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: Hunt, ii. 76.] [Footnote 49: Hickes, 9, _Enthusiasm Exorcised_, 64.] [Footnote 50: Lathbury's _History of the Nonjurors_, 216. Seward speaks of him as 'this learned prelate.'--_Anecdotes of Distinguished Persons_, 250.] [Footnote 51: Secretan, 70. He was much fascinated by the writings of Madame Bourignon.--Hearne to Rawlinson, quoted in Wilson's _History of Merchant Taylors_, 957.] [Footnote 52: _History of Montanism_, &c., 344.] [Footnote 53: Secretan, 273.] [Footnote 54: Id. 70.] [Footnote 55: Secretan, 171. Wilson quotes from the Rawlinson MSS. a very beautiful prayer composed by Lee soon before his death, for 'all Christians, however divided or distinguished ... throughout the whole militant Church upon earth.'--_History of Merchant Taylors_, 956.] [Footnote 56: Hearne dwells enthusiastically on his high qualities, his religious conscientiousness, his learning, modesty, sweet temper, his charity in prosperity, his resignation in adverse fortune.--_Reliquiae_, i. 287.] [Footnote 57: Secretan, 50, 69, 284. He was a learned man, a student of many languages.--_Nichols_, i. 124.] [Footnote 58: Boswell's _Life of Johnson_, iv. 256.] [Footnote 59: A regular form of admission 'into the true and Catholic remnant of the Britannick Churches,' was drawn up for this purpose.--_Life of Kettlewell_, App. xvii.] [Footnote 60: Nelson's _Life of Bull_, 4.] [Footnote 61: Speech before the House of Lords, 1705.--Nelson's _Life of Bull_, 355.] [Footnote 62: Nelson's _Life of Bull_, 11. Archdeacon Conant stood very high in Tillotson's estimation, as a man 'whose learning, piety, and thorough knowledge of the true principles of Christianity would have adorned the highest station.'--Birch's _Life of Tillotson_, _Works_, i. ccxii.] [Footnote 63: Nelson's _Life of Bull_, 243-9. Dorner, ii. 83.] [Footnote 64: Secretan, 255.] [Footnote 65: Birch's _Life of Tillotson_, lxxxviii.] [Footnote 66: 'Concio ad Synodum,' quoted by Macaulay, _History of England_, chap. xiv.] [Footnote 67: Secretan, 135.] [Footnote 68: _Life of Bull_, 64.] [Footnote 69: Sharp's _Life_, by his Son, ii. 32. Secretan, 78-9.] [Footnote 70: _Life of Bull_, 238.] [Footnote 71: _Life_, by his Son, ii. 28.] [Footnote 72: Secretan, 178.] [Footnote 73: 'None,' said Willis in his _Survey of Cathedrals_, 'were so well served as that of York, under Sharp.'--_Life of Sharp_, i. 120.] [Footnote 74: _Thoresby's Corresponde
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