A New and General Biographical Dictionary: Containing an Historical and Critical Account of the Lives and Writings of the Most Eminent Persons in Every Nation; Particularly the British and Irish; from the Earliest Accounts of Time to the Present Period ...W. Strahan, 1784 - Biography |
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Page 165
... university of Padua , which then abounded with men very learned in all fciences , Anatomy and botany were the great objects of his purfuit ; and he became very deeply fkilled in them both . Bartholin tells us , that Hoffman , having ...
... university of Padua , which then abounded with men very learned in all fciences , Anatomy and botany were the great objects of his purfuit ; and he became very deeply fkilled in them both . Bartholin tells us , that Hoffman , having ...
Page 203
... university of Ox- ford about 1582 ; but it does not appear that ever he took a degree . He taught school at Oxford , and in his own coun- Ath . Oxon . try ; and became rector of Southam in Warwickshire , 1604 . He was elected a member ...
... university of Ox- ford about 1582 ; but it does not appear that ever he took a degree . He taught school at Oxford , and in his own coun- Ath . Oxon . try ; and became rector of Southam in Warwickshire , 1604 . He was elected a member ...
Page 225
... universities of Utrecht and Leyden , was born at Haerlem in 1617 , and studied there till he was 16. Then Bayle'sDiets he was fent to Leyden , and afterwards in 1635 went to study at Utrecht . In 1639 , he was admitted a minifter , and ...
... universities of Utrecht and Leyden , was born at Haerlem in 1617 , and studied there till he was 16. Then Bayle'sDiets he was fent to Leyden , and afterwards in 1635 went to study at Utrecht . In 1639 , he was admitted a minifter , and ...
Page 233
... university of Wittemberg , Dec. 1663 ; and not long after P. 4 . made vicar of Allhallows in Oxford , which is in the gift of Lincoln - college . Here he continued two years , and was then taken into the family of the duke of Albemarle ...
... university of Wittemberg , Dec. 1663 ; and not long after P. 4 . made vicar of Allhallows in Oxford , which is in the gift of Lincoln - college . Here he continued two years , and was then taken into the family of the duke of Albemarle ...
Page 265
... university , through the intereft of Dr. Radcliffe and it is faid , that to Hudson's intereft with this phyfician , the univerfity of Oxford is obliged for the most ample benefactions she afterwards received from him . Hud- fon's ...
... university , through the intereft of Dr. Radcliffe and it is faid , that to Hudson's intereft with this phyfician , the univerfity of Oxford is obliged for the most ample benefactions she afterwards received from him . Hud- fon's ...
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Popular passages
Page 220 - That he did not beg a long life of God for any other reason, but to live to finish his three remaining Books of Polity; and then, 'Lord, let thy servant depart in peace;'"* which was his usual expression.
Page 50 - Lord was at that time very merry, for he had now outlived the day which his tutor Sandford had prognosticated upon his nativity he would not outlive ; but he had done it now, for that was his birthday, which had completed his age to fifty years. The next morning, by the time they came to Colebrook, they met with the news of his death.
Page 208 - ... the poetical fire was more raging in one, but clearer in the other, which makes the first more amazing, and the latter more agreeable. The ore was richer in one, but in the other more refined, and better allayed to make up excellent work. Upon the whole...
Page 218 - London and accept of her choice; and he did so in that or about the year following. Now the wife provided for him was her daughter Joan, who brought him neither beauty nor portion; and for her conditions, they were too like that wife's which is by Solomon compared to a dripping house; so that the good man had no reason to rejoice in the wife of his youth...
Page 150 - After this he took a comfortable breakfast ; and then went round the lodgings to wait upon the earl, the countess, and the children, and any considerable strangers, paying some short addresses to all of them.
Page 152 - I shall be glad to find a hole to creep out of the world at...
Page 168 - ... room. One of the disputants struck the other on the head with a quart pot, and cut him very much; the blood running down the man's face, together with the agony of the wound, which had distorted his features into a most hideous grin, presented Hogarth (who shewed himself thus early apprised of the mode Nature had intended he should pursue) with too laughable a subject to be overlooked.
Page 170 - Mr. Hogarth's dutiful respects to Lord . Finding that he does not mean to have the picture which was drawn for him, is informed again of Mr. Hogarth's necessity for the money. If, therefore, his Lordship does not send for it in three days it will be disposed of, with the addition of a tail, and some other little appendages, to Mr. Hare, the famous wild-beast man: Mr.
Page 218 - But when his servant returned and released him, then his two pupils attended him unto his house, where their best entertainment was his quiet company, which was presently denied them, for Richard was called to rock the cradle ; and the rest of their welcome was so like this, that they stayed but till next morning, which was time enough to discover and pity their tutor's condition...
Page 375 - He was in a seaman's garb and drinking a pot in a cellar. This scrivener came into the cellar after some of his clients; and his eye caught that face which made him start; and the chancellor, seeing himself eyed, feigned a cough and turned to the wall with his pot in his hand. But Mr. Trimmer...