Studies from Court and Cloister: being essays, historical and literary dealing mainly with subjects relating to the XVIth and XVIIth centuries eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 413 pages of information about Studies from Court and Cloister.

Studies from Court and Cloister: being essays, historical and literary dealing mainly with subjects relating to the XVIth and XVIIth centuries eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 413 pages of information about Studies from Court and Cloister.

* J. Wilson to Ambrose; Randolph State Papers, Dom.  James I., 1615; R.O.

“The late Mr. Agard has left some manuscripts, the labour of most of his life, including a book on the exemption of the Kings of England from the power of the Pope, abstracts of treaties, and other State matters, which Sir Robert Cotton claims, on pretext that they were left to him by will; but he eras at the making of the will.  It is important that such things be kept in possession of the King’s officers, as otherwise they may be suppressed when most wanted."*

* Dom.  James I., vol. lxxxiii., 69; R.O,

After this, charge after charge was brought against Cotton, till the life, that had so usefully been spent in the service of learning, closed in sadness and gloom.  James, however, whether he gave credence to the accusations of enemies or not, never quite abandoned him.  He made him a member of the " new order of hereditary knights called baronets,” which Cotton had himself advised the king to create, as a means of replenishing the State coffers, without burdening his subjects with taxes. (The fee was fixed at 1000 pounds.)

Disraeli, in his Curiosities of Literature, quoting from a Lansdowne Ms., says that it appeared, “by the manuscript book of Sir Nicholas Hyde, Chief Justice of the King’s Bench, from the second to the third year of Charles I., that Sir Robert Cotton had, in his library, records, evidences, ledger-books, original letters, and other State papers belonging to the King; for the Attorney-General of that time, to prove this, showed a copy of the pardon which Sir Robert had obtained from King James for embezzling records, etc.”

James had the greatest regard for Cotton’s historical acumen, and in the last year of his reign he ordered that no more copies of the life of his mother, Mary Queen of Scots, should be published till Sir Robert Cotton had enlarged it, and made it more authentic by the aid of two ample histories which had lately come out.* The similarity of their tastes always ensured a certain sympathy between the antiquary who was also in some sense a Scotchman, being descended from the Bruces, and the first Stuart King of England.  But James’s successor never took him into favour, and henceforth there was little in his worldly prosperity to divert him from his beloved library—­a perennial source of joy to him-till his enemies turned it into a weapon for his destruction.  He never ceased to add to it while he lived, and casual contributions continued to flow in from various sources.

* Secretary Conway to the Wardens, etc., of the Stationer’s Company, 25th June 1624, Dom.  James 1.; R.O.

Thus, in 1627, Sir James Ware sent a manuscript register of St. Mary’s Abbey, Dublin; and the year after Archbishop Ussher presented a Samaritan Pentateuch (Claudius, B 8).  Already in 1625 he had mentioned this book in a letter to Cotton: 

“Touching the Samaritan Pentateuch, the copye which I have is (as I guess) about three hundred years old, but the work itself commeth very short of the tyme of Esdras and Malachy.  I have compared the testymonyes cited out of it by the ancient Fathers, Eusebius, Jerome, Cyrill, and others, and find them precisely to agree with my booke, which makes me highly to esteeme of it.”

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Studies from Court and Cloister: being essays, historical and literary dealing mainly with subjects relating to the XVIth and XVIIth centuries from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.