Authority Cited: Bramhall
Author name and dates: John Bramhall (1594-1663)
BKG Bio-tweet: Theological writings, most while in exile from Cromwell; controversial Church of England administrator
Categories (list of works cited – preliminary); [BKG Note: About 40 Bramhall cites in 1755 Dict. vol. 1 and about 32 cites in Dict. vol. 2. No additional Bramhall cites were identified in the 1773 Dict. Lot 214 in the Sale Catalogue of Samuel Johnson's Library includes Bramhall's Works, 1677. The works of the Most Reverend Father in God, John Bramhall D.D., late Lord Bishop of Ardmagh [sic], Primate and Metropolitan of all Ireland some of which never before printed, collected into one volume : ... with the life of the author, Dublin : Printed by Benjamin Tooke ..., 1677. This title is a possible source of quotations. Tome III: 1. A defense of true liberty, from antecedent and extrinsical necessity, p. 647. In Samuel Johnson's Library, an Annotated Guide, Green indicates that the collected Bramhall Works were also published in four volumes: Dublin, 1674-1677.]
Author name and dates: John Bramhall (1594-1663)
BKG Bio-tweet: Theological writings, most while in exile from Cromwell; controversial Church of England administrator
Categories (list of works cited – preliminary); [BKG Note: About 40 Bramhall cites in 1755 Dict. vol. 1 and about 32 cites in Dict. vol. 2. No additional Bramhall cites were identified in the 1773 Dict. Lot 214 in the Sale Catalogue of Samuel Johnson's Library includes Bramhall's Works, 1677. The works of the Most Reverend Father in God, John Bramhall D.D., late Lord Bishop of Ardmagh [sic], Primate and Metropolitan of all Ireland some of which never before printed, collected into one volume : ... with the life of the author, Dublin : Printed by Benjamin Tooke ..., 1677. This title is a possible source of quotations. Tome III: 1. A defense of true liberty, from antecedent and extrinsical necessity, p. 647. In Samuel Johnson's Library, an Annotated Guide, Green indicates that the collected Bramhall Works were also published in four volumes: Dublin, 1674-1677.]
- A defence of true liberty from ante-cedent and extrinsecall necessity being an answer to a late book of Mr. Thomas Hobbs of Malmsbury, intituled, A treatise of liberty and necessity. Written by the Right Reverend John Bramhall D.D. and Lord Bishop of Derry, London, Printed for John Crook...., 1655; amatory (Discourse I, No. XX); ambs ace (Discourse I, No. III); anomy, (Discourse I, No. XVII); appetibility (Discourse I, No. XX); appetible (Discourse I, No. XXII); applicative (Discourse I, No. XX); besides (Discourse I, No. XVIII); boldfaced (Discourse I, No. VIII); box (Discourse I, No. XIV); brigand (Discourse I, No. XIV [Note: root rather than rout in 1677 text]); but (Discourse I, No. XIV); cabaret (Discourse I, No. XX); cast (Discourse I, No. III, same quote as ambs ace); castigatory (Discourse I, No. XIV); ... determinative (Discourse I, No. XXII); directive (Discourse I, No. XX); discovenience (Discourse I, No. VIII); elicitation (Discourse I, No. XX, same quote as appetibility); fetter (Discourse I, No. X); galley-slave (Discourse I, No. XI); give (Discourse I, No. XVIII); hexagony (Discourse I, No. VIII); hound (Discourse I, No. XII); humicubation (Discourse I, No. XV); indeliberated (Discourse I, No. XX); indetermination (Discourse I, No. XVII); ... jargon (Discourse I, No. XIX); lieutenant (Discourse I, No. XIV); magistrally (Discourse I, No. XIX); misrecite (Discourse I, No. XI); ... necessitation (Discourse I, No. III); necessitation (Discourse I, No. VI); noxious (Discourse I, No. XIV); objurgation (Discourse I, No. X); perdulous (Discourse I, No. VI) [Note: pendulous rather than perdulous in 1677 text]; positure (Discourse I, No. III, same quote as cast); premunire (Discourse I, No. XX); ... quarrel (Discourse I, No. VIII); racket (Discourse I, No. XX); reprobation (Discourse I, No. XII); sauciness (Discourse I, No. XII); shipboard (Discourse I, No. XIX); slip, (Discourse I, No. XII, same quote as hound); starboard (Discourse I, No. XIX, same quote as shipboard); tergiversation (To the Right Honorable the Marquess of Newcastle &c.); trip (Discourse I, No. I); vindicatory (Discourse I, No. XII); umbrage (Discourse I, No. XXI); unsearchableness (Discourse I, No. XII) [BKG Note: This 1655 title is a possible source for the Dict. quotations of Bramhall. The text SJ used may have been one of the Works cited above. The quotation verification was performed using an 1848 edition. Neither the 1655 nor 1677 editions are divided into numbers in the text.]
- Bramhall (no work cited); About 50 of the approximately 72 citations (almost all cited as Bramhall against Hobbes) were verified as derived from some edition of the title above. In the sample examined, the quotations were all from the first 22 numbers of the 38 numbers in Dicscourse I. The following citations were not verified, but likely also come from this title; ... chant, circumstantiate, clear, coarctation, coexistent, compulsory, conclusive, conjugate, consist, contradictory, ... inevitability, intensively, it, ... misrelation, move, my, ... prick, probatory, proclivity, prolepsis, ... snap, spontaneity, ... stir, ....