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in essentials, and submission in smaller matters to authority duly appointed and legally exercised.

On the accession of queen Elizabeth, Nowell returned to England, and was soon fixed upon, with Parker, Bill, Whitehead, Pilkington, Sandys, &c. to be promoted to the chief preferments then vacant. His first employment

seems to have been that of one of the commissioners for visiting the various dioceses, in order to introduce such regulations as might establish the Reformation. One of these commissions, in which Nowell's name appears, was dated July 22, 1559. In December of that year, he was appointed chaplain to Grindal, and preached the sermon on the consecration of that divine to the bishopric of London. Preferments now began to flow in upon him. On Jan. 1, 1559-60, Grindal collated him to the archdeaconry of Middlesex; in February, archbishop Parker gave him the rectory of Saltwood, with the annexed chapel of Hythe, in Kent, and a prebend of Canterbury. Saltwood he resigned within the year, as he did a prebend of St. Peter's Westminster, then erected into a collegiate church; but was promoted to the deanery of St. Paul's in November 1560, and about the same time was collated to the prebend of Wildland or Willand in the same church.

He now became a frequent preacher at St. Paul's cross, and on one occasion, a passage of his sermon was much talked of, and grossly misrepresented by the papists, as savouring of an uncharitable and persecuting spirit. He had little difficulty, however, in repelling this charge, which at least shews that his words were considered as of no small importance, and were carefully watched. One of his sermons at St. Paul's cross was preached the Sunday following a very melancholy event, the burning of St. Paul's cathedral by lightning, June 4, 1561. Such was his reputation now, that in September of this year, when archbishop Parker visited Eton college, and ejected the provost, Richard Bruerne, for nonconformity, he recommended to secretary Cecil the choice of several persons fit to supply the place, with this remark, "that if the queen would have a married minister, none comparable to Mr. Nowell." The bishop of London also seconded this recommendation; but the queen's prejudice against the married clergy inclined her to give the place to Mr. Day, afterwards bishop of Winchester, who was a bachelor, and in all respects worthy of the promotion.

VOL. XXIII.

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In the course of the ensuing year, 1562, Nowell was frequently in the pulpit on public occasions, before large auditories; but his labours in one respect commenced a little inauspiciously. On the new-year's day, before the festival of the circumcision, he preached at St. Paul's, whither the queen resorted. Here, says Strype, a remarkable passage happened, as it is recorded in a great man's memorials (sir H. Sidney), who lived in those times. The dean having met with several fine engravings, representing the stories and passions of the saints and martyrs, had placed them against the epistles and gospels of their respective festivals, in a Common Prayer-book; which he caused to be richly bound, and laid on the cushion for the queen's use, in the place where she commonly sat; intending it for a new-year's gift to her majesty, and thinking to have pleased her fancy therewith. But it had a quite contrary effect. For she considered how this varied from her late injunctions and proclamations against the superstitious use of images in churches, and for the taking away all such reliques of popery. When she came to her place, and had opened the book, and saw the pictures, she frowned and blushed; and then shutting the book (of which several took notice) she called for the verger, and bade him bring her the old book, wherein she was formerly wont to read. After sermon, whereas she used to get immediately on horseback, or into her chariot, she went straight to the vestry, and applying herself to the dean, thus she spoke to him: "Mr. Dean, how came it to pass, that a new service-book was placed on my cushion ?" To which the dean answered, "May it please your majesty, I caused it to be placed there." Then said the queen, "Wherefore did you so?" "To present your majesty with a new year's gift." "You could never present me with a worse." "Why so, madam?" "You know I have an aversion to idolatry, to images, and pictures of this kind." "Wherein is the idolatry, may it please your majesty?" "In the cuts re

sembling angels and saints; nay, grosser absurdities, pictures resembling the blessed Trinity."

"I meant no

harm; nor did I think it would offend your majesty, when I intended it for a new-year's gift." "You must needs be ignorant then. Have you forgot our proclamation against images, pictures, and Romish reliques, in the churches? Was it not read in your deanery ?" read. But be your majesty assured I meant no harm when

"It was

"Be

I caused the cuts to be bound with the service-book." "You must needs be very ignorant to do this after our prohibition the of them." "It being my ignorance, your majesty may better pardon me." "I am sorry for it; yet glad to hear it was your ignorance rather than your opinion." your majesty assured it was my ignorance." "If so, Mr. dean, God grant you his spirit, and more wisdom for the future." "Amen, I pray God." "I pray, Mr. Dean, how came you by these pictures? who engraved them?" "I know not who engraved them; I bought them." "From "From a German.” "It is whom bought you them?" well it was from a stranger. Had it been any of our subjects, we should have questioned the matter. Pray let no more of these mistakes, or of this kind, be committed within the churches of our realm for the future." "There shall not*" Strype adds to this curious dialogue, that it caused all the clergy in and about London, and the churchwardens of each parish, to search their churches and chapels; and to wash out of the walls all paintings that seemed to be Romish and idolatrous; in lieu whereof, suitable texts of Holy Scripture were written.

Towards the close of 1562, his patron Grindall, bishop of London, collated him to the valuable rectory of Great Hadham, in Hertfordshire, where the ample tithe-barn which he built still remains. Nowell was one of those eminent men mentioned by Isaac Walton, who were fond of angling; and to enable him more commodiously to indulge in this amusement, Dr. Sandys, the succeeding bishop of London, conferred on him a grant of the custody of the river, within the manor of Hadham, with leave to take fish, and to cut down timber, to make pits and dams, free of all expence whatsoever. When the memorable convocation, in which the Articles of Religion were revised and subscribed, met in 1563, Nowell was chosen prolocutor of the lower house. Among other more important matters, rites and ceremonies were warmly agitated in this house. On this occasion, Nowell, with about thirty others, chiefly such as had been exiles during queen Mary's reign, pro

Nowell offended the queen on another occasion, while preaching, by expressing some dislike of the sign of the cross, according to some, but, as his biographer thinks, by some allusion to the crucifix which remained for some time in the queen's chapel. On this

occasion her majesty quite confounded the poor dean, by calling aloud to him from her closet window, commanding. him "to retire from that ungodly di gression, and to return to his text." Churton's Life of Nowell, p. 110.

posed that some other long garment should be used instead of the surplice, or that the minister should, in time of divine service, use the surplice only; that the sign of the cross should be omitted in baptism, and that kneeling at the holy communion should be left to the discretion of the ordinary; that saints' days should be abrogated, and organs removed. But the majority would allow of no alterations in the liturgy or rules of Edward the Sixth's service-book (knowing the wisdom, deliberation, and piety, with which it had been framed) as it was already received and enforced by the authority of parliament, in the first year of the queen. During the plague, the ravages of which this yearwere very extensive, he was appointed to draw up a homily suitable to the occasion, and a form of prayer for general use, both of which were set forth by the queen's special commandment, July 10, 1563.

Nowell, who continued to be a very frequent, and one of the most approved of the public preachers at Paul's Cross, introduced in one of his sermons, Harding's answer to Jewell, reading some passages of it, and confuting them. This was no uncommon practice in those days, during the activity of the popish party, and before matters of controversy could be usefully committed to the press. In the same year he noticed, in another of his sermons, Dorman's answer to Jewell, and appears from this time to have employed his leisure in preparing a more formal answer to that heap of misrepresentations. It was in 1560 that Jewell made his famous challenge to the papists, that none of the peculiar and discriminating dogmas of popery could be proved, either by warrant of scripture, or by authority of the fathers or councils, during six hundred years from the birth of Christ. Attempts were made to answer this challenge by Rastell, and Harding, (see their articles) and now Mr. Dorman published what he called "A Proof of certain articles in Religion, denied by Mr. Jewell." Against this, Nowell published, "A Reproof of a book, entitled A Proof,' &c." 1565, 4to, reprinted, with some additions, in little more than a month. In the same year appeared Dorman's "Disproof of Nowell's Reproof," followed in 1566 by Nowell's "Continuation of his Reproof," and in 1567, by his "Confutation as well of Mr. Dorman's last book, intituled a Disproof,' &c." as also of Dr. Sanders's causes of Transubstantiation," &c. In this controversy Nowell's learning and deep knowledge of eccle

siastical history were not more conspicuous than the candour with which he treated his adversaries. He appears to have had the aid of the bishop of London and other high characters of the time in the publication of these works, which appeared to his learned contemporaries to be of such importance to the cause of the reformation and the character of the reformed church, as to merit their utmost care, even in the minutia of typographical correction. This circumstance, says his biographer, shows "how solicitous the persons to whom, under God, we in great measure owe the final reformation of our church, were ut veritas ipsa limaretur in disputatione, that genuine truth might be fully known, and accurately expressed."

Nowell's preaching as well as writing, appears to have greatly assisted the reformation.

In 1568 we find him among his friends in Lancashire; where, by his continual preaching in divers parts of the country, he brought many to conformity; and obtained singular commendation and praise, even of those who had been great enemies to his religion. So Downham, bishop of Chester, who this year visited his whole diocese, and therefore had the better opportunity of informing himself, reported the matter to secretary Cecil; desiring him to be a means to the queen, and to her honourable council, to give the dean thanks for his great pains, taken among his countrymen.

The principal remaining monument of Nowell's fame is his celebrated" Catechism," of the history of which and of catechisms in general, his biographer has given a very interesting detail. The precise time when he wrote it has not been discovered; nor whether, as is not improbable, he first devised it (or some such summary) for the use of his pupils in Westminster-school. It is, however, certain that it was composed, and in readiness for publication, before the convocation sat in 1562, for, among the minutes of matters to be moved in that synod, we find two memorable papers, both of them noted by the archbishop of Canterbury's hand (Parker), and one of them drawn up by one of his secretaries, in both of which there is express mention of Nowell's catechism. For the proceedings of the convocation on the subject, we must refer to his excellent biographer. The work was not published until June 1570, 4to. This is what is called his " Larger Catechism," and in the preface it is announced that he intended to publish it, reduced into a shorter compass, as

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