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An English Garner Critical Essays & Literary Fragments

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Editor: Arber, Thomas Seccombe, Professor


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to Macaulay, were typical of their order about the time of the Restoration. The first excerpt is from Chamberlayne's _Angliae Notitia_. The author of that work, Edward Chamberlayne, was born on the 13th of December 1616. He was educated at Oxford, where he graduated as B.A. in April 1638. For a short time he was Reader in Rhetoric to the University, but on the breaking out of the Civil War he left for the Continent, where he visited nearly every country in Europe. At the Restoration he returned; and about 1675, after having been secretary to the Earl of Carlisle, he became tutor to the King's natural son, Henry Fitzroy, afterwards Duke of Grafton, and subsequently instructor in English to Prince George of Denmark. He was also one of the earliest Fellows of the Royal Society. He died at Chelsea in May 1703. In 1669 he published anonymously _Angliae Notitia, or the Present State of England with Divers Reflection upon the Ancient State therefor_, a work no doubt suggested by and apparently modelled on the well-known _L'Estat Nouveau de la France_. The work contains more statistics than reflections, and is exactly what its title implies--a succinct account of England, beginning with its name, its climate, its topography, and giving information, now invaluable, about everything included in its constitution and in its economy. The extract printed here is, as is indicated, from pp. 383-389 and p. 401. The work passed through two editions in the year of its appearance, the second bearing the author's name, and at the time of Chamberlayne's death it had, with successive amplifications, reached its twentieth edition.
The Maids Tragedy

THE MAIDS TRAGEDY. Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher Persons Represented in the Play. King. Lysippus, _brother to the King_. Amintor, _a Noble Gentleman_. Evadne, _Wife to_ Amintor. Malantius} Diphilius} _Brothers to_ Evadne.
Of a very different order to Chamberlayne's work is the remarkable tract which follows. The author, John Eachard, was born about 1636, at what date is doubtful, but he was admitted into Catherine Hall, Cambridge, in May 1653. Becoming Fellow of the Hall in 1658, he was chosen, on the death of Dr. Lightfoot, Master. His perfectly uneventful life closed on the 7th of July 1697. Personally he was a facetious and agreeable man, and had the reputation of being rather a wit and humorist than a divine and scholar. Baker complained of his inferiority as a preacher; and Swift, observing 'that men who are happy enough at ridicule are sometimes perfectly stupid upon grave subjects,' gives Eachard as an instance. _The Grounds and Occasions of the Contempt of the Clergy and Religion enquired into, In a letter written to R.L._, appeared anonymously in 1670. This anonymity Eachard carefully preserved during the controversies which it occasioned. It is difficult to understand how any one after reading the preface could have misunderstood the purpose of the book. But Eachard's fate was Swift's fate afterwards, though there was more excuse for the High Church party missing the point of the _Tale of a Tub_ than for the clergy generally missing that of Eachard's plea for them. Ridicule is always a dangerous ally, especially when directed against an institution or community, for men naturally identify themselves with the body of which they are members, and resent as individuals what reflects on them collectively. When one of the opponents of Barnabus Oley in his preface to Herbert's _Country Parson_ observed: 'The pretence of your book was to _show_ the occasions, your book is _become_ the occasion of the contempt of God's ministers,' he expressed what the majority of the clergy felt. The storm burst at once, and the