Papers of the Winthrop Family, Volume 1
1622-08-06
tho’ I have received no letters yet from you, I cannot passe by any opportunitye, without some testimonye of my fatherly affection, and care of your welfare, for which respect I am content to have you absent from me in so farre a distance, for I knowe that in respect of yourself, patria ubicunque bene, and, in respect of the Allmighty his power and providence is alike in all places, and for mine owne comfort it shalbe in your prosperity and welldoeinge wheresoeuer: and because I cannot so ofte putt you in minde of those thinges which concerne your good, as if you were nearer to me, it must be your care the better to observe and ruminate those instructions which I give you, and the better to applye the other good means which you have: especially labour by all means to imprint in your heart the fear of God, and lett not the fearfull profanenesse and contempt of vngodly men diminish the reverent and awfull regard of his great majestye in your heart: but remember still that the tyme is at hande when they shall call to the
W. 1. 6; Savage (1825), I. 336; (1853), 1. 403;
L. and L.
, 1. 172–173.
John, the son, now in his seventeenth year, having prepared for college at the Free Grammar School at Bury St. Edmunds under John Dickenson (infra, p. 314), went to Trinity College, Dublin. It was founded under a charter from Queen Elizabeth in 1591, as the college of “the holy and undivided Trinity,” and was given additional endowment by James I. W. M. Dixon, Trinity College, Dublin (London, 1902), 9–11.