The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes (1907–21).
Volume VIII. The Age of Dryden.
§ 5. Whichcote not a Platonist
It would seem, however, that even More is not to be regarded as the originator of the Platonist movement at Cambridge. So early as the year 1641, there had appeared, printed at the University Press, a collection of Commonplaces, delivered in the chapel of Trinity college, by John Sherman, a fellow of the society and bachelor of divinity, in which the following noteworthy sentences occur:
I know not how it cometh to pass, but too many Christians have too much of heathen talk; and so also, in a reciprocation, some heathen have very much of that which seemeth correspondent unto sacred Scripture.
The teacher of the Gentiles instructeth us Christians not to disembrace goodnesse in any, nor truth in any. Plato’s rule is good,—O[char]. Let us not so much consider who saith, as what is said; who doeth, as what is done.