| Edward Hyde Earl of Clarendon - Great Britain - 1707 - 332 pages
...of Study, than they had been accuftom'd to; and, if he had liv'd, would quickly have extinguifli'd all that Fire in England, which had been kindled at Geneva ; or if he had been lucceeded by Biftiop Andrews, Bifliop Overal, or any Man, who underftood, and loved the Church, that... | |
| Edward Hyde Earl of Clarendon - Great Britain - 1717 - 322 pages
...courfe of Study, than they had been accuftom'd to ; and, if he had hVd, would quickly have extinguifh'd all that Fire in England, which had been kindled at Geneva; or if he had been fucceeded by Bifhop Andrtws, Bifhop Ovtral, or any Man, who underftood, and lov'd the Church, that... | |
| Johnson Grant - Great Britain - 1814 - 598 pages
...subdued the unruly spirit of the non-conformists; that he countenanced men of learning, and disposed the clergy to a more solid course of study than they had been accustomed to*." By the counsel qf this primate, James founded a college at Chelsea, for twenty learned divines; to... | |
| 1821 - 948 pages
...Strype's Whitgiftjllb. IV. ch. xxxiii. t See pp. 104, 105 ; also, pp. 134, 135. of the Calvinian party;" and if he had lived, would quickly have extinguished...fire in England, which had been kindled at Geneva. So writes Lord Clarendon, and so believes the Dean of Achonry. That, like Whitgifl, he was an enemy... | |
| Lucy Aikin - Great Britain - 1822 - 472 pages
...conference at Hampton-court ; coun- ยป tenanced men of the greatest parts in learning, and disposed the clergy to a more solid course of study than they...fire in England which had been kindled at Geneva*." Wilson, on the contrary, calls him " a person severe enough, whose roughness gained little upon those... | |
| Lucy Aikin - Great Britain - 1822 - 468 pages
...the conference at Hampton -court ; countenanced men of the greatest parts in learning, and disposed the clergy to a more solid course of study than they...all that fire in England which had been kindled at Genevaa." Wilson, on the contrary, calls him " a person severe enough, whose roughness gained little... | |
| W C. Smith - Guildford (England) - 1828 - 262 pages
...unruly spirit of the nonconformists; countenanced Men of the greatest parts in learning, and disposed the Clergy to a more solid course of study than they...been accustomed to; and if he had lived would quickly hare extinguished all that fire in England which had been kindled at Geneva; or if he had been succeeded... | |
| John Parker Lawson - Great Britain - 1829 - 630 pages
...to which they had been accustomed ; and, if he had lived, would quickly have extinguished all that in England which had been kindled at Geneva ; or, if he had been succeeded by Bishop Andrews, Bishop Overall, or any man who understood and loved the Church, that infection would easily have been kept... | |
| Englishmen - 1836 - 246 pages
...the conference at Hampton-court ; countenanced men of the greatest parts in learning, and disposed the clergy to a more solid course of study than they...fire in England which had been kindled at Geneva."* The noble historian's confidence in the archbishop's powers will probably create a smile on the part... | |
| Theology - 1837 - 734 pages
...after the conference at Hampton Court, countenanced men of the greatest parts in learning, and disposed the clergy to a more solid course of study than they...if he had been succeeded by Bishop Andrews, Bishop Overall, or any man who understood and loved the church, that infection would easily have been kept... | |
| |