[511] Francis Okely, one of the most distinguished of the English Moravians of the last century, was a great student and admirer of Behmen.—Nichol's Literary Anecdotes, iii. 93.
[512] Schelling and others, says Dorner, 'sought out and utilised many a noble germ in the fermenting chaos of Böhme's notions.'—J.A. Dorner's History of Protestant Theology, 1871, ii. 184.
[513] R.A. Vaughan, Hours with the Mystics, ii. 349.
[514] H. More's Works, 'Antidote against Atheism,' note to chap. xliv.
[515] J. Wesley, 'Thoughts upon Jacob Behmen.'—Works, ix. 509.
[516] Id. 513.
[517] Unqualified, even for Warburton. 'Doctrine of Grace,' b. iii. ch. ii. Works, iv. 706.
[518] A. Gilchrist's Life of Blake, i. 16.
[519] W. Law's introduction to his translation of Behmen's Works.
[520] H. Coleridge, Sonnet on Shakspeare.