtues  of  the  Chriftians,  which  is  like- 
wife  more  than  once  done  by  malice  itfelf,  Julian 
the  apoftate. 

If  a  man  will  lay  all  this  in  one  balance,  and 
compare  with  it  the  few  exceptions  brought  to  it, 
he  will  foon  find  how  ftrong  the  one,  and  how 
flight  the  other  are.  Therefore  it  was  an  impro- 
per way,  to  begin  at  fome  cavils  about  fome 
pafiages  in  the  new  teftament,  or  the  old,  and  from 

thence 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.        47 

thence  to  prepofTefs  one's  mind  againft  the  whole. 
The   right  method  had  been  firft  to  confider  the 
whole   matter,  and  from  fo  general  a  view  to  def- 
cend  to  more  particular   enquiries  :  whereas  they 
fuffered  their  minds  to  be  foreftalled  with  prejudices  j 
fo  that  they  never  examined  the  matter  impartially. 
To  the  greateft  part  of  this  he  feemed  to  aiTent, 
only  he  excepted   to  the  belief  of  myfteries  in   the 
chriftian  religion  ;  which  he  thought  no  man  could 
do,  fmce  it  is  not  in  a  man's  power  to  believe  that 
which   he  cannot   comprehend,  and   of  which   he 
can  have  no  notion.     The  believing  myfteries,  Iiq 
faid,  made  way  for  all  the  jugglings  of  priefts,  for 
they  getting  the  people  under  them  in  that  point, 
fet  out  to  them  what   they  pleafed  ;  and  giving  It 
a  hard  name,  and  calling  it  a  myftery,  the  people 
were  tamed,  and  eaUly  believed  it.     The  reftraiji,- 
ing  a  man   from  the  ufc  of  women,  except  one  in 
the   way  of  marriage,  and   denying  the   remedy  of 
divorce,  he  thought  unreafonable  impofitlons   on 
the    freedom  of  mankind  :  and  the  bufmefs   of  the 
clergy,  and    their  maintenance,  with  the  belief  of 
feme  authority  and  power,  conveyed  in  their  orders, 
looked,  as  he  thought,  like  apiece  of  contrivance  5, 
and  why,  faid  he,  mud  a   man  tell  me,  I  cannot 
be  faved,  unlefs  I   believe   things  againfl  my  lea- 
fon,  and  then  that  1  muft  pay  hhn  for  telUng  me 
of  them  ?  Thefe  were    all  the   exceptions   which 
at  any   time  I  heaid  from  him  to  chriftianity ;  to 
which  I  made  thefe  anfwers. 

l-OF 


48  'The  Life  and  Death  of 

For  myfteries.  It  is  plain  there  is  iii  every  thing, 
fomewhat  that    is   unaccountable.     How   animals 
or  men  are  formed  in  their  mothers  bellies,  how 
feeds  grow  in  the  earth,  how  the  foul  dwells  in  the 
body,  and  afls  and  moves  it  ;  how   we   retain  the 
figures  of  fo   many   words  or  things  in  our  memo- 
ries, and  how   we  draw   them  out   fo    eafily    and 
orderly  in   our  thoughts   or  difcourfes  ?  how  fight 
and  hearing  were  fo  quick  and  dillin£t,  how   vve 
move,    and    how    bodies    were    compounded    and 
united  ?  thefe  things,  if  we  follow  them  into  all 
the  difficulties  that  wc  may  raife  about  them,  will 
appear  every  whit  as  unaccountable  as  any  myftery 
of  religion  ;   and  a  blind  or  deaf  man  would  judge 
fight  or  hearing  as  Incredible  as  any  myllery  may 
be  judged  by  us;  for  our   reafon  is  not  equal  to 
them.     In  the  fame  rank,  different  degrees  of  age 
or  capacity  raife   fome  far  above   others,  fo  that 
children  cannot  fathom  the  learning,  nor  weak  per- 
fons  the  councils  of  more  illuminated  minds  ;  there- 
fore it   was  no  wonder  if  we  could  not  underftand 
the  Divine  EiTence.    We  cannot  imagine  how  two 
fuch  different  natures  as  a  foul  and  body  fhould  fo 
unite  together,  and  be  mutually  affe£Ved  with  one 
anothers    concerns  ?    and    how   the  foul    has  one 
principle  of  reafon,  by  which  it  a6ls  intelle«Slually, 
and  another  of  life,  by   which  it  joins  to  the  brdy 
and  afts   vitally  ?  two   principles  fo  widely  differ- 
ing both  in  their  nature  and  operation,  and  yet 
united  in  one  and  the  iame  perfon.     There  might 
be  as  many  hard    arguments  brought  againft  the 

poffibility 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.         49 

poflibllity    of  thefe  things,  which   yet  every  one 

knows    to    be  true,  from  fpeculative  notions,  as 

againft  the  myfteries  mentioned  in  the  fcriptures. 

As  that  of  the  Trinity,   that  in  one    efTence   there 

are  three  different  principles  of  operation,  which, 

for  want  of  terms   fit  to  exprefs  them  by,  we  call 

perfons,  and  are  called  in  fcripture  the  Father,  Son, 

and  Holy  Ghoft  ;  and  that  the  fecond  of  thefe  did 

unite  himfelf  in  a  moft  intimate  manner  with  the 

human  nature  of  Jefus  Chrift  ;  and  that  the  fuffer- 

ings   he  underwent,  were  accepted   of  God  as    a 

facrifice  for  our  fms  ;  who  thereupon  conferred  on 

him  a  power  of  granting   eternal   life  to   all   that 

fubmit  to  the  terms  on  which  he  offers  it  ;  and 

that  the  matter  of  which  our  bodies  once  confifted, 

which   may  as  juftly  be  called   the  bodies   we  laid 

down  at  our  deaths,  as  thefe  can  be  faid  to  be  the 

bodies  which  we  formerly  lived  in,  being  refined  and 

made  more  fpiritual,  fhall  be  reunited  to  our  fouls, 

and  become  a  fit  infl:rument  for  them  in  a  more 

perfeft  eftate  ;  and  that  God  inwardly  bends   and 

moves   our  wills,  by    fuch   impreffions  as  he  can 

make  on  our  bodies  and  minds. 

Thefe,  which  are  the  chief  myfteries  of  our 
religion,  are  neither  fo  unreafonable,  that  any 
other  objedtion  lies  againft  them,  but  this,  that 
they  agree  not  with  our  common  notions,  nor  fi> 
unaccountable,  that  fom£what  like  them  cannot 
be  aftigned  in  other  things,  which  are  be- 
lieved really  to  be,  though  the  manner  of  them 
cannot  be  apprehended  :  fo  this  ought  not  to  be 

D^  any 


so  I'he  LiFi:  and  Death  of 

any  juft  objedion   to   the  fubmilfion  of  our   reafon- 
to  what  we  cannot  fo  well  conceive,  provided  our 
belief  of  it  be  well  grounded.     There  have  been, 
too  many  niceties  brought  indeed  rather  to  darker^ 
than  explain  thcfe  :  they  have  been   defended  by 
weak  arguments,,  and   illuftrated  by   fimilies    not 
always  fo  very  apt  and   pertinent  ;  and  new  fub- 
tilties  have  been  added,  which   have  rather  per- 
plexed than  cleared  them.     All    this    cannot   be 
denied  ;    the    oppofition   of    hereticks    antiently, 
Gccafioned  too  much  curiofity  among  the  fathers, 
which  the  fcoolmen  have  wonderfully  advanced  of 
late  times.     But  if  myfteries  were  received,  rather 
in  the  fimplicity  in  which  they  are  delivered  in  the 
fcriptures,  than    according   to    the   dlfcantings  of 
fanciful  men  upon   them,  they   would  not  appear 
much  more  incredible,  than  fome  of  the  common 
obje<^s  of  {Qn(e  and  perception.     And  it  is  a  need- 
iefs  fear,  that  if  fome  myfteries  are  acknowledged, 
which  are  plainly  mentioned  in  the  new  teftament, 
it  will  then  be  in  the  power  of  the  priefts   to  add 
more  at  their  pleafure.     For   it  is  an  abfurd  in-> 
t'erence  from  our  being  bound  to  afTent  to  fome 
truths  about  the  Divine  Eflence,  of  which  the  man- 
ner is  not  underftood,  to   argue  that  therefore  in 
an  objed   prefented  daily  to  cur  fenfesj  fuch  as 
bread  and  wine,  we  fhould  be  bound  to  believe 
againft  their  teftimony,   that  it  is  not  what  our 
ienfes  perceived  it  to  be,  but  the  whole  flefh  and 
blood  of  Chrift,  an  entire  body   being    In    every 
crumb  and  drop  of  it.     It  is  not  indeed  in  a  man's 

power 


John  Ear/ of  Rochester.  51 

power  to  believe  thus  againft  his  {en(e  and  reafon, 
where  the  objedl  is  proportioned  to  them,  and  fitly 
applied,  and  the  organs  are  under  no  indifpofition 
or  diforder.  It  is  certain  that  no  myftery  is  to  be 
admitted,  but  upon  very  clear  and  exprefs  authori- 
ties from  fcripture,  which  could  not  reafonably 
be  underftood  in  any  other  {en{e.  And  though 
a  man  cannot  form  an  explicit  notion  of  a  my- 
ftery, for  then  it  would  be  no  longer  a  myftery, 
yet  in  general  he  may  believe  a  thing  to  be,  though 
he  cannot  give  himfelf  a  particular  account  of  the 
way  of  it  ;  or  rather,  though  he  cannot  anfwer 
fome  objecSlions  which  lie  againft  it.  We  knov\A 
we  believe  many  fuch  in  human  matters,  which 
are  more  within  our  reach ;  and  it  is  very  unrea- 
fonable  to  fay  we  may  not  do  it  in  divine  things, 
which  are  much  more  above  our  apprehcnfions. 

For  the  fevere  reftraint  of  the  ufe  of  v/omen,  It 

is  hard  to  deny  that  priviledge  to  Jefus  Chrift  as  a 

law-giver,  to    lay   fuch   reftraints,  as    all    inferior 

legiflators   do  j  who  when  they  find   the  liberties 

their   fubjecls     take   prove    hurtful    to    them,    fet 

fuch    limits,  and   make  fuch  regulations,  as  they 

judge  neceflliry  and  expedient.     It  cannot  be  faid, 

but  the  reftraint  of  appetite   is  neceflary  in   fome 

inftances  ;  and   if  it  is  neceflary  in   thefe,  perhaps 

other  reftraints  are  no  lefs  neceflary  to  fortify  and 

fecure  them.     For  if  it  be  acknowledged,  that  men 

have  a  property  in   their  wives  and   daughters,  fo 

that  to  defile  the  one,  or  corrupt  the  other,  is  an 

unjuft  and  injurious  thing  ;  it  is  certain,  that  ex- 

D  a  ccpt 


5a  I'hs  Life  ajid  Death  of 

cept  a  man  carefully  governs  his  appetites,  he  wi-U. 
break  through  thefe  reftraints ;  and  therefore  our 
Saviour  knowing    that  nothing    could    cfFeftually 
deliver  the  world  from  the  mifchlef  of  unreftrained 
appetite,  as  fuch    a  confinement,   might  very  rea- 
fonably  injoin  it.     And  in  all  fuch  cafes  we  are  to- 
balance  the   inconveniences    on   both    hands,  and 
where  wc  find  they  are  heavieft^we  are  to  acknow- 
ledge the  equity  of  the  law.     On  the  one  hand  there 
is   no   prejudice^  but  the  reftraint  of  appetite  ;  on 
the  other  are  the  mifchiefs  of  being  given   up  to 
pleafure,  of  running  inordinately  into  it,  of  break- 
ing the  quiet  of  our  own  family  at  home,  and  of 
others  abroad  ;  the  engaging  into  much  paffion,  the 
cfoing  many  falfe  and   impious   things  to  compafs 
what  is  defired,  the  wafte  of  men's  eftates,  time, 
and  health.     Now  let  any  man  judge,  whether  the 
prejudices  on  this  fide,   are  not  greater  than  that 
iingle  one  on  the  other  fide,  of  being  denied  fome 
pleafure?  For  polygamy,  it  is  but  reafonable  fince 

(women  are  equally  concerned  in  the  laws  of  mar- 
riage, that  they  fhould  be  confidered  as  well  as 
men  ;  but  in  a  Hate  of  polygamy  they  are  unde? 
great  m.ifery  and  jealoufy,  and  are  indeed  bar- 
baroufly  ufed.  Man  being  alfo  of  a  fc/ciab!e  na- 
ture, friendfliip  and  convcrfe  were  among  the 
primitive  intendments  of  marriage^  in  which,  as  far 
as  the  man  may  excel  the  wife  in  greatnefs  of  mind, 
and  height  of  knowledge,  the  wife  fomevvay  makes 
that  up  with  her  affe»Slionand  tender  care;  fo  that 
from  both  happily  mixed,  there  arifes  a  harmony, 

which 


JOHN  Eiirl  of  Rochester.       53 

which  is  to  virtuous  minds  one  of  the  greateft 
joys  of  life  ;  but  all  this  is  gone  in  a  ftate  of  poly- 
gam)',  which  oc-cafions  perpetual  jarrings  and  jea- 
loufies.  And  the  variety  does  but  engage  men  to 
a  freer  range  of  pleafure,  which  is  not  to  be  put  in 
the  balance  with  the  far  sreater  mifchiefs  that  mud 
follow  the  other  courfe.  So  that  it  is  plain,  our 
Saviour  confidered  the  nature  of  man,  what  it 
could  bear,  and  what  was  fit  for  it,  when  he  fo 
reftrained  us  in  thefe  our  liberties.  And  for  di- 
vorce, a  power  to  break  that  bond  would  too  much 
encourage  married  perfons  in  the  little  quarrellings 
that  may  arife  between  them,  if  it  were  in  their 
povver  to  depart  one  from  another.  For  when  they 
know  that  cannot  be,  and  that  they  muft  live  and 
die  together,  it  does  naturally  incline  them  to  lay 
down  their  refentments,  and  to  endeavour  to  live 
together  as  well  as  they  can.  So  the  law  of  the 
gofpel  being  a  law  of  love,  defigned  to  engage 
chriftians  to  mutual  love,  it  was  fit  that  all  fuch 
provifions  fliould  be  made,  as  might  advance  and 
maintain  it,  and  all  fuch  liberties  be  taken  away  as 
are  apt  to  enkindle  and  foment  ftrife.  This  might 
fall  in  fome  inftances  to  be  uneafy  and  hard  enough ; 
but  laws  confider  what  falls  out  moft  commonly, 
and  cannot  provide  for  all  particular  cafes.  The 
bcft  laws  are  in  fome  inftances  very  great  grie- 
vances :  but  the  advantages  being  balanced  with  the 
inconveniences,  meafures  are  to  be  taken  accord- 
ingly. Upon  this  whole  matter,  I  faid,  that 
pjeafure  itood  in  oppofitlon  to  other  co.nfidcrations 

O3  Of 


54  5"i&(?  Life  and  Death  of 

of  great  weight,  and  (o  the  decifion  was  eafy  :  and 
fince  our  Saviour  offers  us  fo  great  rewards,  it  is 
but  reafonable  he  have  a  priviledge  of  loading 
thefe  promifes  with  fuch  conditions,  as  are  not  ia 
themfelves  grateful  to  our  natural  inclinations  ;  for 
all  that  propofe  high  rewards,  have  thereby  a  right 
to  exa6t  difficult  performances. 

To  this,  he  faid,  we  are  fure  the  terms  are 
difficult,  but  are  not  fo  fure  of  the  rewards.  Upon 
this  I  told  him,  that  we  have  the  fame  aflurance  of 
the  rewards,  that  we  have  of  the  other  parts  of 
chriftian  religion.  We  have  the  promifes  of  God 
made  to  us  by  Chrift,  confirmed  by  many  miracles : 
we  have  the  earnefts  of  thefe,  in  the  quiet  and  peace 
which  follows  a  good  confcience,  and  in  the  re- 
furredlion  of  him  from  the  dead  who  hath  promifed 
to  raife  us  up.  So  that  the  reward  is  fufficiently 
aflured  to  us  ;  and  there  is  no  reafon  it  fliould  be 
given  to  us,  before  the  conditions  are  performed  on 
which  the  promifes  are  made.  It  is  but  reafon- 
able we  fliould  truft  God,  and  do  our  duty,  in 
hopes  of  that  eternal  life,  which  God  who  cannot 
lie  hath  promifed.  The  difficulties  are  not  fo  great, 
as  thofe  which  fometimes  the  commoneft  concerns 
of  life  bring  upon  us  :  the  learning  fome  trades  or 
fciences,  the  governing  our  health  and  affairs,  bring 
us  often  under  as  great  ilraights :  fo  that  it  ought 
to  be  no  juft  prejudice,  that  there  are  fome  things 
in  religion  that  are  uneafy,  fince  this  is  rather  the 
effect  of  our  corrupt  natures,  which  are  farther 
depraved  by  vicious  habits,  and  can  hardly  turn  to 

any 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.  ^t^ 
an)'  new  courfe  of  life,  without  fome  pain,  thaii 
•of  the  di(3:ates  of  chriftianity,  which  are  \n  them- 
felves  jufl  and  reafonable,  and  will  be  eafy  to  us 
when  renewed,  and  in  a  good  meafure  reliorcd  to 
our piiniiti\e  integrity. 

As  for  the  exceptions  he  had  to  the  maintenance 
■of  the  clergy,  and  the  authority  to  which  they 
pretended  if  they  ftretchcd  their  deligns  too  far,  the 
gofpel  did  plainly  reprove  them  for  it ;  fo  that  it  was 
very  fuitable  to  that  church,  which  was  fo  grofly 
faulty  this  way,  to  take  the  fciiptures  out  of  the 
hands  of  the  people,  fince  they  do  fo  manifeftly 
<lifclaim  all  fuch  practices.  The  priefts  of  the  true 
chriftian  religion  have  no  fecrets  among  them, 
which  the  world  muft  not  know  ;  but  are  only  an 
order  of  men  dedicated  to  God,  to  attend  on  facred 
things,  who  ougiit  to  be  holy  in  a  more  peculiar 
jnanner,  fince  they  are  to  handle  the  things  of  God. 
It  was  neceflary  that  fuch  perfons  fliould  have  a 
due  efteem  paid  them,  and  a  fit  maintenance  ap- 
pointed for  them,  that  fo  they  might  be  preferved 
from  the  contempt  that  follows  poverty,  and  the 
-diftradiions  which  the  providing  againft  it  might 
©therwife  involve  them  in  :  and  as  in  the  order  of 
the  world,  it  was  necefiary  for  the  fupport  of  ma- 
giftracy  and  government,  and  for  preferving  its 
efteem,  that  forae  flate  be  ufed  (though  it  is  a 
happinefs  when  great  men  have  philofophical 
minds  to  defpife  the  pageantry  of  it;)  fo  the 
plentiful  fupply  of  the  clergy,  if  well  ufed  and  ap- 
.plied  by  them,  will  certainly  turn  to  the  ad\'antage 

P  4  .   ijS 


5^  ^^^  Life  and  Death  of 

of  religion.  And  if  fome  men  either  through  am- 
bition or  covetoufnefs  ufed  indire£t  means,  or  fer- 
vile  compliances  to  afpire  to  fuch  dignities,  and 
being  pofTefled  of  them,  applied  their  wealth  either 
to  luxury  or  vain  pomp,  or  made  great  fortunes 
out  of  it  for  their  families ;  thefe  were  perfonal 
failings,  in  which  the  do£lrine  of  Chrift  was  not 
concerned. 

He  upon  that  told  me  plaini}'',  there  was  nothing 
that  gave  him,  and  many  others,  a  more  fecret  en- 
,  couragement  in  their  ill  ways,  than  that  thofe  who 
I  pretended  to  believe,  lived  fo  that  they  could  not 
be  thought  to  be  in  earneft  when  they  faid  it  :  for 
he  was  fure  religion  was  either  a  mere  contrivance, 
or  the  moft  important  thing  that  could  be  ;  fo  that 
if  he  once  believed,  he  would  fet  himfelf  in  great 
earneft  to  live  fuitably  to  it.  The  afpirings  that 
he  had  obferved  at  court  of  fome  of  the  clergy, 
"  with  the  fervile  ways  they  took  to  attain  to  pre- 
ferment, and  the  animofities  among  thofe  of  feveral 
parties  about  trifles,  made  him  often  think  they 
fufpe£led  the  things  were  not  true,  which  in  their 
fermons  and  difcourfes  they  fo  earneftly  recom- 
mended. Of  this  he  had  gathered  many  inftances  ; 
I  knew  fome  of  them  were  miftakes  and  calumnies  ; 
yet  I  could  not  deny  but  fomething  of  them  might 
be  too  true  :  and  I  publifh  this  the  more  freely,  to 
put  all  that  pretend  to  religion,  chiefly  thofe  that 
are  dedicated  to  holy  fun6lions,  in  mind  of  the 
great  obligations  that  lies  on  them  to  live  fuitable 
to  their  profeffion  5  fincc  othcrwife  a  great  deal  0/ 

the 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochestier.  57 
the  irreligion  and  athelfm  that  is  among  us,  may 
too  juftly  be  charged  on  them  :  for  wicked  men 
are  delighted  out  of  meafure  when  they  difcover  ill 
things  in  them,  and  conclude  from  thence,  not  only 
that  they  are  hypocrites,  but  that  religion  itfelf  is  a 
cheat. 

But  I  faid  to  him  upon  this  head,  that  though 
no  good  man  could  continue  in  the  practice  of  any 
known  fm,  yet  fuch  might,  by  the  violence  or  fur- 
prife  of  a  temptation,  to  which  they  are  liable  as 
much  as  others,  be  of  a  fudden  overcome  to  do  an 
ill  thing,  to  their  great  grief  all  their  life  after  ; 
and  then  it  was  a  very  unjuft  inference,  upon  fome 
few  failings,  to  conclude  that  fuch  men  do  not 
believe  themfelves.  But  how  bad  foever  many  are, 
it  cannot  be  denied  but  there  are  alfo  many,  both 
of  the  clergy  and  laity,  who  give  great  and  real 
demonftrations  of  the  power  religion  has  over  them, 
in  their  contempt  of  the  world,  the  flricknefs  of 
their  lives,  their  readinefs  to  forgi\'c  injuries,  to 
relieve  the  poor,  and  to  do  good  on  all  occafions  ; 
and  yet  even  thefe  maj  have  their  failing?,  either 
in  fuch  things  in  which  their  conifitutions  are  weak, 
or  their  temptations  ftrong  and  fudden  ;  and  in  all 
fuch  cafes  we  are  to  judge  of  men,  rather  by  the 
courfe  of  their  lives,  than  by  the  errors  that  they 
through  infirmity  or  furprife  may  have  flipt  into, 

Thefe  were  the  chief  heads  we  difcourfed  on  ; 
and  as  far.  as  I  can  remember,  I  have  faithfully  re- 
peated the  fubftance  of  our  arguments.  I  have  not 
foncealed  the  flrongeft  things  he  faid  to  mej  but 

though 


5^  ^he  Life  and  Death  of 

though  I  have  not  enlarged  on  all  the  excurfions 
of  his  wit  in  fetting  them  off,  yet  I  have  given  them 
tiieir  full  ftrength,  as  he  expreffed  them,  and  as 
far  as  I  could  recolleCl,  have  ufed  his  ow^n  vi^oids ; 
io  that  I  am  afraid  feme  may  cenfure  me  for  fet- 
ting down  thefe  things  fo  largely,  which  impious 
raen  may  make  an  ill  ufe  of,  and  gainer  together 
to  encourage  and  defend  themfelves  in  their  vices  : 
but  if  they  will  compare  them  with  the  anfwers 
made  to  them,  and  the  fenfe  that  fo  great  and  re- 
lined  a  wit  had  of  them  afterwards,  I  hope  they 
may,  through  the  bleiling  of  God,  be  not  altogether 
ineffectual. 

The  iffue  of  all  our  difcourfe  was  this ;  he  told 

\  tne,  he  faw  vice   and  impiety  were  as  contrary  to 

I  liuman   fociety,  as  wild  beafts  let  loofe  would  be  i 

and  therefore  he  firmly  refolved  to  change  the  whole 

method  of  his  life,  to  become  ftri6lly  jull  and  true, 

to   be  chafle  and  temperate,  to  forbear   fwearing 

and  irreligious   difcourfe,  to  worfhip  and   pray  to 

his  Maker  ;  and  that  though  he  was  not  arrived  at 

\  a  full   perfuafion  of  chriftianity,  he  would  never 

I  employ  his  wit  more  to  run  it  down,  or  to  corrupt 

others. 

Of  which  I  have  fmc€  a  further  aflurance,  from 
a  perfon  of  quality,  who  con ver fed  much  with  him 
the  laft  year  of  his  life ;  to  whom  he  would  often 
fay,  that  he  was  happy  if  he  did  believe,  and  that 
he  would  never  endeavour  to  draw  him  from  it. 

To  all  this  I  anfwered,  that  a  virtuous  life  would 
be  very  uneafy  to  him,  uniefs  vicious  inclinations 

were 


JOHN  £<7r/ (3/ Rochester.        59 

were  removed,  it  would  otherwife  be  a  perpetual 
conftraint.     Nor  could   it  be  efFei^ed  without  an 
inward    principle  to  change   him  ;  and   that  was 
only  to  be  had  by  applying  himfelf  to  God   for  it 
in  frequent  and  earneft  prayer :  and  I  was  fure,  if 
his  mind  was  once  cleared  of  thefe  diforders,  and 
cured  of  thofe  diftempers,  which  vice  brought  on 
it,  fo  great  an  underftanding  would  foon  fee  through 
all  thofe  flights  of  wit,  that   do  feed   atheifm  and 
irrelio-jon  which  have   a   falfe   o-Iitterina:  in  them, 
that  dazzles  feme   weak-fighted  minds,  who  have 
not  capacity  enough  to  penetrate  further  than  ther 
furfaces  of  things ;  and  fo  they  ftick  in  thefe  toyls, 
which   the  ftren2:th  of  his  mind  would  foon  break 
through,  if  it  were  once  freed  from  thofe  things 
that  depreffed  and  darkened  it. 

At  this  pafs  he  was  when  he  went  from  London, 
about    the  beginning  of  April  :  he  had  not  been 
long  in  the  country,  when  he  thought   he  was  fo 
well,  that  being  to  go  to  his  eftatein  Somerfetfhire, 
he  rode  thither  poft.     This  heat  and  violent  mo- 
tion did  fo  inflame  an  ulcer  that  was  in  his  bladder, 
that  it  raifed  a  very  great  pain  in  thofe  parts  j  yet 
he  with  much  difHculty  came  back  by  coach  to  the 
lodge  at  Woodllock-park.     He  was  then  wounded 
both  in  body  and  mind  j  he  underftood  phyfic  and 
his  own  conftitution  and  diftemper  fo  well,  that  he 
concluded   he  could  hardly  recover  ;  for  the  ulcer 
broke,  and  vaft  quantities  of  purulent  matter  paiTed 
with  his  urine.     But  now  the  hand  of  God  touched 
him,  and  as  he  told  me,  it  was  not  only  a  general 

dark 


6o  7he  Life  md  Death  of 

dark  melancholy  over  his  mind,  fuch   as   he  had 

(formerly  felt,  but   a   moft  penetrating  cutting  for- 
row.     So    that    though    in    his  body    he    fufFered 
extreme  pain  for  fome  weeks,  yet  the  agonies  of 
his  mind  fometimes  fwallowed  up  the  fenfe  of  what 
he  felt  in  his  body.     He  told  me,  and  gave  it  me  in 
charge  to  tell   it  to   one  for  whom  he  was  much 
concerned,  that  though  there  were  nothing  to  come 
after   this  life,  yet  all   the  pleafures  he  had  ever 
known  in  fin,  were  not  worth  that  torture  he  had 
felt  in  his  mind.     He  confidered  he  had  not  only 
neglciSted   and  difhonoured,  but  had   openly  defied 
his  Maker,  an4  had  drawn  many  others  into   the 
like  impieties  ;  fo  that  he  looked  on  himfelf  as  one 
that  was  in  great  danger  of  being   damned.     He 
then  fet  himfelf  wholly  to  turn  to  God  unfeign- 
edly,    and    to   do    all   that    was    poffible    in    that 
little  remainder  of  his   life  v^'hich  vy^as  before  him, 
to   redeem  thofe  great  portions  of  jt  that  he  had 
formerly  fo  ill   eniployed.     The  minifter   that   at- 
tended  conftantly    on  him,    was   that   good    and 
worthy  man   Mr.   Parfons,  his  mother's  chaplain, 
who  hath  fince  his  death  preached,  according  to  the 
directions  he  received  from  him,  his  funeral  fermon  ; 
in  which  there  are  fo  many  remarkable  paflages, 
that  I  ftiall  refer  my  reader  to  them,  and  will  re- 
peat none  of  them  here,  that  I  may  not  thereby 
leflen  his  defire  to  edify   himfelf  by   that  excellent 
difcourfe,  which  hath  given  fo  great  and  fo  general 
a   fatisfa6lion  to  all  good  and  judicious  readers.     I 
Ihall  fpeak  curfoiily  of  every  thing,  but  that  which 

I 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.        6i 

I  had  immediately  from  himfelf.    He  was  vifited 
every  week  of  his  ficknefs  by  his   diocefan,  that 
truly  primitive  prelate,  the  lord  bifhop  of  Oxford  ; 
who  though  he  lived  fix  miles  from  him,  yet  look- 
ed on  this  as  fo  important   a  piece  of  his  paftoral 
care,  that  he   went  often  to  him,  and  treated  him 
with  that  decent  plainnefs  and  freedom  which  is  io 
natural  to  him  ;  and  took  care  alfo  that  he  might 
not  on  terms  more  eafy  than  fafe,  be  at  peace  with 
himfelf.     Dr.    Marfhall,  the    learned  and    worthy 
redtor    of  Lincoln  College  in  Oxford,  being  the 
minifter  of  the   parifh,  was  alfo  frequently  with 
him  J  and  by  thefe  helps   he  was  fo  directed  and 
fupported,  that   he  might  not    on   the  one    hand 
fatisfy  himfelf  with   too  fuperficial  a  repentance, 
nor  on  the  other  hand  be  out  of  meafure  opprefTed 
with  a  forrow  without  hope.     As  foon  as  I  heard 
he  was  ill,  but  yet  in  fuch  a  condition  that  I  might 
write  to  him,  I  wrote  a  letter  to  the  beft  purpofe  I 
could.     He   ordered  one  that  was  then  with  him, 
to  afTure  me  it  was  very  welcome  to  him ;  but  not 
fatisfied  with  that,  he  fent  me  an  anfwer,  which, 
as  the  countefs  of  Rochefter  his  mother  told  me, 
he  dictated  every  word,  and  then  figned  it.     I  was 
once    unwilling  to  have    publifhed  it,   becaufe  of 
a  compliment  in  it  to  myfelf,  far  above  my  merit, 
and  not  very  well  fuiting  with  his  condition. 

But  the  fenfe  he  exprefles  in  it  of  the  change 
then  wrought  on  him,  hath  upon  fecond  thoughts 
prevailed  with  me  to  publifh  it,  leaving  out  what 
concerns  myfelf, 

Woodstock- 


62  'The  Life  and  Death  of 

Woodstock- Park,  OXFORDSHIRE. 

*•  My  moft  honoured  Dr.  Burnett, 

'^'  1^  yr  Y  fpirits  and  body  decay  fo  equally  to- 

*'  jLYA   gether,  that  I   fliall   write  you   a   letter 

*'  as  week  as  I  am  in  perfon.     I   begin  to  value 

"  churchmen  above  all  men  in  the  world,  he.     If 

*'  Godbeyetpleafed  to  fpare  me  longer  in  this  world, 

*'  1  hope  in  your  converfation  to  be  exalted  to  that 

*'  degree  of  piety,  that  the   world   may  fee  how 

\  *'  much   I  abhor  what  I   fo  long  loved,  and  how 

*'  much  I  glory  in  repentance  and  in  God's  fervice. 

'*  Beftow  your  prayers  upon  me,  that  God  would 

**  fpare  me  (if  it  be  his  good  will)  to  fliew  a  true 

"  repentance  and  amendment  of  life  for  the  time  to 

*'  come  :  or  elfe,  if  the  Lord  pleafeth   to  put  an 

"  end  to  my  worldly  being  now,  that  he  would 

"  mercifully  accept  of  my  death -bed   repentance, 

*'  and   perform    that  promife    that  he  hath    been 

"  pleafed  to  make,  that  at  what  time  foevcr  a  fm- 

**  ner  doth  repent,  he  would  receive  him.     Put  up 

*'  thefe  prayers,    moft  dear   do^lor,  to  Almighty 

"  God,  for 

"  YOUR    MOST    OBEDIENT, 

"  LANGUISHING    SERVANT, 

June  25,  1680. 

ROCHESTER." 

He 


JOHN  £^r/ ^/ Rochester.  63 

He  told  me  when  I  faw  him,  that  he  hoped  I 
would  come  to  him  upon  that  general  infinuatioii 
of  the  defire  he  had  of  my  company  j  and  he  was 
loth  to  write  more  plainly,  not  knowing  whether 
I  could  eafily  fpare  fo  much  time.    I  told  him,  that 
on  the  other  hand,  I  looked  on  it  as  a  prefumption 
to   come  fo  far,  when  he   was  in  fuch  excellerit 
hands  j  and  though  perhaps  the  freedom  formerly 
between  us,  might  have  excufed  it  with  thofe  to 
whom  it  was  known,  yet  it   might  have  the  ap- 
pearance  of  fo   much    vanity,    to   fuch   as    were 
Grangers  to  it  ;  fo  that  till  I  received  his  letter,  I 
did  not  think  it  convenient  to  come  to  him  j  and 
then  not  hearing  that  there  v/as  any  danger  of  a 
fudden   change,  I   delayed    going  to  him   till  the 
twentieth    of  July.     At  my  coming  to  his  houfe 
an   accident  fell  out  not  v/orth  mentioning,  but 
that  fome  have  made  a  ftory  of  it.     His  fervant, 
being  a  Frenchman,  carried   up  my  name  wrong, 
fo  that  he  miftook  it  for  another,  who  had  fent  to 
him,  that  he  would   undertake  his  cure,  and  he 
being   refolved   not  to  meddle  with   him,  did  not 
care  to  fee  him  :  this  raiftake  lafted  fome  hours, 
with  which  1  was  the  better  contented,  becaufe  he 
was  not  then  in  fuch  a  condition^  that  my  being 
about  him  could  have  been  of  ahy  ufe  to  him  j  fcr 
that  night  was  like  to  have  b^en  his  laft.     He  had 
a   convulfion   fit,  and   raved  j    but  opiates    beliir^. 
grven  him,  after  fome  hours  reft,  his  raving  left 
him  fo  entirely,  that  it  ney>er  again  returned  to, 
him* 

T 


64.  '^he  Life  and  Death  of 

I  cannot  eafily  exprefs  the  tranfport  he  Was  In, 
when  he  awoke  and  faw  me  by  him  ;  he  broke  out 
in  the   tendereft  expreffions  concerning  my   kind- 
nefs  in  coming  fo  far  to  fee  fuch  a  one,  ufing  terms 
of  great  abhorrence   concerning   himfelf,  which  1 
forbear  to  relate.   He  told  me,  as  his  ftreno-th  ferved 
him  at  feveral  fnatches,  for  he  was  then  fo  low, 
that  he  could  not  hold  up  difcourfe  long  at  once, 
what  fcnfe  he  had  of  his   paft  life ;  what  fad  ap- 
prehenfion  for  having  fo  offended  his  Maker,  and 
difhonoured  his   Redeemer  ;  what  horrors  he    had 
gone  through,  and  how  much  his  mind  was  turned 
to  call  on  God,  and  on  his  crucified   Saviour,  {o 
that  he  hoped  he    fhould    obtain  mercy,  for    he 
believed  he  had   fincerely  repented,  and  had  nov7 
a   calm  in  his   mind  after  that  ftoim  that  he  had 
been  in  for  fome  weeks.     He  had  flrong  appre- 
henfions    and    perfuafions    of   his    admittance    to 
heaven,    of  which  he    fpake    once,  not    without 
fome  extraordinary  emotion.     It   was  indeed   the 
only  time  that  he  fpake  with  any  great  warmth  to 
me  J  for  his  fpirits  were  then  low,  and  fo  far  fpent, 
that  though  thofe   about  him  told  me  he  had  ex- 
preffed  formerly   great   fervour  in   his   devotions  ; 
yet  nature  was  fo  much  fmik,  that    thefe  were  in 
a  great  meafure  fallen  off.     But  he  made  me  pray 
often  with  him  ;  and   fpoke  of  his  converfion  to 
God,  as  a  thing  now  grown  up  in  him  to  a  fettled 
and  calm  ferenity.     He  was  very  anxious  to  know 
my  opinion  of  a  death-bed  repentance.     I  told  him, 
that  before  I  gave  any  refolution  in  that^  it  would 

be 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.         6^ 

be  convenient  that  I  (hould  be  acquainted  more 
particularJy  with  the  circumftances  and  progrefs  o^f 
his  repentance. 

Upon  this  he  fatisfied  me  in  many  particulars. 
He  laid,  he  was  now  periuaded  both  of  the  truth  of 
chriftianity,  and  of  the  power  of  inward  grace,  of 
which  he  gave  me  this  flrange  account.  He  faid, 
Mr.  Parfons,  in  order  to  his  convidlion,  read  to  him 
the  fifty-third  chapter  of  the  prophecy  of  Ifaiah,  and 
compared  that  with  the  hiftory  of  our  Saviour's 
paflion,  that  he  might  there  fee  a  prophecy  con- 
cerning it,  written  many  ages  before  it  was'done  j 
which  the  Jews  that  blafphemed  Jefus  Chrifl:  rtill 
kept  in  their  hands,  as  a  book  divinely  infpired. 
He  faid  to  me,  that  as  he  heard  it  read,  he  felt  an 
inward  force  upon  him,  which  did  fo  enlighten  his  / 
mind,  and  convince  him,  that  he  could  refift  it 
no  longer  ;  for  the  words  had  an  authority  which 
did  fhoot  like  rays  or  beams  in  his  mind,  fo  that 
he  was  not  only  convinced  by  the  reafonings  he  had 
about  it,  which  fatisfied  his  underftanding,  but  by 
a  power  which  did  fo  eft'edlually  conftrain  him, 
that  he  did  ever  after  as  firmly  believe  in  his  Sa- 
viour, as  if  he  had  feen  him  in  the  clouds.  He 
had  made  it  to  be  read  fo  often  to  him,  that  he  had 
got  it  by  heart,  and  went  through  a  great  part  of 
it  in  difcourfe  with  me,  with  a  fort  of  heavenly 
pleafure,  giving  me  his  refle6tions  on  it.  Some 
few  I  remember,  JVho  haih  believed  our  report  ? 
(verfe  i.)  Here,  he  faid,  was  foretold  the  oppofi- 
tion   the   gofpel  was    to   meet   with    from    fuch 

E  wretches 


66  The  Life  and  Death  (ff 

wretches  as  he  was.  He  hath  no  form  nor  comelinef:^ 
and  when  we  Jhall  fee  bhn^  there  is  no  beauty  that  we 
Jhould  defire  him^  (verfe  2.)  On  this,  he  faid,  the 
meannefs  of  his  appearance  and  perfon  has  made 
vain  and  foolifti  people  difparag<2  him,  becaufe  he 
came  not  in  fuch  a  fool's  coat  as  they  delight  in. 
What  he  £aid  on  the  other  parts  I  do  not  well  re- 
tnemberj  and  indeed,,!  was  fo  affe£ted  with  what  he 
faid  then  to  me,  that  the  general  tranfport  I  was 
under  during  the  whole  difcourfe,  made  me  lefe 
capable  to  remember  thefe  particulars,  as  I  wilh  I 
had  done. 

He  told  me,  that  he  had  thereupon  received  the 
facrament  wi<h  great   fatisfa6lion,    and   that   was 
encreafed  by  the  pleafure  he  had  in  his  lady's  receiv- 
ing it  with  him  ;  who  had  been  for  fome  years 
mifled  into  the  communion  of  the  church  of  Rome, 
and  he  himfelf  had  been,  not  a  little  inftrumental  in 
procuring  it,,  as  he  fueely  acknowledged  :  fo   that 
it  was  one  ofthe  joyfulleft  things  that  befell  him  in 
his  ficknefs,^  that  he  had  feen  that  mifchief  remov- 
ed, in  which  he  had  fo  great  a  hand  :  and  during 
his  whole  fieknefs,  he  exprefled   fo  much  tender- 
nefs  and  true  kindnefs  to  his  lady,  that  as  it  eafily 
defaced  the  remembrance  of  every  thing  wherein  he 
had  been  in  fault  formerly,  fo  it  drew  from  her 
the  moH  paflionate  care  and  concern  for  him  that 
was  poflible,  which  indeed  deferves  a  higher  cha- 
ratSler  than  is  decent  to  give  of  a  perfon  yet  alive  : 
Wt  1  fbaU  confine  my  difcourfe  to  the  dead. 

He 


John   Earl  of  Rochester.        6y 

He  told  me,  he  had  overcome  all  his  refent-  . 
Bients  to  all  the  world,  fo  that  he  bore  ill-will  to  no 
perfon,  nor    hated    any    upon   perfonal    accounts. 
He  had  given  a  true  ftate  of  his  debts*  and  had 
ordered  to  pay  them  all,  as  far    as  his  eftate  that 
was  not  fettled  could  go  j  and  was  confident,  that 
if  all  that  was  owing  to  him  were  paid  to  his  ex-* 
ecutors,  his  creditors  would  be  all  fatisfied.     He 
faid,  he  found  his  mind  now  poflefTed  with  another 
fenfe  of  things,  than  ever  he  had   formerly*    He 
did  not  repine  under  all  his  pain,  and  in  one  of 
the   Iharpeft   fits  he  was   under  while  I   was  with 
him,  he  faid,  he  did  willingly  fubmit  j  and  look- 
ing up  to  heaven^  faid,  "  God's  holy  will  be  done^ 
*'  I  blefs  him  for  all  he  does  to  me.  "     He  pro- 
felTed,  he  was  contented  either  to  die   or  live,  as 
fhould   pleafe   God  ;  and  though  it  was  a  foolifh 
thing  for  a  man  to   pretend  to  chufe  whether  he 
would  die    or  live,  yet  he  wifhed  rather  to  die. 
He   knew    he    could   never   be    fo  well  that    life 
{hould   be  comfortable  to  him.     He  was  confident 
he  fhould   be  happy  if  he  died,  but  he  feared  if  he 
lived  he  might  relapfe  j  and  then  faid  he  to  me, 
in  what  a  condition  fhall  I  be,  if  1  relapfe  after  all 
this  ?  but,  he    faid,  he    trufted   in   the  grace  and 
goodnefs   of  God,  and  was  refolved  to  avoid  all 
thofe  temptations,  that  courfe  of  life  and  company, 
that  was  likely  to  enfnare  him  ;  and  he  defired  to 
live  on  no  other   account,  but  that  he  might  by 
the  change  of  his  manners  fome  way  take  ofF  the 
high   fcandal    his     former   behaviour    had    given. 

E  2  All 


6S  ^hs  Life  and  Death  of 

All  thefe  things  at  feveral  times  I  had  from  him, 
bcfides  fome  mefiages  which  very  vi^ll  became  a 
dying  penitent  to  fome  of  his  former  friends,  and 
a  charge  to  publifh  any  thing  concerning  him,  that 
mio-ht  be  a  mean  to  reclaim  others.  Praying 
God,  that  as  his  life  had  done  much  hurt,  fo  his 
death  might  do  fome  good. 

Having  underftood   all  thefe    things  from  him, 
and  beino-  preffed  to  give  him  my  opinion  plainly 
about  his   eternal  ftate  ;  I  told  him,  that  though 
the  promifes   of  the  gofpel   did  all   depend    upon 
a  real  change  of  heart  and   life,  as   the  indifpen- 
fible  condition  upon  which  they  were  made  ;  and 
that  it  was  fcarce  pofTible  to  know  certainly  whe- 
ther our  hearts  are  changed,    unlefs  it  appeared  in 
our  lives  ;   and  the  repentance  of  moft  dying  men, 
being  like  the  bowlings  of  condemned  prifoners 
for   pardon,  which  flowed  from  no  fenfe  of  their 
crimes,  but  from  the  horror  of  approaching  death  ; 
there  was  little  reafon  to  encourage  any  to  hope 
much  from  fuch  forrowing  ;  yet  certainly,  if  the 
mind  of  a  fmner,  even  on   a  death-bed,  be  truly 
renewed    and    turned  to    God,    fo    great     is    his 
mercy,  that   he  will    receive    him,  even    in    that 
extremity.     He  faid,  he   was   fure  his   mind  was 
entirely  turned,  and  though  horror  had  given  him 
his  firft  awaking,  yet  that  was  now  grown  up  in- 
to a  fettled  faith  and  converfion. 

There  is  but  one  prejudice  lies  againft  all  this, 
to  defeat  the  good  ends  of  divipe  providence  by  it 
upon  others,  as  well  as  on  himfdfi  i'.nd  that  is, 

that 


JOHN  £^;'/c/ Roci^ESTER.         69 

that   it   was  a    part  of  his  difeafe,  and  that  the 
lownefs   of  his  fpirits  made  fuch  an   alteration   in 
him,  that  he  was  not  what  he  had  formerly  been; 
and   this   fome  have  carried  fo  far  as  to  fay,  that 
he  died  mad  ;  thefe  reports  are  raifed  by  thofe  who 
are  unwilling  that  the  lafl  thoughts  or  words  of  a 
perfon,  every  way   fo   extraordinary,  fhould   have 
any  efFetfl  either  on   themfelves  or  others  ;  and  it 
is  to  be  feared,  that  fome  have  fo   far  feared  their 
confciences,  and  exceeded  the  common  meafures  of 
fm  and   infidelity,  that  neither  this  teflimony,  nor 
one  coming  from  the  dead,  would   fignify  much 
towards   their    convi6lion.      That   this  lord   was 
either  mad  or  ftupid,  is  a  thing  fo  notorioufly  un- 
true, that  it  is  the  greateft  impudence  for  any  that 
were   about  him,  to  report  it,  and  a  very  unrea- 
fonable  credulity  in  others  to  believe  it.     All  the 
while  I  was  with  him,  after  he  had  flept  out  the 
diforde-rs  of  the  fit  he  was  in  the  firft  night,  he  was 
not  only  without  ravings,  but  had  a  clearnefs   in 
his  thoughts,  in  his  memory,  in  his  refleclions  on 
things  and  perfons,  far  beyond  what  I  ever  faw  in 
a  perfon   (o  low  in  his  flrength.     He  was  not  able 
to  hold  out  long  in  difcourfe,  for  his  fpirits. failed  ; 
but  once  for  a  half  hour,  and  often   for  a  quarter 
of  an  hour  after  he  awaked,  he  had  a  vivacity  in 
his   difcourfe  that  was  extraordinary,    and  in    all 
things  like  himfelf.     He  called  often  for  his  child- 
ren, his  fon,  the  now  earl  of  Rocheflcr,  and  his 
three  daughters,  and  fpakc  to  them   with  a  fenle 
and  feeling  that  cannot  be  exprefled  in  writing. 
-■"  *         E  3  He 


70  ^be  Life  an^  Death  of 

He  called  me  once  to  look  on  them  all,  and  faid, 
**  fee'  how  good  God  has  been  to  me,  in  giving  me 
**  fo  many  bleilings,  and  I  have  carried  myfelf  to 
**  him  lik-9  an  ungracious  and  unthankful  dog.  " 
JHe  once  talked  a  great  deal  to  me  of  public  affairs, 
and  of  many  perfons  and  things  vi'ith  the  fame 
clearnefs  of  thought  and  exprefHon,  that  he  had 
ever  done  before  :  fo  that  by  no  fign  but  his  v/eak- 
nefs  of  body,  and  giving  over  difcourfe  fo  foon, 
could  1  perceive  a  difference  between  what  his 
parts  formerly  were,  and  what  they  were  then. 

And  that  wherein  the  prefence  of  his  mind 
appeared  moft,  was  in  the  total  change  of  an  ill 
habii  grown  fo  much  upon  him,  that  he  could 
hardly  govern  himfelf  when  he  was  any  ways 
heated  three  minutes  without  falling  into  it,  I 
mean  fwearing.  He  had  acknowledged  to  me  the 
former  winter,  that  he  abhorred  it,  as  a  bafe  and 
indecent  thing,  and  had  fet  himfelf  much  to  break 
it  off;  but  he  confeiTed,  that  he  was  fo  over- 
pov/ered  by  that  ill  cuflom,  that  he  could  not 
(peak  with  any  warmth,  without  repeated  oaths, 
which  upon  any  fort  of  provocation,  came  almoft 
naturally  from  him  ;  but  in  his  laft  rernorfes  this 
did  fo  fenfibly  afFe£l  him,  that  by  a  refolute  and 
f  onflant  watchfulnefs,  the  habit  of  it  was  perfedlly 
maflered  ;  fo  that  upon  the  returns  of  pain,  which 
were  very  fevere  and  frequent  upon  him  the  lafl 
day  I  was  with  hjm,  or  upon  fuch  difpleafures  as 
people  fick  or  in  pain  are  apt  to  take  of  a  fudden 
at    thofe  about  them ;  on   all   thefe  occafions   he 

never  fwore  an  oath  all  the  while  I  was  there. 

Once 


JOHN  ^<2r/ &/ Rochester.        71 

Once  he  was  offended  with  the  delay  of  one 
be  thought  made  not  hafte  enough  with  fomewhat 
he  called  for,  and  faid  in  a  little  heat,  "  that 
**  damned  fellow  :  "  foon  afrer,  I  told  him,  I  was 
glad  to  find  his  ftyle  fo  reformed,  and  that  he  had 
fo  entirely  overcome  that  ill  habit  of  fwearing.j 
only  that  word  of  calling  any  damned,  which  had 
returned  upon  him,  was  not  decent.  His  anfwer 
was,  "  Oh  that  language  of  friends  which  was  (^o 
"  familiar  to  me,  hangs  yet  about  me  :  fure  none  has 
**  deferved  more  to  be  damned  than  I  have  done.  " 
And  after  he  had  humbly  atked  God  pardoji  for  it,  he 
defired  me  to  call  the  penfon  to  him,  that  he  might 
afk  him  forgivenefs ;  but  I  told  him  that  was  needlefs, 
for  he  had  faid  it  of  one  that  did  not  hear  it,  and 
fo  could  not^be  offended  by  it. 

In  this  difpoiltion  of  mind  did  he  continue  all 
the  while  I  was  with  bim,  four  days  together  ; 
he  was  then  brought  fo  low,  that  all  hopes  of 
recovery  were  gone^  Much  purulent  matter  came 
from  him  with  his  urine,  which  he  paCed  always 
with  fome  pain,  but  one  day  with  inexprefiSble 
torment ;  yet  he  bore  it  decently,  without  break- 
ing out  into  repinings,  or  impatieait  complaints. 
He  imagined  he  had  a  ftone  in  his  paffage,  but  it 
being  fearched,  none  was  found.  The  whole  fub- 
ftance  of  his  body  was  drained  fey  the  ulcer,  and 
nothing  was  left  but  (kin  and  bone,  and  by  lying 
much  on  his  back,  the  parts  there  began  to  mor- 
»ify  :  but  he  had  been  formerly  fo  low,  that  be 
ieenicd    'as  much  paft  ail  hopes  of  life  as  now ; 

E  4  which 


72  ^he  Life  and  Death  of 

which  made  him  one  morning,  after  a  full  and 
fweet  night's  lelt  procured  by  laudanum,  given 
him  without  his  knowledge,  to  fancy  it  was  an 
effort  of  nature,  and  to  begin  to  entertain  fome 
hopes  of  recovery  :  for  he  faid,  he  felt  him- 
felf  perfectly  well,  and  that  he  had  nothing  ailing 
him,  but  an  extreme  weaknefs,  which  might  go 
off  in  time  j  and  then  he  entertained  me  with  the 
fcheme  he  had  laid  down  for  the  reft  of  his  life,  how 
retired,  how  ftri6l,  and  how  ftudious  he  intended 
to  be  J  but  this  was  foon  over,  for  he  quickly 
felt,  that  it  was  only  the  effecSt  of  a  good  fleep, 
and  that  he  was  ftiil  in  a  very  defperate  flate. 

I  thought  to  have  left  him  on  Friday,  but  not 
without  fome  paflion  he  defired  me  to  ftay  that 
day  ;  there  appeared  no  fy mptom  of  prefent  death  ; 
and  a  worthy  phyfician  then  with  him,  told  me, 
that  though  he  was  fo  low,  that  an  accident  might 
carry  him  away  on  a  fudden  ;  yet  without  that, 
he  thought  he  might  live  yet  fome  weeks.  So  on 
Saturday,  at  four  of  the  clock  in  the  morning,  I 
left  him,  being  the  24th  of  July.  But  I  durft  not 
take  leave  of  him  ;  for  he  had  expreffed  fo  great  an 
unwillingnefs  to  part  with  me  the  day  before,  that 
if  I  had  not  prefently  yielded  to  one  day's  ftay,  it 
was  like  have  given  him  fome  trouble,  therefore  I 
thought  it  better  to  leave  him  without  any  forma- 
lity. Some  hours  after  he  afked  for  me,  and  when 
it  was  told  him,  I  was  gone,  he  feemed  to  be 
troubled,  and  faid,  "  has  my  friend  left  me,  then  I 
"  lliall  die  fliortly. "     After  that,  he  fpake  but  once 

or 


JOHN  Earl  of  RocHESTEVL.  73 

or  twice  till  he  died ;  he  lay  much  filent  ;  once 
they  heard  him  praying  very  devoutly.  And 
on  Monday  about  two  of  the  clock  in  the  morning 
he  died,  without  any  convulfion,  or  fo  much  as 
a  groan. 

The      CONCLUSION. 

THUS  he  lived,  and  thus    he   died  in  the 
three   and  thirtieth   year  of  his   age.     Na- 
ture   had    fitted    him    for  great   things,    and    his 
knowledge   and   obfervation  qualified  him  to  have 
been  one  of  the  moft  extraordinary  men,  not  only 
of  his  nation,  but  of  the  age  he  lived  in  j  and  I  do 
verily  believe,  that  if  God  had  thought  fit  to  have 
continued   him  longer  in  the   world,  he  had  been 
the  wonder  and  delight  of  all  that  knev/  him  :  but 
the  infinite  wife  God  knew  better  what  was  fit  for 
him,  and  what  the  age  deferved.     For  men  who 
have  fo  cad  off  all  fenfc  of  God  and  religion,  deferve 
not  fo  fi2;nal   a  bleffing,  as  the  example  and  con- 
vidlion  which  the  reft  of  his  life  might  have  given 
them.     And    I  am  apt  to  think  that  the  Divine 
Goodnefs  took  pity  on  him,  and  feeing  the  fince- 
rity  of  his  repentance,  would  try  and  venture  him 
no  more  in  circumftances  of  temptation,  perhaps 
too  hard  for  human  frailty.     Now  he  is  at  reft, 
and   1  am  very  confident  enjoys  the  fruits  of  his 
Jatc,  but  fincere  repentance.     But   fuch    as  live, 
and  ftill  go  on  in  their  fins  and  impieties,  and  will 

not 


74  5'^'?  Life  ayd  Death  Df 

not  be  awakened  neither  by  this  nor  the  othCT 

alarms  that   are  about   their  ears,  are,  it  feems, 

given  up  by  God  to  a  judicial  hardnefs  and  impeni- 

tency. 

Here  is  a  public  inftance  of  one  who  lived  of 
their  fide,  but  could  not  die  of  it  :  and  though 
none  of  all  our  libertines  underftood  better  than  he, 
the  fecret  myfteries  of  fin,  had  more  fludied  every 
thing  that  could  fupport  a  man  in  it,  and  had  more 
refifted  all  external  means  of  convidiion  than  be 
had  done  ;  yet  when  the  hand  of  God  inwardly 
touched  him,  he  could  no  longer  kick  againft  thofc 
pricks,  but  humbled  himfelf  under  that  mighty 
hand,  and  as  he  ufed  often  to  fay  in  his  prayers, 
he  who  had  fo  often  denied  him,  found  then  no 
other  Ihelterbut  his  mercies  and  compaflions. 

I  have  written  this  account  with  all  the  tender- 
nefs  and  caution  I  could  ufe,  and  in  whatfoever  I 
may  have  failed,  I  have  been  ftri£t  in  the  truth  of 
what  I  have  related,  remembering  that  of  Job, 
•*  will  ye  lie  for  God  ?  "  Religion  has  ftmngth 
and  evidence  enough  in  itfelf,  and  needs  no  fup- 
port from  lies,  and  made  ftories,  I  do  not  pretend 
to  have  given  the  formal  words  that  he  faid,  though 
I  have  done  that  where  1  could  remember  them. 
But  I  have  written  this  with  the  fame  fmcerity, 
that  I  would  hav€  done,  had  I  known  I  had  been 
to  •die  immediately  after  I  had  finiftied  it,  I  did 
not  take  notes  of  our  difcourfes  laft  winter  after 
■we  parted  ;  fo  I  may  have  perhaps  in  the  fetting 
•ut  of  my  anfwers  to  him,  have  enlarged  on  fe- 

veral 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester."  75 
yeral  things  both  more  fulJy  and  more  regularly, 
than  I  could  fay  them  in  fuch  free  difcourfes  as  \vc 
had.  I  am  not  fo  fure  of  all  I  fet  down  as  faid  by 
me,  as  I  am  of  all  faid  by  him  to  me ;  but  yet  the 
fubftance  of  the  greateft  part,  even  of  that,  is  the 
fame. 

It  remains,  that  I  humbly  and  carneflly  befccch 
all  that  fhall  take  this  book  in  their  hands,  that 
they  will  confider  it  entirely,  and  not  reft  fome 
parts  to  an  ill  intention.  God  the  fearcher  of 
hearts,  knows  with  what  fidelity  I  have  writ  it : 
but  if  any  will  drink  up  only  the  poifon  that  may 
be  in  it,  without  taking  alfo  the  antidote  here 
given  to  thofe  ill  principles  ;  or  confidering  the 
(tw^e  that  this  great  perfon  had  of  them,  when  he 
refledled  ferioufly  on  them;  and  will  rather  confirm 
themfelves  in  their  ill  ways,  by  the  fcruples  and 
objections  which  I  fet  dovi^n,  than  be  edified  by  the 
other  parts  of  it ;  as  I  v/ill  look  on  it  as  a  great 
infelicity,  that  I  (hould  have  faid  any  thing  that 
may  ftrengthen  them  in  their  impieties,  fo  the 
fincerity  of  my  intentions  will,  I  doubt  not,  ex- 
cufe  me  at  his  hands,  to  whom  I  offer  up  this  fmall 
fervicc. 

I  have  now  performed  in  the  bcft  manner  I  could, 
what  was  left  on  me  by  this  noble  lord,  and  have 
done  with  the  part  of  an  hiftorian.  I  fhall,  in  the 
next  place  fay  fomewhat  as  a  divine.  So  ex- 
traordinary a  text  does  almoft  force  a  fermon, 
though  it  is  plain  enough  itfelf,  and  fpeaks  with 
Ip  loud  a  voice,  that  thofe  who  arc  not  awakened 

by 


76  The  Life  and  Death  of 

by  it,  will  perhaps  confider  nothing  that  lean  fay. 
If  our  libertines  will  become  fo  far  fober  as  to  ex- 
amine their  former  courfe  of  life,  with  that  difen- 
gagement    and     impartiality,     which     they    muft 
acknowledge   a  wife  man  ought  to  ufe  in  things 
of  greateft  confequence,  and  balance  the  account  of 
what  they  have  got  by  their  debaucheries,  with 
the  mifchiefs  they  have  brought  on  themfelves  and 
others  by    them,  they   will   foon  fee   what  a   bad 
bargain  they  have  made.      Some  diverfion,  mirth, 
and  pleafure  is  all   they  can  promife  themfelves ; 
but  to  obtain  this,  how  many  evils    are   they  to 
fufFer  ?  Hov/  have   many  wafted    their    ftrength, 
brought   many  difeafes   on   their  bodies,  and  pre- 
cipitated their  age  in  the  purfuit  of  thofe  things  ? 
And  as  they  bring  old  age  early  on  themfelves,  fo 
it  becomes  a  miferable  ftate  of  life  to  the  greateft 
part  of  them ;  gouts,  ftranguries,  and  other  infir- 
mities, being  fevere  reckonings  for  their  paft  follies  ; 
not  to  mention  the  more  loathfome  difeafes,  with 
their  no  lefs   loathfome    and    troublefome   cures, 
which   they  muft  often  go  through,  who  deliver 
themfelves  up  to  forbidden   pleafures.     Many  are 
disfigured  befide  with  the   marks  of  their  intempe- 
rance and   levvdnefs,  and  which  is  yet  fadder,  an 
infection  is  derived  oftentimes    on   their   innocent 
but  unhappy  iflaie,  who  being  defcended   from   fo 
vitiated  an  original,  fuff'er  for  their  excelTes.     Their 
fortunes   are   profufely  wafted,  both  by  their  ne- 
glect of  their  affairs,  they  being  fo  buried  in  vice, 
that  they  cannot  employ  either  their  time  or  fpirits, 

fo 


JOHN  £^r/<?/ Rochester.         j'^ 

fo  much  exhaufted  by  intemperance,  to  confider 
them  ;  and  by  that  prodigal  expence  which  their 
lufts  put  them  upon.  They  fufFer  no  lefs  in  their 
credit,  the  chief  mean  to  recover  an  entangled 
cftate  ;  for  that  irregular  expence  forces  them  to  {o 
many  mean  (hifts,  makes  them  fo  often  falfe  to  all 
their  promifes  and  refolutions,  that  they  muft  needs 
feel  how  much  they  have  loft  that,  which  a  gen- 
tleman, and  men  of  ingenuous  tempers,  do  fome- 
times  prefer  even  to  life  itfelf,  their  honour  and 
reputation.  Nor  do  they  fuffer  lefs  in  the  nobler 
powers  of  their  minds,  which,  by  a  long  courfe 
of  fuch  diflblute  pradlices,  come  to  fink  and  de- 
generate fo  far,  that  not  a  few  whofe  firft  bloffoms 
gave  the  moft  promifmg  hopes,  have  fo  withered, 
as  to  become  incapable  of  great  and  generous  un- 
dertakings, and  to  be  difabled  to  t\^r^  thing,  but 
to  wallow  like  fwine  in  the  n!th  of  fenfuality, 
their  fpirits  being  diflipated,  and  their  minds  fo 
benummed,  as  to  be  wholly  unfit  for  bufmefs,  and 
even  indifpofed  to  think. 

That  this  dear  price  fhould  be  paid  for  a  little 
wild  mirth,  or  grofs  and  corporal  pleafure,  is  a 
thing  of  fuch  unparalelled  folly,  that  if  there  were 
not  too  many  fuch  inftances  before  us,  it  might 
feem  incredible.  To  all  this  we  muft  add  the 
horrors  that  their  ill  adions  raife  in  them,  and  the 
hard  fliiftsthey  are  put  to  to  flave  ofFthefe,  either 
by  being  perpetually  drunk  or  mad,  or  by  an 
habitual  difufe  of  thinking  and  refle^ling  on  their 
actions,  and  (if  thefe  arts  will  not  perfectly  quiet 

■tli  era) 


78  'J^he  Life  and  Death  of 

them)  by  taking  fanftuary  in  fuch  atheiftical  prin- 
ciples, as  may  at  leafl:  mitigate  the  fournefs  of  their 
thoughts,  though  they  cannot  abfolutcly  fettle  their 
minds. 

If  theftateof  mankind  and  human  focieties   are 
confidered,  what  mifchiefs   can   be  equal   to  thofe 
which   follow  thefe  courfes.     Such  perfons  are  a 
plague  where  ever  they  come,  they  can  neither  be 
trufted  nor  beloved,  having  caft  off  both  truth  and 
goodnefs,  which    procure  confidence    and    attract 
love ;    they    corrupt  fome   by    their  ill    pracStices, 
and  do  irreparable  injuries  to    the  reft,  they  run 
great  hazards,  and  put  themfelves  to  much  trou- 
ble, and  all  this  to  do  what  is   in  their  power  to 
make  damnation  as  fure  to  themfelves  as  poffibly 
they  can.     What  influence  this  has  on  the  whole 
nation  is  but  too  vifible  ;  how  the  bonds  of  nature, 
wedlock,  and  all  other  relations  are  quite  broken : 
virtue    is    thought   an  antick  piece  of  formality, 
and  religion  the  effe<5l  of  cowardice  or  ^knavery ; 
thefe  are  the  men  that  would  reform  the  world,  by 
bringing  it  under  a  new  fyfl:em  of  intelledtual   and 
moral  principles  ;  but  bate   them  a  few  bold  and 
lewd  jefts,  what  have  they  ever  done,  or  defigned 
to  do,  to  make  them  to  be  remembered,  except  it 
be  with  deteftation  r  They  are  the  fcorn  of  the  pre- 
fent  age,  and  their  names  muft  rot   in  the  next. 
Here  they  have  before   them  an  inftance  of  one, 
who  was  deeply  corrupted  with  the  contagion  which 
be  firft  derived  from  others,  but  unhappily  height- 
ened it  much  himfelf.     He  was  a  mafter  indeed 

and 


JOHN    Earl  of  Rochester.         79 

and  not  a  bare  trlfler  with  wit,  as  fome  of  thofc 
are  who  repeat,  and  that  but  fcurvily,  what  they 
may  have  heard  from  him  or  fome  others,  and  with 
impudence  and  laughter  will  face  the  world  down, 
as  if  they  were  to  teach  it  wifdom  j  who,  God 
knows,  cannot  follow  one  thought  a  ftep  further 
than  as  they  have  conned  it  j  and  take  from  thera 
their  borrowed  wit  and  mimical  humour,  and  they 
will  prefently  appear,  what  they  indeed  are,  the  leaft 
and  loweft  of  men. 

If  they  will,  or  if  they  can,  think  a  little,.  I  wife 
they  would  confider,  that  by  their  own  principles 
they  cannot  be  fure  that  religion  is  only  a  contri- 
vance ;  all  they  pretend  to  is  only  to  weaken  fome 
arguments  that  are  brought  for  it  j  but  they  have 
not  brow  enough  to  fay,  they  can  prove  that  theit 
own  principles  are  true,  fo  that  at  moll  they  bring 
their  caufe  no  higher,  than  that  it  is  poflible  re- 
ligion may  not  be  true.  But  ftill  it  is  poflible  it 
may  be  true,  and  they  have  no  fbame  left  that  will 
deny  that  it  is  alfo  probable  it  may  be  true  ; 
and  if  fo,  then  what  mad  men  are  they  who  run 
fo  great  a  hazard  for  nothing  ?  By  their  own  con- 
feflion,  it  may  be  there  is  a  God,  a  judgment,  and 
a  life  to  come,  and  if  fo,  then  he  that  believes 
thefe  things,  and  lives  according  to  them,  as  he 
enjoys  a  long  courfe  of  health  and  quiet  of  mind, 
an  innocent  relifli  of  many  true  pleafures,  and  the 
ferenities  which  virtue  raifes  in  him,  with  the 
good-will  and  friendftiip  which  it  procures  him 
from  others  j  fg  when  he  dies,  if  thefe  things  prove 

raiftakesa, 


So  The  Life  afid  Death  of 

miflakes,  he  does  not  out -live  his  error,  nor  fhall 
it  afterwards  raife  trouble  or  difquiet  in  him,  if  he 
then  ceafes  to  be ;  but  if  thefe  things  be  true,  he 
fhall  be  infinitely  happy  in  that  ftate,  where  his 
prefent  fmall  fervrces  fhall  be  fo  exceflively  re- 
warded. The  libertines,  on  the  other  fide,  as  they 
know  they  muft  die,  fo  the  thoughts  of  death  muft 
be  always  melancholly  to  them  ;  they  can  have 
no  pleafant  view  of  that  which  yet  they  know  can- 
not be  very  far  from  them  :  the  leafl  painful  idea 
they  can  have  of  it  is,  that  it  is  an  extimSlion  and 
ceafing  to  be,  but  they  are  not  fure  even  of  that ; 
fome  fecret  whifpers  within  make  them,  whether 
they  will  or  not,  tremble  at  the  apprehenfions  of 
another  flate  ;  neither  their  tinfel  wit,  nor  fuper- 
ficial  learning,  nor  their  impotent  affaults  upon 
the  weak  fide,  as  they  think,  of  religion,  nor  the 
boldeft  notions  of  impiety,  will  hold  them  up  then. 
Of  all  which,  I  now  prefent  fo  lively  an  inftance, 
as  perhaps  hiftory  can  fcarce  parallel. 

Here  were  parts  fo  exalted  by  nature,  and  im- 
proved by  fludy,  and  yet  fo  corrupted  and  debafed 
by  irreligion  and  vice,  that  he  who  was  made  to 
be  one  of  the  glories  of  his  age,  was  become  a 
proverb,  and  if  his  repentance  had  not  intcrpofed, 
would  have  been  one  of  the  greatell  reproaches  of 
it.  He  knew  well  the  fmall  ftrength  of  that  weak 
caufe,  and  at  firft  defpifed,  but  afterwards  ab- 
horred it.  He  felt  the  mifchiefs,  and  faw  the  mad- 
nefs  of  it  ;  and  therefore  though  he  lived  to  the 
fcaudal  of  many,  he  died  as  much  to  the  edification 

of 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.'  8i 

of  all  thofe  who  faw  him,  and  becaufe  they  were 
but  a  fmall  number,  he  defired  that  he  might  even 
when  dead,  yet  fpeak.  He  was  willing  nothing 
Ihould  be  concealed  that  might  caft  reproach  on 
himfelf  and  on  fin,  and  offer  up  glory  to  God  and 
reliffion.  So  that  though  he  lived  a  hainous  finner, 
yet  he  died  a  moft  exemplary  penitent. 

It  would  be  a  vain  and  ridiculous  inference  for 
any,  from  hence  to  draw  arguments  about  the 
abftrufe  fecrets  of  predeftination,  and  to  conclude, 
that  if  they  are  of  the  number  of  the  ele^Sl,  they  may 
live  as  they  will,  and  that  Divine  Grace  will 
at  fome  time  or  other  violently  conftrain  them,  and 
irrefiftably  work  upon  them.  But  as  St.  Paul  was 
called  to  that  eminent  fervice  for  which  he  was 
appointed,  in  fo  ftupendious  a  manner  as  is  no 
warrant  for  others  to  expe£t  fuch  a  vocation ;  fo, 
if  upon  fome  fignal  occafions  fuch  converfions  fall 
out,  which,  how  far  they  are  fhort  of  miracles,  I 
fliall  not  determine,  it  is  not  only  a  vain,  but  a 
pernicious  imagination,  for  any  to  go  on  in  their 
ill  ways  upon  a  fond  conceit  and  expectation  that 
the  like  ivill  befal  them  :  for  whatfoever  God's 
extraordinary  dealings  with  fome  may  be,  we  are 
fure  his  common  way  of  working  is,  by  offering 
thefe  things  to  our  rational  faculties,  which,  by 
the  affiftances  of  his  grace,  if  we  improve  them 
all  v/e  can,  (hall  be  certainly  effc6lual  for  our 
reformation  ;  and  if  we  neglect  or  abufe  thefe,  we 
put  ourfclves  beyond  the  common  methods  of  God's 
mercy,  and  have  no  reafon  to  exped  that  wonders 

F  Ihould 


Si  The  Life  and  Death  of 

fhould  be    wrought   for    our   convIiSlion ;  whichy 
though  they  fometimes  happen,  that  they  may  give 
an  efFe£tual  alarm  for  the  awaking  of  others,  yet 
it  would  deftioy  the  whole  defign  of  religion,.,  if 
men  fhould  depend  upon,  or  look  for  fuch  an  ex- 
traordinary and  forcible  operation  of  God's  grace^ 
And   1  hope,  that    thofe,   who  have  had    fome 
fliarp  refledlions   on  their  paft  life,  fo  as  to  be  re- 
folved  to   forfake  their  ill  courfes,  will  not    take 
the  leaft  encouragement  to  themfelves  in  that  de- 
fperate  and  unreafonable  rcfolution   of  putting  off 
iheir  repentance  till  they  can  fm  no   longer,   from 
the  hopes  I  have  exprelled  of  this  lord's  obtaining 
mercy  at  the  laft,  and   from  thence  prefunie,  that 
they  alfo  Ihall  be  received  when  they  turn  to  God 
on  their  death-beds  :  for  what  mercy  foever  God' 
may  fhew  to  fuch  as  really  were   never  inwardly 
touched  before  that  time  j  yet  there  is  no  reafon  to 
think,  that  thofe  who  have  dealt  fo  difingenuoufly 
with  God  and  their  own  fouls,  as  defignedly  to  put 
off  their  turning  to  him  upon  fuch  confulerations, 
fhould  then  be  accepted   with  him,     They   may 
die  fuddenly,  or  by  a  difcafe  that   may  fo  diforder 
their  uaderftandings,  that  fhey  fhall  not  be  in  any 
capacity   of  refled^ing  on   their  pati   lives.     The; 
inward  converfion  of  our   minds   is  not  i'o  in  our 
power,  that  it  can  be  effected  without  divine  grace 
•jffifting  J  and  there   is  no  reafon  for    thofe    who 
fiave  neglefted  thcfe  afliftances  all   their  lives,  to 
expe6l  them  in  fo  extraordinary  a  manner  at  their 
desth.     Nor  can  one,  efpecially  in  a  ficknefs  that  is 

quick 


JOHN  Earl  of  Rochester.         83 

quick  and  critical,  be  able  to  do  thofe  things  that 
are  often  indifpenfably  neceflary  to  make  his  re- 
pentance complete ;  and  even  in  a  longer  difeafe, 
in  which  there  are  larger  opportunities  for  thefe 
things.  Yet  there  is  great  reafon  to  doubt  of  a 
repentance,  begun  and  kept  up  merely  by  terror, 
and  not  from  any  ingenuous  principle.  In  which, 
though  1  will  not  take  on  me  to  limit  the  mercies 
of  God,  which  are  boundlefs,  yet  this  muft  be 
confefled,  that  to  delay  repentance  with  fuch  a 
defign,  is  to  put  the  greateft  concernment  we  havcj 
upon  the  moft  dangerous  and  defperate  ilTue  that  is 
pofTible. 

But  they  that  will  ftill  g6  on  in  their  fms,  and  be 
fo  partial  to  them,  as  to  ufe  all  endeavours  to 
ftrengthen  themfelves  in  their  evil  courfe,  even  by 
thefe  very  things  which  the  providence  of  God  fets 
before  them  for  the  calling  down  of  thefe  ftrong 
holds  of  fin  :  what  is  to  be  faid  to  fuch  ?  it  is  to  be 
feared,  that  if  they  obftinately  perfift,  they  will  by 
degrees  come  within  that  curfe,  He  that  is  unjuji^  let 
him  be  unjujijiill :  mtd  he  that  is  filthy,  let  him  be 
filthy  Jlill.  But  if  our  gofpel  is  hid,  it  is  hid  to  them 
that  are  lojl,  in  whom  the  god  of  this  world  hath  blinded 
the  minds  of  them  which  believe  not,  lejl  the  light  of  the 
glorious  gofpel  of  Chriji,  who  is  the  image  of  God,  Jhould 
Jhine  unto  them. 


SERMON 

PREACHED     AT     THE 

FUNERAL 

Of  the  Right  Honourable 

JOHN  Earl  of  Rochefter, 

Who  died  at  Woodllock-Park,  the  26th  of 
July,  1680,  and  was  buried  at  Spilfbury, 
in  Oxfordfhire,  the  9th  day  of  Auguft. 


By  ROBERT  PARSONS,  M.  A.  Chaplain  to  the 
Right  Honourable  Anne,  Countefs  of  Rochefter, 


ADVERTISEMENT. 

•tx  L  L  the  lewd  and  profane  poems  and  libels 
pf  the  late  lord  Rochefter,  having  been  (contrary 
to  his  dying  requeft,  and  in  defiance  of  religion, 
government,  and  common  decency)  publifhed  to 
the  world  ;  and  (for  the  eafier  and  furer  propaga- 
tion of  vice)  printed  in  penny-books,  and  cried 
about  the  ftreets  of  this  honourable  city,  without 
any  offence  or  diflike  taken  at  them  :  it  is  humbly 
hoped  that  this  fhort  difcourfe,  which  gives  a  true 
account  of  the  death  and  repentance  of  that  noble 
lord,  may  likewife  (for  the  fake  of  his  name) 
find  a  favourable  reception  among  fuch  perfons  j 
though  the  influence  of  it  cannot  be  fuppofed  to 
reach  as  far  as  the  poifon  of  the  other  books  is 
fpread  ;  which  by  the  ftrength  of  their  own  viru- 
lent corruption,  are  capable  of  doing  more  mifchief 
than  all  the  plays,  and  fairs,  and  flews,  in  and 
about  this  town  can  do  together. 


LUKE    XV.    7. 

I  fay  unto  you.,  that  llkeivife  joy  Jhall  be  hi  heaven  over 
one  /inner  that  repenteth,  more  than  over  ninety  and 
nine  jujl  perfons  that  need  710  repentance. 

IF  ever  there  were  n  fubje<Sl  that  might  deferve 
and  exhaufl  all  the  treafures  of  religious  elo- 
quence in  the  defcription  of  fo  great  a  man, 
and  fo  great  a  Gnner  as  now  lies  before  us  ;  toge- 
ther with  the  wonders  of  the  Divine  Goodnefs,  la 
making  him  as  great  a  penitent  ;  I  think  the  pre- 
fent  occafion  affords  one  as  remarkable  as  any  place 
or  age  can  produce. 

Indeed,  fo  great  and  full  a  matter  it  is,  that 
it  is  too  big  to  come  out  of  my  mouth,  and  perhaps 
not  all  of  it  fit  or  needful  fo  to  do.  The  greatnefs 
of  his  parts  are  well  enough  known,  and  of  his 
fins  too  well  in  the  world  j  and  neither  my  capacity, 
nor  experience,  nor  my  profcilxon,  will  allow  me 
txj  be  fo  proper  a  judge  either  of  the  one  or  the 
other.  Only  as  God  has  been  pleafed  to  make 
me  a  long  while  a  fad  fpeitator,  and  a  fecret 
mourner  for  his  iins.,  fo  as  he  at  laft  gracioufly  heard 
the  prayers  of  his  neareft  relatioi)s  and  true  friends, 
for  his  converfion  and  repentance  :  and  it  is  the 
good  tidings  of  that  efpecially  which  God  has  done 
for  his  foul,  that  I  am  now  to  publifli  and  tell 
abroad  to  the  world,  not  only  by  the  obligations 
of  mine  oflicc,  in  which  1  had  the  honour  to  be 

F  4.  a 


88  //Sermon  f  reached  at  the 

a  weak  minifter  to  it,  but  by  his  own  exprefs  and 

dying  commands. 

Now  although,  to  dcfcribe  this  worthily,  would 
requiie  a  wit  equal  to  that  with  which  he  lived, 
and  a  devotion  too  equal  to  that  with  which  he 
died,  and  to  match  either  would  be  a  very  hard 
tafk  ;  yet  befides  that,  1  am  not  fufficicnt  for  thefe 
things,  (for  who  is  ?)  and  that  my  thoughts  have 
been  rather  privately  bufied  to  fecure  a  real  re- 
pentance to  himfelf  whilft  living,  than  to  publifli 
it  abroad  to  others  in  an  artiiicial  drefs  after  he  is 
dead  :  I  fay,  befides  all  this,  I  think  1  fliall  have 
lefs  need  to  call  in  the  aids  of  fecular  eloquence. 
The  proper  habit  of  repentance  is  not  fine  linen, 
or  any  delicate  array,  fuch  as  are  ufed  in  the  court, 
or  kings  houfes,  but  fack -cloth  and  afhes  :  and  the 
way  which  God  Almighty  takes  to  convey  it,  is 
not  by  the  words  of  man's  wildom,  but  by  the 
plainnefs  of  his  written  word,  aflifted  by  the  in- 
ward power  and  demonftration  of  the  Spirit :  and 
the  effecls  it  works,  and  by  which  it  difcovers 
itfelf,  are  not  any  raptures  of  wit  and  fancy  ;  but 
the  moft  humble  proftrations  both  of  foul  and  fpirit, 
and  the  captivating  all  human  imaginations -to  the 
obedience  of  a  defpifcd  religion  and  a  crucified 
Saviour. 

And  it  is  in  this  array  I  intend  to  bring  out  this 
penitent  to  you  ;  an  array  which  I  am  fure  he  more 
valued,  and  defired  to  appear  in,  both  to  God  and 
the  world,  than  in  all  the  triumphs  of  wit  and  gal- 
lantry ;  and  therefore,  (waving  all  thcfe    rhetorical 

ilourifhess 


Earl  of  Rochester'^  Funeral.       89 

flourifhes,  as  beneath  the  folemnlty  of  the  occafion, 
and  the  majefty  of  that  great  and  weighty  truth  I 
am  now  to  deliver)  I  Ihall  content  myfelf  with  the 
office  of  a  plain  hiftorian,  to  relate  faithfully  and 
impartially  what  I  faw  and  heard,  efpecially  during 
his  penitential  forrows ;  which,  ifall  that  hear  mc  this 
day  had  been  fpe6tators  of,  there  would  then  been 
no  need  of  a  fermon  to  convince  men  ;  but  every 
man  would  have  been  as  much  a  preacher  to  him- 
felfof  this  truth,  as  I  am,  except  thefe  forrows: 
and  yet  even  thefe  forrows  fiiould  be  turned  into 
joys  too,  if  we  would  only  do  v/hat  we  pray  for, 
that  the  will  of  God  may  be  done  in  earth  as  it  is 
in  heaven  ;  for  fo  our  blefled  Lord  afTures  us  ;  "  I  fay 
*'  unto  you,  that  likewife  joy  fiiall  be  in  heaven  over 
*'  one  fmner  that  repenteth,  &c.  "  From  which  I 
fhall  confider, 

I.  The  finner  particularly  that  Is  before  us. 

IT.  The  repentance  of  this  fmner,  together  with 
the  means,  the  time,  and  all  probable  fincerity  of 
it. 

III.  The  joy  that  is  in  heaven,  and  fliould  be  on 
earth,  for  the  repentance  of  this  firmer. 

IV.  I  fhall  apply  myfelf  to  all  that  hear  me  ;  that 
they  would  join  in  this  joy,  in  praife  and  thankf- 
giving  to  God,  for  the  converfion  of  this  finner  j 
and  if  there  be  any  that  have  been  like  him  in  their 
fins,  that  they  would  alfo  fp^edily  imitate  him  in 
their  repentance. 

And 


90  v^Sermon  preached  at  the 

And  I.  Let  us  confider  the  perfon  before  us,  as- 
he  certainly  was  a  great  finner.      But  becaufe  man 
was  upright  before  he  was   a  finner,  and  to  mea- 
fure  the  greatnefs  of  his  fall,  it  will  be  ncceffary  to 
take  a  view  of  that  heighth   from  which  he  fell ; 
give  me  leave  to  go  back  a  little,  to  look  into  the 
rock  from  which  he  was  hewn,  the  quality,  family, 
education,   and   perfonal  accomplifhments  of  this 
great  man.     In  doing  of  which,  I  think  no  man 
will  charge  me  with  any  defign  of  cuftomary  flat- 
tery, or  formality  j  fmce  I  intend  only  thereby  to 
fhcw  the  greatnefs  and  unhappinefs  of  his  folly,  in 
the  perverting  fo    many  excellent  abilities  and  ad- 
vantages for  virtue  and  piety  in  the  fervice  of  fin, 
and  fo  becoming  a  more  univerfal,  infmuating,  and 
prevailing  example  of  it. 

As  for  his  family,  on  both  fides,  from  which  he 
was  defcended,  they  were  fome  of  the  moft  famous 
in  their  generations.  His  grandfather  was  that  ex- 
cellent and  truly  great  man,  Charles  lord  Wilmot, 
vifcount  Athlone  in  Ireland.  Henry  his  father, 
who  inherited  the  fame  title  and  greatnefs,  was  by 
his  late  majefty,  king  Charles  I.  created  baron  of 
Adderbury,  in  Oxfordfhire,  and  by  his  prefent 
majefly,  earl  of  Rochefter.  He  was  a  man  of  fignal 
loyalty  and  integrity  indeed  ;  and  of  fuch  courage 
and  condu*5l  in  military  affairs,  as  became  a  great 
general.  His  mother  was  the  relicl  of  fir  Francis 
Henry  Lee,  of  Ditchly,  in  the  county  of  Oxford, 
baronet,  grandmoLher  to  the  prefent  right  honour- 
able carl  of  Litchfield,  and  the  daughter  of  that 

genejous 


Earl  of  Rochester^  Funeral.       91 

generous  and  honourable  gentleman  fir  John  St. 
Johns,  of  Lyddiard,  in  the  county  of  Wilts,  ba- 
ronet, whofe  family  was  fo  remarkable  for^loyalty, 
that  feveral  of  his  fons  willingly  offered  themfelves 
in  the  day  of  battle,  and  died  for  it ;  and  whilft  the 
memory  of  the  Englifh  or  Irilh  rebellion  lafts,  that 
family  cannot  want  a  due  veneration  in  the  minds 
of  any  perfon,  that  loves  either  God  or  the  ting. 

As  for  his  education,  it  was  in  Wadham  CoilegCj 
Oxford,  under  the  care  of  that  wife  and  excellent 
governor  Dr.  Blandford,  the  late  bifliop  of  Wor- 
cefter ;  there  it  was  that  he  laid  a  good  foundation 
of  learning  and  ftudy,  though  he  afterwards  built 
upon  that  foundation  hay  and  ftubble.  There  he 
firft  fucked  from  the  breaft  of  his  mother  the 
univerfity,  thofe  perfections  of  wit,  and  eloquence, 
and  poetry,  which  afterwards,  by  his  own  corrupt 
ftomach,  where  turned  into  poifon  to  himfeif  and 
others  ;  which  certainly  can  be  no  more  a  blemifli 
to  thofe  illuftrious  feminaries  of  piety  and  good 
learning,  than  a  difobedient  child  is  to  a  wife  and 
virtuous  father,  or  the  fall  of  man  to  the  excellency 
pf  Paradife. 

A  wit  he  had  fo  rare  and  fruitful  in  its  invention, 
and  withal  fo  choice  and  delicate  in  it*  judgment, 
that  there  is  nothing  wanting  in  his  compofures 
to  give  a  full  anfwer  to  that  queition.  What  and 
where  wit  is?  except  the  purity  and  choice  of  fubjecl. 
For  had  fuch  excellent  feeds  but  fallen  upon  good 
ground,  and  inftead  of  pitcliing  upon  a  beaft,  or 
a  lull,  been  raifcd  up  on  high,  to  celebrate   the 

myftcrlcs 


92  *^Sermon  preached  at  the 

myfteries  of  the  divine  love,  in  pl'alms,  and  hymns, 
and  fpiritual  fongs  j  I  perfuade  myfelf  v^^e  might  by 
this  time  have  received  from  his  pen,  as  excellent 
an  idea  of  divine  poetry,  under  the  gofpel,  ufeful 
to  the  teaching  of  virtue,  efpecially  in  this  genera- 
tion, as  his  profane  verfes  have  been  to  deftroy  it. 
And  1  am  confident,  had  God  fpared  him  a  longer 
life,  this  would  have  been  the  whole  bufmefs  of  it, 
as  I  know  it  was  the  vow  and  purpofe  of  his  fick- 
nefs. 

His  natural  talent  was  excellent,  but  he  had 
hugely  improved  it  by  learning  and  induftry,  being 
thoroughly  acquainted  with  all  claflick  authors, 
both  Greek  and  Latin  ;  a  thing  very  rare,  if  not 
peculiar  to  him  among  thofe  of  his  quality,  which 
yet  he  ufed  not,  as  other  poets  have  done,  to  tran- 
slate or  fleal  from  them ;  but  rather  to  better  and 
improve  them  by  his  own  natural  fancy.  And 
whoever  reads  his  compofures,  will  find  all  things 
in  them  fo  peculiarly  great,  new  and  excellent,  that 
he  will  eafily  pronounce,  that  though  he  has  lent  to 
many  others,  yet  he  has  borrowed  of  none  ;  and 
that  he  has  been  as  far  from  a  fordid  imitation  of 
thofe  before  him,  as  he  will  be  from  being  reached 
by  thofe  that  follow  him. 

His  other  perfonal  accomplifhments  in  all  theper- 
feftions  of  a  gentleman,  for  the  court  or  country, 
whereof  he  was  known  of  all  men  to  be  a  very 
great  mafter,  is  no  part  of  my  bufmefs  to  defcribe 
or  underftand  ;  and  whatever  they  were  in  them- 
felves,  I  am  fure  they  were  but  miferable  comfor- 
ters 


Earl  of  Roche ster'j  Funeral.       93 

ters  to  him,  fince  they  only  miniflrered  to  his  fins, 
and  made  his  example  the  more  fatal  and  dangerous ; 
for  fo  we  may  own,  (nay,  I  am  obliged  by  him 
not  to  hide,  but  to  fhew  the  rocks  which  others 
may  avoid)  that  he  was  once  one  of  the  greateft 
of  fmners. 

And  truly  none  but  one  fo  great  in  parts  could 
be  fo.  His  fms  were  like  his  parts,  from  which 
they  fprang,  all  of  them  high  and  extraordinary. 
He  feemed  to  afFeit  fomething  Angular  and  para- 
doxical in  his  impieties,  as  well  as  in  his  writings, 
above  the  reach  and  thought  of  other  men  ;  taking 
as  much  pains  to  draw  others  in,  and  to  pervert  the 
right  ways  of  virtue,  as  the  apoftles  and  primitive 
faints  did  to  fave  their  own  fouls,  and  them  that 
heard  them.  For  this  was  the  heightening  and 
amazing  circumftance  of  his  fms,  that  he  was  {o 
diligent  and  induftrious  to  recommend  and  propa- 
gate them  ;  not  like  thofe  of  old  thathatedthe  light, 
but  thofe  the  prophet  mentions,  Ifaiah  iii.  9,  "  Who 
*'  declare  their  fins  as  Sodom,  and  hide  it  not ;  that 
*'  take  it  upon  their  fiioulders,  and  bind  it  to  them 
"  as  a  crown  ;  "  framing  arguments  for  fin,  mak- 
ing profelytcs  to  it,  and  writing  panegyricks  upon 

vice. 

Nay,  fo  confirmed  v/as  he  in  fin,  that  he  often- 
times aimoft  died  a  martyr  for  it.  God  was 
pleafed  fometimes  to  punifh  him  with  the  cffe<Sls  of 
his  folly,  yet  till  now  (he  conftfll-d)  they  had  no 
power  to  melt  him  into  true  repentance  ;  or  if  at 
any  time  he  had  fyme  lucid  intervals  from  his  folly 

and 


94  -^  Sermon  preached  at  the 

and  niadnefs,  yet  (alas)  how  fhort  and  tranfitory 
were  they  ?  All  that  goodnefs  was  but  as  a  morn- 
ing cloud,  and  as  the  early  dew  which  vanifhes 
away  ;  he  ftill  returned  to  the  fame  excefs  of  riot, 
and  that  with  fo  much  the  more  greedinefs,  the 
longer  he  had  fafted  from  it. 

And  yet  even  this  defpcrate  finner,  that  one 
would  think  had  made  a  covenant  with  death,  and 
was  at  an  agreement  with  hell,  and  juft  upon  the 
brink  of  them  both  ;  God,  to  magnify  the  riches  of 
his  grace  and  mercv,  was  pleafed  to  fnatch  as  a 
brand  out  of  the  fire.  As  St.  Paul,  though  "  before 
'*  a  blafphemer,  a  perfecutor,  an  injurious,  yetob- 
**  tained  mercy,  that  in  him  Chrifi:  Jefus  might 
*'  fhew  forth  all  long-fuffering,  for  a  pattern  to 
**  them  that  Ihould  hereafter  believe  on  hinj  to 
•*  everlafting  life."  i  Tim.  i.  13,  16.  So  God 
ftruck  him  to  the  ground  as  it  were  by  alight  fron^ 
heaven,  and  a  voice  of  thunder  round  about  him  : 
infomuch  that  now  the  fcales  fall  from  his  eyes,  as 
they  did  from  St.  Paul's ;  his  ftony  heart  was 
opened,  and  flreams  of  tears  gulhed  out,  the  bitter 
but  wholefome  tears  of  true  repentance. 

And,  that  this  may  appear  to  be  fo,  I  think  it 
neceflary  to  account  for  thefe  two  things. 

I.  For  the  means  of  it  ;  that  it  was  not  barely 
the  effe^  of  ilcknefs,  or  the  fear  of  death  \  but 
the  hand  of  God  alfo  workiug  in  them  and  by  them 
manifeftly. 

II.  For  the  fincerity  of  it ;  which  tjiough  none 
but   God   that  fees  the  heart,  can  tell    certainly, 

yet 


Earl  of  Rochester^  Funeral.       93 

yet  man  even  alfo  may  and  ought  to  believe  it ; 
not  only  in  the  judgment  of  charity,  but  of  mo- 
ral juftice,  from  all  evident  figns  of  it,  which 
were  poflible  to  be  given  by  one  in  his  condition. 

And  ift.  For  the  means  or  method  of  his  repen- 
tance. That  which  prepared  the  way  for  it  was  a 
{harp  and  painful  ficknefs,  with  which  God  was 
pleafed  to  vifit  him  ;  the  way  which  the  Almighty 
often  takes  to  reduce  the  wandering  fmner  to  the 
knowledge  of  God  and  himfelf.  *•'  I  will  be  unto 
^'  Ephraim  as  a  lion,  and  as  a  young  lion  unto 
**  the  houfe  of  Judah  j  I,  even  I,  will  tear  and  go 
"  away,  and  none  fhall  relieve  him  ;  I  will  go  and 
*'  return  to  my  place,  till  they  acknowledge  their 
'*  offence,  and  feek  my  face  ;  and  in  their  affiiilion. 
'*  they  will  feek  me  early.  "  Hof.  v.  14,  15. 

And  though  to  forfake  our  fins  then,  when  v/e 
can  no  longer  enjoy  them,  feems  to  be  rather  the 
effect  of  impotency  and  neceffity,  than  of  choice,, 
and  fo  not  fo  acceptable  or  praife-worthy  ;  yet  we 
find,  God  Almighty  often  ufes  the  one  to  biiag 
about  the  otbfcr  ;  and  improves  a  forced  abftinenCe 
from  fin,  into  a  fettled  loathing  and  atrue  deleftatioii 
of  it. 

It  is  true,  there  are  fuch  ftubborn  natures,  that 
like  clay,  are  rather  hardened  by  the  fire  of  afiiic- 
tions  ;  ungracious  children,  that  fly  in  the  face  of 
their  heavenly  father  in  the  very  inflant  wiien 
he  is  corredling  them  >  or  it  may  b'j  like  thofe 
children  w'ho  promife  wonders  then,  but  piefeiitly 
after  forget  all.     Such  as  thefe  we  have  dcfcribed, 

i'fal. 


g6         y^  Sermon  preached  at  the' 

Pfal.   Ixxviii.   34,  35,   36,   37.    "  When  he  flew 
*'  them,  then  they  fought  him,  and  they  returned 
"  and  enquired  early  after  God  ;   then  they  remem- 
"  bered   that  God   was  their   rock,  and   that   the 
"  high  God  was  their  Redeemer  ;  neverthelefs  they 
"  did  but  flatter  him  Vv'ith  their  mouth,  and  lyed 
"  unto  him  with  their  tongues,  for  their  heart  was 
"  not  right  with  him,  neither  continued  they  fted- 
*'  fafl:    in    his    covenant.  "     And    it    is    probable 
this   has   been   the  cafe    formerly    of  this   perfon. 
But  there  was  an  evident  dift'erence  betwixt   the 
efFe£ls  of  this  ficknefs  upon  him,  and  many  others 
before  :  he   had  other  fentiments  of  things    now, 
(he  told  me)   and  a<Sl:ed  upon  quite  different  prin- 
ciples ;  he  was  not  vexed  v/ith  it  as  it  was  painful, 
or  hindered  him  from  his  fms,  which  he   would 
have   rolled  under  his   tongue  all   the  while,   and 
longed  again  to  be  at ;  but  he  fubmitted    patiently 
to  it,  accepting  it   as  the  hand  of  God,  and  was 
thankful,    blefllng  and  praifing  God  not  only  in, 
but  for  his  extremities.     There  was  now  no  cur- 
fing,  no  railings  or  reproaches  to  his  fervants,  or 
thofe   about   him,  which  in   other  ficknefles  were 
their   ufual   entertainment,    but    he    treated    them 
with  all   the  meeknefs  and  patience  in  the  world, 
begging  pardon  frequently  of  the  meannefs  of  them 
but  for  a  hafly  word,  which   the  extremity  of  his 
ficknefs,  and  the  fharpnefs  of  his  pain,  might  eafily 
force  from  him.     His  prayers  were  not  fo  much  for 
eafe,   or  health,  or    a  continuance  in   life,  as   for 
grace,  and  faith,  and  perfe«S  refignation  to  the  will 

of 


Etirl  of  Rochester'^"  Tumral.  97 
of  God.  So  that  I  think  we  may  not  only  chari- 
tiibly  but  juftly  conclude,  that  his  ficknefs  was  not 
th^e  chief  ingredient,  but  through  the  grace  of  God, 
an  cfFeJfual  means  of  a  true,  though  late  repentance, 
as  will  befl  be  judged  by  the  marks  I  am  new  to 
give  you  of  the  fincerity  of  it  5  for  which  I  am  in 
the  next  place  to  account. 

II.  And  it  was  the  power  of  Divine  Grace,  and 
o{  that  only,  that  broke  through  all  thofe  obfta- 
cles  that  ufually  attend  a  man  in  his  circiimflances'; 
that  God  (who  is  a  God  of  infinite  compaflion  and 
forbearance)  allowed  him  kifure  and  opportunity 
for  repentance  ;  that  he  awakened  him  from  his 
Spiritual  |lumber  by  a  pungent  ficknefs  ;  that  he 
gave  him  fuch  a  prefence  of  mind,  as  both  to  pro- 
vide prudently  for  his  worldly  affairs,  and  yet  not  to 
be  diftradled  or  diverted  by  them  from  the  thoughts 
cf  a  better  world  ;  that  lengthened  out  his  day  of 
•grace,  and  accompanied  the  ordinary  means  of  fal- 
vation,  and  weak  miniftry  of  his  v/ord,  with  the 
convincing  and  over-ruling  power  of  his  Spirit  to 
his  confcience  ;  which  word  of  God  came  to  him 
quick  and  powerful,  fliarper  than  a  two  edged 
fword,  piercing  even  to  the  dividing  afunder  of 
his  foul  and  fpirit  j  and  at  laft,  the  Spirit  of  God 
■witneiTed  to  his  fpirit,  that  now  he  was  become 
one  of  the  children  of  God. 

Now,  if  the  thief  upon  the  crofs  (an   inftancv^ 
too  much  abufed)  was  therefore  accepted,  becaufe 
accompanied   with  all  the  effects  of  a  fmccre  con- 
vert,   which    his    condition   was    capable   of;    as 

G  confeffion 


98  A  Sermon  preached  at  the  ' 

confeffion    of   Chrift's    in    the  midft  of  the    blaf- 
phemies   of  phaiifees,  and    his    own    lewd    com- 
panion,   and    defertion  of   e\'en    Chrift's  difciplcs  ; 
if  his  repentance  be  therefore  judged  real,  becaufe 
he  feems  to  be  more  concerned  in  the  remembrance 
of  Chrift's  future  kingdom  than   his  own  death  ; 
if  St.  Paul  was  approved  by   the  fame  more  abun- 
dant labours,    which  he  commended    in  the  Co- 
rinthians, *' yea,    what  zeal?    what  fear?    what 
"vehement  defire  ?  "    2   Cor.   vii.   ii.  I  think  I 
ihall  make  it  appear,  that  the  repentace  of  this  per- 
fon  was  accompanied  with  the  like   hopeful  fymp- 
'  toms  :  and  I  am  fo  fenfible  of  that  awful  prefence 
both   of  God  and  man  before  whom  I  fpeak,   who 
are  eafily  able  to  difcover  my  failings,  that  1  fhall 
not  deliver  any  thing,  but  what  I  know  to  be  a 
ftridl  and  religious  truth. 

Upon  my  firft  vifit  to  him,  (May  26,  juft  at 
his   return  from  his  journey  out  of  the  Weft)  he 
moft  gladly  received  me,  fliewed  me  extraordinary 
refpeds  upon  the  fcore  of  mine  office,    thanked 
God,  who  had  in  mercy  and  good  providence  fent 
me  to  him,  -who  fo  much  needed  my  prayers  and 
counfels  ;    and    acknowledging    how    unworthily 
heretofore  he  had  treated  that  order  of  men,  re- 
proaching them  that  they  were  proud,   and  prophe- 
cied  only    for  rewards  ;  but  now  he  had  learned 
how  to  value  them  -,  that  he   efteemed  them  the 
fervants  of  the  moft  High  God,  who  were  to  fliew 
to  him  the  way  to  everlafting  life. 

At 


Earl  cf  RocH ESTER V  Funeral.  99 
At  the  fame  time  I  found  him  labouring  under 
•ilranse  trouble  and  confliifls  of  mind  ;  his  fpirit 
wounded,  and  his  confcience  full  of  terrors.  Upon 
his  journe)'-,  he  told  me,  he  had  been  arguing  with 
greater  vigour  againft  God  and  religion  than  ever 
he  had  done  in  his  life  time  before,  and  that  he 
was  refolved  to  run  them  down  with  all  the  argu- 
*ments  and  fpite  in  the  world  ;  but,  like  the  groat 
convert  St.  Paul,  he  found  it  hard  to  kick  againft: 
the  pricks.  For  God,  at  that  time,  had  fo  ftruck 
his  heart  by  his  immediate  hand,  that  pre- 
fently  he  argued  as  ftrongly  for  God  and  virtue,  as 
before  he  had  done  againft  it.  That  God  ftrangely 
opened  his  heart,  creating  in  his  mind  moft  av/- 
ful  and  tremendo.us  thoughts  and  ideas  of  the 
Divine  Majefty,  with  a  delightful  contemplation 
of  the  Divine  nature  and  attributes,  and  of  the 
lovelinefs  of  religion  and  virtue.  I  never  (faid  he) 
was  advanced  thus  far  towards  happinefs  in  my  life 
before,  though  upon  the  commiilion  of  fome  fins 
extraordinary,  I  have  had  fome  checks  and  warn- 
ings confiderable  from  within,  but  ftill  llrugoled 
with  them,  and  fo  wore  them  oft' again.  7'he  mofl: 
obfcrA'ablc  that  I  remember,  was  this  :  one  day 
•at  an  atheiftical  meeting,  at  a  petfon  of  quality's, 
1  undertook  to  manage  the  caufe,  and  was  the 
principal  difputant  againft  G.  d  and  piety,  and 
for  my  performances  received  the  applaufe  of  the 
whole  company  ;  upon  which  my  mind  was  ter- 
ribly ftruck,  and  I  immediately  replied  thus  to  my- 
iclf.     Good  God  !   that  a  man  that  walks  upright, 

G  2.  that 


100        A  Sermon  'preached  at  the 

that  fees  the  wonderful  works  of  God,  and  has  the 
ufe  of  his  fenfes  and  reafon,  fhould  ufe  them  to  the 
defying  of  his  Creator  !   But  though  this  was  a 
good  beginning  towards  my  converfion,  to  find  niy 
confcience  touched   for  my   fms,  yet    it  went  off 
again;  nay,  all  my  life  long,  I  had  ^  fccret  value 
and  reverence  for  an  honcft  man,  and  loved  mo- 
rality in  others.     But  I  had  formed  an  odd  fcheme 
of  religion  to  myfelf,  which   would  folve  all   that 
God  or  confcience  might  force  upon  me  ;  yet  I  was 
not  ever  well  reconciled  to  the  bufinefs  of  chrifti- 
anity,  nor  had  that  reverence  for  the  gofpel  of  Chrift 
as  I  ought  to  have.     Wlii.h  cftate  of  mind  con- 
tinued till  the  fifty-third  chapter  of  Ifaiah  was  read 
to  him,   (wherein  there  is  a  lively  defcription  of  the 
fufFerings  of  our  Saviour,  and  the  benefits  thereof) 
and    fome    other    portions    of  fcripture  ;    by    the 
power  and  efficacy  of  which  word,  affifled  by   bis 
Holy  Spirit,  God  fo  wrought  upon  his  heart,  that 
he  declared,  that  the  myfterics  of  the  paflion  ap- 
peared as  clear  and  plain  to  him,  as  ever  any  thing 
did  that  was   reprefented   in  a   glafs  ;  fo  that  that 
joy  and  admiration,    which  poflcfled  his  foul  upon 
the  reading  of  God's  word  to  him,  was  remarkable 
to  all  about  him;    and  he  had  fo  much  delight  in 
his  teftimonics,  that  in  my  abfence,  he  begged  his 
mother  and  lady  to  read  the  fame  to  him  frequently, 
and  was  unfatisfied  (notwithftanding  his  great  pains 
and  v/eaknefs)   till  he   had  learned  the  fifty-thir^ 

chapter  of  Ifaiah  without  book. 

^  At 


£^rl  of  Roche ster'j  Funeral.     loi 

At  the  fame  time,  difcouifing  of  his  manner  of 
life  from  his  youth  up,  and  which  all  men  knew 
was  too  much  devoted  to  the  fervice  of  fin,  and 
that  the  lufts  of  the  flefh,  of  the  eye,  and  the  pride 
of  life,  had  captivated  him  :  he  was  very  large  and 
particular  in  his  acknowledgments  about  it,  more 
ready  to  accufe  himfelf  than  I  or  any  one  elfe  can 
be  ;  publickly  crying  out,  O  blelled  God,  can  fuch 
an  horrid  creature  as  I  am  be  accepted  by  thee, 
who  has  denied  thy  being,  and  contemned  thy 
power  ?  Afking  often,  can  there  be  mercy  and  par- 
don for  me  ?  will  God  own  fuch  a  wretch  as  I  ? 
and  in  the  middle  of  his  ficknefs  faid,  ftiall  the 
unfpeakable  joys  of  heaven  be  conferred  on  me  ? 
O  mighty  Saviour  !  never,  but  through  thine  in- 
finite love  and  fatisfailion  !  O  never,  but  by  the 
purchafe  of  thy  blood  !  adding,  that  with  all  ab- 
horrency  he  did  refleft  upon  his  former  life  ;  that 
fincerely  and  from  his  heart  he  did  repent  of  all 
that  folly  and  madnefs  which  he  had  committed. 

Indeed,  he  had  a  true  and  lively  fenfe  of  God's 
great  mercy  to  him,  in  ftriking  his  hard  heart, 
and  laying  his  confcience  open,  which  hitherto 
was  deaf  to  all  God's  calls  and  methods  ;  faying, 
if  that  God,  who  died  for  great  as  well  as  lefler  fin- 
ners  did  not  fpeedily  apply  his  infinite  merits  to  his 
poor  foul,  his  wound  was  fuch  as  no  man  could 
conceive  or  bear,  crying  out,  that  he  was  the  vileft 
wretch  and  dog  that  the  fun  (hined  upon,  or  the 
earth  bore  j  that  he  now  fawhis  error,  in  not  living 
up  to  tlvat  reafon  which  God  endued  him  with,  and 

G  3  'which 


ro2         A  Sermon  preached  at  the 

which  he  unworthily  villified  and  contemned ;  wifhed' 
he  had  been  a  fl-arving  leper  crawling  in  a  ditch^ 
that  he  had  been  a  link-boy  or  a  beggar,  pr  for  his 
whole  life  confined  to  a  dungeon,  rather  than  thus 
to  have  finned  againft  God. 

How  remarkable  was  his  faith,  in  a  hearty 
embracing  and  devout  confeflion  of  all  the  arti- 
tides  of  our  chriftian  religion,  and  all  the  divine 
niyfteries  of  the  gofpel  ?  faying,  that  that  abfurd 
and  foolilh  philofophy,  v^rhich  the  world  fo  much 
admired,  propagated  by  the  late  Mr.  Hobbs,  and 
others,  had  undone  him,  and  many  more  of  the 
beft  parts  in  the  nation  ?  who,  without  God's  great 
mercy  to  them,  may  never,  I  believe,  attain  to  fuch 
a  repentance. 

I  mull  not  omit  to  mention  his  faithful  adhe- 
rence to,  and  cafting  himfelf  entirely  upon  the 
mercies  of  Jefus  Chrill,  and  the  free  grace  of 
God,  declared  to  repenting  finners  through  him  ; 
with  a  tliankful  remembrance  of  his  liie,  deaths 
and  refurrecStion ;  begging  God  to  ftrengthen  his 
faith,  and  often  crying  out,.  Lord,  I  believe,  help 
thou  mine  unbelief. 

His  mighty  love  and  efteem  of  the  holy  fcrip- 
tures,  his  rcfolutions  to  read  them  frequently,  and 
meditate  upon  them,  if  God  fliould  fpare  him, 
having  already  tailed  the  good  word  ;  for  having 
fpoken  to  his  heart,  he  acknowledged  all  the  feem- 
jng  abfurdities  and  contradictions  thereof,  fancied 
by  men  of  corrupt  and  reprobate  judgments,  were 

vaniflied,, 


Earl  of  Roche  ST er'j  Funeral.     103 

Vaniflied,  and  the  excellency  and  beauty  appeared, 
being  come  to  receive  the  truth  in  the  love  of  it. 

His  extraordinary  fervent  devotions,  in  his  fre- 
quent prayers  of  his  ov^^n,  moft  excellent  and  cor- 
rect ;  amongft  the  reft,  for  the  king,  in  fuch  a 
manner  as  became  a  dutiful  fubje(5t,  and  a  truly 
grateful  fervant  j  for  the  church  and  nation,  for 
ibme  particular  relations,  and  then  for  all  men  ; 
his  calling  frequently  upon  me  at  all  hours  to  pray 
with  him,  or  read  the  fcriptures  to  him  ;  and  to- 
ward the  end  of  his  ficknefs,  would  heartily  defire 
God  to  pardon  his  infirmities,  if  he  fhould  not  be 
fo  wakeful  and  intent  through  the  whole  duty  as 
he  wifhed  to  be,  and  that  though  the  flefh  was 
weak,  yet  the  fpirit  was  willing,  and  hoped  God 
would  accept  that. 

His  continual  invocation  of  God's  Grace  and 
Holy  Spirit  to  fuftain  him,  to  keep  him  from  all 
evil  thoughts,  from  all  temptations   and   diabolical 
fuggeftions,  and  every  thing  which  might  be  pre- 
judicial to  that  religious  temper  of  mind,  which 
God  had  now  fo  happily  endued  him  withal ;  cry- 
ing out,    one   night  efpecially,  how   terrible    the 
tempter  did  affault  him,  by  calling  upon  him  lewd 
and  wicked  imaginations  ;  but  I  thank  God   (fuid 
he)   I  abhor  them  all,  by  the  power  of  his  grace, 
which  I  am  fure  is  fufficient  for  me  j  I  have  over- 
come them  ;  it  is  the  malice  of  the  devil,  becaufe 
1  am  refcued  from  him  ;  and  the  goodnefs  of  God, 
that  frees  mc  from  all  my  fpiritual  enemies. 

G  4  His 


104  -^Sermon  preached  at  the 

His  great  joy  at  his  lady's  converfion  from  Popery 
to  the  church  of  England,  (being,  as  he  termed  it, 
a  faclion  fupported  only  by  fraud  and  cruelty) 
which  was  by  her  done  with  deliberation  and  mature 
judgment ;  the  dark  mifts  of  which,  have  for  fome 
months  before  been  breaking  away,  but  now  cleared, 
by  her  receiving  the  blefl'ed  facrament  with  her 
dying  hufband,  at  the  receiving  of  which,  no  man 
could  exprefs  more  joy  and  devotion  that  he  did  j 
and  having  handled  the  word  of  life,  and  k&n  the 
falvation  of  God,  in  the  preparation  of  his  mind, 
he  was  now  ready  to  dep;u-t  in  peace. 

His  heartv  concern  for  the  pious  education  of  his 
children,  wifliing  that  his  fon  might  never  be  a 
wit,  tnat  is  (as  he  himfelf  explained  it)  one  of 
thofe  wretched  creatures,  who  pride  themfelves  in 
abufmg  God  and  religion,  denying  his  being,  or 
his  providence  ;  but  that  he  might  become  an 
honeft  and  religious  man,  which  could  only  be  the 
fupport  and  bleffing  of  his  family,  complaining 
what  a  vicious  and  naughty  world  they  were  brought 
intO;,  and  that  no  fortunes  or  honours  were  compa- 
rable to  the  love  and  favour  of  God  to  them,  in 
whofe  name  he  bleiTed  them,  prayed  for  them, 
and  committed  them  to  his  protedrion. 

His  fl:ri(5l  charge  to  thofe  perfons,  In  whofe 
cuflody  his  papers  were,  to  burn  all  his  profane 
and  lewd  writings,  as  being  only  fit  to  promote 
vice  and  immorality,  by  which  he  had  io  nighly 
offended  God,  and  fhamed  and  blalphemcd  that 
holy  religion  into  which  he  had  been  baptized;  and 

all 


Earl  of  Rochester V  Funeral.     105 

all  his  obfcene  and  filthy  piilures,  which  were  (o 
notorioufly  fcandalous. 

His  rcadinefs  to  make  reftitution  to  the  utmoft 
of  his  power  to  all  perfons  whom  he  had  injured  ; 
and  for  thofe  whom  he  could  not  make  a  compen- 
fation  to,  he  prayed  for  God's  and  their  pardons. 
His  remarkable  juftice  in  taking  all  poflible  care 
for  the  payment  of  his  debts,  which  before,  he  ccui- 
fefled,  he  had  not  fo  fairly  and  efFedtually  done. 

His  readinefs  to  forgive  all  injuries  done  againd 
him,  fome  more  particularly  mentioned,  which 
were  great  and  provoking  ;  nay,  annexing  thereto 
all  the  affurance  of  a  future  friend/hip,  and  hoping 
he  fhould  be  as  freely  forgiven  at  the  hand  of  God. 

How  tender  and  concerned  was  he  for  his  fcr- 
vants  about  him  in  his  extremities,  (manifefted  by 
the  beneficence  of  his  will  to  them)  pitying  their 
troubles  in  watching  with  him,  and  attending  him, 
treating  him  with  candor  and  kindnefs,  as  if  they 
had  been  his  intimates ! 

How  hearty  were  his  endeavours  to  be  fervice- 
able  to  thofe  about  him,  exhorting  them  to  the 
fear  and  love  of  God,  and  to  make  a  good  ufc  of 
his  forbearance  and  lonfr-fufFering;  to  finneis,  which. 
Ihould  lead  them  to  repentance.  And  here  I  muft 
not  pafs  by  his  pious  and  moffc  paflionate  exclama- 
tion to  a  gentleman  of  fome  charailer,  who  came 
to  vifit  him  upon  his  death-bed  j  "  O  remember 
"  that  you  contemn  God  no  more,  he  is  an  aveng- 
**  ing  God,  and  will  vifit  you  foi  your  fins  j  he  v/ill  in 
**  mercy,  I  hope,  touch  yaur  confcience  fobner  or 


ii. 


i^itv^r. 


io6  A  Sermon  preached  at  tht 

"  later,  as  he  has  done  mine.  You  and  I  have  been 
"  friends  and  finners  together  a  great  while,  there- 
"  fore  I  am  the  more  free  with  you.  We  have 
*'  been  all  miftaken  in  our  conceits  and  opinions,, 
*' our  perfuafions  have  been  falfe  and  groundlcfs  ; 
"  therefore  God  grant  you  repentance.  "  And 
feeing  him  the  next  day  again,  he  faid  to  him, 
"  perhaps  you  were  difobliged  by  my  plainnefs  to 
*'  you  yefterday  ;  I  fpake  the  words  of  truth  and 
*'  fobcrnefs  to  you,  (and  ftriking  his  hand  upon 
*'his  bread:)  faid,  I  hope  God  will  touch  your 
«' heart." 

Likewife  his  commands  to  me,  to  preach  abroad, 
and  to  let  all  men  know  (if they  knew  it  not  already) 
h(jw  feverely  God  had  difcipHned  him  for  his  fms 
by  his  afHidting  hand  ;  that  his  fufferings  were  moft 
juft,  though  he  had  laid  ten  thoufand  times  more 
upon  him  ;  how  he  had  laid  one  ftripe  upon  ano- 
ther becaufe  of  his  grievous  provocations,  till  he 
had  brought  him  home  to  himfelf ;  that  in  his  for- 
mer vifitations  he  had  not  that  blefied  effe£l  he  was 
now  fenfible  of.  He  had  formerly  fome  loofe 
thoughts  and  flight  refolutions  of  reforming,  and 
defigned  to  be  better,  becaufe  even  the  preient  con- 
fequences  of  fin  were  Hill  pcftering  him,  and  were 
fo  troublefome  and  inconvenient  to  him  j  but  that 
now  he  had  other  fentiments  of  things,  and  a£led 
upon  otlipr  principles. 

His  willingnefs  to  die,  if  it  pleafed  God,  refign- 
ing  himfelf  always  to  the  divine  difpofal ;  but  if 
God  fliguld  fpare  him  yet  a  longer  time  here,  he 

hoped 


Earl  of  Rochester's  Funeral.       107 

hoped  to  bring  glory  to  the  name  o£  God  in  the 
whole  courfe  of  his  life,  and  particularly  by  his  en- 
deavours to  convince  others,  and  to  afl'ure  them  of 
the  danger  of  their  condition,  if  they  continued  im- 
penitent, and  how  gracioufly  God  had  dealt  w'ith 
him. 

His  great  fenfe  of  his  obligations  to  thofe  excel- 
lent men,  the  right  reverend  my  lord  bifliop  of 
Oxford,  and  Dr.  Marftiall,  for  their  charitable 
and  frequent  vifits  to  him,  and  prayers  with  him  ; 
and  Dr.  Burnett,  who  came  on  purpofe  from  Lon- 
don to  fee  him,  who  were  all  very  ferviceable  to 
bis  repentance. 

His  extraordinary  duty  and  reverence  to  hi5 
mother,  with  all  the  grateful  refpeifs  to  her  imagi- 
nable, and  kindnefs  to  his  good  lady,  beyond  ex- 
preffion,  (which  may  well  enhance  fuch  a  lofs  %o 
them)  and  to  his  children,  obliging  them  with,  all 
the  endearments  that  a  good  hufband  or  a  tender 
father  could  beftow. 

Xo  conclude  thefe  remarks,  I  fhall  only  read  to 
you  his  dying  remonftrance,  fufficiently  attefted  and 
fiffned  by  his  own  hand,  as  his  trueft  itn^Q^  (which 
I  hope  may  be  ufeful  for  that  good  end  he  ileligned 
it)  in  manner  and  form  following. 

*'  Tj^  ^  ^  ^^^  benefit  of  all  thofe  whom  I  may^ 
*^  X/  ^^^^'^  drawn  into  fin  by  my  example  and 
*'  encouragement,  I  leave  to  the  world  this  my 
"  laft  declarAtion,  which  I  deliver  in  the  prcfence 

t'  of 


io3  ^Sermon  preached  at  the 

*'  of  the  great  God,  who  knows  the  fecrets  of  all 
**  hearts,  and  before  whom  I  am  now  appearing 
*'  to  be  judged. 

*'  That  from  the  bottom  of  my  foul  I  deteft 
"  and  abhor  the  whole  courfe  of  my  former  wick- 
"  ed  life ;  that  I  think  I  can  never  fufHciently 
"  admire  the  goodnefs  of  God,  who  has  given  me 
*'  a  true  fenfe  of  my  pernicious  opinions  and  vile 
"  praftices,  by  which,  I  have  hitherto  lived  with- 
*'  out  hope,  and  without  God  in  the  world  ;  have 
*'  been  an  open  enemy  to  Jefus  Chrift,  doing  the 
''  utmoPt  defpite  to  the  Holy  Spirit  of  Grace.  And 
"  that  the  greateft  teflimony  of  my  charity  to  fuch, 
*'  is  to  warn  them  in  the  name  of  God,  and  as  they 
"  reo-ard  the  welfare  of  their  immortal  fouls,  no 
*'  more  to  deny  his  being,  or  his  providence,  or 
"  defpife  his  goodnefs  ;  no  more  to  make  a  mock 
"  of  fin,  or  contemn  the  pure  and  excellent  re- 
"  ligion  of  my  ever  biefled  redeemer,  through 
"  whofe  merits  alone,  I,  one  of  the  greateft  fm- 
*'  ners,  do  yet  hope  for  mercy  and  forgivenefs. 
**  Amen." 

Declared  and  signed  In  the  prefence  of 

ANNE    ROCHESTER. 

June  19,   1680. 
ROBERT    PARSONS. 

J.    ROCHESTER. 

And 


Earl  of  Rochester'j  Funeral,     109 

And   now   I  cannot  but  mention   with  joy  and 
admiration  that  fleady  temper  of  mind  which  he 
enjoyed  through  the  whole  courfe  of  his  ficknefs 
and  repentance  ;  which  muft  proceed,  not  from  a 
hurry  and    perturbation  of  mind   or   body,  arifing 
from  the  fear  of  death,  or  dread  of  hell  only,  but 
from  an  ingenuous  love  to  God,  and  an  uniform 
regard  to  virtue,  (fuitable  to  that  folemn  declara- 
tion of  his,  I  would   not  commit  the  leaft  fni  to 
gain  a  kingdom)   with  all   poffible  fymptoms   of  a 
lafting  perfcverance  in  it,  if  God  flioulJ  have  re- 
ftored  him.    To  which  may  be  added,  his  comfort- 
able perfuafions   of  God's    accepting   him  to  his 
mercy,  faying,  three  or  four  days  before  his  death, 
I  ftiall  die,  but  oh,  what  unfpeakable  glories  do  i 
fee  !   what  joys,  beyond  thought  or  expreflion,  am 
I  fenfible   of!    1   am   afiured  of    God's  mercy   to 
me  through  Jcfus  Chrift.     Oh  how  I  long  to  die, 
and  be  with  my  Saviour  ! 

The  time  of  his  ficknefs  and  repentance  was 
juft  nine  weeks  ;  in  all  which  time  he  was  fo  much 
mafter  of  hi?  rcafon,  and  had  fo  clear  an  under- 
ftanding,  (  faying  thirty  hours,  about  the  middle 
of  it,  in  which  he  was  delirious)  that  he  had 
never  dictated  or  fpokc  more  compofed  in  his  life : 
and  therefore,  if  any  fliall  continue  to  fay,  his 
piety  was  the  eftcd:  of  madnefs  or  vapours  j  let 
me  tell  them,  'tis  highly  difmgenuous,  and  that 
the  aflertion  is  as  filly  as  it  is  wicked.  And  more- 
over that  the  force  of  what  I  have  delivered  may 
be  not  evaded  by  wicked  men,  who  arc  refolved  to 

harden 


no         A  Sermon  preached  at  the 

fearden  their  hearts,  maugre  all  convi6lior.s,  by 
faying,  this  was  done  in  a  corner;  I  appeal,  for 
the  truth  thereof,  to  all  forts  of  perfons  who  in 
confiderable  numbers  vifited  and  attended  him,  and 
more  particularly  to  thofe  eminent  phyficians  who 
■»vere  near  him,  and  converfant  with  him  in  the 
whole  courfe  of  his  tedious  ficknefs  ;  and  wlio, 
if  any,  are  competent  judges  of  a  phrenfy  or 
delirium. 

There  are  many  more  excellent  things  in  my 
abfcnce  which  have  occafionally  dropt  from  his 
mouth,  that  will  not  come  within  the  narrow  com- 
pafs  of  a  fermon  ;  thefe,  I  hope,  will  fufHciently 
prove  what  I  produce  them  for.  And  if  any  fliall 
be  fliil  unfatisfied  here  in  this  hard-hearted  gene- 
ration, it  matteis  not,  let  them  at  their  coft  be 
imbclievers  flill,  fo  long  as  this  excellent  penitent 
cnjoyes  the  comfort  of  his  repentance.  And  now 
from  all  thefe  admirable  figns  we  have  great  rea- 
fon  to  believe  comfortably,  that  his  repentance 
was  real,  and  his  end  happy  ;  and  accordingly  imi- 
tate the  neighbours  and  coufens  of  Elizabeth, 
(Luke  i.  58.)  who,  when  they  heard  how  the 
Lord  had  fliewed  great  mercy  upon  her,  came  and 
rejoiced  with  her. 

Thus  his  dear  mother  fhould  rejoice,  that  the 
fon  of  her  love  and  of  her  fears,  as  well  as  of  her 
bowels,  is  now  born  again  into  a  better  world  j 
adopted  by  his  Heavenly  Father,  and  gone  before 
her  to  take  poffeflion  of  an  eternal  inheritance. 


IL 


Earl  of  Rochester^  Funeral,     iii 

IL  His  truly  loving  confort  fhould  rejoice,  that 
God  has  been  fo  gracious  to  them  both,  as  at  the 
fame  time  to  give  him  a  fight  of  his  errors  in  point 
of  pra6lice,  and  herfelf  (not  altogether  without 
his  means  and  endeavours)  a  fight  of  hers  in  point 
of  faith.  And  truly,  confidering  the  great  preju- 
dices and  dangers  of  the  Roman  religion,  I  think 
I  may  aver  that  there  is  joy  in  heaven,  and  fhould 
be  on  earth,  for  her  converfion  as  well  as  his. 

III.  His  noble  and  moft  hopeful  iflue  fliould  re- 
joice, as  their  years  are  capable  ;  not  that  a  dear 
and  loving  father  has  left  them,  but  that  fmce  he 
muft  leave  them,  he  has  left  them  the  example  of  a 
penitent,  and  not  of  a  fuiner ;  the  bleffing  of  a  faint, 
in  recommending  them  to  an  all-fufficient  Father, 
and  not  entailing  on  them  the  fatal  curfe  that 
attends  the  pofterity  of  the  wicked  and  impeni- 
tent. 

IV.  All  good  men  fliould  rejoice,  to  fee  the 
triumphs  of  the  crofs  in  thefe  latter  days,  and  the 
words  of  divine  wifdom  and  power.  And  bad  men 
certainly,  whenever  they  confider  it,  aie  moft  of 
all  concerned  to  joy  and  rejoyce  in  it,  as  a  con- 
demned malefactor  is,  to  hear  that  a  fellow  crimi- 
nal ha-s  got  his  pardon,  and  that  he  may  do  fo  too, 
if  he  fpeedily  fue  for  it. 

And  this  joy  of  all  will  ftill  be  the  greater,  if 
we  compare  it  with  the  joy  there  is  in  heaven,  in 
the  cafe  of  juft  perfons,  that  need  no  repentance, 
viz.  that  need  not  fuch  a  folemn  extraordinary 
repentance,  or  the  whole  change  of  heart  and  mind, 


ri2  y^  Sermon  preached  at  the 
as  great  finners  do  :  and  of  this  my  text  pronoun- 
ces, that  there  is,  "  greater  joy  in  heaven  over 
"  one  fuch  fmner  that  truly  rcpenteth,  than  there 
*'  is  over  ninety  and  nine  juft  pcrfons  that  need 
"  not  fuch  repentance."  One  reafon  of  which  we 
may  conceive  to  be  this  j  that  fuch  a  penitent's 
former  failings,  are  ordinarily  the  occafion  of  a 
p-reater  and  more  active  piety  afterwards  ;  as  our 
convert  earneftly  vviflied,  that  God  would  be  plea- 
fed  to  fpare  him  but  one  year  more,  that  in  that  he 
mio-ht  honour  his  name  proportionably  to  the  dif- 
honour  done  to  God  in  Kis  whole  life  paft.  And 
we  fee  St.  Paul  laboured  more  abundantly  than  all 
tlic  apoflles  in  the  planting  of  the  church,  becaufe 
he  had  raged  furioufly  before  in  the  deftruclion  of 
it ;  and  our  Saviour  himfelf  tells  us,  that  "  to 
'*  whom  much  Is  forgiven,  they  will  \o\c  much^ 
"  but  to  whom  little  is  forgiven,  they  will  love 
"  little. 

'Tis  certainly  the  more  fafe,  indeed  ihe  only  fafe 
wav  to  be  conftantly  virtuous,  and  he  that  is  wife 
indeed,  i.e.  wife  unto  falvation,  will  endeavour  to 
be  one  of  thofe  that  need  no  repentance  ;  I  mean 
that  intiie  and  whole  work  of  beginning  anew, 
but  will  draw  out  the  fame  thread  through  his 
whole  life,  and  let  not  the  fun  go  down  upon  any 
of  his  fins  :  but  then  the  other  repentance  is  more 
remarkable,  and,  where  it  is  real,  the  more  effec- 
tual, to  produce  a  fervent  and  a  fruitful  piety  ; 
bcficcs,  the  greater  glory  to  God  in  the  influence 
of  the  example.     Which  may  probably  be  a  farther 

'  reafon 


*        Earl  of  RocuiSTER^s  Funeral.     113 

reafon  of  the  exceffive  joy  of  the  angels  at  the  con- 
verfion  of  fuch  a  finner  j  becaufe  they,  who  are 
better  acquainted  with  human  nature  than  we, 
knowing  it  apt,  like  the  Pharifees,  to  demand  a 
fign  from  heaven,  for  the  reformation  of  corrupted 
cuftoms,  difcern  likewife,  that  fuch  defperate  fpiri- 
tual  recoveries,  will  feem  fo  many  openings  of  the 
heavens  in  the  defcent  of  the  Holy  Dove,  vifible  to 
the  ftanders  by;  and  accordingly  will  have  the 
greater  influence  upon  them.  And  'tis  this,  in  the 
laft  place,  that  I  am  to  recommend  to  all  that  heau 
me  this  day. 

And  having  thus  difcharged  the  office  of  an  hif- 
torian,  in  a  faithful  reprefentation  of  the  repen- 
tance and  converfion  of  this  great  fmner ;  give  me 
leave  now  to  befpeak  you  as  an  ambaflador  of  Chrift, 
and  in  his  name,  earneftly  perfuade  you  to  be  re- 
conciled to  him,  and  to  follow  this  illuftrious  perfon, 
not  in  his  fins  any  more^  but  in  his  forrows  for 
them,  and  his  forfaking  them.  If  there  be  any  ia 
this  place,  or  elfewhere,  who  have  been  drawn 
into  a  complacency  or  pra6lice  of  any  kind  of  fin 
from  his  example,  let  thofe  efpecially  be  perfuaded 
to  break  off  their  fins  by  repentance,  by  the  fame 
example  ;  that  as  he  has  been  for  the  fall,  fo  he 
may  now  be  for  the  rifing  again  of  many  in  Ifrael. 
God  knows  there  are  too  many  that  are  wife 
enough  to  difcern  and  follow  the  examples  of  evil, 
but  to  do  good  from  thofe  examples  they  have  no 
power  J  like  thofe  abfurd  flatterers  we  read  of,  who 
could  imitate  Plato  in  his  crookednefsj  Ariftotle  in 

H  his 


114        ^  Sermon  preached  at  the 

his  ftammering,  and  Alexander  the  great  in  t^ 
bending  of  his  neck,  and  the  fhrillnefs  of  his  voice, 
<but  either  could  not,  or  would  not,  imitate  them 
in  any  of  their  perfe6tions.     Such  as  thefe  I  would 
befeech,  in  their  cooler  feafons,  to  afk  themfelves 
that  queftion,  "  what  fruit  had  you  in  thofe  things 
**  whereof  you  are  now  afhamed,  for  the  end  of  thefe 
♦*  things  is  death  ?"     And  if  any  encourage  them- 
felves in  their  wickednefs  from  this  example,  re*- 
folving  however  to  enjoy  the  good  things  that  are 
prefent,    to  fill  themfelves  with  coftly  wines,  and 
U)  let  no  part  of  pleafure  pafs  by  them  untafled, 
fuppofing  with  the  gofpel  rich   man,    that   when 
one  comes  to   them  from  the  dead,  when  ficknefs 
or  old  age  approaches,  that  then  they  will  repent ; 
let  fuch  as  thefe  confider  the  dreadful  hazard  they  run 
by  fuch  pernicious  counfels.     It  may  be  {?t\\A  it  is 
but  jufl  with   God  it  fhould  be)  that  whilft  they 
are  making  provifions  for  the  flefli  to  fulfil  the  lufts 
thereof,  and  are  faying  to  their  fouls,  foul   thou 
baft  much  goods  laid  up  for  many  years,   therefore 
take  thine  eafe,  eat,  drink  and  be  merry ;  perhaps 
juft  then  at  the  fame  time  the  hand  of  God  may 
be  writing   upon  the    walls   of  their  habitations, 
that  fatal  fentence,  "  thou  fool,  this  night  (hall 
«'  thy  foul  be  required  of  thee,  and   then  whofc 
"  fhall  all  thofe  things  be,  which  thou  haft  pro- 
**  mifed  ?"     And  what  fad  refledlions  muft  fuch  a 
one  need  make  upon  his  own  folly,  when  he  fees 
all  that  mirth  and  eafe,    which  he  has  promifed 
himfelf  for  fo  many  years,  muft  be  at  an  end  in 

a  very 


Earl  of  Roche ster'j  Funeral,       115 

t  very  few  hours  ?  And  not  only  fo,  but  that  math 
turned  into  howlings,  and  that  eafe  into  a  bed  of 
flames  i  when  the  foul  muft  be  torn  away  on  a 
fudden  from  the  things  it  loved,  and  go  where  it 
will  hate  to  live,  and  yet  cannot  die.  And  were 
it  not  better  for  us  to  embrace  cordially  the  things 
which  belong  to  our  everlafting  peace,  before  they 
are  hid  from  our  eyes  ?  Were  it  not  better  for  us 
all  to  be  wife  betimes  by  preventing  fuch  a  danger, 
than  to  open  our  eyes,  as  the  unhappy  rich  man 
did,  when  we  are  in  a  place  of  torment  ? 

Be  perfuaded  then  with  humble,  penitent,  and 
obedient  hearts  to  meet  the  blefled  Jefus,  who  is 
now  on  the  way,  and  comes  to  us  in  the  perfon  and 
in  the  bowels  of  a  Saviour,  wooing  us  to  accept  thofe 
eafy  conditions  of  pardon  and  peace  offered  in  his 
holy  gofpel,  rather  than  to  ftay  till  he  become  our 
adverfary  and  our  judge  too,  when  he  will  deliver 
us  over  to  the  tormentors,  till  we  have  paid  the  ut- 
moft  farthing,    i.   e.  to  all  eternity  :    when  thofe 
wiio  have  made  a  mock  at  fin  all  their  lives,  and 
laughed  at  the  pretended  cheats  of  religion  and  its 
priefts,    fhall  find   themfclves  at   laft   the  greateft 
fools,  and   the  moft  fadly  cheated  in   the  world  : 
for  God  will  then  laugh   at  their  calamity,   and 
mock  when  their  fear  cometh,  when  it  cometh  as 
defolation,  and  their  dcffruflion  as  a  whirlwindo 
And   fince  they  would  not  fuffcr  his  mercy  to  re- 
joyce  over  his  juftice,  nor  caufe  any  joy  in  heaven, 
as  the  text  mentions,  in  their  converfion  ;  his  juf- 
tice will  certainly  rejoyce  over  his  mercy,  and  caufe 

H  2  joy 


ii6        A  Sermon  preached  at  the' 

joy  in   heaven   (as   it  did  at  the  fall  of   Babj^Ion) 
which  would  not  be  cured,  Rev.  xix.   i.  in  their 
confufion.     And  oh  that  there  was  fuch  an  heart  in 
them,  that  they  would  ccnfider  this  betimes  !    that 
in  the  midfl  of  their  carnal  jollities  they  would  but 
vouchfafe  one  regard  what  may  happen  hereafter, 
and  what  will  certainly  be  the  end  of  thefe  things. 
For  however  the  fruits  of  fm  may  feem  pleafant  to 
the  eye,  and  to  be  delired  to  make  one  feem  wife 
and  witty  to  the    world,    yet  alas,    they  are  but 
empty  and   unfatisfa6lory  at  prefent,  and  leave  a 
mortal   fling  behind  them,    and  bitternefs   in  the 
latter  end;  like  the  book  St.  John  eat,  (Rev.x.  lo.) 
*'  vi'hich  in  his  mouth  was  fv/eet  as  hoiiey,  but  as 
**  foon  as  he  had   eat   it,    his  belly  v/as  bitter." 
And  that  God  fliould  pleafe  at   laft  to  bring  men 
back  in  their  old  age  from  their  fmful  courfes,  by 
a  way  of  weeping,  to  pluck  them   as  fire-brands 
out  of  everlafi:ing  burnings ;   yet^  if  men  confider 
how  rare  and  difficult  a  thing  it  is  to  be  born  again 
when  one  is  old,  how  many  pangs  and  violences  to 
nature  there  muft  needs  be,  to  put  off  the  habits 
and  inclinations  to  old  fins,  as  difficult   (faith  the 
prophet)  as  for  the  leopard  to  change  his   fpots,  or 
the  Ethiopian  his  fkin  :  and  then  when  that  is  done, 
what  fears  and  weaknefTes  even  a  cure  mufl  leave 
behind.     1    fay,  he  that  duly  confiders  this,    will 
think  it  better   to  fecure  his    falvation,    and  all 
his  prefent  true  comforts,  by  preferving  his  inno- 
cency,  or  alleviating  his   work  by  a  daily    repen- 
tance for  lellbr  failings,  than  to  venture  upon  one 

fingle 


Earl  of  Rochester's  Funeral.       1 1 7 

iingle  chance  of  a  death-bed  repentance  ;  which  is 
no  more  to  be  depended  upon,  for  the  performance, 
or  acceptance,  than  it  can  encourage  any  man  not 
to  labour,  becaufe  Elias  was  fed  by  ravens,  or  the 
Ifraelites  with  manna  from  heaven. 

If  then  there  be  any  (though  alas  that  need  not 
be  afked)  that  have  made  the  greatnefs  of  their 
wit,  or  birth,  or  fortune,  inftruments  of  iniquity  to 
iniquity  ;  let  them  now  convert  them  to  that  origi- 
nal noble  ufe  for  which  God  intended  them,  viz. 
to  be  inftruments  of  righteoufnefd  unto  holiuefs. 

To  thefe  cfpecially  that  are  thus  great,  not  only 
God,  but  this  great  perfon  alfo,  by  my  mouth, 
being  dead  yet  fpeaketh  ;  for  as  St.  Paul  feemed 
more  efpecially  concerned  for  his  brethren  and 
kinfmen  according  to  the  flefh,  and  even  the  rich 
man  in  hell,  though  fufficiently  diftrailed  by  his 
own  fufFerings,  yet  feems  hugely  defirous  that  one 
might  be  fent  from  the  dead  to  his  brethren,  that 
he  might  teftify  unto  them,  leaft  they  alfo  come 
into  that  place  of  torment:  fo  this  iiluftrious  con- 
vert, after  God  had  opened  his  eyes  to  fee  his 
follies,  was  more  efpecially  defirous  of  the  falvatlon 
of  thofe  that  were  his  brethren,  though  not  in  the 
flefh,  yet  in  the  greatnefs  of  their  quality,  and 
of  their  fms  ;  paffionately  wifhing,  that  all  fuch 
were  not  only  almoft,  but  altogether  fuch  as  he 
jiow  was,  fiving  his  bodily  afflidions  ;  and  of 
great  force,  mcthinks,  fliould  the  admonitions  of  4 
d^'ing  friend  be. 


Ii8         A  Sermon  f reached  at  the 

Now  thefe  efpecially  I  would   befeech,   as  the 
minifter  of  Chrift,    and  fuch  as,  though  v/e  are 
reviled  we  blefs,  though  we  are  defamed  we  intreat, 
to  fufrer  the  word  of  exhortation,  that  they  would 
not  terminate  their  eyes   upon   the  outward  pomp 
and  pageantry   that  attends   them,    as   the  vulgar 
Jews  did  upon  their  rites  and  ceremonies  ;  but  (as 
the  wifer  Ifraelites,  who  efteemed  thofe  glittering 
formalities  as  the  types  and   images  of  heavenly 
things)  be    quickened  by  them  to  the  ambition  of 
original  honours,  and  future  glory.     How  much 
were  it  to  be  wiflied,  that  fuch  perfons   efpecially 
would  be   followers  of  God  and    goodnefs,    fmce 
•whether  they  will  or  no,  other  men  will  be  fol- 
lowers of  them. 

It  is  true,  the  temptations  of  great  perfons  are 
more,  and  greater  than  thofe  of  inferiors  j  but 
then  their  abilities  and  underftandings  are  ordi- 
narily greater  too  ;  and  if  they  lye  more  open  to  the 
aflaults  of  the  devil,  they  have  generally  greater 
fagacity  to  forefee  the  danger,  and  more  powerful 
afiiftance  to  go  through  it.  Nor  is  piety  inconfif- 
tent  with  greatnefs,  any  more  than  it  is  with  policy, 
but  is  the  beft  foundation  and  fecurity  both  to  the 
one  and  the  other.  The  breeding  of  Mofes  at 
court,  without  doubt  contributed  much  even  to  his 
religious  performances,  at  leaft  fo  far,  as  to  make 
them  more  ufeful  and  exemplary  to  others  :  but 
then  he  was  fmcerely  virtuous  all  the  while,  as  well 
whilft  reputed  the  fon  of  Pharaoh's  daughter,  as 

"ivhen  Jethro's  foxi-in-law. 

We 


Earl  of  Ro c  H  E  s  T  E  R  V  Funeral.      119 

We  find  chriftlans  in  Caefar's  houfhold  as  foon 
as  any  where  elfe  in  Rome  ;  and  when  chriftianity 
had  once  gained  Conftantine,  it  fpread  itfelf  far- 
ther over  the  empire  in  a  few  years,  than  before 
it  had  done  in  fome  centuries.  Since  then  fo  much 
good  or^ifchief  depends  upon  illuftrious  examples, 
"will  it  not  better  become  men  to  draw  the  multi- 
tude after  them  to  heaven  by  their  piety,  than  by 
infectious  guilts  be  at  the  head  of  a  miferable 
company  of  the  damned. 

'Tis  this  piety,  a  timely  and  exemplary  piety, 
that  will  perpetuate  to  men  of  birth  and  fortunes, 
their  honours,  and  their  eftates  too,  as  well  by 
deriving  on  them  the  blelling  of  God,  who  is  the 
true  fountain  of  honour,  as  by  creating  an  awe 
and  reverence  for  them  from  all  orders  x)f  men, 
even  to  many  generations  ;  a  reverence  which  will 
be  freih  and  lafting,  when  all  the  trophies  of  wit  and 
gaiety  are  laid  in  the  duft.  'Tis  this  piety  that  will  be 
the  guide  of  their  youth,  and  the  comfort  of  their 
age  ;  for  length  of  days  are  in  her  right  hand,  and 
in  her  left  hand  riches  and  honour.  'Tis  this, 
and  this  only,  that  can  make  all  outward  blef- 
fings  comfortable,  and  indeed  bleffings  to  us,  by 
making  them  the  fteps  and  means  of  attaining  the 
never  fading  honours  and  incomprchenfible  glories 
of  that  kingdom  which  is  above  ;  where  there 
fhall  be  no  more  fin,  nor  ficknefs,  nor  pain,  nor 
teais,  nor  death,  but  we  fhall  reft  from  all  our 
labours,  an-i  our  works  fliall  follow  us. 

Unt-o 


120  A  Sermon,    &cJ 

Unto  which  God  of  his  infinite  mercy  bring  us, 
for  the  merits  and  mediation  of  Jefus  Chrift 
our  Saviour ;  to  whom  with  the  Father  and 
Holy  Spirit,  let  us  afcribe  all  praife  and  ado- 
ration, now  and  for  ever.    Amen. 


FINIS. 


AN 


ESSAY 


ON     THE 


MEMORY 


OF      THE      LATE 


OUEEN      MAPvY. 


By  GILBERT  BURNETT,  D.  D. 
Late  Lord  Bifliop  of  Sarum. 


A  N 

ESSAY 

ON      THE 

M       EMORY 

OF      THE       LATE 

QUEEN      MARY. 

*'  A  L  L  fiefh  is  grafs,  and  all  the  goodlinefs 
*'  /-^  therefore,  is  as  the  flower  of  the  field." 
JL  -BL  Someofthefe  flowers  have  more  life  and 
luftre  than  others  ;  they  are  more  beautiful,  as  well 
as  more  lading  :  yet  in  the  courfe  of  things,  the 
grafs  withereth,  and  the  flower  fadeth  ;  and  that 
fometimes  fo  quick,  and  by  fuch  an  unlooked  for 
turn,  that  in  the  morning  it  groweth  up  and 
ilouriflietlk,  and  in  the  evening  it  is  cut  down  and 

A  2  withered. 


4         An  "Ess AY  on  the  Memory  of 

withered.       One   ftroke    of   a    fcythe    cuts   them 
down   by  handfuls  ;  and  then  the  beft  decked  fpot 
of  ground,  docs  quickly  change   Its  face,  and  lofe 
all  its  beauty.     We  who  but  the   other  day  faw  a 
great  queen,  (I  fay  the  other  day,  for  fuch  an  idea 
muft  live  fo  long  and  fo  frefh  in  our  minds,  that  for 
a  great  many  years  we  will  ftill  fay  the  other  day) 
we  who  faw  her,  like  the  mafter-piece  of  nature, 
wrought  up  by  all  the   polifhings  of  art  and  im- 
provement, look  with   fo  frefh  a  bloom,  and  fuch 
promifing  appearances,  who  carried  that  air  of  life 
and  joy  about  her,    that  animated  all  who  fav/  her, 
and  who   reckoned  their  own  lives  both  the  fafer 
and  happier,  becaufe  hers  was  fo  firm,    mufl  now 
lament  that  all   this   is    taken  from   us  with    one 
fudden  and  amazing  ftroke.     The  beft  part  of  us, 
our   hearts  and  hopes,  are  ftruck  down  with  her; 
who  was  the  beft,  God  knows,  the  much  beft  part 
of  us   all.     We   look    up    to    heaven    with    deep, 
though  filent  regret,  as  if  v/e  envied   her  blefted- 
nefs :  we  look  down  to   the  earth,  like   men  that 
are  finking  thither  :    we  look  to   the  grave,  where 
what  was  mortal  is  lodged  till  it  becomes  immortal, 
with  a  fort  of  indignation,  that  it  fliould  .  receive 
and   confume   thofe   facred    remains    for  which  we 
feel   a   fort  of  fuperftition,  which   though  our  rea- 
fon  may    check,    yet  it    cannot   quite  filence    or 

extinguilh. 

l^atuie,   even  on   very  extraordinary  occafions, 

is  apt  to   give  itfelf  fome  vent,  and   to  procure  to 
iifell  fomc  mitigation  of  its  pain.     Ar-d  when  it  is 

too 


the  late  ^een  MARY.  5 

too  full  for  well  chofen  expreflions,   or  regular  dif- 
courfes,  the   broken  and   inarticulate  language  of 
flghs  and  tears,  gives  fome  relief:  a  calm  fuccecds 
thofe  ftorms  ;  they  give  at  leaft  a  breathing,  and 
fofter  intervals.     Here  we  feel  fuch  an  oppreffion, 
and  diftra<5lion    of  thought,    that  they  choak    us 
inwardly,   and  break  out  only  in  amazement,    and 
in  a  wildnefs  of  look  and   behaviour.     We  feel  (o 
great  a  lofs  at  prefent,  that  we  need  not  heighten 
it  by  the  gloomy  profped  of  the  fatal  confequen- 
ces  that  may  follow  it :    and   yet  we  cannot  help 
feeing  that,  which   is   but  too  vifible.     We   dare 
not  pretend  to  enter  into  the  fecret  of  God's  coun- 
cils, which  are  wrapt  up  from  the  eyes  of  mortals  : 
yet  they  have  fuch  charadlers  upon  them,  that  from 
thence  we  are  induced  to  make  fome  conjedurej 
about  them ;  though  after  all,  thefe  are   but  con- 
jectures, and  are  often  ill  grounded.     But  whether 
we  look  up   to  God,   or  to  the  outward   face   of 
things,  and  to   thofe  appearances  that  are  but  too 
obvious,  we  foon  find  caufe  enough  to  drive  back_ 
our  thoughts  to  that  dark  and  native   horror  that 
does  now  haunt  and  poflefs  them.     Some  may  per- 
haps make  vain  complaints  againft  God,  and  try 
to  eafe  their  own  grief,  by  accufing  his  providence: 
our  hearts  may  carry  us  to  fay,    why  was  fo  much 
worth  laid  in  one  mind,  and  fo  nobly  lodged  ?  Whv 
was    it  juft  fhewed    the   world,    with    advantage 
enough  to  let  all  men  fee  what  might  have  been 
expected  from  it  ?   Why  were  fo  many  great  ideas 
and  vail  defigns   formed  by   her  ?     Why  was  Ihe 

furnilbed 


6         A7i^s% AY  on  the  Memory  of 
furnlfhed  with  fuch  (kill    and  foftnefs  in  the  ma-- 
jiagement  of  them  ?     and  the  fad  why  comes  laft, 
why   was   all   this   fnatched  from  us  fo  early  and 
fo  fuddenly  ? 

It  is   true,  all    God's   ways  are  a  great   depth  j 
and  we  may  never  prefume  to   afk  of  him  a  reafou 
of  any  of  his  dealings,  which  are  paft  finding  out : 
but  here  the  fteps  of  his  providence  are  fo  account- 
able, that  we  ought  not  to  be  long  in  the  dark 
about  them.     So  much   worth  was   full  ripe  for 
heaven,    and  was  much  too  good  for  earth,  efpe- 
cially  for  fo   corrupt  a  part  of   it  as   we  are.     If 
thofe  great  bleflings   which  heaven    held  forth  to 
us  in  her,  had   attained  the  ends   for  which  they 
were  defigned,  we  might  then  have  hoped  that  her 
crown  would  have  been  longer  delayed  j  and  that 
our  happinefs   might  have  been   the  more  lafting. 
The  cutting  part  of  our  forrow  is  this,  that  we 
have  too  good  reafon  to  believe  that  we  have  pro- 
cured this   to  ourfelves. 

Unlefs,  according  to  the  growing  impiety  that 
fpreads  itfelf  amongft  us,  wc  will  conclude  that 
God  has  forfaken  the  earth,  and  that  all  things 
roll,  either  under  the  fullennefs  of  fate,  or  the 
giddinefs  of  chance  ;  if  we  believe  that  providence 
watches  over  and  governs  all  that  happens  here 
below,  we  muft  then  acknowledge,  that  fo  great 
a  change  as  this  has  made,  could  not  have  come 
upon  us,  but  by  a  juft  and  wife  direaion.  There- 
fore inftead  of  thofe  irregular  thoughts  and  expref- 
fions  by  which  fo  great  a  commotion  of  mind  may 

difcharge 


ihelate  ^een  MARY.  7 

difcharge  itfelf,  and  inftead  of  thofe  wild  and  dc- 
jetEling  apprehenfions,  which  it  may  be  apt  to 
throw  upon  us,  we  ought  to  reduce  ourfelves  to 
more  order,  and  to  confider  more  fedately,  what 
we  may  juftly  fear,  and  how  we  may  wifely  pro- 
vide againft  it. 

If  we  v/ill  examine  what  may  have  brought  fa 
fevere  a  ftroke  upon  us,  and  what  may  draw  after 
it  yet  heavier  ones,  (but  can  any  be  heavier  !) 
then  if  there  is  yet -room  for  hopes,  if  our  wound 
is  not  incurable,  and  if  the  breach  that  is  made 
upon  us  is  not  wide  as  the  fea,  fo  that  nothing  can 
hinder  our  being  overflown  by  it,  then,  I  fay,  the 
iearching  into  this,  is  all  the  referve  that  is  left  us, 
all  that  can  balance  fo  ineflimable  a  lofsj  or  ra- 
-ther  all  that  can  fave  us  from  being  fwallowed  up 
utterly  by  it. 
Even  in  a  fliipwrack  every  one  is  forced,  after  all 
his  aftonifhment  at  their  common  fate,  to  try  by 
what  fhift  he  himfelf  may  efcape  :  for  tho'  tlie  firll 
diforders  of  melancholy  may  make  one  wifh  rather 
to  perifti  in  fo  terrible  a  calamity,  than  to  furvive 
it,  yet  after  all,  nature  returns  to  itfelf,  and  feels 
felf-prefervation  to  be  too  deeply  wrought  in  its 
compofuion,  to  be  eafily  Ihaken  ofF.  While  then 
fuch  a  load  opprefles  us,  and  when  fuch  fears 
compafs  us  round,  all  that  remains  to  make  the  one 
lighter,  and  to  dillipate  the  other,  is  for  us  to  lay  our 
hands  on  our  mouths,  becaufe  God  has  done  it : 
but  then  to  lay  them  on  our  heart,   and  to  afk 

our- 


8         An  Essay  on  the  Memory  of 

ourfelves  what  have  we  done  ?     And  what  fliall 
we  do  to  be  faved  ? 

How  juft  foever  any  affllflion  may  feem  to  be, 
yet  it  muft  have  its   bounds.     Our  religion   gives 
a   temper  :     it  does   not  impofe    upon   us  the  dry 
fullennefs  of   ftoics  ;    their  moft   admired  fayings, 
that  fate  is   inexorable  ;    that  it  is  in  vain  to  be 
troubled  at   that  we  cannot  help  :    and  the  famed 
anfwer  of  him,  who  upon  the  news  of  his  fon's 
death,  fiiid   coldly,   I    knew  I   begat   him  mortal, 
have  an  air  in  them  that  feems  above  the  prefent  flat* 
of  human  nature.  It  looks  too  favage  and  contrary 
to   thofe  tender  affedions  that  are  planted   in  us, 
and  that  are  in  fome  fort  neceffary  for  carrying  on 
the  common  concerns   of  life.     But  the  extreams 
on  the  other  hand,  are  much  more  boiflerous  and 
untraceable  :    while  the  rages  of   paffion    govern, 
neither  the  calmnefs   of  reafon,  nor  the  authority 
of  religion  will  be  barkened  to.     Heathenifm  was 
fruitful    in  the  inventions  of  fury,    hecatombs  of 
living  creatures  were  thought  poor  oblations  :  hu- 
man   facrifices    were    offered    liberally     on    thofc 
occafions,  nor  was  the  greateft  wafte    of  treafure, 
with  all  the  profufion  of  funeral   piles  and  magni- 
ficent buildings,  thought  a   fuitable   addrefling  of 
their  dead  to  the  invifible  ftate,    to   which    they 
v/ent,   unlefs  innumerable  ghofls   were   fent  after 
them  as  a  welcome  convoy  to  follow  them  thither. 
When  the  civilizing  of  the  world,  and  the  decencies 
firft  of  humanity,  then  of  philofophy,  and  chiefly 
when  revealed  religion  came  to  foften  and  enlighten 


men 


J 


the  late  ^een  MARY.  '  9 

men,  thofe  outragious  folemnlties  fell  off  ;  tho' 
the  coftly  part  was  by  many  kept  up  with  too 
much  oftentation.  The  corrupters  of  religion 
found  that  the  tendernefs  of  affedion,  with  that 
generous  difrnterefTednefs  which  it  gave,  offered  to 
them  a  harveft  that  might  be  fruitful ;  and  they 
were  not  defeilive  in  the  art  of  cultivating  itt 

Opinions  were  invented,  and  practices  were 
contrived,  that  drew  great  wealth  into  their  handsj 
and  begat  a  confideration  for  them,  which,  if  it 
had  not  been  over-done  by  the  managers,  and  that 
in  a  manner  too  coarfe  and  too  ravenous  not  to  be 
found  out  at  laft,  was  bringing  the  whole  world 
under  their  authority.  Their  title  feemed  fure ; 
and  it  was  to  have  its  chief  operation,  when  both 
thofe  who  died,  and  thofe  who  lived,  were  the  leaffc 
able  to  examine  their  pretenfions  :  the  fears  of  the 
one,  and  the  forrows  of  the  other,  made  them  very 
pliant  to  their  condu£l,  and  implicit  under  it. 

We  have  a  better  light,  and  are  governed  by 
truer  meafures  :  we  know  there  is  a  wife  provi- 
dence, and  a  future  ftate  ;  and  in  thofe  two  never- 
failing  fources  of  quiet  and  fubmiflion,  we  give 
our  forrows  juft  abatements.  But  fmce  all  the 
fteps  of  providence,  though  juft  and  wife  in  them- 
felves,  have  not  the  fame  face  to  us,  fome  of  them 
being  as  bright  as  others  are  dark ;  we  ought  not 
to  look  on  providence  as  rigid  fate  j  but  as  the 
fteady  condudt  of  a  mind  that  is  infinitely  wife  : 
we  ought  therefore  to  go  as  far  as  reafonably  we 
can,  in  judging  what  is  the  language  of  that  pro- 

B  videnc« 


JO       yf»  E  s  s  A  y  on  the  Mcmovy  of 

vidence  to  us,  and  what  the  defigns  of  it  upon  U3 
may  be. 

The  livelieft  as  well  as  the  ufefulleft  exercifes  of 
our  thoughts,  is  to  fum  all  that  was  excellent  and 
jmitable  in  the  perfon  whofe  lofs  we  lament ;  to 
l^y  it  altogether  j  to  obferve  how  amiable  it  wasj 
what  an  influence  it  had,  and  in  what  efFedbs  it 
appeared.  This  if  it  rcfts  in  the  bare  commenda- 
tion of  one,  that  may  be  fafely  praifed,  when 
flattery  or  intereft  cannot  be  thought  to  have  any 
Ihare  in  the  incenfe,  that  is  then  given,  it  is  at 
leaft  a  juftlce  to  the  memory  of  a  perfon  that 
^eferved  it,  and  an  homage  to  virtue  itfelf.  It 
will  .probably  go  deeper,  and  have  its  beft  efFe£l 
upon  us  :  it  will  engage  us  to  love  thofe  virtues  in 
ourfelves,  which  we  admire  in  others,  and  will 
reproach  us,  if  we  commend  that  in  another, 
which  we  take  no  care  to  imitate  ourfelves.  Pro- 
bably this  will  not  evaporate  quite  into  difcourfe, 
or  wear  off  with  time  :  fomewhat  will  flick,  and 
have  a  due  effect  upon  us.  Some  of  thofe  virtues 
may  fo  far  infmuate  themfelves  into  us,  that  we 
may  grow  to  love  and  pradlice  them,  A  noble 
pattern  cannot  be  much  looked  at  without  beget- 
ting fome  difpofition  to  copy  after  it,  and  to  imi- 
tate it.  A  great  luffre,  though  it  may  fometimes 
dazzle,  yet  it  enlightens,  as  well  as  it  ftrikes. 

Thofe  who  are  perhaps  tied  too  clofely  by  fome 
fatal  engagements  to  pradtices  that  they  cannot  re- 
folve  on  forfaking.  yet  have  that  fecret  veneration 
for  true  virtue,    efpecially  for  the  fublime  of  it, 

and 


the  late  ^leen  MARY.  n 

and  faw  fo  much  of  that  in  our  blefled  queen,  that 
they  may  be  defirous  to  fee  fuch  a  juft  reprefentation 
of  thofe  various  branches  of  her  charadler,  as  may 
entertain  their  admiration  at  prefent,  and  be  per- 
haps of  fome  more  ufe  to  them  in  other  periods 
of  their  lives.  They  may  defire  to  be  made  wifer, 
if  not  better  by  it.  They  may  hope  that  what 
efFe6l  foever  it  may  have  on  the  prefent  age,  it 
will  have  fome  on  thofe  that  are  to  come  :  it  will 
be  a  lively  part  of  our  hiftory,  and  fet  a  noble 
pattern  to  fucceeding  princes.  And  all  perfons, 
how  bad  foever  they  may  be  themfelves,  have  too 
fenfible  a  fliare  in  government,  not  to  wifh  that 
their  princes  were  truly  and  heroically  good. 

A  pi£lure  of  her,  that  may  have  fome  life  in  it, 
is  that  which  all  feemed  to  defire.  Where  there 
were  fo  many  peculiar  features,  and  yet  fo  much 
of  majefty  fpread  over  them  all,  it  feems  as  hardly 
poflible  not  to  hit  a  great  deal  of  the  refemblance, 
as  to  hit  it  all,  and  to  draw  truly,  and  to  the  life. 
Every  one  will  at  firft  view,  fay,  it  is  fhe ;  but 
this  abatement  muft  be  expected,  that  it  has  not 
quite  taken  her.  It  has  not  her  air,  though  it 
may  have  her  features.  The  colours  may  feem  to 
fink,  when  we  remember  how  the  original  itfelf 
looked. 

Extraordinary  degrees  of  virtue  in  fovereign 
princes  happen  fo  feldom,  that  it  is  no  wonder  if 
they  give  the  world  a  furprife  that  is  as  great  as  it 
is  agreeable.  When  we  look  through  paft  ages, 
and  through  all  the  different  climates  and  corners 

B  2  of 


12        Jn  "Est, AY  on  the  Memory  cf 

of  the  world,  we  find  little  that  is  truly  eminent, 
without  fome  great  diminution  accompanying  it. 

We  accuftom  ourfelves  by  ftudy  and  obfervation 
not  to  be  flattered  with  the  hopes  of  feeing  ideas  of 
perfe£lioji  on  the  throne.     It  feems  a  prefumption 
to  fancy,  that  our  own  times,  fhould   have  a  privi- 
ledge  that  former  ages  could  not  boaft.     We  find 
that  even  David,  and   Solomon  much   more,   had 
blemifhes  almoft  equal  to  their  virtues.     Few  of 
their    fucceffors    arrived    at    their    degree  of  per- 
fection ;  though  they  might  have  all   their   allay. 
Hezekiah  and  Jofiah  are  the  leafi:  exceptional :  yet 
fome  leller  flips  occur  even  in  their  hiftory.     Con- 
ilantine  and  Theodofius   were  tv/O  of  the  greateft 
bleflings   of  the  chriftiaxi  church  ;  yet  v.'e  dare  not 
propofe  them  as  patterns   in  every  thing.      Clovis 
and  Charles   the   great  make  a  mighty  figure  in 
hifiory ;    becaufe    the    world    is    difpofed   to  re- 
member what  was   good  in  them,  and   to  forget 
the  reft.     A  full  piilure  of  thefe  would  have  one 
fide  fo  bright,  with  another  fo  fpotted,  that  the 
whole  would  look  but  odly.     If  the  good  and  bad 
that  was  in  moft  princes,  whofe  names  found  the 
befi-j  were  fet  againfl;  one  another,  as  critically  as 
Suetonius    has  reprefented  the  Roman  emperors, 
the  world  would  perhaps  retradl  much  of  the  ad- 
miration that  it  has  paid  them  j  and  might  be   for 
fome  time  in  fufpence,  which  fide  of  the  character 
was  fuperior,  and  did  preponderate  the  other. 

Female  government   has  had  its   peculiar  ble- 
mill^es,  with  fewer  patterns  to  compenfate  for  the 

faukinefs 


ih^  late  ^eeii  MARY.  13 

faultineis  of  others.     The  fiercenefsof  Semlramis's 
charaSer  does    l.eiTcii  her  greatnefs,  and  the  luxu- 
ries   of  Cleopatra    does   more    than    balance    her 
beauties.     The  cruelties  of  Irene  were  fuch,  that 
even  her  zeal  for  images  could  not  cover  them,  in 
the  thickefi:  mift  of  fuperftitlon.     Mathildis  and  the 
Joans  of  Naples,  are  too  black  to  be  well  thought 
of,    for  all  the  flatteries  of  popes  :  and   pope  Gre- 
gory's raptures  upon  Brunichild  have  Icllened  him, 
rather    than  clianged    her    character.     It  is    true, 
Pulcheria  has  a  fairer  giace,   yet  fomc  fufpicions 
have  a  little  eclipfed  her ;  and  her  reign  was  but  of 
a  hw  days  continuance,    till  flie  chofe  a  hufband, 
who  was   made  emperor  by  the  right  of  marrying 
her.     Amalazuntha  has  a   nobler  character,  it   is 
indeed    given  her  by  Cafliodore,   that  had  been  her 
chief  minifter  J  but  he   was.the  wifeft  and  beft  of 
men  in  the  age  :  her  fate  was  difmal,  and  others 
have  caft  black  imputations  on   her  ;  but  if  that 
wife  fenator  is  to  be  believed,  flae  was  one  of  the 
beft  and  greateft,  though  the  moft  unfortunate  of 
women.     Female  government  has  fcldom    looked 
fo  great,  as   it  did  in  Ifabel  of  Calfile.     But  if  flie 
was  a  good  queen,  (he  was  but  an  indifferent  wife  ; 
and  all  the  honour   fhe  did  her  fex,  was   thrown 
down  in  her  daughter,  who  was   likewife  a  fove- 
reign  ;  whofe    violent  affections  to    her    hufband, 
was  as  troublefome  while  he  lived,  as   extravagant 
after  his  death  ;  flie  keeping  the  dead  body  ftill  iii 
view,  and  making  it  travel  about  with,  her  in  her 
j.curniesj  which  flic  made  only  in  the  night  ;  nc- 

B  3  gledhig 


14       Jn  Rss AY  on  the  Memory  of 
gle£ling  government,  and  finking  into  a  fccblenefs, 
that  made  her  become   at  lafl:  utterly  incapable  of 
even  the  ftiadov^^  of  it,  which  v^ras  all  that  had  re- 
mained in  her  for  many  years. 

If  Jane  of  Navarre  had  had  a  larger  fphere,  fhe 
was  indeed  a  perfedl  pattern  :  nothing  was  ever 
fuggefted  to  lefTen  her,  but  that  which  was  her 
true  glory,  her  receiving  the  reformation  ;  flie  both 
received  it,  and  brought  her  fubje<5ls  to  it.  She 
not  only  reformed  her  court,  but  her  whole  princi- 
pality, to  fuch  a  degree,  that  the  golden  age  feemed 
to  have  returned  under  her  ;  or  rather,  chriftianity 
appeared  again  with  the  purity  and  luftreofits  firft 
beginnings.  Nor  is  there  one  fmgle  abatement 
to  be  made  here,  only  her  principality  was  narrow  ; 
her  dominion  was  fo  little  extended,  that  though 
fhe  had  the  rank  and  dignity  of  a  queen,  yet  it 
looked  liker  a  fhadow,  than  the  reality  of  fovercignty; 
or  rather  it  was  fovercignty  in  minature,  though 
the  colours  were  very  bright,  it  was  of  the  fmallell 
form. 

Two  Marys  in  this  ifland  fhewed  a  greatnefs  of 
genius  that  has  feldom  appeared  to  the  world. 
But  the  fuperllition  and  cruelty  of  the  one,  and 
the  condudl  and  misfortunes  of  the  other,  did  fo 
leflen  them,  that  the  fex  had  been  much  funk  by 
their  means,  if  it  had  not  been  at  the  fame  time  as 
powerfully  fupported  by  the  happieft  and  moft 
renowned  of  all  fovereign  queens  ;  I  know  I  need 
not  name  her. 

The 


the  late  ^teen  MARY.  r5' 

The  ffreat  ^^\xx2.  fhe  made  both  at  home  and" 
abroad,  her  wife  condiKft  and  able  minlftry  were' 
fuch,  that  the  nations  floui  iftiing  in  trade,  and  exJ- 
tendino-  itfelf  in  colonies,  the  encreafe  of  our 
wealth,  and  the  ftrength  of  our  fleets,  owe  their 
beginnings  to  her  aufpicious  reign.  The  great 
tranfaclions  then  abroad  in  the  wcrld,  took  their 
turn  from  the  diredlion  and  the  fupport  that  fhe  gave 
them.  But  that  which  is  above  all,  and  for  which 
we  owe  her  memory  the  profoundeft  acknowledg- 
ments, it  was  by  her  means  that  the  true  religion 
received  its  eftablifhment  among  us.  She  delivered 
us  from  a  foreign  yoke,  fhe  freed  us  from  idolatry 
and  fuperflition,  and  fettled  us  upon  a  conftitution 
that  has  been  ever  fince  the  trucft  honour,  as  well 
as  the  greateft  fupport  of  the  reformation.  So 
much  we  owe  to  the  aflies  of  that  great  queen, 
that  her  memory  is  ftill  frefli  and  facred  among  us  : 
her  times  are  efteemed  the  ftandard  of  our  happinefs, 
and  her  name  ftill  carries  a  delightful  found  to  every 
Englifh  ear.  If  there  were  any  defects  or  diforders 
in  that  time,  we  ought  to  think  mildly  of  them, 
and  to  cenfure  them  gently.  In  her  we  muft  own, 
that  female  government  feemed  to  have  (hined  with 
the  faireft  glory  :  we  are  fure  that  hiftory  can  fhcw 
■  nothing  like  it. 

But  the  lateft  is  commonly  the  frelheft  in  our 
thoughts  ;  and  what  luftre  foever  authority  in  that 
fex  may  have  caft  about  it  in  the  laft  age,  it  has 
come  under  a  cloud  in  the  prefent.  A  queen  has 
lived  in  our  own  times,  whofe  great  defcent  gave 

B  4  lior 


1 6       An  "E^^  AY  on  the  Memory  of 

her  a  juft  title  to  the  higheft  gratitude,  and  whofe 
mind  feemed  born  with  a  fublimjty  made  for  empire, 
that  for  fome  time,  like  the  northern  ftar,  attract- 
ed the  eyes  of  all  the  world  to  her.  But  fhe  aban- 
doned her  throne  and  fubjeds,  and  chofe  rather  to 
wander  inglorioufly,  than  to  maintain  her  poft,and 
exert  her  fuperiority  of  genius  in  governing  well 
at  home,  and  giving  law  to  thofe  about  her.  This 
had  made  the  difpofition  to  Saliclc  laws  become 
more  univerfal.  We  have  (cQn  that  which  has  not 
only  taken  ofF  the  cloud,  which  file  had  caft  on 
her  fex,  but  has  raifed  it  far  beyond  the  precedents 
or  patterns  of  former  times.  In  her,  that  name, 
which  all  generations  fhall  call  blcfled,  has  reco- 
vered the  amiable  found,  that  it  ought  ever  to 
have.  We  heard  it,  not  without  fome  harlhnefs, 
when  we  remembered  fome  who  had  carried  it : 
nothing  can  add  to  the  glorious  beginning  of  that 
name  ;  yet  our  Mary  has  reftored  it  to  its  iirft 
fweetnefs. 

We  feek  in  vain  for  a  pattern  to  refemble  her  : 
Her  grandmother  of  Navarre,  is  the  likcft  thing 
we  find  to  her.  But  we  do  not  leflen  that  queen's 
glory,  when  we  fay  that  this  defcendant  of  hers  had 
an  augufter  appearance  and  a  more  exalted  throne. 
She  had  a  higher  fphere,  and  fo  we  may  conclude 
Ihe  was  the  fuperior  intelligence.  She  was  all  that 
the  other  queen  had  been,  even  whilfl  fhe  was  in 
her  princely  ftate.  The  world  has  reafon  to  be- 
lieve, that  every  thing  would  have  been  the  fame 
in  the  other,  if  fhe  had  been  advanced  to  an  im- 
perial 


•    th£  late  ^een  MARY.  17 

perial  crown.  But  what  may  be  well  believed  of 
her,  was  feen  in  this  branch,  that  fprang  from  her 
root :  her  worth  grew  with  her  advancement.  She 
was  not  only  better  known  in  it,  but  there  was  a 
conflant  progrefs  in  her  virtues,  even  beyond  that 
of  her  fortune. 

Yet  after  all,  this  cannot  fo  properly  be  called  a 
female    government  j  though    fovereignty   was    in 
her,  it   was   alfo   in  another  ;    her    adminiflratioii 
fupplied  the  others  ab fence.     Monarchy  here  feem- 
ed  to  have  loft  its  very  efTence  ;  it  being  a  govern- 
ment by  one.     But  as  the  adminiftration  was  only 
in  one   at   a  time,  fo  they  were  more  one,   than 
either    efpoufals  or   a  joint  tenure  of  the   throne 
could   make   them  ;   there   was  an   union  of  their 
thoughts,   as  well  as  of  their  perfons  ;  and  a  con- 
curring in  the  fame  defigns,  as  well  as  in  the  fame 
interefts.      Both   feemed  to    have    one  foul ;  they 
looked  like  the  different  faculties  of  the  fame  mind. 
Each   of  them  having  peculiar  talents,  they  divid- 
ed  between  them  the  different  parts  of    govern- 
ment, as  if  they  had  been  feveral  provinces  :  while 
he  went  abroad  with  the  fword  in  his  hand,  (he 
ftaid  at  home  with  the  fcepterin  hers  :  he  went  as  the 
arbiter  of  Europe,  to  force 'a  juft,  as  well  as  a  general 
peace;   fhe  ftaid  to  maintain  peace  and  to  dojufticc 
at  home.     He  was  to  conquer  enemies,  and  flic 
was  to  gain  friends.     He  as  the  guardian  of  Chrif- 
tendom,  was  to   diffufe  himfelf  to   all,  while  fhe 
contraiSlcd   her  care  chiefly  to  the  concerns  of  reli- 
gion and  virtue.     While  he  had  more  buftnefs,  and 

(he 


rS'       An  Essay  on  the  Memory  of 

file  mare  leifure,  flic  prepared  and  fuggefted  what 
he  executed.  In  all  this,  there  was  \o  clofe,  but 
fo  entire  an  union,  that  it  was  not  poflible  to  know 
how  much  was  proper  to  any  one ;  or  if  ever  they 
differed  in  a  thought  from  one  another:  but  the 
living  are  not  now  to  be  fpoke  of;  our  thoughts 
muft  run  wholly  where  our  forrows  carry  us. 

While  we  feek  for  refemblance  in  her,  in  facred 
hiftory  we  find  her  fo  like  Jofiah,  that  their  being 
of  the  fame  dignity,  may  excufe  the  parallel,  though 
the  fex  is  different.  He  came,  after  a  lono;  and 
deep  corruption  j  a  reign  that  had  fo  entirely  viti- 
ated the  nation,  that  neither  the  judgments  of  God 
that  fell  on  Manaffes,  nor  his  own  fincere,  though 
lale  repentance,  was  able  to  correil  the  diforders  of 
his  former  years.  So  foon  is  a  nation  run  into  fo 
depraved  a  ftate,  that  its  recovery  becomes  almoft 
defperate.  Jofiah  was  under  much  difadvantage 
in  his  firft  education  :  his  being  a  king  fo  young, 
expofcd  him  to  all  the  flatteries  by  which  thofe 
about  him  might  hope  to  infinuate  themfelves  into 
his  fiivour ;  but  his  happy  temper  was  above  it. 
While  he  was  but  growing  out  of  childhood,  in 
the  eighth  year  of  his  reign,  and  the  fixteenth  year  of 
bis  age,  he  began  to  feek  after  God  :  he  continued 
four  years  in  this  pious  courfe  of  life,  before  he  fet 
about  the  reforming  of  the  people,  that  his  own 
good  example  might  have  fuch  influence,  and  give 
him  fuch  credit  in  it,  as  might  balance  the  flow- 
Befs  of  beginning  it.  When  he  fet  about  it,  it 
wa«  the  work  of  fix  years  to  purge  the  land  from 


tie  late  ^een  MARY.  19 

idolatry ;  and  of  other  fix  to  fet  forward  the  re- 
pairing the  temple.  All  was  not  finifhed  before 
the  eighteenth  year  of  his  reign,  fo  hard  it  is  to 
recover  a  degenerated  nation.  As  they  were  fearch- 
ing  the  temple,  the  book  of  the  law  (by  which 
moft  do  underftand  the  original  itfelf )  was  found, 
the  dreadful  threatnings  in  it  flruck  Jofiah  with 
a  juft  horror.  Pie  fent  to  Huldah,  a  famed 
prophetefs,  to  fee  what  comfort  Ihe  could  give 
him  J  Ihe  anfwered,  that  the  decree  was  fixed 
and  irreverfible  ;  but  he  fhould  die  in  peace,  and 
not  fee  thofe  fatal  days.  This  was  feme  mitigation 
to  his  grief.  He  tried  all  he  could  to  reform  his 
people,  but  without  fuccefs ;  they  were  weary  ot 
him  and  of  his  virtue,  and  were  longing  for  an 
opportunity  to  return  again  to  their  idolatry.  So 
inveterate  was  the  corruption,  that  all  the  exaflnefs 
of  Jofiah's  care,  as  well  as  the  ftridnefs  of  the  ex- 
ample that  he  fet  his  own  fons,  could  not  keep 
them  from  the  fpreading  contagion,  it  was  fo  catch- 
ing. This  was  the  laft  eflay  of  mercy  upon  that 
people,  in  the  beft  of  all  their  kings.  He  was 
fatally  engaged  in  an  unequal  war,  and  was  killed 
in  the  day  of  battle.  His  death,  upon  his  own 
fingle  account,  would  have  given  the  Jews  but  too 
juft  a  caufe  of  a  bitter  mourning  for  him  ;  but  the 
miferies  that  did  immediately  follow  his  death,  mad« 
it  to  be  fo  long  remembered,  that  in  a  book  writ 
about  a  hundred  years  after,  it  is  faid,  that  they 
continued  their  mourning  for  him  to  that  day.  It 
ivas  no  wonder  that  it  was  remembered  by  them 

wuh 


20        An  Essay  on  the  Memory  of 

with  fo  folemn  and  lafling  a  forrow.  A  fuccefllon 
of  calamities  came  fo  thick  after  it,  that  there  was 
fcarce  a  lucid  interval  between  them  j  captivity 
came  after  captivity  ;  and  what  by  war,  v/hat  by 
famine,  and  wha':  by  defertion,  in  the  courfe  of 
four  and  twenty  years  after  his  death,  their  nation 
became  an  aftonifhment,  acurfe,  and  a  bye  word,  to 
all  nations.  Jerufalcm  was  laid  in  heaps,  their 
temple  was  rafed  down  to  the  ground,  and  Zion 
became  a  ploughed  field.  And  if  the  fecond  and 
final  defl:ru(5lion  of  that  city  and  nation  had  not 
been  fo  fignal,  and  fo  particularly  related  by  one 
who  was  an  eye  witnefs  of  it,  that  it  wore  out  the 
remembrance  of  all  that  had  happened  in  former 
times,  this  would  have  paft  for  one  of  the  blackeft 
and  the  moft  amazing  fcenes  in  hiflory. 

That  pathetical  lamentation  which  Jeremy  writ 
upon  it,  has  ftrains  in  it  fo  tender  and  fo  moving, 
that  no  man  who  has  not  hardened  himfelf  againft 
the  compaflions  of  human  nature,  can  read  them 
without  a  fcnfible  emotion,  though  they  relate  to 
tranfa6lions  that  happened  many  ages  ago  ;  fuch 
a  lively  poem  as  that  is,  makes  them  ever  look  frefh, 
and  fecm  prcfent. 

I  will  make  no  reflc6lions  on  any  part  of  this 
Biftorical  deduction.  It  leads  one  fo  naturally  to 
application,  that  there  is  no  need  of  offering  any. 
Here  one  may  go  rather  too  faft,  than  too  flow, 
and  ftretch  the  matter  further  than  it  will  bear. 

The  whole  of  it,  without  any  ftraining,  lets  us 
fee,  that  in  the  worft  ftate  under  which  a  nation 

Can 


the  late  ^ieenMAKY ,  a 

can  fall,  a  good  prince  gives  a  full  flop  to  thofe 
judgments  that  are  referved  for  them  ;  even  when 
they  feemed  to  be  jufl  breaking  out  upon  them ; 
and  that  th^e  removal  of  fuch  princes,  is  like  the 
letting  loofe  that  hand  of  juftice  which  was  reftraln- 
ed  by  their  Intercellions.  But  fmce  there  is  an  uni- 
formity in  the  methods  of  providence,  "  and  that 
"  which  has  been,  is  that  which  fhall  be,  "  then 
fuch  an  amazing  mifery  as  accompanied  the  uttei 
ruin  of  the  Jewifh  nation,  ought  to  make  deep 
impreffions  on  all  others,  and  to  give  thefe  word^ 
of  the  prophet  a  formidable  found  j  "  the  righteous 
"  perifli,  and  the  merciful  perfons  are  taken  away 
*'from  the  evil  to  come  ;  "  which  will  come  the 
quicker,  as  well  as  the  more  certainly,  for  their  be- 
ing taken  away  :  and  that  will  be  yet  the  nearer, 
if  while  fuch  an  appearance  of  things  is  in  view,  no 
man  confiders  it,  nor  lays  it  to  hearr. 

Here  I  return  to  my  fubjeft,  from  which  all  that 
has  been  now  faid,  is  not  fo  much  a  digreffion  as 
it  may  appear  to  be  to  vulgar  readers  :  a  fubject  it 
is,  where  the  common  cenfures  of  difcourfes  of 
this  kind  are  not  to  be  much  apprehended.  On 
other  occafions  of  this  nature,  a  few  virtues  muli 
be  raifed,  to  make  the  moft  of  them  that  may  be  ; 
and  fome  few  accidents  muft  be  fet  out  with  due 
advantages.  For  the  fake  of  thefe,  a  great  deal 
muft  be  forgiven,  and  the  reft  is  to  be  Ihaded  or 
(hewed  as  at  a  diftance  and  in  perfpetSive.  Man- 
kind is  fo  little  difpofed  to  believe  much  good  of 
Pthers,  bgcaufe  moil  men  know  lb  much  ill  by  them- 

I'clves, 


22        An  ^.i,^ Ay  on  the  Memory  of 

felves,  and  are  very  unwilling  to  be  made  better, 
that  in  order  to  the  begetting  a  full  belief  of  that 
which  is  propofed  to  the  imitation  of  others,  the 
words  by  which  it  is  exprefled  muft  be  feverely 
weighed  and  well  chofen.  When  things  of  this 
kind  are  related  with  an  cxasSlnefs  that  feems  too 
much  ftudied,  the  wit  that  is  ill  placed  lefTens 
the  efFe6t  that  might  have  followed,  if  the  recital 
had  been  more  natural  ;  for  what  is  moft  genuine 
will  be  always  the  beft  received  ;  nor  muft  too  much 
be  faid,  how  true  or  juft  foever. 

The  prefent  age  may  be  eafily  brought  to  believe 
any  thing  that  can  be  faid  upon  this  fubjedl:,  be- 
caufe  the  atteftations  of  it  came  fo  thick  from  all 
hands.  Yet  fuch  a  chara6ler  as  is  now  to  be 
offered  the  world,  and  to  be  conveyed  down  to 
pofterity,  muft  be  fo  managed,  that  it  may  not 
fcem  too  exceflive  ;  that  duty  or  aiFe£l:ion  may  not 
be  thought  to  have  raifed  it  too  high.  The  living 
witnefles,  to  whom  we  may  now  appeal,  will  foon 
go  off"  the  ftage  j  the  filent  groans  as  well  as  the 
louder  cries  that  are  now  founding  in  all  our  ftreets 
and  in  every  corner,  will  foon  be  drowned  and 
hufhed  in  filence  :  and  then  that  which  will  be  now 
cenfured,  as  a  narrow  and  fcanty  commendation, 
far  below  the  fubje6l,  and  unworthy  of  it,  will  ap- 
pear to  fucceeding  ages  to  be  a  ftrain  above  human 
nature ;  it  will  pafs  for  the  pi£l:ure  of  an  ima- 
ginary perfedlion,  that  feems  rather  to  fet  forth 
what  our  nature  ought  to  rife  to,  than  what  has 
really  happened. 

This 


the  late  ^een  M kRY ,  23 

This  precaution  is  necefTary,  when  perfons  have 
lived  in  the  fhade,  known  only  to  a  fev/  and 
in  a  narrow  neighbourhood.  But  a  man  may 
take  a  freer  range  when  he  undertakes  to  defcribe 
one  that  was  always  in  view,  that  was  under  a 
conftant  obfervation  ;  and  where  a  high  elevation 
did  put  even  that,  which  humility  might  endeavour 
to  recover,  in  U  true  light.  The  bright  as  well  as 
the  dark  fides  of  fuch  perfons  mufl:  be  found  out. 
Management  may  ferve  a  turn,  and  go  on  for  a  time 
with  fecrefy  and  fuccefs  ;  but  the  continued  and 
uninterrupted  thread  of  life,  led  with  fo  uniform 
an  exaitnefs,  that  cenfure  itfelf  could  never  find 
matter  to  fix  on,  even  fo  long  as  to  keep  a  doubt- 
ful thought  in  fufpence,  is  that  which  one  may  ven- 
ture on,  without  the  danger  of  over-doing  it,  he 
muft  rather  defpair  to  do  it  juflice. 

Where  the  matter  rifes  with  fo  copious  a  fruit- 
fulnefs,  a  nice  choice  muft  be  made ;  much  muft 
be  omitted,  a  great  deal  muft  be  only  mentioned, 
rather  glanced  at  than  enlarged  on.  The  world  is 
now  io  far  beforehand  in  every  thing  that  can  be 
faid,  that  we  muft  own  fame  has  here  changed  her 
charadler,  and  has  given  fuch  true  and  full  repre- 
fentations,  that  there  is  little  left  to  be  done  j  but 
put  things  that  are  generally  known,  and  univer- 
fally  talked  of,  in  a  little  order,  and  to  tell  them  as 
natively  as  fhe  did  them. 

Here  arifes  an  unexam.pled  piece  of  a  charaifler, 
which  may  be  well  begun  with  ;  for  I  am  afraid  it 
both  began  and  will  end  wich  her.     In  moft  per- 
fons. 


24  An  "Ess  AY  on  the  Memory  of 
fons,  even  thofe  of  the  truefl:  merit,  a  ftudied  ma- 
nagement will  Ibmetimes  appear  with  a  little  too 
much  varnifli,  like  a  no£lurnal  piece,  that  has  a 
light  caft  through  even  the  moft  fhaded  parts  :  fome 
difpofition  to  fet  ones  felf  out,  and  fome  fatisfaclion 
in  being  commended,  will  at  fome  time  or  other 
Ihew  itfelf  more  or  lefs.  Here  we  may  appeal  to 
great  multitudes,  to  all  who  had  the  honour  to  ap- 
proach her,  and  particularly  to  thofe  who  were 
admitted  to  the  greateft  nearnefs,  and  the  moft 
conftant  attendance,  if  at  any  one  time,  any  thing 
of  this  fort  did  ever  difcover  iifelf.  When  due 
acknowledgments  v/ere  made,  or  decent  things 
were  faid  upon  occafions  that  did  well  deferve  them, 
(God  knows  how  frequent  thefe  were  !  )  thefe 
feemed  fcarce  to  be  heard  ;  they  were  fo  little  de- 
fired  that  they  were  prefently  paft  over,  without 
fo  much  as  an  anfwer  that  might  feem  to  entertain 
the  difcourfe,  even  when  it  checked  it.  She  went 
off  from  it  to  other  fubjecls,  as  one  that  could  not 
bear  it. 

So  entire  a  deadncfs  to  the  defire  of  glory,  which 
even  the  philofophers  acknowledged  was  the  lafl:  thing 
that  a  wife  man  put  off,  feemed  to  be  fomewhat  a- 
bove  human  nature,  and  nearly  refembling  that  flate 
of  abfolute  perfection,  to  which  (he  has  now  attained. 
The  defire  of  true  glory  is  thought  to  be  the  nobleft 
piinciple  that  can  be  in  fovereigns  j  which  fets 
them  on,  with  the  moft  conftant  zeal,  to  procure 
the  good  of  mankind.  Many  have  thought  that  a 
zealous   purfuit    q^  the  one,  could   not  be   duly 

animated 


the  late  ^een  MARY.  25 

animated  and  maintained  without  the  other.  It 
was  a  part  of  the  felicity  of  our  times,  that  we  have 
feen  the  moft  active  zeal  for  the  public,  and  a  con- 
ftant  delight  in  doing  good,  joined  with  fuch  un- 
aff'e(Sted  humility,  fo  regardlefs  of  applaufe  or  praife, 
that  the  moft  critical  obfervors  could  never  fee  rea- 
fonto  think,  that  the  fecrct  flatteries  of  vanity  or  felf- 
love  did  work  inwardly,  or  had  any  power  over  her. 
An  open  and  native  fmcerity,  which  appeared  in 
genuine  characters,  in  a  free  and  unreftrained  man- 
ner, did  eafily  perfuade  thofe  who  faw  it,  that  all 
was  of  a  piece.  A  conftant  uniform  behaviour, 
when  that  which  is  within  does  not  agree  with  the 
appearances,  feems  to  be  a  ftrain  above  our  pitch. 
Nor  could  any  perfon  find  any  other  reafon  to  fup- 
pofe  that  it  was  otherwife  in  this  inftance,  but  from 
the  fecret  fenfe  that  every  man  has  of  fome  latent 
corruption,  and  the  ftolen  infmuations  of  pride 
that  he  feels  within  himfelf,  which  may  make  him 
conclude,  that  the  whole  race  of  mankind  is  fo 
tainted,  that  nothing  can  be  entirely  freed  from 
thofe  infirmities  which  do  fo  naturally  befet  us. 
But  fuch  perfons  ought  to  make  another  refledion, 
that  daily  obfervation  fhews  to  be  true  ;  that  no 
man  lives  under  fo  exa(ft  a  guard,  and  fuch  a  con- 
ftant prefence  of  mind,  but  that  all  thofe  hidden 
difpofitions  which  lurk  within  him,  will  fhoot  out 
fometimes,  and  fliew  themfelves  on  great  occafions, 
or  fudden  accidents.  Nature  will  break  through 
all  rules,  when  it  is  much  excited,  or  taken  at 
unawares.     Therefore  it  is  much  more  reafonable, 

C  as 


26       An  "Es,^  AY  on  the  Memory  of 

as  well  as  it  is  more  charitable,  to  think  that  there 
are  no  fecret  inclinations,  which  lie  fo  quiet  that 
they  do  never  difcover  themfelves  in  a  courfe  of  ma- 
ny years,  and  of  unlooked  for  accidents,  than  to 
imagine  that  they  are  fo  covered  and  managed,  as  to 
be  chained  up  in  perpetual  reftraint.  There  is  an 
air  in  what  is  genuine  that  is  foon  feen,  (I  had 
almofl  faid  felt.)  It  looks  noble,  without  ftrains 
or  art ;  it  pleafes  as  well  as  perfuades,  with  a  force 
that  is  irrefiftible  ;  and  how  filent  foever  it  may  be, 
it  looks  like  the  univerfal  chara6ler  :  it  is  a  lan- 
guage which  nature  makes  all  men  underftand, 
how  few  foever  they  are  that  feek  it ;  this  was  fo 
peculiar  to  her,  and  fo  lingular  in  her,  that  it  de- 
ferved  well  to  be  begun  with. 

In  moft  of  thofe  perfons  who  have  been  the 
eminenteft  for  their  piety  and  viitue,  their  thoughts 
have  rifen  too  hio-h  for  human  nature  :  their  no- 
tions  have  become  too  fierce,  and  their  tempers 
too  fullen  and  untra£table  ;  they  have  confidered 
only  what  was  good  and  defirable  in  itfelf,  without 
regarding  what  the  world  could  bear.  They  have 
not  foftened  themfelves  enough  into  that  agree- 
ablenefs  of  temper,  that  might  give  fuch  an 
amiable  profpe(5l  of  virtue,  as  fhould  encourage 
the  world  to  love  and  imitate  it.  Their  medita- 
tions have  foured  them  too  much  j  and,  by  an 
obftinate  perfuing'  their  own  ideas,  without  accom- 
modating themfelves  enough  to  the  frailties  of 
others,  they  have  given  advantage  to  thofe  who 
have  ftudied  to  load  them  with  prejudices  :  their 

defigns 


the  late  ^een  MARY,  27 

defigns  have  mifcarried,  and  they  themfelves  have 
become  morofe  and  melancholy;  defparing  of  doing 
any  thing,  becaufe  they  could  not  hope  to  do  every 
thing.  Cato's  error  has  run  through  the  heft  fort  of 
men  that  have  ever  Jived  :  of  proje6ling  a  common- 
wealth like  Plato's,  when  the  Romans  were  run 
to  a  dreg.  Children  muft  be  gained  even  by  flat- 
tering their  weakneffes,  and  by  the  foftnefs  of 
kindnefs  and  good  humour.  The  grown  ftate  of 
man  is  often  but  an  advanced  childhood  :  a  dotage 
rather  than  a  ripenefs.  It  muft  be  confelTed,  that 
few  of  thofe  who  in  all  other  refpedls  feem  to  have 
been  born  for  the  good  of  mankind,  have  been  able 
to  give  their  aotions  that  turn,  to  fet  them  off  with 
that  air,  and  to  recommend  them  with  that  addrefs, 
which  we  of  late  admired  fo  much.  A  charmins: 
behaviour,  a  genuine  fweetnefs,  and  the  fprightli- 
nefs,  as  well  as  the  freedom  of  good  humour,  had 
foftened  all  thofe  frightful  apprehenfions  that  the 
world  is  too  willing  to  entertain  of  the  feverities 
of  virtue,  and  of  the  flri6tncfs  of  true  religion, 
LefTer  matters  were  not  much  flood  on :  an  eafy 
compliance  in  fome  of  thefe,  how  little  foever  they 
were  liked,  on  their  own  account,  was  intended  to 
give  her  advantages,  in  order  to  the  compaliing  of 
greater  things.  While  a  frefli  and  graceful  air, 
more  turned  to  ferioufnefs,  but  always  ferene,  that 
dwelt  on  her  looks,  difcovered  both  the  pcrfe<5l 
calm  that  was  within,  and  {hewed  the  force  as 
well  as  the  amiablcnefs  of  thofe  principles  which 

C  2  were 


28        An  ^ss AY  on  the  Me?ncry  of 

were  the  fprings  of  fo  chearful  a  temper,  and  fo 
lively  a  deportment. 

The  freedom  of  chearfulnefs  is  not  always  under 
an  exa6l  command  ;  it  will  make  efcapes  from  rules, 
and  be  apt  to  go  too  far,  and  to  forget  all  meafures 
and  bounds  :  it  is  feldom  kept  under  a  perpetual 
guard.  The  opennefs  of  her  behaviour  was  fub- 
je£l  to  univerfal  obfervation  j  but  it  was  under  that 
regularity  of  condu61:,  that  thofe  who  knew  her 
beft  and  faw  her  ofteneil:,  could  never  difcover  her 
thoughts  or  her  intentions  further,  than  as  fhe  her- 
felf  had  a  mind  to  let  them  be  known.  No  half 
word,  or  change  of  look,  no  forgetfulnefs,  or  run 
of  difcourfe,  did  ever  draw  any  thing  from  her, 
further,  or  fooner,  than  as  flie  defigned  it.  This 
was  managed  in  fo  peculiar  a  way,  that  no  diftruft: 
was  fhewed  in  it,  nor  diflafle  given  by  it.  It  ap- 
peared to  be  no  other,  than  that  due  refervednefs 
which  became  her  elevation  j  and  fuited  thofe 
affairs  that  were  to  pafs  through  her  hands.  When 
Die  faw  caufe  for  it,  fhe  had  the  trueft  methods  to 
oblige  others  to  ufe  all  due  freedom  v/ith  herfelf  j 
while  yet  flie  kept  them  at  a  fit  diftance  from  her 
own  thoughts. 

She  would  never  take  any  afliflance  from  thofe 
arts,  that  are  become  fo  common  to  great  pofts, 
that  fome  perhajjs  fancy  them  neceflary  :  fhe  did  not 
cover  her  purpofes  by  doubtful  expreflions,  or  fuch 
general  words,  as  taken  ftricStly  do  fignify  little, 
but  in  common  ufe  are  underftood  -  to  import  a 
j^reat  deal  more.     As  flie  would  not  deceive  others, 

fo 


tbe  late  ^ieen  MARY.  29' 

fo  fhe  avoided  the  faying  of  that  which  might  give 
them  an  occafion  to  deceive  themlelves :  and 
when  flie  did  not  intend  to  promife,  fhe  took  care 
to  explain  her  meaning  fo  critically,  that  it  might 
be  underftood  that  no  conftruiSlion  of  a  promife  was 
to  be  made  from  general  words  of  favour.  In  a 
courfe  of  feveral  years,  and  of  many  turns,  when 
great  occafion  was  given  for  more  artificial -me- 
thods, and  when,  according  to  the  maxims  of  the 
world,  great  ufe  might  have  been  made  of  them  ; 
yet  fhe  maintained  her  fincerity  fo  intirely,  to  the 
honour  of  truth,  be  it  faid,  as  well  as  to  hers, 
that  fhe  never  once  needed  explanations  to  juftify 
either  her  words  or  actions.  Integrity  preferved 
her,  as  well  as  fhe  preferved  it. 

Such  eminejit,  I  am  forry  to  fay,  fuch  unufual  . 
perfeitions,  had  they  appeared  in  one  of  the  mcanefl 
capacity,  and  of  the  lovvefl  degree  of  improvement, 
yet  mufl  have  challenged  great  veneration.  Com- 
mon obfervation  makes  it  but  too  apparent,  that 
thofe  of  the  highefl  form,  that  have  an  exaltation 
in  them,  which  makes  them  like  another  rank  of 
mortals,  that  have  a  true  flight  of  thought,  a 
great  compafs  of  knowledge,  a  fi:ability  and  equa- 
blenefs  of  temper,  with  a  deep  and  corre6l  judg- 
ment, who  have  cultivated  the  advantages  of  nature, 
by  fearching  and  laborious  acquifitions  ;  fuch  per- 
fons,  I  fay,  do  fwell  too  much  upon  the  preference 
that  is  due  to  them  ;  and  foil  thofe  fhining-  diflinc- 
tions  that  were  born  with  them,  by  mixtures  that 
need  not  now  be  enlarged  on.     A  fubjedl  compofed 

^3  of 


30     ^n  "Ess AY  on  the  Memory  of 

of  fo  much  perfeflion,  ought  not  to  be  digiefled 
from,  to  fet  out  the  diforders  that  appear  but  too 
frequently  in  the  fublimeft  pieces  of  mankind. 
Thefe  are  fo  unacceptable,  while  virtue  has  fo  be- 
nign an  afpe(5l,  that  eminent  degrees  of  it,  though 
joined  with  a  lower  proportion  of  that  which  feems 
to  have  more  luflre,  is  much  more  valuable,  than 
all  that  can  be  called  great  in  human  nature,  is 
without  it. 

But  if  both  thefe  (hould  happen  to  meet  together, 
and  that  In  as  hio-h  a  de2;ree  as  our  mortal  flate  is 
capable  of,  then   we  muft  acknowledge,  that  this 
is   all  that  we  can  expe6l  from  our  nature,  under 
its   prefent  depreilion.     So  few  inftances  of  fuch  a 
mixture  have  appeared  to  us,  that  we  muft  confefs, 
it  is  much  more  than  we  ought  to  look  for.     The 
hiftory  of  princes  that  have  lived  at  a  great  diftance 
from  us,  is  feldom  believed  to  be  fo  exa61:,  efpecially 
in  the   commendatory   part,    that  we  rely    much 
upon  it,     Xenophon  has  made  Cyrus  appear  to  be 
a  prince,  fo  much  perfe6ter  than  the  world  is  dif- 
pofed  to  believe,  that  the  pi<Sl:Lire  he  gives  of  him 
pafles  rather  for  a  piece  of  invention,  than  of  hif- 
tory.     When  the   world  fhall   have  lived  beyond 
the  fame  of  tradition  and  report,  a  minute  hiftory 
of  his   life,    if  exadly   writ,    may   probably  have 
the  fame  fate :  it  will  look  too  great  to  be  credible. 
What  is  good,  as  well  as  what  is  great  in  human 
nature,    were  here    fo  equally    mixed,    and  both 
fhined  fo  bright  in  her,  that  though  one  of  thefe 

is 


the  late  §lueen  MARY.  31 

is  always  the  better  part,  yet  it  is  hard  to  tell,  in 
whether  of  the  two  fhe  was  the  more  eminent. 

I  will  fay  little  either  of  her  rank,  or  of  her 
perfon  :  the  dignity  of  the  one,  and  the  majefty  of 
the  other,  were  born  with  her.  Her  fphere  was 
great,  and  fhe  was  furnifhed  with  advantages  pro- 
portioned to  it.  She  maintained  her  authority  with 
fo  becoming  a  grace  ;  and  infpired  fo  particular  a 
refpedl,  that  in  this  regard  only,  fhe  was  abfo- 
lute  and  defpotical,  and  could  not  be  refifced.  The 
port  of  royalty,  and  the  humility  of  chriilianity 
did  fo  happily  concur  in  her,  that  how  different 
foever  their  chara^lers  may  feem  to  be,  they  gave 
a  mutual  Juflre  to  each  other. 

She  maintained  that  refpetSt  that  belonged  to  her 
fex,  without  any  of  thofe  diminutions,  that  though 
generally  fpeaking,  they  do  not  much  mifbecome 
it,  yet  do  feem  a  little  to  lefTen  it.  She  would 
never  afte6l  to  be  above  it  in  common  and  meaner 
things :  fhe  had  a  courage  that  was  refolute  and 
firm,  mixed  with  a  mildnefs  that  was  foft  and 
gentle  ;  fhe  had  in  her  all  the  graces  of  her  own 
fex,  and  all  the  ffreatnefs  of  ours.  If  file  did  not 
affedl  to  be  a  Zcnobia  or  a  Boadicia,  it  was  not 
becaufe  fhe  wanted  their  courage,  but  becaufe 
{he  underflood  the  decencies  of  her  fex  better  than 
they  did.  The  chara6ler  of  a  Jean  of  Navarre, 
or  of  our  celebrated  Elizabeth,  was  much  more 
valuable  in  her  eftccm,  than  that  of  a  Semiramis, 
or  of  a  Thomiris.  A  defire  of  power,  or  an  eager- 
«cfs  of  empire,    were   things   fo   flxr  below  her, 

C  4  though 


32        An  "Es^ AY  on  the  Memory  of 

though  they  generally  pafs  for  heroical  qualities, 
that  perhaps  the  world  never  yet  faw  fo  great  a 
capacity  for  government,  joined  with  fo  little  appe- 
tite to  it;  fo  unwillingly  affumed,  fo  modeftly 
managed,  and  fo  chearfuliy  laid  down. 

The  clearnefs  of  her  apprehenfion,  the  prefence 
of  her  mind,  the  exacStnefs  of  her  memory,  the 
folidity  of  her  judgment,  the  correclnefs  of  her 
expreflions,  had  fuch  particular  diftindlions  in  them, 
that  great  enlargements  might  be  made  on  every 
one  of  thefe,  if  a  cloud  of  witnefl'es  did  not  make 
them  lefs  necefiary.  None  took  things  fooncr,  or 
retained  them  longer  :  none  judged  truer,  or  fpoke 
more  exactly.  She  writ  clear  and  fliort,  with  a 
true  beauty  and  force  of  ftile.  She  difcovered  a 
fuperiority  of  genius,  even  in  the  moft  trifling 
matters,  which  were  confidered  by  her  only  as 
amufements,  and  fo  gave  no  occafion  for  deep 
Tefle£tions.  A  happinefs  of  imagination,  and  a 
livelinefs  of  expteflion,  appeared  upon  the  com- 
jnonefl  fubjedls  ;  on  the  fudden,  and  in  greateft 
variety  of  accidents,  fhe  was  quick  but  not  hafty  : 
and  even  without  the  advantages  that  her  condition 
gave  her,  fhe  had  an  exaltation  of  mind,  that  fub- 
dued  as  well  as  charmed  all  that  came  near  her. 

A  quicknefs  of  thought  is  often  fuperficial  j  it 
catches  eafily,  and  fparkles  with  fome  luftre ;  but 
it  lafts  not  long,  nor  does  it  go  deep  :  a  bright 
vivacity  was  here  joined  with  fearching  diligence. 
Her  age  and  her  rank  had  denied  her  opportuni- 
ties for  much  iludy  3  yet  flie  had  gone  far  that  waj, 

and 


the  late  ^een  MARY.  33 

and  had  read  the  beft  book  in  the  three  languages, 
that  were  almoft  equally  familiar  to  her.  She  gave 
the  moft  of  her  hours  to  the  ftudy  of  the  fcriptures, 
and  of  books  relating  to  them.  It  were  eafy  to 
^ve  ama<z^ing  inftances  of  her  underftanding  ia 
matters  of  divinity.  She  had  fo  well  confidered 
our  difputes  with  the  church  of  Rome,  that  fhe 
was  capable  of  managing  debates  in  them,  with 
equal  degrees  of  addrefs  and  judgment  :  nor  was 
{he  unacquainted  with  thofe  unhappy  queftions 
that  have  didraded  us  :  and  had  fuch  juft,  as  well 
as  large  notions  about  them,  that  they  would  have 
foon  laid  our  animofities,  and  have  compofed  our 
differences,  if  theic  had  been  temper  enough,  on 
all  fides,  to  have  hearkened  to  them. 

She  had  a  2:enerous  and  a  fublime  idea  of  the 
chriflian  religion,  and  a  particular  affedlion  to  the 
church  of  Enp-land  :  but  an  affeiSlion  that  was 
neither  blind  nor  partial.  She  faw  what  finifliings 
we  ftill  wanted  j  and  had  dedicated  her  thoughts 
and  endeavours  to  the  confidering  of  the  beft 
means  that  might  both  compleat  and  eftablifh  us. 
She  intended  to  do  all  that  was  pofTible,  in  order 
to  the  raifing  a  higher  fpirit  of  true  devotion  among 
us,  to  engage  thofe  of  our  profeilion  to  a  greater 
application  to  their  functions  ;  and  to  difpofe  us  all 
to  a  better  underflanding  among  ourfelves  ;  that  we 
might  with  united  endeavours  fet  ourfelves  to  beat 
down  impiety  and  immorality.  She  read  and  medi- 
tated much  on  thefe  fubje6ls ;  and  judged  of  them 
with    fo  juft  an  exadlnefs,    that   it   appeared   the 

ftrength 


^4-       jtn  KsSAY  on  the  Memory  of 

llrength  of  her  mind  went  far  beyond  the  compafs 
of  her  knowledge.  She  took  that  care  to  be  well 
informed  of  thefe  matters,  that  when  fhe  met  with 
hints,  either  in  books  or  fermons,  that  related  to 
other  fubjedts  with  which  jfhe  was  not  acquainted, 
fhe  loft  none  of  them  :  if  they  feemed  to  be  of 
importance,  fhe  called  for  explanations  of  them, 
from  thofe  whom  fhe  fuffered  to  entertain  herupon 
fuch  fubjecSls.  She  propofed  them  often  with  a 
preface,  confeffing  her  own  ignorance  ;  and  when 
ihe  had  flated  fome  difficulties  to  them  very  clearly, 
flie  would  conclude  with  words  that  carried  in 
them  an  air  of  modefty,  that  fliined  then  moft 
particularly,  when  flie  feemed  to  defire  an  increafe 
of  knowledge.  She  would  fay,  *'  fhe  did  not 
**  know  if  there  was  any  difficulty  in  fuch  things 
*'  or  not ;  or,  if  fhe  apprehended  or  exprefTed  it 
'*  right ;  or,  if  it  was  only  her  ignorance."  When 
any  new  thing  was  laid  before  her,  flie  feemed  glad 
to  have  an  occafion  to  own,  that  fhe  knew  nothing 
of  that  before  ;  but  then  fhe  would  have  it  to  be 
fully  explained  to  her,  till  fhe  found  fhe  did  tho- 
roughly apprehend  it.  All  thefe  intimations  were 
fo  carefully  laid  up  by  her,  that  fhe  feemed  fcarce 
capable  of  forgetting  them.  After  feveral  years  ot 
interval,  fhe  returned  in  difcourfe  to  fome  fubjedls, 
that  had  been  formerly  opened  to  her,  with  a  frefh- 
nefs  of  apprehenfion  about  them,  as  if  the  firft 
difcourfe  had  never  been  interrupted.  She  knew 
none  of  the  learned  languages,  yet  when  fome 
.paiTages  of  fcripture  were  explained  to  her,  by  the 

genius 


the  late  ^een  MARY.  35 

genius  and  phrafes  of  the  original  languages,  fhe 
retained  them  very  carefully,  even  though  fhe  un- 
derftood  not  the  foundation  of  them.  She  loved 
fincerity  in  every  thing,  to  fuch  a  degree,  that  fhe 
■defired  to  underftand  the  weak  fide  as  well  as  the 
flrong  one  of  all  parties  and  do6irines.  She  loved 
a  diflincS  knowledge  of  every  thing  ;  and  fhe  had 
•accuflomed  thofe  whom  fhe  admitted  to  talk  to  her 
on  fuch  fubjedls,  to  .hide  neither  the  weaknefs  of 
the  one  fide,  nor  the  flrength  of  the  other  from 
her.  When  fhe  delivered  her  own  judgment, 
which  fhe  generally  avoided  to  do,  unlef?  there 
was  fome  neceffity  for  it,  fhe  did  it  vi^ith  that  mo- 
defly,  as  w^ll  as  exa6lnefs,  that  it  fhewed  the  force 
as  v.^ell  as  the  purity  of  her  mind. 

Next  to  the  befl  fubje<51:s,  flie  beflowed  mofl:  of 
her  time  on  books  of  hiftory,  chiefly  of  the  latter- 
ages,  particularly   thofe  of  her  own  kingdoms,  as 
being  the  moll:  proper  to  give  her  ufeful  inflruc- 
tloii.     Lively  books,    where  wit  and  reafon  gave 
the  mind  a  true  entertainment,   had  m.uch  of  her 
time.     She  was  a  good   judge   as  well  as  a  great 
lover  of  poetry  :  fhe  loved  it  befl  when  it  dwelt 
on  the  beft  fubjeils.     So  tender  fhe  was  of  poetry, 
though  much  more  of  virtue,  that  fhe  had  a  par- 
ticular  concern   in  the  defilement,    or   rather  the 
proftitution  of  the  mufes    among  us.     She  made 
fome  fteps   to   the   underftanding    philofophy    and 
mathcmaticks,  but  fhe  flopped  foon  ;  only  fhe  went 
far  in  natural   hiftory   and  perfpeclive,  as^fhe  was 
very   exa£l  in    geography.     She  thought   fublime 

things 


g6       ^n  Ess  AY  en  the  Memory  of 

things  were  too  high  flights  for  the  fex ;  which  (he 
oft   talked  of  with  a  liberty  that   was  very  lively  : 
but  fhe  might  well   be  familiar  with  it,  after  (he 
had  siveii  fo  efFedual  a  demonftratlon  of  the  im- 
provements   it  was  capable  of.     Upon  the  whole 
matter,  fhe  ftudied   and  read  more  than  could  be 
imagined   by  any,  who  had  not  known  how  many 
of  her  hours  were  fpent  in  her  clofet.     She  would 
have  made  a  much  greater  progrefs,  if  the  frequent 
returns  of  ill  humours  on  her  eyes,  had  not  forced 
her   to    fpare   them.      Her  very    diverfions    gave 
indications  of  a  mind  that  was   truly  great :    ihe 
had  no  relilh  for  thofe  lazy  ones,  that  are  the  too 
common  confumers  of  moft  peoples  time,  and  that 
make  as  great  waftes    on  their  minds,  as  they  do 
on  their  fortunes.     If  {he   ufed   them  fometimes, 
flie  made  it  vifible,  it  was  only  in  compliance  with 
forms  j    becaufe  fhe  was  unwilling  to  offend  others 
with  too  harfh  a  feverity  :    fhe  gave  her  minutes 
of   leifure  with  the  greateft  willingnefs  to  archi- 
tecture and  gardenage.     She  had  a  riches  of  inven- 
tion,   with  a  happinefs  of  contrivance,    that  had 
airs  in  it  that  were    freer  and  nobler  than   what 
was  more  fliff,  though  it  might  be  more  regular : 
fhe  knew  that  this  drew  an  expence  after  it ;  fhe 
had  no  other  inclinations  befides  this,  to  any  diver- 
fions that  were  expenceful  ;  and  fmce  this  employed 
many  hands,  fhe  was  pleafed  to  fay,  "  that  fhe 
*'  hoped  it  would  be  forgiven  her."     Yet  fhe  was 
uneafy  when  fhe  felt    the  weight  of  the  charge 

that  lay  upon  it. 

When 


the  late  ^een  MARY.  gjr 

When  her  eyes  were  endangered  by  reading  toQ 
much,    fhe  found  out  the    amufement  of  work  ; 
and  in  all  thofe  hours  that  were  not  given  to  bet- 
ter employments,  ihe  wrought  with  her  own  hands, 
and  that  fometimes  with   fo  conftant  a  diligence, 
as  if  fhe  had  been  to  earn  her  bread  by  it.     It  was 
a  new  thing,  and  looked  like  a  fight,  to  fee  a  queea 
work  fo   many   hours  a  day.     *'  She  looked  on 
*'  idlenefs  as  the  great  corrupter  of  human  nature ; 
*'  and  believed  that  if  the  mind   had  no  employ- 
"  ment  given  it,  it  would  create  fome  of  the  worft 
*'  fort  to  itfelf :  and  fhe  thought  that  any   thing 
*'  that   might   amufe  and  divert,    without  leaving 
*'  a  dreg  and  ill  imprefTion  behind  it,  ought  to  fill 
"  up  thofe  vacant  hours,  that  were  not  claimed  by 
*'  devotion  or  bufmefs.  "  Her  example  foon  wrought 
on,    not    only   thofe   that  belonged   to   her,    but 
the  whole  town  to  follow  it  :  fo  that  it  was  become 
as  much  the  fafhion  to  work,  as  it  had  been  for- 
merly to  be  idle,     in  this,  which  feemed  a  nothing, 
and  was  turned  by  fome  to  be  the  fuhjeil  of  raillery, 
a  greater  flep  was  made  than  perhaps  every    one 
was  aware  of,  to  the  bettering  of  the  age.     While 
fhe  diverted  herfelf  thus  with  work,  fhe  took  care 
to  give  an  entertainment  to  her  own  mind,  as  well 
as  to  thofe  who  were   admitted  to  the  honour  of 
working  with  her  :  one   was  appointed  to  read  to 
the   reft ;  the  choice  was  fuited  to  the  time  of  the 
day,  and  to  the  employment :  fome  book  or  poem 
that   was   lively,  as   well  as  inftru6ling.     Few  of 
her  fex,  not  to  fay  of  her  rank,  gave  ever  lefs  time 

to 


38         An  'E^% AY  on  the  Memory  of 

to  drefling,  or  feemed  lefs  curious  about  it.  Thofe 
parts  of  it  which  required  more  p-itience,  were  nor 
given  up  intirely  to  it.   She  read  often,  all  the  while 
herfelf,  and  generally  aloud  ;    that  thofe  who   fer- 
ved  about  her,  might  be  the  better  for   it :    when 
Ihe  was  indifpofed,    another  was  called  to  do  it: 
all  was  intermixed  with  fuch  pleafant  refledions  of 
her  own,  that  the  glofs  was  often  better  liked  than 
the  text.     An  agreeable  vivacity  fpread  that  inno- 
cent chearfulnefs  among  all  about  her,  that  whereas 
in  moft  courts,  the  hours  of  fcri6l  attendance  are 
the  heavieft  parts  of  the  day,  they  were  in  hers  the 
moll  delightful  of  all  others. 

Her  chearfulnefs  may  be   well  termed   Innocent, 
for  none  was  ever  hurt  by  it :    no  natural  defcds, 
or  real  faults,  true  or  falfe,  were  ever  the  fubjedls 
of  her  mirth  :    nor  could  flie  bear  it  in  others,  if 
their   wit    happened    to    glance    that    way.      She 
thought  it  a  cruel  and  barbarous  thing,  to  be  merry 
on  other  peoples  cofl ;  or,  to  make  the  misfortunes 
or  follies  of  others,  the  matter  of  their  diverfion. 
She  fcarce  ever  expreiled  a  more  intire  fatisfadion 
in  any  fermon  that  flie  had  heard,  than  in  our  late 
primate's  againft  evil  fpeaking.    When  flie  thought 
fome  were  guilty  of  it,    fhe   would   afk  them,   if 
they  had  read   that  fermon.     This  was  underftood 
to  be  a  reprimand,   though  In  the  fofteft  manner. 
She  had  indeed  one  of  the  bleflings  of  virtue,  that 
does  not  always  accompany  it :  for  flie  was  as  free 
from  cenfures,   as   flie  was  from  deferving  them> 
'  When  refledions  were  made  on  this,  before  her, 

flie 


the  late  ^een  MARY.  3.9 

file  faid,  "  flie  afcribed  that  wholly  to  the  good- 
"  nefs  of  God  to  her  :  for  fhe  did  not  doubt  but 
*'  that  many  fell  under  hard  charaders,  that  de- 
"  ferved  them  as  little.  She  gave  it  this  further 
**  turn,  that  God  knew  her  weaknefs,  and  that 
"  fhe  was  not  able  to  bear  fome  imputations  j  and 
*'  therefore  he  did  not  try  her  beyond  her  ftrength." 
In  one  refpedl,  fhe  intended  never  to  provoke  c&n- 
fure:  fhe  was  confcientioufly  tender  of  wounding 
others  ;  and  faid,  "  fhe  hoped  God  would  flili 
"  blefs  her  in  her  own  good  name,  as  long  as  flie 
"^  was  careful  not  to  hurt  others ;  "  but  as  fhe 
was  exadl  in  not  wronging  any  other  while  fhe  di- 
verted herfelf,  fo  upon  indifferent  fubjeds  fhe  had 
a  fpring  of  chearfulnefs  in  her,  that  was  never  to 
be  exhaufted  :  it  never  run  to  repetition,  or  forced 
mirth. 

A  mind  that  was  fo  exalted  by  nature,  and  w:i% 
fo  improved  by  induftry,  who  was  as  much  above 
all  about  her  by  her  merit,  as  fhe  was  by  her 
condition,  and  that  owed  thofe  peculiar  advantages 
under  God,  chiefly  to  herfelf,  for  very  little  was 
added  to  her  by  others,  had  certainly  a  right  to  in- 
dulgent cenfures,  even  though  fhe  had  given  oc- 
cafion  to  them.  Much  ought  to  have  been  forgiven 
to  one  that  had  deferved  io  well  j  but  this  is  per- 
haps the  firft  infl^ance  that  the  world  has  yet  feen, 
of  one  that  had  fo  much  in  her  that  deferved  to  bs 
valued  and  admired,  without  one  fmgle  defecSl  or 
allay,  that  needed  allowances  to  be  made  for  it. 

i  have 


46        An  Essay  on  the  Memory  of 

1  have  dwelt  hitherto  upon  the  more  general 
parts  of  her  charadter  ;  I  go  next  to  confider  what 
was  more  fpecial.  Thofe  that  deferve  to  be  moft 
enlarged  on,  are  the  difpofitions  of  her  mind,  both 
with  relation  to  the  impreffions  of  religion,  and  the 
companions  of  human  nature.  What  fhe  was  in- 
wardly with  relation  to  God,  was  only  known  to 
him  whom  fhe  now  fees  face  to  face.  Thofe  with 
whom  Ihe  talked  with  more  than  ordinary  freedom 
-  upon  thofe  matters,  faw  on  many  occafions  what 
an  awful  fenfe  (lie  had  of  God,  and  of  all  things 
in  which  his  glory  was  concerned  j  they  faw  with 
how  exa61:  a  teudernefs  {he  weighed  every  thing 
by  which  the  purity  of  her  own  confcience  was  to 
be  preferved,  unblemifhed  as  well  as  unfpotted. 

In  thofe  great  fteps  of  her  later  years,  that  carried 
a  face  which  at  firft  appearance  feemed  liable  to 
cenfure,  and  that  were  the  fmcrle  inflances  of  her 
whole  life,  that  might  be  thought  capable  of  hard 
conftruiStions  ;  Ihe  weighed  the  reafons  fhe  went 
on  vvlth  a  caution  and  exadtnefs  that  well  became 
the  Importance  of  them  ;  the  biafs  lying  ftill  againft 
that,  which  to  vulgar  minds  might  feem  to  be 
her  intereft.  She  was  convinced  that  the  public 
good  of  mankind,  the  prefer vation  of  that  religion, 
which  fhe  was  afl'ured  was  the  only  true  one,  and 
thofe  real  extremities  to  which  matters  vyere  driven, 
ought  to  fuperfede  all  other  confiderations.  She 
had  generous  notions  of  the  liberty  of  human  nature, 
and  of  the  true  ends  of  government  ;  fhe  thought 
it  was  defigned  to  make  mankind  fafe  and   happy, 

and 


the  late  ^(eenM^RY.  41 

nnd  not  to  raife  the  power  of  thofe,  into  whofe 
hands  it  was  committed,  upon  the  ruins  of  property 
and  liberty.  Nor  could  {he  think  that  religion  was- 
te be  delivered  up  to  the  humours  of  mifguided 
princes,  whofe  perfuafion  m^ade  them  as  cruel  in 
impofuig  on  their  fubjedls  the  dictates  of  others, 
as  they  themfelves  were  implicit  in  fubmitting  to 
them  :  yet  after  all,  her  inclinations  lay  fo  ftrong 
to  a  duty,  that  nature  had  put  her  under,  that  {he 
made  a  facrifice  of  herfelf  in  accepting  that  high 
elevation,  that  perhaps  was  harder  to  her  to  bear, 
than  if  {he  had  been  to  be  made  a  facrifice  in  the  fe- 
vered fenfe.  She  faw  that  not  only  her  own  repu- 
tation might  fufFer  by  it,  but  that  religion  too 
might  be  concerned  in  thofe  reproaches  that  {he 
was  to  look  for.  This  was  much  more  to  her 
than  all  that  crowns  with,  their  gaudy  luflre  could 
ofter  inftead  of  ft ;  but  the  faving  of  whole  nations 
feemed  to  require  it ;  and  that  being  the  only  vifible 
mean  left  to  preferve  the  proteftant  religion,  not 
only  here,  but  every  where  elfe,  {he  was  thereby 
determined  to  it. 

She  was  no  enthufiafl  ;  and  yet  {he  could  not 
avoid  thinking,  that  her  being  preferved  during  - 
her  childhood  in  that  flexibility  of  age  and  un- 
derflanding,  without  fo  much  as  one  fingle  at- 
tempt made  upon  her,  was  to  be  afcribed  to  a 
fpecial  providence  watching  over  her  :  to  that  {lie 
added,  her  being  early  delivered  from  the  danger  of 
all  temptations,  and  the  advantages  {he  had  after- 
wards to  employ  much  privacy  in  fo  large  a  courfe 

D  of 


42        An  ^^s> AY  on  the  Memory  of 

of  ftudy,  which  had  not  been  poflible  for  her  to  have 
compafled,  if  fhe  had  lived  in  the  conftant  diffipa- 
tion  of  a  public  court.     Thefe  concurring  had  con- 
vinced   her,  that   God  had  condu(9:ed  her  by  an 
immediate    hand,   and   that  fhe  was  raifed   up  to 
preferve  that  religion  which  was  then  every  where 
in  its  laft  agonies  ;  yet  when  thefe  and  many  other 
confiderations,  which  ihe  had  carefully  attended  to, 
determined  her,  nature  IHII  felt  itfelf  loaded  :  flie 
bore  it  with  the  outward  appearances  of  fatisfa£lion, 
becaufe  fhe  thought  it  became  her  not  to  difcourage 
others,  or  to  give  them  an  occafion  to  believe  that 
her  uneafmefs  was  of  another  nature  than  truly  it 
was  ;  but  in  that  whole  matter  fhe  put  a  conftraint 
upon  herfelf  (upon  her  temper  I  mean,  for  no  con- 
fiderationwhatfoever  could  have  enduced  her  to  have 
forced  her  confcience,)  that  was  more  fenfible  and 
violent  to  her,  than  any  thing  that  could  have  been 
wifhed  her  by  the  mofl  enraged  and  virulent  of  all 
her  enemies. 

Oh,  could  any  be  enemies  to  fuch  virtue  !  and 
to  fo  pure  and  fo  angelical  a  mind  I  Could  fhe  that 
was  the  glory  of  her  fex,  the  darling  of  human  na- 
ture, and  the  wonder  of  all  that  knew  her,  become 
the  fubjedl:  of  hatred  or  obloquy  I 

A  nobler  fubjecl  calls  me  from  this  tranfport  j  to 
look  over  the  other  parts  of  her  chara£ler,  upon 
this  head  of  religion.  Modefty  and  humility  co- 
vered a  great  deal  from  common  obfervation,  indeed 
all  that  was  poffible  for  her  to  conceal ;  but  no 
clouds  can  quite  darken  the  day  j  it  calls  a  light 

evea 


the  late  ^een  MARY.  43 

even  when  it  does  not  fhine  out.  Her  pun(3:ual 
exaftnefs,  not  only  to  public  offices,  but  to  her 
fecret  retirements,  was  fo  regular  a  thing,  that  it 
was  never  put  off  in  the  greateft  croud  of  bufinefs 
or  little  journeys  j  then,  though  the  hour  was  an- 
ticipated, the  duty  was  never  negledled  :  fhe  took 
care  to  be  fo  early  on  thofe  occafions,  that  (he 
might  never  either  quite  forget,  or  very  muchfhorten 
that,  upon  which  flie  reckoned  that  the  bleffing  of 
the  whole  day  turned.  She  obferved  the  Lord's  day 
fo  religioufly,  that  befides  her  hours  of  retirement, 
jfhe  was  conftantly  thrice  a  day  in  the  public  wor- 
ship of  God  ;  and  for  a  great  part  of  the  year  four 
times  a  day  while  fhe  lived  beyond  fea.  She  was 
conftant  to  her  monthly  communions,  and  retired 
herfelf  more  than  ordinary  for  fome  days  before  them. 
In  them,  as  well  as  in  all  the  other  parts  of  the  wor- 
fhip  of  God,  an  unexampled  ferioufnefs  appeared 
always  in  her,  without  one  glance  let  out  for  ob- 
fervation  ;  and  fuch  care  was  taken  to  hide  the 
more  folemn  elevations  of  her  mind  to  God,  that 
thefe  thin2;s  ftruck  all  thofe  who  faw  them,  but 
had  never  feen  any  thing  like  them  before.  This 
did  fpread  a  fpiiit  of  devotion  among  all  that  were 
about  her,  who  could  not  fee  fo  much  in  her,  with- 
out feeling  fomewhat  to  arife  in  themfelves  ;  though 
few  could  chain  themfelves  down  to  fuch  a  fixed 
and  fteady  application  as  they  faw  in  her.  No- 
thing in  that  was  theatrical,  nothing  given  to 
(hew ;  every  thing  was  fincere,  as  well  as  folemn, 
and  genuine  as  well  as  majeftical. 

D  2  '  Her 


44     ■^^'  Essay  on  the    Memory  cf 

Her  attention  to  fermons  was  fo  entire,  that  as 
her  eye  never  wandered  from  a  good  preaeher,  fo 
flie  fliewed  no  wearincfs  of  an  indifferent  one  :  when 
fhe  was  afked,  how  fhe  could  be  fo  attentive  to 
fome  fermons  that  were  fiir  from  being  perfeft.  Die. 
anfwercd,  "  That  fhe  thought  it  did  not  become 
*'  her,  by  any  part  of  her  behaviour,  to  difcourage, 
*'  or  feem  to  diflike  one  that  was  doino-  his   beft." 

to 

The  hardeft  cenfure  that  (he  pall  on  the  word,  was 
to  fay  nothing  to  their  advantage  ;  for  (he  never  de- 
nied her  commendations  to  any  thing  thatdcferved 
them.  She  was  not  content  to  be  devout  herfelf  ; 
fhe  infufed  that  temper  into  all  that  came  near  her  j 
chiefly  into  thofe  whom  fhe  took  into  her  more  im- 
mediate care,  w^hom  fhe  ftudied  to  form  with  the 
tendernefs  and  watchfulnefs  of  a  mother.  She 
charmed  them  with  her  inftrudlions,  as  fhe  over- 
came them  with  her  kindnefs ;  never  was  miftrefs 
both  feared  and  loved  fo  entirely  as  fhe  was.  She 
fcattered  books  of  inftru6lion  to  all  that  were  round 
about  her,  and  gave  frequent  orders  that  good  books 
fhould  be  laid  in  the  places  of  attendance,  that  fuch 
as  waited,  might  not  be  condemned  toidlenefs  ;  but 
might  entertain  themfelves  ufefully,  while  they 
were  in  their  turns  of  fervice. 

She  had  a  true  regard  to  piety  wherever  fhe  faw 
it,  in  what  form  or  party  foever.  Her  judgment 
tied  her  to  our  communion,  but  her  charity  was  ex- 
tended to  all.  The  liberty  that  fome  have  taken 
to  unchurch  great  bodies  of  chriftians,  for  fome  de- 
feds  and  irregularities,   were  ftrains  that  Hie  couM 

never 


the  late  ^teen  MARY.  45 

never  aflent  to  ;  nor  indeed  could  fhe  well  bear 
them.  She  longed  to  fee  us  In  a  clofer  conjuniiLion 
with  all  proteftants  abroad,  and  hoped  we  might 
flrengthen  ourfclves  at  home,  by  uniting  to  us  as 
many  as  could  be  brought  within  our  body.  Few 
things  ever  grieved  her  more,  than  that  thofe  hopes 
feemed  to  languifli,  and  that  the  profpedl  of  fo  de- 
fired  an  union  vanifhcd  out  of  fight. 

The  raifmg  the  reputation  and  authority  of  the 
clergy,  as  the  chief  inftrument  for  advancing  reli- 
gion, was  that  to  which  flie  intended  to  apply  her 
utmoft  diligence.  She  knew  that  the  only  true 
way  to  compafs  this,  was  to  engage  them  to  be 
exemplary  in  their  lives,  and  eminent  in  their  la- 
•boufs  ;  to  watch  over  their  flocks,  and  to  edify 
them  by  good  preaching  and  diligent  catechifmg. 
She  was  refolved  to  have  the  whole  nation  under- 
ftand,  that  by  thefe  ways,  and  by  thefe  only,  di- 
vines were  to  be  recommended  to  favour  and  pre- 
ferment. She  made  it  vifible,  that  the  fteps  were 
to  be  made  by  merit,  and  not  by  friendfhip  and 
importunity.  Solicitations  and  afpirlngs  were  prac- 
tices that,  affecled  her  deeply  ;  bccaufe  fhe  faw  the 
ufe  that  was  made  of  them  by  malicious  obfervers  ; 
who  concluded  from  thence,  that  we  run  to  our 
profeflion  as  to  a  trade,  for  the  fake  of  the  gains 
and  honours  that  we  might  find  in  it,  and  not  to 
fave  fouls,  or  to  edify  the  church.  Every  inflance 
of  this  kind  gave  her  a  fenfible  wound,  becaufe  it 
hardened  bad  men  in  the  contempt  of  religion.  She 
therefore  charged  thofe,  whom  Ihc  truflcd  niofl:  iii 

D    3.  fuch 


4^       ^n  Essay  en  the  Memory  of 

fuch  matters,  to  look  out  for  the  beft  men,  and 
the  beft  preachers,  that  they  might  be  made  known 
to  her.  She  was  under  a  real  anxiety  when  church- 
preferments,  efpecially  the  more  eminent  ones,  were 
to  be  difpofed  of.  She  reckoned  that  that  was  one 
of  the  main  parts  of  her  care  j  for  which  a  parti- 
cular account  was  to  be  given  to  that  God,  from 
whom  her  authority  was  derived,  and  to  whom  fhe 
had  devoted  it.  When  fhe  apprehended  that 
friendfhip  might  give  a  biafs  to  thofe  whom  fhe  al- 
lowed to  fpeak  to  her  on  thofe  heads ;  fhe  told 
them  of  it,  with  the  authority  that  became  her, 
and  that  they  well  deferved.  She  could  deny  the 
moft  earneft  folicitations,  with  a  true  firmnefs, 
■when  fhe  thought  the  perfon  did  not  deferve  them  ; 
for  that  was  fuperior  with  her  to  all  other  con- 
fiderations.  But  when  fhe  denied  things,  fhe  did 
it  with  fo  much  foftnefs,  and  upon  fo  good  reafon, 
that  fuch  as  might  be  mortified  by  the  repulfe,  were 
yet  forced  to  confefs  that  fhe  was  in  the  right  j 
even  when,  for  the  fake  of  a  friend,  they  v/ifhed 
fhe  had  for  once  been  in  the  wrong. 

It  grieved  her  to  hear  how  low  and  depauperated 
a  great  many  of  the  churches  of  England  were  be- 
come :  which  were  funk  into  fuch  extreme  poverty, 
that  it  was  fcarce  polTible,  even  by  the  help  of  a  plu- 
rality, to  find  a  fubfiftence  in  them.  She  had  form- 
ed a  great  and  noble  defign,  to  bring  them  all  to  a 
juft  flute  of  plenty,  and  to  afford  a  due  encourage- 
ment ;  but  pluralities  and  non-refidence,  when  not 
enforced  by  real  neceility,  were  otherwife  fo  odious 

to 


tie  late  ^een  MARY.  47 

•to  her,  that  fhe  refolvcd  to  throw  fuch  perpetual 
difgraces  upon  them,  as  fhould  oblige  all  perlbns  to 
let  go  the  hold  that  they  had  got  of  the  cures  ot 
fouls,  over  whom  they  did  not  watch,  and  among 
whom  they  did  not  labour. 

In  a  full  difcourfe  on  this  very  fubiecl,  the  day 
feefore  the  fatal  iilnefs  ove 'took  her ;  {he  faid, 
^*  fhe  had  no  great  hope  of  mending  matters  ;  )'ct 
"  fhe  was  refolved  to  go  on,  and  never  to  fuffer 
"  herfelf  to  be  difcouraged,  or  to  Jofe  heart :  fhe 
*'  would  flill  try  what  could  be  done,  and  perfue 
*'  her  defign,  how  flow  or  inferifible  foeyer  the 
*'  progrefs  might  be."  She  had  taken  pains  to 
form  a  true  plan  of  the  primitive  conftitutions  ; 
and  had  refolved  to  bring  ours,  as  near  it  as  could 
he  ;  that  fo  it  might  become  more  firm  and  ufeful, 
for  attaining  the  great  ends  of  religion.  Neither 
the  fpirit  of  a  party,  nor  of  bigotry,  lay  at  the 
bottom  of  all  this.  She  did  not  project  any  part 
of  it  as  an  art  of  government,  or  an  inftrument 
of  power  and  dominion. 

Her  fcheme  was  thus  laid  ;  fhe  thought  that  the 
chriftian  religion  was  revealed  from  heaven,  to 
make  mankind  happy  here,  as  well  as  hereafter  : 
and  that  as  mankind  and  fociety  could  not  fubfift 
without  any  religion  at  all,  fo  alfo  the  corruption 
of  chriftianity  had  made  many  nations  the  worfe 
rather  than  the  better,  for  that  fhadow  of  it  that 
was  received  amon*  them.  She  thought  that  a 
pious,  learned,  and  laborious  clergy,  was  the 
chief  me.m  of  bringing  the  world  under  the  power 

D  4  of 


4-8        ^«  Essay  on  the  Memory  of 

of  the    chriftian  religion  ;    and  that  the  treating 
their  perfons  with  refpe(Sl,  was  neceflary  to  procure 
them  credit  in  the  difcharge  of  their  fun6lion.    She 
intended  to  carry  on  all  this  together,  and  not  any 
one  part  of  it  feparate  from   the   reft.     If  at  any 
time  {he  knew  any  thing  in   thofe  who  ferved   at 
the  altar,  that  expofed  them  to  juft  cenfures,  (he 
covered  it  all  that  could  be  from  common  obferva- 
tion ;    but  took  care  that  the  perfons   concerned 
fhould  be  both   roundly  fpoke  to,    and    proceeded 
againfc  when  fofter  methods  did  not  fucceed,  or 
that    it    feemed    necelTary    that    their   punifhment 
ought  to  be  made  as  public  as  their  crimes    were. 
She   would  never  fufFer  any   to  go   away  with   a 
conceit,  that  a  zeal  for  the  fervice  of  the  crown, 
could  atone  for  other  faults ;  or  compound  for  the 
great  duties  of.  their  fun(5lion.     This  feemed  to  be 
the  fctting  the  interefts  of  religion  after  their  own  j 
but  file  was   refolved  to  give  them  always   the  pre- 
ference. 

No  intimation  was  ever  let  fall  to  her  in  any 
difcourfe,  that  offered  a  probable  mean  of  making 
us  better,  which  was  loft  by  her.  She  would  call 
upon  fome  to  turn  that  motion  over  and  over  again, 
till  fhe  had  formed  her  own  thoughts  concerning 
it.  The  laft  thing  that  fhe  had  fettled  with  our 
late  bleffed  primate,  was  a  fchemc  of  fuch  rules, 
as  our  prefent  circumftances  could  bear,  publiflied 
fmce  by  his  majefly ;  which  was  an  earnefl  of 
many  others  that  were  to  follow  in  due  time.  It 
was  indeed   an  r.mazin^,   as  well  as  a  delightful 

thing, 


the  tale  ^teen  MARY.  49 

thln^T,  to  fee   how  well  fhe  underftood  fuch  mat- 
ters,  and  how  much  flie  was  fet  on  piomoting  them. 
She  jy|||ed   aright,  that  the  true  end  of  power, 
and  the  "Deft  exercife  of  it,  was  to  do  good,  and  to 
make  the  world  the  better  for  it.     She  often  faid, 
that  fhe  found  nothing  in  it  to  make  it  fupportable, 
not  to  fay  pleafant,  befides  that  :  and  fhe  wondered 
that  the  true  pleafure   which  accompanied  it,  did 
not   engage   princes  to    perfiie  it  more   effectually. 
Without  this  file  thought,  that  a  private  life,  with 
moderate  circumflances,    was   the  happier  as   well 
as   the   fafer  flate.     When    refleilions   were   once 
made  before  her,  of  the  fharpnefs   of  fome  hifto- 
jiraiVf  v/ho  had  left  heavy  imputations  on  the  me- 
Jnory  of  fome   princes ;    fhe   anfwered,    "  that   if 
I"  thofe  princes    were  truly  fuch,  as  the  hiftorians 
•  "  reprefented   them,'  they   had  well  deferved   that 
"  treatment ;    and   others   who   tread    their  fteps, 
*'  might  look  for   the  fame  :  for  the   truth  would 
'-  be  told  at  lafl,  and  that  with  the  more  acrim.ony 
"  of  flilc,  for  being  fo  long  reftraincd.     It  was  a 
"  gentle  fuftering  to  be  expofed   to   the   world    ia 
*'  their  true  colours,  much  below  what  others  had 
"  fuftered  at  their  hands  :  file  thou2:ht  that  all  fo- 
*'  vereigns    ought  to  read    fuch  hiflories   as    Pro- 
*'  copius  ;    for   how    much    foever   he  may    have 
*'    aggravated    matters,     and    how    unbecomingly 
"  foever  he  may  have  writ,  yet  by  fuch  books  they 
*'  might  fee,  what  would  be  probably  faid  of  theni- 
**  felves,  when  all  terrors  and  rertraints  fhould  fall 
"  oft"    with   their    li\'cs."     She  encouraged    thofe 

whom 


50        /^n  E.  s  s  A  Y  on  the  Memory  of 

whom  {he  admitted  to  frequent  accefs,  to  lay  before 
her  all  the  occafions   of  doing  good   that    might 
occur  to   their  thoughts  ;    and    was    always   well 
pleafed  when  new  opportunities  were  offered  to  her, 
in  which   fhe  might   exercife  that  which  was  the 
inoft  valued  of  all  her  prerogatives.    So  defirous  fhe 
was  to   know  both  how   to  corre6l  what  might  be 
amifs,  and  to  promote  every  good  defign,  that  fhe 
not  only    allowed  of  great  freedom,    in  bringing 
proportions  of  that  kind  to  her,  but  fhe  charged  the 
confciences  of  fome,  with  a  command  to  keep  no- 
thing of  that  nature  from  her,  which  they  thought 
fhe  ou2:ht  to  know.     Nor  were  fuch  motions  ever 
unacceptable  to   her ;    even   when  other    circum- 
ftances  made  it  impoflible  for  her  to  put  them  in 
execution. 

The  reforming  the  manners  of  her  people  was 
one  of  her  chief  cares.  If  a  greater  progrefs  was 
not  made  in  this,  according  to  the  pious  wifhes  of 
fome,  who  had  good  intentions,  and  much  zeal, 
the  true  account  of  that  flownefs  was  this ;  fhe  had 
often  heard  that  the  hypocrify  of  the  former  times 
had  brought  on  the  atheifm  and  impiety  of  the  pre- 
fent,  and  had  fortified  libertines  in  their  prejudices ; 
therefore  flie  refolved  to  guard  againft  every  thing 
that  might  feem  to  revive  that.  She  obferved  that 
Jofiah  was  for  the  fpace  of  four  years  engaged  in  a 
religious  courfe  of  life,  before  he  fet  himfelf  to  the 
reforming  of  his  people;  that  by  the  example  he  fet 
them,  he  might  gain  fo  much  credit  in  carrying  on 
that  defign,  as  might  excufe,  as  well  as  compen- 

fate 


the  late  ^leen  MARY.  51 

fate  the  flownefs  of  beginning  it.  She  judged  that 
all  people  ought  to  be  well  poffefTed  of  their  inten- 
tions in  that  matter :  and  fhe  feared,  lefl  in  the 
dif-jointed  ftate,  in  which  our  affairs  have  lain  fo 
long,  the  going  on  with  that  defign  might  have 
the  face  of  ferving  fome  other  end  under  that  ap- 
pearance, for  that  will  be  popular,  even  when 
things  are  in  a  very  corrupt  flate.  Therefore  tho* 
this  was  no  fooner  moved  to  her,  than  fhe  fet  it  a 
going,  yet  finding  few  inftruments  to  concur  in  it, 
and  feeing  a  violent  oppofition  to  thofe  that  did, 
fhe  thought  that  her  putting  her  whole  flrength  to 
it  might  be  referved  with  great  advantage  to  ano- 
ther time,  in  which  our  affairs  fliould  have  a  calmer 
face,  and  be  brought  to  a  more  fedate  flate.  She 
did  hearken  carefully  after  every  thing  that  feemed 
to  give  fome  hope,  that  the  next  generation  Ihould 
be  better  than  the  prefent,  with  a  particular  atten- 
tion. She  heard  of  a  fpirit  of  devotion  and  piet)'^, 
that  was  fpreading  itfclf  among  the  youth  of  this 
great  city,  with  a  true  fatisfaclion  ;  fhe  enquired 
often  and  much  about  it,  and  was  glad  to  hear  it 
went  on  and  prevailed.  "  She  lamented  that 
*'  whereas  the  devotions  of  the  church  of  Rome  were 
*'  all  (hew,  and  made  up  of  pomp  and  pageantry  ; 
*'  that  we  were  too  bare  and  naked  ;  and  pradifed 
*'  not  enough  to  entertain  a  ferious  temper,  or  a 
*'  warm  and  an  affe6lionate  heart  :  we  might  have 
**  light  enough  to  diredt,  but  wc  wanted  flame  to 
*'  raife  an  exalted  devotion." 

I 


52         An  "Es?, AY  on  the  Memory  of 

I  have  now  given  fome  inftances  of  the  temper 
of  her  mind,  in  that  which  concerned  God  and 
reh'gion ;  I  go  in  the  next  place  to  confider  her 
with  relation  to  human  nature. 

Princes  are  railed  fo  far  above  the  reft  of  mankind, 
that  they  do  generally  lofe  fight  ofthofe  miferies  to 
which  the  greater  part  is  fubjedt.  It  would  difturb 
that  eafe,  in  which  they  pafs  away  their  hours 
too  much,  to  hear  difmai  recitals  of  the  calamities 
of  their  people.  How  much  foever  they  may  be 
lifted  up  with  the  glorious  title  of  the  parents  of 
their  country,  yet  for  the  moft  part  they  know 
little  of  the  preiTures  their  people  lie  under,  and 
they  feel  them  lefs.  Our  bleiTed  queen  was  be- 
come the  delight  of  all  that  knew  her,  by  the 
obliging  tendernefs  with  which  fhe  treated  all  thol'e 
who  came  near  her  :  flie  made  the  afRi6lions  of  the 
unfortunate  eafier  to  them,  by  the  fhare  that  fh-e 
bore  of  them,  and  the  neceflities  of  the  miferable 
the  more  fupportable,  by  the  relief  that  fhe  gave 
them.  She  was  tender  of  thofe  who  deferved  her 
favour ;  and  companionate  towards  thofe  who 
wanted  her  pity.  It  y^'as  eafy  for  her  to  reward, 
for  all  forts  of  bounty  flowed  readily  from  her.  But 
it  was  much  harder  for  her  to  punifh,  except  when 
the  nature  of  the  crime  made  mercy  become  a  cru- 
elty, and  then  fhe  was  inflexible,  not  only  to  im- 
portunity, but  to  the  tendernefs  of  her  own  com- 
paffionate  heart. 

She  was  indeed  happily  framed  by  nature,  which 
wrought  fo  foon  that  it  prevented  education.     She 

was 


the  la-te  ^een  MARY.  53 

was  goofi  and  gentle,  before  fhe  was  capable  of 
knowing  that  fhe  ought  to  be  fo.  This  grew  up 
with  her  in  the  whole  progrefs  of  childhood  :  flie 
might  need  inftru6lion,  but  fhe  wanted  no  per- 
fuafion  ;  and  I  have  been  often  told  that  (he  never 
once,  in  the  whole  courfe  of  her  education,  gave 
any  occafion  to  reprove  her  :  fo  naturally  did  (he  go 
into  every  thing  that  was  good,  often  before  (lie 
knew  it,  and  always  after  fhe  once  underftood  it. 

She  was  but  grouping  out  of  childhood,  when 
fhe  went  among  ftrangcrs  ;  but  fhe  went  under  the 
guard  of  fo  exa£t  a  conduct,  and  fo  much  difcre- 
tion  ;  fhe  exprefl'ed  fuch  agentlenefs,  acceis  to  her 
was  fo  eafy,  and  her  deportment  was  fo  obliging  1 
her  life  was  fuch  an  example,  and  her  charity  was 
fo  free,  that  perhaps  no  age  ever  had  fuch  an  inftancc. 
Never  was  there  fuch  an  univerfal  love  and  cfteeni 
(one  is  tem.pted  to  feek  for  other  words,  if  langu:ige 
did  afford  them)  paid  to  any,  as  fhe  had  from 
perfons  of  all  ranks  and  conditions  in  the  United 
Provinces.  It  was  like  tranfport  and  rapture  :  the 
veneration  was  fo  profound,  that  how  juft  foever 
it  might  be,  it  feemed  rather  excefUve.  Neither 
her  foreign  birth,  nor  regal  extra£tion,  neither  the 
diverfity  of  intcrefls  of  opinions,  nor  her  want  of 
power  and  treafure,  (equal  to  her  bounty)  dimi- 
nifhed  the  refpects  that  were  offered  her,  even  from 

a  people,  whofe  conflitution  gives  them  naturally  a 
jealoufy  of  too  great  a  merit  in  thofe  who  arc   at 

the  head  of  their  government. 


54       ^n  TLssAY  on  the  Memory  of 

I  am  afraid  to  enlarge  too  much  on  the  juftlcc 
that  was  done  her  in  thefe  parts  ;  or  on  that  uni- 
verfal  mourning,  with  which  her  departui-e  from 
them  was  followed  :  thatfeemed  fcarce  capable  of  an 
addition,  till  now  that  there  has  appeared  fo  black  a 
gloom  of  defpondingforrow  fpread  among  them  all  ; 
defpair  and  death  feeming  to  dwell  on  every  face, 
when  the  dreadful  news  flew  over  to  them.  I  am 
afraid,  I  fay,  to  dwell  too  much  on  this,  leaft  it 
may  feem  to  reproach  thofe  who  owed  her  much 
more. 

In  her  chara6ler,  ordinary  things,  how  fmgular 
foever  {he  might  be  in  them,  muft  be  thrown  Into 
the  heap.  She  was  a  gentle  miftrefs,  a  kind  friend, 
(if  this  word  is  too  low  for  her  ftate,  it  is  not  too 
low  for  her  humility,)  and  above  all  flie  was  fo 
tender  and  fo  refpeclful  a  wife,  that  fhe  feemed  to 
go  beyond  the  perfecSleft  ideas  that  wit  or  invention 
has  been  able  to  rife  to.  The  lowefl  condition 
of  life,  or  the  greateft  inequality  of  fortune,  has 
not  afforded  fo  perfe£l  a  pattern.  Tendernefs  and 
complacency  feemed  to  ftrive  which  of  them  fhould 
te  the  more  eminent.  She  had  no  higher  fatls- 
faction  in  the  profpeft  of  greatnefs,  that  was  def- 
cending  on  her,  than  that  it  gave  her  an  occafion 
of  making  him  a  prefent  worthy  of  himfelf.  Nor 
had  crowns  or  thrones  any  charm  in  them,  that 
■was  fo  pleafant  to  her,  as  that  they  raifed  him  to 
a  greatnefs,  which  he  fo  well  deferved,  and  could 
io  well  maintain.  She  was  all  zeal  and  rapture, 
when  any  thing  was  to  be  done,  that  could  either 

exprefs 


the  late  ^mn  MARY.  c,^ 

exprefs  affeftion,  or  (hew  refpei^:  to  him.  She 
obeyed  with  more  pleafure,  than  the  moft  ambiti- 
ous could  have  when  they  command.  This  fubjecSi: 
is  too  hard  to  be  well  fet  out,  and  fo  it  muft  be  lefc 
in  general  and  larger  exprefllons. 

Thofe  who  ferved  her,  can  never  give  over 
when  they  are  relating  the  inftances  of  her  gentle- 
nefs  to  them  all.  She  was  fo  foft  when  flie  gave 
her  orders,  and  fo  careful  of  not  putting  too  much 
upon  them  ;  fo  tender  of  them  in  their  ficknefs 
and  afflidlions,  fo  liberal  on  many  different  occa- 
fions,  that  as  the  inftances  are  innumerable,  fo" 
they  have  peculiarities  in  them  which  (liew  that 
every  thing  in  her  was  of  a  piece  with  the  reft. 
She  (hewed  a  fenfibility  at  the  death  of  thofe  v/hom 
llie  particularly  valued  ;  that  perfons  of  fo  exalted 
a  condition,  do  generally  think  may  miibecome 
them.  The  many  tears  that  flie  fhed  upon  the 
death  of  our  good  primate,  who  got  the  ftart  of 
her,  a  very  few  days,  fliewed  how  well  (he  under- 
ftood  his  worth,  and  how  much  fhe  valued  it. 

So  careful  flie  was  of  all  that  belonged  to  her, 
that  when  flie  faw  what  her  laft  ficknefs  was  like 
to  grow  to,  flie  made  thofe,  who  had  not  yet  gone 
through  it,  withdraw.  She  would  fuffer  none  to  ft^y 
about  her,  when  their  attendance  might  endanger 
their  own  health ;  and  yet  fi\e  was  fo  tender  of 
them,  when  they  fell  under  that  fo  juftly  dread- 
ful illnefs,  that  flie  would  not  fuffer  them  to  be 
removed,  though  they  happened  to  be  lodged  very 
near  herfelf. 

Her 


^6       y^ii  Es  5  AY  on  the  Memory  of 

Her  bounty  and  her  compaffions  had  great  mat- 
ter   given   them   to  work  upon.     And   how  wide 
foever  her  fphere  may  have  been,  fhe  went  in  this 
rather  beyond   her  ftrength,  than   kept   within    it. 
Thofe   generous   confeflbrs   and   exiles   whom  the 
perfecutioa    of  France  fent  over  hither,  as  well  as 
to  the  United  Provihces,  felt  the  tendernefs  as  well 
as  the  bounty  of  the  welcome  that  fhe  gave  them. 
The  confufions  of  Ireland  drove  over  multitudes  of 
all  ranks,  who  fled  hither  for  flielter,  and  M'ere  foon 
reduced  to   great  ftraights,  from  a  Hate  of  as  great 
plenty  :  moft  of  thefe  wcre^   by  her  means,   both 
fupported  during  their  ftay,  and  enabled   to  return 
home  after  that  ftorm  was  over  :  the  largeiiefs   of 
the  fupplies   that  were  given,  and  the  tender  man- 
ner  of  giving   them,    made    their    exile   both   the 
fliorter  and  the  more  tolerable  :  the  miferable  among 
ourfelves,  particularly   thofe   who   fuftered    by   the 
accidents   of  war,  found   in    her  a  relief  that   was 
eafily  come  at,  and  was  copioufly  fmnilhcd.     She 
would  never  limit  any  from  laying   proper  objects 
for  her  charity  in  her  way ;  nor  confine  that  care 
to  the  minifters  of  the  Almonry  ;  fhe   encouraged 
all  that  were  about  her,  or  that  had  free  accefs  to 
her,  to  acquaint   her  with    the    neceflities     under 
which  perfons  of  true  merit  might  languifh  ;   and 
{xio.  was  never  uneafy  at   applications  of  that  kind, 
nor  was   her  hand  ever   fcanty,  when  the   perfon 
was    defeiving,    or    the    extremity   was   pinching. 
She  was  regular  and  exa^t  in  this  ;  fhe  found  that 
even  a  royal  treafure,  though  difpenfed  by  a  hand 

that 


the  late  §lueen  MARY.  57 

that  was  yet  more  royal,  could  not  anfwer  all  de- 
mands. Therefore  flie  took  care  to  have  a  juft 
account,  both  of  the  worth  and  of  the  neceflities 
of  thofe  who  pretended  ;  and  flie  ftiewed  in  this  as 
great  an  exa(Slnefs,  and  as  attentive  a  regard,  as 
much  memory,  and  as  much  diligence,  as  if  {he 
had  had  no  cares  of  a  higher  nature  upon  her.  It 
feemed  fhe  kept  tables  of  journals  ;  for  llie  had  a 
method  in  it,  with  which  no  body  was  ever  ac- 
quainted, as  far  as  I  could  learn.  It  was  very  rea- 
fonable  to  believe,  that  fhe  took  notes  and  fet  rules 
to  herfelf  in  this  mattert 

But  fhe  was  fo  exad  to  the  rule  of  the  gofpel,  of 
managing  it  with  deep  fecrefy,    that  none   knew 
what,  or  to  whom,  fhe  gave,  but  thofe  whom  fhe 
was  forced  to  employ  in  it.     When  it   was  to  fall 
on  perfons  who  had  accefs  to  her,  her   own  hand 
was    the  conveyance ;    what  went  through    other 
hands,  was  charged  on  them  with  an  injundlion  of 
fecrefy  j    and  fhe  herfelf  was  fo  far  from   fpeaking 
of  fuch  things,  that  when  fome  perfons  were  of- 
fered   to   her    charity,    who     had    been     already 
named  by  others,  and  were  relieved  by  herfelf,  fhe 
would  not  let  thofe  who   fpoke  to  her,  upon  the 
fame  of  their  being  in  want,  underfland  any  thing 
of  the  notice  that  had  been  already  taken  of  it;  but 
either  file  let  the   thing  pafs  in  filence,  or  if  the 
neceflity   was  reprefented  as  heavier  than  fKe  had 
underflood  it  to  be,  a  new  fupply  was  given,  with- 
out fo  much  as  a  hint  of  what  had  gone  before,      , 

E  But 


58        Afj  "Essay  on  the  Memory  of 

But  how  good  foever  ihe  was  m  herfelf,  fhe  car- 
ried a  heavy  load  upon  her  mind  :  the  deep  fenfe 
that    fhe    had  of    the  guilt   and   judgments    that 
ieemed  to  be  hanging  over  us,  as.  no  doubt  it  gave 
her  many   afflicting  thou2,hts    in   the   prefence   of 
God,  fo  it  broke  often  out  in  many  fad  flrains  to 
thofe-  to  whom  fhe  gave  her  thoughts  a  freer  vent. 
The  impieties  and  blafphemies,  the  open  contempt 
of  religion,  and  the  fcorn  of  virtue,  that  flie  heard 
of  from  fo  many   hands,  and  in  fo  many  different 
corners  of  the  nation,  gave  her  a  fecret  horror,  and 
offered  fo  black  a  profpeft,  that  it  filled  her   witb 
melancholy  refledlions,  and  engaged  her  into  much 
fecret   mourning.       This    touched    her   the    more 
fenfibly  when  fhe  at  any  time  heard  that  fome,  who 
pretended  to  much  zeal  for  the  crown  and  the  pre- 
fent  eftaBlifhment,.  feemed  from   thence  to   think 
they  had  fome  right  to  be  indulged  in  their  licenci- 
oufnefs,.  and   other  irregularities.     She  often  faid, 
"  can  a  blefling  be  expected  from  fuch    hands,  or 
*'  on  any  thing  that  muft  pafs  through  them  ?  " 
She  longed  to  fee  a  fet  of  men  of  integrity  and  pro- 
bity, of  generous  tempei  3  and  public  fpirits,iii  whofe 
hands  the  concerns  of  the  crown  and  nation  might 
be  lodged,  with  reafonable  hopes  of  fuccefs,  and  of  a 
blelTing  from  above,  upon  their  fervices.  She  had  a  jufl 
efteem  of  all  perfons  as  f]ie  found  them  truly  virtuous 
and  religious  ;  nor  could  any  other  confiderations 
have  a  great  effeil  u[on  her,  when  thefe  were  want- 
ing.    She  made  a  great  difference  between   thofe 
that  were  convinced   of  the  principles  of  religion,. 

how 


the  late  ^leen  MARY.  59 

how  fatally  foever  they  might  be  fliut  up  from  ha- 
ving their  due  efFe<S  on  them,  and  thofe  who  had 
quite  thrown    them  off;  where   ihefe  were    quite 
extinguifhed,  no  hope  was  left,  nor  foundation  to 
build  upon  :  but  where  they  remained,  how  feeble 
or  unadive  foever,  there  was  a  feed  ftill  within  them, 
that   at  fome  time  or  other,  and  upon  fome  happy 
oceafion,  might  fhoot  and  grow.     Next  to  open 
impiety,  the  coldnefs,  the  want  of  heat  and  life  in 
thofe  who  pretended  to  religion,   the  deadnefs  and 
dif-union  of  the  whole  body  of proteftants,  and  the 
weaknefs,  the  humours  and  affedations,   of  fome 
who  feemed  to  have  good  intentions,  did  very  {^n- 
fibly  affed  her.     She  faid  often,  with  feeling   and 
cutting  regret,  "  can  fuch  dry  bones  live  ?  "  When 
ihc  heard  what  crying  fins  abounded  in  our  fleets 
and   armies,    Ihe  gave    fuch  diredions  as  feemed 
pradicable,  to  thofe   who  fhe  thought  might    in 
ix>m^  meafure  corred  them ;  and  /lie  made  fome,  in 
very   eminent  ftations,   underiland,    that  nothing 
could  both  pleafe,  and  even  oblige  her  more,  than 
that  care  fhould  be  taken  to  flop  thofe  growino- dif- 
orders,  and  to  reduce  matters  to  the  gravity  and 
fobriety  <jf  former  times.     The  laft  great  projetSt 
that  her  thoughts  were  working  on,  with  relation 
to  a  noble  and  royal  provifion  for  maimed  and  de- 
cayed feamen,  was  particularly  defigned  to   be  fo 
conftituted,  as   to  put  them  in  a  probable  way  of 
ending  their  days  in  the  fear  of  God.     Every  new 
hint  that  wa)',  was  entertained  by  her  with  a  lively 
joy  :  (he  had  fomedifcourfcon  that  head  the  very  day 

E  2  before 


€o       An  EssAV  on  the  Memory  of 

before  fhe  was  taken  111.  It  gave  her  a  fenfible  con- 
cern, to  hear  that  Ireland  was  fcarce  got  out  of  its 
miferies,  when  it  was  returning  to  the  levities,  and 
even  to  the  abominations  of  former  times  :  fhe 
fpake  of  thofe  things  like  one  that  was  trembling 
and  fmking  under  the  weight  of  them.  She  took 
particular  methods  to  be  well  informed  ofthcftate 
of  our  plantations,  and  of  thofe  colonies  that  we 
have  among  infidels  :  but  it  was  no  fmall  grief  to 
her  to  hear  that  they  were  but  too  generally  a  re- 
proach to  the  religion  by  which  they  were  nalmed, 
(I  do  not  fay  which  they  profefled,  for  many  of 
them  feem  fcarce  to  profefs  it.)  She  gave  a  willing 
ear  to  a  propofition  that  was  made  for  eredling 
fchools,  and  the  founding  of  a  college  among  them. 
She  confidered  the  whole  fcheme  of  it,  and  the  en- 
dowment which  was  defired  for  it.  It  was  a  noble 
one,  and  was  to  rife  out  of  fome  branches  of  the 
revenue,  which  made  it  liable  to  objections  :  but 
fhetook  care  to  confider  the  whole  thing  fowell,that 
Ihe  herfelf  anfwered  all  obje»5tions,  and  efpoufed 
the  matter  with  fo  afie6lionate  a  concern,  that  fhe 
prepared  it  for  the  king  to  fettle  it  at  his  coming 
over.  She  knew  how  heartily  he  concurred  in  all 
defigns  of  that  nature,  though  other  more  prefling 
cares  denied  him  the  opportunities  of  confidering 
them  fo  much  :  fhe  digefted  and  prepared  them  for 
him ;  and  as  fhe  knew  how  large  a  fhare  of  zeal 
his  majefly  had  for  good  things,  fhe  took  care  alfo 
to  give  him  the  largeft  fliare  of  the  honour  of  tbem. 
Nor  indeed  could  any  thing  infiame  her  more,  than 

the 


the  late  ^een  MARY,  6i 

the  profpeit  of  fetting  religion  forward,  efpccially 
where  there  were  hopes  of  working  upon  infidels ; 
though  after  all,  the  infidels  at  home  feemed  to  be 
more  incurable  and  defperate  than  thofe  abroad. 

Her  concern  and  her  charafler  was  not  limited 
to  that  which  might  fecm  to  be  her  own  immediate 
province,  and  was  more  efpecially  put  xmder  her 
care  ;  the  foreign  churches  had  alfo  a  liberal 
fhare  of  it.  She  was  not  infenfible  of  the  kind- 
nefs  of  the  Dutch  ;  flie  remembered  it  always  with 
a  grateful  tendernefs,  and  was  heartily  touched 
with  all  their  concerns.  The  refugees  of  France 
were  confidered  by  her,  as  thofe  whom  God  had 
fent  to  fit  fafe  under  her  fliadow,  and  cafy  through 
her  favour.  Thofe  fcattered  remnants  of  our  elder 
fifter,  that  had  Iteen  hunted  out  of  their  vallies, 
were  again  brought  together  by  their  majefties 
means.  It  was  the  king's  powerful  interceflion 
that  reftored  them  to  their  feats,  as  well  as  to  their 
edi(Sts.  And  it  was  the  queen's  charity  that  form- 
ed them  into  bodies,  and  put  them  in  the  method 
of  enjoying  thofe  advantages,  and  of  tranfmitting 
them  down  to  the  fucceediiig:  ages.  She  took  care 
alfo  of  preferving  the  little  that  was  left  of  the 
Bohemian  churches  :  file  ha4  fomicd  nurferies  of 
religion  in  fomc  of  the  parts  of  Germany  which 
were  exhaufied  by  war,  and  difabled  to  carry  on 
the  education  of  their  youth  :  and  to  tranfmit  to 
the  next  age,  the  faith  which  they  themfelves  pro- 
feflcd. 

I 

E  3  Such 


62        ^n  "Ess AY  on  the  Memoiy  of 

Such  was  the  temper  of  our  blefled  queen  ;  thefe 
were  the  earnefls  of  what  we  expetSled  from  her ; 
they  had  been  a  full  return  of  the  moft  promifing 
expedlations  in  any  other  ;  but  in  her  they  were 
only  earnefts  of  what  we  looked  for,  It  was  but 
the  dawning  of  her  day  ;  the  mifts  and  clouds  rofe 
fo  thick  upon  it,  thediforders  of  war  did  fo  obftru£l 
many  great  defigns,  that  her  light  was  much  in- 
tercepted, it  could  not  fhine  through  ;  fhe  under- 
flood  well  the  decencies  of  things  j  they  were  beau- 
ful  in  their  feafons  ;  and  they  would  not  have  had 
fo  fair  an  appearance,  if  they  had  come  before  the 
proper  time,  and  the  other  circuniflances  that  might 
fit  them.  She  feemed  to  have  many  years  before 
her  ;  her  youth  was  that  which  added  this  particu' 
lar  happinefs  to  all  the  other  bleffings  that  we  had 
in  her,  that  we  thought  we  were  fecure  in  a  long 
continuance  of  it.  We  flattered  ourfelves  with  the 
hopes  of  a  reign  that  fliould  have  been  lafting. 
The  hopes  of  that  made  us  neither  to  doubt  nor 
fear  any  thing  elfe.  What  generous  or  abftrafled 
thoughts  foever  we  may  have  in  fpeculation,  felf- 
love  lies  fo  near  us,  that  after  all  we  are  chiefly 
concerned  for  our  own  times.  We  thijik  we  may 
more  eafily  deliver  over  the  concerns  of  the  next 
age  to  thofe  who  are  to  live  in  it.  It  feems  to  be 
the  voice  of  nature  that  Hezekiah  faid,  "  good  is 
*'  the  word  of  the  Lord,  that  peace  and  truth  fhall 
*'  be  in  my  days.  "  Therefore  when  the  profpe<5l 
of  a  fixed  happinefs  goes  farther  than  the  reafoiv 
able  profpedt   of  our   o\An  continuance  here,    we 

think 


the  hits  i^iicsn  MARY.  63 

think  we  ourfeives  are  very  fafe.     It  is  alfo  a  de- 
li'fj-htful  thought  to  one,  that  confiders  how  much 
all  things  are  out  of  joint,   and  into  what  diforder 
they  have  fallen,  to  hope  that  fo  dexterous  a  hand 
was  like  to  have  fo  long  a  courfe  of  life  before  her, 
for  putting  every  thing  again  into  proper  methods, 
and  in  regular  channels  j  and  that  might  have  lived 
till  the  nation  had  put  on  another  face,  till  we  had 
recovered  our  antient  virtue,  as   well  as  our  much, 
blafted  fame  ;  till  religion  had   been  not  only  fe- 
cured,  but  raifed  to  fuch  a  degree,  as  to  have  {hined 
out  from  us  through  the  whole  earth,  with  a  benign 
•influence  on  all  the    foreign  churches,  as  well  as 
with  a  dreadful  one  towards  the  Roman  church,  (I 
mean  not  the  dreadfulnefs  of  cruelty ;   that  is   her 
own  chara£ter,  which  we  ftill  leave  entire  to  her, 
I  mean  the  dazzling  her  with  the  brightnefs  of  vir- 
tue and  religion  among  us)  and   till  public  liberty 
had  been   fettled  upon  a  true  bails.     I  mean  the 
authority  of  a  well  balanced  and  well  conduiled 
government ;  that  fiiould  have  maintained  property, 
and  have  aftcrted  the  generous  principles  of  the  free- 
■dom  of  human  nature  j  that  fliould  have  difpenfcd 
juftlce,  and    rewarded    virtue,  with    a  gentle  but 
fteady  hand,  and  have  rcpreffed  the  luxuriant  pie- 
tenfions   of  thofe  who  undcrftand  public  liberty  fo 
little,  as  not  to  be  able  to  diftinguifli  it  fromlicen- 
cioufnefs  ;  uhich  flrikcs  flrll:  at  religion  and  virtue, 
and  then  muft  foon  fall  with  its  own  burden,  under 
the  mifcry  of  ufurpations  at  home,  or  become  an 
-c^y  prey  to  foreign  conquerors.     A  corrupted  ftate 

^4-  of 


6'4       An  Kss AY  on  the  Memory  of 

of  mankind  Is  well  prepared  to  be  a  fcene  of  flavery;. 
Liberty  cannot  be  maintained  but  by  virtue,  tem- 
perance, moderate  defires,  and  contented  minds  ; 
and  fmce  thofe  are  not  to  be  attained  to  but  by  re- 
ligion, this  is  an  imcontefled  truth,  that  liberty 
and  religion  live  and  die  together. 

All  this,  and  a  deal  more,  both  with  relation  to 
ourfelves,  and  to  all  that  are  round  about  us,  was 
that  which  we  thought  we  had  a  right  to  expe£l 
from  the  continuance  of  fuch  a  reign  :  we  thought 
that  God  had  formed  her  by  fp  many  peculiar 
chara6lers,  and  conducted  her  by  fo  many  happy 
providences,  that  from  all  thefe  we  had  fome  right 
to  conclude,  that  it  would  be  lading.  The  appear- 
ances were  of  our  fide  ;  for  though  flie  tempered 
the  chearfulnefs  of  youth  with  the  gravity  of  age, 
and  the  ferioufnefs  even  of  old  age,  yet  youth  flill 
fmiled  in  her  countenance  with  fo  frefh  an  air, 
that  we  thought  nature  had  not  gone  half  its  way, 
and  had  yet  a  long  career  t(3  run.  So  firm  a  health, 
fo  regular  a  courfe  of  life,  and  fo  calm  a  temper, 
thatexaelnefs  of  method,  and  punctualnefs  of  hours, 
feemed  to  add  a  further  fecuiity  to  our  hopes  :  nor 
did  they  flop  under  the  reign  or  age  of  a  queen 
Elizabeth. 

We  felt  (o  happy  an  influence  from  her  example, 
as  well  as  by  her  government,  that  even  under  the 
terror  that  her  ficknefs  gave  us,  we  flattered  our- 
felves with  the  hopes  that  God  was  only  trying  us, 
to  give  us  a  jufler  value  of  fo  ineftimable  a  blciling, 
that  fo  it  might  be  reflored  to  us  with  the  more 
advantage,  and  an  higher  endearment.     We  ccuM 

iiPt 


the  late  ^een  MARY.  65 

not  let  ourfelves  think,  that  fo  terrible  a  ftrokc 
was  To  near  us.  We,  who  but  a  few  days  before, 
had  been  fancying,  what  our  childrens  children 
were  to  fee  in  her,  were  then  driven  to  apprehend 
that  our  fun  was  to  fet  before  it  had  attained  to 
its  noon.  Then  under  the  darknefs  of  that  thick 
cloud,  every  one  began  to  recollect  what  he  had 
feen  and  obferved  in  her  :  and  though  fome  knew 
more  than  others,  yet  every  one  knew  enough  to 
ftrike  him  with  amazement  and  forrow.  Then 
her  whole  adminiflration,  as  well  as  the  privater 
parts  of  her  lite,  was  remembered  :  every  one  had 
fomething  to  fay,  and  all  added  to  the  common 
flock,  and  increafed  the  general  lamentation. 

It  is  true,  a  veil  ought  heie  to  be  drawn  over 
that  which  Is  facred.  The  fecrets  of  government 
arefoj  and  muft  not  break  out,  till  the  proper 
time  comes  of  recording  them,  and  of  delivering 
them  down  to  poftcrity  ;  and  then  we  know  what 
a  figure  her  hiftory  mufl  make.  But  in  this  way, 
and  under  the  due  referves  of  fpeaking  of  prefent 
things,  fomewhat  may  be  ventured  on,  without 
breaking  in  too  far.  Her  pun61;ualnefs  to  hours, 
her  patience  in  audiences,  her  gcntlenefs  in 
commanding,  her  refervednefs  in  fpeaking,  her 
caution  in  promifing,  her  foftnefs  in  finding 
fault,  her  readinefs  in  rewarding,  her  diligence 
in  ordering,  her  hearkening  to  all  that  was  fug- 
gefted,  and  the  copious  accounts  that  flie  gave 
to  hini  whom  both  God,  and  her  own  choice,  had 
made  her  oracle,  were  every  one  of  them  furprifingj 
but  all  together  they  feem  to  look  rather  like  the  idea 

of 


66       An  'E,%SAY  O/t  the  Memory  of 

of  what   ought   to  be,  than  that  which   could   in 
reafon  be  expelled  from  any  one  perfon.     It  might 
have  been  fuppofed  that  her  whole  time  muft  have 
gone  to   this.      If    many   other  things    had   been 
omitted,  it  was  that   which  mufc  have   been    well 
allowed  of ;  but  that   there   might  be  a  fulnefs  of 
leifure  for  every  thing,  the  day  was  early  begun  ; 
Ihe   had   many  hours  to   fpare,  and  nothing    was 
<Jone  in  hafte  ;  no  huny  nor  impatience  appeared. 
Her  devotions,    both    private  and     public,     were 
not  fo  much  as   fhortened  ;  and    fhe  found  time 
«nou2;h  for  keeping  up  the  chearfulnefs  of  a  court, 
and  for  admitting  all  perfons  to  her.     She  was  not 
io  wholly   pofTefTed  by  the  greateft   cares,   that   fhe 
forgot  the  fmalleft.     Thofe  who  are  exacSt  in  little 
things,  generally  trifle  in  great  ones  ;  and   thofe 
who  mind  great  things,  think  they   have  a  right 
to  neglecSl  fmaller  ones  :    they  think  they  (hould 
rather  be  leffened  if  they  were  too  exa(9;  in  them. 
But  it  was  a   new  thing   to  fee  one,  who  never 
forgot  things,  which  fhe  herfelf  efteemed  but  trifles, 
and  which  fhe  managed  with  fo  becoming  a  grace, 
that  even  in  thefe  fhe  pcrferved  her  own  character, 
yet  to  carry  on  the  great -concerns  of  government 
with  fo  firm  a  condu6t,  and  fuch  an  air  ©f  majefly. 
If  any  thing  was  ever  found  in  her,  that  might 
feem  to  fall  too  low,  it 'was  that  her  humility  and 
modcfty  did  really  deprefs  her  too  much  in  her  own 
-eyes ;  and  that  fhe  might  toofcon  be  made  to  think, 
that  the  reafons  which  v/ere  offered  to  her  by  others, 
were  better  than  her  own.     But  even  this    was 

only 


the  late  ^leen  MARY.  6j 

only  in  fuch  matters,  In  which  the  want  of  prac- 
tice might  make  that  modeft  diftruft  feem  more 
reafonable  :  and  when  {he  did  fee  nothing  in  that 
which  was  before  her,  in  which  confcience  had 
any  (hare,  for  whenfoever  that  appeared,  fhc  was 
firm  and  un  moveable. 

Her  adminiftration  had  a  peculiar  happlnefs  at- 
tending on  it;  v/e  had  reafon  to  believe  that  it 
went  the  better  with  us  upon  her  accounc.  There 
was  fomewhat  in  herfelf  that  difarmed  many  of 
her  enemies  ;  fuch  of  them  as  came  near  her,  were 
foon  conquered  by  her  ;  while  the  dexterity  and 
fecrefy  of  her  condu6l,  defeated  the  defigns  of 
thofe  who  were  reftlefs  and  implacable.  Wc 
feemed  once  to  be  much  expofed  ;  unprofperous 
accidents  at  fea  gave  our  enemies  the  appearance 
of  a  triumph  :  they  lay  along  our  coafts,  and  were 
for  fome  time  the  mailers  of  our  feas.  But  a  fecret 
guard  feemed  then  to  environ  us  :  all  the  harm 
that  they  did  us,  in  one  inftance  of  barbarit)-', 
that  fhewed  what  our  sreneral  treatment  mi^ht 
probably  have  been,  if  we  had  became  a  prey  to 
them,  did  us  little  huit :  it  feemed  rather  fuffcreJ 
by  heaven,  to  unite  us  againft  them.  The 
nation  loft  no  courage  by  it ;  their  zeal  was 
the  more  inflamed.  This  was  her  iirft  effay  of 
government  ;  but  then  fhe,  who  upon  ordinary 
occafions  was  not  out  of  countenance  to  own  a 
fear  that  did  not  mifbecomc  her,  did  now,  when  a 
vifible  danger  threatncd  her,  fliew  a  firmnefs  of 
mind,  and  a  compofcdncfs  of  behaviour,  that  made 

the 


6S       An  Kss AY  on  thi  Memory  of 
the  nien  of  the  clearefl:  courage  afhamed  of  them- 
ielves.     She  covered  the  inward  apprehenfions  that 
£he  had,  with  fuch  an  equality  of  behaviour,  that 
ihe  fecnied  afiaid  of  nothing,  when  flie  had  reafon 
to  fear  the  worfl  that  could  happen.  She  was  refol- 
ved,  if  things  fliould  have   gone  to  extremities,  to 
have  ventured  herfelf  with  her  people,  and  either  to 
have  preferved  them,  or  to  have  perifhed  with  them. 
This  was   fuch  a  beginning  of  the  exercife  of 
royal   power,  as  might  for  ever  have  given  her  a 
difguft  of  it.     She  feemed  all  the  while  to  poflefs 
her  foul  in  patience  ;  and  to  live  in  a  conftant  re- 
ficnation  of  herfelf  to  the   will   of  God,   without 
any  anxiety  concerning  events.     The  happy  news 
of  a  great  victory,  and  of  a  greater  prefervation  of 
his  majefty's  facred   perfon,  from  the  fuieft  inftru- 
nients  of  death,  which  feemed  to  be  fent  with  that 
djredion,  that  it  might  (hew  the  immediate  watch- 
fulnefs  of  providence  about  him,    did  foon  change 
the  fcene,    and  put    another  face  on  our   affairs. 
She  only  feemed  the  leaft  changed  ;    Ihe   looked 
more  chearful,  but  with  the  fame  tranquility  :  the 
appearances   of  it  had  never  left  her.     Nor  was  it 
a  fmall  addition  to  her  joy,  that  another  perfon, 
for  whom  fhe  flill  retained    profound  regards,   was 
alfo  preferved.     She  was  a  true  Sabine  in  the  cafe ; 
and  though  Ihe  was   no  part   of  the   caufe  of  the 
war,  yet  (he  would  willingly  have   facrificed  her 
own   life,    to   have  preferved  either  of  thofe  that 
feemed  to  be  then  in  danger.     She  fpoke  of  that 
matter,  two  days  after  the  news  came,  with  fo  ten- 
der 


the  late  ^leen  MARY.  69 

der  a  fenfe  of  the  goodnefs  of  God  to  her  in  it, 
that  it  drew  tears  from  her  :  and  then  fhe  freely 
confefTed,  "  that  her  heart  had  trembled,  not  fo 
*'  much  from  the  apprehenfion  of  the  danger,  that 
*'  {he  herfelf  was  in,  as  from  the  fcene  that  was 
*'  then  in  aftion  at  the  Boyne  :  God  had  heard  her 
**  prayers,  and  (he  bleffed  him  for  it,  with  as  ^qyX' 
"  fible  a  joy,  as  for  any  thing  that  had  ever  hap- 
"  pened  to  her." 

The  next  feafon  of  her  adminiftration  concluded 
the  redudtion  of  Ireland.  The  expedtations  of 
fuccefs  there,  were  once  fo  much  funk,  that  it 
feemed  that  that  ifland  was  to  be  yet,  for  another 
year,  a  field  of  blood,  and  a  heap  of  afhes.  She 
laid  the  blame  of  this  in  a  great  meafure  on  the 
licencioufnefs  and  other  diforders  that  Ihe  hearii 
had  rather  increafed,  than  abated  among  them.  A 
fudden  turn  came  from  a  bold  but  neceffary  refolu- 
tion,  that  was  executed  as  gallantly  as  it  was 
generoufly  undertaken.  In  the  face  of  a  great 
army,  a  handful  of  men  pafTed  a  deep  river,  forceil 
a  town,  and  made  the  enemy  to  retire  in  hafte.  Alt 
poflerity  will  reckon  this  among  the  moll  fignal 
performances  of  war  :  an  inflance  that  (hewed  how 
far  courage  coufd  go  ;  and  what  brave  men,  well 
led  on^  could  do.  A  great  vi£lory  followed  a  few 
days  after  :  the  fuccefs  of  the  adtion  was  at  fo  long 
and  fo  doubtful  a  ftand,  that  there  was  juft  reafon 
to  believe,  that  pure  hands  lifted  up  to  heaven, 
might  have  great  influence,  and  might  have  giveii 
the  turn  ;  from  that  time  fuccefs  was  lefs  doubtful. 
AH  was  concluded  with  the  h:i|'py  reduclicn  of  the 

v.hol« 


« 


sc 


^o       -^^^  Ess  AT  0^  the  Memory  of 

whole  ifland.     The  reflexions  that  fhe  made  oa 
this,   looked  the   fame  way  that  all    her  thoughts 
did.     "    Our   forces  elfewhere,    both   at  fea  and 
'  land,  were   thought  to   be  confiderable,  and   fo 
*'  promlfing,    that    we    were    in    great    hopes    of 
**  fomewhat  that  might  bedecifivej  only  Ireland 
was  apprehended  to  be   too  weakly    furnifhed 
for  a   concluding  campaign  j     yet    fo    different 
•^  are  the  methods  of  providence  from  human  ex- 
pectations, that  nothing  memorable    happened 
any  where,  but  only  in  Ireland,  where  little  pr 
nothing  was  expefted." 
She  was  again  at  the  helm  when  we  were  threat- 
jied   with  a  defcent,  and  an  invafion  ;  which   was 
condu6led  v/ith  that  fecrefy,  that  we  were  in  dan- 
ger of  being  furprifed  by  it,  when  our  preparations 
at  fea  were  not  finifhed,  and  our  force  at  land  was 
not  confiderable.     The  ftruggle  was  like  to  have 
been  formidable  ;    and  there  was  a  particular  vio- 
lence to  be  done   to  herfelf,  by  reafon  of  him  who 
was  to  have    conduiled   it.     Then   we  felt  new 
proofs  of  the  watchfulnefs  of  heaven.  What  comes 
immediately  from  caufes  that  fall  not  under  human 
counfels,    nor   can  be   redrefled   by  fkill  or  force, 
may  well  be  afcribed  to   the  fpecialities  of  provi- 
dence :  and  the  rather,  if  nature  feems  to  go  out 
of  its  courfe,    and   feafons  change  their  ordinary 
face,     A  long  uninterrupted  continuance  of  boif- 
terous  weather,  that  came  from  the  point  that  was 
jnoft:  contrary   to  their   defigns,  made   the  project 
;mpradlicable,     A  fucceflion  of  turns  of  weather 

fol- 


the  late  ^leen  MARY.  7? 

followed  after  that,  happily  to  us,  and  as  fatally  to 
them.  While  the  fame  wind  that  flopped  their 
fleets,  joined  ours.  It  went  not  out  of  that  direc- 
tion, till  it  ended  in  one  of  the  moft  glorious 
adlions  that  ever  England  had  ;  and  then  thofe  who 
were  brought  together  to  invade  us,  were  forced 
to  be  the  melancholy  fpedators  of  the  deftrufiion 
of  the  beft  part  of  that  fleet,  on  wliich  all  their 
hope  was  built.  In  that,  without  detrading  either 
from  the  gallantry  of  our  men,  or  .the  condud  of 
our  admiral,  it  muft  be  acknowledged  that  provi- 
dence had  the  largeft  fharc  :  and  if  we  may  pre- 
fume  to  enter  into  thofe  fecrets,  and  to  judfe  of 
the  hidden  caufes  of  them,  we  may  well  conclude,, 
that  her  piety  and  her  prayers  contributed  not  a 
little  to  it. 

She  bore  fuccefs  with  the  fame  decency  that 
appeared  when  the  fky  feemed  to  be  more  clouded. 
So  firm  a  fituation  of  mind  as  £tiz  had,  feemed  to  be 
above  the  power  of  accidents  of  any  fort  whatfo- 
ever.  Clouds  returned  again  in  another  year  of 
her  adminiflration  ;  though  not  with  a  face  that 
was  quite  fo  black.  She  thought  God  was  angry 
with  us ;  and  it  was  not  hard  to  find  out  a  reafon 
to  juflify  the  fevered:  of  his  providences. 

It  feemed  much  more  accountable,  that  our  af- 
fairs fhould  have  met  with  fome  unhappy  interrup- 
tions, than  that  lb  many  bleflings  £hould  have 
attended  upon  us.  She  had  a  tender  fenfe  of  any 
thing  that  looked  like  a  mifcarriage,  under  her 
condadl,  and  was  afraid  left  fome  miflake  of  hers 


Diighs 


72        \An  KssA Y  on  the  Memory  of 

might  have  occafloned  it.  When  difficulties  gfew 
too  hard  to  be  extricated,  and  that  Ihe  felt  an 
iineafmefs  in  them,  fhe  made  God  her  refuge  ;  and 
though  file  had  neither  the  principles  nor  the  tent- 
per  of  an  enthufiafl,  yet  Ihe  often  owned  that  fhe 
felt  a  full  calm  upon  her  thoughts,  after  fhe  had 
given  them  a  free  vent  before  God  in  prayer. 

When  fad  accidents  came  from  the  immediate 
hand  of  heaven,  particularly  on  the  occafion  of  a 
great  lofs  at  fea  ;  fhe  faid,  "  though  there  was  no 
*'  occafion  for  complaint  or  anger  upon  thefe,  yet 
*'  there  was  a  jufler  caufe  of  grief,  fince  God's 
*'  hand  was  to  be  feen  fo  particularly  in  them." 
Sometimes  fhe  feared  there  mio-ht  be  fome  fecret 
fins  that  might  lie  at  the  root  and  blafl  all  j  but 
fhe  went  foon  off  from  that,  and  faid,  '^  where  fo 
*'  much  was  vifible,  there  was  no  need  of  divina- 
'*  tion  concerning  that  which  might  be  hidden/* 

When  the  fky  grew  clearer,  and  in  her  more 
profperous  days,  fhe  was  never  lifted  up.  A  great 
refolution  was  taken,  which  has  fince  changed  the 
fcene  very  vifibly  :  it  has  not  only  afferted  a  domi- 
nion over  thofe  feas  which  we  claim  as  our  own, 
but  has  for  the  prefent  afl'umed  a  more  extended 
empire  ;  while  we  are  maflers  both  of  the  ocean 
and  the  Mediterranean  j  and  have  our  enemies 
coafls,  as  well  as  the  feas,  open  to  us.  She  had  too 
tender  a  heart  to  take  any  real  fatisfailion  in  the 
deflrudtion  of  their  towns,  or  the  ruin  of  their 
poor  and  innocent  inhabitants.  She  fpoke  of  this 
with  true  indignation,   at  thofe  who  had  begun 

fuch 


the  late  ^een  MARY.  73 

fuch  pra£lices,  even  in  full  peace  j  or  after  protec- 
tions had  been  given.  She  was  forry  that  the  ftate 
of  war  made  it  neceflary  to  reftrain  another  prince' 
from  fuch  barbarities,  by  making  himfelf  feel  the 
effedls  of  them ;  and  therefore  ftie  faid,  "  fhe 
*'  hoped,  that  fuch  pra6lices  fhould  become  fo  odi- 
*'  ous,  in  all  that  ftiould  begin  them,  and  by  their 
"  doing  fo  force  others  to  retaliate,  that  for  the 
*'  future  they  Ihould  be  for  ever  laid  afide." 

When  her  affairs  had  another  face,  fhe  grew 
not  fecure,  nor  went  fhe  off  from  her  dependance 
upon  God.  In  all  the  pleafures  of  life,  fhe  main- 
tained a  true  indifference  for  the  continuance  of 
them  ;  and  fhe  feemed  to  think  of  parting  with 
them,  in  fo  eafy  a  manner,  that  it  plainly  appeared 
how  little  they  had  got  into  her  heart  :  fhe  had  no 
occafion  for  thefe  thoughts,  from  any  other  prin- 
ciple, but  a  mere  difguft  of  life,  and  the  afpiring 
to  a  better.  She  apprehended  fhe  felt  once  or  twice 
fuch  indifpofitions  upon  her,  that  fhe  concluded 
nature  was  working  towards  fome  great  ficknefs ; 
lb  fhe  fet  herfelf  to  take  full  and  broad  views  of 
death,  that  from  thence  fhe  might  judge,  how  fhe 
fhould  be  able  to  encounter  it.  But  fhe  felt  fo 
quiet  an  indifference  upon  that  profpe6l,  leaning 
rather  toward  the  defire  of  a  diffolution,  that  fhe 
faid,  "  though  (he  did  not  pray  for  death,  yet  fhe 
"  could  neither  wifh  nor  pray  againfl  it.  She  left 
*'  that  before  God,  and  referred  herfelf  intirely  to 
"  the  difpofai  of  providence.  If  fhe  did  not  wifh 
**  for  death,  yet  fhe  did  not  fear  it." 

F  As 


7'4     y/«  Essay     on  the  Memory  of 

As  this  was  her  temper,  when  fhe  viewed  it  at 
fome  diftance,     fo  fhe  maintained  the  fame  calm, 
when  in  the  clofeft  flruggle  with  it.   Here  darknefs 
and  horror  fall  upon  me ;  for  who  can  look  thro*" 
that  fcene  fo  unconcerned  as  flie  went  through  it  ? 
I  know  if  1  would  write  according  to  the  rules  of 
art,  1  fnould  draw  a  veil  here,  and  leave  the  reader 
to   imagine  that,  which  no  pen  can  properly  ex- 
prefs.     Every  thing  muft  feem  flat  here,    upon  a 
fubjedt  that  gives  a    flame  too  high,  to  be  either 
manasied  or   defcribed.     But  it  is  nature  and  not 
art  that  governs  me.     I  will  therefore  go  through 
"what  remains,  though  without  the   force  or  flight 
that   it   feems   to  command  :  I   will  do  it,  though, 
but  faiatly,  with  a  feeblenefs  fuitable  to  the  temper 
of  my  own  mind,  without  any  anxious  ftudy  to 
manage  fo  poor  a  thing,    as  the  credit  of  writing 
in  proportion  to  the  fublimity  of  the  fubje<St.     Let 
the  matter  itfelf  fpeak  j  that  will  have  a  force  that 
v/ill  fupply  all  defeds. 

She  only  was  calm,  when  all  was  in  a  ftorin 
ahout  her  :  the  difmal  fighs  of  all  that  came  near 
her,  could  not  difcompofe  her.  She  was  rifing 
fo  faft  above  mortality,  that  even  he  who  was  more 
to  her  than  all  the  world  befides,  and  to  all  whofe 
thoughts  flie  had  been  upon  every  other  occalion 
intirely  refigned,  could  not  now  infpire  her  with 
any  defues  of  returning  back  to  life.  Her  mind 
feemcd  to  be  dif-entangllng  itfelf  from  her  body,^ 
and  fo  flie  rofe  above  that  tendernefs,  that  we«t 
deeper  in  her  than  all  other  earthly  things  what- 

foever* 


the  late  ^isen  MARY.  75 

Toever.     It  feemed  all  th^t  was    mortal  was  falling 
off,  when  that  could  give  her  no  uneafinefs. 

She  received  the  intimations  of  approaching 
death  with  a  firmnefs  that  did  neither  bend  nor 
foften  under  that  which  has  made  the  ftrongeft 
ininds  to  tremble.  Then,  when  even  the  moft  artifi- 
cial grov/  fincere,  it  appeared  how  eftablifiied  a  calm 
and  how  fublime  a  piety  poffeffed  her.  A  ready 
willingnefs  to  be  diffolved,  and  an  entire  refigna- 
tion  to  the  will  of  God,  did  not  forfake  her  one 
minute,  nor  had  any  thing  been  left  to  bedifpatch- 
ed  in  her  lall  hours.  Her  mind  was  in  no  hurry, 
tut  foft  as  the  ftill  voice  that  feemed  to  be  calling 
her  foul  away  to  the  regions  above.  So  that  flue 
-made  her  laft  fteps  with  a  liability  and  fenoufnefs, 
that  how  little  ordinary  foever  they  may  be,  were 
indeed  the  natural  conclufions  of  fuch  a  life  as  flie 
Jiad  led. 

But  how  quiet  foever  fiie  was,  the  news  of  her 
danger  ftruck  the  whole  nation,  as  well  as  the 
town,  with  fo  aftonifhing  a  terror,  as  if  thunders 
and  earthquakes  had  been  fiiaking  both  heaven  and 
earth.  Elacknefs  then  dwelt  on  every  face ;  a 
iilent  confufion  of  look,  burfting  out  often  into 
tears  and  fighs,  v/as  fo  univerfal,  and  looked  with 
fo  folemn  an  air,  that  how  much  foever  ihe  de- 
ferred the  afFeilions  of  the  nation,  yet  we  never 
thought  that  (he  poflefled  them  fo  entirely,  as  ap- 
peared in  thofe  days  of  forrow.  It  was  a  fcafon  of 
great  joy  :  we  were  celebrating  that  Bleffed  Na- 
tivity that  gave  us  all  life  and  the  hopes  of  a  blcflcd 

F  2  immortality. 


7^       Jn  Ess  AY  on  ibe  Memory  of 

immortality.  But  it  was  a  fad  interruption  to  that 
facred  feilivity  when  we  were  alarmed  with  thofe 
frightful  apprehenfions.  We  were  once  revived 
with  the  hopes  of  a  lefs  formidable  ficknefs.  This 
fpread  a  joy  that  was  as  high  and  univerfal  as  our 
grief  had  been.  We  were  eafily  enough  brought 
to  flatter  ourfelves  with  the  belief  of  that  which 
was  fo  much  wiflied  for.  But  this  went  foon  off; 
it  was  an  ill-grounded  joy,  the  clouds  returned  fo 
much  the  blacker,  by  reafon  of  that  miftaken  in- 
terval. Then  all  that  prayed  upon  any  account 
whatfoever,  redoubled  their  fervour,  and  cried  out, 
*'  fpare  thy  people,  and  give  not  thy  heritage  to  re- 
*'  proach."  We  prayed  for  ourfelves  more  than  for 
her,  when  we  cried  to  God  for  her  life  and  re- 
covery ;  both  prieft  and  people,  rich  and  poor,  all 
ranks  and  forts  joined  in  this  litany.  A  univerfal 
groan  was  ecchoed  to  thofe  prayers  through  our 
churches  and  ftrcets.  We  were  afraid  to  afk  after 
that  facred  health  ;  and  yet  we  were  impatient  to 
know  how  it  ftood.  It  fecmed  our  fins  cried  louder 
than  our  prayers  j  they  were  heard,  and  not  the 
other. 

But  how  feverely  foever  God  intended  to  vifit  us, 
ftie  was  gently  handled  ,  fhe  felt  no  inward  depref- 
flon  nor  finking  of  nature.  She  then  declared  that 
(he  felt  in  her  mind  the  joys  of  a  good  confcicnce, 
and  the  powers  of  religion  giving  her  fupports,, 
which  even  the  laft  agonies  could  not  fhake  :  her 
conllant  loftnefs  to  all  about  her  never  left  her. 
That  was  indeed  natural  to  her,  but  by  it,  all  faw 
vifibly  that  nothing  could  put  her  mind  out  of  it^ 

natur4 


the  late  ^eenMA'R.Y.  *jy 

natural  fituation  and  ufual  methods.  A  few  hours 
before  fhe  breathed  her  laft,  when  he  who  miniftred 
to  her  in  the  beft  things,  had  continued  in  a  long 
attendance  about  her,  fhe  was  fofree  in  hei"  thoughts, 
that  apprehending  he  might  be  weary,  fhe  com- 
manded him  to  fit  down ;  and  repeated  her  orders 
till  he  obeyed  them.  A  thing  too  mean  in  itfelf  to 
be  mentioned,  but  that  it  fhewed  theprefenceof  her 
mind,  as  well  as  the  fweetnefs  of  her  temper. 
Prayer  was  then  her  conftant  exercife,  as  oft  as  fhe 
was  awake ;  and  fo  fenfible  was  the  refrefliment 
that  her  mind  found  in  it,  that  fhe  thought  it  did 
her  more  good,  and  gave  even  her  body  more  eafe, 
than  any  thing  that  was  done  her.  Nature  funk 
apace  ;  fhe  lefolved  to  furnifh  herfelf  with  the  great 
viaticum  of  chriftians,  the  laft  provifions  for  her 
journey  ;  fhe  received  the  blefled  facrament  with  a 
devotion  that  inflamed,  as  well  as  it  melted  all  thofc 
who  faw  it :  after  that  great  a6l  of  church-commu- 
nion v/as  over,  fhe  delivered  herfelf  up  fo  entirely 
to  meditation,  that  fhe  feemed  fcarce  to  mind  any 
rtiing  elfe.  She  was  then  upon  the  wing.  Such 
was  her  peace  in  her  latter  end,  that  though  the 
fymptoms  fhewed  that  nature  was  much  opprefled, 
yet  fhe  fcarce  felt  any  uneafmefs  from  it.  It  was 
only  from  what  fhe  perceived  was  done  to  her,  and 
from  thofe  intimations  that  were  given  her,  that 
fhe  judged  her  life  to  be  in  danger  ;  but  file  fcarce 
knew  herfelf  to  be  fick  by  any  thing  that  fhe  felt 
at  heart.  Her  bearing  fo  much  fickncfs  with  fo 
little  emotion,  was  for  fomc  time  imputed  to  that 

undiflurbed 


73         ^«  E  s  s  A  Y  c«  the  Memory  cf 

-undifturbed  quiet  and  patience  in  which  ftie  poflfefled 
■her  foul  :  but  when  fhe  repeated  it  fo  often,  that 
iiie  felt  herfelf  well  inwardly,  then  it  appeared 
that  there  was  a  particular  blefling  in  fo  eafy  a  con- 
clufion  of  a  life  that  had  been  led  through  a  great 
variety  of  accidents,  with  a  conftant  equality  of 
•temper. 

The  lafl  and  hardcft  ftep  is  now  to  be  made  j 
our  imaginations,  which  inuft  ftill  be  full  of  the 
jioblefl  and  augufteft  ideas  of  her,  may  be  apt  to 
reprefent  her  to  our  thoughts  as  ftill  alive,  with 
all  thofe  graces  of  majefty  and  fweetnefs  that  always 
accompanied  her.  But,  alas  !  we  are  but  too  fure, 
that  all  this  is  the  illufion  of  fancy.  She  has  left 
lis  ;  fhe  is  gone  to  thofe  blefled  feats  above,  where 
even  crowns  and  thrones  are  but  fmall  matters, 
compared  to  that  brighter  glory,  which  rifes  far 
above  the  fplendour  of  triumphs,  proceilions,  and 
coronations. 

The  meafuring  of  fo  great  a  change,  and  fo  vaft 
an  advancement  in  its  full  latitude,  as  it  is  the  pro- 
pereft  thought  to  mitigate  our  forrows,  fo  it  feems 
to  be  too  lively  a  one  for  us  now,  and  above 
%vhat  we  are  capable  of  in  our  prefent  depreflion. 
This  may  -make  us  conclude  with  a  fudden  tranfport 
cf  joy,  that  Ihe  is  happy,  unfpeakably  happy,  by 
the  change  ;  and  has  rifen  much  higher  above  what 
fhe  herfelf  was  a  little  while  ago,  than  fhe  was  then 
above  the  reft  of  mortals. 

But  black  and  genuine  horror  ftill  returns,  and 
feems  to  wrap  us,  and  all  things  about  us,  with  fo 

thick 


the  late  ^{een  Mh'KY.  79 

thick  a  mift,  that  (o  bright  a  thought,  as  that  of 
her  prefent  glory  cannot  break  through  it.  While 
we  are  perfuaded  of  her  happinefs,  and  that  fhe 
has  gained  infinitely  by  the  change,  yet  fclf-love  is 
fo  ftrong,  and  fenfe  makes  fo  powerful  an  impref- 
fion,  that  when  we  confider  what  we  have  loft  in 
lofing  her,  we  fink  under  our  biirthren  ;  dif- 
pirited,  as  if  our  life  and  joy  were  gone  with  her, 
as  if  black  night  and  lafting  winter  had  chilled  all 
our  blood,  and  damped  all  our  powers. 

It  may  feem  a  needlefs  feverity  to  aggravate  all 
this,  as  if  we  were  not  loaded  enough  already  ; 
but  that  a  further  black  fcene  muft  be  opened,  and 
that  we  muft  be  filled  with  the  gloomy  profpecl  of 
tliat  which  we  may  but  too  juftly  and  too  reafon- 
ably  look  for,  God  feems  to  be  making  a  way  for 
his  anger  j  and  to  be  removing  that  interpofitioR 
which  we  have  reafon  to  believe  did  effedlualk' 
ftop  thofe  miferies,  for  which  we  may  well  fear  that 
we  are  more  than  ripe. 

We  are  not  quite  abandoned  ;  God  does  ftil! 
preftrve  him  to  us,  by  whofe  means  only,  confider- 
ing  our  prefent  circumftances,  we  can  hope  either 
to  be  fafe  or  happy.  That  duty  and  refpe6t  which 
was  before  divided,  does  now  center  all  in  him. 
All  that  we  payed  her,  does  now  devolve  to  him,  by= 
a  title  that  becomes  fo  much  the  jufter,  becaufe  we 
have  all  feen  (1  wifh  we  may  not  feel  It)  how  deep 
a  wound  this  made  on  him,  whofe  mind  has  appeared 
hitherto  invulnerable,  and  where  firmnefs  feemed 
to  be  the  peculiar  chara6lcr.     It  is  indeed  but  na- 

tuiaJf 


So        An  "Et^ AY  on  the  Memory  of 

tural  that  he  who  knew  her  beft,  (hould  value  her 
moft.  The  beft  tribute  that  we  can  offer  to  the 
aflies  of  our  blefTed  queen,  is  to  double  our  duty, 
and  our  zeal  to  him,  whom  fhe  loved  fo  intirely, 
and  in  whom  herniemory  is  ftill  fo  frefh,  that  tho' 
for  our  own  fakes  we  mull  be  concerned  to  fee  it  fink 
fo  deep  ;  yet  for  his  fake,  we  cannot  but  be  pleafed 
to  fee  how  much  his  charafter  rifes,  by  the  juft 
acknowledgments  he  pays  her,  and  by  that  deep 
affli£tlon  for  her  lofs,  which  has  almoft  overwhelm- 
ed a  mind,  that  had  kept  its  ground  in  the  hardeft 
Ihocks  of  fortune,  but  loft  it  here. 

If  our  apprehenfions  of  his  facred  life,  grow  now 
more  tender,  and  we  feel  more  fenfibly  than  for- 
merly, that  it  is  he  who  makes  us  fafe  at  home, 
as  well  as  great  abroad  ^  if  we  do  now  fee,  what  is 
that  interpofition  that  is  now  left,  and  that  keeps 
off  mifery  and  deftrudtion  from  breaking  in  upon  us, 
as  the  fea  to  fwallow  us  up  ;  if  that  life  itfelf  is 
fo  often  expofed,  that  this  creates  a  new  cloud 
Upon  our  minds,  gloomy  and  black,  as  if  charged 
with  ftorm  and  thunder  ;  if  all  this  gives  us  a  me- 
lancholy profpedt,  we  know  that  nothing  can  divert 
or  diifipate  it,  but  our  turning  from  our  fms,  which 
lay  us  fo  naked,  which  have  brought  one  fevere 
ftroke  already  upon  us,  and  by  which  God  may  be 
yet  further  provoked  to  vifit  us  again.  Another 
Uroke  muft  make  an  end  of  us. 

To  conclude, 

The 


'  The  late  ^icen  MARY.  S'l 

The  trueft  as  well  as  the  ufefuleft  way  of  la- 
menting this  lofs,  is,  after  that  we  have  given 
fomewhat  to  nature,  and  have  let  forrow  have  a 
free  courfe,  then  to  recolledl  our  thoughts,  and 
to  ftudy  to  imitate  thofe  virtues  and  perfections 
which  we  admired  in  her ;  and  for  which  her  me- 
mory mufl  be  ever  precious  among  us :  preciousL, 
as  ointment  poured  forth,  ever  favory  and  fragrant. 

Her  death  has  indeed  fpread  a  melting  tender- 
nefs,  and  a  flowing  forrow  over  the  whole  nation, 
beyond  any  thing  we  ever  faw  ;  which  does  in 
fome  meafure  bear  a  proportion  to  the  juft  occafion 
of  it  :  how  difmal  foever  this  may  look,  yet  it  is 
fome  fatisfadtion  to  fee  that  juft  refpedts  are  paid  her 
memory,  and  that  our'  mournings  are  as  deep  as  ' 
they  are  univerfal.  They  have  broke  out  in  the 
folemneft  as  well  as  in  the  decenteft  manner :  thofe 
auguft  bodies  that  reprefent  the  whole,  began 
tliem  ;  and  from  them  they  have  gone  round  the 
nation,  in  genuine  and  native  ftrains,  free  and  not 
emendicated.  But  if  this  fhould  have  its  chief  and  beft 
efFevSl,  to  drive  the  impreffions  of  religion,  and  the 
terrors  of  God,  deeper  into  us,  then  we  may  hope 
that  this  fatal  ftrokc,  as  terrible  and  threatning  as 
it  now  looks,  might  produce  great  and  even  happy 
effe^Sls  :  fo  different  may  events  be,  from  the 
caufes,  or  at  leaft  from  the  occafions  of  them. 

How  lowering  foever  the  fky  may  now  feem,  a 
general  repentance,  and  a  fincere  reformation  of 
manners,  would  foon  give  it  another  face  :  it 
would  break  through   thofe  clouds  that  fecni  no^v 

G  to 


S2         An  "Ess AY  on  the  Memor  • 

to  be  big,  and  even  ready  to  burft.  If  Li..^  is  a 
much  to  be  expected,  yet  if  there  were  b-V?^ 
that  did  heartily  go  into  good  defigns,  even  .h( 
might  procure  to  us  a  lengthening  out  of  our  trai 
quility,  and  a  mitigation  of  our  miferies,  and  tha 
though  they  were  fixed  on  us  by  irreverfible  d 
crees.  A  number  of  true  mourners  might  hope 
leaft  to  ftop  their  courfe,  till  they  themfelves  Ihou 
die  in  peace  ;  or  they  might  look  for  a  mi  -i^ 
if  they  (hould  happen  to  be  involved  in  a 
calamity. 

Mark  the  perfeSi^  and  behold  the  upright^  j 
end  is  peace. 


FINIS. 


n 


c'f 


i»"'-i*       ^v\ 


I 


'"•"'^^ -^— *.  JUN6    1968 


DA  Burnet,    Gilbert,   Bp.   of 

Uin  Salisbury 

H18B3  The  lives  of  Sir  Matthew 

1774  Hale 


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