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abuses committed that way; only that the king and parliament could not discern the difference between greater and lesser, as to the point of sacrilege; and since the Pope had shewed them the way, by granting bulls for the dissolution of the lesser monasteries, they thought, since the Pope's power was taken away, they might, with as little sacrilege, dissolve the rest. I will shut up this with the words of archbishop Laud: "But if there have been any wilful and gross errors, not so much in opinion as fact, (sacrilege too often pretending to reform superstition,) that's the crime of the reformers, not of the Reformation, and they are long since God to answer it, to whom I leave them. "*

gone to The method I proposed for satisfaction of conscience about the Reformation, was to consider, whether there were not sufficient cause for it? Whether there were not sufficient authority? And, whether the proceedings of our Reformation were not justifiable by the rules of scripture, and the ancient church? He tells me, "he may safely join issue with me upon all three points, and conclude in the negative.' But upon second thoughts, he finds he may much more safely let it alone: and very fairly would have me take it for granted, "That the church of Rome cannot err in matters of faith;" (for that he must mean by the church there,) "and that our church hath no authority of reforming herself; and that our proceedings were not justifiable, according to the right interpretation of scriptures by the fathers and councils." But if I will not allow his affirmations for proofs, for his part he will act the grim logician no longer; and in truth, it becomes him so ill, that he doth well to give it over. When he will

Conference, § 24. p. 156.

undertake to prove, that the church of Rome is the one Catholic and infallible church of Christ, and answer what I have produced in the former discourses, I will ease him of any farther trouble; for then I will grant that our Reformation cannot be justified. But till then, I shall think it no want of humility to conclude the victory to be on our side. And I would desire him not to end with such a bare-faced assertion of a thing so well known to be false, viz. "That there is not one original treatise written by a Protestant, which hath handled distinctly, and by itself, that Christian virtue of humility." Since within a few years, (besides what hath been printed formerly,) such a book hath been published in London. But he doth well to bring it off with, "at least that I have seen or heard of;' for such books have not lain much in the way of his enquiries. Suppose we had not such particular books, we think the Holy Scripture gives the best rules and examples of humility of any book in the world; but I am afraid he should look on his case as desperate, if I send him to the scripture, since he saith," Our divines do that, as physicians do with their patients whom they think incurable, send them at last to Tunbridge-waters, or to the air of Montpellier."

THE

ART OF PAINTING;

BY

C. A. DU FRESNOY.

WITH REMARKS.

TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH;

WITH AN ORIGINAL PREFACE, CONTAINING

A PARALLEL BETWEEN PAINTING AND POETRY.

FIRST PRINTED IN QUARTO IN 1695.

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