FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55  
56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   >>  
as a farther illustration of this subject. Zacharie Boyd says, in _The Last Battell of the Sovle in Death_, 1629, reprinted Glasgow, 1831, at p. 469.: "Now after his Battell ended hee hath surrendered the spirit, _Clepsydra effluxit_, his _houre-glasse_ is now runne out, and his soule is come to its wished home, where it is free from the fetters of flesh." This divine was minister of the barony parish of Glasgow, the church for which was then in the crypt of the cathedral. I have no doubt the hour-glass was there used from which he draws his simile. Your correspondent refers to sermons an hour long, but, to judge from the contents of "Mr. Zacharie's" MS. sermons still preserved in the library of the College of Glasgow, each, at the rate of ordinary speaking, must have occupied at least an hour and a half in delivery. When he had become infirm and near his end, and had found it necessary to shorten his sermons, his "kirk session" was offended, as-- "Feb. 13, 1651. Some are to speak to Mr. Z. Boyd about the soon skailing (dismissing) of the Baronie Kirk on Sunday afternoon." Though sermons are now generally restricted from three quarters to an hour's delivery, the practice of long preaching in the olden times in the west of Scotland had much prevailed. Within my own recollection I have heard sermons of nearly two hours' duration; and early among a few classes of the first Dissenters, on "Sacramental Occasions" as they are yet called, the services lasted altogether (not unfrequently) continuously from ten o'clock on Sabbath forenoon, to three and {83} four o'clock the following morning. A traditional anecdote is current of an old Presbyterian clergyman, unusually full of matter, who, having preached out his hour-glass, was accustomed to pause, and addressing the precentor, "_Another glass and then_," recommenced his sermon. A pictorial representation of the hour-glass in a country church is to be seen in front of the precentor's desk, or pulpit, in a very scarce humorsome print, entitled "Presbyterian Penance," by the famous David Allan. It also figures in the engraving of the painting by Wilkie, of John Knox preaching before Mary Queen of Scots. About twenty years ago it was either in the Cathedral of Stirling or the Armory of the Castle (the ancient chapel), that I saw the hour-glass (about twelve inches high) which had been connected with one or other of the pulpits, from both of whi
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55  
56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   >>  



Top keywords:
sermons
 

Glasgow

 

precentor

 

delivery

 
Presbyterian
 
church
 

preaching

 
Battell
 

Zacharie

 

unusually


classes

 

clergyman

 
addressing
 

accustomed

 
Dissenters
 
duration
 

preached

 

matter

 
forenoon
 

altogether


lasted

 

Sabbath

 

unfrequently

 
Another
 

current

 
Occasions
 

Sacramental

 

anecdote

 

morning

 

services


called

 

traditional

 
continuously
 

Stirling

 

Cathedral

 

Armory

 
Castle
 
ancient
 

twenty

 

chapel


pulpits

 

connected

 

twelve

 

inches

 
pulpit
 

recollection

 
scarce
 

humorsome

 
pictorial
 

sermon