200 ADDITIONS. 



&quot; reports. The last time I was a means, by advice, to have 

 &quot; it in some such form as did better content ; and the order 

 &quot; to set down the objections and answers, and to repeat 

 &quot; them written, so as the parties should acknowledge them 

 &quot; to be their own before any answer or reply made unto 

 &quot; them, did greatly satisfy the hearers ; being so surely 

 &quot; used, that in the whole day Campion could not complain 

 &quot; that I did him wrong in any one word, but always con- 

 &quot; fessed that his sayings were rightly conceived, and truly 

 &quot; set down. By which, mere confusion was avoided, and 

 &quot; by-talk was cut off: he was hardly driven to the wall : 

 &quot; what he once had granted, he could not resume ; and our 

 &quot; cause is not so subject to false reports of his favourers,&quot;&quot; 



Numb. II. Pag. 36. 



ONE Cawood was mentioned there to have been taken up 

 by Bishop Aylmer, for applauding publicly the abovesaid 

 Campion and his learning, in his conferences, to the dis 

 paraging of the Protestant Divines that disputed with him. 

 There was also another, named Oliver Plucket, (another of 

 the crowd of common auditors,) who openly commended the 

 said Campion, saying, that he had heard him dispute, and 

 thought, in his conscience, that Campion was discreet and 

 learned, and spoke very well : and that he would have con 

 vinced them that opposed him, if he might have been heard 

 According with indifferency. Which words were laid to his charge in 

 of the in- th December by the foreman of the Wardmote-inquest of 

 quest, vid. the parish of St. Andrew^s, Holborn; which he owned, 

 p. esa. &quot; V Whereupon the deputy of the ward, with the said foreman, 

 preferred a bill of information against him to Fleetwood 

 the Recorder. The issue was, that he also was committed. 



Numb. III. Pag. 52. 



The BU HERE we fall into the year 1580, where let me note, that 



ings in Con- while Aylmer was Bishop of London, the Clergy of the 



vocation. 



