[307] Abridged from the Autobiography of Sir John Branston, quoted in the Ecclesiastic, October, 1853.
[308] Aubrey's Letters, iii. 363.
[309] Wood's Ath. Ox., ii. 465.
[310] Life prefixed to Sherlock's Practical Christian, p. 24, 25.
[311] Hand-Book to Western Cathedrals, p. 56.
[312] The letter, dated September 13th, 1634, (State Papers,) published in Laud's Works, vii. 88, is a very curious one, and expresses strong disapproval of Goodman's conduct.
[313] See Laud's Works, iii. 287.
[314] Church Hist., iii. 409.
[315] Nalson's Col. i. 371, 372.
There is an interesting account of Goodman in the Ecclesiastic, November, 1852, with extracts from his writings. He wrote a book on the Two Great Mysteries, The Trinity and the Incarnation, which, strange to say, he dedicated to Oliver Cromwell,—"with flattery," observes Echard "and a servile petition for hearing his cause and doing justice to him."