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COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1

Cotton Mather
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COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
24 direct quotes, 24 source rows

Quotes

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4. A certain gentleman [if nothing in the following story contradict that name] was employed in obtaining from the Grand Council of Plymouth and England, a Patent in the name of these planters for a convenient quantity o…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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There was a time when the court of election being, for fear of tumult, held at Cambridge, May 17, 1637, the sectarian part of the country, who had the year before gotten a governour more unto their mind, had a project no…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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But though I know that the reverend elders of this church, and some others, do very well apprehend that the church cannot enquire into the proceedings of the court; yet, for the satisfaction of the weaker, who do not app…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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This acknowledging disposition in the governor made them all acknowledge, that he was truly 'a man of an excellent spirit.' In fine, the victories of an Alexander, an Hannibal, or a Caesar over other men, were not so glo…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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The self-denying gentleman, who had imployed his commission of governour so little to the disadvantage of the infant-colony at Connecticut, was himself, ere long, by election made governour of that colony.

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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Jewish proverb, Ne Habites in urbe ubi caput urbis est Medicus:

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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Moreover, he successively buried three wives;

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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And there was one passage of his charity that was perhaps a little unusual: in an hard and long winter, when wood was very scarce at Boston, a man gave him a private information that a needy person in the neighbourhood s…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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He was, indeed, a governour, who had most exactly studied that book which, pretending to teach politicks, did only contain three leaves, and but one word in each of those leaves, which word was, MODERATION.

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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The people have a negative upon all the executive part of the civil government, as well as the legislative, which is a vast priviledge, enjoyed by no other plantation in America, nor by Ireland'no, nor hitherto by Englan…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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and had occasion to think on the Italian proverb, ' To wait for one who does not come; to lye a bed not able to sleep; and to find it impossible to please those whom we serve; are three griefs enough to kill a man.

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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He has sometimes said that he could be willing to walk twelve miles on his feet, on condition he might have an opportunity to preach a sermon: and he seldom did preach a sermon without tears.

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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Hence, though he were a zealous enemy to all vice, yet his practice was according to his judgment thus expressed: 'In the infancy of plantations, justice should be administered with more lenity than in a settled state; b…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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the spirit of an Heylin, who seems to count no obloquy too hard for a reformer; and the spirit of those (folio-writers there are, some of them, in the English nation!) whom a noble Historian stigmatizes, as, 'Those hot-h…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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10. If the reader would know, how these good people fared the rest of the melancholy winter, let him know, that besides the exercises of Religion, with other work enough, there was the care of the sick to take up no litt…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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11. The doleful winter broke up sooner than was usual. But our crippled planters were not more comforted with the early advance of the Spring, than they were surprized with the appearance of two Indians, who in broken En…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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Of all which catastrophe's, I suppose none was more sudden than that of Monsieur Finch, whom in a ship from France, trucking with the Massachuset-Natives; those bloody salvages, coming on board without any other arms, bu…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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Well, it was not long before the Council of Plymouth in England had, by a deed bearing date March 19, 1627, sold unto some knights and gentlemen about Dorchester, viz: Sir Henry Rowsel, Sir John Young, Thomas Southcott,…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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Fifthly, The schools of learning and religion are so corrupted, as (besides the unsupportable charge of education) most children, even the best, wittiest, and of the fairest hopes, are perverted, corrupted, and utterly o…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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They then sent their agents to view the country, who returned with so advantageous a report, that the next year there was a great remove of good people thither: on this remove, they that went from Cambridge became a chur…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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So they jogged on for many years; and whereas, before the year 1644, that worthy gentleman, George Fenwick Esq., did, on the behalf of several persons of quality, begin a plantation about the mouth of the river, which wa…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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The well-known Mr. Davenport, and Mr. Eaton, and several eminent persons that came over to the Massachuset-bay among some of the first planters, were strongly urged, that they would have settled in this Bay; but hearing…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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4. Well may New-England lay claim to the name it wears, and to a room in the tenderest affections of its mother, the happy Island! for as there are few of our towns but what have their name-sakes in England, so the reaso…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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He was a person for study as well as action; and hence, notwithstanding the difficulties through which he passed in his youth, he attained unto a notable skill in languages: the Dutch tongue was become almost as vernacul…

Cotton Mather · COTTON MATHER: Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), Volume 1
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