PREVIOUS CHAPTER - HELP - GR VIDEOS - GR YOUTUBE - TWITTER - SD1 YOUTUBE . ft1. It should be remembered that the book was written in the fourteenth century, and the reader must expect inaccuracies which would not be tolerated now. For instance, I would mention the author’s views about the sins of heathens, and inadequate notions of the Sacrament of Penance. ft2. This treatise exists in manuscript in the library of Merton College. Mr Bliss, one of the librarians of the Bodleian, has kindly examined it, and assures me that it nowhere implies that Hilton himself belonged to the Order. ft3. Many of these particulars are taken from the very interesting account of the Anchorets in Dr Rock’s “Church of our Fathers.” ft4. Compare “Ancren Riwle,” p. 24, with Brockie, tom. IV, 121 . It is also plain, from p. 38 of the Riwle, that the author did not believe the Immaculate Conception. ft5. Chaire Française au Moyen Age, 414. ft6. Ancren Riwle, p. 13. ft7. P. 291. ft8. P. 241. ft9. This interpretation is rather different from that of the learned translator of the “Riwle.” ft10. P. 417. ft11. Blomfield, in his History of Norfolk, p. 546, mentions a MS., apparently existing in his day, and belonging to a clergyman of the name of Peck, author of “The Antiquities of Stamford.” The book was first published by Cressy in 1670, and reprinted in 1843. ft12. Sir Thomas Erpingham has the credit of having been a partisan of Wycliffe. That for twenty-eight years before his death he was a good Catholic is certain. From the year 1400 he was an intimate friend of the Bishop of Norwich, the great enemy of the Lollards. He is said to have built a gate at the west end of the Cathedral as an atonement for his errors. In the same will there is a legacy for Masses for his soul, and special bequests to each Monk. — Blomfield, 372, 526. ft13. It is true that Juliana Lampit is there said to be the recluse of Carrow (v. Blomfield, p 515). The church of St Julian, however, belonged to the nunnery of Carrow, and therefore the recluse might very well have been called by that name. — Pp. 545, 546, 862, where 1528 is evidently a misprint for 1428. ft14. P. 157. ft15. Pfeiffer, p. 386. ft16. P. 110. ft17. P. 62. ft18. P. 71. ft19. P. 111. ft20. P. 9. ft21. P. 63. ft22. Purg. vii. ft23. Quoted in Longman’s Edward, i, 295. ft24. Compare Purg. 23 and Par. 15, 16. ft25. Cantu, Histoire des Italiens, tom. 7, c. 123. ft26. Chaire Française au Moyen Age. P. 409. ft27. Cantu, Ibid. ft28. Schwab, Johannes Gerson, p. 38. ft29. Chaire Française, 357. ft30. Longman’s Life of Edward III, ii, 24. ft31. Ibid., 259. ft32. It is true that Malespina mentions Epicureans (Muratori, 8, 933), even in the Countess Matilda’s time, but there seem to have been heretics of an older type to whom Malespina gives a name more familiar to himself. ft33. Neander , vol. ix, p. 241, Bohn’s edition. He appends the following note, “Among the forty-five articles attributed to Wycliffe, the proposition, ‘Omnia de necessitate absolute eveniunt,’ might justly be condemned as one actually belonging to him.” Neander is my authority throughout, for I am not acquainted with Wycliffe’s writings. ft34. For instance, p. 131. ft35. “We premise this, that when we attribute Personality to God, we intend to asseverate of Him nothing else than that He is a Being (Wesen) separated from all other existence (Sein), self-subsisting, self-conscious, and free.” — Kleutgen, Theologie, i, 229 . In other words, though freedom does not constitute Personality, yet every free intellectual being must be personal. Thus, because the Sacred Humanity was free, it must ipso facto have possessed a personality, i.e., since it had none of its own, that of the Divine Word. ft36. P. 149. ft37. P. 67. ft38. How accessible were anchoresses to the influence of the outer world is proved by the curious fact that the last anchoress of Carrow was actually perverted by Bilney, and turned Protestant in 1530. — Blomfield, p. 145. ft39. Blomfield, 546. All that is known is that she was alive in 1443, but was a hundred years old. She had two servants to wait upon her. ft40. V. Mone, i, 286, 293, 254, and Ancren Riwle. ft41. P. 151. ft42. 1 Corinthians 13. ft43. 1 Corinthians 8. ft44. Psalm 33. ft45. Ephesians 5. ft46. 1 Corinthians 6:17. ft47. Hansel, a first gift. ft48. 1 Corinthians 13. ft49. <19D801> Psalm 138. ft50. 2 Corinthians 5:13-14. ft51. 2 Corinthians 3:18. ft52. Since. ft53. 1 John 4:1. ft54. Know. ft55. 1 John 4:3. ft56. Ephesians 3:18. ft57. Philippians 3:13. ft58. Stable truth. ft59. Matthew 5. ft60. Right rule. ft61. John 4. ft62. Respect. ft63. Luke 14. ft64. Ecclus. xv. ft65. Isaiah 66. ft66. Unskilful. ft67. 1 Corinthians 10. ft68. Assayed. ft69. <19E101> Psalm 141. ft70. Psalm 40. ft71. <19D501> Psalm 135. ft72. Unprosperous. ft73. Interrupted. ft74. Jeremiah 20:9. ft75. 1 Corinthians 14:14,15. ft76. Leviticus 6. ft77. Acts 2. ft78. Psalm 1. ft79. 1 Corinthians 2. ft80. John 16. ft81. Psalm 90. ft82. Isaiah 54:7-8. ft83. Job 11. ft84. Ecclus. 4:18. ft85. 1 Corinthians 7. ft86. 1 Corinthians 12. ft87. Ephesians 4. ft88. The fairness and the foulness of it. ft89. Luke 13. ft90. Matthew 16, John 12. ft91. Colossians 3. ft92. Romans 10. ft93. 1 John 1. ft94. John 14. ft95. Cant. 5. ft96. Luke 10. ft97. Deuteronomy 11. ft98. Psalm 72. ft99. <19B801> Psalm 118. ft100. Matthew 8. ft101. Proverbs 2. ft102. Luke 15. ft103. <19B801> Psalm 118. ft104. Matthew 6. ft105. Luke 8. ft106. Molle. ft107. Psalm 18. ft108. Swink. ft109. Silently. ft110. Isaiah 45. ft111. Matthew 13. ft112. Psalm 44. ft113. John 14. ft114. Matthew 11. ft115. John 13. ft116. Romans 6. ft117. Agrise. ft118. Brest it. ft119. Romans 7. ft120. To feel. ft121. Romans 8. ft122. Mede. ft123. Homely. ft124. Manhood. ft125. Daniel 12. ft126. Proverbs 14. ft127. Job 20. ft128. Galatians 4. ft129. Defame. ft130. Isaiah 5. ft131. Romans 5. ft132. 1 Corinthians 13. ft133. Sickerly. ft134. Romans 8. ft135. <19D801> Psalm 138:16. ft136. Matthew 5. ft137. John 13. ft138. Luke 16. ft139. Jeremiah 9. ft140. Cantic. 1. ft141. Reprieved. ft142. Cantic. 2. ft143. Luke 14. ft144. Joel 12. ft145. Genesis 3. ft146. Ecclus. 10. ft147. Philippians 3. ft148. Wisd. 2. ft149. Matthew 5. ft150. 1 Corinthians 4. ft151. Proverbs 6. ft152. Psalm 38. ft153. 1 Corinthians 15. ft154. Galatians 5. ft155. Ephesians 4. ft156. Proverbs 4. ft157. Isaiah 3. ft158. Galatians 4. ft159. John 14. ft160. Genesis 1. ft161. 1 Corinthians 1. ft162. Isaiah 2. ft163. Hebrews 11. ft164. Romans 8. ft165. Hebrews 10. ft166. 1 John 3. ft167. Galatians 5. ft168. Romans 8. ft169. Matthew 5. ft170. Cant. 1. ft171. Cant. 1. ft172. Twining. ft173. John 5. ft174. Ephesians 6. ft175. Wroken of him. ft176. Revelation 21. ft177. It is to me to wyte no more. ft178. Uggen. ft179. Jeremiah 28. ft180. John 1. ft181. Ezekiel 33. ft182. Sly. ft183. Speedful. ft184. Disease. ft185. Psalm 83. ft186. Swink and sweat. ft187. Psalm 42. ft188. Isaiah 26. ft189. Job 3. ft190. John 1. ft191. Din. ft192. Homeliness. ft193. Claude fenestras ut luceat domus . ft194. Isaiah 9. ft195. Ezekiel 40. ft196. James 3. ft197. Psalm 96. ft198. Malachi 4. ft199. Hinder. ft200. Galatians 6. ft201. Colossians 3. ft202. Matthew 19. ft203. Psalm 72. ft204. Isaiah 9. ft205. Isaiah 58. ft206. Isaiah 47. ft207. <19D801> Psalm 138. ft208. Romans 8. ft209. Isaiah 43. ft210. Mirror. ft211. Lamentations 4. ft212. Subtle in kind. ft213. Acts 2. ft214. Pyned. ft215. In novitate sensus. Romans 12. ft216. Colossians 1. ft217. Ephesians 4. ft218. Colossians 3. ft219. John 3. ft220. 1 John 1. ft221. Psalm 35. ft222. Hebrews 12. ft223. 2 Corinthians 4. ft224. John 17. ft225. 1 John 4. ft226. <620401> 1 St. John 4. ft227. Arrected. ft228. Restfully. ft229. Medeful. ft230. Nigheth. ft231. Romans 8. ft232. Buxom. ft233. Mede. ft234. 1 Corinthians 3. ft235. Philippians 2. ft236. In little. ft237. Perceiver. ft238. Psalm 45. ft239. Softness. ft240. Sadness. ft241. Laborsome. ft242. Softness. ft243. Full mede. ft244. Soft. ft245. Worship. ft246. Keep. ft247. Psalm 38. ft248. Unnoteful. ft249. Isaiah 40. ft250. Anentes. ft251. Dainty. ft252. Softly. ft253. Lack. ft254. Well paid. ft255. Psalm 24. ft256. Psalm 90:5. ft257. Glenteth. ft258. Wotteth. ft259. Softly. ft260. Softly. ft261. Melancholy. ft262. Chargeth. ft263. Merch. ft264. Well lever. ft265. Liking. ft266. Kepe. ft267. Hangeth. ft268. Lever. ft269. Acts 5. ft270. Felness. ft271. Minstrelsy. ft272. Craft. ft273. Lever. ft274. Assay. ft275. Privity. ft276. Entre. ft277. Virtue. ft278. Psalm 28. ft279. Hebrews 4. ft280. Revelation 8. ft281. Boldness. ft282. Romans 8. ft283. 2 Corinthians 1. ft284. Buxom. ft285. Psalm 63. ft286. Homeliness. ft287. Oneliness. ft288. Hosea 2. ft289. Noyous. ft290. Privity. ft291. Isaiah 24. ft292. Revelation 2. ft293. Relief. ft294. Sadness. ft295. Cant. 5. ft296. Luke 9. ft297. Spered. ft298. Fairhead. ft299. Highing. ft300. Hardly. ft301. Fleshly heed. ft302. Job 34. ft303. Cant. 3. ft304. Cant. 4. ft305. Sothfastness. ft306. Softly. ft307. Cant. 1. ft308. Sorted. ft309. Keeps not. ft310. Unkind. ft311. James 1. ft312. Commoning. ft313. Meanes. ft314. Oonyd. ft315. Hebrews 10. ft316. John 3. ft317. Sobriety. ft318. Dissolution. ft319. Buxom. ft320. Chaffeth. ft321. Lovings. ft322. <19E001> Psalm 140. ft323. Happed. ft324. Homely. ft325. Fleshly heed. ft326. <19D001> Psalm 130. ft327. 1 John 4. ft328. Luke 24. ft329. John 15. ft330. Cunning. ft331. Isaiah 22. ft332. <19B801> Psalm 118. ft333. 1 Corinthians 13. ft334. Ezekiel 1. ft335. John 10. ft336. Haughtful. ft337. Cant. 3. ft338. Proverbs 12. ft339. Matthew 8. ft340. 1 Corinthians 4:3. ft341. Shent. ft342. Hebrews 1. ft343. Job 4. ft344. Psalm 28. ft345. Cant. 2:4. ft346. Leviticus 6:12,13. ft347. Deuteronomy 4:24; Hebrews 12:29. ft348. Luke 12:49. ft349. 2 Corinthians 5:6. ft350. Colossians 2:9. ft351. Ecclesiastes 3. ft352. Proverbs 25:27. ft353. Ecclus. 3:22.. SCALE OF PERFECTION INDEX & SEARCH
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