After his ejectment he gathered a private congregation, which assembled in a small meeting-house in Long Walk, Bermondsey. For many years he took into his house candidates in divinity, including some from abroad.[2] He also took part in conventicles at the house of Frances Cecil, Dowager Countess of Exeter (née Brydges, widow of Thomas Cecil, 1st Earl of Exeter, who died in 1663),[3] with her chaplain Thomas Jacomb and Matthew Poole.[4]
He has two sermons in Samuel Annesley's Morning Exercises. In 1674 eighteen of his sermons, which had been taken in shorthand, were published by his widow, with a dedication to Elizabeth Cecil, Countess of Exeter, and a sketch of the author's character by Thomas Jacomb.[2]
Notes
^ Neal, Daniel; Toulmin, Joshua (1796). The History of the Puritans; Or, Protestant Non-conformists from the Reformation to the Death of Queen Elizabeth: From the Death of King Charles I. to the king's Declaration of indulgence, in the year 1672. C. Ewer and Wm. B. Allen. p. 542.