out of certain Monies he at his Death bequeath’d
to the use of studious and learned Men. An Account
of which coming to the Ears of
Francis King
of
France, he invited him by Letters to
Paris,
in order, by his Advice to erect the like College
there. But certain Affairs happening, his Journey
thither was hindred. He went to
Friburg
in
Alsace, where he bought him an House, and
liv’d seven Years in great Esteem and Reputation,
both with the chief Magistrates and Citizens of the
Place, and all Persons of any Note in the University.
But his Distemper, which was the Gout, coming rudely
upon him, he, thinking the Change of Air would afford
him Relief, sold his House, and went again to
Basil,
to the House of
Frobenius; but he had not been
there above nine Months before his Gout violently
assaulted him, and his strength having gradually decay’d,
he was seized with a Dysentery, under which having
laboured for a Month, it at last overcame him, and
he died at the House of
Jerome Frobenius, the
son of
John the famous Printer, the 12th of
July 1536, about Midnight, being about seventy
Years of Age: After his last retreat to
Basil,
he went seldom abroad; and for some of the last Months
stirred not out of his Chamber. He retained a
sound Mind, even to the last Moments of his Life;
and, as a certain Author saith, bid Farewell to the
World, and passed into the State of another Life,
after the Manner of a Protestant, without the Papistical
Ceremonies of Rosaries, Crosses, Confession, Absolution,
or receiving the transubstantiated Wafer, and in one
Word, not desiring to have any of the
Romish
Superstitions administered, but according to the true
Tenor of the Gospel, taking Sanctuary in nothing but
the Mercies of God in Christ. And finding himself
near Death, he gave many Testimonies of Piety and
Christian Hope in God’s Mercy, and oftentimes
cry’d out in the
German Language,
Liever
Godt,
i.e. dear God; often repeating, O
Jesus have Mercy on me! O Lord, deliver me!
Lord, put an End to my Misery! Lord, have Mercy
upon me.
In his last Will, he made the celebrated Lawyer Bonifacius
Amerbachius his Executor, bequeathing the greatest
Part of his Substance to charitable Uses; as for the
Maintenance of such as were poor and disabled through
Age or Sickness; for the Marrying of poor young Virgins,
to keep them from Temptations to Unchastity; for the
maintaining hopeful Students in the University, and
such like charitable Uses. In the overseeing
of his Will, he join’d with Amerbachius,
two others, Jerome Frobenius, and Nicholas
Episcopius, who were his intimate Friends, and
whom a certain Author says, had then espoused the
Reformation began by Luther and other Reformers.
The city of Basil still pays Erasmus
the Respect which is due to the Memory of so eminent
a Person; they not only call’d one of the Colleges
there after his Name, but shew the House where he
died to Strangers, with as much Veneration as the
People of Roterdam do the House where he was
born.