His heresy, and was "received
into the holy Catholic Church." Returning to England he recanted his
Roman Catholic opinions, and even wrote "His Pilgrimage, wherein is
displayed the lives of the proud Popes, ambitious Cardinals, leacherous
Bishops, fat bellied Monks, and hypocritical Jesuits" (1581).
Notwithstanding which, he went beyond the seas again (to turn Mohometan,
his enemies said), and under threats and imprisonment at Rouen, recanted
all that he had formerly uttered against the Romanists. - Athenae
Oxonienses, ed. Bliss, i. p. 496.
Footnote 183: Understood: "for in the pulpit, being eloquent, they,"
etc.
Footnote 184: In volume iii. of his Itinerary (reprint by the University
of Glasgow, 1908), preceded by an Essay of Travel in General, a
panegyric in the style of Turler, Lipsius, etc., containing most points
of previous essays in praise of travel, and some new ones. For instance,
in his defence of travel, he must answer the objection that travellers
run the risk of being perverted from the Church of England.
Footnote 185: Itinerary, iii. 411.
Footnote 186: Ibid., i. 304.
Footnote 187: Ibid., i. 78-80.
Footnote 188: Ibid., i. 399.
Footnote 189: Ibid., iii. 389.
Footnote 190: Itinerary, iii. 400.
Footnote 191: Ibid., iii. 388.
Footnote 192: Ibid., iii. 387.
Footnote 193: Ibid., iii. 375.
Footnote 194: Itinerary, iii. 411.
Footnote 195: Ibid., iii. 413.
Footnote 196: See Ben Jonson, Every Man out of his Humour, Act II.