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Henry Smith (c. 1560-1591?), is widely regarded to have been "the most popular Puritan preacher of Elizabethan London. A Puritan of 16th and 17th century England was an associate of any number of religious groups advocating for more "purity" of Worship and Doctrine, " His sermons at St. Clement Danes drew enormous crowds, and earned him a reputation as "Sliver Tongued" Smith. A sermon is an oration by a Prophet or member of the Clergy. Sermons address a Biblical, theological, or religious topic St Clement Danes is a church in the City of Westminster, London. The collected editions of his sermons, and especially his tract, "God's Arrow Against Atheists" were among the most frequently reprinted religious writings of the Elizabethan age. Romance and reality The Victorian era and the early twentieth century idealised the Elizabethan era

Despite his popularity in the Elizabethan period, considerable uncertainty surrounds Smith's biography. Probably born in Leicestershire around 1560, Smith may have enrolled during the 1570s in colleges at both Cambridge and Oxford, but seems not to have taken a degree. Leicestershire (ˈlɛstəʃə(r or ˈlɛstəʃɪə(r abbreviation Leics The city of Cambridge (ˈkeɪmbrɪdʒ is a university town and the administrative centre of the county of Cambridgeshire, England Oxford is currently bidding for the 2010 Wikimania Conference Oxford () is a city, and the County town of Oxfordshire, He was in any case by 1589 among London's most popular preachers; however in that year, Smith seems to have contracted an illness which according to Coopers's Athenae Cantabrigienses caused him to devote his remaining time to preparing his writings for publication:

During his sickness, being desirous to do good by writing, he occupied himself in revising his sermons and other works for the press. his collected sermons he dedicated to his kind patron Lord Burghley. . . He died before the collection came from the press, being buried at Husbands Bosworth in his native country. In the register of that parish is this entry: Anno 1591, Henricus Smyth, theologus,m filius Erasmi Smyth, armigeri, sepult. fuit 4to. die Julii.

Smith's preparations allowed his writings to become among England's most popular, after his death. It should be noted however that some sources indicate that Smith may have survived until around 1600, or even until as late as 1613.

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