Maycock 1938

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Maycock, A. L. Nicholas Ferrar of Little Gidding. London: SPCK, 1938.

St. Francis de Sales, Introduction to the Devout Life

  • known by Ferrar; was bound by the Little Gidding women

pgs 49-51: no good reason to think Ferrar came in contact with Oratorian Rule, although it bears a resemblance to how Little Gidding was run

Ferrar's prayer of thanksgiving, after delivering his family from near-ruin financially (108-9) (c.f. [Skipton 1907])

life of the church during/after the civil wars (140-142)

house

  • private bedchambers
  • common sitting-room known as the Sisters' Chamber fo rht use of the Collett sisters; meetings of the Little Academy held here (146)
  • dining room with an organ
  • large apartments at opposite ends of the house, night oratories (one for men, one for women)
  • infirmary and surgery
  • suite of rooms acting as a miniature almshouse; permanent home for four poor widows (based on Dutch almshouses Ferrar saw during his travels) (147-8)
  • Great Chamber; long Tudor gallery; hung with tapestry, with an organ on one side; table in the center with the Bible and a Book of Common Prayer (148)
    • this is where psalms were recited, religious exercises performed; chief public room
  • Concordance Room, adjoining Great Chamber, used for making Harmonies (148-9)
    • decorated in green; long tables against the walls
    • two large presses, operated by iron bars, for stampin gthe folios as they were completed (149)
    • walls hung with inscripions -- text from Scriptures, aphorisms, exhortations

Nicholas was fond of inscriptions; kept a visitor's book, for visitors to inscribe sentences and aphorisms

  • inscription hung over the mantlepiece the urging of Herbert (see 149) -- has IHS, Jesuit inscription (Jesus Hominum Salvator); used commonly at Little Gidding
    • IHS caused suspicions of popery; finally taken down at Bishop Williams' urging in 1641 (151)