HER 
felf by his valour, shich, in fome inftances, was carried te 
the extreme of ra: After the fiege he vifite 
twerp and Bruffels, sd returned to Lon oe where he was 
looked now ae - one of the moft confpicuous characters of 
the time. An a mpt was made to affaflinate him in re- 
In 1616 
he was fent to the court of France, in which 
aie he higiered nae ASRCEY oat zeal in all the be coe 
entrufted to him. occafion » however ad a 
pn = the French rniditter which cated his recal: 
though office was devolved on = again at a future 
pee Tt was at Paris, in 1624, that he printed his 
amous book, * De Veritate prout Ee igs a Revela 
Tet 2 that now fhines on me, and giver of all inward dlumi- 
nations, o befeech thee, of - infinite goodnefs, to 
pardon a caer requeft than I a finner ought to make : 
I am not fatishied enough, whether I thall publifh this book 
_* De Veritate;’’ if it be for thy glory, I befeech thee give 
‘me fome fign from heaven; if not, I fhall fupprefs it —I 
had no fooner fpoken thefe words, but a loud, though yet 
@ gentle noife came from heaven (for it was ike nothing on 
earth), which did fo comfort ane cheer me, that I took 
work & ufficiency, univer- 
tht, a and ; abtolute perfection, of natural religion, with a 
view oe proving the ufeleffnefs gf revelation. has b 
yee 
o 
oO 
5 
eS ae ? “but 
t ty for the 
a : the Eng 
free 
ith Ryle o of | lord eee is itr 
le quaintn 
s poems we were 
oe log es memoirs himfelf, in 1764, by Mr. Walpole. 
Of. Orit. _ ‘ 
: enpert, G EC 2GR, brother of t the preceding, was born alfo 
in 1593+ ug ; rae ooentet ‘at Weitmintter fchool, from 
which place h to Trini rinity epheges Aare where 
ued his | udies with great dili ook his 
he 
s soi 4619 was chofen orator | of 
of $ 
s and pedantry oft ee 
ile 3 in 1665, by Nicholas Fer- 
HER 
character he feems to have ufed the moft abfurd flattery to» 
wards king James I., whom he made indefinitely greater, as 
an orator and writer, than the fages of Greece 
1e never po He was not de ther unfuccefsful, 
but obtained font James a a of 120/. per annum. On 
the death of the monarc erbert refolved to enter 
upon holy orders, and From ei period the ardour of his 
mind was entirely turned upon an exemplary difcharge of 
a minifterial fun€tions. In 1626 he was prefented to the 
end of Layton Ecclefia, i = the dioeefe of Lincoln. His 
ew up a brief manual, entitled “ The Coun- 
‘try Parfon,’’ containing rules for the conduét of a perfon in 
that fituation, which are much praifed for their excellent 
tendency. 
upon thefe rules. H 
- death a pofthumous work was publifhed, entitled « The 
facred Poems and private Ejaculations.” Thefe 
SS infomuch that 
beneficed, he was little lefs that fainted. 
HERBESTIEN, Semicre, ae born at Vippach, 
in Stiri in 1486, entered into the impe erial _ in 
In 
cated a privy cobsfcher, and preftdent of the Au 
chamber. In 1541 he went out as ambaffador to the 
Hetad who was at that time with his army near 
ment, and, a 
oreri. 
ee EARINE oe 
wn of France, in: 
Vendée, Coe ef -phice of a cantons. 
Sy Eo Mo pct 
BI 
HERBIER 
the department of sk 
in the diftri ict © 
miles 
m nes. . 
e a yative of. Bit tehens. 
oe = st mt Water-Falls 
ftin in Fo-- 
degrees, w 
suniverlity. In this carnivorous, 
