As soon as Whitgift's "head was laid," a new and enlarged edition was published.
So keen was the struggle between him and Whitgift that the chancellor, William Cecil, had to intervene.
Whitgift was buried at Croydon where he founded a school and hospital.
Whitgift's Hospital stands to-day almost as its founder left it.
This book was immediately suppressed by order of Archbishop Whitgift, possibly because it was supposed to savour of Puritanism.