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II.

Anno 1545.

CHAP. Thoma Didymo ingenue clames, Deus meus, et Dominus Quare te in hac tristi ægritudine, quam tu, ut spero, tranquillissimo ac serenissimo animo fers, non detinebo longior. Hoc unum a Deo patre Domini nostri Jesu Christi assidue precor, ut quem ego in loco patris in terris habui, sanum atque incolumem aliquando ab hac ægritudine propter gloriam nominis sui liberet. Atque utinam certe, quemadmodum præsens, tecum animo ac voluntate sum, sic liceret mihi corpore tecum adesse, quo mihi, percipere solatium conspectus tui, sed aliter tum voluntate tua tum negotiis meis impedito, fas esset, si non morbum tuum tollere ad te veniendo, saltem dolorem meum minuere, quem ex invita absentia mea capio. Dominus Jesus, cujus est omnis potestas, pro beneplacito suo uxorem, liberos, familiamque tuam conservet, ac ab hac ægritudine eruat. Harfordiæ xiii. Octobris.

Tuus animo filius,

Ornatissimo viro D. Guliel

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mo Butts, Regio Medico,
ac Patrono suo singulari.

"Sir,

JOANNES CHECUS.

To this tenor in English.

"I doubt not but in imitation of Christ you bear with a "most equal mind this loss of your health. For to them, "who by faith understand that he disposeth all things, "nothing can seem evil which proceeds from him. And they who think God to be very wise and good, know "that he governs all by counsel, and that he sends all "things to good men for their salvation. And howsoever "sicknesses, or other afflictions, do disturb those that are "godly, they are not so thrust upon them by some chance, "but sent to them from above by their heavenly Father. "For the Prophet spake very wisely, [or rather God by "the Prophet,] There is no evil in the city, and I have "not done it. And in another place it is written, that the "Lord killeth and restoreth to life, that he bringeth down "to the grave, and bringeth back again. So that it can

II.

"not be denied, that God maketh use of these troubles SECT. "and miseries of life to his glory, and according to his pleasure prescribes men these medicines, as one may Anno 1545. "call them, for their health and preservation. For when

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we are judged of the Lord, we are chastised, that we may not be condemned with the world. But if these "divers sorts of diseases, troubles, and crosses, drive "away eternal punishments, make a way to salvation, "free from condemnation, stir up the exercises of piety, "and if the afflicted depend upon the faith of our Lord "Jesus Christ, and have submitted themselves wholly to "his mercy, we should with a cheerful and most willing ❝ mind suffer and undergo them. For we are not so much to regard what things we feel by our senses, as to re"joice when we well weigh the cause why they are sent by God. It is a faithful saying, saith Paul, if we suffer "with him, we shall reign with him. A godly man there"fore should lay aside, or rather cast off this apprehension "of pain. Because a very little share of grief hath a very great recompense of glory and joy annexed to it.

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"But you, Sir, of yourself understand better and more "plainly all these things, who rest firmly on the faith of "Jesus Christ by the grace of God; who reckon the "death of Christ, the remission of sins, and reconciliation "to be yours; who believe Christ to be the Redeemer of "all men, but to be the Redeemer especially of those that "believe; so that you may freely cry out with Thomas Didymus, My God, and my Lord. Wherefore I will not "detain you longer in this doleful sickness, which you, I “hope, bear with a very calm and composed spirit. This one thing I daily beg of God the Father of our Lord "Jesus Christ, that him whom I had here on earth in the "stead of a father, he would restore to health, and for "the glory of his name at length deliver from this sick"ness. And I wish surely, that as I am present with you ❝in mind and will, so I might be in body; whereby I might partake of the comfort of seeing you, being other"wise hindered as well by your will, as mine own busi

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CHAP.

II.

Anno 1545.

tron's death

and epitaph.

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ness, if not to take away your disease by coming to you, "at least to lessen my sorrow which I have from my forced absence. The Lord Jesus, who hath all power, "according to his good pleasure, preserve your wife, chil"dren, and family, and restore you from this sickness. "At Hartford the xiii of Octob.

"Your Son in heart,

"JOHN CHEKE."

This pious letter was the more seasonable, since this gentleman must now have been very ill, this disease proving mortal, and within little less than a month after ending his life; as appears by his monument in Fulham church, against the wall in the chancel, which I will here set down, and the rather, he having been Cheke's chief paраtron and dear friend, and that the memory of so worthy a man might be preserved:

Cheke's pa- Epitaphium D. Guil. Buttii Eq. Aurati, et Medici Regis
Henrici VIII. qui obiit anno Dom. 1545, 17 Novembr.
Quid medicina valet, quid honos, quid gratia regum,
Quid popularis amor, mors ubi sæva venit?
Sola valet pietas, quæ structa est auspice Christo,
Sola in morte valet; cætera cuncta fluunt.
Ergo mihi in vita fuerit quando omnia Christus,
Mors mihi nunc lucrum, vitaque Christus erit.

And what if I should think that this was the issue of
Cheke's own pious fancy, as his last respects to this
man, for which he had so high and deserved a veneration?
This epitaph, when time had almost defaced, after four-
score years and upwards, Leonard Buttis, of Norfolk, Esq.
(viz. in the year 1627,) renewed.

SECT. III.

His private studies.

NOW also some of the spare hours Cheke could re

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III.

tion's con

deem to himself, he employed in reading of Chrysostom in SECT. Greek. With whom he was so conversant, that one of his friends, speaking to him of that author, called him, Anno 1547. Tuus Chrysostomus, i. e. your own Chrysostom. And Sets forth Chrysoto make his studies useful to others as well as to himself, stom's orahe translated the six orations of that eloquent and pious cerning Father, De Fato, that is, Of Providence, out of Greek Fate. into Latin, and published them about the year 1547, (as he had translated some before,) where Cheke lively expressed his own style, language, and affection. Insomuch that his contemporary at the University, and his good friend told him in a letter, " b That his book conveyed with it an earnest desire to enjoy his voice, his conversation, his wit: "all which that writing as a certain picture of his mind "did admirably represent. So that the voice in this dis"putation seemed not to be so much Chrysostom's, as "Cheke's own. So plentiful was this whole volume of "most noble sentences concerning God, so handsome the "placing them, words so well suited to the matter, such elegant translations, so familiar and delightful narra66 tions, so great a contexture of arguments, such agree"ment of the whole oration with the cause. Which were "all properly Cheke's own virtues, partly natural, and "partly obtained by study and knowledge." And as Haddon had a poetical vein, so on a sudden in some heat of fancy, when he had read this translation of Cheke's, he wrote this tetrastich upon it:

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Divus Joannes Chrysostomus aurea Græca,
Fundere quod posset, nomen suscepit ab auro.
Noster Joannes sit nomine Checus eodem,
Aurea qui Græcis verbis dat verba Latina.

And besides the royal youth, Cheke seems to have the Takes care care of his sister, the Lady Elizabeth's studies, at least

b Maximum iste liber mihi desiderium attulit tuæ vocis, tuæ consuetudinis, tui ingenii, quæ sane omnia hoc scriptum tanquam effigies quædam animi tui, repræsentavit, &c. G. Haddonus Joan. Checo.

of the Lady Elizabeth's studies.

CHAP. Sometimes. When the Prince was once at his honour of II. Ampthil in Bedfordshire, (as at other times, for changing Anno 1547. of air, he was at Hartford, and at Hatfield,) his said sister was with him. And she was then under Cheke's instruction, as may be gathered from a copy of verses made by Leland to that lady, to this import; that once going to Ampthil to see Prince Edward, and Cheke, his tutor; Cheke brought him also to the Lady Elizabeth, to have a sight of her, when Cheke also prays her to salute that learned man, and speak to him in Latin, which she did. Which honour done him, Leland expresses in these verses:

Cheke's condition

Edward's

reign.

Tempore quo Chacus, musarum cura, politus
Me commendavit, voce favente, tibi.
Utque salutares me tunc sermone Latino,
Egit, ut hinc scirem, quantus in ore lepos, &c.

SECT. IV.

Cheke's interest under King Edward. Applied to.

Marries.

WHEN Cheke's royal charge and care came to reign, under King our learned man began to move in an ampler sphere: preferments and favours began to be accumulated upon him by his loving and grateful scholar, now his Sovereign; and applications began to be made to him by men of desert. And he ever readily used his interest with his Prince, (to whom he was very dear,) to promote and further all worthy and commendable both men and enterprises. And the University of Cambridge, knowing what a careful friend he was already, and would be to it on any occasion they might have of application to the Court, now near the beginning of King Edward's reign, addressed a letter to him of high respect, full of his deserved praises, and expressive of the assurance they had in his assistance at all times which, because it will serve to give a light to our history, and shew in part our learned man, I cannot omit

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