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Old St. Paul's Cathedral by William Benham
page 55 of 120 (45%)

HISTORICAL MEMORIES OF THE TUDOR PERIOD.


_Good Dean Colet_--_Accession of Henry VIII._--_Papal Favour_
--_Cardinal Wolsey at St. Paul's_--_Bishop Fisher's Preaching at
Paul's Cross_--_Fall of Wolsey_--_Alienation of the King from the
Pope_--_The English Bible in the Cathedral_--_Edward VI._
--_Ridley's Strong Protest against the Images_--_Progress of the
Reformed Doctrines_--_Somerset's Evil Deeds_--_Destruction of the
Cloisters_--_Re-establishment of the Roman Mass under Mary_
--_Cardinal Pole at St. Paul's_--_The Lord Mayor's Proclamation_
--_Alienation of the Nation from Romanism_--_Death of Mary and
Accession of Elizabeth_--_The Reformed Liturgy Restored_--_Growth
of Puritanism_--_Destruction of the Steeple by Lightning_
--_Continued Irreverence_--_Retrospect, the Tudor Monuments._


It seems fitting that we should open the chapter of a new era in the
history of St. Paul's with the name of its most famous Dean, a great,
wise, good man. His name was John Colet. He was born in London, in
the year 1466, within three months of his famous friend, Erasmus. His
father, Sir Henry Colet, was twice Lord Mayor, one of the richest
members of the Mercers' Company. John, who was his eldest son, had ten
brothers and eleven sisters, all by the same mother, who outlived
the last of them. The young man was presented to livings (it was no
unusual thing then) before he took Orders, and gave himself to
study, both mathematical and classical, and in his zeal for learning
travelled much abroad, where he saw much of ecclesiastical life,
which startled him greatly. Returning, at length, to England, he was
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