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Compare 1577 edition: 1 During these dooings, Henrie Beauford bishop of Winchester, and called the rich cardinall, departed out of this world, & buried at Westminster. He was son to Iohn Duke of Lancaster,The death of the bishop of Winchester & his descriptiõ. descended of an ho|norable linage, but borne in hast, more noble in blood than notable in learning, hautie in stomach, and high of countenance, rich aboue measure, but not verie li|berall, disdainefull to his kin, and dreadfull to his lo|uers, preferring monie before friendship, manie things beginning and few performing, sauing in malice and mischiefe; his insatiable couetousnesse and hope of long life made him both to forget God, his prince, and himselfe. Of the getting of his goods both by power legantine, and spirituall briberie, I will not speake; but the keeping of them, which he chiefelie gathered for ambitious purpose, was both great losse to his naturall prince and natiue coun|trie: for his hidden riches might haue well holpen the king, and his secret treasure might haue relieued the communaltie, when monie was scant and char|ges great.

[Of this catholike clerke such were the déeds, W. P. EEBO page image 628 that with king and ech estate else (saith Polydor) the lighter was the losse, Lib. 23. bicause as for his hat he was a prelate proud inough, so for a bishop was there a bet|ter soone set in his roome. One William Patin, son and heire to Richard his father, and eldest brother to Iohn that deceassed deane of Chichester, and to Ri|chard that liued and died at Baslo in Derbishire. This William was a person by parentage borne a gentleman, for vertue and learning first consecrate bishop of Winchester, then anon after for wisedome and integritie chosen lord chancellor of England: wherein his prudence made eminent, in warilie weilding the weight of that office at those daies, which were so dangerous for all estates to liue in.

His vertuous disposition was right apparant, and it were but by this the godlie erection of that worthie worke, Magdalene colledge in Oxford, a plot right aptlie chosen out for studie at first, with strength and workemanship soone after builded according, in pro|portion beautifull outward, and for vse verie commo|dious within, sorted into a faire mansion for the pre|sident, seuerall and méet for a man to that office of worship and grauitie, and also into other roomes for the fellowes, officers, and yoonger students. Not without a vertuous remembrance of the verie ten|derlings, who might appeare to be toward and teach|able; whereof part to be trained vp in the diuine sci|ence of musike iustlie reported in a distichon, that

Gaudia si superûm res sit mortalibus vlla,
Integra quae referat; musica sola refert:
the vse of it commendablie seruing by sweet harmo|nie to praise God in church, and for delectable recrea|tion to a gentlemanlie mind any where else: and part of these yoong ones to be taught the grammar in a faire schoole well appointed therefore, out of which as out of a nursserie of it owne, for supplement certeine to keepe full the number, these budlings at néed from time to time to be dulie deriued and drawen.

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