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tle faith given) I will not at this distance of time undertake to justify: for, though I have used great diligence, and compared relations and circumstances, and probable results and expressions, yet I shall not impose my belief upon my reader; I shall rather leave him at liberty. But if there shall appear any material omission, I desire every lover of truth and the memory of Mr. Hooker, that it may be made known unto me. And to incline him to it, I here promise to acknowledge and rectify any such mistake in a second impression, which the printer says he hopes for; and by this means my weak, but faithful endeavours may become a better monument, and, in some degree, more worthy the memory of this venerable

man.

I confess, that when I consider the great learning and virtue of Mr. Hooker, and what satisfaction and advantages many eminent scholars and admirers of him have had by his labors, I do not a little wonder that in sixty years no man did undertake to tell posterity of the excellencies of his life and learning, and the accidents of both; and sometimes wonder more at myself that I have been persuaded to it; and indeed I do not easily pronounce my own pardon, nor expect that my reader shall, unless my Introduction shall prove my apology; to which I refer him.

THE INTRODUCTION.

I HAVE been persuaded by a friend, that I ought to obey, to write the Life of Richard Hooker, the happy author of five (if not more) of the eight learned books of "The Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity." And though I have undertaken it, yet it hath been with some unwillingness; foreseeing that it must prove to me, and especially at this time of my age, a work of much labor to inquire, consider, research, and determine, what is needful to be known concerning him. For I knew him not in his life, and must therefore not only look back to his death (now sixty-four years past), but almost fifty years beyond that, even to his childhood and youth; and gather thence such observations and prognostics, as may at least adorn, if not prove necessary for the completing of what I have undertaken.

This trouble I foresee, and foresee also that it is impossible to escape censures; against which I will not hope my well-meaning and diligence can protect me (for I consider the age in which I live); and shall therefore but entreat of my reader a suspension of them, till I have made known

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unto him some reasons, which, I myself wo now fain believe, do make me in some measure for this undertaking. And if these reasons sh not acquit me from all censures, they may at le abate of their severity; and this is all I can pr ably hope for. My reasons follow.

About forty years past (for I am now in seventieth of my age) I began a happy affi with William Cranmer (now with God), gra nephew unto the great Archbishop of that na a family of noted prudence and resolution. W him and two of his sisters I had an entire and friendship. One of them was the wife of Spencer, a bosom-friend, and sometime com-p with Mr. Hooker in Corpus Christi Colleg Oxford, and after President of the same. I n them here, for that I shall have occasion to tion them in this following discourse; as also t brother, of whose useful abilities my reader have a more authentic testimony than my pen purchase for him, by that of our learned Can and others.

This William Cranmer, and his two foreed sisters, had some affinity, and a most fan friendship with Mr. Hooker, and had had part of their education with him in his h when he was parson of Bishop's-Bourne, near terbury; in which city their good father the ed. They had, I say, a great part of their

cation with him, as myself, since that time, a hap py cohabitation with them; and having some years before read part of Mr. Hooker's works with great liking and satisfaction, my affection for them made me a diligent inquisitor into many things that concerned him; as namely, of his person, his nature, the management of his time, his wife, his family, and the fortune of him and his. Which inquiry hath given me much advantage in the knowledge of what is now under my consideration, and intended for the satisfaction of my reader.

I had also a friendship with the reverend Doctor Usher, the late learned Archbishop of Armagh; and with Doctor Morton, the late learned and charitable Bishop of Durham; as also with the learned John Hales, of Eton College; and with them also (who loved the very name of Mr. Hooker) I have had many discourses concerning him; and from them, and many others that have now put off mortality, I might have had more informations, if I could then have admitted a thought of any fitness for what by persuasion I have now undertaken. But though that full harvest be irrecoverably lost, yet my memory hath preserved some gleanings, and my diligence made such additions to them as I hope will prove useful to the completing of what I intend. In the discovery of which I shall be faithful, and with this assurance put a period to my Introduction.

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