[610] Fuller's History of Cambridge, 205.

[611] Thorndike's Works, vol. vi., Oxford edition. Note by Editor, 170. Pure Emmanuel occurs in Corbet's satirical poem, 1615. It was commonly so styled.

[612] Halley's Life of Goodwin, prefixed to Works, vol. ii. of Nichol's edit., p. 23. But Brownrigg, in 1645, was put out of the Mastership of Trinity Hall.

[613] Cartwright, Travers, Calamy, Seaman, Doolittle, S. Clarke, and W. Jenkyns, came from Cambridge. Out of seventy-seven Puritan names in Brook, I find forty-seven belonging to Cambridge, and thirty to Oxford.

[614] The four were Goodwin (Catherine), Burroughs, Bridge (Emmanuel), and Sydrach Sympson. Nye was an Oxford man.

[615] Cooper, quoted in Notes to Thorndike, vol. vi. 177.

[616] Calendar of State Papers, Chas. I., 1633-4, Domestic, July 22, p. 150.

[617] Thorndike's Works, vi. 169.

[618] Cooper gives 2,091 University residents in 1641, but says it does not include the whole.—Thorndike, vi. 165. Walker reports nearly 200 masters and fellows as ejected, besides inferior scholars. Some of the ejected heads of houses were men of moderate opinions.—Neal, iii. 116.

Newcome, in his Autobiography, Cheetham Society, speaks of the bitter feuds between the new and the old fellows in 1645. He judged the supporters of the Parliament to be the most religious, "religion being as little favoured" by many of their opponents as the Puritans themselves were (p. 7).