Authority Cited: Hall
Author name and dates: Joseph Hall (1574-1656)
BKG Bio-tweet: Early poetry; introduced Juvenalian satire in English; later Cleric; polemical Anglican theological works
Categories (list of works cited – preliminary) [BKG Note: about 5 cites in Dict. Vol. 1, about 19 cites in Dict. Vol. 2 + about 7 total cites added in 1773 Dict. Only two cites refer to Hall's Contemplations: ditation and stomach. Bolded headwords indicate Hall citations added in the 1773 Dict.]
- Contemplations on Principal Passages of the Holie History; The works of Joseph Hall, B. of Exceter, with a Table now added to the same. 1634. London: Printed for Nath. Butter, at the Pide Bull neere S. Austins Gate; [BKG Note: per the (original) DNB, Contemplations was issued in 8 volumes between 1612 and 1626, but only 7 volumes are listed in the 1634 Works. Contemplations on the New Testament (author: Jos. Exon., presumably Hall's title as Bishop) was issued in 1628. An edition of Hall's Works, which included the Contemplations was issued in 1634. SJ's source for the citations is unknown.]
- Contemplations vpon the principall passages of the holy story. The fourth volume. By Ios. Hall, 1618, London: Printed by Edward Griffin for Henry Fetherstone; ditation (p.419, The Purification) [BKG Note: Vol. 4 of Contemplations is at p.1015 of the 1634 Works]; stomach (Book XIII, Jonathan's love and Saul's envy)
- Contemplations vpon the historie of the the New Testament. The first volume in three bookes, by Ios. Hall, D. of Diuinity and Deane of Worcester, Imprinted at London in the yeare 1628; cension (p.9, Contemplation III, the Birth of Christ); higgle (Contemplation II, subtitle: Zacchaeus, added in 1773 Dict. but misattributed to Hale); retribution (Contemplation II, subtitle: Zacchaeus); [BKG Note: higgle and retribution are from a single quote]
- No Peace with Rome: wherein is proved, that, as terms now stand, there can be no reconcilation of the reformed religion with the Romish : and that the Romanists are in all the fault, 1852, Chiswick Press, London: Reprinted for V. Pickering; abide (p.87); definitively (p.101); ever (p.81); fatherhood (p.87); harmful (p.81); imperiously (p.87); monkery (p.84); multipresence (p.98); niggardly (p.80); obtrude (p.87); pardonableness (pp.81-82, padonableness in 4th); parity (p.80); puddle (p.86); sleeveless (p.98); sophistical (p.98); ubiquitary (p.101); univocally (p.81); unrighteousness (p.82); wafer (p.98); whoredom (p.83); [BKG Note: the following Dict. quote is referenced under four headwords: "Who can abide, that, against their own doctors, six whole books should, by their fatherhoods of Trent, be under pain of a curse, imperiously obtruded upon God and his church. Hall." Ever and harmful are from a single (reworded) quote. Multipresence and sleeveless are from a single quote. A later edition of No Peace with Rome is cited for convenience; first edition: ?1626. No Peace with Rome is at p.605 of the 1634 Works.]
- Epistles, the third and last volume. Containing two decades. 1611, London : Printed by W. Stansby and W. Jaggard for Samuell Macham, at the Bul-head in Pauls Churchyard; (pp.77-90) Decad. V, Ep. VII, To M. Thomas Sutton, exciting him and (in him) all others, to early and cheareful beneficence, shewing the necessity and benefit of good works; foreslow (p.84); forethink (p.82); without (p.83)
- Virgidemiarum. Satires in six books. By Joseph Hall, of Emanuel College, Afterwards Bishop of Exeter and of Norwich. 1753, Oxford : printed for R. Clements. Sold by R. Baldwin, at the Rose in Pater-Noster Row, and R. Dodsley in Pall Mall, London; and T. Merrill in Cambridge; satyrist (Satires, Book I, Prologue, Dict. quote: "I first adventure, follow me who list, and be the second English satyrist."); partlet (p.75, book IV, Satire VI) [BKG Note: Hall's Satires were first published in 1597-1598 and 1602; no editions of intermediate dates have been yet identified, so SJ may have seen the 1753 publication while working on Dict. Vol.2, or recalled both quotes from memory.]
- Hall (no work cited); sacramentally,