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THE JOURNAL OF GEORGE FOX.
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EIGHTH EDITION
OF THE
JOURNAL OF GEORGE FOX.
TWO VOLUMES, 5/- NET.
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“His life well repays study. It is a rich mine, and every page of it
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THE JOURNAL
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IN TWO VOLUMES.
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The present issue of _The Journal of George Fox_ has been printed from
the stereotype plates of the Eighth (Bi-Centenary) Edition, slightly
corrected, and has been furnished with additional particulars of
previous editions of _The Journal_ (see pp. 541-544) and with greatly
enlarged Indexes.
To accompany this issue, a map has been prepared to show the places
mentioned in _The Journal_, the spelling of the names being mostly taken
from the First Edition. This work has necessitated a considerable amount
of research and enquiry in order to identify some of the more obscure
localities referred to by George Fox. It is hardly to be expected that
the positions of all these, after this lapse of time, will accord with
the judgment of all readers, but it is hoped that the map may promote
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INTRODUCTION
TO THE EIGHTH EDITION.
The following Eighth Edition of _The Journal of George Fox_, taken from
the Seventh Edition, as prepared by the late Wilson Armistead, of Leeds,
has been carefully read and collated with the original or First Edition
of that Work. And the reader can be confidently assured, making due
allowance for the translation or omission of a few obsolete expressions,
that the Work is now, in truth and substance, _the same_ as when it was
first printed. A large number of corrections in the spelling of names,
and of other chiefly clerical errors, have also been made, bringing all
down, so far as practicable, into harmony with the usage of the present
date in these respects.
DANIEL PICKARD.
LEEDS, 1891.
CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
PAGE.
CHAPTER I.—1663-1666.—George Fox visits London—taken up at
Tenterden and examined by the magistrates, but
liberated—travels to the S.W. of England—precious meetings in
Wales—at Derwentwater meets with an old woman whose husband was
aged 122 years—apprehended and taken before the magistrates at
Holker Hall, but liberated on his parole to appear at the
sessions—appears accordingly, and is committed to Lancaster
jail—many poor Friends imprisoned there at the same time, whose
families become chargeable in consequence—one of them (Oliver
Atherton) dies in jail, where he was immured by the Countess of
Derby for tithes—George Fox has the oath tendered him at the
assizes, and is re-committed—Margaret Fell is also imprisoned
there—the prisoners in Lancaster jail to Justice Fleming—a
brief warning to the same by George Fox—George Fox disputes
with Major Wiggan (who was also a prisoner), and confutes
him—writes to the judges against giving nicknames—writes a
warning to all high professors—also a warning against the
spirit of John Perrot—at the assizes he points out many fatal
errors in his indictment, and it is quashed in consequence, but
the judge ensnares him with the oath, and he is again remanded
to prison—suffers much from the badness of the prison—at the
next assizes he again points out fatal errors in his
indictment, and is immediately hurried away to jail, and
sentence is passed on him in his absence—a testimony against
tithes—he is removed to Scarbro’ Castle—has several conferences
and disputes with divers persons there—writes to the king
respecting his imprisonment, and is set at liberty—copy of his
discharge and passport—the day after George Fox’s liberation
the great fire broke out in London, a vision of which he had in
Lancaster Castle—the hand of the Lord turned against
persecutors, 1
CHAPTER II.—1666-1669.—George Fox visits a man above one hundred
years old, who had been convinced—refutes a slander that
Friends love none but themselves—has a meeting at Captain
Taylor’s [at Brighouse], where a neighbouring knight threatens
again to imprison him—comes to London, and finds the city in
ruins as he had seen it in a vision some years before—is moved
to recommend the setting up of monthly meetings to take care of
God’s glory, and to admonish and exhort such as walk
disorderly—travels through the nation for this purpose—meets
with opposition in Huntingdonshire and Bedfordshire—when at
Shrewsbury it was rumoured that “the great Quaker of England
was come to town“—the hypocrisy of the Presbyterians
detected—they and the Independents persecute when in power, but
flinch in time of persecution by other powers—George Fox
recommends certain regulations to be observed relative to
Friends’ marriages—he also recommends the establishment of a
school at Waltham for boys, and one at Shacklewell for
girls—the meetings for discipline are the means of a great
reformation among the people—George Fox discovers a cheat,
writes a prophetic warning to Friends—monthly meetings settled
throughout the nation—the order and good results thereof—George
Fox disputes with a Papist—confers with Esquire Marsh
(Justice), and shows him how to distinguish between Friends and
other Dissenters who refused the oath—Justice Marsh is
afterwards very serviceable to Friends in screening them from
suffering, and recommends the king to grant liberty of
conscience—fourteen monthly meetings are settled in
Yorkshire—Isaac Lindley to George Fox—when at Scarbro’ the
governor presses George Fox to accept his hospitality—large and
precious meetings, 74
CHAPTER III.—1669-1671.—George Fox sails for Ireland in company
with several other Friends—he there sends a challenge to the
Popish priests to try their God, which is not accepted—he
contrasts them with Baal’s priests—the authorities of Cork
threaten him, and issue warrants for his apprehension—he rides
publicly through the city, and is seen by the mayor, but not
molested—writes to Friends in the ministry there—discourses
with professors on election and reprobation—returns to
England—a report is spread that George Fox is turned
Presbyterian, through a trick to obtain a congregation for John
Fox, the Presbyterian, which, however, turns to the advantage
of Friends—George Fox is married to Margaret Fell at
Bristol—writes to the quarterly meetings about putting children
apprentices—Margaret Fox is cast into prison—two of her
daughters go to the king, and obtain a promise of their
mother’s liberty—on the passing of the Conventicle Act, George
Fox writes a declaration against seditious conventicles—writes
to Friends to strengthen them in their trials—is apprehended at
a meeting in Gracechurch Street—taken before the mayor, who
discourses with him and sets him at liberty—visits Friends in
Reading jail—undergoes great travail of spirit, loses his sight
and hearing, and becomes as a sign—persecution becoming hot,
some meeting-houses are pulled down, and Friends are much
abused—George Fox endures great mental conflict—the
faithfulness of Friends is said by some professors to have
preserved the nation from debauchery—George Fox writes an
encouraging letter to Friends—as persecution abates he
recovers—writes a warning to the rulers of the
nation—recommends certain regulations respecting
marriage—writes a prayer, 107
CHAPTER IV.—1671-1672.—His wife being still detained a prisoner,
George Fox puts two women Friends upon going to the king to
procure her discharge, which he granted under the broad seal,
to clear her person and estate after being a prisoner under
premunire ten years—he sails for the plantations in America
with several other Friends—chased by a Sallee man-of-war—the
master in a strait asks advice of George Fox, who seeks counsel
of the Lord, and is assured of their preservation—the event
verifies the prediction—they land at Barbadoes, after a seven
weeks’ passage—a man in the island, who was greatly incensed
against George Fox without just cause, and who had threatened
his life, died a few days before his landing—is laid up for
some weeks—writes to Friends in England—exhorts Friends to care
and watchfulness in regard to marriages, keeping registers, and
records, providing burial grounds, &c.—to deal mildly with
their negroes, and, after certain years of servitude, to set
them free—writes a further exhortation to Friends in
England—visits the governor, who is very kind—has many large
meetings, and there is a great convincement; Colonel Lyne
testifies how much Friends exalt Christ in all his offices
beyond what he had ever heard—the priests rage, and try in vain
to stir up persecution—there is much clamour and cavilling
against Friends, and many slanders and false reports are
issued, which George Fox answers in a paper addressed to the
governor—the governor visits him—writes to his wife—sails for
Jamaica, where he has many meetings, and many are
convinced—Elizabeth Hooton dies there, 140
CHAPTER V.—1672-1673.—George Fox embarks for Maryland, where he
arrives after a seven weeks’ voyage, and having experienced
some remarkable deliverances—attends a General Meeting for
Maryland, which held four days—several meetings for discipline
established—has meetings with the Indian kings—travels towards
New England—attends the Half-year’s Meeting on Long Island,
which continued four days—has a meeting with some
opposers—visits Rhode Island, where the Yearly Meeting for New
England is held, which continued six days—attends a marriage
there, and has a meeting with some Ranters—also one with some
Indians on Shelter Island—one of his companions thrown from his
horse and lays apparently dead, but soon recovers in an
unexpected manner—they reach Maryland after nine days’ travel
overland between three and four hundred miles—visits a judge
who is ill, but recovers—attends the General Meeting for
Maryland, which held five days—sails for Virginia, and arrives
in three days, a distance of 200 miles—thence proceeds towards
Carolina—visits the Indians, and shows them that God made but
one woman for one man—returns to Virginia—sails for
Maryland—endures great extremes of heat and cold within a very
short period—speaks to a woman who had been many years in
trouble, and entreats the Lord for her, and she is thereupon
restored—attends the General Meeting for Maryland, to the
edification and comfort of Friends—sails for England, and
arrives safe, after a six weeks’ passage, 161
CHAPTER VI.—1673-1675.—George Fox writes to his wife from
Bristol—has a glorious powerful meeting there, in which he
declares of three estates and three teachers—at Slaughterford
meets with much opposition to the settlement of women’s
meetings—the chief opposer, struck by the Lord’s power,
condemns his error—at Armscott is arrested by Justice Parker,
and sent to Worcester jail with Thomas Lower—writes to his
wife—he and T. Lower write to Lord Windsor and other
magistrates, with a statement of their case—they are examined
at the sessions, but George Fox is ensnared with the oath, and
re-committed for refusing to take it—Thomas Lower is
discharged, and afterwards visits Justice Parker, and gives the
priest of the parish (who instigated their imprisonment) a
severe rebuke in his presence, though unknown—George Fox
disputes with Dr. Crowder on swearing—he is removed to London
by Habeas Corpus—but ultimately remanded to Worcester—is
examined at the assizes by Judge Turner, but the case is
referred to the sessions—death of his mother—disputes with a
priest on perfection—brought up at the sessions and
re-committed, but has liberty till the next sessions—is again
removed by Habeas Corpus, and tenders in court a declaration
instead of the oath—attends the Yearly Meeting in
London—appears again at the sessions at Worcester, and points
out the flaws in his indictment—yet he is brought in guilty and
premunired—writes to the king respecting the principle of
Friends—is seized with illness, and his life almost despaired
of—Justice Parker writes to the jailer to relax the rigour of
his imprisonment—his wife intercedes with the king for his
release, which he is willing to grant by a pardon—this George
Fox could not accept, as it implied guilt—he is once more
removed by Habeas Corpus—the under-sheriff quarrels with him
for calling their ministers priests—he is brought before the
judges, and Counsellor Corbet starts a new plea, that the court
cannot imprison on a premunire—the indictment is quashed for
error, and he is freed by proclamation after nearly fourteen
months’ imprisonment—he writes many papers and pamphlets in
Worcester jail, 197
CHAPTER VII.—1675-1677.—George Fox attends the Yearly Meeting,
and afterwards sets forward towards the North—attends the
Quarterly Meeting at Lancaster, and goes thence to
Swarthmore—writes many books and papers for the Truth—the
titles of several named—writes to Friends in Westmorland to
keep in the power of God, and thereby avoid strife—writes an
epistle to the Yearly Meeting—makes a collection and
arrangement of his various papers and writings, and of the
names of divers Friends engaged in particular service, or
against the Truth—some meetings for discipline established in
the North in 1653—recites his labours and travels for
establishing meetings for discipline—a spirit of discord and
separation appears in the church—the separatists are rebuked
and reproved—the establishment of men’s and women’s meetings is
much opposed—a narrative of the spreading of Truth, and of the
opposition from the worldly powers—death of Priest Lampitt, a
persecutor—George Fox travels again towards the South—writes to
his wife from York—finds some slack in their testimony against
Tithes—writes an epistle to Friends on the subject—attends the
Yearly Meeting—with John Burnyeat, and other Friends, visits
William Penn at his house at Worminghurst, in Sussex—sets
things in order for visiting Holland—precious meeting, 232
CHAPTER VIII.—1677.—George Fox sails for Holland, with several
other Friends, and lands at Briel—attends the Quarterly Meeting
at Amsterdam—writes an epistle to Friends against the spirit of
separation—writes to the Princess Elizabeth—her answer—a
Monthly Meeting is established at Frederickstadt—Friends are
imprisoned and banished from Embden, and suffer greatly—a
Monthly Meeting settled at Harlingen—a priest assents to the
doctrine promulgated by George Fox—he is questioned for it by
his hearers—George Fox writes an epistle to Friends respecting
the seducing spirit—he writes an epistle of encouragement to
Friends under suffering at Dantzic—and again to Friends
respecting the spirit of separation—spends a considerable time
at Amsterdam in writing on Truth’s account—a warning to the
magistrates and people at Oldenburg—an epistle concerning
fasts, prayers, honour, persecution, true liberty, and the
observance of days and times—a warning to the magistrates,
priests, and people of Hamburg—to the ambassadors met to effect
a treaty of peace in the city of Nimeguen—completes his travels
in Holland—writes a book addressed to the Jews, 266
CHAPTER IX.—1677-1680.—George Fox, with other Friends, sails for
England, and lands at Harwich, after a hazardous voyage of
three days—has a large meeting at Colchester, and proceeds
thence to London—writes to his wife—receives further accounts
of persecution in New England—travels into Buckinghamshire, and
meets with some false brethren, who are unruly and troublesome
at meetings—Friends have a special meeting with them
afterwards—at Reading meets with opposition to the settlement
of a women’s meeting—visits Bristol during the fair, where are
many Friends from various parts—the separatists there are very
rude and abusive—he aids Friends in drawing up a breviat of
their sufferings, to present to the judges at Gloucester
assizes—meets with some separatists at Finchcomb—is engaged
with other Friends in soliciting Parliament to grant them
relief from the statutes made against Popish recusants—attends
the Yearly Meeting, which was a glorious and heavenly
one—Friends greatly united in testifying against the spirit of
separation—not one mouth opened on its behalf—the Truth
prospers at home and abroad—George Fox writes to his
wife—writes to the king of Poland to dissuade him from
persecution—to Friends in Amsterdam—Friends again press their
suit for relief from the statutes made against Popish recusants
without success—are much exercised with the spirit of
separation, which opposes the order and discipline of the
church—George Fox writes a paper to open the understandings of
the weak, and as a reproof to a censorious judging spirit—has
conferences with some of the opposers at Hertford—writes again
to Friends to warn them of this spirit of false liberty—visits
Friends in prison at Leicester—advises Friends how to end their
differences—writes an epistle to Friends in London—writes to
Friends in prison to console them under suffering—writes an
epistle to the Yearly Meeting—an encouragement to Friends to be
valiant for the Truth—also a caution to Friends to keep in
humility—travels again towards the South—visits prisoners in
York Castle—recommends Friends to lay their sufferings before
the judge at the assizes—attends the Yearly Meeting in
London—writes to the Great Turk and to the Dey of Algiers—to
the latter particularly respecting Friends who are captives
there—at Hertford meets with John Story (the schismatic) and
some of his party, but the Truth prevails—has a meeting with
some of the opposers—solicits the Parliament to grant relief to
Friends under suffering—writes a paper against plots and
plotters, 312
CHAPTER X.—1681-1683.—George Fox answers two envious books
written abroad—writes to magistrates to persuade them to
moderation—writes to the Quarterly Meetings—attends the judges
at Chambers, respecting a tithe-suit against himself and his
wife—George Fox had bound himself not to intermeddle with his
wife’s estate—this is shown to the judges in court, at which
they wonder—his counsel thereon founds an argument in his
favour—he again writes against the spirit of strife and
division in the church—writes to the magistrates who had
illegally condemned Friends upon _ex-parte_ evidence—writes two
papers respecting the choice of Sheriffs—Friends are
interrupted at Gracechurch Street Meeting by a civil and
military force—George Fox writes divers books and papers in
support and defence of the Truth—the Spirit of God directed to
as the rule to distinguish between Truth and error, whereby the
evil of persecution may be avoided—an epistle to encourage
Friends under their sufferings, both from the outward powers,
and from false brethren—the laws are now more strictly enforced
against Dissenters—an epistle to Friends, commending them to
the power of God in themselves—writes to Friends imprisoned at
Denbigh, to console them in their sufferings, and exhorting
them to faithfulness—Friends are kept out of their
meeting-houses, and fined for speaking—a Friend is speedily
restored from a sudden illness, in a remarkable manner, through
the prayers of George Fox—persecution is now hot, and George
Fox writes to Friends not to risk the loss of other people’s
goods through their sufferings, 350
CHAPTER XI.—1683-1685.—A salutation of love to Friends, designed
to stir up the pure mind—an epistle to Friends commending them
to Christ, the rock and sure foundation—an epistle of counsel
to Friends—George Fox taken from a meeting and examined by a
magistrate, but soon released—writes an epistle to the faithful
to beware of a seducing spirit—after the Yearly Meeting sails
for Holland, and lands at the Briel—attends the Yearly Meeting
at Amsterdam—writes to Galenus Abrahams, a Mennonist or
Baptist, who, seven years before, bid him “keep his eyes off
him,” for he said “they pierced him,” but now he was become
very loving and tender, as well as his family—George Fox
returns to England—writes to the Duke of Holstein an able
defence of women’s preaching—writes an epistle of counsel to
Friends—advises with, and assists them in, drawing up an
account of sufferings, which is printed and spread amongst
Parliament-men—writes a caution to Friends to keep out of the
world’s spirit, &c.—and a warning against pride and excess in
apparel, 381
CHAPTER XII.—1685-1686.—George Fox tarries in London, labouring
in the service of Truth—removes to Epping on account of his
health—writes an epistle to Friends—returns to London—writes a
paper concerning order in the Church of God—and a warning to
backsliders—assists in distributing money raised for sufferers
by Friends in Ireland—writes an epistle to the king of Poland,
on behalf of Friends of Dantzic—who suffer imprisonment for
conscience’ sake—a paper concerning judging—looks diligently
after Friends’ sufferings in London, and obtains a general
release of prisoners—writes an epistle to Friends, many having
been recently liberated from prison—another on a similar
occasion—an epistle to Friends to keep in the unity in the
Truth—another to remind them of the evidence and seal they had
received of their meetings for discipline having been set up in
the power and spirit of God—a paper concerning the state of the
true Church—a paper respecting the “falling away” foretold by
the apostle Paul, 2 Thess. ii. 3—a paper showing how the Lord,
in all ages, called the righteous out from amongst the wicked,
before he destroyed the latter, 415
CHAPTER XIII.—1686-1687.—The first and second Adam compared—the
two seeds distinguished—George Fox is daily exercised in London
in services relating to the Church, visiting the sick or
afflicted, and writing in defence of Truth, or refuting
error—true prayer distinguished from the practice of the
Papists—visits his son-in-law, William Mead—a distinction
between the true offering and sacrifice, and the false, under
the old and new covenant—a general toleration and liberty being
now granted, George Fox writes a word of counsel and caution to
Friends, to walk circumspectly in a time of liberty—how
redemption by Christ is known and witnessed—repentance must
precede the reception of the gospel, baptism, &c.—a paper
showing wherein God’s people are to be like him—the right way
to Christ—the kingdom of God is to be measurably known in this
life—George Fox is benefited by being three months in the
country—has much service in London again—at Kingston writes a
paper, showing how the Jews, by disobedience, lost the Holy
City and the Holy Land, designed as a warning to
Christians—everlasting life through, and in, Christ, to be
received and witnessed in this life—the stone cut out of the
mountain signifies the kingdom and power of Christ—a
miscellaneous paper, being a collection of Scripture passages
respecting regeneration, sanctification, &c., 446
CHAPTER XIV.—1687-1690.—George Fox continues to have service in
London and the neighbourhood—writes a paper respecting the
gospel and the seed; being also an incentive to diligence—a
general epistle to Friends, forewarning them of an approaching
storm—Moses and Christ both faithful under their respective
dispensations—Christ is on his throne—George Fox’s health
declining, he visits William Mead again for a few weeks—the
world’s teachers, and the emptiness of their teaching—those who
turn people from the inward manifestation of Christ in the
heart, remove them from the heavenly landmark, and bring a
curse on themselves—the prophets, apostles, and holy men of old
were husbandmen and tradesmen, unlike the world’s teachers—the
vanity of being too much busied with, and spending the time in,
hearing and telling news—though still declining, George Fox
attends at the Parliament-house many days on behalf of his
Friends—writes to Peter Hendricks, and to Friends at Dantzic,
to strengthen and comfort them under their sufferings—to the
magistrates and priests of Dantzic, showing the evil of
persecution, and persuading to Christian moderation—an appendix
to the Yearly Meeting’s epistle—an epistle to the Northern
Yearly Meeting, to be held at York—George Fox’s health still
impaired—writes an epistle to Friends in Barbadoes—to Friends
in Pennsylvania and other parts of America—to all that profess
the Truth of God; being a warning to the young against the
world’s fashions, and to the old against going into the earthly
things—Christ is the “Ensign,” prophesied of by Isaiah—an
appendix to the Yearly Meeting’s epistle—an epistle to Friends
in the ministry—to Friends in the ministry gone to America—to
suffering Friends in Ireland—death of George Fox in
1690—epistle written with his hand and found sealed up—some
account of the interment, 472
APPENDIX:—
Testimony of Margaret Fox, concerning her late husband, George
Fox; with a brief account of some of his travels, sufferings,
and hardships, endured for the Truth’s sake, 511
Testimony of some of the author’s relations, 519
An Epistle, by way of testimony, to Friends and brethren of the
Monthly and Quarterly Meetings in England, Wales, and
elsewhere, concerning the decease of our faithful brother,
George Fox, 521
Thomas Ellwood’s account of that eminent and honourable servant
of the Lord, George Fox, 526
An Epistle of George Fox’s, written with his own hand, and left
sealed up with this superscription, viz., “Not to be opened
before the time,” 527
The appearance of the Lord’s everlasting Truth, and its breaking
forth again in his eternal power, in this our day and age in
England, 529
A Chronological Register of the Places visited by George Fox, 531
Texts of Scripture occurring in the _Journal_, 538
Particulars of the English editions of the _Journal_, 541
Particulars of the American editions of the _Journal_, 544
Index I. Persons and Places, 545
Index II. Principal Subjects, 583
JOURNAL OF GEORGE FOX.
VOL. 2.
-------------------------------------------
CHAPTER 1.
1663-1666.—George Fox visits London—taken up at Tenterden and examined
by the magistrates, but liberated—travels to the S. W. of
England—precious meetings in Wales—at Derwentwater meets with an old
woman whose husband was aged 122 years—apprehended and taken before
the magistrates at Holker Hall, but liberated on his parole to
appear at the sessions—appears accordingly, and is committed to
Lancaster jail—many poor friends imprisoned there at the same time,
whose families become chargeable in consequence—one of them (Oliver
Atherton) dies in jail, where he was immured by the Countess of
Derby for tithes—George Fox has the oath tendered him at the
assizes, and is re-committed—Margaret Fell is also imprisoned
there—the prisoners in Lancaster jail to Justice Fleming—a brief
warning to the same by George Fox—George Fox disputes with Major
Wiggan (who was also a prisoner), and confutes him—writes to the
judges against giving nicknames—writes a warning to all high
professors—also a warning against the spirit of John Perrot—at the
assizes he points out many fatal errors in his indictment, and it is
quashed in consequence, but the judge ensnares him with the oath,
and he is again remanded to prison—suffers much from the badness of
the prison—at the next assizes he again points out fatal errors in
his indictment, and is immediately hurried away to jail, and
sentence is passed on him in his absence—a testimony against
tithes—he is removed to Scarbro’ Castle—has several conferences and
disputes with divers persons there—writes to the king respecting his
imprisonment, and is set at liberty—copy of his discharge and
passport—the day after George Fox’s liberation the great fire broke
out in London, a vision of which he had in Lancaster Castle—the hand
of the Lord turned against persecutors.
Having passed through NORFOLK, SUFFOLK, ESSEX, and HERTFORDSHIRE, we
came to LONDON again; where I stayed awhile, visiting Friends in their
meetings, which were very large, and the Lord’s power was over all.
After some time I left the city again, and travelled into KENT, having
Thomas Briggs with me. We went to ASHFORD where we had a quiet, and a
very blessed meeting; and on First-day we had a very good and peaceable
one at CRANBROOK. Then we went to TENTERDEN, and had a meeting there, to
which many Friends came from several parts, and many other people came
in, and were reached by the truth. When the meeting was over, I walked
with Thomas Briggs into a field, while our horses were got ready; and
turning my head, I espied a captain coming, and a great company of
soldiers with lighted matches and muskets. Some of them came to us, and
said, “We must go to their captain.” When they had brought us before
him, he asked, “Where is George Fox? which is he?” I said, “I am the
man.” Then he came to me and was somewhat struck, and said, “I will
secure you among the soldiers.” So he called for them to take me. He
took Thomas Briggs, and the man of the house with many more; but the
power of the Lord was mightily over them all. Then he came to me again,
and said, “I must go along with him to the town;” and he carried himself
pretty civilly, bidding the soldiers bring the rest after. As we walked,
I asked him, “Why they did thus;” for I had not seen so much ado a great
while, and I bid him be civil to his peaceable neighbours.
When we were come to the town, they had us to an inn that was the
jailer’s house; and after a while the mayor of the town, and this
captain, and the lieutenant, who were justices, came together and
examined me, “why I came thither to make a disturbance?” I told them, I
did not come to make a disturbance, neither had I made any since I came.
They said, “there was a law against the Quakers’ meetings, made only
against them.” I told them, I knew no such law. Then they brought forth
the act that was made against Quakers and others. I told them, that was
against such as were a terror to the king’s subjects, and were enemies,
and held principles dangerous to the government, and therefore that was
not against us, for we held truth; and our principles were not dangerous
to the government, and our meetings were peaceable, as they knew, who
knew their neighbours were a peaceable people. They told me, “I was an
enemy to the king.” I answered, We loved all people and were enemies to
none; that I, for my own part, had been cast into Derby dungeon, about
the time of Worcester fight, because I would not take up arms against
him, and that I was afterwards brought by Colonel Hacker to London, as a
plotter to bring in King Charles, and was kept prisoner there till set
at liberty by Oliver. They asked me, “whether I was imprisoned in the
time of the insurrection?” I said, yes; I had been imprisoned then, and
since that also, and had been set at liberty by the king’s own command.
I opened the act to them, and showed them the king’s late declaration;
gave them the examples of other justices, and told them also what the
House of Lords had said of it. I spoke also to them concerning their own
conditions, exhorting them to live in the fear of God, to be tender
towards their neighbours that feared him, and to mind God’s wisdom, by
which all things were made and created, that they might come to receive
it, be ordered by it, and by it order all things to God’s glory. They
demanded bond of us for our appearance at the sessions; but we, pleading
our innocency, refused to give bond. Then they would have us promise to
come no more there; but we kept clear of that also. When they saw they
could not bring us to their terms, they told us, “we should see they
were civil to us, for it was the mayor’s pleasure we should all be set
at liberty.” I told them their civility was noble, and so we parted.
Then leaving Tenterden we went to NEWICK in SUSSEX, where we visited
some Friends. Thence we passed through the country, visiting Friends,
and having great meetings; all quiet and free from disturbance, except
by some jangling Baptists, till we came into HAMPSHIRE. After a good
meeting at SOUTHAMPTON, we went to POUNER, in the parish of Ringwood,
where was a monthly meeting next day, to which many Friends came from
Southampton, Poole, and other places; and the weather being very hot,
some of them came pretty early in the morning. I took a friend and
walked out with him into the orchard, inquiring of him how the affairs
of truth stood amongst them; (for many of them had been convinced by me,
before I was a prisoner in Cornwall.) While we were conversing, a young
man came and told us the trained bands were raising, and he heard they
would come and break up the meeting. It was not yet meeting-time for
about three hours, and there being other Friends walking in the orchard,
the Friend that I was discoursing with before, desired me to walk into a
corn-field adjoining it, which we did. After a while the young man that
spoke of the trained bands left us, and when he was gone some distance,
he stood and waved his hat. Whereupon I spoke to the other young man
that was with me, to go and see what he meant. He went, but did not
return; for the soldiers were come into the orchard. As I kept walking I
could see the soldiers, and some of them, as I heard afterwards, saw me,
but had no mind to meddle. Coming so long before the meeting-time, they
did not tarry; but took what Friends they found at the house, and some
whom they met in the lane coming, and led them away. After they were
gone, it drew towards eleven, Friends began to come in apace, and a
large and glorious meeting we had; for the everlasting Seed of God was
set over all, and the people were settled in the new covenant of life,
upon the foundation, Christ Jesus.
Towards the latter part of the meeting, there came a man in gay apparel,
and looked in while I was declaring, and went away again presently. This
man came with an evil intent; for he went forthwith to Ringwood, and
told the magistrates “they had taken two or three men at Pouner, and had
left George Fox there preaching to two or three hundred people.” Upon
this the magistrates sent the officers and soldiers again; but the
meeting being nearly ended when the man looked in, and he having about a
mile and a half to go with his information, to fetch the soldiers, and
they as far to come, after they had received their orders, before they
came our meeting was over; ending about three o’clock peaceably and
orderly. After the meeting I spoke to the Friends of the house where it
was held (the hostess lying then dead in the house,) and then some
Friends conducted me to another Friend’s at a little distance; where,
after we had refreshed ourselves, I took horse, having about twenty
miles to ride that afternoon to one —— Fry’s house in WILTSHIRE, where a
meeting was appointed for the next day.
After we were gone, the officers and soldiers came in a great heat, and
when they found they were too late, and had missed their prey, they were
much enraged; and the officers were offended with the soldiers, because
they had not seized my horse in the stable the first time they came. But
the Lord, by his good providence, delivered me, and prevented their
mischievous design. For the officers were envious men, and had an evil
mind against Friends; but the Lord brought his judgments upon them, so
that it was taken notice of by their neighbours. For “whereas before
they were wealthy men, after this their estates wasted away; and John
Line, the constable, who was not only very forward in putting on the
soldiers to take Friends, but also carried those that were taken to
prison, and took a false oath against them at the assize, upon which
they were fined and continued prisoners, was a sad spectacle to behold.
For his flesh rotting away while he lived, he died in a very miserable
condition, wishing he had never meddled with the Quakers, and confessing
that he had never prospered since he had had a hand in persecuting them;
and that he thought the hand of the Lord was against him for it.”
At —— Fry’s in Wiltshire, we had a very blessed meeting, and quiet,
though the officers had purposed to break it up, and were on their way
in order thereunto. But before they got to it, word was brought them,
that there was a house just broken up by thieves, and they were required
to go back again with speed, to search after and pursue them; by which
means, our meeting escaped disturbance, and we were preserved out of
their hands.
We passed through Wiltshire into DORSETSHIRE, having large and good
meetings. The Lord’s everlasting power was with us, and carried us over
all; in which we sounded forth his saving truth and word of life, which
many gladly received. Thus we visited Friends, till we came to TOPSHAM
in DEVONSHIRE, travelling some weeks eight or nine score miles a week,
and had meetings every day. At Topsham we met with Margaret Fell and two
of her daughters, Sarah and Mary, and with Leonard Fell and Thomas
Salthouse.[1] Thence we passed to TOTNESS, where we visited some
Friends, then to KINGSBRIDGE, and to Henry Pollexfen’s, who had been an
ancient justice of peace. There we had a large meeting. This old Justice
accompanied us to PLYMOUTH, and into CORNWALL to Justice Porter’s, and
thence to Thomas Mount’s, where we had another large meeting. After
which we went to Humphrey Lower’s, where also we had a large meeting,
and thence to Loveday Hambley’s, where we had a general meeting for the
whole country; and all was quiet.
A little before this, Joseph Hellen and G. Bewley, had been at Loo to
visit Blanch Pope, a Ranting woman, under pretence to convince and
convert her; but before they left her, she had so darkened them with her
principles, that they seemed to be like her disciples, especially Joseph
Hellen; for she had asked them, “who made the devil; did not God?” This
idle question so puzzled them, that they could not answer her. They
afterwards asked me that question. I told them, no; for all that God
made was good and was blessed; so was not the devil. He was called a
serpent before he was called a devil and an adversary, and then he had
the title of devil given to him. Afterwards he was called a dragon,
because he was a destroyer. The devil abode not in the truth, and by
departing from the truth, he became a devil. So the Jews, when they went
out of the truth, were said to be of the devil, and were called
serpents. Now there is no promise of God to the devil, that ever he
shall return to truth again; but to man and woman, who have been
deceived by him, the promise of God is, that “the Seed of the woman
shall bruise the serpent’s head,”—shall break his power and strength to
pieces. Now when these things were opened more at large to the
satisfaction of Friends, those two who had yielded to the spirit of that
ranting woman, were judged by the truth; and one of them, Joseph Hellen,
ran quite out, and was disowned by Friends; but George Bewley was
recovered, and afterwards became serviceable.
We passed from Loveday Hambley’s to Francis Hodges’s, near FALMOUTH and
PENRYN, where we had a large meeting. Thence we went to HELSTONE that
night, where some Friends came to visit us; and next day passed to
Thomas Teage’s, where we had another large meeting, at which many were
convinced. I was led to open “the state of the church in the primitive
times, the state of the church in the wilderness, and the state of the
false church that was got up since, and to show that now the everlasting
gospel was preached again over the head of the whore, beast, false
prophets, and antichrists, which had got up since the apostles’ days;
and now the everlasting gospel was received and receiving, which brought
life and immortality to light, that they might see over the devil that
had darkened them.” The people received the gospel and the word of life
gladly, and a glorious blessed meeting we had for the exalting of the
Lord’s everlasting truth and his name. After the meeting was over I
walked out, and as I was coming in again I heard a noise in the court,
and coming nearer, I found the man of the house speaking to the tinners
and others, and telling them, “it was the everlasting truth that had
been declared there that day;” and the people generally confessed to it.
From thence we passed to the LAND’S END, to John Ellis’s, where we had a
precious meeting. Here was a fisherman, one Nicholas Jose, that was
convinced. He spoke in meetings, and declared the truth amongst the
people, and the Lord’s power was over all. I was glad that the Lord had
raised up his standard in those dark parts of the nation, where there is
since a fine meeting of honest-hearted Friends; many are come to sit
under Christ’s teaching; and a great people the Lord will have in that
country.
Thence we returned to REDRUTH, and next day to TRURO, where we had a
meeting. Next morning, some of the chief of the town desired to speak
with me, amongst whom was Colonel Rouse. I went and had much discourse
with them concerning the things of God. In their reasoning, they said,
“the gospel was the four books of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John;” and
they called it natural. I told them, “the gospel was the power of God,
which was preached before Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, or any of them
were printed or written; and it was preached to every creature (of which
a great part might never see or hear of those four books,) so that every
creature was to obey the power of God; for Christ, the spiritual man,
would judge the world according to the gospel, that is, according to his
invisible power.” When they heard this, they could not gainsay; for the
truth came over them. I directed them to their teacher, the Grace of
God, and showed them the sufficiency of it, which would teach them how
to live, and what to deny; and being obeyed, would bring them salvation.
So to that grace I recommended them, and left them.
Then we returned through the country, visiting Friends, and had meetings
at Humphrey Lower’s again, and at Thomas Mount’s. Afterwards at George
Hawkins’s, at STOKE, we had a large meeting, to which Friends came from
Launceston and several other places. A living, precious meeting it was,
in which the Lord’s presence and power was richly manifested amongst us;
and I left Friends there under the Lord Jesus Christ’s teaching.
In Cornwall I was informed there was one Colonel Robinson, a very wicked
man, who, after the king came in, was made a justice of peace, and
became a cruel persecutor of Friends, of whom he sent many to prison.
Hearing that they had some little liberty, through the favour of the
jailer, to come home sometimes to visit their wives and children, he
made great complaint thereof to the judge at the assize against the
jailer; whereupon the jailer was fined a hundred marks, and Friends were
kept very strictly up for a while. After he was come home from the
assize, he sent to a neighbouring justice, to desire him to go to a
fanatic-hunting with him. On the day that he intended, and was prepared
to go, he sent his man about with his horses, and walked himself on foot
from his dwelling-house to a tenement, where his cows and dairy were
kept, and where his servants were then milking. When he came there he
asked for his bull. The maid-servants said, they had shut him into the
field, because he was unruly against the kine, and hindered their
milking. Then he went into the field to the bull, and having formerly
accustomed himself to play with him, he began to fence at him with his
staff. But the bull snuffed at him, and passed a little back; then
turning upon him again, ran fiercely at him and struck his horn into his
thigh, and heaving him upon his horn, threw him over his back, and tore
up his thigh to his belly. When he came to the ground again he gored him
with his horns, run them into the ground in his rage and violence,
roared, and licked up his master’s blood. The maid-servant, hearing her
master cry out, ran into the field, and took the bull by the horns to
pull him off from her master. The bull, without hurting her, put her
gently by with his horns, but still fell to goring him and licking up
his blood. Then she ran and got some men, that were at work not far off,
to come and rescue her master; but they could not at all beat off the
bull, till they brought mastiff dogs to set on him; and then he fled in
great rage and fury. Upon hearing of it his sister came, and said to
him, “Alack! brother, what a heavy judgment is this that has befallen
you!” He answered, “Ah! sister, it is a heavy judgment indeed. Pray let
the bull be killed, and the flesh given to the poor,” said he. They
carried him home, but he died soon after. The bull was grown so fierce
that they were forced to shoot him; for no man durst come near to kill
him. Thus does the Lord sometimes make some examples of his just
judgment upon the persecutors of his people, that others may fear, and
learn to beware.
After I had cleared myself of Cornwall, and Thomas Lower had brought us
over Horsebridge into DEVONSHIRE again, we took our leave of him. Thomas
Briggs, Robert Widders, and I, came to TIVERTON; and it being their
fair, and many Friends there, we had a meeting amongst them. The
magistrates gathered in the street, but the Lord’s power stopped them. I
saw them in the street over against the door, but they had not power to
come in to meddle with us, though they had will enough to do it.
After the meeting we passed to COLLUMPTON and WELLINGTON, for we had
appointed a meeting five miles off, where we had a large one at a
butcher’s house, and a blessed meeting it was. The people were directed
to their Teacher, the Grace of God, which would bring them salvation,
and many were settled under its teaching. The Lord’s presence was
amongst us, and we were refreshed in him, in whom we laboured and
travailed; and the meeting was quiet. There had been very great
persecution in that country and town a little before, insomuch that some
Friends questioned the peaceableness of our meeting; but the Lord’s
power chained all, and his glory shone over all. Friends told us how
they had broken up their meetings by warrants from the justices, and how
by their warrants they were required to carry Friends before the
justices; and Friends bid them “carry them then.” The officers told
Friends, “they must go:” but Friends said, nay; that was not according
to their warrants, which required them to carry them. Then they were
forced to hire carts, and waggons, and horses, and to lift Friends into
their waggons and carts, to carry them before a justice. When they came
to a justice’s house, sometimes he happened to be from home, and if he
were a moderate man, he would get out of the way, and then they were
obliged to carry them before another, so that they were many days
carting and carrying friends up and down from place to place. And when
afterwards the officers came to lay their charges for this upon the
town, the town’s-people would not pay it, but made them bear it
themselves; which broke the neck of their persecution there for that
time. The like was done in several other places, till the officers had
shamed and tired themselves, and then they were glad to give over.
At one place they warned Friends to come to the steeple-house. Friends
met to consider of it, and finding freedom to go to the steeple-house,
they met together there. Accordingly when they came thither, they sat
down to wait upon the Lord in his power and Spirit, and minded the Lord
Jesus Christ, their Teacher and Saviour; but did not mind the priest.
When the officers saw that, they came to them to put them out of the
steeple-house again; but the Friends told them, it was not time for them
to break up their meeting yet. A while after, when the priest had done,
they came to the Friends again, and would have had them go home to
dinner; but the Friends told them, they did not choose to go to dinner,
they were feeding upon the bread of life. So there they sat, waiting
upon the Lord, and enjoying his power and presence, till they found
freedom in themselves to depart. Thus the priest’s people were offended,
because they could not get them to the steeple-house: and when there,
they were offended, because they could not get them out again.
From the meeting near Collumpton we went to TAUNTON, where we had a
large meeting. The next day we came to a general meeting in
Somersetshire, which was very large; and the Lord’s everlasting word of
life and truth was largely declared. The people were refreshed thereby,
and settled upon Christ, their Rock and Foundation, and brought to sit
under his teaching; the meeting was peaceable. But about the second hour
of the night there came a company of men who knocked at the door, and
bid us open it, or they would break it open; for they wanted a man that
they came to search the house for. I heard the noise, and got up, and at
the window saw a man at the door with his sword by his side. When they
had let him in, he came into the chamber where I was, and looked on me,
and said, “You are not the man I look for:” and went his way.
We came thence to STREET, and to William Beaton’s, at PUDDIMORE, where
we had a very large general meeting, wherein the Lord’s everlasting
truth was declared, the people refreshed, and all quiet. Thence we went
to John Dander’s, where we had another large and very precious meeting;
and then passed on to BRISTOL, where we had good service for the Lord,
and all quiet. Here we met with Margaret Fell and her daughters again.
After some time we went to SLAUGHTERFORD in WILTSHIRE, where was a very
large meeting in a great barn. Good service we had there: for the truth,
as it is in Jesus, was published amongst them, and many were gathered by
it into the name of the Lord.
After this I passed into GLOUCESTERSHIRE and HEREFORDSHIRE, having large
meetings in each. In HEREFORD I had a meeting in the inn. When I was
gone, the magistrates, hearing there had been a meeting, came to search
the inn for me, and were vexed that they had missed me. But the Lord so
ordered it, that I escaped their hands; and Friends were established
upon Christ, their Foundation, the Rock of Ages.
Then I went into RADNORSHIRE, in WALES, and had several precious
meetings there. The Lord’s name and standard was set up, and many were
gathered to it, and settled under the teaching of Christ Jesus, their
Saviour, who bought them.
After I was clear of Wales, I came to a market-town between England and
Wales, where there was a great fair that day; and several Friends being
at the fair, we went to an inn, and they came to us. After we had had a
fine opportunity with Friends, we parted from them, and went on our way.
The officers of the town took notice, it seems, of our being there, and
of Friends gathering to us. They began also to meet together to consult
among themselves how to ensnare us, though it was the fair time; but
before they could do anything we were gone on our journey, and so
escaped them.
Thence we came into SHROPSHIRE, where we had a large and precious
meeting. After many meetings in those parts we came into WARWICKSHIRE,
and visited Friends there, and so into DERBYSHIRE and STAFFORDSHIRE,
visiting Friends’ meetings as we went. At WHITEHAUGH we had a large,
blessed meeting, and quiet; after which we rode about twenty miles that
night to Captain Lingard’s. We heard afterwards that when we were gone,
the officers came to seize us, and were much disturbed that they missed
us; but the Lord disappointed them, and Friends were joyful in the Lord
that we escaped them.
At Captain Lingard’s we had a blessed meeting, the Lord’s presence being
wonderfully amongst us. After this we passed through the PEAK-COUNTRY in
DERBYSHIRE, and went to SYNDERHILL-GREEN,[2] where we had a large
meeting. Here John Whitehead[3] and several other Friends came to me.
Then I passed through the country, visiting Friends, till I come to the
farther end of HOLDERNESS, and so passed by SCARBRO’, WHITBY, and
MALTON, to YORK, having many meetings in the way; and the Lord’s
everlasting power was over all.
We went from York to BOROUGHBRIDGE, where I had a glorious meeting.
Thence we passed into Durham to one Richmond’s, where there was a
general meeting; and the Lord’s power was over all, though people were
grown exceedingly rude about this time. After the meeting we went to
Henry Draper’s, where we stayed all night. Next morning a Friend came to
me, as I was passing away, and told me, “if the priests and justices
(for many priests were made justices in that country at that time) could
find me, they would destroy me.”
Being clear of Durham, I went over STAINMOOR into YORKSHIRE, and to
SEDBERGH, where having visited Friends, I went into WESTMORLAND,
visiting Friends there also. Thence I passed into LANCASHIRE and came to
SWARTHMORE. Here I stayed but a little while before I went over the
Sands to ARNSIDE, where I had a general meeting. After it was ended,
there came some men to break it up; but understanding before they
arrived that the meeting was over, they turned back. I went to Robert
Widders’s, and thence to UNDERBARROW, where I had a glorious meeting,
and the Lord’s power was over all. Thence I passed to GRAYRIGG, and
having visited Friends there, I went to Ann Audland’s, where they would
have had me to stay their meeting next day; but I felt a stop in my
spirit. It was upon me to go to John Blakelin’s in SEDBERGH, and to be
next day at the meeting there; which is large, and a precious people
there is. We had a very good meeting next day at Sedbergh; but the
constables went to the meeting at Ann Audland’s, to look for me. Thus by
the good hand and disposing Providence of the Lord, I escaped their
snare.
I went from John Blakelin’s with Leonard Fell to STRICKLAND HEAD, where
on First-day we had a very precious meeting on the common. That night we
stayed amongst Friends there, and next day passed into NORTHUMBERLAND.
After the justices had heard of this meeting at Strickland-Head, they
made search for me; but by the good hand of the Lord, I escaped them
again, though there were some very wicked justices. We went to Hugh
Hutchinson’s house in NORTHUMBERLAND, a Friend in the ministry, whence
we visited Friends thereabouts, and then went to DERWENTWATER, where we
had a very glorious meeting. There came an ancient woman to me, and told
me her husband remembered his love to me; she said, I might call him to
mind by this token, that I used to call him “the Tall White Old Man.”
She said, he was six score and two years old, and that he would have
come to the meeting, but his horses were all employed upon some urgent
occasion. I heard he lived some years after.
When I had visited Friends in those parts, and they were settled upon
Christ, their Foundation, I passed through NORTHUMBERLAND, and came to
old Thomas Bewley’s in CUMBERLAND. Friends came about me, and asked,
“would I come there to go into prison?” For there was great persecution
in that country at that time; yet I had a general meeting at Thomas
Bewley’s, which was large and precious, and the Lord’s power was over
all.
One Musgrave was at that time deputy-governor of Carlisle. Passing along
the country, I came to a man’s house that had been convinced, whose name
was Fletcher; and he told me, “if Musgrave knew I was there, he would be
sure to send me to prison, he was such a severe man.” But I stayed not
there, only calling on the way to see this man; and then I went to
William Pearson’s, near WIGTON, where the meeting was, which was very
large and precious. Some Friends were then prisoners at Carlisle, whom I
visited by a letter, which Leonard Fell carried. From William Pearson’s
I visited Friends, till I came to PARDSHAW-CRAG, where we had a general
meeting, which was large; all was quiet and peaceable, and the glorious,
powerful presence of the everlasting God was with us.
So eager were the magistrates about this time to stir up persecution in
those parts, that some offered five shillings, and some a noble a day,
to any that could apprehend the speakers amongst the Quakers; but it
being now the time of the quarter Sessions in that county, the men who
were so hired were gone to the sessions to get their wages, and so all
our meetings were at that time quiet.
From Pardshaw-Crag we went into WESTMORLAND, calling on the way upon
Hugh Tickell[4], near KESWICK, and upon Thomas Laythes, where Friends
came to visit us; and we had a fine opportunity to be refreshed
together. We went that night to Francis Benson’s, in Westmorland, near
Justice Fleming’s house. This Justice Fleming was at that time in a
great rage against Friends, and me in particular; insomuch that in the
open sessions at Kendal just before, he had bid five pounds to any man
that should take me, as Francis Benson told me. And it seems, as I went
to this Friend’s house, I met one man coming from the sessions that had
this five pounds offered him to take me, and he knew me; for as I passed
by him, he said to his companion, that is George Fox; yet he had not
power to touch me, for the Lord’s power preserved me over them all. The
justices being so eager to have me, and I being so often near them, and
yet they missing me, tormented them the more.
I went thence to James Taylor’s at CARTMEL, where I stayed First-day,
and had a precious meeting; and after it I came over the Sands to
SWARTHMORE.
When I came there, they told me, Colonel Kirby had sent his lieutenant
thither to take me, and that he had searched trunks and chests for me.
That night as I was in bed, I was moved of the Lord to go next day to
KIRBY-HALL, which was Colonel Kirby’s house, about five miles off, to
speak with him, and I did so. When I came thither, I found the Flemings,
and several others of the gentry (so called) of the country, come to
take their leave of Colonel Kirby, he being about to go up to London to
the parliament. I was shown into the parlour amongst them; but Colonel
Kirby was not then within, being gone out; so they said little to me,
nor I much to them. But presently he came in, and I told him, that
understanding he was desirous to see me, “I came to visit him, to know
what he had to say to me, and whether he had anything against me.” He
said, before all the company, “As he was a gentleman, he had nothing
against me. But,” said he, “Mistress Fell must not keep great meetings
at her house, for they meet contrary to the act.” I told him, “that act
did not take hold on us, but on such as met to plot and contrive, and to
raise insurrections against the king, whereas we were no such people;
for he knew that they that met at Margaret Fell’s house were his
neighbours, and a peaceable people.” After many words had passed, he
shook me by the hand, and said again, “he had nothing against me;” and
others of them said, I was a deserving man. So we parted, and I returned
to SWARTHMORE.
Shortly after, when Colonel Kirby was gone to London, there was a
private meeting of the justices and deputy-lieutenants at Holker-Hall,
where Justice Preston lived; and there they granted a warrant to
apprehend me. I heard over-night both of their meeting and of the
warrant, and so could have escaped out of their reach if I would; for I
had not appointed any meeting at that time, and I had cleared myself of
the north, and the Lord’s power was over all. But I considered, there
being a noise of a plot in the north, if I should go away, they might
fall upon Friends; but if I gave up myself to be taken, it might stop
them, and the Friends should escape the better. So I gave up to be
taken, and prepared myself against they came.
Next day an officer came with sword and pistols to take me. I told him,
“I knew his errand before, and had given up myself to be taken; for if I
would have escaped their imprisonment, I could have gone forty miles off
before he came; but I was an innocent man, and so cared not what they
could do to me.” He asked me “How I heard of it, seeing the order was
made privately in a parlour.” I said it was no matter, it was sufficient
that I heard of it. I asked him to let me see his order; whereupon he
laid his hand on his sword, and said, “I must go with him before the
lieutenants, to answer such questions as they should propose to me.” I
told him it was but civil and reasonable for him to let me see his
order; but he would not. Then said I, I am ready. So I went along with
them, and Margaret Fell accompanied us to HOLKER-HALL.
When we came thither, there was one Rawlinson, a justice, and one called
Sir George Middleton, and many more that I did not know, besides old
Justice Preston who lived there. They brought Thomas Atkinson, a Friend
of Cartmel, as a witness against me, for some words which he had told to
one Knipe, who had informed them; which words were, “that I had written
against the plotters, and had knocked them down.” These words they could
not make much of, for I told them I had heard of a plot, and had written
against it. Old Preston asked me, whether I had a hand in that script? I
asked him what he meant? He said, in the Battledore. I answered, Yes.
Then he asked me, whether I understood languages. I said, sufficient for
myself; and that I knew no law that was transgressed by it. I told them
also, that “to understand outward languages, was no matter of salvation;
for the many tongues began but at the confusion of Babel; and if I did
understand anything of them, I judged and knocked them down again for
any matter of salvation that was in them.” Thereupon he turned away, and
said, “George Fox knocks down all the languages. Come,” said he, “we
will examine you of higher matters.”
Then said George Middleton, “You deny God, and the church, and the
faith.” I replied, “Nay, I own God, and the true church, and the true
faith. But what church dost thou own?” said I (for I understood he was a
Papist.) Then he turned again and said, “You are a rebel and a traitor.”
I asked him to whom he spoke, or whom did he call rebel: he was so full
of envy that for a while he could not speak, but at last he said, “he
spoke it to me.” With that I struck my hand on the table, and told him,
“I had suffered more than twenty such as he, or than any that was there;
for I had been cast into Derby dungeon for six months together, and had
suffered much because I would not take up arms against this king before
Worcester fight. I had been sent up prisoner out of my own country by
Colonel Hacker to Oliver Cromwell, as a plotter to bring in King Charles
in the year 1654; and I had nothing but love and goodwill to the king,
and desired the eternal good and welfare of him and all his subjects.”
“Did you ever hear the like,” said Middleton. “Nay,” said I, “ye may
hear it again if ye will. For ye talk of the king, a company of you, but
where were ye in Oliver’s days, and what did ye do then for him? But I
have more love to the king for his eternal good and welfare than any of
you have.”
Then they asked me, “whether I had heard of the plot?” and I said, “yes,
I had heard of it.” They asked me how I had heard of it, and whom I knew
in it? I told them, I had heard of it through the high-sheriff of
Yorkshire, who had told Dr. Hodgson that there was a plot in the north;
that was the way I heard of it; but I had never heard of any such thing
in the south, nor till I came into the north. And as for knowing any in
the plot, I was as a child in that, for I knew none of them. Then said
they, “why would you write against it, if you did not know some that
were in it.” I said, “my reason was because you are so forward to mash
the innocent and guilty together, therefore I wrote against it to clear
the truth from such things, and to stop all forward, foolish spirits
from running into such things. I sent copies of it into Westmorland,
Cumberland, Durham, and Yorkshire, and to you here. I sent another copy
of it to the King and his council, and it is likely it may be in print
by this time.” One of them said, “O, this man hath great power!” I said,
“yes, I had power to write against plotters.” Then said one of them,
“you are against the laws of the land.” I answered, “Nay, for I and my
Friends direct all people to the Spirit of God in them, to mortify the
deeds of the flesh. This brings them into well-doing, and from that
which the magistrate’s sword is against, which eases the magistrates,
who are for the punishment of evil-doers. So people being turned to the
Spirit of God, which brings them to mortify the deeds of the flesh,—this
brings them from under the occasion of the magistrate’s sword; and this
must needs be one with magistracy, and one with the law, which was added
because of transgression, and is for the praise of them that do well. In
this we establish the law, are an ease to the magistrates, and are not
against, but stand for, all good government.”
Then George Middleton cried, “Bring the book and put the oaths of
allegiance and supremacy to him.” Now he himself being a Papist, I asked
him, “whether he had taken the oath of supremacy, who was a swearer? As
for us, we could not swear at all, because Christ and the apostle had
forbidden it.” Some of them would not have had the oath put to me, but
have set me at liberty. But the rest would not agree to that; for this
was their last snare, and they had no other way to get me into prison,
all other things had been cleared to them. This was like the Papist’s
sacrament of the altar, by which they ensnared the martyrs. So they
tendered me the oath, which I could not take; whereupon they were about
to make my mittimus to send me to Lancaster jail; but considering of it,
they only engaged me to appear at the sessions, and so for that time
dismissed me. I went back with Margaret Fell to Swarthmore; and soon
after Colonel West came to see me, who was at that time a justice of
peace. He told us, “he acquainted some of the rest of the justices, that
he would come over to see me and Margaret Fell; but it may be,” said he,
“some of you will take offence at it.” I asked him, “What he thought
they would do with me at the sessions;” and he said, “they would tender
the oath to me again.”
Whilst I was at Swarthmore, William Kirby came into Swarthmore meeting,
and brought the constables with him. I was sitting with Friends in the
meeting, and he said to me, “How now, Mr. Fox! you have a fine company
here.” “Yes,” said I, “we meet to wait upon the Lord.” So he began to
take the names of Friends, and them that did not readily tell him their
names, he committed to the constables’ hands, and sent some to prison.
The constables were unwilling to take them without a warrant, whereupon
he threatened to set them by the heels; but one of the constables told
him, “he could keep them in his presence, but after he was gone, he
could not keep them without a warrant.”
The sessions coming on, I went to LANCASTER, and appeared according to
my engagement. There was upon the bench Justice Fleming, who had bid
five pounds in Westmorland to any man that would apprehend me; for he
was a justice both in Westmorland and Lancashire. There were also
Justice Spencer, Colonel West, and old Justice Rawlinson the lawyer, who
gave the charge, and was very sharp against truth and Friends; but the
Lord’s power stopped them. The session was large, and the concourse of
people great; and way being made for me, I came up to the bar and stood
there with my hat on, they looking earnestly upon me, and I upon them
for a pretty space. Proclamation being made for all to keep silence upon
pain of imprisonment, and all being quiet, I said twice, “Peace be among
you.” The chairman asked, “If I knew where I was;” I said, “yes, I do,
but it may be,” said I, “my hat offends you; that is a low thing, that
is not the honour that I give to magistrates; for the true honour is
from above; which I have received, and I hope it is not the hat which ye
look upon to be the honour.” The chairman said, “they looked for the hat
too,” and asked, “wherein I showed my respect to magistrates, if I did
not put off my hat?” I replied, “In coming when they called me.” Then
they bid one, “take off my hat.” After which it was some time before
they spoke to me, and I felt the power of the Lord to arise.
After some pause, old Justice Rawlinson, the chairman, asked me, “if I
knew of the plot?” I told him, “I had heard of it in Yorkshire, by a
Friend, that had it from the high-sheriff.” Then they asked me, “whether
I had declared it to the magistrates.” I said, “I had sent papers abroad
against plots and plotters, and also to you, as soon as I came into the
country, to take all jealousies out of your minds concerning me and my
friends; for it was and is our principle to declare against such
things.“ They asked me then, “if I knew not of an act against meetings.”
I said, “I knew there was an act that took hold of such as met to the
terrifying of the king’s subjects, and were enemies to the king, and
held dangerous principles; but I hoped, they did not look upon us to be
such men, for our meetings were not to terrify the king’s subjects,
neither are we enemies to him or any man.” Then they tendered me the
oaths of allegiance and supremacy. I told them “I could not take any
oath at all, because Christ and his apostle had forbidden it; and they
had had sufficient experience of swearers, first one way, then another;
but I had never taken any oath in my life.” Then Rawlinson the lawyer
asked me, “whether I held it was unlawful to swear?” This question he
put on purpose to ensnare me; for by an act that was made, such were
liable to banishment or a great fine that should say, it was “unlawful
to swear.” But I seeing the snare, avoided it, and told him, “that in
the time of the law amongst the Jews, before Christ came, the law
commanded them to swear; but Christ, who doth fulfill the law in his
gospel time, commands ‘not to swear at all;’ and the apostle James
forbids swearing, even to them that were Jews, and had the law of God.”
After much discourse they called for the jailer and committed me to
prison.
I had about me the paper which I had written as a testimony against
plots, which I desired they would read, or suffer to be read, in open
court; but they would not. So being committed for refusing to swear, “I
bid them and all the people take notice, that I suffered for the
doctrine of Christ, and for my obedience to his command.” Afterwards I
understood the justices said, they had private instructions from Colonel
Kirby to prosecute me, notwithstanding his fair carriage and seeming
kindness to me before, when he declared before many of them “that he had
nothing against me.” Several other Friends were committed to prison,
some for meeting to worship God, and some for not swearing; so that the
prison was very full. Many of them being poor men, that had nothing to
maintain their families by but their labour, which now they were taken
from, several of their wives went to the justices who had committed
their husbands, and told them, “if they kept their husbands in jail for
nothing but the truth of Christ, and for good conscience’ sake, they
would bring their children to them to be maintained.” A mighty power of
the Lord rose in Friends, and gave them great boldness, so that they
spoke much to the justices. Friends also that were prisoners wrote to
the justices, laying the weight of their sufferings upon them, and
showing them both their injustice and want of compassion towards their
poor neighbours, whom they knew to be honest, conscientious, peaceable
people, that in tenderness of conscience could not take any oath; yet
they sent them to prison for refusing to take the oath of allegiance.
Several who were imprisoned on that account were known to be men that
had served the king in his wars, and had hazarded their lives in the
field in his cause, and had suffered great hardships, with the loss of
much blood for him, and had always stood faithful to him from first till
last, and had never received any pay for their service. To be thus
requited for all their faithful services and sufferings, and that by
them that pretended to be the king’s friends, was hard, unkind, and
ungrateful dealing. At length the justices being continually attended
with complaints of grievances, released some of the Friends, but kept
divers of them still in prison.
Amongst those that were then in prison, there were four Friends for
tithes, who had been sent at the suit of the Countess of Derby, and had
lain near two years and a half. One of these, Oliver Atherton, a man of
a weakly constitution, was, through his long and hard imprisonment in a
cold, raw, unwholesome place, brought so low and weak in his body, that
there appeared no hope of his life, unless he might be removed.
Wherefore a letter was written on his behalf to the Countess, and sent
by his son, Godfrey Atherton, wherein were laid before her “the reasons
why he and the rest could not pay tithes; because, if they did, they
should deny Christ come in the flesh, who by his coming had put an end
to tithes, and to the priesthood to which they had been given, and to
the commandment by which they had been paid under the law. His weak
condition of body was also laid before her, and the apparent likelihood
of his death if she continued to hold him there; that she might be moved
to pity and compassion, and also warned not to draw the guilt of his
innocent blood upon herself.” When his son went to her with his father’s
letter, a servant of her’s abused him, plucked off his cap, and threw it
away, and put him out of the gate. Nevertheless the letter was delivered
into her own hand, but she shut out all pity and tenderness, and
continued him in prison till death. When his son returned to his father
in prison, and told him, as he lay on his dying bed, that the Countess
denied his liberty, he only said, “She hath been the cause of shedding
much blood, but this will be the heaviest blood that ever she spilt;”
and soon after he died. Friends having his body delivered to them to
bury, as they carried it from the prison to Ormskirk, the parish wherein
he had lived, they stuck up papers upon the crosses at Garstang,
Preston, and other towns, through which they passed, with this
inscription:—“_This is Oliver Atherton, of Ormskirk parish, persecuted
to death by the Countess of Derby for good conscience’ sake towards God
and Christ, because he could not give her tithes_,” &c., setting forth
at large the reasons of his refusing to pay tithes, the length of his
imprisonment, the hardships he had undergone, her hard-heartedness
towards him, and the manner of his death.
After his death, Richard Cubban, another of her prisoners for tithes,
wrote a large letter to her, on behalf of himself and his
fellow-prisoners at her suit, laying their innocency before her; and
“that it was not out of wilfulness, stubbornness, or covetousness, that
they refused to pay her tithes, but purely in good conscience towards
God and Christ; and letting her know that, if she should be suffered to
keep them there till every one died, as she had done their
fellow-sufferer Oliver Atherton, they could not yield to pay her. And
therefore desired her to consider their case in a Christian spirit, and
not bring their blood upon herself also.” But she would not show any
pity or compassion towards them, who had now suffered hard imprisonment
about two years and a half under her. Instead thereof she sent to
Garstang, and threatened to complain to the king and council, and bring
them into trouble, for suffering the paper concerning Oliver Atherton’s
death, to be stuck upon their cross. The rage that she expressed made
the people take the more notice of it, and some of them said, “the
Quakers had given her a bone to pick.” But she, that regarded not the
life of an innocent sufferer for Christ, lived not long after herself;
for that day three weeks that Oliver Atherton’s body was carried through
Ormskirk to be buried, she died; and her body was carried that day seven
weeks through the same town to her burying-place. Thus the Lord pursued
the hard-hearted persecutor.
I was kept till the assize; and Judge Turner and Judge Twisden coming
that circuit, I was brought before Judge Twisden on the 14th day of the
month called March, in the year 1663. When I was set to the bar, I said,
“Peace be amongst you all.” The judge looked upon me, and said, “What!
do you come into the court with your hat on?” Upon which, the jailer
taking it off, I said, “The hat is not the honour that comes from God.”
Then said the judge to me, “Will you take the oath of allegiance, George
Fox?” I said, “I never took any oath in my life, nor any covenant or
engagement.” “Well,” said he, “will you swear or not?” I answered, “I am
a Christian, and Christ commands me ‘not to swear,’ and so does the
apostle James, and whether I should obey God or man, do thou judge.” “I
ask you again,” said he, “whether you will swear or not?” I answered
again, “I am neither Turk, Jew, nor heathen, but a Christian, and should
show forth Christianity.” And I asked him, “if he did not know that
Christians in the primitive times, under the ten persecutions, and some
also of the martyrs in Queen Mary’s days, refused swearing, because
Christ and the apostle had forbidden it?” I told him also, “they had had
experience enough, how many men had first sworn for the king and then
against him. But as for me, I had never taken an oath in my life; and my
allegiance did not lie in swearing, but in truth and faithfulness; for I
honour all men, much more the king. But Christ, who is the great
Prophet, and King of kings, who is the Saviour of the world, and the
great Judge of all the earth, saith, ‘I must not swear.’ Now, whether
must I obey Christ or thee? For it is in tenderness of conscience, and
in obedience to the commands of Christ, that I do not swear; and we have
the word of a king for tender consciences.” Then I asked the judge, “if
he owned the king?” “Yes,” said he, “I do own the king.” “Why then,”
said I, “dost thou not observe his declaration from Breda, and his
promises made since he came into England, ‘that no man should be called
in question for matters of religion, so long as he lived peaceably?’ If
thou ownest the king, why dost thou call me into question, and put me
upon taking an oath, which is a matter of religion, seeing neither thou
nor any else can charge me with unpeaceable living?”
Upon this he was moved, and looking angrily at me, said, “Sirrah, will
you swear?” I told him, “I was none of his sirrahs, I was a Christian;
and for him, an old man and a judge, to sit there and give nick-names to
prisoners, it did not become either his gray hairs or his office.”
“Well,” said he, “I am a Christian too.” “Then do Christian works,” said
I. “Sirrah!” said he, “thou thinkest to frighten me with thy words.”
Then catching himself, and looking aside, he said, “Hark! I am using the
word [sirrah] again;” and so checked himself. I said, “I spoke to thee
in love; for that language did not become thee, a judge. Thou oughtest
to instruct a prisoner in the law, if he were ignorant and out of the
way.” “And I speak in love to thee too,” said he. “But,” said I, “love
gives no nick-names.” Then he roused himself up, and said, “I will not
be afraid of thee, George Fox; thou speakest so loud, thy voice drowns
mine and the court’s; I must call for three or four criers to drown thy
voice: thou hast good lungs.” “I am a prisoner here,” said I, “for the
Lord Jesus Christ’s sake; for his sake do I suffer, for him do I stand
this day; and if my voice were five times louder, I should lift it up,
and sound it for Christ’s sake, for whose cause I stand this day before
your judgment-seat, in obedience to Christ, who commands not to swear;
before whose judgment-seat you must all be brought and must give an
account.” “Well,” said the judge, “George Fox, say, whether thou wilt
take the oath, yea or nay?” I replied, “I say, as I said before, whether
ought I to obey God or man, judge thou? If I could take any oath at all,
I should take this; for I do not deny some oaths only, or on some
occasions, but all oaths, according to Christ’s doctrine, who hath
commanded his followers not to swear at all. Now if thou or any of you,
or your ministers or priests here, will prove that ever Christ or his
apostles, after they had forbidden all swearing, commanded Christians to
swear, then I will swear.” I saw several priests there, but not one of
them offered to speak. “Then,” said the judge, “I am a servant to the
king, and the king sent me not to dispute with you, but to put the laws
in execution; therefore tender him the oath of allegiance.” “If thou
love the king,” said I, “why dost thou break his word, and not keep his
declarations and speeches, wherein he promised liberty to tender
consciences? I am a man of a tender conscience, and, in obedience to
Christ’s command, I cannot swear.” “Then you will not swear,” said the
judge; “take him away, jailer.” I said, “It is for Christ’s sake that I
cannot swear, and for obedience to his command I suffer, and so the Lord
forgive you all.” So the jailer took me away; but I felt the mighty
power of the Lord was over them all.
The sixteenth day of the same month I was brought before Judge Twisden
again: he was somewhat offended at my hat; but it being the last morning
of the assize before he was to leave town, and not many people there, he
made the less of it. He asked me, “whether I would traverse, stand mute,
or submit.” But he spoke so fast that it was hard to know what he said.
However, I told him, “I desired I might have liberty to traverse the
indictment, and try it.” Then said he, “Take him away, I will have
nothing to do with him, take him away.” I said, “Well, live in the fear
of God, and do justice.” “Why,” said he, “have not I done you justice?”
I replied, “That which thou hast done has been against the command of
Christ.” So I was taken to the jail again, and kept prisoner till the
next assizes.
Some time before this assize, Margaret Fell was sent prisoner to
Lancaster jail by Fleming, Kirby, and Preston, justices; and at the
assize the oath was tendered to her also, and she was again committed to
prison, to lie till the next assize.
Now Justice Fleming being one of the fiercest and most violent justices
in persecuting Friends, and sending his honest neighbours to prison for
religion’s sake, and many Friends at this time being in Lancaster jail
committed by him, and some having died in prison, we that were then
prisoners had it upon us to write to him, as follows:—
“O JUSTICE FLEMING!
“Mercy, compassion, love, and kindness adorn and grace men and
magistrates. O! dost thou not hear the cry of the widows, and the cry
of the fatherless, who were made so through persecution! Were they not
driven, like sheep, from constable to constable, as though they had
been the greatest transgressors or malefactors in the land? Which
grieved and tendered the hearts of many sober people, to see how their
innocent neighbours and countrymen, who were of a peaceable carriage,
and honest in their lives and conversations amongst men, were used and
served! One more is dead whom thou sent to prison, having left five
children, both fatherless and motherless. How canst thou do otherwise
than take care of these fatherless infants, and also of the other’s
wife and family? Is it not thy place? Consider Job (c. xxix). He was a
father to the poor, he delivered the poor that cried, and the
fatherless that had none to help. He broke the jaws of the wicked, and
plucked the spoil out of his teeth. But oh! measure thy life and his,
and take heed of the day of God’s eternal judgment, which will come,
and the sentence and decree from Christ, when every man must give an
account, and receive a reward according to his deeds. Then it will be
said, ‘O, where are the months that are past!’
“Again, Justice Fleming, consider, when John Stubbs was before thee,
having a wife and four small children, and little to live on, but what
they honestly got by their own diligence, as soon as he appeared thou
criedst out, ‘Put the oath to that man.’ And when he confessed that he
was but a poor man, thou hadst no regard; but cast away pity, not
hearing what he would say. And now he is kept in prison, because he
could not swear, and break the command of Christ and the apostle; it
is to be hoped thou wilt take care for his family, that his children
do not starve; and see that they do not want bread. Can this be
allegiance to the king, to do that which Christ and his apostle say is
evil, and brings into condemnation? Would not you have cast Christ and
the apostle into prison, who commanded ‘not to swear,’ if they had
been in your days?
“Consider also thy poor neighbour, William Wilson,[5] who was known to
all the parish and neighbours to be an industrious man, and careful to
maintain his wife and children; yet had little, but what he had got
with his hands in diligence and travels to supply himself. How should
his wife maintain her children, when thou hast cast her husband into
prison, and thereby made him incapable of working for them? Therefore
it may be expected, thou wilt have a care of his wife and children,
and see they do not want; for how should they live, having no other
way to be sustained, but by the little that he got? Surely the noise
of this is in the very markets, the death of thy two neighbours; and
the cry of the widows and fatherless is heard. All those fatherless
and widows are made so for righteousness’ sake. For might not John
Stubbs and William Wilson have had their liberty still, if they would
have sworn, though they had been such as go after mountebanks and
stage-plays, or run a hunting?
“O! consider, for the Lord’s mind is otherwise; he is tender. And the
king hath declared his mind to be, that there should be no cruelty
inflicted upon his peaceable subjects. Besides, several poor, honest
people were fined, who had need to have something given them; and it
had been more honourable to have given them something, than to fine
them and send them to prison; some of whom live upon the charity of
other people. What honour or grace can it be to thee, to cast thy poor
neighbours into prison who are peaceable, seeing thou knowest these
people cannot do that which thou requirest of them, if it were to save
their lives, or all that they have? Because in tenderness they cannot
take any oath, thou makest that a snare to them. What, thinkest thou,
do the people say concerning this? ‘We know,’ say they, ‘the Quakers’
principle, that keep to Yea and Nay; but we see others swear and
forswear.’ For many of you have sworn first one way and then another.
So we leave it to the Spirit of God in thy conscience, Justice
Fleming, who wast so eager for the taking of George Fox, and so
offended with them that had not taken him, and now hast fallen upon
thy poor neighbours. But, oh! where is thy pity for their poor,
fatherless children, and motherless infants? O, take heed of Herod’s
hard-heartedness, and casting away all pity! Esau did so, not Jacob.
“Here is also Thomas Walters, of Bolton, cast into prison, and the
oath imposed on him through thee; and for denying to swear at all, in
obedience to Christ’s command, he is continued in prison; having five
small children, and his wife near confinement. Surely thou shouldst
take care for them also, and see that his wife and small children do
not want; who are as fatherless, and she as a widow, through thee.
Dost thou not hear in thy ears the cry of the fatherless, and the cry
of the widows, and the blood of the innocent speak, who through thee
have been persecuted to prison, and are now dead? O! heavy sentence at
the day of judgment! How wilt thou answer, when thou and thy works
come to be judged,—when thou shalt be brought before the judgment-seat
of the Almighty, who in thy prosperity hast made widows and fatherless
for righteousness’ sake, and for tenderness of conscience towards God?
The Lord knows and sees it! O man! consider in thy life-time, how thou
hast stained thyself with the blood of the innocent! When thou hadst
power, and might have done good amongst thy peaceable neighbours, and
would not, but used thy power not to a good intent, but contrary to
the Lord’s mind and to the king’s. The king’s favour, his mercy, and
clemency to sober people, and to tender consciences, have been
manifested by declarations and proclamations, which thou hast abused
and slighted by persecuting his peaceable subjects. For at London, and
in other parts, the Quakers’ meetings are peaceable; and if thou look
but as far as Yorkshire, where the plot hath been, Friends’ innocency
hath cleared itself in the hearts of sober justices; and for you here
to fall upon your peaceable neighbours and people, and to be rigorous
and violent against them that are tender, godly, and righteous, it is
no honour to you. How many drunkards and swearers, fighters, and such
as are subject to vice, have you caused to be brought before your
courts? It were more honourable for you to look after such; for the
law was not made for the righteous, but for sinners and transgressors.
Therefore, consider, and be humbled for these things; for the Lord may
do to thee as thou hast done to others; and thou dost not know how
soon there may be a cry in thy own family, as the cry is amongst thy
neighbours, of the fatherless and widows that are made so through
thee. But the Quakers can and do say, ‘the Lord forgive thee, and lay
not these things to thy charge, if it be his will.’”[6]
Besides this, which went in the name of many, I sent him also a line
subscribed by myself only, and directed:—
“_To Daniel Fleming._
“FRIEND,
“Thou hast imprisoned the servants of the Lord, without the breach of
any law; therefore take heed what thou doest, for in the light of the
Lord God thou art seen, lest the hand of the Lord be turned against
thee!”
G. F.
It was not long after this ere Fleming’s wife died, and left him
thirteen or fourteen motherless children.
When I was prisoner at Lancaster, there was prisoner also one Major
Wiggan, a Baptist preacher. He boasted much beforehand what he would say
at the assize, if the oath should be put to him; and that he would
refuse to swear. But when the assize came, and the oath was tendered
him, he desired time to consider of it; and that being granted him till
the next assize, he got leave to go to London before the assize came
again, and stayed there till the plague broke forth, and there both he
and his wife were cut off. He was a very wicked man, and the judgments
of God came upon him; for he had published a book against Friends, full
of lies and blasphemies; the occasion of which was this. Whilst he was
in Lancaster castle he challenged Friends to a dispute. Whereupon I got
leave of the jailer to go up to them; and entering into discourse with
him, he affirmed, “that some men never had the Spirit of God, and that
the true light, which enlighteneth every man that cometh into the world,
is natural.” For proof of his first assertion he instanced Balaam,
affirming, “that Balaam had not the Spirit of God.” I affirmed and
proved, “that Balaam had the Spirit of God, and that wicked men have the
Spirit of God; else how could they quench it, and vex it, and grieve it,
and resist the Holy Ghost, like the stiff-necked Jews?” To his second
assertion I answered, “that the true light, which enlighteneth every man
that cometh into the world, was the life in the Word, and that was
divine and eternal, and not natural; and he might as well say that the
Word was natural, as that the life in the Word was natural. And wicked
men were enlightened by this light, else how could they hate it? Now it
is expressly said, that they did hate it; and the reason given why they
hated it was, because ‘their deeds were evil;’ and they would not come
to it, because it reproved them; and that must needs be in them, that
reproved them. Besides, that light could not be the Scriptures of the
New Testament, for it was testified of before any part of the New
Testament was written; so it must be the divine light, which is the life
in Christ, the Word, before the Scriptures were. And the grace of God,
which brought salvation, had appeared unto all men, and taught the
saints; but they that turned it into wantonness, and walked despitefully
against the Spirit of Grace, were the wicked. Again, the Spirit of
Truth, the Holy Ghost, the Comforter, which leads the disciples of
Christ into all truth, the same should reprove the world of sin, of
righteousness, of judgment, and of their unbelief. So the wicked world
had it to reprove them; and the true disciples and learners of Christ,
that believed in the light as Christ commands, had it to lead them. But
the world that did not believe in the light, though they were lighted;
but hated the light which they should have believed in, and loved the
darkness rather than it,—this world had a righteousness and a judgment,
which the Holy Ghost reproved them for, as well as for their unbelief.”
Having proved that the good and the bad were enlightened, that the grace
of God had appeared unto all, and that all had the Spirit of God, else
they could not vex and grieve it, I told Major Wiggan, the least babe
there might see him; and presently one Richard Cubban stood up, and
proved him an antichrist and a deceiver by Scripture. Then the jailer
had me away to my prison again. Afterwards Wiggan wrote a book of this
dispute, and put in abundance of abominable lies; but it was soon
answered in print, and himself not long after was cut off, as aforesaid.
This Wiggan was poor, and while he was a prisoner at Lancaster, he sent
into the country, and got money gathered for relief of the poor people
of God in prison; and many people gave freely, thinking it had been for
us, when indeed it was for himself. But when we heard of it, we laid it
upon him, and wrote also into the country, that Friends might let the
people know the truth of the matter, that it was not our manner to have
collections made for us; and that those collections were only for Wiggan
and another, a drunken preacher of his society.
After this it came upon me to write to the judges, and other
magistrates, concerning their “giving evil words and nick-names to such
as were brought before them;” which was after this manner:—
“_To all you that be Judges, or other officers whatsoever, in the whole
world, who profess yourselves to be Christians._
“FRIENDS,
“Herein and by reading the Scriptures, ye may see both your own words
and behaviour, and the words and practice of both Jews and Heathens,
and of the King of Kings, the great Lawgiver and Judge of the whole
world. First, for the words and carriage of the Jews, when such as
were worthy of death were brought before the rulers amongst them. When
Achan had taken the Babylonish garment, and the two hundred shekels of
silver, and the wedge of gold of fifty shekels weight, and Joshua, who
was then judge of Israel, had by lot found him out, he did not say
unto him, Sirrah,[7] nor, you rascal, knave, rogue, as some, that are
called Christian magistrates, are too apt to do. But Joshua said unto
Achan, ‘My son’ (mark his clean language, his savoury expression and
gracious words), ‘My son,’ said he, ‘give, I pray thee, glory to the
Lord God of Israel, and make confession unto him, and tell me now what
thou hast done; hide it not from me.’ Then Achan confessed, that he
had sinned against the Lord God of Israel, and thus and thus he had
done. Then Joshua the judge said, ‘Why hast thou troubled Israel? The
Lord shall trouble thee this day.’ And they stoned him and his with
stones, and burnt his goods with fire. But there was no unsavoury word
given to him that we read of, though he was worthy of death. Josh.
vii.
“So when the man that gathered sticks upon the Sabbath-day was taken
and brought before Moses, the judge of Israel, and put in ward until
the mind of the Lord was known concerning him, we read not of any
reviling language given him, but the Lord said to Moses, and Moses to
the people, ‘The man shall surely be put to death.’ Numb. xv. 35.
“Likewise in the rebellion of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram, where Moses
called them to trial, he did not sirrah them or miscall them, but said
to Korah and the rest, ‘Hear, I pray you, ye sons of Levi,’ Numb. xvi.
8. And when he gave the sentence against them, he said, ‘If these men
die the common death of all men,’ &c. He did not say, If these rascals
or knaves, as many that profess themselves Christians now do.
“When Elihu spoke to Job, who was a judge, and to his friends, and
said, ‘Let me not, I pray you, accept any man’s person, neither let me
give flattering titles unto man, for I know not to give flattering
titles: in so doing my Maker would soon take me away,’ Job xxxii. Job
did not say, ‘Sirrah, hold thy tongue,’ nor give him any unsavoury
expression. Then for the words of David and Solomon, and other kings
and officers, see in the books of the Kings and Chronicles the savoury
language that they gave to them that were brought before them; nay,
though Shimei cursed David the king, yet neither did David then, or
afterwards, nor Solomon, when he caused him to be put to death, give
him any reproachful language, or so much as call him sirrah; 2 Sam.
xvi. and 1 Kings ii.
“Read the prophecies of Isaiah and Micah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and the
rest of the prophets, who prophesied to several people, and against
rulers, kings, and magistrates; yet where can it be found, that they
had any bad language given them, as sirrah, or the like, by any ruler
either of the Jews or heathens? Nay, though Jeremiah was cast into
prison, and into the dungeon, yet there was no such word as sirrah, or
knave given to him. Jer. xxxvii.
“Then for the words and carriage of the heathens: when Abraham was
brought before Abimelech, who was a king, he gave Abraham no unsavoury
expressions, Gen. xx. And when Isaac came before Abimelech, he gave
him no taunting language either, Gen. xxvi. When Joseph was cast into
prison, and that in Egypt, we do not read that he had any railing
language given him, Gen. xxxix. Neither did Pharaoh, when Moses and
Aaron appeared before him, give them bad language, as sirrah, knave,
or the like.
“When Nebuchadnezzar sentenced the three children to the fiery
furnace, there was no such language given them as sirrah, knave,
rascal; but he called them by the names they were known by, Dan. iii.
And when Daniel was brought before Darius, and sentenced to be cast
into the lions’ den, he had no such names given him, as many give now,
who call those rulers heathens, but themselves Christians.
“If ye look into the New Testament, in the parable of the wedding
supper, the king, that came to view his guests, did not say unto him
that was found without a wedding-garment, ‘Sirrah, how camest thou in
hither?’ but, ‘Friend, how camest thou in hither?’ &c., though he was
one that was to be bound hand and foot, and cast into outer darkness,
Matt. xxii. Nay, when Judas had betrayed his master Christ Jesus, the
Lord of life, and had sold him to the priests, Christ did not call him
sirrah, when he came to apprehend him, but friend: Matt. xxvi. 50.
Stephen in his examination, sentence, and death, had no such
reproachful word given him as sirrah, or knave, Acts vi. and vii. When
the apostles Peter and John were brought before the high priest and
rulers of the Jews, and commanded not to preach in the name of Jesus,
Acts iv., they were not called sirrah, or knaves, nor had they any
such ill names given them. And when Paul and Silas were cast into
prison by the magistrates, there was no such word given them in their
examination, nor in their sentence, Acts xvi. They called them men,
not rogues, sirrahs, or knaves. And when the magistrates had done
contrary to law, they feared. So ye may see how short of this example
many are, that call themselves Christian rulers, who are not afraid to
cast innocent people into prison, and give them ill names besides,
below both Jews and Heathens.
“When the uproar was at Ephesus about Diana’s shrine, Demetrius, who
bore great sway among the craftsmen, did not call Paul sirrah, but
Paul, Acts xix. And when Paul was brought prisoner before the
high-priest Ananias, and the council of the Jews, and told them he had
lived in all good conscience towards God until that day, though they,
who professed the Scriptures but lived out of the life of them, could
not bear to hear of living in a good conscience, as professors of the
Scriptures now, that live not in the life, cannot bear to hear of
living in a good conscience now-a-days: but Ananias caused Paul to be
smitten on the mouth; yet he did not call him knave or sirrah, Acts
xxiii. The apostate Jews indeed, who, though they professed Scripture,
were out of the life thereof, and had rejected Christ, in accusing
Paul before the Roman magistrates, did once call him a ‘pestilent
fellow,’ Acts xxiv., as the accusing professors who live out of the
life will sometimes call us now. But Felix gave Paul no such language;
neither did Festus nor King Agrippa, in all their examinations of him,
give him any such words as sirrah, rascal, knave, or the like, but
heard him patiently. So now Christians may see through all the
Scriptures, that when any persons were brought before rulers, kings,
or magistrates, whether Jews or Heathens, they did not use to call
them evil names, as sirrah, rascal, knave, and the like; they had no
such fouled-mouthed language in their courts, nor did they use to say
to them, ‘Sirrah, put off your hat.’ Now, ye that profess
Christianity, and say the Scripture is your rule, may see, that more
corrupt words proceed out of your mouths, than either out of the Jews
or Heathens, if ye will try your practice by the Scriptures. And doth
not the apostle tell you, that no corrupt communication should proceed
out of your mouths, and that your words should be gracious? Now I
query, where and whence ye, that call yourselves Christians, have got
all these bad words and names, seeing neither God, nor Christ, nor the
prophets, nor the judges, nor kings, nor rulers, ever gave any such
names, so far as appears by Scripture, either amongst Heathens, Jews,
or Christians?”
G.F.
Before the next assizes, there was a quarter-sessions held at Lancaster
by the justices; to which though we were not brought, I put Friends upon
drawing up an account of their sufferings, and laying them before the
justices in their open sessions. For Friends had suffered deeply by
fines and distresses, the bailiffs and officers, making great havock and
spoil of their goods, but no redress was afforded.
And because some evil-minded magistrates would tell us sometimes of the
late plot in the North, we gave forth the following paper to stop their
mouths, and to clear truth and Friends therefrom.
_A Testimony from the people of God, whom the world calls Quakers, to
all magistrates and officers, of what sort soever, from the highest to
the lowest._
“We are peaceable, and seek the peace, good, and welfare of all, as in
our lives and peaceable conduct is manifested; and we desire the
eternal good and welfare of all, and their souls’ everlasting peace.
We are become heirs of the blessing before the curse was, and of the
power of God before the devil was, and before the fall of man. We are
heirs of the gospel of peace, which is the power of God; and we are
heirs of Christ, who have inherited him and his everlasting kingdom,
and do possess the power of an endless life. Knowing this our portion
and inheritance, this is to remove all jealousies out of your minds,
and out of the minds of all people concerning us, that all plots and
conspiracies, plotters and conspirators against the king, and all
aiders and assisters thereunto, we always did and do utterly deny to
be of us, or to be of the fellowship of the gospel of Christ’s
kingdom, or his servants. For Christ said, ‘his kingdom was not of
this world; if it were his servants would fight.’ And therefore he bid
Peter ‘put up his sword, for,’ said he, ‘he that taketh the sword,
shall perish with the sword.’ Here is the faith and patience of the
saints, to bear and suffer all things, knowing that vengeance is the
Lord’s, and he will repay it to them that hurt his people, and wrong
the innocent. Therefore we cannot avenge, but suffer for his name’s
sake. We know that the Lord will judge the world in righteousness,
according to their deeds, and that, when every one shall give an
account to him of the ‘deeds done in the body,’ then will the Lord
give every man according to his works, whether they be good or evil.
Christ said, he came not to ‘destroy men’s lives;’ and when his
disciples would have had ‘fire to come down from heaven,’ to consume
them that did not receive him, he told them, ‘they knew not what
spirit they were of,’ that would have men’s lives destroyed, and
therefore he rebuked them and told them, ‘that he came not to destroy
men’s lives, but to save them.’ We are of Christ’s mind, who is the
great Prophet, whom all ought to hear in all things, who saith to his,
‘if they strike thee on one cheek, turn the other; and render to no
one evil for evil.’ This doctrine of his we have learned, and not only
confess him in words, but follow his doctrine; therefore we suffer all
manner of reproaches, scandals, slanders, spoiling of goods,
buffetings, whippings, stripes, and imprisonments, for these many
years; and can say, ‘the Lord forgive them that have thus served us,
and lay not these things to their charge.’ And we know that the Jews’
outward sword, by which they cut down the Heathen outwardly, was a
type of the inward sword of the Spirit, which cuts down the inward
Heathen, the raging nature in people. The blood of bulls, lambs, rams,
and other offerings, and that priesthood which offered them, together
with other things in the law, were types of Christ, the one offering,
and of his blood, who is the everlasting priest and covenant, our life
and way to God, the great prophet and shepherd, the head of his
church, and the great bishop of our souls, whom we witness come; and
he doth oversee and keep his flock. For in Adam, in the fall, we know
the striving, quarrelling, unpeaceable spirits are in the enmity one
with another, and not in peace; but in Christ Jesus, the second Adam,
that never fell, is peace, rest and life. The doctrine of Christ, who
never sinned, is, to ‘love one another;’ and they who are in this
doctrine, hurt no man; in which we are, in Christ, who is our life.
“Therefore it is well for you to distinguish between the precious and
the vile, between them that fear God and serve him, and them that do
not; and to make a difference between the innocent and the guilty,
between him that is holy and pure, and the ungodly and profane; for
they that do not so, bring troubles, burthens, and sorrows upon
themselves. This we write in love to your souls, that ye may consider
these things; for we cannot say that they who hate enemies and one
another, are of God, or in Christ’s doctrine, but are opposers of it.
And such as wrestle with flesh and blood, with carnal weapons, are
gone into the flesh, out of the Spirit. They are not in our fellowship
in the Spirit, in which is the bond of peace; neither are they of us,
nor have we unity with them in their fleshly state, and with their
carnal weapons. For our unity and fellowship stand in the gospel,
which is the power of God, before the devil was, the liar, and the
murderer, the man-slayer, and the envious. Christ’s mind and his
doctrine being to save men’s lives, we, who are of Christ’s mind, are
out of, and above these things. And our desire is, that in the fear of
the Lord, ye may all live, and receive God’s wisdom, by which all
things were created, that by it all may be ordered to his glory.
“This is from them that love all your souls, and seek your eternal
good.”
Being now a prisoner in Lancaster Castle, a deep sense came upon me of a
day of sore trial and exercise that was come and coming upon all who had
been in high profession of religion; and I was moved to give forth the
following paper as a warning to such:—
“Now is the day that every one’s faith and love to God and Christ will
be tried; they who are redeemed out of the earth, and they who are in
the earth, will be manifested; and who is the master they serve, and
whether they will run to the mountains to cover them. Now will it
appear who are the stony ground, who are the thorny ground, and who
are the highway ground, in whom the fowls of the air take away the
seed, and the thorns and cares of the world choke, and the heat of
persecution scorches and burns up your green blade; for the day trieth
all things. Therefore let not such as forsake truth, for saving the
earth, say that your brother priest only ‘serveth not the Lord Jesus
Christ, but his own belly, and mindeth earthly things,’ for such
themselves also do the same, and hug and embrace self, and not the
Lord. Now it will be made manifest, who is every one’s God, Christ,
and Saviour, and their love will be manifest, whether it be of the
world, or of God; for if it be the love of the world, it is enmity,
and the enmity will manifest itself what it is; and the day will try
every spirit and his fruits. Therefore, my dear friends, in the
everlasting Seed of God live, that is over all the house of Adam and
his works in the fall; and so dwelling in the Seed, Christ, that never
fell, in him you all have virtue, life, and peace, and through him ye
will overcome all that is in the fall.”
G.F.
I wrote also another epistle to Friends, to warn them to keep out of the
spirit, that wrought in John Perrot and his company against the truth:—
“DEAR FRIENDS,
“Dwell in the love of God, and in his righteousness; that will
preserve you above all changeable spirits, that dwell not in the
truth, but in quarrels. Avoid such, and keep your habitations in the
truth. Dwell in the truth, and in the Word of God, by which ye are
reconciled to him. Keep your meetings in the name of Jesus Christ, who
never fell; then ye will see over all the gatherings of Adam’s sons
and daughters, you being met in the life over them all, in which are
your unity, peace, and fellowship with God, and one with another, in
the life, in which ye may enjoy God’s presence among you. So remember
me to all Friends in the everlasting Seed of God. The fellowship of
all those that are got into fellowship in outward things, will corrupt
and wither away. Therefore live in the gospel, the power of God, which
was before the devil was. This fellowship in the gospel, the power of
God, is a mystery to all the fellowships of the world. So look over
all outward sufferings, and look at the Lord, and the Lamb, who is the
First and the Last, the Amen; in whom farewell.”
G.F.
In the sixth month, the assizes were held again at Lancaster, and the
same judges, Twisden and Turner, came that circuit again; but Judge
Turner then sat on the crown bench, and so I was brought before him.
Before I was called to the bar, I was put among the murderers and felons
for about two hours, the people, the justices, and the judge, also
gazing upon me. After they had tried several others, they called me to
the bar, and empannelled a jury. Then the judge asked the justices,
“whether they had tendered me the oath at the sessions.” They said,
“they had.” Then he bid, “give them the book, that they might swear they
had tendered me the oath according to the indictment.” Some of the
justices refused to be sworn; but the judge said, he would have it done,
to take away all occasion of exception. When the jury were sworn, and
the justices had sworn that “they had tendered me the oath according to
the indictment,” the judge asked me, “whether I had not refused the oath
at the last assizes?” I said, “I never took an oath in my life, and
Christ, the Saviour and Judge of the world, said, ‘Swear not at all.’”
The judge seemed not to take notice of my answer, but asked me, “whether
or not I had refused to take the oath at the last assizes?” I said, “the
words that I then spoke to them were, that if they could prove, either
judge, justices, priest, or teacher, that after Christ and the apostle
had forbidden swearing, they commanded that Christians should swear, I
would swear.” The judge said he was not at that time to dispute, whether
it was lawful to swear, but to inquire whether I had refused to take the
oath or not, I told him, “those things mentioned in the oath, as
plotting against the king, and owning the Pope’s, or any other foreign
power, I utterly deny.” “Well,” said he, “you say well in that, but did
you deny to take the oath? what say you?” “What wouldst thou have me to
say?” said I; “for I have told thee before what I did say.” Then he
asked me, “if I would have these men to swear, that I had taken the
oath?” I asked him, “If he would have those men to swear, that I had
refused the oath?” at which the court burst out into laughter. I was
grieved to see so much lightness in a court, where such solemn matters
are handled, and thereupon asked them, “if this court was a play-house?
where is gravity and sobriety? for this behaviour doth not become you.”
Then the clerk read the indictment, and I told the judge, “I had
something to speak to it;” for I had informed myself of the errors that
were in it. He told me, “he would hear afterwards any reasons that I
could allege, why he should not give judgment.” Then I spoke to the
jury, and told them, “that they could not bring me in guilty according
to that indictment, for the indictment was wrong laid, and had many
gross errors in it.” The judge said, “I must not speak to the jury, but
he would speak to them,” and he told them I had denied to take the oath
at the last assizes; and, said he, “I can tender the oath to any man
now, and premunire him for not taking it;” and he said, they must bring
me in guilty, seeing I refused to take the oath. Then said I, “What do
ye do with a form? ye may throw away your form then.” And I told the
jury, “it lay upon their consciences, as they would answer it to the
Lord God, before his judgment-seat.” Then the judge spoke again to the
jury, and I called to him to “do me justice.” The jury brought me in
guilty. Whereupon I told them, that “both the justices and they had
foresworn themselves, and therefore they had small cause to laugh, as
they did a little before.” O! the envy, rage, and malice that appeared
against me, and the lightness; but the Lord confounded them, and they
were wonderfully stopped. So they set me aside, and called up Margaret
Fell, who had much good service among them; and then the court broke up
near the second hour.
In the afternoon we were brought again to have sentence passed upon us.
Margaret Fell desired, that sentence might be deferred till the next
morning. I desired nothing but law and justice at his hands, for thieves
had mercy; only I requested the judge to send some one to see my prison,
which was so bad, they would put no creature they had in it; and I told
him, that Colonel Kirby, who was then on the bench, said, “I should be
locked up, and no flesh alive should come to me.” The judge shook his
head, and said, “when the sentence was given, he would leave me to the
favour of the jailer.” Most of the gentry of the country were gathered
together, expecting to hear the sentence; and the noise among the people
was, “that I should be transported.” But they were all crossed at that
time; for the sentence being deferred till next morning, I was sent to
prison again. Upon my complaining of the badness of my prison, some of
the justices, with Colonel Kirby, went up to see it; but when they came,
they durst hardly go in, the floor was so bad and dangerous, and the
place so open to wind and rain. Some that came up said, “sure it was a
jakes-house.” When Colonel Kirby saw it, and heard what others said of
it, he excused the matter as well as he could, saying, “I should be
removed ere long to some more convenient place.”
Next day, towards eleven, we were called again to hear the sentence; and
Margaret Fell being called first to the bar, had counsel to plead, who
found many errors in her indictment; whereupon, after the judge had
acknowledged them, she was set by. Then the judge asked, “what they
could say to mine?” I was not willing to let any man plead for me, but
to speak to it myself; and indeed, though Margaret had some that pleaded
for her, yet she spoke as much herself as she would. But before I came
to the bar, I was moved in my spirit to pray, that God would confound
their wickedness and envy, set his truth over all, and exalt his Seed.
The Lord heard and answered, and did confound them in their proceedings
against me; and though they had most envy against me, yet the most gross
errors were found in my indictment.
Now, I having put by others from pleading for me, the judge asked me,
“what I had to say, why he should not pass sentence upon me?” I told
him, “I was no lawyer, but I had much to say, if he would have patience
to hear.” At that he laughed, and others laughed also, and said, “Come,
what have you to say? he can say nothing.” “Yes,” said I, “I have much
to say, have but the patience to hear me.” Then I asked him, “whether
the oath was to be tendered to the king’s subjects, or to the subjects
of foreign princes?” He said, “to the subjects of this realm.” “Then,”
said I, “look at the indictment, and ye may see that ye have left out
the word, subject: so not having named me in the indictment as a
subject, ye cannot premunire me for not taking the oath.” Then they
looked over the statute and the indictment, and saw that it was as I
said; and the judge confessed it was an error.
I told him, “I had something else to stop his judgment;” and I desired
him to look what day the indictment said the oath was tendered to me at
the sessions there. They looked, and said, “it was the eleventh day of
January.” “What day of the week were the sessions held on?” said I. “On
a Tuesday,” said they. “Then,” said I, “look at your almanacs, and see
whether there were any sessions held at Lancaster on the eleventh day of
January, so called?” So they looked, and found that the eleventh was the
day called Monday, and that the sessions were on the day called Tuesday,
which was the twelfth day of that month. “Look now,” said I, “ye have
indicted me for refusing the oath in the quarter sessions held at
Lancaster on the eleventh day of January last, and the justices have
sworn that they tendered me the oath in open sessions here that day, and
the jury upon their oaths have found me guilty thereupon; and yet ye see
there were no sessions held in Lancaster that day.” Then the judge, to
cover the matter, asked, “whether the sessions did not begin on the
eleventh?” But some in the court answered, “no; the sessions held but
one day, and that was the twelfth.” Then the judge said, “this was a
great mistake, and an error.” Some of the justices were in a great rage
at this, and were ready to quit the bench; they stamped and said, “who
hath done this? somebody hath done it on purpose;” and a great heat was
amongst them. “Then,” said I, “are not the justices here, that have
sworn to this indictment, forsworn men in the face of the country? But
this is not all,” said I, “I have more yet to offer why sentence should
not be given against me.”
Then I asked, “in what year of the king the last assize here was holden,
which was in the month called March last?” The judge said, “it was in
the sixteenth year of the king.” “But,” said I, “the indictment says it
was in the fifteenth year.” They looked, and found it so. This also was
acknowledged to be another error. Then they were all in a fret again,
and could not tell what to say; for the judge had sworn the officers of
the court, that the oath was tendered to me at the assize mentioned in
the indictment. “Now,” said I, “is not the court here forsworn also, who
have sworn that the oath was tendered to me at the assize holden here in
the fifteenth year of the king, when it was in his sixteenth year, and
so they have sworn a year false?” The judge bid them look whether
Margaret Fell’s indictment was so or not. They looked, and found it was
not so.
I told the judge, “I had more yet to offer to stop sentence;” and asked
him, “whether all the oath ought to be put into the indictment or not?”
“Yes,” said he, “it ought to be all put in.” “Then,” said I, “compare
the indictment with the oath, and there thou mayest see these words,
viz. [or by any authority derived, or pretended to be derived from him,
or his see] left out of the indictment, which is a principal part of the
oath, and in another place the words [heirs and successors] are left
out.” The judge acknowledged these also to be great errors. “But,” said
I, “I have something further to allege.” “Nay,” said the judge, “I have
enough, you need say no more.” “If,” said I, “thou hast enough, I desire
nothing but law and justice at thy hands, for I don’t look for mercy.”
“You must have justice,” said he, “and you shall have law.” Then I
asked, “Am I at liberty and free from all that hath ever been done
against me in this matter?” “Yes,” said the judge, “you are free from
all that hath been done against you. But then,” starting up in a rage,
he said, “I can put the oath to any man here, and I will tender you the
oath again.” I told him, “he had examples enough yesterday of swearing
and false-swearing, both in the justices and the jury; for I saw before
mine eyes, that both justices and jury had forsworn themselves.” The
judge asked me, “if I would take the oath?” “I bid him do me justice for
my false imprisonment all this while; for what had I been imprisoned so
long for? and I told him I ought to be set at liberty.” “You are at
liberty,” said he, “but I will put the oath to you again.” Then I turned
me about and said, “All people, take notice, this is a snare, for I
ought to be set free from the jailer and from this court.” But the judge
cried, “Give him the book;” and the sheriff and the justices cried,
“Give him the book.” Then the power of darkness rose up in them, like a
mountain, and a clerk lifted up a book to me. I stood still and said,
“If it be a Bible, give it me into my hand.” “Yes, yes,” said the judge
and justices, “give it him into his hand.” So I took it and looked into
it, and said, “I see it is a Bible, I am glad of it.”
Now he had caused the jury to be called, and they stood by; for after
they had brought in their former verdict, he would not dismiss them,
though they desired it; but told them, “he could not dismiss them yet,
for he should have business for them, and therefore they must attend and
be ready when they were called.” When he said so, I felt his intent,
that if I was freed, he would come on again. So I looked him in the
face, and the witness of God started up in him, and made him blush when
he looked at me again, for he saw that I saw him. Nevertheless,
hardening himself, he caused the oath to be read to me, the jury
standing by; and when it was read, he asked me, “whether I would take
the oath or not?” Then said I, “Ye have given me a book here to kiss and
to swear on, and this book which ye have given me to kiss, says, ‘Kiss
the Son;’ and the Son says in this book, ‘Swear not at all;’ and so says
also the apostle James. Now, I say as the book says, and yet ye imprison
me; how chance ye do not imprison the book for saying so? How comes it
that the book is at liberty amongst you, which bids me not swear, and
yet ye imprison me for doing as the book bids me? Why don’t ye imprison
the book?” As I was speaking this to them, and held up the Bible open in
my hand, to show them the place in the book, where Christ forbids
swearing, they plucked the book out of my hand again; and the judge
said, “Nay, but we will imprison George Fox.” Yet this got abroad over
all the country as a by-word, “that they gave me a book to swear on,
that commanded me ‘not to swear at all;’ and that the Bible was at
liberty, and I in prison for doing as the Bible said.”
Now when the judge still urged me to swear, I told him, “I never took
oath, covenant, or engagement in my life, but my yea or nay was more
binding to me than an oath was to many others; for had they not had
experience how little men regarded an oath; and how they had sworn one
way and then another; and how the justices and court had forsworn
themselves now?” I told him, ‘I was a man of a tender conscience, and if
they had any sense of a tender conscience, they would consider, that it
was in obedience to Christ’s command that I could not swear. “But,” said
I, “if any of you can convince me, that after Christ and the apostle had
commanded not to swear, they altered that command and commanded
Christians to swear; then ye shall see I will swear.” There being many
priests by, I said, “if ye cannot do it, let your priests stand up and
do it.” But not one of the priests made any answer. “O,” said the judge,
“all the world cannot convince you.” “No,” said I, “how is it like the
world should convince me; for ‘the whole world lies in wickedness;’ but
bring out your spiritual men, as ye call them, to convince me.” Then
both the sheriff and the judge said, “the angel swore in the
Revelations.” I replied, “when God bringeth in his first-begotten Son
into the world, he saith, ‘Let all the angels of God worship him;’ and
he saith, ‘swear not at all.’” “Nay,” said the judge, “I will not
dispute.” Then I spoke to the jury, telling them, “it was for Christ’s
sake that I could not swear, and therefore I warned them not to act
contrary to that of God in their consciences, for before his
judgment-seat they must all be brought.” And I told them, “that as for
plots and persecution for religion and Popery, I do deny them in my
heart; for I am a Christian, and shall show forth Christianity amongst
you this day. It is for Christ’s doctrine I stand.” More words I had
both with the judge and jury before the jailer took me away.
In the afternoon I was brought up again, and put among the thieves some
time, where I stood with my hat on till the jailer took it off. Then the
jury having found this new indictment against me “for not taking the
oath,” I was called to the bar; and the judge asked me, “what I would
say for myself:” I bid them read the indictment, for I would not answer
to that which I did not hear. The clerk read it, and as he read the
judge said, “take heed it be not false again;” but he read it in such a
manner that I could hardly understand what he read. When he had done,
the judge asked me, “what I said to the indictment?” I told him, “at
once hearing so large a writing read, and at such a distance that I
could not distinctly hear all the parts of it, I could not well tell
what to say to it; but if he would let me have a copy, and give me time
to consider it, I would answer it.” This put them to a little stand; but
after a while the judge asked me “what time I would have?” I said, “till
the next assize.” “But,” said he, “what plea will you now make? are you
guilty or not guilty?” I said, “I am not guilty at all of denying
swearing obstinately and wilfully; and as for those things mentioned in
the oath, as jesuitical plots and foreign powers, I utterly deny them in
my heart; and if I could take any oath, I should take that; but I never
took any oath in my life.” The judge said, “I said well; but,” said he,
“the king is sworn, the parliament is sworn, I am sworn, the justices
are sworn, and the law is preserved by oaths.” I told him, “they had had
sufficient experience of men’s swearing, and he had seen how the
justices and jury had sworn wrongly the other day; and if he had read in
the _Book of Martyrs_ how many of the martyrs had refused to swear, both
within the time of the ten persecutions and in Bishop Bonner’s days, he
might see, that to deny swearing in obedience to Christ’s command was no
new thing.” He said, “he wished the laws were otherwise.” I said, “Our
Yea is yea, and our Nay is nay; and if we transgress our yea and our
nay, let us suffer as they do, or should do, that swear falsely.” This,
I told him, we had offered to the king; and the king said, “it was
reasonable.” After some further discourse, they committed me to prison
again, there to lie till the next assize; and Colonel Kirby gave order
to the jailer, “to keep me close, and suffer no flesh alive to come at
me, for I was not fit,” he said, “to be discoursed with by men.”
Then I was put into a tower, where the smoke of the other prisoners came
up so thick, that it stood as dew upon the walls, and sometimes it was
so thick that I could hardly see the candle when it burned; and I being
locked under three locks, the under-jailer, when the smoke was great,
would hardly be persuaded to come up to unlock one of the uppermost
doors, for fear of the smoke, so that I was almost smothered. Besides,
it rained in upon my bed, and many times, when I went to stop out the
rain in the cold winter season, my shirt was wet through with the rain
that came in upon me, while I was labouring to stop it out. And the
place being high and open to the wind, sometimes as fast as I stopped
it, the wind blew it out again. In this manner did I lie, all that long
cold winter, till the next assize; in which time I was so starved with
cold and rain, that my body was greatly swelled, and my limbs much
benumbed.
The assize began on the 16th day of the month called March, 1664-5. The
same Judges, Twisden and Turner, coming that circuit again, Judge
Twisden sat this time on the crown-bench, and before him I was brought.
I had informed myself of the errors in this indictment also. For though
at the assize before, Judge Turner had said to the officers in court,
“Pray see that all the oath be in the indictment, and that the word,
subject, be in, and that the day of the month and the year of the king
be put in right; for it is a shame that so many errors should be seen
and found in the face of the country;” yet there were many errors, and
those great ones, in this indictment, as well as in the former. Surely
the hand of the Lord was in it, to confound their mischievous work
against me, and to blind them therein; insomuch, that although after the
indictment was drawn at the former assize, the judge examined it himself
and tried it with the clerks, yet the word, subject, was left out of
this indictment also, the day of the month was put in wrong, and several
material words of the oath were left out; yet they went on confidently
against me, thinking all was safe and well.
When I was set to the bar, and the jury called over to be sworn, the
clerk asked me, first, “whether I had any objection to make against any
of the jury?” I told him, “I knew none of them.” Then, having sworn the
jury, they swore three of the officers of the court to prove “that the
oath was tendered to me at the last assizes, according to the
indictment.” “Come, come,” said the judge, “it was not done in a
corner.” Then he asked me, “what I had said to it, or whether I had
taken the oath at the last assize?” I told him, what I had said, viz.,
“that the book they gave me to swear on, says, ‘swear not at all;’” and
I repeated more of what I had formerly said to them, as it now came to
my remembrance. Whereupon the judge said, “I will not dispute with you,
but in point of law.” “Then,” said I, “I have something to speak to the
jury concerning the indictment.” He told me, I must not speak to the
jury, but if I had anything to say, I must speak to him. Then I asked
him, “whether the oath was to be tendered to the king’s subjects only,
or to the subjects of foreign princes?” He replied, “to the subjects of
this realm; for I will speak nothing to you,” said he, “but in point of
law.” “Then,” said I, “look in the indictment, and thou mayest see that
the word, subject, is left out of this indictment also. And therefore
seeing the oath is not to be tendered to any but the subjects of this
realm, and ye have not put me in as a subject, the court is to take no
notice of this indictment.” I had no sooner spoken than the judge cried,
“Take him away, jailer, take him away.” So I was presently hurried away.
The jailer and people looked when I should be called for again; but I
was never brought to the court any more, though I had many other great
errors to assign in the indictment.
After I was gone, the judge asked the jury, “if they were agreed?” They
said, “yes,” and found for the king against me as I was told. But I was
never called to hear sentence given, nor was any given against me, that
I could hear of. I understood that when they had looked more narrowly
into the indictment, they saw it was not good: and the judge having
sworn the officers of the court, that the oath was tendered me at the
assize before, such a day, according as was set in the indictment, and
that being the wrong day, I should have proved the officers of the court
forsworn men again, if the judge would have suffered me to plead to the
indictment; which was thought to be the reason why he hurried me away so
soon. The judge had passed sentence of premunire upon Margaret Fell,
before I was brought in; and it seems, when I was hurried away, they
recorded me as a premunired person, though I was never brought to hear
the sentence or knew of it; which was very illegal. For they ought not
only to have had me present to hear the sentence given, but also to have
asked me first, “what I could say why sentence should not be given
against me?” But they knew I had so much to say, that they could not
give sentence, if they heard it.
While I was prisoner in Lancaster castle, there was a great noise and
talk of the Turk’s overspreading Christendom, and great fears entered
many. But one day as I was walking in my prison chamber, “I saw the
Lord’s power turn against him, and that he was turning back again.” And
I declared to some what the Lord had let me see, when there were such
fears of his over-running Christendom; and within a month after the news
came, that they had given him a defeat.
Another time, as I was walking in my chamber, with my eye to the Lord,
“I saw the angel of the Lord with a glittering drawn sword stretched
southward, as though the court had been all on fire.” Not long after the
wars broke out with Holland, the sickness broke forth, and afterwards
the fire of London; so the Lord’s sword was drawn indeed.
By reason of my long and close imprisonment in so bad a place, I was
become very weak in body; but the Lord’s power was over all, supported
me through all, and enabled me to do service for him, and for his truth
and people, as the place would admit. For while I was in Lancaster
prison, I answered several books, as the _Mass_, the _Common-Prayer_,
the _Directory_, and the _Church Faith_; which are the four chief
religions that are got up since the apostles’ days. And there being
several Friends in prison at Lancaster and other prisons for not paying
tithes, I was moved to give forth the following lines:—
_Concerning Tithes._
“In the time of the law, they that did not bring their tithes into the
store-house, robbed God; then there was not meat in their house;
therefore the Lord commanded ‘to bring them into his house, that there
might be meat in the store-house, which was to fill the fatherless,
stranger, and widow.’ But these priests, who are counterfeits, who
take people’s tithes now by a law, are from the beast; and if any will
not pay them, they imprison them, or make them pay treble. These rob
the poor, rob the fatherless; and the stranger and the widow are not
filled; so their cry is gone up to heaven against these. Many are made
almost beggars by these oppressing priests, their cattle and corn
being taken away, and they cast into prison. Others are sued at law by
them, and have treble damage taken from them; yet such priests are
cried up to be ministers of the gospel. Though, when the unchangeable
priest was come, the priesthood that was changeable, was denied, as we
now deny these. But if any be moved now to cry against them, they are
stocked, beaten, or imprisoned. Many are now in prison at Lancaster,
and in other places, by a national law; the like whereof was never
done by the law of God, which was delivered to Moses. For we do not
read, that under Moses’s law any suffered imprisonment, or spoiling of
their goods for not paying tithes, or had to pay treble damage.
Surely, surely, the cry for vengeance will be heard, which arises from
the oppressed souls that lie under the altar. There are many prisoners
at Kendal, because they cannot pay tithes, as Captain Ward, Thomas
Robertson,[8] and the widow Garland, who has many small children;
these suffer because they cannot pay tithes. Others are in Kendal
prison, who were moved of the Lord to speak to the priests, one to go
in sackcloth, and with ashes upon her head. Others have been moved to
go in sackcloth, as a lamentation for the miserable estate of this
nation, seeing so much crying up of the preaching of the gospel, and
yet so much strife, debate, and oaths, and dissension among people.
But where the gospel is received indeed, strife and contention are
ended, and oppression is taken off.
O! the land mourns, because of the oppression of those called
ministers! And though the cry of the oppressed hath not entered into
the ears of the magistrates; yet is the cry of the poor, oppressed
people of God, entered into the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth, who now
will be avenged of all his adversaries. You unjust lawgivers, and
unjust judges, to that in all your consciences I speak, to be cleared,
when ye are judged by the just Judge of heaven and earth; whose terror
is gone forth against all the ungodly, and all the oppressors of God’s
people whatsoever, whether ye will hear or forbear.”
G.F.
After the assize, Colonel Kirby and some other justices were very uneasy
with my being at Lancaster; for I had galled them sore at my trials
there, and they laboured much to get me removed to some remote place.
Colonel Kirby threatened I should be sent far enough, and sometimes
said, I should be sent beyond sea. About six weeks after the assizes,
they got an order from the king and council to remove me from Lancaster;
and with it they brought a letter from the Earl of Anglesea, wherein was
written, “that if those things were found true against me, which I was
charged withal, I deserved no clemency or mercy:” yet the greatest
matter they had against me was, because I could not disobey the command
of Christ, and swear.
When they had prepared for my removal, the under-sheriff and the
head-sheriff’s man, with some bailiffs, came and fetched me out of the
castle, when I was so weak with lying in that cold, wet, and smoky
prison, that I could hardly go or stand. They had me into the jailer’s
house, where were William Kirby, a justice, and several others, and they
called for wine to give me. I told them, “I would have none of their
wine.” Then they cried, “Bring out the horses.” I desired them first to
show me their order, or a copy of it, if they intended to remove me; but
they would show me none but their swords. I told them, “there was no
sentence passed upon me, nor was I premunired, that I knew of; and
therefore I was not made the king’s prisoner, but was the sheriff’s; for
they and all the country knew, that I was not fully heard at the last
assize, nor suffered to show the errors that were in the indictment,
which were sufficient to quash it, though they had kept me from one
assize to another, to the end they might try me. But they all knew,
there was no sentence of premunire passed upon me; and therefore not
being the king’s prisoner, but the sheriff’s, I desired to see their
order.” Instead of showing me their order, they haled me out, and lifted
me upon one of the sheriff’s horses. When I was on horseback in the
street, the town’s-people being gathered to gaze upon me, I told the
officers, I had received neither Christianity, civility, nor humanity,
from them. They hurried me away about fourteen miles to BENTHAM, though
I was so very weak, I was hardly able to sit on horseback; and my
clothes smelt so of smoke, that they were loathsome to myself. The
wicked jailer, one Hunter, a young fellow, would come behind, and give
the horse a lash with his whip, and make him skip, and leap; so that I
being weak, had difficulty to sit him; and then he would come and look
me in the face, and say, “How do you, Mr. Fox?” I told him, “it was not
civil in him to do so.” The Lord cut him off soon after.
When we were come to Bentham, there met us many troopers, and a marshal;
and many of the gentry of the country were come in, and abundance of
people to stare at me. I being very weak and weary, desired them to let
me lie down on a bed, which the soldiers permitted me; for they that
brought me thither, gave their order to the marshal, and he set a guard
of his soldiers upon me. When they had stayed a while, they pressed
horses, and raised the bailiff of the hundred, and the constables, and
others, and had me to GIGGLESWICK that night; but exceedingly weak I
was. There they raised the constables with their clog-shoes, who sat
drinking all the night in the room by me, so that I could not get much
rest. Next day we came to a market-town, where several Friends called to
see me; and Robert Widders and divers Friends came to me on the road.
The next night I asked the soldiers, “whither they intended to carry me,
and whither I was to be sent?” Some of them said, “beyond sea;” others
said, “to Tynemouth Castle.” A great fear there was amongst them, lest
some one should rescue me out of their hands; but that fear was
needless.
Next night we came to YORK, where the marshal put me into a great
chamber, where most part of two troops came to see me. One of these
troopers, an envious man, hearing that I must be premunired, asked me,
“what estate I had, and whether it was copyhold or free land?” I took no
notice of his question, but was moved to declare the word of life to the
soldiers, and many of them were very loving. At night the Lord
Frecheville (so called), who commanded these horse, came to me, and was
very civil and loving. I gave him an account of my imprisonment, and
declared many things to him relating to truth. They kept me at York two
days, and then the marshal and four or five soldiers were sent to convey
me to SCARBRO’ CASTLE. Indeed these were very civil men, and carried
themselves civilly and lovingly to me. On the way we baited at MALTON,
and they permitted Friends to come and visit me. When we were come to
SCARBRO’, they had me to an inn, and gave notice to the governor, who
sent six soldiers to be my guard that night. Next day they conducted me
into the castle, put me into a room, and set a sentry on me. Being very
weak and subject to fainting, they let me go out sometimes into the air
with the sentry. They soon removed me out of this room, and put me into
an open one, where the rain came in; and smoked exceedingly, which was
very offensive to me.
One day the governor, Sir J. Crossland, came to see me, and brought with
him Sir Francis Cobb. I desired the governor to go into my room, and see
what a place I had. I had got a little fire made in it, and it was so
filled with smoke, that when they were in it, they could hardly find
their way out again; and he being a Papist, I told him, that was his
Purgatory which they had put me into. I was forced to lay out about
fifty shillings to stop out the rain, and keep the room from smoking so
much. When I had been at that charge, and made it somewhat tolerable,
they removed me into a worse room, where I had neither chimney nor
fire-hearth. This being to the sea-side and lying much open, the wind
drove in the rain forcibly, so that the water came over my bed, and ran
about the room, that I was fain to skim it up with a platter. And when
my clothes were wet, I had no fire to dry them; so that my body was
benumbed with cold, and my fingers swelled, that one was grown as big as
two. Though I was at some charge in this room also, I could not keep out
the wind and rain. Besides they would suffer few Friends to come to me,
and many times not any, no, not so much as to bring me a little food;
but I was forced for the first quarter to hire one, not a Friend, to
bring me necessaries. Sometimes the soldiers would take it from her, and
she would scuffle with them for it. Afterwards I hired a soldier to
fetch me water and bread, and something to make a fire of, when I was in
a room where a fire could be made. Commonly a threepenny loaf served me
three weeks, and sometimes longer, and most of my drink was water with
wormwood steeped or bruised in it. One time when the weather was very
sharp, and I had taken great cold, I got a little elecampane beer, and I
heard one of the soldiers say to the other, that they would play me a
trick, for they would send for me up to the deputy-governor, and in the
meantime drink my strong beer out; and so they did. When I came back,
one of the soldiers came to me in a jeer, and asked me for some strong
beer. I told him they had played their pretty trick; and so I took no
further notice of it.
But inasmuch as they kept me so very strait, not giving liberty for
Friends to come to me, I spoke to the keepers of the castle to this
effect: “I did not know till I was removed from Lancaster castle, and
brought prisoner to this castle of Scarbro’, that I was convicted of a
premunire; for the judge did not give sentence upon me at the assizes in
open court. But seeing I am now a prisoner here, if I may not have my
liberty, let my friends and acquaintance have their liberty to come and
visit me, as Paul’s friends had among the Romans, who were not
Christians but Heathens. For Paul’s friends had their liberty; all that
would, might come to him, and he had his liberty to preach to them in
his hired house; but I cannot have liberty to go into the town, nor for
my friends to come to me here. So you that go under the name of
Christians, are worse in this respect than those heathens were.”
But though they would not let Friends come to me, they would often bring
others, either to gaze upon me, or to contend with me. One time a great
company of Papists came to discourse with me; they affirmed, “the Pope
was infallible, and had stood infallible ever since Peter’s time.” But I
showed them the contrary by history; for one of the bishops of Rome,
(Marcellinus by name,) denied the faith and sacrificed to idols;
therefore he was not infallible. I told them, if they were in the
infallible spirit, they need not have jails, swords, and staves, racks
and tortures, fires and faggots, whips and gallows, to hold up their
religion by, and to destroy men’s lives about it; for if they were in
the infallible spirit they would preserve men’s lives, and use none but
spiritual weapons about religion. I told them also what one that had
been of their society told me. A woman who lived in Kent, had not only
been a Papist herself, but had brought over several to that religion;
but coming to be convinced of God’s truth, and turned by it to Christ
her Saviour, she exhorted the Papists to the same. One of them, a
tailor, being at work at her house, while she opened to him the
falseness of the Popish religion, and endeavoured to draw him from it to
the truth, drew his knife, and got between her and the door; but she
spoke boldly to him, and bid him put up his knife, for she knew his
principle. I asked the woman, “what she thought he would have done with
his knife?” She said, “he would have stabbed her.” “Stabbed thee,” said
I, “what would he have stabbed thee for? thy religion.” “Yes,” said she,
“it is the principle of the Papists, if any turn from their religion, to
kill them if they can.” This story I told those Papists, and that I had
it from a person that had been one of them, but had forsaken their
principles and discovered their practices. They did not deny this to be
their principle; but said, “What! would I declare this abroad?” I told
them, “yes, such things ought to be declared abroad; that it might be
known how contrary their religion was to true Christianity.” Whereupon
they went away in a great rage.
Another Papist came to discourse with me, who said all the patriarchs
were in hell, from the creation till Christ came, and that when Christ
suffered he went into hell, and the Devil said to him “What comest thou
hither for, to break open our strongholds?” And Christ said, “to fetch
them all out.” So he said, “Christ was three nights and three days in
hell, to bring them out.” I told him that was false, for Christ said to
the thief, “This day thou shalt be with me in paradise.” And Enoch and
Elijah were translated into heaven. And Abraham was in heaven, for the
Scripture saith, Lazarus was in his bosom; and Moses and Elias were with
Christ upon the Mount before he suffered. These instances stopped the
Papist’s mouth, and put him to a stand.
Another time came Dr. Witty, who was esteemed a great doctor of physic,
with Lord Falconbridge; with these came also the governor of Tynemouth
castle, and several knights. Being called to them, Witty undertook to
discourse with me, and asked me, “what I was in prison for?” I told him,
“because I would not disobey the command of Christ, and swear.” He said,
“I ought to swear my allegiance to the king.” He being a great
Presbyterian, I asked him, “whether he had not sworn against the King,
and House of Lords, and taken the Scotch covenant? and had he not since
sworn to the king? and what then was his swearing good for? But my
allegiance,” I told him, “did not consist in swearing, but in truth and
faithfulness.” After some further discourse, I was sent away to my
prison again. And afterwards this Dr. Witty boasted in the town amongst
his patients, that he had conquered me. When I heard of his boasting, I
told the governor, “it was a small boast in him to say he had conquered
a bondman.” I desired to bid him visit me again, when he came to the
castle.
He came again a while after, with sixteen or seventeen great persons;
and ran himself worse on ground than before. For he affirmed before them
all, “that Christ hath not enlightened every man that cometh into the
world; and that the grace of God, that bringeth salvation, hath not
appeared unto all men; and that Christ died not for all men.” I asked
him, “what sort of men those were whom Christ had not enlightened? and
to whom his grace had not appeared? and for whom he had not died?” He
said, “Christ did not die for adulterers, and idolaters, and wicked
men.” I asked him, “whether adulterers and wicked men were not sinners?”
He said, “Yes.” “And did not Christ die for sinners?” said I. “Did he
not come to call sinners to repentance?” “Yes,” said he. “Then,” said I,
“thou hast stopped thy own mouth.” So I proved that the grace of God had
appeared unto all men, though some turned it into wantonness, and walked
despitefully against it; and that Christ had enlightened all men, though
some hated the light. Several of the people that were present, confessed
it was true; but he went away in a great rage, and came no more to me.
Another time the governor brought a priest, but his mouth was soon
stopped. Not long after he brought two or three parliament-men, who
asked me, “whether I owned ministers and bishops?” I told them, “yes,
such as Christ sent, such as had freely received, and would freely give,
such as were qualified, and were in the same power and Spirit that they
were in in the apostles’ days. But such bishops and teachers as theirs
were, that would go no farther than a great benefice, I did not own; for
they were not like the apostles. Christ saith to his ministers, ‘Go ye
into all nations, and preach the gospel;’ but ye parliament-men, who
keep your priests and bishops in such great fat benefices, have spoiled
them all. For do ye think they will go into all nations to preach; or
any farther than they have a great fat benefice? Judge yourselves
whether they will or not.”
There came another time the widow of old Lord Fairfax, and with her a
great company; one of whom was a priest. I was moved to declare the
truth to them, and the priest asked me, “Why we said, Thou and Thee to
people? for he counted us but fools and idiots for speaking so.” I asked
him, “Whether they that translated the Scriptures, and that made the
grammar and accidence, were fools and idiots, seeing they translated the
Scriptures so, and made the grammar so, Thou to one, and You to more
than one, and left it so to us. If they were fools and idiots, why had
not he, and such as he, that looked upon themselves as wise men, and
that could not bear Thou and Thee to a singular, altered the grammar,
accidence, and Bible, and put the plural instead of the singular. But if
they were wise men that had so translated the Bible, and had made the
grammar and accidence so, I wished him to consider whether they were not
fools and idiots themselves, that did not speak as their grammars and
Bibles taught them; but were offended with us, and called us fools and
idiots for speaking so?” Thus the priest’s mouth was stopped, and many
of the company acknowledged the truth, and were pretty loving and
tender. Some of them would have given me money, but I would not receive
it.
After this came Dr. Cradock, with three priests more, and the governor
and his lady (so called) and another that was called a lady, and a great
company with them. Dr. Cradock asked me, “what I was in prison for?” I
told him, “for obeying the command of Christ and the apostle, in not
swearing. But if he, being both a doctor and a justice of peace, could
convince me, that after Christ and the apostle had forbidden swearing,
they commanded Christians to swear, then I would swear. Here was the
Bible,” I told him, “he might, if he could, show me any such command.”
He said, “It is written, ‘ye shall swear in truth and righteousness.’”
“Ay,” said I, “It was written so in Jeremiah’s time; but that was many
ages before Christ commanded, ‘not to swear at all;’ but where is it
written so, since Christ forbade all swearing? I could bring as many
instances for swearing out of the Old Testament as thou, and it may be
more; but of what force are they to prove swearing lawful in the New
Testament, since Christ and the apostle had forbade it? Besides,” said
I, “in that text, where it is written, ye shall swear, what ye was this?
Was it ye Gentiles, or ye Jews?” To this he would not answer. But one of
the priests that were with him answered, “it was to the Jews that this
was spoken.” Then Dr. Cradock confessed it was so. “Very well,” said I,
“but where did God ever give a command to the Gentiles to swear? For
thou knowest that we are Gentiles by nature.” “Indeed,” said he, “in the
gospel-times everything was to be established out of the mouths of two
or three witnesses; but there was to be no swearing then.” “Why then,”
said I, “dost thou force oaths upon Christians, contrary to thy own
knowledge, in the gospel-times. And why dost thou excommunicate my
friends?” (for he had excommunicated abundance, both in Yorkshire and
Lancashire). He said, “for not coming to church.” “Why,” said I, “Ye
left us above twenty years ago, when we were but young lads and lasses,
to the Presbyterians, Independents and Baptists, many of whom made spoil
of our goods and persecuted us, because we would not follow them. Now we
being but young, knew little then of your principles; and if ye had
intended to keep the old men that did know them, to you, and your
principles alive, that we might have known them, ye should either not
have fled from us as ye did, or ye should have sent us your epistles,
collects, homilies, and evening-songs, for Paul wrote epistles to the
saints, though he was in prison. But they and we might have turned Turks
or Jews for any collects, homilies, or epistles, we had from you all
this while. And now thou hast excommunicated us, both young and old, and
so have others of you done: that is, ye have put us out of your church,
before ye have got us into it, and before ye have brought us to know
your principles. Is not this madness in you, to put us out before we
were brought in? Indeed, if ye had brought us into your church, and when
we had been in, if we had done some bad thing, that had been something
like a ground for excommunication or putting out again. But,” said I,
“what dost thou call the church?” “Why,” said he, “that which you call
the steeple-house.” Then I asked him, “whether Christ shed his blood for
the steeple-house; and purchased and sanctified the steeple-house with
his blood? And seeing the church is Christ’s bride and wife, and that he
is the head of the church, dost thou think the steeple-house is Christ’s
wife and bride, and that he is the head of that old house, or his
people?” “No,” said he, “Christ is the head of the people, and they are
the church.” “Then,” said I, “but you have given the title, church,
which belongs to the people, to an old house, and you have taught people
to believe so.”
I asked him also, “why he persecuted Friends for not paying tithes? And
whether God ever gave a command to the Gentiles, that they should pay
tithes? And whether Christ had not ended tithes, when he ended the
Levitical priesthood that took tithes? And whether Christ when he sent
forth his disciples to preach, had not commanded them to preach freely,
as he had given them freely? And whether all ministers of Christ, are
not bound to observe this command of Christ?” He said, “he would not
dispute that;” neither did I find he was willing to stay on that
subject, for he presently turned to another matter, and said, “you
marry, but I know not how.” I replied, “it may be so; but why dost thou
not come and see?” Then he threatened that he would use his power
against us as he had done. “I bid him take heed, for he was an old man.”
I asked him also, “where he read from Genesis to the Revelations, that
ever any priest did marry any?” And I wished him to show me some
instance thereof, if he would have us come to them to be married; “for”
said I, “thou hast excommunicated one of my friends, two years after he
was dead, about his marriage. And why dost thou not excommunicate Isaac,
and Jacob, and Boaz, and Ruth? Why dost thou not use thy power against
these; for we do not read that they were ever married by the priests;
but they took one another in the assemblies of the righteous, in the
presence of God and his people; and so do we. So that we have all the
holy men and women, that the Scripture speaks of in this practice, on
our side.” Much discourse we had, but when he found he could get no
advantage over me, he went away with his company.
With such people I was much exercised while I was there; for most that
came to the castle would desire to speak with me, and great disputes I
had with them. But, as to Friends, I was as a man buried alive: for
though many came far to see me, yet few were suffered to come to me: and
when any Friend came into the castle about business, if he looked
towards me they would rage at him. At last the governor came under some
trouble himself; for he having sent out a privateer to sea, they took
some ships that were not enemies’ ships, but their friends’; whereupon
he was brought into trouble; after which he grew somewhat more friendly
to me. For before I had a marshal set over me, on purpose to get money
out of me, but I was not free to give him a farthing; and when they
found they could get nothing from me, he was taken away again. The
officers often threatened that I should be hanged over the wall. Nay,
the deputy-governor told me once that the king, knowing I had a great
interest in the people, had sent me thither, that if there should be any
stirring in the nation, they should hang me over the wall to keep the
people down. There being, a while after, a marriage at a Papist’s house,
upon which occasion a great many of them were met together, they talked
much then of hanging me. But I told them, “if that was what they
desired, and it was permitted them, I was ready; for I never feared
death nor sufferings in my life, but I was known to be an innocent,
peaceable man, free from all stirrings and plottings, and one that
sought the good of all men.” Afterwards, the governor growing kinder, I
spoke to him when he was going to London to the Parliament, and desired
him to speak to Esquire Marsh, Sir Francis Cobb (so called), and some
others; and let them know how long I had lain in prison, and for what;
and he did so. When he came down again, he told me, that Esquire
Marsh[9] said he would go a hundred miles barefoot for my liberty, he
knew me so well; and several others, he said, spoke well of me. From
which time the governor was very loving to me.
There were, amongst the prisoners, two very bad men, that often sat
drinking with the officers and soldiers; and because I would not sit and
drink with them too, it made them the worse against me. One time when
these two prisoners were drunk, one of them (whose name was William
Wilkinson, a Presbyterian who had been a captain), came to me and
challenged me to fight with him. Seeing what condition he was in, I got
out of his way; and, next morning, when he was more sober, showed him,
“how unmanly it was in him to challenge a man to fight, whose principle,
he knew, it was not to strike; but if he was stricken on one ear to turn
the other. I told him, if he had a mind to fight, he should have
challenged some of the soldiers, that could have answered him in his own
way. But however, seeing he had challenged me, I was now come to answer
him with my hands in my pockets; and (reaching my head towards him)
‘here,’ said I, ‘here is my hair, here are my cheeks, here is my back.’”
With that he skipped away from me, and went into another room; at which
the soldiers fell a laughing; and one of the officers said, “you are a
happy man, that can bear such things.” Thus he was conquered without a
blow. After a while he took the oath, gave bond, and got out of prison;
and not long after the Lord cut him off.
There were great imprisonments in this, and the former year, while I was
prisoner at Lancaster and Scarbro’. At London many Friends were crowded
into Newgate, and other prisons, where the sickness was; and many died
in prison.[10] Many also were banished, and several sent on shipboard by
the king’s order. Some masters of ships would not carry them, but set
them on shore again; yet some were sent to Barbadoes, to Jamaica, and to
Nevis, and the Lord blessed them there. One master of a ship was very
wicked and cruel to Friends that were put on board his vessel; for he
kept them down under decks, though the sickness was amongst them; so
that many died of it. But the Lord visited him for his wickedness; for
he lost most of his seamen by the plague, and lay several months crossed
with contrary winds, though other ships went out and made their voyages.
At last he came before Plymouth, and there the governor and magistrates
would not suffer him, or any of his men, to land, though he wanted many
necessaries for his voyage; but Thomas Lower, Arthur Cotton, John Light,
and other Friends, went to the ship’s side and carried necessaries for
the Friends that were prisoners on board. The master being thus crossed
and vexed, cursed them that put upon him this freight, and said, “he
hoped he should not go far before he was taken.” And the vessel was but
just out of sight of Plymouth before she was taken by a Dutch
man-of-war, and carried into Holland. When they came there, the States
sent the banished Friends back to England, with a passport, and a
certificate, “that they had not made an escape, but were sent back by
them.” In time the Lord’s power wrought over this storm, and many of our
persecutors were confounded and put to shame.[11]
After I had lain prisoner above a year in Scarbro’ Castle, I sent a
letter to the king, in which I gave him “an account of my imprisonment,
and the bad usage I had received in prison; and also that I was
informed, no man could deliver me but he.” After this, John Whitehead
being at London, and being acquainted with Esquire Marsh, went to visit
him, and spoke to him about me; and he undertook, if John Whitehead
would get the state of my case drawn up, to deliver it to the master of
requests, Sir John Birkenhead, and endeavour to get a release for me. So
John Whitehead and Ellis Hookes[12] drew up an account of my
imprisonment and sufferings, and carried it to Marsh; and he went with
it to the master of requests, who procured an order from the king for my
release. The substance of the order was, “that the king being certainly
informed, that I was a man principled against plotting and fighting, and
had been ready at all times to discover plots, rather than to make any,
&c., therefore his royal pleasure was, that I should be discharged from
my imprisonment,” &c. As soon as this order was obtained, John Whitehead
came to Scarbro’ with it, and delivered it to the governor; who, upon
receipt thereof, gathered the officers together, and without requiring
bonds or sureties for my peaceable living, being satisfied that I was a
man of a peaceable life, he discharged me freely, and gave me the
following passport:—
“Permit the bearer hereof, George Fox, late a prisoner here, and now
discharged by His Majesty’s order, quietly to pass about his lawful
occasions, without any molestation. Given under my hand at Scarbro’
Castle, this first day of September, 1666.”
JORDAN CROSLANDS,
Governor of Scarbro’ Castle.
After I was released, I would have made the governor a present for
the civility and kindness he had of late showed me; but he would not
receive anything; saying, “whatever good he could do for me and my
friends he would do it, and never do them any hurt.” And afterwards,
if at any time the mayor of the town sent to him for soldiers to
break up Friends’ meetings, if he sent any down he would privately
give them a charge “not to meddle.” He continued loving to his dying
day. The officers also and the soldiers were mightily changed, and
became very respectful to me, and when they had occasion to speak of
me, they would say, “he is as stiff as a tree, and as pure as a
bell; for we could never bow him.”
The very next day after my release, the fire broke out in London,
and the report of it came quickly down into the country.[13] Then I
saw the Lord God was true and just in his word, which he had showed
me before in Lancaster jail, when I saw the angel of the Lord with a
glittering sword drawn southward, as before expressed. The people of
London were forewarned of this fire; yet few laid it to heart, or
believed it; but rather grew more wicked, and higher in pride. For a
Friend was moved to come out of Huntingdonshire a little before the
fire, to scatter his money, and turn his horse loose on the streets,
to untie the knees of his breeches, let his stockings fall down, and
to unbutton his doublet, and tell the people, “so should they run up
and down, scattering their money and their goods, half undressed,
like mad people, as he was a sign to them;” and so they did, when
the city was burning.
Thus hath the Lord exercised his prophets and servants by his power,
showed them signs of his judgments, and sent them to forewarn the
people; but, instead of repenting, they have beaten and cruelly
entreated some, and some they have imprisoned, both in the former
power’s days and since. But the Lord is just, and happy are they
that obey his word. Some have been moved to go naked in their
streets, in the other power’s days, and since, as signs of their
nakedness; and have declared amongst them “that God would strip them
of their hypocritical professions, and make them as bare and naked
as they were.” But instead of considering it, they have many times
whipped, or otherwise abused them, and sometimes imprisoned them.
Others have been moved to go in sackcloth, and to denounce the woes
and vengeance of God against the pride and haughtiness of the
people; but few regarded it. And in the other power’s days, the
wicked, envious, and professing priests, put up several petitions
both to Oliver and Richard, called protectors, and to the
parliaments, judges, and justices, against us, full of lies,
vilifying words and slanders; but we got copies of them, and,
through the Lord’s assistance, answered them all, and cleared the
Lord’s truth and ourselves of them. But O! the body of darkness that
rose against the truth in them that made lies their refuge. But the
Lord swept them away; and in and with his power, truth, light, and
life, hedged his lambs about, and preserved them as on eagles’
wings. Therefore we all had, and have great encouragement to trust
the Lord, who, we saw by his power and Spirit, overturned and
brought to naught all the confederacies and counsels that were
hatched in darkness against his truth and people; and by the same
truth gave his people dominion, that therein they might serve him.
Indeed I could not but take notice, how the hand of the Lord turned
against those persecutors, who had been the cause of my
imprisonment, or had been abusive or cruel to me in it. The officer
that fetched me to Holker-Hall wasted his estate, and soon after
fled into Ireland. And most of the justices that were upon the bench
at the sessions when I was sent to prison, died in a while after; as
old Thomas Preston, Rawlinson, Porter, and Matthew West, of Borwick.
And Justice Fleming’s wife died, and left him thirteen or fourteen
motherless children, who had imprisoned two Friends to death, and
thereby made several children fatherless. Colonel Kirby never
prospered after. The chief constable, Richard Dodgson, died soon
after, and Mount, the petty constable, and the wife of the other
petty constable John Ashburnham, who railed at me in her house, died
soon after. William Knipe, the witness they brought against me, died
soon after also. Hunter, the jailer of Lancaster, who was very
wicked to me while I was his prisoner, was cut off in his young
days: and the under-sheriff that carried me from Lancaster prison
towards Scarbro’, lived not long after. And Joblin, the jailer of
Durham, who was prisoner with me in Scarbro’ castle, and had often
incensed the governor and soldiers against me, though he got out of
prison, yet the Lord cut him off in his wickedness soon after. When
I came into that country again, most of those that dwelt in
Lancashire were dead, and others ruined in their estates; so that,
though I did not seek revenge upon them, for their actings against
me contrary to the law, yet the Lord had executed his judgments upon
many of them.
-----
Footnote 1:
Thomas Salthouse of Lancashire (but afterwards resided in the South of
England,) was born about 1630, and convinced when George Fox first
came to Swarthmore. He became an eminent minister of the gospel, for
which he suffered much. In 1655 he, and Miles Halhead, being pressed
in spirit to visit the Friends imprisoned at Plymouth, they were taken
up on suspicion of having a hand in an insurrection which broke out a
little before; and though the high Sheriff confessed he did not
believe them concerned in it, he caused them to be kept close
prisoners at Exeter for fourteen days, and then sent them from officer
to officer towards home. In going towards Bridgewater, the officer who
conducted them fell down, and lay grovelling on the ground in the
sight of many people, and was able to go no further. So they returned
to the justice to tell him what had befallen the officer, and to know
what further he would do with them. But he declined to interfere with
them again; set them at liberty, and desired the Lord to be with them.
For further particulars of Thomas Salthouse, the reader is referred to
Whiting’s _Memoirs_, p. 452-460. Whiting concludes his account by
saying, “He was a pleasant man in conversation, which rendered him
acceptable to many others as well as Friends, had a large capacity,
and an excellent gift in the ministry. He wrote some notable books,
and excellent epistles to Friends, though never collected as they
deserve. He died at his own house Cornwall in 1690, about sixty years
of age, in peace with the Lord; and is no doubt at rest with him from
all his labours and sufferings, and his works follow him.”
Footnote 2:
Near Handsworth-Woodhouse.
Footnote 3:
John Whitehead was a very eminent Minister amongst the early Friends,
valiant for the truth, and a great sufferer for it. His life and
writings have been published, to which the reader is referred. He
wrote a very beautiful and encouraging epistle to Friends, dated
Aylesbury prison, 12th month, 1660, which is inserted in _Letters,
&c., of Early Friends_, 382-387. William Penn, in his preface to
_Whitehead’s Works_, says, “He was among the most eminent for his
sound mind and capacity, great zeal and boldness, and as great
humility, patience, and labour in word, doctrine, and charity.”
Footnote 4:
Hugh Tickell was born in Cumberland, about the year 1610, being
convinced by George Fox when he first visited Cumberland in 1653, he
gave up his house for meetings, and entertained the Lord’s messengers.
He became a faithful and eminent minister, travelling up and down in
the service of the Gospel, suffering much for it, both in the spoiling
of his goods and in imprisonments. In 1664 he was cast into Carlisle
jail, with four other Friends, by priest Marshall of Crosthwaite, and
though he kept him in prison three years, yet he took tithe of his
land. But afterwards this priest fell down stairs and broke his skull,
upon which he died. Hugh Tickell was again imprisoned in Carlisle
jail, when about sixty-eight years old, by Richard Lowry, another
priest of Crosthwaite, because he could not pay him tithes, who kept
him prisoner about nine months, part of it in a cold winter, and in a
damp nasty place not fit for men to lie in. This priest Lowry was
suddenly stricken, and had the use of one side of his tongue, and his
understanding much taken from him, and so continued a long time—a
remarkable judgment.
Hugh Tickell patiently bore all his sufferings, and willingly endured
them for the testimony of Jesus and a good conscience. But in his last
imprisonment he contracted a distemper of body, which, increasing upon
him after he came home, he grew weak, but continued in great patience;
and being sensible his end drew nigh, set his house in order, and,
taking leave of friends and neighbours, he sweetly departed in great
peace in 1680, being above seventy years of age.
Footnote 5:
Of the William Wilson here alluded to, the following particulars have
been gathered:—He was a man of an innocent life, and though he had
little outward learning, God was pleased to teach him himself, and
called him to bear a testimony to his name, which he did faithfully,
not only in many parts of England, but in Germany and Scotland, which
he visited several times. He was of a lowly and meek spirit, upright
and just among his neighbours, which caused them often to submit their
differences to his arbitration, in which he was careful to find out
the real truth, and would never countenance deceit. In this service he
was successful, seldom missing his desired end, viz., to restore
peace. He was faithful in his testimony for the truth, and a sufferer
for the same in prison at Kendal, in 1666, and several times
afterwards, as well as by distress on his goods. Besides which he
suffered cruel mockings, stoning, blows, and wounds, both from priests
and people, particularly at Eskdale, where he exhorted the people “to
mind that of God in their consciences, and turn to that holy light and
law which he had put into their inward parts, that by the same they
might come to know the will of God, and do it.” Because of these and
like words, one Parker, a priest, beat and wounded him, and with one
of his crutches broke his head, causing the blood to run down his
shoulders. The priest being lame, and not able as he would to effect
his cruel purpose, caused his horse to be brought, on which he
mounted, and in the sight of the people broke his staff in three
pieces upon William Wilson’s bare head, which made them cry out
against such merciless behaviour. Before the priest got home, he was
overtaken with sickness, and never came more to the steeple-house.
During the time of his sickness he was very loathsome, and so died.
A few weeks after, William Wilson went to the same place at Eskdale,
and for speaking to the people, one Fogo, a priest, took him by the
hair of the head, pulled him to the ground, and drew him out. In rage
and cruelty he also abused his brother Michael Wilson; but a few
months after, this same Fogo, riding over some sands, accompanied by
several people, fell into a quicksand, and was immediately smothered.
William Wilson left behind him a widow and two daughters, to whom he
was a true husband and a tender father, instructing his children “to
keep in the fear of the Lord, and to walk in the way of truth, which
he walked in himself;” often saying to them, “it would be the best
portion that they could enjoy.” His last illness was short. Having
recently returned from a long journey, wherein his body was much spent
and weak, he said, “I have not served the Lord unfruitfully; I have no
trouble upon me; and I am very sensible that all is well with me.”
Again he said, “He was content, whatsoever way the Lord pleased; he
felt as a dove, harmless; and as a lamb, innocent.” A few hours before
he died, at which time he walked several times over the room, he said,
as he had often before, “My peace far exceeds my pain;” and standing
upon his feet before two Friends, he said, “O that every one would
mind the Lord, that they might keep life.” He then sat down and drew
breath no more.
He died at his own house at Langdale, the 10th of the 5th month, 1682.
Footnote 6:
We cannot be surprised at the hard language sometimes used by the
early Friends in protesting against the unchristian conduct of their
persecutors. The rapacity of their enemies in the early periods of the
Society carried their plunder to so great an excess, as not only to
involve many in total ruin, but subjected them to long and cruel
imprisonments, which, in many cases of particular hardship, terminated
in death. It has already been stated that at one time there were 4,500
Quakers in prison in England and Wales at one time. In 1662, twenty
died in different prisons in London, and seven more after their
liberation, from ill treatment. In 1664, twenty-five died, and in
1665, fifty-two more. The number which perished in this way,
throughout the whole kingdom, amounted to 369. But for fuller
particulars of the cruelties practised against the early Quakers, the
reader is referred to the two closely printed folio volumes, entitled
_Besse’s Sufferings_.
Footnote 7:
The word Sirrah must not be confounded with Sir. It was no doubt
made use of strictly in the sense of the only meaning Walker gives
to it in his _Dictionary_, viz., “A compellation of reproach and
insult.”
Footnote 8:
Of Thomas Robertson not much is known, but he appears to have been a
faithful labourer in his day. Ambrose Rigge, in the _Account of his
Life_, states. “A fellow-labourer was prepared for me, which was
Thomas Robertson of Westmorland; who was made willing to leave his
dear wife and tender babes, to go with me into the Lord’s harvest.” In
_Letters, &c., of Early Friends_, p. 226, is a letter from Thomas
Robertson to Margaret Fell, under date 1655.
Footnote 9:
The person whom George Fox here and elsewhere styles Esquire Marsh,
was a gentleman attached to the court of Charles II. He always
remained attached to George Fox, and ever retained a most friendly
interest for the Society in general. From his station at court and
office as a magistrate, he had frequent opportunities of interposing
his authority to protect the early Friends from the unjust oppression
of their persecutors.
Footnote 10:
The sickness here alluded to was the “Plague,” which visited London in
1665. The state of the city during this dreadful visitation seems to
have been most deplorable. The following striking description is from
_Ellis’s Original Letters in the British Museum_. The letter is one
addressed to Dr. Sancroft from J. Tillison, dated Sept. 14, 1665:—
“The desolation of the city is very great. That heart is either of
steel or stone, that will not lament this sad visitation, and will not
bleed for those unutterable woes! What eye would not weep to see so
many habitations uninhabited—the poor sick not visited—the hungry not
fed—the grave not satisfied! Death stares us continually in the face
in every infected person that passes by us, in every coffin which is
daily and hourly carried along the streets. The custom was in the
beginning to bury the dead in the night only; but now both night and
day will hardly be time enough to do it. The Quakers (as we are
informed) have buried, in their piece of ground, a thousand for some
weeks together past.”
George Whitehead relates the satisfaction and comfort many innocent
Friends expressed on their deathbeds, both in Newgate and other
noisome places during the plague. Death was truly gain to these: “it
being through death,” says Whitehead, “that the Lord had appointed the
final deliverance of many from the cruelties and rod of the
oppressors, and from the miseries and evil to come.”—“Whilst the
plague was raging in the city,” he adds, “our persecutors took
fifty-five of our Friends (men and women) out of Newgate, where the
distemper also prevailed, and forced them on board a ship for
banishment, which lay for some time in the river. They were so crowded
on board, and the distemper breaking out amongst them, most of them
were infected, and twenty-seven of them soon died. I visited them, and
had a meeting with them on board, and the Lord my God preserved me,
both from the distemper and also from banishment, wherein I did humbly
confess his power and special providence to his own praise and glory.”
Footnote 11:
See extraordinary occurrences in an attempt to banish a number of
Friends recorded in a note in _Letters, &c., of Early Friends_, p.
142-145.
Footnote 12:
Ellis Hookes was employed in London as a recording clerk to the
Society of Friends. It was he who commenced the _Record of
Sufferings_ (mentioned to George Fox in a letter bearing date
1660, inserted in _Letters, &c., of Early Friends_, p. 86, 87),
which were written out into large folio volumes, still preserved
among the Society’s records in London. These are continued down to
the present day in forty or more of these large volumes. The clear
and excellent writing of Ellis Hookes extends over a large portion
of the first of these bulky folios. To the narratives of
sufferings and persecutions, were added accounts of what were
regarded as judgments upon persecutors; which were, doubtless in
that day, ordered to be recorded, under a sense of the fear of
God, and in testimony unto his overruling power.
Ellis Hookes died in 1681. In the London _Register of Burials_, he
is described “of Horslydown in Southwark, scrivenor;” and “died
the 12th of the 9th month, 1681, of a consumption (having been
clerk to Friends in London about twenty-four years)—he was buried
in Checker Alley.”
Footnote 13:
The great fire of London occurred towards the latter end of 1666.
The narratives given in the Diaries of Evelyn and Pepys, who were
eye-witnesses of it, are sad indeed. Evelyn writes—“Sept. 3. The
fire continued all this night (if I may call that night, which was
light as day for ten miles about), after a dreadful manner—when
conspiring with a fierce eastern wind, in a very dry season. I
went on foot to the Bankside in Southwark, and saw the whole south
part of the city burning from Cheapside to the Thames, and all
along Cornhill, Tower Street, Gracious Street, and so along to
Bainard’s Castle, and was now taking hold of St. Paul’s Church.
The conflagration was so universal, and the people so astonished,
that from the beginning (I know not by what despondency or fate)
they hardly stirred to quench it; so that there was nothing heard
or seen but crying out and lamentation, and running about like
distracted creatures. O! the miserable and calamitous spectacle!
such as happily the world had not seen the like since the
foundation of it, nor to be outdone till the universal
conflagration. All the sky was of a fiery aspect, like the top of
a burning oven, the light [being] seen above forty miles round
about for many nights. The poor inhabitants were dispersed about
St. George’s Fields and Moorfields, as far as Highgate, and
several miles in circle—some under tents, some under miserable
huts and hovels, many without a rag or necessary utensils, bed or
board; who, from delicateness, riches, or easy accommodations in
stately and well-furnished houses, were now reduced to extremest
misery and poverty,” &c., vol. i. p. 372-374.
CHAPTER II.
1666-1669.—George Fox visits a man above one hundred years old, who
had been convinced—refutes a slander that Friends love none but
themselves—has a meeting at Captain Taylor’s [at Brighouse],
where a neighbouring knight threatens again to imprison
him—comes to London, and finds the city in ruins as he had seen
it in a vision some years before—is moved to recommend the
setting up of monthly meetings to take care of God’s glory, and
to admonish and exhort such as walk disorderly—travels through
the nation for this purpose—meets with opposition in
Huntingdonshire and Bedfordshire—when at Shrewsbury it was
rumoured that “the great Quaker of England was come to town”—the
hypocrisy of the Presbyterians detected—they and the
Independents persecute when in power, but flinch in time of
persecution by other powers—George Fox recommends certain
regulations to be observed relative to Friends’ marriages—he
also recommends the establishment of a school at Waltham for
boys, and one at Shacklewell for girls—the meetings for
discipline are the means of a great reformation among the
people—George Fox discovers a cheat, writes a prophetic warning
to Friends—monthly meetings settled throughout the nation—the
order and good results thereof—George Fox disputes with a
Papist—confers with Esquire Marsh (Justice), and shows him how
to distinguish between Friends and other dissenters who refused
the oath—Justice Marsh is afterwards very serviceable to Friends
in screening them from suffering, and recommends the king to
grant liberty of conscience—fourteen monthly meetings are
settled in Yorkshire—Isaac Lindley to George Fox—when at
Scarbro’ the governor presses George Fox to accept his
hospitality—large and precious meetings.
Being now freed from my imprisonment in Scarbro’ castle, I went
about three miles to a large general meeting at a Friend’s house,
that had been a chief constable; and all was quiet and well. On the
fourth day after, I returned to Scarbro’, and had a meeting in the
town at Peter Hodgson’s house. To this came one called a lady, and
several other great persons, also a young man, son to the bailiff of
the town, who had been convinced, while I was there in prison. That
lady (so called) came to me, and said, “I spoke against the
ministers.” I told her, “such as the prophets and Christ declared
against formerly, I declared against now.”
From hence I went to WHITBY; and, having visited Friends there,
passed to BURLINGTON, where I had another meeting. Thence to ORAM,
where I had another meeting: and thence to Marmaduke Storr’s, and
had a large meeting at a constable’s house, on whom the Lord had
wrought a great miracle.
Next day, two Friends being to take each other in marriage, there
was a very great meeting, which I attended. I was moved to open to
the people the state of our marriages, declaring how the people of
God took one another in the assemblies of the elders, and that it
was God who joined man and woman together before the fall. And
though men had taken upon them to join in the fall, yet in the
restoration it was God’s joining, that was the right and honourable
marriage: but never any priest did marry any, that we read of in the
Scriptures, from Genesis to the Revelations. Then I showed them the
duty of man and wife, how they should serve God, being heirs of life
and grace together.
I passed thence to Grace Barwick’s, where I had a general meeting,
which was very large. I came next to Richard Shipton’s, where I had
another meeting; and so to a priest’s house, whose wife was
convinced, and himself grown very loving, and glad to see me. This
was that priest, who, in the year 1651, threatened, “if ever he met
me again, he would have my life, or I should have his;” and said,
“he would lose his head, if I were not knocked down in a month.” But
now he was partly convinced, and become very kind. I went from his
house towards the sea, where several Friends came to visit me; and
amongst others, Philip Scafe, who had formerly been a priest, but,
having received the truth, was now become a preacher of Christ
freely, and continued so.
Passing on, I called to see an ancient man, who was convinced of
truth, and was above a hundred years old. Then I came to a Friend’s
house, where I had a great meeting, and quiet. I had a great meeting
near MALTON; and another large one near HULL; from which I went to
HOWDEN-DYKE. As we went into the town, the watchmen questioned me
and those that were with me; but not having any warrant to stay us,
we passed by them, who in a rage threatened they would search us
out. I went to the house of one called the Lady Montague, where I
lodged that night; and several friends came to visit me. Next
morning, being up early, I walked into the orchard, and saw a man
about sunrise go into the house in a great cloak. He stayed not
long; but came soon out again, and went away, not seeing me. I felt
something strike at my life; and went into the house, where I found
the maid-servant affrighted and trembling. She told me, “that man
had a naked rapier under his cloak.” By which I perceived he came
with an intent to do mischief, but the Lord prevented him.
I then visited Friends till I came to YORK, where we had a large
meeting. After which I went to visit Justice Robinson, an ancient
justice of the peace, who had been very loving to me and Friends
from the beginning. There was a priest with him, who told me, “it
was said of us, that we loved none but ourselves.” I told him, “we
loved all mankind, as they were God’s creation, and as they were
children of Adam and Eve by generation; and we loved the brotherhood
in the Holy Ghost.” This stopped him. After some other discourse, we
parted friendly, and passed away.
About this time I wrote a book, entitled _Fear God, and Honour the
King_; in which I showed, “that none could rightly fear God, and
honour the King, but they that departed from sin and evil.” This
book affected the soldiers much, and most people.
Having visited Friends at YORK, we passed to a market town, where we
had a meeting at George Watkinson’s, formerly a justice. A glorious,
blessed meeting it was, and very large, and the Seed of life was set
over all. We should have been troubled to get into this town, had
not Providence made way for us; for the watchmen stood ready to stop
us. But a man riding just before us, the watchmen questioned him
first; and perceiving he was a justice of peace, they let him pass;
and we riding close after him, by that means escaped.
From this place we passed to Thomas Taylor’s, formerly a captain,
where we had a precious meeting. Hard by Thomas Taylor’s lived a
knight, who was much displeased when he heard I was likely to be
released out of prison; and threatened that, “if the king set me at
liberty, he would send me to prison again the next day.” But though
I had this meeting so near him, yet the Lord’s power stopped him
from meddling, and the meeting was quiet. Colonel Kirby also, who
had been the chief means of my imprisonment at Lancaster and
Scarbro’ castles, when he heard I was set at liberty, got another
order for taking me up; and said, “he would ride his horse forty
miles to take me, and would give forty pounds to have me taken.” A
while after I came so near as to have a meeting within two miles of
him; he was then struck with the gout, and kept his bed, so that it
was thought he would have died.
From Thomas Taylor’s I visited Friends till I came to
SYNDERHILL-GREEN, where I had a large and general meeting. The
priest of the place, hearing of it, sent the constable to the
justices for a warrant, and they rode their horses so hard, that
they almost spoiled them; but the notice they had being short, and
the way long, the meeting was ended before they came. I did not hear
of them till I was going out of the house, after meeting was over,
and then a Friend came and told me, “they were searching another
house for me, the one I was then going to.” As I went along the
fields to it, I met the constables, wardens, and the justice’s
clerk. I passed through them, they looked at me, and went to the
house they had been searching. Thus they lost their design; for the
Lord’s power bound them, and preserved me over them; and Friends
parted, and all escaped them. The officers went away as they came;
for the Lord had frustrated their design; praised be his name for
ever.
After this I went to DERBYSHIRE, where I had a large meeting. Some
Friends were apprehensive of the constables coming; for they had
great persecution in those parts; but our meeting was quiet. A
justice of peace in that county had taken away much of Friends’
goods; whereupon Ellen Fretwell had made her appeal to the sessions;
and the rest of the justices granted her her goods again, and spoke
to the persecuting justice, that he should not do so any more. She
was moved to speak and warn him; whereupon he bid her, “come and sit
down on the bench.” “Ay,” said she, “if I may persuade you to do
justice to the country, I will sit down with you.” “No,” said he,
“then you shall not; get out of the court.” As she was going out,
she was moved of the Lord to turn again, and say, “she should be
there, when he should not.” After the sessions were ended, he went
home, and drove away her brother’s oxen, for going to meetings. Then
Susan Frith, a Friend of Chesterfield, was moved of the Lord to tell
him, that “if he continued in persecuting the innocent, the Lord
would execute his plagues upon him.” Soon after which he fell
distracted, and died in that state. This relation I had from Ellen
Fretwell herself.
I travelled into NOTTINGHAMSHIRE, and had a large meeting at SKEGBY;
from thence I went to MANSFIELD, where also I had a meeting; thence
to another town, where there was a fair, at which I met with many
Friends. Then passing through the forest in a very thundering and
rainy day, I came to NOTTINGHAM. So great was the tempest many trees
were torn up by the roots, and some people killed; but the Lord
preserved us. On First-day following I had a large meeting in
Nottingham, very quiet; Friends were come to sit under their
teacher, the Grace of God, which brought them salvation, and were
established upon the rock and foundation, Christ Jesus. After the
meeting I went to visit the Friend who had been sheriff about the
year 1649, whose prisoner I then was.
From Nottingham I passed into LEICESTERSHIRE and came to SILEBY,
where we had a large, blessed meeting. After which I went to
LEICESTER to visit the prisoners there, and then to John Penford’s,
where we had a general meeting, large and precious. From thence I
passed, visiting Friends and my relations, till I came to WARWICK,
where having visited the prisoners, I passed to BADDESLEY, and had a
precious meeting there. Then I travelled through NORTHAMPTONSHIRE,
BEDFORDSHIRE, BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, and OXFORDSHIRE, visiting Friends in
each county. In Oxfordshire the devil had laid a snare for me, but
the Lord broke it; his power came over all, his blessed truth
spread, and Friends were increased therein.
Thus after I had passed through many counties, visiting Friends, and
had many large and precious meetings amongst them, I came to LONDON.
But I was weak with lying almost three years in cruel and hard
imprisonments; my joints and my body were so stiff and benumbed,
that I could hardly get on my horse or bend my joints; nor could I
well bear to be near the fire or to eat warm meat, I had been kept
so long from it. Being come to London, I walked a little among the
ruins, and took good notice of them. I saw the city lying, according
as the word of the Lord came to me concerning it several years
before.
After I had been a time in London, and visited Friends’ meetings
through the city, I went into the country again, and had large
meetings at KINGSTON, READING, and in WILTSHIRE, till I came to
BRISTOL, where also I had many large meetings. Thomas Lower came
thither out of Cornwall to meet me: and Friends were there from
several parts of the nation, it being then the fair time. After I
was clear of Bristol, I left that city and went to Nathaniel
Crisp’s; and so through the country to LONDON again, having large
meetings in the way, and all quiet, blessed be the Lord. Thus,
though I was very weak, yet I travelled up and down in the service
of the Lord, who enabled me to go through it.
About this time some, that had run out from truth and clashed
against Friends, were reached unto by the power of the Lord, which
came wonderfully over, and made them condemn and tear their papers
of controversies to pieces. Several meetings we had with them, and
the Lord’s everlasting power was over all, and set judgment on the
head of that which had run out. In these meetings, which lasted
whole days, several who had run out with John Perrot and others,
came in again, and condemned that spirit which led them to keep on
their hats, when Friends prayed, and when they themselves prayed.
Some of them said, “that Friends were more righteous than they,” and
that, “if Friends had not stood, they had been gone, and had fallen
into perdition.” Thus the Lord’s power was wonderfully manifested,
and came over all.
Then I was moved of the Lord to recommend the setting up of five
monthly meetings of men and women in the city of London (besides the
women’s meetings and the quarterly meetings,) to take care of God’s
glory, and to admonish and exhort such as walked disorderly or
carelessly, and not according to truth. For whereas Friends had had
only quarterly meetings, now truth was spread, and Friends were
grown more numerous, I was moved to recommend the setting up of
monthly meetings throughout the nation.[14] And the Lord opened to
me what I must do, and how the men’s and women’s monthly and
quarterly meetings should be ordered and established in this and in
other nations; and that I should write to those where I did not
come, to do the same. After things were well settled at London, and
the Lord’s truth, power, seed, and life reigned and shone over all
in the city, I went into ESSEX. After the monthly meetings were
settled in that county, I went into SUFFOLK and NORFOLK, Thomas Dry
being with me. When we had visited Friends in those parts, and the
monthly meetings were settled, we went into HUNTINGDONSHIRE, where
we had very large and blessed gatherings; and though we met with
some opposition, the Lord’s power came over all, and the monthly
meetings were established there also. When we came into
BEDFORDSHIRE, we had great opposition; but the Lord’s power came
over it all. Afterwards we went into NOTTINGHAMSHIRE, where we had
many precious gatherings, and the monthly meetings were settled
there. Then passing into LINCOLNSHIRE we had a meeting of some men
Friends of all the meetings in the county, at his house who had
formerly been sheriff of Lincoln, and all was quiet. After this we
passed over Trent into NOTTINGHAMSHIRE again, the ex-sheriff of
Lincoln being with me, where we had some of all the meetings in that
county together. Our meeting was glorious and peaceable; and many
precious meetings we had in that county.
At that time William Smith was very weak and sick, and the
constables and others had seized all his goods, to the very bed he
lay upon, for truth’s sake. These officers threatened to break up
our meeting; but the Lord’s power chained them, so that they had not
power to meddle with us, blessed be his name. After it, I went to
visit William Smith, and there were constables and others watching
his corn and beasts, that none of them might be removed.[15]
Thence we passed to LEICESTERSHIRE and WARWICKSHIRE, where we had
many blessed meetings. The order of the gospel was set up, and the
men’s monthly meetings established in all those counties. Then we
went into DERBYSHIRE, where we had several large and blessed
meetings. In many places we were threatened by the officers, but,
through the power of the Lord we escaped their hands. Leaving things
well settled in Derbyshire, we travelled over the Peak hills, which
were very cold (for it was then frost and snow), and came into
STAFFORDSHIRE. At Thomas Hammersley’s we had a general men’s
meeting; where things were well settled in the gospel order, and the
monthly meetings established also. But I was so exceedingly weak, I
was hardly able to get on or off my horse’s back; but my spirit
being earnestly engaged in the work the Lord had concerned me in,
and sent me forth about, I travelled on therein, notwithstanding the
weakness of my body, having confidence in the Lord, that he would
carry me through, as he did, by his power.
We came into CHESHIRE, where we had several blessed gatherings, and
a general men’s meeting, wherein all the monthly meetings for that
county were settled, according to the gospel order, in and by the
power of God. After the meeting I passed away. But when the justices
heard of it, they were very much troubled, that they had not come
and broken it up, and taken me; but the Lord prevented them. After I
had cleared myself there in the Lord’s service, I passed into
LANCASHIRE, to William Barnes’s, near WARRINGTON, where met some of
most of the meetings in that county; and there all the monthly
meetings were established in gospel order. From thence I sent papers
into WESTMORLAND by Leonard Fell and Robert Widders, and also into
DURHAM, CLEVELAND, NORTHUMBERLAND, CUMBERLAND, and SCOTLAND, to
exhort Friends to settle the monthly meetings in the Lord’s power in
those places; which they did. So the Lord’s power came over all, and
the heirs of it came to inherit it. For the authority of our
meetings, is the power of God, the gospel, which brings life and
immortality to light; that all may see over the devil that hath
darkened them, and that all the heirs of the gospel may walk
according to the gospel, and glorify God with their bodies, souls,
and spirits, which are the Lord’s; for the order of the glorious
gospel is not of man, nor by man. To this meeting in Lancashire,
Margaret Fell, being a prisoner, got liberty to come, and went with
me to Jane Milner’s in CHESHIRE, where we parted. I passed into
SHROPSHIRE, and from thence into WALES, and had a large general
men’s meeting at Charles Lloyd’s, where some opposers came in, but
the Lord’s power brought them down.
Having gone through DENBIGHSHIRE and MONTGOMERYSHIRE we passed into
MERIONETHSHIRE, where we had several blessed meetings; and then went
to the sea-side, where we had a precious meeting. And Friends in
these parts, being established on Christ, their foundation, and the
monthly meetings settled in the power of God, we left Wales and
returned into Shropshire, where the Friends of the country gathering
together, the monthly meetings were established there also. Then
coming into WORCESTERSHIRE, after many meetings amongst Friends in
that county, we had a general men’s meeting at Henry Gibb’s house,
at PASHUR, where also the monthly meetings were settled in gospel
order.
The sessions were held that day in the town, and some Friends were
concerned lest they should send officers to break up our meeting;
but the Lord’s power restrained them, so that it was quiet; through
which power we had dominion. I had several meetings amongst Friends
in that county till I came to WORCESTER; and it being the fair time,
we had a precious meeting there. There was then in Worcester one
Major Wild, a persecuting man; and after I was gone out of town,
some of his soldiers inquired after me; but having left Friends
there settled in good order, we passed to DROITWICH, and thence to
SHREWSBURY, where also we had a very precious meeting. The mayor
hearing that I was in town, got the rest of the officers together,
to consult what to do against me; for they said, “the great Quaker
of England was come to town.” But when they were come together, the
Lord confounded their counsels, so that, when some were for
imprisoning me, others opposed it; and so being divided among
themselves, I escaped their hands.
We went also into RADNORSHIRE, where we had many precious
gatherings, and the monthly meetings were settled in the Lord’s
power. As we came out of that county, staying a little at a
market-town, a justice’s clerk and other rude fellows combined
together to do us mischief on the road. They followed us out of
town, and soon overtook us; but there being many market-people on
the way, they were somewhat hindered from doing what they intended.
Yet observing two of our company ride at some distance behind, they
set upon them; and one of them drew his sword, and cut one of those
two Friends, whose name was Richard Moor, Surgeon, of Shrewsbury.
Meanwhile another of these rude fellows came galloping after me and
the other Friend that was with me; and having to pass over a narrow
bridge, in his eagerness to get before us he rode into the brook,
and plunged his horse into a deep hole in the water. I saw the
design, and stopped, desiring Friends to be patient, and give them
no occasion. By this time Richard Moor came up to us, with the other
Friend that was with him, who knew the men and their names. Then we
rode on, and a little further met another man on foot much in
liquor, with a naked sword in his hand. And not far beyond him we
met two men and women, one of whom had his thumb cut off by the
drunken man; for he, being in drink, attempted rudeness to one of
the women; and this man withstanding him, and rescuing her, he drew
his sword and cut off his thumb. Now this drunken man had a horse,
which being loose, followed him some way behind. I rode after it,
and having caught it, brought it to the man that had his thumb cut
off; and bid him take the horse to the next justice of peace, by
which means they might find out, and pursue the man that had wounded
him.
On this occasion I wrote to the justices, and to the judge of the
assize which was then at hand; and employed some Friends to carry it
to the justices first. The justice to whom the clerk belonged,
rebuked his clerk and the others also, for abusing us on the
highway; so that they were glad to come and entreat Friends not to
appear against them at the assize; which, on their submission and
acknowledgment of their fault, was granted. This was of good service
in the country, for it stopped many rude people, who before had been
forward to abuse Friends.
We passed into HEREFORDSHIRE, where we had several blessed
gatherings; and we had a general men’s meeting also, where all the
monthly meetings were settled. There was about this time a
proclamation against meetings; and as we came through Herefordshire,
we were told of a great meeting there of the Presbyterians, who had
engaged themselves to stand and give up all, rather than forsake
their meetings. When they heard of this proclamation, the people
came, but the priest was gone, and they were then at a loss. Then
they met in Leominster privately, and provided bread, cheese, and
drink in readiness, that if the officers should come, they might put
up their Bibles and fall to eating. The bailiff found them out, and
came in among them, and said, “their bread and cheese should not
cover them, he would have their speakers.” They cried, “what then
would become of their wives and children?” But he took their
speakers and kept them awhile. This the bailiff told Peter Young,
and said, “they were the veriest hypocrites that ever made a
profession of religion.”
The like contrivance they had in other places. For there was one
Pocock at London, that married Abigail Darcy, who was called a lady;
and she being convinced of truth, I went to his house to see her.
This Pocock had been one of the triers of the priests; and, being a
high Presbyterian, and envious against us, he used to call our
Friends house-creepers. He being present, she said to me, “I have
something to speak to thee against my husband.” “Nay,” said I, “thou
must not speak against thy husband.” “Yes,” said she, “but I must in
this case. Last First-day,” said she, “he and his priests and
people, the Presbyterians, met; they had candles and tobacco-pipes,
bread, cheese, and cold meat on the table; and they agreed
beforehand, that if the officers should come in upon them, then they
would leave their preaching and praying, and fall to their cold
meat.” “O,” said I to him, “is not this a shame to you, who
persecuted and imprisoned us, and spoiled our goods, because we
would not join you in your religion, and called us house-creepers,
that now ye do not stand to your own religion yourselves? Did ye
ever find our meetings stuffed with bread and cheese and
tobacco-pipes? Or did you ever read in the Scriptures of any such
practice among the saints?” “Why,” said the old man, “We must be as
wise as serpents.” I replied, “this is the serpent’s wisdom indeed.
But who would have thought that you Presbyterians and Independents,
who persecuted and imprisoned others, spoiled their goods, and
whipped such as would not follow your religion, should now flinch
yourselves, and not dare to stand to your own religion, but cover it
with tobacco-pipes, flagons of drink, cold meat, and bread and
cheese!” But this, and such-like deceitful practices, I understood
afterwards, were too common amongst them in times of persecution.
After we had travelled through Herefordshire, and meetings were well
settled there, we passed into MONMOUTHSHIRE, where I had several
blessed meetings; and at Walter Jenkins’s, who had been a justice of
the peace, we had a large gathering, where some were convinced; this
meeting was quiet. But to one before this, came the bailiff of the
hundred, almost drunk, pretending he was to take up the speakers.
There was a mighty power of God in the meeting, so that, although he
raged, the power of the Lord limited him, that he could not break it
up. When it was over, I stayed awhile, and he stayed also. After
some time I spoke to him, and so passed quietly away. At night some
rude people came, and shot off a musket against the house, but did
not hurt anybody. Thus the Lord’s power came over all, and chained
down the unruly spirits, so that we escaped them. We came to Ross
that night, and had a meeting at James Merrick’s.
After this we came into GLOUCESTERSHIRE and had a general men’s
meeting at Nathaniel Crisp’s house, where all the monthly meetings
were settled in the Lord’s everlasting power; and the heirs of
salvation were exhorted to take their possessions in the gospel, the
power of God, which was and is the authority of their meetings. Many
blessed gatherings we had up and down in that county, before we came
to BRISTOL. And after several powerful meetings there, the men’s and
women’s meetings were settled there also.
As I was in bed at Bristol, the word of the Lord came to me, that I
must go back to London. Next morning Alexander Parker and several
others came to me: I asked them, “what they felt?” They in like
manner asked me, “what was upon me?” I told them, “I felt I must
return to London.” They said, “the same was upon them.” So we gave
up to return to London; for whatever way the Lord moved and led us,
thither we went in his power. Leaving Bristol, we passed into
WILTSHIRE, and established the men’s monthly meetings in the Lord’s
power there; and visited Friends till we came to LONDON.
After we had visited Friends in the city, I was moved to exhort them
to bring all their marriages to the men’s and women’s meetings, that
they might lay them before the faithful; that care might be taken to
prevent those disorders that had been committed by some. For many
had married contrary to their relations’ minds; and some young, raw
people that came amongst us, had mixed with the world. Widows had
married without making provision for their children by their former
husbands, before their second marriage. Yet I had given forth a
paper concerning marriages about the year 1653, when truth was but
little spread over the nation; advising Friends who might be
concerned in that case, “that they might lay it before the faithful
in time, before anything was concluded, and afterwards publish it in
the end of a meeting, or in a market, as they were moved thereto.
And when all things were found clear, they being free from all
others and their relations satisfied, they might appoint a meeting
on purpose for the taking of each other, in the presence of at least
twelve faithful witnesses.” Yet these directions not being observed,
and truth being now more spread over the nation, it was therefore
ordered, by the same power and Spirit of God, “that marriages should
be laid before the men’s monthly and quarterly meetings, or as the
meetings were then established; that Friends might see that the
relations of those that proceeded to marriage, were satisfied; that
the parties were clear from all others; and that widows had made
provision for their first husband’s children, before they married
again; and what else was needful to be inquired into; that all
things might be kept clean and pure, and be done in righteousness to
the glory of God.” Afterwards it was ordered, in the same wisdom of
God, “that if either of the parties, that intended to marry, came
out of another nation, county, or monthly meeting, they should bring
a certificate from the monthly meeting to which they belonged; for
the satisfaction of the monthly meeting before which they came to
lay their intentions of marriage.”[16]
These things, with many other services for God, being set in order,
and settled in the churches in the city, I passed out of London, in
the leadings of the Lord’s power into HERTFORDSHIRE. After I had
visited Friends, and the men’s monthly meetings were settled there,
I had a great meeting at BALDOCK, of many sorts of people. Then
returning towards London by WALTHAM, I advised the setting up of a
school there for teaching boys; and also a girls’ school at
SHACKLEWELL, for instructing them in whatsoever things were civil
and useful in the creation.[17]
After I had had several precious meetings in the country, I came to
LONDON again, where I stayed a while in the work and service of the
Lord; and then went into BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, where I had many precious
meetings. At John Brown’s, of WESTON near Aylesbury, some of the men
Friends of each meeting being gathered together, the men’s monthly
meetings for that county were established, in the order of the
gospel, the power of God; and the power of the Lord confirmed it in
all that felt it, and they came thereby to see and feel, that the
power of God was the authority of their meetings. Then after the
monthly meetings were settled there in the order of the gospel, and
upon the foundation of Christ Jesus, I went to Nathaniel Ball’s, at
NORTH NEWTON near BANBURY, in Oxfordshire, who was a Friend in the
ministry. And there being a general meeting, where some from all the
meetings were present, the monthly meetings for that county, were
then settled in the power of God; and Friends were very glad of
them; for they came into their services in the church, to take care
for God’s glory. After this meeting, we passed into GLOUCESTERSHIRE,
visiting Friends, till we came into MONMOUTHSHIRE, to Richard
Hambery’s; where meeting with some from all the meetings of that
county, the monthly meetings were settled there also in the Lord’s
power, that all might take care of God’s glory, and admonish and
exhort such as did not walk as became the gospel. And indeed these
meetings made a great reformation amongst people, insomuch that the
justices took notice of their usefulness.
Richard Hambery and his wife accompanied us a day’s journey visiting
Friends, till we came to a widow’s house, where we stayed that
night. Thence we passed over the hills next day, visiting Friends
and declaring truth to the people, till we came to another widow’s,
where we had a meeting. She could not speak English, yet she praised
the Lord for sending us to visit them.
We travelled till we came to SWANSEA, where on the First-day we had
a large and precious meeting, the Lord’s presence being eminently
amongst us. On a week day afterwards we had a general meeting beyond
Swansea, of men Friends from Swansea, Tenby, Haverfordwest, and
other places; and there the monthly meetings were settled in gospel
order, and received by Friends in the power of the Lord; and the
Lord’s truth was over all.
From hence we endeavoured to go by water into Cornwall, and returned
through Swansea to MUMBLES, thinking to get passage there, but the
captain deceived us; for though he had promised to carry us, yet
when we came he would not. We went to another place where there was
a passage-boat, into which we got our horses; but some rude men in
the boat (though called gentlemen) threatened to pistol the master,
if he took us in, who, being afraid of them, turned our horses out
again; which put us out of hopes of getting over that way. Wherefore
turning back into the country, we stayed up all night, and about two
in the morning took horse, and travelled till we came near CARDIFF,
where we stayed one night. The next day we came to NEWPORT; and it
being market-day there, several Friends came to us with whom we sat
a while; and after a refreshing season together we parted from them,
and went on our way.
Beyond this market-town we overtook a man, who lingered on the way,
as if he stayed for somebody; but when we came up to him, he rode
along with us, and asked us many questions. At length meeting with
two others, who seemed to be pages to some great persons, he made
acquaintance with them, and I heard him tell them he would stop us,
and take us up. We rode on; being in our way; and when he came to
us, and would have stopped us, I told him, “none ought to stop us on
the king’s highway, for it was as free for us as for them;” and I
was moved to exhort him to fear the Lord. Then he galloped away
before us; and I perceived his intent was to stop us at SHIPTON in
Wales, which was a garrison town, through which we were to pass.
When we were come to Shipton, John-ap-John being with me, we walked
down the hill into the town leading our horses. It being the
market-day there, several Friends met us, and would have had us to
an inn. But we were not to go into any inn; so we walked directly
through the town over the bridge, and then we were out of the limits
of that town. Thus the Lord’s everlasting arm and power preserved
us, and carried us on in his work and service.
The next First-day we had a large meeting in the FOREST OF DEAN; and
all was quiet. Next day we passed over the water to OLVESTON; where,
after we had visited Friends, we came again to William Yeoman’s
house, at IRB’S COURT in Somersetshire. From thence we went to a
meeting at PORTISHEAD, whither several Friends from Bristol came to
us. After this we went further up into the country, and had several
large meetings; and the Lord’s living presence was with us,
supporting and refreshing us in our labour and travel in his
service.
We came to a place near MINEHEAD, where we had a general meeting of
the men Friends in Somersetshire. There came also a cheat, whom some
friendly people would have had me to take along with me. I saw he
was a cheat; and therefore bid them bring him to me, and see whether
he could look me in the face. Some were ready to think I was too
hard towards him, because I would not let him go along with me; but
when they brought him to me, he was not able to look me in the face,
but looked hither and thither; for he was indeed a cheat, and had
cheated a priest by pretending to be a minister; he had got the
priest’s suit and went away with it.
After the meeting we passed to MINEHEAD, where we tarried. In the
night I had an exercise upon me, from a sense of a dark spirit,
working and striving to get up to disturb the church of Christ. Next
morning I was moved to write a few lines to Friends as a warning
thereof, as follows:—
“DEAR FRIENDS,
“Live in the power of the Lord God, in his Seed that is set over
all, and is over all trials that you may have with the dark
spirit, which would be owned in its actings, and thrust itself
amongst you; which is not come as yet: but in the power of the
Lord God, and his Seed, keep over it, and bring it to
condemnation. For I felt a kind of dark spirit thrusting itself up
towards you, and heaving up last night; but you may keep it down
with the power of God, that the witness may arise to condemn its
actings, so far as it hath spread its dark works, before it have
any admittance. So no more, but my love in the Seed of God, which
changeth not.”
G.F.
Minehead in Somersetshire, 22nd of 4th Month, 1668.
Next day several Friends of Minehead accompanied us as far as
BARNSTAPLE and APPLEDORE in DEVONSHIRE, where we had a meeting.
Barnstaple had been a bloody, persecuting town. There were two men
Friends of that place, who had been a great while at sea; and coming
home to visit their relations, one of them having a wife and
children, the mayor of the town sent for them, under pretence to
converse with them; and he put the oaths of allegiance and supremacy
to them. Because they could not swear, he sent them to Exeter jail,
where Judge Archer premunired them, and kept them till one of them
died in prison. When I heard of this, I was moved to write a letter
to Judge Archer, and another to the mayor of Barnstaple, laying
their wicked and unchristian actions upon their heads, and letting
them know, “that the blood of that man would be required at their
hands.”
After a precious meeting at Appledore among some faithful Friends
there, we passed to STRATTON, and stayed at an inn all night. Next
day we rode to Humphrey Lower’s, where we had a very precious
meeting; and next day to TRURO; visiting Friends till we came to the
LAND’S-END. Then coming up by the south part of that county, we
visited Friends till we came to TREGANGEEVES, where at Loveday
Hambley’s we had a general meeting for all the county; in which the
monthly meetings were settled in the Lord’s power, and in the
blessed order of the gospel; that all who were faithful might
admonish and exhort such as walked not according to the gospel; that
so the house of God might be kept clean, and righteousness might run
down, and all unrighteousness be swept away. Several that had run
out, were brought to condemn what they had done amiss; and through
repentance came in again.
Being clear of the county of CORNWALL, we came into DEVONSHIRE, and
had a meeting amongst Friends at PLYMOUTH. Whence passing to Richard
Brown’s, we came to the widow Phillips’s, where we had some men
Friends from all the meetings together; and there the men’s monthly
meetings were settled in the heavenly order of the gospel, the power
of God; which answered the witness of God in all. There was a great
noise of a troop of horse coming to disturb our meeting; but the
Lord’s power prevented it, and preserved us in peace and safety.
After things were well settled, and the meeting over, we came to
KINGSBRIDGE, and visited Friends there. Then leaving Friends in
those parts well settled in the power of God, we passed to TOPSHAM,
and MEMBURY, visiting Friends, and having many meetings in the way,
till we came to ILCHESTER in SOMERSETSHIRE. Here we had a general
men’s meeting, and therein settled the men’s monthly meetings for
that county in the Lord’s everlasting power; and Friends being
refreshed and comforted in the Lord’s power, and established upon
Christ, their rock and foundation, we passed to PUDDIMORE; where, at
William Beaton’s, we had a blessed meeting, and all was quiet;
though the constables had threatened before.
When we had visited most of the meetings in Somersetshire, we passed
into DORSETSHIRE to George Harris’s house, where we had a large
men’s meeting. There all the men’s monthly meetings for that county
were settled in the glorious order of the gospel, that all in the
power of God might “seek that which was lost, and bring again that
which was driven away; cherish the good, and reprove the evil.”
Then we came to SOUTHAMPTON, where we had a large meeting on
First-day. Thence we went to Captain Reeves’s, where the general
men’s meeting for Hampshire was appointed; to which some of all the
county came, and a blessed time we had. There the men’s monthly
meetings for that county were settled in the order of the gospel,
which had brought life and immortality to light in them. But there
came a rude company of Ranters, who had opposed and disturbed our
meetings much. One of the women had lain with a man, who declared it
at the market-cross, and gloried in his wickedness. A company of
these lewd people lived together at a house hard by the place where
our meeting was. I went to it, and told them of their wickedness.
The man of the house said, “Why! did I make so strange of that?”
Another of them said, “It was to stumble me.” I told them, “their
wickedness should not stumble me, for I was above it.” And I was
moved of the Lord to tell them, “that the plagues and judgments of
God would overtake them, and come upon them.” Afterwards they went
up and down the country, till at last they were cast into Winchester
jail, where the man that had lain with the woman stabbed the jailer,
but not mortally. And after they were let out of jail, this fellow
that had stabbed the jailer hung himself; the woman had like to have
cut a child’s throat, as we were informed. These people had formerly
lived about London; and when the city was fired, they prophesied,
“that all the rest of London should be burnt within fourteen days,”
and hastened out of town. Though they were Ranters, great opposers
of Friends, and disturbers of our meetings, yet in the country where
they came, some people that did not know them, would be apt to say
they were Quakers. Wherefore I was moved of the Lord to write a
paper, to be dispersed among the magistrates and people of
Hampshire, to clear Friends and truth of these lewd people and their
wicked actions.
After the men’s monthly meetings in those parts were settled, and
the Lord’s blessed power was over all, we went to a town where we
had a meeting with Friends. Thence we came to Farnham, where we met
many Friends, it being the market-day. We had many precious meetings
up and down that country. Friends in those parts had formerly been
plundered, and their goods much spoiled, both for tithes, and for
going to meetings; but the Lord’s power at this time preserved both
them and us from falling into the persecutor’s hands.
We passed thence, and had a general men’s meeting at a Friend’s
house in SURREY, who had been plundered so extremely, that he had
scarcely a cow, horse, or swine left. The constables threatened to
come and break up our meeting, but the Lord restrained them. At this
meeting the men’s monthly meetings were settled in the authority of
the heavenly power. After we had visited Friends in that county, and
had many large and precious gatherings, we passed to a Friend’s
house in SUSSEX, where the general meeting for the men Friends of
that county was appointed to be held; and thither came several
Friends from London to visit us. We had a blessed meeting; and the
men’s monthly meetings for that county were then settled in the
Lord’s eternal power. There were at that time great threatenings of
disturbance; but the meeting was quiet. We had several large
meetings in that county, though Friends were then in great
sufferings there, and many in prison. I was sent for to visit a
Friend that was sick, and went to see those that were prisoners.
There was danger of my being apprehended; but I went in the faith of
God’s power, and thereby the Lord preserved me in safety.
Having visited Friends through the country, we passed into Kent,
where, after we had been at several meetings, we had a general
meeting for the men Friends of that county. There also the men’s
monthly meetings for that county were settled in the power of God,
and established in the order of the gospel, for all the heirs of it
to enter into their services, and care in the church for the glory
of God. Friends rejoiced in the order of the gospel, and were glad
of the settlement thereof, which is not of man nor by man. After
this I visited Friends in their meetings in KENT; and when I had
cleared myself of the Lord’s service in that county, I came up to
LONDON.
Thus were the men’s monthly meetings settled through the nation; for
I had been in Berkshire before, where most of the ancient Friends of
that county were in prison; and when I had informed them of the
service of these monthly meetings, they were settled amongst them
also. The quarterly meetings were generally settled before. I wrote
also into Ireland by faithful Friends, and into Scotland, Holland,
Barbadoes, and several parts of America, advising Friends to settle
their men’s monthly meetings in those countries. For they had their
general quarterly meetings before; but now that truth was increased
amongst them, they should settle those men’s monthly meetings in the
power and Spirit of God, that first convinced them.
Since these meetings have been settled, and all the faithful in the
power of God, who are heirs of the gospel, have met together in the
power of God, which is the authority of them, to perform service to
the Lord therein, many mouths have been opened in thanksgivings and
praise, and many have blessed the Lord God, that ever he sent me
forth in this service; yea, with tears have many praised the Lord.
For now all coming to have a concern and care for God’s honour and
glory, that his name be not blasphemed, which they profess; and to
see that all who profess the truth, walk in the truth, in
righteousness, and in holiness, which becomes the house of God, and
that all order their conversation aright, that they may see the
salvation of God; all having this care upon them for God’s glory,
and being exercised in his holy Power and Spirit, in the order of
the heavenly life and gospel of Jesus, they may all see and know,
possess and partake of, the government of Christ, of the increase of
which there is to be no end. Thus the Lord’s everlasting renown and
praise are set up in every one’s heart that is faithful; so that we
can say, the gospel order established amongst us, is not of man, nor
by man, but of and by Jesus Christ, in and through the Holy Ghost.
This order of the gospel, which is not of man, nor by man, but from
Christ, the heavenly man, is above all the orders of men in the
fall, whether Jews, Gentiles, or apostatized Christians, and will
remain when they are gone. For the power of God, which is the
everlasting gospel, was before the devil was, and will be and remain
for ever.
And as the everlasting gospel was preached in the apostles’ days to
all nations, that all nations might come into the order of it,
through the divine power, which brings life and immortality to
light, that they who are heirs of it, might inherit the power and
authority of it; so now, since all nations have drunk the whore’s
cup, and all the world hath worshipped the beast (but they whose
names are written in the book of life from the foundation of the
world, who have worshipped God in Spirit and in truth, as Christ
commanded), the everlasting gospel is to be, and is, preached again,
as John the divine foresaw it should, to all nations, kindreds,
tongues, and people. This everlasting gospel torments the whore, and
makes her and the beast to rage, even the beast that hath power over
the tongues, which are called the original, to order them, by which
they make divines, as they call them. But all that receive the
gospel, the power of God, which brings life and immortality to
light, come to see over the beast, devil, whore, and false prophet,
that darkened them and all their worships and orders, and come to be
heirs of the gospel, the power of God, which was before the beast,
whore, false prophet, and devil were, and will be, when they are all
gone and cast into the lake of fire. And they that are heirs of this
power and of this gospel, inherit the power which is the authority
of this order, and of our meetings. These come to possess the joyful
order of the joyful gospel, the comfortable order of the comfortable
gospel, the glorious order of the glorious gospel, and the
everlasting order of the everlasting gospel, the power of God, which
will last for ever, and will out-last all the orders of the devil,
and that which is of men or by men. These shall see the government
of Christ, who hath all power in heaven and earth given to him; and
of the increase of his glorious, righteous, holy, just government,
there is no end; but his government and his order will remain; for
he who is the author of it, is the first and the last, the beginning
and ending, the foundation of God, which over all stands sure,
Christ Jesus, the Amen.
Being returned to LONDON, I stayed some time there, visiting
Friends’ meetings in and about the city. While I was in London, I
went one day to visit Esquire Marsh, who had showed much kindness
both to me and to Friends; I happened to go when he was at dinner.
He no sooner heard my name, than he sent for me up, and would have
had me sit down with him to dinner; but I had not freedom to do so.
Several great persons were at dinner with him; and he said to one of
them who was a great Papist, “Here is a Quaker, whom you have not
seen before.” The Papist asked me, “whether I owned the christening
of children?” I told him, “there was no Scripture for any such
practice.” “What,” said he, “not for christening children?” I said,
“nay.” I told him, “the one baptism by the one Spirit into one body
we owned; but to throw a little water on a child’s face, and say
that was baptizing and christening it, there was no Scripture for
that.” Then he asked me, “whether I owned the Catholic faith,” I
said, “yes,” but added, that “neither the Pope nor the Papists were
in that Catholic faith; for the true faith works by love, and
purifies the heart, and if they were in that faith that gives
victory, by which they might have access to God, they would not tell
the people of a purgatory after they were dead.” So I undertook to
prove that “neither Pope nor Papists that held a purgatory
hereafter, were in the true faith; for the true, precious, divine
faith, which Christ is the author of, gives victory over the devil
and sin, that had separated man and woman from God. And if they, the
Papists, were in the true faith, they would never use racks,
prisons, and fines, to persecute and force others to their religion,
that were not of their faith. This was not the practice of the
apostles and primitive Christians, who witnessed and enjoyed the
true faith of Christ; but it was the practice of the faithless Jews
and Heathens so to do.
“But,” said I, “seeing thou art a great and leading man among the
Papists, and hast been taught and bred up under the Pope, and seeing
thou sayest, ‘there is no salvation but in your church,’ I desire to
know of thee, what it is that doth bring salvation in your church?”
He answered, “a good life.” “And nothing else?” said I. “Yes,” he
said, “good works.” “And is this it that brings salvation in your
church, a good life and good works? Is this your doctrine and
principle?” said I. “Yes,” said he. “Then,” said I, “neither thou,
nor the Pope, nor any of the Papists know what it is that brings
salvation.” Then he asked me, what brought salvation in our church?
I told him, “that which brought salvation to the church in the
apostles’ days, the same brought salvation to us, and not another;
namely, ‘the Grace of God,’ which, the Scripture says, brings
salvation, and hath appeared to all men, which taught the saints
then, and teaches us now. This Grace which brings salvation, teaches
to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts, and to live soberly,
righteously, and godly. So it is not the good works nor the good
life that brings salvation, but the Grace.” “What!” said the Papist,
“doth this Grace that brings salvation, appear unto all men?” “Yes,”
said I. “Then,” said he, “I deny that.” I replied, “all that deny
that, are sect-makers, and are not in the universal faith, grace,
and truth, which the apostles were in.”
Then he spoke to me about the mother church. I told him, “the
several sects in Christendom had accused us, and said, ‘we forsook
our mother-church.’ The Papists charged us with forsaking their
church, saying, ‘Rome was the only mother-church.’ The Episcopalians
taxed us with forsaking the old Protestant religion, alleging,
‘theirs was the reformed mother-church.’ The Presbyterians and
Independents blamed us for leaving them, each of them pretending,
‘theirs was the right reformed church.’” But, I said “if we could
own any outward city or place to be the mother-church, we should own
Jerusalem, where the gospel was first preached by Christ himself and
his apostles, where Christ suffered, where the great conversion to
Christianity by Peter was, where were the types, figures, and
shadows, which Christ ended, and where Christ commanded his
disciples to ‘wait until they were endued with power from on high.’
If any outward place deserved to be called the mother, that was the
place where the first great conversion to Christianity was. But the
apostle saith, Gal. iv. 25-27, ‘Jerusalem, which now is, is in
bondage with her children; but Jerusalem which is above, is free,
which is the mother of us all.’ For it is written, ‘Rejoice, thou
barren, that bearest not; break forth and cry, thou that travailest
not; for the desolate hath many more children than she which hath an
husband.’ The apostle does not say, outward Jerusalem was the
mother, though the first and great conversion to Christianity was
there. And there is less reason for the title [mother] to be given
to Rome, or to any other outward place or city, by the children of
Jerusalem, that is above and free; neither are they Jerusalem’s
children, that is above and free, who give the title of mother
either to outward Jerusalem, to Rome, or to any other place or sect
of people. And though this title [mother] hath been given to places
and sects amongst and by the degenerate Christians, yet still we
say, as the apostle said of old, ‘Jerusalem that is above, is the
mother of us all.’ And we can own no other, neither outward
Jerusalem nor Rome, nor any sect of people for our mother, but
Jerusalem which is above, which is free, the mother of all that are
born again, and are become true believers in the light, grafted in
Christ, the heavenly Vine. For all who are born again of the
immortal Seed, by the Word of God, which lives and abides for ever,
feed upon the milk of the Word, the breasts of life, and grow by it
in life, and cannot acknowledge any other to be their mother but
Jerusalem which is above.” “O,” said Esquire Marsh to the Papist,
“You do not know this man, if he would but come to church now and
then, he would be a brave man.”
After some other discourse, I went aside with Justice Marsh into
another room, to speak with him concerning Friends; for he was a
justice of peace for Middlesex, and being a courtier, the other
justices put much of the management of affairs upon him. He told me
“he was in a strait how to act between us and some other Dissenters.
For,” said he, “you cannot swear, and the Independents, Baptists,
and Fifth-monarchy people say also they cannot swear; therefore,”
said he, “how shall I know how to distinguish betwixt you and them,
seeing they and you all say it is for conscience’ sake that you
cannot swear?” I answered “I will show thee how to distinguish.
They, or most of them, thou speakest of, can and do swear in some
cases, but we cannot swear in any case. If a man should steal their
cows and horses, and thou shouldst ask them whether they would swear
they were theirs; many of them would readily do it. But if thou try
our Friends, they cannot swear for their own goods. Therefore, when
thou puttest the oath of allegiance to any of them, ask them,
‘whether they can swear in any other case, as for their cow or
horse;’ which, if they be really of us, they cannot do, though they
can bear witness to the truth.” Hereupon I gave him a relation of a
trial in Berkshire, which was thus: A thief stole two beasts from a
Friend of ours, the thief was taken and cast into prison, and the
Friend appeared against him at the assizes. But somebody having
informed the judge, that the prosecutor was a Quaker, and could not
swear, the judge, before he heard what the Friend could say, said,
“Is he a Quaker? and will he not swear? Then tender him the oaths of
allegiance and supremacy.” So he cast the Friend into prison, and
premunired him, and set the thief at liberty that had stolen his
goods. Justice Marsh, said, “that judge was a wicked man.” “But,”
said I, “if we could swear in any case, we would take the oath of
allegiance to the king, who is to preserve the laws that are to
support every man in his estate. Whereas others, that can swear in
some cases to preserve a part of their estates, if they be robbed,
will not take this oath to the king, who is to preserve them in
their whole estates and bodies also. So that thou mayest easily
distinguish, and put a difference between us and those people.”
Justice Marsh was afterwards very serviceable to Friends in this and
other cases; for he kept several, both Friends and others, from
being premunired. When Friends were brought before him in time of
persecution, he set many of them at liberty; and when he could not
avoid sending to prison, he sent some for a few hours, or for a
night. At length he went to the king, and told him, “he had sent
some of us to prison contrary to his conscience, and he could not do
so any more.” Wherefore he removed his family from Limehouse, where
he lived, and took lodgings near St. James’s Park. He told the king
that “if he would be pleased to give liberty of conscience, that
would quiet and settle all; for then none could have any pretence to
be uneasy.” And indeed he was a very serviceable man to truth and
Friends in his day.
We had great service at London this year; the Lord’s truth came over
all, and many that had gone out from truth came in again, confessing
and condemning their outgoings. After I had stayed some time in
London, I visited Friends in SURREY and SUSSEX, and in other places
that way, and afterwards travelled northward, having Leonard Fell
with me. We visited Friends till we came to WARWICK, where many were
in prison; and we had a meeting in the town. I passed thence to
BIRMINGHAM and BADDESLEY. At Baddesley I had a large meeting; after
which I came to NOTTINGHAM, where on First-day we had a precious
meeting, but not without danger of being apprehended, the constables
having threatened to take up Friends.
I passed thence, visiting Friends, till I came to BALBY, and so to
YORK, to the quarterly meeting; and a blessed time we had. Friends
in Yorkshire had seven monthly meetings before; and they were so
sensible of the service of them, that they desired to have seven
more added to them, for truth was much spread in that county. So
they were established; and now they have fourteen monthly meetings
in that county.[18]
It being the assizes at York, I met with Justice Hotham, a
well-wisher to Friends, who had been tender, and very kind to me
from the first.
After I had finished my service for the Lord in York, I passed into
the country. As I went a great burthen fell upon me, but I did not
presently know the reason of it. I came to a meeting on First-day at
Richard Shipton’s, which was very large, but there being one the
same day at another place also, the priest of that place, being
misinformed that I was to be there, got a warrant, and made great
disturbance at that meeting; of which Isaac Lindley, who was there,
gave me an account in the following letter:—
G.F.
“When thou went from York, the First-day after thou wast at
Richard Shipton’s, that day I had appointed a meeting ten miles
from York, where there had not been one before. But the priest and
the constable got a warrant on the seventh day, and put thy name
only in the warrant, for they had heard that thou wast to be
there. They came with weapons and staves, and cried, ‘Where is Mr.
Fox?’ over and over; many Friends being there, they concluded thou
wast among them. But those raveners, being disappointed, plucked
me down and abused me, and beat some Friends, and then took me
before a magistrate, but he set me at liberty.”
ISAAC LINDLEY.
Then I visited Friends at WHITBY and SCARBRO’. When at Scarbro’, the
governor hearing I was come, sent to invite me to his house, saying,
“surely I would not be so unkind as not to come and see him and his
wife.” After the meeting I went up to visit him, and he received me
very courteously and lovingly.
Having visited most of the meetings in Yorkshire, the WOLDS, and
HOLDERNESS, I came to Henry Jackson’s, where I had a great meeting.
Thence to Thomas Taylor’s, and so to John Moor’s at ELDRETH, where
we had a very large meeting; the Lord’s power and presence were
eminently amongst us. Not far from this place lay Colonel Kirby,
lame of the gout, who had threatened that “if ever I came near he
would send me to prison again; and had bid forty pounds to any man
that could take me;” as I was credibly informed.
After this I came into STAFFORDSHIRE, and CHESHIRE, where we had
many large and precious meetings. I had a very large one at William
Barnes’s house, about two miles from WARRINGTON; and though Colonel
Kirby was out again, as violent in breaking up meetings as before,
and was then at Warrington, the Lord did not suffer him to come to
this meeting; and so we were preserved out of his hands.
-----
Footnote 14:
For some very interesting particulars respecting the setting up of
Monthly and other disciplinary Meetings and their object, see
_Letters of Early Friends_, pp. 288-292.
Footnote 15:
The William Smith mentioned here was originally pastor of an
Independent congregation, living after the strictest manner of
that people. He was convinced about the year 1658, and became a
faithful labourer in the gospel. Many were turned to God by him,
for he proved himself a minister of Jesus Christ, in labours, in
travails, in watchings, necessities, and distresses, suffering
much loss of goods and long and tedious imprisonments. For not
paying tithes he was imprisoned twenty-one weeks among felons in
Nottingham jail; and another time had the value of £42 taken from
him, whilst he was in prison, for £7 demanded by the priest of
Elton.
In the times of his frequent imprisonments, William Smith wrote
several books, which were printed together in a folio volume in
1675, entitled _Balm from Gilead, &c._ When at liberty he
travelled abroad strengthening the brethren, and though often
visited by sickness, he was kept in patience and content, much of
the power and presence of God appearing in him many times when he
was in great weakness of body, to the admiration of beholders.
During his last sickness, one evening, many Friends being in the
room sitting in silence, he turned in his bed towards them, and
plentifully declared of the love of God, by which they were much
refreshed and tendered. He also testified of a large portion which
he had in life eternal. Then he spoke to Friends “to be mindful of
truth, and of their service therein, more than of their daily
food; and so committed them to the grace of God.” The day before
he died he called his children (six or seven), and tenderly
exhorted them “to keep in the fear of God, and to love the truth,
and God would be a father and portion to them.”
Footnote 16:
Some interesting documents, exhibiting the early care of the
Society with regard to marriages, may be referred to in _Letters,
&c., of Early Friends_, p. 259, 279, 283, &c. So early as 1659, at
a meeting of Friends from four counties, an _Epistle of Counsel
and Advice_ was issued on this, and other subjects; recommending
“that no marriage take place hastily or rashly; but in the fear of
the Lord, and in the presence of many witnesses, according to
Scripture example; that so no scandal or blemish may be laid upon
the truth, but that all may be brought to the light; that a record
in writing of the day, place, and year, be kept within the meeting
where a marriage occurs, of which one or both are members; under
which the witnesses may set their names.”
Footnote 17:
In the establishment of the schools at Waltham and at Shacklewell,
at the suggestion of George Fox, we have evidence of his desire
that a useful education should be imparted to youth. It is an
error to suppose the early Friends depreciated human learning, and
they must be exonerated from any such charge. They exhibited in
their own persons, the practicability of the union of knowledge
and virtue. While they were, many of them, eminent for their
learning, they were distinguished for the piety of their lives.
They were indeed the friends of both, but did not patronise the
one to the prejudice and expulsion of the other. They always
maintained (as Friends continue to do) that learning is not
necessary to make a gospel minister, and here it is that many have
mistaken their meaning.
Barclay, in his celebrated _Apology_, nowhere condemns the
propriety, or usefulness of human learning, or denies it to be
promotive of the temporal comforts of man. He says the knowledge
of Latin, Greek, and Hebrew, or of Logic and Philosophy, of Ethics
or of Physics and Metaphysics, is not necessary. But mark his
meaning. Not necessary to make a minister of the gospel. But where
does he say that knowledge, which he himself possessed to such a
considerable extent, was not necessary; or that it did not
contribute to the innocent pleasures of life? What would have been
the character of his own book, or what would have been its
comparative value and usefulness, had he not been able to quote so
many authors to his purpose in their original texts, or to have
detected so many classical errors, introduced such apposite
history, or to have drawn up his propositions with so much logical
and mathematical clearness and precision; if he had not been among
the first literary characters of his day?
William Penn was equally celebrated with Barclay as a scholar. His
works afford abundant proof of his erudition, and of the high
cultivation of his mind. Like the rest of his associates, he was
no advocate for learning as a qualification for a minister of the
gospel; but he was yet a friend to it, on the principle that it
enlarged the understanding, and that it added to the innocent
pleasures of the mind. He entreated his wife, in the beautiful
letter he left her before he embarked on his first voyage to
America, “not to be sparing of expense in procuring learning for
his children; for that by such parsimony, all was lost that was
saved.” And he recommended also, in the same letter, a
mathematical and philosophical education.
Penn’s Secretary, James Logan, was also a patron of learning among
the early Friends. He was a correspondent of Sir Hans Sloane and
other literati of Europe, a contributor to Philosophical
Transactions, and bequeathed his library, of 3000 vols. on arts
and sciences in various languages, to the city of Philadelphia,
with an endowment to preserve it for public use.
Thomas Ellwood, the companion of Milton, was so sensible of the
disadvantages arising from a want of knowledge, that he revived
his learning with great industry after he had become a Friend. “I
mentioned before,” says he in his Journal, “that when I was a boy
I made some progress in learning, and that I lost it all again
before I came to be a man. Nor was I rightly sensible of my loss
therein, till I came amongst Friends. But there I both saw my loss
and lamented it, and applied myself with the utmost diligence at
all leisure times to recover it. So false I found that charge to
be, which in those times was cast as a reproach on the Society,
that they despised and decried all human learning, because they
denied it to be essentially necessary to a gospel ministry, which
was one of the controversies of those times.” Ellwood’s friend,
Isaac Penington, assisted him in this matter, and through his
influence with Dr. Paget, procured him the means of improvement in
becoming a reader to Milton.
Footnote 18:
The fourteen monthly meetings mentioned above as settled in
Yorkshire so early as 1669, were York, Balby, Pontefract,
Brighouse, Knaresbro’, Settle, Malton, Thirsk, Richmond, Guisbro’,
Scarbro’, Kelk, Oustwick, and Elloughton.
CHAPTER III.
1669-1671.—George Fox sails for Ireland in company with several
other Friends—he there sends a challenge to the Popish priests
to try their God, which is not accepted—he contrasts them with
Baal’s priests—the authorities of Cork threaten him, and issue
warrants for his apprehension—he rides publicly through the
city, and is seen by the mayor but not molested—writes to
Friends in the ministry there—discourses with professors on
election and reprobation—returns to England—a report is spread
that George Fox is turned Presbyterian, through a trick to
obtain a congregation for John Fox, the Presbyterian, which
however turns to the advantage of Friends—George Fox is married
to Margaret Fell at Bristol—writes to the quarterly meetings
about putting children apprentices—Margaret Fox is cast into
prison—two of her daughters go to the king, and obtain a promise
of their mother’s liberty—on the passing of the Conventicle
Act, George Fox writes a declaration against seditious
conventicles—writes to Friends to strengthen them in their
trials—is apprehended at a meeting at Gracechurch Street—taken
before the mayor, who discourses with him and sets him at
liberty—visits Friends in Reading jail—undergoes great travail
of spirit, loses his sight and hearing, and becomes as a
sign—persecution becoming hot, some meeting-houses are pulled
down, and Friends are much abused—George Fox endures great
mental conflict—the faithfulness of Friends is said by some
professors to have preserved the nation from debauchery—George
Fox writes an encouraging letter to Friends—as persecution
abates he recovers—writes a warning to the rulers of the
nation—recommends certain regulations respecting marriage—writes
a prayer.
Now was I moved of the Lord to go over into IRELAND to visit the
seed of God in that nation. There went with me Robert Lodge, James
Lancaster, Thomas Briggs, and John Stubbs. We waited near Liverpool
for shipping and wind. After waiting some days, we sent James
Lancaster to take passage, which he did, and brought word the ship
was ready, and would take us in at Black Rock. We went thither on
foot; and it being some distance, and the weather very hot, I was
much spent with walking. When we arrived, the ship was not there; so
we were obliged to go to the town, and take shipping. When we were
on board, I said to the rest of my company, “Come, ye will triumph
in the Lord, for we shall have fair wind and weather.” Many
passengers in the ship were sick, but not one of our company. The
captain and many of the passengers were very loving; and we being at
sea on the first day of the week, I was moved to declare truth among
them; whereupon the captain said to the passengers, “Here are things
that you never heard in your lives.”
When we came before DUBLIN, we took boat and went ashore; and the
earth and air smelt, methought, of the corruption of the nation, so
that it yielded another smell to me than England did; which I
imputed to the Popish massacres that had been committed, and the
blood that had been spilt in it, from which a foulness ascended. We
passed through among the officers of the customs four times, yet
they did not search us; for they perceived what we were: some of
them were so envious they did not care to look at us. We did not
soon find Friends; but went to an inn, and sent out to inquire for
some; who when they came to us were exceedingly glad of our coming,
and received us with great joy. We stayed there the weekly meeting,
which was a large one, and the power and life of God appeared
greatly in it. Afterwards we passed to a province meeting, which
lasted two days, there being one about the poor, and another meeting
more general; in which a mighty power of the Lord appeared. Truth
was livingly declared, and Friends were much refreshed therein.
Passing thence about four and twenty miles, we came to another
place, where we had a very good refreshing meeting, but after it,
some Papists that were there were angry, and raged very much. When I
heard of it, I sent for one of them, who was a schoolmaster; but he
would not come. Whereupon I sent a challenge to him, with all the
friars and monks, priests and Jesuits, to come forth, and “try their
God and their Christ, which they had made of bread and wine,” but no
answer could I get from them. Wherefore I told them, “they were
worse than the priests of Baal; for Baal’s priests tried their
wooden god, but these durst not try their god of bread and wine; and
Baal’s priests and people did not eat their god as these did, and
then make another.”
We went to NEW GARDEN, where there was a great meeting. Thence we
travelled on among Friends, till we came to BANDON BRIDGE and the
LAND’S END, having many meetings as we went, in which the mighty
power of the Lord was manifested, Friends were well refreshed, and
many people were affected with the truth. At Bandon, the Mayor’s
wife being herself convinced, desired her husband to come to the
meeting; but he bid her, for her life, not to make known that I was
at a meeting there.
He that was then Mayor of CORK was very envious against truth and
Friends, and had many Friends in prison; and knowing that I was in
the country, he had issued four warrants to take me; wherefore
Friends were desirous that I might not ride through Cork. But being
at Bandon, there appeared to me, in a vision, “a very ugly visaged
man, of a black and dark look: my spirit struck at him in the power
of God; and it seemed to me, that I rode over him with my horse, and
my horse set his foot on the side of his face.” When I came down in
the morning, I told a Friend that was with me, that the command of
the Lord was to me to ride through Cork; but bade him tell no man.
So we took horse, many Friends being with me; and when we came near
the town, they would have showed me a way on the backside of the
town; but I told them, my way was through the streets. Wherefore
taking one of them along with me, whose name was Paul Morrice, to
guide me through the town, I rode on; and as we rode through the
market-place, and by the mayor’s door, he seeing me ride by, said,
“there goes George Fox;” but he had not power to stop me. When we
had passed through the sentinels, and were come over the bridge, we
went to a Friend’s house and alighted. There the Friends told me
what a rage was in the town, and how many warrants were granted to
take me. While I was sitting there with Friends, I felt the evil
spirit at work in the town, stirring up mischief against me; and I
felt the power of the Lord strike at that evil spirit. By and by
some other Friends coming in, told me, that it was over the town,
and amongst the magistrates, that I was in the town. I said, “let
the devil do his worst.” After a while, and Friends were refreshed
one in another, and we travellers had refreshed ourselves, I called
for my horse, and having a Friend to guide me, we went on our way.
But great was the rage, that the mayor and others of Cork were in,
that they had missed me; and great pains they afterwards took to
take me, having their scouts abroad upon the roads, as I understood,
to observe which way I went. Afterwards there was scarcely a public
meeting I came to, but spies came to watch if I were there. And the
envious magistrates and priests sent informations one to another
concerning me, describing me by my hair, hat, clothes, and horse, so
that when I was near a hundred miles from Cork, they had an account
concerning me, and description of me, before I came amongst them.
One very envious magistrate, who was both a priest and a justice,
got a warrant from the judge of the assize to apprehend me; which
warrant was to go over all his circuit, which reached near a hundred
miles. Yet the Lord disappointed all their counsels, and defeated
all their designs against me; by his good hand of Providence
preserved me out of all their snares, and gave us many sweet and
blessed opportunities to visit Friends, and spread truth through
that nation. For meetings were very large, Friends coming to them
far and near; and other people flocking in. The powerful presence of
the Lord was preciously felt with and amongst us; whereby many of
the world were reached, convinced, and gathered to the truth; the
Lord’s flock was increased, and Friends were greatly refreshed and
comforted in feeling the love of God. O, the brokenness that was
amongst them in the flowings of life! So that, in the power and
Spirit of the Lord, many together broke out into singing, even with
audible voices, making melody in their hearts.
At which time I was moved to declare as follows:—
_To Friends in the Ministry._
“Sound, sound abroad, ye faithful servants of the Lord, and
witnesses in his name, ye prophets of the Highest, and angels of
the Lord! Sound ye all abroad in the world, to the awakening and
raising of the dead, that they may be awakened, and raised up out
of the grave, to hear the voice that is living. For the dead have
long heard the dead, the blind have long wandered among the blind,
and the deaf amongst the deaf. Therefore sound, ye servants,
prophets, and angels of the Lord, ye trumpets of the Lord, that
you may awaken the dead, and them that are asleep in their graves
of sin, death and hell, sea and earth, and who lie in the tombs.
Sound abroad, ye trumpets, and raise up the dead, that they may
hear the voice of the Son of God, of the second Adam that never
fell; the voice of the Light, and of the Life; the voice of the
Power, and the voice of Truth; the voice of the Righteous, and of
the Just. Sound ye the trumpets, the melodious sound abroad, that
all the deaf ears may be opened to hear the pleasant sound of the
trumpet to judgment and life, to condemnation and light.
“Sound your trumpets all abroad, ye angels of the Lord, sons and
daughters, prophets of the Highest, that all who are dead and
asleep in the graves—who have been long dreaming and slumbering,
may be awakened, and hear the voice of the Lamb;—that all who have
long heard the voice of the beast, may now hear the voice of the
Bridegroom and the voice of the Bride;—that they may now hear the
voice of the great Prophet and King—the Shepherd and Bishop of
their souls. Sound, sound it all abroad, ye trumpets, among the
dead in Adam; for Christ is come, the second Adam, that they might
have life, yea have it abundantly. Awaken the dead, awaken the
slumberers, the dreamers, them that are asleep, awaken them out of
their graves, out of their tombs, out of their sepulchres, out of
the seas! Sound abroad, ye trumpets that awaken the dead, that
they may all hear the sound of it in the graves, and they that
hear may live, and come to the Life, that is, the Son of God. He
is risen from the dead; the grave could not hold nor contain him,
neither could all the watchers of the earth, with all their
guards, keep him therein. Sound, ye trumpets of the Lord, to all
the seekers of the living among the dead, that he is risen from
the dead; to all the seekers of the living among the dead, and in
the graves that the watchers keep; he is not in the grave, he is
risen; there is that under the grave of the watchers of the
outward grave, which must be awakened and come to hear His voice,
who is risen from the dead, that they may come to live. Therefore
sound abroad, ye trumpets of the Lord, that the grave may give up
her dead, and hell and the sea give up their dead; that all may
come forth to judgment, to the judgment of the Lord before his
throne, and have their sentence and reward according to their
works.”
G. F.
To James Hutchinson’s in Ireland came many great persons, desiring
to discourse with me about election and reprobation. I told them,
“though they judged our principle foolish, it was too high for them,
they could not with their wisdom comprehend it; therefore I would
discourse with them according to their capacities. You say (said I),
that God hath ordained the greatest part of men for hell, and that
they were ordained so before the world began; for which your proof
is in Jude. You say Esau was reprobated, and the Egyptians, and the
stock of Ham. But Christ saith to his disciples, ‘Go, teach _all_
nations,’ and ‘go into all nations and preach the gospel of life and
salvation.’ Now, if they were to go to _all_ nations, were they not
to go to Ham’s stock and Esau’s stock; did not Christ die for _all_?
then for the stock of Ham, of Esau, and the Egyptians. Doth not the
Scripture say, ‘God would have _all_ men to be saved?’ Mark, _all_
men, then the stock of Esau and of Ham also. Doth not God say,
‘Egypt, my people?’ and that he would have an altar in Egypt? Isa.
xix. Were there not many Christians formerly in Egypt? And doth not
history say, that the Bishop of Alexandria would formerly have been
Pope? And had not God a church in Babylon? I confess, ‘the word came
to Jacob, and the statutes of Israel; the like was not to other
nations.’ For the law of God was given to Israel; but the gospel was
to be preached to _all_ nations, and is to be preached. The gospel
of peace and glad tidings is to all nations, ‘he that believes, is
saved; but he that doth not believe, is condemned already;’ so the
condemnation comes through unbelief. And whereas Jude speaks of
some, that were of old ordained (or written of before) to
condemnation, he doth not say, before the world began; but, ‘written
of old,’ which may be referred to Moses’s writings, who wrote of
those whom Jude mentions, namely, Cain, Korah, Balaam, and the
angels that kept not their first estate. And such Christians as
followed them in their way, and apostatized from the first state of
Christianity, were and are ordained for condemnation by the light
and truth, which they are gone from. And though the apostle speaks
of God’s loving Jacob and hating Esau; yet he tells the believers,
‘we all were by nature children of wrath as well as others.’ This
includes the stock of Jacob, of which the apostle himself and all
believing Jews were. Thus both Jews and Gentiles were _all_
concluded under sin, and so under condemnation, that God might have
mercy upon all, through Jesus Christ. The election and choice stands
in Christ; and ‘he that believes, is saved; and he that believes
not, is condemned already.’ Jacob typifies the second birth, which
God loved; and both Jews and Gentiles must be born again, before
they can enter the kingdom of God. When you are born again, ye will
know election and reprobation; for the election stands in Christ,
the Seed, before the world began; but the reprobation lies in the
evil seed, since the world began.” After this manner, but somewhat
more largely, I discoursed with those great persons on this matter,
and they confessed they had never heard so much before.
After I had travelled over Ireland, and had visited Friends in their
meetings, as well for business as for worship, and had answered
several papers and writings from monks, friars, and Protestant
priests (for they all were in a rage against us, and endeavoured to
stop the work of the Lord; and some Jesuits swore in the hearing of
some of us, that we came to spread our principles in that nation,
but we should not do it,) I returned to DUBLIN to take passage for
England. When I had stayed the First-day meeting there (which was
very large and precious,) a ship being ready and the wind serving,
we took our leave of Friends, parting in much tenderness and
brokenness, in the sense of the heavenly life and power, manifested
amongst us. So having put our horses and necessaries on board in the
morning, we went ourselves in the afternoon, many Friends
accompanying us to the ship; and divers, both Friends and friendly
people, came after us in boats when we were near a league at sea,
their love drawing them, though not without danger. A good, weighty,
and true people there is in that nation, sensible of the power of
the Lord God and tender of his truth; and very good order they have
in their meetings, for they stand up for righteousness and holiness,
which dams up the way of wickedness. A precious visitation they had,
and there is an excellent spirit in them, worthy to be visited. Many
things more I could write of that nation, and of my travels in it,
which would be large to mention particularly; but this I have
thought good to signify, that the righteous may rejoice in the
prosperity of truth.
James Lancaster, Robert Lodge, and Thomas Briggs came back with me;
John Stubbs having further service there, stayed behind. We were two
nights at sea; in one of which a mighty storm arose, that put the
vessel in great danger. But I saw the power of God went over the
winds and storms; he had them in his hand, and his power bound them.
And the same power of the Lord God which carried us over, brought us
back again; and in his life gave us dominion over all the evil
spirits that opposed us there.
We landed at LIVERPOOL, and went to Richard Johnson’s. Whence
departing the next day, we passed to William Barnes’s house, and
so to William Gandy’s, visiting Friends, and having many
precious meetings in LANCASHIRE and CHESHIRE. When we came into
GLOUCESTERSHIRE, we met with a report at NAILSWORTH, which was
spread about that country, “that George Fox was turned Presbyterian;
that they had prepared a pulpit for him, and set it in a yard, and
that there would be a thousand people there the next day to hear
him.” I thought it strange that such a report should be raised of
me; yet as we went further, from one Friend’s house to another, we
met with the same. We passed by the yard where the pulpit was, and
saw it, and went on to the place where Friends’ meeting was to be
next day, and there we stayed that night. Next day, being First-day,
we had a very large meeting, and the Lord’s power and presence were
amongst us.
The occasion of this strange report (as I was informed) was this.
There was one John Fox, a Presbyterian priest, who used to go about
preaching; and some changing his name (as was reported) from John to
George, gave out that George Fox had changed his religion, and was
turned from a Quaker, to be a Presbyterian, and would preach at such
a place such a day. This begot so great a curiosity in the people,
that many went thither to hear this Quaker turned Presbyterian, who
would not have gone to hear John Fox himself. By this means, it was
reported, they had got together above a thousand people. But when
they came there, and perceived they had a trick put upon them, and
that he was a counterfeit George Fox, and understood that the real
George Fox was hard by, several hundreds of them came to our
meeting, and were sober and attentive. I directed them to the grace
of God in themselves, which would teach them, and bring them
salvation. When the meeting was over, some of the people said, “they
liked George Fox the Quaker’s preaching better than George Fox the
Presbyterian’s.” Thus, by my providential coming into those parts at
that time, was this false report discovered; and shame came over the
contrivers of it.
Not long after, this John Fox was complained of in the House of
Commons, for “having a tumultuous meeting, in which treasonable
words were spoken;” which (according to the best information I could
get of it) was thus:—He had formerly been priest of Mansfield
[Manningford?] in Wiltshire; and being put out of that place, was
afterwards permitted by a Common-Prayer priest to preach sometimes
in his steeple-house. At length this Presbyterian priest, presuming
too far upon the parish priest’s former grant, began to be more bold
than welcome, and attempted to preach there, whether the parish
priest would or not. This caused a great bustle and contest in the
steeple-house between the two priests, and their hearers, on each
side; in which contest the Common-Prayer-Book was cut to pieces, and
some treasonable words were spoken by some of the followers of John
Fox. This was quickly put in the news: and some malicious
Presbyterians caused it to be worded as if it had proceeded from
George Fox, the Quaker, when I was above two hundred miles from the
place where this bustle happened. When I heard of it, I soon
procured certificates from some of the members of the House of
Commons, who knew this John Fox, and gave it under their hands, that
it was John Fox, who had formerly been parson at Mansfield in
Wiltshire, that was complained of to the House of Commons, to be the
chief ringleader in that unlawful assembly.
And indeed this John Fox discovered himself to be an ill man; for
when some, who had been his followers, came to be convinced of
truth, and thereupon left him, he came to some of their houses to
talk with them about it, and they telling him, “he was in the steps
of the false prophets, preaching for hire and filthy lucre, like
them whom Christ cried woe against, and the apostles declared
against, such as served not the Lord Jesus Christ, but their own
bellies; and telling him also, Christ said, ‘freely ye have
received, freely give;’ and therefore he should not take money of
people for preaching, especially now times were so hard;” he
replied, “God bless preaching, for that brings in money, let times
go how they will. Fill my belly with good victuals; and then call me
false prophet, or what you will, and kick me about the house when ye
have done if ye will.” This relation I had from a man and his wife,
who had been formerly his hearers, and whom this John Fox, with
others, caused deeply to suffer. For he and some other Presbyterian
priests, using to resort to a widow-woman’s house, who had the
impropriation, and took the tithes of the parish, she told them,
there was a Quaker in that parish, that would not pay her tithes,
and asked what she should do with him. They advised her “to send
workmen to cut down and carry away his corn;” which she did, and
thereby impoverished the man. But to proceed—
After this meeting in Gloucestershire was over, we travelled till we
came to BRISTOL; where I met with Margaret Fell, who was come to
visit her daughter Yeomans. I had seen from the Lord a considerable
time before, that I should take Margaret Fell to be my wife. And
when I first mentioned it to her, she felt the answer of Life from
God thereunto. But though the Lord had opened this thing to me, yet
I had not received a command from the Lord, for the accomplishing of
it then. Wherefore I let the thing rest, and went on in the work and
service of the Lord as before, according as he led me; travelling up
and down in this nation and through Ireland. But now being at
BRISTOL, and finding Margaret Fell there, it opened in me from the
Lord that the thing should be accomplished. After we had discoursed
the matter together, I told her, if “she also was satisfied with the
accomplishing of it now, she should first send for her children;”
which she did. When the rest of her daughters were come, I asked
both them and her sons in law, “if they had anything against it, or
for it;” and they all severally expressed their satisfaction
therein. Then I asked Margaret, “if she had fulfilled and performed
her husband’s will to her children.” She replied, “the children knew
that.” Whereupon I asked them, “whether, if their mother married,
they should not lose by it?” And I asked Margaret, “whether she had
done anything in lieu of it, which might answer it to the children?”
The children said, “she had answered it to them, and desired me to
speak no more of it.” I told them, “I was plain, and would have all
things done plainly; for I sought not any outward advantage to
myself.” So after I had thus acquainted the children with it, our
intention of marriage was laid before Friends, both privately and
publicly, to their full satisfaction, many of whom gave testimony
thereunto that it was of God. Afterwards, a meeting being appointed
for the accomplishing thereof, in the meeting-house at Broad-Mead in
Bristol, we took each other, the Lord joining us together in the
honourable marriage, in the everlasting covenant and immortal Seed
of life. In the sense whereof, living and weighty testimonies were
borne thereunto by Friends, in the movings of the heavenly power
which united us together. Then was a certificate relating both to
the proceedings and the marriage, openly read, and signed by the
relations, and by most of the ancient Friends of that city, besides
many others from divers parts of the nation.[19]
We stayed about a week in Bristol, and then went together to
OLVESTON; where taking leave of each other in the Lord, we parted,
betaking ourselves to our several services, Margaret returning
homewards to the north, and I passing on in the work of the Lord, as
before. I travelled through WILTSHIRE, BERKSHIRE, OXFORDSHIRE, and
BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, and so to LONDON, visiting Friends; in all which
counties I had many large and precious meetings.
Being in LONDON, it came upon me to write to Friends throughout the
nation, about “putting out poor children to trades.” Wherefore I
sent the following epistle to the quarterly meetings of Friends in
all counties:—
“MY DEAR FRIENDS,
“Let every quarterly meeting make inquiry through all the monthly
and other meetings, to know all Friends that are widows, or
others, that have children fit to put out to apprenticeships; so
that once a quarter you may set forth an apprentice from your
quarterly meeting; and so you may set forth four in a year in each
county, or more, if there be occasion. This apprentice, when out
of his time, may help his father or mother, and support the family
that is decayed; and in so doing, all may come to live
comfortably. This being done in your quarterly meetings, ye will
have knowledge through the county in the monthly and particular
meetings, of masters fit for them, and of such trades as their
parents or you desire, or the children are most inclinable to.
Thus being placed out with Friends, they may be trained up in
truth; and by this means in the wisdom of God, you may preserve
Friends’ children in the truth, and enable them to be a strength
and help to their families, and nursers and preservers of their
relations in their ancient days. Thus also things being ordered in
the wisdom of God, you will take off a continual maintenance, and
free yourselves from much cumber. For in the country, ye know, ye
may set forth an apprentice for a little to several trades, as
bricklayers, masons, carpenters, wheelwrights, plough-wrights,
tailors, tanners, curriers, blacksmiths, shoemakers, nailers,
butchers, weavers of linen and woollen, stuffs and serges, &c. And
you may do well to have a stock in your quarterly meetings for
that purpose. All that is given by any Friends at their decease
(except it be given to some particular use, person, or meeting,)
may be brought to the public stock for that purpose. This will be
a way for the preserving of many that are poor among you, and it
will be a way of making up poor families. In several counties it
is practised already. Some quarterly meetings set forth two
apprentices; and sometimes the children of others that are laid on
the parish. You may bind them for fewer or more years, according
to their capacities. In all these things the wisdom of God will
teach you, by which ye may come to help the children of poor
Friends, that they may come to support their families, and
preserve them in the fear of God. So no more, but my love in the
everlasting Seed, by which ye will have wisdom to order all things
to the glory of God.”
G.F.
London, 1st of 11th Month, 1669.
I stayed not long in LONDON; but having visited Friends, and finding
things there quiet and well, the Lord’s power being over all, I
passed into ESSEX, and HERTFORDSHIRE, where I had many precious
meetings. Intending to go as far as LEICESTERSHIRE, I wrote a letter
to my wife, before I left London, to acquaint her therewith, that if
she found it convenient to her she might meet me there. From
Hertfordshire I turned into CAMBRIDGESHIRE, thence into
HUNTINGDONSHIRE, and so into LEICESTERSHIRE; where, instead of
meeting with my wife, I heard she was haled out of her house to
Lancaster prison again, by an order obtained from the king and
council, to fetch her back to prison upon the old premunire; though
she had been discharged from that imprisonment by their order the
year before. Wherefore, having visited Friends as far as
Leicestershire, I returned by DERBYSHIRE into WARWICKSHIRE, and so
to LONDON, having had many large and blessed meetings in the several
counties I passed through, and been sweetly refreshed amongst
Friends in my travels.
As soon as I reached LONDON, I hastened Mary Lower and Sarah Fell
(two of my wife’s daughters) to the king, to acquaint him how their
mother was dealt with, and see if they could obtain a full discharge
for her, that she might enjoy her estate and liberty without
molestation. This was somewhat difficult, but by diligent
attendance, they at length obtained it; the king giving command to
Sir John Otway, to signify his pleasure therein by letter to the
sheriff, and others concerned therein in the country. Which letter
Sarah Fell going down with her brother and sister Rous, carried with
her to Lancaster; and by them I wrote to my wife as follows:—
“MY DEAR HEART IN THE TRUTH AND LIFE, THAT CHANGETH NOT,
“It was upon me that Mary Lower and Sarah should go to the king
concerning thy imprisonment, and to Kirby, that the power of the
Lord might appear over them all in thy deliverance. They went, and
then they thought to come down; but it was upon me to stay them a
little longer, that they might follow the business till it was
effected; which it now is, and is here sent. The late declaration
of mine hath been very serviceable, people being generally
satisfied with it. So no more, but my love in the holy Seed.”
G.F.
The declaration here mentioned, was a printed sheet, written upon
occasion of a new persecution stirred up. For by the time I was
returned out of Leicestershire to London, a fresh storm was risen,
occasioned (it was thought) by that tumultuous meeting in a
steeple-house in Wiltshire or Gloucestershire, mentioned a little
before (page 116); from which, it was said, some members of
parliament took advantage to get an act passed against seditious
conventicles;[20] which soon after came forth and was turned against
us, who of all people were free from sedition and tumult. Whereupon
I wrote a declaration, showing from the preamble and terms of the
act, that we were not such a people, nor our meetings such as were
described in that act. I wrote also another short paper on the
occasion of that act against meetings, opening our case to the
magistrates, as follows:—
“O Friends, consider this act, which limits us to five. Is this
doing as ye would be done by? Would ye be so served yourselves? We
own Christ Jesus as well as you, his coming, death, and
resurrection; and if we be contrary-minded to you in some things,
is not this the apostle’s exhortation, ‘to wait till God hath
revealed it?’ Doth not he say, ‘what is not of faith, is sin’?
Seeing we have not faith in things, which ye would have us to do,
would it not be sin in us, if we should act contrary to our faith?
Why should any man have power over another man’s faith, seeing
Christ is the author of it? When the apostles preached in the name
of Jesus, and great multitudes heard them, and the rulers forbade
them to speak any more in that name, did not they bid them judge
whether it were better to obey God or man? Would not this act have
taken hold of the twelve apostles and seventy disciples; for they
met often together? If there had been a law made then, that not
above five should have met with Christ, would not that have been a
hindering of him from meeting with his disciples? Do ye think that
He, who is the wisdom of God, or his disciples, would have obeyed
it? If such a law had been made in the apostles’ days, that not
above five might meet together, who had been different-minded from
either the Jews or the Gentiles, do ye think the churches of
Christ at Corinth, Philippi, Ephesus, Thessalonica, or the rest of
the gathered churches, would have obeyed it? O therefore consider!
for we are Christians, and partake of the nature and life of
Christ. Strive not to limit the Holy One; for God’s power cannot
be limited, and is not to be quenched. Do unto all men as ye would
have them do unto you; for that is the law and the prophets.”
“This is from those who wish you all well, and desire your
everlasting good and prosperity, called Quakers; who seek the
peace and good of all people, though they afflict us, and cause us
to suffer.”
G. F.
As I had endeavoured to soften the magistrates, and to take off the
sharpness of their edge in the execution of the act, so it was upon
me to write a few lines to Friends “to strengthen and encourage them
to stand fast in their testimony, and bear, with Christian patience
and content, the suffering that was coming upon them.” This I did in
the following epistle:—
“My dear Friends, Keep in the faith of God above all outward
things, and in his power, that hath given you dominion over all.
The same power of God is still with you to deliver you as
formerly; for God and his power is the same; his Seed is over all,
and before all; and will be, when that which makes to suffer, is
gone. Be of good faith in that which changeth not; for whatsoever
any do against the truth, it will come upon themselves, and fall
as a millstone on their heads. If the Lord suffer you to be tried,
let all be given up; and look at the Lord and his power, which is
over the whole world, and will remain when the world is gone. In
the Lord’s power and truth rejoice over that which makes to
suffer, in the Seed, which was before it was; for the life, truth,
and power of God is over all. All keep in that; and if ye suffer
in that, it is to the Lord.
“Friends, the Lord hath blessed you in outward things; and now the
Lord may try you, whether your minds be in outward things, or with
the Lord that gave you them? Therefore keep in the Seed, by which
all outward things were made, and which is over them all. What!
shall not I pray, and speak to God, with my face towards heavenly
Jerusalem, according to my wonted time? Let not any one’s Delilah
shave his head, lest he lose his strength; neither rest in its
lap, lest the Philistines be upon you. For your rest is in Christ
Jesus; therefore rest not in anything else.”
G. F.
London, 12th of 2nd Month, 1670.
On the First-day after the act came in force, I went to the meeting
at GRACECHURCH-STREET, where I expected the storm was most likely to
begin. When I came there, I found the street full of people, and a
guard set to keep Friends out of their meeting-house. I went to the
other passage out of Lombard-street, where also I found a guard; but
the court was full of people, and a Friend was speaking amongst
them; but he did not speak long. When he had done, I stood up, and
was moved to say, “Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? it is hard
for thee to kick against that which pricks thee. Then I showed that
it is Saul’s nature, that persecutes still, and that they who
persecute Christ in his members now, where he is made manifest, kick
against that which pricks them. That it was the birth of the flesh
that persecuted the birth born of the Spirit; and that it was the
nature of dogs to tear and devour the sheep, but that we suffered as
sheep that bite not again; for we were a peaceable people, and loved
them that persecuted us.” After I had spoken a while to this effect,
the constable came with an informer and soldiers; and as they pulled
me down, I said, “Blessed are the peacemakers.” The commander of the
soldiers put me among the soldiers, and bid them secure me, saying
to me, “You are the man I looked for.” They took also John Burnyeat
and another Friend, and led us away first to the Exchange, and
afterwards towards Moorfields.
As we went along the streets the people were very moderate; some of
them laughed at the constable, and told him, “we would not run
away.” The informer went with us unknown, till falling into
discourse with one of the company, he said, “It would never be a
good world till all people came to the good old religion that was
two hundred years ago.” Whereupon I asked him, “Art thou a Papist?
What! a Papist informer; for two hundred years ago there was no
other religion but that of the Papists.” He saw he had ensnared
himself, and was vexed at it; for as he went along the streets, I
spoke often to him, and manifested what he was. When we were come to
the mayor’s house, and were in the court-yard, several of the people
that stood about, asked me, “how and for what I was taken?” I
desired them to ask the informer, and also know what his name was;
but he refused to tell his name. Whereupon one of the mayor’s
officers looking out at a window, told him, “he should tell his name
before he went away; for the lord mayor would know by what authority
he intruded himself with soldiers into the execution of those laws
which belonged to the civil magistrate to execute, and not to the
military.” After this, he was eager to be gone; and went to the
porter to be let out. One of the officers called to him, saying,
“Have you brought people here to inform against, and now will you go
away before my lord mayor comes?” Some called to the porter not to
let him out; whereupon he forcibly pulled open the door, and slipped
out. No sooner was he come into the street, than the people gave a
shout, that made the street ring again, crying out, “a Papist
informer! a Papist informer!” We desired the constable and soldiers
to go and rescue him out of the people’s hands, fearing lest they
should do him a mischief. They went, and brought him into the
mayor’s entry, where they stayed a while; but when he went out
again, the people received him with another shout. The soldiers were
fain to go and rescue him once more, and they led him into a house
in an alley, where they persuaded him to change his periwig, and so
he got away unknown.
When the mayor came, we were brought into the room where he was, and
some of his officers would have taken off our hats, which he
perceiving, called to them, and bid them, “let us alone, and not
meddle with our hats; for,” said he, “they are not yet brought
before me in judicature.” So we stood by while he examined some
Presbyterian and Baptist teachers; with whom he was somewhat sharp,
and convicted them. After he had done with them, I was brought up to
the table where he sat; and then the officers took off my hat; and
the mayor said mildly to me, “Mr. Fox, you are an eminent man
amongst those of your profession; pray, will you be instrumental to
dissuade them from meeting in such great numbers? for, seeing Christ
hath promised that where two or three are met in his name, he will
be in the midst of them, and the king and parliament are graciously
pleased to allow of four to meet together to worship God; why will
not you be content to partake both of Christ’s promise to two or
three, and the king’s indulgence to four?” I answered to this
purpose: “Christ’s promise was not to discourage many from meeting
together in his name, but to encourage the few, that the fewest
might not forbear to meet, because of their fewness. But if Christ
hath promised to manifest his presence in the midst of so small an
assembly, where but two or three were gathered in his name, how much
more would his presence abound where two or three hundred are
gathered in his name? I wished him to consider, whether this act
would not have taken hold of Christ, with his twelve apostles and
seventy disciples, if it had been in their time, who used to meet
often together, and that with great numbers? However, I told him
this act did not concern us; for it was made against seditious
meetings, of such as met, under colour and pretence of religion, ‘to
contrive insurrections, as (the act says) late experience had
shown;’ but we had been sufficiently tried and proved, and always
found peaceable, and therefore he should do well to put a difference
between the innocent and the guilty.” He said, “the act was made
against meetings, and a worship not according to the liturgy.” I
told him, “according to” was not the very same thing: and I asked
him, “whether the liturgy was according to the Scriptures? and
whether we might not read Scriptures, and speak Scriptures?” He said
“Yes.” I told him, “this act took hold only of such, as met to plot
and contrive insurrections, as late experience had shown; but they
had never experienced that by us. Because thieves are sometimes on
the road, must not honest men travel? And because plotters and
contrivers have met to do mischief, must not an honest, peaceable
people meet to do good? If we had been a people that met to plot and
contrive insurrections, &c., we might have drawn ourselves into
fours; for four might do more mischief in plotting than if there
were four hundred, because four might speak out their minds more
freely one to another than four hundred could. Therefore, we being
innocent, and not the people this act concerns, we keep our meetings
as we used to do: and, I said, I believed that he knew in his
conscience we were innocent.” After some more discourse, he took our
names and the places where we lodged, and at length, as the informer
was gone, set us at liberty.
Being set at liberty, the Friends with me asked me “whither I would
go?” I told them, “to Gracechurch Street meeting again, if it were
not over.” When we came there, the people were generally gone; only
some few stood at the gate. We went into Gerrard Roberts’s house;
and from thence I sent out to know how the other meetings in the
city were. I understood that at some of the meeting-places Friends
were kept out; at others they were taken, but set at liberty again a
few days after. A glorious time it was, for the Lord’s power came
over all, and his everlasting truth got renown. For as fast as some
that were speaking were taken down, others were moved of the Lord to
stand up and speak, to the admiration of the people; and the more,
because many Baptists and other sectaries left their public
meetings, and came to see how the Quakers would stand. As for the
informer aforesaid, he was so frightened, that there durst hardly
any informer appear publicly again in London for some time after.
But the mayor, whose name was Samuel Starling, though he carried
himself smoothly towards us, proved afterwards a very great
persecutor of our Friends, many of whom he cast into prison, as may
be seen in the trials of W. Penn, W. Mead, and others, at the Old
Bailey this year.[21]
After some time the heat of persecution in London began to abate,
and meetings were quieter there. Being now clear of the city, I went
to visit Friends in the country; and attended several meetings in
MIDDLESEX, BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, and OXFORDSHIRE, which were quiet,
though in some places there was much threatening. At READING most of
the Friends were in prison, and I went to visit them. When I had
been a while with them, the Friends that were prisoners gathered
together, and several other persons came in; so that I had a fine
opportunity amongst them, and “declared the Word of Life,
encouraging them in the truth; and they were refreshed in feeling
the presence and power of the Lord amongst them.” When the meeting
was ended, the jailer understanding that I was there, the Friends
were concerned how to get me out safe again; for they feared lest he
should stop me. But after I had stayed a while, and eaten with them,
I went down stairs, and the jailer being at the door, I put my hand
in my pocket, which he had such an eye to, hoping to get something
from me, that he asked me no question. So I gave him something, and
bade him “be kind and civil to my Friends in prison, whom I came to
visit;” and he let me pass out without interruption. But soon after
Isaac Penington coming to visit them, he stopped him, and caused him
to be made a prisoner.[22]
Next morning I rode about fourteen miles to a meeting at BANGHURST
in HAMPSHIRE, Thomas Briggs being with me. When we came into the
parish, some sober people told us, that “the priest of the town was
an envious man, and threatened us.” We went on to the meeting, which
was large; and after some time Thomas Briggs stood up and spoke. It
seems the priest had got a warrant, and sent the constables and
other officers with it. They came to the house, stayed a while, and
then went away again, without coming into the meeting; so we in the
meeting did not know of their being there. After Thomas Briggs had
done speaking, I was moved of the Lord to stand up, and declare the
Word of Life to the people; and a precious meeting we had. When it
was ended and risen, I heard a great clatter in the yard; and when
we came out, the man of the house told us, “that the officers had
been in the house before, but did not come into the meeting, going
away without doing anything; and that now the priest in a great rage
had sent them again, and his own servant with them.” But the meeting
being ended before they came, they could do nothing. Thus the good
providence of the Lord preserved us from the wicked design of the
envious priest.
Thence we went to a Friend’s house on the edge of BERKSHIRE, where
several Friends came to visit us. Afterwards we passed into SURREY,
and had many precious meetings, till we came to Stephen Smith’s,
near GUILDFORD, where great persecution had been, and very much
property taken away from Friends for their meetings; and under great
threatenings they were at that time; yet we had several blessed
meetings thereabouts, and the Lord’s power was over all, in and by
which we were preserved.
We went into SUSSEX, by Richard Baxe’s, where we had a large,
precious, quiet meeting, though the constables had given out
threatenings before. I had many more meetings in that county; and
though there were some threatenings, they were peaceable; and
Friends were refreshed, and established upon the foundation of God,
that stands sure. When I had thoroughly visited SUSSEX, I went into
KENT, and had many glorious and precious meetings in several parts
of that county. I went to a meeting near DEAL, which was very large;
and returning from thence to CANTERBURY, visited Friends there. I
then passed into the ISLE OF SHEPPEY, where I stayed two or three
days; and thither came Alexander Parker, George Whitehead, and John
Rous to me.
Next day, finding my service for the Lord finished there, we passed
towards ROCHESTER. On the way, as I was walking down a hill, a great
weight and oppression fell upon my spirit; I got on my horse again,
but the weight remained so that I was hardly able to ride. At length
we came to Rochester, but I was much spent, being so extremely laden
and burdened with the world’s spirits, that my life was oppressed
under them. I got with difficulty to GRAVESEND, and lay at an inn
there; but could hardly either eat or sleep. The next day John Rous
and Alexander Parker went for London; and John Stubbs being come to
me, we went over the ferry into ESSEX. We came to HORNCHURCH, where
was a meeting on First-day. After it I rode with great uneasiness to
STRATFORD, to a Friend’s house, whose name was Williams, and who had
formerly been a captain. Here I lay exceedingly weak, and at last
lost both hearing and sight. Several Friends came to me from London:
and I told them, that “I should be as a sign to such as would not
see, and such as would not hear the truth.” In this condition I
continued some time. Several came about me; and though I could not
see their persons, I felt and discerned their spirits, who were
honest-hearted, and who were not. Divers Friends who practised
physic, came to see me, and would have given me medicines, but I was
not to meddle with any; for I was sensible I had a travail to go
through; and therefore desired none but solid, weighty Friends might
be about me. Under great sufferings and travails, sorrows and
oppressions, I lay for several weeks, whereby I was brought so low
and weak in body, that few thought I could live. Some that were with
me went away, saying, “they would not see me die;” and it was
reported both in London and in the country, that I was deceased; but
I felt the Lord’s power inwardly supporting me. When they that were
about me had given me up to die, I spoke to them to get a coach to
carry me to Gerrard Roberts’s, about twelve miles off; for I found
it was my place to go thither. I had now recovered a little
glimmering sight, so that I could discern the people and fields as I
went, and that was all. When I came to Gerrard’s, he was very weak:
and I was moved to speak to him, and encourage him.
After I had stayed about three weeks there, it was with me to go to
Enfield. Friends were afraid of my removing; but I told them I might
safely go. When I had taken my leave of Gerrard, and was come to
ENFIELD, I went first to visit Amor Stoddart, who lay very weak, and
almost speechless. I was moved to tell him, “he had been faithful as
a man, and faithful to God; and that the immortal seed of life was
his crown.” Many more words I was moved to speak to him, though I
was then so weak I was hardly able to stand; and within a few days
after, Amor died. I went to the widow Dry’s at Enfield, where I lay
all that winter, warring in spirit with the evil spirits of the
world, that warred against truth and Friends. For there were great
persecutions at this time; some meeting-houses were pulled down, and
many were broken up by soldiers. Sometimes a troop of horse, or a
company of foot came; and some broke their swords, carbines,
muskets, and pikes, with beating Friends; and many they wounded, so
that their blood lay in the streets. Amongst others that were active
in this cruel persecution at London, my old adversary Colonel Kirby
was one; who, with a company of foot, went to break up several
meetings; and he would often enquire for me at the meetings he broke
up. One time as he went over the water to Horsleydown, there
happening some scuffle between some of his soldiers and some of the
watermen, he bid his men “fire at them.” They did so, and killed
some.
I was under great sufferings at this time, beyond what I have words
to declare. For I was brought into the deep, and saw all the
religions of the world, and people that lived in them, and the
priests that held them up, who were as a company of men-eaters,
eating up the people like bread, and gnawing the flesh from off
their bones. But as for true religion and worship, and ministers of
God, alack! I saw there were none amongst those of the world that
pretended to it. For they that pretended to be the church, were but
a company of men-eaters, men of cruel visages, and of long teeth;
and, though they had cried against the men-eaters in America, I saw
they were in the same nature. And as the great professing Jews did
“eat up God’s people like bread,” and the false prophets and priests
then preached peace to people, so long as they “put into their
mouths and fed them;” but if they fed them not, they prepared war
against them, “they ate their flesh off their bones, and chopped
them as for the caldron;” so these that profess themselves
Christians now (both priests and professors,) and are not in the
same power and Spirit that Christ and the holy prophets and apostles
were in, are in the same nature that the old professing Jews were
in, and are men-eaters as well as they. These stirred up persecution
and set the wicked informers to work; so that a Friend could hardly
speak a few words in a private family, before they sat down to eat
meat, but some were ready to inform against them. A particular
instance of which I have heard as follows:—
At Droitwich, John Cartwright came to a Friend’s house, and being
moved of the Lord to speak a few words before he sat down to supper,
there came an informer, and stood hearkening under the window. When
he had heard the Friend speak, hoping to get some gain to himself,
he went and informed, and got a warrant to distrain his goods, under
pretence that there was a meeting at his house; whereas there were
none in the house at that time, but the Friend, the man of the
house, his wife, and their maid-servant. But this evil-minded man,
as he came back with his warrant in the night, fell off his horse,
and broke his neck. So there was a wretched end of a wicked
informer, who hoped to enrich himself by spoiling Friends; but the
Lord prevented him, and cut him off in his wickedness.
Now, though it was a cruel, bloody, persecuting time, yet the Lord’s
power went over all, and his everlasting Seed prevailed; and Friends
were made to stand firm and faithful in the Lord’s power. Some sober
people of other professions would say, “if Friends did not stand,
the nation would run into debauchery.”
Though by reason of my weakness, I could not travel amongst Friends
as I used to do, yet in the motion of life, I sent the following
lines as an encouraging testimony to them:—
“MY DEAR FRIENDS,
“The Seed is above all. In it walk: in which ye all have life. Be
not amazed at the weather; for always the just suffered by the
unjust, but the just had the dominion. All along ye may see, by
faith the mountains were subdued; and the rage of the wicked, and
his fiery darts, were quenched. Though the waves and storms are
high, yet your faith will keep you so as to swim above them; for
they are but for a time, and the truth is without time. Therefore
keep on the mountain of holiness, ye who are led to it by the
light where nothing shall hurt. Do not think that anything will
outlast the truth, which standeth sure; and is over that which is
out of the truth; for the good will overcome the evil; the light,
darkness; the life, death; virtue, vice; and righteousness,
unrighteousness. The false prophet cannot overcome the true; but
the true prophet, Christ, will overcome all the false. So be
faithful, and live in that which doth not think the time long.”
G.F.
After some time it pleased the Lord to allay the heat of this
violent persecution; and I felt in spirit an overcoming of the
spirits of those men-eaters, that had stirred it up, and carried it
on to that height of cruelty, though I was outwardly very weak. And
I plainly felt, and those Friends that were with me, and that came
to visit me, took notice, that as the persecution ceased, I came
from under the travails and sufferings, that had lain with such
weight upon me; so that towards the spring I began to recover, and
to walk up and down, beyond the expectation of many, who did not
think I could ever have gone abroad again.
Whilst I was under this spiritual suffering, the state of the New
Jerusalem, which comes down out of heaven, was opened to me; which
some carnal-minded people had looked upon to be like an outward city
dropped out of the elements. I saw the beauty and glory of it, the
length, the breadth, and the height thereof, all in complete
proportion. I saw, that all who are within the light of Christ, and
in his faith, which he is the author of; and in the Spirit, the Holy
Ghost, which Christ and the holy prophets and apostles were in; and
within the grace, and truth, and power of God, which are the walls
of the city;—such are within the city, are members of it, and have
right to eat of the tree of life, which yields her fruit every
month, and whose leaves are for the healing of the nations. But they
that are out of the grace, truth, light, Spirit, and power of God;
they who resist the Holy Ghost, quench, vex, and grieve the Spirit
of God; who hate the light, turn the grace of God into wantonness,
and do despite to the Spirit of Grace; they who have erred from the
faith, and made shipwreck of it and of a good conscience, who abuse
the power of God, and despise prophesying, revelation, and
inspiration;—these are the dogs and unbelievers that are without the
city. These make up the great city Babylon, confusion, and her cage,
the power of darkness; and the evil spirit of error surrounds and
covers them over. In this great city Babylon are the false prophets,
in the false power and false spirit; the beast, in the dragon’s
power, and the whore that is gone a whoring from the Spirit of God,
and from Christ her husband. But the Lord’s power is over all this
power of darkness, false prophets, and their worshippers, who are
for the lake which burns with fire.
Many things more did I see concerning the heavenly city, the New
Jerusalem, which are hard to be uttered, and would be hard to be
received. But, in short, this holy city is within the light, and all
that are within the light, are within the city; the gates whereof
stand open all the day (for there is no night there,) and all may
come in. Christ’s blood being shed for every man, he tasted death
for every man, and enlighteneth every man that cometh into the
world; and his grace that brings salvation having appeared to all
men, there is no place or language where his voice may not be heard.
The Christians in the primitive times were called by Christ, “a city
set upon a hill;” they were also called “the light of the world,”
and “the salt of the earth;” but when Christians lose the light, and
salt, and power of God, then they came to be trodden under foot,
like unsavoury salt. Even as the Jews, who while they kept the law
of God, were preserved above all nations; but when they turned their
backs on God and his law, they were trodden under foot of other
nations. Adam and Eve, while they obeyed God, were kept in his image
and in the Paradise of God, in dominion over all the works of his
hands; but when they disobeyed God, they lost his image, the
righteousness and the holiness in which they were made; they lost
their dominion, were driven out of paradise; and so fell under the
dark power of Satan, and came under the chains of darkness. But the
promise of God was, “that the Seed of the woman, Christ Jesus,
should bruise the serpent’s head,”—should break his power and
authority, which had led into captivity, and had held man therein.
So Christ, who is the first and the last, sets man free, and is the
resurrection of the just and unjust, the judge of the quick and
dead; and they that are in him are invested with everlasting rest
and peace, out of all the labours, and travails, and miseries of
Adam in the fall. So he is sufficient and of ability to restore man
into the state he was in before he fell; and not into that state
only, but into that also that never fell, even to himself.
I had also in this time a great exercise and travail of spirit upon
me, concerning the powers and rulers of these nations, from the
sense I had of the many tender visitations and faithful warnings,
that had been given them, and of their great abuse thereof, who had
refused to hear, and rejected the counsel of the Lord. And though I
knew Friends would be clear of their blood, yet I could not but
mourn over them, and gave forth these few lines following concerning
them:—
“We have given them a visitation, have faithfully warned them,
have declared to them our innocency and uprightness, and that we
never did any hurt to the king, nor to any of his people. We have
nothing in our hearts but love and goodwill to him and his people,
and desire their eternal welfare. But if they will not hear, the
day of judgment and of sorrow, of torment, misery, and sudden
destruction, will come from the Lord upon them, that have been the
cause of the sufferings of many thousands of simple, innocent,
harmless people that have done them no hurt, nor have had any
ill-will towards him or them; but have desired their eternal good
for the eternal truth’s sake. Destruction will come upon them that
turn the sword backward. Therefore do not blind your eyes, the
Lord will bring swift destruction and misery upon you; surely he
will do it, and will relieve his innocent people; who have groaned
for deliverance from under your oppression, and have also groaned
for your deliverance out of wickedness. Blessed be the Lord God,
that he hath a people in this nation, that seek the good of all
men upon the face of the earth; for we have the mind of the Lord
Jesus Christ, that desires not the death of a sinner, but the
salvation and good of all. Blessed be the name of the Lord our God
for ever.”
G. F.
While I continued at Enfield, a sense came upon me of a hurt that
sometimes happened, by persons under the profession of truth coming
out of one country into another, to take a husband or wife amongst
Friends, where they were strangers, and it was not known whether
they were clear and orderly, or not. And it opened in me to
recommend the following method unto Friends for preventing such
inconveniences:—
“All Friends that marry, whether they be men or women, if they
come out of another nation, island, or county, let them bring a
certificate from the men’s meeting of that county, nation, or
island from which they came, to the men’s meeting where they
propose their intention of marriage. For the men’s meeting being
made up of the faithful, this will stop all wrong spirits from
roving up and down. When any come with a certificate, or letter of
recommendation from one men’s meeting to another, one is refreshed
by another, and can set their hands and hearts to the thing. This
will prevent a great deal of trouble. And then what ye have to say
to them in the power of God, in admonishing and instructing them,
ye are left to the power and Spirit of God to do it, and to let
them know the duty of marriage, and what it is; that there may be
unity and concord in the Spirit, and power, and light, and wisdom
of God, throughout all the men’s meetings in the whole world, in
one, in the life.
“Let copies of this be sent to every county, and nation, and
island where Friends are, that so all things may be kept holy, and
pure, and righteous, in unity and peace; and God over all may be
glorified among you, his lot, his people and inheritance, who are
his adopted sons and daughters, and heirs of his life. So no more,
but my love in that which changeth not.”
G. F.
14th of 1st Month, 1670-1.
When I had recovered, so that I could walk a little, I went from
Enfield to Gerrard Roberts’s again, and thence to the women’s school
at SHACKLEWELL, and so to the meeting at Gracechurch Street, LONDON;
where, though I was yet but weak, the Lord’s power upheld and
enabled me to declare his eternal Word of life.
About this time I was moved to pray to the Lord as follows:—
“O Lord God Almighty! Prosper truth, and preserve justice and
equity in the land! Bring down all injustice and iniquity,
oppression and falsehood, cruelty and unmercifulness in the land;
that mercy and righteousness may flourish!
“O Lord God! Set up and establish verity, and preserve it in the
land! Bring down in the land all debauchery and vice, whoredoms
and fornication, and this raping spirit, which causeth people to
have no esteem of thee, O God! nor of their own souls or bodies;
nor of Christianity, modesty, or humanity.
“O Lord! Put it in the magistrates’ hearts to bring down all this
ungodliness, violence, and cruelty, profaneness, cursing, and
swearing; and to put down all those lewd houses and play-houses,
which corrupt youth and people, and lead them from thy kingdom,
where no unclean thing can enter, neither shall come! Such works
lead people to hell! Lord! In mercy bring down all these things in
the nation, to stop thy wrath, O God! from coming on the land.”
G. F.
This Prayer was written at night, the 17th
of the 2nd Month, 1671.
-----
Footnote 19:
The date of the marriage of George Fox and Margaret Fell, in the
Bristol Register of Friends, is 27th of 8th Month, 1669.
Margaret Fell, it will be remembered, was the widow of Judge Fell
of Swarthmore Hall. It is remarkable with what high esteem and
Christian love this devoted woman appears to have been regarded by
our early and most eminent Friends. She seems to have been
generally acknowledged as a faithful nursing-mother of the flock;
and she often addressed them, when in bonds or otherwise, with
letters of consolation and encouragement. (See numerous letters to
and from her in _Barclay’s Letters, &c., of Early Friends_). It is
also probable she contributed largely from her means to the relief
of their outward necessities. Having faithfully fulfilled her
allotted labours, she died much beloved and lamented, at her own
house at Swarthmore, in 1702, being near the eighty-eighth year of
her age, and having survived George Fox about twelve years.
Some remarkable expressions of assured happiness fell from her
lips during her last illness, if that could be called an illness,
which was the decay of nature. At one time, under the meltings of
heavenly love, she said, “Oh my sweet Lord! into thy holy bosom do
I commit myself freely; not desiring to live in this troublesome,
painful world—it is all nothing to me—for my Maker is my husband.”
A little before her departure she called her daughter Rachel to
her, saying, “Take me in thy arms”—after which she said, “I am in
peace!”
Footnote 20:
The “Conventicle Act” so called, first passed in 1664, was renewed
at the above time (1670), with increased rigour. The penalties
were £5, or three months to the house of correction, for the first
offence of attending a conventicle, if above sixteen years of age;
£10, or six months, for the second; _transportation_ for seven
years for the third, with sequestration of estate, or distraint
for the charges; and _five years’_ SLAVERY IN THE COLONIES, by
contract between the sheriff and a purchaser, on being sent
abroad, in defect of property to distrain upon; _or out of which
to pay_ £100 _as a liberating fine_. This fine to be repeated,
and £100 added as oft as he should offend afterwards, or
_transportation_, &c. (with _death_ for returning), and the
forfeiture of his _life-interest in his estate_.
_Conventicles to be broken up by an armed force_, under the
direction of lieutenants of counties, sheriffs, &c. Even a _femme
covert_ could not escape; but must be redeemed by her husband, at
the price of £40; or go to prison, or be transported with him. Nor
could a _peer of the realm_: he must be fined £10 for the first
offence, £20 for the second, and for the third, be tried by his
peers. The fines to be levied by distress, by warrant of any two
justices, or a chief magistrate.
The force of this Act was directed against the _Quakers_, by
inserting, in the latter part of it, three sections, which brought
_their refusal to take an oath_ under its full penalties; and they
suffered dreadfully through it! In the streets, or where they met
to assert their religious rights, they were dragooned; in court
they had oaths tendered, and were convicted under this Act upon
their refusal.
“This Act,” says Besse, “was forthwith put into a rigorous
execution, and many hungry informers [for the sake of their
_third_ of the penalties] _made it their business_ to live upon
the spoil and ruin of conscientious people.” Friends were great
sufferers thereby, of the nature of which the reader may have some
idea by reference to “Sufferings under the Conventicle Act;”
_Select Miscellanies_, vol. iii., pp. 220-245.
Footnote 21:
The celebrated trial of Penn and Mead at the Old Bailey, above
alluded to, may be seen at full length in Clarkson’s _Life of
Penn_—“a trial which, for the good it has done to posterity, ought
to be engraved on tablets of the most durable marble.” It was
certainly one of those events which, in conjunction with others of
a similar sort, by showing the inadequacy of punishment for
religion to its supposed end, not only corrected and improved the
notions of succeeding ages in this respect, but, by so doing,
lessened the ravages of persecution, and the enmity between man
and man. Nor ought posterity to be less grateful for it as a
monument of the ferocity and corrupt usages of former times; for,
contrasting these with the notions and customs of our own age, we
see the improvement of our social and moral condition. Newgate is
no longer the receptacle of innocent individuals suffering for
conscience’ sake. In our courts of law we see an order, a decorum,
and an administration of justice, unknown at the period of this
memorable trial. Nor will the prospect be less grateful, if we
quit the present for a moment, and direct our eyes to the future.
We have the best reason to hope, on contemplating the signs of the
times, that the day is approaching when the Christian religion,
which is capable of cementing men in the strongest possible union,
and for the noblest purposes, will be restored to its primitive
purity, and made a blessing to all the dwellers upon the earth.
Footnote 22:
Isaac Penington has been mentioned before, but only cursorily, in
the whole of this Journal; not often meeting with George Fox. But
he was one of the most eminent, experienced, and beloved, of the
Early Friends. He was well descended as to his worldly parentage,
being the eldest son of Alderman Penington, who was two years
successively Mayor of London, and a noted member of the Long
Parliament. Born about the year 1617, he received a liberal
education, having, according to Penn, “all the advantages the
schools and universities of his own country could give, joined
with the conversation of some of the most learned and considerable
men of that time.”
From childhood, Isaac Penington was religiously inclined, and, in
a paper written by himself, and found after his death amongst his
writings, we have such a living portrait of a deeply-exercised
mind, as demonstrates that godliness with him was indeed the “one
thing needful.” “In the sense of my lost estate,” he writes, “I
sought after the Lord; I read the Scriptures; I watched over mine
own heart; and whatever I read in the Scriptures, as the way of
God, to my understanding, I gave myself to the faithful practice
of.” He became fully convinced of the principles of Friends, and
joined that despised people—becoming a faithful sufferer for the
cause of Christ.
“Early believers in the light of Truth
Dwelt not at ease in Zion. They endured
Conflicts and trials, and imprisonments.
Even the humble Penington, whose mind
Seemed purged and purified from dross
Of human nature—who appeared as meek
And harmless as an infant—was compelled
To dwell in loathsome prisons.”
He was six times in jail, some of his imprisonments being long,
yet borne with great quietness and constancy of mind. His first
imprisonment was in Aylesbury jail in 1661 and 1662, being
committed there for worshipping God in his own house. He was kept
there seventeen weeks, great part of it in winter—in a cold and
very incommodious room without a chimney, from which usage he
contracted so severe an indisposition, that for several weeks
after he was unable to turn himself in his bed.
In the sixty-third year of his age “he died as he lived, in the
faith that overcomes the world.”
CHAPTER IV.
1671-1672.—His wife being still detained a prisoner, George Fox puts
two women Friends upon going to the king to procure her
discharge, which he granted under the broad seal, to clear her
person and estate after being a prisoner under premunire ten
years—he sails for the plantations in America with several other
Friends—chased by a Sallee man-of-war—the master in a strait
asks advice of George Fox, who seeks counsel of the Lord, and is
assured of their preservation—the event verifies the
prediction—they land at Barbadoes after a seven weeks’ passage—a
man in the island, who was greatly incensed against George Fox
without just cause, and who had threatened his life, died a few
days before his landing—is laid up for some weeks—writes to
Friends in England—exhorts Friends to care and watchfulness in
regard to marriages, keeping registers and records, providing
burial grounds, &c.—to deal mildly with their negroes, and,
after certain years of servitude, to set them free—writes a
further exhortation to Friends in England—visits the governor,
who is very kind—has many large meetings, and there is a great
convincement; Colonel Lyne testifies how much Friends exalt
Christ in all his offices beyond what he had ever heard—the
priests rage, and try in vain to stir up persecution—there is
much clamour and cavilling against Friends, and many slanders
and false reports are issued, which George Fox answers in a
paper addressed to the governor—the governor visits him—writes
to his wife—sails for Jamaica, where he has many meetings, and
many are convinced—Elizabeth Hooton dies there.
I mentioned before, that, upon the notice I received of my wife’s
being imprisoned again, I sent two of her daughters to the king, and
they procured his order to the sheriff of Lancashire, for her
discharge. But though I expected she would be set at liberty
thereby, this violent storm of persecution coming suddenly on, the
persecutors there found means to hold her still in prison. But now
the persecution a little ceasing, I was moved to speak to Martha
Fisher and another woman Friend, to go to the king about her
liberty. They went in faith, and in the Lord’s power, who gave them
favour with the king, so that he granted a discharge under the
broad-seal, to clear both her and her estate, after she had been ten
years a prisoner, and premunired; the like whereof was scarcely to
be heard of in England. I sent down the discharge forthwith by a
Friend; by whom also I wrote to her, informing her how to get it
delivered to the justices, and acquainting her that it was upon me
from the Lord to go beyond the seas to visit America; and therefore
desired her to hasten to London, as soon as she could conveniently,
after she had obtained her liberty, because the ship was then
fitting for the voyage. In the meantime I got to Kingston, and
stayed at John Rous’s till my wife came up, and then I began to
prepare for the voyage. But the Yearly Meeting being near at hand, I
stayed till that was over. Many Friends came up to it from all parts
of the nation, and a very large and precious meeting it was; for the
Lord’s power was over all, and his glorious everlastingly-renowned
Seed of life was exalted above all.
After this meeting was over, and I had finished my services for the
Lord in England, the ship and the Friends that intended to go with
me being ready, I went to GRAVESEND on the 12th of 6th month, my
wife and several Friends accompanying me to the Downs. We went from
Wapping in a barge to the ship, which lay a little below Gravesend,
and there we found the Friends that were bound for the voyage with
me, who had gone down to the ship the night before. Their names were
Thomas Briggs, William Edmundson, John Rous, John Stubbs, Solomon
Eccles, James Lancaster, John Cartwright, Robert Widders, George
Pattison, John Hull, Elizabeth Hooton, and Elizabeth Miers. The
vessel was a yacht, called the _Industry_; the captain’s name Thomas
Forster, and the number of passengers about fifty. I lay that night
on board, but most of the Friends at Gravesend.
Early next morning the passengers, and those Friends that intended
to accompany us to the Downs, being come on board, we took our leave
in great tenderness of those that came with us to Gravesend only,
and set sail about six in the morning for the DOWNS. Having a fair
wind, we out-sailed all the ships that were outward-bound, and got
thither by evening. Some of us went ashore that night, and lodged at
DEAL; where, we understood, an officer had orders from the governor
to take our names in writing; which he did next morning, though we
told him they had been taken at Gravesend. In the afternoon, the
wind serving, I took leave of my wife and other Friends, and went on
board. Before we could sail, there being two of the king’s frigates
riding in the DOWNS, the captain of one of them sent his
press-master on board us, who took three of our seamen. This would
certainly have delayed, if not wholly prevented, our voyage, had not
the captain of the other frigate, being informed of the leakiness of
our vessel, and the length of our voyage, in compassion and much
civility, spared us two of his own men. Before this was over, a
custom-house officer came on board to peruse packets and get fees;
so that we were kept from sailing till about sunset; during which
delay a very considerable number of merchantmen, outward-bound, were
got several leagues before us. Being clear, we set sail in the
evening, and next morning overtook part of that fleet about the
height of Dover. We soon reached the rest, and in a little time left
them all behind; for our yacht was counted a very swift sailer. But
she was very leaky, so that the seamen and some of the passengers
did, for the most part, pump day and night. One day they observed,
that in two hours’ time she sucked in sixteen inches of water in the
well.
When we had been about three weeks at sea, one afternoon we spied a
vessel about four leagues astern of us. Our master said it was a
Sallee man-of-war, that seemed to give us chase. Our master said,
“Come, let us go to supper, and when it grows dark we shall lose
him.” This he spoke to please and pacify the passengers, some of
whom began to be very apprehensive of the danger. But Friends were
well satisfied in themselves, having faith in God, and no fear upon
their spirits. When the sun was gone down, I saw the ship out of my
cabin making towards us. When it grew dark, we altered our course to
miss her; but she altered also, and gained upon us. At night the
master and others came into my cabin, and asked me, “what they
should do?” I told them, “I was no mariner;” and I asked them, “what
they thought was best to do?” They said, “There were but two ways,
either to outrun him, or to tack about, and hold the same course we
were going before.” I told them, “if he were a thief, they might be
sure he would tack about too; and as for outrunning him, it was to
no purpose to talk of that, for they saw he sailed faster than we.”
They asked me again “what they should do? for,” they said, “if the
mariners had taken Paul’s counsel they had not come to the damage
they did.” I answered, “it was a trial of faith, and therefore the
Lord was to be waited on for counsel.” So retiring in spirit, the
Lord showed me, “that his life and power was placed between us and
the ship that pursued us.” I told this to the master and the rest,
and that our best way was to tack about and steer our right course.
I desired them also to put out all their candles, but the one they
steered by, and to speak to all the passengers to be still and
quiet. About eleven at night, the watch called and said, “they were
just upon us.” That disquieted some of the passengers; whereupon I
sat up in my cabin, and looking through the porthole, the moon being
not quite down, I saw them very near us. I was getting up to go out
of the cabin; but remembering the word of the Lord, “that his life
and power was placed between us and them,” I lay down again. The
master and some of the seamen came again and asked me, “if they
might not steer such a point?” I told them, “they might do as they
would.” By this time the moon was quite down, a fresh gale arose,
and the Lord hid us from them; and we sailed briskly on and saw them
no more. The next day, being the first day of the week, we had a
public meeting in the ship, as we usually had on that day throughout
the voyage, and the Lord’s presence was greatly among us. And I
desired the people “to mind the mercies of the Lord, who had
delivered them; for they might have been all in the Turks’ hands, by
that time had not the Lord’s hand saved them.” About a week after,
the master and some of the seamen endeavoured to persuade the
passengers, that it was not a Turkish pirate that chased us, but a
merchantman going to the Canaries. When I heard of it, I asked them,
“Why then did they speak so to me? why did they trouble the
passengers? and why did they tack about from him and alter their
course?” I told them “they should take heed of slighting the mercies
of God.”
Afterwards, while we were at Barbadoes, there came in a merchant
from Sallee, and told the people, “that one of the Sallee men-of-war
saw a monstrous yacht at sea, the greatest that ever he saw, and had
her in chase, and was just upon her, but that there was a spirit in
her that he could not take.” This confirmed us in the belief that it
was a Sallee-man we saw make after us, and that it was the Lord that
delivered us out of his hands.
I was not sea-sick during the voyage, as many of the Friends and
other passengers were; but the many hurts and bruises I had formerly
received, and the infirmities I had contracted in England by extreme
cold and hardships, that I had undergone in many long and sore
imprisonments, returned upon me at sea; so that I was very ill in my
stomach and full of violent pains in my bones and limbs. This was
after I had been at sea about a month. For about three weeks after I
came first to sea, I perspired abundantly, chiefly my head, and my
body broke out in pimples, and my legs and feet swelled extremely,
so that my stockings and slippers could not be drawn on without
difficulty and great pain. Suddenly the sweating ceased, so that
when I came into the hot climate, where others perspired most
freely, I could not perspire at all; but my flesh was hot, dry, and
burning; and that which broke out in pimples, struck in again to my
stomach and heart, so that I was very ill, and weak beyond
expression. Thus I continued during the rest of the voyage, which
was about a month; for we were above seven weeks at sea.
On the third of the eighth month, early in the morning, we
discovered the Island of BARBADOES, but it was between nine and ten
at night ere we came to anchor in CARLISLE BAY. We got on shore as
soon as we could, and I, with some others, walked to a Friend’s
house, a merchant, whose name was Richard Forstall, above a quarter
of a mile from the bridge. But being very ill and weak, I was so
tired with that little walk, that I was in a manner spent by the
time I got thither. There I abode very ill for several days, and
though they several times gave me things to make me perspire, they
could not effect it. But what they gave me did rather parch and dry
up my body, and made me probably worse than otherwise I might have
been. Thus I continued about three weeks after I landed, having much
pain in my bones, joints, and whole body, so that I could hardly get
any rest; yet I was pretty cheerful, and my spirit kept above it
all. Neither did my illness take me off from the service of truth,
but both while I was at sea, and after I came to Barbadoes, before I
was able to travel about, I gave forth several papers (having a
Friend to write for me), some of which I sent by the first
conveyance for England to be printed.
After I had rested three or four days at Richard Forstall’s, where
many Friends came to visit me, John Rous[23] having borrowed a coach
of Colonel Chamberlain, came to fetch me to his father, Thomas
Rous’s house.[23] But it was late ere we could get thither, and
little or no rest could I take that night. A few days after, Colonel
Chamberlain, who had so kindly lent his coach, paid me a visit, and
was very courteous towards me.
Soon after I came into the island, I was informed of a remarkable
occurrence, wherein the justice of God did eminently appear. It was
thus:—
There was a young man of Barbadoes, whose name was John Drakes, (a
person of some note in the world’s account, but a common swearer and
wicked man,) who, when in London, had a mind to marry a Friend’s
daughter, left by her mother very young, and with a considerable
portion, to the care and government of several Friends, whereof I
was one. He made application to me, that he might have my consent to
marry this young maid. I told him, “I was one of her overseers
appointed by her mother, who was a widow, to take care of her; that
if her mother had intended her for a match to any man of the world,
she would have disposed of her accordingly; but she committed her to
us, that she might be trained up in the fear of the Lord, and
therefore I should betray the trust reposed in me, if I should
consent that he who was out of the fear of God, should marry her;
which I would not do.” When he saw that he could not obtain his
desire, he returned to Barbadoes with great offence of mind against
me, but without just cause. Afterwards, when he heard I was coming
to Barbadoes, he swore desperately, and threatened, that “if he
could possibly procure it, he would have me burned to death when I
came there.” Which a Friend hearing, asked him, “what had I done to
him, that he was so violent against me?” He would not answer, but
said again, “I’ll have him burned.” Whereupon the Friend replied,
“Do not march on too furiously, lest thou come too soon to thy
journey’s end.” About ten days after, he was struck with a violent
burning fever, of which he died; and by which his body was so
scorched, that the people said, “it was as black as a coal.” Three
days before I landed, his body was laid in the dust. This was taken
notice of as a sad example.
While I continued so weak, that I could not go abroad to meetings,
the other Friends that came over with me, bestirred themselves in
the Lord’s work. The day but one after we landed, they had a great
meeting at the bridge, and after that several others in different
parts of the island; which alarmed the people of all sorts, so that
many came to our meetings, and some of the chief rank. For they had
got my name, understanding I was come upon the island, and expected
to see me at those meetings, not knowing that I was unable to go
abroad. And indeed, my weakness continued the longer on me, by
reason that my spirit was much pressed down at first with the filth
and dirt and unrighteousness of the people, which lay as a heavy
weight and load upon me. But after I had been above a month upon the
island, my spirit became somewhat easier, and I began to recover in
some measure my health and strength, and to get abroad among
Friends. In the meantime, having opportunity to send to England, I
wrote to Friends there, to let them know how it was with me, as
follows:—
“DEAR FRIENDS,
“I have been very weak these seven weeks past, and not able to
write myself. My desire is to you and for you all, that ye may
live in the fear of God, and in love one unto another, and be
subject one to another in the fear of God. I have been weaker in
my body than ever I was in my life that I remember, yea, my pains
have been such as I cannot express; yet my heart and spirit is
strong. I have hardly perspired these seven weeks past, though I
am come into a very hot climate, where hardly any but are well
nigh continually perspiring; but as for me, my old bruises, colds,
numbness, and pains, struck inwardly, even to my very heart. So
that I have taken little rest, and the chief things that were
comfortable to my stomach, were a little water and powdered
ginger; but now I begin to drink a little beer as well as water,
and sometimes a little wine and water mixed. Great pains and
travails I have felt, and in measure am under; but it is well, my
life is over all. This island was to me as all on a fire ere I
came to it, but now it is somewhat quenched and abated. I came in
weakness amongst those that are strong, and have so continued; but
now I am got a little cheery, and over it. Many Friends, and some
considerable persons of the world, have been with me. I tired out
my body much when amongst you in England; it is the Lord’s power
that helps me; therefore I desire you all to prize the power of
the Lord and his truth. I was but weak in body when I left you,
after I had been in my great travail amongst you; but after that,
it struck all back again into my body, which was not well settled
after so sore travails in England. Then I was so tired at sea,
that I could not rest, and have had little or no stomach a long
time. Since I came into this island, my life hath been very much
burthened; but I hope, if the Lord give me strength to manage his
work, I shall work thoroughly, and bring things that have been out
of course, into better order.
“So, dear Friends, live all in the peaceable truth, and in the
love of it, serving the Lord in newness of life; for glorious
things and precious truths have been manifested among you
plentifully, and to you the riches of the kingdom have been
handed. I have been almost a month in this island, but have not
been able to go abroad or ride out; only very lately I rode out
twice, a quarter of a mile at a time, which wearied me much. My
love in the truth is to you all.”
G. F.
Because I was not well able to travel, the Friends of the island
concluded to have their men’s and women’s meeting for the service of
the church at Thomas Rous’s, where I lay; by which means I was
present at each of their meetings, and had very good service for the
Lord in both. For they had need of information in many things,
divers disorders having crept in for want of care and watchfulness.
I exhorted them, more especially at the men’s meeting, “to be
watchful and careful with respect to marriages, to prevent Friends
marrying in near kindreds, and also to prevent over-hasty
proceedings towards second marriages, after the death of a former
husband or wife; advising that a decent regard might be had in such
cases to the memory of the deceased husband or wife.
“As to Friends’ children marrying too young, as at thirteen or
fourteen years of age, I showed them the unfitness thereof, and the
inconveniences and hurts that attend such childish marriages. I
admonished them to purge the floor thoroughly, to sweep their houses
very clean, that nothing might remain that would defile, and to take
care that nothing be spoken, out of their meetings, to the
blemishing or defaming one of another.
“Concerning the registering of marriages, births, and burials, I
advised them to keep exact records of each in distinct books for
that only use; and also to record in a book for that purpose, the
condemnations of such as went out from truth into disorderly
practices, and the repentance and restoration of such of them as
returned again.
“I recommended to their care the providing of convenient
burying-places for Friends, which in some parts were yet wanting.
Some directions also I gave them concerning wills, and the ordering
of legacies left by Friends for public uses, and other things
relating to the affairs of the church.
“Then as to their blacks or negroes, I desired them to endeavour to
train them up in the fear of God, those that were bought, and those
born in their families, that all might come to the knowledge of the
Lord; that so, with Joshua, every master of a family might say, ‘As
for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.’ I desired them also
that they would cause their overseers to deal mildly and gently with
their negroes, and not use cruelty towards them, as the manner of
some hath been and is; and that after certain years of servitude,
they would make them free.”[24] Many sweet and precious things were
opened in these meetings by the Spirit, and in the power of the
Lord, to the edifying, confirming, and building up of Friends, both
in the faith and holy order of the gospel.
After these meetings, the vessel bound for England not being gone, I
was moved to write another epistle to Friends there, as follows:—
“Dear Friends and brethren, to whom is my love in that which never
changeth, but remains in glory, which is over all, the top and
corner-stone. In this all have peace and life, as ye dwell in the
blessed Seed, wherein all is blessed, over that which brought the
curse; where all shortness and narrowness of spirit, brittleness
and peevishness are. Therefore keep the holy order of the gospel.
Keep in this blessed Seed, where all may be preserved in
temperance, patience, love, meekness, righteousness, holiness, and
peace, in which the Lord may be seen amongst you, and no ways
dishonoured, but glorified by you all. In all your meetings, in
cities, towns, and countries, let righteousness flow among you,
and the holy truth be uppermost; the pure Spirit your guide and
leader, and the holy wisdom from above your orderer, which is
gentle, and easy to be entreated. Keep in the religion that
preserves from the spots of the world, which is pure and undefiled
in God’s sight. Keep in the pure and holy worship, in which the
pure and holy God is worshipped, to wit, in the Spirit and in the
truth, which the devil is out of, who is the author of all
unholiness and of that which dishonours God. Be tender of God’s
glory, of his honour, and of his blessed and holy name, in which
ye are gathered. All who profess the truth, see that ye walk in
it, in righteousness, godliness, and holiness; for ‘holiness
becomes the house of God, the household of faith.’ And that which
becomes God’s house, God loves; for he loves righteousness—the
ornament which becomes his house, and all his family. Therefore
see that righteousness run down in all your assemblies, that it
flow, to drive away all unrighteousness. This preserves your peace
with God; for in righteousness, ye have all peace with the
righteous God of Peace, and one with another.
“Everyone that bears the name of the Anointed, that high title of
being a Christian, named after the Heavenly Man, see that ye be in
the divine nature, made conformable unto his image, even the image
of the Heavenly Divine Man, who was before that image which Adam
and Eve got from Satan in the fall; so that in none of you that
fallen image may appear, or be seen; but his image, and you made
conformable unto him. Here translation is showed forth in life and
conversation, not in words only; yea, and conversion and
repentance, which is a change of the nature of the mind and of the
heart, of the spirit and affections, which have been below, and
come to be set above; and so receive the things that are from
above, and have your conversation in heaven, not that conversation
which is according to the power of the prince of the air, that now
rules in the disobedient. So be faithful; this is the word of the
Lord God unto you all. See that godliness and holiness,
righteousness and truth, virtue, and the fruits of the good
Spirit, flow over the bad and its fruits, that ye may answer that
which is of God in all; for your heavenly Father is glorified in
that ye bring forth much fruit. Therefore ye, who are plants of
his planting, and his trees of righteousness, see that every tree
be full of fruit.
“Keep in true humility, and in the true love of God, which doth
edify his body; that the true nourishment from the head, the
refreshings, and springs, and rivers of water, and bread of life,
may be plenteously known and felt amongst you; that so praises may
ascend unto God. Be faithful to the Lord God, and just and true in
all your dealings and doings with men. Be not negligent in your
men’s meetings to admonish, to exhort, and reprove in the spirit
of love and of meekness; to seek that which is lost, and to bring
back again that which hath been driven away. So let all minds and
spirits, souls and hearts, be bended down under the yoke of Christ
Jesus, the power of God.
“Much I could write, but am weak, and have been mostly so since I
left you. Burthens and travails I have been under, and have gone
through many ways; but it is well. The Lord Almighty knows my
work, which he hath sent me forth to do by his everlasting arm and
power; which is from everlasting to everlasting. Blessed be his
holy name, which I am in, and in which my love is to you all.”
G. F.
After I was able to go about, and had been a little amongst Friends,
I went to visit the governor; Lewis Morice, Thomas Rous, and some
other Friends being with me. He received us very civilly, and
treated us very kindly, making us dine with him; and keeping us most
part of the day before he let us go away.
The same week I went to BRIDGE-TOWN. There was to be a general
meeting of Friends that week; and the visit I had made to the
governor, and the kind reception I had with him, being generally
known to the officers, civil and military, many came to this meeting
from most parts of the island, and those not of the meanest rank;
several being judges or justices, colonels or captains; so that a
very great meeting we had, both of Friends and others. The Lord’s
blessed power was plentifully with us; and although I was somewhat
straightened for time, three other Friends having spoken before me,
yet the Lord opened things through me to the general and great
satisfaction of them that were present. Colonel Lewis Morice came to
this meeting, and with him a neighbour of his, a judge in the
country, whose name was Ralph Fretwell; who was very well satisfied,
and received the truth.
Paul Gwin, a jangling Baptist, came into the meeting, and asked me,
“How I spelt Cain? and whether I had the same spirit as the apostles
had?” I told him, “Yes.” And he bade the judge take notice of it. I
told him, “He that had not a measure of the same Holy Ghost as the
apostles had, was possessed with an unclean spirit.” And then he
went his way.
I went home with Lewis Morice that night, being about nine or ten
miles, going part of the way by boat, the rest on horseback. The
place where his plantation was, I thought to be in the finest air of
the island. The next day Thomas Briggs and William Edmundson came to
see me, intending to leave the island the day following, to go on
the Lord’s service to Antigua and Nevis. Lewis Morice went with
them; at Antigua they had several good meetings, to which there was
a great resort of people; and many were convinced. But when they
went to Nevis, the governor, an old persecutor, sent soldiers on
board the vessel, to stop them, and would not suffer them to land.
Wherefore, after Friends of the place had been on board the vessel
with them, and they had been sweetly refreshed together, feeling the
Lord’s power and presence amongst them, they returned to Antigua;
where having stayed a while longer, they came back again to
Bardadoes, Thomas Briggs being weak and ill.
Of the other Friends that came over with me from England, James
Lancaster, John Cartwright, and George Pattison, were gone some time
before to Jamaica, and others to other places, so that few remained
in Barbadoes with me. We had many great and precious meetings, both
for worship and for the affairs of the church; to the former of
which many other people came. At one of these meetings Colonel Lyne,
a sober person, was so well satisfied with what I declared, that he
said, “Now I can gainsay such as I have heard speak evil of you; who
say, you do not own Christ, nor that he died; whereas I perceive you
exalt Christ in all his offices beyond what I have ever heard
before.”[25] This man, observing a person take in writing the heads
of what I delivered, desired to have a copy of it; and stayed
another day with us; so great a love was raised in him to the truth.
Indeed, a very great convincement there was in most parts of the
island; which made the priests and professors rage.
Our meetings were very large, and free from disturbance from the
government, though the envious priests and some professors
endeavoured to stir up the magistrates against us. When they found
they could not prevail that way, some Baptists came to the meeting
at the town, which was full of people of several ranks and
qualities. A great company came with them; and they brought a
slanderous paper, written by John Pennyman, with which they made a
great noise. But the Lord gave me wisdom and utterance to answer
their cavils; so that the auditory generally received satisfaction,
and those quarrelsome professors lost ground. When they had wearied
themselves with clamour, they went away; but the people staying, the
meeting was continued; the things they cavilled about were further
opened and cleared; and the life and power of God came over all. But
the rage and envy in our adversaries did not cease; they endeavoured
to defame Friends with many false and scandalous reports, which they
spread abroad through the island. Whereupon we drew up a paper, to
go forth in the name of the people called Quakers, for the clearing
of truth and Friends from those false reports. It was directed
thus:—
_“For the Governor of Barbadoes, with his Council and Assembly,
and all others in power, both civil and military, in this
Island; from the people called Quakers._
“Whereas many scandalous lies and slanders have been cast upon us,
to render us odious; as that ‘We deny God, and Christ Jesus, and
the Scriptures of truth,’ &c. This is to inform you, that all our
books and declarations, which for these many years have been
published to the world, clearly testify the contrary. Yet, for
your satisfaction, we now plainly and sincerely declare, ‘that we
do own and believe in God, the only wise, omnipotent, and
everlasting God, the Creator of all things both in heaven and in
earth, and the preserver of all that he hath made; who is God over
all, blessed for ever; to whom be all honour and glory, dominion,
praise, and thanksgiving, both now and for evermore!’
“And we own and believe in Jesus Christ, his beloved and only
begotten Son, in whom he is well pleased; who was conceived by the
Holy Ghost, and born of the Virgin Mary; in whom we have
redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness of sins; who is
the express image of the Invisible God, the first-born of every
creature, by whom were all things created that are in heaven, and
that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones,
or dominions, principalities, or powers, all things were created
by him. And we do own and believe that He was made a sacrifice for
sin, who knew no sin, neither was guile found in his mouth; that
he was crucified for us in the flesh, without the gates of
Jerusalem; and that he was buried, and rose again the third day by
the power of his Father, for our justification; and that he
ascended up into heaven, and now sitteth at the right hand of God.
This Jesus, who was the foundation of the holy prophets and
apostles, is our foundation; and we believe that there is no other
foundation to be laid than that which is laid, even Christ Jesus;
who tasted death for every man, shed his blood for all men, and is
the propitiation for our sins, and not for ours only, but also for
the sins of the whole world; according as John the Baptist
testified of him, when he said, ‘Behold the Lamb of God, that
taketh away the sin of the world.’ John i. 29. We believe that he
alone is our Redeemer and Saviour, even the Captain of our
Salvation, who saves us from sin, as well as from hell, and the
wrath to come, and destroys the devil and his works; he is the
Seed of the woman, that bruises the serpent’s head, to wit, Christ
Jesus, the Alpha and Omega, the First and the Last. He is (as the
Scriptures of truth say of him,) our wisdom and righteousness,
justification and redemption; neither is there salvation in any
other, for there is no other name under heaven given among men
whereby we may be saved. It is he alone, who is the Shepherd and
Bishop of our souls; He is our Prophet, whom Moses long since
testified of, saying, ‘A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up
unto you of your brethren, like unto me; Him shall ye hear in all
things, whatsoever he shall say unto you; and it shall come to
pass, that every soul that will not hear that prophet, shall be
destroyed from among the people.’ Acts iii. 22, 23.
“He it is that is now come, and hath given us an understanding,
that we may know him that is true. He rules in our hearts by his
law of love and of life, and makes us free from the law of sin and
death. We have no life but by him; for he is the quickening
Spirit, the second Adam, the Lord from heaven; by whose blood we
are cleansed, and our consciences sprinkled from dead works to
serve the living God. He is our Mediator, that makes peace and
reconciliation between God offended and us offending, He being the
oath of God, the new covenant of light, life, grace, and peace;
the author and finisher of our faith. This Lord Jesus Christ, the
heavenly Man, the Emmanuel, God with us, we all own and believe
in; him whom the high-priest raged against, and said, he had
spoken blasphemy; whom the priests and the elders of the Jews took
counsel together against, and put to death; the same whom Judas
betrayed for thirty pieces of silver, which the priests gave him
as a reward for his treason, who also gave large money to the
soldiers to broach a horrible lie, namely, ‘that his disciples
came and stole him away by night, whilst they slept.’ After he was
risen from the dead, the history of the Acts of the Apostles sets
forth, how the chief priests and elders persecuted the disciples
of this Jesus, for preaching Christ and his resurrection. This, we
say, is that Lord Jesus Christ, whom we own to be our life and
salvation.
“Concerning the Holy Scriptures, we do believe that they were
given forth by the Holy Spirit of God, through the holy men of
God, who (as the Scripture itself declares, 2 Pet. i. 21.) ‘spake
as they were moved by the Holy Ghost.’ We believe they are to be
read, believed, and fulfilled (He that fulfils them, is Christ;)
and they are ‘profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for
correction, and for instruction in righteousness, that the man of
God may be perfect, throughly furnished unto all good works,’ 2
Tim. iii, 15, and are ‘able to make wise unto salvation, through
faith in Christ Jesus.’ We believe that the Holy Scriptures are
the words of God; for it is said, Ex. xx. 1, ‘God spake all these
words, saying,’ &c., meaning the ten commandments given forth upon
Mount Sinai. And in Rev. xxii. 18, saith John, ‘I testify to every
man that heareth the words of the prophecy of this book: if any
man addeth unto these, and if any man shall take away from the
words of the book of this prophecy’ (not the word,) &c. So in Luke
i. 20, ‘Because thou believedst not my words.’ And in John v. 47;
xv. 7; xiv. 23; and xii. 47. So that we call the Holy Scriptures,
as Christ and the apostles called them, and holy men of God called
them, viz., the words of God.
“Another slander which they have cast upon us is, ‘that we teach
the negroes to rebel;’ a thing we utterly abhor in our hearts; the
Lord knows it, who is the searcher of all hearts, and knows all
things, and can testify for us, that this is a most abominable
untruth. For that which we have spoken to them is, ‘to exhort and
admonish them to be sober, and to fear God; to love their masters
and mistresses, and to be faithful and diligent in their masters’
service and business; and then their masters and overseers would
love them, and deal kindly and gently with them; also, that they
should not beat their wives, nor the wives their husbands, neither
should the men have many wives; that they should not steal, or be
drunk,—should not commit adultery, or fornication,—should not
curse, swear, lie, or give bad words to one another, or to any one
else: for there is something in them that tells them, they should
not practise these or any other evils. But if, notwithstanding,
they should do them, then we let them know there are but two ways,
the one that leads to heaven, where the righteous go; and the
other that leads to hell, where the wicked and debauched,
whoremongers and adulterers, murderers and liars go. To the one
the Lord will say, ‘Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the
kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world;’ but to
the other he will say, ‘Depart, ye cursed, into everlasting fire,
prepared for the devil and his angels:’ so ‘the wicked go into
everlasting punishment, but the righteous into life eternal.’
Matt. xxv.
“Consider, Friends, it is no transgression for a master of a
family to instruct his family himself, or for some others to do it
in his behalf; but rather it is a very great duty incumbent upon
them. Abraham and Joshua did so: of the first the Lord said, Gen.
xviii. 19, ‘I know that Abraham will command his children and his
household after him; and they shall keep the way of the Lord, to
do justice and judgment, that the Lord may bring upon Abraham the
things that he hath spoken of him.’ And the latter said, Josh.
xxiv. 15, ‘Choose ye this day whom ye will serve; but as for me
and my house, we will serve the Lord.’ We declare that we esteem
it a duty incumbent on us to pray with and for those in and
belonging to our families, and to teach, instruct, and admonish
them; this being a command of the Lord, disobedience whereunto
will provoke his displeasure; as may be seen, Jer. x. 25, ‘Pour
out thy fury upon the heathen that know thee not, and upon the
families that call not upon thy name.’ Now Negroes, Tawnies,
Indians, make up a very great part of the families in this island;
for whom an account will be required by him who comes to judge
both quick and dead, at the great day of judgment, when everyone
shall be ‘rewarded according to the deeds done in the body,
whether they be good or whether they be evil:’ at that day, we
say, of the resurrection both of the good and of the bad, of the
just and of the unjust, when ‘the Lord Jesus shall be revealed
from heaven with his mighty angels, in flaming fire, taking
vengeance on them that know not God, and obey not the gospel of
our Lord Jesus Christ, who shall be punished with everlasting
destruction from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of
his power, when he shall come to be glorified in his saints, and
admired in all them that believe in that day.’ 2 Thess. i. 8, &c.
See also 2 Pet. iii. 3, &c.”
This wicked slander (of our endeavouring to make the negroes rebel)
our adversaries took occasion to raise, from our having had some
meetings with and amongst the negroes; for both I and other Friends
had several meetings with them in several plantations, wherein we
exhorted them to justice, sobriety, temperance, chastity, and piety,
and to be subject to their masters and governors; which was
altogether contrary to what our envious adversaries maliciously
suggested against us.
As I had been to visit the governor as soon as I was well able,
after I came thither; and so when I was at Thomas Rous’s, the
governor came to see me, carrying himself very courteously.
Having been three months or more in Barbadoes, and having visited
Friends, thoroughly settled meetings, and despatched the service for
which the Lord had brought me thither, I felt my spirit clear of
that island, and found drawings to Jamaica. When I had communicated
this to Friends, I acquainted the governor also, and divers of his
council, that I intended shortly to leave the island and go to
Jamaica. This I did, that as my coming thither was open and public,
so my departure also might be. Before I left the island, I wrote the
following letter to my wife; that she might understand both how it
was with me, and how I proceeded in my travels:—
“MY DEAR HEART,
“To whom is my love, and to all the children in the Seed of Life
that changeth not, but is over all; blessed be the Lord for ever.
I have undergone great sufferings in my body and spirit, beyond
words; but the God of heaven be praised, his truth is over all. I
am now well; and, if the Lord permit, within a few days I pass
from Barbadoes towards Jamaica; and I think to stay but little
there. I desire that ye may be all kept free in the Seed of Life,
out of all cumbrances. Friends are generally well. Remember me to
Friends that enquire after me. So no more, but my love in the Seed
and Life that changeth not.”
G.F.
Barbadoes, 6th of 11th Month, 1671.
I set sail from Barbadoes to Jamaica on the 8th of the 11th month,
1671; Robert Widders, William Edmundson, Solomon Eccles, and
Elizabeth Hooton, going with me. Thomas Briggs and John Stubbs,
remained in Barbadoes; with whom were John Rous and William Bailey.
We had a quick and easy passage to JAMAICA, where we met with our
Friends James Lancaster, John Cartwright, and George Pattison again,
who had been labouring there in the service of truth; into which we
forthwith entered with them, travelling up and down through the
island, which is large; and a brave country it is, though the people
are, many of them, debauched and wicked. We had much service. There
was a great convincement, and many received the truth; some of whom
were people of account in the world. We had many meetings there,
which were large and very quiet. The people were civil to us, so
that not a mouth was opened against us. I was twice with the
governor, and some other magistrates, who all carried themselves
lovingly towards me.
About a week after we landed in Jamaica, Elizabeth Hooton, a woman
of great age, who had travelled much in truth’s service, and
suffered much for it, departed this life. She was well the day
before she died; and departed in peace, like a lamb, bearing
testimony to truth at her departure.
When we had been about seven weeks in Jamaica, had brought Friends
into pretty good order, and settled several meetings amongst them,
we left Solomon Eccles there; the rest of us embarked for Maryland,
leaving Friends and truth prosperous in Jamaica, the Lord’s power
being over all, and his blessed Seed reigning.
Before I left Jamaica, I wrote another letter to my wife, as
follows:—
“MY DEAR HEART,
“To whom is my love, and to the children, in that which changeth
not, but is over all; and to all Friends in those parts. I have
been in Jamaica about five weeks. Friends here are generally well;
and there is a convincement: but things would be too large to
write of. Sufferings in every place attend me; but the blessed
Seed is over all: the great Lord be praised, who is Lord of sea
and land, and of all things therein. We intend to pass from hence
about the beginning of next month, towards Maryland if the Lord
please. Dwell all of you in the Seed of God; in his truth I rest
in love to you all.”
G.F.
Jamaica, 23rd of 12th Month, 1671.
-----
Footnote 23:
Thomas Rous was a wealthy sugar-planter of Barbadoes. John Rous
was his son, and son-in-law to George Fox, having married his
wife’s eldest daughter. John Rous visited New England as a gospel
minister when a young man, and suffered whipping and imprisonment
there. After his release from Boston jail in 1658, except a visit
which he paid to the island of Nevis towards the close of that
year, we lose all trace of him until his marriage with Margaret,
eldest daughter of Judge Fell, at Swarthmore Hall, in 1662. After
his marriage he settled in London, in which, and in its vicinity,
he appears to have resided during the remainder of his life. But
few particulars respecting him are preserved, except a visit to
the county of Kent in 1670, accompanied by Alexander Parker and
George Whitehead; and to Barbadoes the following year with George
Fox, as related in this Journal. Besides this, and a visit to the
counties of York and Durham in 1689, we know nothing of his gospel
labours after he settled in England. In his will, dated from
Kingston in Surrey in 1692, he describes himself as a merchant,
and his property, which, it appears was considerable, lay chiefly
in Barbadoes. It is singular no record of his death has been
found, but as his will was proved in 1695, it probably took place
in that year.
Footnote 24:
The interest of Friends in behalf of the Negro may be dated from
the rise of the Society, at least from the time of their
acquaintance with them at the above date. In proportion as
intercourse was more frequently maintained with the distant
colonies, and the abominations of Slavery were more generally
known, Friends were more decided in their opposition to it. In
1727 the whole Society, at their Yearly Meeting in London, passed
a general resolution: “That the importing of Negroes from their
native country is not a commendable or allowable practice, and is
therefore censured by this meeting.” At several subsequent
meetings, through a series of years, minutes were passed to the
same effect, but gradually increasing in strength. In 1758, the
practice was declared to be in direct violation of the gospel
rule, and Friends were warned carefully to avoid being in any way
concerned in reaping the unrighteous profits arising from so
iniquitous a practice. In 1761 all were disowned who persisted in
a practice so repugnant to Christianity, and so reproachful to a
Christian profession.
Clarkson, in alluding to this subject, observes, “I must beg leave
to stop here for a moment, just to pay the Quakers a due tribute
of respect for the proper estimation in which they have uniformly
held these miserable outcasts of society. What a contrast does it
afford to the sentiments of many others concerning them! How have
we been compelled to prove, by a long chain of evidence, that
Negroes have the same feelings and capacities as ourselves! How
many, professing themselves enlightened, even now view them as of
a different species. But by the Friends we have seen them
uniformly represented, as persons ‘ransomed by one and the same
Saviour,’ ‘as visited by one and the same light for salvation,’
and ‘as made equally for immortality as others.’ These practical
views of mankind, as they are highly honourable to the members of
this Society, so they afford a proof both of the reality and of
the consistency of their religion.”
See Clarkson’s _History of the Abolition of the Slave Trade_, and
Copley’s _History of Slavery_.
Footnote 25:
The faith of the early Friends in the divinity and offices of our
Saviour being called in question by some, they boldly resented
such an inference. From a work published by Samuel Crisp, in 1704,
take the following extracts:—
“Our faith is, and always has been in that Christ, the Son of God,
who, according to the flesh, was crucified without the gates of
Jerusalem: He is the object of our faith, to the merit of whose
death and passion, with the work of his Spirit in our hearts, we
trust only for life and salvation; with his stripes we are
healed.”
“As to what he (a libeller) says of our forcing ourselves to speak
with a seeming reverence and respect of the outward Christ, his
death and sufferings, I would hope that he knows better in his own
conscience than thus to represent us. We bear a true reverence and
respect to Jesus Christ, his death and sufferings, and can never
be sufficiently thankful to him who was pleased to humble himself
to death, even the death of the cross; that all that believe in
him might, through the cross, be made heirs of life and
immortality.”
For further elucidation of the soundness of the early Friends in
their belief as to the divinity and offices of Christ, see Evans’
_Exposition of the Faith of the Society of Friends_, especially
John Banks’ “Testimony concerning his faith in Christ,” and an
“Essay drawn up by John Burnyeat and John Watson in 1688,”
contained in the above-mentioned work.
CHAPTER V.
1672-1673.—-George Fox embarks for Maryland, where he arrives after
a seven weeks’ voyage, and having experienced some remarkable
deliverances—attends a General Meeting for Maryland,
which held four days—several meetings for discipline
established—has meetings with the Indian kings—travels towards
New England—attends the half-year’s meeting on Long
Island, which continued four days—has a meeting with some
opposers—visits Rhode Island, where the Yearly Meeting for New
England is held, which continued six days—attends a marriage
there, and has a meeting with some Ranters—also one with some
Indians on Shelter Island—one of his companions thrown from his
horse and lays apparently dead, but soon recovers in an
unexpected manner—they reach Maryland after nine days’ travel
overland between three and four hundred miles—visits a judge who
is ill, but recovers—attends the General Meeting for Maryland,
which held five days—sails for Virginia, and arrives in three
days, a distance of 200 miles—thence proceeds towards
Carolina—visits the Indians, and shows them that God made but
one woman for one man—returns to Virginia—sails for
Maryland—endures great extremes of heat and cold within a very
short period—speaks to a woman who had been many years in
trouble, and entreats the Lord for her, and she is thereupon
restored—attends the General Meeting for Maryland, to the
edification and comfort of Friends—sails for England, and
arrives safe, after a six weeks’ passage.
We went on board on the 8th of 1st Month, 1671-2; and having
contrary winds, were a full week sailing forwards and backwards,
before we could get out of sight of Jamaica. A difficult voyage this
proved, and dangerous, especially in passing through the Gulf of
Florida, where we met with many trials by winds and storms. But the
great God, who is Lord of the sea and land, and who rideth upon the
wings of the wind, did by his power preserve us through many and
great dangers, when by extreme stress of weather our vessel was many
times likely to be upset, and much of her tackling broken. And
indeed we were sensible that the Lord was a God at hand, and that
his ear was open to the supplications of his people. For when the
winds were so strong and boisterous, and the storms and tempests so
great, that the sailors knew not what to do, but let the ship go
which way she would; then did we pray unto the Lord, who graciously
heard us, calmed the winds and the seas, gave us seasonable weather,
and made us to rejoice in his salvation; blessed and praised be the
holy name of the Lord, whose power hath dominion over all, whom the
winds and the seas obey!
We were between six and seven weeks in this passage from Jamaica to
MARYLAND. Some days before we came to land, after we had entered the
bay of PATUXENT RIVER, a great storm arose, which cast a boat upon
us for shelter, in which were several people of account in the
world. We took them in; but the boat was lost, with five hundred
pounds’ worth of goods in it, as they said. They continued on board
us several days, not having any means to get off; and we had a very
good meeting with them in the ship. But provisions grew short, for
they brought none in with them; and ours, by reason of the length of
our voyage, were well nigh spent when they came to us; so that with
their living with us too, we had now little or none left. Whereupon
George Pattison took a boat, and ventured his life to get to shore;
the hazard was so great, that all but Friends concluded he would be
cast away. Yet it pleased the Lord to bring him safe to land; and in
a short time after, the Friends of the place came to fetch us to
land also, in a seasonable time, for our provisions were quite
spent.
We partook also of another great deliverance in this voyage, through
the good providence of the Lord, which we came to understand
afterwards. For when we were determined to come from Jamaica, we had
our choice of two vessels, that were both bound for the same coast.
One of these was a frigate, the other a yacht. The master of the
frigate, we thought, asked unreasonably for our passage; which made
us agree with the master of the yacht, who offered to carry us ten
shillings a-piece cheaper than the other. We went on board the
yacht, and the frigate came out together with us, intending to be
consorts during the voyage; and for several days we sailed together;
but what with calms and contrary winds, we were in a while
separated. After that, the frigate, losing her way, fell among the
Spaniards; by whom she was taken and plundered, and the master and
mate were made prisoners; afterwards, being retaken by the English,
she was sent home to her owners in Virginia. Which when we came to
understand, we saw and admired the providence of God, who preserved
us out of our enemies’ hands; and he that was covetous fell among
the covetous.
Here we found John Burnyeat[26] intending shortly to sail for
England; but on our arrival he altered his purpose, and joined us in
the Lord’s service. He had appointed a general meeting for all the
Friends in the province of Maryland, that he might see them
together, and take his leave of them, before he departed out of the
country; and it was so ordered by the good providence of God, that
we landed just in time to reach that meeting; by which means we had
a very seasonable opportunity of taking the Friends of the province
together. A very large meeting this was, and held four days; to
which, besides Friends, came many other people, many of whom were of
considerable quality in the world’s account; for there were amongst
them five or six justices of the peace, a speaker of their
parliament or assembly, one of the council, and divers others of
note; who seemed well satisfied with the meeting.
After the public meetings were over, the men’s and women’s meetings
began; wherein I opened to Friends the service thereof to their
great satisfaction. After this we went to a place called the CLIFFS,
where another general meeting was appointed. We went some part of
the way by land, the rest by water; and a storm arising, our boat
was run on ground, in danger to be beaten to pieces; and the water
came in upon us. I perspired much, having come very hot out of a
meeting before, and was now wet with the water beside; yet having
faith in the divine power, I was preserved from taking hurt; blessed
be the Lord. To this meeting also many people came, and received the
truth with reverence. We had also a men’s meeting and a women’s
meeting, at which most of the backsliders came in again; and several
of those meetings were established for taking care of the affairs of
the church.
After these two general meetings, we parted company, dividing
ourselves unto several coasts, for the service of truth. James
Lancaster and John Cartwright went by sea for New England; William
Edmundson and three other Friends sailed for Virginia, where things
were much out of order; John Burnyeat, Robert Widders, George
Pattison, and I, with several Friends of the province, went over by
boat to the eastern shore, and had a meeting there on the First-day;
where many people received the truth with gladness, and Friends were
greatly refreshed. A very large and heavenly meeting it was; and
several persons of quality in that country were at it, two of whom
were justices of the peace.
It was upon me from the Lord, to send to the Indian emperor and his
kings to come to that meeting. The emperor came and was at it; but
his kings, lying further off, could not reach in time; yet they came
after with their cockarooses. I had in the evening two good
opportunities with them; they heard the word of the Lord willingly,
and confessed to it. What I spoke to them, I desired them to speak
to their people; and let them know, that “God was raising up his
tabernacle of witness in their wilderness country, and was setting
up his standard and glorious ensign of righteousness.” They carried
themselves very courteously and lovingly, and inquired “where the
next meeting would be, and they would come to it;” yet they said,
“they had had a great debate with their council about their coming,
before they came now.”
Next day we began our journey by land to New England; a tedious
journey through the woods and wilderness, over bogs and great
rivers. We took horse at the head of TREDHAVEN CREEK, and travelled
through the woods, till we came a little above the head of MILES
(now “St.” Michael’s) RIVER; by which we passed, and rode to the
head of WYE RIVER, and so to the head of CHESTER RIVER; where,
making a fire, we took up our lodging in the woods. Next morning we
travelled through the woods till we came to SASSAFRAS RIVER, which
we went over in canoes (or Indian boats,) causing our horses to swim
by. Then we rode to BOHEMIA RIVER; where in like manner swimming our
horses, we ourselves went over in canoes. We rested a little while
at a plantation by the way, but not long, for we had thirty miles to
ride that afternoon, if we would reach a town; which we were
desirous to do, and therefore rode hard for it. I with some others,
whose horses were strong, got to the town that night, exceedingly
tired, and wet to the skin; but George Pattison and Robert Widders
being weaker-horsed, were obliged to lie in the woods that night
also. The town we went to was a Dutch town, called NEWCASTLE,
whither Robert Widders and George Pattison came to us next morning.
We departed thence and got over the River Delaware, not without
great danger of some of our lives.
When we were over, we were troubled to procure guides; who were hard
to get and very chargeable. Then had we that wilderness country to
pass through, since called WEST JERSEY, not then inhabited by
English; so that we have travelled a whole day together, without
seeing man or woman, house or dwelling-place. Sometimes we lay in
the woods by a fire, and sometimes in the Indians’ wigwams or
houses. We came one night to an Indian town, and lay at the king’s
house, who was a very worthy man. Both he and his wife received us
very lovingly, and his attendants (such as they were) were very
respectful to us. They laid us mats to lie on; but provision was
very short with them, having caught but little that day.[27] At
another Indian town where we stayed, the king came to us, and he
could speak some English. I spoke to him much, and also to his
people, and they were very loving to us.
At length we came to MIDDLETOWN, an English plantation in EAST
JERSEY, where there were some Friends, but we could not stay to have
a meeting there at that time, being earnestly pressed in our
spirits, to get to the half-year’s meeting of Friends at Oyster-Bay
in Long Island, which was very near at hand. We went with a Friend,
Richard Hartshorn, (brother to Hugh Hartshorn, the upholsterer, in
London,) who received us gladly at his house, where we refreshed
ourselves, and then he carried us and our horses in his own boat
over a great water, which occupied most part of the day getting
over, and set us upon LONG ISLAND. We got that evening to Friends at
GRAVESEND, with whom we tarried that night, and next day got to
FLUSHING, and the day following reached OYSTER-BAY; several Friends
of Gravesend and Flushing accompanying us.
The half-year’s meeting began next day, which was the first day of
the week, and lasted four days. The first and second days we had
public meetings for worship, to which people of all sorts came; on
the third day were the men’s and women’s meetings, wherein the
affairs of the church were taken care of. Here we met with some bad
spirits, who had run out from truth into prejudice, contention, and
opposition to the order of truth, and to Friends therein. These had
been very troublesome to Friends in their meetings there and
thereabouts formerly, and likely would have been so now; but I would
not suffer the service of our men’s and women’s meetings to be
interrupted and hindered by their cavils. I let them know, that “if
they had anything to object against the order of the truth which we
were in, we would give them a meeting another day on purpose.” And
indeed I laboured the more, and travelled the harder to get to this
meeting, where it was expected many of these contentious people
would be; because I understood they had reflected much upon me, when
I was far from them.
The men’s and women’s meetings being over, on the fourth day we had
a meeting with these discontented people, to which as many of them
as chose came, and as many Friends as desired were present also; and
the Lord’s power broke forth gloriously to the confounding of the
gainsayers. Then some of those that had been chief in the
mischievous work of contention and opposition against the truth,
began to fawn upon me, and to cast the blame upon others; but the
deceitful spirit was judged down and condemned, and the glorious
truth of God was exalted and set over all; and they were all brought
down and bowed under. Which was of great service to truth, and to
the satisfaction and comfort of Friends; glory to the Lord for ever!
After Friends were gone to their several habitations, we stayed some
days upon the island; had meetings in several parts thereof, and
good service for the Lord. When we were clear of the island, we
returned to Oyster-Bay, waiting for a wind to carry us to RHODE
ISLAND, which was computed to be about two hundred miles. As soon as
the wind served we set sail, and arrived there on the thirtieth day
of the third month; and were gladly received by Friends. We went to
Nicholas Easton’s house, who at that time was governor of the
island; where we rested, being very weary with travelling. On
First-day following we had a large meeting, to which the
deputy-governor and several justices came, who were mightily
affected with the truth.
The week following, the Yearly Meeting for all the Friends of New
England and the other colonies adjacent, was held in this island; to
which, besides very many Friends who lived in those parts, came John
Stubbs from Barbadoes, and James Lancaster and John Cartwright from
another way. This meeting lasted six days, the first four days being
general public meetings for worship, to which abundance of other
people came; for they having no priest in the island, and so no
restriction to any particular way of worship; and both the governor
and deputy-governor, with several justices of the peace daily
frequenting the meetings; this so encouraged the people that they
flocked in from all parts of the island. Very good service we had
amongst them, and truth had a good reception. I have rarely observed
people, in the state wherein they stood, hear with more attention,
diligence, and affection, than generally they did, during the four
days together; which also was taken notice of by other Friends.
After these public meetings were over, the men’s meeting began,
which was large, precious, and weighty; and the day following was
the women’s meeting, which also was large and very solemn. These two
meetings being for ordering the affairs of the church, many weighty
things were opened and communicated to them, by way of advice,
information, and instruction in the services relating thereunto;
that all might be kept clean, sweet, and savoury amongst them. In
these two meetings, several men’s and women’s meetings for other
parts, were agreed and settled, to take care of the poor, and other
affairs of the church; and to see, that all who profess truth, walk
according to the glorious gospel of God. When this great general
meeting in Rhode Island was ended, it was somewhat hard for friends
to part; for the glorious power of the Lord, which was over all, and
his blessed truth and life flowing amongst them, had so knit and
united them together, that they spent two days in taking leave one
of another, and of the Friends of the island; and then, being
mightily filled with the presence and power of the Lord, they went
away with joyful hearts to their various habitations, in the several
colonies where they lived.[28]
When Friends had taken their leave one of another, we, who travelled
amongst them, dispersed ourselves into our several services, as the
Lord ordered us. John Burnyeat, John Cartwright, and George
Pattison, went into the eastern parts of New England, in company
with the Friends that came from thence, to visit the particular
meetings there; whom John Stubbs and James Lancaster intended to
follow a while after, in the same service; but they were not yet
clear of this island. Robert Widders and I stayed some time longer
also upon this island; finding service still here for the Lord,
through the great openness of the people, and the daily coming in of
fresh people from other colonies, for some time after the general
meeting; so that we had many large and serviceable meetings among
them.
During this time a marriage took place amongst Friends in this
island; and we were present. It was at a Friend’s house, who had
formerly been governor of the island; three justices of the peace,
and many others not in profession with us, were there; and both they
and Friends said, they never saw so solemn an assembly on such an
occasion, so weighty a marriage and so comely an order. Thus truth
was set over all. This might serve for an example to others, for
there were some present from many other places.
After this I had a great travail in spirit concerning the Ranters in
those parts, who had been rude at a meeting which I was not at.
Wherefore I appointed a meeting amongst them, believing the Lord
would give me power over them; which he did to his praise and glory:
blessed be his name for ever. There were at this meeting many
Friends, and other people; some of whom were justices of the peace,
and other officers, who were generally well affected. One of the
justices, who had been one twenty years, was convinced, and spoke
highly of the truth; and more highly of me, than is fit for me to
mention or take notice of.
Then we had a meeting at PROVIDENCE, which was very large,
consisting of many sorts of people; I had a great travail upon my
spirit, that it might be preserved quiet, and that truth might be
brought over the people, might gain entrance, and have a place in
them; for they were generally above the priests, in high notions;
and some of them came on purpose to dispute. But the Lord, whom we
waited upon, was with us, and his power went over them all; and his
blessed Seed was exalted and set above all. The disputers were
silent, and the meeting was quiet, and ended well; praised be the
Lord! The people went away mightily satisfied, much desiring another
meeting. This place (called Providence) was about thirty miles from
Rhode Island; and we went to it by water. The governor of Rhode
Island, and many others, went with me thither; and we had the
meeting in a great barn, which was thronged with people, so that I
was exceedingly hot, and perspired much; but all was well; the
glorious power of the Lord shone over all; glory to the great God
for ever!
After this we went to NARRAGANSET, about twenty miles from Rhode
Island; and the governor went with us. We had a meeting at a
justice’s house, where Friends had never had any before. It was very
large, for the country generally came in; and people came also from
Connecticut, and other parts round about, amongst whom were four
justices of the peace. Most of these people had never heard Friends
before; but they were mightily affected with the meeting, and a
great desire there is after the truth amongst them; so that our
meeting was of very good service, blessed be the Lord for ever! The
justice at whose house the meeting was, and another justice of that
country, invited me to come again; but I was then clear of those
parts, and going towards Shelter Island. But John Burnyeat and John
Cartwright, being come out of New England into Rhode Island, before
I was gone, I laid this place before them; and they felt drawings
thither, and went to visit them. At another place, I heard some of
the magistrates said among themselves, “If they had money enough,
they would hire me to be their minister.” This was, where they did
not well understand us, and our principles; but when I heard of it,
I said, “It was time for me to be gone; for if their eye was so much
to me, or any of us, they would not come to their own teacher.” For
this thing (hiring ministers) had spoiled many, by hindering them
from improving their own talents: whereas our labour is to bring all
men to their own teacher in themselves.
I went from hence towards Shelter Island, having with me Robert
Widders, James Lancaster, George Pattison, and John Jay, a planter
of Barbadoes. We went in a sloop; and passing by POINT JUDITH and
BLOCK ISLAND, we came to FISHER’S ISLAND, where at night we went on
shore; but were not able to stay for the mosquitoes which abound
there, and are very troublesome. Wherefore we went into our sloop
again, put off from the shore, and cast anchor; and so lay in our
sloop that night. Next day we went into the SOUND, but finding our
sloop was not able to live in that water, we returned again, and
came to anchor before Fisher’s Island, where we lay in our sloop
that night also. There fell abundance of rain, and our sloop being
open, we were exceedingly wet. Next day we passed over the waters
called the TWO HORSE RACES, and then by GARDNER’S ISLAND; after
which we passed by GULL’S ISLAND, and so got at length to SHELTER
ISLAND; which, though it was but about twenty-seven leagues from
Rhode Island, yet through the difficulty of the passage we were
three days in reaching.
The day after, being First-day, we had a meeting there. In the same
week, I had another among the Indians; at which were their king, his
council, about a hundred Indians more. They sat down like Friends,
and heard very attentively, while I spoke to them by an interpreter,
an Indian that could speak English well. After the meeting they
appeared very loving, and confessed that what was said to them was
truth. Next First-day we had a great meeting on the island, to which
came many people who had never heard Friends before. They were very
well satisfied with it, and would not go away when it was over, till
they had spoken with me; wherefore I went amongst them, and found
they were much taken with the truth; good desires were raised in
them, and great love. Blessed be the Lord, his name spreads, and
will be great among the nations, and dreadful among the heathen.
While we were in Shelter Island, William Edmundson came to us, who
had been labouring in the work of the Lord in Virginia. From whence
he travelled through the desert-country, through difficulties and
many trials till he came to ROANOKE, where he met with a tender
people. After seven weeks’ service in those parts, sailing over to
Maryland, and so to New York, he came to Long Island, and so to
Shelter Island; where we met with him, and were very glad to hear
from him the good service he had had for the Lord, in the several
places where he had travelled since he parted from us.
We stayed not long in Shelter Island, but entering our sloop again,
put to sea for Long Island. We had a very rough passage, for the
tide ran so strong for several hours, that I have not seen the like;
and being against us, we could hardly get forwards, though we had a
gale. We were upon the water all that day and the night following;
but found ourselves next day driven back near to Fisher’s Island.
For there was a great fog, and towards day it was very dark, so that
we could not see what way we made. Besides, it rained much in the
night, which in our open sloop made us very wet. Next day a great
storm arose, so that we were fain to go over the Sound, and got over
with much difficulty. When we left Fisher’s Island, we passed by
Falkner Island, and came to the Main, where we cast anchor till the
storm was over. Then we crossed the Sound, being all very wet; and
much difficulty we had to get to land, the wind being strong against
us. But blessed be the Lord God of heaven and earth, and of the seas
and waters, all was well. We got safe to OYSTER-BAY in Long Island,
on the seventh of sixth month, very early in the morning, which is
about two hundred miles from Rhode Island. At Oyster-bay we had a
very large meeting. The same day James Lancaster and Christopher
Holder[29] went over the Bay to Rye, on the continent, in Governor
Winthrop’s government, and had a meeting there. From Oyster-Bay we
passed about thirty miles to FLUSHING, where we had a very large
meeting; many hundreds of people being there, some of whom came
about thirty miles to it. A glorious and heavenly meeting it was
(praised be the Lord God!) and the people were much satisfied.
Meanwhile Christopher Holder and some other Friends went to a town
in Long Island, called Jamaica, and had a meeting there. We passed
from Flushing to GRAVESEND, about twenty miles, and there had three
precious meetings; to which many would have come from New York, but
the weather hindered them.
Being clear of this place, we hired a sloop; and the wind serving,
set out for the New Country, now called JERSEY. Passing down the Bay
by Coney Island, Natton (now Governor’s) Island, and Staten Island,
we came to Richard Hartshorn’s, at MIDDLETOWN HARBOUR, about break
of day, the 27th of sixth Month. Next day we rode about thirty miles
into the country through the woods and over very bad bogs, one worse
than all the rest; the descent into which was so steep, that we were
fain to slide down with our horses, and then let them lie and
breathe, before they could go on. This place the people of the
country called Purgatory. We got at length to SHREWSBURY in EAST
JERSEY, and on First-day had a precious meeting there, to which
Friends and other people came from far; and the blessed presence of
the Lord was with us. The same week we had a men’s and women’s
meeting out of most parts of New Jersey. They are building a
meeting-place in the midst of them, and there is a monthly and
general meeting set up; which will be of great service in those
parts, in “keeping up the gospel order and government of Christ
Jesus (of the increase of which there is no end), that they who are
faithful may see that all who profess the holy truth live in the
pure religion, and walk as becometh the gospel.”
While we were at Shrewsbury, an accident befell, which, for the
time, was a great exercise to us. John Jay, a Friend of Barbadoes,
who came with us from Rhode Island, and intended to accompany us
through the woods to Maryland, being to try a horse, got upon his
back; and the horse fell a-running, and cast him down upon his head,
and broke his neck, as the people said. They that were near him took
him up as dead, carried him a good way, and laid him on a tree. I
got to him as soon as I could; and feeling him, concluded he was
dead. As I stood by him, pitying him and his family I took hold of
his hair, and his head turned any way, his neck was so limber.
Whereupon I took his head in both my hands, and setting my knees
against the tree, I raised his head, and perceived there was nothing
out or broken that way. Then I put one hand under his chin, and the
other behind his head, and raised his head two or three times with
all my strength, and brought it in. I soon perceived his neck began
to grow stiff again, and then he began to rattle in the throat, and
quickly after to breathe. The people were amazed: but I bid them
have a good heart, be of good faith, and carry him into the house.
They did so, and set him by the fire. I bid them get him something
warm to drink, and put him to bed. After he had been in the house a
while he began to speak; but he did not know where he had been. The
next day we passed away (and he with us, pretty well) about sixteen
miles to a meeting at MIDDLETOWN, through woods and bogs, and over a
river; where we swam our horses, and got over ourselves upon a
hollow tree. Many hundred miles did he travel with us after this. To
this meeting came most of the people of the town. A glorious meeting
we had, and the Truth was over all; blessed be the great Lord God
for ever!
After the meeting we went to MIDDLETOWN-HARBOUR, about five miles,
in order to take our long journey next morning, through the woods
towards Maryland; having hired Indians for our guides. I determined
to pass through the woods on the other side of Delaware-Bay, that we
might head the creeks and rivers as much as possible. On the 9th of
the 7th month we set forwards, and passed through many Indian towns,
and over some rivers and bogs; and when we had rode about forty
miles, we made a fire at night, and laid by it. As we came among the
Indians, we declared the day of the Lord to them. Next day we
travelled fifty miles, as we computed; and at night, finding an old
house, which the Indians had forced the people to leave, we made a
fire and stayed there, at the head of Delaware-Bay. Next day we swam
our horses over a river about a mile, at twice, first to an island
called UPPER TINICUM, and then to the mainland; having hired Indians
to help us over in their canoes. This day we could reach but about
thirty miles, and came at night to a Swede’s house, where we got a
little straw, and stayed that night. Next day, having hired another
guide, we travelled about forty miles through the woods, and made a
fire at night, by which we lay, and dried ourselves; for we were
often wet in our travels. The next day we passed over a desperate
river, which had in it many rocks and broad stones, very hazardous
to us and our horses. Thence we came to CHRISTIANA RIVER, where we
swam our horses, and went over ourselves in canoes; but the sides of
this river were so bad and miry, that some of the horses had like to
have been laid up. Thence we went to NEWCASTLE, heretofore called
NEW AMSTERDAM; and being very weary, and inquiring in the town where
we could buy some corn for our horses, the governor came and invited
me to his house; and afterwards desired me to lodge there, saying he
had a bed for me, and I should be welcome. So I stayed there, the
other Friends being taken care of also. This was on the seventh day
of the week; and he offering his house for a meeting, we had the
next day a pretty large one; for most of the town were at it. There
had never been a meeting here before, nor any within a great way of
it; but this was a very precious one, many of the people were
tender, and confessed to the truth; and some received it; blessed be
the Lord for ever!
On the the 16th of the 7th month we set forward again, and
travelled, as near as we could compute, about fifty miles, through
woods and over bogs, heading BOHEMIA and SASSAFRAS RIVERS. At night
we made a fire in the woods, and lay there all night; and it being
rainy weather, we got under some thick trees for shelter, and
afterwards dried ourselves again by the fire. Next day we waded
through CHESTER RIVER, a very broad water, and after passing through
many bad bogs, lay that night also in the woods by a fire; not
having gone above thirty miles that day. The day following we
travelled hard; and though we had some troublesome bogs in our way,
we rode about fifty miles; and got safe that night, but very weary,
to Robert Harwood’s, at MILES (now “ST.” MICHAEL’S) RIVER in
MARYLAND. This was the eighteenth of the month; and though we were
very weary, and much dirtied with getting through the bogs in our
journey, yet hearing of a meeting next day, we went to it, and then
to John Edmundson’s; from whence we went three or four miles by
water to a meeting the First-day following. Here was a judge’s wife,
who had never been at any of our meetings before; who was reached,
and said after, “she had rather hear us once, than the priest a
thousand times.” Many others also were very well satisfied; for the
power of the Lord was eminently with us; blessed for ever be his
holy name!
We passed thence about twenty-two miles, and had a meeting upon the
KENTISH shore, to which one of the judges came; and a good meeting
it was. Then, after another meeting hard by, at Henry Wilcock’s
house, where also we had good service for the Lord, we went by water
about twenty miles to a very large meeting, where were some hundreds
of people, four justices of the peace, the high-sheriff of Delaware,
an Indian emperor or governor, and two chiefs. With these Indians I
had a good opportunity the night before. I spoke to them by an
interpreter; they heard the truth attentively, and were very loving.
A blessed meeting this was, and of great service, both for
convincing and establishing in the truth them that were convinced of
it. Blessed be the Lord, who causeth his blessed truth to spread!
After the meeting a woman came to me, whose husband was one of the
judges of that part of the country, and a member of the assembly,
and told me, “her husband was sick, not likely to live; and desired
me to go home with her to see him.” It was three miles to her house;
and being just come hot out of the meeting, it was hard for me then
to go; yet considering the service, I got a horse, went with her,
visited her husband, and spoke what the Lord gave me to him. The man
was much refreshed, and finally was raised up by the power of the
Lord; and he afterwards came to our meetings.
I went back again to the Friends that night; and next day we
departed thence about twenty miles to TREDHAVEN-CREEK, to John
Edmundson’s again; whence, on the 3rd of the 8th month, we went to
the general meeting for all Maryland Friends. This held five days;
the first three, we had meetings for public worship, to which people
of all sorts came; the other two were spent in the men’s and women’s
meetings. To the public meetings came many Protestants of divers
sorts, and some Papists; amongst these were several magistrates and
their wives, and other persons of chief account in the country.
There were so many, besides Friends, that it was thought there were
sometimes a thousand people at one of these meetings. So that,
though they had not long before enlarged their meeting-place, and
made it as large again as it was before, it could not contain the
people. I went by boat every day four or five miles to it, and there
were so many boats at that time passing upon the river, that it was
almost like the Thames. The people said, “there were never so many
boats seen there together before.” And one of the justices said, “he
never saw so many people together in that country before.” It was a
very heavenly meeting, wherein the presence of the Lord was
gloriously manifested, and Friends were sweetly refreshed, the
people generally satisfied, and many convinced; for the blessed
power of the Lord was over all; everlasting praises to his holy name
for ever! After the public meetings were over, the men’s and women’s
meetings began, and were held the other two days; for I had
something to impart to them which concerned the glory of God, the
order of the gospel, and the government of Christ Jesus. When these
meetings were over, we took our leave of Friends in those parts,
whom we left well established in the truth.
On the 10th of the 8th Month we went thence about thirty miles by
water, passing by CRANES ISLAND, SWAN ISLAND, and KENT ISLAND, in
very foul weather and much rain; whereby (our boat being open) we
were not only very much wet, but in great danger of being overset;
insomuch that some thought we could not escape being cast away, till
they saw us come to shore next morning. But blessed be God, we were
very well. Having got to a little house, dried our clothes by the
fire, and refreshed ourselves a little, we took to our boat again;
and put off from land, sometimes sailing and sometimes rowing; but
having very foul weather that day too, we could not get above twelve
miles forward. At night we got to land, and made a fire; some lay by
that, and some by a fire at a house a little way off. Next morning
we passed over the GREAT-BAY, and sailed about forty miles that day.
Making to shore at night, we lay there, some in the boat, and some
at an ale-house. Next morning, being First-day, we went six or seven
miles to a Friend’s house, who was a justice of the peace; where we
had a meeting: this was a little above the head of the Great-Bay. We
were almost four days on the water, weary with rowing, yet all was
very well: blessed and praised be the Lord. We went next day to
another Friend’s house, near the head of HATTON’S ISLAND, where we
had good service amongst Friends and others; as we had also the day
following at George Wilson’s,[30] a Friend that lived about three
miles further; where we had a very precious meeting, there being
great tenderness amongst the people.
After this meeting we sailed about ten miles to James Frizby’s, a
justice of the peace, where, on the 16th, we had a very large
meeting, at which, besides Friends, were some hundreds of people it
was supposed; amongst whom were several justices, captains, and the
sheriff, with other persons of note. A blessed, heavenly meeting
this was; a powerful, thundering testimony for the truth was borne
therein; a great sense there was upon the people, and much
brokenness and tenderness amongst them. We stayed after meeting till
about eleven at night, that the tide turned for us; then taking
boat, we passed that night and next day about fifty miles, to
another Friend’s house. The two next days we made short journeys,
visiting Friends, and on the twentieth we had a great meeting at a
place called SEVERN, where there was a meeting-house, but not large
enough to hold the people. Divers chief magistrates were at it, and
many other considerable people, and it gave them generally great
satisfaction.
Two days after, we had a meeting with some that walked disorderly,
and had good service. Then spending a day or two in visiting
Friends, we passed to the WESTERN-SHORE; and on the twenty-fifth had
a large and precious meeting at William Coale’s,[31] where the
speaker of their assembly, his wife, a justice, and several other
people of quality were present. Next day we had a meeting six or
seven miles further, at Abraham Birkhead’s, where many of the
magistrates and upper sort of people were, and the speaker of the
assembly for that country was convinced: a blessed meeting it was,
praised be the Lord!
We travelled next day; and the day following, the 28th, had a large
and very precious meeting at Peter Sharp’s, on the CLIFFS, between
thirty and forty miles distant from the former. Many of the
magistrates and people of upper rank were at this meeting, and a
heavenly meeting it was. The wife of one of the governor’s council
was convinced, and her husband was very loving to Friends. A justice
from Virginia was convinced, and had a meeting afterwards at his
house. Some Papists were at this meeting, and one of them threatened
before he came, that he would dispute with me; but he was reached,
and could not oppose. Blessed be the Lord, the truth reached into
the hearts of people beyond words, and it is of a good savour
amongst them! After the meeting we went about eighteen miles, to
James Preston’s, a Friend that lived on Patuxent river; and thither
came to us an Indian king, with his brother, to whom I spoke, and
found they understood what I spoke of. Having finished our service
in Maryland, and intending for Virginia, we had a meeting at
PATUXENT on the 4th of the 9th month, to take our leave of Friends.
Many people of all sorts were at it, and a powerful meeting it was.
On the 5th we set sail for VIRGINIA, and in three days came to a
place called NANCEMOND, about two hundred miles from Maryland. In
this voyage we met with foul weather, storms, and rain, and lay in
the woods by a fire in the night. At Nancemond lived a Friend,
called the widow Wright. Next day we had a great meeting there, of
Friends and others. There came to it Colonel Dewes, with several
other officers and magistrates, who were much taken with the truth
declared. After this we hastened towards Carolina; yet had several
meetings by the way, wherein we had good service for the Lord; one
about four miles from Nancemond Water, which was very precious; and
there was a men’s and women’s meeting settled, for taking care of
the affairs of the church. Another very good one also we had at
William Yarrow’s, at PAGAN CREEK, which was so large, that we were
fain to be abroad, the house not being large enough to contain the
people. A great openness there was, the sound of truth spread
abroad, and had a good savour in the hearts of people: the Lord have
the glory for ever!
After this our way to Carolina grew worse, being much of it plashy,
and pretty full of great bogs and swamps; so that we were commonly
wet to the knees, and lay abroad at nights in the woods by a fire;
saving one night we got to a poor house, at SOMMERTOWN [now
SOMERTON,] and lay by the fire. The woman of the house had a sense
of God upon her. The report of our travel had reached thither, and
drawn some that lived beyond Sommertown, to that house, in
expectation to see and hear us (so acceptable was the sound of truth
in that wilderness country:) but they missed us. The next day, the
21st of the 9th Month, having travelled hard through the woods, and
over many bogs and swamps, we reached BONNER’S CREEK; and there we
lay that night by the fireside, the woman lending us a mat to lie
on.
This was the first house we came to in CAROLINA; here we left our
horses, over-wearied with travel. From hence we went down the creek
in a canoe, to Macocomocock [now Chowan] River; and came to Hugh
Smith’s house, where the people came to see us (for there were no
Friends in that part of the country,) and many of them received us
gladly. Amongst others came Nathaniel Batts, who had been governor
of Roanoke; he went by the name of Captain Batts, and had been a
rude, desperate man. He asked me about a woman in Cumberland, who,
he said, he was told, had been healed by our prayers, and laying on
of our hands, after she had been long sick, and given over by the
physicians; and he desired to know the certainty of it. I told him
we did not glory in such things, but many such things had been done
by the power of Christ.
Not far from hence we had a meeting among the people, and they were
taken with the truth: blessed be the Lord! Then passing down the
river ROANOKE in a canoe, we went down the bay CONEY-HOE, and came
to a captain’s house, who was very loving, and lent us his boat, for
we were much wet in the canoe, the water splashing in upon us. With
this boat we went to the governor’s house; but the water in some
places was so shallow that the boat being laden, could not swim; so
that we were fain to put off our shoes and stockings, and wade
through the water some distance. The governor, with his wife,
received us lovingly; but a doctor there would needs dispute with
us. And truly his opposing us was of good service, giving occasion
for the opening of many things to the people, concerning the light
and Spirit of God, which he denied to be in every one; and affirmed
that it was not in the Indians. Whereupon I called an Indian to us,
and asked him, “Whether or not, when he lied, or did wrong to any
one, there was not something in him that reproved him for it?” he
said, “There was such a thing in him, that did so reprove him; and
he was ashamed when he had done wrong, or spoken wrong.” So we
shamed the doctor before the governor and the people; insomuch that
the poor man ran out so far, that at length he would not own the
Scriptures. We tarried at the governor’s that night; and next
morning he very courteously walked with us himself about two miles
through the woods, to a place whither he had sent our boat about to
meet us. Taking leave of him, we entered our boat, and went that day
about thirty miles to Joseph Scott’s, one of the representatives of
the country. There we had a sound, precious meeting; the people were
tender, and much desired after meetings. Wherefore at a house about
four miles further, we had another meeting, to which the governor’s
secretary came, who was chief secretary of the province, and had
been formerly convinced.
I went from this place among the Indians, and spoke unto them by an
interpreter; showing them, “that God made all things in six days,
and made but one woman for one man; and that God drowned the old
world, because of their wickedness. Afterwards I spoke to them
concerning Christ, showing them, that he died for all men, for their
sins, as well as for others; and had enlightened them as well as
others; and that if they did that which was evil, he would burn
them, but if they did well, they should not be burned.” There was
among them their young king; and others of their chief men, who
seemed to receive kindly what I said to them.
Having visited the north part of Carolina, and made a little
entrance for truth upon the people there, we began to return towards
Virginia, having several meetings in our way, wherein we had very
good service for the Lord, the people being generally tender and
open; blessed be the Lord. We lay one night at the Secretary’s
house, to which we had much to do to get; for the water being
shallow, we could not bring our boat to shore; but the secretary’s
wife seeing our strait, came herself in a canoe (her husband being
from home) and brought us to land. Next morning our boat was sunk;
but we got her up, mended her, and went away in her that day about
twenty-four miles, the water being rough, and the winds high; but
the great power of God was seen, in carrying us safe in that rotten
boat. In our return we had a very precious meeting at Hugh Smith’s;
praised be the Lord for ever! The people were very tender, and very
good service we had amongst them. There was at this meeting an
Indian captain who was very loving, and acknowledged it to be truth
that was spoken. There was also one of the Indian priests, whom they
call a Pawaw, who sat soberly among the people. On the 9th of the
10th Month we got back to BONNER’S CREEK, where we had left our
horses; having spent about eighteen days in North Carolina.
Our horses having rested, we set forward for VIRGINIA again,
travelling through the woods and bogs, as far as we could well reach
that day; and at night lay by a fire in the woods. Next day we had a
tedious journey, through bogs and swamps, and were exceedingly wet
and dirty all the day, but dried ourselves at night by a fire. We
got that night to SOMMERTOWN. When we came near the house, the woman
of the house seeing us, spoke to her son to fasten up their dogs
(for both in Virginia and Carolina they generally keep great dogs to
guard their houses, living lonely in the woods); but the son said,
“he need not, for the dogs did not use to meddle with these people.”
Whereupon, when we were come into the house, she told us, “we were
like the children of Israel, whom the dogs did not move their
tongues against.” Here we lay in our clothes by the fire, as we had
done many a night before. Next day, before we went away, we had a
meeting; for the people having heard of us, had a great desire to
hear us; and a very good meeting we had among them, where we never
had one before; praised be the Lord for ever! After the meeting we
hasted away. When we had rode about twenty miles, calling at a house
to inquire the way, the people desired us to tarry all night with
them, which we did. Next day we came among Friends, after we had
travelled about a hundred miles from Carolina into Virginia; in
which time we observed a great variety of climates, having passed in
a few days from a very cold, to a warm and spring-like country. But
the power of the Lord is the same in all, is over all, and doth
reach the good in all; praised be the Lord for ever!
We spent about three weeks in travelling through Virginia, mostly
among Friends, having many large and precious meetings in several
parts of the country; as at the widow Wright’s, where a great many
magistrates, officers and other high people came. A most heavenly
meeting we had, wherein the power of the Lord was so great, that it
struck a dread upon the assembly and chained all down, and brought a
reverence upon the people’s minds. Among the officers was a major,
kinsman to the priest; he told me, “the priest threatened to come
and oppose us.” But the Lord’s power was too strong for him, and
stopped him; we were quiet and peaceable, and the people were
wonderfully affected with the testimony of truth; blessed be the
Lord for ever! Another very good meeting we had at CRICKATROUGH, at
which many considerable people were, many of whom had never heard a
Friend before; and they were greatly satisfied with the meeting,
praised be the Lord! We had also a very good and serviceable meeting
at John Porter’s, which consisted mostly of other people; in which
the power of the Lord was gloriously seen and felt, and it brought
the truth over all evil walkers and talkers; blessed be the Lord!
Divers other meetings we had, and many opportunities of doing
service for the Lord amongst the people where we came. The last week
we stayed, we spent some time and pains among Friends, sweeping away
that which was to be swept out, and working down a bad spirit that
was got up in some; blessed for ever be the name of the Lord! he it
is that gives victory over all.
Having finished what service lay upon us in Virginia, on the 30th we
set sail in an open sloop for MARYLAND. But having a great storm,
and being much wet, we were glad to get to shore before night; and,
walking to a house at WILLOUGHBY POINT, we got lodging there that
night. The woman of the house was a widow, and a very tender person;
she had never received Friends before; but she received us very
kindly, and with tears in her eyes. We returned to our boat in the
morning, and hoisted up our sail, getting forward as fast as we
could; but towards evening a storm rising, we had much to do to get
to shore; and our boat being open the water splashed often in, and
sometimes over us, so that we were completely wet. Being got to
land, we made a fire in the woods, to warm and dry us, and there we
lay all night, the wolves howling about us.
On the 1st of 11th month we sailed again, but the wind being against
us, we made but little way, and were fain to get to shore at POINT
COMFORT, where yet we found but small comfort; for the weather was
so cold, that though we made a good fire in the woods to lie by, our
water, that we had got for our use, was frozen near the fireside. We
made to sea again next day; but the wind being strong and against
us, we advanced but little, but were glad to get to land again, and
travel about to find some house, where we might buy some provisions,
for our store was spent. That night also we lay in the woods; and so
extremely cold was the weather, the wind blowing high, and the frost
and snow being great, that it was hard for some to abide it.
On the 3rd, the wind setting pretty fair, we fetched it up by
sailing and rowing, and got that night to MILFORD-HAVEN, where we
lay at Richard Long’s, near Quince’s Island. Next day we passed by
Rappahannock River, where dwell much people; and Friends had a
meeting there-aways at a justice’s house, who had formerly been at a
meeting where I was. We passed over Potomac River also, the winds
being high, the water very rough, our sloop open, and the weather
extremely cold; and having a meeting there-aways also, some people
were convinced; and when we parted thence, some of our company went
amongst them. We steered our course for Patuxent River. I sat at the
helm most part of the day, and some of the night. About the first
hour in the morning we reached James Preston’s house on Patuxent
River, which is about two hundred miles from Nancemond in VIRGINIA.
We were very weary; yet the next day, being the first of the week,
we went to the meeting not far from thence. The same week we went to
an Indian King’s cabin, where several of the Indians were, with whom
we had a good opportunity to discourse; and they carried themselves
very lovingly. We went also that week to a general meeting; then
about eighteen miles further to John Geary’s, where we had a very
precious meeting; praised be the Lord God for ever!
After this the cold grew so exceedingly sharp, the frost and snow so
extreme, beyond what was usual in that country, that we could hardly
endure it. Neither was it easy or safe to stir out; yet we got, with
some difficulty, six miles through the snow to John Mayor’s, where
we met with some Friends come from New England, whom we had left
there when we came away; and glad we were to see each other, after
so long and tedious travels. By these Friends we understood, that
William Edmundson, having been at Rhode Island and New England, was
returned to Ireland; that Solomon Eccles, coming from Jamaica and
landing at Boston in New England, was taken at a meeting there, and
banished to Barbadoes; that John Stubbs and another Friend were gone
into New Jersey, and several other Friends to Barbadoes, Jamaica,
and the Leeward Islands. It was matter of joy to us, to understand
that the work of the Lord went on and prospered, and that Friends
were unwearied and diligent in the service.
On the 27th we had a very precious meeting in a tobacco-house; and
next day returned to James Preston’s, about eighteen miles distant.
When we came there, we found his house was burnt to the ground the
night before, through the carelessness of a servant; so we lay three
nights on the ground by the fire, the weather being very cold. We
made an observation, which was somewhat strange, but certainly true;
that one day in the midst of this cold weather, the wind turning
into the South, it grew so hot that we could hardly bear it; and the
next day and night, the wind changing back into the North, we could
hardly endure the cold.
The 2nd of 12th month we had a glorious meeting at Patuxent; and
after it, went to John Geary’s again, where we waited for a boat to
carry us to the monthly meeting at the CLIFFS, and a living one it
was; praised be the Lord! This was on the 6th: another meeting we
had on the 9th, wherein the glory of the Lord shone over all;
blessed and magnified be his holy name for ever!
On the 12th of the month we set forward in our boat; and, travelling
by night, ran aground in a creek near MANOKIN RIVER. There we were
fain to stay till morning, when the tide came and lifted her off. In
the meantime sitting in an open boat, and the weather being bitterly
cold, some of us had like to have lost the use of our hands, they
were so frozen and benumbed with cold. In the morning, when the tide
had set us afloat again, we got to land, and made a good fire, at
which we warmed ourselves well. Then returning to our boat, we
passed on about ten miles further to a Friend’s house; where next
day we had a very precious meeting, at which some of the chief of
the place were. I went after it to a Friend’s house, about four
miles off, at the head of ANAMESSIC RIVER, where, on the day
following, the judge of the country and the justice with him came to
me, and were very loving, and much satisfied with Friends’ order.
The next day we had a large meeting in the justice’s barn, for his
house could not hold the company. There were several of the great
folks of that country, and among the rest an opposer; but all was
preserved quiet and well; a precious meeting it was, and the people
were much affected with the truth; blessed be the Lord! We went next
day to see Captain Colburn, who was also a justice, and there we had
some service; then returning again, we had a very glorious meeting
at the same justice’s, where we met before; to which came many
people of account in the world, magistrates, officers, and others.
It was large, and the power of the Lord was much felt, so that the
people were generally well satisfied, and taken with the truth; and
there being several merchants and masters of ships from New England,
the truth was spread abroad; blessed be the Lord!
A day or two after, we travelled about sixteen miles through the
woods and bogs, heading ANAMESSIC RIVER and AMOROCA RIVER, part of
which last, we went over in a canoe, and came to MANOKIN, to a
friendly woman’s house; where, on the 24th, we had a large meeting
in a barn. The Lord’s living presence was with us, and among the
people; blessed be his holy name for evermore! Friends had never had
a meeting in those parts before. After this we passed over the River
Wicomico, through many bad and watery swamps and marshy ways, and
came to James Jones’s, a Friend, and a justice of the peace; where
we had a large and very glorious meeting; praised be the Lord God.
Then passing over the water in a boat, we took horse and travelled
about twenty-four miles through woods and troublesome swamps, and
came to another justice’s house, where we had a very large meeting,
much people, and many of considerable account being present; and the
living presence of the Lord was amongst us, praised for ever be his
holy name! This was on the 3rd of the 1st month, 1672-3;[32] and on
the 5th we had another living and heavenly meeting, at which divers
of the justices, with their wives, and many other people, were;
amongst whom we had very good service for the Lord; blessed be his
holy name. At this meeting was a woman that lived at Anamessic, who
had been many years in trouble of mind, and sometimes would sit
moping near two months together, and hardly speak or mind anything.
When I heard of her, I was moved of the Lord to go to her, and tell
her, “that salvation was come to her house.” After I had spoken the
word of life to her, and entreated the Lord for her, she mended,
went up and down with us to meetings, and is since well, blessed be
the Lord!
Being now clear of these parts, we left Anamessic on the 7th, and
passing by water about fifty miles, came to a friendly woman’s house
at HUNGER RIVER. We had very rough weather in our passage to this
place, and were in great danger, for the boat had nearly been turned
over; but through the good providence of God, we got safe thither;
praised be his name! At this place we had a meeting; and amongst the
people present, were two Papists, a man and a woman; he was very
tender, and she confessed to the truth. This meeting was not so
large as it would have been, if many, who had intended, could have
got to it; but the weather was so foul, and the water, by reason of
high winds, so rough, that it was not safe to pass over it. I had no
Friend now with me but Robert Widders, the rest having dispersed
themselves into several parts of the country in the service of
truth.
As soon as the wind would permit, we passed hence about forty miles
by water, rowing most part of the way, and came to the head of
LITTLE CHOPTANK RIVER, to Dr. Winsmore’s, who was a justice, lately
convinced. Here we met with some Friends, with whom we stayed a
while; and then went on by land and water, and had a large meeting
out of doors, for the house we were at could not receive the people.
Divers of the magistrates and their wives were present, and a good
meeting it was; blessed be the Lord, who is making his name known in
that wilderness country! We returned thence to a Friend’s house,
named William Stephens, where we met the Friends that had been
travelling in other parts; and were much refreshed in the Lord
together, imparting to each other the good success we had had in the
Lord’s work, and the prosperity and spreading of truth in the places
where we travelled. John Cartwright and another Friend had been in
Virginia, where there were great desires in people after truth; and
being now returned, they stayed a little with us here, and then set
forward for Barbadoes. Before we left this place we had a very
glorious meeting, at which were very many people; amongst others,
the judge of that country, three justices, and the high-sheriff,
with their wives. Of the Indians was one called their emperor, an
Indian king and their speaker, who all sat very attentive, and
carried themselves very lovingly. An establishing, settling meeting
it was. This was on the 23rd of 1st month.
On the 24th we went by water ten miles to the Indian town where this
emperor dwelt, whom I had acquainted before of my coming, and
desired him to get their kings and councils together. In the morning
the emperor came himself, and had me to the town; and they were
generally come together, and had their speaker and other officers
with them, and the old empress sat among them. They sat very grave
and sober, and were all very attentive, beyond many called
Christians. I had some with me that could interpret to them, and we
had a very good meeting with them, and of very great service it was;
for it gave them a good esteem for truth and Friends: blessed be the
Lord.
After this we had many meetings in several parts of that country,
one at William Stephens’s, which was a general meeting once a month;
others at Tredhaven Creek, Wye, Reconow Creek, and at Thomas
Taylor’s in the Island of Kent. Most of these were large, there
being many people at them, divers of them of the most considerable
account. The Lord’s power and living presence were with us, and
plenteously manifested amongst the people; by which their hearts
were tendered and opened to receive the truth, which had a good
savour amongst them; blessed be the Lord God over all for ever.
Being clear of that side, we passed over the bay about fourteen
miles to a Friend’s house, where we met with several Friends. I sent
for Thomas Thurston thither, and had a meeting with him, to bring
the truth over his bad actions.
Having travelled through most parts of that country and visited most
of the plantations, having sounded the alarm to all people where we
came, and proclaimed the day of God’s salvation amongst them, we
found our spirits began to be clear of these parts of the world, and
draw towards Old England again. Yet we were desirous, and felt
freedom from the Lord, to stay over the general meeting for the
province of Maryland (which drew nigh) that we might see Friends
generally together before we departed. Wherefore spending our time,
in the interim, in visiting Friends and friendly people, in
attending meetings about the Cliffs and Patuxent, and in writing
answers to cavilling objections, which some of the truth’s
adversaries had raised and spread abroad, to hinder people from
receiving the truth, we were not idle, but laboured in the work of
the Lord, until that general provincial meeting came on, which began
on the 17th of the 3rd month, and lasted four days. On the first of
these, the men and women had their meetings for business, wherein
the affairs of the church were taken care of, and many things
relating thereto were opened unto them, to their edification and
comfort. The other three days were spent in public meetings for the
worship of God, of which divers of considerable account of the
government, and many others, were present, who were generally
satisfied, and many of them reached; for it was a wonderful,
glorious meeting, and the mighty presence of the Lord was seen and
felt over all; blessed and praised be his holy name for ever, who
over all giveth dominion!
After this meeting we took our leave of Friends, parting in great
tenderness, in the sense of the heavenly life and virtuous power of
the Lord, that was livingly felt amongst us; and went by water to
the place where we were to take shipping, many Friends accompanying
us thither and tarrying with us that night. Next day, the 21st of
the 3rd month, 1673, we set sail for England; the same day Richard
Covell came on board our ship, having had his own taken from him by
the Dutch. We had foul weather and contrary winds, which caused us
to cast anchor often, so that we were till the 31st ere we could get
past the capes of Virginia and come out into the main sea. But after
this we made good speed, and on the 28th of the 4th month cast
anchor at King’s Road, which is the harbour for BRISTOL. We had on
our passage very high winds and tempestuous weather, which made the
sea exceedingly rough, the waves rising like mountains; so that the
masters and sailors wondered at it, and said they never saw the like
before. But though the wind was strong, it set for the most part
with us, so that we sailed before it; and the great God who commands
the winds, who is Lord of heaven, of earth, and the seas, and whose
wonders are seen in the deep, steered our course and preserved us
from many imminent dangers. The same good hand of Providence that
went with us, and carried us safely over, watched over us in our
return, and brought us safely back again; thanksgiving and praises
be to his holy name for ever! Many sweet and precious meetings we
had on board the ship during this voyage (commonly two a week,)
wherein the blessed presence of the Lord did greatly refresh us, and
often break in upon and tender the company.
-----
Footnote 26:
John Burnyeat, a fellow-labourer in the gospel with George Fox,
and who is several times named in this Journal, was born in
Cumberland about the year 1631. He was well educated, and
religiously inclined from his youth, and convinced by George Fox
when he first came into Cumberland in 1653. He became an unwearied
traveller in the gospel, both in this country and in America,
boldly proclaiming the glad tidings of salvation, for which he
fell in for his share of abuse and imprisonments. Once at Ripon,
when visiting twenty-four of his friends imprisoned there for the
testimony of Jesus, speaking a few words to them he was haled away
before the mayor, and several times knocked off his knees when at
prayer, being sent to prison to his friends, and kept there
fourteen weeks.
He married and settled in Ireland, where his service mostly lay in
his latter days. In 1683 he was imprisoned in the Marshalsea in
Dublin two months for meeting and preaching. His wife died in
1688; and he, having finished his course, and kept the faith,
departed in peace in 1690. His works, and testimonies concerning
him, with an account of his convincement, and journal of his
travels, were published in a 4to volume, to which the reader is
referred. See also _Piety Promoted_, vol. i. p. 179; and Whiting’s
_Memoirs_, p. 416-430.
Footnote 27:
The instances of heathen kindness and hospitality, experienced by
George Fox and others who have visited the Indians in a friendly
manner, contrast very favourably in comparison with the many acts
of bigoted intolerance and cruelty recorded in these volumes on
the part of those professedly civilized and Christian.
Many incidents might be related in proof of Indian kindness when
unprovoked to opposite conduct. When the Quakers were under a
cruel persecution by the magistrates of Boston, in New England,
Nicholas Upshal, “a man of unblameable conversation,” and a church
member of their communion, showed the sufferers kindness, by
giving five shillings a week to the jailer to let those confined
in prison have the sustenance necessary for life—_the magistrates
having caused the jail window to be boarded up, that none might
communicate with, or help them_. He proceeded afterwards to reason
with the magistrates, and warn them not to be found fighting
against God, for which he was fined £20, imprisoned, and then
banished; though a weakly old man, and the season the depth of
winter. In his banishment in the wilderness, he met an Indian,
who, having understood how he had been dealt with, took compassion
on him, and very kindly told him, _if he would live with him he
would make him a warm house_; and further said, “What a God have
these English, who deal so with one another about their God!”
See here the Red Indian’s kindly care
Though he the name of _savage_ bear.
Christian, more savage thou than he,
Blush for thy cruel deeds of infamy:
The Indian’s unasked cup of charity
Is larger than as mixed by thee.
The white man aged, through frost and snows,
A banish’d exile to his country goes,
Full many a welcome does he say,
To his warm house whate’er the day.
More Christian he who thus does prove
By practice kindred with a God of love.
More Christian he than they who thus pollute
Their faith, and for their God a brother persecute.
Footnote 28:
See Bowden’s _History of Friends in America_, vol. i., pp.
280-284.
Footnote 29:
This is the only mention of Christopher Holder in these volumes.
He was a great sufferer in the New England persecution. In 1657 he
and another Friend being at Salem, went to the Puritan place of
worship there, and after the priest had concluded, Christopher
Holder addressing the assembly, was not allowed to proceed; one of
the commissioners with much fury “seizing him by the hair of his
head,” and violently thrusting a glove and handkerchief into his
mouth. These two Friends were subsequently sentenced, under “the
law against Quakers,” to receive thirty lashes. The brutal manner
in which this sentence was carried out, was in accordance with the
spirit that prompted the rulers to pass the cruel law. A
three-corded knotted whip was used on the occasion; and the
executioner, to make more sure of his blows, “measured his
ground,” and then “fetched his strokes with all his might.” Thirty
strokes thus inflicted, as will be readily imagined, left the
sufferers miserably torn and lacerated; and in this state they
were conveyed to their prison cell. Here, without any bedding, or
even straw to lie on, the inhuman jailer kept them for three days
without food or drink; and, in this dismal abode, often exposed to
damp and cold, were these faithful men confined for the space of
nine weeks. We may wonder that, under such aggravated cruelties
their lives were spared; but He, for whose holy cause they thus
suffered, was near to support and console them. His ancient
promise was fulfilled in their experience, and they rejoiced in
the comforting presence of his living power.—Bowden’s _History of
Friends in America_.
Previous to this, Christopher Holder and his companion had been
banished from Rhode Island. The governor having hired an Indian to
convey them off the island, ordered the Friends to pay for the
passage themselves. But not being willing to facilitate their own
banishment, and not feeling that it was their Divine Master’s will
for them to leave the island, they declined to go, or to pay the
Indian who was hired to take them. The governor directed the
constable forcibly to obtain the requisite sum from the strangers,
and gave peremptory orders to the natives to take them away in
their canoes. The Algonquins, however, not being in any great
haste to execute the bidding of the governor, contrary to the will
of the Friends, and at a time too when the weather was stormy,
entertained them for three days with marked kindness and
hospitality. A change in the weather then taking place, and the
banished ones feeling that it was no longer required of them to
stay on the island, the Indians, at their own request, prepared to
take them across. Before leaving the island the Friends offered to
remunerate the natives for their kindness, but these poor people,
from the generous impulses of their hearts, acting more in unison
with the spirit of Christianity than those who were wont to be
their teachers, declined to receive any reward. “You are
strangers,” they replied, “and Jehovah hath taught us to love
strangers.” Such simple and feeling language from the lips of
North American Indians, was a striking rebuke to the bigotry and
intolerance which marked the conduct of their highly professing
teachers.—Bowden’s _History of Friends in America_.
Footnote 30:
This George Wilson, at whose house George Fox was entertained, is
not mentioned elsewhere in the Journal. He was originally from
Great Britain, and a great sufferer for the truth during the New
England persecution. In 1661, it appears he was amongst
twenty-seven other Friends in prison in Boston, who were liberated
that year by an order from the home government. But these faithful
messengers of the Lord, who were thus unexpectedly released from
bondage, were concerned, almost immediately on leaving the jail,
to preach to the inhabitants those truths for which they had
suffered. The magistrates, already at their wits’-end, in
fruitlessly endeavouring to arrest the spread of Quaker
principles, being impatient at this fresh manifestation of
devotedness, ordered a guard of soldiers to drive all the Friends
out of their territory into the wilderness; an order which was
speedily executed. George Wilson was among those who were thus
forcibly expelled; but, undismayed by the new law for the
application of the whip, they returned at once to their homes.
There they were quickly apprehended, and sentenced to undergo a
flogging through three towns, and to be put out of the limits of
the colony. The executioner, desirous of lending his ingenuity to
increase the severity of the sentence, provided himself with a
singularly constructed whip, or as it is called, a “cruel
instrument,” with which he “miserably tore” the bodies of the
sufferers. Such was the new and barbarous character of the weapon
used on this occasion, that Friends endeavoured, though
unsuccessfully, to obtain it to send to England, as another proof
of the malignant cruelty which actuated the rulers of
Massachusetts towards the new Society. At the conclusion of this
whipping at Boston, George Wilson, in the midst of his
persecutors, knelt in solemn supplication to the Most High.
Being on a gospel mission in Virginia, George Wilson became a
victim to the reigning intolerance, and was incarcerated in the
dungeon at James’ Town. The circumstances of his case evinced
great barbarity on the part of his persecutors. The place of his
imprisonment was an extremely loathsome one, without light or
ventilation. Here, after being cruelly scourged and heavily ironed
for a long period, he had to feel the heartlessness of a
persecuting and dominant hierarchy; until, at last, his flesh
actually rotted from his bones, and, within the cold damp walls of
the miserable dungeon of James’ Town, he laid down his life a
faithful martyr for the testimony of Jesus.
The patience and resignation with which George Wilson bore his
aggravated sufferings, and his faithfulness unto death, form a
striking instance of the inflexible adherence to conscientious
conviction, which so remarkably characterized the early Friends.
Living near to Him who is the fountain and fulness of love, his
enemies also became the objects of his solicitude; and, whilst
lingering in the wretched dungeon, his heart was lifted up in
prayer for his persecutors. “For all their cruelty,” he writes, “I
can truly say, Father, forgive them, for they know not what they
do.”—Bowden’s _History of Friends in America_.
Footnote 31:
William Coale, a Friend of Maryland, was convinced about the year
1657. He was a man of an innocent and tender spirit; and a living
and weighty minister of the gospel of Christ. He visited Friends
in Virginia with George Wilson, and was very serviceable, some
being turned to the Lord through his ministry, and many
established in the truth. He suffered cruel imprisonment for the
gospel, which injured him so much that he never recovered it. In
the time of his last illness he was cheerful, freely given up to
die, saying, “The living presence of the Lord is with me;” with
many more words of the great satisfaction he had from the Lord
concerning his peace; adding, “I bless the Lord, I have finished
my course, and I have nothing to do but to wait on the Lord and
die.” He departed very peaceably and quietly about the year 1678.
Footnote 32:
The difference implied here and elsewhere in the date is between
the old style and the new. The above may be read either, the 3d of
the 11th month, 1672; or the 3rd of the 1st month, 1673. It would
appear that an alteration in the mode of reckoning did not take
place generally till made by Act of Parliament in 1752, when the
Friends also adopted a change in the mode of reckoning the months,
which is explained at large in the _Book of Discipline_, p. 73.
ED.: 1833.
CHAPTER VI.
1673-1675.—George Fox writes to his wife from Bristol—has a glorious
powerful meeting there, in which he declares of three estates
and three teachers—at Slaughterford meets with much opposition
to the settlement of women’s meetings—the chief opposer struck
by the Lord’s power, condemns his error—at Armscott is arrested
by Justice Parker, and sent to Worcester jail with Thomas
Lower—writes to his wife—he and T. Lower write to Lord Windsor
and other magistrates, with a statement of their case—they are
examined at the sessions, but George Fox is ensnared with the
oath, and re-committed for refusing to take it—Thomas Lower is
discharged, and afterwards visits Justice Parker, and gives the
priest of the parish (who instigated their imprisonment) a
severe rebuke in his presence, though unknown—George Fox
disputes with Dr. Crowder on swearing—he is removed to London by
Habeas Corpus—but ultimately remanded to Worcester—is examined
at the assizes by Judge Turner, but the case is referred to the
sessions—disputes with a priest on perfection—brought up at the
sessions and re-committed, but has liberty till the next
sessions—is again removed by Habeas Corpus, and tenders in court
a declaration instead of the oath—attends the Yearly Meeting in
London—appears again at the sessions of Worcester, and points
out the flaws in his indictment—yet he is brought in guilty and
premunired—writes to the king respecting the principle of
Friends—is seized with illness, and his life almost despaired
of—Justice Parker writes to the jailer to relax the rigour of
his imprisonment—his wife intercedes with the king for his
release, which he is willing to grant by a pardon—this George
Fox could not accept, as it implied guilt—he is once more
removed by Habeas Corpus—the under-sheriff quarrels with him for
calling their ministers priests—he is brought before the judges,
and Counsellor Corbet starts a new plea, that the Court cannot
imprison on a premunire—the indictment is quashed for error, and
he is freed by proclamation after nearly fourteen months’
imprisonment—he writes many papers and pamphlets in Worcester
jail.
When we came into Bristol Harbour, there lay a man-of-war, and the
press-master[33] came on board us to press our men. We had a meeting
at that time in the ship with the seamen before we went to shore,
and the press-master sat down with us and stayed the meeting, and
was very well satisfied with it. I spoke to him to leave two of the
men he had pressed in our ship (for he had pressed four), one of
whom was a lame man; and he said, “at my request, he would.”
We went on shore that afternoon, and got to SHIREHAMPTON, where we
obtained horses, and rode to BRISTOL that night, where Friends
received us with great joy. In the evening I wrote a letter to my
wife, to give her notice of my landing; as follows:—
“DEAR HEART,
“This day we came into Bristol near night, from the sea; glory to
the Lord God over all for ever, who was our convoy, and steered
our course! the God of the whole earth, of the seas and winds, who
made the clouds his chariot, beyond all words, blessed be his name
for ever! He is over all in his great power and wisdom, Amen.
Robert Widders and James Lancaster[34] are with me, and we are
well; glory to the Lord for ever, who hath carried us through many
perils, perils by water, and in storms, perils by pirates and
robbers, perils in the wilderness and amongst false professors!
praises to him whose glory is over all for ever, Amen! Therefore
mind the fresh life, and live all to God in it. I intend (if the
Lord will) to stay a while this away; it may be till the fair. So
no more, but my love to all Friends.”
G.F.
Bristol, 28th of 4th Month, 1673.
Between this and the fair, my wife came out of the North to Bristol
to me, and her son-in-law Thomas Lower with two of her daughters[35]
came with her. Her other son-in-law John Rous, W. Penn and his wife,
and Gerrard Roberts, came from London, and many Friends from several
parts of the nation, to the fair; and glorious, powerful meetings we
had at that time, for the Lord’s infinite power and life was over
all. In the fresh openings whereof, I was moved to declare of “Three
estates, and three teachers,” viz.: “God was the first teacher of
man and woman in Paradise; and as long as they kept to and under his
teaching, they kept in the image of God, in his likeness, in
righteousness and holiness, and in dominion over all that he had
made; in the blessed state, in the paradise of God. But when they
hearkened to the serpent’s false teaching (who was out of truth,)
disobeyed God and obeyed the serpent, in feeding upon that which God
forbade them, they lost the image of God, the righteousness and
holiness, came under the power of Satan, and were turned out of
Paradise, out of the blessed into the cursed state. Then the promise
of God was, ‘that the Seed of the woman should bruise the serpent’s
head,’ break his power that man and woman were under, and destroy
his works. So here were three states and three teachers.”
God was the first teacher in Paradise; and whilst man kept under his
teaching, he was happy. The serpent was the second teacher; and when
man followed his teaching, he fell into misery, into the fall from
the image of God, from righteousness and holiness, and from the
power that he had over all that God had made; and came under the
serpent, whom he had power over before. Christ Jesus was the third
teacher; of whom God saith, ‘This is my beloved Son, in whom I am
well pleased, hear ye him;’ and who himself saith, ‘Learn of me.’
This is the true gospel-teacher, who bruises the head of the
serpent, the false teacher, and the head of all false teachers, and
of all false religions, false ways, false worships, and false
churches. Now Christ, who said, ‘Learn of _me_,’ and of whom the
Father said, ‘Hear ye _him_,’ said, ‘I am the Way to God, I am the
Truth, I am the Life, and the true Light.’ So as man and woman come
again to God, and are renewed up into his image, righteousness, and
holiness by Christ, thereby they come into the Paradise of God, the
state which man was in before he fell; and into a higher state than
that, to sit down in Christ that never fell. Therefore the Son of
God is to be heard in all things, who is the Saviour and Redeemer;
who laid down his life, and bought his sheep with his precious
blood.
We can challenge all the world. Who hath anything to say against our
way? our Saviour? our Redeemer? our Prophet, whom God hath raised up
that we may hear, and whom we must hear in all things? Who hath
anything against our Shepherd, Christ Jesus, who leads and feeds us,
and we know his heavenly voice? Who hath anything against our
Bishop, in whose mouth was never guile found, who doth oversee us in
his pasture of life, that we do not go astray from God, and out of
his fold? Who hath anything against our Priest, Christ Jesus, made
higher than the heavens, who gives us freely, and commands us to
give freely? Who hath anything to say against our Leader and
Counsellor, Christ Jesus, who never sinned; but is holy, harmless,
and separate from sinners? God hath commanded us to hear Him; and He
saith, ‘Learn of me;’ and if we should disobey God’s and Christ’s
command, we should be like our father Adam and mother Eve, who
disobeyed God’s command, and hearkened to the serpent’s teaching.
Man commands, and would force us to hear the hirelings, who plead
for sin and the body of death to the grave; which doctrine savours
of the devil’s teaching, not of Christ’s; but we resolve to hear the
Son, as both he and the Father command, and in hearing the Son we
hear the Father also, as the Scripture testifies. For the author to
the Hebrews says, ‘God, who at sundry times, and in divers manners,
spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets, hath in these
last days spoken unto us by his Son;’ mark that, God hath spoken
unto us (his apostles, disciples, church), by his Son. And whereas
some have objected, that although Christ did speak both to his
disciples and to the Jews, in the days of his flesh, yet since his
resurrection and ascension he doth not speak now:—the answer is,
that ‘as God did then speak by his Son in the days of his flesh, so
the Son, Christ Jesus, doth now speak by his Spirit.’ Wherefore John
saith in the Revelations, ‘He that hath an ear let him hear, what
the Spirit saith to the churches,’ Rev. ii. And Christ is said to
‘speak from heaven,’ Heb. xii. 25. ‘See that ye refuse not him that
speaketh; for if they escaped not who refused him that spake on
earth, much more shall not we escape, if we turn away from Him that
speaketh from heaven.’ They that resisted Moses’ law, who spake on
earth, died for it without mercy, which was a natural death; but
they that refuse Him that speaks from heaven, neglect and slight
their own salvation, and so die a spiritual death through unbelief
and hardness of heart. Therefore was the exhortation given of old,
‘To-day, if ye will hear his voice, harden not your hearts, as in
the provocation,’ &c. Heb. iii. 15, &c. So that they who neglect or
refuse to hear the voice of Christ, now speaking from heaven in this
his gospel-day, harden their hearts.
“Let all therefore mark well these three estates and teachers; the
God of Truth was the first teacher, while man was in Paradise and in
innocency. The serpent was the second teacher, the false teacher,
who by his false teaching came to be the god of the world, which
lies in wickedness. Christ Jesus, that bruises the serpent’s head,
is the third teacher, who saith, ‘Learn of me,’ and of whom God
saith, ‘This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased, hear ye
him;’ and of whom the testimony of the saints of old was, ‘God hath
in these last days spoken unto us by his Son.’ Thus they that come
to be renewed up again into the divine, heavenly image, in which man
was at first made, will know the same God, that was the first
teacher of Adam and Eve in Paradise, to speak to them now by his
Son, who changes not; glory be to his name for ever!”
Many deep and precious things were opened in those meetings by the
Eternal Spirit, which searcheth and revealeth the deep things of
God.
After I had finished my service for the Lord in that city, I
departed thence into GLOUCESTERSHIRE, where we had many large and
precious meetings; and the Lord’s everlasting power flowed over all.
From Gloucestershire I passed into WILTSHIRE, where also we had many
blessed meetings.
At SLAUGHTERFORD, in Wiltshire, we had a very good meeting, though
we met there with much opposition from some who had set themselves
against WOMEN’S MEETINGS; which I was moved of the Lord to recommend
to Friends, for the benefit and advantage of the Church of Christ.
“That faithful women, who were called to the belief of the truth,
being made partakers of the same precious faith, and heirs of the
same everlasting gospel of life and salvation that men are, might in
like manner come into the possession and practice of the gospel
order, and therein be meet-helps unto the men in the restoration, in
the service of truth, in the affairs of the church, as they are
outwardly in civil, or temporal things. That so all the family of
God, women as well as men, might know, possess, perform, and
discharge their offices and services in the house of God, whereby
the poor might be better taken care of, the younger instructed,
informed, and taught in the way of God; the loose and disorderly
reproved and admonished in the fear of the Lord; the clearness of
persons proposing marriage more closely and strictly inquired into
in the wisdom of God; and all the members of the spiritual body, the
church, might watch over and be helpful to each other in love.” But
after these opposers had run into much contention and wrangling, the
power of the Lord struck down one of the chief of them, so that his
spirit sunk, and he came to be sensible of the evil he had done in
opposing God’s heavenly power, and confessed his error before
Friends; and afterwards gave forth a paper of condemnation, wherein
he declared, “that he did wilfully oppose (although I often warned
him to take heed,) until the fire of the Lord did burn within him;
and he saw the angel of the Lord with his sword drawn in his hand,
ready to cut him off,” &c.
Notwithstanding the opposition at the meeting at Slaughterford, yet
a very good and serviceable one it was; for occasion was thereby
administered to answer their objections and cavils, and to open the
services of women in and for the church. At this the women’s
meetings, for that county, were established in the blessed power of
God.
After this I went to MARLBOROUGH and had a meeting there, to which
some of the magistrates came, and were civil and moderate. Then
passing to Bartholomew Maylin’s, I had a very precious meeting
there; and then went a little beyond OARE, where we had a blessed
meeting, and very large, as we had also soon after upon the border
of HAMPSHIRE. Then turning into OXFORDSHIRE, we visited Friends
there; and then went to READING, where we had a large meeting.
Thence passing into BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, we had many precious meetings
in that county. After which we visited Friends till we came to
KINGSTON-UPON-THAMES, where my wife and her daughter Rachel met me.
I made no long stay at Kingston, but went to LONDON, where I found
the Baptists and Socinians, with some old apostates, grown very
rude, having printed many books against us; so that I had a great
travail in the Lord’s power, before I could get clear of that city.
But blessed be the Lord, his power came over them, and all their
lying, wicked, scandalous books were answered.
I made a short journey into some parts of ESSEX and MIDDLESEX,
visiting Friends at their meetings, and their children at their
schools, and returned soon to LONDON. After some service there among
Friends, I went to KINGSTON, and thence to Stephen Smith’s in
SURREY, where was a very large meeting, many hundreds of people
attending it. I stayed in those parts till I had cleared myself of
the service the Lord had given me to do there, and then returned by
KINGSTON to LONDON, whither I felt my spirit drawn; having heard
that many Friends were taken before the magistrates, and divers
imprisoned in London and other towns, for opening their shop-windows
on holidays and fast-days (as they were called,) and for bearing
testimony against all such observations of days. Which Friends could
not but do, knowing that the true Christians did not observe the
Jews’ holidays in the apostles’ times, neither could we observe the
Heathens’ and Papists’ holidays (so called) which have been set up
amongst those called Christians, since the apostles’ days. For we
were redeemed out of days by Christ Jesus, and brought into the day
which hath sprung from on high, and are come into Him who is Lord of
the Jewish Sabbath, and the substance of the Jews’ signs.
After I had stayed some time in London, labouring for some relief
and ease to Friends in this case, I took leave of Friends there, and
went into the country with my wife, and her daughter Rachel, to
HENDON, in MIDDLESEX, and thence to William Penn’s at RICKMANSWORTH,
in HERTFORDSHIRE, whither Thomas Lower (who married another of my
wife’s daughters) came next day to accompany us in our journey
northward. After we had visited Friends thereabouts, we passed to a
Friend’s house near AYLESBURY, and thence to Bray Doily’s at
ADDERBURY, in OXFORDSHIRE, where, on First-day, we had a large and
precious meeting. Truth being well spread, and Friends in those
parts much increased in number, two or three new meetings were then
set up.
At night, as I was sitting at supper, I felt I was taken; yet I said
nothing then to any one of it. But getting out next morning, we
travelled into WORCESTERSHIRE, and went to John Halford’s, at
ARMSCOTT, where we had a very large and precious meeting in his
barn, the Lord’s powerful presence being eminently with and amongst
us. After the meeting, Friends being most of them gone, as I was
sitting in the parlour, discoursing with some Friends, Henry Parker,
a justice, came to the house, and with him one Rowland Hains, a
priest of HUNNINGTON, in WARWICKSHIRE. This justice heard of the
meeting by means of a woman Friend, who being nurse to a child of
his, asked leave of her mistress to go to the meeting to see me; and
she, speaking of it to her husband, he and the priest plotted
together to come and break it up and apprehend me. But from their
sitting long at dinner, it being the day on which his child was
sprinkled, they did not come till the meeting was over, and Friends
mostly gone. But though there was no meeting when they came, yet I
being in the house, who was the person they aimed at, Henry Parker
took me, and Thomas Lower for company with me; and though he had
nothing to lay to our charge, sent us both to Worcester jail, by a
strange sort of mittimus; a copy of which here follows:—
“_To the constables of Tredington, in the said county of
Worcester, and to all constables and tithing-men of the
several townships and villages within the said parish of
Tredington, and to the keeper of the jail for the county of
Worcester._
“Complaint being made to me, being one of His Majesty’s justices
of the peace for the said county of Worcester, that within the
said parish of Tredington in the same county, there has of late
been several meetings of divers persons, to the number of four
hundred persons and upwards at a time, upon pretence of exercise
of religion, otherwise than what is established by the laws of
England. And many of the said persons, some of them were teachers,
and came from the North, and others from the remote parts of the
kingdom; which tends to the prejudice of the reformed and
established religion, and may prove prejudicial to the public
peace. And it appearing to me that there was, this present day,
such a meeting as aforesaid, to the number of two hundred or
thereabouts, at Armscott, in the said parish of Tredington, and
that George Fox of London, and Thomas Lower of the parish of
Creed, in the county of Cornwall, were present at the said
meeting, and the said George Fox was teacher or speaker of the
said meeting; and no satisfactory account of their settlement or
place of habitation appearing to me, and forasmuch as the said
George Fox and Thomas Lower refused to give sureties to appear at
the next sessions of the peace to be holden for the said county,
to answer the breach of the common laws of England, and what other
matters should be objected against them; these are, therefore, in
His Majesty’s name, to will and require you, or either of you,
forthwith to convey the bodies of the said George Fox and Thomas
Lower to the county jail of Worcester aforesaid, and there safely
to be kept, until they shall be from thence delivered by due
course of law; for which this shall be your sufficient warrant in
that behalf. Dated the 17th day of December, in the 25th year of
His Majesty’s reign over England, &c.”
HENRY PARKER.
Being thus made prisoners, without any probable appearance of being
released before the quarter sessions at soonest, we got some Friends
to accompany my wife and her daughter into the North, and we were
conveyed to WORCESTER jail. From whence, by that time I thought my
wife could be got home, I wrote her the following letter:—
“DEAR HEART,
“Thou seemedst to be a little grieved when I was speaking of
prisons, and when I was taken; be content with the will of the
Lord God. For when I was at John Rous’s at Kingston, I had a sight
of my being taken prisoner, and when I was at Bray Doily’s in
Oxfordshire, as I sat at supper, I saw I was taken; and I saw I
had a suffering to undergo. But the Lord’s power is over all;
blessed be his holy name for ever!”
G. F.
When we had been some time in the jail, we thought fit to lay our
case before the Lord Windsor, who was lord-lieutenant of
Worcestershire, and before the deputy-lieutenants and other
magistrates: which we did by the following letter:—
“These are to inform you, the lord-lieutenant (so called,) and the
deputy-lieutenants, and the justices of the county of
Worcestershire, how unchristianly and inhumanly we have been dealt
withal by Henry Parker, a justice (so called,) in our journey
towards the North. We coming to our Friend, John Halford’s house,
on the 17th of the 10th month, 1673, and some Friends bringing us
on the way, and others coming to visit us there, towards night
there came the aforesaid justice, and a priest, called Rowland
Hains, of Hunnington, in Warwickshire, and demanded our names and
places of abode. And though we were not in any meeting, but were
discoursing together when they came in, yet he made a mittimus to
send us to Worcester jail.
“Now, whereas he says in his mittimus, ‘that complaint had been
made to him of several by-past meetings of many hundreds at a
time,’ we know nothing of that, nor do we think that concerns us.
And whereas he says further, ‘that no satisfactory account of our
settlement, or place of habitation appeared unto him.’ This he
contradicts in his own mittimus, mentioning therein the places of
our abode and habitation, the account of which we satisfactorily
and fully gave him. And one of us (Thomas Lower) told him, that he
was going down with his mother-in-law (who is George Fox’s wife,)
and with his sister, to fetch up his own wife and child out of the
North into his own country. And the other of us (George Fox) told
him, that he was bringing forward his wife on her journey towards
the North (who had been at London, to visit one of her daughters
that had lately lain in.) And having received a message from his
mother, an ancient woman in Leicestershire, that she earnestly
desired to see him before she died, he intended, as soon as he had
brought his wife on her journey as far as Cossall, in
Warwickshire, to turn into Leicestershire, to visit his mother and
relations there, and then to return to London again. But by his
interrupting us on our journey, taking the husband from his wife,
and the son from his mother and sister, and stopping him from
visiting his wife and child so remote, we were forced to get
strangers, or whom we could, to help them on their journey, to our
great damage and their hinderance. We asked the priest, ‘whether
this was his gospel, and their way of entertaining strangers?’ And
we desired the justice to consider, ‘whether this was doing as he
would be done by?’ But he said, ‘he had said it, and he would do
it.’ And whereas he says, ‘we refused to give sureties;’ he asked
only George Fox for sureties; who replied, ‘he was an innocent
man, and knew no law he had broken;’ but he did not ask Thomas
Lower for any, as if it had been crime and cause enough for his
commitment, that he came out of Cornwall. If we were at a meeting,
as he says in his mittimus, he might have proceeded otherwise than
by sending us to jail, to answer the breach of the common laws;
though he showed us no breach of any; as may be seen in the
mittimus. We thought fit to lay before you the substance of his
proceedings against us, hoping there will more moderation and
justice appear in you towards us, that we may prosecute our
intended journey.”
GEORGE FOX.
THOMAS LOWER.
But no enlargement did we receive by our application to the Lord
Windsor (so called.) And although Thomas Lower received several
letters from his brother, Dr. Lower, who was one of the king’s
physicians, concerning his liberty, and one, by his procurement,
from Henry Savile, who was of the king’s bed-chamber, to his
brother, called the Lord Windsor, to the same effect; yet seeing it
related only to his enlargement, not mine, so great was his love and
regard to me that he would not seek his own liberty singly, but kept
the letter by him unsent. So we were continued prisoners till the
next general quarter sessions; at which time divers Friends from
several places being in the town, spoke to the justices concerning
us, who answered fair and said we should be discharged. For many of
the justices seemed to dislike the severity of Parker’s proceedings
against us, and declared an averseness to ensnare us by the tender
of the oaths. Some Friends also had spoken with Lord Windsor, who
likewise answered them fair, so that it was the general discourse
that we should be discharged. We heard also that Dr. Lower had
procured a letter from Colonel Sands at London, to some of the
justices in favour of us. Some of the justices also spoke to some
Friends to acquaint us, that they would have us speak but little in
the court, lest we should provoke any of the bench; and they would
warrant we should be discharged.
We were not called till the last day of the sessions, which was the
21st of the 11th month, 1673. When we came in, they were stricken
with paleness in their faces, and it was some time before anything
was spoken; insomuch that a butcher in the hall said, “What, are
they afraid? Dare not the justices speak to them?” At length, before
they spoke to us, Justice Parker made a long speech on the bench,
much to the same effect as was contained in the mittimus; often
mentioning the common laws, but not instancing any that we had
broken; adding, “that he thought it a milder course to send us two
to jail, than to put his neighbours to the loss of two hundred
pounds, which they must have suffered, had he put the law in
execution against conventicles.” But in this he was either very
ignorant or very deceitful, for there being no meeting when he came,
or any to inform, he had no evidence to convict us, or his
neighbours by.
When Parker had ended his speech, the justices spoke to us, and
began with Thomas Lower, whom they examined as to the cause of his
coming into that country; of which he gave them a full and plain
account. Sometimes I put in a word while they were examining him,
and then they told me, “they were upon his examination, but that
when it came to my turn, I should have free liberty to speak, for
they would not hinder me; but I should have full time, and they
would not ensnare us.” When they had done with him, they asked me an
account of my travel, which I gave them, as is mentioned before, but
more largely. And whereas Justice Parker, to aggravate the case, had
made a great noise of “there being some from London, some from the
North, some from Cornwall, and some from Bristol, at the house where
I was taken;” I told them, that “this was in a manner all but one
family, for there was none from London, but myself; none from the
North, but my wife and her daughter; none from Cornwall, but my
son-in-law, Thomas Lower; nor any from Bristol, but one Friend, a
merchant there; who met us, as it were, providentially, to assist my
wife and her daughter in their journey homewards, when by our
imprisonment they were deprived of our company and help.” When I had
spoken, the chairman, whose name was Simpson, an old Presbyterian,
said, “Your relation or account, is very innocent.”
Then he and Parker whispered a while together, and after that the
chairman stood up and said, “You, Mr. Fox, are a famous man, and all
this may be true which you have said; but, that we may be the better
satisfied, will you take the oaths of allegiance and supremacy?” I
told them, “they had said they would not ensnare us; but this was a
plain snare; for they knew we could not take any oath.” However,
they caused the oath to be read; and when they had done, I told
them, “I never took an oath in my life, but I had always been true
to the government; that I was cast into the dungeon at Derby, and
kept a prisoner six months there, because I would not take up arms
against King Charles at Worcester fight; and for going to meetings
was carried up out of Leicestershire, and brought before Oliver
Cromwell, as a plotter to bring in King Charles. And ye know,” said
I, “in your own consciences, that we, the people called Quakers,
cannot take an oath, or swear in any case, because Christ hath
forbidden it. But as to the matter or substance contained in the
oaths, this I can and do say, that I do own and acknowledge the king
of England to be the lawful heir and successor to the realm of
England; and do abhor all plots and plotters, and contrivances
against him; and I have nothing in my heart but love and good-will
to him and all men, and desire his and their prosperity; the Lord
knows it, before whom I stand, an innocent man. And as to the oath
of supremacy, I deny the Pope, and his power, and his religion, and
abhor it with my heart.” While I was speaking, they cried, “give him
the book;” and I said, “the book saith, ‘Swear not at all.’” Then
they cried, “take him away, jailer;” and I still speaking on, they
were urgent upon the jailer, crying, “take him away, we shall have a
meeting here; why do you not take him away? that fellow (meaning the
jailer) loves to hear him preach.” Then the jailer drew me away, and
as I was turning from them, I stretched out my arm and said, “the
Lord forgive you, who cast me into prison for obeying the doctrine
of Christ.” Thus they apparently broke their promise in the face of
the country; for they promised I should have free liberty to speak,
but now they would not give it me; and they promised they would not
ensnare us, yet now they tendered me the oaths on purpose to ensnare
me.
After I was had away Thomas Lower was stayed behind in the court,
and they told him, “he was at liberty.” Then he would have reasoned
with them, asking them, “why I might not be set at liberty as well
as he, seeing we were both taken together, and our case was alike?”
But they told him, “they would not hear him,” saying, “you may be
gone about your business, for we have nothing more to say to you,
seeing you are discharged.” And this was all he could get from them.
Wherefore after the court was risen, he went to speak with them at
their chamber, desiring to know, “what cause they had to detain his
father, seeing they had discharged him;” and wishing them to
consider whether this was not partiality, and would be a blemish to
them. Whereupon Simpson threatened him, saying, “if you be not
content, we will tender you the oaths also, and send you to your
father.” To which he replied, “they might do that, if they thought
fit; but whether they sent him or not, he intended to go, and to
wait upon his father in prison, for that was now his business in
that country.” Then said Justice Parker to him, “Do you think Mr.
Lower, that I had not cause to send your father and you to prison,
when you had so great a meeting, that the parson of the parish
complained to me, that he has lost the greatest part of his
parishioners; so that when he comes among them, he has scarcely any
auditors left?” “I have heard,” replied Thomas Lower, “that the
priest of that parish comes so seldom to visit his flock (but once,
it may be, or twice in a year, to gather up his tithes,) that it was
but charity in my father to visit so forlorn and forsaken a flock;
and therefore thou hadst no cause to send my father to prison for
visiting them, or for teaching, instructing, and directing them to
Christ, their true teacher, who had so little comfort or benefit
from their pretended pastor, who comes amongst them only to seek for
his ‘gain from his quarter.’” Upon this the justice fell a laughing,
for it seems Dr. Crowder (who was the priest they spoke of) was then
in the room, sitting among them, though Thomas Lower did not know
him; and he had the wit to hold his tongue, and not undertake to
vindicate himself in a matter so notoriously known to be true. But
when Thomas Lower was come from them, the justices did so play upon
Dr. Crowder, that he was pitifully ashamed, and so nettled with it
that he threatened to sue Thomas Lower in the bishop’s court, upon
an action of defamation. Which when Thomas Lower heard, he sent him
word, that he would answer his suit, let him begin it when he would;
and would bring his whole parish in evidence against him. This
cooled the doctor. Yet some time after, he came to the prison,
pretending that he had a mind to dispute with me, and to talk with
Thomas Lower about that business; and he brought another with him,
he himself being then a prebendary at Worcester.
When he came in, he asked me, “What I was in prison for?” “Dost thou
not know that?” said I. “Wast not thou upon the bench when Justice
Simpson and Parker tendered the oath to me? And hadst not thou a
hand in it?” Then he said, “It is lawful to swear; and Christ did
not forbid swearing before a magistrate; but swearing by the sun,
and the like.” I bid him prove that by the Scriptures, but he could
not. Then he brought that saying of Paul’s, “All things are lawful
unto me,” 1 Cor. vi. 12. “And if,” said he, “all things were lawful
unto him, then swearing was lawful unto him.” “By this argument,”
said I, “thou mayest also affirm, that drunkenness, adultery, and
all manner of sin and wickedness is lawful also, as well as
swearing.” “Why,” said Dr. Crowder, “do you hold that adultery is
unlawful?” “Yes,” said I, “that I do.” “Why then,” said he, “this
contradicts the saying of St. Paul.” Thereupon I called to the
prisoners and the jailer, to hear what doctrine Dr. Crowder had laid
down as orthodox, viz., “that drunkenness, swearing, adultery, and
such like things were lawful.” Then he said, “he would give it under
his hand;” and took a pen, but wrote another thing than that which
he had spoken. Then, turning to Thomas Lower, he asked him, “whether
he would answer what he had there written?” who undertook it.
Whereupon, when he had threatened Thomas Lower to sue him in the
bishop’s court, for speaking so abusively (as he called it) of him
before the justices, and Thomas had bid him begin when he pleased,
for he would answer him, and bring his parishioners in evidence
against him, he went away in a great fret, grumbling to himself as
he went. A few days after Thomas Lower sent him an answer to the
paper he had written and left with him; which answer a Friend of
Worcester carried to him; and he read it and said, “he would reply
to it;” but never did, though he often sent him word he would do it.
Soon after the sessions, the term coming on, an habeas corpus was
sent down to Worcester for the sheriff to bring me up to the King’s
Bench bar. Whereupon, the under-sheriff, having made Thomas Lower
his deputy to convey me to London, we set out the 29th of the 11th
Month, 1673, and came to LONDON the 2nd of the 12th; the ways being
very deep, and the waters out. Next day, notice being given that I
was brought up, the sheriff was ordered to bring me into court. I
went accordingly, and appeared before Judge Wild; and both he and
the lawyers were pretty fair, so that I had time to speak, to clear
my innocency, and show my wrong imprisonment. After the return of
the writ was entered, I was ordered to be brought into court again
next day, the order of court being as follows:—
“WORCESTER. } Thursday, next after the morrow of the
The King } Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary,
against } in the 26th Year of King Charles the
George Fox. } Second.
“The defendant being brought here into court, upon a writ of
‘habeas corpus ad subjiciend’, &c., under the custody of the
sheriff of the county aforesaid; it is ordered, That the Return
unto the habeas corpus be filed, and the defendant is committed
unto the marshal of this court, to be safely kept until, &c.
“By motion of Mr. G. STROUDE.
“By the court.”
In the morning, I walked in the hall, till the sheriff came to me
(for he trusted me to go whither I would,) and it being early, we
went into the court of the King’s Bench, and sat there among the
lawyers almost an hour till the judges came in. When they came in,
the sheriff took off my hat; and after a while I was called. The
Lord’s presence was with me, and his power I felt was over all. I
stood and heard the king’s attorney, whose name was Jones, who
indeed spoke notably on my behalf, as did also another counsellor
after him; and the judges, who were three, were all very moderate,
not casting any reflecting words at me. I stood still in the power
and Spirit of the Lord, seeing how he was at work. When they had
done, I applied to the chief justice to speak; and he said, I might.
Then I related the cause of our journey, the manner of our being
taken and committed, and the time of our imprisonment until the
sessions; with a brief account of our trial there, and what I had
offered to the justices then, as a declaration that I could make or
sign, instead of the oaths of allegiance and supremacy. When I had
done, the chief justice said, “I was to be turned over to the King’s
Bench, and the sheriff of Worcester to be discharged of me.” He said
also “they would consider further of it; and if they found any error
in the record, or in the justice’s proceedings, I should be set at
liberty.” So a tipstaff was called to take me into custody, and he
delivered me to the keeper of the King’s Bench, who let me go to a
Friend’s house, where I lodged, and appointed to meet me at Edward
Mann’s, in Bishopsgate Street, next day.
But after this, Justice Parker, or some other of my adversaries
moved the court that I might be sent back to Worcester. Whereupon
another day was appointed for another hearing, and they had four
counsellors that pleaded against me. George Stroude, a counsellor,
pleaded for me, and was pleading before I was brought into court;
but they bore him down, and prevailed with the judges to give
judgment, that “I should be sent down to Worcester sessions.” Only
they told me, I might put in bail to appear at the sessions, and to
be of good behaviour in the meantime. I told them, “I never was of
ill behaviour in my life; and that they, the four judges, might as
well put the oath to me there, as send me to Worcester to be
ensnared by the justices, in their putting the oath to me, and then
premuniring me, who never took an oath in my life.” But I told them,
“if I broke my Yea and Nay, I was content to suffer the same penalty
that they should who break their oaths.” This alteration of the
judge’s minds in my case, proceeded, as was thought, from some false
informations, that my adversary, Justice Parker, had given against
me; for between the times of my former appearance and this, he had
spread abroad a very false and malicious story, viz., “that there
were many substantial men with me, out of several parts of the
nation, when he took me; and that we had a design or plot in hand;
and that Thomas Lower stayed with me in prison, long after he was
set at liberty, to carry on our design.” This was spoken in the
parliament house, insomuch, that if I had not been brought up to
London when I was, I should have been stopped at Worcester, and
Thomas would have been recommitted with me. But although these lies
were easily disproved, and laid open to Parker’s shame, yet would
not the judges alter their last sentence, but remanded me to
Worcester jail; only this favour was granted, that I might go my own
way, and at my own leisure; provided I would be without fail there
by the assize, which was to begin the 2nd of the 2nd month
following.
I stayed in and about London till toward the latter end of the 1st
month, 1674, and then went down leisurely (for I was not able to
bear hasty and hard travelling,) and came into WORCESTER on the last
day of the 1st month, 1674, being the day before the judges came to
town. On the 2nd of the 2nd month, I was brought from the jail to an
inn near the hall, that I might be in readiness if I should be
called. But not being called that day, the jailer came to me at
night, and told me, “I might go home” (meaning to the jail.)
Whereupon Gerrard Roberts of London being with me, he and I walked
down together to the jail without any keeper. Next day being brought
up again, they set a little boy of about eleven years old, to be my
keeper. I came to understand that Justice Parker and the clerk of
the peace had given order that I should not be put into the
calendar, that so I might not be brought before the judge; wherefore
I got the judge’s son to move in court that “I might be called;” and
thereupon I was called, and brought up to the bar before Judge
Turner, my old adversary, who had tendered me the oaths and
premunired me once before at Lancaster.
After silence made, he asked me, “what I desired?” I answered, “My
liberty, according to justice.” He said, “I lay upon the oath;” and
asked, “if I would take it.” I desired he would hear the manner of
my being taken and committed, and he being silent, I gave him an
account thereof at large, as is before set down, letting him also
know that “since my imprisonment I had understood that my mother,
who was an ancient, tender woman, and had desired to see me before
she died, hearing that I was stopped and imprisoned in my journey,
so that I was not likely to come to see her, was so struck by it,
that she died soon after: which was a very hard thing to me.” When I
had done speaking, he again asked me “to take the oaths;” I told him
I could not take any oath for conscience’ sake, and that I believed
he and they all knew in their consciences, that it was for
conscience’ sake I could not swear at all. I declared amongst them
what I could say, and what I could sign, in owning the king’s right
to the government, and in denying the Pope and his pretended powers,
and all plotters, plots, and conspiracies against the government.
Some thought the judge had a mind to set me at liberty, for he saw
they had nothing justly against me; but Parker, who committed me,
endeavoured to incense him against me, telling him, “that I was a
ringleader; that many of the nation followed me, and he knew not
what it might come to;” with many more envious words, which some
that stood near took notice of: who also observed that the judge
gave him no answer to it. However, the judge, willing to ease
himself, referred me and my case to the sessions again, bidding the
justices make an end of it there, and not trouble the assizes any
more with me. So I was continued prisoner chiefly (as it seemed)
through the means of Justice Parker, who, in this case, was as false
as envious; for he had promised Richard Cannon, of London, who had
acquaintance with him, that he would endeavour to have me set at
liberty; yet he was the worst enemy I had in court, as some of the
court observed and reported. Other justices were very loving, and
promised that I should have the liberty of the town, to lodge at a
Friend’s house till the sessions; which accordingly I had, and the
people were very civil and respectful to me.
Between this time and the sessions, I had some service for the Lord,
with several people that came to visit me. At one time three
nonconformist priests and two lawyers came to discourse with me; and
one of the priests undertook to prove, “that the Scriptures are the
only rule of life.” Whereupon, after I had plunged him about his
proof, I had a fit opportunity to open unto them “the right and
proper use, service, and excellency of the Scriptures; and also to
show, that the Spirit of God, which was given to everyone to profit
withal—the grace of God, which bringeth salvation, and which hath
appeared unto all men, and teacheth them that obey it to deny
ungodliness and worldly lusts, and to live soberly, righteously, and
godly in this present world; that this, I say, is the most fit,
proper, and universal rule, which God hath given to all mankind to
rule, direct, govern, and order their lives by.”
Another time came a Common-Prayer priest, and some people with him.
He asked me, “if I was grown up to perfection?” I told him, “what I
was, I was by the grace of God.” He replied, “it was a modest and
civil answer.” Then he urged the words of John, “If we say that we
have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.” And
he asked, “what did I say to that?” I said, with the same apostle,
“If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar, and His word
is not in us;” who came to destroy sin, and to take away sin. So
there is a time for people to see that they have sinned, and there
is a time for them to see that they have sin; and there is a time
for them to confess their sin, and to forsake it, and to know “the
blood of Christ to cleanse from all sin.” Then the priest was asked,
“whether Adam was not perfect before he fell? and whether all God’s
works were not perfect?” The priest said, “there might be a
perfection, as Adam had, and a falling from it.” But I told him,
“there is a perfection in Christ, above Adam, and beyond falling;
and that it was the work of the ministers of Christ, to present
every man perfect in Christ; and for the perfecting of whom they had
their gifts from Christ; therefore, they that denied perfection,
denied the work of the ministry, and the gifts which Christ gave for
the perfecting of the saints.” The priest said, “we must always be
striving.” But I told him, “it was a sad and comfortless sort of
striving, to strive with a belief that we should never overcome.” I
told him also, “that Paul, who cried out of the body of death, did
also ‘thank God, who gave him the victory, through our Lord Jesus
Christ.’ So there was a time of crying out for want of victory, and
a time of praising God for the victory. And Paul said, ‘there is no
condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus.’” The priest said,
“Job was not perfect.” I told him, “God said, Job was a perfect man,
and that he did shun evil: and the Devil was forced to confess that
‘God had set a hedge about him,’ which was not an outward hedge, but
the invisible heavenly power.” The priest said, “Job said, ‘He
chargeth his angels with folly, and the heavens are not clean in his
sight.’” I told him, “that was his mistake; for it was not Job who
said so, but Eliphaz, who contended against Job.” “Well but,” said
the priest, “what say you to that Scripture, ‘The justest man that
is, sinneth seven times a day.’” “Why truly,” said I, “I say, there
is no such Scripture;” and with that the priest’s mouth was stopped.
Many other services I had with several sorts of people between the
assizes and the sessions.
The next quarter sessions began the 29th of the 2nd month, and I was
called before the justices. The chairman’s name was —— Street, who
was a judge in the Welsh circuit; and he misrepresented me and my
case to the country, telling them, “that we had a meeting at
Tredington, from all parts of the nation, to the terrifying of the
king’s subjects, for which we had been committed to prison: that for
the trial of my fidelity the oaths were put to me; and having had
time to consider of it, he asked me, ‘if I would now take the
oaths?’” I desired liberty to speak for myself; and having obtained
that, began first to clear myself from those falsehoods he had
charged on me and Friends, declaring “that we had not any such
meeting from all parts of the nation, as he had represented it; but
that (except the Friend from whose house we came, and who came with
us to guide us thither, and one Friend of Bristol, who came
accidentally, or rather providentially, to assist my wife homewards
after we were taken) they that were with me were part of my own
family, being my wife, her daughter, and her son-in-law. And we did
not meet in any way that would occasion terror to any of the king’s
subjects, for we met peaceably and quietly, without arms; and I did
not believe there could any one be produced that could truly say he
was terrified with our meeting. Besides, I told them, we were but in
our journey, the occasion whereof I now related as before. Then as
to the oaths, I showed why I could not take them (seeing Christ hath
forbidden all swearing), and what I could say or sign in lieu of
them, as I had done before.” Yet they caused the oaths to be read to
me again, and afterwards read an indictment also, which they had
drawn up in readiness, having a jury ready also.
When the indictment was read, the judge asked me, “if I was guilty?”
I said, “Nay, for it was a great bundle of lies, which I showed and
proved to the judge in several particulars, which I instanced;
asking him, if he did not know in his conscience that they were
lies?” He said, “it was their form.” I said, “it was not a true
form.” He asked me again, “whether I was guilty?” I told him “nay, I
was not guilty of the matter, nor of the form; for I was against the
Pope and Popery, and did acknowledge and should set my hand to
that.” Then the judge told the jury what they should say, and what
they should do, and what they should write on the backside of the
indictment; and as he said, they did. But before they gave in their
verdict, I told them, “that it was for Christ’s sake, and in
obedience to his and the apostle’s command, that I could not swear;
and therefore, said I, take heed what ye do, for before his
judgment-seat ye shall all be brought.” The judge said, “this is
canting.” I said, “If to confess our Lord and Saviour, and to obey
his command, be called ‘canting’ by a judge of a court, it is to
little purpose for me to say more among you: yet ye shall see that I
am a Christian, and shall show forth Christianity, and my innocency
shall be manifest.” So the jailer led me out of the court; and the
people were generally tender, as if they had been in a meeting. Soon
after I was brought in again, and the jury found the bill against
me, which I traversed; and then I was asked to put in bail till the
next sessions, and the jailer’s son offered to be bound for me. But
I stopped him, and warned Friends not to meddle; for I told them,
“there was a snare in that:” yet I told the justices, that I could
promise to appear, if the Lord gave health and strength, and I were
at liberty. Some of the justices were loving, and would have
hindered the rest from indicting me, or putting the oath to me; but
Justice Street, who was the chairman, said, “he must go according to
law.” So I was sent to prison again; yet within two hours after,
through the moderation of some of the justices, I had liberty given
me to go at large till next quarter-sessions. These moderate
justices, it was said, desired Justice Parker to write to the king
for my liberty, or for a Noli prosequi, because they were satisfied
I was not such a dangerous person as I had been represented. This,
it was said, he promised them to do; but he did it not.
After I had got a copy of the indictment, I went to LONDON, visiting
Friends as I went. When I came there, some that were earnest to get
me out of the hands of those envious justices, that sought to
premunire me at Worcester, would needs be tampering again, to bring
me before the judges of the King’s Bench: whereupon I was brought
again by a habeas corpus before them. I tendered them a paper, in
which was contained what I could say instead of the oaths of
allegiance and supremacy, as follows:—
“This I do in the truth, and in the presence of God declare, that
King Charles the Second is lawful king of this realm, and of all
other his dominions; that he was brought in, and set up king over
this realm by the power of God: and I have nothing but love and
goodwill to him and all his subjects, and desire his prosperity
and eternal good. I do utterly abhor and deny the Pope’s power and
supremacy, and all his superstitions and idolatrous inventions:
and do affirm, that he hath no power to absolve sin. I do abhor
and detest his murdering of princes or other people, by plots or
contrivances. And likewise I do deny all plots and contrivances,
and plotters and contrivers against the king and his subjects;
knowing them to be the works of darkness, the fruits of an evil
spirit, against the peace of the kingdom, and not from the Spirit
of God, the fruit of which is love. I dare not take an oath,
because it is forbidden by Christ and the apostle; but if I break
my Yea or Nay, let me suffer the same penalty as they that break
their oaths.”
GEORGE FOX.
But the business being so far proceeded in at Worcester, they would
not meddle in it, but left me to appear again before the justices,
at the next general quarter-sessions at Worcester.
Meanwhile the YEARLY MEETING of Friends came on, at which (through
the liberty granted me till the sessions) I was present, and
exceedingly glorious the meetings were beyond expression; blessed be
the Lord.
After the Yearly Meeting I set forward for Worcester, the sessions
drawing on, which were held in the 5th month. When I was called to
the bar, and the indictment read, some scruple arising among the
jury concerning it, the judge of the court, Justice Street, caused
the oaths to be read and tendered to me again. I told him, “I came
now to try the traverse of my indictment, and that his tendering me
the oaths anew, was a new snare.” I desired him to answer me a
question or two; and asked him, “whether the oaths were to be
tendered to the king’s subjects, or to the subjects of foreign
princes?” He said, “to the subjects of this realm.” “Then,” said I,
“you have not named me a subject in the indictment, and therefore
have not brought me within the statute.” The judge cried, “Read the
oath to him:” I said, “I require justice.” Again I asked him,
“Whether the sessions ought not to have been held for the king and
the body of the county?” He said, “Yes.” “Then,” said I, “you have
there left the king out of the indictment; how then can you proceed
upon this indictment to a trial between the king and me, seeing the
king is left out?” He said, “the king was in before.” But I told
him, “the king’s name being left out, here was a great error in the
indictment, and sufficient, as I was informed, to quash it.
Besides,” I told him, “that I was committed by the name of George
Fox, of London; but now I was indicted by the name of George Fox, of
Tredington, in the county of Worcester: and I wished the jury to
consider, how they could find me guilty upon that indictment, seeing
I was not of the place the indictment mentioned?” The judge did not
deny that there were errors in the indictment; but said, “I might
take my remedy in the proper place.” I answered, “Ye know we are a
people that suffer all things, and bear all things; and therefore ye
thus use us, because we cannot revenge ourselves; but we leave our
cause to the Lord.” The judge said, “The oath has been tendered to
you several times, and we will have some satisfaction from you
concerning the oath.” I offered them the same declaration instead of
the oath, which I had offered to the judges above; but it would not
be accepted.
Then I desired to know, seeing they put the oath anew to me, whether
the indictment was quashed or not? Instead of answering me, the
judge told the jury, “they might go out.” Some of the jury were not
satisfied; whereupon the judge told them, “they had heard a man
swear that the oath was tendered to me the last sessions:” and then
he told them what they should do. I told him, “he should leave the
jury to their own consciences.” However, the jury, being put on by
him, went forth, and soon came in again, and found me guilty. I
asked the jury “how they could satisfy themselves to find me guilty
upon that indictment, which was laid so false, and had so many
errors in it?” They could make but little answer; yet one, who
seemed to be the worst of them, would have taken me by the hand; but
I put him by, saying, “How now Judas, hast thou betrayed me, and
dost thou now come with a kiss?” So I bid him and them repent. Then
the judge began to tell me, “how favourable the court had been to
me.” I asked him, “how he could say so? Was ever any man worse dealt
by than I had been in this case, who was stopped in my journey, when
travelling upon my lawful occasions, and imprisoned without cause;
and now had the oaths put to me only for a snare?” And I desired him
to “answer me in the presence of the Lord, in whose presence we all
were, whether this oath was not tendered me in envy?” He would not
answer that, but said, “Would you had never come here to trouble us
and the country.” I told him, “I came not thither of myself, but was
brought, being stopped in my journey. I did not trouble them, but
they had brought trouble upon themselves.” Then the judge told me,
“what a sad sentence he had to tell me.” I asked him, “whether what
he was going to speak was by way of passing sentence, or of
information? For,” I told him, “I had many things to say, and more
errors to assign in the indictment, besides those I had already
mentioned, to stop him from giving sentence against me upon that
indictment.” He said, “he was going to show me the danger of a
premunire, which was the loss of my liberty, and of all my goods and
chattels, and to endure imprisonment during life.” But he said, “he
did not deliver this as the sentence of the court upon me, but as an
admonition to me.” Then he bid the jailer take me away. I expected
to be called again to hear the sentence; but when I was gone, the
clerk of the peace (whose name was Twittey) asked him, as I was
informed, “whether that which he had spoken to me should stand for
sentence?” And he, consulting with some of the justices, told him,
“Yes, that was the sentence, and should stand.” This was done behind
my back, to save himself from shame in the face of the country.
Many of the justices, and the generality of the people, were
moderate and civil; and John Ashley, a lawyer, was very friendly,
both the time before and now, speaking on my behalf, and pleading
the errors of the indictment for me; but Justice Street, who was the
judge of the court, would not regard, but overruled all. This
Justice Street said to some Friends in the morning before my trial,
“that if he had been upon the bench the first sessions, he would not
have tendered me the oath; but if I had been convicted of being at a
conventicle, he would have proceeded against me according to that
law; and that he was sorry that ever I came before him;” and yet he
maliciously tendered the oath to me in the court again, when I was
to have tried my traverse upon the indictment. But the Lord pleaded
my cause, and met with both him and Justice Simpson, who first
ensnared me with the oath at the first sessions; for Simpson’s son
was arraigned not long after, at the same bar, for murder. And
Street, who, as he came down from London, after the judges had
returned me back from the King’s Bench to Worcester, said, “Now I
was returned to them, I should lie in prison and rot,” had his
daughter, whom he so doted on that she was called his idol, brought
dead from London in a hearse, to the same inn where he spoke those
words, and brought to Worcester to be buried within a few days
after. People took notice of the hand of God, how sudden it was upon
him; but it rather hardened than tendered him, as his conduct
afterwards showed.
After I was returned to prison, several came to see me; and amongst
others, the Earl of Salisbury’s son, who was very loving, and
troubled that they had dealt so wickedly by me. He stayed about two
hours with me, and took a copy of the errors in the indictment in
writing.
The sessions being now over, and I fixed in prison by a premunire,
my wife came out of the North to be with me; and the assizes coming
on, in the sixth month, the state of my case being drawn up in
writing, she and Thomas Lower delivered it to Judge Wild. In it were
set forth the occasion of my journey; the manner of my being taken
and imprisoned; the proceedings of the several sessions against me;
and the errors in the indictment by which I was premunired. When the
judge had read it, he shook his head, and said, “we might try the
validity or invalidity of the errors, if we would;” and that was all
they could get from him.
While I lay in prison, it came upon me to state our principle to the
king; not with particular relation to my own sufferings, but for his
better information concerning our principle, and us as a people.
“TO THE KING.
“The principle of the Quakers is the Spirit of Christ, who died
for us, and is risen for our justification; by which we know that
we are his. He dwelleth in us by his Spirit; and by the Spirit of
Christ we are led out of unrighteousness and ungodliness. It
brings us to deny all plottings and contrivings against the king,
or any man. The Spirit of Christ brings us to deny all manner of
ungodliness, as lying, theft, murder, adultery, fornication, and
all uncleanness, debauchery, malice, hatred, deceit, cozening, and
cheating whatsoever, and the devil and his works. The Spirit of
Christ brings us to seek the peace and good of all men, and to
live peaceably; and leads us from such evil works and actions as
the magistrates’ sword takes hold upon. Our desire and labour are,
that all, who profess themselves Christians, may walk in the
Spirit of Christ; that they, through the Spirit, may mortify the
deeds of the flesh, and by the sword of the Spirit cut down sin
and evil in themselves. Then the judges and other magistrates
would not have so much work in punishing sin in the kingdom;
neither then need kings or princes fear any of their subjects; if
they all walked in the Spirit of Christ; for the fruits of the
Spirit are love, righteousness, goodness, temperance, &c.
“If all, that profess themselves Christians, walked in the Spirit
of Christ, and by it did mortify sin and evil, it would be a great
ease to the magistrates and rulers, and would free them from much
trouble; for it would lead all “to do unto others, as they would
have others to do unto them;” and so the royal law of liberty
would be fulfilled. For if all, that are called Christians, did
walk in the Spirit of Christ, by it to have the evil spirits and
its fruits mortified and cut down in them; then, not being led by
the evil spirit, but by the good Spirit of Christ, the fruits of
the good Spirit would appear in all. For as people are led by the
good Spirit of Christ, it leads them out of sin and evil, which
the magistrates’ sword takes hold of, and so would be an ease to
the magistrates. But as people err from this good Spirit of
Christ, and follow the evil spirit, which leads them into sin and
evil; that spirit brings the magistrate into much trouble, to
execute the law upon the sinners and transgressors of the good
Spirit. That Spirit which leads people from all manner of sin and
evil, is one with the magistrates’ power, and with the righteous
law; for the law being added because of transgression, that Spirit
that leads out of transgression, must needs be one with that law
that is against transgressors. So that Spirit which leads out of
transgression, is the good Spirit of Christ, and is one with the
magistrates in the higher power, and owns it and them; but that
spirit which leads into transgression, is the bad spirit, is
against the law, against the magistrates, and makes them much
troublesome work.
“Now the manifestation of the good Spirit is given to every man to
profit withal; and no man can profit in the things of God, but by
the Spirit of God, which brings to deny all sin and evil. It is
said of Israel, Neh. ix., ‘The Lord gave them his good Spirit to
instruct them, yet they rebelled against it.’ But if all people
did mind this manifestation of the Spirit, which God hath given to
instruct them, it would lead them to forsake all manner of sin and
evil, enmity, hatred, malice, and all manner of unrighteousness
and ungodliness, and to mortify it. And then in the Spirit of
Christ they would have fellowship and unity, which is the bond of
peace; then would love and peace, which are the fruits of the good
Spirit, flow among all that are called Christians.
“We are a people, who, in tenderness of conscience to the command
of Christ and his apostle, cannot swear; for we are commanded in
Matt. v. and James v. to keep to Yea and Nay, and ‘not to swear at
all; neither by heaven, nor by the earth, nor by any other oath,
lest we go into evil, and fall into condemnation.’ The words of
Christ are these, ‘Ye have heard that it hath been said by (or to)
them of old time, Thou shalt not forswear thyself, but shalt
perform unto the Lord thine oaths.’ These were true and solemn
oaths, which they who made, ought to have performed in old time;
but these Christ and his apostle forbid in the gospel times, as
well as false and vain oaths. If we could take any oath at all, we
could take the oath of allegiance, as knowing that King Charles
was by the power of God brought into England, and set up king of
England, &c., over the heads of our old persecutors; and as for
the Pope’s supremacy, we do utterly deny it. But Christ and the
apostle having commanded us not to swear, but to keep to Yea and
Nay, we dare not break their commands; and therefore many have put
the oaths to us, as a snare, that they might make a prey of us.
Our denying to swear is not in wilfulness, stubbornness, or
contempt, but only in obedience to the command of Christ and his
apostle, and we are content, if we break our Yea and Nay, to
suffer the same penalty that they should who break their oaths. We
desire, therefore, that the king would take this into
consideration, and also how long we have suffered in this case.
This is from one who desires the eternal good and prosperity of
the king, and of all his subjects in the Lord Jesus Christ.”
G. F.
About this time I had a fit of sickness, which brought me very low
and weak in my body; and I continued so a pretty while, insomuch
that some Friends began to doubt of my recovery. I seemed to myself
to be amongst the graves and dead corpses; yet the invisible power
did secretly support me, and conveyed refreshing strength into me,
even when I was so weak, that I was almost speechless. One night, as
I was lying awake upon my bed in the glory of the Lord, which was
over all, it was said unto me, “that the Lord had a great deal more
work for me to do for him, before he took me to himself.”
Endeavours were used to get me released, at least for a time, till I
was grown stronger; but the way of effecting it proved difficult and
tedious; for the king was not willing to release me by any other way
than a pardon, being told he could not legally do it; and I was not
willing to be released by a pardon, which he would readily have
given me, because I did not look upon that way as agreeable with the
innocency of my cause. Edward Pitway, a Friend, having occasion to
speak with Justice Parker, upon some other business, desired him to
give order to the jailer, that, in regard of my weakness, I might
have liberty to go out of the jail into the city. Whereupon Justice
Parker wrote the following letter to the jailer, and sent it to the
Friend to deliver.
“MR. HARRIS,
“I have been much importuned by some friends to George Fox to
write to you. I am informed by them, that he is in a very weak
condition, and very much indisposed; what lawful favour you can do
for the benefit of the air for his health, pray show him. I
suppose, the next term they will make application to the king.
“I am, Sir, your loving friend,
“HENRY PARKER.”
Evesham, the 8th of October, 1674.
After this, my wife went to London, and spoke to the king, laying
before him my long and unjust imprisonment, with the manner of my
being taken, and the justices’ proceedings against me, in tendering
me the oath as a snare, whereby they had premunired me; so that I
being now his prisoner, it was in his power, and at his pleasure, to
release me, which she desired. The king spoke kindly to her, and
referred her to the lord-keeper; to whom she went, but could not
obtain what she desired; for he said, “the king could not release me
otherwise than by a pardon;” and I was not free to receive a pardon,
knowing I had not done evil. If I would have been freed by a pardon,
I need not have lain so long, for the king was willing to give me
pardon long before, and told Thomas Moore, “that I need not scruple
being released by a pardon, for many a man, that was as innocent as
a child, had had a pardon granted him;” yet I could not consent to
have one. For I had rather have lain in prison all my days, than
have come out in any way dishonourable to truth; wherefore I chose
to have the validity of my indictment tried before the judges. And
thereupon, having first had the opinion of a counsellor upon it
(Thomas Corbet, of London, whom Richard Davies of Welchpool was well
acquainted with, and recommended to me), an habeas corpus was sent
down to Worcester to bring me up once more to the King’s Bench bar,
for the trial of the errors in my indictment. The under-sheriff set
forward with me the 4th of the 12th Month, there being with us in
the coach the clerk of the peace and some others. The clerk had been
my enemy all along, and now sought to ensnare me in discourse; but I
saw, and shunned him. He asked me, “what I would do with the errors
in the indictment?” I told him, “they should be tried, and every
action should crown itself.” He quarrelled with me for calling their
ministers priests. I asked him, “if the law did not call them so?”
Then he asked me, “What I thought of the church of England? were
there no Christians among them?” I said, “they are all called so,
and there are many tender people amongst them.”
We came to LONDON on the 8th, and on the 11th I was brought before
the four judges at the King’s Bench, where Counsellor Corbet pleaded
my cause. He started a new plea; for he told the judges, “that they
could not imprison any man upon a premunire.” Whereupon Chief
Justice Hale, said, “Mr. Corbet, you should have come sooner, at the
beginning of the term, with this plea.” He answered, “we could not
get a copy of the return and the indictment.” The judge replied,
“you should have told us, and we would have forced them to make a
return sooner.” Then said Judge Wild, “Mr. Corbet, you go upon
general terms; and if it be as you say, we have committed many
errors at the Old Bailey, and in other courts.” Corbet was positive
that by law they could not imprison upon a premunire. The judge
said, “there is summons in the statute.” “Yes,” said Corbet, “but
summons is not imprisonment; for summons is in order to a trial.”
“Well,” said the judge, “we must have time to look in our books and
consult the statutes.” So the hearing was put off till the next day.
The next day they chose rather to let this plea fall, and begin with
the errors of the indictment; and when they came to be opened, they
were so many and gross, that the judges were all of opinion that,
“the indictment was quashed and void, and that I ought to have my
liberty.” There were that day several great men, lords and others,
who had the oaths of allegiance and supremacy tendered to them in
open court, just before my trial came on; and some of my adversaries
moved the judges, that the oaths might be tendered again to me,
telling them, “I was a dangerous man to be at liberty.” But Judge
Hale said, “he had indeed heard some such reports, but he had also
heard many more good reports of me;” and so he and the rest of the
judges ordered me to be freed by proclamation. Thus after I had
suffered imprisonment a year and almost two months for nothing, I
was fairly set at liberty upon a trial of the errors in my
indictment, without receiving any pardon, or coming under any
obligation or engagement at all; and the Lord’s everlasting power
went over all, to his glory and praise. Counsellor Corbet, who
pleaded for me, obtained great fame by it, for many of the lawyers
came to him, and told him he had brought that to light which had not
been known before, as to the not imprisoning upon a premunire; and
after the trial a judge said to him, “You have attained a great deal
of honour by pleading George Fox’s cause so in court.”
During the time of my imprisonment in Worcester, notwithstanding my
illness and want of health, and my being so often hurried to and fro
to London and back again, I wrote several books for the press; one
of which was called, _A Warning to England_. Another was, _To the
Jews, proving, by the Prophets, that the Messiah is come_. Another,
_Concerning Inspiration, Revelation, and Prophecy_. Another,
_Against all Vain Disputes_. Another, _For all Bishops and Ministers
to try themselves by the Scriptures_. Another, _To such as say, “We
love none but ourselves.”_ Another entitled, _Our Testimony
concerning Christ_. And another little book, _Concerning Swearing_;
being the first of those two that were given to the parliament.
Besides these, I wrote many papers and epistles to Friends to
encourage and strengthen them in their services for God, which some,
who had made profession of truth, but had given way to a seducing
spirit, and were departed from the unity and fellowship of the
gospel, in which Friends stand, endeavoured to discourage them from,
especially in their diligent and watchful care for the well-ordering
and managing of the affairs of the church of Christ.
-----
Footnote 33:
An officer who had power to force men to serve as sailors and
soldiers in the navy; a procedure long since abolished.
Footnote 34:
This is nearly the last mention of James Lancaster, whose name
occurs so often in these volumes. Perhaps there was no one who
associated so much in gospel labours with George Fox as he; not
only accompanying him throughout his visit to the western
hemisphere, but was also with him during his visit to Scotland in
1657, and to Ireland in 1669, and on these occasions it appears
that he frequently acted as his amanuensis. James Lancaster’s
residence was on the island of Walney, in Lancashire, and he was
convinced by George Fox during his visit to that county in 1652.
In the following year he came forth as a minister and in 1654,
went on a gospel mission to Scotland with Miles Halhead. In 1665,
he visited many of the midland counties of England.
Footnote 35:
When George Fox married the widow of Judge Fell, she had one son;
and seven daughters; viz., Margaret, who married John Rous;
Bridgett, married to John Draper; Isabel; Sarah, married to
William Mead; Mary, married to Thomas Lower; Susanna, married to
William Ingram; and Rachel, married to Daniel Abraham.
CHAPTER VII.
1675-1677.—George Fox attends the Yearly Meeting, and afterwards
sets forward towards the North—attends the Quarterly Meeting at
Lancaster, and goes thence to Swarthmore—writes many books and
papers for the Truth—the titles of several named—writes to
Friends in Westmorland to keep in the power of God, and thereby
avoid strife—writes an epistle to the Yearly Meeting—makes a
collection and arrangement of his various papers and writings,
and of the names of divers Friends engaged in particular
service, or against the Truth—some meetings for discipline
established in the North in 1653—recites his labours and travels
for establishing meetings for discipline—a spirit of discord and
separation appears in the church—the separatists are rebuked and
reproved—the establishment of men’s and women’s meetings is much
opposed—a narrative of the spreading of Truth, and of the
opposition from the worldly powers—death of Priest Lampitt, a
persecutor—George Fox travels again towards the South—writes to
his wife from York—finds some slack in their testimony against
Tithes—writes an epistle to Friends on the subject—attends the
Yearly Meeting—with John Burnyeat, and other Friends, visits Wm.
Penn at his house at Worminghurst, in Sussex—sets things in
order for visiting Holland—precious meeting.
Being now at liberty, I visited Friends in LONDON; and having been
very weak, and not yet well recovered, I went to KINGSTON. I did not
stay long, but having visited Friends there, I returned to LONDON,
wrote a paper to the parliament, and sent several books to them. A
great book against Swearing had been delivered to them a little
before; the reasonableness whereof had so much influence upon many
of them, that it was thought they would have done something towards
our relief, if they had sat longer. I stayed in and near London till
the Yearly Meeting, to which Friends came from most parts of the
nation, and some from beyond the sea. A glorious meeting we had in
the everlasting power of God.
This meeting being over, and the parliament also risen (who had done
nothing for or against Friends,) I was clear of my service for the
Lord at London. And having taken my leave of Friends there, and had
a glorious meeting with some of them at John Elson’s in the morning,
I set forward with my wife and her daughter Susan, by coach (for I
was not able to travel on horseback) towards the North; many Friends
accompanying us as far as HIGHGATE, and some to DUNSTABLE, where we
lodged that night. We visited Friends, and were visited by them, at
NEWPORT-PAGNEL, NORTHAMPTON, and COSSALL, where, amongst others,
came a woman, and brought her daughter, for me to see how well she
was; putting me in mind, “that when I was there before, she had
brought her to me, much troubled with the disease called the king’s
evil, and had then desired me to pray for her;” which I did, and she
grew well upon it, praised be the Lord! From Cossall we went on by
John Simcock’s and William Gandy’s, to WARRINGTON and PRESTON, and
so to LANCASTER.
I had not been at Lancaster since I was carried prisoner from thence
by the under-sheriff and jailer, towards Scarbro’ Castle. I found
the town full of people; for it was both the fair time, and the
trained bands were met upon a general muster. Many Friends were also
in town from several parts of the county, because the Quarterly
Meeting was to be there the next day. I stayed two nights and a day
at Lancaster, and visited Friends both at their men’s and women’s
meetings, which were very full, large, and peaceable; for the Lord’s
power was over all, and none meddled with us. Here met us Thomas
Lower and his wife, Sarah Fell, James Lancaster, and Leonard Fell.
Next day after the meeting, being the 25th of the 4th Month, we went
over the Sands, with several other Friends, to SWARTHMORE.
After I had been a while at Swarthmore, several Friends from divers
parts of the nation came to visit me, and some out of Scotland; by
whom I understood that four young students of Aberdeen were
convinced there this year, at a dispute held there by Robert
Barclay, and George Keith, with some of the scholars of that
university.[36]
Among others Colonel Kirby paid me a visit, who had been one of my
great persecutors; but now, he said, he came to bid me welcome into
the country; and carried himself in appearance very lovingly. Yet
before I left Swarthmore, he sent for the constables of Ulverstone,
and ordered them to tell me, “that we must have no more meetings at
Swarthmore; for if we had, they were commanded by him to break them
up; and they were to come the next First-day.” That day we had a
very precious meeting, the Lord’s presence was wonderfully amongst
us, and the constables did not come to disturb us. The meetings have
been quiet since, and have increased.
The illness I got in my imprisonment at Worcester had so much
weakened me, that it was long before I recovered my natural strength
again. For which reason, and as many things lay upon me to write,
both for public and private service, I did not stir much abroad
during the time that I now stayed in the North; but when Friends
were not with me, spent much time in writing for truth’s service.
While I was at Swarthmore, I gave several books to be printed. One,
_Concerning Swearing_. Another, showing, “that none are successors
to the Prophets and Apostles, but who succeed them in the same power
and Holy Ghost that they were in.” Another, “that Possession is
above Profession, and how the professors now do persecute Christ in
Spirit, as the professing Jews did persecute him outwardly in the
days of his flesh.” Also the eight following books, viz.:—_To the
Magistrates of Dontzic_; _Cain against Abel, or, an Answer to the
New Englandmen’s Laws_; _To Friends at Nevis, concerning
Watching_;[37] _A General Epistle to all Friends in America_;
_Concerning Cæsar’s due, and God’s due, &c._; _Concerning the
Ordering of Families_; _The Spiritual Man judgeth all things_;
_Concerning the Higher Power_.
Besides these, I wrote several epistles to Friends, both in England,
and beyond the seas; and answers to divers papers concerning “the
running out of some, who had opposed the order of the gospel, and
had stirred up much strife and contention in Westmorland.” Wherefore
I was moved to write a few lines, particularly to Friends there.
“THIS IS FOR FRIENDS IN WESTMORLAND.
“All live in the power of God, in his Light and Spirit, which
first convinced you; that in it ye may keep in the ancient unity,
in humility, in the fear of the Lord, and his gentle and peaceable
wisdom, which is easy to be entreated; that in the same Power,
Light, and Spirit of God, ye may all be serviceable in your men’s
and women’s meetings, in the possession of the gospel-order; which
gospel, the power of God, hath brought life and immortality to
light; that in this ye may see over him that hath darkened you. In
this power, the glorious gospel, no apostates can come; for the
power of God was before apostates were, or the fall of man and
woman was, or the devil either, and will be when he is gone.
Therefore praise God in the eternal fellowship of the everlasting
gospel of Jesus Christ, which is not of man, nor by man. And
therefore, all Friends in Westmorland, keep in the power of God,
which will and must preserve and cover you, if ye be preserved.
Let your faith stand in the power of God, and not in the wisdom of
men’s words, lest ye fall. In God’s power ye have peace, life, and
unity; and for want of keeping in God’s power, and in his
righteousness and Holy Ghost, is all this strife come among you.”
G. F.
I also wrote the following general epistle to Friends at the Yearly
Meeting in London:—
“MY DEAR FRIENDS AND BRETHREN,
“Whom the Lord hath preserved by his eternal power to this day,
over and through many troubles, storms, tempests, and prisons.
Let, therefore, every one’s faith stand in the power of God, which
is over the Devil and was before him. So your faith standing in
the invisible power of God, stands in that which does not change;
and the faith, that Christ Jesus, the power of God, is the author
of, must stand in the power of God; so then it stands in that
which is over all, in which they are established. To this the
apostle brought the church, the true Christians; and so now the
faith of all true Christians, which Christ is the author of, must
stand in the power of God, in which the everlasting kingdom
stands. As every one’s faith stands in the power of God, it keeps
all in the power of godliness.
“For as it was in the days of the apostles, when some were crying
up Paul and Apollos, and so forth, he judged them as carnal; and
exhorted and admonished them, that their faith should not stand in
men, nor in the words of man’s wisdom, but in the power of God. He
said ‘he would not know the speech of them, but the power amongst
them; for the kingdom of God is not in word, but in power.’ So it
is to be now. Every one’s faith must stand in the power of God,
and not in men, nor in their speeches or good words. For we have
seen by experience, when any begin to cry up men, and their faith
stands in them, such men as would have people’s faith stand in
them, love popularity, and bring not people’s faith to stand in
the power of God. Such cannot exalt Christ; and when such fall,
they draw a great company after them. Therefore the apostle would
not know such after the flesh, but would know them that were in
the power and Spirit; and struck down every one’s faith that stood
in the words of man’s wisdom, that they might stand in the power
of God. So it must be now. They whose faith doth not stand in the
power of God, cannot exalt his kingdom that stands in power;
therefore every one’s faith must stand in the power of God.
“The apostle denied popularity, when he judged the Corinthians,
for looking at Paul and Apollos, to be carnal; such are carnal
still. Therefore all should know one another in the Spirit, life,
and power, and look at Christ; this keeps all in humility. They,
whose faith stands in men, will make sects; as in the days of J.
N. and J. P. and others. The faith of such Christ is not the
author of; and if he hath been, they have erred from it, and made
shipwreck of it. All that are in the true faith, that stands in
the power of God, will judge them as carnal, and judge down that
carnal part in them, that cries up Paul or Apollos; that their
faith may stand in the power of God, and that they may exalt
Christ, the author of it. For every one’s eye ought to be to
Jesus; and every just man and woman may live by their faith, which
Jesus Christ is the author and finisher of. By this faith every
man and woman may see God, who is invisible; this faith gives the
victory, and by it he hath access to God. So every one’s faith and
hope standing in the power of God, all therein have unity,
victory, and access to God’s throne of grace; in which faith they
please God. By this faith they are saved;—by this faith they
obtain the good report, and subdue all the mountains that have
been betwixt them and God.
“This power hath preserved Friends over their persecutors, over
the wrath of men, and above the spoilings of their goods, and
imprisonments; as seeing God who created all—who gives the
increase of all, and upholds all by his word and power. Therefore
let every one’s faith be in his power. In this no schism or sect
can come; for it is over them, before they were, and will be when
they are gone. But perfect unity is in the truth, in the Spirit,
that circumcises the body of death, that puts off the sins of the
flesh, and plunges it down with the Spirit. In the Spirit of God,
there is perfect fellowship; and Christ is the minister of this
circumcision and baptism.
“This is upon me from the Lord, to write unto you, that every one
of you, whose faith Jesus is the author of, may stand in the power
of God. From the Lord I warn you, and all everywhere, of the same.
For if a star should fall, which has been a light, either the
earth or the sea does receive it; that is, the earthly mind, or
the foaming, raging people; though neither the seed, light, power,
nor truth ever fell, nor the faith itself, the gift of God; but
men going from it, become unsavoury.
“Adam, whilst he kept in truth, and obeyed the command of God, was
happy; but when he disobeyed the Lord, he fell under the power of
Satan, and became unhappy, though he might talk after of his
experiences in Paradise; but he had lost his image, his power and
dominion, in which God had created him.
“The Jews received the law of God, and as long as they kept the
law, which was just, holy, good, and perfect, it kept them good,
just, holy, and savoury; but when they turned their backs on the
Lord, and forsook his law, then they came under the power of
darkness, under the powers of the earth, and were trodden under as
unsavoury.
“So the Christians were called ‘a city set on a hill, the light of
the world, and the salt of the earth;’ but when they forsook the
power of God, and their faith stood in words and men, and not in
the power, then their walls fell down, though the power in itself
stood; and they lost their hill, their saltness, and their
shining. And as Christendom now does confess, they are not in the
same power and spirit that the apostles were in; so not in the
same salt, nor upon the same hill. So they came to be trodden
under; and the beast, the whore, and the false prophet are
uppermost, the unsavoury. Their dead faith is in men, and in
words; therefore they are full of sects, and one against another.
“And now the everlasting gospel, the power of God, is preached
again, which was before the devil was, that darkened man; and by
this power of God, life and immortality are brought to light
again. Therefore every one’s faith is to stand in this power, that
hath brought life and immortality to light in them, that so all
may come to be heirs of the power of God, the gospel. Herein all
have a right to the power of God, which is also the authority of
the men’s and women’s meetings, and of all the other meetings set
up thereby.
“Now, as the gospel is preached again, if your faith does not
stand in the power, but in men, and in the wisdom of words, you
will grow carnal; and such are for judgment, who cry up Paul or
Apollos, and not Christ, the author of your faith. They who love
to be popular, would have people’s faith to stand in them; and
such do not preach Christ, but themselves. But such as preach
Christ and his gospel, would have every man and woman to be in the
possession of it, and every man and woman’s faith to stand in
Christ, the author of it, and in the power of God. And as their
faith stands in the power of God, nothing can get between them and
God; for if any should fall amongst us, as too many have done,
that [love of popularity] leads its followers either into the
waters, or into the earth.
“If any should go from the spirit of prophecy, that did open to
them, and from the power, they may speak their experiences, which
the power opened to them formerly. So might Adam and Eve speak of
what they saw and enjoyed in Paradise; so might Cain and Balaam of
what they saw; and also the Jews, Korah and Dathan, who praised
God on the banks, saw the victory over Pharaoh, ate of the manna,
drank of the rock, came to Mount Sinai, and saw the glory of the
Lord. So also might the false apostles speak of their experiences,
and all those false Christians, that turned from the apostles and
Christ. And so may those do now, that err from the Spirit, that
are come out of Egypt (in spirit) and Sodom, and have known the
raging of the Sodomites, as Lot did the outward; and the pursuit
of the spiritual Egyptians, as the outward Jew did of the outward
Egyptians; yet if they do not walk in the Spirit of God, in the
light, and in the grace, which keeps their hearts established, and
their words seasoned, and also their faith in the power of God, in
which the kingdom stands; they may go forth like the false
Christians, like the Jews, like Adam and Eve, Cain, Korah, and
Balaam, and be wandering stars, trees without fruit, wells without
water, and clouds without rain; and so come to be unsavoury and
trodden down; as Adam who lost Paradise, and the Jews who lost the
Holy Land, not walking in the law, and keeping the command of God;
and as the Christians who lost the city, the hill, the salt, and
the light since the apostle’s days, and came to be unsavoury, and
to be trodden under foot of men.
“Therefore, let every one’s faith stand in the Lord’s power, which
is over all; through which they may be built upon the Rock, the
Foundation of God, the Seed Christ Jesus. So all in Christ may be
always fresh and green; for he is the green tree that never
withers. All are fresh and green that are grafted into and abide
in him, bringing forth heavenly fresh fruits to the praise of God.
And though Adam and Eve fell from Paradise, the Jews fell from the
law of God, and many of the Christians fell from their prophecies,
and erred from the faith, the Spirit, and the grace; and the stars
have fallen, as was spoken in the Revelations: yet the Spirit,
grace, faith, and power of God remain.
“Many such states have I seen within these twenty-eight years;
though there is a state that shall never fall, nor be deceived, in
the Elect before the world began. These are come to the end of the
prophecies, are in Him where they end, and renewed by Christ into
the image of God which man was in before he fell,—in that power
where he had dominion over all that God made: and not only so, but
they ‘attain to a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of
the fulness of Christ,’ who never fell. In him is the sitting down
in life eternal, where their feet stand sure and fast in the
gospel, his power. Here their bread is sure; and he that eats this
bread lives for ever.
“And all Friends and brethren, that declare God’s eternal truth,
and word of life, live in it; be seasoned with grace, and salted
with the heavenly salt, that your lives and conversations may
preach wherever you come;—that there be no rawness, no quenching
of the Spirit, no despising of prophecy either in men or women.
For all must meet in the faith that Jesus is the author of, and in
the light that comes from Jesus, and be so grafted into the life,
that your knowledge may be there one of another, in Christ; and
that there may be none slothful, nor sitting down in earthly
things, minding them, like Demas of old; lest you clothe
yourselves with another clothing than you had at first; but all
keep chaste; for the chaste do follow the Lamb.
“And Friends, that are settled in places, and are ministers,
possess, as if ye did not; be married, as if ye were not; and be
loose to the world in the Lord’s power; for God’s oil will be
above all visible things, which makes his lamps burn, and gives
light afar off. Let none strive nor covet to be rich in this
world, in these changeable things that will pass away; but let
your faith stand in the Lord God, who changes not, who created
all, and gives the increase of all.
“Now Friends, concerning faithful men’s and women’s meetings,
which were set up in God’s counsel; whoever oppose them, and the
authority and tenure of them, oppose the power of God, which is
the authority of them. They are no ministers of the gospel, nor of
Christ, that oppose his power, which all are to possess. The
gospel is to be preached to all nations: as deceit is gone over
all nations, and all nations have drunk the whore’s cup, and she
hath them in her cage, her unclean power from the beast and
dragon, out of the power of God, and out of truth, and the Spirit
of God the apostles were in; the power of God must come over all
this again; and all the true ministers that preach the gospel, the
power of God, must bring people into the possession of it again. I
say, whosoever preaches the gospel of Christ and him to people or
nations, those people and nations receiving the gospel, receive
the power of God, that brings life and immortality to light in
them; they see over the devil that hath darkened them, and over
the beast, the whore, and her cage. So, by the power of God, life
and immortality are brought to light in them; then these men and
women, being heirs of this power, the gospel, are heirs of
authority and power over the devil, beast, whore, and dragon.
“This is their possession and portion; and they are to labour in
their possession and portion, and do God Almighty’s business and
service in the possession of the power of God, the gospel, which
is a joyful, glorious, everlasting order. And here is the
authority of our men’s and women’s meetings, and other meetings in
the name of Jesus, the gospel of Christ, the power of God, which
is not of man, nor by man. In this are all to meet and to worship
God; by this are all to act; and in this all have fellowship, a
joyful fellowship, a joyful and comfortable assembly. This is the
day when, in the eternal light, all are to take their possession
of the gospel and its order, that power of God, which they are
heirs of. All faithful men and women in every country, city, and
nation, whose faith stands in the power of God, the gospel of
Christ, who have received, and are in the possession of, this
gospel, the power of God, have all right to the power in these
meetings; for they are heirs of the power, which is the authority
of the men’s and women’s meetings.
“So here is God’s choice (and not man’s) by his power, of his
heirs; and they have all freedom in this gospel, the power of God,
to go to the meetings, the men to the men’s, and the women to the
women’s; for they are heirs of the power, which is not of man, nor
by man, but from heaven, received in the Holy Ghost; and they see
over enmity, and before it was, by the light, by the life, and
immortality, which are brought to light in them.
“The devil, the author of enmity, cannot get into this authority,
power, order, nor fellowship of the gospel; nor into this life,
light, nor unity of the faith, which gives victory over him that
hath separated man from God. Into the unity of this faith the
serpent cannot come, nor into the worship of God in Spirit and
truth can the devil come, or any enmity. And they that are in
this, are in unity over him. Therefore, let every one’s faith
stand in the power of God, the glorious gospel; and let all walk
as becomes the gospel, and the order of it. As every one hath
received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in him, and let him be
their Lord and Orderer. For the preaching of the gospel of Christ
Jesus is to the intent that all may come to be heirs of the
gospel, and into the possession of it; and to be heirs of Christ
and of his government, of the increase of which there is no end;
who is over all in his righteousness, and over all in his light,
life, power, and dominion. Therefore know one another in his
power, his gospel, which is the authority of your meetings; know
one another in Christ Jesus, who is able to restore man out of the
state of the fall, into the image of God, into that power and
dominion that man had before he fell, and into Himself that never
fell, whence they shall go no more forth. Here is the rock and
foundation of God that stands sure.
“And, Friends, be tender to the tender principle of God in all.
Shun vain disputes and janglings, both amongst yourselves and
others; for that many times is like a blustering wind that hurts
and bruises the tender buds and plants. For the world, though they
have the words, are out of the life; and the apostle’s disputing
with them was to bring them to the life. And those disputers, that
were amongst the Christians, about genealogies, circumcision, and
the law, meats, drinks, and days, came to be the worst sort of
disputers, whom the apostles judged; for such destroyed people
from the faith. Therefore the apostles exhorted the churches, that
every one’s faith should stand in the power of God, and to look at
Jesus, the author of it. There every graft stands in Christ, the
vine, quiet; where no blustering storms can hurt them; there is
safety. There all are of one mind, one faith, one soul, one
spirit, baptized into one body with the one Spirit, and made all
to drink into one Spirit, one church, one head, that is heavenly
and spiritual; one faith in this head, Christ, who is the author
of it, and hath the glory of it; one Lord to order all, who is the
baptizer into this one body. So Christ hath the glory of this
faith out of every man and woman; and God through him hath his
glory, the Creator of all in his power, the gospel that hath
brought life and immortality to light in them; and their faith
standing in it, they know the immortal God, serve and worship him,
in his Spirit and in his truth; by which they are made God’s free
men and women, free from him that is out of the truth.
“Now, Friends, you that have long been labourers, and have known
the dealings of the Lord these twenty years (more or less,) as I
have often said to you, draw up what you can, of those passages
and sufferings which the Lord hath carried you through by his
power, and how by him ye have been supported from the first; that
the Lord may be exalted by his power now, and in ages to come, who
hath been the only support, defence, and stay, of his people all
along, over all to himself; to whom be all glory and praise for
ever and ever, Amen. He deserves it in his church throughout all
ages, from his living members, who return the praise to the living
God, who lives and reigns over all, blessed for ever; who is the
life, and strength, and health, and length of days of all his
people. Therefore let there be no boasting, but in the Lord, and
in his power and kingdom; this keeps all in humility.
“And, Friends, in the Lord’s power and truth, what good you can do
for Friends in prison, or sufferers, by informing or helping them,
every one bend yourselves to the Lord’s power and spirit, to do
his will and his business; and in that all will have a
fellow-feeling of one another’s condition, in bonds, or in what
trials and tribulations soever; you will have a fellow-feeling one
of another, having one head, one Lord, and being one body in him.
For God’s heavenly flail hath brought out his seed, his heavenly
plough hath turned up the fallow ground, and his heavenly seed is
sown by the heavenly man, which brings forth fruits to the
heavenly sower, in some fifty, sixty, and a hundred fold in this
life; and such in the world without end will have life eternal. O,
therefore, all keep within; let your lights shine, and your lamps
burn, that you all may be wells full of the living water, and
trees full of the living fruit of God’s planting, whose fruit is
unto holiness, and the end everlasting life.
“The Lord God of power preserve you all in his power. Let your
faith stand therein, that you may have unity in the faith, and in
the power; and by this faith and belief you may be all grafted
into Christ, the sure root, where the eternal Sun of Righteousness
shines, in the heavenly and eternal day, upon his plants and
grafts. This sun never goes down; and the heavenly springs of
life, and showers are known to water and nourish the grafts, and
plants, and buds, that they may always be kept fresh and green,
and never wither; bringing forth fresh and green, and living
fruit, which is offered up to the living God, who is glorified in
that you bear much fruit. The Lord God Almighty keep you, and
preserve you all in his power, light, and life, over death and
darkness; that therein you may spread his truth abroad, and be
valiant for it upon the earth, answering that of God in all; that
with it, the minds of people may be turned to him, so that with it
they may come to know the Lord Christ Jesus in the new covenant,
in which the knowledge of the Lord shall cover the earth as the
waters do the sea. His life must go over death, and his light must
go over darkness, and the power of God must go over the power of
Satan.
“So, all ye that are in the light, life, and power, keep the
heavenly fellowship in the heavenly power, the heavenly unity in
the heavenly divine faith, and the unity of the Spirit, which is
the bond of the heavenly Prince of princes’ peace; who bruises the
head of the enemy, the adversary, and reconciles man to God, and
all things in heaven and in the earth: a blessed reconciliation!
Let every one’s faith stand in the power of God, which Jesus
Christ is the author of; that all may know their crown of life.
For all outward things without the substance, life, and power,
areas the husk without the kernel, and do not nourish the immortal
soul, nor the new-born babe; but that by which it is nourished, is
the milk of the Word, whereby it groweth in the heavenly life,
strength, and wisdom. The gospel is not of man, nor by man, but is
the power of God, and answers the truth in all; all the possessors
of it are to see that all walk according to it; which everlasting
order is ordained of God already, and all the possessors of him
possess their joy, their comfort, and salvation. My love unto you
all, with him that reigns and is over all, from everlasting to
everlasting.
“Dwell in the love of God, which passeth knowledge, and edifieth
the living members of the body of Christ; which love of God you
come to be built up in, and in the holy faith. This love of God
will bring you to bear all things, endure all things, and hope all
things. From this love of God which you have in Christ Jesus,
nothing will be able to separate you; neither powers nor
principalities, heights nor depths, things present nor things to
come, prisons nor spoiling of goods, neither death nor life. The
love of God keeps above all that which would separate from God,
and makes you more than conquerors in Christ Jesus. Therefore in
this love of God dwell, that with the same love you may love one
another, and all the workmanship of God—that you may glorify God
with your bodies, souls, and spirits, which are the Lord’s. Amen.”
G. F.
“All Friends sit low in life, the Lord’s power. Keep your place in
it, till the Lord and Master of the feast bid you ‘sit higher;’
lest you take the highest place, and be put down with shame. He
that hath an ear, let him hear.”
G. F.
“Friends, take heed of speaking the things of God in the words
that men’s wisdom hath taught; for those words will lift up the
foolish, that have erred from the Spirit of God; which words and
wisdom are for condemnation, and that which is lifted up by them,
and they that thereby speak the things of God in them. So that old
house, with its goods, must be thrown under the foot of the new
birth.
“And, Friends, I desire that you may all keep the holy order,
which is in the gospel, the glorious order in the power of God,
which the devil is out of; which was before all his orders were,
and before the world made any.
“This joyful order keeps all hearts pure to God, in everlasting
peace, unity, and order; feel it, and keep the order of it, both
men and women, and come to be heirs of the gospel, which brings
life and immortality to light; and to see over that power of
darkness, by Him who was before the power of death was. In this is
the holy order of love and peace. So keep in this, that keeps you
always pure; what men and women act in this, they act in that
which will stand when the world is gone.
“There hath been some scruple about men’s and women’s meetings.
Men and women in the gospel are heirs of the power, which was
before the devil was; heirs of this, then enter into the
possession of it, and do the Lord’s business therein. Everyone
take the care of God’s honour, and keep all things in
righteousness, in holiness which becomes God’s house, and in that
which honours the Lord God. It eased me, when those meetings were
set up; for men and women, that are heirs of the gospel, have
right to the gospel order; and it belongs to them. Then take your
possessions, and practise in it; be not talkers only, but live and
walk in the gospel, the power of God, which is the authority of
your meetings.”
G. F.
Swarthmore, the 28th of the 2nd Month, 1676.
[The above Epistle was read at the Yearly Meeting in London, the
17th of the 3rd Month, 1676.]
During this time I collected together as many as I could, of the
epistles I had written in former years to Friends. I made a
collection of the several papers that I had written to Oliver
Cromwell, and his son Richard, in the time of their protectorships;
and to the parliaments and magistrates that were in their times. I
collected also the papers I had written to King Charles II. since
his return, and to his council and parliaments, and the justices or
other magistrates under him. I made another collection of
certificates, which I had received from divers governors of places,
judges, justices, parliament-men, and others, for the clearing of me
from many slanders, which the envious priests and professors, both
here and beyond the seas, had cast upon me. This I did for the
truth’s sake, as knowing that their design in slandering me, was to
defame the truth published by me, and hinder the spreading thereof
amongst the people. Besides these, I made two books of collections;
one was, a list or catalogue of the names of those Friends who went
out of the North of England, when truth first broke forth there, to
proclaim the day of the Lord through this nation. The other was of
the names of those Friends that went first to preach the gospel in
other nations, countries, and places, in what years, and to what
parts they went.
I made another collection, in two books; one of epistles and letters
from Friends and others, on several occasions, to me; the other of
letters of mine to Friends and others.
I wrote also a book of the types and figures of Christ, with their
significations; and many other things, which will be of service to
truth and Friends in time to come.
I took notice also of those who had run out from truth, drawn others
out after them, and turned against truth and Friends at several
times since the first breaking forth of truth in this latter age,
and what became of them; noting particularly the repentance and
return of such of them as came back to truth again. Some ran quite
out, and never returned, but were cut off in their gainsaying and
rebellion; for the word and power of God hath blasted and is
blasting them, and the holy seed hath ground, and is grinding them
to pieces. I have observed, that they who have been convinced, and
have not lived and walked in the truth, have been the worst enemies
to the truth, and done most hurt amongst Friends in the truth, and
to others. In these I have seen fulfilled what the Lord did long
since show me, “that such should be greater deceivers than all the
priests and professors.” For such as came as far as Cain, Balaam,
Korah, and Dathan, and could “preach Christ,” and say, “they had
preached in his name;” such as came to be apostles, and had tasted
of the power of Christ, and then turned from it, could yet speak
their old experiences, and have good words, like Korah and Balaam:
but not keeping in the life and truth, they deceived the hearts of
the simple. Such come to be of the devil, who abode not in the
truth; as Cain, and all the Jews, that abode not in the truth, were.
For though Cain did sacrifice to God, and did talk with God; and the
Jews could talk of Abraham, Moses, and the prophets, yet Christ told
them, “they were of their father, the devil.” In like manner, though
they who are called Christians, can talk of Christ, and use his and
his apostles’ and disciples’ words, yet not abiding in the truth,
and power, and Spirit, that the apostles were in, they are of the
devil, out of truth, and do his work. So are all those that have
been convinced of God’s eternal truth since it sprang up in this
nation, that have not abode in the light, and in the Spirit and
power of Christ Jesus; but have turned against the power, and have
opposed the work thereof; though they may retain their former
experiences, and be able to speak many good words, yet not living in
the life and power that gave them those experiences, they live in
the power of darkness, which is of the devil: and by the light and
truth both he and they are condemned; and must own their
condemnation if ever they come to truth again. For to resist the
heavenly power, and to oppose the workings and divine manifestations
thereof through any, is not a light matter.
As I had been moved of the Lord to travel in his power round this
nation, and in other parts, to preach the everlasting gospel, and to
declare the Word of Life, which was in the beginning, through many
imprisonments, hardships, sufferings, and trials; so I was
afterwards moved to travel, in the same heavenly power, about the
nation again (and to write to such places where I came not) to
recommend to Friends the “setting up of the quarterly and monthly
meetings in all counties, for looking after the poor, taking care
for orderly proceedings in marriages; and other matters relating to
the church of Christ;” though some meetings for this end were
settled in the North of England, in the year 1653.
After this also, truth still spreading further over the nation, and
Friends increasing in number, I was moved, by the same eternal
power, to recommend the setting up of women’s meetings also; that
all, both male and female, who had received the gospel, the Word of
eternal Life, might come into the order of the gospel, brought forth
by the power of God, and might act for God in the power, and therein
do business and service for him in his church. All the faithful must
labour in God’s vineyard, they being his hired servants, and he
having given them the earnest of his Spirit. For a master that hires
a servant, and gives him the earnest of his hire, expects he should
do his work, after he knows his will, in the outward creation; so
all God’s people, that are of the new creation, and have received
the earnest of his Spirit, ought to labour with, by, and in his
Spirit, power, and grace, and faith, in the light, in God’s
vineyard, that they may have their wages when they have done God’s
work and business in his day, which is eternal life. But none can
labour in his vineyard, and do his work and will, but as they walk
in the heavenly divine light, grace, and Spirit of Christ; which it
hath been, and is, my travail and labour in the Lord to turn all to.
Some that professed truth, and had made a great show therein, being
gone from the simplicity of the gospel into jangling, division, and
a spirit of separation, endeavoured to discourage Friends
(especially the women), from their godly care and watchfulness in
the church over one another in the truth; opposing their meetings,
which, in the power of the Lord, were set up for that end and
service. Wherefore I was moved of the Lord to write the following
epistle, and send it among Friends, for the discovering of that
spirit, by which those opposers acted, its work and way, by which it
wrought, and to warn Friends of it, that they might not be betrayed
by it:—
“All my dear Friends, Live in the seed of peace, Christ Jesus, in
whom ye have life. That spirit that comes amongst you to raise up
strife, is out of Christ; for it is the spirit that is not easy to
be entreated, not gentle, so not of the wisdom of God, which is
justified of her children. They that follow that spirit, are none
of Wisdom’s children. There is a spirit that hath made a
separation, and has been against men’s and women’s meetings; yet
those of this spirit have set up one of their own, to which they
have given power, and allow none to sit amongst them but such as
they give power to, looking upon others as usurpers of authority.
This spirit and its work is not of God, though it has made a
jumble amongst some; and the path it may travel in, is through the
earthly affections, amongst the unestablished, or apostates. But
all that are in the life, Spirit, and light, in the grace, truth,
and power of God, bar it out; and such as sit under their own
vine, Christ Jesus, and are grafted into him, have no need of
their exhortation or counsel; for the true believers are entered
into their rest. Therefore all keep in the gospel of peace; and
you that are heirs of the kingdom, keep in your possession of it.
“Some of this spirit have said to me, ‘they see no service in
women’s meetings.’ My answer is, and hath been to such, if they be
blind and without sight, they should not oppose others; for none
impose anything upon them. God never received the blind for a
sacrifice, neither can his people. But Christ has enlightened all;
and to as many as receive him, he gives ‘power to become the sons
of God.’ Such as are heirs of his power, and of his gospel, which
brings life and immortality to light, can see over him that has
darkened them; and all such keep the order of the gospel, the
power of God, and their meetings therein, which preserves them in
life and immortality. These see the great service of men’s and
women’s meetings, in the order of the gospel, the power of God;
for they are meet-helps in this power, which is the authority of
their meetings.
“Now I say to all of you, that are against women’s meetings or the
men’s, and say, ‘you see no service for the women’s meetings,’ and
oppose them, you are therein out of the power of God, and his
Spirit you live not in. For God saw a service for the assemblies
of the women in the time of the law, about those things that
appertained to his worship and service, and to the holy things of
his tabernacle; and so they in his Spirit see now their service in
the gospel; many things in these meetings being more proper for
the women than the men; and they in the power and wisdom of God
may inform the men of such things as are not proper for them; and
the men may inform the women of such things as are not proper for
them, as meet-helps to each other. For in the time of the law, the
women were to offer as well as the men; so in the time of the
gospel much more are they to offer their spiritual sacrifices; for
they are all called, both men and women, a royal priesthood; they
are of the household of faith; they are the living stones that
make up the spiritual building, which Christ is the head of; and
are to be encouraged in their labour in the gospel; for all things
that they do, both men and women, are to be done _in the power of
God_. All such as see no service for these women’s meetings, or
the men’s, but oppose them, and make strife amongst Friends, are
in the spirit of the world, that is against, and forbids our other
meetings;—are in the same spirit of the world, that hath been, and
is against women’s speaking in meetings, and say, ‘they must be
silent,’ &c., though the same apostle commands, ‘that men should
keep silence as well as the women,’ if there were not an
interpreter. Therefore, you may see that the spirit of the world
hath entered such opposers, though they come under another colour;
for they would not have us to meet at all. And these are against
the women’s meetings, and some of them against the men’s also, and
say, ‘they see no service for them;’ then they may hold their
tongues, and not oppose them that do see their service for God in
these meetings.
“Therefore, all you that feel the power of God, and your service
for God in them, both men and women, keep your meetings in the
power of God, the authority of them, as they were settled in it;
then ye will be preserved both over this spirit that opposes them,
and over the spirit of the world that opposes your other meetings;
for it is all one in the ground, and would bring you into bondage.
Such are out of the peaceable gospel, who oppose its order; out of
the faith that works by love; out of the wisdom that is gentle,
easy, and peaceable, &c., and out of the kingdom that stands in
peace and joy. Therefore, keep over that spirit that sows discord
or dissension, and would draw you from your habitation and
possession in the order of the gospel; for it is the same spirit
that deceived Adam and Eve, by which they lost their habitation in
righteousness and holiness,, and their dominion; so that spirit
got over them; and so it would get over you. One while it will
tell you, ‘it sees no service for your meetings,’ and another time
will oppose you. But I say, this is the blind spirit, which is out
of the power of God, and which the power of God is over.
Therefore, keep in the power, that ye may stand up for your
liberty in Christ Jesus, males and females, heirs of him and of
his gospel, and his order. Stand up for your liberty in the
gospel, and in the faith, which Christ Jesus hath been the author
of; for if ye lose it, and let another spirit get over you, ye
will not so soon regain it.
“I knew the devil would bestir himself in his instruments, when
men’s and women’s meetings came to be set up in the power, light,
and truth, and the heirs of the gospel, to take their possession
of it in every county and city, therein to walk, and to watch one
over another, to take care of God’s glory and honour, and his
precious truth; and to see that all walk in the truth, and as
becomes the gospel, and that nothing be lacking; and so to exhort
all whatsoever is decent, modest, virtuous, lovely, comely,
righteous, and of good report, to follow after; to admonish all
that are not faithful, and to rebuke all that do evil. I knew this
would give such a check to all loose speakers, talkers, and
walkers, that there would be an opposition against such meetings.
But never heed, truth will come over them all, and is over them
all, and faith must have the victory; for the gospel and its order
is everlasting; the Seed (Christ) is the beginning and the ending,
and will outlast all; the Amen, in whom ye have peace. I say all
that oppose the men’s and women’s meetings, or that marriages
should be laid before them, or the recording of condemnations of
sin and evil, or admonishing or exhorting such as walk not in the
truth, are of a loose spirit, and their spirits tend to looseness.
Let those take them that will; truth will not have them, nor any
of their sacrifice; for nothing is accepted of God, but what is
done in truth, and in his Spirit, which is peaceable. The
authority of our men’s and women’s meetings is the power of God;
and all the heirs of the gospel are heirs of that authority and
dignity; this is of God, and shall answer the witness of God in
all. The greatest opposers of this practice and work, are such as
have been convinced of God’s truth, but have not lived in it. Such
were the greatest troublers of the church in Moses’ day, and in
the days of the apostles; but mark their end, and read what became
of them all. And therefore, all keep your habitation in the truth,
and therein ye may see what has become of all the opposers of it
for twenty years past; they are all gone, and the truth lives and
reigns; the Seed is over all, and all are one in it, in rest,
peace, and life everlasting; and therein they sit down together in
the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, the Amen.”
G. F.
Swarthmore, the 5th of the 8th Month, 1676.
_Narrative of the spreading of Truth, and of the opposition
thereto._
“The truth sprang up first to us, so as to be a people to the
Lord, in Leicestershire in 1644, in Warwickshire in 1645, in
Nottinghamshire in 1646, in Derbyshire in 1647, and the adjacent
counties in 1648, 1649, and 1650; in Yorkshire in 1651, in
Lancashire and Westmorland in 1652; in Cumberland, Durham, and
Northumberland in 1653; in London, and most of the other parts of
England, Scotland, and Ireland, in 1654.
“In 1655 many went beyond sea, where truth also sprang up, and in
1656 it broke forth in America and many other places.
“In the authority of this divine truth, Friends stood all the
cruelties and sufferings that were inflicted upon them by the Long
Parliament; to the spoiling of goods, imprisonment, and death, and
over all reproaches, lies, and slanders; as well as those in
Oliver Cromwell’s time, and all the acts made by him and his
parliament; his son Richard after him, and the Committee of
Safety; and afterwards withstood and outlasted all the acts and
proclamations since 1660, that the king came in.
“Friends never feared their acts, prisons, jails, houses of
correction, banishment, nor spoiling of goods, nay, nor the loss
of life itself; nor was there ever any persecution that came, but
we saw in the event it would be productive of good; nor were there
ever any prisons that I was in, or sufferings, but it was for the
bringing multitudes out of prison; though they who imprisoned the
truth, and quenched the Spirit in themselves, would imprison and
quench it without them; so that there was a time when so many were
in prison, that it became as a by-word, ‘truth is scarce anywhere
to be found but in jails.’
“And after the king came in, divers Friends suffered much, because
they would not drink his health, and say, ‘God bless the king’; so
that many Friends were in danger of their lives from rude persons,
who were ready to run them through with their swords for refusing
it, until the king gave forth a proclamation against drinking
healths; for we were and are against drinking any healths, and all
excess, both before his coming in and after; and we desire the
king’s good, and that the blessing of God might come upon him and
all his subjects, and all people on the face of the earth; but we
desired people not to drink the king’s health, but let him have
his health, and all people else; and to drink for their own health
and necessity only; for that way of drinking healths, and to
excess, was not for the king’s health, nor their own nor any
others’; which excess often brought forth quarrelling and
destroying one another; for they destroyed the creation and one
another; and this was not for the king’s wealth, nor health, nor
honour, but might grieve him to have the creatures and his
subjects destroyed; and so the Lord’s power gave us dominion over
that also, and all our other sufferings. But,
“O! the number of sufferers in the Commonwealth’s and Oliver
Cromwell’s days, and since; especially those who were haled before
the courts for not paying tithes, refusing to swear on their
juries, not putting off their hats, and for going to meetings on
the First-days; under pretence of breaking the Sabbath; and to
meetings on other days of the week: who were abused both in
meetings and on the highways.
“O! how great were the sufferings we then sustained upon these
accounts! for sometimes they would drive Friends by droves into
the prison-houses like penfolds, confine them on the First-days,
and take their horses from them, and keep them for pretended
breach of their Sabbath, though they would ride in their coaches
and upon their fat horses to the steeple-houses themselves, and
yet punish others. And many Friends were turned out of their
copyholds and customary tenements, because, in obedience to the
command of Christ and his apostle, they could not swear; and as
they went to meetings, they have been stoned through the streets,
and otherwise cruelly abused. Many were fined with great fines,
and lay long in prison for not putting off their hats, which fines
Friends could never pay, though they kept them in prison till they
had satisfied their own wills, and at last turned them out, after
keeping them a year or more in prison.
“Many books I gave forth against tithes, showing how the
priesthood was changed that took them; and that Christ sent forth
his twelve, and afterwards seventy disciples, saying unto them,
‘Freely ye have received, freely give.’ So all who do not obey the
doctrine and command of Christ therein, we cannot receive them.
“I was also moved to give forth several books against swearing,
and that our Yea and Nay might be taken instead of an oath, which,
if we broke, let us suffer the same punishment as they who broke
their oaths. And in Jamaica the governor and the assembly granted
the thing; it is also granted in some other places; and several of
the parliament men in England have acknowledged the reasonableness
thereof. The magistrates, after some time, when they saw our
faithfulness in Yea and Nay, they who were moderate, both before
and since the king came in, would put Friends into offices without
an oath; but the cruel and envious would fine Friends to get money
of them, though they could not pay them any.
“Thus the Lord’s power hath carried us through all, and over all,
to his everlasting glory and praise; for God’s power hath been our
hedge, our wall and our keeper (the preserver of his plants and
vineyard,) who have not had the magistrates’ sword and staff to
help us, nor ever trusted in the arm of flesh, but have gone
without these, or Judas’ bag, to preach the Word of life, which
was in the beginning before they were; which reconciles to God.
And thousands have received this Word of reconciliation, and are
born again of the immortal Seed, by the Word of God; and are
feeding upon the milk of the Word, which lives and abides for
ever.
“Many have suffered death for their testimony, in England and
beyond the seas, both before and since the king came in; which may
be seen in an account given to the king and both houses of
parliament; being, ‘A brief, plain, and true relation of the late
and sad sufferings of the people of God in scorn called Quakers,
for worshipping and exercising a good conscience towards God and
man.’
“By reason whereof eighty-nine have suffered till death;
thirty-two of whom died before the king came into England, and
fifty-seven since, by hard imprisonment and cruel usage.
Forty-three have died in the city of London and Southwark since
the Act made against meetings, &c., about 1661, of which a more
particular account was given, with the names of the sufferers, to
the king and parliament, about 1663.
“And though divers laws were designed against us, yet never could
any of them justly touch us, being wrested and misapplied in their
execution by our adversaries, which some have been made to
confess. All those laws that were made, and the oath which they
imprisoned us for, because, in obedience to the command of Christ
Jesus, we could not swear at all, were not originally intended
against us; and yet we suffered by the several powers, and their
laws, both spoiling of goods and imprisonment, even to death. And
the governor of Dover castle, when the king asked him if he had
dispersed all the sectaries’ meetings? said, that ‘he had; but the
Quakers, the devil himself could not; for if he did imprison them,
and break up their meetings, they would meet again; and if he
should beat them or knock them down, or kill some of them, all was
one, they would meet, and not resist again.’ Thus the Lord’s power
supported and kept them over their persecutors, and made them to
justify our patience and lamb-like nature. This was about 1671.
“Since the king came in, three acts have been made against us,
besides the proclamations, by which many have suffered
imprisonment and banishment, and many to death. And yet for all
these acts and proclamations, persecutions, sufferings,
banishments, faithful Friends are as fresh as ever in the Lord’s
power, and valiant for his name and truth.
“Some weak ones there were, when the king came in, who took the
oath; but after they had so done, they were sore troubled for
disobeying the command of Christ and the apostle, and went to the
magistrates, condemned themselves, and offered to go to prison.
“Thus the Lord, in his everlasting power, hath been the support
and stay of his people; and still his Seed reigns, his truth is
over all, and exceedingly spreads unto this year 1676.”
In 1676, while I was at Swarthmore, died William Lampitt, the old
priest of Ulverstone (which parish Swarthmore is in.) He was an old
deceiver, a perverter of the right way of the Lord, and a persecutor
of the people of God. Much contest I had with him, when I first came
into those parts. He had been an old false prophet; for in 1652 he
prophesied (and said he would wage his life upon it), “that the
Quakers would all vanish, and come to nought within half a year:”
but he came to nought himself. For he continued in his lying and
false accusing of God’s people, till a little before he died, and
then he cried for a little rest. To one of his hearers that came to
visit him before he died, he said, “I have been a preacher a long
time, and thought I had lived well; but I did not think it had been
so hard a thing to die.”
After I had finished the services which lay upon me then to do,
feeling my spirit drawn again towards the south (though I was yet
but weakly, and not able to travel far in a day,) I left Swarthmore
the 26th of the 1st Month, 1677, and went to Thomas Pearson’s at
POOL BANK, in WESTMORLAND, where I had a meeting the next day; and
thence to Thomas Camm’s,[38] at CAMSGILL, where Robert Widders with
his wife, and several other Friends came to see me before I left the
country, and to attend the meeting there next day, which was very
large, and in which I was largely drawn forth in testimony to the
truth. I had much discourse with some of that meeting, who were not
in unity with the quarterly meeting they belonged to; but afterwards
several of them that were somewhat tender, came to see their error,
and gave forth condemnations against themselves. Next day John
Blakelin came to Thomas Camm’s, to bring me to his house at DRAWELL
in SEDBERGH, whither I went with him, visiting Friends in the way. I
stayed at Drawell two or three nights, having meetings there and
thereabouts; for while I was there the men’s and women’s meetings
were held there, which were very large and precious.
The First-day following I had a meeting at BRIGFLATS, to which came
most of the Friends from the several meetings round about, and a
great concourse of others also; it was thought there were five or
six hundred people. A very good meeting it was, wherein truth was
largely declared and preciously opened, to the comforting and
refreshing of the faithful, and the drawing near of them that were
afar off. I had another meeting at John Blakelin’s, at which were
many Friends that were going to the quarterly meeting at Kendal.
With them my wife went back, who, with her daughter Rachel, had
accompanied me thus far; and I, having Leonard Fell with me, passed
on through SEDBERGH and GARSDALE, into WENSLEYDALE, visiting Friends
as we went. At night I reached Richard Robinson’s at COUNTERSIDE,
where several Friends came to me that evening; some of whom went
with me next day over the hills to the widow Tennant’s at SCARHOUSE,
in LANGSTROTH-DALE, which we had much difficulty to reach, the snow
lay so deep, though it was a week in the 2nd [4th?] Month. Here, on
First-day, we had a large meeting, Friends coming to it from several
parts round about; and the Lord gave me a very seasonable testimony
to bear amongst them, which I did for several hours, to their great
satisfaction and comfort.
Thence passing through BISHOPDALE, MIDDLEHAM, BARTON, and so by
BEDALE and NORTHALLERTON, I came to George Robinson’s at BURROWBY;
where also Friends coming out of several parts, we had a very large
and good meeting, and very peaceable. But not long after, an envious
justice, who lived not far off, hearing that I had a great meeting
there, troubled Friends about it, and made them appear at the
sessions, where he asked them many ensnaring questions; for he knew
not how to convict them, because he had no proof against them. When
he saw his questions did not catch them, he told them, “he had heard
that George Fox was at a large meeting with them, and they all sat
silent, and none spoke in the meeting.” This false story he
cunningly feigned, thinking thereby to draw out some of the Friends
to contradict him, and say, “that I had spoken in the meeting;” that
so he might convict them upon their own confession, and fine them.
But Friends standing in the wisdom of God, did not answer him
according to his desire, and so escaped his snare. But two Friends
that came out of Ireland, and were at this meeting, having another
that evening about three miles off, this evil-minded justice got
information thereof, and fined Friends, and plundered them very
sorely for it.
I went from Burrowby to Isaac Lindley’s, calling upon Friends as I
went. Robert Lodge and other Friends being with me, we passed next
day to YORK, and the day following being First-day, I was at
Friends’ meeting there, which was large and peaceable. Second day
also I stayed in York, and had two meetings with Friends at John
Taylor’s;[39] whence I wrote to my wife, as follows:—
“DEAR HEART,
“To whom is my love, and to thy daughters, and to all Friends that
inquire after me. My desires are, that ye all may be preserved in
the Lord’s everlasting Seed, in whom ye will have life and peace,
dominion and settlement in the everlasting home or dwelling in the
house built upon the foundation of God. In the power of the Lord I
am brought to York, having had many meetings in the way. The road
was many times deep and bad with snow, our horses sometimes were
down, and we were not able to ride; and sometimes we had great
storms and rain; but by the power of the Lord I went through all.
At Scarhouse there was a very large meeting, and another at
Burrowby, to which Friends came out of Cleveland and Durham; and
many other meetings we have had. At York, yesterday, we had a very
large meeting, exceedingly thronged, Friends being at it from many
parts, and all quiet, and well satisfied: O! the glory of the Lord
shone over all. This day we have had a large men’s and women’s
meeting, many Friends, both men and women, being come out of the
country, and all was quiet; and this evening we are to have the
men’s and women’s meeting of the Friends of the city. John
Whitehead is here, with Robert Lodge[40] and others; Friends are
mighty glad, above measure. So I am in my holy element, and holy
work in the Lord, glory to his name for ever! To-morrow I intend
to go out of the city towards Tadcaster, though I cannot ride as
in days past; yet praised be the Lord that I can travel as well as
I do! So with my love in the fountain of life, in which as ye all
abide, ye will have refreshment of life, that by it ye may grow
and gather eternal strength to serve the Lord, and be satisfied.
To the God of all power, who is all-sufficient to preserve you, I
commit you all to his ordering.”
G. F.
York, the 16th of the 2nd Month, 1677.
Leaving York, I visited Friends at TADCASTER, KNOTTINGLEY,
DONCASTER, and BALBY, having meetings as I went. At Balby I stayed
the First-day meeting, and went next day to Thomas Stacey’s at
BALLOWFIELD, where in the evening I had a meeting, to compose a
difference that had happened between some that professed truth, and
they were reconciled. Next day I came to STAINSBY in DERBYSHIRE, in
which county I had formerly lived about the first breaking forth of
truth. Here I had a good meeting with Friends, and afterwards passed
to SKEGBY in NOTTINGHAMSHIRE, and from thence to NOTTINGHAM, to John
Reckless’s. I had a meeting with Friends at his house that evening,
and another next day in Friends’ public meeting-house, which was
peaceable and well.
I went the day following to John Fox’s at WIMESWOLD in
LEICESTERSHIRE, where I had a meeting that evening; and next day to
William Smith’s at SILEBY, where, it being First-day, we had a very
large meeting; for besides Friends from several places, many of the
townspeople hearing I was there, came to it, and heard the truth
declared gladly. Next day I went to LEICESTER, where finding many
Friends come out of the country, to be at the horse-fair next day, I
had a very good meeting with them that night; and another next
evening at William Wells’s house at KNIGHTON, about a mile from
Leicester. Next day I passed to SWANNINGTON, and had a meeting
there; thence to Samuel Fretwell’s at HARTSHORN in DERBYSHIRE, where
I had a meeting also; then to Henry Sidon’s, at BADDESLEY in
WARWICKSHIRE, and stayed the meeting there, which, it being
First-day, was very large and peaceable, notwithstanding a justice
had threatened to come and break it up.
Having stayed a while with Friends, I went in the evening to Richard
Ball’s of WHITTINGTON, where several Friends came to visit me. Next
day I went to Nathaniel Newton’s at HARTSHILL, where several Friends
met me, with whom I had good service. After this I passed on,
visiting Friends in divers places, till I came to DINGLEY, where a
meeting was appointed before, which was very large, and truth was
largely opened to the people. It was peaceable and quiet, and the
people generally sober; saving that while I was showing how
Christendom (so called) was gone from the pure religion that is
undefiled, &c., one man rushed out in a furious manner, and said, “I
deny that.” After this meeting I went with Thomas Charles to his
house at ADINGWORTH, and next day to NORTHAMPTON, where I stayed the
First-day meeting, which was very large and peaceable. I had much
service among Friends besides. Next day Edward Cooper of
Northampton, accompanied me to OLNEY in BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, where I
stayed at James Brierlie’s, several Friends coming to see me in the
evening.
Next day I went to a meeting at TURVEY in BEDFORDSHIRE, to which
Friends came from several parts; so that it was very large. Here I
met with William Dewsbury, who after the meeting took me to his
son-in-law John Rush’s of KEMPSTON, where I stayed with William that
night and most of next day, passing thence towards evening through
AMPTHILL, to Thomas Gamboll’s of BULLOCK’S HILL. William Dewsbury
went along with me, and several Friends came to visit us. Next day,
passing through LUTON, I went to MARKET STREET, William Dewsbury
accompanying me part of the way, and the day following Leonard
Fell[41] and I had a meeting at KENSWORTH, which was pretty large
and peaceable. After it we went to ALBAN’S, where we visited
Friends; and next day passing through SOUTH MIMS and BARNET, where
also we visited Friends, we came that night to widow Hayley’s at
GUTTERHEDGE in HENDON in MIDDLESEX. Next day, being First-day, we
had a very large meeting there, several Friends coming from London.
I stayed there Second-day, and on third went to William Mead’s house
at HIGHGATE, with whom next day I went to LONDON. It being Fourth
day, I went to the meeting at Gracechurch Street, where Friends and
I were greatly refreshed in each other in the Lord, and the Lord’s
power and Seed were set over all, blessed be his name for ever!
Thus it pleased the Lord to bring me safe to London, though much
wearied, for though I rode not very far in a day, yet through
weakness of body, continual travelling was hard to me. Besides, I
had not much rest at night to refresh nature; for I often sat up
late with Friends, where I lodged, to inform and advise them in
things wherein they were wanting; and when in bed, I was often
hindered of sleep by great pains in my head and teeth, occasioned,
as I thought, from cold taken by riding often in the rain. But the
Lord’s power was over all, and carried me through all, to his
praise.
In my journey I observed a slackness and shortness in some that
professed the truth, in keeping up the ancient testimony against
tithes; for wherever that spirit got entrance, which wrought
division in the church, and opposed the men’s and women’s meetings,
it weakened those that received it in their testimony against
tithes. Wherefore I was moved of the Lord to issue a short “Epistle
to Friends,” to stir up the pure mind, and to encourage and
strengthen them in their Christian testimony against that
antichristian yoke and oppression:—
“MY DEAR FRIENDS,
“Be faithful to the Lord in your testimony for Jesus, who ended
the Levitical priesthood of Aaron, that took tithes, and sent his
ministers forth freely, to give freely that which they had
received of him freely, without a bag or a staff. Christ’s
disciples could not join with those that made a trade of
preaching. And as there was a testimony to be borne against those
tithes which were commanded, in the law, for Levi and Aaron, so
there is a testimony to be borne against these tithes, which have
been set up by man, in the dark time of Popery, and not by God or
Christ. Now to cry against the priests in words, and yet to give
them means, and put into their mouths, that they may not prepare
war against you, is a contradiction. Therefore take heed; for if
the Lord bless you with outward creatures, and you bestow them
upon Baal’s priests, he may justly require the outward things from
you again, which he hath given you: who saith, that his ministers
should freely give, as they have freely received. So all the
preachers for tithes and money, and the takers and payers of
tithe, must be testified against in the Lord’s power and Spirit;
that all may stand up in their testimony for Jesus Christ, in his
power and Spirit, against the tithe-mongers. Consider how many
faithful servants and valiants of the Lord, have laid down their
lives against them, in this day of the Lord; and in the days of
the martyrs they did witness against them. Consider also what
judgments have come upon those that spoiled Friends’ goods, and
cast them into prison for tithes and maintenance. Therefore in the
power of the Lord, maintain the war against the beast, and do not
put into his mouth, lest he cry peace to you; which peace you must
not receive; but it must be broken, and thrown out by the Spirit
of God. Then in the same Spirit, ye will receive from the Son of
Peace, that peace which the beast, and the whore, and the world,
with all their earthly teachers for the earth, made by man, cannot
receive, nor bereave you of. Therefore keep your authority and
dominion in the power, Spirit, and name of Jesus, in whom my love
is to you.”
G. F.
3rd Month, 1677.
I came to LONDON on the 23rd of the 3rd month, ten or twelve days
before the Yearly Meeting, in which time I fell in with Friends
there in the service of truth, visiting them at the meetings. The
parliament then sitting, we prepared something to lay before them,
concerning the seizing of the third part of Friends’ estates, as
Popish recusants, which was a great suffering, and a grievance we
complained of; but we obtained no redress.
To the Yearly Meeting many Friends came from most parts of the
nation; and some out of Scotland, Holland, &c., and very glorious
meetings we had, wherein the Lord’s powerful presence was very
largely felt; and the affairs of truth were sweetly carried on in
the unity of the Spirit, to the satisfaction and comfort of the
upright-hearted; blessed be the Lord for ever! After the Yearly
Meeting, having stayed a week or two with Friends in London, I went
down with William Penn[42] to his house in SUSSEX; John Burnyeat and
some other Friends being with us. As we passed through SURREY,
hearing the quarterly meeting was that day, William Penn, John
Burnyeat, and I, went from the road to it; and after the meeting
returning to our other company, went with them to William Penn’s
that night; which is forty miles from London. I stayed at
WORMINGHURST about three weeks; in which time John Burnyeat and I
answered a very envious and wicked book, which Roger Williams, a
priest of New England (or some colony thereabout) had written
against truth and Friends. When we had finished that service, we
went with Stephen Smith to his house at WORPLESDON in SURREY, where
we had a large meeting. Friends thereaway had been exceedingly
plundered about two months before on the priest’s account; for they
took from Stephen Smith five kine (being all he had) for about fifty
shillings’ tithes.
Thence we went to KINGSTON, and so to LONDON, where I stayed not
long; for it was upon me from the Lord to go into Holland, to visit
Friends and to preach the gospel there, and in some parts of
Germany. Wherefore setting things in order for my journey as fast as
I could, I took leave of Friends at London; and with several other
Friends went down to COLCHESTER, in order to my passage for Holland.
Next day, being First-day, I was at the public meeting of Friends
there, which was very large and peaceable. In the evening I had
another large one, but not so public, at John Furly’s house, where I
lodged. The day following, I was at the women’s meeting there, which
also was very large. Thence next day we passed to HARWICH, where
Robert Duncan, and several other Friends out of the country came to
see us; and some from London came to us there, that intended to go
over with me. The packet in which we were to go not being ready, we
went to the meeting in the town, and a precious opportunity we had
together; for the Lord, according to his wonted goodness, by his
overcoming, refreshing power, opened many mouths to declare his
everlasting truth, and to praise and glorify him.
-----
Footnote 36:
Some particulars of the controversy here alluded to, may be seen
in Barclay’s _Works_; also in Jaffray’s _Diary_, p. 328-330. The
students who were convinced issued a written declaration, stating
the grounds of their change, which is to be found in Jaffray’s
_Diary_.
Footnote 37:
See _Selections from the Epistles of George Fox_, by Samuel Tuke.
Footnote 38:
Thomas Camm, of Camsgill, in Westmorland, was born in 1641, and
had a good education. He was from childhood inclined to be
religious, was early convinced of Friends’ principles, and after
some time called to the work of the ministry. He counted nothing
too near or dear to part with for truth’s sake, but left all to
follow the Lord, and, with his whole strength and substance, was
given up to serve him. He was an able preacher, diligent and
laborious in the work of the Lord, and instrumental to convince
and establish many in the way of truth. His doctrine was sound,
and his delivery in the demonstration of that Divine power which
reached the witness of God in the hearts of his hearers.
Great and many were the sufferings he met with and went through,
as, imprisonments, spoiling of goods, mockings and scoffings from
those without, and suffering among false brethren; in all which,
he stood firm and faithful, approving himself a true follower of
Jesus Christ, suffering joyfully for his name’s sake, who had
counted him worthy not only to believe, but suffer for him. During
an illness of some continuance, many were the weighty expressions
that fell from him, often magnifying the Lord to the tendering of
all hearts present. When grown very weak, being asked how he felt,
he would say, “Weak of body, but strong in the Lord;” saying also,
“In Abraham’s bosom there is sweet repose.” Seeming to be faint, a
friend gave him a little wine, thinking it might refresh him, but
his stomach could not bear it; then looking at him he said, “Thou
seest these things will not do; but one cup of new wine in the
heavenly kingdom, with my dear and blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ, will make up all.”—For further particulars, see _Piety
Promoted_, vol. ii., p. 101-108.
Footnote 39:
John Taylor was an able minister amongst the early Friends, but a
very brief account is preserved of his religious labours. He was
born in Huntingdonshire (?) about the year 1638. He embarked on a
gospel mission to America in 1660, being then only in the
twenty-second year of his age. How long he was occupied there is
not stated, but his religious services were not confined to the
English settlers. Trusting to the never-failing arm of Divine
guidance and protection, he travelled alone among the Indian
tribes, and “had meetings in the woods and wilderness, to declare
the truth to them,” as he remarks, “and to turn them from darkness
to the light of Christ Jesus in their own hearts.” By these
untutored sons of the forest the stripling preacher was “received
with kindness,” and in their wigwams he became a welcome guest.
“They heard me soberly,” he says, “and confessed to the truth I
spoke, by an interpreter; and they were loving and kind afterwards
to Friends.”
On his return from America, John Taylor, being on gospel service
in London, was taken from a meeting and committed to prison. He
visited America a second time, and resided some time in Jamaica,
also in Barbadoes, where he became a merchant, but finally
returned to England, and settled at York as a sugar refiner. After
which, he was also largely engaged in the ministry in different
parts of the nation, and died in 1708, aged about seventy, a
minister about fifty years.
John Taylor is described by a contemporary as “an able minister of
the New Testament; in the publishing of which, the Spirit of God
and of glory rested upon him, to the comforting and true
refreshment of the churches, where the Lord ordered him, or his
lot was cast.”
Footnote 40:
Robert Lodge, mentioned before, was of Masham, in Yorkshire, born
about the year 1636. He was religiously inclined from his youth,
was convinced about 1658, and became a valiant gospel minister. He
was very serviceable in gathering many out of the ways of the
world, into the way of life, travelling up and down in the service
of his Lord, enduring many trials, exercises, and imprisonments
for his sake. John Whiting says of him, “He was an excellent
minister; he had a fine refreshing testimony, and an extraordinary
gift in prayer. He was instrumental to turn many to righteousness,
and to build them up in the most holy faith. His testimony reached
to the witness of God in the consciences of many; and was a
consolation to the watering and refreshing many weary souls. He
kept his first love and habitation in the truth to the last; and,
towards his latter end, laboured much with and for the young
generation, that they might come up in the footsteps of those who
were gone before. He was a man of a sweet disposition, and left a
good savour behind him.” Much might be said of him, but I refer to
the _Several Living Testimonies given forth by divers Friends
concerning him, and his Faithful Labours and Travels_, printed in
1691.
Footnote 41:
The above is the last mention of Leonard Fell, whose name has
frequently occurred in the progress of this Journal. Very little
is known of him but that he was a faithful minister amongst the
early Friends.
I feel inclined to insert an anecdote respecting him, as an
instance among others that might be adduced, of the carrying out
of the non-resistant principle. The conduct of several “Friends”
who, having “fallen among thieves,” were, of course, precluded
from retaliating violence, even in their own defence, affords an
exemplification of this feature in the Christian character.
Leonard Fell, when travelling alone, was attacked by a highwayman,
who demanded his money, which he gave him; then he desired to have
his horse: Leonard dismounted and let him take it. Then feeling
the power of truth rise in his mind, he turned to the robber, and
under its authority, solemnly warned him of the evil of his ways;
but he flying into a passion, asked the Friend why he preached to
him, and threatened to blow out his brains. But Leonard replying
to this effect, “Though I would not give my life for my money or
my horse, I would give it to save thy soul,” so struck the
astonished robber, that he declared, if he was such a man as that,
he would take neither his money nor his horse from him; and,
returning both to the faithful Friend, went his way, leaving
Leonard to the enjoyment of that peace, attending the honest
discharge of his conscience, to obtain which he had not counted
his life dear.
The courage and presence of mind exhibited by a true soldier of
Jesus Christ, when permitted in the course of Divine Providence,
to be cast into straits and trying situations, is often
conspicuous. He not only knows the strength of that preserving
arm, which rules or overrules all circumstances for the good of
those that are faithful, he not only is furnished for all
occasions, and “out of weakness is made strong,” so as even to
“stop the mouths of lions,” and “quench the violence of fire”
(Heb. xi.), but is abundantly furnished with resignation to submit
unto the Lord in all things; and, with one who was “in perils of
robbers,” and “in deaths oft,” he can say, “Whether we live or
die, we are the Lord’s.” (Rom. xiv. 8).—W.A.
Footnote 42:
A close intimacy existed between William Penn and George Fox,
which enabled the former to indite so admirable an introduction to
these volumes. The name of William Penn occurs frequently in these
pages. Scarcely any name is more generally known or respected, by
those of other religious persuasions than his; indeed, so familiar
are most readers with his history, that it would be superfluous to
enter into much relating to him.
It may suffice briefly to state that his birth and education were
both good; he being the son of Admiral Penn, who was knighted by
Charles II; and became a great favourite with the Duke of York,
afterwards James II. William, his son, was born at London in 1644.
He imbibed religious impressions as early as his twelfth year. In
his fifteenth year he entered a student at Christ Church, Oxford.
On his return home he exhibited a religious seriousness and manner
of deportment, which (as likely to stand in the way of his worldly
preferment) was so displeasing to his father that he turned him
out of doors.
Ultimately he joined the despised Quakers, a step which highly
displeased his father the Admiral; but he became quite reconciled
to him before his death. Penn continued to advance in religious
growth, became a minister amongst the Quakers, and a considerable
writer in defence of their principles, suffering persecution and
imprisonment in consequence. It was whilst he was imprisoned in
the Tower that he wrote that excellent work, _No Cross, No Crown_.
The persecution of Dissenters continuing to rage in England,
notwithstanding their repeated applications to parliament for
sufferance and protection, William Penn turned his thoughts
towards a settlement in the New World, as a place where himself
and his friends might enjoy their religious opinions without
molestation, and where an example might be set to the nations of a
just and righteous government. He therefore, in 1681, obtained a
patent from Charles II., for a province in North America, in
consideration of his father’s services, and of a debt still due to
him from the crown. He founded the colony of Pennsylvania, and
watched it with a paternal eye, till his death in 1718. Its
prosperity is a lasting monument of his wisdom as a politician and
a legislator. For further particulars the reader is referred to
Clarkson’s _Life of William Penn_; a highly interesting work, and
well worthy of perusal.
CHAPTER VIII.
1677.—George Fox sails for Holland, with several other Friends, and
lands at Briel—attends the Quarterly Meeting at Amsterdam—writes
an epistle to Friends against the spirit of separation—writes to
the Princess Elizabeth—her answer—a monthly meeting is
established at Frederickstadt—Friends are imprisoned and
banished from Embden, and suffer greatly—a Monthly Meeting
settled at Harlingen—a priest assents to the doctrine
promulgated by George Fox—he is questioned for it by his
hearers—George Fox writes an epistle to Friends respecting the
seducing spirit—he writes an epistle of encouragement to Friends
under suffering at Dantzic—and again to Friends respecting the
spirit of separation—spends considerable time at Amsterdam in
writing on Truth’s account—a warning to the magistrates and
people of Oldenburg—an epistle concerning fasts, prayers,
honour, persecution, true liberty, and the observance of days
and times—a warning to the magistrates, priests, and people of
Hamburg—to the ambassadors met to effect a treaty of peace in
the city of Nimeguen—completes his travels in Holland—writes a
book addressed to the Jews.
After the meeting at Harwich we returned to John Vandewall’s, where
I had lodged; and when the boat was ready, taking leave of Friends,
we that were bound for Holland, went on board about nine in the
evening, on the 25th of the 5th Month, 1677. The Friends that went
over with me, were William Penn, Robert Barclay, George Keith and
his wife, John Furly and his brother, William Tallcoat, George
Watts, and Isabel Yeomans, one of my wife’s daughters.
About one in the morning we weighed anchor, having a fair brisk
wind, which by next morning brought us within sight of Holland. But
that day proving very clear and calm we got forward little, till
about four in the afternoon, when a fresh gale arose, which carried
us within a league of land. Then being becalmed again, we cast
anchor for that night, it being between the hours of nine and ten in
the evening: but William Penn and Robert Barclay, understanding that
Benjamin Furly was come from Rotterdam to the Briel to meet us, got
two of the boatmen to let down a small boat that belonged to the
packet, and row them to shore; but before they could reach it the
gates were shut; and there being no house without the gates, they
lay in a fisherman’s boat all night. As soon as the gates were
opened in the morning, they went in and found Benjamin Furly, with
other Friends of Rotterdam, that were come thither to receive us;
and they sent a boat, with three young men in it, that lived with
Benjamin Furly, who brought us to the BRIEL, where the Friends
received us with great gladness.
We stayed about two hours to refresh ourselves, and then took boat,
with the Holland Friends, for ROTTERDAM, where we arrived about
eleven that day, the 28th of the Month. I was very well this voyage,
but some of the Friends were sea-sick. A fine passage we had, and
all came safe and well to land; blessed and praised be the name of
the Lord for ever!
Next day, being First-day, we had two meetings at Benjamin Furly’s,
where many of the town’s-people and some officers came in, and all
were civil. Benjamin Furly or John Claus, a Friend of Amsterdam,
interpreted, when any Friend declared. I spent the next day in
visiting Friends there. The day following, William Penn and I, with
other Friends, went towards Amsterdam with some Friends of that
city, who came to Rotterdam to conduct us thither. We took boat in
the afternoon, and, passing by OVERKIRK, came to DELFT, through
which we walked on foot; and then took boat again to LEYDEN, where
we lodged that night at an inn. This is six Dutch miles from
Rotterdam, which are eighteen English miles, and five hours’ sailing
or travelling; for our boat was drawn by a horse that went on the
shore. Next day taking boat again, we went to HAARLEM, fourteen
miles from Leyden, where we had appointed a meeting, which proved
very large; for many of the townspeople came in, and two of their
preachers. The Lord gave us a blessed opportunity, not only with
respect to Friends, but to other sober people, and the meeting ended
peaceably and well. After it we passed to AMSTERDAM, accompanied by
several Friends of that city and of Alkmaar.
Next day was the quarterly meeting at Amsterdam, to which came
Friends from Haarlem and Rotterdam, and with them those of our
company, whom we had left at Rotterdam, viz.: Robert Barclay, George
Keith and his wife, &c. The meeting was at Gertrude Dirick Nieson’s
house. A very large and serviceable one it was; for both William
Penn and I were drawn to open many things concerning the order of
the gospel, and to show the benefit and service of yearly,
quarterly, and monthly meetings of men and women. We had another
meeting at Gertrude’s the next day, more public, and very large, at
which were professors of several sorts, unto whom the way of life
and salvation was largely and livingly opened; which they hearkened
very attentively to, none making any objection to what was declared.
In the afternoon we had another meeting in the same place, but less,
and more private. The day following we had a meeting of Friends
only, wherein by joint agreement were settled several meetings; to
wit, monthly, quarterly, and a yearly meeting, to be held at
Amsterdam for Friends in all the United Provinces of Holland, and in
Embden, the Palatinate, Hamburg, Frederickstadt, Dantzic, and other
places in and about Germany; which Friends were glad of, and it has
been of great service to truth.
Next day an exercise came upon me concerning that deceitful spirit,
which wrought in some to make divisions in the church; and the care
of the churches being upon me, I was moved to write a few lines to
warn Friends of it, as follows:—
“All Friends, keep over that spirit of separation and division, in
the peaceable truth, and in the Seed of life, which will wear it
all out and outlast it. For the Lamb will have the victory over
all the spirits of strife, as it hath had since the beginning; and
they will wither, as others have done; but all that keep in the
Seed, which is always green, shall never wither; as Friends have
been to this day kept. And if any have backslidden, and thrown off
the cross, are grown loose and full, and are gone into strife and
contention with their earthly spirits, and therein plead for a
liberty, this spirit taketh with loose, earthly spirits, and cries
imposition to such as admonish them to come to the life, light,
Spirit, and power of God, that they may be alive, and may live
again with the living. Upon this admonition, their spirits rise
into contention, strife, and separation, turning against the
living, in their loose, earthly spirits, which would have the name
of truth, but are not in the nature of it, but are for eternal
judgment of the living Seed. This is it which doth deceive; but it
is judged by that which doth undeceive and save.”
G.F.
Amsterdam in Holland, the 5th of the 6th Month, 1677.
This being First-day, we had a very large meeting again, there
coming to it a great concourse of people of different opinions, as
Baptists, Seekers, Socinians, Brownists, and some of the collegians.
Robert Barclay, George Keith, William Penn, and I, declared the
everlasting truth among them; opening the state of man in the fall,
and showing by what way man and woman may come into the restoration
by Christ Jesus. Indeed, the mystery of iniquity, and the mystery of
godliness, were very plainly laid open; and the meeting ended
quietly and well.
The day following, George Keith, Robert Barclay, and William Penn,
leaving me and some other Friends at Amsterdam, set forward towards
GERMANY; where they travelled many hundred miles, and had good
service for the Lord; Benjamin Furly going with them and
interpreting.
That day and the next I stayed at Amsterdam, visiting Friends, and
assisting them in some business concerning their meetings. Three
Baptists came to discourse with me, to whom I opened things to their
satisfaction, and they parted from me in kindness. I wrote a letter
also to the Princess Elizabeth, which Isabel Yeomans delivered to
her, when George Keith’s wife and she went to visit her:—
“PRINCESS ELIZABETH,
“I have heard of thy tenderness towards the Lord and his holy
truth, by some Friends that have visited thee, and also by some of
thy letters, which I have seen. It is indeed a great thing for a
person of thy quality to have such a tender mind after the Lord
and his precious truth, seeing so many are swallowed up with
voluptuousness, and the pleasures of this world; yet all make an
outward profession of God and Christ one way or other, but without
any deep, inward sense and feeling of him. For it is not many
mighty, nor wise of the world, that can become fools for Christ’s
sake, or can become low in the humility of Christ Jesus from their
mighty state, through which they might receive a mightier estate,
and a mightier kingdom through the inward Holy Spirit—the divine
light and power of God; and a mightier wisdom which is from above,
pure and peaceable. This wisdom is above that which is below; that
is earthly, sensual, and devilish, by which men destroy one
another, yea, about their religions, ways, worships, and churches;
but this they have not from God nor Christ. The wisdom which is
from above, by which all things were made and created, which the
holy fear of God in the heart is the beginning of, keeps the heart
clean: and by this wisdom are all God’s children to be ordered,
and with it to order all things to God’s glory. This is the wisdom
that is justified of her children. In this fear of God and this
wisdom, my desire is, that thou mayest be preserved to God’s
glory. For the Lord is come to teach his people himself, and to
set up his ensign, that the nations may flow unto it.
“There hath been an apostacy since the apostles’ days, from the
divine light of Christ, which should have given them ‘the light of
the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ Jesus;’
and from the Holy Spirit, which would have led them into all
truth; and therefore have people set up so many leaders without
them, to give them knowledge; and also from the holy and precious
faith, which Jesus Christ is the author and finisher of; which
purifies the heart, and gives victory over that which separates
from God; through which faith they have access to God, and in
which they please God; the mystery of which is held in a pure
conscience. And also from the gospel which was preached in the
apostles’ days (which gospel is the power of God,) which brings
life and immortality to light in man and woman, by which people
should have seen over the devil that has darkened them; which
gospel will preserve all them that receive it, in life and
immortality. For the eyes of people have been after men, and not
after the Lord, who writes his law in the hearts, and puts it into
the minds of all the children of the new covenant of light, life,
and grace, through which they all come to know the Lord, from the
least to the greatest; so that the knowledge of the Lord may cover
the earth, as the waters do the sea.
“This work of the Lord is beginning again, as it was in the
apostles’ days. People shall come to receive an unction in them
again from the Holy One, by which they shall know all things, and
shall need not any man to teach them, but as the anointing doth
teach them; and also to know what the righteousness of faith
speaks, the Word nigh in the heart and mouth, to obey it and to do
it. This was the Word of faith the apostles preached; which is now
received and preached again, and which it is the duty of all true
Christians to receive. Now people are coming out of the apostacy
to the light of Christ and his Spirit, and to receive faith from
him, and not from men; to receive the gospel from him their
unction from him, the Word; and as they receive him, they declare
him freely, as his command was to his disciples, and is still to
the learners and receivers of him.
“For the Lord God and his Son Jesus Christ, is come to teach his
people, and to bring them from all the world’s ways, to Christ,
the way, the truth, and the life, who is the way to the Father;
and from all the world’s teachers and speakers, to him the Speaker
and Teacher, as Heb. i. 1.; and from all the world’s worshippers,
to worship God in the Spirit and in the truth, (which the devil,
the destroyer, is out of;) which worship Christ set up above
sixteen hundred years ago, when he put down the Jews’ worship at
the Temple at Jerusalem, and the worship at the mountain where
Jacob’s well was; to bring people from all the world’s religions,
which they have made since the apostles’ days, to the religion
that was set up by Christ and his apostles, which is pure and
undefiled before God, and keeps from the spots of the world; to
bring them out of all the world’s churches and fellowships, made
and set up since the apostles’ days, to the church that is in God,
the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ; (Thess. i. 1,) and to bring
to the unity and fellowship in the Holy Spirit, that doth mortify,
circumcise, and baptize, to plunge down sin and corruption, that
has got up in man and woman by transgression. In this holy Spirit
there is a holy fellowship and unity; yea, it is the bond of the
Prince of princes, and King of kings, and the Lord of lords’
peace; which heavenly peace all true Christians are to maintain
with spiritual weapons, not with carnal.
“And now, my friend, the holy men of God wrote the Scriptures as
they were moved by the Holy Ghost; and all Christendom are on
heaps about those Scriptures, because they are not led by the same
Holy Ghost as those were that gave forth the Scriptures; which
Holy Ghost they must come to in themselves, and be led by, if they
come into all the truth of them, and to have the comfort of God,
of Christ, and of them. For none can call Jesus Lord, but by the
Holy Ghost; and all that call Christ Lord without the Holy Ghost,
take his name in vain. Likewise all that name his name are to
depart from iniquity; then they name his name with reverence, in
truth and righteousness.
“O therefore, feel the grace and truth in thy heart, that is come
by Jesus Christ, that will teach thee how to live, and what to
deny. It will establish thy heart, season thy words, and bring thy
salvation; it will be a teacher unto thee at all times. By it thou
mayest receive Christ from whom it comes; and as many as receive
him, to them he gives power, not only to stand against sin and
evil, but to become the sons of God; if sons, then heirs of a
life, a world, and kingdom, without end, and of the eternal riches
and treasures thereof. So in haste, with my love in the Lord Jesus
Christ, who tasted death for every man, and bruises the serpent’s
head, who is between man and God, that through Christ man may come
to God again, and praise him through Jesus Christ, the Amen; who
is the spiritual and heavenly rock and foundation for all God’s
people to build upon, to the praise and glory of God, who is over
all, blessed for evermore.”
GEORGE FOX.
Amsterdam, the 7th of the 6th Month, 1677.
“_Postscript._—The bearer hereof is a daughter-in-law of mine,
that comes with Gertrude Dirick Nieson and George Keith’s wife, to
visit thee.”
G.F.
_The Princess Elizabeth’s answer._
“DEAR FRIEND,
“I cannot but have a tender love to those that love the Lord Jesus
Christ, and to whom it is given, not only to believe in him, but
also to suffer for him; therefore your letter and your friends’
visit have been both very welcome to me. I shall follow their and
your counsel as far as God will afford me light and unction;
remaining still your loving friend,
ELIZABETH.”[43]
Herford, the 30th of August, 1677.
Next day John Claus and I took a boat and passed to BUYCKSLOTE,
thence to PURMEREND, where having refreshed ourselves, we went by
waggon to ALKMAAR, about thirty miles from Amsterdam. We went to a
Friend’s house there, whose name was William Williams, where I had a
meeting that night. I had another next day, which was larger; for
several professors came, and all was quiet and well. After the
meeting, I visited some Friends; and then, taking boat, passed to
HOORN, which is counted the chief city in North Holland. We lodged
at an inn; and, taking waggon early next morning, passed to
ENCKHUYSEN, where we took ship for FRIESLAND; and landing in the
afternoon at WORKUM, took waggon and rode upon the high bank of the
Friezen Seas, till we met two Friends coming with a waggon to meet
us; with whom (discharging our waggon at Mackum, a village hard by,)
we went to HARLINGEN, the chief seaport town in Friesland. We went
to Hessel Jacobs’, whither several Friends came to visit us that
night. Next day we visited the Friends of the place; and I wrote a
paper, “To all them that persecute Friends for not observing their
fast-day.”
The day following being First-day, Friends had a meeting there, to
which we went, and many professors came to it. I declared the
everlasting gospel amongst them, John Claus interpreting. They were
all very civil, and heard attentively; and when it was done,
departed peaceably, without making any opposition. After meeting I
went to Hessel Jacobs’ again, whither after a while came a Calvinist
to ask me some questions, which I answered to his satisfaction; and
he departed friendly. Soon after he was gone, a preacher of the
collegians came to discourse with me, who seemed well satisfied
also, and we parted lovingly. That evening I had another meeting
with the Friends there, and next morning, when we had taken our
leave of them, we passed to LEEUWARDEN, the chief city in FRIESLAND,
and lodged that night at a Friend’s house there, whose name was
Sybrand Dowes.
Next morning early, taking boat, we passed to DOCKUM, and walking
through the city, took boat again to STROBUS, which is the utmost
part of Friesland. There we baited at a commissary’s house; and then
taking boat again, passed to GRONINGEN, the chief city of the
province of Groningland. One of the magistrates of that city came
with us from Leeuwarden, with whom I had some discourse on the way,
and he was very loving. We walked nearly two miles through the city,
and then took boat for Delfziel; and passing in the evening through
a town called APPINGDALEM, where had been a great horse-fair that
day; there came many officers rushing into the boat, and being
somewhat in drink, they were very rude. I spoke to them, exhorting
them to “fear the Lord, and beware of Solomon’s vanities.” They were
boisterous fellows; yet somewhat more civil afterwards. We landed at
DELFZIEL about ten at night, having travelled about fifty English
miles that day. We went to an inn to lodge, and as we passed through
the guards, they examined John Claus, whether I was not a militia
soldier; and when he had told them I was not, they let us pass
peaceably.
DELFZIEL stands on the river Ems, over which we passed next day to
EMBDEN, a place where Friends had been cruelly persecuted, and from
which they had been often banished. I went to an inn, where I dined
with some men that understood English, with whom I had a fine time,
and they were loving. Meanwhile John Claus went with his wife to her
father’s, in Embden; whither, after I had dined, I went also,
understanding the old man was desirous to see me. In the afternoon
John Claus and I walked through the city to the place where the
waggon, which he had hired, was to meet us; and while we waited for
it, the Friends that were in the city came to the house where we
were, and we had a little meeting. When it was over, and the waggon
came not, we sent to know the reason. The master of it sent us word,
that he durst not let it go; for the bishop of Munster’s soldiers
were up in the country, and he was afraid they would take away his
horses. So being disappointed of our passage, we returned to John
Claus’s father-in-law’s house, where I left him, and went to my inn
at night.
We took shipping next day, and passed about fifteen miles upon the
river Ems, to a market-town in East-Friesland, called LEER, where
lived a Friend that had been banished from Embden. When we had
visited him, we hired a waggon in that town, and passed to a
garrisoned town, called STRIKEHUYSEN, where the guards examined us;
and then went on to DETEREN, where, hiring another waggon, we passed
to another garrisoned town, where we were very strictly examined.
Thence we passed to APEN, where we lodged that night. In our
travelling this day, we met the Earl of Oldenburg, going to the
treaty of peace at Lembachie.
Next day, we passed by waggon to OLDENBURG, lately a great and
famous place, but then burnt down, and but few houses left standing
in it. At this place we hired another waggon, and went to
DELMENHORST; where, after we had been examined by the guards, we
went to a burgher-master’s to lodge, whose house was an inn. There
being many people I declared the way of truth to him and them,
warning them of the day of the Lord that was coming upon all
evil-doers.
We passed next day by waggon to BREMEN, a stately city in GERMANY;
and thence, after a double examination, we went to a water called
OVERDELAND, and there took boat to FISHERHOLDER; where, finding many
people together, I declared the way of God to them, and exhorted
them to fear the Lord. There we took waggon again, and travelled in
the bishop of Munster’s country to CLOSTERSEVEN; and, having no
inclination to stay there, got fresh horses, intending to travel all
night. We went a little way, but it quickly grew so dark, and rained
so hard, that we thought it best to turn back again; for our waggon
being open, we had no defence against the rain, and our clothes were
already wet with what had fallen for several days before. So we went
to an inn, and got a little fresh straw, upon which we lay till
about break of day; and then set out and travelled to BUXTEHUDE.
The people in the bishop of Munster’s country were very dark. As we
passed amongst them, I preached truth to them, warning them of the
great and notable day of the Lord; and exhorting them to soberness,
and to mind the good Spirit of God in themselves.
It was on a First-day that we went through Buxtehude; and without
the walls there was a great fair of sheep and geese that day. We
stayed a little to refresh ourselves, and went on as fast as we
could to HAMBURG, partly by waggon, and partly by water. We reached
the city in time enough to get a meeting there that evening; and a
good and glorious one it was. There were at it, amongst others, a
Baptist teacher and his wife, and a great man of Sweden and his
wife; and all was quiet, blessed be the Lord, whose power was
exalted over all. Yet a dark, hard place this is, and the people are
much shut up from truth.
At Hamburg was a woman that had spoken against me in John Perrott’s
time, though she had never seen me till now. She had been troubled
for it ever since, and now was glad of an opportunity to acknowledge
her fault; which she very readily did, and I as readily and freely
forgave her.
We stayed that night at Hamburg, encouraging and strengthening the
Friends there in their testimony to the truth; and betimes next
morning set forward towards Frederickstadt, two long days’ journey
from Hamburg. We went the first day to ELMSHORN, where we baited;
and then rode on through a garrison-town of the king of Denmark’s;
and passing by the monument of the Earl of Rantzow, came to the city
of ITZEHOE, where we lodged that night. I had some service in the
evening among the people in the inn, whom I exhorted to soberness,
and to live in the fear of the Lord. Next morning we travelled to
HOGHENHORN, where we dined at an inn with one of the council of
Frederickstadt; to whom, and to the rest of the people present, I
declared the truth, with which they seemed to be affected. Then
travelling on, we came to a river called Eyder, where we took boat
and so went to FREDERICKSTADT, to William Paul’s, where several
Friends came to us, for there is a pretty company of Friends in that
city. We had a fine refreshing meeting together that evening, which
made us forget our weariness; for we were indeed very weary, having
travelled hard two days, and being wet through our clothes, having
had much rain in our open waggons. But the Lord made all easy and
good to us; and we were well, and glad to see Friends; blessed be
his holy name for ever!
This city is in the Duke of Holstein’s country, who would have
banished Friends out of the city and country, and sent to the
magistrates of the city to do it; but they said, they would lay down
their offices rather than do it; inasmuch as Friends came to that
city to enjoy liberty of conscience. Friends still enjoy their
liberty there, and truth and they are of good report amongst the
people, both in city and country.
On First-day I had a meeting here, to which many people came, and
some rough spirits; but the power of the Lord bound them down, and
the Seed of life was set over all. While I was here I had a
discourse with a Jew that was a Levite, concerning the coming of the
Messiah, and he was much confounded in what he said; yet he carried
himself lovingly, and invited me to his house. I went, and there I
discoursed with another Jew, who showed me their Talmud and many
other Jewish books; but they are very dark, and do not understand
their own prophets.
There was at this city a Baptist teacher, who had reproached and
belied Friends; wherefore John Claus went with two Friends of the
town, to the house where he lodged, and cleared truth and Friends
from his reproaches; and laid his lies and slanders upon his own
head, to his shame.
Before we left this place I had another meeting with the Friends
only, wherein I laid before them the usefulness and benefit of a
monthly meeting, for looking after the poor, and taking care that
marriages, and all other things relating to the church, were
performed in an orderly manner. The thing answered the witness of
God in their consciences, so that they readily agreed to have
monthly meetings thence-forward among themselves, that both men and
women might take care of the outward concerns of the church.
After this meeting, feeling my spirit clear of that place, we took
leave of Friends there, whom we left in good order, and turned back
again for Hamburg. When we had travelled one day’s journey, and were
come to an inn at night to lodge, I enquired whether there were any
tender people in the town that feared God, or that had a mind to
discourse of the things of God? The innkeeper told me there were few
such in that town. Next night we got to HAMBURG; and having passed
the guards, went to a Friend’s house, being very weary; for we had
been up those two mornings before three o’clock, and had travelled
each day hard and late. Here we met with John Hill, an English
Friend, who had been travelling in Germany, and being in a ship
bound for Amsterdam, that waited for a wind, he had lain sick on
board about two weeks. Hearing I was in the country, he left the
ship and came hither to meet me, and go along with me.
The day after we came to Hamburg we had a very good meeting, and
very peaceable. After it I had discourse with a Swede, an eminent
man in his own country; who, having been banished thence on the
account of his religion, was come to Hamburg, and was at the meeting
I had there before. When I had done with him, I had another
discourse with a Baptist concerning the sacraments, so called; in
both which I had good service, having opportunity thereby to open
truth unto them.
Being clear of Hamburg, we took leave of Friends there, whom we left
well; and taking John Hill with us, passed by boat to a city in the
Duke of LUNEBERG’S country; where, after we were examined by the
guards, we were had to the main-guard, and there examined more
strictly; but after they found we were not soldiers, they were
civil, and let us pass. In the afternoon we travelled by waggon, and
the waters being much out, by reason of heavy rains, when it drew
towards night, we hired a boy on the way to guide us through a great
water we had to pass. When we came to it, the water was so deep
before we could come at the bridge, that the waggoner had to wade,
and I drove the waggon. When we were come on the bridge, the horses
broke part of it down, and one of them fell into the water, the
waggon standing upon that part of the bridge which remained
unbroken; and it was the Lord’s mercy to us that the waggon did not
run into the brook. When they had got the horse out, he lay a while
as if dead; but at length they got him up, put him to the waggon
again, and laid the planks right; and then, through the goodness of
the Lord to us, we got safely over.
After this we came to another water, which finding to be very deep,
and it being in the night, we hired two men to help us through, who
put cords to the waggon to hold it by, that the force of the water
might not drive it from the way. But when we came into it, the
stream was so strong, that it took one of the horses off his legs,
and was carrying him down the stream. I called to the waggoner to
pluck him to him by his reins, which he did, and the horse recovered
his legs, and with much difficulty we got over the bridge, and went
to BORMER-HAVEN, the town where the waggoner lived. It was the last
day of the 6th month that we escaped these dangers; and it being
about eleven at night when we came in here, we got some fresh straw
and lay upon it, till about four in the morning. Then getting up, we
set forward again towards Bremen, by waggon and boat. On the way I
had good opportunities to publish truth among the people, especially
at a market-town, where we stayed to change our passage; where I
declared the truth to the people, warning them of the day of the
Lord, that was coming upon all flesh; and exhorting them to
righteousness, telling them, “that God was come to teach his people
himself,” and that they should turn to the Lord, and hearken to the
teachings of his Spirit in their own hearts.
At BREMEN, after we were examined, we went to an inn, and stayed
till another waggon was provided to carry us further. Though I felt
the Lord’s power was over the city, and kept the wicked and unruly
spirits down, yet my spirit suffered much in this place for the
people’s sake. When our waggon was ready, we left Bremen and
travelled to KEBY, where we lodged at an inn, and early next morning
set out for OLDENBURG. It was a lamentable sight to see so great and
brave a city burnt down. We went to an inn, and though it was
First-day, the soldiers were drinking, and playing at shovel-board;
and at the few houses that were left, the shops were open, and the
people trading one with another. I was moved to declare the truth
among them, and warn them of the judgments of God; and though they
heard me quietly, and were civil, yet I was burdened with their
wickedness. Many times in mornings, noons, and nights, at the inns
and on the ways as I travelled, I spoke to the people, preaching the
truth to them, warning them of the day of the Lord, and exhorting
them to turn to the light and Spirit of God in themselves, that
thereby they might be led out of evil.
Next day, passing through many great waters, we came at night to
LEER, and the day following to EMBDEN, where John Claus’s wife’s
father lived; at whose house, when we went into Germany, we left a
young man sick, who travelled with me, and used to write for me;
whom now we found pretty well recovered. John Claus went to his
father-in-law’s; John Hill and I to an inn, where we dined. After
dinner we went also to John Claus’s father’s, and had a good meeting
there in the evening.
The day following we took shipping at Embden, passed to DELFZIEL,
and went to an inn, where a Friend came to us that then lived there,
having been often banished from Embden; he was a goldsmith, and had
a house and shop in Embden; and still as they banished him, he went
again. Then they imprisoned him, and fed him with bread and water;
and at length took his goods from him, and banished him, his wife,
and children, leaving them neither place to come to, nor anything to
subsist on. We comforted and encouraged him in the Lord, exhorting
him to be faithful, and stand stedfast in the testimony committed to
him. When we had taken leave of him, we took boat, and passed the
same day to GRONINGEN, where we met with Cornelius Andries, a Friend
that had also suffered much by imprisonment and banishment at
Embden. We went with him to his house, and next day had a good
meeting in that city, to which several professors came, who were
very peaceable and attentive. After meeting we passed by boat to
STROBUS, and so to DOCKUM, where we lodged at an inn. Taking boat
again next morning we passed to LEEUWARDEN, the chief city of
Friesland, where I found my daughter Yeomans, who was come from
Amsterdam to meet me. That day we had a precious meeting at Sybrand
Dowes’s house. After the meeting I had discourse with some that were
at it, who had been formerly convinced of truth, but were not come
into obedience to it. We stayed there that night; but John Hill left
us and went that day to Harlingen, and so to Amsterdam.
Next day we passed down the river to the lake of HEMPEN-SARMER, and
thence by the lake LUGMER, and so to a town called ANDERIGO; whence
sailing through the lake WHISPOOL, we came to GARDICK within night.
We lodged at an inn; and next day being First-day, we were at
Friends’ meeting there, which was very large, many of the
town’s-people coming in; amongst whom I declared the truth, in the
power of the Lord that was upon me, which tendered the people, and
they were very sober. After it we stayed a little while to refresh
ourselves, and then went to take boat again; but the people
observing us, gathered together at a bridge, which we were to pass;
and there I spoke unto them again, declaring the way of life and
salvation; and they were very attentive and civil.
We went back that evening to LEEUWARDEN, twenty-seven miles; but
before we could reach it, the gates were shut, and the bridges drawn
up, so that we could not get into the city, but lay in the boat all
night. Next morning, there having been a man killed in the city that
night, it was late before the gates were opened. When we could get
in, we went to a Friend’s house, where we stayed a while; then
taking boat again, we passed through FRANEKER to HARLINGEN, to
Hessel Jacobs’s, where we found several Dutch Friends, who were come
to be at the meeting there next day. In the evening William Penn
came to us from Amsterdam; who having returned two or three days
before out of Germany, had been at a large meeting at Amsterdam on
First-day; and after it, understanding I was at Harlingen, he came
thither to me.
The next day was the monthly meeting for the men and women, to which
we went; it was large and good. And there it was agreed, that “a
meeting should be held there once a month, both for the men and for
the women, to take care of the outward concerns of the church.”
In the afternoon we had a public meeting, to which came people of
several sorts, Socinians, Baptists, Lutherans, &c., amongst whom
were a doctor of physic and a priest. After I had declared the truth
pretty largely to the people, opening the happy state that man and
woman were in, whilst they kept under God’s teaching, and abode in
the Paradise of God; and on the other hand, the woe and misery that
came upon them when they went from God’s teaching, hearkening to the
Serpent’s—when they transgressed God’s command, and were driven out
of Paradise; and then came to set forth the way, whereby man and
woman might come into that happy state again—the priest, an ancient,
grave man, stood up, just as I had done speaking, and putting off
his hat, said, “I pray God to prosper and confirm that doctrine, for
it is truth, and I have nothing against it.” He would willingly have
stayed till the meeting ended, but having to preach that evening, he
could not stay longer, the time for his own worship being come.
Wherefore when he had made confession to the truth, he hastened
away, that he might come again; and did come, it seems, to the
meeting-place, but the meeting was ended first. After meeting we
went to Hessel Jacobs’s, where I had a meeting with Friends, and the
doctor of physic came thither to discourse with William Penn, who
had a good opportunity to open the truth to him. By this doctor the
priest sent his love to me, wishing him to tell me, that he had left
preaching that evening half an hour sooner than he used to do, that
he might come to our meeting again, to hear more of that good
doctrine. I heard afterwards that his hearers questioned him, for
what he had said in our meeting; and that, he standing by his words,
they had complained of him for it to the other priests of the city,
who called him to account about it; but the result I could not
learn.
Early next morning William Penn, taking John Claus with him, passed
from Harlingen to Leeuwarden, where he had appointed a meeting;
intending after that, to travel into some other parts of Germany, to
visit a tender people there. I with those Friends that were with me,
took ship the same day for AMSTERDAM, where we arrived a little
after midnight, but the gates being shut, we lay on board till
morning; then went to Gertrude Dirick Nieson’s, where many Friends
came to see us, being glad of our safe return. Next day, feeling a
concern upon my mind, with relation to those seducing spirits that
made division among Friends, and being sensible that they
endeavoured to insinuate themselves into the affectionate part, I
was moved to write a few lines to Friends concerning them, as
follows:—
“All these that set up themselves in the affections of the people,
set up themselves, and the affections of the people, and not
Christ. But Friends, your peaceable habitation in the truth, which
is everlasting, and changes not, will outlast all the habitations
of those that are out of the truth, be they ever so full of words.
So they that are so keen for J.S. and J.W. let them take them, and
the separation; and you, that have given your testimony against
that spirit, stand in your testimony, till they answer by
condemnation. Do not strive, nor make bargains with that which is
out of the truth; nor save that alive to be a sacrifice for God,
which should be slain, lest you lose your kingdom.”
G. F.
Amsterdam, the 14th of the 7th Month, 1677.
On the First-day following, I was at Friends’ meeting at Amsterdam,
to which many people came, and were very civil and attentive,
hearing truth declared several hours. John Roeloffs interpreted for
me. Before this time, several of the Friends that came over with me,
were returned to England, as Robert Barclay,[44] George Keith’s
wife, and others; and now my daughter Yeomans went back also; so
that I was left alone at Amsterdam.
While I was there, it came upon me to visit my suffering Friends at
Dantzic with a few lines, to encourage and strengthen them in their
sufferings, as follows:—
“DEAR FRIENDS,
“To whom is my love in the Lord’s truth, that is over all, and by
which all God’s people are made free men and women, being thereby
set free from him that is out of the truth; that walking in the
truth, they may answer the witness of God in all people; which
truth all must come to if they be made free. Therefore be faithful
unto what the Lord makes known unto you. I am glad the Lord hath
witnesses in that city, to stand for his glory and name, and for
Christ Jesus, the great Prophet, whom God hath raised up, who is
to be heard in all things; so that ye need none of the prophets,
which men have raised up. Therefore, stand faithful to Christ
Jesus, your Shepherd, that he may feed you; hear his voice, and
follow him, who laid down his life for you: but follow none of the
shepherds and hirelings, that are made by men, though they be
angry, because you will not follow them to their dry and barren
mountains; who have been, and are the thieves, persecutors, and
robbers, that climb up another way, than by Christ. Set up Christ
to be your Counsellor and Leader, and then, ye will have no need
of any of the counsellors and leaders of the world; for Christ is
sufficient, whom God has given you. Set up Christ Jesus to be your
Bishop and Overseer, who is sufficient to oversee you, that ye go
not astray from God; by which ye may see over all the
hireling-overseers made by men, who keep the people that they do
not go astray from the rudiments and formalities, fashions and
customs of the world; which hath been and is their work. I am glad
ye are come to own Christ Jesus, your High Priest, who is holy,
harmless, separate from sinners, and made higher than the heavens,
as the church and the apostle owned him in their days, Heb. vii.,
who is the High-Priest over the household of faith; which faith,
Jesus Christ is the author and finisher of: and this do all the
children of the new covenant witness, who walk in the new and
living way.
“Therefore my desire is, that ye all may be steadfast, whether in
bonds or out, in the faith of Christ Jesus, which is the gift of
God; by which faith all the valiants overcame the devil and all
their enemies; in which faith they had victory and access to God;
and in that was their unity: which mystery of faith is held in a
pure conscience, hidden from the world. I do believe that your
imprisonments and sufferings in that place will be for good in the
end, as it hath been in other places, ye standing faithful to the
Lord who is all-sufficient. For your sufferings and trials will
try their teachers and religions, churches and worships, and make
manifest what birth they are of; even that which persecutes him
that is born of the Spirit: for ye know that there is no salvation
by any other name under the whole heaven, than by the name of
Jesus; therefore it is time to leave them, when there is no
salvation by or in any of them.
“Now, Friends, I desire that you would take a list of the names of
all those that belong to the king of Poland, and where they live,
and how ye may send books or epistles to them, and keep a
correspondence with them: also the name of the bishop or cardinal
that I heard was with you; and if ye can, get any of them that
belong to the king to come and visit the prisoners, that they may
inform the king of their cruel sufferings. Also I desire you to
get as many books of mine as you can dispose of, that set forth
your sufferings, and the cruelty of the magistrates of Dantzic;
and give them to the king, his council, attendants, and bishops.
And some of the women may speak to the queen, if they can, that
she may signify to the king their cruel sufferings; and especially
some of the sufferers’ wives, if there be any of a capacity to do
it. You may likewise give his attendants any other Friends’ books;
what books ye lack, send for to Amsterdam, where ye may be
furnished with them, to answer every tender desirer, and inquiring
mind after the Lord. So let your minds be bended with the Lord’s
power, to spread his truth abroad; and where ye hear of any, or
have any correspondence in outward trading with any sober people,
far or near, send them books, that their understandings may be
opened after the Lord.
“The Lord God Almighty preserve you! To his protection, in his
eternal power, do I commend you all, in bonds or at liberty, with
my love to you in the everlasting Seed of God, Christ Jesus, who
bruises the head of the serpent that makes you suffer. Christ is
over him, and will be when he is gone; who is First and Last, over
all, from everlasting to everlasting, in whom ye have life,
knowledge, wisdom, and salvation; and through him live to the
praise and glory of God, who is blessed for evermore. Amen.”
G.F.
Amsterdam, the 18th of the 7th Month, 1677, English style.
Next day, the fourth of the week and 19th of the month, I had a
large meeting at Amsterdam, many professors being at it; and truth
was largely opened to them, in the demonstration of the heavenly
power. The day following I went by boat from Amsterdam, many Friends
going with me, to LANDSMEER in Waterland (a town in which, they say,
there are above a hundred bridges,) where I had a very good meeting,
to which several professors came. After it I returned with Friends
to AMSTERDAM, where I stayed till the First-day following, and went
to their meeting, which was large. Many professors of several sorts
were at it, and heard the truth declared with great attention.
I tarried there next day, and in the night following had a great
exercise upon my spirit concerning that loose spirit, that was run
out into strife and contention among Friends, and had drawn some
after it into division and separation; the way, work, and end
whereof the Lord opened to me: wherefore feeling the motion of life
upon me, I got up in the morning and wrote the following epistle to
Friends:—
“MY DEAR FRIENDS,
“Keep your first love in the truth, power, and Seed of life in
Christ Jesus; for this last night, as I was lying in my bed at
Amsterdam, I had a great travail in the holy Seed of life and
peace, and my spirit was troubled with that spirit of strife and
separation. I saw it was a destroying spirit, and did seek not
only to get over the Seed, but to destroy it, and to eat out the
minds of people from it by strife and contention; and, under
pretence of standing for the ancient truth, its work is to root it
out, and destroy the appearance of it, to set up itself. It is a
creeping spirit, seeking whom it can get into; and what it cannot
do itself, it stirreth up others to do, and setteth their spirit
afloat, with the dark wisdom to destroy the simple. This spirit is
managed by the prince of the air, and leadeth some to do things
which they would have been ashamed to have done as men, which doth
unman them; and they would not have suffered them if they had kept
to the tender principle of God, which leadeth to peace. It is a
despising, backbiting, secret-whispering spirit, a sower of
dissension, and a taker of advantage of all prejudiced spirits,
that are disobedient to their first principle, and love of truth,
and begetteth into hatred; so it begetteth all into that spirit,
whose work is to destroy both the good within, and the good order
without. Nay, it would, if it could, destroy the government of
Christ, and the order of the gospel, to set up its own will and
spirit, which is not of God; and, under pretence of crying down
man, is setting up man, and gathering into a separation of
disobedient men, who float above their conditions. This spirit
which neither liveth in the truth nor its order, but opposeth them
that do, I cannot express it, as I see it and its work, whose end
will be accordingly.
“Therefore, Friends, I am to warn you all, that have not lost your
simplicity, not to touch it, nor to have any unity with it, lest
you be defiled, and lose your conditions of your eternal estate
and everlasting portion; and that your inward man, which is after
God, may be preserved, and Christ may reign in all your hearts. It
will be very hard for those that are joined with them, ever to
come down to truth in themselves, to see their own conditions, and
to have that spirit of strife and contention (which eateth as a
canker) brought down in them; which is carnal and slayeth the
tender babe, which was once begotten in themselves. The Philistine
is got up in them, that stoppeth the wells and springs, maketh a
great bustle, and is crying up men, and pleading for them instead
of Christ. So, Friends, strive not with them, but let those take
them that cry them up. Keep you to the Lord Jesus Christ with his
light, that cometh from him, that he may be your Lord; and ye in
him may be all in unity, in one light, life, power, and dominion,
in Christ, your head. The God of peace and power preserve you all
in Christ Jesus, your Saviour; and out of and from that
mischievous spirit, which is idle and slothful as to the work of
the power, and Spirit, and light of God and Christ. Its very act
worketh strife and disturbance against the peace of the church of
Christ. It thinks in its wilfulness, stubbornness, and unruliness,
to set up itself, and in that to have peace; but destruction will
be the end of it, and it is sealed for the fire and eternal
judgment. Therefore, let Christ, the Seed, be the head and crown
of every one of you, that nothing may be between you and the Lord
God.
Be not deceived with vain, feigned, or rough words; for Satan is
transforming himself, as an angel of light, to deceive; but God’s
foundation standeth sure, and God knoweth who are his, and will
preserve them upon the rock and foundation of life, in his
peaceable truth and habitation, that in the same they may grow.
Keep out of strife and contention with it, after ye have borne
your testimony in the Lord’s power and truth against it, then keep
in the truth; for it hath a life in scribbling, strife and
jangling, and would bring others into its misery with the airy
power, and would get power over the good, disjoin people from it,
and so commit rapes upon the simplicity by its subtilty. But I do
believe the Lord will defend his people, though he may try them
and exercise them with this spirit for a time, as he hath done in
days past, in other vessels it hath made use of, as it doth of
these now; who have a more seeming fair outside, but foul, rough,
and rugged enough within, against the Seed, Christ, as ever were
the Pharisees to destroy it. They, under a pretence of preaching
Christ, are destroyers and crucifiers of him, and killers of the
just, not only in themselves, but are endeavouring with all their
might, to destroy it in others, where it is born. Pharaoh and
Herod slay the young Jews in the Spirit, as the old did; I feel it
worrying them. That is got up to be king which knew not suffering
Joseph. But God will plague him, and the Seed will have more rest,
and be better entertained in Egypt, than under Herod, into whom
old Pharaoh’s spirit is entered.
“He that hath an ear to hear, let him hear: and an eye to see, let
him see, how this spirit hath transformed in all ages against the
just and righteous; but mark, what hath been its end? The Seed
reigneth; glory to the Lord God over all for ever! His truth
spreadeth, and Friends here are in unity and peace, and of good
report, answering the good, or that of God in people. My desires
are, that all God’s people may do the same in all places, that the
Lord may be glorified in their bringing forth much fruit that is
heavenly and spiritual. Amen.”
G.F.
Amsterdam, the 25th of the 7th Month, 1677.
After I had given forth the foregoing epistle, whereby my spirit was
in some measure eased of the weight that lay upon it, I went in the
afternoon to the monthly meeting of Friends at Amsterdam, where the
Lord was present with us, and refreshed our spirits together in
himself.
I had thought to go next day to Haarlem; but a fast being appointed
to be kept that day, I was stopped in my spirit, and moved to stay
at Friends’ meeting that day at Amsterdam. We had a very large
meeting, a great concourse of people coming to it, and amongst them
many great persons. The Lord’s power was over the meeting; and in
the openings thereof I was moved to declare to the people, “that no
man, by all his wit and study, nor by reading history in his own
will, could declare or know the generation of Christ, who was, not
begotten by the will of man, but by the will of God.” After I had
largely opened this unto them, “I showed them the difference between
the true fast and the false; manifesting, that the professed
Christians, Jews, and Turks, were out of the true fast, and fasted
for strife and debate, being under the band and fists of iniquity
and oppression, wherewith they were smiting one another; but the
pure hands were not lifted up to God. And though they did all appear
to men to fast, and did hang down their heads for a day like a
bulrush, yet that was not the fast which God did accept; but in that
state all their bones were dry, and when they called upon the Lord,
he did not answer them, neither did their health grow; for they kept
their own fast and not the Lord’s. I exhorted them to keep the
Lord’s fast, which was to fast from sin and iniquity, from strife
and debate, from violence and oppression, and to abstain from every
appearance of evil.” These things were opened to the astonishment of
the fasters; and the meeting ended peaceably and well.
I went to HAARLEM the day following, having before appointed a
meeting. Peter Hendricks and Gertrude Dirick Nieson went with me;
and a blessed meeting we had. There were professors of several
sorts, and a priest of the Lutherans, who sat very attentive for
several hours, while I declared the truth amongst them, Gertrude
interpreting. When the meeting was done, the priest said, “he had
heard nothing but what was according to the Word of God; and desired
that the blessing of the Lord might rest upon us, and our
assemblies.” Others also confessed to the truth, saying, “they had
never heard things so plainly opened to their understandings
before.”
We stayed that night at Haarlem at a Friend’s house, whose name was
Dirick Klassen; and, returning next day to AMSTERDAM, went to
Gertrude’s house; where we had not been long, before a priest of
great note, who had formerly belonged to the Emperor of Germany, and
with him another German priest came, desiring to have some
conference with me. I took the opportunity to declare the way of
truth unto them, opening unto them “how they might come to know God
and Christ, and his law and gospel;” and showing them that “they
could never know it by study, nor by philosophy, but by divine
revelation through the Spirit of God, opening to them in the
stillness of their minds.” The men were tender, and went away well
satisfied.
On the First-day following I was at Friends’ meeting at Amsterdam;
where, amongst several sorts of professors that were present, was a
doctor from Poland, who for his religion was banished the place he
lived in; and being affected with the testimony of truth in the
meeting, he came afterwards to have some discourse with me; and
after we had been some time together, and I had opened things
further to him, he went away very tender and loving.
While I was at Amsterdam, I spent much of my time in writing books,
papers, or epistles on truth’s behalf. I wrote several epistles from
Amsterdam to Friends in England and elsewhere, on several occasions,
as the Lord moved me by his Spirit thereunto. I wrote also from
thence, “A Warning to the Inhabitants of the City of Oldenburg,
which was lately burnt down;” also, “A Warning to the Inhabitants of
the City of Hamburg,” both of which were as follows:—
“_A Warning to the Magistrates and People of the City of
Oldenburg._
“FRIENDS,
“Have you not seen and felt the judgments of God upon your city,
the Lord sending lightning from heaven that destroyed and burnt
it? As I passed through your city on a First-day of the week,
which you call your Sabbath, I saw some drinking, and soldiers
playing at shuffleboard, and others with their shops open and
trading, when they should have been waiting upon God and
worshipping him; and your people were light and vain, without any
sense of God’s judgments or repentance. O therefore repent, lest
the all-seeing God, who sees all your actions and is over all,
bring swift judgment upon you in his wrath, fury, and indignation.
Repent, and lay aside all manner of evil and wickedness,
ungodliness, and unrighteousness; for the day of the Lord will
come upon all that do evil, all the workers of iniquity. This
mighty day of the Lord will find them all out, and will burn as an
oven, and burn up all the proud and wicked, and neither leave them
root nor branch.
“Therefore, all ye magistrates, priests, and people, search in
yourselves to find out the cause, and what evil you have
committed, that has brought the wrath, vengeance, and judgment of
God upon you and your city, in burning it. All return, and come to
the light of Christ in your hearts, and to God’s Spirit, and to
the grace and truth in your hearts, that comes by Jesus Christ;
that with it ye may search your hearts. Do not grieve, nor vex,
nor quench God’s good Spirit in your hearts, and walk not
despitefully against the Spirit of grace, nor turn from it into
wantonness; and yet make a profession of God and Christ in words,
when your hearts are afar off, living in pleasures and wantonly
upon the earth, sporting yourselves, killing the just, crucifying
to yourselves Christ afresh, and putting him to open shame; and so
dishonouring God, and Christ, and Christianity, and making a
profession and a trade of the Scriptures, keeping people always
learning, that they may be always paying.
“Cease from man, whose breath is in his nostrils, and look unto
the Lord, all ye ends of the earth, and be saved; for the Lord God
of heaven and earth is come, to teach his people himself by his
light, Spirit, grace, and truth, and to bring them off from all
the world’s teachers. God hath raised up Christ Jesus, his
Prophet, whom people should hear; and saith, ‘This is my beloved
Son, hear ye him’; and Christ saith, ‘Learn of me, I am the way,
the truth, and the life; and no man comes to the Father, but by
me.’ There is no salvation by any other name under the whole
heaven than by the name of Jesus, who saith, ‘I am the Good
Shepherd, and have laid down my life for my sheep; and my sheep
hear my voice and follow me, and will not follow the hireling’;
for Christ feeds them in the pastures of life that will never
wither. God hath anointed Christ Jesus to preach, if you will hear
him; and God hath given Christ for a Counsellor and a Leader, if
you will be led and counselled by him; and God hath given Christ
for a Bishop to oversee you, and a King to rule you, if you will
be overseen and ruled by him. You that will not have Christ, who
never sinned, nor was guile found in his mouth, to rule over you,
you may read his sentence in the New Testament upon such. Is not
Christ a sufficient teacher, whose blood was shed for you, and who
tasted death for every man?
“Doth not Christ say to his ministers, ‘Freely ye have received,
freely give?’ And the apostle saith, ‘We covet no man’s gold,
silver, or apparel.’ They laboured with their hands, and kept the
gospel without charge. Have they that are called ministers amongst
you done the same, and kept this command of Christ Jesus? Let them
be examined and examine themselves. Have you not trimmed your
outsides? but look within with the light and Spirit of Christ
Jesus, and see if your insides be not black and foul. For Christ
Jesus, who doth enlighten every man that cometh into the world,
with the life in himself, saith, ‘Believe in the light, that ye
may become children of the light.’ With the light ye may see all
the evil and ungodly deeds that ye have committed; all your
ungodly words you have spoken; and all your ungodly thoughts ye
think; that ye may turn from them to Christ, from whom the light
comes; who is your Saviour and Redeemer, who hath given you a
light to see your sin, and that you are dead in Adam; that with
the same light you may see Christ, the quickening Spirit, who
makes you alive to God, and saves you from your sin. But if you
hate the light, which is the life in Christ, the Prince of Life,
and love the darkness and the prince of darkness more than the
light or the life in Christ, because it will reprove you; Christ
tells you, ‘This light will be your condemnation,’ John iii.
“Therefore be warned now in your day, and while you have time,
turn to the Lord. Do not quench the Spirit of the Father by which
he draws to the Son; nor hate the light of Christ; for if you do,
you hate the life in Christ, and so remain under condemnation from
God and Christ with the light, who now speaks to his people by his
Son, as he did in the apostles’ days; the same God, that was the
speaker by the prophets to the fathers, and speaker to Adam and
Eve in Paradise; and happy had Adam and Eve, and the Jews, and all
Christians been, if they had kept to this speaker, and not
followed that serpent, that false speaker, and his instruments.
And now God is the true speaker by his Son, who bruises the head
of the serpent, the false teacher, who is the head of all false
ways, false prophets, false churches, and false religions and
worships. So God in Christ is bringing people to the pure and
undefiled religion, that will keep them from the spots of the
world, into the new and living way, Christ Jesus; and to the
church in God, which Christ is the head of, as he was in the
apostles’ days; and to worship God in the Spirit and in truth,
which worship Christ set up above sixteen hundred years since.
Therefore must all people come to the grace and Spirit of truth in
their own hearts, to know the God of truth, who is a Spirit; and
in the Spirit and truth to worship, serve, honour, and glorify the
living God, who is over all, and worthy of all, blessed for
evermore. Amen.
“Ye magistrates and officers, read this in all your assemblies,
and cause all your priests to read it in their churches; that they
and you, and all people may hear and fear the God of heaven, as
you will answer it at the great and terrible day of judgment, and
vengeance of the Lord God Almighty. This is in love to your souls,
and for your temporal and eternal good.”
G.F.
Amsterdam, the 19th of the 7th Month, 1677.
“_A Warning to the Magistrates, Priests, and People of the City of
Hamburg, to humble themselves before the Lord, and not be
high-minded._
“FRIENDS,
“You have painted and garnished the inside of your outward houses
and high places; but look within your hearts with the light of
Christ, which he hath enlightened you and every man that cometh
into the world withal, and with it you may see how foul your
hearts and insides are with sin and evil, which Christ tells you
ye should make clean; who told the Pharisees how they ‘painted the
sepulchres of the righteous,’ and they themselves were full of
rottenness and corruption. Therefore look into yourselves and your
own hearts, what you are full of. To paint the sepulchres of the
righteous apostles, and make a trade and a profession of their
words, without the same Holy Ghost, and power, and light, and
truth which they were in, will not stand the day of God’s
vengeance.
“Therefore repent while you have time, turn to the Lord with your
whole hearts, and do not think yourselves secure, without his
immediate almighty protection. For not all your works, nor all
your own strength, and power, and defence can protect you; it is
not for you to look at them, and think yourselves secure, to sit
down in your security, and in it let your hearts be merry, and at
rest and ease. But when the Lord brings a scourge upon you, that
you are filled with terrors and fears, remember you were warned,
that you were set down, but not in the true rest. Then all your
own strength and force will stand you in no stead; and you will
acknowledge that it must be God that must protect you. Therefore
take warning; for your priests and people are too high, and are
swallowed up too much in this world. The vanities of it carry your
minds away from God, and your care is more for the world than for
God, and more after the riches of this world, than after the
riches of the world that has no end. Know you not, that all your
heaps of outward treasure must have an end, and that you must
leave them all behind you?
“Therefore I am to warn and advise you, both high and low, priests
and people, to come to the grace, light and truth, that comes by
Jesus Christ; to the manifestation of the good Spirit of God,
which is given to you to profit withal; that with this grace, and
truth, light, and Spirit of Christ, you may turn to Christ Jesus,
from whence it comes, who saith, ‘Learn of me;’ and God saith,
‘This is my beloved Son, hear ye Him.’ So all the children of the
new covenant, that walk in the new and living way, hear Christ
their Prophet, that God has raised up, and anointed to be their
Teacher and Priest. So now, God doth speak to his people by his
Son, as he did in the apostles’ days. The Lord is come to teach
his people himself by his grace, light, truth, and Spirit, and to
bring them off all the world’s teachers that are made by men since
the apostles’ days; who have kept people always learning, that
they may be always paying them. He is come to bring them off all
the world’s religions, to the religion that he set up in the
apostles’ days, in the new covenant, which is pure and undefiled
before God in his sight, and keeps from the spots of the world,
&c. And the Lord is come to bring them off all the world’s
churches, to the church in God, which Christ the heavenly man is
head of; and to bring them off all the world’s worships, to
worship God in Spirit and in truth, which Christ set up above
sixteen hundred years since. So all men and women must come to the
Spirit and truth in their hearts, by which they must know the God
of truth, who is a Spirit; and then in the Spirit and in truth
they will worship him, and know what and whom they worship. Also
the Lord is come to bring his people off all the world’s temples,
that with the Spirit they may know their bodies to be the temples
of the Holy Ghost. And the Lord is come to bring his people off
all the world’s crosses, pictures, images, and likenesses, to know
that the power of God is the cross of Christ, which crucifies them
to the world, and brings them up into the likeness and image of
God, that man and woman were in before they fell; and so to Christ
that never fell.
“This work must all know in their hearts, by the light of Christ
Jesus, who ‘is the true light, that lighteth every man that cometh
into the world.’ It is called the light in man and woman, and the
life in Christ the Word: and Christ saith, ‘Believe in the light,
that ye may be the children of light.’ And the light lets you see
all your evil actions, that you have committed; your ungodly ways
you have walked in; and your ungodly words and thoughts. If you
hate this light, and love the darkness, and the prince of it, more
than this light, which is the life in Christ, the Prince of Life,
and will not come to it, because your deeds are evil, it will
reprove you; Christ tells you, ‘this light is your condemnation.’
Then what is all your profession good for, when you remain under
the condemnation of the true light, in which you should believe;
and so become children of light, and out of condemnation?
Therefore everyone must believe in the light, if they receive
Christ Jesus; and as many as receive him, he gives them ‘power to
become the sons of God.’ He that hath the Son of God, hath life;
and they that have not the Son of God, have not life: if then you
have not life, what good doth all your profession of the
Scriptures from Genesis to Revelations do you, any more than the
Jews, Scribes, and Pharisees, that would not receive Christ the
life, upon whom God brought his overflowing scourge?
“Therefore do you take heed, for your strength will be no better
than theirs, if you have not God and Christ’s supporting power,
when God’s scourge comes upon you, and you are filled with horrors
and fears. My desires are, that you may all repent, even from the
highest to the lowest, and not grieve, nor quench, nor vex, nor
rebel against, God’s good Spirit in you, nor ‘walk despitefully
against the Spirit Of Grace,’ which would teach you, and bring
your salvation; nor turn from it unto wantonness. If you do, how
can you escape the overflowing scourge of the Almighty, and the
wrath of the Lamb? My desires are, that you may all obey God’s
good Spirit of truth, which will lead you out of all evil into all
truth, and reprove you for your own righteousness, and for your
own judgment and sin. It will bring you to cleave to that which is
good, to forsake that which is evil, and to turn to the Lord, who
will receive you in his mercy and kindness; by which means you may
escape the overflowing scourge in the day of vengeance, which
dreadful day is coming upon all evil-doers. This is a warning to
you, both for your temporal and eternal good; to read in your
assemblies, and your priests in their churches, that all people
may hear and fear; as you will answer it at the terrible and
dreadful day of judgment.”
G.F.
Amsterdam, the 19th of the 7th Month, 1677.
I wrote also an Epistle to the ambassadors that were treating about
a peace at Nimeguen,[45] as follows:—
“_For the Ambassadors, that are met to treat for Peace at the
City of Nimeguen, in the States’ dominions._
“Christ Jesus saith, ‘Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall
be called the children of God,’ Matt. v. 9, so all Christian men
are to forsake evil, and do good, to seek peace and follow it, if
they will ‘love life, and see good days,’ 1 Pet. iii. 11. God hath
called all true Christians unto peace, 1 Cor. vii., and therefore
all Christians ought to follow this peace, which God calls them
to. They should let the peace of God rule in all their hearts;
which is above the peace of this world, that is so soon broken.
For the apostle commands the Christians to let the peace of God
rule in their hearts, to which all Christians should be subject.
The practice of this should be among all that profess
Christianity; and this peace is above that, which Christ takes
from the earth, Rev. vi., which is the peace of the wicked. And
the apostle saith to the Christians, ‘Be at peace among
yourselves,’ 1 Thess. v. Now all Christians should obey this
command, and be at peace among themselves; not in wars and strife.
And further, the apostle exhorts the Christians to ‘keep the unity
of the Spirit in the bond of peace.’ So this unity, this bond of
peace, should be kept (and not be broken) by all that bear that
noble name, Christian. They should keep the unity of the Spirit of
Christ in the bond of the Prince of princes, King of kings, and
Lord of lords’ peace, which is the duty of all true Christians to
keep. Herein they may honour Christ, in bringing forth the fruits
of peace, which are love and charity. For the apostle tells you,
‘The fruit of the good Spirit is love, joy, peace, long-suffering,
gentleness, goodness,’ &c., Gal. v.
“And the apostle exhorts the Christians, and saith, ‘If it be
possible, as much as lieth in you, live peaceably with all men:’
this should be the endeavour of all Christians. For it is no
honour to Christ, that Christians should war and destroy one
another, that profess his name, who saith, ‘He came to save men’s
lives, and not to destroy them.’ Christians have enemies enough
abroad without them, and therefore they should love one another,
as Christ commands, who saith, ‘By this ye shall be known to be my
disciples, if ye love one another.’ For Christians are commanded
to love enemies; therefore much more, one another. And Christ
saith, ‘As the Father hath loved me, so I have loved you: continue
ye in my love,’ John xv. 8, and ‘By this shall all men know that
ye are my disciples, if ye love one another,’ John xiii. 35. But
if Christians war and destroy one another, this will make Jews,
Turks, Tartars, and Heathens say, that you are not disciples of
Christ. Therefore, as you love God, and Christ, and Christianity,
and its peace, all make peace, as far as you have power, among
Christians, that you may have the blessing. You read, that
Christians were called the household of faith, the household of
God, a holy nation, a peculiar people: and they are commanded to
be ‘zealous of good works,’ not of bad: and Christians are also
commanded not to bite and devour one another, lest they be
consumed one of another.
“Is it not a sad thing for Christians to be biting and consuming
one another in the sight of the Turks, Tartars, Jews, and
Heathens, when they should ‘love one another, and do unto all men,
as they would have them do unto them?’ Such devouring work as
this, will open the mouths of Jews and Turks, Tartars and
Heathens, to blaspheme the name of Christ, who is the King of
kings, and Lord of lords, and cause them to speak evil of
Christianity, for them to see how the unity of the Spirit is
broken among such, as profess Christ and Christ’s peace. Therefore
all Christians are to mind God and Christ’s teaching, who teacheth
Christians to love one another, yea enemies; and persuade all
kings and princes, to give liberty to all tender consciences in
matters of religion and worship, they living peaceably under every
government: so that for the time to come, there may be no more
imprisonment and persecution among Christians, for tender
consciences about matters of faith, worship, and religion, that
the Jews, Turks, Tartars, and Heathens, may not see how Christians
are persecuting one another for religion: seeing, from Christ and
the apostles, Christians have no such command, but on the
contrary, to love one another; and knowing, that Christ said to
such as would have been plucking up tares, ‘Let the tares and the
wheat grow together till the harvest (which is the end of the
world) lest they plucked up the wheat;’ and at the end of the
world Christ would send forth his angels, and they should sever
the wheat from the tares. So Christ tells you, that it is the
angels’ work at the end of the world, and not men’s work, before
the harvest at the end of the world. Hath not all this
persecution, banishing, and imprisoning, and putting to death,
concerning religion, been the pretence of plucking up tares? and
hath not all this been before the harvest, before the end of the
world? And therefore have not all these been actors against the
express command of Christ, the king of Heaven?
“All kings and rulers, especially they that call themselves
Christians, should obey their Lord and Saviour’s command; ‘Let the
tares and the wheat grow together, till the harvest;’ and the
harvest is the end of the world. Christ also told some of his
disciples, that in their zeal would have had fire to come down
from heaven, to destroy such as would not receive him, ‘That they
did not know what spirit they were of;’ and rebuked them, and
said, ‘He came not to destroy men’s lives, but to save them.’ And
therefore all such as have destroyed men’s lives concerning
religion, and the worship of God, have they known what spirit they
have been of? Have they not done that which they should not do?
done that which Christ forbade, who saith, ‘Lest ye should pluck
up the wheat with the tares,’ and saith, ‘It is the angel’s work
at the end of the world?’ And hath not God showed unto man what is
good, and his duty, ‘To love mercy, to do justly, and to walk
humbly with his God?’ which man is to mind.
“And the apostle exhorts Christians, ‘To follow peace with all
men, and holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord,’ Heb.
xii. 14. Why should Christians war and strive one with another,
seeing they all own in words one King, Lord, and Saviour, Christ
Jesus, whose command is, that they should ‘love one another;’
which is a mark that they shall be known by, to be Christ’s
disciples, as I said before. And Christ, who is the King of kings,
and Lord of lords, saith, ‘This is my commandment, that ye love
one another, as I have loved you,’ John xv. 12, and John xiii. And
the apostle saith, Christians ought to ‘be patient towards all
men,’ 1 Thess. v. 14.
“From him, who is a lover of truth, righteousness, and peace, who
desires your temporal and eternal good; and that in the wisdom of
God, that is from above, pure, gentle, and peaceable, you may be
ordered, and order all things, that God hath committed to you, to
his glory; and stop those things among Christians, so far as you
have power, which dishonour God, Christ, and Christianity!”
G.F.
Amsterdam, the 21st of the 7th Month, 1677.
To the magistrates and priests of Embden I wrote, showing them their
unchristian practices in persecuting Friends.[46] And several other
books I wrote, in answer to priests and others of Hamburg, Dantzic,
and other places, to clear the truth and Friends from their charges
and false slanders.
“_An Epistle concerning true Fasting, true Prayer, true Honour,
and against Persecution, and for the true Liberty in Christ
Jesus; that all may have a care, that the apostle hath not
bestowed his labour in vain upon you in your observing of Days,
Months, Times, Feasts, and Years, and of coming under the
beggarly elements and the yoke of bondage again, and of bringing
and forcing people into them._
“Where did ever Christ or his apostles command any believers or
Christians to observe holidays or feast-days? Let us see where it
is written in the Scriptures of the New Testament, in the four
Evangelists, or the Epistles, or the Revelation, that ever Christ
or his apostles commanded Christians to observe the time called
Christmas, or a day for Christ’s birth? or to observe the time
called Easter, or Whitsuntide, or Peter’s or Paul’s, Mark’s,
Luke’s, or any other saint’s day?
“You, that profess yourselves to be the reformed churches from the
Papists, Jews, and Heathens, and the Scriptures to be your rule,
and are professors of the new covenant, where do you prove out of
the New Testament, that the apostles and the primitive church
practised or forced any such thing, or that Christ and his
Apostles gave any such command to the churches that they should
practise and observe any such days? Let us see where this command
is written. Did not the apostle say unto the Galatians in the
fourth chapter, ‘But now, after that ye have known God, or rather
ye are known of God, how turn ye again to the weak and beggarly
elements, whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage? Ye observe
days, and months, and times, and years; I am afraid of you, lest I
have bestowed upon you labour in vain.’ And in the third of
Galatians it is said, ‘O foolish Galatians, who hath bewitched
you, that you should not obey the truth,’ &c. And in Galatians the
fifth, the apostle exhorts them to ‘stand fast in the liberty
wherewith Christ had made them free;’ and moreover said, ‘Be not
entangled again with the yoke of bondage.’
“Now doth not this manifest, that there were some teachers, that
were drawing the church of the Galatians into these beggarly
elements, and bringing them again into bondage, in observing days,
months, times, and years? It was the apostle’s work to bring them
out of those bondages and beggarly elements; and therefore, when
they were going back again into observing days, months, times, and
years, he was afraid that he had ‘bestowed his labour upon them in
vain;’ and he exhorts them to ‘stand fast in the liberty wherewith
Christ Jesus hath made them free, and not to be entangled again
with the yoke of bondage,’ and again signifies, that ‘they had
been once entangled with that yoke of bondage and beggarly
elements.’
“But O! how are people, called Christians, since the apostles’
days, gone again under this yoke of bondage, and these beggarly
elements, in observing days, months, times, and years, let their
practice declare. Nay, do not both Papists and Protestants force
people to observe days, months, and times? And therefore is not
the apostle’s labour and travail bestowed upon Christendom in
vain, which was to bring people from under such beggarly elements,
and that yoke of bondage (which the law did require), to ‘stand
fast in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made them free, and not
to be entangled again with the yoke of bondage?’ It was and is
Christ, that hath made and doth make his people free from these
beggarly elements; therefore, they that are redeemed, are to
‘stand fast in that liberty wherewith Christ hath made them free.’
This liberty all true Christians are to stand fast in; they are
made free by Christ and not by man; for man, without the Spirit
and mind of Christ, seeks to force and compel Christ’s followers,
such as are made free from the yoke of bondage, to outward things
that the law commanded, to the observing of days, months, times,
feasts, and years. From such weak, beggarly elements, they that
know God, or are known of God and Christ, are to stand fast in
their liberty, and not come under, nor be entangled with the yoke
of bondage to such things again, seeing he hath made them free.
For they that are in such things, and would force others to them,
are gone from that which gives the knowledge of God, and have not
stood fast in the liberty wherewith Christ makes free.
“Concerning Prayer, we do not read that ever Christ or his
apostles did seek by force to compel any to fast or pray with
them. But Christ taught them how they should pray, and be distinct
from the hypocrites. His words are as follows:—‘When thou prayest,
thou shalt not be as the hypocrites are; for they love to pray
standing in the synagogues, and in the corners of the streets,
that they may be seen of men,’ &c. ‘But thou, when thou prayest,
enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to
thy Father, which is in secret, and thy Father which seeth in
secret, shall reward thee openly. But when ye pray, use not vain
repetitions, as the heathen do; for they think they shall be heard
for their much speaking. Be not ye therefore like unto them; for
your Father knoweth what things ye have need of, before ye ask
him,’ &c. As the apostles and saints did, so do we; we pray in
secret, and we pray in public, as the Spirit gives us utterance,
which helps our infirmities, as it did the apostles and true
Christians; after this manner we pray for ourselves, and for all
men both high and low.
“Concerning Fasting, Christ saith, ‘Moreover when ye fast, be not
as the hypocrites, of a sad countenance; for they disfigure their
faces, that they may appear unto men to fast. But when thou
fastest, anoint thy head and wash thy face, that thou appear not
unto men to fast, but unto thy Father which is in secret; and thy
Father, which seeth in secret, shall reward thee openly.’
“You may see in Isaiah the lviiith., what the true fast is which
the Lord requires; where it is said to the prophet, ‘Cry aloud,
and spare not, lift up thy voice like a trumpet, and show my
people their transgression, and the house of Jacob their sins; yet
they seek me daily, and delight to know my ways as a nation that
did righteousness, and forsook not the ordinance of their God;
they ask of me the ordinances of justice; they take delight in
approaching to God. Wherefore have we fasted, say they, and thou
seest not? wherefore have we afflicted our soul, and thou takest
no knowledge? Behold, in the day of your fast ye find pleasure,
and exact all your labours. Behold, ye fast for strife and debate,
and to smite with the fist of wickedness, ye shall not fast, as ye
do this day, to make your voice to be heard on high. Is it such a
fast that I have chosen? A day for a man to afflict his soul? Is
it to bow down his head as a bulrush, and to spread sackcloth and
ashes under him? Wilt thou call this a fast, and an acceptable day
to the Lord? Is not this the fast that I have chosen, saith the
Lord; to loose the bands of wickedness, to undo the heavy
burthens, and to let the oppressed go free, and that ye break
every yoke?’ So this fast that the Lord requires, is not to lay
yokes, to oppress, and lay heavy burthens, and to make fast the
bands of wickedness; but to loose and to break such things.
“And further, concerning the true fast the Lord requires, ‘Is it
not to deal thy bread to the hungry, and that thou bring the poor,
that are cast out, to thy house? When thou seest the naked, that
thou cover him, and that thou hide not thyself from thy own flesh?
(Do you keep this true fast?) Then shall thy light break forth as
the morning, and thine health shall spring forth speedily; and thy
righteousness shall go before thee, the glory of the Lord shall be
thy rereward. Then shalt thou call, and the Lord shall answer;
thou shalt cry, and he shall say, Here I am; if thou take away
from the midst of thee the yokes, the putting forth of the finger
and speaking vanity; and if thou draw out thy soul to the hungry,
and satisfy the afflicted soul, then shall thy light arise out of
obscurity, and thy darkness be as the noon-day. And the Lord shall
guide thee continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought, and make
fat thy bones; and thou shalt be like a watered garden, and like a
spring of water, whose waters fail not,’ &c.
“Now here is the practice of the true fast the Lord requires of
his people; and to them that observe this fast, the Lord saith,
‘When they call, he will answer.’ You may see what glorious and
happy comforts they receive from the Lord, that keep this true
fast; but such as fast for strife and debate, smite with the fists
of wickedness, and make their voices to be heard on high; who
afflict their souls for a day, bow down their head as a bulrush,
and loose not the bands of wickedness; who do not undo every heavy
burthen, break not off every yoke, nor let the oppressed go free;
who do not deal their bread to the hungry, clothe not the naked,
nor bring the poor to their house, but hide themselves from their
own flesh:—such fasts and fasters the Lord doth not accept,
neither hath he chosen them. But these appear to men with their
disfigured faces, and hang down their heads as a bulrush for a
day, like the hypocrites, to fast, as Christ speaks in Matt. vi.
“And is it not the command of Christ, that in their fast they
should not appear unto men to fast? And now you that would force
us to shut up our shops on fasting-days, or for a day, does not
this fast appear to men? and is not this the fast that the Lord
saith in Isaiah he ‘doth not accept?’ for he saith, ‘Is this the
fast that I have chosen, a day for a man to afflict his soul, and
bow down his head as a bulrush?’ &c. ‘Wilt thou call this a fast,
and an acceptable day to the Lord?’ Isa. lviii.
“Therefore all God’s people are to keep the true fast of the Lord
from debate and strife, and the fists of wickedness; that fast
that breaks the bands of wickedness, and undoes every heavy
burthen; breaks every yoke, and lets the oppressed go free; deals
bread to the hungry, clothes the naked, and brings the poor that
are cast out to his own house. Every one that keeps this true
fast, their health shall grow, and when they call, the Lord will
hear them; he will be their guide continually, satisfy their souls
in drought, and make their bones fat; and they shall be like a
watered garden, and like a spring of water, whose waters fail not.
Now you, that keep not this true fast, when you call upon the Lord
on your own fasting-days, does the Lord answer you, and say, ‘Here
I am?’ Doth the Lord guide you continually? Are your bones made
fat by him, and your souls satisfied in drought? Are you like a
watered garden, and like a spring, whose waters fail not? But you
that keep not this true fast, do you not want these waters, which
fail not? so your souls are not satisfied in drought, but your
bones are lean, and you hear not the voice of the Lord, who saith,
‘Here I am;’ so you lose the heritage of Jacob, and ride not upon
the high places there; but come under.
“Therefore every man and woman, shut your hearts against all
manner of evil whatsoever, and trade not with Babylon’s merchants
of confusion; but keep the supernatural day of Christ that is
sprung from on high, that is kept by believing and walking in the
light of Christ, and being grafted into him. This will bring you
to the true fast, from feeding upon any evil, and to the true
praying in the Spirit, as Christ and the apostles have taught. The
fruit of the Spirit is love, &c. The birth of the Spirit is not a
persecuting birth; but he that is born of the flesh, will
persecute him that is born of the Spirit, because he will not
follow the birth of the flesh, with its weak, beggarly elements,
that entangles with its yoke of bondage, and its observing of
days, months, times, fasts, feasts, and years; which the birth of
the Spirit is to stand fast against in the liberty wherewith
Christ hath made it free.
“Do you not know, that the Turks keep their Sabbath on the sixth
day, the Jews upon the seventh day, and the Christians meet
together on the First-day of the week? And that day which the
Turks keep, the Jews’ and Christians’ shops are open, and that day
the Jews keep, Christians’ and Turks’ shops are open; and the
First-days that Christians keep, both Jews’ and Turks’ shops are
open? The Turk does not force the Jews nor the Christians to shut
up their shops on their meeting-days, but lets them have their
liberty in Turkey. And where do you read, that ever the Turks
forced any Christians to observe any of their holidays, fasts, or
feasts? If not, should not Christians be beyond the Turks in
giving liberty to all tender consciences to serve God, seeing
Christ and the apostles command not, nor force people to observe
holidays, or times, or months, or years, but that they should pray
always in the Spirit, and fast always from strife and debate, from
all manner of sin and evil; and that will keep down the fist of
wickedness, and the bond of iniquity, &c.
“Why should not people of a tender conscience have their liberty
to exercise their consciences towards God, that they may have ‘a
good conscience always towards God and man,’ to perform that which
God requires, and to ‘do unto all men, as they would have them to
do unto them, and to love their neighbours as themselves;’ seeing
so many debauched, evil, and seared consciences, as with a hot
iron, have liberty in their loose lives and conversations, and in
their loose words, whose tongues are at liberty to swear and
curse, and their spirits at liberty in drunkenness and
uncleanness? Let the magistrates look and see, how this evil,
seared conscience hath its liberty to be exercised in all manner
of evil things all Christendom over; which is a great shame and
dishonour to God, and Christ, and Christianity, yea, and humanity.
Therefore why should not God’s people have their liberty to
exercise their good and tender consciences towards God and man?
For the mystery of faith, which Jesus Christ is the author and
finisher of, is held in a pure conscience; and should not the work
of the true Christian magistrate be to encourage the exercise of
this pure conscience towards God and man, and to discourage the
exercise of this evil, seared conscience, that dishonours both God
and Christ, and true Christianity? If not, how are they a praise
to them that do well, and a terror to evil-doers?
“Concerning the not putting off our hats to men. Many that go
under the name of Christians, have taken offence at us, because we
could not put off our hats, and bow down to them; for which we
find no command from Christ or his apostles, but rather to the
contrary. For Christ saith, ‘I receive not honour of men’ (mark,
he did not receive honour of men); and further Christ saith, ‘How
can ye believe which receive honour one of another, and seek not
the honour that comes from God only?’ Now Christ declares it to be
a mark of unbelievers, that seek ‘honour one of another,’ and seek
not that ‘honour that comes from God only;’ and is not the putting
off the hat, and bowing with it, an honour to men, which they seek
one of another, and are offended if they have it not? Nay, have
they not fined, persecuted, and imprisoned some, because they did
not put off their hats to them? Nay, do not the very Turks mock at
the Christians in their proverb, saying that ‘the Christians spend
much of their time in putting off their hats, and showing their
bare head to one another?’ But should not those be beyond the
Turks, that bear the noble name of Christian, above seeking honour
one of another, and persecuting them that will not give it, when
all true believing Christians should seek the honour that comes
from God only? which is the duty of all true believers in Christ
Jesus, for he would not receive honour of men. And ‘He that
believeth on the Son of God, hath everlasting life; and he that
believeth not the Son, shall not see life; but the wrath of God
abideth on him,’ John iii. 36. Is not the Turks’ proverb a
reproach to the Christians, who say ‘that the Christians spend
much of their time in putting off their hats, and showing their
bare heads one to another?’ Have you not fined and imprisoned
many, because they would not put off their hats to you, and show
you their bare heads? Nay, in many of your courts they shall not
have right and justice, nor liberty and freedom in cities or
states, though they have truly served their time, and are honest
and civil men, unless they will put off their hats and show their
bare heads? Have you not made a law against such, that they must
forfeit two guilders if they do not? Do you not seek to compel and
force them to do it, and fine such as do not, as at Lansmeer in
Waterland? Is not this the honour that you seek one of another?
Did not the Pharisees and Jews do the same?
“As for your saying, ‘the apostle commands to honour all men; and
such as rule well are worthy of double honour.’ If this ‘honouring
all men,’ were to put off their hats to all men, and show all men
their bare heads, then this command you break yourselves; for you
do not this to all men generally; and if they that rule well must
have double hat-honour, then they must put off their hats twice;
and show them their bare heads. If this hat-honour, and showing
the bare head, be an invention of men, and not from God, and ye
cannot prove it by Scripture, yet say, ‘it is your rule;’ then you
act beside the rule, and compel people to act contrary to your
rule. For where did ever the prophets, Christ, or the apostles
command any such thing? Let us see a command, a practice, and an
example for it. Nebuchadnezzar, who was a persecutor, and cast the
three children of Israel into the fire with their hose, cloaks,
and hats, we do not read that he was offended at them, because
they did not put off their hats, and show him their bare heads;
but because they would not bow to his image. And is it not said in
the margin of the Bible, where it is said, ‘honour all men,’ ‘have
all men in esteem?’ Then they that rule well are worthy of double
esteem; and this esteem must be truly in the heart, without any
envy, malice, or hatred. As all men are the workmanship of God,
they are to be esteemed in the heart with the Spirit of God; and
they that rule well, are worthy of double esteem; here is true
honour from the heart, both to God, and man, his workmanship. For
people may put off their hats, and show their bare heads one to
another, once or twice to the officers and magistrates, and yet be
full of envy, and malice, and hatred, and murder in their hearts
one against another; and give them that honour, as you call it,
and yet speak or wish bad things to them, when they have turned
their backs on them.
“The true honour or esteem in the heart to all men, as they are
God’s creation, is without any evil wish or thought in the heart
to any men, and especially to them that rule well, who have the
double esteem, whom God hath placed over people. There is no evil
in the heart that gives this respect, esteem, or honour, and
brings them to love their neighbours as themselves, and to ‘do
unto all men, as they would have them do unto them;’ in that they
esteem all men, and have a double esteem for them that rule well.
This is beyond all the honour of putting off the hats once to all
men, and twice to them that are worthy of the double honour, as
you may call it. But we would ask Christians that practise this
hat-honour, and show one another their bare heads, Who invented
this single honour and double honour, seeing they cannot prove,
that ever Christ or the apostles did command or practise any such
thing, or Moses in the time of the law? Now, do not say or think
that we had this practice of not putting off our hats from the
Turk; for we were moved by the Spirit of the Lord, before ever we
heard of the Turks’ proverb and practice, to leave the honour that
is below, and seek the honour that comes from above, when we came
to be true believers in Christ Jesus.
“Now concerning persecuting, imprisoning, and banishing God’s
people, in whom Christ is manifest, and dwells in their hearts;
doth not Christ tell you, that in so doing you imprison him? Then
do you not banish him, and persecute him out of your cities and
corporations? And how can you enter into, and have a share in his
kingdom, though you may profess him in words? Are not such to go
into everlasting punishment, that do not visit Christ in prison?
Then what will become of you that banish and imprison him, where
he is manifest in his members, and suffer them not to meet
together to enjoy him amongst them, according to his promise?
Therefore you, that will not let Christ reign in his people, and
have his liberty in them, in your cities and countries, to
exercise his offices, you will not have your liberty in heaven.
You that will not let Christ reign in your hearts, nor suffer him
to reign in his people here upon the earth, in this world, in your
kingdoms;—you will not reign with Christ in heaven in his kingdom,
nor in the world without end.
“You, that banish the truth out of your cities or countries, or
its people for its sake, banish the truth and Christ out of your
hearts from ruling there; so you yourselves are not the temples of
God. When you have banished Christ and his truth out of your own
hearts, you banish such in whom he rules out of your estates and
country, then see what judgments the Lord doth bring upon you,
when you are left to yourselves; yea, fears and troubles, one
judgment after another, come upon you; you are even filled with
them. But the banished, the sufferers for truth and Christ’s sake,
have a peaceable habitation in the truth, which the devil is out
of, and cannot get into; which habitation will outlast all the
habitations of the wicked and persecutors, though they be ever so
full of words without life and truth. The life and the truth will
outlast all airy notions, and Christ, the Lamb and patient Seed,
will overcome the devourer and the unpatient seed; and they that
have the garment, the righteousness of Christ, which is the fine
linen, will find it to outlast all the rags and inventions of men.
For Christ saith to his learners, ‘Be of good cheer, I have
overcome the world,’ the persecuting world. He said also to his
disciples, ‘If the world hate you, ye know that it hated me before
it hated you.’ Therefore let all that profess themselves
Christians lay aside persecution about religion, churches, or
worship, fasting or praying days; for you have no command from
Christ and his apostles to persecute any. Christ, who is the King
of kings and Lord of lords, when they called him a deceiver, and
blasphemed him, and said, ‘He had a devil,’ did not persecute any
of them for it, nor force or compel any to hear and believe him,
nor the apostles after him; but he bade them, that would have been
plucking up the tares, ‘Let the tares and wheat grow together
until the harvest.’ So you have no command from Christ or his
apostles to persecute, imprison, banish, or spoil the goods of
any, for matter of pure conscience and religion, worship, faith,
and church, in the gospel-times.”
G.F.
Harlingen in Friesland, the 11th of the 6th Month, 1677.
After some time George Keith and William Penn came back from Germany
to Amsterdam, and had a dispute with one Galenus Abrahams (one of
the most noted Baptists in Holland), at which many professors were
present; but not having time to finish the dispute then, they met
again two days after, and the Baptist was much confounded, and truth
gained ground.[47] Between these two disputes we had a very great
meeting at Friends’ meeting-place, at which many hundreds of people
were, and some of high rank in the world’s account. An earl, a lord,
and divers other eminent persons, were present, who all behaved
themselves very civilly. But when the meeting was ended, some
priests began to make opposition; which, when William Penn
understood, he stood up again, and answered them to the great
satisfaction of the people, who were much affected with the several
testimonies they had heard declared. After the meeting several of
them came to Gertrude’s, where we were, with whom George Keith had
much discourse in Latin.
Having now finished our service at Amsterdam, we took leave of the
Friends there, and passed by waggon to LEYDEN, about twenty-five
miles; where we stayed a day or two, seeking out and visiting some
tender people we heard of there. We met with a German, who was
partly convinced. He informed us of an eminent man that was
inquiring after truth. Some sought him out, and visited him, and
found him a serious man; I also spoke to him, and he owned the
truth. William Penn and Benjamin Furly went to visit another great
man, that lived a little out of Leyden, who, they said, had been
general to the King of Denmark’s forces. He and his wife were very
loving to them, and heard the truth with joy.
From Leyden we went to the HAGUE, where the Prince of Orange kept
his court; and we visited one of the judges of Holland, with whom we
had pretty much discourse. He was a wise, tender man, and put many
objections and queries to us; which when we had answered, he was
satisfied, and parted with us in much love. Leaving the Hague, we
went to DELFT, and thence to ROTTERDAM that night, where we stayed
some days, and had several meetings. While I was here I gave forth a
book for the Jews; with whom, when I was at Amsterdam, I had a
desire to have some discourse, but they would not. Here also I
reviewed several other books and papers which I had given forth
before, and which were now transcribed.
-----
Footnote 43:
Elizabeth, Princess of the Rhine, was the eldest daughter of
Frederick V., Elector Palatine, and King of Bohemia—her mother
being a daughter of king James I. of England. This excellent
princess is spoken of as a woman of great amiability and religious
character. She possessed only a small territory; but she governed
with great judgment, and attention to the happiness of her
subjects. She made it a rule to hear, one day in the week, all
such causes as were brought before her. On these occasions, her
wisdom, justice, and moderation were very conspicuous. She
frequently remitted forfeitures, in cases where the parties were
poor, or in any respect worthy of favour. It was remarkable that
she often introduced religious considerations, as motives to
persuade the contending parties to harmony and peace. She was
greatly beloved and respected by her subjects; and also by many
persons of learning and virtue not resident in her dominions; for
she patronised men of this character, whatever their country or
their religious profession.
The respect in which this exemplary Christian held Friends and
their principles, was unreservedly expressed in her letters to
individuals connected with the English court; and her good offices
were more than once exerted to preserve this persecuted people
from the penalties of those laws which interdicted the exercise of
public worship in conventicles, as all meeting-houses were then
denominated. William Penn and Robert Barclay paid her two visits.
She received them with great openness, and was much affected by
the interview which, on the second visit, took place, as is
related by William Penn. They went from Amsterdam to Herwerden,
the residence of the Princess and of her intimate acquaintance,
Anna Maria, Countess de Hornes, who dwelt much in her house, and
was, as well as herself, a woman seeking after the best things,
and a favourer of such (says Penn) as separate themselves from the
world for the sake of righteousness.
The visitors were welcomed by the Princess and her friend the day
after their arrival, and were invited to dine with them. They held
a religious meeting together, which was so satisfactory that the
Princess desired another might be appointed, at which several
persons were present. William Penn thus speaks of it:—“The eternal
word showed itself as a hammer this day; yea, sharper than a
two-edged sword, dividing asunder between the soul and the spirit,
between the joints and the marrow. Let my right hand forget its
cunning, and my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth, when I
shall forget the loving-kindness of the Lord, and the sure mercies
of our God, to us that day.” The following day they paid two
visits at this little court; and the day after, which was the
first of the week, they held a meeting there, appointed by the
direction of the Princess, which several others attended besides
those of her household. Of this meeting W. Penn says: “The
quickening power and life of Jesus wrought and reached them; and
virtue from him, in whom dwelleth the Godhead bodily, went forth.”
After this meeting, which was held late in the evening, the
visitors took their leave, but not before they had been witnesses
of the tender disposition of mind of the Princess; who, attempting
to set forth her sense of the power and presence of God prevalent
among them, could not proceed, but turned herself to the window,
and said, “My heart is full, I cannot speak to you.” W. Penn, on
another occasion, says, “I cannot forget her last words when I
took my leave of her: ‘Let me desire you to remember me, though I
live at so great a distance, and you should never see me more. I
thank you for this good time. Be assured, though my condition
subjects me to divers temptations, yet my soul has strong desires
after the best things.’”
The Princess Elizabeth lived to the age of 60, departing this life
in 1680, as much lamented, as she had been beloved, by her people.
Footnote 44:
This being the last mention of Robert Barclay in these volumes,
the following brief particulars may interest the reader who is not
already acquainted with his history. He was the son of Colonel
David Barclay, descended from the Barclays of Mathers, an ancient
and honourable Scotch family, and of Katharine Gordon, from the
Gordons of the house of the Duke of Gordon. He was born at
Edinburgh in 1648, educated in France, and returned to Scotland in
1664. His father having joined the despised Quakers, Robert
Barclay, though uninfluenced by him, soon followed his example,
and came forth a zealous witness for the truth, receiving a gift
in the ministry, in which he laboured to bring others to God. He
was much exercised in controversy, from the many contradictions
that fell upon truth, and upon him for its sake. He published
several works in defence of the principles he had espoused, which
he believed to be those of the New Testament, as promulgated by
Christ and his apostles. His chief work was his _Apology for the
True Christian Divinity_, which has gone through many editions,
and remains uncontrovertible.
In common with the early Friends, Robert Barclay suffered
imprisonments and ill-usage, which he bore with exemplary
patience. He travelled extensively to spread the gospel of Christ,
for he loved the truth above all the world; not ashamed of it
before men, but bold and able in maintaining it, sound in
judgment, strong in argument, of a pleasant disposition, yet solid
and exemplary in his conversation. He was a learned man, a good
Christian, an able minister, a tender and careful father, and a
good and kind neighbour and friend. His last illness was short.
James Dickenson of Cumberland, in his journey in Scotland,
visiting him when on his deathbed, as he sat by him, the Lord’s
power and presence bowed their hearts together, and Robert Barclay
was sweetly melted in the sense of God’s love, and, with tears,
expressed his love to all faithful brethren in England; and adding
a message of love to dear George Fox, he said, “God is good still,
and though I am under great weight of sickness and weakness as to
my body, yet my peace flows, and this I know, whatever exercises
may be permitted to come upon me, it shall tend to God’s glory and
my salvation, and in that I rest.”
He died at his own house, at Ury, in Scotland, in 1690, aged
forty-two, leaving behind him four sons and three daughters.
Footnote 45:
These ambassadors were deputies from the King of France, the
United Netherlands, and several other potentates of Europe, who
met to consult the peace of Christendom. George Fox’s _Epistle_ to
them was translated and printed in Latin. Robert Barclay also
wrote a treatise in Latin, which was addressed and presented to
each of the ambassadors, with a copy of his principal work, _An
Apology for the True Christian Divinity_. In the former, Barclay
strongly urged them to promote the good work for which they were
assembled, pointing out the true causes of war, and its
incompatibility with Christian principles. Before the year ended,
a peace was concluded.
Footnote 46:
William Penn also addressed the Council and Senate of the city of
Embden, relative to the sufferings of Friends there. Though these
appeals did not procure any immediate relief, yet, in about ten
years after, Friends enjoyed perfect liberty there.—See Sewell’s
_History_, vol. ii., 420-425.
Footnote 47:
It appears that Galenus Abrahams asserted that nobody in the
present day could be accepted as a messenger of God, unless he
confirmed his doctrine by miracles.—See Sewell’s _History_, vol.
ii., 366-368.
CHAPTER IX.
1677-1680.—George Fox, with other Friends, sails for England, and
lands at Harwich, after a hazardous voyage of three days—has a
large meeting at Colchester, and proceeds thence to
London—writes to his wife—receives further accounts of
persecution in New England—travels into Buckinghamshire, and
meets with some false brethren, who are unruly and troublesome
at meetings—Friends have a special meeting with them
afterwards—at Reading meets with opposition to the settlement of
a women’s meeting—visits Bristol during the fair, where are many
Friends from various parts—the separatists there are very rude
and abusive—he aids Friends in drawing up a breviat of their
sufferings, to present to the judges at Gloucester assizes—meets
with some separatists at Finchcomb—is engaged with other Friends
in soliciting Parliament to grant them relief from the statutes
made against Popish recusants—attends the Yearly Meeting, which
was a glorious and heavenly one—Friends greatly united in
testifying against the spirit of separation—not one mouth opened
on its behalf—the Truth prospers at home and abroad—George Fox
writes to his wife—writes to the king of Poland to dissuade him
from persecution—to Friends in Amsterdam—Friends again press
their suit for relief from the statutes made against Popish
recusants without success—are much exercised with the spirit of
separation, which opposes the order and discipline of the
church—George Fox writes a paper to open the understandings of
the weak, and as a reproof to a censorious judging spirit—has
conferences with some of the opposers at Hertford—writes again
to Friends to warn them of this spirit of false liberty—visits
Friends in prison at Leicester—advises Friends how to end their
differences—writes an epistle to Friends in London—writes to
Friends in prison to console them under suffering—writes an
epistle to the Yearly Meeting—an encouragement to Friends to be
valiant for the Truth—also a caution to Friends to keep in
humility—travels again towards the South—visits prisoners in
York Castle—recommends Friends to lay their sufferings before
the judge at the assizes—attends the Yearly Meeting in
London—writes to the Great Turk and to the Dey of Algiers—to the
latter particularly respecting Friends who are captives there—at
Hertford meets with John Story (the schismatic) and some of his
party, but the Truth prevails—has a meeting with some of the
opposers—solicits the Parliament to grant relief to Friends
under suffering—writes a paper against plots and plotters.
Finding our spirits clear of the service which the Lord had given us
to do in Holland, we took leave of Friends of Rotterdam, and passed
by boat to the BRIEL, in order to take passage that day for England;
several Friends of Rotterdam accompanying us, and some of Amsterdam,
who were come to see us again before we left Holland. But the packet
not coming in till night, we lodged that night at the Briel; and
next day being the 21st of the 8th month, and the First-day of the
week, we went on board, and set sail about ten, viz., William Penn,
George Keith, and I, and Gertrude Dirick Nieson, with her children.
We were in all about sixty passengers, and had a long and hazardous
passage; for the winds were contrary, and the weather stormy; the
boat also was very leaky, insomuch that we had to have two pumps
continually going, day and night; so that it was thought there was
quite as much water pumped out as the vessel would have held. But
the Lord, who is able to make the stormy winds to cease, and the
raging waves of the sea calm, yea, to raise them and stop them at
his pleasure, He alone did preserve us: praised be his name for
ever! Though our passage was hard, yet we had a fine time, and good
service for truth on board among the passengers, some of whom were
great folks, and were very kind and loving. We arrived at HARWICH on
the 23rd, at night, having been two nights, and almost three days at
sea. Next morning William Penn and George Keith took horse for
Colchester; but I stayed, and had a meeting at Harwich; and there
being no Colchester coach there, and the postmaster’s wife being
unreasonable in her demands for a coach, and deceiving us of it also
after we had hired it, we went to a Friends’ house about a mile and
a half in the country, and hired his waggon which we bedded well
with straw, and rode in it to Colchester.
I stayed there till First-day, having a desire to be at Friends’
meeting that day; and a very large and weighty one it was; for
Friends hearing of my return from Holland, flocked from several
parts of the country, and many of the town’s-people coming in also,
it was thought there were about a thousand people at it; and all was
peaceable. Having stayed a day or two longer at Colchester, I
travelled through ESSEX, visiting Friends at HALSTEAD, BRAINTREE,
FELSTEAD, and SALING, and having meetings with them. At CHELMSFORD I
had a meeting in the evening; and there being many Friends
prisoners, they got liberty and came to the meeting; and we were all
refreshed together in the Lord. Next day, the 9th of the 9th month,
I got to LONDON, where Friends received me with great joy; and on
the First-day following went to Gracechurch Street meeting, where
the Lord visited us with his refreshing presence, and the glory of
the Lord surrounded the meeting; praised be the Lord.
After I had been a little while in London, I wrote the following
letter to my wife:—
“DEAR HEART,
“To whom is my love and to the children, and to all the rest of
Friends, in the Lord’s truth, power, and Seed, that is over all;
glory to the Lord, and blessed be his name for ever beyond all
words! who hath carried me through and over many trials and
dangers, in his eternal power! I have been twice at Gracechurch
Street meeting; and though the opposite spirits were there, yet
all was quiet; the dew of heaven fell upon the people, and the
glory of the Lord shone over all. Every day I am fain to be at
meetings about business, and sufferings which are great abroad;
and now many Friends are concerned with many persons about them:
so in haste, with my love to you all.”
G.F.
London, the 24th of the 9th Month, 1677.
About this time, I received letters from New England, which gave
account of the magistrates’ and rulers’ cruel and unchristian-like
proceedings against Friends there, whipping and abusing them very
shamefully; for they whipped many women Friends. One woman they tied
to a cart, and dragged her along the street, stripped above the
waist. They whipped some masters of ships that were not Friends,
only for bringing Friends thither. And at that very time, while they
were persecuting Friends in this barbarous manner, the Indians slew
three-score of their men, took one of their captains, and flayed the
skin off his head while he was alive, and carried it away in
triumph; so that the sober people said “the judgments of God came
upon them, for persecuting the Quakers;” but the blind dark priests
said, “It was because they did not persecute them enough.”[48] Great
exercise I had in seeking relief here for our poor suffering Friends
there, that they might not lie under the rod of the wicked. Upon
this and other services for truth, I stayed in London a month or
five weeks, visiting meetings, and helping and encouraging Friends
to labour for the deliverance of their suffering brethren in other
parts.
Afterwards I went down to KINGSTON, and visited Friends there and
thereaway. Having stayed a little among Friends there, looking
over a book I had then ready to go to press, I went into
Buckinghamshire, visiting Friends, and having several meetings
amongst them, as at AMERSHAM, HUNGER-HILL, JORDANS, HEDGERLY,
WYCOMBE, and TURVILLE-HEATH. In some of which, they that were gone
out from the unity of Friends in truth into strife, opposition,
and division, were very unruly and troublesome; particularly at
the men’s meeting at Thomas Ellwood’s at HUNGER-HILL, where the
chief of them came from Wycombe, endeavouring to make disturbance,
and to hinder Friends from proceeding in the business of the
meeting. When I saw their design I admonished them to be sober and
quiet, and not trouble the meeting by interrupting its service;
but rather, if they were dissatisfied with Friends’ proceedings,
and had anything to object, let a meeting be appointed on purpose
some other day. So Friends offered to give them a meeting another
day: and at length it was agreed to be at Thomas Ellwood’s[49] the
week following. Accordingly Friends met them there, and the
meeting was in the barn; for there came so many, that the house
could not receive them. After we had sat awhile they began their
jangling. Most of their arrows were shot at me; but the Lord was
with me, and gave me strength in his power to cast back their
darts of envy and falsehood upon themselves. Their objections were
answered, and things were opened to the people; a good opportunity
it was, and serviceable to the truth; for many that before were
weak, were now strengthened and confirmed; some that were doubting
and wavering, were satisfied and settled; and faithful Friends
were refreshed and comforted in the springings of life amongst us.
For the power arose, and life sprung, and in the arisings thereof
many living testimonies were borne against that wicked, dividing,
rending spirit, which those opposers were joined to, and acted by;
and the meeting ended to the satisfaction of Friends. That night I
lodged, with other Friends, at Thomas Ellwood’s; and the same week
had a meeting again with the opposers at WYCOMBE, where they again
showed their envy, and were made manifest to the upright-hearted.
After I had visited Friends in that upper side of Buckinghamshire, I
called upon Friends at HENLEY in OXFORDSHIRE, and afterwards went by
CORSHAM to READING, where I was at meeting on First-day, and in the
evening had a large meeting with Friends. Next day there being
another meeting about settling a women’s meeting, some of them that
had let in the spirit of division, fell into jangling, and were
disorderly for a while, till the weight of truth brought them down.
After this I passed on, visiting Friends, and having meetings in
several places, through BERKSHIRE and WILTSHIRE, till I came to
BRISTOL, which was on the 24th of the 11th Month, just before the
fair.
I stayed at Bristol all the time of the fair, and some time after.
Many sweet and precious meetings we had; many Friends being there
from several parts of the nation, some on account of trade, and some
in the service of truth. Great was the love and unity of Friends
that abode faithful in the truth, though some who were gone out of
the holy unity, and were run into strife, division, and enmity, were
rude and abusive, and behaved themselves in a very unchristian
manner towards me. But the Lord’s power was over all; by which being
preserved in heavenly patience, which can bear injuries for his
name’s sake, I felt dominion therein over the rough, rude, and
unruly spirits; and left them to the Lord, who knew my innocency,
and would plead my cause. The more these laboured to reproach and
vilify me, the more did the love of Friends, that were sincere and
upright-hearted, abound towards me; and some that had been betrayed
by the adversaries, seeing their envy and rude behaviour, broke off
from them; who have cause to bless the Lord for their deliverance.
When I left Bristol, I went with Richard Snead to his house in the
country, and thence to Hezekiah Coale’s at WINTERBOURNE, in
GLOUCESTERSHIRE, whither came several Friends that were under great
sufferings for truth’s sake, whom I had invited to meet me there.
Stephen Smith[50], Richard Snead, and I, drew up a breviat of their
sufferings, setting forth the illegal proceedings against them,
which was delivered to the judges at the assizes at Gloucester; and
they promised to put a stop to those illegal proceedings. Next day
we passed to SUDBURY, and had a large meeting in the meeting-house
there, which at that time was of very good service. We went next day
to Nathaniel Crisp’s at TEDBURY, and thence passed on to NAILSWORTH;
where on First-day we had a brave meeting, and large. Thence we went
to the quarterly meeting at FINCHCOMB, where were several of the
opposite spirit, who, it was thought, intended to make some
disturbance amongst Friends; but the Lord’s power was over, and kept
them down, and good service for the Lord we had at that meeting. We
returned from Finchcomb to NAILSWORTH, and had another very precious
meeting there, to which Friends came from the several meetings
thereabouts; which made it very large also.
We went from Nailsworth the 1st of the 1st Month, 1678, and
travelled through the country visiting Friends and having many
meetings at CIRENCESTER, CROWN-ALLINS, CHELTENHAM, STOKE-ORCHARD,
TEWKESBURY, &c., so went to WORCESTER, where I had formerly suffered
imprisonment above a year for truth’s sake; and Friends rejoiced
greatly to see me there again. Here I stayed several days, and had
many very precious meetings in the city, and much service amongst
Friends. After which, I had meetings at PERSHORE and EVESHAM; and
then struck to RAGLEY in WARWICKSHIRE, to visit the Lady Conway,[51]
who I understood was very desirous to see me, and whom I found
tender and loving, and willing to detain me longer than I had
freedom to stay. About two miles hence I had two meetings at a
Friend’s house, whose name was John Stanley, whither William
Dewsbury came, and stayed with me about half a day. Afterwards I
visited Friends in their meetings, at STRATFORD, LAMCOTE, and
ARMSCOTT (whence I was sent prisoner to Worcester in 1673,) and
thence passed into OXFORDSHIRE, visiting Friends, and having
meetings at SIBFORD, NORTH-NEWTON, BANBURY, ADDERBURY, &c. Then
visiting Friends through BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, at LONG-CRENDON, ILMER,
MENDLE, WESTON, CHOLESBURY, CHESHAM, &c., I came to Isaac
Penington’s, where I stayed a few days; and then turning into
HERTFORDSHIRE, visited Friends at CHORLEYWOOD, WATFORD,
HEMEL-HEMPSTEAD, and MARKET-STREET, at which places I had meetings
with Friends. From Market-Street I went in the morning to LUTON in
BEDFORDSHIRE, to see John Crook, with whom I spent good part of the
day, and went towards evening to ALBAN’S, where I lay that night at
an inn. And visiting Friends at SOUTH-MIMS, BARNET, and HENDON,
where I had meetings, I came to LONDON the 8th of the 3rd Month. It
being the fourth day of the week, I went to Gracechurch-Street
meeting, which was peaceable and well; and many Friends, not knowing
I was come to town, were very joyful to see me there; and the Lord
was present with us, refreshing us with his living virtue: blessed
be his holy name!
The parliament was sitting when I came to town, and Friends having
laid their sufferings before them, were waiting on them for relief
against the laws made against Popish recusants, which they knew we
were not; though some malicious magistrates took advantages against
us, to prosecute us in several parts of the nation upon those
statutes. Friends attending on that service when I came, I joined
them therein; and there was some probability that something might be
obtained towards Friends’ ease and relief in that case, many of the
parliament-men being tender and loving towards us, believing we were
much misrepresented by our adversaries. But when I went down one
morning with George Whitehead to the parliament house, to attend
upon them on Friends’ behalf, suddenly they were prorogued, though
but for a short time.
About two weeks after I came to London, the Yearly Meeting began, to
which Friends came up out of most parts of the nation, and a
glorious heavenly meeting we had. O the glory, majesty, love, life,
wisdom, and unity, that were amongst us! The power reigned over all,
and many testimonies were borne therein against that ungodly spirit,
which sought to make rents and divisions amongst the Lord’s people;
but not one mouth was opened amongst us in its defence, or on its
behalf. Good and comfortable accounts also we had, for the most
part, from Friends in other countries; of which I find a brief
account in a letter, which soon after I wrote to my wife, the copy
whereof here follows;—
“DEAR HEART,
“To whom is my love in the everlasting Seed of life that reigns
over all. Great meetings here have been, and the Lord’s power hath
been stirring through all, the like hath not been. The Lord hath
in his power knit Friends wonderfully together, and his glorious
presence did appear among them. And now the meetings are over,
blessed be the Lord! in quietness and peace. From Holland I hear
things are well there: some Friends are gone that way, to be at
their Yearly Meeting at Amsterdam. At Embden, Friends that were
banished are got into the city again. At Dantzic, Friends are in
prison, and the magistrates threatened them with harder
imprisonment; but the next day the Lutherans rose, and plucked
down (or defaced) the Popish monastery; so they have work enough
among themselves. The King of Poland received my letter, and read
it himself; and Friends have since printed it in High Dutch. By
letters from the half-yearly meeting in Ireland, I hear that they
are all in love there. At Barbadoes, Friends are in quietness, and
their meetings settled in peace. At Antigua also and Nevis, truth
prospers, and Friends have their meetings orderly and well.
Likewise in New England and other places, things concerning truth
and Friends are well; and in those places the men’s and women’s
meetings are settled; blessed be the Lord! So keep in God’s power
and Seed, that is over all, in whom ye all have life and
salvation; for the Lord reigns over all in his glory, and in his
kingdom; glory to his name for ever, Amen. In haste, with my love
to you all, and to all Friends.”
G. F.
London, the 26th of the 3rd Month, 1678.
The letter to the King of Poland mentioned is as follows:—
_To Johannes III. King of Poland, &c._
“O KING!
“We desire thy prosperity both in this life and that which is to
come. And we desire that we may have our Christian liberty to
serve and worship God under thy dominion; for our principle leads
us not to do anything prejudicial to the king or his people. We
are a people that exercise a good conscience towards God through
his Holy Spirit, and in it do serve, worship, and honour him; and
towards men in the things that are equal and just, doing to them
as we would have them do unto us; looking unto Jesus, who is the
author and finisher of our faith; which faith purifies our hearts,
and brings us to have access to God; without which we cannot
please him; by which faith all the just live, as the Scripture
declares. That which we desire of thee, O king, is, that we may
have liberty of conscience to serve and worship God, and to pray
unto him in our meetings together in the name of Jesus, as he
commands, with a promise that he will be in the midst of them. The
king, we hope, cannot but say that this duty and service is due to
God and Christ; and we give Cæsar his due, and pay our tribute and
custom equal with our neighbour, according to our proportion. We
never read in all the Scriptures of the New Testament, that Christ
or his disciples banished or imprisoned any that were not of their
faith or religion, and would not hear them, or gave them any such
command; but, on the contrary, let the tares and the wheat grow
together, till the harvest; and the harvest is the end of the
world. Then Christ will send his angels to sever the wheat from
the tares, &c. He rebuked such as would have had fire from heaven
to consume those that would not receive Christ; and told them that
they did not know what spirit they were of. He came not to destroy
men’s lives, but to save them.
“We desire the king to consider how much persecution there has
been in Christendom, since the apostles’ days, concerning
religion. Christ said, they should go into everlasting punishment,
that did not visit him in prison; then what will become of them
that imprison him in his members, where he is manifest? None can
say that the world is ended; and therefore how will Christendom
answer the dreadful and terrible God at his day of judgment, that
have persecuted one another about religion, before the end of the
world, under pretence of plucking up tares; which is not their
work, but the angels’, at the end of the world? Christ commands
men to love one another, and to love enemies, and by this they
should be known to be his disciples. O! that all Christendom had
lived in peace and unity, that they might, by their moderation,
have judged both Turks and Jews; and let all have their liberty
that do own God and Jesus, and walk as becomes the glorious gospel
of the Lord Jesus Christ. Our desires are, that the Lord God of
heaven may soften the king’s heart to all tender consciences, that
fear the Lord, and are afraid of disobeying him.
“We entreat the king to read some of the noble expressions of
several kings and others, concerning liberty of conscience; and
especially Stephanus, king of Poland’s sayings, viz.: ‘It
belongeth not to me to reform the consciences; I have always
gladly given that over to God, which belongeth to him; and so
shall I do now, and also for the future. I will suffer the weeds
to grow till the time of harvest, for I know that the number of
believers is but small: therefore,’ said he, when some were
proceeding in persecution, ‘I am king of the people not of their
consciences.’ He also affirmed, that ‘religion was not to be
planted with fire and sword.’ _Chron. Liberty of Religion_, part
2.
“Also a book written in French by W. M., anno 1576, hath this
sentence, viz.: ‘Those princes that have ruled by gentleness and
clemency, added to justice, and have exercised moderation and
meekness towards their subjects, always prospered and reigned
long; but, on the contrary, those princes that have been cruel,
unjust, prejudiced, and oppressors of their subjects, have soon
fallen, they and their estates, into danger, or total ruin.’
“Veritus saith, ‘Seeing Christ is a Lamb, whom you profess to be
your head and captain, then it behoveth you to be sheep, and to
use the same weapons that he made use of; for he will not be a
shepherd of wolves and wild beasts, but only of sheep. Wherefore,
if you lose the nature of sheep,’ said he, ‘and be changed into
wolves and wild beasts, and use fleshly weapons, then will you
exclude yourselves out of his calling, and forsake his banner; and
then will he not be your captain,’ &c.
“Also we find it asserted by King James, in his speech to the
parliament, in the year 1609, ‘That it is a pure rule in divinity,
that God never planted his church with violence of blood.’ And
furthermore he said, ‘it was usually the condition of Christians
to be persecuted, but not to persecute.’
“King Charles, in his [Greek: Eikôn Basilikê], page 61, said in
his prayer to God, ‘Thou seest how much cruelty amongst Christians
is acted under the colour of religion; as if we could not be
Christians unless we crucified one another.’
“Page 28, ‘Make them at length seriously to consider, that nothing
violent nor injurious can be religious.’
“Page 70, ‘Nor is it so proper to hew out religious reformation by
the sword as to polish them by fair and equal disputations among
those that are most concerned in the differences; whom not force,
but reason, must convince.’
“Page 66, ‘Take heed that outward circumstances and formalities in
religion devour not all.’
“Pages 91, 92, ‘In point of true conscientious tenderness I have
so often declared, how little I desire my laws and sceptre should
entrench on God’s sovereignty, who is the only King of
conscience.’
“Page 123, ‘Nor do I desire any man should be further subject unto
me, than all of us may be subject unto God.’
“Page 200, ‘O thou Sovereign of our souls, the only Commander of
our consciences!’
“Page 346 (In his ‘Meditations on Death’,) ‘It is indeed a sad
state to have his enemies to be his accusers, parties, and
judges.’
“The Prince of Orange testified, anno 1579, ‘That it was
impossible the land should be kept in peace, except there was a
free toleration in the exercise of religion.’
“‘Where hast thou read in thy day (said Menno) in the writings of
the apostles, that Christ or the apostles ever cried out to the
magistrates for their power against them that would not hear their
doctrine, nor obey their words? I know certainly,’ said he, ‘that
where a magistrate shall banish with the sword, there is not the
right knowledge, spiritual word, nor church of Christ; it is,
Invocare brachium seculare (to invoke the secular arm.’)
“‘It is not Christian-like, but tyrannical (said D. Philipson,) to
banish and persecute people about faith and religion; and they
that so do are certainly of the Pharisaical generation, who
resisted the Holy Ghost.’
“Erasmus said, ‘That though they take our money and goods, they
cannot therefore hurt our salvation; they afflict us much with
prisons, but they do not thereby separate us from God.’—_In de
Krydges wrede_, fol. 63.
“Lucernus said, ‘He that commandeth anything, wherewith he bindeth
the conscience, this is an antichrist.’—_In de Bemise Disp._, fol.
71.
“Irenæus affirmed, ‘that all forcing of conscience, though it was
but a forbidding of the exercise which is esteemed by one or
another to be necessary to salvation, is in no wise right nor
fitting.’ He also affirmed, ‘that through the diversity of
religions the kingdom should not be brought into any disturbance.’
“Constantius, the emperor, said, ‘That it was enough that he
preserved the unity of the faith, that he might be excusable
before the judgment-seat of God; and that he would leave every one
to his own understanding, according to the account he will give
before the judgment-seat of Christ. Hereto may we stir up people
(said he,) not compel them; beseech them to come into the unity of
the Christians, but to do violence to them we will not in any
wise.’—_Sebast. Frank_, _Chron._ fol. 127.
“Augustinus said, ‘Some disturbed the peace of the church while
they went about to root out the tares before their time; and
through this error of blindness (said he) are they themselves
separated so much the more from being united unto Christ.’
“Retnaldus testified, ‘That he who, with imprisoning and
persecuting, seeketh to spread the gospel, and greaseth his hands
with blood, shall much rather be looked upon for a wild hunter
than a preacher, or a defender of the Christian religion.’
“‘I have for a long season determined (said Henry IV., king of
France, in his speech to the parliament, 1599,) to reform the
church, which, without peace, I cannot do: and it is impossible to
reform or convert people by violence. I am king, as a shepherd,
and will not shed the blood of my sheep, but will gather them
through the mildness and goodness of a king, and not through the
power of tyranny: and I will give them that are of the reformed
religion right liberty to live and dwell free, without being
examined, perplexed, molested, or compelled to anything contrary
to their consciences; for they shall have the free exercise of
their religion, &c.’—[_Vid. Chron. Van de Underg._ 2. deel, p.
1514.]
“Ennius said, ‘Wisdom is driven out when the matter is acted by
force. And therefore the best of men, and most glorious of
princes, were always ready to give toleration.’
“Eusebius, in his second book of the life of Constantine, reports
these words of the emperor: ‘Let them which err, with joy receive
the like fruition of peace and quietness with the faithful; sith
the restoring of communication and society may bring them into the
right way of truth: let none give molestation to any; let every
one do as he determines in his mind. And indeed, there is great
reason for princes to give toleration to disagreeing persons,
whose opinions cannot by fair means be altered; for if the persons
be confident, they will serve God according to their persuasions:
and if they be publicly prohibited, they will privately convene:
and then all those inconveniences and mischiefs, which are
arguments against the permission of conventicles, are arguments
for the public permission of differing religions, &c., they being
restrained and made miserable, endears the discontented persons
mutually, and makes more hearty and dangerous confederations.’
“The like counsel, in the divisions of Germany at the first
reformation, was thought reasonable by the Emperor Ferdinand, and
his excellent son Maximilian; for they had observed, ‘that
violence did exasperate, was unblessed, unsuccessful, and
unreasonable; and therefore they made decrees of toleration.’
“The Duke of Savoy, repenting of his war undertaken for religion
against the Piedmontese, promised them toleration; and was as good
as his word.
“It is remarkable, that till the time of Justinian the emperor,
Anno Domini 525, the Catholics and Novatians had churches
indifferently permitted, even in Rome itself.
“And Paul preached the kingdom of God, teaching those things which
concerned the Lord Jesus Christ, with all confidence; and no man
forbade him: and this he did for the space of two years in his own
hired house at Rome, and received all that came to him.
“Now, O king, seeing these noble testimonies concerning liberty of
conscience from kings, emperors, and others, and the liberty that
Paul had at Rome in the days of the heathen emperor, our desire
is, that we may have the same liberty at Dantzic to meet together
in our own hired houses; which cannot be any prejudice, either to
the king or the city, for us to meet together to wait upon the
Lord, and pray unto him, and to serve and worship him in Spirit
and in truth in our own hired houses; seeing our principle leads
us to hurt no man, but to love our enemies, and to pray for them:
yea, them that persecute us. Therefore, O king, consider, and the
city of Dantzic, would you not think it hard for others to force
you from your religion to another, contrary to your consciences?
And if it be so, that you would think it hard to you, then ‘do you
unto others as you would have them do unto you;’ do not you that
unto others, which you would not have them do unto you; for that
is the royal law, which ought to be obeyed. And so in love to thy
immortal soul, and for thy eternal good, this is written.”
G. F.
“_Postscript._—‘Blessed be the merciful, for they shall obtain
mercy.’ And remember, O king, Justin Martyr’s two Apologies to the
Roman emperors, in the defence of the persecuted Christians; and
that notable Apology, which was written by Tertullian, upon the
same subject; which are not only for the Christian religion, but
against all persecution for religion.”
“_Dear Peter Hendricks, John Claus, J. Rawlins, and all the rest of
Friends in Amsterdam, Friesland, and Rotterdam, to whom is my
love in the Seed of life, that is over all._
“I received your letter with one from Dantzic: I have written
something directed to you, to the King of Poland, which you may
translate into High Dutch, and send to Friends there to give to
the king; or you may print it, after it be delivered in
manuscript, which may be serviceable to other princes. So in
haste, with my love. The Lord God Almighty over all give you
dominion in his eternal power, and in it over all preserve you,
and keep you to his glory, that you may answer that of God in all
people. Amen.”
GEORGE FOX.
London, the 13th of the 9th Month, 1677.
I continued yet in and about London some weeks, the parliament
sitting again, and Friends attending to get some redress of our
sufferings, which about this time were very great, and heavy upon
many Friends in divers parts of the nation; being very unduly
prosecuted upon the statutes made against Popish recusants; though
our persecutors could not but know that Friends were utterly against
Popery; having borne testimony against it in word and writing, and
suffered under it. But though many of the members of parliament in
each house were kind to Friends, and willing to do something for
their ease, yet having much business, they were hindered from doing
the good they would, so that the sufferings of Friends continued.
But that which added much to the grief and exercise of Friends, was,
that some who made a profession of the same truth with us, being
gone from the simplicity of the gospel into a fleshly liberty, and
labouring to draw others after them, opposed the order and
discipline, which God by his power had set up and established in his
church; and made a great noise and clamour against prescriptions;
whereby they easily drew after them such as were loosely inclined,
and desired a broader way than the path of truth to walk in. Some
also that were more simple, but young in truth, or weak in judgment,
were apt to be betrayed by them, not knowing the depths of Satan in
these wiles; for whose sake I was moved to write the following
paper, for undeceiving the deceived, and opening the understandings
of the weak in this matter:—
“All you that deny prescriptions without distinction, may as well
deny all the Scriptures, which were given forth by the power and
Spirit of God. For do not they prescribe how men should walk
towards God and man, both in the Old Testament and in the New?
Yea, from the very first promise of Christ in Genesis, what people
ought to believe and trust in, and all along, till ye come to the
prophets? Did not the Lord prescribe to his people by the Fathers,
and then by his prophets? Did he not prescribe to the people how
they should walk, though they turned against the prophets in the
old covenant, for declaring or prescribing to them the way, how
they might walk to please God, and keep in favour with him? In the
days of Christ, did not he prescribe and teach, how people should
walk and believe? And after him, did not the apostles prescribe to
people how they might come to believe, and receive the gospel and
the kingdom of God, directing to that which would give them the
knowledge of God, and how they should walk in the new covenant in
the days of the gospel, and by what way they should come to the
holy city? And did not the apostles send forth their decrees by
faithful chosen men, that had hazarded their lives for Christ’s
sake, to the churches, by which they were established?
“So you that deny prescriptions given forth by the power and
Spirit of God, do thereby oppose the Spirit that gave them forth
in all the holy men of God. Were there not some all along in the
days of Moses, and in the days of the prophets, in the days of
Christ, and in the days of his apostles, who did withstand that
which they gave forth from the Spirit of God? And hath there not
been the like since the days of the apostles? How many have risen,
since truth appeared, to oppose the order which stands in the
power and Spirit of God? who are but in the same spirit which hath
opposed the Spirit of God all along from the beginning. See, what
names or titles the Spirit of God gave that opposing spirit in the
old covenant, and also in the new; which is the same now; for
after the Lord had given forth the old covenant, there were some
among themselves that opposed; these were worse than public
enemies. And likewise in the days of the new covenant, in the
gospel-times, you may see what sort opposed Christ and the
apostles, after they came to some sight of the truth, and how they
turned against Christ and his apostles? See what liberty they
pleaded for, and ran into, in the apostles’ days, who could not
abide the cross, the yoke of Jesus.
“We see the same rough and high spirit cries now for liberty,
which the power and Spirit of Christ cannot give—cries,
‘Imposition,’ and yet is imposing;—cries, ‘liberty of conscience,’
and yet is opposing liberty of conscience; and cries against
‘prescriptions,’ and yet is prescribing both in words and writing.
So with the everlasting power and Spirit of God this spirit is
fathomed; its rise, beginning, and end; and it is judged. This
spirit cries, ‘we must not judge conscience; we must not judge
matters of faith; and we must not judge spirits, nor religions,’
&c. Yes; they that are in the pure Spirit and power of God, which
the apostles were in, judge of conscience, whether it be a seared
conscience, or a tender conscience; they judge of faith, whether
it be a dead one or a living one; they judge of religion, whether
it be vain, or pure and undefiled; they judge of spirits, and try
them, whether they be of God or not; they judge of hope, whether
it be that of hypocrites, or the true hope that purifies, even as
God is pure; they judge of belief, whether it be that which is
born of God, and overcometh the world, or that which runs into the
spirit of the world, which lusts to envy, and doth not overcome
the world; they judge of worships, whether they be will-worships,
and the worship of the beast and dragon, or the worship of God in
Spirit and in truth; they judge of angels, whether they be fallen,
or those that keep their habitation; they judge the world, that
grieves and quenches the Spirit, hates the light, turns the grace
of God into wantonness, and resists the Holy Ghost; they judge of
the hearts, ears, and lips, which are circumcised, and which are
uncircumcised; they judge of ministers, and apostles, and
messengers, whether they be of Satan or of Christ; they judge of
differences in outward things, in the church or elsewhere; yea,
the least member of the church hath power to judge of such things,
having the one true measure, and true weight to weigh things, and
measure things withal, without respect to persons. This judgment
is given, and all these things are done, by the same power and
Spirit the apostles were in. Such also can judge of election and
reprobation; who keep their habitation, and who do not; who are
Jews, and who are of the synagogue of Satan; who are in the
doctrine of Christ, and who are in the doctrines of devils; who
prescribes and declares things from the power and Spirit of God;
and who prescribes and declares things from a loose spirit, to let
all loose from under the yoke of Christ, the power of God, into
looseness and liberty.
“These likewise can judge and discern, who brings people into the
possession of the gospel of light and life, over death and
darkness, and into the truth, where the devil cannot get in; and
who brings them into the possession of death and darkness, out of
the glorious liberty of the gospel, and of Jesus Christ, his
faith, truth, Spirit, light, and grace. For there is no true
liberty, but in that; and that liberty answers the grace, the
truth, the light, the Spirit, the faith, the gospel of Christ in
every man and woman, and is the yoke to the contrary in every man
and woman. That makes it rage, and swell, and puff up; for it is
restless, unruly, out of patience, and ready to curse his God, and
that which reigns over him, because it hath not its will. It works
with all subtlety and evasion with its restless spirit, to get in
and defile the minds of the simple, and to make rapes upon the
virgin minds. But as they receive the heavenly wisdom, by which
all things were made (which wisdom is above that spirit,) through
this wisdom they will be preserved over that spirit.
“And Christ hath given judgment to his saints in his church,
though he be judge of all; and the saints, in the power and Spirit
of God, had and have power to judge of words and manners, of lives
and conversations, of growths and states, from a child to a father
in the truth; and to whom they are a savour of death, and to whom
they are a savour of life; who serve the Lord Jesus Christ and
preach him, and who preach themselves and serve themselves; and
who talk of the light, of faith, of the gospel, of hope, and of
grace, and preach such things; yet in their works and lives deny
them all, and God and Christ, and preach up liberty from that in
themselves to that in others, which should be under the yoke and
cross of Christ, the power of God. So the saints, in the power and
Spirit of Christ, can discern and distinguish, who serves God and
Christ, and who serves him not; and can put a distinction between
the profane and the holy. But such as have lost their eye-salve,
and whose sight is grown dim, lose this judgment, discerning, and
distinction in the church of Christ; and such come to be spewed
out of Christ’s mouth, except they repent; and if not, they come
to corrupt the earth, and burden it, that it vomits them out of
it.
“Therefore, all are exhorted to keep in the power and Spirit of
Christ Jesus, in the word of life, and the wisdom of God (which is
above that which is below,) in which they may keep their heavenly
understandings and discernings; and so set the heavenly, spiritual
judgment over that which is for judgment, which dishonours God,
and leads into loose and false liberty; out of the unity, which
stands in the heavenly Spirit, which brings into conformity to the
image of the Son of God, and his gospel, the power of God (which
was before the devil was,) and his truth (which the devil is out
of,) in which all are of one mind, heart, and soul, and come to
drink into one Spirit, being baptized into one Spirit, and so into
one body, of which Christ is the head; and so keep one fellowship
and unity in the Spirit, which is the bond of peace, the Prince of
princes’ peace. And they that cry so much against judging, and are
afraid of judgment, whether they be apostates, professors, or
profane, are the most judging with their censorious, false
spirits, and judgment; and yet they cannot bear the true judgment
of the Spirit of God, nor stand in his judgment. This hath been
manifest from the beginning, they having the false measures, and
the false weights; for none have the true measure and true weight
but they that keep in the light, power, and Spirit of Christ. And
now there is a loose spirit, that cries for liberty, and against
prescriptions, and yet is proscribing ways, both by words and
writings. The same spirit cries against judging, and would not be
judged, and yet is judging with a wrong spirit. This is given
forth in reproof to that spirit.”
G. F.
London, the 9th of the 4th Month, 1678.
When I had finished what service I had for the Lord at this time
here, I went towards Hertford; visiting Friends, and having several
meetings in the way. At HERTFORD I stayed some days, having much
service for the Lord there, both amongst Friends in their meetings,
and in conferences with such as having let in evil surmisings and
jealousies concerning Friends, stood in opposition to the order of
truth: and in answering some books written against truth and
Friends. While I was here, it came upon me to write a few lines, and
send them abroad amongst Friends, as follows:—
“DEAR FRIENDS,
“Let the holy Seed of life reign over death and the unholy seed in
you all; that in the holy Seed of the kingdom ye may all feel the
everlasting holy peace with God, through Christ Jesus, your
Saviour, and sit down in Him, your life and glorious rest, the
holy rock and foundation, that standeth sure over all from
everlasting to everlasting, in whom all the fulness of blessedness
is; so that ye may glory in Him that liveth for evermore, Amen!
who is your eternal joy, life, and happiness; through whom you
have peace with God. This holy Seed bruiseth the head of the
serpent, and will outlive all his wrath and rage, malice and envy;
who was before he and it were, and remains when he and it are gone
into the fire that burns with brimstone. The Seed, Christ, will
reign; and so will ye, as ye do live and walk in Him, sit down in
Him, and build up one another in the love of God.”
G. F.
Hertford, the 10th of the 5th Month, 1678.
Next day a fresh exercise came upon me, with respect to those unruly
and disorderly spirits, that were gone out from us, and were
labouring to draw others after them into a false liberty. In the
sense I had of the hurt and mischief these might do, where they were
given way to, I was moved to write a few lines to warn Friends of
them, as follows:—
“ALL FRIENDS,
“Keep in the tender life of the Lamb, over that unruly, puffed up,
and swelling spirit, whose work is for strife, contention, and
division, under a pretence of conscience, and drawing into
looseness and false liberty, dangerous to the welfare of youth.
They that do encourage them, will be guilty of their destruction,
and set up a sturdy will, instead of conscience, in their rage and
passion; which will quench the universal Spirit in themselves, and
in every man and woman: and so, that spirit shall not have liberty
in themselves, nor in others; thus they shut up the kingdom of
heaven in themselves, and also in others. So a loose spirit
getting up under a pretence of liberty of conscience; or a
stubborn will, making a profession of the words of truth in a form
without power, all looseness and vileness will be sheltered and
covered under this pretence, which is for eternal judgment: for
that doth dishonour God. Therefore, keep to the tender Spirit of
God in all humility, that in it you may know that ye are all
members of one another, and all have an office in the church of
Christ. All these living members know one another in the Spirit,
and not in the flesh. So here is no man ruling over the woman, as
Adam did over Eve in the fall: but Christ, the spiritual man,
among and over his spiritual members, which are edified in the
heavenly love that is shed in their heart from God, where all
strife ceases.”
G. F.
Hertford, the 11th of the 5th Month, 1678.
I went from Hertford to a meeting at RABLEY-HEATH, and thence to
Edward Crouch’s, of STEVENAGE. Next day to BALDOCK, where I had a
meeting that evening; and after that had meetings at HITCHIN and
ASHWELL. Then passing through part of BEDFORDSHIRE, where I had a
meeting or two, I went to HUNTINGDON, in which county I stayed
several days, having many meetings, and much service amongst
Friends; labouring to convince gainsayers, and to confirm and
strengthen Friends in the way and work of the Lord. At IVES, in
Huntingdonshire, George Whitehead came to me, and travelled with me,
in the work of the Lord, for five or six days in that county, and in
some part of NORTHAMPTONSHIRE; and leaving me in GREAT BOWDEN in
LEICESTERSHIRE, he went towards Westmorland. I stayed longer in
Leicestershire, visiting Friends at SADDINGTON, WIGSTON, KNIGHTON,
LEICESTER, SILEBY, SWANNINGTON, and divers other places; where I had
very precious meetings, and good service amongst Friends and other
people: for there was great openness, and many weighty and excellent
truths did the Lord give me to deliver amongst them.
At LEICESTER I went to the jail to visit the Friends that were in
prison there for the testimony of Jesus, with whom I spent some
time; encouraging them in the Lord to persevere steadfastly and
faithfully in their testimony, and not to be weary of suffering for
his sake. And when I had taken my leave of them, I spoke with the
jailer, desiring him to be kind to them, and let them have what
liberty he could, to visit their families sometimes.
I had a meeting or two in WARWICKSHIRE, and then went into
STAFFORDSHIRE, where I had several sweet and opening meetings, both
for gathering into truth and establishing therein. While I was in
Staffordshire, I was moved to give forth the following paper:—
“Dear Friends of the quarterly and monthly meetings everywhere: My
desire is, that ye may all strive to be of one mind in the Lord’s
power and truth, which is peaceable, and into which strife and
enmity cannot come; also in the wisdom of God, which is pure,
peaceable, and easy to be entreated, which is above that which is
below, that is earthly, devilish, and sensual; and that with, and
in this heavenly wisdom, you may be all ordered, and do what ye
do, to God’s glory.
“And, dear Friends, if there should happen at any time anything
that tends to strife, dispute or contention in your monthly or
quarterly meetings, let it be referred to half a dozen, or such a
like number, to debate and end, out of your meetings, as it was at
first, that all your monthly and quarterly meetings may be kept
peaceable. And then they may inform the meeting what they have
done; that the weak and youth amongst you may not be hurt, through
hearing of strife or contention in your meetings, where no strife
or contention ought to be; but all to go on, and determine things
in one mind, in the power of God, the gospel order: in which
gospel of peace ye will preserve the peace of all your meetings.
“If any man or woman have anything against any one, let them speak
to one another, and end it between themselves; if they cannot so
decide, let them take two or three to end it. In case these
determine it not, let it be laid before the church; and let half a
dozen, or such a number out of your monthly or quarterly meeting
hear it, and finally end it, without respect of persons. Let all
prejudice be laid aside and buried; also all shortness one towards
another; and let love, which is not puffed up, envies not, seeks
not her own, but bears all things, have the dominion in all your
meetings; for that doth edify the body, which Christ is the head
of; and this will rule over all sounding brass and tinkling
cymbals. This love will suffer long, and is kind; it will keep
down that which would vaunt itself, or be puffed up, or behave
itself unseemly, or is easily provoked; it hath a sway over all
such fruits, as are not of the Spirit, the fruit of which is love,
&c. And that with this Holy Spirit ye may all be baptized into one
body, and be made to drink into one Spirit; in which Spirit ye
will have unity, in which is the bond of the King of kings’, and
Lord of lords’ peace. They that dwell in love, dwell in God; for
God is love: therefore let every one keep his habitation. My love
to you in Christ Jesus, the everlasting Seed, which is over all.”
G.F.
Staffordshire, the 20th of the 6th Month, 1678.
Out of Staffordshire I went to visit John Gratton[52] at MONYASH in
DERBYSHIRE, with whom I tarried one night; and went next day to
William Shaw’s of the Hill in YORKSHIRE, where I appointed a meeting
to be on First-day following. Many Friends out of Derbyshire, and
from several meetings in Yorkshire, came, and a precious,
comfortable meeting it was; wherein was opened the blessed state of
man before he fell; the means by which he fell; the miserable
condition into which he fell; and the right way of coming out of it,
into a happy state again by Christ, the promised Seed.
I spent about two weeks in Yorkshire, travelling from place to place
amongst Friends in the Lord’s service; and many heavenly meetings I
had in that county. Then visiting Robert Widders, at KELLET, in
LANCASHIRE, I passed to ARNSIDE, in WESTMORLAND, where I had a
precious, living meeting in the Lord’s blessed power, to the great
satisfaction and comfort of Friends, who came from divers parts to
it. Next day I went to SWARTHMORE; and it being the meeting-day
there, I had a sweet opportunity with Friends, our hearts being
opened in the love of God, and his blessed life flowing amongst us.
I had not been long at Swarthmore, ere a concern came upon me to
visit the churches of Christ in London and elsewhere, by an epistle,
as follows:—
DEAR FRIENDS,
“To whom is my love in the heavenly Seed, in whom all nations are
blessed. O, keep all in this Seed, in which ye are blessed, and in
which Abraham and all the faithful were blessed, without the deeds
of the law; for the promise was and is to, and with the Seed, and
not with the law of the first covenant. In this Seed all nations,
and ye, are blessed, which bruiseth the head of the seed that
brought the curse, and separated man from God; this is the Seed
which reconciles you to God, this is the Seed in which ye are
blessed both in temporals and spirituals; through which ye have an
inheritance among the sanctified, that cannot be defiled, neither
can any defiled thing enter into its possession; for all
defilements are out of this Seed. This is that which leavens into
a new lump, and bruises the head of the wicked seed, which leavens
into the old lump, upon which the Sun of Righteousness goes down
and sets; but it never goes down and sets to them that walk in the
Seed, in which all nations are blessed: by which Seed they are
brought up to God, which puts down that seed which separated them
from God; so that there comes to be nothing between them and God.
Now, all my dear Friends, my desires are, that ye may all be
valiant in this heavenly Seed, for God and his truth upon the
earth, and spread it abroad, answering that of God in all; that
with it the minds of people may be turned towards the Lord, that
he may come to be known, and served, and worshipped; and that ye
may all be as the salt of the earth, to make the unseasoned
savoury.
“And in the name of Jesus keep your meetings, who are gathered
into it, in whose name ye have salvation; he being in the midst of
you, whose name is above every name under the whole heaven. So ye
have a Prophet, Bishop, Shepherd, Priest and Counsellor (above all
the counsellors and priests, bishops, prophets, and shepherds
under the whole heaven) to exercise his offices among you, in your
meetings, that are gathered in his name. For Christ’s meeting and
gathering is above all the meetings and gatherings under the whole
heaven; and his body, his church, and he the head of it, is above
all the bodies, churches, and heads under the whole heaven. And
the faith that Christ is the author of, the worship that he hath
set up, and his fellowship in the gospel, are above all historical
faiths, and the faiths that men have made, together with their
worships and fellowships under the whole heaven.
“And now, dear Friends, keep your men’s and women’s meetings in
the power of God, the gospel, the authority of them, which brings
life and immortality to light in you; and this gospel, the power
of God, will preserve you in life, and in immortality, that ye may
see over him that hath darkened, and kept from the knowledge of
the things of God: for it is he and his instruments which have
darkened you from life and immortality, that would throw down your
men’s and women’s meetings, and would darken you again from this
life and immortality, which the gospel hath brought to light, and
will preserve you, as your faith stands in this power, in which
every one sees his work and service for God. Every heir in the
power of God, the gospel, hath right to this authority, which is
not of man, nor by man; which power of God is everlasting, an
everlasting order and fellowship; and in the gospel is everlasting
joy, comfort, and peace, which will outlast all those joys,
comforts, and peaces, that will have an end; and that spirit also
that opposes its order, and the glorious fellowship, peace, and
comfort in it.
“And, dear Friends, my desire is, that ye may keep in the unity of
the Spirit, that baptizes you all into one body, of which Christ
is the heavenly and spiritual Head; so that ye may see and bear
witness thereto, and all drink into the one Spirit; which all
people upon the earth are not likely to do, while they grieve,
quench, and rebel against it; nor to be baptized into one body,
and to keep the unity of the Spirit, which is the bond of peace,
yea, the King of kings’ and Lord of lords’ peace; which it is the
duty of all true Christians to keep, who are inwardly united to
Christ. My love to you all in the everlasting Seed.”
G. F.
Swarthmore, the 26th of the 7th Month, 1678.
There were about this time several Friends in prison for bearing
testimony to the truth, to whom I was moved to write a few lines, to
comfort, strengthen, and encourage them in their sufferings; having
a true sense of their sufferings upon my spirit, sympathizing with
them therein. That which I wrote was after this manner:—
“MY DEAR FRIENDS,
“Who are sufferers for the Lord Jesus’ sake, and for the testimony
of his truth; the Lord God Almighty with his power uphold and
support you in all your trials and sufferings, and give you
patience and content in his will, that ye may stand valiant for
Christ and his truth upon the earth, over the persecuting and
destroying spirit, which makes to suffer, in Christ (who bruises
his head) in whom ye have both election and salvation. For his
elect’s sake the Lord hath done much from the foundation of the
world; as may be seen throughout the Scriptures of truth. They
that touch them touch the apple of God’s eye; they are so tender
to him; and therefore it is good for all God’s suffering children
to trust in the Lord, and to wait upon him: for they shall be as
Mount Sion, that cannot be removed from Christ, their rock and
salvation, who is the foundation of all the elect of God, of the
prophets and the apostles, and of God’s people now, and to the
end. Glory to the Lord and the Lamb over all! Remember my dear
love to all Friends, and do not think the time long; for all time
is in the Father’s hand, his power. Therefore keep the word of
patience, and exercise that gift; and the Lord strengthen you in
your sufferings, in his Holy Spirit of Faith. Amen.”
G.F.
Swarthmore, the 5th of the 12th Month, 1678.
I abode in the North at this time above a year, having service for
the Lord amongst Friends there, and being much taken up in writing
in answer to books published by adversaries; and for opening the
principles and doctrines of truth to the world, that they might come
to have a right understanding thereof, and be gathered thereunto.
Several epistles also to Friends I wrote in this time, on divers
occasions; one was to the Yearly Meeting of Friends held in London
this year, 1679, a copy of which here follows:—
“MY DEAR FRIENDS AND BRETHREN,
“Who are assembled together in the name and power of the Lord
Jesus Christ; grace, mercy, and peace from God the Father, and
from the Lord Jesus Christ, fill all your hearts, and establish
you in his grace, mercy, and peace upon Christ, the holy, living
Rock and Foundation, who is the First and Last, and over all the
rocks and foundations in the whole world; a Rock and Foundation of
life for all the living to build upon, which stands sure in his
heavenly, divine light, which is the life in Him, by whom all
things were made: who is the precious stone laid in Zion (and not
in the world), which all the wise master-builders rejected, who
pretended to build people up to heaven with the words of the
prophets, and the law from Mount Sinai, but out of the life of
both. Such builders therefore could not receive the law of life
from Christ, the precious Stone laid in Sion, nor the word from
heavenly Jerusalem. But you, my dear Friends, that have received
this law from heavenly Sion, and the word from heavenly Jerusalem,
in the new covenant, where the life and substance is enjoyed, you
see the end and abolishing of the Jews’ law and ceremonies from
Mount Sinai.
“And therefore, my desire is, that you all may keep in the law of
life and love, which ye have in Christ Jesus, by which love the
body is edified, knit, and united together to Christ Jesus, the
Head. This love beareth all things, and fulfils the law; and it
will preserve all in humility, to be of one mind, heart, and soul;
so that all may come to drink into that one Spirit that doth
baptize and circumcise them; plunging down and cutting off the
body of the sins of the flesh, that is gotten up in man and woman
by their transgressing of God’s commands. So that in this holy,
pure spirit, all may serve and worship the pure God in Spirit and
in truth, which is over all the worships that are out of God’s
Spirit and his truth. In this Spirit ye will all have a spiritual
unity and fellowship, over all the fellowships of the unclean
spirits which are out of truth in the world. By this holy Spirit
all your hearts, minds, and souls, may be knit together to Christ,
from whence it comes; and by the grace and truth which is come by
Jesus Christ, which all should be under the teachings of in the
new covenant, and not under the law, as the outward Jews were in
the old covenant—by this grace and truth in the new covenant, all
may be made God’s free men and women, to serve God in the new
life, and in the new and living way; showing forth the fruits of
the new heart and new spirit, in the new covenant, over death and
darkness; glory be unto the Lord for ever!
“Now, Friends, in this grace and truth is your heavenly, gracious,
and true liberty to every spiritual mind, that makes you free from
him that is out of truth, where your bondage was; also your
liberty in the holy, divine, and precious faith, which gives you
victory over that which once separated you from God and Christ,
and by which faith ye have access to God again, through Jesus
Christ. So in this divine and holy faith, ye have divine, holy,
and precious liberty, yea, and victory over him that separated you
from God: and this faith is held in a pure conscience. So the
liberty in the Spirit of God, is in that which baptizes and
plunges down sin and iniquity, and puts off the body of death and
of the sins of the flesh, that is gotten up by transgressing God’s
command. And also the liberty of the gospel, which is sent from
heaven by the Holy Ghost, which is the power of God, which was,
and is again to be, preached to all nations: in this gospel (the
power of God, which is over the power of Satan,) is the true
liberty, and the gospel-fellowship and order. So that the evil
spirit or conscience, or false, dead faith, and that which is
ungracious and out of truth, and not in the Spirit of God, nor in
his gospel, nor in the divine faith, its liberty is in the
darkness: for all the true liberty is in the gospel, and in the
truth that makes free; in the faith, in the grace, and in Christ
Jesus, who destroys the devil and his works, that hath brought all
mankind into bondage. So in this heavenly, peaceable Spirit, and
truth, and faith, which works by love, and in the gospel of peace,
and in Christ Jesus, is all the saints’ peace, and pure, true, and
holy liberty; in which they have salt, and sense, feeling,
discerning, and savour, yea, unity and fellowship one with
another, and with the Son and the Father, heavenly eternal
fellowship. So all being subject to the grace, and truth, to the
faith, and gospel (the power of God,) and to his good Spirit; in
this they distinguish all true, pure, and holy liberty, from that
which is false. This will bring all to sit low: for patience runs
the race, and the Lamb must have the victory; and not the rough,
unruly, and vain talkers, unbaptized, uncircumcised, and
unsanctified. Such travel not in the way of regeneration, but in
the way of unregeneration; neither go they down into death with
Christ by baptism; and therefore such are not like to reign with
him in his resurrection, who are not buried with him in baptism.
Therefore, all must go downward into the death of Christ, and be
crucified with him, if they will arise, and follow him in the
regeneration, before they come to reign with him.
“And, Friends, many may have precious openings; but I desire all
may be comprehended in that thing which doth open to them; and
that they may all keep in the daily cross; then they keep in the
power, that kills and crucifies that, which would lead them
amongst the beasts and goats, to leaven them into their rough,
unruly spirit; that through the cross, the power of God, _that_
may be crucified, and they in the power may follow the Lamb. For
the power of God keeps all in order, subjection, and humility—in
that which is lovely and virtuous, decent, comely, temperate, and
moderate; so that their moderation appears to all men. My desire
is, that all your lights may shine, as from a city set upon a
hill, that cannot be hid; and that ye may be the salt of the
earth, to salt and season it, and make it savoury to God, and you
all seasoned with it. Then all your sacrifices will be a sweet
savour to the Lord, and ye will be as the lilies and roses, and
garden of God, which gives a sweet smell unto him; whose garden is
preserved by his power, the hedge, that hedges out all the unruly
and unsavoury, and the destroyers and hurters of the vines, buds,
and plants, and God’s tender blade, which springs up from his Seed
of life; who waters it with his heavenly water, and word of life
continually, that they may grow and be fruitful; that so he may
have a pleasant and fruitful garden. Here all are kept fresh and
green, being watered every moment with the everlasting, holy water
of life, from the Lord, the fountain.
“My dear Friends, my desire is, that this heavenly Seed, that
bruises the head of the serpent, both within and without, may be
all your crown and life, and ye in him, one another’s crown and
joy, to the praise of the Lord God over all, blessed for evermore!
This holy Seed will outlast and wear out all that which the evil
seed, since the fall of man, has brought forth and set up. As
every one hath received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in him in
the humility which he teaches; and shun the occasions of strife,
vain janglings, and disputings with men of corrupt minds, who are
destitute of the truth: for the truth is peaceable, and the gospel
is a peaceable habitation in the power of God; his wisdom is
peaceable and gentle, and his kingdom stands in peace. O, his
glory shines over all his works! and in Christ Jesus, who is not
of the world, ye will have peace, yea, a peace that the world
cannot take away: for the peace which ye have from him, was before
the world was, and will be when it is gone. This keeps all in
that, which is weighty and substantial, over all chaff. Glory to
the Lord God over all for ever and ever! Amen.
“And now, my dear Friends, the Lord doth require more of you than
he doth of other people; because he hath committed more to you. He
requires the fruits of his Spirit, of the Light, of the Gospel, of
the Grace, and of the Truth; for herein is he glorified (as Christ
said,) in your bringing forth much fruit—fruits of righteousness,
holiness, godliness, virtue, truth, and purity; so that ye may
answer that which is of God in all people. Be valiant for his
everlasting, glorious gospel, in God’s Holy Spirit and truth;
keeping in unity, and in the Holy Spirit, Light, and Life, which
is over death and darkness, and was before death and darkness
were. In this Spirit ye have the bond of peace, which cannot be
broken, except ye go from the Spirit; and then ye lose this unity
and bond of peace, which ye have from the Prince of Peace.
“The world also expects more from Friends than from other people;
because you profess more. Therefore you should be more just than
others in your words and dealings, and more righteous, holy, and
pure in your lives and conversations; so that your lives and
conversations may preach. For the world’s tongues and mouths have
preached long enough; but their lives and conversations have
denied what their tongues have professed and declared.
“And, dear Friends, strive to excel one another in virtue, that ye
may grow in love, that excellent way which unites all to Christ
and God. Stand up for God’s glory, and mind that which concerns
the Lord’s honour, that in nowise his power may be abused, or his
name evil spoken of, by any evil talkers or walkers: but that in
all things God may be honoured, and ye may glorify him in your
bodies, souls, and spirits, the little time ye have to live. My
love to you all in the holy Seed of Life, that reigns over all,
and is the First and Last; in whom ye all have life and salvation,
and your election and peace with God, through Jesus Christ, who
destroys him that hath been between you and God; so that nothing
may be between you and the Lord, but Christ Jesus. Amen.
“My life and love is to you all, and amongst you all. The Lord God
Almighty by his mighty power, by which he hath preserved all his
people unto this day, preserve and keep you all in his power, and
peaceable, holy truth, in unity and fellowship one with another,
and with the Son and the Father. Amen.”
G.F.
The 24th of the 3rd Month, 1679.
Divers other epistles and papers I wrote to Friends, during my stay
in the North; one was in a few lines, to encourage Friends to be
bold and valiant for the Truth, which, the Lord had called them to
bear witness to; it was thus:—
“DEAR FRIENDS,
“All be valiant for the Lord’s Truth upon the earth, which the
serpent, Satan, and the devil is out of; and in the truth keep him
out, in which you all have peace and life, and unity with God and
his Son, and one with another. Let the love of God fill all your
hearts, that in it ye may build up and edify one another in the
light, life, Holy Spirit, and power of God, the glorious
comfortable gospel of Christ, the heavenly Man, your Lord and
Saviour; who will fill all your vessels with his heavenly wine and
water of life; clothe you with his heavenly clothing, his fine
linen, that never waxeth old; and arm you with his heavenly
weapons and armour, that ye may stand faithful witnesses for God
and his Son, who is come, and hath given you an understanding to
know Him, and ye are in him. So walk in him, in whom ye all have
life and salvation, and peace with God. My love to you all in the
Lord Jesus Christ, in whom I have laboured; and God Almighty, in
his eternal power and wisdom, preserve you all to his glory.
Amen.”
G.F.
Swarthmore, the 29th of the 10th month, 1679.
The next day, having a sense upon me that some who had received the
Truth, and had openings thereof, for want of keeping low, had run
out therefrom, I was moved to give forth the following epistle as “a
warning and exhortation to all to dwell in humility:”—
“MY DEAR FRIENDS,
“Whom the Lord in his tender mercies, hath visited with the day
spring from on high, and hath opened you to confess and bow to his
name; keep low in your minds, and learn of Christ, who teacheth
you humility, to keep in it; so that in no wise, ye that are
younger, be exalted, or puffed up, or conceited through your
openings, and by that means lose your conditions, by being carried
up into presumption; and then fall into despair, and so abuse the
power of God. For it was the apostles’ care, that none should
abuse the power of the Lord God; but in all things their faith was
to stand therein, that they all might be comprehended into the
truth, which they spoke to others, that they might not be
preachers to others, and themselves cast-aways. Therefore it doth
concern you to be comprehended into that, which ye do preach to
others, and keep low in it; then the God of Truth will exalt the
humble in his truth, light, grace, power, and Spirit, and in his
wisdom to his glory. Here all are kept in their measures of grace,
light, faith, and the Spirit of Christ, the heavenly and spiritual
Man.
“So let none quench the Spirit, or its motions, grieve it, or err
from it; but be led by it, which keeps all in their tents; which
giveth an understanding, how to serve, worship, and please the
holy, pure God, the Maker and Creator in Christ Jesus, and how to
wait, speak, and answer the Spirit of God in his people; in which
Holy Spirit is the holy unity and fellowship. The Holy Spirit
teacheth the holy, gentle, meek, and quiet lowly mind to answer
the seed, that Christ hath sown upon all grounds; and to answer
the light, grace, and Spirit, and the gospel in every creature,
though they are gone from the Spirit, grace, light and gospel in
the heart. So by holy walking all may come to do it, as well as by
holy preaching, that God in all things may be glorified by you,
and that ye may bring forth fruits to his praise, Amen.”
G.F.
Swarthmore, the 30th of the 10th Month, 1679.
About the latter end of this year I was moved of the Lord to travel
into the South again. I set forward in the beginning of the first
month, 1679-80; and passing through part of WESTMORLAND and
LANCASHIRE, I visited Friends at several meetings, and came into
YORKSHIRE. Divers large and weighty meetings I had in Yorkshire,
before I came to YORK. When I came there it was the assize time; and
there being many Friends in prison for truth’s sake, I put those,
that were at liberty, upon drawing up the sufferings of Friends in
prison, to lay before the judges; and I assisted them therein. There
were then in York many Friends from several parts of the county, for
the quarterly meeting was at that time; so that I had a brave
opportunity among them. Many weighty and serviceable things did the
Lord open through me to the meeting, relating to the inward state of
man, how man by faith in Christ comes to be grafted into him, and
made a member of his spiritual body; and also to the outward state
of the church, how each member ought to walk and act, according to
his place in the body. I spent several days in York, having divers
meetings; and all was peaceable and well. I went also to the castle,
to visit Friends that were prisoners; with whom I spent some time,
encouraging and strengthening them in their testimony.
Then leaving York, I travelled southward, having meetings in many
places amongst Friends, till I came to BARTON in LINCOLNSHIRE;
where, on First-day, I had a large and precious meeting. Then
turning into NOTTINGHAMSHIRE, I travelled through good part of that
county, in which I had several good meetings; and then passed into
DERBYSHIRE, LEICESTERSHIRE, and WARWICKSHIRE, having meetings all
along as I went, till I came to WARWICK; there William Dewsbury came
to me, and several other Friends, and we had a little meeting in
that town. Then passing through SOUTHAM and RADWAY, at each of which
places I had a very good meeting, I came to Nathaniel Ball’s, of
NORTH NEWTON in OXFORDSHIRE, and so to BANBURY to a monthly meeting
there. After I had visited Friends in the bordering parts of
OXFORDSHIRE, GLOUCESTERSHIRE, and NORTHAMPTONSHIRE, I passed to
Richard Baker’s[53] of BIDDLESDEN in BUCKINGHAMSHIRE; and next day,
being First-day, I had a very large meeting in Biddlesden, at an old
abbey house, which a Friend rented and dwelt in. Many Friends and
people came to it out of Oxfordshire, Northamptonshire and the parts
adjacent; and of good service it was. After this, I visited Friends
in those parts, having meetings at LILLINGSTON-LOVEL and BUGBROOK.
Then going to STONY-STRATFORD, I went from thence into some parts of
BEDFORDSHIRE, till I came to Edward Chester’s of DUNSTABLE. Passing
on by MARKET STREET, I had a meeting at ALBAN’S; and calling on
Friends at MIMS and BARNET, I came to the Widow Hayley’s, at
GUTTERHEDGE, in HENDON, Middlesex, on a Seventh-day night, and had a
very large and good meeting there the day following.
I passed thence to LONDON on the Third-day following, and went
directly to the Peel-meeting at John Elson’s; and next morning to
the meeting at Gracechurch Street, which was very large and quiet;
and Friends rejoiced in the Lord to see me. The Yearly Meeting was
the week following, to which many Friends came out of most parts of
the nation; and a blessed opportunity the Lord gave us together;
wherein the ancient love was sweetly felt, and the heavenly life
flowed abundantly over all. After the Yearly Meeting, I continued a
month or five weeks, in and about London, labouring in the work of
the Lord, both in and out of meetings; for besides the public
testimony which the Lord gave me to bear both to Friends and to the
world in meetings, I had much service upon me, with respect to
Friends’ sufferings, in seeking to get ease and liberty for them in
this and other nations. Much pains and time I spent, while in
London, in writing letters to Friends in divers parts of England,
and in Scotland, Holland, Barbadoes, and several parts of America.
After this I was moved of the Lord to visit Friends in some parts of
Surrey and Sussex. I went to KINGSTON by water, and tarried certain
days; for while I was there, the Lord laid it upon me to write both
to the great Turk, and the Dey of Algiers severally, to warn them,
and the people under them, to turn from their wickedness, fear the
Lord, and do justly; lest the judgments of God should come upon
them, and destroy them without remedy. To the Algerines I wrote more
particularly, concerning the cruelty they exercised towards Friends
and others, whom they held captives in Algiers.[54] When I had
finished that service, and visited Friends in their meetings at
Kingston, I went further into the country, and had meetings amongst
Friends at WORPLESDON, GUILDFORD, ESHER, CAPEL, PATCHGATE,
WORMINGHURST, BLETCHINGTON, HORSHAM, IFIELD, REIGATE, GATTON, &c.,
and so came back to KINGSTON again; and thence to HAMMERSMITH.
Having spent some days in the service of truth amongst Friends at
Hammersmith, BATTERSEA, WANDSWORTH, and thereabouts, I crossed over,
by KENSINGTON, to HENDON, where I had a very good meeting on a
First-day; and went thence to LONDON.
When I had been about ten days in LONDON, I was drawn again to visit
Friends in the country; and went to EDMONTON, to Christopher
Taylor’s, who kept a school for the educating of Friends’ children.
I had some service here amongst the youth; and then went towards
Hertford, visiting Friends on the way. At HERTFORD I met with John
Story, and some others of his party;[55] but the testimony of truth
went over them, and kept them down, so that the meeting was quiet.
It was on a First-day; and the next day being the men’s and women’s
meeting for business, I visited them also, and the rather, because
some in that place had let in a disesteem of them. Wherefore I was
moved to open the service of those meetings, and the usefulness and
benefit thereof to the church of Christ, as the Lord opened the
thing in me; and it was of good service to Friends. I had a meeting
also with some of those, that were gone into strife and contention,
to show them wherein they were wrong; and having cleared myself of
them, I left them to the Lord. Then, after another public meeting in
the town, I returned towards London by WALTHAM ABBEY, where I had a
public meeting on the First-day following; and another with Friends
in the evening. Next day I went to Christopher Taylor’s at EDMONTON,
and stayed there a day or two, having some things upon me to write,
which were for the service of truth. When I had finished that
service, I went to LONDON by SHACKLEWELL, where was a school kept by
Friends, for the bringing up of young women that were Friends’
daughters.
I abode at LONDON most part of this winter, having much service for
the Lord there, both in and out of meetings: for as it was a time of
great suffering among Friends, I was drawn in spirit to visit
Friends’ meetings more frequently; to encourage and strengthen them
both by exhortation and example. The parliament also was sitting,
and Friends were diligent in waiting upon them, to lay their
grievances before them. We received fresh accounts almost every day
of the sad sufferings Friends underwent in many parts of the nation.
In seeking relief for my suffering brethren I spent much time;
together with other Friends, who were freely given up to that
service, attending at the parliament-house for many days together,
and watching all opportunities to speak with such members of either
house, as would hear our just complaints. And indeed, some of these
were very courteous to us, and appeared willing to help us if they
could; but the parliament being then earnest in examining the Popish
plot, and contriving ways to discover such as were Popishly
affected, our adversaries took advantages against us (because they
knew we could not swear nor fight) to expose us to those penalties
that were made against Papists; though they knew in their
consciences that we were no Papists, and had had experience of us,
that we were no plotters. Wherefore, to clear our innocency, and to
stop the mouths of our adversaries, I drew up a short paper, to be
delivered to the parliament; as follows.
“It is our principle and testimony, to deny and renounce all plots
and plotters against the king, or any of his subjects; for we have
the Spirit of Christ, by which we have the mind of Christ, who
came to save men’s lives, and not to destroy them. We desire the
safety of the king and of all his subjects. Wherefore we declare,
that we will endeavour, to our power, to save and defend him and
them, by discovering all plots and plotters (which shall come to
our knowledge) that would destroy the king or his subjects. This
we do sincerely offer unto you. But as to swearing and fighting,
which in tenderness of conscience we cannot do, ye know that we
have suffered these many years for our conscientious refusal
thereof. And now that the Lord hath brought you together, we
desire you to relieve us, and free us from these sufferings; and
that ye will not put upon us to do those things, which we have
suffered so much and so long already for not doing; for if you do,
you will make our sufferings and bonds stronger, instead of
relieving us.”
G.F.
-----
Footnote 48:
For full particulars of the great intolerance and spirit of
persecution manifested by the Puritans of New England towards the
Quakers, the reader is referred to Bowden’s _History of Friends in
America_, vol. v., from the commencement to p. 308.
Footnote 49:
Thomas Ellwood is only mentioned twice incidentally in these
volumes. It was he who, after the death of George Fox, transcribed
his journal for the press. (See _Letters, &c., of Early Friends_,
p. 213.) He was also the author of several works, including _A
Life of David_, in verse; a work on tithes; a _Sacred History_,
&c. Ellwood was born in 1639, at Crowell, in Oxfordshire, and
joined Friends when about twenty years of age. Brought up in ease,
luxury, and fashion, he had much to learn; much to unlearn, much
to forsake, of the manners, the pride, and the will-worship of the
world; and to follow after that plainness and purity of life unto
which the spirit of truth leads. Nothing but religion could have
enabled one, with a disposition naturally so high and resolute as
his, to submit, as he did, to buffetings, beatings, cruel
treatment, and persecution, with becoming meekness and patience.
In 1662, Ellwood became the companion of the poet Milton, and it
was he who suggested to the latter the writing of _Paradise
Regained_. He had a peculiar gift for government in the church,
and was very serviceable therein; an ornament to the meeting he
belonged to, and much missed when he died. According to his
biographer, he was “a man of comely aspect, of a free and generous
disposition, of a courteous and affable temper, and pleasant
conversation; a gentleman born and bred; a scholar, a true
Christian, an eminent author, a good neighbour, a kind friend.” He
proved a very useful and acceptable elder in the church, devoting
nearly the whole of his time and talents to its service. He died
in 1713, and was buried at Jordans, leaving behind him a most
interesting autobiography, to which the reader is referred for
further particulars.
Footnote 50:
This being the last mention of Stephen Smith, it may be added,
that he was born in 1623, and being convinced in 1665, suffered
both in person and estate by imprisonment and spoiling of goods,
for his testimony on behalf of Christ. He was a man of account in
the world, who, in his younger years, travelled much abroad,
having resided some time at Scanderoon, in Syria, as a merchant,
and afterwards published a work called, _Wholesome Advice and
Information_, wherein he shows how much some of the Turks exceeded
some Christians in their dealings.
He was an honest, upright man, one that feared God and was of good
report, being a preacher of righteousness in his daily conduct,
ever ready to do good. He became a valiant gospel minister, and
spoke to the comfort and encouragement of those that heard him,
travelling in many parts of England in gospel service. He died in
peace at his own house, near Guildford, in Surrey, in 1678. He
wrote many serviceable works, which were collected and published
in an 8vo volume, entitled, _The True Light Discovered to all who
Desire to Walk in the Day_.
Footnote 51:
Lady Conway was a person of great piety, and a favourer of
Friends. In a letter to the learned and excellent Dr. Henry More,
who was her particular friend, she thus expresses herself
concerning them:—
“Your conversation with them (the Friends) at London might be, as
you express it, charitably intended, like that of a physician
frequenting his patients for the increase or confirmation of their
health; but _I_ must confess, that _my_ converse with them is, to
receive health and refreshment from them.”—See Appendix to
Barclay’s second edition of _Isaac Penington’s Letters_, p. 311.
Footnote 52:
John Gratton was born about the year 1641. He was first brought
under religious conviction when he was a shepherd boy about eleven
years old, but he remained in a halting state till he attained to
manhood, after which he became more devoted in heart to the Lord.
He was brought into great grief on observing the instability of
some professed preachers of the gospel, in times of persecution.
In 1670 he began to preach among the Baptists, but soon left this
people because they also flinched in the day of trial, and
becoming convinced of the soundness of the principles held by
Friends, and seeing their constancy under suffering, he joined
them in 1671. The third time he attended a Friends’ meeting, he
spoke under the constraining influence of the Divine Spirit; and
he soon became an able minister of Christ. He often left his
temporal concerns to make apostolic visits to various parts of
Great Britain and Ireland. He also suffered imprisonment for about
five years and a half for the gospel’s sake. His residence was for
many years at Monyash, in Derbyshire, but in 1708 he removed to
Needham, and resided with a daughter, at whose house he died in
1711, aged 68—a minister about forty years.
Footnote 53:
Richard Baker is described as a man of circumspect life, and a
pattern of good works. He suffered cheerfully for Christ both the
spoiling of his goods and imprisonment of his body; and would
often say, “If people did but know the pleasure of godliness, they
would not live in the earth as they did.” He was a zealous
labourer, a vigilant watchman, a sharp reprover of evil, an
encourager of the good, and a faithful minister, endeavouring to
bring those he ministered to into an inward exercise of spirit
towards God, and to a greater acquaintance with, and subjection
to, the power of God. Concerning this he wrote a treatise
entitled, _A Testimony to the Power of God, being Greater than the
Power of Satan_.
He died in 1697, having often said in his last sickness, “All is
well,” and testified that the power and strength of God was with
him.
Footnote 54:
There appear to have been at this time a number of Friends at
Algiers, who had been captured. In the early times of the Society
many of its members were seafaring men; and to such, of whatever
religious profession, it was no uncommon thing to be taken at sea
by the Algerines or other _corsairs_, who continually scoured the
Mediterranean, and ventured occasionally beyond its limits to make
prize of merchant ships, and consign their crews to slavery.
Great care was exercised towards these captive Friends by the
Society, and efforts made for their redemption. They are mentioned
in the Yearly Meeting epistles of 1682-1687, and in most of the
succeeding ones. In the epistle of 1698 it is stated, “Divers of
our Friends who were captives at Mequinez, and suffered great
hardships there, are dead; and there yet remain five, for whose
ransom great endeavours have been used, but it is not yet
effected.” The epistle of the following year states, “Earnest
endeavours have again lately been used for the liberty of our
Friends, captives in Barbary, though not as yet obtained; and
there being at this time some negotiations on foot, by the
tenderness and care of the government, for the redemption of all
the English there; and though the persons in Barbary, employed
therein by Friends, do wait some time to see the effect of that,
yet we shall continue our further endeavours for their discharge,
and in the meantime take care to send them supplies for food, they
having little allowance in that country, of anything to support
their bodies, under the great severities of labour, and undeserved
stripes, that captives often endure.”
In the epistle of 1702 the conclusion of the Barbary captives is
stated, namely, that live Friends, being all who remained alive in
that long and sore captivity, _have been this year redeemed_,
whose ransom (including a Friend’s son from Pennsylvania) cost the
Society upwards of £480. The redeemed tenderly and gratefully
acknowledged Friends’ love and care of them.
Footnote 55:
A schism, of which Story and Wilkinson were at the head, is
frequently referred to in the writings of some of the early
Friends. It commenced and spread mostly in the north. There were,
however, those in London, Bristol, and some southern counties,
who, through ease and unwatchfulness, having lost their first love
and the discerning spirit, were deceived by a specious bait, and
became the cause of much exercise and trouble to their brethren.
The ground of difference was alleged by them to be, their
objection to those meetings for regulating the affairs of the
church, exercising a salutary discipline over its members; and
more especially against the establishment of women’s meetings,
which G. Fox and other Friends “were moved to set up.” They
stated, with a show of plausibility which gained some, chiefly the
looser sort, to their ranks, “That such meetings were needless,
some years having been passed in peace and unity without them; and
that every individual ought to be guided by the Spirit, and left
free to act; that meetings for discipline were a form, and the
exercise of that discipline an infringement upon individual
liberty.” Great endeavours were made for their enlightenment and
restoration. In 2nd Month, 1676, a meeting was held at Drawell,
which lasted four days, in which “many Friends laboured much for
their preservation, but they were too far gone in a separate
spirit to be reclaimed.” They, therefore, became out of unity with
the body who, “walking by the same rule, minded the same thing.”
They fell to jangling, and, after a while, the best among them
came to see how they had been deceived; and the rest, after having
had separate meetings, are said to have “vanished as snow in the
fields.”—_See_ Sewell’s _History_, folio edition, pp. 583, 584.
CHAPTER X.
1681-1683.—George Fox answers two envious books written
abroad—writes to magistrates to persuade them to
moderation—writes to the Quarterly Meetings—attends the judges
at Chambers, respecting a tithe-suit against himself and his
wife—George Fox had bound himself not to intermeddle with his
wife’s estate—this is shown to the judges in court, at which
they wonder—his counsel thereon founds an argument in his
favour—he again writes against the spirit of strife and
division in the church—writes to the magistrates who had
illegally condemned Friends upon _ex-parte_ evidence—writes
two papers respecting the choice of sheriffs—Friends are
interrupted at Gracechurch Street Meeting by a civil and
military force—George Fox writes divers books and papers in
support and defence of the Truth—the Spirit of God directed to
as the rule to distinguish between Truth and error, whereby
the evil of persecution may be avoided—an epistle to encourage
Friends under their sufferings, both from the outward powers,
and from false brethren—the laws are now more strictly
enforced against Dissenters—an epistle to Friends, commending
them to the power of God in themselves—writes to Friends
imprisoned at Denbigh, to console them in their sufferings,
and exhorting them to faithfulness—Friends are kept out of
their meeting-houses, and fined for speaking—a Friend is
speedily restored from a sudden illness, in a remarkable
manner, through the prayers of George Fox—persecution is now
hot, and George Fox writes to Friends not to risk the loss of
other people’s goods through their sufferings.
About this time I received two very envious books, written against
Truth and Friends; one of them by a doctor (so called) of Bremen, in
Germany, the other by a priest of Dantzic. They were both full of
gross falsehoods, and reproachful slanders. I found it upon me to
answer them both; and that I might not be much interrupted therein
by other business and company, I went to KINGSTON-UPON-THAMES, where
I wrote an answer to each of them; and also to some other scandalous
papers which had been printed and scattered about to misrepresent
Friends.
While I was there I wrote also the following paper, to persuade the
magistrates to moderation towards Dissenters, and take off their
edge to persecution. That it should have its full service, I
directed it—
“_To all the Rulers, Magistrates, and Law-makers in England,
Scotland, and Ireland, from the highest to the lowest; and to
all other Magistrates everywhere, in that which is called
Christendom; desiring their health, peace, tranquillity, life,
and salvation in Christ Jesus, the Lord of Glory, and Lamb of
God, who takes away the sins of the world, who is the King of
kings, and Lord of lords, to whom all power in heaven and in
earth is given; and who will reward every man according to his
words and works._
“You that bear the name of Christian magistrates, my desire is,
that you may all be found in Christ; and not only have the name,
but be made partakers of his divine nature; that ye may be not
only sayers, but doers of the word; not only professors and
talkers of Christ, but letting him rule in your hearts by faith,
and be walkers in Christ. For as his great apostle saith, ‘As
every one hath received the Lord Jesus Christ, so let him walk in
him; for in him there is peace.’ If all that profess Christ, did
walk in Christ, they would walk in peace, and be in unity; for the
apostle exhorted the Christians in his day to keep the unity of
the Spirit; which is the bond of peace, yea, of Christ the King of
kings’ peace. All Christians, who have the Scriptures, and are not
in this Spirit of Christ, are not in unity one with another; and
so have broken this bond of peace, which should knit and unite
them together. Likewise all that profess the truth of Christ,
should live in it; for it is peaceable, and the gospel is the
gospel of peace; which, if all Christians lived in, they would be
at peace one with another, and in the glorious fellowship of the
gospel. And if all Christians kept in the fear of God, which is
the beginning of the pure, heavenly peaceable, and gentle wisdom,
which is easy to be entreated (above that wisdom which is earthly,
sensual, devilish, and destroying), there would be no difference
and destroying about matters of religion.
“I do declare the mighty day of the Lord is come and coming; and
the Lord God is come to teach his people himself by his Son, Heb.
i., who bruises the serpent’s head, that false teacher, that led
Adam and Eve from God their Teacher. God will teach his people by
his Son, who was the Teacher of Adam and Eve in paradise, before
they fell and disobeyed the Lord, forsook him, and followed the
serpent; whose head Christ bruises, and renews man and woman up
again into the image of God, which Adam and Eve were in before
they fell: glory and honour be to God through Jesus Christ, who
hath called us by his Son into his glorious image, to serve and
worship him in Spirit and truth; which Holy Spirit and truth the
devil is out of, and into which he cannot come.
“I desire all Christian magistrates to take heed of persecuting
any, though they differ from you in matters of faith, worship, and
religion. For Christ saith, ‘Let the tares and the wheat grow
together till the harvest:’ and he forbade such as would be
plucking up tares: the reason was, ‘lest they should pluck up the
wheat also;’ for Christ said, it should be his angels’ work, to
separate the tares from the wheat. Moreover, Christ said, they
should go into everlasting punishment that did not visit him in
prison in his members; then what will become of them that cast him
into prison, where he is made manifest in his members! O, lay
these things to heart! A day of judgment will come, vengeance and
recompense upon every one according to his works.
“To those disciples who would have had fire to come down from
heaven to consume them that would not receive them, Christ turned
him about, rebuked them, and told them, ‘they knew not what spirit
they were of; for he came not to destroy men’s lives, but to save
them.’
“Therefore let all magistrates and priests in that which is called
Christendom, consider who have destroyed men’s lives since the
apostles’ days, because they could not receive the religions,
ways, and worships which they have made and set up: have they
known what spirit they have been of? Are they not all reproved by,
and come under the judgment of Christ? Therefore let all
persecution be laid aside concerning religion; let love bear the
sway, to overcome evil and enemies; and let patience oversway
passion in all, that all may retain the heavenly reason, and the
pure understanding,—that your moderation in true Christianity may
be known to all men. For have you not the Turks, Jews, Tartars,
Indians, and atheists’ eyes upon you, and upon Christendom?
Therefore be in unity, and let not the name of God and Christ be
blasphemed amongst them by means of any that bear the name of
Christians. So God may be glorified by all and in all, through
Jesus Christ, who is over all, who calls all to peace, and is
blessed for ever.
“I would have you to be as noble as the Bereans, and search the
Scriptures of Christ and the apostles. Where did he or they give
any command to imprison, banish, persecute, or put to death, any
that would not receive or conform to them, or that were
contrary-minded to them in religion, or differed from them in
matters of worship?
“Again, I desire all Christian magistrates to search both
Scriptures and Chronicles, and see what was the end of all
persecutors, and what judgments came upon them. What came to Cain,
who was the first persecutor for matters of faith and sacrifice?
Did not he become a vagabond and a fugitive in the earth? What
became of the old world, that grieved God, and Noah, a preacher of
righteousness? What became of Sodom, that vexed just Lot? What
became of Pharaoh, that persecuted God’s people in Egypt (though
the more he persecuted them the more they grew?) What became of
Ahab and Jezebel, that persecuted the Lord’s prophets? And what
became of Haman, that would have destroyed the Jews? What became
of the Jews and Jerusalem, that persecuted Christ and the
apostles? What was the end of all these? Are they not become
vagabonds in the earth, and driven away from their native country?
Therefore I beseech you in the love and fear of God, be so noble
as to search both Scripture and history, and let not your divine
understanding be clouded. What will become of the beast and whore
spoken of in the Revelations, with their false prophets, that have
drunk the blood of the saints, martyrs, and prophets of Jesus?
Must they not all go with the devil, who is a murderer, destroyer,
and adversary of mankind, into the lake of fire, that burns with
brimstone? And ye may be sure that spirit that stirs you up to
persecution, let it be in whomsoever it will, is not of Christ,
and of his lamb-like nature; who takes away the sins of the world,
not the lives of men.
“Paul was a persecutor, and a haler to prison, before he was
converted to Christianity; but never after. And therefore, are not
all in Saul’s nature, let them be of what name or profession
soever, that are persecutors, and unconverted into Paul’s life of
Christianity? He said, the life that he lived after he was
converted, was ‘by the faith of the Son of God;’ and that he
lived, yet not he, but ‘Christ lived in him,’ who came to save
men’s lives, and not to destroy them. This life should be the life
of all Christians now, which Paul in his converted state lived in.
And the apostle saith, ‘The law is good if a man use it lawfully;
knowing this, that the law is not made for a righteous man, but
for the lawless and disobedient, for the ungodly, and for sinners,
for unholy and profane, for murderers of fathers and murderers of
mothers, for manslayers, for whoremongers, for them that defile
themselves with mankind, for men-stealers, for liars, and for
perjured persons,’ 1 Tim. i. 8-10. So the law, in its place, is
good against such.
“Again the apostle says, ‘The law was added because of
transgression,’ Gal. iii. 19. Here all magistrates may see what
the law in its place is good against; what it was made for and
against; and what evils, the apostle says, it takes hold of. He
does not say the law should be laid upon men that differed from
them in their religion and judgment, nor upon righteous men. So
you may see in what condition the law is good, and what it was
made against; not against righteous men, against whom ye have
nothing in their lives and conversations, only because they differ
from you in matters of religion; letting manslayers, whoremongers,
perjured persons, ungodly, profane persons, liars, &c., go
unpunished; such do not use, nor execute the law lawfully, as the
apostle says, ‘The law is good, if a man use it lawfully.’
Therefore it ought to be used lawfully; which law, the apostle
says, ‘is for the punishment of evil-doers, and a praise for them
that do well;’ as may be seen, Rom. xiii. So, as the apostle said,
‘We do not break the law, nor make it void; but we establish the
law,’ (Rom. iii. 31.)
“This is from him who desires the eternal good and salvation of
you all in Christ Jesus. Amen.”
G. F.
Kingston-upon-Thames, the 4th of the 1st Month, 1680-1.
After I had finished these services I returned to LONDON, where I
stayed about a month, labouring amongst Friends in the work of the
Lord, both in public meetings for worship, and in those relating to
the outward affairs of the church. Then feeling my spirit drawn to
visit Friends about Enfield, I went to WALTHAM ABBEY, where I had a
very precious meeting; and another at FLAMSTEAD HEATH. Having spent
some time among Friends thereabouts, and had divers good meetings at
EDMONTON, ENFIELD, WINCHMORE-HILL, and other places, I came back to
LONDON a little before the Yearly Meeting, which was in the 3rd
month, 1681. It was a very precious time, in which the glorious
presence and power of the Lord was eminently felt and enjoyed.
Some time after the Yearly Meeting it came upon me to write the
following epistle:—
“_To the Men’s and Women’s Quarterly Meetings that are gathered in
the name and power of Jesus._”
“Christ, the second Adam, who is both Head and Husband of his
church, the Redeemer, Purchaser, Saviour, Sanctifier, and
Reconciler of his sons and daughters (his church) to God, I say,
his presence (to wit, Christ’s) feel among you, to exercise his
prophetical office, in opening you with his light, grace, truth,
power, and Spirit; and to exercise his office, as he is a Bishop,
to oversee you with his light, grace, power, and Spirit, that ye
do not go astray from God. And as Christ is a Shepherd, feel, see,
and hear him exercising that office, who laid down his life for
his sheep, feeding them in his living pastures of life, and making
them to drink of his living, eternal springs. Let Him rule and
govern in your hearts, as he is King, that his heavenly and
spiritual government all may live under, as true subjects of his
righteous, peaceable kingdom, which stands in righteousness,
peace, joy in the Holy Ghost, over Satan and his power, and all
unrighteousness. So all ye subjects to Christ’s kingdom of peace,
if ye want wisdom, or knowledge, life, or salvation, Christ is the
treasure; feel Him the treasure among you. And all, as ye have
received Christ, walk in him, in whom ye have peace; who bruises
the head of the serpent, the author of all strife, distraction,
and confusion: yea, you have peace with God, and one with another,
though the trouble be from the world and the world’s spirit.
“Therefore, my dear Friends, brethren and sisters, love one
another with the love that is of God shed in your hearts; that ye
may bear the marks of Christ’s disciples, and it may appear that
Christ is in you, and ye in Him; so that God Almighty may be
glorified among you. Whatever ye do, let it be done in the name of
Jesus, to the praise of God the Father, keeping in unity in the
Holy Spirit of God, which was before the unholy spirit was: which
Holy Spirit is your bond of peace, yea, the Holy King of kings’
and Lord of lords’ peace. And in this holy, pure Spirit is your
eternal unity and fellowship; in which ye serve and worship the
God of Truth, who is over all, blessed for ever, Amen. So the Lord
guide you all with his Word of patience, life, power, and wisdom,
in all your actions, lives, conversations, and meetings, to God’s
glory. My love to you all in the Lord Jesus Christ, by whom all
things were made, and who is over all, the First and the Last.”
G. F.
London, the 9th of the 4th Month, 1681.
About this time I had occasion to go to several of the judges’
chambers upon a suit about tithes. For my wife and I and several
other Friends, were sued in Cartmel-Wapentake Court in Lancashire,
for small tithes, and we had demurred to the jurisdiction of that
court. Whereupon the plaintiff prosecuted us in the Exchequer Court
at Westminster, where they run us up to a writ of rebellion, for not
answering the bill upon oath; and got an order of court to the
sergeant, to take me and my wife into custody. This was a little
before the Yearly Meeting, at which time it was thought they would
have taken me up; and according to outward appearance, it was
likely, and very easy for him to have done it, lodging at the places
where I used to do, and being very public in meetings. But the
Lord’s power was over them, and restrained them; so that they did
not take me. Yet understanding there was a warrant out against me,
as soon as the Yearly Meeting was over, I took William Mead with me,
and went to several of the judges’ chambers, to speak with them
about it; and to let them understand both the state of the case, and
the ground and reason of our refusing to pay tithes.
The first I went to was Judge Gregory, to whom I tendered mine and
my wife’s answer to the plaintiff’s bill; in which was set forth,
that she had lived three and forty years at Swarthmore, and in all
that time there had been no tithe paid or demanded: and an old man,
who had long been a tithe-gatherer, had made affidavit, that he
never gathered tithe at Swarthmore-Hall in Judge Fell’s time, or
since. There were many particulars in our answer, but it would not
be accepted without an oath. I told the judge that both tithe and
swearing among Christians came from the Pope, and it was matter of
conscience to us not to pay tithes, nor to swear; for Christ bid his
disciples, who had freely received, give freely; and he commanded
them “not to swear at all.” The judge said, there was tithe paid in
England before Popery was: I asked him by what law or statute they
were paid then; but he was silent. Then I told him, there were eight
poor men brought up to London out of the North about two hundred
miles for small tithes, and one of them had no family but himself
and his wife, and kept no living creature but a cat. I asked him
also, whether they could take a man and his wife, and imprison them
both for small tithes, and so destroy a family; and if they could, I
desired to know by what law: he did not answer me, but only said,
“that was a hard case.”
When I found there was no help to be had there, we left him, and
went to Judge Montague’s chamber; and with him I had much discourse
concerning tithes. Whereupon he sent for our adversary’s attorney;
and when he came I offered him our answer. He said, if we would pay
the charges of the court, and be bound to stand trial, and abide the
judgment of the court, we should not have the oath tendered to us. I
told him that they had brought those charges upon us, by requiring
us to put in our answer upon oath; which they knew before we could
not do for conscience’ sake; and as we could not pay any tithe nor
swear, so neither should we pay any of their charges. Upon this he
would not receive our answer. So we went from thence to Judge
Atkyns’s chamber, and he being busy, we gave our answers and our
reasons against tithes and swearing to his clerk; but neither could
we find any encouragement from him to expect redress there.
Wherefore leaving him we went to one of the most noted counsellors,
and showed him the state of our case and our answers: he was very
civil to us, and said, “this way of proceeding against us was
somewhat like an inquisition.”
A few days after, those eight poor Friends that were brought up so
far out of the North, appeared before the judges; and the Lord was
with them, and his power was over the court, so that the Friends
were not committed to the Fleet. Our cause was put off till the next
term (called Michaelmas), and then it was brought before the four
judges again. Then William Mead told the judges that I had engaged
not to meddle with my wife’s estate. The judges could hardly believe
that any man would do so: whereupon he showed them the writing under
my hand and seal, at which they wondered. Then two of the judges and
some of the lawyers stood up, and pleaded for me, that I was not
liable to the tithes: but the other two judges and divers lawyers,
pressed earnestly to have me sequestered; alleging that I was a
public man. At length they prevailed with one of the other two
judges to join with them; and then they granted a sequestration
against me and my wife together. Thereupon, by advice of counsel, we
moved for a limitation, which was granted, and that much defeated
our adversary’s design in suing out the sequestration; for this
limited the plaintiff to take no more than was proved. One of the
judges, Baron Weston, was very bitter, and broke forth in a great
rage against me in the open court; but shortly after he died.
After the Yearly Meeting, I tarried about a month in London; and
then went into SUSSEX, to visit Friends there, amongst whom I had
many large and very precious meetings in divers parts of that
county. Yet I spent not much time now in Sussex, but returned pretty
soon to LONDON, whither I felt drawings in spirit; and had very good
service for the Lord there, both in public meetings and amongst
Friends. When I had tarried some time in London, I went to EDMONTON;
thence into BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, where I visited Friends at several
meetings in that county: and then went by HENLEY to READING, where I
tarried several meetings. I went no farther westward at this time
than to OARE, where I had a very large meeting; after which,
striking through the edge of OXFORDSHIRE, I had a large and very
precious meeting at WARBOROUGH, in which the glory of the Lord shone
over all. Many Friends came to it out of Berkshire, Buckinghamshire,
and Hampshire.
Thence I passed to ILMER in the vale of Buckinghamshire, where we
had a glorious meeting; and the day following I returned to Mary
Penington’s, visiting the men’s and women’s monthly meetings at
HUNGER-HILL, and some other meetings thereabouts; and then passed to
WATFORD, where was a marriage of two Friends, at which I was
present. A very large meeting we had on that occasion, and the
Lord’s power was over all. I went from Watford to LONGFORD in
MIDDLESEX, visiting Friends at UXBRIDGE in the way. At Longford we
had a large meeting on First-day, and the presence of the Lord was
preciously felt amongst us; blessed be his name! I passed from
Longford to KINGSTON, visiting Friends as I went, at STAINES and
SUNBURY. At Kingston I abode with Friends two meetings, wherein we
were sweetly refreshed together in the Lord. Passing thence towards
London, I had a very precious meeting at WANDSWORTH: then crossing
over to HAMMERSMITH, I had a good meeting there, which was larger on
account of a burial; and there being openness in the people, I had a
fine opportunity to open the way of truth amongst them.
After I was come to LONDON, I was moved to write the following
paper, concerning that spirit which had led some, who professed
truth, into strife and division, and to oppose the way and work of
the Lord:—
“FRIENDS,
“You that keep your habitations in the truth, that is over all,
see that it is the same spirit that leads the back-sliders and
apostates now, from the spiritual fellowship and unity of God’s
people, and the church of Christ, that led Adam and Eve from God,
and the Jews from God and his law, to rebel against his Spirit.
This spirit is the same that was in the world, which got into the
Jews, when they were gone from the Spirit of God; and then they
turned against God and his prophets, and against Christ and his
apostles. This spirit led them to be as bad as Pilate, or worse.
The enmity or adversary got within them against the truth, and
them that walked in it, and the Spirit of the Lord; so that they
killed and destroyed the Just. This was the spirit of the devil,
the destroyer, who sought not only to destroy the truth, but the
order of it, and them that walked in it, when true Christianity
was planted among the possessors of the light, grace, and truth,
and the holy gospel faith and Spirit, who enjoyed Christ in their
hearts. But when some began to err from the Spirit and faith, to
hate the light, disobey the gospel, turn the grace of God into
wantonness, walk despitefully against the Spirit of Grace, turn
from the truth, crucify to themselves Christ afresh, and put him
to open shame; these were they, that let in the spirit of the
world; who held the form of godliness, but denied the power
thereof; and troubled the churches in the apostles’ days. When the
spirit of Satan had got into such, they were more troublesome to
the church than the open persecutors that were without: these got
into the assemblies to deceive the hearts of the simple, having
the good words, fair speeches, and sheep’s clothing. Paul, Peter,
John, Jude, and James had much to do with such, to keep them from
troubling the church of Christ; for they are out of the light,
power, and Spirit; therefore the apostles of Christ exhorted the
saints to keep to the Word of life within; to the anointing; to
the grace, truth, and Holy Spirit in their hearts. This foul
spirit will profess all the Scriptures in words; but by the Spirit
of God, which is holy, this spirit is tried, and its fruits. So
the apostates went from the power and Spirit of God, and turned
against the prophets, and the martyrs of Jesus; and became the
whore, whose cup all nations drank of. The dragon with his tail
threw down many of the stars, and would have devoured the woman
with his flood; but the woman, the true church, was preserved; for
the gates of hell cannot prevail against her; and then the dragon
made war with her seed. So the dragon, the whore, the beast, and
false prophets, all made war against the Lamb and the saints; but
the Lamb and the saints will overcome them all, and will have the
victory.
“And now the everlasting gospel is preached again to all nations,
tongues, and peoples; and many are gathered into the gospel, the
power of God, are turned to the light, which is the life in
Christ, are grafted into him, and are come to walk in the order of
the new covenant of light and life, in the gospel of peace and
salvation. The same spirit that opposed the apostles and the
churches in their days, opposes now; yea, it is the same that
opposed Christ, and disdained him, that disdaineth God’s servants
now. The same that opposed the prophets, and rebelled against
Moses, opposes and rebels against God’s servants and people now.
It is the same dark, blind, disobedient, faithless, wilful,
jealous spirit, that persecutes some with the hands, and others
with the tongue. It is the same spirit of enmity, the adversary
and destroyer, that tempted Adam and Eve to disobey God, and
deceived them; which deceived the Jews and tempted them, and
deceived all those that went from the church in the apostles’
days. And it is the same spirit that is now going about sometimes
like a roaring lion, sometimes like a twisting serpent to tempt,
to deceive, and to devour, in those who have fair speeches, good
words, and sheep’s clothing, in a form of godliness, and under
pretence of light and liberty, but who deny the power thereof, and
inwardly are ravening wolves; and if it were possible, they would
deceive the very elect. But the elect are in the covenant of light
and life, and in the power of God over them, and in Christ, who
will grind them to pieces; and will slay all his enemies with his
spiritual sword, who will not have him to rule over, or in them.
“In Christ all his people have rest and peace, who is their
sanctuary over all storms and tempests. In Christ, the sanctuary,
no deceiver nor destroyer can come; for he is a place of sweet
rest and safety. Hallelujah! praise the Lord for his sanctuary.
Amen.”
G.F.
Sufferings continuing severe upon Friends at LONDON, I found my
service lay mostly there; wherefore I went but little out of town,
and not far; being frequent at the most public meetings, to
encourage Friends, both by word and example, to stand fast in the
testimony to which God has called them. At other times I went about
from house to house, visiting Friends that had their goods taken
away for their testimony to truth. And because the wicked informers
were grown very audacious, by reason that they had too much
countenance and encouragement from some justices, who, trusting
wholly to their information, proceeded against Friends without
hearing them; whereby many were made to suffer, not only contrary to
right, but even contrary to law also; I advised with some Friends
about it; and we drew up a paper, which was delivered to most of the
magistrates in and about the city; which was as follows:—
“Whereas informers have obtained warrants of some justices of
peace, who have convicted many of us without a hearing, or once
summoning us to appear before them; by which proceedings many have
had their goods seized and taken away, being generally fined ten
pounds each for an unknown speaker; and some of those persons so
fined, have not been at the meetings they were fined for; and the
speaker notwithstanding has himself been fined for the same
meeting, the same day the others were fined for the unknown
speaker. By this the justices may see the wickedness of these
informers, by whose false oaths we have been convicted for an
unknown preacher, when the preacher has been both known and fined.
Also in their swearing such persons to have been at such a meeting
such a day, when indeed they, whom they have so sworn against,
have not been at that meeting. By which proceedings several
families of the king’s peaceable subjects are likely to be ruined,
if a speedy stop be not put thereunto.
“Therefore we hope and desire, that you, the king’s justices, for
the time to come, when any informers shall come to any of you with
information against any of us, will summon such as are accused to
appear before you, and hear us and our accusers face to face; that
none for the time to come may suffer for that they are not guilty
of. For Pilate the governor heard Christ and his accusers, face to
face, before he condemned him, (John xix.) The council and chief
priests heard Stephen and his accusers, with the witnesses that
were brought against him, face to face, before they condemned him,
(Acts vii.) The Roman captain heard Paul and his accusers face to
face (Acts xxiii.) Felix the governor heard Paul, and Ananias the
high priest, and the elders that accused Paul, face to face (Acts
xxiv.) And when the high priests and chief of the Jews accused
Paul to Festus, he heard Paul and his accusers, and them that
witnessed against him, face to face (Acts xxv.) Doth the law of
God, or did the Roman law, or doth the law of the land judge any
man, before he and his accusers, and they that witness against
him, be heard face to face?”
This somewhat moderated the justices; and after this several
Friends, that had been illegally prosecuted and fined, entered their
appeals; and upon trial were acquitted, and the informers cast:
which was a great discouragement to the informers, and some relief
to Friends.
A little before the time for choosing new sheriffs for the city,
they who put up to be chosen desiring our Friends to give their
voices for them, I wrote a few lines, tending to discover what
spirit they were of, and how they stood affected to true liberty;
and it was by way of inquiry, thus:—
“Do any here in London, who stand to be chosen sheriffs, own that
Christ, that was crucified without the gates of Jerusalem, to be
the light of the world, that ‘enlightens every man that cometh
into the world,’ who saith, ‘Believe in the light, that ye may
become children of light?’ Are any of you against persecuting
people for their religion and worship of God in spirit and in
truth, as Christ commandeth? For Christ, said, ‘I am not of this
world, nor my kingdom;’ therefore he doth not uphold his spiritual
worship and pure religion with worldly and carnal weapons. Christ
said, ‘Swear not at all;’ and his apostle James saith the same;
but will not you force us to swear, and so to break Christ’s and
his apostle’s commands, in putting oaths to us? Christ saith to
his apostles, ‘Freely ye have received, freely give.’ Will not you
force us to give tithes and maintenance to such teachers as we
know God hath not sent? Shall we be free to serve and worship God,
and keep his and his Son’s commands, if we give our voices freely
for you? For we are unwilling to give our voices for such as will
imprison and persecute us, and spoil our goods.”
But whatever they were that stood to be chosen, I observed heat and
strife in the spirits of the people that were to choose; wherefore I
wrote a few lines to be spread amongst them, directed thus:—
“_To the People who are choosing Sheriffs in London._”
“PEOPLE,—All keep in the gentle and peaceable wisdom of God, which
is above all that which is earthly, sensual, and devilish; and
live in that love of God that is not puffed up, nor is unseemly;
which envieth not, but beareth and endureth all things. In this
love ye will seek the good and peace of all, and the hurt of no
man. Keep out of all heats, and be not hot-headed; but be cool and
gentle, that your Christian moderation may appear to all men; for
the Lord is at hand, who beholds all men’s words, thoughts, and
actions, and will reward every one according to his works; and
what every man soweth, that shall he reap.”
Now I had some inclination to go into the country to a meeting, but
hearing that there would be a bustle at our meetings, and feeling a
great disquietness in people’s spirits in the city about choosing
sheriffs, it was upon me to stay in the city, and go to the meeting
in Gracechurch Street upon the First-day of the week. William Penn
went with me, and spoke; and while he was declaring the truth to the
people, a constable came in with his great staff, and bid him give
over, and come down; but he continued, declaring truth in the power
of God. After a while the constable drew back, and when William Penn
had done, I stood up, and declared to the people “the everlasting
gospel, which was preached in the apostles’ days, and to Abraham;
and which the church in the apostles’ days received, and came to be
heirs of. This gospel, I declared, was sent from heaven by the Holy
Ghost in the apostles’ days, and is so now; and was not of man,
neither by man; but by the revelation of the Holy Ghost. And now
this gospel is preached again (as John saw, and said it should be)
to all nations, tongues, and people; and all people now are to hear
Christ the prophet, in this his gospel of the new covenant. For as
Moses said, ‘Like unto me will God raise up a prophet, and Him shall
ye hear in all things;’ so, said I, this prophet, Christ, is come,
and all the Jews in spirit, the true believing Christians in the
light, who have the law of God written in their hearts, and put into
their minds, are to hear Christ in his gospel, new testament, and
new covenant, which is the law of the spirit of life in Christ
Jesus, who bruises the serpent’s head (which is the head of enmity),
and makes free from the law of sin and death. I showed, that all
whom Christ quickens and makes alive, he makes to sit together in
the heavenly places in himself. So that they do not wander up and
down, like the fool’s eye, in the corners of the earth; nor are
their eyes abroad in the world, to sit down in the world’s invented
seats of religion; but they sit together in Him, as the saints did
in the apostles’ days. So Christ was and is their treasure of
wisdom, life, knowledge and salvation.”
As I was thus speaking, two constables came in with their great
staves, and bid me give over speaking and come down; but, feeling
the power of the Lord with me, I spoke on therein, both to the
constables and to the people. To the constables I declared, “that we
were a peaceable people, who meet to wait upon God, and worship him
in spirit and in truth; and therefore they needed not to come with
their staves amongst us, who were met in a peaceable manner,
desiring and seeking the good and salvation of all people.” Then
turning my speech to the people again, I declared what further was
upon me to them; and while I was speaking the constables drew out
towards the door; and the soldiers stood with their muskets in the
yard. When I had done speaking, I kneeled down and prayed, desiring
the Lord to open the eyes and hearts of all people, both high and
low, that their minds might be turned to God by his Holy Spirit;
that he might be glorified in all and over all. After prayer the
meeting rose, and Friends passed away; the constables being come in
again, but without the soldiers: and indeed, both they and the
soldiers carried themselves civilly.
William Penn and I went into a room hard by, as we used to do, and
many Friends went with us; and lest the constables should think we
would shun them, a Friend went down and told them, that if they
would have anything with us, they might come where we were, if they
pleased. One of them came to us soon after, but without his staff;
which he chose to do, that he might not be observed; for he said,
the people told him he busied himself more than he needed. We
desired to see his warrant; and therein we found, that the informer
was one Hilton, a North-countryman, who was reputed to be a Baptist.
The constable was asked, whether he would arrest us by his warrant
on that day; it being the First-day of the week, which in their law
was called the Lord’s day; he said, he thought he could not. He told
us also, that he had charged the informer to come along with him to
the meeting, but he had run away from him. We showed the constable
that both he and we were clear; yet to free him from all fear of
danger, we were free to go to the alderman that granted the warrant.
Then a Friend that was present said, he would go with the constable
to speak with the alderman; which they did, and came presently back
again, the alderman being gone from home. Seeing the constable in a
strait, and finding him to be a tender man, we bid him fix an hour
to come to us again, or send for us, and we would come to him. So he
appointed five in the afternoon; but neither came, nor sent for us;
and a Friend meeting him afterwards in the evening, the constable
told him, he thought it would come to nothing, and therefore did not
look after us. So the Lord’s power was over all; to him be the
glory!
On the Fourth-day following, it was upon me to go to Gracechurch
Street meeting again; for I had heard that they would come to break
it up that day. The neighbours, it seems, were informed so; a
justice had granted a warrant for that purpose, and the constable
told a Friend, that Hilton the informer had been with him about it.
The constable would have had the informer to go with him to the
meeting, but he would not; but would have the constable to go
without him; whether that put the constable by, I know not; but he
did not come. I was in a travail of spirit in the power of God, and
was moved in it to go to the meeting; and the Lord’s power chained
all down. Though they threatened to bring the red coats, none came,
nor was there any disturbance; but a glorious, powerful meeting it
was, and very peaceable. Glory, honour, and praises be to the Lord
over all for ever. Amen!
During the time I thus abode at London, as I had leisure between
meetings, and from other public services, I wrote divers books and
papers, some of which were printed, and others spread about in
manuscript. Of these, one was directed “To the bishops and others,
that stirred up persecution; to show them from the Holy Scriptures
that they did not walk therein according to the royal law, ‘to love
their neighbour as themselves, and to do to others as they would be
done unto.’”
Another was, “To all the several sorts of professed Christians, as
well Protestants as Papists, whose religion and worship stand in
outward observances and ceremonies; pressing them from those words
of the apostle Paul to the Galatians, chap. v. ver. 2-4, ‘Behold, I
Paul say unto you, that if ye be circumcised, Christ shall profit
you nothing. For I testify again to every man that is circumcised,
that he is a debtor to the whole law. Christ is become of no effect
unto you, whosoever of you are justified by the law; ye are fallen
from grace,’ to consider whether they, being gone back into legal
observations and shadowy ceremonies (in upholding tithes, offerings,
first-fruits, priests’ garments, outward altars, temples, lamps,
lights, &c., and in observing days, months, times, years, with many
other things commanded by the law), were not gone into the same
state that the Galatians were running into; and so were fallen from
grace, and become debtors to do the whole law.”
Another was, “To direct and turn all people to the Spirit of God,
that they might thereby receive a right understanding, and be able
to distinguish between right and wrong, truth and error; that under
pretence of punishing evil-doers, they might not themselves do evil
in persecuting the righteous.” That paper, being short, is here
inserted:—
“The Spirit of God, which he hath poured upon all, giveth an
understanding to all who are led by it; and to those who do not
quench the motions of it, it giveth knowledge and understanding to
distinguish good from evil, light from darkness, Christ from
antichrist, the old testament or covenant from the new, the old
way from the new and living way; the sheep and lambs from the
goats and wolves; the worship of God, which Christ set up above
sixteen hundred years ago, from the dragon’s and beast’s worship;
and all them that worship the works of men’s hands, and the
will-worshippers, from them that worship God in his Spirit and in
his truth, in which God’s people worship him; which worship is
over all false worships and worshippers. They who believe in the
light, which is the life in Christ, become the children of light,
and are the lambs of Jesus. These lambs follow the Lamb of God,
that taketh away the sins of the world; and they will not follow
the hirelings, nor the strangers, to be led into strange ways,
doctrines, religions, worships, and churches; for the lambs of
Christ follow Christ, the Lamb of God, and know his heavenly
voice. They know also, that they who are without Christ are dogs
and wolves, adulterers, idolaters, liars, and unbelievers, who
would devour the lambs; but these are in the hand of the Lord,
which is his power, that is over all. Such do good in his power
unto all; for they have the mind of Christ, who would have all to
come to the knowledge of the truth, and be saved. They that do
good to all, do hurt to none; for that spirit that doth hurt to
any, is not of God; but that spirit which doth good to all, and
especially to the household of faith, is of God. Christ came not
to destroy men’s lives, but to save them: it is the devil that is
the destroyer of men’s lives about religion, that corrupts men,
and makes them deaf and blind to the things of God, and to halt
out of God’s way. They that obey the evil one and forsake the
Lord, such the destroyer doth destroy; but Christ destroys that
destroyer; and in Christ all have life.”
G. F.
I wrote another paper also concerning meditation, delight, exercise,
and study; showing from the Scriptures of truth, what the true
Christians ought to meditate upon, and to exercise their minds in;
what they should take delight in, and what they should study to do.
For in these things, not the profane and loose people only, but even
the great professors of religion are very much mistaken; taking
delight in earthly, fading, perishing things; whereas they ought to
meditate on heavenly things, delight in the law of God after the
inward man, and exercise themselves to have always “a conscience
void of offence towards God, and towards men,” as the apostle Paul
did.
As sufferings continued very sore and heavy upon Friends, not only
in the city but in most parts of the nation, I drew up a paper to be
presented to the king; setting forth our grievances, and desiring
redress from him in those particular cases which I understood were
in his power. But not having relief from him, it came upon me to
write an epistle to Friends, to encourage them in their sufferings,
that they might bear with patience the many exercises that were
brought upon them, both from the outward magistrates, and by false
brethren and apostates, whose wicked books and filthy slanders
grieved the upright-hearted. This epistle I wrote at DALSTON,
whither I went to visit an ancient Friend that lay sick:—
“Friends and brethren in Christ Jesus, whom the Lord hath called
and gathered into himself, in him abide; for without him ye can do
nothing, and through him ye can do all things. He is your strength
and support in all your trials, temptations, imprisonments, and
sufferings, who for Christ’s sake are accounted as sheep for the
slaughter: in all these things we are more than conquerors,
through Christ who hath loved us. And therefore, Friends, though
you suffer by the outward powers, ye know that the prophets,
Christ, and the apostles, suffered by the unconverted. And though
ye suffer by false brethren and false apostates for a time, and by
their filthy books and tongues; whose tongues indeed are become no
slander, let them speak, write, or print what they will; for the
sober people even of the world hardly regard it: it is well they
have manifested themselves to the world, that their folly may
proceed no farther. Though, to the utmost of their power, they
have showed their wicked intent, to stir up the magistrates,
professors, and profane against us, and to speak evil of the way
of truth, God’s judgments will overtake them, and come upon them,
as sure as they have come upon those that are gone before them.
Let their pretence be ever so high, mark their end; for they will
fall like untimely figs, and wither like the grass upon the top of
the house. Though they may seem to flourish, and make a boast and
a noise for a time, yet the Seed is on the head of such, and will
grind them to powder; which Seed bruises the serpent’s head.
Therefore in this Seed, Christ, who is your sanctuary, rest,
peace, and quiet habitation, who is the First and the Last, and
over all, in Him walk; for the Lord taketh pleasure in his people
that are faithful, that serve and worship him. Therefore let the
saints be joyful in glory; and the God of peace, ‘the God of all
grace, who hath called us into his eternal glory by Jesus Christ,
after that ye have suffered a while, make you perfect, stablish,
strengthen, settle you.’ Cast all your care upon the Lord, for he
careth for you.
“And, dearly beloved, think it not strange concerning the fiery
trial that is to try you, as though some strange thing had
happened unto you; for it is better, if the will of God be so,
that ye suffer for well-doing, than for evil-doing: and rejoice,
inasmuch as ye are made partakers of Christ’s sufferings.
Wherefore let them that suffer according to the will of God,
commit the keeping of their souls to him in well-doing, as unto a
faithful Creator; for unto you is given, in the behalf of Christ,
not only to believe in him, but also to suffer for his sake. So it
is given, or is a gift from Christ, to suffer for his name; and
therefore rejoice, inasmuch as ye are made partakers of Christ’s
sufferings. If ye be reproached, or evil spoken of for the name of
Christ, happy are ye; for the spirit of glory and of God resteth
upon you: on their part he is evil spoken of, but on your part he
is glorified. Therefore, if any suffer as Christians, let them not
be ashamed; but let them glorify God on this behalf; though now
for a season ye are in sufferings, and trials, and temptations,
that the trial of your faith, being much more precious than that
of gold, which perishes, though it be tried with fire, may be
found unto praise, honour, and glory, who are kept by the power of
God, through faith, unto salvation. Therefore mind your Keeper,
wherever ye are, or what sufferings soever ye be in; and mind the
example of the apostle, how he suffered trouble as an evil-doer
unto bonds. But the Word of God is not bound, which is everlasting
and endures for ever; and they who are in that which is not
everlasting, and doth not endure for ever, cannot bind the Word.
The apostle said, I endure all things for the elect’s sake, that
they may also obtain the salvation, which is in Christ Jesus, with
eternal glory (mark, with eternal glory). And if we suffer with
Christ, we shall reign with Christ, who abide faithful.
“Therefore strive not about words to no profit, but shun profane
and vain babblings, for they will increase unto more ungodliness;
that ye may be vessels of honour, sanctified and meet for Christ
your Master’s use, and prepared unto every good work. Follow after
righteousness, godliness, faith, love, patience, and meekness.
Fight the good fight of faith with your heavenly weapons; which
faith is victory (or gives victory) by which ye lay hold on
eternal life, and have access unto God, ‘who will render to every
man according to his deeds; to them who, by patient continuing in
well-doing, seek for glory, and honour, and immortality, eternal
life; but unto them that are contentious, and do not obey the
truth, but obey unrighteousness, indignation and wrath,
tribulation and anguish upon every soul of man that doeth evil;
but glory, honour, and peace to every man that worketh good.’
Christ said to his disciples, ‘If the world hate you, ye know that
it hated me before it hated you. If ye were of the world, the
world would love its own; but because ye are not of the world, but
I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hateth
you.’ And, ‘If they have persecuted me, they will also persecute
you.’ And John, in his general epistle to the church, saith,
‘Marvel not, my brethren, if the world hate you. We know that we
have passed from death unto life, because we love the brethren.’
And Christ, in his prayer to his Father, saith of his followers,
‘As thou hast sent me into the world, even so have I also sent
them into the world; and the glory which thou gavest me I have
given them, that they may be one, even as we are one.’ And,
therefore, all ye that know God and Jesus Christ, whom to know is
eternal life, and are partakers of his glory, keep the testimony
of Jesus, and be valiant for his truth upon earth, that ye may be
all settled upon Christ, the rock and foundation.”
G.F.
Dalston, the 3rd of the 8th Month, 1682.
I made but little stay at Dalston, but returned to LONDON, where I
continued most part of the winter, labouring in the service of truth
amongst Friends; save that I was a little while at Kingston, in the
10th month of this year, where I wrote a book, setting forth “The
state of the birth temporal, and the birth spiritual; and the duty
and state of a child, youth, young men, aged men, and fathers in the
truth,” &c. But I stayed not long at Kingston, for the heat of
persecution still continuing, I felt my service to be chiefly at
London; where our meetings were for the most part disturbed and
broken up, or Friends were forced to meet without doors, being kept
out of their meeting-houses by the officers. Yet sometimes, beyond
expectation, we got a quiet and peaceable meeting in the houses. One
time I intended to go a mile or two out of town, to visit a Friend
that was not well; but hearing that the king had sent to the mayor
to put the laws in execution against Dissenters, and that the
magistrates thereupon intended to nail up the meeting-house doors, I
had not freedom to go out of town, but was moved to go to the
meeting in Gracechurch Street; and notwithstanding all the threats,
a great meeting it was, and very quiet; the glory of the Lord shone
over all.
The same week I went to the meeting at THE PEEL in John’s Street;
and the sessions were holden the same day at Hicks’s-Hall. I went to
The Peel in the morning; and William Mead being to appear at the
sessions-house for not going to the steeple-house worship, came once
or twice from Hicks’s-Hall to me at The Peel; which some ill-minded
people observing, went and informed the justices at the bench, that
he was gone to a meeting at The Peel. Whereupon the justices sent a
messenger to see if there was a meeting; but this being in the
forenoon, there was none; so the messenger, when he had looked
about, went back and told them. Then others informed the justices
that there would be one there in the afternoon; whereupon they sent
for the chief constable, and asked him “why he suffered a meeting to
be at The Peel, so near him?” He told them, “he did not know of any
meeting there.” They asked him, “how he could not know, and live so
near it?” He said, “he was never there in his life, and did not know
that there was a meeting there.” They would have persuaded him that
he must needs know of it; but he standing steadfast in the denial of
it, they said, “they should take order to have it looked after in
the afternoon.” But a multitude of business coming before them at
the sessions, when dinner time came, they hastened to it, without
giving order, and when they came to the bench again after dinner,
the Lord put it out of their minds, so that they sent no officer.
The meeting was quiet, beginning and ending in peace; and a blessed
one we had, the Lord’s presence being preciously amongst us. Many
Friends had a concern upon their minds, when they saw me come into
the meeting, lest I should be taken; but I was freely given up to
suffer, if it was the Lord’s will, before I went to the meeting; and
had nothing in my mind concerning it but the Lord’s glory. I do
believe the Lord put it out of their minds, that they should not
send to break up our meeting that day. Yet the First-day after,
three or four justices (as I heard) came to The Peel, and put
Friends out of their meeting there, and kept them out; and inquired
for William Mead,[56] but he was not there.
That day I was moved to go to GRACECHURCH STREET meeting; and it was
expected that the officers would come to break it up, or keep
Friends out; and many hundreds of people came to see what would be
done to us. But the officers came not; so we were in peace and
quietness; and many of the people that came to look on, stayed all
the time; and a glorious, precious meeting we had; for the Lord’s
presence was plentifully amongst us, and his power came over all;
glory to his name for ever, who is over all!
I had seen the mayor’s printed speech for putting the laws in
execution against Dissenters; and it was much in my mind that we
should draw up a paper to send to the mayor and aldermen, to clear
ourselves from being such, as those laws were made against; and to
set forth our peaceable behaviour both towards the king and the
government. Accordingly a paper was drawn up and signed, and
delivered to the mayor; copies of which were also delivered to the
aldermen, and the bishop of London, who generally took it kindly,
and were civil to the Friends that delivered it.
About this time I was moved to write the few lines following to
Friends:—
“DEAR FRIENDS,
“Feel the power of God in you all, and over all, and by it let
your hearts be united to one another, and to the Lord God who hath
gathered you to himself, by his power and Spirit, to be a people
to serve and worship him. So that you may all strive to excel one
another in virtue, and in that love that beareth all things, and
edifieth the body of Christ, the body of the second Adam. For the
body of old Adam in the fall is full of malice, envy, and vice.
Therefore you, that are called out of old Adam in the fall, and
have put on Christ, the second Adam, that never fell, walk in Him,
who is the treasure of life, wisdom, and knowledge, in whom ye
have peace with God, who is the First and the Last, the Beginning
and the Ending. So let all be gathered up to God, into Him who
reconcileth all things in one, both things in heaven and things on
earth; who is the faithful and true witness in male and female. In
Him sit down, who is above the subtle foxes in their holes, and
the fowls of the air in their nests; I say, sit down in Christ,
who hath no place among them to lay his head; He is your rest. So
in him is my love to you all,”
G. F.
London, the 20th of the 11th Month, 1682.
Not long after this, I received an account by letter, from some
Friends, that were prisoners at Denbigh, in Wales, that many Friends
there were under great sufferings, for the testimony of a good
conscience. In the tender sense whereof I was moved, in the love of
God, to visit them with a few lines, as a word of consolation to
them in their sufferings; and of exhortation, to stand fast in the
testimony committed to them, after this manner:—
“Dear suffering lambs for the name and command of Jesus: be
valiant for his truth, and faithful, and ye will feel the presence
of Christ with you. Look at Him, who suffered for you, who hath
bought you, and will feed you; who saith, ‘Be of good comfort, I
have overcome the world;’ who destroys the devil and his works,
and bruises the serpent’s head. I say, look at Christ, your
sanctuary, in whom ye have rest and peace. To you it is given not
only to believe, but to suffer for his name’s sake. They that will
live godly in Christ Jesus, shall suffer persecution by the
ungodly professors of Christ Jesus, who live out of him. Therefore
be valiant for God’s truth upon the earth, and look above that
spirit that makes you suffer, up to Christ, who was before it was,
and will be when it is gone. Consider all the prophets, Christ,
and his apostles, who suffered, and were persecuted; but they were
never persecuted as true men, but as deceivers, and yet true.
Christ is the same to-day as he was yesterday; a rock and
foundation for your age and generation, for you to build upon.
“I have written concerning you (since I heard your letter) to
Friends in Cheshire to visit you, understanding that you belong to
their quarterly meeting; and therefore I desire that some Friends
of your county would go, and lay your suffering condition before
the monthly or quarterly meeting in Cheshire. I have written
likewise to Richard Davies,[57] that some of that side may go and
visit you, and see what your condition is. My love is to you in
the Lord, who is your alone support.”
G. F.
London, the 27th of the 11th Month, 1682.
Now because the magistrates were many of them unwilling to have
fines laid upon meeting-houses, they kept Friends out in many
places, setting officers and guards of soldiers at the doors and
passages; yet sometimes Friends were fined for speaking or praying,
though it was abroad. One First-day it was upon me to go to
Devonshire House meeting in the afternoon; and because I had heard
Friends were kept out there that morning (as they were that day at
most meetings about the city), I went sooner, and got into the yard
before the soldiers came to guard the passages; but the constables
were there before me, and stood in the doorway with their staves. I
asked them to let me go in; they said, “they could not, nor durst
not; for they were commanded the contrary, and were sorry for it.” I
told them I would not press upon them: so I stood by, and they were
very civil. I stood till I was weary, and then one gave me a stool
to sit down on; and after a while the power of the Lord began to
spring up among Friends, and one began to speak. The constables soon
forbade him, and said he should not speak; and he not stopping, they
began to be wroth. But I gently laid my hand upon one of the
constables, and wished him to let him alone; the constable did so,
and was quiet; and the man did not speak long.
After he had done, I was moved to stand up and speak; and in my
declaration, I said, “they need not come against us with swords and
staves, for we were a peaceable people; and had nothing in our
hearts but goodwill to the king and magistrates, and to all people
upon the earth. We did not meet, under pretence of religion, to plot
and contrive against the government, or to raise insurrections; but
to worship God in Spirit and in truth. We had Christ to be our
Bishop, Priest, and Shepherd to feed us, and oversee us, and he
ruled in our hearts; so we could all sit in silence, enjoying our
teacher; so to Christ, their Bishop and Shepherd, I recommended them
all.” I then sat down; and after a while I was moved to pray, and
the power of the Lord was over all; and the people, the constables,
and soldiers, put off their hats. When the meeting was done, and
Friends began to pass away, the constable put off his hat, and
desired the Lord to bless us; for the power of the Lord was over him
and the people, and kept them under.
After this I went up and down, visiting Friends at their houses, who
had their goods taken from them for worshipping God. We took an
account of what had been taken from them; and some Friends met
together about it, and drew up the case of the sufferings of our
Friends in writing, and gave it to the justices at their petty
sessions. Whereupon they made an order, “that the officers should
not sell the goods of Friends which they had in their hands, but
keep them until the next sessions;” which gave some discouragement
to the informers, and put a little stop to their proceedings.
Next First-day it was upon me to go to the meeting at the SAVOY; and
by the time it was gathered the beadle came in; and after him the
wild people like a sea; but the Lord’s power chained them all. The
Spirit of the Lord went through and over all, and they were quiet,
and we had a glorious, peaceable meeting; blessed be the Lord for
his unspeakable goodness. This was in the 12th month, 1682.
In the 1st month, 1683, I went to KINGSTON-UPON-THAMES; and it being
then a time of persecution, as I went to the meeting, I met the
chief constable, who had been at the meeting-place, and had set
watchmen there to keep us out; yet he was pretty civil, and the
watchmen let Friends have a couple of forms out, to sit upon in the
highway; so we met together there, and a very precious meeting we
had; for the refreshing presence of the Lord was with us, in which
we parted in peace.
Having visited and encouraged Friends there, I returned to LONDON,
and went to the meeting at the Bull-and-Mouth, where the constables
with their watchmen kept a guard, to keep Friends out of the house.
So we met in the street; and when any Friend spoke, the officers and
watchmen made a great bustle to pull him down, and take him into
custody. After some other Friends had spoken, it was upon me to
speak; and I said, “Heaven is God’s throne, and earth is his
footstool; and will ye not let us stand upon God’s footstool to
worship, and serve the living God?” While I spoke they were quiet;
and after I had cleared myself, we broke up our meeting in peace.
This was on the Sixth-day of the week.
On the First-day following I was moved to go to the meeting at
GRACECHURCH STREET. When I came there, I found a guard set at the
entrance in Lombard Street, and another at the gate in Gracechurch
Street, to keep Friends out of the meeting-place; so we had to meet
in the street. After some time I got a chair, stood up on it, and
spoke largely to the people, “opening the principles of truth to
them, and declaring many weighty truths concerning magistracy, and
concerning the Lord’s prayer.” There were, besides Friends, a great
multitude of people, and amongst them many professors; all was very
quiet; for the Lord’s power was over all, and in his time we broke
up our meeting, and departed in peace.
The next day I went to GUILDFORD in SURREY; and having visited
Friends there, passed to WORMINGHURST in SUSSEX, where I had a very
blessed meeting among Friends, free from disturbance. While I was
there, James Claypole, of London (who was there with his wife also,)
was suddenly taken ill with so violent a fit of the stone, that he
could neither stand nor lie; but, through the extremity of pain,
cried out. When I heard it, I was much exercised in spirit for him;
and went to him. After I had spoken a few words to him, to turn his
mind inward, I was moved to lay my hand upon him, and prayed the
Lord to rebuke his infirmity. As I laid my hand on him, the Lord’s
power went through him; and through faith in that power he had
speedy ease, so that he quickly fell into a sleep. When he awoke, he
was so relieved and well, that next day he rode with me
five-and-twenty miles in a coach; though he used formerly (as he
said) to lie sometimes two weeks, sometimes a month, in one of those
fits. But the Lord was entreated for him, and by his power soon gave
him ease at this time; blessed and praised be his holy name
therefor!
After I had had some meetings in Sussex and Surrey, and had visited
Friends thereaway, I returned to London by KINGSTON, where I had a
meeting on the 1st of the 2nd month, being First-day. We were kept
out of the meetinghouse by a constable and watchmen, as before, and
so were obliged to meet in the highway. But it being the monthly
meeting day, and many people being there, the meeting was pretty
large, and very quiet; and the Lord’s blessed presence was amongst
us; blessed be his name for ever!
Being come to LONDON, I went to the meeting at WHEELER STREET, near
Spitalfields, which that day proved very large; and a glorious,
blessed time it was; for the Lord’s power and truth were over all,
and many deep and weighty things were opened to the people, to their
great satisfaction. I tarried in and near London, visiting Friends’
meetings, and labouring in the service of the gospel, till the
Yearly Meeting came on, which began on the 28th of the 3rd month.
It was a time of great sufferings; and much concerned I was, lest
Friends that came up out of the country on the church’s service,
should be taken and imprisoned at London. But the Lord was with us;
his power preserved us, and gave us a sweet and blessed opportunity
to wait upon him, to be refreshed together in him, and to perform
his services for his truth and people for which we met. As it was a
time of great persecution, and we understood that in most counties
Friends were under great sufferings, either by imprisonments or
spoiling of goods, or both, a concern was weightily upon me lest any
Friends that were sufferers, especially such as were traders and
dealers in the world, should hazard the losing of other men’s goods
or estates through their sufferings. Wherefore, as the thing opened
in me, I drew up an epistle of caution to Friends in that case,
which I communicated to the Yearly Meeting; and from thence it was
sent forth among Friends throughout the nation; a copy of which here
follows:—
“Dear Friends and brethren in the Lord Jesus Christ, who is your
only sanctuary in this day of storm and persecution, spoiling of
goods, and imprisonments! Let every one’s eye be unto him, who has
all power in heaven and in earth given unto him; so that none can
touch a hair of your head, nor you, nor anything ye have, except
it be permitted or suffered in this day, to try his people,
whether their minds be with the Lord, or in outward things. Dear
Friends, take care that all your offerings be free, and of your
own, that has cost you something; so that ye may not offer of that
which is another man’s, or that which ye are entrusted withal and
not your own, or fatherless’ or widows’ estates; but all such
things settle and establish in their places.
“You may remember many years ago, in a time of great persecution,
divers Friends, who were traders, shop-keepers and others, had the
concerns of widows and fatherless, and other people’s estates in
their hands. And when a great suffering, persecution, and spoiling
of goods came upon Friends, especial care was taken that all might
offer up to the Lord in their sufferings what was really their
own, and not any other people’s estates or goods which they had in
their hands; and that they might not offer up another body’s, but
that which they had bought and paid for, or were able to pay for.
Afterwards several letters came out of the country to the meeting
at London, from Friends that had goods of the shopkeepers at
London upon credit, which they had not paid for; who wrote to
their creditors whom they had their goods of, entreating them to
take their goods again. And some Friends came to London
themselves, and treated with their creditors, letting them
understand ‘that they lay liable to have all that they had taken
from them;’ and told them, ‘they would not have any man to suffer
by them: neither would they by suffering offer up anything but
what was really their own, or what they were able to pay for.’
Upon which several took their goods again. This wrought a very
good savour in the hearts of many people, when they saw such a
righteous, just, and honest principle in Friends, that would not
make any suffer for their testimony; but what they did suffer for
the testimony of Jesus should be really and truly their own, not
other people’s. In this they owed nothing to any, but love. So in
this every man and woman stands in the free offering, a free
people, whether it be spiritual or temporal, which is their own;
and in that they wrong no man, neither inwardly, nor outwardly.
Ornan said unto David, ‘I give thee the threshing-floor, &c., and
the oxen for burnt-offerings, and the threshing instruments for
wood, and the wheat for the meat-offering; I give it all.’ But
king David said unto Ornan, ‘Nay, but I will verily buy it for the
full price; for I will not take that which is thine for the Lord,
nor offer burnt-offerings without cost,’ 1 Chron. xxi. 22, &c. So
it should be his own; and so should it be every man’s that offers.
You may see here that David would not accept of another man’s gift
for an offering to the Lord; he would not offer up that which cost
him nothing; but what should be really his own, Psal. cxii. 5. ‘A
good man ... will guide his affairs with discretion.’
“Let this be read in your monthly and quarterly men’s and women’s
meetings.”
G.F.
London, the 2nd of the 4th Month, 1683.
-----
Footnote 56:
William Mead is often mentioned in these pages; and his trial,
along with William Penn, is alluded to in a previous note. Of his
life and ministry we have much less account than of most others of
note in his day. George Fox sometimes calls him his son, he having
married Sarah, a daughter of Judge Fell; George Fox’s wife being
her mother. Before his joining Friends, William Mead appears to
have been a captain in the army. In his remarks in court on the
term, _vi et armis_, during his trial, he observes, “Time was when
I _had freedom to use a carnal weapon_, and then I thought I
feared no man; but now I fear the living God, and dare not make
use thereof, nor hurt any man.” He died 1713, aged eighty-six.
Footnote 57:
Richard Davies—some account of whose life, written by himself, was
published after his decease, and a third edition of the volume in
1771—was convinced of the truth about the year 1657. He resided in
Montgomeryshire; and his life contains an interesting account of
the first spreading of truth in Wales. Richard Davies was a
faithful minister of the gospel, endued with spiritual gifts, and
serviceable in the exercise thereof in the churches of Christ;
sound in doctrine, and exemplary in conversation.
CHAPTER XI.
1683-1685.—A salutation of love to Friends, designed to stir up
the pure mind—an epistle to Friends commending them to
Christ, the rock and sure foundation—an epistle of counsel
to Friends—George Fox taken from a meeting and examined by a
magistrate, but soon released—writes an epistle to the
faithful to beware of a seducing spirit—after the Yearly
Meeting sails for Holland, and lands at the Briel—attends
the Yearly Meeting at Amsterdam—writes to Galenus Abrahams,
a Mennonist or Baptist, who, seven years before, bid him
“keep his eyes off him.” for he said “they pierced him,” but
now he was become very loving and tender, as well as his
family—George Fox returns to England—writes to the Duke of
Holstein an able defence of women’s preaching—writes an
epistle of counsel to Friends—advises with, and assists them
in, drawing up an account of sufferings, which is printed
and spread amongst Parliament-men—writes a caution to
Friends, to keep out of the world’s spirit &c.—and a warning
against pride and excess in apparel.
Some time after the Yearly Meeting I went down to
KINGSTON-UPON-THAMES to visit Friends there; and while I was there
it came upon me to write the following epistle to Friends in
general, as a salutation of love, and to stir up the pure mind in
them:—
“DEAR FRIENDS AND BRETHREN,
“Who are turned from darkness to light, and from the power of
Satan to God, who are believers in the light, which is the life in
Christ, and are become children of the light and of the day;—who
are grafted into Christ, the second Adam, the Lord from heaven,
and are gathered in the name of Jesus, in whom ye have salvation,
and not in any other name under the whole heaven. For Christ Jesus
saith, ‘Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there
am I in the midst of them,’ Matt. xviii. 20. So you being gathered
in the name of Jesus, he is in the midst of you, a Saviour, a
Mediator, a Prophet, a Shepherd, a Bishop, a Leader, a Counsellor,
the Captain of your salvation, who bruises the serpent’s head, and
destroys the devil and his works. Therefore, brethren in Christ
Jesus, exhort one another daily, while it is called to-day, lest
any of you be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin. For you
are made partakers of Christ, if ye hold fast the beginning of
your confidence stedfast to the end, Heb. iii. 14. Therefore hear
Christ’s voice, for he is in the midst of you a teacher.
“Take heed, lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief
in departing from the living God, as there is in too many in this
day of provocation and temptation. While it is to-day hear his
voice, and let us consider one another, to provoke unto love and
to good works. Let us hold fast the profession of our faith
without wavering (for he is faithful that hath promised and hath
called you), not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together,
as the manner of some is; (mark) as the manner of some is, that
did and do forsake the assembling of themselves together: but
exhorting one another, and so much the more as you see the day of
light appearing. For if we sin wilfully, after we have received
the knowledge of the truth, there remains no more sacrifice for
sins; but a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery
indignation, which shall devour the adversaries, Heb. x.
“And therefore it is good not to forsake the assembling of
ourselves together, but exhort one another daily; for Christ is in
the midst of his people a teacher, and a prophet, who saith,
‘Learn of me; the way, the truth, and the life.’ We being many,
are one body in Christ, gathered in his name, and everyone members
one of another. Having then gifts differing according to the grace
that is given us, whether they be prophecy, let us prophesy
according to the proportion of faith; and let those that minister,
wait on their ministry; those that be teachers, on their teaching;
and him that exhorteth, on exhortation; he that giveth, let him do
it with simplicity; and he that ruleth, with diligence; and he
that showeth mercy, is to do it with cheerfulness. Abhor that
which is evil; cleave to that which is good. Be kindly affectioned
one towards another, with brotherly love, in honour preferring one
another. Rejoice in hope; be patient in tribulations; be not
overcome with evil, but overcome evil with good; and, if it be
possible, as much as lieth in you, live peaceably with all men,
Rom. xii. This is and was the practice of the church of Christ.
And now the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in
believing, that ye may abound in hope, through the power of the
Holy Ghost. I myself also am persuaded of you, my brethren, that
ye also are full of goodness, filled with all knowledge, and are
able also to admonish one another, Rom. xv. 13, 14. Here the
church of Christ, in which He was in the midst a teacher and the
head of the church, were and are able through him to admonish one
another. Let the peace of God rule in your hearts, to which ye are
also called into one body, to wit, of Christ. Let the word of
Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom, teaching and admonishing
one another, &c., Col. iii. Whatsoever ye do, in word or deed, do
all in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, giving thanks to God and
the Father by him: and above all things put on charity, which is
the bond of perfectness.
“The apostle said to Timothy, ‘Be not thou ashamed of the
testimony of our Lord, nor of me, his prisoner; but be thou
partaker of the afflictions of the gospel, according to the power
of God, who hath saved us, and called us with a holy calling; not
according to our works, but according to his own purpose and
grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began,’
2 Tim. i. 8, 9. It concerns every one not to be ashamed of the
testimony of our Lord, who hath called them by his grace; and not
to be ashamed of any of Christ’s prisoners, and afflicted ones for
Christ’s and his gospel’s sake, who abolishes death, and brings
life and immortality to light through his gospel: you that believe
in the light, know it.
“Peter saith, in his general epistle to the church of Christ, ‘As
every man’ (mark, every man) ‘hath received the gift, so minister
the same one to another, as good stewards of the manifold grace of
God. If any man speak, let him speak as the oracles of God, not of
men; if any man minister, let him do it as of the ability which
God gives, not of the ability of men’s arts and sciences, that God
in all things may be glorified through Jesus Christ,’ &c. For
these gifts and grace come from Jesus into the hearts of the
members of his church, whom he is in the midst of. And if any man
suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed; but let him glorify
God, &c. Every true Christian hath the presence of Christ, who
hath all power in heaven and in earth given him, to support him
with his power, light, and life. Christ saith to his believers,
‘Beware of men, for they will deliver you up to the councils, and
they will scourge you in the synagogues, and you shall be brought
before governors and kings for my name’s sake, for a testimony
against them and the Gentiles. But when they deliver you up, take
no thought how or what ye shall speak; for it shall be given you
in the same hour what ye shall speak: for it is not you that
speak, but the Spirit of your Father that speaketh in you. And ye
shall be hated of all men for my name’s sake: but he that endureth
to the end, shall be saved. The disciple is not above his Master,
nor the servant above his lord; it is enough for the disciple that
he be as his Master, and the servant as his lord: for if they have
called the master of the house Beelzebub, what will they do to his
servant? Fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to
kill the soul, &c. A sparrow shall not fall to the ground without
your heavenly Father, &c. The hairs of your head are all numbered;
ye are of more value than many sparrows. Whosoever therefore shall
confess me before men, him will I confess also before my Father
who is in heaven; but whosoever shall deny me before men, him will
I also deny before my Father who is in heaven. And whosoever shall
be ashamed of me and of my words, of him shall the Son of Man be
ashamed,’ &c., Matt. x. And again Christ saith, ‘Whosoever shall
be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful
generation, of him also shall the Son of Man be ashamed, when he
comes in the glory of his Father with his holy angels,’ Mark viii.
38.
“And Christ saith to his disciples, ‘He that receiveth you
receiveth me; and he that receiveth me, receiveth him that sent
me: he that receiveth a prophet in the name of a prophet shall
receive a prophet’s reward; and he that receiveth a righteous man
in the name of a righteous man, shall receive a righteous man’s
reward. And whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these little
ones a cup of cold water only, in the name of a disciple, verily I
say unto you, he shall in no wise lose his reward.’ Matt. x.
40-42. Here ye may see how Christ encourages his disciples, and
them that receive them. And John saith, ‘Among the chief rulers of
the Jews many believed in Christ; but because of the Pharisees,
they did not confess him, lest they should be put out of the
synagogue,’ John xii. 42. Too many such believers there are
now-a-days, who dare not confess Christ, lest they should lose the
favour of men. But Christ encouraged the faithful disciples, and
told them they would put them out of their synagogues; yea, that
the time should come, that whosoever killed them would think they
did God service: And ‘these things,’ said he, ‘will they do unto
you, because they have not known the Father, nor me. But these
things have I told you, that when the time shall come, ye may
remember that I told you of them,’ Jo hn xvi. 2-4. Here we may see
what Christ told his disciples should come to pass to them. And
Saul before he was converted, compelled the Christians to
blaspheme, and make havoc of the church of Christ, Acts viii. and
chap. xxii. and xxvi. And did not the beast in the Revelations
compel both small and great to worship him and his image? And did
not all worship it, but they who had their names written in the
Lamb’s book of life? Did not Nebuchadnezzar set up an image sixty
cubits high, and six cubits broad? And did not he cause a herald
to cry aloud ‘It is commanded that all people, nations, and
languages fall down, and worship the golden image that
Nebuchadnezzar hath set up; and whoso falleth not down, and
worshippeth, shall the same hour be cast into the midst of the
fiery furnace?’ And were not Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, cast
into the furnace? Dan. iii. But God delivered them.
“Therefore it is good to be faithful to God and his worship in
Spirit and in truth. The Jews agreed that if any man should
confess Christ, he should be put out of their synagogue, John ix.
22. So it was for Christ’s sake they were excommunicated out of
their synagogues. But as it is written, ‘Behold, I lay in Zion a
stumbling-stone, and a rock of offence; and whoso believes on him,
shall not be ashamed.’ So Christ is a stumbling-block and a rock
of offence to all the unbelievers in the light, which is the life
in Christ, whether they be Jews, Christians, or Gentiles. The Jews
believed Christ was to come, from the Scriptures; and the
Christians believe he is come by the Scriptures; but do not
believe in the light, as Christ commands, and so do not become
children of the light. Therefore ye that are believers in the
light, and are become children of light, walk in Christ, your way,
life, and salvation.”
G.F.
Kingston, the 5th Month, 1683.
Before I left Kingston, something further opened in me, which I was
moved to write, and send amongst Friends; as follows:—
“DEAR FRIENDS,
“My love is to all in the holy Seed, that reigns over all. And my
desire is, that every one, both male and female, may feel the Seed
Christ in you, which is heir of the promise of life eternal, that
ye may all grow up in Christ Jesus your head, and be built upon
Him, the rock and foundation that God hath laid, which stands sure
over all rocks and foundations in the world;—that ye may eat and
drink of this spiritual rock, the spiritual water and food; so
that ye may truly and inwardly say, that your rock and foundation,
your bread and water of life, is from heaven, and your bread and
water is sure; and that ye know his voice that feeds you, and
leads you into the pastures of life, which are always fresh and
green. In this, your affections are set on things that are above,
seeking that which comes down from above, where Christ sits at the
right hand of God, making intercession for you; who is your
Mediator, making peace between God and you; who is your heavenly
Bishop to oversee you, that ye keep in his light, life, and power,
and do not go astray from his heavenly fold and pasture, that He
your Shepherd may feed you therein; who is your Prophet, to open
to you the fulfilling of the promises and prophecies, himself
being the substance; that ye may live in him, and he in you, yea,
and reign in your hearts, there to exercise his offices, his
prophetical, priestly, and kingly office, who is heavenly and
spiritual;—that ye may know the three that bear witness in the
earth, the Spirit, the Water, and the Blood, which is the life of
Christ, which cleanseth from all sin; the Water that washes and
refreshes you; and the Spirit that baptizes and circumcises you,
and leads you into all truth; that ye may come all to drink into
one Spirit, and keep the unity of the Spirit, which is the bond of
the heavenly peace. So being led by the Spirit of God, ye are his
sons and daughters, and by his Spirit will come to know the three
that bear witness in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy
Ghost. These are the three witnesses that are in heaven, that bear
record of all things; for he is God in heaven, and God in the
earth.
“Therefore I desire, that ye may all feel his love shed in your
hearts, and in it live (above the love of the world, which is
enmity), and in that you will keep in the excellent way. For love
edifies the body of Christ, builds his church up, and keeps out of
the enmity, for it is above it, and brings and keeps all in true
humanity, and in the true divinity; to be courteous, kind, and
tender, one towards another, and to show forth the nature of
Christ, and true Christianity in all your lives and conversations;
that the blessings of the Lord may rest upon you, as ye all live
in the seed of the gospel, the seed of the kingdom of God, in
which all nations are blessed. In that ye will all have a care of
God’s glory. There is the hill or mountain, where the light shines
to the answering the witness of God in all; and the salt that is a
good savour to the witness of God in the hearts of all; and that
savour being kept in, the salt doth not come under the feet of
men.
“So my love to you all in Christ Jesus, whom God hath given to be
a sanctuary for all his people, who is from above and not of this
world, in whom you have life, peace and salvation. In Him, God
Almighty keep and preserve you all to his glory. Amen. As you live
in the peaceable truth of God, it keeps you under, and within, his
protection; but they that make a profession of the Scriptures of
truth, and yet live out of the truth, in the spirit of strife,
unquietness, and discontent, in a contriving, plotting, ravenous,
destroying spirit, which is of the devil, and not of God, that
spirit is judged out of the truth, and to be of him, in whom there
is no truth, whose portion is in the lake, and in the fire that
burns.”
G.F.
Kingston, the 27th of the 5th Month, 1683.
Having visited Friends at and about Kingston, I returned to LONDON;
for it being a suffering time with Friends there, I had not freedom
to be long from the city. I went to the meeting at THE PEEL, which
but a little before the justices and constables had broken up, and
had carried themselves very roughly; but that day it was in the
house and quiet; and a glorious meeting it was, blessed be the Lord.
On the First-day following I went to the meeting at GRACECHURCH
STREET. When I came there, I found three constables in the
meeting-house, who kept Friends out; so we met in the court. After I
had been some time there, I stood up and spoke to the people, and
continued speaking some time. Then one of the constables came, and
took hold of my hand, and said, “I must come down.” I desired him to
be patient, and went on speaking to the people; but after a little
time, he pulled me down, and had me into the meeting-house. I asked
them if they were not weary of this work. One of them said, “indeed
they were.” They let me go into the widow Foster’s house, which
joined to the meeting house, where I stayed, being hot. When the
meeting was ended, for one prayed after I was taken away, the
constables asked some Friends, “which of them would pass their words
that I should appear, if they should be questioned about me”; but
Friends telling them, they need not require that, for I was a man
well known in the city, to be one that would neither fly, nor
shrink; they went away, and I heard no further of it.
The same week I was at the meeting at the SAVOY, which used to be
kept out and disturbed; but that day it was within doors and
peaceable; and a precious time it was. The First-day after, it was
upon me to go to the meeting at WESTMINSTER, where there used to be
great disturbances; but there also the meeting was within doors,
that day, and very large. The Lord’s power was over all, and kept
all quiet and still; for though many loose spirits were there, yet
they were bound down by the power and Spirit of the Lord, that they
could not get up to make disturbance.
About this time I was moved to write the following epistle:—
“FRIENDS AND BRETHREN,
“Who have received the peaceable truth, let the fruits of its
peaceableness and of your quiet spirit appear in all your
meetings, and in all your words and actions; for he that inhabits
eternity dwells with a humble heart, he gives grace to the humble,
and resisteth the proud. Heaven is his throne and the earth ye
walk upon is his footstool; happy are ye that see and know him
that is invisible. And now, Friends, let all things be done in
your meetings, and otherwise, in love, without strife or
vainglory. For love fulfils the law, love overcomes, and edifies
the body of Christ. There is neither self nor envy in love,
neither is it puffed up; but abides and bears all things. See that
this love of God have the sway in you all and over you all.
“Christ saith, ‘Blessed are the poor in spirit; for theirs is the
kingdom of heaven. Blessed are they that mourn; for they shall be
comforted. Blessed are the meek; for they shall inherit the earth.
Blessed are they that do hunger and thirst after righteousness;
for they shall be filled. Blessed are the merciful; for they shall
obtain mercy. Blessed are the pure in heart; for they shall see
God. Blessed are the peace-makers; for they shall be called the
children of God. Blessed are they that are persecuted for
righteousness’ sake; for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed
are ye, when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall
say all manner of evil against you falsely for my sake. Rejoice
and be exceeding glad; for great is your reward in heaven; for so
persecuted they the prophets which were before you.’
“Now Friends, here is a great deal in these words; and all must be
in these states and conditions, if they have these blessings. The
children of God are peace-makers, and strive to make peace in the
truth; and to live in peace with all men, if it be possible. So
live in peace and good-will to all men; which good-will is both
for their sanctification and salvation. And, Friends, consider,
the wisdom of God, which is from above, is pure, peaceable,
gentle, and easy to be entreated, full of mercy and good fruits,
without partiality and without hypocrisy. Dear Friends, let this
pure, peaceable, gentle wisdom, that is from above, that is easy
to be entreated, and is full of mercy and good fruits, be
exercised and practised in all the true churches of Christ, so
that wisdom may be justified of her children. For the works of the
flesh, or fleshly spirit, are hatred, variance, wrath, strife,
envyings, drunkenness, revellings, adultery, fornication,
lasciviousness, uncleanness, &c., and they which do such things
shall not inherit the kingdom of God. But the fruits of the Spirit
of God are love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness,
faith, meekness, temperance, &c. So, dear Friends and brethren,
strive to exceed one another, and all people upon the earth, in
humility, meekness, gentleness, temperance, love, patience,
pureness, and in mercy; then ye will show forth the fruits of the
Spirit of God, and of his heavenly wisdom that is from above. In
this, wisdom will be justified of her children; ye will be the
salt of the earth, the light of the world set on a hill, that
cannot be hid; and your moderation will appear to all men.
Be ye just and righteous, faithful and true in all your words,
dealings, and conversations, so that ye may answer the truth in
all people; for Christ saith, his Father is glorified by such as
bring forth fruits, when men do see their good works; for he that
doeth righteousness, is accepted with God. And he that dwells in
love, dwells in God; for love is his habitation. Let that be the
habitation of every one that hath received the truth; for if it be
not, such do not dwell in God, let them profess what they will.
Therefore my desire is, that all you who have received Christ, the
Seed, which bruises the serpent’s head, may walk in Him, your
sanctuary, life, and salvation, your rest and peace. Amen.”
G.F.
London, the 14th of the 6th Month, 1683.
I continued yet at LONDON, labouring in the work and service of the
Lord both in and out of meetings; sometimes visiting Friends in
prison for the testimony of Jesus, encouraging them in their
sufferings, and exhorting them to stand faithful and steadfast in
the testimony, which the Lord had committed to them to bear;
sometimes also visiting those that were sick and weak in body, or
troubled in mind, helping to bear up their spirits from sinking
under their infirmities. Sometimes our meetings were quiet and
peaceable; sometimes they were disturbed and broken up by the
officers.
One First-day it was upon me to go to the meeting at the SAVOY,
which was large; for many professors and sober people were there.
The Lord opened many precious, weighty things in me to the people,
which I declared amongst them, and “directed them to the Spirit of
God in themselves, which the Lord had given them a measure of; that
all by the Spirit might understand the Scriptures, which were given
forth from the Spirit of God; and that by the Spirit of God, they
might know God, and Christ whom God hath sent; whom to know is
eternal life; and that by the Spirit, they might all come into
Christ, and know Him to be their sanctuary, who destroys the devil,
the destroyer, and his works, and bruises the serpent’s head. For
Christ was a sanctuary to them, to whom he was a Saviour, whom he
saved from the destroyer. And Christ did baptize them with the Holy
Ghost and with fire, and did thoroughly purge his floor, and burn up
their chaff with unquenchable fire; this is, sin and corruption,
which is got into man by transgression; but Christ gathereth his
wheat into his garner. So all that are baptized with Christ’s
baptism, their wheat is in God’s garner; and no spoiler can get into
God’s garner to meddle with the wheat there, though they may be
permitted to meddle with the outward goods,” &c.
As I was speaking in the power of the Lord, and the people were
greatly affected therewith, suddenly the constables, with the rude
people, came in like a sea. One of the constables said to me, “Come
down;” and he laid hands on me. I asked him, “Art thou a Christian?
We are Christians.” He had hold of my hand, and was very fierce to
pluck me down; but I stood still, and spoke a few words to the
people; desiring of the Lord that the blessings of God might rest
upon them all. The constable still called upon me to come down, and
at length plucked me down, and bid another man with a staff take me,
and carry me to prison. That man led me to another officer’s house,
who was more civil; and after a while they brought in four Friends
more, whom they had taken. I was very weary and in a great
perspiration; and several Friends hearing where I was, came to me in
the constable’s house; but I bid them all go their ways, lest the
constables and informers should stop them.
After a while the constables led us almost a mile to a justice, who
was a fierce, passionate man; who, after he had asked me my name,
and his clerk had taken it in writing, upon the constable’s
informing him that “I preached in the meeting,” said in an angry
manner, “Do not you know, that it is contrary to the king’s laws to
preach in such conventicles, contrary to the Liturgy of the Church
of England?” There was present one —— Shad (a wicked informer, who
was said to have broken jail at Coventry, and to have been burned in
the hand at London,) who hearing the justice speak so to me, stepped
up to him, and told him, “that he had convicted them on the Act of
the 22nd of King Charles the Second.” “What! you convict them?” said
the justice; “Yes,” said Shad, “I have convicted them, and you must
convict them too upon that Act.” With that the justice was angry
with him, and said, “You teach me! what are you? I’ll convict them
of a riot.” The informer hearing that, and seeing the justice angry,
went away in a fret; so he was disappointed of his purpose. I
thought he would have sworn somebody against me, whereupon I said,
“Let no man swear against me, for it is my principle ‘not to swear;’
and therefore I would not have any man swear against me.” The
justice thereupon asked me, “If I did not preach in the meeting;” I
told him, “I confessed what God and Christ had done for my soul, and
praised God; and I thought I might have done that in the streets,
and in all places, viz., praise God and confess Christ Jesus; and
this I was not ashamed to confess. Neither was this contrary to the
Liturgy of the Church of England.” The justice said, “the laws were
against such meetings as were contrary to the Liturgy of the Church
of England.” I said, “I knew no such laws against our meetings; but
if he meant that Act that was made against such as met to plot,
contrive, and raise insurrections against the king, we were no such
people, but abhorred all such actions; and bore true love and
good-will to the king, and to all men upon the earth.” The justice
then asked me, “if I had been in orders;” I told him, “No.”
Then he took his law-books and searched for laws against us; bidding
his clerk take the names of the rest in the mean time: but when he
could find no other law against us, the clerk swore the constable
against us. Some of the Friends bid the constable “take heed what he
swore, lest he were perjured; for he took them in the entry, and not
in the meeting.” Yet the constable, being an ill man, swore “that
they were in the meeting.” However, the justice said, “seeing there
was but one witness, he would discharge the rest; but he would send
me to Newgate, and I might preach there.” I asked him, “If it stood
with his conscience to send me to Newgate for praising God, and for
confessing Christ Jesus?” He cried, “Conscience! conscience!” but I
felt my words touched his conscience. He bid the constable take me
away, and he would make a mittimus to send me to prison when he had
dined. I told him, “I desired his peace, and the good of his family,
and that they might be kept in the fear of the Lord;” so I passed
away. And as we went the constable took some Friends’ word, that I
should come to his house the next morning by eight. Accordingly I
went with those Friends; and then the constable told us, that he
went to the justice for the mittimus after he had dined, and he bid
him come again after the evening service; which he did; and then the
justice told him he might let me go. “So,” said the constable, “you
are discharged.” I blamed the constable for turning informer, and
swearing against us; and he said he would do so no more. Next day
the justice meeting with Gilbert Latey, asked him, “if he would pay
twenty pounds for George Fox’s fine.” He said, “No.” “Then,” said
the justice, “I am disappointed; for being but a lodger I cannot
come by his fine, and he having been brought before me, and being of
ability himself, I cannot lay his fine on any other.”
After I was discharged, I went into the city. The same week the
sessions coming on, where many Friends were concerned, some as
prisoners, and some on trials of appeal upon the conventicle act, I
went to a Friend’s house not far off, that I might be in readiness
to assist them with counsel, or otherwise, as occasion should offer;
and I found service in it. But as my spirit was concerned on behalf
of Friends, with respect to their outward sufferings by the
persecutors without; so an exercise also came weightily upon me at
this time, in the sense I had of the mischievous working of that
adulterated spirit, which, being gone out from the heavenly unity,
and having drawn out some that professed truth into enmity and
opposition against Friends, endeavoured to trouble the church of
Christ with their janglings and contention. And as a further
discovery of the working of that seducing spirit, and a warning to
all Friends to beware of it, I was moved to write the following
epistle:—
“_To all the elect faithful, called, and chosen of God,
the flock and heritage of God, who have been acquainted with
the dealings of the Lord, and have kept your habitations in
his life, power, and truth, being built upon the holy,
heavenly rock and foundation, Christ Jesus, who was the
foundation of the prophets and apostles; which foundation
stands sure._
“Many foundations have been laid since the apostles’ days, by such
as have gone from Christ, the true and sure Foundation; but their
foundations have proved rotten, and come to nought; and they
themselves have come to loss. Many, since the day of Christ and
the truth hath appeared in this nation, have had some openings and
sights, and come among us for a time; and then gone out from us
again; these have been the comers and goers, like those in the
apostles’ days. Such had an outward profession of the truth, and
have gone from the true foundation, Christ Jesus, and so from the
heavenly society and unity of the saints in light. Then they set
up foundations of their own; and having a form of godliness, but
out of the power thereof, out of the order thereof, such have
turned to janglings and vain disputings. This sort of spirit you
have been acquainted with, who have kept your habitations in
Christ Jesus, the First and the Last.
“And you are not insensible of the scurrilous and filthy books of
lies and defamations, which have been spread abroad in this
nation, and beyond the seas, against the faithful. It is very well
that the Lord hath suffered them to publish their own shame in
print, that truth’s enemies may be discovered; that their fruits
and spirits have appeared and manifested themselves both in print
and otherwise. And I do believe, that the Lord will yet suffer
this spirit so to publish its fruits, its shame and nakedness, to
professor and profane, and to all sober, moderate, and innocent
people, that its shame and nakedness shall more fully appear.
Though for a time it hath been hid and covered with the fig-leaves
of an outward profession, and sometimes with fawning and
flattering words, as at other times, it hath discovered itself by
rough, lying, and defaming words; yet the Lord God will blast all
such vain talkers, that do not walk in the order of life, truth,
and the gospel.
“Therefore, ye that are faithful, stand fast in the liberty
wherewith Christ hath made you free in his government. It is upon
his shoulders; he bears it up; of the increase of it, and of its
peace, there is no end. For all quarellers against his order and
government are not in him, nor in his heavenly, spiritual
government and peace. Therefore, ye faithful ones, who have stood
the trial through many persecutions, imprisonments, spoilings of
goods; you know that there is a crown of glory laid up for you.
You that suffer with Christ, shall reign with him in his kingdom
of glory; ye that die with Christ, shall live with him in eternal
life, in the world that hath no end, who have gone through the
sufferings without, and within, by false brethren, by comers and
goers, that have caused the way of truth to be evil spoken of, and
have been the persecutors of the faithful with their tongues; and
by printing and publishing their lying, defaming books against the
faithful, these have stirred up the magistrates and priests who
were willing to get any occasion to speak evil of the right way,
and precious truth of Christ, by which his people are made free;
it would have been better for such had they never been born. But
God hath brought them to light, and their fruits and ravenous
spirits are seen, savoured, and known; who are become Judases, and
sons of perdition, to betray Christ now within (where he is made
manifest) to the priests, magistrates, and profane, as Judas
betrayed Christ without to the priests and Pilate; though some of
the magistrates and sober people see their envy and folly, and
that they have more malice than matter against the faithful. But
the Lord will consume this Judas, or son of perdition. The Lord
will consume him with the Spirit of his mouth, and destroy him
with the brightness of his coming. So let all the faithful look
unto the Lord. And let the wicked son of perdition know, though he
may be got as high as Judas without (who was partaker of the
ministry with the apostles,) ‘the Lord will consume him with the
Spirit of his mouth, and destroy him with the brightness of his
coming.’ That is his portion. The brightness of the Lord will
destroy him, and the Spirit of his mouth will consume him. And
when he is destroyed and consumed, there will not be a son of
perdition to betray Christ in his people, and his people that live
and walk in Christ, who hath all power in heaven (mark, in heaven)
and in earth given to him; and with his holy and glorious power he
limits and orders; so that nothing shall be done against his
people, but what is suffered for their trial and their good,
neither by apostates, persecutors with the tongue, Judases, sons
of perdition to betray, or the outward powers to imprison, or
spoil goods; all these are limited by Christ’s power, who hath all
power in heaven and in earth given to him. Every one’s faith is to
stand in him and his power, and rejoice in his power, and see the
increase of his righteous, holy, heavenly, spiritual, peaceable
government, in which the glorious, holy order of life is lived and
walked in, by all his sons and daughters. In his Spirit is the
holy unity and bond of peace; though ye be absent in body one from
another, yet all joying and rejoicing, being present in his
Spirit, and beholding in the same Spirit your spiritual order,
unity, and fellowship, and the steadfastness of your faith in
Christ Jesus, who is steadfast for ever, the First and the Last,
whose presence is among his people, and who is their head. Here is
heavenly Sion known, and heavenly Jerusalem, and the innumerable
company of angels (which are spirits) and the spirits of the just
men made perfect. Here is the general assembly, and a general,
heavenly, holy, and spiritual joy and rejoicing, lauding and
praising the Lord God Almighty, and the Lamb, that lives for
evermore. Amen.”
G. F.
London, the 14th of the 8th Month, 1683.
“Read this in your assemblies amongst the faithful.”
I tarried a little in LONDON, visiting Friends and meetings, and
labouring in the work of the Lord there. And being on a First-day at
the Bull-and-Mouth, where the meeting had long been kept out, it was
that day in the house peaceable and large; the people were so
affected with the truth, and refreshed with the powerful presence of
the Lord, that when it was ended they were loth to go away.
After some time, having several things upon me to write, I went to
KINGSTON, that I might be free from interruptions. When I came
there, I understood the officers had been very rude at the meeting,
abusing Friends, and had driven them out of the meeting-place, and
very abusive they continued to be for some time. Whilst I was there
I wrote a little book (printed soon after,) entitled, “The Saints’
heavenly and spiritual worship, unity, and communion, &c., wherein
is set forth what the true gospel worship is, and in what the true
unity and communion of the saints stands; with a discovery of those
that were gone from this holy unity and communion, and were turned
against the saints, that abode therein.”
When I had finished the services for which I went thither, and had
visited the Friends, I returned to LONDON, and visited most of the
meetings in and about the city. Afterwards I went to visit a Friend
in ESSEX; and returning by DALSTON, made some stay at the widow
Stot’s, where I wrote an epistle to Friends, declaring the word of
the Lord to them, which may be read amongst my other printed books.
I came from Dalston to LONDON, and next day was sent for in haste to
my son Rous’s at KINGSTON, whose daughter, Margaret, lay very sick,
and had a desire to see me. I tarried now at Kingston about a week,
and then returned to LONDON; where I continued for the most part of
the winter and the spring following, until the general meeting in
1684, save that I went once as far as Enfield, to visit Friends
thereabouts. In this time I ceased not to labour in the work of the
Lord, being frequent at meetings, and visiting Friends that were
prisoners, or that were sick; and in writing books for the spreading
of truth, and opening the understandings of the people to receive
it.[58]
The Yearly Meeting was in the 3rd month. A blessed weighty one it
was, wherein Friends were sweetly refreshed together; for the Lord
was with us, and opened his heavenly treasures amongst us. And
though it was a time of great difficulty and danger, by reason of
informers and persecuting magistrates, yet the Lord was a defence
and place of safety to his people.
Now had I drawings in Spirit to go into Holland, to visit the Seed
of God there. And as soon as the Yearly Meeting was over I prepared
for my journey. There went with me from London Alexander Parker,
George Watts, and Nathaniel Brassey, who also had drawings into that
country. We took coach the 31st of the 3rd month, 1684, and got to
COLCHESTER that night. Next day being First-day, we went to the
meeting there; and though there was no notice given of my coming,
yet our being there was presently spread over the town, and in
several places in the country at seven and ten miles distance; so
that abundance of Friends came in double-horsed, which made the
meeting very large. I had a concern and travail in my mind, lest
this great gathering should have stirred up the town, and been more
than the magistrates could well bear; but it was very quiet and
peaceable, and a glorious meeting we had, to the settling and
stablishing of Friends both in town and country; for the Lord’s
power was over all; blessed be his name for ever! Truly the Lord’s
power and presence was beyond words; for I was but weak to go into a
meeting, and my face (by reason of a cold I had taken) was sore; but
God manifested his strength in us and with us, and all was well: the
Lord have the glory for evermore for his supporting power. After the
meeting, I think above a hundred Friends of the town and country
came to see me at John Furly’s, and very glad we were to see one
another, and greatly refreshed together, being filled with the love
and riches of the Lord; blessed be his name for ever!
We tarried at Colchester two days more; which we spent in visiting
Friends, both at their meetings for business and at their houses.
Then early in the morning of Fourth-day we took coach for Harwich,
where we met William Bingley, and Samuel Waldenfield, who went over
with us. About eight at night we went on board the packet, Richard
Gray master; but by reason of contrary winds it was one in the
morning before we sailed. We had a very good passage; and about five
in the afternoon next day we landed at the BRIEL in HOLLAND, where
we stayed that night. Early next morning we went to ROTTERDAM, where
we abode some days.
The day after we came to Rotterdam, one Wilbert Frouzen, a
burgomaster, and kinsman of Aarent Sunneman’s, hearing I was there,
invited me to his country house, having a desire to speak with me
about some business, relating to Aarent Sunneman’s daughters. I took
George Watts with me, and a brother of Aarent Sunneman’s had us
thither. The burgomaster received us very kindly, and was very glad
to see me; and entering into discourse about his kinsman’s
daughters, I found he was apprehensive that, their father being
dead, and having left them considerable portions, they might be
stolen and married to their disadvantage. Wherefore I told him,
“that it was our principle and practice, that none should marry
amongst us unless they had a certificate of the consent of their
relations or guardians; for it was our Christian care to watch over
and look after all young people that came among us; especially those
whose natural relations were dead. And as for his kinsman’s
daughters, we should take care that nothing should be offered to
them but what should be agreeable to truth and righteousness, and
that they might be preserved in the fear of God, according to their
father’s mind.” This seemed to give him great satisfaction. While I
was with him there came many great people to me, and “I exhorted
them all to keep in the fear of God, and to mind his good Spirit in
them, to keep their minds to the Lord.” After I had stayed two or
three hours, and had conversed with him on several things, I took my
leave of him, and he very kindly sent me to Rotterdam in his
chariot.
Next day being First-day, we were at the meeting at Rotterdam, which
was pretty large, and declared to them by an interpreter. The day
following Alderman Gaul came to speak with me, with whom we had much
discourse about religious matters; he seemed to be well satisfied,
and was very tender. Several other persons of account had intended
to come to speak with me that day, but being hindered by
extraordinary business (as I understood), they came not.
We went next day to AMSTERDAM, where we had a large and very
precious meeting. In the afternoon I was at another meeting with
Friends there, about business.
There is a Yearly Meeting at Amsterdam for the Friends of Holland
and Germany, &c., which begun now on the 8th of the 4th month, and
ended on the 12th. Here we had a fine opportunity of seeing Friends
from many parts, and of being refreshed together in the love of God.
After this meeting, before those that came out of the several
provinces were gone, we had a meeting with some particular Friends,
about the places and countries into which we who came out of England
in the work of the ministry were to travel; and to enquire who among
them were suitable persons to go along with us for interpreters.
When this was concluded on, William Bingley[59] and Samuel
Waldenfield[60] took shipping for Friesland, with Jacob Claus, their
interpreter.
Alexander Parker and George Watts remained with me. We tarried a few
days longer at Amsterdam, where I had further service. Before I left
I went to visit one, Galenus Abrahams, a teacher of chief note among
the Mennonites, or Baptists. I had been with him when I was in
Holland about seven years before; and William Penn and George Keith
had disputes with him. He was then very high and shy, so that he
would not let me touch him, nor look upon him (by his good will),
but bid me “keep my eyes off him, for,” he said, “they pierced him.”
But now he was very loving and tender, and confessed in some measure
to truth; his wife also and daughter were tender and kind, and we
parted from them very lovingly.
Feeling our spirits drawn towards Friesland, Alexander Parker,
George Watts, and I, having John Claus of Amsterdam with us for our
interpreter, took shipping, and having sailed nine or ten leagues,
we left the ship, and travelled through Friesland, sometimes by
boat, sometimes by waggon, visiting Friends and tender people in the
towns and villages where we came; having one or two meetings in a
day. After we had been at LEUWARDEN, we passed by FRANEKER to
HARLINGEN in West Friesland, which was the furthest place we went to
that way. And having been six days from Amsterdam, and had very good
service in that time, visiting Friends and publishing truth amongst
the people, we took ship at Harlingen for Amsterdam on the 26th of
4th month, and arrived there that night. The First-day following we
were at the meeting at AMSTERDAM, which was very large and precious.
Many of the people were there, their teachers, and some great
persons also. They seemed very attentive, and a good opportunity we
all had, one after another, to declare the word of the Lord and open
the way of truth amongst them, John Claus interpreting for us. I
tarried next day at Amsterdam; but George Watts went to a burial at
Haarlem, attended by many hundreds of people, amongst whom he had a
good opportunity, and came back at night to us.
The day following we went by boat to OSAN-OVERTON in WATERLAND, and
thence, in another small boat, about a league over a small river,
where we passed over and by a hundred bridges, and so went to
LANDSMEER to a Friend’s house whose name was Timon Peters; where we
had a very good meeting. We returned to AMSTERDAM that night, and
were at the meeting there next day. Many were at this meeting
besides Friends, and among the rest, the great Baptist teacher,
Galenus, who was very attentive to the testimony of the truth, and
when it was over, came and got me by the hand very lovingly.
We went next day by boat to ALKMAAR, about eight leagues
from Amsterdam, passing through SARDAM, the great town of
ship-carpenters, and several other towns in the way. At Alkmaar,
which is a pretty city, we stayed, and had a meeting next day at
William Williams’s. There were besides Friends many very sober
people at this meeting, who were very attentive to the testimonies
of truth, that were borne both by Alexander Parker, George Watts,
and myself, John Claus being our interpreter. This was on a sixth
day, and on the seventh we returned to AMSTERDAM, being willing to
be at the meeting at Amsterdam on First-day, because it was likely
to be the last we should have there. Accordingly we were at it, and
a very large and open meeting it was. Many great persons were at it,
some earls, we were told, with their attendants, out of Germany, who
were very grave and sober, and the everlasting gospel was preached
unto them.
After this we took leave of the Friends of Amsterdam; and next
morning departed thence to HAARLEM, where we had a meeting at a
Friend’s house, whose name is Abraham Frondenberg. Great numbers of
people were at this meeting, and of great service it was. After it a
watchmaker of Amsterdam, who, with his wife, attended it, desired to
speak with me concerning religion. I had much discourse with him,
and both he and his wife were very low and tender, received with
gladness what I spoke to them, and seemed well satisfied when they
went away.
We went next day to ROTTERDAM, where we tarried two meetings; and on
the 16th of the 5th month went to the BRIEL, to take ship for
England. About four in the afternoon we went on board the packet,
William Sherman master, and set sail from the Briel. But when we had
gone over the Maese about a league, we cast anchor at a place called
the PITT, because it is near to the sands, where we stayed till
about four next morning; when, having a pretty fair wind, and the
tide with us, we weighed anchor, and by four next day were within
five leagues of Harwich, over against Aldborough Castle; but the
wind falling short, and the tide being weak, it was one in the
afternoon before we came so near to HARWICH that boats could come to
receive the passengers and goods. There were on board about forty
passengers in all; English, Scotch, Dutch, French, Spanish, Flemish,
and some Jews.
I spent a day with Friends at Harwich, while Alexander Parker and
George Watts went by water to visit Friends at Ipswich, and returned
at night. Next morning early we all took coach for Colchester, and
were at the meeting there, which was large and peaceable; after it,
we travelled to WITHAM, and lodged there that night. Next day,
William Mead meeting us on the way at HARE STREET, I went with him
to his house, the other Friends going on for London.
Here, being weak with travel and continual exercise, I spent some
time to rest myself, and recover my health; visiting in the mean
time the Friends in that part of the country, as I was able to get
abroad.[61] When I was a little recovered, I went to ENFIELD,
visiting Friends there and thereabouts; and so to DALSTON to see the
widow Stot; and thence to LONDON, some Friends being come over from
New Jersey in America, about business, which I was desired to be
present at.
It was the latter end of the summer when I came to LONDON, where I
stayed the winter following; saving that once or twice, my wife
being in town with me, I went with her to her son Rous’s at
Kingston. And though my body was very weak; yet I was in continual
service, either in public meetings, when I was able to bear them, or
in particular business amongst Friends, and visiting those that were
sufferers for truth, either by imprisonment or loss of goods.
Many things also in this time I wrote, some for the press, and some
for particular service; as letters to the King of Denmark and Duke
of Holstein, on behalf of Friends that were sufferers in their
dominions; of the latter, the following is a copy:—
“_For the Duke of Holstein, whom I entreat, in the love of God, to
read over this, which is sent in love to him_.
“I understand that formerly, by some evil-minded persons, it was
reported to thee, when Elizabeth Hendricks came to Frederickstadt
to visit the people called Quakers, that it was a scandal to the
Christian religion, that a woman should be suffered to preach in a
public assembly religiously gathered together, &c. Upon which thou
gave forth an order to the rulers of Frederickstadt, ‘to make the
said people leave that place forthwith, or to send them away.’ But
the said rulers being Arminians, and they, or their fathers,
having come to live there, as a persecuted people in Holland, not
much above threescore years ago, made answer to the duke, ‘they
were not willing to persecute others for conscience’ sake, who had
looked upon persecution on that account in their own case as
antichristian,’ &c. But after that, the people of God, in scorn
called Quakers, wrote unto thee, O duke, from Frederickstadt; and
since that time they have had their liberty, and their meetings
peaceable, to serve and worship God almost these twenty years at
Frederickstadt, and thereabouts, freely without any molestation;
which liberty they have acknowledged as a great favour and
kindness from thee.
“And now, O duke, thou professing Christianity from the great
and mighty name of Christ Jesus, who is King of kings and Lord
of lords, and the Holy Scriptures of truth of the Old and New
Testament, do not you use many women’s words in your service and
worship out of the Old and New Testament? The apostle saith,
‘Let your women keep silence in the churches;’ and that, ‘he did
not permit a woman to speak, but to be under obedience; and if
she will learn anything, to ask her husband at home; for it is a
shame for a woman to speak in the church.’ And 1 Tim. ii. 11,
12. ‘Women are to learn in silence and not suffered to teach,
nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence.’ 1
Cor. xiv. 34. Now, here the duke may see, what sort of women
were to be in silence and in subjection, whom the law commands
to be silent, and not to usurp authority over the man, nor to
speak in the church; these were unruly women. In the same
chapter he commands women ‘not to plait or broider their hair,
nor to wear gold, pearls, or costly array.’ These things were
forbidden by the apostle; and such women as wear such things,
are to learn in silence and to be subject, and not to usurp
authority over the men; for it is a shame for such to speak in
the church. But do not such women as these, that wear gold and
silver, and pearls and gaudy apparel, or costly array, and plait
and broider their hair, speak in your church, when your priest
sets them to sing psalms? Do they not speak when they sing
psalms? Consider this, O duke! Yet you say, ‘your women must
keep silence in the church, and must not speak in the church;’
but when they sing psalms in your churches, are they then
silent? Though the apostle forbids such women before-mentioned
to speak in the church, yet in another place the apostle
encourages the good or holy women to be teachers of good things,
as in Tit. ii. 3, 4. The apostle said, ‘I entreat thee, true
yoke-fellow, help those women which laboured with me in the
gospel, and with other my fellow-labourers, whose names are
written in the book of life.’ Here he owns these holy women, and
encourages them, which laboured with him in the gospel, and did
not forbid them; Phil. iv. 2, 3. He likewise commends Phœbe
unto the church of the Romans, calls her ‘a servant unto the
church of Cenchrea,’ sends his epistle by her to the Romans from
Corinth, and desires the church at Rome ‘to receive her in the
Lord as becometh saints:’ and to ‘assist her in whatsoever
business she had need of; for she had been a succourer of many
and of himself also.’ And he said, ‘Greet Priscilla and Aquila,
my helpers in Christ Jesus, who have for my life laid down their
own necks; unto whom not only I give thanks, but also all the
churches of the Gentiles.’ Now here the duke may see these were
good, holy women, whom the apostle did not forbid speaking, Rom.
xvi. 1-4, but commended them. And Priscilla and Aquila
instructed and expounded unto Apollos the way of God more
perfectly, Acts xviii. 26. So here Priscilla was an instructor
as well as Aquila; which holy women the apostle doth not forbid.
Neither did the apostle forbid Philip’s four daughters, which
were virgins, to prophesy. Women might pray and prophesy in the
church, 1 Cor. xi. 5.
“The apostles showed to the Jews the fulfilling of Joel’s
prophecy; that in the last days God would pour of his Spirit upon
all flesh, and their sons and daughters, servants and handmaids,
should prophesy with the Spirit of God. So the apostle encourages
daughters and handmaids to prophesy as well as sons; and if they
do prophesy, they must speak to the church or people, Joel ii. 28;
Acts ii. 17, 18. Did not Miriam the prophetess sing unto the Lord,
and all the women with her, when the Lord had delivered the
children of Israel from Pharaoh? Did not she praise the Lord, and
prophesy in the congregation of the children of Israel? and was
not this in the church? Exod. xv. 21. Moses and Aaron did not
forbid her prophesying or speaking; but Moses said, ‘would God all
the Lord’s people were prophets!’ and the Lord’s people are women
as well as men. Deborah was a judge and a prophetess; and do not
you make use of Deborah’s and Miriam’s words in your service and
worship? See (Judg. v. 1-31) Deborah’s large speech or song. Barak
did not forbid her, nor any of the Jewish priests. Did not she
make this speech or song in the congregation or church of Israel?
In the book of Ruth there are good speeches of those good women,
which were not forbidden. Hannah prayed in the temple before Eli,
and the Lord answered her prayer. See what a speech Hannah makes,
and a praising of God, before Eli the high-priest, who did not
forbid her, 1 Sam. ii. 1-10. Josiah the king sent his priest with
several others, to ask counsel of Huldah the prophetess, who dwelt
at Jerusalem in the college, 2 Kings, xxii. 14; 2 Chron. xxxiv.
22. So here the king and his priests did not despise the counsel
of this prophetess; and she prophesied to the congregation of
Israel, as may be seen in these chapters.
“And in Luke i. 41-55, see what a godly speech Elizabeth made to
Mary, and what a large godly speech Mary made also. Mary said,
‘that the Lord did regard the low estate of his handmaid,’ &c. And
do you not make use in your worship and service of Mary’s and
Elizabeth’s words from Luke i. 41-55, in your churches, and yet
forbid women’s speaking in your churches? Yet all sorts of women
speak in your churches, when they sing, and say Amen. In Luke ii.
there was Anna the prophetess, a widow of about fourscore and four
years; who departed not from the temple, but served God with
fasting and prayer night and day. Did not she confess Christ Jesus
in the temple, and give thanks to the Lord, and ‘speak of Christ
to all that looked for redemption in Jerusalem?’ Luke ii. 36-38.
So such holy women were not forbidden to speak in the church,
neither in the law nor gospel. Was it not Mary Magdalene and other
women that first preached Christ’s resurrection to the apostles?
The woman indeed (namely, Eve) was first in transgression; and so
they were women that first preached the resurrection of Christ
Jesus; for Christ said to Mary, &c. ‘Go to my brethren, and say
unto them, I ascend unto my Father and to your Father, and to my
God and to your God,’ John xx. 17. And Luke xxiv. 10, it was Mary
Magdalene and Joanna, and Mary the mother of James, and other
women that were with them, who told the apostles, ‘that Christ was
risen from the dead, and their words and these women’s words, were
as idle tales to the apostles, and they believed them not,’ ibid.
ver. 11. And ver. 22, ‘Certain women also of our company made us
astonished,’ they said: so here it may be seen, that the women’s
preaching the resurrection of Christ did astonish the apostles.
Christ sent these women to preach his resurrection; so it is no
shame for such women to preach Christ Jesus; neither are they to
be silent when Christ sends them. The apostle says, ‘Every tongue
shall confess to God,’ Rom. xiv. 11; and ‘Every tongue shall
confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the
Father,’ Phil. ii. 11. So here it is clear, that women must
confess Christ as well as men, if every tongue must confess. And
the apostle saith, ‘There is neither male nor female; for ye are
all one in Christ Jesus,’ Gal. iii. 28.
“And whereas it is said, ‘Women must ask their husbands at home,’
&c., the duke knows very well virgins have no husbands, nor
widows; for Anna the prophetess was a widow; and if Christ be the
husband, men must ask counsel of him at home as well as women,
before they teach. And set the case, that a Turk’s wife should be
a Christian, or a Papist’s wife should be a Lutheran, or a
Calvinist, must they ask and learn of their husbands at home,
before they confess Christ Jesus in the congregation of the Lord?
Their counsel will be to them to turn Turks or Papists.
“I entreat the duke to consider these things. I entreat him to
mind God’s grace and truth in his heart that is come by Jesus;
that by his Spirit of grace and truth he may come to serve and
worship God in his spirit and truth; so that he may serve the
living eternal God that made him, in his generation, and have his
peace in Christ, that the world cannot take away. And I do desire
his good, peace, and prosperity in this world, and his eternal
comfort and happiness in the world that is everlasting. Amen.”
G.F.
London, 26th of the 8th Month, 1684.
Besides the foregoing, I wrote also epistles to Friends; of one of
which the following is a copy:—
“Friends and Brethren in the Lord Jesus Christ, in whom you have
all life, peace, and salvation; walk in Him, who is your heavenly
Rock and Foundation, that stands sure, who hath all power in
heaven and earth given unto him. So his power is over all. Let
your faith stand in his power, which is over all from everlasting
to everlasting, over the devil and his power; that in the holy,
heavenly wisdom of God, ye may be preserved and kept to God’s
glory, out of all snares and temptations; so that God’s wisdom may
be justified of all his children in this day of his power, and
they all may be faithful, serving and worshipping God in his
Spirit and truth, and valiant for it upon the earth.
“For, as the apostle saith, ‘They that believe are entered into
their rest, and have ceased from their own works, as God did from
his.’ Now this rest is an eternal rest in Christ, the eternal Son
of God, in whom every true believer hath everlasting life in
Christ Jesus, their rest and everlasting day. For Christ the Rest
bruiseth the serpent’s head, and through death destroyeth death,
and the devil, the power of death, and his works. He is the
Eternal Rest, that giveth eternal life to his sheep. Christ
fulfilleth the prophets, and all the figures, shadows, and
ceremonies, as in the Old Testament; and all the promises are yea
and amen in Christ, who was the Eternal Rest to all true believers
in the apostles’ days, and ever since, and is so now. Christ is
the beginning and the ending, the first and the last, who is
ascended above all principalities, powers, thrones, and dominions,
that he might fill all things. For ‘by Jesus Christ all things
were made and created, whether they be things in heaven, or things
in the earth;’ and he is the Eternal Rest. They that believe are
entered into Christ, their Eternal Rest, in whom they have eternal
life and peace with God. Wherefore I say again, in Him who is your
Rest, live and abide; for in Him ye are happy, and his blessings
will rest upon you. God Almighty keep and preserve you all, his
true believers, in Christ your Rest and Peace this day. Amen.”
G.F.
London, the 18th of the 12th Month, 1684-5.
About a month after I got a little out of London, visiting Friends,
at SOUTH STREET, FORD GREEN, and ENFIELD, where I had meetings.
Afterwards I went to WALTHAM ABBEY, and was at the meeting there on
a First-day, which was very large and peaceable. Then returning
through ENFIELD and EDMONTON SIDE, I came back to LONDON in the 3rd
Month, to advise with and assist Friends, in laying their sufferings
before the Parliament then sitting. We drew up a short account
thereof, which we caused to be printed and spread among the
Parliament-men.
The Yearly Meeting coming on, I was much concerned for the Friends
that came up to it out of the country, lest they should meet with
any trouble or disturbance in their passages up or down; and the
rather, because about that time a great bustle arose in the nation
on the Duke of Monmouth’s landing in the West. But the Lord,
according to his wonted goodness, was graciously pleased to preserve
Friends in safety, gave us a blessed opportunity to meet together in
peace and quietness, and accompanied our meeting with his living,
refreshing presence; blessed for ever be his holy name!
Now, considering the hurries that were in the nation, it came upon
me, at the close of this meeting, to write a few lines to Friends,
“to caution all to keep out of the spirit of the world, in which the
trouble is, and to dwell in the peaceable truth;” as follows:—
“DEAR FRIENDS AND BRETHREN,
“Whom the Lord hath called and chosen in Christ Jesus, your Life
and Salvation, in whom ye have all rest and peace with God; the
Lord God by his mighty power, which is over all, hath preserved
and supported you to this day, to be a peculiar, holy people to
himself, so that by his eternal Spirit and power ye might be all
kept out of the world; for in the world is trouble. And now, in
this great day of the Lord God Almighty, he is shaking the heavens
and the earth of outward professions, their elements are in a
heat, their sun and their moon are darkened, the stars falling,
and the mountains and hills shaking and tottering, as it was among
the Jews in the day of Christ’s appearing. Therefore, dear Friends
and brethren, dwell in the Seed, Christ Jesus, the Rock and
Foundation, that cannot be shaken; that ye may see with the light
and Spirit of Christ, that ye are as fixed stars in the firmament
of God’s power; and in this his power and light, you will see over
all the wandering stars, the clouds without water, and trees
without fruit. That which may be shaken, will be shaken; as will
all they that are wandered from the firmament of God’s power.
“Dear Friends and brethren, you that are redeemed from the death
and fall of Adam, by Christ the second Adam, in Him ye have life,
rest, and peace; for Christ saith, ‘In me ye shall have peace; but
in the world trouble.’ And the apostle saith, ‘They that believe
are entered into their Rest,’ namely, Christ, who hath overcome
the world, who bruiseth the serpent’s head, destroys the devil and
his works, and fulfils the types, figures, and shadows of the Old
Testament and the prophets; in whom the promises are yea and amen;
who is the first and the last, the beginning and the ending—the
Eternal Rest. So keep and walk in Christ, your Rest, every one
that have received him.
“And now, dear Friends and brethren, whatever bustlings and
trouble, tumults and outrages, quarrels and strife, arise in the
world, keep out of them all; concern not yourselves with them: but
keep in the Lord’s power and peaceable truth, that is over all
such things; in which power ye seek the peace and good of all men.
Live in the love which God hath shed abroad in your hearts through
Christ Jesus; in which nothing is able to separate you from God
and Christ, neither outward sufferings, persecutions, nor any
outward thing, that is below and without; nor to hinder or break
your heavenly fellowship in the light, gospel, and Spirit of
Christ; nor your holy communion in the Holy Ghost, that proceeds
from the Father and the Son, and which leads you into all truth.
In this Holy Ghost, in which is your holy communion, that proceeds
from the Father and the Son, you have fellowship with the Father
and the Son, and one with another. This is it which links and
joins Christ’s church or body together, to Him the heavenly and
spiritual head, and in unity in his Spirit, which is the bond of
peace, to all his church and living members, in whom they have
eternal rest and peace in Christ, and with God everlasting, who is
to be blessed and praised for ever. Amen.
“Dear Friends, forsake not the assembling of yourselves together,
who are gathered in the name of Jesus, who is your prophet, whom
God hath raised up in the New Testament, to be heard in all
things; who opens to you, and no man can shut; and shuts, and no
man can open; who is your Priest, made higher than the heavens by
the power of an endless life, by whom you are made a royal
priesthood, to offer up to God spiritual sacrifice; who is the
Bishop of your souls, to oversee you, that ye do not go astray
from God; who is the good Shepherd, that hath laid down his life
for his sheep; and they hear his voice, and follow him, and he
gives them eternal life.
“And now, dear Friends and brethren, abide in Christ, the vine,
that ye may bring forth fruit to the glory of God. And as every
one hath received Christ, walk in Him, who is not of the world,
that lies in wickedness; so that ye may be preserved out of the
vain fashions and customs of the world, which satisfy the lust of
the eye, the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life, which are
not of the Father, but of the world that passes away. Whoever
joins to that which is not of the Father, or encourages it, draws
the mind from God the Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore
let Christ rule in your hearts, that your minds, souls, and
spirits may be kept out of the vanities of the world, in their
words, ways, and actions, that ye may be a peculiar people,
zealous of good works, serving the Lord through Jesus Christ, to
the praise and glory of God; that by the Word of his grace your
words may be gracious, and in your lives and conversations ye may
show forth righteousness, holiness, and godliness; that so God
Almighty may be glorified in you all, and through you all, who is
above all, blessed and praised for ever. Amen.”
G. F.
London, the 11th of the 4th Month, 1685.
Several other letters also I wrote at this time to Friends in divers
foreign countries, from whom I had received letters about the
affairs of truth. Which when I had despatched, the Yearly Meeting
being over, and country Friends for the most part being gone, I got
a little way out of town; being much spent with the heat of the
weather, throngs in meetings, and continual business. I went at
first to SOUTH STREET, where I abode some days. And among other
services I had there, a great sense entered me of the growth and
increase of pride, vanity, and excess in apparel; and that not only
amongst the people of the world, but too much also amongst some that
came among us, and seemed to make profession of the truth. In the
sense I had of the evil thereof, it came upon me to give forth the
following, as a reproof and check thereunto:—[62]
“The apostle Peter saith (in 1 Pet. iii.) of the women’s adorning;
‘Let it not be (mark, let it not be; this is a positive
prohibition) that outward adorning of plaiting the hair, and of
wearing of gold, or of putting on of apparel; but let it be the
hidden man of the heart, in that which is not corruptible, even
the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit, which is in the sight of
God of great price; for after this manner in the old time the holy
women also, who trusted in God, adorned themselves.’
“Here ye may see what is the ornament of the holy women, which was
in the sight of God of great price, and which the holy women, who
trusted in God, adorned themselves with. But the unholy women,
that trust not in God, their ornament is not a meek and a quiet
spirit; they adorn themselves with plaiting the hair, putting on
of apparel, and wearing of gold; which is forbidden by the apostle
in his general epistle to the church of Christ, the true
Christians.
“And the apostle saith (1 Tim. ii. 9, 10), ‘In like manner also,
that women adorn themselves in modest apparel, with shamefacedness
and sobriety; not with broidered hair, or gold, or pearls, or
costly array, but (which becometh women professing godliness) with
good works.’
“Here ye may see what the women were not to adorn themselves with,
who professed godliness; they were not to adorn themselves with
broidered hair, nor gold, nor pearls, nor costly array; for this
was not looked upon to be modest apparel for holy women, that
professed godliness and good works. But this adorning or apparel
is for the immodest, unshamefaced, unsober women, that profess not
godliness, neither follow those good works that God commands.
Therefore it doth not become men and women who profess true
Christianity and godliness to be adorned with gold, or chains, or
pearls, or costly array; or with broidered hair; for these things
are for the lust of the eye, the lust of the flesh, and the pride
of life, which are not of the Father. All holy men and women are
to mind that which is more precious than gold; who are ‘redeemed
not with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain
conversation; but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a Lamb
without blemish and without spot. Therefore as obedient children
to God, not fashioning yourselves according to your former lusts
in your ignorance; but as he which hath called you is holy, so be
ye holy in all manner of conversation,’ 1 Pet. i. 14, 15.
“Christ saith, ‘The life is more than meat, and the body is more
than raiment,’ Luke xii. 23.
“I read of a “wise moral philosopher, who, meeting a woman with
her neck and breast bare, laid his hand upon her, and said,
‘Woman, wilt thou sell this flesh?’ and she replying, No; ‘Then
pray,’ said he, ‘shut up thy shop;’” (meaning her bare breasts and
neck). So they were looked upon as harlots, that went with their
necks, breasts, and backs bare, and not modest people, even among
the moral heathens. Therefore they that profess the knowledge of
true Christianity, should be ashamed of such things. You may see a
book written by the very Papists, and another by Richard Baxter
the Presbyterian, against bare breasts and bare backs. They that
were but in an outward profession, declared against such things;
therefore they who are in the possession of truth and true
Christianity, should be ashamed of such things. Read, I pray you,
the third of Isaiah, and there see how that holy prophet was
grieved with the foolish women’s vain attire, and how he was sent
by the Lord to reprove them. Envious, persecuting Jezebel’s
attired head and bravery, like a painted harlot out of the truth,
did not keep her from the judgments of God, when the Lord stirred
up Jehu against her. Doth not pride go before a fall, and a
haughty mind before destruction? God resisteth the proud, and
giveth grace to the humble. Solomon saith, ‘The Lord will destroy
the house of the proud,’ Prov. xv. 25. ‘For the day of the Lord
shall be upon every one that is proud and lofty, &c., and he shall
be brought low,’ Isa. ii. 12, and Mal. iv. Therefore take heed of
calling the proud happy; for ‘the Lord will scatter the proud in
the imaginations of their own hearts, and exalt them of low
degree.’ And you may read in the Revelations (chap. xvii. 4, and
xviii. 16), of the false church, how she was outwardly decked, but
full of abomination, and came to a downfall at last. Therefore it
is good for all that profess the truth, to use this world as not
abusing it; for the fashion of this world passeth away; but the
Word of the Lord endureth for ever. ‘The Lord taketh pleasure in
his people, he will beautify the meek with salvation,’ Psa. cxlix.
4. All that know the truth as it is in Jesus, are to be beautified
and clothed with this salvation, which salvation is a strong wall
or a bulwark against that spirit, that would lead you further into
the fall from God, into those things which the fallen man and
woman delight in, and beautify or adorn themselves with.
Therefore, all that profess the truth, be circumspect, sincere,
and fervent, following the Lord Jesus Christ, who is not of this
world; in whom ye have life and peace with God.”
G. F.
South-street, the 24th of the 4th Month, 1685.
-----
Footnote 58:
Frequent mention being made by George Fox of his being engaged
with his pen on behalf of the truth, it may be well to apprize the
reader that these volumes contain only a very small portion of his
writings. Many others of his works were collected and printed in
1706, forming a large volume, entitled, _Gospel Truth
Demonstrated, in a collection of Doctrinal Books, given forth by
that faithful minister of Jesus Christ, George Fox, &c._ This
collection consists of above 1000 folio pages, comprising about
160 pieces, the dates from 1653-1689.
In addition to treatises in explanation or defence of the
principles and doctrines taught by George Fox, this volume
contains many others of a more extended character. There are three
addressed to the Jews; and papers in behalf of the doctrine of the
gospel, and against persecution, to be delivered to the following
rulers:—The Great Turk, the magistrates of Malta, the Emperor of
Austria, the Kings of France and Spain, the Pope, and the Emperor
of China. And in 1688, Sultan Mahomet IV. having sent a defiance
to the Emperor Leopold in his Christian character, threatening to
ruin him, _and pursue his crucified God_, George Fox wrote a Reply
to this public document; warning the Turk to fear the great God
that made him and all things, and showing him out of their Koran,
that the founder of their religion wrote more respectfully of
Christ: whom he then proceeds to set forth to the notice of the
Sultan by citations from the Scriptures.
In the books and treatises forming the above collection, the
doctrine of our blessed Lord, and those matters essential to
salvation and true Christianity, are plainly asserted and fully
demonstrated according to the Scriptures. For although he gave
preference to the Holy Spirit (as all true spiritual Christians
do), yet his true love to, and sincere esteem of, the Holy
Scriptures (as being given by Divine inspiration), is clearly
manifest; 1st, In his frequent advice to Friends to keep to
Scripture language, terms, words, and doctrines, as taught by the
Holy Ghost, in matters of faith, religion, controversy, and
conversation; and not to be imposed upon and drawn into
unscriptural terms, invented by men in their human wisdom. 2nd, In
his great industry in searching the Scriptures, and frequently
quoting, reciting, aptly applying and opening the same in his
writings, as appears in the above-named work. He truly testified,
both in his ministry and writings, of Christ Jesus, his power, and
coming, in the flesh and in the spirit. He was both for the sacred
history and mystery of Christ revealed according to the Scripture
testimonies of him, respecting his sufferings without, the work of
his power within, and his kingdom and glory; and, under his
guidance, he faithfully warred against the spirit of Antichrist
and persecution—against the false church—the corruptions of the
world, its deceit and hypocrisy, under all professions.
Footnote 59:
William Bingley became a minister among Friends while residing in
Yorkshire, and visited Ireland in 1675 and in 1682. He settled in
London as a stuff merchant when in the meridian of life; and in
1684 accompanied Samuel Waldenfield on an apostolic journey in
Holland and the Netherlands. He was one of the Friends who
preached at the funeral of George Fox, in 1690-91; and he appears
to have paid religious visits to different parts of Great Britain
at various periods. He died in London in 1714, aged 64 years.
Footnote 60:
Samuel Waldenfield, born at Edmondsbury, in Suffolk, in 1652, was
religiously inclined in his youth, and a hearer of the
Independents. But becoming convinced of the principles of truth,
as held by Friends, about the year 1670, he came forth a powerful
preacher of the word of life; and, with the Lord’s blessing on his
labours, many were convinced of the truth, and turned from
darkness to light, and from the power of Satan unto God, and were
as the seals of his ministry. In 1684 he married, and settled in
London, continuing faithful and diligent in the work he was called
unto; and suffered for his testimony by imprisonment, &c. His
travels on gospel service, to the year 1700 were near 40,000
miles, which were also, subsequently, very considerable. Samuel
Waldenfield is spoken of as being very considerate of the poor,
humble, and merciful, and as an elder worthy of double honour. He
was a bright ornament to our religion in his conversation, gaining
great reputation to truth and Friends among rich and poor. He was
ill about two months before his decease, during which time he
uttered many expressions worthy of being noted. He died in great
peace in 1715.—See _Piety Promoted_, vol. ii., pp. 248-252.
Footnote 61:
After returning from his last visit to Holland, George Fox did not
travel far from London, his usual residence during the latter part
of his life. His health had been gradually declining for some
years, in consequence of his many and grievous imprisonments, and
the great fatigue of body and mind, occasioned by his long travels
for the promotion of the cause of truth, and by his incessant
labours in “defence of the gospel” against the clamour and
opposition of apostate brethren, and the unfounded imputations of
others, decidedly hostile to the truth as it is in Jesus. His
solicitude, however, to promote the welfare of the Society, and
procure relief to his Friends under suffering, both at home and
abroad, remained undiminished. In the course of his declining
state, he wrote many epistles to his friends, some of sympathy and
consolation, to encourage and strengthen them in their deep
sufferings; others of counsel, exhortation, and reproof, “stirring
up the pure mind by way of remembrance,” and labouring to build
them up in the most holy faith; and, on all occasions, seeking not
his own honour, but the honour of God only, and the edification of
his church and people.
Footnote 62:
Those Christians whose experience enters most deeply into the
spiritual nature of the gospel dispensation, will find that it
leads them into simplicity as regards their outward appearance.
The practice in the primitive church, as regards “outward
adorning,” is thus spoken of by Coleman, in his _Antiquities of
the Christian Church_:—
“Nothing may appear more purely a matter of indifference than the
fashion and colour of dress; and yet, in the circumstances of the
primitive Christians, articles of that nature did acquire such an
importance that they gradually fell into a style of clothing
peculiar to themselves. Not that they affected any singularities
in their personal appearance, for their habiliments were made and
worn in the ordinary fashion of the time and place: and
Christians, whether found in the high, the middle, or the lower
ranks, were accustomed to equip themselves in a manner suited to
the decencies of the state or profession to which they belonged;
but, looking to the moral influence of dress, and desirous of
avoiding everything that might minister to vanity, or lead the
wearer to forget, in attending to the outward man, the ornament of
a ‘meek and quiet spirit,’ they studiously rejected all finery as
unbecoming the humility of their character, and confined
themselves to a suit of apparel, remarkable not so much for the
plainness of the material as for the absence of all superfluous
ornament. Everything gaudy or sumptuous, that partook of the
costly stuffs or the crimson dyes that suited the luxurious taste
of the times, was discountenanced by the spiritually-minded
followers of Christ. The same simplicity reigned throughout their
domestic establishments; and even those of their number who were
persons of rank and opulence, chose to content themselves with
such things as were recommended by their utility rather than their
elegance, and calculated to answer the purposes of necessity and
comfort, rather than to gratify ‘the lust of the eye, and the
pride of life.’ And however refined or exquisite the taste, which,
through education and the habits of society, any of them had
acquired, they learned to subject it to the higher principle of
denying themselves to everything that tended too much to captivate
the senses, and increase their love to a world, the fashion
whereof, they thought, was soon to pass away.”
The remarks of John Wesley on simplicity in dress are excellent,
but too long to be quoted here. He says that “following the
fashions of the world is directly at war with the spirit of the
gospel.” See _Select Miscellanies_, vol. v., p. 288, for Wesley’s
views on this subject; also of T. à Kempis, and others.
CHAPTER XII.
1685-1686.—George Fox tarries in London, labouring in the service of
Truth—removes to Epping on account of his health—writes an
epistle to Friends—returns to London—writes a paper concerning
order in the Church of God—and a warning to backsliders—assists
in distributing money raised for sufferers by Friends in
Ireland—writes an epistle to the king of Poland, on behalf of
Friends of Dantzic, who suffer imprisonment for conscience’
sake—a paper concerning judging—looks diligently after Friends’
sufferings in London, and obtains a general release of
prisoners—writes an epistle to Friends, many having been
recently liberated from prison—another on a similar occasion—an
epistle to Friends to keep in the unity in the Truth—another to
remind them of the evidence and seal they had received of their
meetings for discipline having been set up in the power and
spirit of God—a paper concerning the state of the true Church—a
paper respecting the “falling away” foretold by the apostle
Paul, 2 Thess. ii. 3—a paper showing how the Lord, in all ages,
called the righteous out from amongst the wicked, before he
destroyed the latter.
After I had been some weeks at South Street and Enfield, in which
time I had several meetings with Friends, I returned to LONDON.
Amongst other services I found there, one was to assist Friends in
drawing up a testimony to clear our Friends from being concerned in
the late rebellion in the West, and from all plots against the
government: which was delivered to the chief justice, who was then
going down into the West with commission to try prisoners.
I tarried some time in London, visiting meetings, and labouring
among Friends in the service of truth. But finding my health much
impaired for the want of fresh air, I went to Charles Bathurst’s
country-house at EPPING-FOREST, where I stayed a few days. While I
was there it came upon me to write the following epistle to
Friends:—
“DEAR FRIENDS,
“Who are called, chosen, and faithful in this day of trial,
temptations, and sufferings, whom the Lord by his right hand hath
upholden in all your sufferings (and some to death) for the Lord
and his truth’s sake. Christ saith, ‘Be of good cheer, I have
overcome the world; in me ye have peace; but in the world ye have
trouble.’ The children of the Seed, who are heirs of the kingdom,
know this is true. And though ye have trials by false brethren,
Judases and sons of perdition, that are got into the temple of
God, and exalted above all that is called God, whom the Lord will
destroy with the breath of his mouth, and the brightness of his
coming: and though ye be tried by powers or principalities, yet
there is nothing able to separate you from the love of God, which
ye have in Christ Jesus. In that love dwell, which bears all
things and fulfils the law; in which edify one another, and be
courteous, kind, and humble; for to such God giveth his grace
plentifully, and such he teacheth. And pray in the Holy Ghost,
which proceeds from the Father and the Son; in it keep your holy
communion, and unity in the Spirit, the bond of peace, which is
the king of kings’ heavenly peace. In that you are all bound to
good behaviour, to keep peace among yourselves, to seek the peace
of all men; and to show forth the heavenly, gentle, and peaceable
wisdom to all, in righteousness and truth, answering the good in
all people in your lives and conversations (for the Lord is
glorified in your bringing forth spiritual fruit), that ye may eye
and behold the Lord in all your actions; that his blessings ye may
all feel to rest upon you.
“Whether ye be the Lord’s prisoners for his name and truth’s sake,
or at liberty, in all things labour to be content, for that is a
continual feast; and let no trouble move you; then ye will be as
Mount Sion, that cannot be removed. In all things exercise the
word of patience, which word will sanctify all things to you.
Study to be quiet, and do the Lord’s business that he requires of
you, and your own, in truth and righteousness: and whatsoever ye
do, let it be done to the praise and glory of God in the name of
Jesus Christ. All they that make God’s people suffer, make the
Seed suffer in their own particulars, and imprison the Just there.
Such will not visit the Seed in themselves, but cast it into
prison in others, and not visit it in prison. You may read that
Christ saith, such must go into everlasting punishment. That is a
sad punishment and prison. All such as become apostates and
backsliders, that crucify to themselves Christ afresh, put him to
open shame, and trample under feet the blood of the Son of God, by
which they were cleansed, and then come to be unclean; such
grieve, vex, quench, and rebel against, the Spirit of God in
themselves; and then rebel against them that walk in it. Such are
unfaithful to God and man, and are enemies to every good work and
service of God: but their end will be according to their works;
who are like unto the earth, that hath often received rain, but
brings forth briars and thorns, which are to be rejected, and are
for the fire.
“Therefore, dear Friends, in all your sufferings feel the Lord’s
eternal arm and power, which hath supported you to this day, and
will to the end, as your faith stands in it, and as you are
settled upon the rock and foundation Christ Jesus, that cannot be
removed; in whom ye have life and peace with God. The Lord God
Almighty in him give you dominion, and preserve you all to his
glory; that in all your sufferings ye may feel his presence: and
that when ye have finished your testimony, ye may receive the
crown of glory, which God hath laid up for them that fear and
serve him. Amen.”
G. F.
The 15th of the 7th Month, 1685.
Having spent about a week in the country, I returned to LONDON,
where I continued about two months, visiting meetings, and labouring
to get relief for Friends from their sufferings, which yet lay heavy
upon them in many parts of the nation. Several papers also I wrote
relating to the service of truth, one of which was concerning order
in the church of God, which some that were gone out of the unity of
Friends much opposed. It was as follows:—
“Among all societies, families, or nations of people in the world,
there exists some sort of order. There was the order of Aaron in
the Old Testament; and the order of Melchizedeck before that,
after whose order Christ Jesus came; and he did not despise that
order. God is a God of order in his whole creation, and in his
church: and all believers in the light, the life in Christ, that
pass from death to life, are in the order of the Holy Spirit,
power, light, life, and government of Christ Jesus, of the
increase whereof there is no end. This is a mystery to all those
disorderly people, who have written and printed so much against
the order which the Lord’s power and Spirit hath brought forth
among his people. And you that cry so much against order, is it
not manifest that you are gone into a land of darkness, and of the
shadow of death, into disorder, and where the light is as
darkness? Is not this your condition seen by all them that live
and walk in the truth, whose conversations are according to the
gospel of life and salvation?
“The devil, Satan, dragon, the first and second beast, the whore
and false prophets, and their worshippers and followers, are all
out of the truth, abode not in it, nor in the order of it; and the
truth is over them all. In Salem is God’s tabernacle; and his
tabernacle is in Shiloh; these are far beyond the tabernacles of
Ham. (Ps. lxxvi. and lxxviii.).
“All the figures and shadows were and are comprehended in time;
but Christ the substance is the beginning and the ending. And all
trials, troubles, persecutions, and temptations, came up in time;
but the Lord’s power which is everlasting, is over all such
things; in which is safety.
“The black world of darkness lieth in wickedness, and by its
wisdom knoweth not God, that made the world and all things
therein; for the god of the world and prince of the air ruleth in
the hearts of all that disobey the living God that made them. So
the God of this wicked world hath blinded the eyes of the infidels
or heathen; so that by their wisdom they know not the living God.
“In the Old Testament the Lord said, ‘With all thy offerings thou
shalt offer salt.’ (Lev. ii. 13.). And Christ saith in his new
covenant, ‘Every one shall be salted with fire, and every
sacrifice shall be salted with salt. Salt is good; but if the salt
have lost its saltness, wherewith will you season it? Have salt in
yourselves; and have peace one with another,’ Mark ix. 49, 50.
“We have received the earnest of the Spirit, which is the earnest
of the inheritance, that fadeth not away. For God poureth out of
his Spirit upon all flesh. It is God’s Spirit which is above our
natural spirit, by which alone we do not know God; for it is by
the Spirit of God that we know the things of God. And the Spirit
of God doth witness to our souls and spirits, that this Spirit of
God is the earnest of an eternal inheritance. ‘God opens his
people’s ears to discipline, and commands that they turn from
iniquity. If they obey and serve him, they shall spend their days
in prosperity and their years in pleasures; but if they obey not,
they shall perish by the sword, and they shall die without
knowledge,’ Job xxxvi. 10-12. So the disobedient that do not turn
from their iniquity have not this prosperity and pleasure, but die
without the knowledge of God; and their ears are shut to this
discipline, which God opens to his people.”
G. F.
When I had been about two months in London, I was sent for to my son
Rous’s at KINGSTON, to visit a daughter of his, who at that time lay
very sick; but recovered. Whilst I stayed there I had several
meetings with Friends; and returning by HAMMERSMITH, stayed the
First-day meeting there, which was large and peaceable. Having
visited Friends thereabouts, I came back to LONDON again, being very
intent upon the business of getting redress for suffering Friends.
In this and other services I continued at London, till the latter
end of the 11th month; save that I went to visit an ancient Friend
at BETHNAL-GREEN, with whom I tarried three or four days. While I
was there, I was much exercised in the sense of the enemy’s working,
to draw from the holy way of truth into a false liberty, and so into
the world’s ways and worships again. And the example of the
backsliding Jews coming before me, I was moved to write the
following as a warning to all such:—
“You may see, when the Jews rebelled against the good Spirit of
God, which he gave to instruct them, they forsook him and his law,
way, and worship, and went a whoring after Balaam’s ways, and
became like the wild ass’s colt, snuffing up the wind, as in Jer.
ii. 24. And in Jer. iii., see how Judah played the harlot under
every green tree, and upon every high mountain: and therefore the
Lord divorced Judah, as he had divorced Israel, when she forsook
his way and followed the ways of the heathen. Though the Lord had
fed them to the full, yet they forsook him, ‘they committed
adultery, and assembled themselves together in harlots’ houses,’
Jer. v. 7. ‘And with their whoredom they defiled the land, and
committed adultery with stocks and stones,’ Jer. iii. 9. Here you
may see, when they forsook the living eternal God, they followed
the religions and worships of other nations, whose gods were made
of stocks and stones, which the Jews worshipped, and committed
adultery withal. When they forsook the living God, and his way and
worship, they forsook the worship at the temple at Jerusalem, and
followed the heathen’s worships in the mountains and fields; so it
was called adultery and whoredom to join with other religions and
forsake God; as in Jer. xiii. 27.
“And now, if the children of New Jerusalem that is above, should
forsake the worship that Christ in his New Testament set up (which
is in Spirit and in truth) and follow the worships of nations,
which men have set up, will not they that do so, commit adultery
with them, in forsaking God’s worship, and Christ, the new and
living way?
“In Jer. xliv., ye may see how the children of Judah provoked the
Lord against them, by worshipping the works of their own hands,
and following the gods of the land of Egypt. In this they
committed adultery, forsaking the living God, their husband, and
his worship; and there ye may see God’s judgments pronounced
against them to their destruction. And what will become of those
that forsake the worship in Spirit and in truth, which Christ set
up, and worship the works of their own hands in spiritual Egypt,
and follow spiritual Egypt’s will-worship, which they invented?
May not this be called whoredom in them that forsake Christ, the
new and living way, his pure religion, and his worship, that he
hath set up? And they that forsake the Lord’s way, and his worship
that he set up, and follow the world’s ways and worships that they
set up, do not they, whose way they follow, become at last their
enemies? as in Lam. i. See how the Jews forsook the Lord’s way and
worship, and doted on their lovers (the Assyrians, &c.) and with
all their idols they were defiled; and how they did not leave the
whoredoms brought from Egypt, and how they were polluted with the
Babylonians’ bed; as ye may read in Ezek. xxiii. When they forsook
the Lord, his way and worship, and followed the way and worship of
the heathen; then it was said they went a whoring after other
lovers, and committed adultery with them.
“Ye may see in Ezek. xvi. the state of the Jews was likened unto
that of their sister Sodom, and how they had played the harlot
with the Assyrians, and committed fornication with the Egyptians,
and had increased their whoredoms in following their abominable
idols. And therefore the Lord carried away the two tribes that
forsook him into Babylon; as you may see in Ezek. xvii. 20. And
they that forsake Christ, the new and living Way, and the worship
of God in Spirit and in truth, which Christ set up in his New
Testament, go into captivity in spiritual Babylon.
“In Hosea ii., see how he discovers the whoredoms and idolatry of
the Jews, who forsook the Lord, and compares them to a harlot. And
in chap, viii., the destruction threatened against the Jews, for
their impiety and idolatry. In chap. ix. also, the distress and
captivity of the Jews is threatened for their sins and idolatry.
And again they are reproved and threatened for their impiety and
idolatry, Hos. x. This was for forsaking the Lord and his way, and
following the ways of their own inventions, and the ways of the
heathen.
“Doth not Isaiah say, ‘That the Lord would visit Tyre, and that
she should commit fornication with all the kingdoms of the world
upon the face of the earth;’ and therefore the Lord threatened
destruction upon her, chap, xxiii. And in chap. lvii. see how the
Lord reproved the Jews for their whorish idolatry, and said, ‘Upon
a high and lofty mountain hast thou set thy bed; even thither
wentest thou up to offer sacrifices. Thou hast enlarged thy bed,
and made a covenant with them; thou lovedst their bed, where thou
sawest it.’ This was a joining to the heathen’s religions, altars,
and sacrifices, and a forsaking of the Lord’s altar and
sacrifices, which he commanded in the law; and therefore that was
committing whoredom with the heathen, and going into their beds
from the living God that made them. And now in the New Testament
God having ‘poured his Spirit upon all flesh,’ that by his Spirit
all might come to be ‘a royal priesthood, to offer up spiritual
sacrifices to God by Jesus Christ;’ all that err from the Spirit
of God and rebel against it, are not like to offer spiritual
sacrifices to God; the sacrifice of such God doth not accept, no
more than he did that of the heathens, or of the Jews, who
rebelled against his good Spirit, that he gave to instruct them.
“And ye may see in the xviith, xviiith, and xixth chapters of the
Revelations, the punishment of the great whore, Babylon, the
mother of harlots; and the victory of the Lamb, and how he calleth
God’s people out of Babylon; for ‘in her was found the blood of
the prophets, and of the saints, and of all that were slain upon
the earth.’ There ye may read her judgment and her downfall. This
whore are they, that are whored from the Spirit of God, and so
from God and from his holy worship in spirit and in truth, from
the pure, undefiled religion, that keeps from the spots of the
world, and from the new and living way, Christ Jesus; these are
whored from the Spirit of God into false religions, ways, and
worships, and so have corrupted the earth with her abominations.
But her judgment and downfall are seen, over whom Christ hath the
victory; and the marriage of the Lamb is come, glory to the Lord
for ever! And God’s pure religion, and pure worship in Spirit and
in truth, Christ hath set up, as it was in the apostles’ days.
Hallelujah!”
G. F.
I soon returned to LONDON, but made no long stay there, my body not
being able to bear the closeness of the city long together. While I
was in town, besides the usual services of visiting Friends, and
looking after their sufferings to get them eased, I assisted Friends
of the city in distributing certain sums of money, which our Friends
of Ireland had charitably and very liberally raised, and sent over
for the relief of their brethren, who suffered for the testimony of
a good conscience; which money was distributed amongst poor,
suffering Friends in the several counties, in proportion as we
understood their need.
Before I left the city, I heard of a great doctor lately come from
Poland; whom I invited to my lodging, and had much discourse with
him. After I had informed myself by him of such things as I had a
desire to know, I wrote a letter to the King of Poland on behalf of
Friends at Dantzic, who had long been under grievous sufferings. A
copy whereof follows:—
“_To John the Third, King of Poland, Grand Duke of Lithuania,
Russia, and Prussia, Defender of the city of Dantzic, &c.
Concerning the innocent and afflicted people, in scorn called
Quakers, who are now fed with bread and water in Bridewell of
the aforesaid city, under close confinement, where their
friends, wives, and children, are hardly suffered to come to
see them._
“O KING!
“The magistrates of the city of Dantzic say, that it is thy order
and command, that these innocent and afflicted people should
suffer such oppression. Now this punishment is inflicted upon them
only because they come together in the name of Jesus Christ, their
Redeemer and Saviour, who died for their sins, and is risen from
the dead for their justification; who is their Prophet, whom God
hath raised up like unto Moses; whom they ought to hear in all
things in this day of the gospel and new covenant; who went astray
like scattered sheep, but now are returned to the chief Shepherd
and Bishop of their souls, 1 Pet. ii. 25. ‘Who has given his life
for his sheep, and they hear his voice and follow him;’ who leads
them into his ‘pastures of life,’ John x.
“Now, O King! I understand that thou openly professest
Christianity, and the great and mighty name of Jesus Christ, who
is King of kings, and Lord of lords, to whom is given all power in
heaven and in earth, who rules all nations with a rod of iron.
Therefore, O king, it seems hard to us, that any who openly
confess Christ Jesus (yea, the magistrates of Dantzic do the
same,) should inflict those punishments upon an innocent and
harmless people, by reason of their tender conscience, only
because they come together to serve and worship the Eternal God,
who made them, in Spirit and in truth; which worship Christ Jesus
set up sixteen hundred years ago; as we read in John iv. 23, 24.
“I beseech the king, that he would consider, whether Christ in the
New Testament, ever gave such a command to his apostles, that they
should shut up any in prison, and feed them with bread and water,
who were not conformable in every particular to their religion,
faith, and worship? Where did the apostles exercise such things in
the true church after Christ’s ascension? Is not this the doctrine
of Christ and the apostles, that his followers should ‘love their
enemies, and pray for them that hate them and persecute and
despitefully use them?’ (Matt, v.)
“Is it not a shame to Christendom among the Turks and others, that
one Christian should persecute another for the doctrine of faith,
worship, and religion? They cannot prove that Christ ever gave
them such a command, whom they profess to be their Lord and
Master. For Christ says that his believers and followers should
‘love one another,’ and by this they should be known to be his
disciples. And did not Christ reprove those who would have ‘fire
to come down from heaven,’ to destroy them who would not receive
him? and did not he tell them, ‘they did not know what spirit they
were of?’ Have all who have persecuted men, or taken away their
lives, because they would not receive their religion, known what
spirit they were or are of? Is it not good for all to know, by the
Spirit of Christ, what spirit they are of? For the apostle says,
Rom. viii. 9, ‘If any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is
none of his.’ And 2 Cor. x. 4, ‘The weapons of our warfare are not
carnal, but spiritual,’ &c. And ‘We wrestle not against flesh and
blood, but against spiritual wickedness,’ &c. Thus we see, that
the fight of the first Christians, and their weapons in the days
of the apostles, were spiritual.
“Now would not the king and the magistrates of Dantzic think it
contrary to their consciences, it they should be forced by the
Turk to his religion? Would it not in like manner seem hard to the
magistrates of Dantzic, and contrary to their consciences, if they
should be forced to the religion of the King of Poland? or to the
King of Poland, if he should be compelled to the religion of the
magistrates of Dantzic? And if they would not be subject
thereunto, that then they should be banished from their wives and
families, and out of their native country, or otherwise be fed
with bread and water under strict confinement?
“Therefore we beseech the king with all Christian humility, and
the magistrates, that they would order their proceedings in this
matter according to the royal law of God, which is, ‘to do unto
others as they would have others do unto them,’ and ‘to love their
neighbour as themselves.’ For we have this charity, that we hope
and believe, that the King of Poland and his people, with the
magistrates of Dantzic, own the writings of the New Testament, as
well as of the Old; and therefore we beseech the king and
magistrates to take heed, that their work of imprisoning an
innocent people, for nothing but their meeting together, in
tenderness of conscience, to serve and worship God, their Creator,
may not be contrary and opposite to the royal law of God, and to
the glorious and everlasting gospel of truth.
“We desire the king, in Christian love, earnestly and weightily to
consider these things, and to give order to set the innocent
prisoners, our friends, called Quakers, at liberty from their
strict confinement in Dantzic; that they may have freedom to serve
and worship the Living God in Spirit and in truth, to go home to
their habitations, and follow their trades and calling, to
maintain their wives, children, and families. And we believe that
the king, in doing such a noble, glorious, yea Christian work,
will not go unrewarded from the Great God who made him, whom we
serve and worship, who has the hearts of kings, and their lives
and length of days in his hands.
“From him who desires that the king and all his ministers
may be preserved in the fear of God, and receive his Word of
wisdom, by which all things were made and created; that by it
he may come to order all things to the glory of God, which God
has put under his hand: that both he and they may enjoy the
comforts and blessings of the Lord in this life, and in that
which is to come, life eternal. Amen.”
G. F.
London, the 10th of the 3rd Month, commonly called May,
1684.
“_Postscript._—The king may please to consider, that his and all
men’s consciences are the prerogative of God.”
After this I went to ENFIELD, where, and in the country around,
several Friends had country-houses, amongst whom I tarried some
time, visiting and being visited by Friends, and having meetings
with them. Several things I wrote in this time, relating to the
service of truth; one was “Concerning judging:” for some, who had
departed from the truth, were so afraid of its judgment, that they
made it much of their business to cry out against judging. Wherefore
I wrote a paper, proving by the Scriptures of truth, that the church
of Christ has power and ability to judge those that profess to be of
it, not only with respect to outward things relating to this world,
but with respect to religious matters also. A copy of which
follows:—
“CONCERNING JUDGING.
“‘The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God,
for they are foolishness to him, neither can he know them, because
they are spiritually discerned; but he that is spiritual judgeth
all things (mark all things); yet he himself is judged of no man,’
1 Cor. ii. 14, 15. So the natural man cannot judge of those things
he receives not, for they are foolishness to him; but he is
comprehended by the spiritual man, and his foolishness, and is
judged, though he cannot judge the spiritual man.
“‘Do not ye judge them that are within?’ saith the apostle (this
power the church had, and hath,) ‘therefore put away from amongst
yourselves that wicked person.’ Did not this wicked person, think
you, profess and plead for liberty for his wickedness, and his
freedom, as he was a Christian, who was looked upon as a member of
the church?
“The apostle saith, ‘For I verily, as absent in body, yet present
in spirit, have judged already, as though I were present,
concerning him that hath done this wicked deed,’ 1 Cor. v. 3, 12.
Here the apostle judged, though afar off, and set up judgment in
the church against false liberty, under what pretence soever it
was.
“And the apostle saith, ‘Dare any of you, having a matter against
a brother, go to law before the unjust, and not before the
saints?’ Here the saints, the church, are to judge of things
amongst themselves, and not for the unjust to judge of their
matters. ‘Do ye not know the saints shall judge the world?’ So the
saints are to judge the unjust, and not the unjust to judge their
matters.
“And farther, the apostle saith, ‘If the world shall be judged by
you (to wit, the saints,) are you unworthy to judge the smallest
matters amongst you?’
“It is thus clear that the saints have a judgment given them of
Christ, by his power and Spirit, light and wisdom, to judge the
world, and not to carry their matters before the unjust, but to
judge of them amongst themselves; and if they carry them before
the unjust, they show their unworthiness of the saints’ judgment.
“Again, ‘Know ye not that we shall judge angels? (and angels are
spirits) how much more things which pertain to this life?’
“‘If ye then have judgment of things pertaining to this life, set
them up to judge who are least esteemed in the church,’ 1 Cor. vi.
4. Here it is clear the church of Christ has a judgment in the
power and Spirit of God, not only to judge in things that pertain
to this life, but also to judge of things between brethren,
without brother going to law with brother before unbelievers;
which was a fault, and to be judged, if they did so.
“But also the saints have a judgment to judge angels that kept not
their habitations; and the world. As in Jude, ‘He judged the
angels that kept not their habitations, their first state.’ Did
not he judge in divine matters here? He judged the state of Cain,
and Balaam, and Core, and such Christians as were in their steps,
and were gone as far as they, though they professed themselves
Christians? Here again he judged in divine matters; and of their
states and beings, who stood in the divine principle, and who were
fallen from it.
“The apostle saith, ‘Try the spirits, and believe not every
spirit,’ 1 John iv. Here again was a judgment in divine matters;
and he judged such as went out from them; these, whilst they were
with them, had sight of things and openings; but when they went
from them they went from the anointing; and therefore he exhorts
the saints to keep to the anointing. Such as went from them that
had the anointing, came to be the seducers and false prophets that
went into the world.
“John had a judgment to try sacrifices, and distinguished Cain’s
from Abel’s; and, by the Spirit of God, knew which God accepted,
and which he did not accept, 1 John iii. 12. Paul judged and tried
such messengers and apostles, and transformers of themselves like
to the apostles of Christ; and would have the church to try such,
and have the same judgment that he had, 2 Cor. xi.
“The apostle Peter judged Ananias and Sapphira, and the thoughts
of Simon Magus, who would have been a worker of miracles for
money. Was not all this judgment in divine matters? And the
apostle Paul judged the preachers of circumcision, both in the
Romans and Galatians. For it was the faith and liberty of those
preachers to preach up circumcision, though it was a wrong faith.
Did not the apostle here again judge in divine matters?
“James judged in matters of faith, and manifested the living faith
from the dead one. He also judged in matters of religion, the vain
from the pure religion, and distinguished them.
“Paul judged of the false brethren, that would spy out the liberty
of the true; to whom he would give no place by subjection, no, not
for an hour, that the truth of the gospel might continue with the
saints; as in Gal. ii. Did not the apostle here judge in divine
matters? and he judged concerning the matters of the gospel when
some came to pervert them with another gospel, and said, ‘The
gospel which I received is not of man, neither was I taught it,
but by the revelation of Jesus Christ,’ Gal. i. 12. So here was a
judgment to distinguish the gospel of Christ from all other
gospels, which were accursed, which are after man, received and
taught of man, and not by the revelation of Jesus Christ, Gal. i.
And he had a judgment to know, ‘who made the gospel chargeable,
and who kept it without charge.’
“He set up a judgment in the church that the believers should not
be unequally yoked; and to see when men had a communion in the
light, and when they had it in the darkness; when with Christ, and
when with Baal; with the believer and unbeliever; with the temple
of God and with idols: as in 2 Cor. vi. Did he not set up a clear
judgment here in divine matters in the church?
“And the apostle judged such libertines as through their knowledge
could sit at meat in the idol’s temple; who through their
knowledge and liberty caused the weak brother to perish, for whom
Christ died. These, it is like, did profess it was their faith and
their liberty; yet they did not keep in the unity of the true
faith, but went about to destroy it, 1 Cor. viii.
“Peter gives judgment upon the angels that sinned, and were cast
down into hell; upon the state of the old world, and of Sodom, and
the state of the false prophets then amongst them, that could
speak great swelling words of vanity; and whilst they promised
them liberty, they themselves were the servants of corruption. And
had not Peter here a judgment in divine matters? These were such
whose work was to bring into bondage, and these were like the dog
and sow that were washed; which shows that they have been washed,
but were turned into the mire again. The apostle Paul had a
judgment upon such as, with their fair words and men’s wisdom,
deceived the hearts of the simple; and upon such as ‘served not
the Lord Jesus Christ, but their own bellies, and were enemies to
the cross of Christ.’ He had a judgment and discerning who lived
in the cross of Christ, and who did not; and exhorted all to live
in the cross of Christ, the righteous power of God, that slew all
deceit, and the deeds of the old man, agreeably to Christ’s words,
‘He that will be my disciple, must take up his cross and follow
me.’ Was not here a judgment again in divine matters, of such as
walked in the divine power, and such as did not?
“Christ sets up a judgment in his seven churches, and commends
them that did keep in his judgment, and had tried them which said,
‘they were apostles,’ who might pretend they were sent of God and
Christ, and were not; but the church of Christ had found them
liars. Christ commended this judgment of the church of Ephesus,
because they had ‘not borne with them that were evil, but had
tried those false apostles:’ and Christ commends this church, for
they had ‘hated the deeds of the Nicolaitanes, which he also
hated:’ and had not these Nicolaitanes sprung from Nicolas, one of
the deacons? and were not these become a sect of Christians?
though they might talk and preach of Christ, yet Christ hated
their doctrine.
“Christ saith to the church of Smyrna, ‘I know the blasphemy of
them which say they are Jews, and are not, but are of the
synagogue of Satan.’ So the church is to have a judgment upon
these blasphemers, and to distinguish the Jews in the Spirit from
such as are not, but of the synagogue of Satan.
“To the church in Pergamos Christ saith, ‘I have a few things
against thee, because thou hast there them that hold the doctrines
of Balaam,’ &c., and ‘also them that hold the doctrine of the
Nicolaitanes, which thing I hate.’ Now, these that held the
doctrine of Balaam, and the doctrine of the Nicolaitanes, were got
into the church, and might look upon themselves to be high
Christians, and take great liberty to go into Balaam’s doctrine,
and Nicolas’s doctrine, which was hated by Christ; but the church
was to keep a spiritual and divine judgment upon the heads of all
these.
“To the church of Thyatira, saith Christ, ‘I have a few things
against thee, because thou sufferest the woman Jezebel to teach,
which seduces my people,’ &c. Here was a suffering, which should
have been a judgment by Christ’s Spirit, upon that Jezebel, which
was erred from his Spirit, and so from Christ. Such as these were
high preachers. And is not the church to beware of suffering such
now, lest they come under the reproof of Christ, for not passing
judgment against the false teacher and seducer?
“The church of Sardis ‘had a name to live, but was dead, and her
works were not found perfect before God.’ There is a judgment to
be set up in the church, to judge all imperfect works, and such as
would have a name, but not the nature; a name to live, but are
dead. All the members of Christ’s church must be in Christ, living
members, and live to his name. This church had a few names that
had not defiled their garments, that did walk in white; but such
as have a name to live, but are dead, whilst they are in the dead
state, cannot walk in white, nor judge in divine matters.
‘Behold,’ saith Christ, ‘I will make them of the synagogue of
Satan, which say they are Jews, and are not, but do lie; behold, I
will make them to come, and to worship before thy feet, and to
know that I have loved thee,’ Rev. iii. 9.
“And to the church of Laodicea, that was ‘neither cold nor hot,’
but lukewarm; ‘I would thou wert cold or hot: I will spew thee out
of my mouth, because thou saidst thou wast rich, and wanted
nothing; when thou wast wretched, miserable, poor, blind, and
naked.’ Now this was for want of living in the Power and Spirit of
Christ. These could talk of high experiences, and great
enjoyments, but were naked, miserable, and blind; so lived not in
the power, and Spirit, the light, and righteousness of Christ, by
which they might be clothed, and have the eternal riches. So the
church of Christ had a spiritual judgment given to them that are
faithful in his power, and Spirit, and light, to judge of temporal
things, and the things of this life; and to judge of eternal and
divine things and states; of angels and wicked men, and such as go
from truth; and of the states of election and reprobation; yea,
and of the devils who are out of truth; these being in Christ
Jesus, who is the First and Last, from whom they have the eternal
judgment, to judge eternal, spiritual, and divine things; and in
this Word of power and wisdom, by which all things were made, and
by which all things are upheld, to order all things to God’s
glory, and to judge of all things in righteousness.
“The apostle judged, and set up a judgment in the church, of
gifts, of prophecies, of mysteries, of faith, and of giving the
body to be burned, and of giving goods to the poor, and of
speaking with tongues of men and angels; and yet, if they had not
love, all this was nothing, but as a sounding brass and tinkling
cymbal. Therefore they are to be tried by the fruits of the good
Spirit, which is love. So here the apostle not only judged himself
in divine things, but set up a judgment in the church in those
spiritual and divine matters.
“The apostle James judges of fountains, and of fig-trees, of the
wisdom from below, and of the wisdom from above, and of the fruits
of both, James iii. And Paul judged in divine matters when he
said, ‘The Spirit spake expressly, that in the latter times some
should depart from the faith,’ 1 Tim. iv. And he judged in divine
matters, when he judged all those teachers that were high-minded,
and had got the form of godliness, but denied the power; and
termed them like unto Jannes and Jambres, who withstood Moses,
coming out of outward Egypt; as these with their form of
godliness, oppose Christ and his power, that brings them out of
spiritual Egypt now. Was not he a judge here in divine matters,
who judged such as had gotten the form of godliness, but denied
the divine power? 2 Tim. iii.
“When the apostle said, ‘the priesthood of Aaron was changed, and
the law was changed, and the commandment disannulled, that gave
them their tithes,’ did not he judge here in divine and spiritual
matters? and was not the law spiritual, which served till the Seed
came?
“Did not the apostle judge in divine and spiritual matters, in the
sixth of the Hebrews, where he saith, ‘Let us go on to perfection,
not laying again the foundation of repentance from dead works, and
of faith towards God, and of the doctrine of baptisms, and of
laying on of hands, and of the resurrection of the dead, and of
eternal judgment: and this will we do, if God permit,’ &c. And
does not the apostle judge here, ‘that it was impossible for those
who were once enlightened, and tasted of the heavenly gift, and
were partakers of the Holy Ghost, and had tasted of the good word
of God, and of the power of the world to come, if they shall fall
away, to renew them again unto repentance; seeing they crucify to
themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to open shame?’ Heb.
vi. Were not these spiritual, eternal, and divine matters and
states, that the apostle judged of? and have not the saints the
same judgment given unto them in the same Spirit? Have not the
apostles and the church a spiritual judgment to judge of prophets,
mysteries, faith, apostles, angels, the world, and the devil? And
is not this judgment given them of God in divine matters, besides
the judgment given them in matters pertaining unto this life?
“And had not they judgment to discern the true gospel from the
false? and all such as had a profession of the form, and did not
live in the power? and such as spoke the things of God, in the
words that man’s wisdom did teach? which things of God were not to
be spoken in the words which man’s wisdom taught, but in the words
which the Holy Ghost taught. Therefore did not the apostle exhort
to know the power, and that their faith might stand in the power
of God? for the kingdom of God stands not in word but in power.
“Had not all the prophets a divine judgment to judge in divine
matters? as Jeremiah, when he judged the prophets. Ezekiel also
judged all such as came with a pretence of the Word of the Lord,
using their tongues, and saying, ‘Thus saith the Lord, when the
Lord never spoke unto them;’ as in Jer. xxiii. Exek. xiii., and
many other places might be instanced. Did not he judge Hananiah,
who prophesied falsely? and did not this Hananiah pretend to speak
the Word of the Lord to the priests and people? as in Jer. xxviii.
“Did not Isaiah judge in divine matters, when he judged the
watchmen and the shepherds? Isa. lvi. Did not Micah judge in
divine and spiritual matters when he said, ‘he was full of power
by the spirit of the Lord, and of judgment?’ Did not he judge of
priests, prophets, and judges, though they would lean upon the
Lord, and say, ‘Is not the Lord amongst us, and no evil can come
unto us;’ yet did not he let them see their states and conditions,
and divide the precious from the vile? Mic. iii. And so the rest
of the prophets. You may see they judged for God in his divine
matters, ‘who served him, and who served him not; and who lived in
truth, and who not;’ and likewise the apostles. And this divine,
spiritual, and heavenly judgment was given of God to his holy men
and women.
“They that judge in God’s divine matters, must live in his divine
Spirit, power, and light now, as they did then; which spiritual
and divine judgment Christ has given to his church, the living
stones, and living members, that make up his spiritual household;
to try Jews, apostles, and prophets; to try faiths and religions,
trees and fruits, shepherds and teachers; and to try spirits. So
the living members have a living, divine judgment in the church of
Christ, which he is the Head of, the Judge of all.
“Nay, the church has a power given them, which is farther than a
judgment: for what they ‘bind on earth, is bound in heaven by the
power of God: and what they loose on earth is loosed in heaven by
the power of God.’ This power has Christ given to his living
members, the church.”
G. F. to Friends.
The 20th of the 12th Month, 1685-6.
I came back to LONDON in the 1st month, 1686, and set myself with
all diligence to look after Friends’ sufferings, from which we had
now some hopes of getting relief. The sessions came on in the 2nd
month at Hicks’s Hall, where many Friends had appeals to be tried;
with whom I was from day to day, to advise and see that no
opportunity were slipped, nor advantage lost; and they generally
succeeded well. Soon after also the king was pleased, upon our often
laying our sufferings before him, to give order for the “releasing
of all prisoners for conscience’ sake that were in his power to
discharge.” Whereby the prison-doors were opened, and many hundreds
of Friends, some of whom had been long in prison, were set at
liberty. Some of them, who had for many years been restrained in
bonds, came now up to the Yearly Meeting, which was in the 3rd month
this year. This caused great joy to Friends, to see our ancient,
faithful brethren, again at liberty in the Lord’s work, after their
long confinement. And indeed a precious meeting we had; the
refreshing presence of the Lord appearing plentifully with us and
amongst us.
After the meeting I was moved to write a few lines, to be sent
amongst Friends: the tenor whereof was thus:—
“DEAR FRIENDS,
“My love is to you all in the holy Seed, Christ Jesus, that
bruises the serpent’s head, and destroys the devil and his works;
and who hath all power in heaven and in earth given him. Let every
one’s faith stand in Him, and in his power, who is the author and
finisher of your faith. And now for you, who have been partakers
of his power, and are sensible of it in this day of his power,
that is over darkness and its power; by whose power the hearts of
the king and rulers have been opened, and your outward
prison-doors set open for your liberty, my desires are, that all
may be preserved in humility and thankfulness, in the sense of the
mercies of the Lord; and live in the peaceable truth, that is over
all; that ye may answer God’s grace, and his light and Spirit in
all, in a righteous, godly life and conversation. Let none be
lifted up by their outward liberty, neither let any be cast down
by suffering for Christ’s sake; but all live in the Seed (which is
as wheat) which is not shaken, nor blown away by the winds and
storms, as the chaff is. Which Seed of life none below can make
higher or lower; for the children of the Seed are the children of
the everlasting, unchangeable kingdom of Christ and God. In Christ
Jesus, whom God hath given you for a sanctuary, God almighty keep
you, in whom ye have life everlasting, and wisdom from above,
which is pure, peaceable, gentle, and easy to be entreated, full
of mercy and good fruits; that all now may be exercised in, and
may practise this wisdom in holy lives and conversations; so that
this wisdom may be justified of all her children, and they
exercised and preserved in it in this day of the power of Christ,
in which all his people are made a willing people, to serve and
worship God in Righteousness and holiness, in Spirit and in truth.
“Let none abuse the power of the Lord, nor grieve his Spirit, by
which you are sealed, and kept to the day of salvation and
redemption; but always exercise yourselves to have ‘a good
conscience, void of offence towards God and towards all men,’
being exercised in holiness, godliness, and righteousness; and in
the truth, and in the love of it. All study to be approved unto
God in innocency, virtue, simplicity, and faithfulness, labouring
and studying to be quiet in the will of God. ‘And whatsoever ye do
in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus; giving
thanks to God the Father by him;’ that he who is over all, may
have the praise for all his mercies and blessings, with which he
hath refreshed his people, and by his eternal arm and power hath
kept and preserved them to this day; glory to his name over all
for ever. Amen!
“Christ hath called you by his grace into one body, to him the
holy Head; therefore live in charity, and in the love of God,
which is the bond of perfectness in his body. This love edifies
the body of Christ; which body and all his members are knit
together, and increased with the increase of God, from whom they
receive nourishment. For by one Spirit we are all baptised into
one body, and have been made all to drink into one Spirit, in
which Spirit the body and all its members have fellowship with
Christ, the head, and one with another. The unity of this Holy
Spirit is the bond of peace of all the living members of Christ
Jesus, of which he is the spiritual Head, Rock, and Foundation. In
the midst of his church of living members, Christ exercises his
spiritual prophetical office, to open to them the mysteries of his
kingdom. He is a spiritual Bishop to oversee them, that they do
not go astray from the living God that made them; a Shepherd that
feeds them with bread and water of life from heaven; and none is
able to pluck his sheep out of his hands. He is a Priest that died
for them, sanctifies them, and presents them to God; who ruleth in
their hearts by the divine faith, which he is the author and
finisher of. His living members praise God through Jesus Christ,
in whom they have life and salvation, who reconciles them to God,
that they can say they have ‘peace with God through Jesus Christ;’
and so praise God through him that was dead, and is alive again,
who reigns over all, and liveth for evermore, blessed for ever;
Hallelujah. Amen!
“Greet one another with a holy kiss of charity. Love or charity
beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things,
endureth all things. It envieth not, vaunteth not itself, is not
puffed up, nor doth it behave itself unseemly. It rejoices not in
iniquity, but rejoices in the truth. Charity is not easily
provoked, and thinks no evil, but suffereth long and is kind.
Charity never faileth. I say, greet one another with this holy
kiss of charity, and peace be with you all, that are in Christ
Jesus, your life and salvation.”
G. F.
The 30th of the 3rd Month, 1686.
I remained most part of this year in LONDON, save that sometimes I
got out to BETHNAL-GREEN for a night or two, or as far as ENFIELD
and thereabouts amongst Friends, and once or twice to CHISWICK,
where an ancient Friend had set up a school for the educating of
Friends’ children; in all which places I found service for the Lord.
At LONDON, I spent my time amongst Friends, either in public
meetings (as the Lord drew me) or visiting those that were not well,
and in looking after the sufferings of Friends. For though many were
released out of prisons, yet some remained prisoners still for
tithes, &c., and sufferings of several sorts lay heavy on Friends in
many places. Yet inasmuch as many Friends, that had been prisoners,
were now set at liberty, I felt a concern upon me, that none might
look too much at man, but might eye the Lord therein, from whom
deliverance comes. Wherefore I wrote an epistle to them, as
follows:—
“FRIENDS,
“The Lord, by his eternal power, hath opened the heart of the king
to open the prison doors, by which about fifteen or sixteen
hundred are set at liberty, and hath given a check to the
informers; so that in many places our meetings are pretty quiet.
My desires are, that both liberty and sufferings may be sanctified
to his people, that Friends may prize the mercies of the Lord in
all things, and to him be thankful, who stilleth the raging waves
of the seas, allayeth the storms and tempests, and maketh a calm.
Therefore it is good to trust in the Lord, and cast your care upon
him, who careth for you. For when ye were in jails and prisons,
the Lord did, by his eternal arm and power, uphold you, and
sanctified them to you (and unto some he made them as a
sanctuary), and tried his people as in a furnace of affliction,
both in prisons and spoiling of goods. In all this the Lord was
with his people, and taught them to know that ‘the earth is the
Lord’s and the fulness thereof;’ and that he was in all places;
‘who crowneth the year with his goodness,’ Psal. lxv.
Therefore let all God’s people be diligent, and careful to keep
the camp of God holy, pure, and clean, and to serve God and
Christ, and one another in the glorious, peaceable gospel of life
and salvation, which glory shines over God’s camp; and his great
Prophet, Bishop, and Shepherd is among, or in the midst of them,
exercising his heavenly offices in them; so that you his people
may rejoice in Christ Jesus, through whom you have peace with God.
For he that destroyeth the devil and his work, and bruises the
serpent’s head, is all God’s people’s heavenly Foundation and Rock
to build upon; which was the holy prophets’ and apostles’ Rock in
days past, and is now the Rock of our age; which Rock and
Foundation of God standeth sure. Upon this the Lord God establish
all his people. Amen.”
G. F.
London, the 25th of the 7th Month, 1686.
Divers other epistles and papers I wrote this year; one of which was
an exhortation “to Friends to keep in unity in the truth, in which
there is no division nor separation;” it was thus:—
“DEAR FRIENDS AND BRETHREN IN THE
LORD JESUS CHRIST,
“In whom ye have all peace and life, and in whom there is no
division, schism, rent, strife, nor separation; for Christ is not
divided: there can be no separation in the truth, nor in the
light, grace, faith, and Holy Ghost, but unity, fellowship, and
communion. For the devil was the first that went out of the truth,
separated from it, and tempted man and woman to disobey God, and
to go from the truth into a false liberty, to do that which God
forbade. So it is the serpent now that leads men and women into a
false liberty, even the God of the world, from which man and woman
must be separated by the truth; that Christ the Truth may make
them free, and then they are free indeed. Then they are to stand
fast in that liberty, in which Christ hath made them free, and in
Him there is no division, schism, rent, or separation; but peace,
life, and reconciliation to God, and to one another. So in Christ,
male and female are all one; for whether they be male or female,
Jew or Gentile, bond or free, they are all one in Christ. And
there can be no schism, rent, or division in Him; nor in the
worship of God, in his Holy Spirit and truth; nor in the pure and
undefiled religion, that keeps from the spots of the world; nor in
the love of God that beareth and endureth all things; nor in the
Word of God’s grace, for it is pure and endureth for ever.
“Many, you see, have lost the Word of patience and the Word of
wisdom, that is pure, and peaceable, and gentle, and easy to be
entreated: then they run into the wisdom that is below, that is
‘earthly, sensual, and devilish,’ and very uneasy to be entreated.
They go from the love of God that beareth all things, endureth all
things, thinketh no evil, and doth not behave itself unseemly:
then they cannot bear, but grow brittle, and are easily provoked,
run into unseemly things, and are in that, that vaunteth itself,
are puffed up, rash, heady, high-minded, and fierce, and become as
sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal; but this is contrary to the
nature of the love of God. Therefore, dear Friends and brethren,
dwell in the love of God; for they who dwell in love, dwell in
God, and God in them. Keep in the Word of wisdom, that is gentle,
pure, and peaceable, and in the Word of patience, that endureth
and beareth all things; which Word of patience the devil, and the
world, and all his instruments can never wear out; it will wear
them all out; for it was before they were, and will be, when they
are gone, the pure, holy Word of God, by which all God’s children
are born again, feed on the milk thereof, and live and grow by it.
My desires are, that ye may all be of one heart, mind, soul, and
spirit in Christ Jesus. Amen.”
G. F.
Soon after this, finding those apostates, whom the enemy had drawn
out into division and separation from Friends, continued their
clamour and opposition against our monthly, quarterly, and yearly
meetings, it came upon me to write another short epistle to Friends,
to put them in mind of the “evidence and seal they had received in
themselves by the Spirit of the Lord, that those meetings were of
the Lord, and accepted by him,” that so they might not be shaken by
the adversaries. I wrote as follows:—
“MY DEAR FRIENDS IN THE LORD JESUS CHRIST!
“All you, that are gathered in his holy name, know, that your
meetings for worship, your quarterly, monthly and other meetings
are set up by the power and Spirit of the Lord God, and witnessed
by his Spirit and power in your hearts; and by the Spirit and
power of the Lord God they are established to you, and in the
power and Spirit of the Lord God you are established in them. The
Lord God hath with his Spirit sealed to you, that your meetings
are of his ordering and gathering, and he hath owned them, by
honouring you with his blessed presence in them; and you have had
great experience of his furnishing you with his wisdom, life, and
power, and heavenly riches from his treasure and fountain, by
which many thanks and praises have been returned in your meetings
to his holy, glorious name. He hath sealed your meetings by his
Spirit to you, and that your gathering together hath been by the
Lord, to Christ his Son, and in his name: and not by man. So the
Lord hath the glory and praise of them and in them, who hath
upheld you and them, by the arm of his power, against all opposers
and backsliders, and their slanderous books and tongues. For the
Lord’s power and Seed doth reign over them all, in which he doth
preserve his sons and daughters to his glory, by his eternal arm
and power, in his work and service, as a willing people in the day
of his power, without being weary or fainting, but strong in the
Lord, and valiant for his glorious name and precious truth, and
his pure religion; that ye may serve the Lord in Christ Jesus,
your Rock and Foundation, in your age and generation. Amen.”
G.F.
London, the 3rd of 11th Month, 1686-7.
A little after it came upon me to write something concerning the
state of the true church, and of the true members thereof, as
follows:—
“_Concerning the Church of Christ being clothed with the Sun, and
having the Moon under her feet._
“They are living members, living stones, built up a spiritual
household, children of the promise, and of the Seed and flesh of
Christ; and as the apostle saith, ‘Flesh of his flesh, and bone of
his bone.’ They are the good seed, the children of the everlasting
kingdom written in heaven; and have put on the Lord Jesus Christ.
They sit together in heavenly places in Christ, are clothed with
the Sun of Righteousness, Christ Jesus, and have the moon under
their feet, as Rev. xii. So all changeable things, that are in the
world, all changeable religions, worships, ways, fellowships,
churches, and teachers in the world, are as the moon; for the moon
changes, but the sun doth not change. The Sun of Righteousness
never changeth, nor goes down; but all the ways, religions,
worships, fellowships of the world, and the teachers thereof,
change like the moon.
“The true church, which Christ is the head of, which is in God,
the Father, is called ‘the pillar and ground of truth,’ whose
conversation is in heaven; this church is clothed with the Sun,
Christ Jesus, her head, who doth not change, and hath all
changeable things under her feet. These are the living members,
born again of the Immortal Seed, by the Word of God, who feed upon
the immortal milk, and live and grow by it. Such are the new
creatures in Christ Jesus, who makes all things new, and sees the
old things pass away. His church and all his members, which are
clothed with the Sun, their worship is in Spirit, and in truth,
which doth not change; which truth the devil, the foul, unclean
spirit, is out of, and cannot get into this worship in Spirit and
in truth. Their religion is pure and undefiled before God, that
keeps from the spots of the world, &c., and their way is the new
and living way, Christ Jesus. So the church of Christ, that is
clothed with the Sun, that hath the moon and all changeable
religions and ways under her feet, hath an unchangeable worship,
religion, and way, an unchangeable Rock and Foundation, Christ
Jesus, and an unchangeable High Priest; and so are children of the
New Testament, and in the everlasting Covenant of Light and Life.
“Now all, that profess the Scriptures both of the New and Old
Testament, and are not in Christ Jesus, the apostle tells them,
they are ‘reprobates, if Christ be not in them.’ Therefore these,
that are not in Christ, cannot be clothed with Christ, the Sun of
Righteousness, that never changes. They are under the changeable
moon, in the world, in the changeable things, changeable
religions, ways, worships, teachers, rocks, and foundations. But
Christ, the Son of God, and Sun of Righteousness, doth not change;
in whom his people are gathered, and sit together in heavenly
places in him, clothed with Christ Jesus, the Sun, who is the
mountain, that filleth the whole earth with his divine power and
light. So all his people see him, and feel him both by sea and
land. He is in all places of the earth, felt and seen of all his.
And Christ Jesus saith to the outward professors, the Jews, ‘I am
from above,’ ye are from below, ‘ye are of this world.’ So their
religions, worships, ways, teachers, faiths, beliefs, and creeds
are made by men, and are below, of this world that changeth like
the moon. You may see their religions, ways, worships, and
teachers, are all changeable, like the moon; but Christ, the Sun,
with which the church is clothed, doth not change, nor his church;
for they are spiritually minded, and their way, worship, and
religion is spiritual, from Christ, who is from above, and not of
this world. Christ hath redeemed his people from the world, and
its changeable rudiments, elements, and old things, and from its
changeable teachers, faiths, and beliefs. For Christ is the author
and finisher of his church’s faith, who is from above, and saith,
‘Believe in the light, that ye may become children of light;’ and
it is given them not only to believe, but to suffer for his name.
So this faith and belief is above all faiths and beliefs, which
change, like the moon. God’s people are a holy nation, a peculiar
people, a spiritual household, and royal priesthood, offering up
spiritual sacrifice to God, by Jesus Christ; and are zealous of
righteous, godly, good works; and their zeal is for that which is
of God, against the evil which is not of God.
“Christ took upon him the seed of Abraham; he doth not say, the
corrupt seed of the Gentiles: so, according to the flesh, he was
of the holy seed of Abraham and of David; and his holy body and
blood was an offering and a sacrifice for the sins of the whole
world, as a lamb without blemish, whose flesh saw no corruption.
By the one offering of himself in the New Testament or New
Covenant, he has put an end to all the offerings and sacrifices
amongst the Jews in the Old Testament. Christ, the holy Seed, was
crucified, dead, and buried, according to the flesh, and raised
again the third day; and his flesh saw no corruption. Though he
was crucified in the flesh, yet he was quickened again by the
Spirit, and is alive, and liveth for evermore; he hath all power
in heaven and in earth given to him, and reigneth over all; and is
the one Mediator between God and man, even the man Christ Jesus.
“Christ said, ‘He gave his flesh for the life of the world:’ and
the apostle says, ‘His flesh saw no corruption:’ so that which saw
no corruption he gave for the life of the corrupt world, to bring
them out of corruption. Christ said again, ‘He that eateth my
flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternal life: for my flesh is
meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed. And he that eateth my
flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me, and I in him.’ He that
eats not his flesh and drinks not his blood, which is the life of
the flesh, hath not eternal life. As the apostle saith, all died
in Adam; then all are dead. Now all coming spiritually to eat the
flesh of Christ, the second Adam, and drink his blood, his blood
and flesh gives all the dead in Adam, life, and quickens them out
of their sins and trespasses, in which they were dead; so they
come to sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus, living
members of the church of Christ, that he is the head of; are
clothed with the Sun of Righteousness, the Son of God, that never
changes, and have the changeable moon under their feet, and all
changeable, worldly things and inventions, and works of men’s
hands. These see the people, how they change from one worship to
another, from one religion to another, from one way to another,
and from one church to another; and yet their hearts are not
changed. The letter of Scripture is read by the Christians like
the Jews; but the mystery is hid: they have the sheep’s clothing,
the outside, but are inwardly ravened from the Spirit, which
should bring them into the Lamb’s and Sheep’s nature. The
Scripture saith, ‘All the uncircumcised must go down into the
pit:’ and therefore all must be circumcised with the Spirit of
God, which puts off the body of death, and sins of the flesh, that
came into man and woman by their disobedience, and transgressing
of God’s commands. I say, all must be circumcised with the Spirit,
which puts off the body of death and sins of the flesh, before
they come up into Christ, their Rest, that never fell, and be
clothed with Him, the Sun of Righteousness.”
G. F.
Towards the latter end of this year I went to KINGSTON to visit
Friends there; and stayed some time at my son Rous’s. I wrote there
a paper concerning “the falling away” foretold by the apostle Paul,
2 Thess. ii. 3, as follows:—
“The apostle saith that there must be ‘a falling away’ first,
before the wicked one, that man of sin, the son of perdition, be
revealed, which betrayeth Christ within, as the son of perdition
betrayed Christ without; and they that betray Christ within,
crucify to themselves Christ afresh, and put him to open shame.
Before the apostles died, this man of sin, the son of perdition,
was revealed: for they saw antichrist come, and false prophets,
false apostles, and deceivers come, having a form of godliness,
but denying the power thereof. They saw the wolves dressed in the
sheep’s clothing, and such as went in Cain’s, Korah’s, and
Balaam’s way, and Jezebel’s; and the whore of Babylon, the whore
of confusion, the mother of harlots, and such as were enemies to
the cross of Christ, that served not the Lord Jesus Christ, but
their own bellies. These Christ saw should come, and said, ‘If it
were possible, they should deceive the elect;’ and commanded his
followers not to go after them. The apostle said, ‘Turn away from
such;’ and Christ and his apostles warned the church of Christ of
such.
“And now, in this day of Christ and his gospel, after the long
night of apostasy from the light, grace, truth, life, and Spirit
of Christ Jesus, the son of perdition, the wicked one, the man of
sin, is revealed again; and the inwardly ravening wolves in
sheep’s clothing, and the spirit of Cain, Korah, Balaam, Jezebel,
the antichrists, false prophets, and false apostles, and such as
are enemies to the cross of Christ, who serve not the Lord Jesus,
but their own bellies; and crucify Christ to themselves, and put
him to open shame. This spirit have we seen in this gospel-day of
Christ; but Christ will consume them with the Spirit of his mouth,
and destroy them with the brightness of his coming. But God’s
people, whom he hath chosen unto salvation in Christ from the
beginning, ‘through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the
truth,’ stand stedfast in Christ Jesus; and are thankful to God,
by and through his Son, their rock and salvation, who is their
happiness and eternal inheritance.
“The apostle saith, ‘Ye were as sheep going astray; but are now
returned to the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls.’ So when people
are returned to Christ, their Shepherd, they know his voice, and
follow him; and are returned to the Bishop of their souls: then
they believe in him, and receive wisdom and understanding from
him, who is from above, heavenly and spiritual. Then they act like
spiritual and holy men and women; and come to be members of the
church of Christ. Then a spiritual care cometh upon the elders in
Christ, that all the members walk in Christ, in his light, grace,
Spirit, and truth, that they may adorn their profession of Christ;
and see that all walk in the order of the Holy Spirit, and the
everlasting gospel of peace, life, and salvation. This order keeps
out of confusion; for the gospel of peace, the power of God, was
before confusion was. And all the heirs of the gospel are heirs of
its order, and are in this gospel, which brings life and
immortality to light in them; by which all may see their work and
service in it, to look after the poor, widows, and fatherless, and
to see that nothing be lacking; and that all honour the Lord in
their lives and conversations.
“When the whole house of Israel were in their graves and
sepulchres, and were called ‘the scattered dry bones,’ yet they
could speak, and say, ‘their bones were dry, their hope was lost,’
or they were without hope, ‘and they were cut off.’ They were
alive outwardly, and could speak outwardly. So that which is
called Christendom may very well be called ‘the scattered dry
bones,’ and they may be said to be in their graves and sepulchres,
dead from the heavenly breath of life, the Spirit and Word of
life, that gathereth to God. Though they can speak, and are alive
outwardly, yet they remain in the congregations or churches of the
dead, that want the virtue of life. For the Jews, whom God poured
his Spirit upon, and gave them his law, when they rebelled against
the Spirit of God, and turned from God and his law, came to be dry
scattered bones, and were turned into their graves and sepulchres.
So Christendom, that is turned from the grace, truth, and light of
Christ, and the Spirit, that God poureth upon all flesh, they are
become the scattered dry bones, are in their graves and
sepulchres, and are the congregations or churches of the dead,
though they can speak, and are alive outwardly.
“Christ saith, ‘I am come that they might have life, and that they
might have it more abundantly.’ He gave his flesh for the life of
the world. And he saith, ‘I am the resurrection and the life’;
and, ‘I am the way, the truth, and the life; no man cometh unto
the Father but by me.’ Christ is the quickening Spirit. All being
dead in Adam, are to be quickened and made alive by Christ, the
second Adam. And when they are quickened and made alive by him,
they meet together in the name of Jesus Christ their Saviour, who
died for their sins, and is risen for their justification; who was
dead and is alive again, and liveth for evermore. All whom he hath
quickened and made alive (even all the living) meet in the name of
Jesus, who is alive, and He, their living Prophet, Shepherd, and
Bishop, is in the midst of them; and is their living Rock and
Foundation, and a living Mediator between them and the living God.
So the living praise the living God through Jesus Christ, through
whom they have peace with God. All the living have rest in Christ,
their life. He is their sanctification, their righteousness, their
treasure of wisdom, knowledge, and understanding, which is
spiritual and heavenly. He is the spiritual tree and root, which
all the believers in the light, the life in Christ, that pass from
the death in Adam to the life in Christ, and overcome the world,
and are born of God, are grafted into; even Christ, the heavenly
tree, which beareth all the spiritual branches or grafts. These
meet in his name, are gathered in him, and sit together in
heavenly places in Christ Jesus, their life, who hath quickened
and made them alive. So all the living worship the living God in
his Holy Spirit and truth, in which they live and walk. Into this
worship, the foul, unclean spirit, the devil, cannot get; for the
Holy Spirit and truth is over him, and he is out of it. This is
the standing worship, which Christ set up in his new covenant. And
they that are quickened by Christ are the living stones, living
members, and spiritual household and church, or congregation of
Christ, who is the living head and husband. They that are made
alive by Christ are a living church, have a living head, and are
come from the congregations or churches of the dead in Adam, where
death and destruction talk of God, and of his prophets and
apostles, in their wisdom that is below, earthly and devilish; in
the knowledge that is brutish, and in the understanding that comes
to naught. For what they know is natural, by their natural
tongues, arts, sciences; in which they corrupt themselves. This is
the state of the dead in Adam: but the quickened, they that are
made alive by Christ, discern between the living and the dead.”
G.F.
Kingston-upon-Thames, the 12th Month, 1686-7.
While I was at Kingston, I wrote also another paper, showing “that
the Lord, in all ages, called the righteous out from amongst the
wicked, before he destroyed them;” after this manner:—
“Noah and his family were called into the ark, before the old
world was destroyed with the flood. And all the faithful
generation, that lived before, were taken away, and died in the
faith, before that flood of destruction came upon the wicked old
world.
“The Lord called Lot out of Sodom, before he destroyed and
consumed it, and the wicked there.
“Christ said, ‘It cannot be that a prophet perish out of
Jerusalem:’ and he said, ‘O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, which killest
the prophets, and stonest them that are sent unto thee, how often
would I have gathered thy children together, as a hen gathereth
her brood under her wings! and ye would not,’ Luke xiii. 33, 34.
And he said to the Jews, ‘Therefore also said the wisdom of God, I
will send them prophets and apostles, and some of them they shall
slay and persecute; that the blood of all the prophets, which was
shed from the foundation of the world, may be required of this
generation; from the blood of Abel, unto the blood of Zacharias,
which perished between the altar and the temple. Verily, I say
unto you, it shall be required of this generation,’ Luke xi.
49-51. And he said to the Jews, ‘Behold your house is left unto
you desolate,’ Matt. xxiii. 34, &c. Christ told his disciples,
that the temple at Jerusalem should be thrown down, and there
should not be one stone left upon another, that should not be
thrown down, Matt. xxiv. 2. Also, that he must go to Jerusalem,
and ‘suffer many things of the Jews, elders, and chief priests,
and be killed, and raised again the third day,’ Matt. xvi. 21. And
Christ said, ‘When ye shall see Jerusalem compassed with armies,
then know the desolation thereof is nigh.’ He foretold, that the
Jews should fall by the edge of the sword, and should be led away
‘captive into all nations; and Jerusalem should be trodden down of
the Gentiles,’ Luke xxi. 20, 24.
“Here you may see, how Jerusalem was often warned by Christ, and
how often he would have ‘gathered them, but they would not,’
before they were scattered over or into all nations, their houses
left desolate, and their temple and Jerusalem besieged with
armies, destroyed, and thrown down. And though the disciples and
apostles of Christ did meet, with the elders and church, at
Jerusalem, after Christ was risen, yet Eusebius reports in his
_Ecclesiastical History_, that the Christians at Jerusalem had a
vision, or a revelation to depart out of Jerusalem. Being
forewarned also by Christ, that when they should see Jerusalem
compassed with armies, its desolation was nigh; and that the
temple should be thrown down, and not one stone left upon another;
it is said, that the Christians did depart out of bloody
Jerusalem, before it and the temple were destroyed by Titus, the
emperor, who besieged it with his armies. He was of the Gentiles,
and destroyed the temple and Jerusalem, as Christ had fore-spoken
to his disciples, because of the wickedness of the Jews, and the
innocent blood that they had shed in it. So the Lord called his
people out of bloody Jerusalem, before he destroyed it.
“And it is said, that Titus destroyed the temple and Jerusalem
about forty-two years after Christ was crucified, and risen again;
and that with so great a destruction, that the Jews never built
the city again, nor the temple (as Sodom was never built again,
nor the cities of the old world.) But the Jews for above these
thousand years have been, and are a scattered people in all
nations to this day; and Christ (whom they crucified) and his
doctrine, is preached, and set over them; and the Gentiles, whom
they hated, have received, and do receive him and his doctrine,
and praise God for it through Jesus Christ. Amen.
“God called his people out of Egypt, after he had poured out his
ten plagues upon the Egyptians; when he had destroyed the
first-born of Egypt, then the Lord brought his people out of
Egypt. And after the Lord had clearly brought his people out, he
destroyed Pharaoh, and all his hosts and chariots.
“John says, he heard a voice, saying, ‘Come out of her, my people,
(to wit, out of Babylon, the false church), that ye be not
partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues; for
her sins have reached to heaven, and God hath remembered her
iniquities,’ Rev. xviii. 4, 5, Here ye may see that God called his
people out of spiritual Babylon, before he destroyed her, and cast
her down, to be utterly burnt with fire, ver. 8, 9, 21.
“Was not Nebuchadnezzar’s empire thrown down and ended by Cyrus
and Darius, who were of the seed of the Medes, before Cyrus and
Darius gave forth their proclamation for all the Jews to go into
their own land, out of Babylon’s captivity? And was there not a
prophecy of Cyrus, ‘that he should subdue nations, and that the
Lord would loose the loins of kings before him, and break in
pieces the gates of brass, and cut in sunder the bars of iron, and
open the two-leaved gates; and that the gates should not be shut?’
And the Lord said, ‘This is for Jacob, my servant’s sake, and for
Israel mine elect,’ Isa. xlv. Was not this fulfilled in Cyrus’s
and Darius’s time? For did not then the Jews go out of captivity
into their own land, Ezra i. 2-4; vi. 1, 12; Isa. xliv. 28; xlv.
13. Was not this prophecy of Isaiah fulfilled when the children of
Israel came out of Babylon? Were not the Assyrians, that carried
away the ten tribes, subdued? and the Babylonians, that carried
away the two tribes, were they not subdued in the days of Cyrus
and Darius, in whose days the ‘loins of kings were loosed, and the
two-leaved gates of brass and iron were opened?’ and had not
Israel and Jacob their liberty by them in their days, to go into
their own land?
“And here in England, was it not observed, that most of the honest
and sober people were turned out of the army, and their
commissions, offices, and places taken from them, because they
could not join with others in their cruelty and persecuting? And
others laid down their commissions themselves, and came out from
amongst those persecutors, before they were overthrown and brought
to confusion. All that are wise, see these things, and learn by
such examples and way-marks to shun such bogs. The righteous are
safe, that keep _in Christ_, their everlasting sanctuary, that
changes not in whom they have rest and peace with God. Amen.”
G.F.
Kingston, the 29th of the 12th Month, 1686-7.
CHAPTER XIII.
1686-1687.—The first and the second Adam compared—the two seeds
distinguished—George Fox is daily exercised in London in
services relating to the church, visiting the sick or afflicted,
and writing in defence of Truth, or refuting error—true prayer
distinguished from the practice of the Papists—visits his
son-in-law, William Mead—a distinction between the true
offering, and sacrifice, and the false, under the old and new
covenant—a general toleration and liberty being now granted,
George Fox writes a word of counsel and caution to Friends, to
walk circumspectly in a time of liberty—how redemption by Christ
is known and witnessed—repentance must precede the reception of
the gospel, baptism, &c.—a paper showing wherein God’s people
are to be like him—the right way to Christ—the kingdom of God is
to be measurably known in this life—George Fox is benefited by
being three months in the country—has much service in London
again—at Kingston writes a paper, showing how the Jews, by
disobedience, lost the Holy City and the Holy Land, designed as
a warning to Christians—everlasting life through, and in,
Christ, to be received and witnessed in this life—the stone cut
out of the mountain signifies the kingdom and power of Christ—a
miscellaneous paper, being a collection of Scripture passages
respecting regeneration, sanctification, &c.
While I was at Kingston, one day, as I was meditating on the things
of God, some particular observations arose in my mind, _Concerning
the first, and the second or last Adam_. As that—
“The first man Adam was made on the sixth day of the week; and
Christ, the second Adam, was crucified on the sixth day of the
week.
“The first Adam was betrayed by the serpent in the garden of Eden;
Christ our Saviour, the second Adam, was betrayed by Judas in a
garden near Jerusalem.
“Christ arose from the dead on the First-day of the week; and they
that believe on him are entered into Christ, their Rest; the
Christians meet together to worship God on the First-day of the
week; and on the First-day of the week it was that God said, ‘Let
there be light, and there was light.’ The Jews’ rest was on the
seventh-day of the week, which was given to them as a sign of the
eternal rest of the Lord, sanctifying them, after they came out of
the land of Egypt; for before that time the Lord had not given to
man and woman his outward Sabbath-day to keep, neither in the old
world, nor after in Abraham’s time, nor in Isaac’s, nor in Jacob’s
time; until the Jews came out of Egypt to Mount Sinai in the
wilderness. Then the Lord gave the law and his Sabbath, as a sign
in the old covenant, of Christ the Eternal Rest, in the new
covenant; and they that believe do enter into Christ, their Rest.
“Adam, the first man, is the root from whence we all spring
naturally; and Christ is called the last, or second Adam, because
he is the beginning and root of all that are spiritual.
“The first Adam was made a living soul; and Christ, the last Adam,
is a quickening spirit.
“Christ by the grace of God tasted death for every man, that they
might all come into favour with God; and that every tongue should
confess, that ‘Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the
Father.’”
I wrote also a paper there, _Concerning the two seeds,
distinguishing the seed wherein the blessing is received, from the
seed which the curse remains upon_. Of which the following is a
copy:—
“The Lord said to Abraham, ‘In thy seed shall all the nations of
the earth be blessed,’ Gen. xxii. 18. ‘And thy seed shall be as
the stars of heaven, and as the sand, which is upon the sea-shore,
and as the dust of the earth, that cannot be numbered,’ chap.
xiii. 16; xv. 5; xxii. 17. In this seed all nations and families
of the earth are blessed; but not in the seed of evil-doers and of
falsehood, nor in the seed of the adulterer and the whore, Isa. i.
4, and lvii. 3, 4; ‘for the seed of the wicked shall be cut off,’
saith the Lord, Psal. xxxvii. 28. The Lord said to David, ‘That
his seed should endure for ever,’ Psal. lxxxix. 36. And again it
is said, Psal. cii. 28, ‘The children of thy servants shall
continue, and their seed shall be established before thee.’ Here
is a distinction between the two seeds; for the seed of
evil-doers, of the adulterer, and of the wicked, shall be cut off;
and so it is not blessed. But Christ bruises the head of the
serpent, and his seed which he soweth in them, that disobey and
transgress God’s command, and rebel against God’s good Spirit.
This wicked seed of the serpent is cursed, and is an enemy to the
Seed in whom all are blessed; but Christ bruises the head of this
cursed seed of enmity, and destroys the devil and his works; and
in his seed all are blessed, and all are in unity in this seed.
All the children of the seed are the children of the kingdom of
God, and of Christ, and are blessed with faithful Abraham. Whoever
are of the saving, divine, precious faith, are of Abraham, walk in
the steps of the seed and faith of Abraham, and are blessed with
him, yea, of all nations, and all the families of the earth.
“And the Lord said to Abraham, ‘Thy seed shall be a stranger in a
land that is not theirs, and shall serve them; and they shall
afflict them four hundred years; and that nation whom they shall
serve, will I judge; and afterwards shall they (to wit, God’s
seed) come out with great substance,’ Gen. xv. 13, 14. Here ye may
see, that which afflicts God’s seed, he will judge, and did judge;
for he destroyed the firstborn of Pharaoh, and overthrew him and
his host.
“A holy man said, ‘Except the Lord of Sabaoth had left us a seed
or remnant, we had been as Sodom,’ &c., that is, destroyed. But in
the Seed, which destroys the devil and his works, and bruises the
head of the serpent and his seed, are all nations and families of
the earth blessed.
“Christ, according to the flesh, was of Abraham and of David, for
he took not on him the nature of angels, but the seed of Abraham,
in which seed all nations and families of the earth are blessed.
So they that are of his seed, are of the generation of Christ; are
‘flesh of his flesh, and bone of his bone.’ Now, all nations and
families of the earth must be in this holy Seed, if they have the
blessings and are blessed. And ‘out of the mouth of this Seed’s
seed shall not God’s word depart;’ but shall remain and abide in
the mouth of this Seed’s seed, in which they are blessed, Isa.
lix. 21. So it is not the first-birth’s talking of the words of
Christ, the Seed, in whose mouth the word of God doth not abide;
that makes an outward profession, like the Jews who killed and
persecuted the prophets, and crucified Christ, the Seed, and
substance of the law and prophets, which the Jews professed in
words, but they denied Christ, the Seed and Life. And all
Christians (so called) that profess the Scriptures in words, and
are not in the Seed, Christ, are in the confusion, and are like
the Jews; and so, neither Jews nor Christians are blessed, except
they be in Christ, the Seed of Life.
“But though Christ is said to be of the Seed of David, and of
Abraham, as his generation is declared by Matthew and Luke; yet
Christ was not born of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of
man, but of God. For he was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of
the Virgin, and supposed to be son of Joseph, but was the Son of
God. His name was called Jesus, because he should ‘save his people
from their sins;’ and Emmanuel, God with us. Christ took not upon
him the nature of angels, but the seed of Abraham (as I said
before) and so ‘was made of the seed of David according to the
flesh; and declared to be the Son of God with power, according to
the Spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead,’ Rom.
i. 4. So the generation of Christ is a mystery. Christ saw his
Seed or Word grow up in his disciples; and ‘Christ in you, the
hope of glory,’ the apostle calls ‘The mystery, which hath been
hid from ages and generations; but now is made manifest to the
saints,’ or sanctified ones, Col. i. 26, 27. ‘Whom we preach;
warning every man, and teaching every man in all wisdom, that we
may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus,’ ver. 28. For in
Christ, the second Adam, all are made perfect and complete; and in
Adam in the fall, all are deformed and made imperfect; so out of
Christ all mankind are imperfect and deformed: let them paint, and
dress themselves with the sheep’s clothing, with the form of
godliness, of the prophets’, and Christ’s, and his apostles’ words
ever so much; yet if Christ be not in them, they are incomplete,
imperfect, deformed, reprobates. But the apostle tells the church
of Christ, ‘Ye are complete in Christ, which is the head of all
principality and power,’ Col. ii. 10 (for he hath all power in
heaven and in earth given to him, Matt, xxviii. 18). So all the
saints are made perfect and complete in Christ Jesus; blessed be
the Lord God over all for ever, through Jesus Christ. Amen, Amen.”
G. F.
Kingston, the 15th of the 1st Month, 1686-7.
Quickly after this I returned to LONDON, and continued there a month
in the service of the Lord; being daily exercised either in public
meetings, or more particular services relating to the church of
Christ; as visiting such as were sick or afflicted, and writing
books or papers for the spreading of truth, or refuting of error. As
it was a time of general liberty, the Papists appeared more open in
their worship than formerly; and many unsettled people going to view
them at it, a great talk there was of their praying to saints, and
by beads, &c., whereupon I wrote a short paper concerning prayer; as
follows:—
“CHRIST JESUS, when he taught his disciples to pray, said unto
them, ‘When ye pray, say, Our Father, which art in heaven,
hallowed be thy name,’ &c. Christ doth not say, that they should
pray to Mary, the mother of Christ; nor doth he say, that they
should pray to angels, or to saints, that were dead. Christ did
not teach them to pray to the dead, nor for the dead: neither did
Christ or his apostles teach the believers to pray by beads, nor
to sing by outward organs; but the apostle said he would sing and
pray in the Spirit; ‘for the Spirit itself maketh intercession;
and the Lord, that searcheth the heart, knoweth the mind of the
Spirit.’
“To take counsel of the dead, was forbidden by the law of God;
they were to take counsel of the Lord. And he hath given Christ in
the new covenant, in his gospel-day, to be a counsellor and a
leader to all believers in his light. Men are not to run to the
dead for the living; for the law and testimony of God forbids it.
Those Jews that refused the running waters of Shiloh, the floods
and waters of the Assyrians and Babylonians came over them, and
carried them into captivity; and they that refuse the waters of
Christ, are overflowed with the flood of the world, that lieth in
wickedness. They that asked counsel of stocks and stones, were in
the spirit of error and whoredom; they were gone a whoring from
God. Hos. iv. 12. And they that joined themselves to Baal-Peor,
and ate the sacrifices of the dead, provoked the Lord’s anger, and
brought the Lord’s displeasure upon them, Psal. cvi. 28, 29. So
here ye may see, the sacrifices of the dead were forbidden. The
living know that they shall die, but the dead know not anything,
neither have they any more a reward; for the memory of them is
forgotten, Eccl: ix. 5. ‘Woe to the rebellious children, saith the
Lord, that take counsel, but not of me; and that cover with a
covering, but not of my Spirit, that they may add sin to sin,’”
Isa. xxx. 1.
G. F.
When I had stayed about a month in London, I got out of town
again; for by reason of the many hardships I had undergone in
imprisonments, and other sufferings for truth’s sake, my body was
grown so infirm and weak, that I could not bear the closeness of
the city long together; but was obliged to go a little into the
country, for the benefit of the fresh air. At this time I went
with my son-in-law William Mead, to his country-house called
GOOSES in ESSEX, where I stayed about two weeks; and among other
services I had there, I wrote the following paper:—
“_A Distinction between the True Offering and Sacrifice, and the
False, in the Old and New Covenant._
“The Lord saith, ‘He that sacrificeth to any god, save unto the
Lord only, he shall be utterly destroyed.’ Exod. xxii. 20. So no
god is to be minded, nor sacrificed to, but the Lord God: it is
death to sacrifice to any other god, save the Lord. The Lord saith
also, ‘Thou shalt not offer the blood of my sacrifice with
leavened bread.’ Exod. xxiii. 18. So that sour, heavy leaven, must
not be offered with the Lord’s sacrifice. Again the Lord saith,
‘Thou shalt not build an altar of hewn stone: for if thou lift up
thy tool upon it, thou hast polluted it,’ Exod. xx. 25. Therefore
have a care of polluting the altar with your own tools, you that
profess to offer the spiritual sacrifice.
“Jonah said, ‘he would sacrifice unto the Lord with the voice of
thanksgiving,’ when he was in the fish’s belly; and there he
prayed unto the Lord, Jonah ii. For Jonah in the whale’s belly had
no lambs, nor rams, nor outward sacrifices to offer.
“The Lord forbids his people to sacrifice with harlots, Hos. iv.
14. And the Lord forbids his people to offer sacrifice of the
blind, lame, sick, or that which was deformed, or had any blemish;
as in Mal. i. and many other places. So they that offer spiritual
sacrifice, must not offer the blind, lame, blemished, or deformed
sacrifice to God.
“The scribe saith unto Christ, ‘To love God with all the heart,
and with all the understanding, and with all the soul, and with
all the strength, and to love his neighbour as himself, is more
than all whole burnt-offerings and sacrifices,’ Mark xii. 33. And
when Jesus saw that he answered discreetly, he said unto him ‘Thou
art not far from the kingdom of God,’ v. 34. To love God, and
their neighbour as themselves, was more than whole burnt offerings
and sacrifices in the time of the law; therefore all offerings and
sacrifices in the time of the gospel, if there be not love to God,
and to their neighbour as themselves, avail nothing.
“David said, ‘Let them sacrifice a sacrifice of thanksgiving, and
declare his works with rejoicing,’ Psal. cvii. 22. These are the
sacrifices that the Lord requires of his people, more than outward
sacrifices. David said, ‘Let my prayer be set forth before thee,
as incense; and the lifting up of my hands as the evening
sacrifice,’ Psal. cxli. 2. Here David looks upon his prayer to the
Lord, and the lifting up of his hands to him, to be accepted with
the Lord, as much as the outward incense, and the outward evening
sacrifice. Again David says, ‘The sacrifices of God are a broken
spirit; a broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not
despise,’ Psal. li. 17. See also Isa. lvii. 15; lxvi. 2. These are
the sacrifices that David said God would accept, and not despise;
which are beyond the unbroken spirit, and uncontrite heart, with
outward offerings and sacrifices.
“The adversaries of the Jews would have joined with them towards
the building of the temple, saying unto them, ‘Let us build with
you, for we seek your God, as ye do; and we do sacrifice unto
him.’ But the Jews refused them, and said, ‘You have nothing to do
with us, to build a house unto our God,’ Ezra iv. 2, 3. Here ye
may see that God’s people refused their building with them, and
their sacrifice. Solomon saith, ‘The sacrifice of the wicked is an
abomination to the Lord,’ Prov. xv. 8. See also Isa. i. 11: lxvi.
3. Solomon also saith, ‘Better is a dry morsel, and quietness
therewith, than a house full of sacrifices with strife,’ Prov.
xvii. 1. Now let all the people consider, what good your house
full of sacrifices doth with strife, when a dry morsel and
quietness therewith is better? Consider, all people, if ye live in
wickedness, your sacrifice is an abomination to the Lord.
“Again, Solomon speaking of the sacrifice of fools, saith, ‘They
consider not that they do evil,’ Eccl. v. 1. Fools are such as do
not walk in the Spirit of God, or begin in the Spirit, and end in
the flesh, like the foolish Galatians; for the Spirit of God is
the Spirit of wisdom and understanding, and cannot join with the
sacrifices of the dead, nor of the fools, nor of the wicked whose
sacrifice is abominable; who grieve and quench the Spirit of God;
by which the spiritual and righteous offer up spiritual
sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ.
“The apostle Paul said, he was the ‘minister of Jesus Christ to
the Gentiles, ministering the gospel of God, that the offering up
of the Gentiles might be acceptable, being sanctified by the Holy
Ghost,’ Rom. xv. 16. So ye may see, that all the acceptable
offerings and sacrifices to God must be sanctified by the Holy
Ghost. The same apostle saith to the Corinthians, ‘Ye are bought
with a price; therefore glorify God in your body, and in your
spirit, which are God’s,’ I Cor. vi. 20. And to the Romans he
saith, ‘I beseech you, brethren, by the mercies of God, that you
present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God,
which is your reasonable service,’ Rom. xii. 1. This is the duty
of all true Christians.
“Peter also saith, in his general epistle to the Church of Christ,
‘Ye also, as lively stones, are built up a spiritual house, a holy
priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by
Jesus Christ,’ I Pet. ii. 5. So every man and woman must come to
the Spirit of God in their own hearts, if they offer up spiritual
sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ. For as Christ
saith, ‘Every sacrifice shall be salted with salt,’ Mark ix. 49.
And in the Old Testament ye may see, all their outward offerings
they were to season with salt, Lev. ii. 13, a type and figure of
Christ, who gave himself for us, an offering and a sacrifice to
God, for a sweet-smelling savour, Eph. v. 2. Therefore all his
people must be baptized with the Holy Ghost and with fire, that
they may be salted with fire, and every sacrifice salted with
salt, with the Spirit of grace that is poured upon all; so that
they may offer up this spiritual sacrifice, acceptable to God by
Jesus Christ.
“Samuel said to king Saul, ‘Hath the Lord as great delight in
burnt-offerings and sacrifices, as in obeying the voice of the
Lord? behold, to obey is better than sacrifice, and to hearken
than the fat of rams,’ I Sam. xv. 22. So ye may see, all offerings
and sacrifices are nothing, if there be not a hearkening to the
Lord in his Spirit, and an obeying of his voice. Christ told the
Jews, that were outward sacrificers, that he would have mercy, and
not sacrifice; and bid them ‘Go and learn what that meaneth,’”
Matt. ix. 13.
G.F.
Gooses, the 28th of the 2nd Month, 1687.
The beginning of the 3rd month I returned to LONDON, and continued
there till after the Yearly Meeting, which began on the 16th of the
same, and was very large, Friends having more freedom to come up out
of the counties to it, by reason of the general toleration and
liberty now granted. The meeting lasted several days; and at the
close thereof it was upon me to write the following lines, to be
dispersed amongst Friends everywhere, as—“_A word of counsel and
caution to them to walk circumspectly in this time of liberty_:”—
“DEAR FRIENDS AND BRETHREN, IN THE LORD JESUS CHRIST,
“The Lord, by his eternal arm and power, having supported you in
all your sufferings, and great spoiling of goods, and tedious
imprisonments, only for serving and worshipping the living God
that made you; who gave up wife and children, and goods, and
suffered the spoil of them, and imprisonment for his truth and
name’s sake;—the Lord, by his infinite power and mercy, having
been pleased to open the king’s heart towards you, by which you
are set at liberty from jails, and the spoilers of your goods are
stopped, whereby ye may follow your callings, confess Christ
Jesus, and call him Lord by the Holy Ghost, in your assemblies and
meetings, without being cast into jails, or having your goods
spoiled; a great concern lies upon me from the Lord to write unto
you, dear brethren, that none may abuse this liberty, nor the
mercies of the Lord, but prize them; for there is great danger in
time of liberty, of getting up into ease, looseness, and false
liberty. And now, seeing that ye have not the outward persecutors
to war with in sufferings, with the spiritual weapons keep down
that which would not be subject to Christ; that He, the Holy One,
may reign in your hearts; that your lives, conversations, and
words, may preach righteousness and truth; that ye may all show
forth good ensamples of true believers in Christ, in virtue and
holiness, answering that which may be known of God in all people,
that ye are the sons and daughters of God; standing fast in that
righteous, holy liberty in Christ, the just and holy One, that has
made you free, over the loose or false; shunning vain disputes,
and foolish questions of men of corrupt minds; for the serpent was
the first questioner of Eve, who drew her and Adam out of the
truth.
“Therefore as ye have received Christ, live and walk in Him, who
bruises the serpent’s head, who is your safe sanctuary, in whom ye
have election, reconciliation, and peace with God. Therefore live
in the peace which ye have from Christ, which is not of this
world; be at peace one with another, and seek the peace of all men
in Christ Jesus; for blessed are the peacemakers. Labour to
exercise a good conscience towards God, in obedience to him in
what he requires; and in doing to all men the thing that is just
and honest; in your conversations and words, giving no offence to
Jew or Gentile, nor to the church of God. So ye may be as a city
set on God’s Sion-hill, which cannot be hid; and may be lights to
the dark world, that they may see your good fruits and glorify
your Father, which is in heaven; for he is glorified in your
bringing forth good fruits, as ye abide in Christ, the vine, in
this his day of life, power, and light, that shines over all.
Therefore all you that believe in the light, walk in the light, as
children of the light, and of Christ’s everlasting day; that in
the light ye may have fellowship with the Father and the Son, and
one with another; keeping in the unity of his Holy Spirit, in the
bond of his holy peace, in his church that he is head of. My
desire is, that God’s wisdom everywhere may be justified of her
children, and that it may be showed forth in meekness and in the
fear of the Lord in this his day. Amen.”
G. F.
By that time the Yearly Meeting was over, I was very much wearied
and spent; wherefore, about a week after the meeting, I got out of
town to a Friend’s house a little beyond EDMONTON, where, and at
SOUTH STREET, I abode some time, and had meetings amongst Friends
there; and at WINCHMORE-HILL and BURY STREET. And having my mind
continually exercised in the things of God, the sense of his
infinite goodness and mercy to mankind in visiting them after they
had transgressed and rebelled against him, and providing a way and
means for their return to him again, was very much upon me, and in
the opening of the Spirit of truth I wrote the following paper on
that subject:—
“God, who made all mankind, though they have transgressed his
commands and laws, rebelled against him, hated his light, grieved
his Spirit, and walked despitefully against his Spirit of grace;
God, who is merciful, would yet have all to be saved, and come to
the knowledge of the truth. All that come to the knowledge of the
truth must know it in their inward parts; I say, all that know and
find the grace and truth which comes by Jesus, do know and find it
in their hearts. And such find the hidden man of the heart, the
pearl, the leaven, the lost piece of silver, and the kingdom of
heaven _within_. For until they come to the light and truth in
their hearts, all are strangers to these things,—are in Adam, in
the fall from the image of God, and from his light, power, Spirit,
and kingdom. But Christ that never fell, brings man and woman that
follow him again to know these things, to know the truth, and Him
the Saviour, and brings them into his image, and his everlasting
kingdom.
“The devil, who is out of the truth, tempted man and woman to
disobey God; and so drew them into the fall from the truth. It is
the devil that hath stopped men’s eyes, ears, and hearts from the
truth, who is called the god of the world, who hath blinded the
eyes of infidels, or heathen. But Christ, who bruises the
serpent’s head, and destroys the devil and his works, doth open
men’s hearts, eyes, and ears. He is their Saviour and Redeemer,
and giveth life eternal to his people that obey him and his truth.
Blessed be the Lord for ever through Jesus Christ, who hath tasted
death for all men, to bring them out of the death of Adam; who is
a propitiation for the sins of the whole world, and gave himself a
ransom for all, to be testified of in due time. For as by Adam’s
transgression and disobedience death and condemnation came upon
all, so by Christ’s obedience unto death, justification of life is
come upon all; and he that believeth in Christ hath eternal life;
but he that doth not is condemned already. But God would have all
men to be saved, and come unto the knowledge of the truth as it is
in Jesus, who is their Saviour; and in him there is no
condemnation.”
G. F.
After I had been a while here, I went to a monthly meeting at
ENFIELD, and thence with some Friends to HERTFORD; where I stayed
three or four days, visiting Friends both at their public meetings
on First-day, and at their quarterly meetings of men and women; and
good service for the Lord I had amongst them. Then passing to
WALTHAM ABBEY, I had a very good meeting with Friends there; and
next day went thence to another place, to compose a difference,
which, for want of a right understanding of each other, had happened
between some Friends. I returned to Waltham that night; and next day
went with some Friends to William Mead’s house, in ESSEX.
Here I stayed some weeks, yet was not idle, but often visited the
meetings thereabouts; as at WANSTEAD, BARKING, and at John
Harding’s. Between meeting and meeting I wrote many things for the
spreading of truth, and for the opening of people’s understandings
to receive it. One was a paper proving, from the Scriptures, that
people must repent before they can receive the gospel, and the Holy
Spirit, and the kingdom of God, or be baptized; after this manner:—
“John the Baptist came preaching in the wilderness of Judea,
saying, ‘Repent ye: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand,’ Matt.
iii. 2. And when John the Baptist was cast into prison, Mark says,
'That Jesus came into Galilee, preaching the gospel of the kingdom
of God, and saying, The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God
is at hand: Repent ye, and believe the gospel,’ Mark i. 14, 15.
Matthew also says, ‘From that time Jesus began to preach, and to
say, Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand,’ Matt. iv. 17.
And when Christ sent forth his twelve disciples, two and two, they
went out and preached that men should repent, Mark vi. 12. Christ
said to the Jews, ‘Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise
perish,’ Luke xiii. 3, 5. When the publicans and sinners came to
hear Christ, and the Pharisees and Scribes murmured saying, ‘This
man receiveth sinners and eateth with them,’ Luke xv. 1, 2, Christ
reproved them by a parable, and then told them, ‘Joy shall be in
heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than over ninety and
nine just persons which need no repentance,’ ver. 7, adding,
‘There is joy in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner
that repenteth,’ ver. 10. Christ, after he was risen, said unto
his disciples, ‘That repentance and remission of sins should be
preached in his name among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem,’
Luke xxiv. 47. Peter said unto the Jews, ‘Repent and be baptized,
every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ, for the remission
of sins; and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost,’ Acts
ii. 38. And Paul said, ‘The times of this ignorance God winked at;
but now commandeth all men everywhere to repent,’ Acts xvii. 30.
Simon Magus was called to repentance, if he had regarded it, Acts
viii. 22. And the apostle Paul preached at Damascus, and at
Jerusalem, and throughout all the coasts of Judea, and then to the
Gentiles (turning them from darkness to the light of Christ, and
from the power of Satan to God,) that they should ‘repent and turn
to God, and do works meet for repentance,’ Acts xxvi. 20.
“Here ye may see that people must repent before they believe, and
are baptized, and before they receive the Holy Ghost, and the
kingdom of God. They must repent of their vain life and
conversation before they receive the gospel, be turned from
darkness to the light of Christ, and from the power of Satan unto
God, before they receive his Holy Spirit, and his gospel of life
and salvation. The Lord commands all men everywhere to repent, and
do works meet for repentance. They must show forth that their
lives and conversations are changed, and that they serve God in
newness of life, with new tongues and new hearts.”
G. F.
Gooses, the 6th Month, 1687.
Another short paper I wrote about the same time, showing wherein
God’s people should be like unto him. It was thus:—
“God is righteous; and he would have his people to be righteous,
and to do righteously. God is holy; and he would have his people
holy, and to do holily. God is just; and he would have his people
to be just, and to do justly to all. God is light; and his
children must walk in his light. God is an eternal, infinite
Spirit; and his children must walk in the Spirit. God is merciful;
and he would have his people to be merciful. God’s sun shines upon
the good and the bad, and he causes the rain to fall upon the evil
and the good; so should his people do good unto all. God is love;
and they that dwell in love, dwell in God. Love worketh no ill to
his neighbour: therefore ‘love is the fulfilling of the law,’ Rom.
xiii. 10. The apostle says, ‘All the law is fulfilled in one word,
even in this; Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself,’ Gal. v.
14. ‘As the Father hath loved me, so I have loved you; continue ye
in my love,’ John xv. 9. This should be the practice of all God’s
people.”
G. F.
Gooses, the 6th Month, 1687.
And because most people would confess, that God’s people should be
thus, but few know how to come to this state; therefore in the
openings of the Spirit of truth I wrote another short paper,
directing to “_The right way and means, whereby people might come
unto Christ, and so be made like unto God_.” Thus:—
“Christ saith, ‘I am the way, the truth, and the life; no man
cometh unto the Father, but by me,’ John xiv. 6. And again, ‘No
man can come to me, except the Father, which hath sent me, draw
him,’ John vi. 44. Now, what is the means by which God doth draw
people to his Son, but by his Holy Spirit, who ‘poureth out of his
Spirit upon all flesh.’ By this Holy Spirit, the holy and
righteous God doth draw people from their unrighteousness and
unholiness, to Christ, the righteous and holy One, the great
Prophet in his New Covenant and New Testament, whom Moses in the
Old Covenant and Testament said, God would raise up, like unto
him, and whom people should ‘hear in all things: and they that
would not hear him, should be cut off.’
“They that do not hear the Son of God, the great Prophet, do not
mind the drawing of the Father by his Holy Spirit to his Son; but
to them that mind the drawings of the good Spirit of the Father to
his Son, the Spirit giveth understanding to know God and Jesus
Christ, which is eternal life. Then they know that Jesus Christ is
the way, the truth, and the life, and that none can come unto God
but by and through his Son, who is their Shepherd to feed them in
his pastures and springs of life; and his sheep know his holy
voice, in whom there was no sin, and in whose mouth there was no
guile; and a hireling they will not hear, for he careth not for
the sheep; for they are not the hireling’s, but Christ’s, who hath
laid down his life for his sheep.
“He that robs and steals his neighbour’s words, that climbeth up
another way, and entereth not by the door, is a thief and a
robber; but Christ is the door into his sheepfold, for his sheep
to enter in by. They know that Christ is the Bishop of their
souls, to see that they do not go astray from God, nor out of his
pastures of life; they know that Christ is their Mediator, and
makes their peace with God; and they know that Christ is their
High-priest, made higher than the heavens, and hath died for their
sins, doth cleanse them with his blood, is risen for their
justification; and is able to the utmost to save all that come to
God by him.”
G.F.
Gooses, the 6th Month, 1687.
Before I left this place, I wrote another paper, to show, by many
instances from the Holy Scriptures, that the kingdom of God, which
most people talk of at a distance, and refer altogether to another
life, is in some measure to be known and entered into in this life;
but that none can know an entrance thereinto, but such as are
regenerated and born again. Of which paper the following is a copy:—
“Christ saith, ‘Except a man be born again, he cannot see the
kingdom of God,’ John iii. 3. ‘That which is born of the flesh, is
flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit, is spirit,’ ver. 6.
So, ‘except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot
enter into the kingdom of God,’ ver. 5. And John, writing to the
seven churches in Asia, calls himself their brother, and companion
in tribulation, and in the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ,
Rev. i. 9. Here you may see, that John was in the kingdom; so he
was born again: for he not only saw the kingdom, but was in it.
“And John saith, ‘Behold, what manner of love the Father hath
bestowed upon us, that we should be called the sons of God;
therefore the world knoweth us not, because it knew him not,’ 1
John iii. 1. ‘Beloved, now are we the sons of God,’ ver. 2. ‘If ye
know that he is righteous, ye know that every one that doeth
righteousness is born of him,’ chap. ii. 29. ‘Whosoever is born of
God, doth not commit sin; for his seed remaineth in him, and he
cannot sin, because he is born of God,’ chap. iii. 9. Again John
saith, ‘Let us love one another; for love is of God; and every one
that loveth, is born of God, and knoweth God. He that loveth not,
knoweth not God; for God is love,’ chap. iv. 7, 8. ‘Whosoever
believeth that Jesus is the Christ, is born of God,’ chap. v. 1.
And, ‘Whosoever is born of God, overcometh the world; and this is
the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith,’ ver. 4.
Were not these, that were born of God, in the kingdom of God? And
seeing John says, every one that doeth righteousness, is born of
God, do not such see the kingdom of God that stands in
righteousness, and enter into it?
“Peter, in his first general epistle to the church of Christ,
saith, ‘As new-born babes desire the sincere milk of the Word,
that ye may grow thereby,’ 1 Pet. ii. 2. And he tells them they
were a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a
peculiar people; that they should show forth the praises of Him
who had called them out of darkness into his marvellous light,
ver. 9. And that, as lively stones, they were built up a spiritual
house, a holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices,
acceptable to God by Jesus Christ, ver. 5. Did not these new-born
babes, these lively stones, spiritual household, royal priesthood,
holy nation, and chosen generation, who were called out of
darkness into Christ’s marvellous light, see, and enter into his
holy kingdom, being heirs of the same? who were born again, not of
corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, by the Word of God, which
liveth and abideth for ever, 1 Pet. i. 23. And had these not an
entrance ministered to them into the everlasting kingdom of our
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ?
“James, in his general epistle to the church of Christ, says,
‘Hath not God chosen the poor of this world, to be rich in faith,
and heirs of the kingdom, which he hath promised to them that love
him?’ James ii. 5. The apostle Paul says, ‘God sent forth his Son,
made of a woman, &c., to redeem them that were under the law; that
we might receive the adoption of sons; and because ye are sons,
God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts,
crying, Abba, Father. Wherefore thou art no more a servant, but a
son; and if a son, then an heir of God through Christ,’ Gal. iv.
4-7. The same apostle says, ‘As many as are led by the Spirit of
God, they are the sons of God;’ and tells the saints at Rome, ‘Ye
have received the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba,
Father. The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we
are the children of God; and if children, then heirs; heirs of
God, and joint-heirs with Christ; if so be we suffer with him,
that we may be also glorified together (namely, with Christ),’
Rom. viii. 14-17. Now seeing they are the sons of God that are led
by the Spirit of God, and the Spirit beareth witness unto their
spirit, that they are the children of God, and heirs of God, and
joint-heirs with Christ, are not all these children of God heirs
of the righteous, glorious, kingdom of God? and do they not see
it, and enter into it?
“The Lord saith in Hosea i. 10, ‘Where it was said unto them, Ye
are not my people; there it shall be said unto them, Ye are the
sons of the living God.’ Did not this relate to the gospel-days of
the new covenant? see Rom. ix. 26. And what the Lord said by the
prophet Jeremiah, chap. xxxi. 1, the apostle applies to the
gospel-days, and says, ‘Be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch
not the unclean thing; and I will receive you, and will be a
Father unto you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters, saith the
Lord Almighty,’ 2 Cor. vi. 18. Are not these the children that
see, and enter into the righteous kingdom of God, that separate
from that which is unclean, and touch it not?
“The Lord saith also by Isaiah, ‘I will say to the north, Give up;
and to the south, Keep not back; bring my sons from far, and my
daughters from the ends of the earth?’ Isa. xliii. 6. Then does
not he bring them to his kingdom of glory, that stands in
righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost?
“The Lord said to Job, ‘When the morning stars sang together, and
all the sons of God shouted for joy,’ Job xxxviii. 7, where did
these sons of God shout for joy? Was it not in his kingdom of
glory?
“Christ saith, ‘The least in the kingdom of God is greater than
John,’ Luke vii. 28. And in chap. xvi. 16, he says, ‘The law and
the prophets were until John: since that time (viz., since the
law, and the prophets, and John) the kingdom of God is preached,
and every man presseth into it.’
“‘The good seed are the children of the kingdom,’ Matt. xiii. 38.
And ‘the righteous shall shine forth as the sun, in the kingdom of
their Father,’ ver. 43. Christ said unto his disciples, ‘Unto you
it is given to know the mysteries of the kingdom of God,’ Mark iv.
11. And Christ lifted up his eyes upon his disciples, and said,
‘Blessed be ye poor: for yours is the kingdom of God,’ Luke vi.
20. And the apostles preached the kingdom of God. These were born
again: that saw and knew the kingdom of God, and preached it.
“Christ said to his disciples, ‘Fear not, little flock, for it is
your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom,’ Luke xii.
32. And, ‘I appoint unto you a kingdom,’ said Christ, ‘as my
Father hath appointed unto me,’ chap. xxii. 29. The Lord said, ‘He
that overcometh, shall inherit all things: and I will be his God,
and he shall be my son,’ Rev. xxi. 7. And John saith, ‘I have
written unto you, young men, because ye are strong, and the Word
of God abideth in you, and ye have overcome the wicked one,’ 1
John ii. 14. And Christ, by whom are all things, is said ‘to bring
many sons to glory,’ Heb. ii. 10.
“Christ said, ‘Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites;
for ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men; for ye neither
go in yourselves, neither suffer them that are entering, to go
in,’ Matt. xxiii. 13. He also said, ‘Woe unto you, lawyers; for
you have taken away the key of knowledge; ye enter not in
yourselves; and them that were entering in ye hindered,’ Luke xi.
52. Christ gives unto his children the key of the kingdom, his
Spirit; but the scribes, and the Pharisees, and the lawyers, great
professors, who were erred from the Spirit, like the great
professors in our age that scoff at the Spirit, and draw people
from the Spirit of God within, these shut up the kingdom from men,
and draw people from the key of knowledge, and the key of the
kingdom. ‘For no man knows the things of God, but by the Spirit of
God; for the things of God are spiritually discerned.’ So the
Spirit is the key, by which the kingdom of God, and the things of
God, are revealed and discerned, and known, according to 1 Cor.
ii. 10, 11, 13, 14. The apostle names some in his epistle to the
Colossians, and says, ‘These are my fellow-workers unto the
kingdom of God,’ Col. iv. 11. And he tells that church, that ‘God
hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and hath translated
us into the kingdom of his dear Son,’ chap. i. 13. So ye may see
these were born again, that were translated into the kingdom of
Christ, and were fellow-workers unto the kingdom of God.
“Christ exhorts his disciples to love and to do good, that they
might be the children of their Father which is in heaven, Matt. v.
45. He bids them be perfect, even as their Father which is in
heaven, is perfect; ver. 48. The apostle saith to the church at
Philippi, ‘That ye may be blameless and harmless, the sons of God,
without rebuke, in the midst of a crooked and perverse nation,
amongst whom ye shine as lights in the world, holding forth the
word of life,’ &c., Phil. ii. 15, 16. And writing to the church of
the Thessalonians, he puts them in mind how he had exhorted them
that they would ‘walk worthy of God, who had called them into his
kingdom and glory,’ 1 Thess. ii. 12.
“The Lord had promised by the prophet Joel, that he would ‘pour
out his Spirit upon all flesh,’ and that ‘sons and daughters
should prophesy, old men should dream dreams, and young men see
visions,’ Joel ii. 28. Now the cause that sons and daughters,
handmaids, servants, young men, and old men, have not these
heavenly visions, dreams, and prophecies, is, because they are
erred from the Spirit of God, which he poureth upon them: but as
many as are led by the Spirit of God, are the sons of God.
“John saith, Christ was the ‘true light, which lighteth every man
that cometh into the world,’ John i. 9; and that ‘As many as
received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God;’
ver. 12, ‘which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the
flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God,’ ver. 13. Now, the
reason why people do not become the sons of God, is because they
do not receive Christ. The Jews, the great professors, who had the
promises, prophecies, figures, and shadows of him, would not
receive him when he came. And now the priests and high professors
of Christ, are so far from receiving the light of Christ, and
believing in it, that they hate the light, and scoff at it,
calling it a natural conscience; and some, Jack-in-the-lantern.
Such are not like to become the sons of God, nor to see the
glorious kingdom of Christ, which stands in righteousness, peace,
and joy in the Holy Ghost. For the light that shines in the heart,
gives ‘the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face
of Christ Jesus.’ They that do not receive Christ Jesus, but hate
his light (which is the life in him) and yet profess him in words,
neither know the children of the light, nor true fellowship in the
light, nor the kingdom of God, that stands in righteousness,
peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost; but by the light they are
condemned. ‘And this is the condemnation, that light is come into
the world, and men love darkness rather than light, because their
deeds are evil. For every one that doeth evil, hateth the light,
neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved,’
John iii. 19, 20. But the children of the light, that walk in the
light, come to heavenly Jerusalem, and to the city of the living
God, to the innumerable company of angels, and to the general
assembly and church of the first-born, that are written in heaven,
and can sing Hallelujah!”
G.F.
Gooses, the 2nd of the 7th Month, 1687.
Having been more than a quarter of a year in the country, I returned
to LONDON, somewhat better in health than formerly, having received
much benefit by the country air. And it being now a time of general
liberty, and great openness amongst the people, I had much service
for the Lord in the city; being almost daily at public meetings, and
frequently taken up in visiting Friends that were sick, and in other
services of the church. I continued at London about three months;
and then finding my strength much spent, with continual labouring in
the work of the Lord, and my body much stopped for want of fresh
air, I went down to my son Rous’s, by KINGSTON, where I abode some
time, and visited Friends at Kingston.
While I was there, it came upon me to write a paper concerning the
Jews, showing “how by their disobedience and rebellion, they lost
the holy city and land.” By which example the professed Christians
may see what they are to expect, if they continue to disobey and
provoke the Lord. The copy here follows:—
“The Lord gave the Jews in the Old Testament the land of Canaan,
and they built the temple at Jerusalem to worship in. It was
called ‘the holy temple;’ and Jerusalem was called ‘the holy
city;’ and Canaan ‘the holy land.’ But when the Jews rebelled
against the good Spirit, which God gave to instruct them, rebelled
against his law, set up idols and images, and defiled the land and
the city, the Lord sent his prophets to cry against them, to bring
them back again to his Spirit, and to his law, and so to God, to
serve and worship him, that they might not worship images and
idols, the works of their own hands. But instead of hearkening to
God’s prophets, they persecuted them, and at last killed his Son
Christ Jesus, and persecuted his apostles. But Christ told the
Jews, that both their city and temple should be laid waste, and
they should be scattered over all nations: and it was so. Titus
the Roman emperor came and took Jerusalem, and destroyed the city
and temple; which was a day of vengeance upon the Jews for all
their idolatries and their wickedness, and for the innocent blood
they had shed, both in the city and country; and they were driven
out of their own city and land, and scattered over all nations.
The Jews have never had power to obtain the land since, nor to
build Jerusalem, nor the temple; but the Turk hath both the land
of Canaan, and that which is called ‘the city of Jerusalem.’
“Now, the Turk neither makes images, nor worships images; and so
it is a just hand of the Lord, that he should be over the
persecuting, idolatrous Jews, so that they cannot defile the land
of Canaan now with images and idols, for the Turk hath it, who
neither makes images, nor idols, nor worships them. The Jews must
never hope, believe, nor expect, that ever they shall go again
into the land of Canaan, to set up an outward worship at
Jerusalem, and there for their priests to offer outward sacrifices
of rams, sheep, and heifers, &c., for burnt-offerings; for Christ,
the one offering, hath offered himself once for all, and by this
one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified.
“And Christ hath changed the priesthood of Aaron, that offered
sacrifices, that was made after the power of a carnal commandment;
but Christ was made after the power of an endless life, a Priest
for ever, who is holy, harmless, separate from sinners, and made
higher than the heavens. This is the Priest that gives power to
all that receive him, to become the sons and daughters of God: and
Jerusalem that is above, is the mother of all the sons and
daughters of God, and is free; but Jerusalem that is below, is in
bondage with her children. They that are the children of Jerusalem
that is above, do not look down at Jerusalem that is below; but
they look at Jerusalem that is above, which is their mother.
Christ said, ‘Neither at outward Jerusalem, nor in the mountain of
Samaria, should God be worshipped; but God should be worshipped in
Spirit and in truth; for he is a Spirit, and such he seeks to
worship him,’ John iv. This is the worship that Christ set up
above sixteen hundred years ago; and therefore the idolatrous Jews
must never think to offer their outward offerings and sacrifices,
nor set up their outward worship at Jerusalem, in the holy land of
Canaan more. For Christ, by the offering up of himself once for
all, for the sins of the whole world, hath ended all the Jews’
offerings, and changed the priesthood, and the law by which it was
made; and hath blotted out the handwriting of ordinances, which
commanded both priests and offerings; and triumphed, over them. So
he is the offering and sacrifice of all the children of the New
Testament, and New Covenant, and heavenly New Jerusalem, that is
above. He is their Prophet that openeth to them; their Shepherd
that feeds them; their Bishop that oversees them; and Priest that
died for their sins, and is risen for their justification;—who
sanctifies and presents them to God. He is the one Mediator
between God and man, even the Man Christ Jesus.”
G. F.
Kingston, the 9th of the 10th Month, 1687.
After this I went to GUILDFORD to visit Friends there, and stayed
three days with them; having a large and very good meeting there on
First-day. After which I came back to KINGSTON again, and tarried
about two weeks longer, visiting Friends, and having meetings
amongst them, both at their public meeting-house and in their
families. Many things I wrote while I was at Kingston; among which
was the following:—
“‘God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that
whosoever believeth in him, shall not perish (mark, not perish,)
but have everlasting life,’ John iii. 16. Again, he saith, ‘He
that believeth on the Son of God, hath (mark, hath) everlasting
life,’ ver. 36. So these believers have everlasting life while
they are upon the earth. And ‘He that believeth on Christ is not
condemned; but he that believeth not, is condemned already, and
the wrath of God abideth on him.’ And, ‘He that heareth Christ’s
word, and believeth on God that sent him, hath (mark, hath)
everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation, but is
passed from death,’ the death in the first Adam, ‘unto life,’ the
life in Christ, the second Adam, John v. 24. And that meat which
Christ doth give, endureth unto everlasting life, as in John vi.
27. And the water that Christ doth give, shall be in him that
drinks it, ‘a well of water springing up into everlasting life,’
John iv. 14.
“Christ said to the Jews, ‘Search the Scriptures, for in them ye
think ye have eternal life; and they are they which testify of me;
and ye will not come to me, that ye might have life,’ John v. 39,
40. Here ye may see eternal life is to be found in Christ, and not
in the Scriptures, which testify of Him, the Life. Christ’s sheep
that hear his voice, know and follow him; he gives them eternal
life, and they shall not perish, neither shall any pluck them out
of his hand. They shall not pluck Christ’s sheep, to whom he hath
given eternal life, out of his hand. Christ said to Martha, ‘I am
the resurrection and the life; he that believeth in me, though he
were dead (mark, though he were dead) yet shall he live; (mark,
live, though he were dead;) and whosoever liveth, and believeth in
me, shall never die. Believest thou this? Martha said, Yea, Lord,’
John xi. 27. This is the true and substantial belief, which they
that believe, shall not perish, but have everlasting life. John
saith, ‘This is the record, that God hath given to us eternal
life; and this life is in his Son,’ 1 John v. 11. ‘The life was
manifested, and we have seen it and bear witness, and show unto
you that eternal life, which was with the Father, and was
manifested unto us,’ 1 John i. 2. So these were the believers that
had eternal life in the Son of God, and showed it unto others. ‘He
that hath the Son hath life,’ says John, ‘and he that hath not the
Son of God, hath not life,’ 1 John v. 12. Christ says, ‘Every one
that hath forsaken houses, or brethren, or sisters, or father, or
mother, or wife, or children, or lands, for my name’s sake, shall
receive an hundred fold, and shall inherit everlasting life,’
Matt. xix. 29.
“The wicked that do not receive Christ, shall go into everlasting
punishment; but the righteous into eternal life. The true servants
of God have their fruits unto holiness, and their end is
everlasting life; for ‘the wages of sin is death: but the gift of
God is eternal life, through Jesus Christ our Lord.’ Such have a
building of God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the
heavens. Therefore I desire that God’s people may endure all
things, that they may obtain this salvation, which is in Jesus
Christ, with eternal glory. For Christ being made perfect, became
the Author of eternal salvation to all them that obey him. This
eternal salvation is above an external salvation; for they come to
receive an eternal inheritance, and live in the possession of the
everlasting gospel of joy, comfort, peace, and salvation, having
everlasting life in Christ Jesus.”
G.F.
Kingston, the 6th of the 11th Month, 1687.
Another paper I wrote there, concerning the Stone spoken of by
Daniel, chap. ii., which became a great mountain, and filled the
whole earth; showing “that thereby was set forth the kingdom and
power of Christ:”—
“When Christ, the Stone, that became a great mountain, and filled
the whole earth, had broken to pieces the head of gold, and the
breast of silver, and the belly of brass, and the legs of iron,
and the feet part iron part clay (which were the four monarchies,
to wit, the Babylonian and Mede, the Persian, the Grecian, and the
Roman), and had ended the outward Jews’ typical kingdom; Daniel
saith, ‘in the days of these kings shall the God of heaven set up
a kingdom, which shall never be destroyed,’ Dan. ii. 44. Christ
saith, ‘All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth,’ Matt.
xxviii. 18. And, ‘My kingdom is not of this world,’ John xviii.
36. ‘Christ is the image of the invisible God, the Firstborn of
every creature. For by him were all things created, that are in
heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they
be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers,; all
things were created by him, and for him; and he is before all
things, and by him all things consist,’ Col. i. 15-17.
“Here ye may see, all things consist by Jesus Christ, and all
things were created by Christ, and for him, whether they be
things in heaven, or things in earth, visible or invisible, they
were created by him and for him; yea, thrones, dominions,
principalities, and powers, these were all created by him and
for him. So Christ ‘is King of kings, and Lord of lords,’ Rev.
xix. 16. And the ‘Prince of the kings of the earth,’ chap. i. 5.
Out of his mouth goeth a sharp sword, with which he shall smite
the nations, and he shall rule them with a rod of iron; as the
vessel of a potter, shall they be dashed in pieces, who do not
obey him, the King of kings and Lord of lords. This is Christ,
who said, ‘I am Alpha and Omega, the Beginning and the Ending,
the First and the Last;’ so he is over all nations, and above
them all. We must understand this rod of iron, by which Christ
rules the nations, is a figurative speech of Christ, who is
ascended into heaven, and is at the right hand of God. All power
in heaven and in earth is given unto him, and all things were
created by him and for him; so then they are Christ’s, and he
hath power over all things, for all are his. So, as the
Scripture saith, ‘By me kings reign, and princes decree
justice,’ Prov. viii. 15. But if they abuse his power, and do
not do justice, as is decreed by Christ, the King of kings and
Lord of lords, the First and the Last, they must feel and know
the weight of his rod of iron, by which he will rule such as
abuse his power. That is decreed by Him, who hath all power in
heaven and in earth given to him, and rules in the kingdoms of
men.”
G.F.
Kingston, the 11th Month, 1687.
Several other things I wrote while at KINGSTON; for my spirit being
continually exercised towards God, I had many precious openings of
divine matters; and divers portions of Scripture, both in the Old
Testament and in the New, relating to a state of regeneration, and
sanctification, &c., were brought to my remembrance by the Holy
Spirit; some of which I committed to writing, as follows—
“They that touched the dead were unclean, and were to be cleansed
by the water of purification, Num. xix. And they who touch the
dead doctrines or faiths, and let them in, burden the pure,
defile, and make themselves unclean, until the spring of the water
of the Word do arise, and wash and cleanse them; for all the dead
in Adam in the fall are unclean, and they must be washed by
Christ, in his blood, and water of life, who quickens and makes
alive.”
“A dwarf might not come near to offer upon God’s altar; but he
might eat of the holy bread, that he might grow, Lev. xxi. 20, &c.
So the new-born babes may eat of the milk of the Word, that they
may grow thereby and increase. He that had any blemish might not
come near to offer upon God’s altar; neither might anything be
offered upon God’s altar that had any blemish, or was unclean,
Lev. xxi. And it is said, ‘The ungodly shall not stand in the
judgment, nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous,’ Psal.
i. 5. But ‘God standeth in the congregation of the mighty,’” Psal.
lxxxii. 1.
“The camp of God was to be kept clean and holy. That which was
unclean, or defiled, was to be kept out of God’s camp in the old
Testament. And in the New Testament all that is defiled and
unclean must be kept out of God’s kingdom, the new and heavenly
Jerusalem, that is from above. All was to pass through the fire
(even of those things that would bear the fire), and to be
purified by fire and water, before the people might come into
God’s camp, Num. xxxi. So all must be circumcised and baptized
with the Holy Ghost and with fire, and be cleansed with the blood
of Christ, and washed with the water of the Word before they come
into the kingdom of God, and into heavenly Jerusalem.”
“The apostle Paul says, ‘We know that if our earthly house of this
tabernacle were dissolved, we have a building of God, a house not
made with hands, eternal in the heavens. For in this we groan,
earnestly desiring to be clothed upon with our house, which is
from heaven, that mortality might be swallowed up of life,’ 2 Cor.
v. 1, 2, 4. Here is (WE in the earthly house of this tabernacle)
which (WE) are they that have received Christ, and are become the
sons of God, new creatures, and children of the light, that
believe in Christ’s light; who have an eternal house in the
heavens, where mortality is swallowed up of life, in which house
from heaven they will not groan.”
“Peter said, ‘I think it meet, as long as I am in this tabernacle,
to stir you up by putting you in remembrance, knowing that shortly
I must put off this my tabernacle, even as our Lord Jesus Christ
hath showed me,’ 2 Pet. i. 13, 14. So Peter knew he must put off
this tabernacle shortly; but as long as he was in it he stirred up
the saints to their duty in holiness, that they might remember it
after he was deceased.”
“The apostle Paul says, ‘The first man is of the earth, earthy,’
(mark, earthy), 1 Cor. xv. 47. ‘And as we have borne the image of
the earthy, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly’ (mark,
the heavenly), ver. 40. And, ‘We have this treasure in earthen
vessels,’ &c., 2 Cor. iv. 7. ‘Nevertheless I live,’ said he, ‘yet
not I, but Christ liveth in me,’ Gal. ii. 20, who is the life of
all God’s people.”
“Christ said to the Jews, ‘That the dead are raised, even Moses
showed at the bush, when he calleth the Lord the God of Abraham,
and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob: for he is not the God
of the dead, but of the living; for all live unto him,’ Luke xx.
37, 38. So, ‘None of us liveth to himself, and no man dieth to
himself; for whether we live, we live unto the Lord; and whether
we die, we die unto the Lord. Whether we live, therefore, or die,
we are the Lord’s. For to this end Christ both died, and rose, and
revived, that he might be Lord both of the dead and living,’ Rom.
xiv. 7-9. For all died in Adam; and Christ, by the grace of God,
tasted death for every man, that they might come out of the death
in Adam, to the eternal life in Jesus Christ, who is also a
quickening Spirit; for as in Adam all died, even so in Christ
shall all be made alive. So Christ that died and rose again is
Lord both of the living and of the dead: for the living live to
the Lord, and die in him, and are blessed.”
“All Christendom say they believe in God and in Christ, and that
they believe Moses and the prophets, and preach Christ, Moses, and
the prophets; so their words and writings are preached and
printed; and ye say ye believe them. But what life do ye live? Are
ye through the law dead to the law, that ye may live unto God? Are
ye crucified with Christ? and doth Christ live in you? Is the life
that ye now live in the flesh by the faith of the Son of God; and
ye do not live, but Christ liveth in you, who gave himself for
you? Is this your present life? for the just live by the faith
which Christ is the author and finisher of: by which holy, divine,
and precious faith they have victory over that which is vile,
unholy, and not divine; and in this faith they please God, and
have access to God and his Son, who fulfilleth the law and the
prophets. For the law and the prophets were until John; and since
that the kingdom of God hath been preached, and men press into it:
and the least in the kingdom of God is greater than John, though
he was the greatest prophet born of a woman. See whether ye are in
the kingdom that stands in peace, and righteousness, and joy in
the Holy Ghost, or not.
“Christ, ‘who is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of
every creature, was before any creature; for by him were all
things created that are in heaven and that are in earth, visible
or invisible, whether they be thrones or dominions, principalities
or powers, all things were created by him and for him; he was
before all things, and by him all things consist: and he is the
head of the body, the church, who is the beginning, the firstborn
from the dead.’ So here ye may see that all things were made by
Christ Jesus, and created for him, and by him all things consist
and have their being, who is the firstborn from the dead, and
dieth no more. It pleased the Father that in him all fulness
should dwell; and by Christ to reconcile all things unto himself,
whether they be things in heaven, or things in the earth. ‘In him
are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge,’ who is the
head of all principality and power; for ‘all power in heaven and
in earth is given to him,’ the first-born of every creature, and
the firstborn from the dead, who liveth for evermore in his power
over all; the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world. While
the world’s spirit rules in men’s hearts, they do not know Christ,
nor the beginning nor ending of the work of God.
“Christ was outwardly crucified and slain without the gates of
Jerusalem by the disobedient Jews; and they that hate the light of
Christ, disobey his gospel, quench his Spirit, and are erred from
his faith, crucify to themselves Christ afresh. So Adam and Eve,
and their children that disobeyed God, did slay the Lamb; and the
blind Jews, that disobeyed God, crucified Christ Jesus; and the
outward Christians, that live and walk not in Christ, but in sin
and evil, though they make an outward profession of Christ, yet
crucify to themselves Christ afresh. But as to Christ himself, he
is ‘ascended far above all principalities, thrones, powers, and
dominions,’ so that they cannot put him to death or crucify him
any more as to himself: but what the killers, crucifiers, and
persecutors do now upon the earth, is against Christ, as in
themselves, and in his members; as Christ said to Saul, ‘Why
persecutest thou me,’ Acts ix. 4. For what is done to his members
Christ takes as done to himself, Matt. xxv. 40, 45. And they that
did not visit Christ, but persecuted him in his members,
persecuted Christ in themselves first.”
“The serpent, that enemy to man and woman, the destroyer, the god
of the world and prince of the air, that ruleth in the hearts of
the disobedient, got in by disobedience. But Christ bruises his
head, breaks his power to pieces, and destroys the devil and his
works; and through death destroys death, and the devil, the power
of death. So Christ, the light and life, hath all power in heaven
and in earth, and openeth the prison-doors, and the eyes of the
blind, and takes captive him that hath led into captivity, and
gives gifts unto men. So Christ binds the strong man of sin,
spoils his goods, and casts him out; hallelujah! For the strong
man of sin is the god of the world, and his house is the whole
world, that lieth in wickedness. And this god of the world hath
kept his house, and his goods have been in peace, until a stronger
than he comes and binds and casts him out; and then destroys him
and his goods. So Christ, the Son of God, who is stronger than the
devil, having destroyed the devil and his works, setteth up his
own house. All the believers in the light are the children of
light, are of the Son of God’s spiritual house, and the Son of God
is over his house for evermore: glory to God in the highest,
through Jesus Christ. Amen.”
“God spoke by the mouth of all his holy prophets concerning Christ
Jesus, his Son, the Holy One; so they were holy men, and not
unholy, that God spoke by. Therefore all that name the name of the
Lord Jesus Christ are to depart from iniquity.”
G.F.
Kingston-upon-Thames, the 11th Month, 1687.
CHAPTER XIV.
1687-1690.—George Fox continues to have service in London and the
neighbourhood—writes a paper respecting the gospel and the seed;
being also an incentive to diligence—a general epistle to
Friends, forewarning them of an approaching storm—Moses and
Christ both faithful under their respective dispensations—Christ
is on his throne—George Fox’s health declining, he visits
William Mead again for a few weeks—the world’s teachers and the
emptiness of their teaching—those who turn people from the
inward manifestation of Christ in the heart, remove them from
the heavenly landmark, and bring a curse on themselves—the
prophets, apostles, and holy men of old were husbandmen and
tradesmen, unlike the world’s teachers—the vanity of being too
much busied with, and spending the time in, hearing and telling
news—though still declining, George Fox attends at the
Parliament-house many days on behalf of his Friends—writes to
Peter Hendricks, and to Friends at Dantzic, to strengthen and
comfort them under their sufferings—to the magistrates and
priests at Dantzic, showing the evil of persecution, and
persuading to Christian moderation—an appendix to the Yearly
Meeting’s epistle—an epistle to the Northern Yearly Meeting to
be held at York—George Fox’s health still impaired—writes an
epistle to Friends in Barbadoes—to Friends in Pennsylvania, and
other parts of America—to all that profess the truth of God;
being a warning to the young against the world’s fashions, and
to the old against going into the earthly things—Christ is the
“Ensign,” prophesied of by Isaiah—an appendix to the Yearly
Meeting’s epistle—an epistle to Friends in the ministry—to
Friends in the ministry gone to America—to suffering Friends in
Ireland—death of George Fox in 1690—epistle written with his
hand and found sealed up—some account of the interment.
I returned to London towards the latter end of the 11th month, 1687,
visiting Friends in the way at CHISWICK, and at HAMMERSMITH, where I
had two meetings, one on a First-day, the other upon the occasion of
a marriage there, at which there were many people of other
denominations, amongst whom I had a very seasonable opportunity of
opening the way of truth. Being come to LONDON, I visited Friends’
meetings in and about the city, as the Lord led me, in whose service
I continued labouring in the city until the middle of the first
month, 1687-8. At which time I went down towards ENFIELD, and
visited Friends there and thereabouts, and at BARNET, WALTHAM ABBEY,
and other places, where I had many meetings, and very good service;
in which I spent several weeks.
I then returned to LONDON, where I continued labouring in the work
of the gospel, till after the Yearly Meeting, which this year was
about the beginning of the fourth month. A precious meeting it was;
and a very refreshing season Friends had together, the Lord
vouchsafing to honour our assemblies with his living and glorious
presence in a very plentiful manner. At the conclusion of the
meeting I felt a concern upon my spirit to give forth the following
paper, to be dispersed amongst Friends:—
“All you believers in the light, that are become children of the
light, walk as children of the light, and of the day of Christ; as
a city set on a hill, that cannot be hid. Let your light shine,
that people may see your good works, and glorify your Father,
which is in heaven. For a good tree bringeth forth good fruit;
therefore be ye trees of righteousness, the planting of the Lord,
having fruits unto holiness; and then your end will be everlasting
life. Such are the wells and cisterns, that hold the living water,
which springs up in them to eternal life. Ye may all drink water
out of your own cisterns, running water out of your own wells; and
eat every one of his own fig-tree, and of his own vine: having
salt every one in yourselves, to season every one’s sacrifice,
acceptable to God by Jesus Christ; and like unto the wise virgins,
that have oil in their lamps, follow the Lamb, and enter in with
the bridegroom. Now is the time to labour, while it is day (yea,
the day of Christ), to stir up every one’s pure mind, and the gift
of God that is in them; and to improve your talents, that Christ
hath bestowed upon you, that ye may profit; and to walk every one
according to the measure that Christ hath given you; for ‘the
manifestation of the Spirit of God is given to every one to profit
withal.’
“Consider what you have profited in spiritual and heavenly things,
with the heavenly Spirit of God. Be not like the wicked and
slothful, that hid his talent, from whom it was taken, and he cast
into utter darkness. A dwarf, or one that had any blemish, was not
to come nigh to offer upon God’s altar; therefore mind the word of
wisdom, to keep you out of that which will corrupt and blemish
you; and that ye may grow in grace, and in faith, and in the
knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ: and feeding upon the milk of
the word, may grow by it, that ye may not be dwarfs; and so offer
your spiritual sacrifice upon God’s holy altar. For the field or
vineyard of the slothful grows over with thorns and nettles, and
his walls go down. Such are they that are not diligent in the
Spirit of God, and the power, which is the wall, a sure fence. The
Spirit of God will weed all thorns, thistles, and nettles, out of
the vineyard of the heart.
“And you, that are keepers of others’ vineyards, see that you keep
your own vineyard clean with the Spirit and power of Christ.
Sanctify yourselves, and sanctify the Lord in your hearts, that ye
may be a holy people to the Lord, who saith, ‘Be ye holy, for I am
holy:’ that ye may be the holy members of the church of Christ,
that is clothed with the sun, and hath the moon under her feet;
the changeable world with all her changeable worships, religions,
churches, and teachers. Be ye new and heavenly Jerusalem’s
children: for new and heavenly Jerusalem, that is above, is the
mother of all the children of light, and that are born of the
Spirit. These are they that have been persecuted, and have
suffered by the false church, mystery Babylon, the mother of
harlots.
“And now, all heavenly Jerusalem’s and Sion’s children, that are
from above, labour in the gospel, the power of God, and the Seed,
in which all nations, and all the families of the earth are
blessed: which Seed, Christ, bruises the serpent’s head, and
destroys the devil and his works, and overcomes the whore, the
false church, the beast, and the false prophet. He takes away the
curse, and the veil that is spread over all nations, and over all
the families of the earth; and brings the blessing upon all (if
they will receive it) saying, ‘In thy seed shall all nations and
all the families of the earth be blessed.’ This is the gospel of
God preached to Abraham, before Moses wrote his five books, and
was preached in the apostles’ days, and is now preached again;
which brings life and immortality to light; and is the gospel of
peace, life, and salvation, to every one that believes it. So all
nations, and all the families of the earth, must be in Christ, the
Seed, if they be blessed, and be partakers of the blessing in the
Seed.
“This gospel was revealed by Christ unto his apostles, who
preached it; which is not of man, nor from man. Now, God and
Christ hath revealed the same gospel unto me, and many others in
this age (I say, the gospel and the Seed, in which all nations and
families of the earth are blessed;) in which gospel I have
laboured, and do labour, that all may come into this blessed Seed,
Christ, who bruises the head of the serpent, that in it they might
have peace with God. This everlasting gospel is preached again to
them that dwell upon the earth; and they that believe it, and
receive it, receive the blessing, the peace, joy, and comfort of
it; and the stability in it, and the life and immortality, which
it brings to light in them and to them. Such can praise the
everlasting God in his everlasting gospel.
“And Friends, all seek the peace and good of all in Christ: for
truth makes no Cains, Korahs, Balaams, nor Judases; for they come
to be such that go out of the peaceable truth. Therefore walk in
the peaceable truth, and speak the truth in the love of it, as it
is in Jesus.”
G. F.
Some time after the Yearly Meeting, I went to my son Mead’s house,
in ESSEX, and abode there some weeks; often visiting Friends’
meetings near, and sometimes at Barking. After I had been a while
there, I went to visit Friends at WALTHAM ABBEY, HODDESDON, ENFIELD,
SOUTH STREET, FORD GREEN, and WINCHMORE HILL; where I had several
very serviceable meetings, the Lord opening many deep and weighty
things through me, for informing the understandings of inquirers,
building up those that were gathered into the truth, and
establishing them therein.
In the 7th month I returned to London, having been near three months
in the country for my health’s sake, which was very much impaired;
so that I was hardly able to stay in a meeting the whole time; and
often after a meeting had to lie down on a bed. Yet did not my
weakness of body take me off from the service of the Lord, but I
continued to labour in and out of meetings, in his work, as he gave
me opportunity and ability.
I had not been long in London before a great weight came upon me,
and a sight the Lord gave me of the great bustles and troubles,
revolution and change, which soon after came to pass. In the sense
whereof, and in the movings of the Spirit of the Lord, I wrote “A
general epistle to Friends, to forewarn them of the approaching
storm, that they might all retire to the Lord, in whom safety is;”
as follows:—
“My dear Friends and brethren everywhere, who have received the
Lord Jesus Christ, and to whom he has given power to become his
sons and daughters; in Him ye have life and peace, and in his
everlasting kingdom, that is established and cannot be shaken, but
is over all the world, and stands in his power, and in
righteousness, and joy in the Holy Ghost, into which no
unrighteousness, nor the foul, unclean spirit of the devil in his
instruments can enter. Therefore, dear Friends and brethren, every
one in the faith of Jesus, stand in His power, who has all power
in heaven and in earth given to him, and will ‘rule the nations
with his rod of iron, and dash them to pieces, like a potter’s
vessel,’ that are not subject and obedient to his power; whose
voice will shake the heavens and the earth, that that which may be
shaken may be removed, and that which cannot be shaken may appear.
Stand in Him; and all things shall work together for good to them
that love him.
“And now, dear Friends and brethren, though these waves, and
storms, and tempests be in the world, yet you may all appear the
harmless and innocent lambs of Christ, walking in his peaceable
truth, keeping in the Word of power, wisdom, and patience; and
this Word will keep you in the day of trials and temptations, that
will come upon the whole world, to try them that dwell upon the
earth. For the Word of God was before the world, and all things
were made by it; it is a tried Word, which gave all God’s people
in all ages wisdom, power, and patience. Therefore let your
dwelling and walking be in Christ Jesus, who is called the Word of
God; and in his power, which is over all. Set your affections on
things that are above, where Christ sits at the right hand of God
(mark,) on those things which are above, where Christ sits; not on
those things that are below, which will change, and pass away.
Blessed be the Lord God, who by his eternal arm and power hath
gathered a people to himself; and hath preserved his faithful to
himself through many troubles, trials, and temptations; his power
and Seed, Christ, is over all, and in Him ye have life and peace
with God. Therefore in Him all stand, and see your salvation, who
is the First and Last, the Amen. God Almighty preserve and keep
you all in Him, your ark and sanctuary; in Him you are safe over
all floods, storms, and tempests; for He was before they were, and
will be when they are all gone.”
G.F.
London, the 17th of the 8th Month, 1688.
About this time great exercise and weights came upon me (as had
usually done before the great revolutions and changes of
government,) and my strength departed from me; so that I reeled, and
was ready to fall, as I went along the streets. At length I could
not go abroad at all, I was so weak, for some time, till I felt the
power of the Lord to spring over all, and had received an assurance
from him, that he would preserve his faithful people to himself
through all.
In the time that I kept within, I wrote a paper, showing, how
“Moses, as a servant, was faithful in all his house, in the Old
Testament; and Christ, as a Son, is over his house, in the New
Testament.”
“The house of Israel was called God’s Vineyard, in Isa. v. 7, and
all the Israelites were called the house of Israel. Israel
signifies ‘a prince with God, and a prevailer with men,’ Gen.
xxxii. 28. When Peter preached Christ to the house of Israel, he
said, ‘Let all the house of Israel know assuredly, that God hath
made the same Jesus, whom ye have crucified, both Lord and
Christ,’ Acts ii. 36. So they were all called the house of Israel.
And it is said, ‘Moses was faithful in all his house (to wit, this
house of Israel), as a servant, for a testimony of those things
which were to be spoken after; but Christ, as a son, over his own
house, which house are we, if we hold fast the confidence, and the
rejoicing of the hope firm unto the end,’ Heb. iii. 5, 6. Here it
is manifest, that Moses was faithful in all his house, as a
servant, viz., in the house of Israel, in the Old Testament; but
Christ Jesus, the Son of God, is over his house in his new
Testament and Covenant; and all his true believers are of his
house.
“The apostle tells the Ephesians (who were the church of Christ,)
‘They were fellow-citizens with the saints, and of the household
of God,’ Eph. ii. 19. And the saints are called ‘the household of
faith,’ Gal. vi. 10. Peter in his general epistle tells the church
of Christ, they were ‘a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a
holy nation, a peculiar people,’ 1 Pet. ii. 9. And that as lively
stones, they were built up ‘a spiritual house, an holy priesthood,
to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus
Christ,’ ver. 5. The apostle says to the church of Christ at
Corinth, ‘If our earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved,
we have a building of God, a house not made with hands, eternal in
the heavens,’ 2 Cor. v. 1. And Christ said to his disciples, ‘Let
not your hearts be troubled; ye believe in God, believe also in
me. In my Father’s house are many mansions (a mansion is a
dwelling, or abiding place;) if it were not so, I would have told
you; I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a
place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto myself,
that where I am, there ye may be also,’ John xiv. 1-3. The
Psalmist saith, ‘Those that be planted in the house of the Lord,
shall flourish in the courts of our God; they shall bring forth
fruit in old age; they shall be fat and flourishing,’ Psal. xcii.
13, 14. Again, ‘Holiness becomes thine house, O Lord, for ever,’
Psal. xciii. 5.
“Isaiah also said by way of prophecy, ‘It shall come to pass in
the last days, that the mountain of the Lord’s house shall be
established in the top of the mountains, and shall be exalted
above the hills, and all nations shall flow unto it,’ Isa. ii. 2.
Is not that a great house? Is not this mountain, Christ, who is
over his house in the New Testament and New Covenant? To this
mountain and house all the children of the New Testament and New
Covenant flow in these latter days, so that it is come to pass,
which was prophesied of by Isaiah; for he said, ‘Many people shall
go and say, Come ye, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord,
to the house of the God of Jacob, and he will teach us of his
ways, and we will walk in his paths; for out of Zion shall go
forth the law, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem. And he
shall judge among the nations, and shall rebuke many people; and
they shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears
into pruning-hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation,
neither shall they learn war any more. O house of Jacob, come ye,
and let us walk in the light of the Lord,’ ver. 3-5. Here ye may
see, they that come to the mountain of the house of God, and to
God’s teaching, must walk in the light of the Lord; yea the house
of Jacob. Jacob signifies a supplanter; he supplanted profane
Esau, who is hated, and Jacob is loved.
“Now these two births must be known within; and they that walk in
the light of the Lord, and come to Christ, the mountain of the
house of the Lord, established above all mountains and hills,
break their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into
pruning-hooks; and in Christ, this mountain and house of the Lord,
there are no spears, nor swords to hurt one another withal.
Christ, the Son of God, is over his house and great family, the
children of the light, that believe in it, and walk in it, the
children of the day of Christ, his holy and royal priesthood, that
offer up spiritual sacrifice to God by him. All such are of
Christ’s (the spiritual man’s) house, who are born of God, and led
by his Spirit; they are of the Lord of lords, and King of kings’
house and family, which he is over; and are of the household of
the holy, divine, pure, and precious faith, which Christ is the
author and finisher of. And they that are of the Son’s house, are
pure, righteous, and holy, and can do nothing against the truth,
but for it, in their words, lives, and conversations; and so are a
chosen generation, a holy nation, a peculiar people, that they
should show forth the praise of Him, who hath called them out of
darkness into his marvellous light. These are Christ’s lively
stones, that build up a spiritual house, which He (Christ, the
spiritual man, the King of kings, and Lord of lords) is over.”
G.F.
London, the 10th Month, 1688.
Some time after this, my body continuing weak, I went down with my
son Mead to his house in ESSEX, where I stayed some weeks. In which
time I wrote many things relating to the service of truth, of which
some were printed soon after, others were spread abroad in
manuscript; and amongst other things, a few lines to this purpose:—
“That while men are contending for thrones here below, Christ is
on his throne, and all his holy angels are about him; who is the
Beginning and the Ending, the First and the Last, over all. And
that the Lord will make way and room for himself, and for them
that are born of his Spirit, who are heavenly Jerusalem’s
children, to come home to their free mother.”
A few words also I wrote concerning the world’s teachers, and the
emptiness of their teaching. Which were thus:—
“Doth not all that, which is called Christendom, live in talking
of Christ’s, and of the apostles’ and prophets’ words, and the
letter of the Scriptures? And do not their priests minister the
letter, with their own conceptions thereupon, for money, though
the Holy Scriptures were freely given forth from God and Christ,
and his prophets and apostles? Yet the apostle says, ‘The letter
killeth; but the Spirit giveth life,’ 2 Cor. iii. 6. The ministers
of the New Testament are not ministers of the letter, but of the
Spirit; and they sow to the Spirit, and of the Spirit reap life
eternal. But people spending time about old authors, and talking
of them, and of the outward letter, this doth not feed their
souls. For talking of victuals and clothes, doth not clothe the
body, nor feed it. No more are their souls and spirits fed and
clothed, except they have the bread and water of life from heaven
to feed them, and the righteousness of Christ to clothe them.
Talking of outward things and spiritual things, and not having
them, may starve both their bodies and their souls. Therefore,
quench not the Spirit of God, which will lead to be diligent in
all things.”
With this I wrote another short paper, showing the hurt they did,
and the danger they run into, who turned people from the inward
manifestation of Christ in the heart:—
“The Jews were commanded by the law of God, ‘Not to remove the
outward land-mark,’ Deut. xix. 14. They that did so, or that
caused the blind to wander, were cursed in the Old Covenant, Deut.
xxvii. 17. In the New Covenant the apostle saith, ‘Let him be
accursed, that preacheth any other gospel than that which he had
preached,’ Gal. i. 8. Now the gospel that he preached, was ‘The
power of God unto salvation, to every one that believeth,’ Rom. i.
16. And the gospel that was preached to Abraham was, ‘That in his
seed all nations, and all the families of the earth should be
blessed.’ And in order to bring men to this blessed state, God
poureth out of his Spirit upon all flesh; and Christ doth
enlighten every one that cometh into the world; and the grace of
God, which bringeth salvation, hath appeared unto all men, and
teacheth Christians, the true believers in Christ; and God doth
write his law in the true Christians’ hearts, and putteth it in
their minds, that they may ‘all know the Lord, from the greatest
to the least;’ and he giveth his word in their hearts to obey and
do, and the anointing within them; so that they need not any man
to teach them, but as the anointing doth teach them.
“Now all such as turn people from the Light, Spirit, Grace, Word,
and Anointing within, remove them from their heavenly landmark of
their eternal inheritance, and make them blind; and cause the
blind to wander from the living way to their eternal house in the
heavens, and from the new and heavenly Jerusalem. So they are
cursed, that cause the blind to wander out of their way, and to
remove them from their heavenly landmark.”
G. F.
I wrote also a paper to show, by instances from the Scriptures, that
“many of the holy men and prophets of God, and of the apostles of
Christ, were husbandmen and tradesmen;” by which people might see
how unlike to them the world’s teachers now are:—
“Righteous Abel was a shepherd, ‘a keeper of sheep,’ Gen. iv. 2.
Noah was a husbandman; and he was a ‘just man, and perfect in his
generation, and walked with God,’ Gen. ix. 20; vi. 9. Abraham, the
father of the faithful, was a husbandman, and had great flocks of
cattle; and just Lot was a husbandman, and had great flocks and
herds, Gen. xiii. Isaac also was a husbandman, and had great
‘flocks and herds of cattle, and great store of corn,’ Gen xxvi.
12, 14. And the promise was with Isaac; for the Lord said to
Abraham, ‘In Isaac shall thy seed be called,’ Gen. xxi. 12. Jacob
was a husbandman, and his sons keepers of flocks of cattle, Gen.
xlvi. 32, 34, and God loved Jacob. Moses kept sheep, Exod. iii. 1,
and the Lord spake to him when he was keeping sheep, ver. 4, and
sent him to Pharaoh, to bring God’s people, or sheep, out of
Egypt. And by the hand and power of the Lord, he and Aaron his
brother brought them out of Egypt, a land of anguish, bondage,
darkness, and perplexity. And Moses kept the Lord’s people, or
sheep, forty years in the wilderness; a meek shepherd of God he
was, and kept his great flock of sheep: though some of them were
scabbed with the leprosy of contention and murmuring, and were
destroyed in the wilderness.
“David (though he afterwards came to be a king) was a keeper of
his father’s sheep in the wilderness, 1 Sam. xvii. 15, 28. And the
Lord God called him from the sheepcotes to feed his sheep, the
house of Israel, and to defend them from the spiritual wolves,
bears, and lions; and he did it to purpose, who was a man after
God’s own heart.
“Elisha was a ploughman, 1 Kings xix. 19. He was called from the
plough, to teach God’s people, the children of Israel, to plough
up the fallow ground of their hearts, that they might bring forth
seed and fruits to God, their Creator.
“The word of the Lord came to Amos, when he was among the herdsmen
of Tekoa, Amos i. 1. And Amaziah, the priest of Bethel, said to
Amos, ‘Prophesy not again any more at Bethel; for it is the king’s
chapel, and it is the king’s court,’ chap. vii. 13. Then answered
Amos, and said to Amaziah, ‘I was no prophet, neither was I a
prophet’s son; but I was a herdsman, and a gatherer of
sycamore-fruit; and the Lord took me, as I followed the flock. And
the Lord said unto me, Go, prophesy unto my people Israel,’ ver.
14, 15. Here ye may see, how the Lord made use of a poor man, and
how he called him from following the outward flock, and from
gathering outward fruits, to gather his fruits, and to follow his
people or flock, the children of Israel.
“Christ called Peter and Andrew his brother, when they were
fishing, and casting their net into the sea (for they were
fishers;) ‘and he said unto them, Follow me, and I will make you
fishers of men,’ Matt. iv. 18, 19. Christ likewise called James
and John his brother, when they were ‘in a ship, with Zebedee,
their father, mending their nets; and they immediately left the
ship, and their father, and followed him,’ ver. 21, 22. He gave
them power (a net that will hold, and not want mending), and made
them fishers of men, to fish them out of the great sea, the world
of wickedness. We read, that when Peter, Thomas, Nathanael, the
sons of Zebedee, and other disciples, went a fishing together, and
that night caught nothing, in the morning Jesus appeared to them
and said, ‘Cast the net on the right side of the ship, and ye
shall find;’ and they did so, and caught so great a multitude,
that they were not able to draw them to shore. When thereupon one
of the other disciples said unto Peter, ‘It is the Lord,’ Peter
hearing that it was the Lord, ‘girded his fisher’s coat unto him,’
John xxi. 2-7. This was after Christ was risen. So here ye may
see, Peter had not laid aside his fisher’s coat all the while that
he had been preaching before Christ’s death.
“‘Jesus saw Matthew sitting at the receipt of custom, and he said
unto him, Follow me; and he arose and followed him,’ Matt. ix. 9.
And Christ employed Matthew to gather his people, that were
scattered from God; another manner of treasure than the outward
custom of the Romans. Luke was a physician, whom Christ made a
physician spiritual; which was better than outward.
“Paul was a tent-maker; and being one of the same craft with
Aquila and Priscilla, he abode with them at Corinth, and wrought
(for by their occupation they were tent-makers), Acts xviii. 3.”
G.F.
Gooses, the 1st Month, 1688-9.
It was now a time of much talk; and people busied their minds and
spent their time too much in hearing and telling news. To show them
the vanity thereof, and to draw them from it, I wrote the following
lines:—
“In the low region, in the airy life, all news is uncertain; there
nothing is stable; but in the higher region, in the kingdom of
Christ, there all things are stable and sure, and the news always
good and certain. For Christ, who hath all power in heaven and in
earth given unto him, ruleth in the kingdoms of men; and he, who
doth inherit the heathen, and possess the utmost parts of the
earth with his divine power and light, rules all nations with his
rod of iron, and dashes them to pieces like a potter’s vessel, the
vessels of dishonour, and the leaky vessels, that will not hold
his living water; and he doth preserve his elect vessels of mercy
and honour. His power is certain, and changes not, by which he
removes the mountains and hills, and shakes the heavens and the
earth. Leaky, dishonourable vessels, the hills and mountains, and
the old heavens and the earth, are all to be shaken, and removed,
and broken to pieces, though they do not see it, nor him that doth
it; but his elect and faithful both see it and know him, and his
power, that cannot be shaken, and which changeth not.”
G.F.
The 5th of 1st Month, 1688-9.
About the middle of the first month, 1688-9, I went to LONDON, the
parliament then sitting, and engaged about the bill for indulgence.
Though I was weak in body, and not well able to stir about, yet so
great a concern was upon my spirit on behalf of truth and Friends,
that I attended continually for many days, with other Friends, at
the parliament-house, labouring with the members, that the thing
might be done comprehensively and effectually.
In this, and other services, I continued till towards the end of the
second month, when, being much spent with continual labour, I got
out of town for a little while as far as SOUTHGATE and thereabouts.
While I was there I wrote a letter to Peter Hendricks, a Friend at
Amsterdam, in which I enclosed an epistle to the Friends at Dantzic,
who at this time were under great persecution. And as I wrote to
encourage and strengthen them in their testimony, and comfort them
in their sufferings for the truth, so also I wrote a paper to their
persecutors, the magistrates of Dantzic, laying before them the evil
of persecution, and persuading them to Christian moderation, and “to
do unto others in matters of religion as they would be done unto.”
Which papers were as follows:—
“_To Peter Hendricks at Amsterdam, and to Friends at Dantzic who
are under persecution._
“DEAR FRIEND P. H.
“With my love to thee and thy wife, J. Claus, and J. Roeloffs, and
all the rest of Friends everywhere in Christ Jesus, who reigns
over all. I am glad to hear that Friends are well everywhere,
except at Dantzic; and that you were so diligent in spreading my
papers to the strengthening of Friends. I have lately printed the
life of William Caton, but have not made a collection of his
books. I think to send some of them to you, which you may
translate and print, if you will; they may be serviceable among
Friends, especially them that knew him.[63]
“Concerning the dear Friends at Dantzic, whom the Lord hath
supported by his eternal arm and power to this day; I hope by the
same arm and power he will support them, and in it they will feel
his blessed presence with them in all their sufferings; who is
over the cruelty of their persecutors, who will hardly let them
breathe outwardly or inwardly in the common air of their native
soil. Which shows both their immorality, inhumanity, and
unchristianity, and that they want the counsel of a Gamaliel
amongst them; whose actions are below the law of God, to ‘do unto
others as they would have others to do unto them:’ God will not
bless the doings of such. I desire, however, that Friends may mind
the Lord’s power, that is over all; be valiant for his truth, and
keep upon their rock and foundation, Christ Jesus, that stands
sure in this time of the heat of persecution, which is so hot upon
you, that they will not suffer you to have so much as your houses
to work and sleep in, nor to meet, nor serve God in. The Lord
beholds all such actors and their actions. Therefore look over all
to Him, who is able to deal with them and reward them according to
their works. God Almighty preserve you all in Christ Jesus, in
whom you have rest, life, and peace. Amen.”
G.F.
Southgate, the 28th of the 2nd Month, 1689.
“_To the Magistrates of Dantzic:—Christian Shroder, President of
the Council, and Emanuel Dilger, N. Gadecken, and N. Fraterus,
Deputies of the Council, and the rest of the Magistrates and
Priests._
“We have seen your order, and your breathing out persecution
against that little flock, the lambs of Christ, that live under
your jurisdiction in the city of Dantzic; and that you have
imprisoned and banished two by the hangman out of the government
of your city; and others you threatened to do the same to, with
great punishment, if they return. Likewise you threaten those with
punishment they rent their houses of, if they let them have them
either to live in, or meet in to serve and worship the Lord that
made them. Truly I am heartily sorry for both your magistrates and
priests, that go under the name of Christians, and show such
immoral, inhuman, and unchristian actions, below the royal law of
God, which is, to ‘do to others as you would have them do unto
you.’ For would you think it was moral, human, or Christian, or
according to the law of God, if the king of Poland, who is of
another religion than you, should banish you out of your city by
the hangman and call you murderers of souls? Could you say, but
this was according to the law of God, ‘to do unto you as you have
done unto others?’
“But if you say that you have the sword, the horn, and the power;
blessed be the Lord that hath shortened your sword, your power,
and your horn, that it reaches no further than your jurisdiction
at Dantzic; and you do not know how long God may suffer you to
have your horn, your power and your sword. We are sure you have
not the mind, nor the Spirit of Christ; and the apostle saith,
‘They that have not the Spirit of Christ are none of his,’ Rom.
viii. And Christ bids Peter ‘put up his sword:’ they that draw the
sword concerning him, to defend him and his worship and faith,
should perish with the sword. Peter and the apostles never drew
the outward sword after; but said their weapons were spiritual,
not carnal; and they did not wrestle with flesh and blood. Christ
never gave any such command, that they should banish any by the
hangmen that were not of their religion, and would not receive it.
“Are not you worse than the Turks, who let many religions be in
their country, yea, Christians, and to meet peaceably? Yea, the
Turkish patroons let our Friends that were captives meet together
at Algiers, and said, ‘it was good so to do.’ You are worse than
those barbarous people at Sallee who do not profess Christianity,
for you profess Christ in words, but in works deny him. And did
you ever find, either in Scripture or history, that any
persecutors prospered long? You are worse than they are in the
Mogul’s country, who, they say, permits sixty religions in his
dominions: and many others might be mentioned, all of whom you
exceed in your cruelty and persecution of God’s people, only for
meeting together in the name of Jesus, and serving and worshipping
God, their Creator. No, they must not breathe their natural air,
neither natural nor spiritual, in your dominions. I pray, where
had you these commands from? Neither from Christ nor his apostles.
Do not you profess the Scriptures of the New Testament to be your
rule? But, I pray you, what Scripture have you for this practice?
It is good for you to be humble, to do justly, and love mercy;
call home your banished ones, and love and cherish them: yea,
though they were your enemies, you are to obey the command of
Christ, and love them. I wonder how you and your wives and
families can sleep quietly in your beds, that do such cruel
actions, without thinking the ‘Lord may do to you the same!’ You
cannot be without sense and feeling, except you be given over to
reprobation, and your consciences seared with a hot iron. But
Christian charity hopes that you are not all in that state; but
that there may be some relenting or consideration of your actions
among some of you, either according to the law of God, or his
gospel.
“From him that desires your temporal and eternal good and
salvation, and not destruction. Amen.”
G.F.
Middlesex, the 28th of the 2nd Month, 1689.
“Peter, thou mayest translate this into high Dutch, and send them;
and you may print it, if you will, and send it abroad; and
translate that part of the letter that is to Friends into high
Dutch, and send it to them.”
Having stayed in the country about three weeks, I returned to LONDON
a little before the Yearly Meeting, which was in the third month
this year, and was a very solemn, weighty meeting; the Lord, as
formerly, visiting his people, and honouring the assembly with his
glorious presence, to the great satisfaction and comfort of Friends.
After the business was over, it was upon me to add a few lines to
the Epistle which went from the meeting to Friends, after this
manner:—
“DEAR FRIENDS AND BRETHREN,
“Who have known the Lord’s eternal arm and power, that hath
preserved you upon the heavenly rock and foundation, and hath
built your house upon it; you have known many winds, tempests, and
storms, that have risen out of that sea where the beast rose; and
many raging storms that have risen by apostates of several sorts;
but the Seed that bruises the serpent’s head, and is the
foundation of God’s people, stands sure. Dear Friends and
brethren, though there be great shakings in the world, the Lord’s
power is over all, and his kingdom cannot be shaken. Therefore all
ye children of God, children of the light, and heirs of his
kingdom, a joyful, peaceable habitation keep in; keeping out of
all the contentions and disputes about things below. Lay hand on
no man, nor nothing suddenly, lest they should be puffed up with
that which fades, and so come to loss: but mind the Lord’s power,
that keeps open your heavenly eye, to see things present and to
come; and in that ye will see and handle the word of life.
“Dear Friends everywhere, have power over your own spirits. As God
hath blessed you with his outward things, have a care of trusting
in them, or falling into difference one with another about these
outward things that are below, which will pass away. But all live
in the love of God, and in that live in peace with God, and one
with another. Follow the works of charity, and overcome evil with
good to all; for what good have all the tinklers done, with their
cymbals and sounding brass? They always bred confusion, and never
did good in any age; tinkling with their cymbals, and sounding
with their brass, to draw out the simple to follow them.
Therefore, it is good for all the children of God to keep in their
possession of life, and in the love of God, that is everlasting.
“As for all the tumults of the world, and the apostates from the
truth, the Lord’s power is over them all, and Christ reigns; and
the Lord saith, ‘No weapon that is formed against thee shall
prosper,’ Isa. liv. 17. Now, Friends, you are not insensible how
many weapons have been formed against us, who are the sons and
daughters of God; and the Lord hath restrained them according to
his promise; they have not prospered. The Lord said, ‘Every tongue
that shall rise up in judgment against thee, thou shalt condemn:’
so God hath given such a power to his children, to condemn all the
tongues that shall rise up in judgment against them, and this is
the heritage of the servants of the Lord; ‘their righteousness is
of me, saith the Lord.’ You are not insensible of the many tongues
that have risen up against us in judgment, yea, of apostates and
profane. But in and with the truth, the power of God, according to
the promise of God, ‘Every tongue that riseth against thee, thou
shalt condemn.’ It is not one tongue only thou shalt condemn, but
‘every tongue that shall rise up in judgment against thee, thou
shalt condemn.’ The Lord giveth this power to his servants and
children, to judge the evil tongues; and he doth restrain the
weapons formed against them, so that they shall not prosper
against his children that he hath begotten. Praises and honour be
to his holy name for ever! Amen.”
G.F.
Soon after this, the Yearly Meeting began at York; which because of
the largeness of that county, and for the conveniency of Friends in
the northern parts, had for some years been held there. And inasmuch
as there had been some hurt done in that place, by some that were
gone out of the unity of Friends, it was upon me to write a few
lines to that meeting, “to exhort them to keep in the pure, heavenly
love, which brings into, and keeps in, the true unity.” Which was
thus:—
“DEAR FRIENDS AND BRETHREN IN CHRIST JESUS,
“Whom the Lord by his eternal arm and power hath preserved to this
day, all walk in the power and Spirit of God, that is over all, in
love and unity; for love overcomes, builds up, and unites all the
members of Christ to him the Head. Love keeps out of all strife,
and is of God. Love, or charity, never fails, but keeps the mind
above all outward things, and strife about outward things. It
overcomes evil, and casts out all false fears. It is of God, and
unites all the hearts of his people together in the heavenly joy,
concord, and unity. The God of love preserve you all, and
establish you in Christ Jesus, your life and salvation, in whom ye
have all peace with God. So walk in him, that ye may be ordered in
his peaceable, heavenly wisdom, to the glory of God, and the
comfort one of another. Amen.”
G.F.
London, the 27th of the 3rd Month, 1689.
Being much wearied and spent with many large meetings, and much
business with Friends, during the time of the Yearly Meeting, and
finding my health much impaired thereby, I went out of town with my
daughter Rous, to their country-house near KINGSTON, and tarried
there most of the remaining part of the summer. In which time I
sometimes visited Friends at Kingston, and wrote divers things for
the service of truth and Friends. One was an epistle to Friends in
Barbadoes; as follows:—
“_To all Friends in Barbadoes, that are convinced of God’s
truth._”
“My desires are that ye may live and walk in his peaceable truth,
and show forth that ye are children of the light and of the truth;
for the heavenly, gentle, and peaceable wisdom is justified of her
children. But debate, strife, wilfulness, and laying open one
another’s nakedness and weakness, is not the practice of heavenly
wisdom’s children (but of Ham’s,) nor from the Spirit of Christ;
neither such as bite and tear one another; that is from a
devouring spirit, not from the Spirit of Jesus, which covers that
which is uncomely, and can forgive.
“Now, my Friends, you profess that truth which is beyond all the
world’s ways; therefore see that you excel them in the heavenly,
gentle wisdom, that is easy to be entreated; for the wisdom of the
world is not easy to be entreated; and sometimes will not be
entreated at all. Pray see you excel the world in wisdom, in
virtue, in kindness, in love that is over hatred, in meekness and
humility, in sobriety, civility, and modesty, in temperance and
patience, and in all morality and humanity, which will not act
anything below men or unmanly. Show forth true Christianity, and
that ye are the converted and translated believers in Christ,
dwelling in the love of God, that beareth all things, endureth all
things, is not puffed up, and envies not. For they that are out of
this love of God and Christian charity, are nothing, but as a
tinkling cymbal and as sounding brass, and are discontented,
murmurers, and complainers, full of doubts, questions, and false
jealousies. Keep that spirit out of the camp of God; for do not
you read in the Scriptures, both of the New and Old Testament,
that the end of such was misery? Therefore, in the love of God,
build up one another; for love edifies the body of Christ, and he
commands his believers to love enemies, and to love one another;
by this they are known to be the disciples of Christ. But to live
in envy, strife, and hatred, is a mark they are no disciples of
Christ; ‘For he that loveth not his brother, abides in death; and
whosoever hates his brother, is a murderer: and ye know that no
murderer hath eternal life abiding in him. But they that love the
brethren, are passed from death to life,’ 1 John iii. 14, 15. And,
‘if a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother, he is a liar:
for he that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he
love God whom he hath not seen? And this commandment have we from
God, that he who loveth God, love his brother also,’ chap. iv. 20,
21. ‘Therefore, love one another;’ for love is of God, and hatred
is of the devil; and every one that loveth is born of God, and
knows God. All are children of God by creation; therefore in that
state they are to love their neighbours as themselves; and to do
unto all men as they would have them do unto them.
“Secondly, God poureth his Spirit upon all flesh (or all men and
women;) all that are led by the Spirit of God are the sons of God,
heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ; and are in fellowship
in the everlasting gospel; and in unity in the Spirit, the bond of
peace. They that go out of this unity, out of the bond of peace,
and do not keep it, break the King of king’s peace; but they that
keep in the unity, and fellowship in the Spirit, and walk in the
light, have fellowship one with another, and with the Father and
the Son. It is not everyone that talks of the light, of the word,
of righteousness, of Christ, and of God, but he that ‘doeth the
will of God.’ Therefore, my Friends, strive to excel one another
in love, in virtue, in good life and conversation; and strive all
to be of one mind, heart, and judgment in the Spirit of God; for
in Christ all are one, and are in peace with him. The Lord God
Almighty preserve you in him, your rock and foundation, that is
heavenly and stands sure; that ye may be valiant for the truth
upon earth, for the Lord and his glorious name; that ye may all
serve him in your generation, and in his new creation in Christ
Jesus. Amen.
“And now, that you are come into so much favour with the
magistrates and powers, that they let you serve the office of
constable, &c., without swearing or taking any oaths, hereby
Christ’s doctrine and command, and his apostle’s is set up.
Therefore, I desire, that you may double your diligence in your
offices, in doing that which is just, and true, and righteous; so
that ye may excel and exceed all that are tied or bound by oaths
to perform their offices; and you can do it upon your Yea and Nay;
so say, and so do; according to Christ’s doctrine and command. For
Adam and Eve, by disobeying the command of God, fell under
condemnation; and they that disobey the command of Christ, in
taking oaths and swearing, go into evil and fall into
condemnation, Matt. v.; James v. My love in the Lord is to you
all.”
G.F.
Kingston-upon-Thames, the 10th of the 5th Month, 1689.
I stayed at Kingston till the beginning of the seventh month, where
not only Friends came to visit me, but some considerable people of
the world, with whom I discoursed about the things of God. Then
leaving Kingston, I went to LONDON by water, visiting Friends as I
went, and taking HAMMERSMITH meeting in my way. Having recovered
some strength by being in the country, when I was come to LONDON, I
went from meeting to meeting, labouring diligently in the work of
the Lord, and opening the divine mysteries of the heavenly things,
as God by his Spirit opened them in me. But I found my body would
not long bear the city; wherefore, when I had travelled amongst
Friends there about a month, I went to TOTTENHAM-HIGH-CROSS, and
thence to Edward Mann’s country-house near WINCHMORE-HILL, and to
ENFIELD, spending three weeks among Friends thereabouts; and had
meetings at all those places. Then, being a little refreshed with
being in the country, I went back to LONDON; where I tarried,
labouring in the work of the ministry, till the middle of the ninth
month; at which time I went down with my son Mead to his house in
ESSEX, and abode there all the winter. During which I stirred not
much abroad, unless it were sometimes to the meeting, to which that
family belonged, which was about half-a-mile from thence; but I had
meetings often in the house with the family, and those Friends that
came thither.
Many things also I wrote, while I was there; some of which follow.
One was an epistle to the quarterly and yearly meetings of Friends
in Pennsylvania, New England, Virginia, Maryland, the Jerseys,
Carolina and other plantations in America. Which was thus:—
“MY DEAR FRIENDS AND BRETHREN IN THE LORD JESUS CHRIST,
“Who, by believing in his light, are become children of his light
and of his day; my desires are, that you may all walk in the light
and in the day, and keep the feast of Christ our passover, who is
sacrificed for us, not with old leaven, neither with the leaven of
malice and wickedness; but let all that be purged out, that ye may
be a new lump, keeping the feast of Christ our passover, with the
unleavened bread of sincerity and truth. Let no leavened bread be
found in your houses, nor in your meetings, nor in the camp of
God, or household of faith, which are the household of Christ; but
all that old leaven, which makes people’s hearts sour, and burn
one against another, must be purged out of the camp of God, and
kept out. For the feast of Christ our passover, must be kept in
the New Covenant, with his heavenly unleavened bread of life. The
Jews’ feast in the Old Testament was kept with outward, unleavened
bread; and now in the New Testament, in the gospel day, our feast
is to be kept with the heavenly, unleavened bread of sincerity and
truth.
“Therefore, Friends, I desire you seriously to consider and to
keep this feast, which the apostle directed the church of Christ
to keep. Do you not see Christendom, so called, keep their feasts
with the leavened bread of malice and wickedness? which makes them
so sour, and their hearts so burn one against another, that they
have destroyed, or do destroy one another about religion.
Therefore, all live in the love of God, which keeps above the love
of the world, so that none of your hearts may be choked or
surfeited with these outward things, or with the cares of the
world, which will pass away; but mind ye the world and the life
that is without end, that ye may be heirs of it.
“And Friends, you should strive to excel all, both professor and
profane, in morality, humanity, and Christianity, modesty,
sobriety, and moderation, and in a good, godly, righteous life and
conversation, showing forth the fruits of the Spirit, and that you
are the children of the living God, children of the light, and of
the day, and not of the night. And serve God in newness of life;
for it is the life, and a living and walking in the truth, that
must answer the witness of God in all people; that ‘they, seeing
your good works, may glorify our Father, which is in heaven.’
Therefore, be valiant for God’s holy, pure truth, and spread it
abroad, among both professors and profane, and the Indians.
“And you should write over once a year, from all your yearly
meetings to the yearly meeting here, concerning your diligence in
the truth, and of its spreading, and of people’s receiving it,
both professors and profane, and the Indians; and concerning the
peace of the church of Christ amongst yourselves. For, blessed be
the Lord, truth gains ground in these parts, and many are made
very loving to Friends, and the Lord’s power and seed is over all;
in which God Almighty keep all his people to his glory. Amen.”
G.F.
Gooses, the 28th of the 11th Month, 1689.
While I was in the city, I had a concern upon my spirit with respect
to a twofold danger that attended some who professed truth: one was
of young people’s running into the fashions of the world; and the
other was of old people’s going into earthly things. And that
concern coming now again weightily upon me, I was moved to give
forth the following paper, as a reproof to such, and an exhortation
and warning to all Friends to beware of, and keep out of those
snares:—
“_To all that profess the Truth of God._”
“My desires are, that you may walk in humility in it. For when the
Lord first called me forth, he let me see, that young people grew
up together in vanity and the fashions of the world; and old
people went downwards into the earth, raking it together; and to
both these I was to be a stranger. And now, Friends, I see too
many young people that profess the truth, grow up into the
fashions of the world, and too many parents indulge them; and
amongst the elder, some are going downwards, and raking after the
earth. Therefore take heed, that you are not making your graves,
while you are alive outwardly, and loading yourselves with thick
clay (Hab. ii. 6). For if you have not power over the earthly
spirit, and that which leadeth into a vain mind, and the fashions
of the world, and into the earth, though you have often had the
rain fall upon your fields, you will but bring forth thistles,
briars, and thorns, which are for the fire. Such will become
brittle, peevish, fretful spirits, that will not abide the
heavenly doctrine, the admonitions, exhortations, and reproofs of
the Holy Ghost, or heavenly Spirit of God; which would bring you
to be conformable to the death of Christ, and to his image, that
ye might have fellowship with him in his resurrection. Therefore
it is good for all to bow to the name of Jesus, their Saviour,
that all may confess him to the glory of God, the Father.
“For I have had a concern upon me, in a sense of the danger of
young people’s going into the fashions of the world, and old
people’s going into earthly things, and many going into a loose
and false liberty, till at last they go quite out into the spirit
of the world, as some have done. The house of such hath been built
upon the sand of the sea-shore, not upon Christ, the Rock, that
they are so soon in the world again, under a pretence of liberty
of conscience. But it is not a pure conscience, nor in the Spirit
of God, nor in Christ Jesus; for in the liberty in the Spirit
there is the unity, which is the bond of peace; and all are one in
Christ Jesus, in whom is the true liberty: and this is not of the
world; for He is not of the world. Therefore all are to stand fast
in Him, as they have received Him; for in Him there is peace, who
is the Prince of Peace; but in the world there is trouble. For the
spirit of the world is a troublesome spirit; but the Spirit of
Christ is a peaceable Spirit; in which God Almighty preserve all
the faithful. Amen.”
G.F.
Gooses, the 1st of the 2nd Month, 1690.
Another paper I wrote while I was here, “concerning the Ensign,
which Isaiah prophesied the Lord should set up for the Gentiles,”
which I showed was Christ. Of which follows a copy:—
“The Lord saith, ‘They shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy
mountain; for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the
Lord, as the waters cover the sea,’ Isa. xi. 9. ‘And in that day
there shall be a root of Jesse, which shall stand for an Ensign of
the people; to it shall the Gentiles seek, and his rest shall be
glorious,’ ver. 10. ‘And he shall reign over the Gentiles, and in
him shall the Gentiles trust,’ Rom. xv. 12. This Ensign is Christ,
who was prophesied of by the prophet; which prophecy the apostle,
who was a minister to the Gentiles, showeth was fulfilled in the
New Testament. And in this day of Christ, Isaiah saith, ‘The Lord
shall set his hand again the second time, to recover the remnant
of his people, which shall be left, from Assyria and from Egypt,’
&c. ‘And he shall set up an Ensign for the nations, and shall
assemble the outcasts of Israel, and gather together the dispersed
of Judah from the four corners of the earth,’ ver. 11, 12. This is
in the day of Christ, and his gospel of life and salvation, which
is preached to every creature under heaven; who ‘enlighteneth
every man that cometh into the world,’ both Jews and Gentiles;
that by his heavenly, divine light, they may see Christ, their
Ensign, and Captain of their salvation; so Christ is one Ensign
both to the Jews and Gentiles.
“Isaiah saith, ‘The Redeemer shall come to Sion,’ &c., Isa. lix.
20. And, ‘This is my covenant with them, saith the Lord, my
Spirit, that is upon thee (to wit, Christ), and my words, which I
have put in thy mouth, shall not depart out of thy mouth, nor out
of the mouth of thy seed, nor out of the mouth of thy seed’s seed,
saith the Lord, from henceforth and for ever,’ ver. 21. ‘Arise,
shine, for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen
upon thee,’ chap. lx. 1. ‘And the Gentiles shall come to thy
light,’ ver. 3. ‘And the abundance of the sea shall be converted
unto thee,’ ver. 5 (the sea is the world). ‘The Lord shall be thy
everlasting light,’ ver. 20. And, ‘Thou shalt call thy walls,
Salvation, and thy gates, Praise,’ ver. 18. And the Lord saith, ‘I
will make the place of my feet glorious,’ ver. 13. ‘Heaven is his
throne, and the earth is his footstool,’ chap. lxvi. 1. ‘And he
that puts his trust in me, saith the Lord, shall possess the land,
and shall inherit my holy mountain,’ chap. lvii. 13. Which
mountain is established above all the mountains and hills, Isa.
ii. 2. The Lord saith (speaking of Christ), ‘I have put my spirit
upon him, he shall bring forth judgment to the Gentiles,’ Isa
xlii. 1. And he saith of him, ‘I will give thee for a covenant of
the people, for a light of the Gentiles; to open the blind eyes,
to bring out the prisoners from the prison, and them that sit in
darkness out of the prison-house. I am the Lord, that is my name,
and my glory will I not give to another, neither my praise to
graven images,’ ver. 6-8. So Christ the Light is come, and the
glory of the Lord is risen; and the Gentiles are come to the Light
of Christ. This prophecy of Isaiah concerning Christ, many of the
Gentiles witness fulfilled, that ‘Salvation is come to the
Gentiles,’ Rom. xi. 11. God gave his glory to his Son; and Christ
saith, ‘The glory which thou gavest me, I have given them (namely,
his believers and followers), that they may be one, even as we are
one,’ John xvii. 22.
“Now here you may see, the promises and prophecies are fulfilled
in Christ Jesus, whom God hath given for an Ensign both to the
Jews and Gentiles, and the Captain of their salvation; and he doth
enlighten every one that cometh into the world; that with his
heavenly, divine light, they might see Christ, the Lord from
heaven, their Captain and Ensign, and trust in Him, their
Conqueror, who bruises the serpent’s head, and destroys the devil
and his works; and Christ and his followers overcome the dragon,
beast, and false prophet. Therefore all Jews, Gentiles, and
Christians, that come to believe in Christ, are to stand to their
Ensign, Christ; who is also the Captain of their salvation, above
all ensigns and captains below; for he is from above; therefore
all are to trust in him; for he is certain and able to save to the
utmost, &c. He is the same Ensign and Captain to-day that he was
yesterday, and so for ever, the First and the Last, the Beginning
and the Ending, the Lord of all lords, and King of all kings upon
the earth; and there is nothing certain to be trusted in below
Christ Jesus, who is from above.
“You see in the Scriptures there were many ways and religions
among the heathen, as there were many sects among the Jews when
Christ came; and now there are many sects or religions among the
Christians, who believe from the Scriptures that ‘he is come,’ as
the Jews believed ‘he was to come.’ But they that close their
eyes, and stop their ears to the Light of Christ, are not likely
to see Christ, who hath enlightened them, to be their Ensign and
the Captain of their salvation, that see not with the heavenly
eye, nor hear with the heavenly ear, to see and hear their
heavenly Ensign and Captain of their salvation, to convert and
heal them; that they might follow him, and be of his holy camp,
his heavenly soldiers, to whom he gives spiritual arms and armour,
the helmet of salvation, the breastplate of righteousness, the
armour of light, and the shield of faith (which will quench all
the fiery darts of Satan, and give victory), and the sword of the
Spirit, the Word of God, which shall cut, hammer down, and burn up
all the strongholds of Satan. Also he clothed his soldiers with
fine linen, white and clean, his righteousness, and shoeth them
with the everlasting gospel of peace, the power of God; which
clothes and shoes will never wax old. And all that are shod with
the everlasting gospel, the power of God, will never wax old, but
will stand all storms and tempests in the world. They that are
shod with the gospel, the power of God, can in it tread upon
serpents, vipers, and scorpions, and all the venomous beasts upon
the earth, and all the thorns, briars, brambles, thistles, and
sharp rocks and mountains, and never be hurt, nor ever wear out
their shoes; but their feet are always beautiful upon the
mountains. Moses, a captain, the servant of the Lord, said unto
the people of Israel, ‘I have led you forty years in the
wilderness; your clothes are not waxen old upon you, and thy shoe
is not waxen old upon thy foot,’ Deut. xxix. 5. Here ye may see
the Jews in the Old Testament, their clothes and their shoes did
not wax old; so they who are Christ’s followers, whom he shoeth
with his everlasting gospel of peace, clothes with his fine linen,
his righteousness, and arms with his arms and armour, are clothed,
shod, and armed, with that which will never decay, or wax old,
never canker, or rust, corrupt, or grow blunt.
“Now, all (whether Christians, or Jews, or Gentiles) that hate the
Light of Christ, and close their eyes and stop their ears to it,
are not likely to see Christ, their Ensign, and Captain of their
salvation; but are blind. As no outward captain would enlist a
company of blind and deaf men, and clothe and arm them with
outward armour; so such as are blind and deaf, whose eyes are
closed, and ears stopped to the heavenly Light of Christ, he is
not likely to clothe them with his fine linen, and arm them with
his heavenly and spiritual armour; neither are they like to be
heavenly and spiritually disciplined, to see and know his holy,
spiritual, living camp, nor to follow him, while they are deaf and
blind, and hate his Light, which is the Life in Christ. For it is
the Light that shines in the heart, which gives the knowledge of
the glory of God in the face of Christ Jesus; who is the Ensign
and Captain of men’s salvation, and who hath brought, and doth
bring many sons unto glory; praises, honour, and glory be unto the
Lord over all, who liveth for ever. Amen.”
G.F.
Gooses, the 14th of the 2nd Month, 1690.
A week after this I returned to LONDON; and after a little stay
there went to visit Friends at KINGSTON, where I stayed not long;
but came back to LONDON, and remained there in the Lord’s work till
after the Yearly Meeting, which was in the fourth month this year;
in which the wonted goodness of the Lord was witnessed, his blessed
presence enjoyed, and his heavenly power livingly felt, opening the
hearts of his people unto him, and his divine treasures of life and
wisdom in and unto them; whereby many useful and necessary things,
relating to the safety of Friends and to the honour and prosperity
of truth, were weightily treated of, and unanimously concluded.
After the meeting I wrote the following paper to Friends, to be
added to the epistle which from the Yearly Meeting was sent into the
several counties:—
“All Friends everywhere, that are alive to God through Jesus
Christ, and are living members of Christ, the holy Head, be still;
and stand still in the Lord’s camp of holiness and righteousness;
and therein see the salvation of God, and your eternal life, rest,
and peace. In it you may feel and see the Lord’s power is over
all; and how the Lord is at work in his power, ruling the nations
with his rod of iron, and breaking (in the nations) the old leaky
vessels and cisterns to pieces, like the potter’s vessels, that
will not hold his living water; who are erred from his Spirit.
“But blessed be the Lord God of heaven and earth, who, by his
eternal arm and power hath settled all his people upon the living,
holy rock and foundation, that stands sure; whom he hath drawn by
his Spirit to his Son, and gathered into the name of Jesus Christ,
his only begotten Son, full of grace and truth; who hath all power
in heaven and in earth given to him; whose name is above every
name under the whole heaven; and all his living members know there
is no salvation given by any other name than by the name of Jesus.
He, their salvation and their living head, is felt in the midst of
them in his light, life, Spirit, grace, and truth, and his word of
patience, wisdom, and power; who is his people’s prophet, that God
hath raised up in his New Testament and Covenant, to open to them;
and their living Shepherd, that hath purchased, redeemed, and
bought them with his precious blood.
“Christ, the living One, feeds his living sheep in his pastures of
life, and they know their living Shepherd’s voice with his living
bread and water, and follow him; and will not follow any of the
world’s hirelings, nor thieves, nor robbers, nor climbers, that
are without Christ, the door. Christ’s living children likewise
know him, the bishop of their souls, to oversee them with his
heavenly and spiritual eye, that they may be preserved in his fold
of life, and go no more forth. They also know Christ, their holy
priest, that by the grace of God tasted death for them, and for
every man, and is a propitiation for their sins; and not for
theirs only, but for the sins of the whole world: and by the one
offering up of himself he hath perfected for ever them that are
sanctified.
“Such a High-priest becomes Christ’s sheep in his New Covenant and
Testament, who is holy, harmless, and separate from sinners, and
is made higher than the heavens; who is not made a priest after
the order of Aaron, with his tithes, offerings, &c., but makes an
end of all those things, having abolished them; and is made a
High-priest after the power of an endless life, who ever liveth to
make intercession for his people: and is able to save to the
uttermost all that come to God through him. He is the one holy
Mediator between God and man; who sanctifies his people, his
church, that he is head of, and presents them to God without spot,
or wrinkle, or blemish, or any such thing; and makes them a holy,
royal priesthood, to offer up spiritual, holy sacrifices,
acceptable to God by Jesus Christ, who is King of all kings, and
Lord of all lords in the earth; so a holy, heavenly King, who hath
all power in heaven and in earth given to him; and rules in all
the hearts of his sheep and lambs, by his holy, divine, precious
faith, that is held in all the pure consciences of his people: of
which holy faith Christ, the holy One, is the author and finisher.
By this holy faith all the just live: in which divine and precious
faith all the just and holy ones have unity; by it they quench all
the fiery darts of Satan, have access to the pure God, and in it
please him.
“Christ, who is set on the right hand of the throne of the Majesty
in heaven, in his New Testament and New Covenant, is the minister
of the sanctuary and true tabernacle which the Lord hath pitched,
and not man. Therefore all the lambs and sheep of Christ must feel
this holy Minister in their temple and sanctuary, who ministers
spiritual, holy, and heavenly things to them in their sanctuary
and tabernacle. For all the tabernacles and sanctuaries that are
built or pitched by man, men make ministers for them; and such
ministers are of men and by men, with their worldly sanctuaries
and tabernacles of men’s pitching, by men’s hands.
“And now, dear Friends and brethren everywhere that are of the
flock of Christ; Christ our passover is sacrificed for us.
Therefore let us all keep this heavenly feast of our passover in
his New Testament and Covenant, not with old leaven, neither of
malice nor wickedness; but let all that be purged out, with the
sour, old leavened bread, that all may become a new lump; and so
keep this heavenly feast of Christ, our heavenly Passover, with
the unleavened bread (mark, with the unleavened bread) of
sincerity and truth. My desires are, that all the flock of Christ
everywhere may keep this heavenly feast of Christ, our heavenly
passover, with his heavenly, unleavened bread of sincerity and
truth. Amen.”
G.F.
I stayed in town three weeks or a month after the Yearly Meeting;
and then went to TOTTENHAM-HIGH-CROSS, where was a meeting on
First-day, which I was at; and then went to Edward Mann’s house, at
FORD-GREEN, near Winchmore-Hill; and on the First-day following to
the meeting at ENFIELD, where the Lord gave me many precious
openings to declare to the people. Afterwards moving amongst Friends
thereabouts, I visited the meetings at CHESHUNT, WALTHAM ABBEY,
ENFIELD, TOTTENHAM, and WINCHMORE-HILL, frequently; the Lord being
with me, and opening many deep and weighty truths, divine and
heavenly mysteries to his people, through me, to their great
refreshment, and my joy. After some time I went to HERTFORD, to
visit Friends there; and was at their meeting on a First-day. And
having something more particular upon me to the ancient Friends of
that place, I had a meeting with some of them the next day, and
imparted what the Lord had given me for them. Then passing to WARE,
I made a little stay amongst Friends there, and was at their
meeting. After which, returning, amongst Friends about EDMONTON side
and TOTTENHAM, and taking meetings as I went, I came back to LONDON
the end of the seventh month.
I remained at London till the beginning of the ninth month, being
continually exercised in the work of the Lord, either in public
meetings, opening the way of truth to people, and building up and
establishing Friends therein, or in other services relating to the
church of God. For the parliament now sitting, and having a bill
before them concerning oaths, and another concerning clandestine
marriages, several Friends attended the house, to get those bills so
worded, that they might not be hurtful to Friends. In this service I
also assisted, attending on the parliament, and discoursing the
matter with several of the members.
Having stayed more than a month in London, and much spent myself in
these services, I went to TOTTENHAM; and some time after to
FORD-GREEN; at which places I continued several weeks, visiting
Friends’ meetings round about there, at TOTTENHAM, ENFIELD, and
WINCHMORE-HILL. In this time several things came upon me to write;
one was
“_An epistle to Friends in the ministry._”
“All Friends in the ministry everywhere, to whom God hath given a
gift of the ministry, and who travel up and down in it, do not
‘hide your talent, nor put your light under a bushel, nor cumber
or entangle yourselves with the affairs of this world.’ For the
natural soldiers are not to cumber themselves with the world, much
less the soldiers of Christ, who are not of this world; but are to
mind the riches and glory of the world that is everlasting.
Therefore, stir up the gift of God in you, and improve it; do not
sit down, Demas-like, and embrace this present world, that will
have an end; lest ye become idolaters. Be valiant for God’s truth
upon the earth, and spread it abroad in the day-light of Christ,
you who have sought the kingdom of God, and the righteousness
thereof, and have received it, and preached it; which ‘stands in
righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost.’
“As able ministers of the Spirit sow to the Spirit, that of the
Spirit ye may reap life everlasting. Go on in the Spirit,
ploughing with it in the purifying hope; and thrashing, with the
power and Spirit of God, the wheat out of the chaff of corruption,
in the same hope. For he that looks back from the spiritual plough
into the world, is not fit for the spiritual and everlasting
kingdom of God; and is not likely to press into it, as the
faithful do. Therefore you that are awakened to righteousness, and
to the knowledge of the truth, keep yourselves awakened in it;
then the enemy cannot sow his tares in your field; for truth and
righteousness is over him, and before he was. My desires are, that
all may fulfil their ministry, that the Lord Jesus Christ hath
committed to them; and then by the blood (or life) and testimony
of Jesus you will overcome the enemy that opposes it, within and
without.
“All All you that preach the truth, do it as it is in Jesus, in
love: and all that are believers in Jesus, and receivers of him,
he gives them power to become the sons of God, and joint-heirs
with Christ; whom he calleth brethren; and he gives them the water
of life, which shall be a well in them, springing up as a river to
eternal life, that they may water the spiritual plants of the
living God. So that all may be spiritual planters, and spiritual
waterers; and may see with the spiritual eye the everlasting,
eternal God over all, to give the increase, who is the infinite
fountain. My desires are, that you may be kept out of all the
beggarly elements of the world, which are below the spiritual
region, to Christ, the Head; and may hold Him, who bruiseth the
head of enmity, and was before it was; that ye may all be united
together in love, in your Head, Christ, and be ordered by his
heavenly, gentle, peaceable wisdom, to the glory of God. For all
that be in Christ, are in love, peace, and unity. In Him they are
strong, and in a full persuasion; and in Him, who is the first and
the last, they are in a heavenly resolution and confidence for
God’s everlasting honour and glory. Amen.
“From him, who is translated into the kingdom of his dear Son,
with all his saints, a heavenly salutation. Salute one another
with a holy kiss of charity, that never faileth.”
G.F.
Ford-Green, the 25th of the 9th Month, 1690.
Another epistle I wrote soon after, more particularly to the Friends
in the ministry that were gone into America; after this manner:—
“Dear Friends and Brethren, Ministers, Exhorters, and Admonishers,
that are gone into America and the islands thereaway. Stir up the
gift of God in you, and the pure mind, and improve your talents,
that ye may be the light of the world, a city set upon a hill,
that cannot be hid. Let your light shine among the Indians, the
Blacks, and the Whites, that ye may answer the truth in them, and
bring them to the standard and ensign, that God hath set up,
Christ Jesus. For from the rising of the sun to the going down of
the same, God’s name shall be great among the Gentiles; and in
every temple, or sanctified heart, incense shall be offered up to
God’s name.
“And have salt in yourselves, that ye may be the salt of the
earth, that ye may salt it; that it may be preserved from
corruption and putrefaction; so that all sacrifices offered up to
the Lord may be seasoned, and be a good savour to God. All grow in
the faith and grace of Christ, that ye may not be like dwarfs, for
a dwarf shall not come near to offer upon God’s altar; though he
may eat of God’s bread, that he may grow by it. And Friends, be
not negligent, but keep up your negroes’ meetings and your family
meetings; and have meetings with the Indian kings, and their
councils and subjects everywhere, and with others. Bring them all
to the baptizing and circumcising Spirit, by which they may know
God, and serve and worship Him. And all take heed of having your
minds in earthly things, coveting and striving for them; for to be
carnally minded brings death, and covetousness is idolatry. There
is too much strife and contention about that idol, which makes too
many go out of the sense and fear of God; so that some have lost
morality, humanity, and true Christian charity.
“O therefore, be awakened to righteousness, and keep awakened: for
the enemy soweth his tares, while men and women sleep in
carelessness, and security. Therefore so many slothful ones go in
their filthy rags, and have not the fine linen, the righteousness
of Christ; but are straggling, and ploughing with their ox and
their ass, in their woollen and linen garments, mixed stuff,
feeding upon torn food that dieth of itself, and drinking of the
dregs of their old bottle, and eating the sour, leavened bread,
which makes their hearts burn one against another. But all are to
keep the feast of Christ, our passover, with the unleavened bread
of sincerity and truth. This unleavened bread of life from heaven,
makes all hearts and souls glad and joyful, lightsome and
cheerful, to serve and love God, and to love, and serve one
another in the peaceable truth, and to keep in the unity of God’s
Spirit, which is the bond of peace. In this love and peace, God
Almighty keep and preserve all his people, and make them valiant
for his truth upon the earth, to spread it abroad in doctrine,
good life and conversation. Amen.
“All the members of Christ have need one of another. For the foot
hath need of the hand, and the hand of the foot; the ear hath need
of the eye, and the eye of the ear. So that all the members are
serviceable in the body, which Christ is the head of; and the head
sees their service. Therefore, let none despise the least member.
“Have a care to keep down that greedy, earthly mind, that raveneth
and coveteth after the riches and things of this world, lest ye
fall into the low region, like the Gentiles or heathen, and so
lose the kingdom of God, that is everlasting; but seek that first,
and God knows what things ye have need of; who takes care for all,
both in heaven and in the earth: thanks be unto God for his
unspeakable gifts, both temporal and spiritual.”
G. F.
Tottenham, the 11th of the 10th Month, 1690.
Not long after I returned to LONDON, and was almost daily with
Friends at meetings. When I had been near two weeks in town, the
sense of the great hardships and sore sufferings that Friends had
been and were under in Ireland,[64] coming with great weight upon
me, I was moved to write the following epistle, as a word of
consolation unto them:—
“Dear Friends and Brethren in the Lord Jesus Christ, whom the Lord
by his eternal arm and power hath upheld through your great
sufferings, exercises, trials, and hardships (more, I believe,
than can be uttered), up and down that nation, which I am very
sensible of; and the rest of the faithful Friends, who have been
partakers with you in your sufferings; and who cannot but suffer
with the Lord’s people that suffer. My confidence hath been in the
Lord, that he would and will support you in all your sufferings;
and that he would preserve all the faithful in his wisdom, that
they might give no just occasion to one nor other to make them
suffer; and if you did suffer wrongfully, or unjustly, that the
righteous God would assist and uphold you; and reward them
according to their works, that oppressed or wronged you.
“And now my desire is unto the Lord, that in the same holy and
heavenly wisdom, ye may all be preserved to the end of your days,
to the glory of God, minding His supporting hand and power, who is
God All-sufficient, to strengthen, help, and refresh, in time of
need. Let none forget the Lord’s mercies and kindnesses, which
endure for ever; but always live in the sense of them. And truly,
Friends, when I consider the thing, it is the great mercy of the
Lord, that ye have not been all swallowed up, seeing with what
spirits ye have been compassed about. But the Lord carrieth his
lambs in his arms, and they are as tender to him as the apple of
his eye; and his power is his hedge about his vineyard of heavenly
plants.
“Therefore it is good for all his children, to be given up to the
Lord with their minds and souls, hearts and spirits, who is a
faithful keeper, that never slumbers nor sleeps; but is able to
preserve and keep you, and to save to the utmost; and none can
hurt so much as a hair of your heads, except he suffer it, to try
you; for he upholds all things, in heaven and in earth, by the
Word of his power; all things were made by Christ, and by him all
things consist (mark, consist), whether they be visible or
invisible, &c. So he hath power over all; for all power in heaven
and in earth is given to him; and to you that have received him,
he hath given power to become the sons and daughters of God; so
living members of Christ, the living head, grafted into Him, in
whom ye have eternal life. Christ, the Seed, reigns, and his power
is over all; who bruises the serpent’s head, and destroys the
devil and his works, and was before he was. So all of you live and
walk in Christ Jesus; that nothing may be between you and God, but
Christ, in whom ye have salvation, life, rest, and peace with God.
“As for the affairs of truth in this land and abroad, I hear that
in Holland and Germany and thereaway, Friends are in love, unity,
and peace; and in Jamaica, Barbadoes, Nevis, Antigua, Maryland,
and New England, I hear nothing but Friends are in unity and
peace. The Lord preserve them all, out of the world (in which
there is trouble), in Christ Jesus, in whom there is peace, life,
love, and unity. Amen. My love in the Lord Jesus Christ to all
Friends everywhere in your land, as though I named them.”
G.F.
London, the 10th of the 11th Month, 1690.
----------------------------
Thus, reader, thou hast had some account of the life and travels,
labours, sufferings, and manifold trials and exercises of this holy
man of God, from his youth to almost the time of his death, of which
himself kept a journal; out of which the foregoing sheets were
transcribed. It remains that an account be added of the time, place,
and manner of his death and burial, which were thus:—
The day after he had written the foregoing epistle to Friends in
Ireland, he went to the meeting at Gracechurch Street, which was
large, being the First-day of the week; and the Lord enabled him to
preach the truth fully and effectually, opening many deep and
weighty things with great power and clearness. After which having
prayed, and the meeting being ended, he went to Henry Goldney’s, in
White-Hart-Court, near the meeting-house; and some Friends going
with him there, he told them “he thought he felt the cold strike to
his heart, as he came out of the meeting;” “yet,” he added, “I am
glad I was here; now I am clear, I am fully clear.” As soon as the
Friends withdrew, he lay down upon a bed (as he sometimes used to
do, through weariness after meeting,) but soon rose again; and in a
little time lay down again, complaining still of cold. And his
strength sensibly decaying, he was soon obliged to go into bed;
where he lay in much contentment and peace, and very sensible to the
last.
And as, in the whole course of his life, his spirit, in the
universal love of God, was bent upon the exalting of truth and
righteousness, and the making known the way thereof to the nations
and people afar off; so now, in the time of his outward weakness,
his mind was intent upon, and (as it were) wholly taken up with
that; and some particular Friends he sent for, to whom he expressed
his mind and desire for the spreading of Friends’ books, and truth
thereby in the world. Divers Friends came to visit him in his
illness; to some of whom he said, “All is well; the Seed of God
reigns over all, and over death itself. And though,” said he, “I am
weak in body, yet the power of God is over all, and the Seed reigns
over all disorderly spirits.”
Thus lying in a heavenly frame of mind, his spirit wholly exercised
towards the Lord, he grew weaker and weaker in his natural strength;
and on the third day of the week, between the hours of nine and ten
in the evening, he quietly departed this life in peace, and sweetly
fell asleep in the Lord, whose blessed truth he had livingly and
powerfully preached in the meeting but two days before. Thus ended
he his day in his faithful testimony, in perfect love and unity with
his brethren, and in peace and good-will to all men, on the 13th of
the 11th Month [old style], 1690, being in the 67th year of his age.
After the death of George Fox, an epistle was found written with his
own hand, and left sealed up, with this superscription; “Not to be
opened before the time”; that is, not till after his decease. When
it was opened, it was found to be addressed to Friends, and to all
the Children of God, in all places in the world. It was afterwards
printed, and is inserted in the Appendix to this Journal.
On the day appointed for the interment of George Fox, a very great
concourse of Friends, and others, assembled at the meeting-house in
White-Hart-Court, near Gracechurch Street, about the middle of the
day, to attend his body to the grave. The meeting held about two
hours with great and heavenly solemnity, manifestly attended with
the Lord’s blessed presence and glorious power; in which divers
living testimonies were given, from a lively remembrance and sense
of the blessed ministry of this dear and ancient servant of the
Lord, his early entering into the Lord’s work at the breaking forth
of this gospel-day, his innocent life, long and great travels, and
unwearied labours of love in the everlasting gospel, for the turning
and gathering of many thousands from darkness to the light of Christ
Jesus, the foundation of true faith; the manifold sufferings,
afflictions, and oppositions, which he met withal for his faithful
testimony, both from his open adversaries, and from false brethren;
and his preservations, deliverances, and dominion in, out of, and
over them all, by the power of God; to whom the glory and honour
always was by him, and is, and always ought to be by all, ascribed.
After the meeting was ended, his body was borne by Friends, and
accompanied by very great numbers, to Friends’ burying-ground, near
Bunhill-Fields; where, after a solemn waiting upon the Lord, and
several living testimonies borne, recommending the company to the
guidance and protection of that Divine Spirit and power, by which
this holy man of God had been raised up, furnished, supported, and
preserved, to the end of his day, his body was committed to the
earth; but his memorial shall remain, and be everlastingly blessed
among the righteous.
-----
Footnote 63:
William Caton, whose service was much in Holland, died at
Amsterdam in 1665. He was one of the earliest associates of George
Fox, being convinced by him in 1652, and is often mentioned in the
earlier part of this Journal. He was not only a literary man, but
zealous for religion; and being of a courteous and affable
disposition, was in general esteem. When about fourteen years of
age he went to reside in Judge Fell’s family at Swarthmore Hall,
as a companion for his son, sharing with him, both in instruction
and recreation. He was very early inclined to religion, and, as he
grew in years, he advanced in godliness.
After joining Friends, he travelled considerably as a gospel
minister, and underwent many sufferings for Christ’s sake. At
Maidstone, in 1654, he and another Friend were stripped, their
necks and arms put in the stocks, and, in that condition, they
were desperately whipped. At Yarmouth he was, with seven other
Friends, taken from a religious meeting on the first day of the
week, and confined six months in prison.
A valuable collection of letters of early Friends was met with at
Swarthmore some years ago, written nearly throughout by William
Caton, and appears to have been intended by him for publication.
It has a title page, dated Swarthmore, 23rd of 6th Month, 1659;
and a preface signed by himself, dated 7th of 2nd Month, 1660. The
life of Caton, George Fox mentions as having been printed, was
re-published in 1839, by John Barclay, forming one of the _Select
Series_, to which the reader is referred for further particulars.
Footnote 64:
The sufferings of Friends in Ireland at this time were very great.
The havoc and spoil they underwent were enormous, as related by
the historians Sewell and Rutty, and more minutely by Besse, in
his _Collection of Sufferings_, to which allusion has been made
before, and to which the reader is now finally referred. The loss
sustained by Friends from persecution in a single year (1689) was
estimated at £100,000, many being deprived of all their substance.
Great numbers were immured for years in prison, and many died
there for Christ’s sake. Others when there was a prospect of their
being released, because they could not satisfy the unjust demand
of fees, as having done no wrong (thus bravely, though passively,
asserting their Christian liberty,) were either detained or
stripped of their clothes, and turned out.
Surrounded as they were with perils on every hand, they placed
their confidence in Divine protection; and in the worst times of
trial, when not in prison, they kept up their meetings for
worship, as well as discipline; collected at the latter the
accounts of the sufferings of their members, and took what care
they could for their relief.
APPENDIX;
CONTAINING
TESTIMONY OF MARGARET FOX RESPECTING HER HUSBAND GEORGE FOX.
TESTIMONY OF SOME OF THE AUTHOR’S RELATIONS.
TESTIMONY FROM THE MORNING MEETING IN LONDON.
TESTIMONY OF THOMAS ELLWOOD.
AN EPISTLE OF GEORGE FOX, FOUND AFTER HIS DEATH SEALED UP,
ADDRESSED TO THE CHILDREN OF GOD EVERYWHERE.
THE APPEARANCE OF THE LORD’S EVERLASTING TRUTH, AND ITS BREAKING
FORTH AGAIN IN HIS ETERNAL POWER, IN THIS OUR DAY AND AGE, IN
ENGLAND.
A CHRONOLOGICAL REGISTER OF THE PLACES VISITED BY THE AUTHOR.
TEXTS OF SCRIPTURE OCCURRING IN THIS JOURNAL.
PARTICULARS OF THE VARIOUS EDITIONS OF GEORGE FOX’S JOURNAL, ETC.
TESTIMONY OF MARGARET FOX,
CONCERNING HER LATE HUSBAND
GEORGE FOX;
WITH A BRIEF ACCOUNT OF SOME OF HIS TRAVELS, SUFFERINGS, AND
HARDSHIPS ENDURED FOR THE TRUTH’S SAKE.
--------------
It having pleased Almighty God to take away my dear husband out of
this evil, troublesome world, who was not a man thereof, being
chosen out of it; who had his life and being in another region, and
whose testimony was against the world, that the deeds thereof were
evil, and therefore the world hated him: so I am now to give in my
account and testimony for him, whom the Lord hath taken unto his
blessed kingdom and glory. And it is before me from the Lord, and in
my view, to give a relation, and leave upon record the dealings of
the Lord with us from the beginning.
He was the instrument in the hand of the Lord in this present age,
which he made use of to send forth into the world, to preach the
everlasting gospel, which had been hid from many ages and
generations; the Lord revealed it unto him, and made him open that
new and living way, that leads to life eternal, when he was but a
youth, and a stripling. And when he declared it in his own country
of Leicestershire, and in Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, and
Warwickshire, his declaration being against the hireling priests and
their practices, it raised a great fury and opposition amongst the
priests and people against him; yet there were always some that
owned him in several places; but very few that stood firm to him
when persecution came on him. He and one other were put in prison at
Derby, but the other declined, and left him in prison there, where
he continued almost a whole year; and when he was released out of
prison, he went on with his testimony abroad, and was put in prison
again at Nottingham; and there he continued a while, and after was
released again.
He then travelled on into Yorkshire, and passed up and down that
great county, and several received him, as William Dewsbury, Richard
Farnsworth, Thomas Aldam, and others, who all came to be faithful
ministers of the Spirit for the Lord. He continued in that country,
and travelled through Holderness and the Wolds, and abundance were
convinced: and several were brought to prison at York for their
testimony to the truth, both men and women: so that we heard of such
a people that were risen, and we did very much inquire after them.
And after a while he travelled up farther towards the Dales in
Yorkshire, as Wensleydale, and Sedbergh; and amongst the hills,
dales, and mountains he came on, and convinced many of the eternal
Truth.
In the year 1652 it pleased the Lord to draw him towards us; so he
came on from Sedbergh, and so to Westmorland, as Firbank Chapel,
where John Blakelin came with him; and so on to Preston, Grayrigg,
Kendal, Underbarrow, Poolbank, Cartmel, and Stavely; and so on to
Swarthmore, my dwelling-house whither he brought the blessed tidings
of the everlasting gospel, which I, and many hundreds in these
parts, have cause to praise the Lord for. My then husband, Thomas
Fell, was not at home at that time, but gone to the Welsh circuit,
being one of the judges of assize; and our house being a place open
to entertain ministers and religious people at, one of GEORGE FOX’S
friends brought him hither, where he stayed all night.
The next day being a lecture, or a fast-day, he went to Ulverstone
steeple-house, but came not in till people were gathered; I and my
children had been a long time there before. And when they were
singing before the sermon, he came in; and when they had done
singing, he stood up upon a seat or form, and desired that he might
have liberty to speak; and he that was in the pulpit said he might.
And the first words that he spoke were as followeth: “He is not a
Jew that is one outward; neither is that circumcision which is
outward; but he is a Jew that is one inward; and that is
circumcision which is of the heart.” And so he went on, and said,
how that Christ was the Light of the world, and lighteth every man
that cometh into the world; and that by this light they might be
gathered to God, &c. I stood up in my pew and wondered at his
doctrine; for I had never heard such before. And then he went on,
and opened the Scriptures, and said, “the Scriptures were the
prophets’ words, and Christ’s and the apostles’ words, and what, as
they spoke, they enjoyed and possessed, and had it from the Lord:”
and said, “then what had any to do with the Scriptures, but as they
came to the Spirit that gave them forth? You will say, Christ saith
this, and the apostles say this; but what canst thou say? Art thou a
child of Light, and hast thou walked in the Light, and what thou
speakest, is it inwardly from God?” &c. This opened me so, that it
cut me to the heart; and then I saw clearly we were all wrong. So I
sat down in my pew again, and cried bitterly: and I cried in my
spirit, to the Lord, “We are all thieves; we are all thieves; we
have taken the Scriptures in words, and know nothing of them in
ourselves.” So that served me, that I cannot well tell what he spoke
afterwards; but he went on in declaring against the false prophets,
and priests, and deceivers of the people.
And there was one John Sawrey, a justice of peace, and a professor,
that bid the churchwarden take him away; and he laid his hands on
him several times, and took them off again, and let him alone; and
then after a while he gave over, and came to our house again that
night. And he spoke in the family amongst the servants, and they
were all generally convinced; as William Caton, Thomas Salthouse,
Mary Askew, Anne Clayton, and several other servants. And I was
struck into such a sadness, I knew not what to do, my husband being
from home. I saw it was the truth, and I could not deny it; and I
did as the apostle saith, “I received the truth in the love of it:”
and it was opened to me so clear, that I had never a tittle in my
heart against it; but I desired the Lord that I might be kept in it;
and then I desired no greater portion.
Then he went on to Dalton, Aldingham, Dendron, and Rampside chapels
and steeple-houses, and several places up and down, and the people
followed him mightily; and abundance were convinced, and saw that
what he spoke was truth; but the priests were all in a rage. About
two weeks after, James Naylor and Richard Farnsworth followed him,
and inquired him out, till they came to Swarthmore, and there stayed
a while with me at our house, and did me much good, for I was under
great heaviness and judgment. But the power of the Lord entered upon
me within about two weeks that he came; and about three weeks’ end
my husband came home; and many were in a mighty rage. And a deal of
the captains and great ones of the country went to meet my then
husband as he was coming home, and informed him “that a great
disaster was befallen amongst his family, and that they were
witches; and that they had taken us out of our religion: and that he
might either set them away, or all the country would be undone.” But
no weapon formed against the Lord shall prosper, as you may see
hereafter.
So my husband came home greatly offended: and any may think what a
condition I was like to be in, that either I must displease my
husband, or offend God; for he was very much troubled with us all in
the house and family, they had so prepossessed him against us. But
James Naylor and Richard Farnsworth were both then at our house, and
I desired them to come and speak to him, and so they did, very
moderately and wisely; but he was at first displeased with them,
till they told him they came in love and goodwill to his house. And
after that he had heard them speak a while, he was better satisfied;
and they offered as if they would go away; but I desired them to
stay, and not to go away yet, for George Fox will come this evening.
And I would have had my husband to have heard them all, and
satisfied himself farther about them: because they had so
prepossessed him against them of such dangerous, fearful things, in
his coming first home. And then he was pretty moderate and quiet;
and his dinner being ready, he went to it; and I went in, and sat me
down by him. And whilst I was sitting, the power of the Lord seized
upon me: and he was struck with amazement, and knew not what to
think; but was quiet and still. And the children were all quiet and
still, and grown sober, and could not play on their music that they
were learning: and all these things made him quiet and still.
At night George Fox came: and after supper my husband was sitting in
the parlour, and I asked him, if George Fox might come in; and he
said, Yes. So George came in without any compliment, and walked into
the room, and began to speak presently; and the family, and James
Naylor, and Richard Farnsworth came all in: and he spoke very
excellently as ever I heard him, and opened Christ’s and the
apostles’ practices, which they were in, in their day. And he opened
the night of apostasy since the apostles’ days, and laid open the
priests and their practices in the apostasy; that if all England had
been there, I thought they could not have denied the truth of those
things. And so my husband came to see clearly the truth of what he
spoke, and was very quiet that night, said no more and went to bed.
The next morning came Lampitt, priest of Ulverstone, and got my
husband into the garden, and spoke much to him there; but my husband
had seen so much the night before, that the priest got little
entrance upon him. And when the priest Lampitt was come into the
house, George spoke sharply to him, and asked him “when God spoke to
him, and called him to go and preach to the people?” but after a
while the priest went away: this was on a Sixth day of the week,
about the Fifth month, 1652. And at our house divers Friends were
speaking one to another, how there were several convinced hereaways;
and we could not tell where to get a meeting; my husband also being
present, he overheard, and said of his own accord, “You may meet
here, if you will;” and that was the first meeting we had that he
offered of his own accord. And then notice was given that day and
the next to Friends, and there was a good large meeting on the day’,
which was the first meeting that was at Swarthmore; and so continued
there a meeting from 1652 till 1690. And my husband went that day to
the steeple-house, and none with him but his clerk and his groom
that rode with him; and the priest and people were all fearfully
troubled: but praised be the Lord, they never got their wills upon
us to this day.
After a few weeks George went to Ulverstone steeple-house again, and
the said Justice Sawrey, with others, set the rude rabble upon him;
and they beat him so that he fell down as in a swoon, and was sore
bruised and blackened in his body, and on his head and arms. Then my
husband was not at home; but when he came home he was displeased
that they should do so; and spoke to Justice Sawrey, and said it was
against law to make riots. And after that he was sore beat and
stoned at Walney till he fell down; and also at Dalton was he sore
beat and abused; so that he had very hard usage in divers places in
those parts. And then when a meeting was settled there, he went
again into Westmorland, and settled meetings there; and there was a
great convincement, and abundance of brave ministers came out
thereaways, as John Camm, John Audland, Francis Howgill, Edward
Burrough, Miles Halhead, and John Blakelin, with divers others. He
also went over the sands to Lancaster, and Yealand, and Kellet,
where Robert Widders, Richard Hubberthorn, and John Lawson, with
many others, were convinced. And about that time he was in those
parts, many priests and professors rose up, and falsely accused him
of blasphemy, and did endeavour to take away his life; and got
people to swear at a sessions at Lancaster that he had spoken
blasphemy. But my then husband and Colonel West, having had some
sight and knowledge of the truth, withstood the two persecuting
justices, John Sawrey and Thompson, and brought him off, and cleared
him; for indeed he was innocent. And after the sessions there was a
great meeting in the town of Lancaster; and many of the
town’s-people came in, and many were convinced. And thus he was up
and down about Lancaster, Yealand, Westmorland, and some parts of
Yorkshire, and our parts above one year; in which time there were
above twenty-four ministers brought forth, that were ready to go
with their testimony of the Eternal Truth unto the world; and soon
after Francis Howgill and John Camm went to speak to Oliver
Cromwell.
In the year 1653, George’s drawings were into Cumberland, by Millom,
Lamplugh, Embleton, and Brigham, Pardshaw and Cockermouth, where at
or near Embleton he had a dispute with some priests, as Larkham and
Benson; but chiefly with John Wilkinson, a preacher at Embleton and
Brigham, who was afterwards convinced, and owned the Truth, and was
a serviceable minister both in England, Ireland, and Scotland. Then
he went to Coldbeck and several places, till he came to Carlisle,
and went to their steeple-house; there they beat and abused him, and
had him before the magistrates, who examined him, and put him in
prison in the common jail among the thieves. At the assizes was one
Anthony Pearson, who had been a justice of peace, and was convinced
at Appleby (when he was upon the bench) by James Naylor and Francis
Howgill, who were then prisoners there, and brought before him; so
Anthony Pearson spoke to the justices at Carlisle, he being
acquainted with them, having married his wife out of Cumberland; and
after a while they released him. Afterwards he went into several
parts of Cumberland, and many were convinced, and owned the Truth;
and he gathered and settled meetings there amongst them, and up and
down in several parts in the North.
In the year 1654, he went southward to his own country of
Leicestershire, visiting Friends. And then Colonel Hacker sent him
to Oliver Cromwell; and after having been kept prisoner a while, he
was brought before Oliver, and released. He then stayed a while,
visiting Friends in London, and the meetings therein; and so passed
westward to Bristol and visited Friends there. He afterwards went
into Cornwall, where they put him in prison at Launceston, and one
Edward Pyot with him, where he had a bad, long imprisonment. When he
was released, he passed into many parts of that county of Cornwall,
and settled meetings there. Then he travelled through many counties,
visiting Friends and settling meetings all along; and so came into
the North, and to Swarthmore, and to Cumberland.
And so for Scotland he passed in the year 1657, and there went with
him Robert Widders, James Lancaster, John Grave, and others. He
travelled through many places in that nation, as Douglas, Heads,
Hamilton, Glasgow, and to Edinburgh, where they took him, and
carried him before General Monk and the council, and examined him,
and asked him his business into that nation; who answered, he came
to visit the seed of God. And after they had threatened him, and
charged him to depart their nation of Scotland, they let him go.
Then he went to Linlithgow, and Stirling, and Johnstone, and many
places, visiting the people; and several were convinced. And after
he had stayed a pretty while, and settled some meetings, he returned
into Northumberland, and into the bishopric of Durham, visiting
Friends and settling meetings as he went; and then returned back
again to Swarthmore, and stayed amongst Friends a while, and so
returned south again. In 1658, Judge Fell died.
In 1660 he came out of the South into the North, and had a great
general meeting about Balby in Yorkshire; and so came on, visiting
Friends in many places, till he came to Swarthmore again. And King
Charles then being come in, the justices sent out warrants, and took
him at Swarthmore, charging him in their warrants, that he drew away
the king’s liege people, to the endangering the embruing the nation
in blood; and sent him prisoner to Lancaster castle. And I having a
great family, and he being taken in my house, I was moved of the
Lord to go to the king at Whitehall; and took with me a declaration,
and an information of our principles, and a long time, and much ado
I had, to get to him. But at last, when I got to him, I told him if
he was guilty of those things, I was guilty, for he was taken in my
house; and I gave him the paper of our principles, and desired that
he would set him at liberty, as he had promised that none should
suffer for tender consciences; and we were of tender consciences,
and desired nothing but the liberty of our consciences. Then with
much ado, after he had been kept prisoner near half a year at
Lancaster, we got a _habeas corpus_, and removed him to the king’s
bench, where he was released. And then would I gladly have come home
to my great family, but was bound in my spirit, and could not have
freedom to get away for a whole year. The king had promised me
several times that we should have our liberty, but then the
Monarchy-men rose; and then came the great and general imprisonment
of Friends the nation through; and so could I not have freedom nor
liberty to come home, till we had got a general proclamation for all
our Friends’ liberty. Then I had freedom and peace to come home.
In 1663 he came North again, and to Swarthmore. Then they sent out
warrants, and took him again; and had him to Holker before the
justices, who tendered him the oath of allegiance, and sent him
prisoner to Lancaster castle. And about a month after, the justices
sent for me also out of my house, and tendered me the oath, and sent
me prisoner to Lancaster. And the next assizes they again tendered
the oath of allegiance and supremacy to us both, and premunired me;
but they had missed the date, and other things in the indictment,
and so it was quashed; but they tendered him the oath again, and
kept him prisoner a year and a half at Lancaster castle. And then
they sent him to Scarbro’ castle in Yorkshire, where they kept him
prisoner close under the soldiers much of a year and a half, so that
a Friend could scarcely have spoken to him; yet after that, it
pleased the Lord that he was released; but I continued in prison,
and a prisoner four years at that time; and an order was procured
from the council, whereby I was set at liberty. And in that time I
went down into Cornwall with my son and daughter Lower, and came
back by London to the Yearly Meeting; and there I met with him
again; and then he told me the time was drawing on towards our
marriage, but he might first go into Ireland. And a little before
this time was he prisoner in his own country at Leicester for a
while, and then released. So into Ireland he went, and I went into
Kent and Sussex, and came back to London again; and afterwards I
went to the West, towards Bristol, in 1669, and there I stayed till
he came over from Ireland, which was eleven years after my former
husband’s decease. In Ireland he had had a great service for the
Lord and his eternal truth, amongst Friends and many people there,
but escaped many dangers, and times of being taken prisoner, they
having laid in wait aforehand for him in many places. And then he
being returned, at Bristol he declared his intentions of marriage;
and there also was our marriage solemnized. Within ten days after I
came homewards, but my husband stayed up and down in the countries
amongst Friends, visiting them.
Soon after I came home, there came another order from the council to
cast me into prison again; and the sheriff of Lancashire sent his
bailiff, and pulled me out of my own house, and had me prisoner to
Lancaster castle (upon the old premunire), where I continued a whole
year, and most part of that time was I sick and weakly; my husband
also was weak and sickly at that time. After a while he recovered,
and went about to get me out of prison, and a discharge at last was
got under the great seal; and so I was set at liberty. Then I was to
go up to London again, for my husband was intending for America. He
was full two years away, before he came back again into England; and
having arrived at Bristol, he came thence to London, intending to
come to the middle of the nation with me; but when we came into some
parts of Worcestershire, they got there information of him; and one
Justice Parker, by his warrant, sent him and my son Lower to
Worcester jail. The justices there tendered him the oath, and
premunired him, but released my son Lower, who stayed with him most
of the time he was prisoner there.
After some time he fell sick, in a long, lingering sickness, and
many times was very ill; so they writ to me from London, that if I
would see him alive, I might go to him; which accordingly I did.
After I had tarried seventeen weeks with him at Worcester, and no
discharge likely to be obtained for him, I went up to London, and
wrote to the king an account of his long imprisonment, and how he
was taken in his travel homewards, and that he was weak and sick,
and not likely to live if they kept him long there. I went with it
to Whitehall myself, where I met with the king and gave him the
paper; and he said, I must go to the chancellor, he could do nothing
in it. Then I wrote also to the lord chancellor, and went to his
house, gave him my paper, and spoke to him, that the king had left
it wholly to him; and if he did not take pity and release him out of
that prison, I feared he would end his days there. The Lord
Chancellor Finch was a very tender man, and spoke to the judge, who
gave out an _habeas corpus_ presently. When we got it we sent it
down to Worcester, and they would not part with him at first, but
said he was premunired, and was not to go out on that manner. Then
we were forced to go to Judge North, and to the attorney-general,
and we got another order, and sent down from them; and with much
ado, and great labour and industry of William Mead and other
friends, we got him up to London, where he appeared in Westminster
Hall at the king’s bench, before Judge Hale, who was a very honest,
tender man; and he knew they had imprisoned him but in envy. So that
which they had against him was read, and our counsel pleaded that he
was taken up in his travel and journey. And there was but a little
said till he was acquitted. This was the last prison that he was in,
being freed by the court of king’s bench.
When he was at liberty he recovered again; and then I was very
desirous to go home with him, which we did. This was the first time
that he came to Swarthmore after we were married; and he stayed here
much of two years, and then went to London again to the Yearly
Meeting; and after a while went into Holland, and some parts of
Germany, where he stayed a pretty while, and then returned to London
again at the next Yearly Meeting. And after he had stayed a while in
and about London, he came into the North to Swarthmore again, and
stayed that time near two years; and then he grew weakly, being
troubled with pains and aches, having had many sore and long
travels, beatings, and hard imprisonments. But after some time he
rode to York, and so passed on through Nottinghamshire and several
counties, visiting Friends, till he came to London to the Yearly
Meeting, and stayed there, and thereaways, till he finished his
course, and laid down his head in peace.
And though the Lord had provided an outward habitation for him, yet
he was not willing to stay at it, because it was so remote and far
from London, where his service most lay. And my concern for God, and
his holy eternal truth, was then in the North, where God had placed
and set me, and likewise for the ordering and governing of my
children and family; so that we were very willing both of us, to
live apart for some years on God’s account, and his truth’s service,
and to deny ourselves of that comfort which we might have had in
being together, for the sake and service of the Lord and his truth.
And if any took occasion, or judged hard of us because of that, the
Lord will judge them; for we were innocent. And for my own part, I
was willing to take many long journeys, for taking away all occasion
of evil thoughts; and though I lived two hundred miles from London,
yet have I been nine times there, upon the Lord and his truth’s
account; and of all the times that I was at London, this last was
most comfortable, that the Lord was pleased to give me strength and
ability to travel that great journey, being seventy-six years of
age, to see my dear husband, who was better in his health and
strength than many times I had seen him before. I look upon it, that
the Lord’s special hand was in it, that I should go then, for he
lived but about half a year after I left him; which makes me admire
the wisdom and goodness of God, in ordering my journey at that time.
And now he hath finished his course, and his testimony, and is
entered into his eternal rest and felicity. I trust in the same
powerful God, that his holy arm and power will carry me through,
whatever he hath yet for me to do; and that he will be my strength
and support, and the bearer up of my head unto the end, and in the
end. For I know his faithfulness and goodness, and I have experience
of his love; to whom be glory and powerful dominion for ever. Amen.
M.F.
TESTIMONY OF SOME OF THE AUTHOR’S RELATIONS.
Neither days nor length of time with us can wear out the memory of
our dear and honoured father, George Fox, whom the Lord hath taken
to himself. And though his earthly house of this tabernacle be
dissolved, and mortality put off, yet we believe he has a “building
with God eternally in the heavens, and is entered into rest,” as a
reward to those great labours, hard sufferings, and sore trials he
patiently endured for God and his truth. Of which truth he was made
an able minister, and one, if not the first promulgator of it in our
age; who, though of no great literature, nor seeming much learned,
as to the outward (being hid from the wisdom of this world), yet he
had the tongue of the learned, and could speak a word in due season
to the conditions and capacities of most, especially to them that
were weary, and wanted soul’s rest; being deep in the divine
mysteries of the kingdom of God. And the word of life and salvation
through him reached unto many souls, whereby many were convinced of
their great duty of inward retiring to wait upon God; and as they
became diligent in the performance of that service, were also raised
up to be preachers of the same everlasting gospel of peace and glad
tidings to others; who are as seals to his ministry both in this and
other nations, and may possibly give a more full account thereof.
Howbeit we knowing his unwearied diligence, not sparing, but
spending himself in the work and service whereunto he was chosen and
called of God, could not but give this short testimony of his
faithfulness therein, and likewise of his tender love and care
towards us; who, as a tender father to his children (in which
capacity we stood, being so related to him), never failed to give us
his wholesome counsel and advice.
And not only so, but, as a father in Christ, he took care of the
whole family and household of faith, which the Lord had made him an
eminent overseer of, and endued him with an excellent spirit of
wisdom and understanding, to propose and direct such helps and
advantages to the well-ordering and establishing of affairs and
government in the church, as now are found very serviceable
thereunto; and have greatly disappointed and prevented the false,
loose, and libertine spirit of some who, to their own confusion,
have endeavoured, by separation and division, to disturb the
church’s peace. And although many of that sort have at sundry times
shot their poisonous darts at him, publicly in print, and privately
other ways, yet he has been always preserved by the heavenly power
of God, out of the reach of their envy, and all perils and
difficulties that attended on their account; who, as a fixed star in
the firmament of God’s power, did constantly abide, and held his
integrity to the last, being of a sweet, savoury life; and as to
conversation, kept his garments clean: and though outwardly dead,
yet he liveth, and his memory is right precious unto us; as it is
and will be to all that abide in the love of truth, and have not
declined the way of it. For he was one of the Lord’s worthies,
valiant for the truth upon earth, not turning his back in the day of
battle; but his bow still abiding in its strength, he, through many
hardships, brought gladness and refreshment to Israel’s camp, being
assisted by the might of that power that always put the armies of
aliens and enemies to flight. And now having finished his course, he
is removed from us into a glorious state of immortality and bliss,
and is gathered unto the Lord as a shock of corn in its full season,
and to that habitation of safety where the wicked cease from
troubling and the weary are at rest.
JOHN ROUS, MARGARET ROUS,
WILLIAM MEAD, SARAH MEAD,
THOMAS LOWER, MARY LOWER,
WILLIAM INGRAM, SUSANNA INGRAM,
DANIEL ABRAHAM, RACHEL ABRAHAM,
ABRAHAM MORRICE, ISABEL MORRICE.
------------------------------------
AN EPISTLE BY WAY OF TESTIMONY,
TO FRIENDS AND BRETHREN OF THE MONTHLY AND QUARTERLY MEETINGS
IN ENGLAND, WALES, AND ELSEWHERE, CONCERNING THE DECEASE
OF OUR FAITHFUL BROTHER, GEORGE FOX.
From our Second-day’s Morning-Meeting in London, the 26th of 11th
Month, 1690.
Dear and truly beloved friends, brethren and sisters in Christ
Jesus, our blessed Lord and Saviour, we sincerely and tenderly
salute you all in his free and tender love wherewith he hath
graciously visited us, and largely shed it abroad in our hearts and
souls, to our own unspeakable comfort and consolation, and towards
his whole heritage and royal offspring; blessed be his pure and
powerful name forevermore. And our souls do truly and fervently
desire, and breathe unto the God of all our mercies, that you all
may be preserved, and kept truly faithful and diligent in his work
and service, according to your heavenly calling and endowments with
his light, grace, and truth, unto the end of your days; as being
livingly engaged thereby all your appointed time to serve him, and
to wait till your change come; that none may neglect that true
improvement of your times and talents, that God has afforded you
here, for your eternal advantage hereafter, in that inheritance and
life immortal that never fades away. And that the whole flock and
heritage of Christ Jesus, which he has purchased and bought for
himself with a price incorruptible, may always be so preserved in
his own pure love and life, as to grow, increase, and prosper in the
same; and thereby be kept in love, unity, and peace with one
another, as becomes his faithful and true followers, is that which
our very hearts and souls desire, being often truly comforted and
enlarged in the living sense and feeling of the increase and
aboundings thereof, among faithful friends and brethren.
And, dear brethren and sisters, unto this our tender salutation we
are concerned, in brotherly love and true tender-heartedness, to add
and impart unto you some account of the decease of our dear and
elder brother in Christ, namely, His and His church’s true and
faithful servant and minister, George Fox; whom it hath pleased the
Lord to take unto himself, as he hath divers others of his faithful
servants and ministers of late time; who have faithfully served out
their generation, and finished their testimony and course with joy
and peace. Howbeit, O dear brethren and friends! that so many
worthies in Israel, and serviceable instruments in the Lord’s hand,
are of late taken away and removed from us so soon one after
another, appears a dispensation that deeply and sorrowfully affects
us, and many more whose hearts are upright and tender towards God,
and one to another in the truth. The consideration of the depth,
weight, and meaning thereof is very weighty upon our spirits, though
their precious life and testimony live with us, as being of that
same body, united to one head, even Christ Jesus; in which we still,
and hope ever shall, have secret comfort and union with them, whom
the Lord has removed and taken to himself, out of their earthly
tabernacles and houses into, their heavenly and everlasting
mansions.
This our said dear brother, George Fox, was enabled, by the Lord’s
power, to preach the truth fully and effectually in our public
meeting in White-Hart Court, by Gracechurch Street, London, on the
11th day of this instant 11th month, 1690: after which he said, “I
am glad I was here; now I am clear, I am fully clear.” Then he was
the same day taken with some illness or indisposition of body more
than usual; and continued weak in body for two days after, at our
friend Henry Goldney’s house, in the same court, close by the
meeting-house, in much contentment and peace, and very sensible to
the last. In which time he mentioned some divers Friends, and sent
for some in particular; to whom he expressed his mind for the
spreading of Friends’ books and truth in the world, and through the
nations thereof; as his spirit in the Lord’s love and power was
universally set and bent for truth and righteousness, and the making
known the way thereof to the nations and people afar off: signifying
also to some Friends, “That all is well; and the Seed of God reigns
over all, and over death itself: that though he was weak in body,
yet that the power of God is over all, and the Seed reigns over all
disorderly spirits;” which were his wonted sensible expressions,
being in the living faith and sense thereof, which he kept to the
end. And on the 13th instant, between the ninth and tenth hour in
the night, he quietly departed this life in peace; being two days
after the Lord enabled him to publish and preach the blessed truth
in the meeting as aforesaid. So that he clearly and evidently ended
his days in his faithful testimony, in perfect love and unity with
his brethren, and peace and good-will to all men; being about sixty
and six years of age (as we understand) when he departed this life.
And on the 16th of this instant, being the day appointed for his
funeral, a very great concourse of Friends and people assembled at
our meeting-house in White-Hart Court aforesaid, about the
mid-day, in order to attend his body to our burying-place, near
Bunhill-Fields, to be interred, as Friends’ last office of love
and respect due on that account. The meeting was held about two
hours, with great and heavenly solemnity, manifestly attended with
the Lord’s blessed power and presence; and divers living
testimonies given, from a lively remembrance and sense of this his
dear ancient servant, his blessed ministry and testimony of the
breaking forth of this gospel-day; his innocent life, long and
great travels, and labours of love in the everlasting gospel, for
the turning and gathering many thousands from darkness to the
light of Christ Jesus, the foundation of true faith; also of his
manifold sufferings, afflictions, and oppositions, which he met
withal for his faithful testimony, both from his open adversaries
and false brethren; and his preservations, dominion, and
deliverances out of them all by the power of God; to whom the
glory and honour was and is ascribed, in raising up and preserving
this his faithful witness and minister to the end of his days;
whose blessed memorial will everlastingly remain.
He loved truth and righteousness, and bore faithful testimony
against deceit and falsehood, and the mystery of iniquity; and
often, of late time especially, warned Friends against covetousness,
earthly-mindedness, against getting into the earth, and into a
brittle spirit; and the younger sort, against looseness and pride of
life, &c.
A few days before he died, he had a great concern upon his mind
concerning some in whom the Lord’s power was working, to lead them
into a ministry and testimony to his truth; who, through their too
much entangling themselves in the things of this world, did make
themselves unready to answer the call and leadings of the power of
God, and hurt the gift that was bestowed upon them, and did not take
that regard to their service and ministry as they ought; and
mentioned the apostle’s exhortation to Timothy, to “take heed to his
ministry, and to show himself approved,” &c.: and expressed his
grief concerning such as preferred their own business before the
Lord’s business, and sought the advancing worldly concerns before
the concerns of truth: and concluded with a tender and fatherly
exhortation to all to whom God had imparted of his heavenly
treasure, that they would improve it faithfully, and be diligent in
the Lord’s work, that the earth might be sown with the seed of the
kingdom, and God’s harvest might be minded by those whom he had
called and enabled to labour therein: and that such would commit the
care of their outward concerns to the Lord, who would care for them,
and give a blessing to them. However, this is not mentioned to
encourage any to run unsent, or without being called of God.
Many are living witnesses that the Lord raised him up by his power,
to proclaim his mighty day to the nations, and made him an effectual
instrument in our day to turn many from darkness to light, and from
Satan’s power to God; and freely to suffer and bear all reproaches,
and the manifold persecutions, bufferings, halings, stonings,
imprisonments, and cruelties, that were in the beginning, and for
some time inflicted on him and others, for the name of Christ Jesus.
He was in his testimony as a fixed star in the firmament of God’s
power, where all that be truly wise, and that turn many to
righteousness, shall shine as the brightness of the firmament, and
as the stars, for ever and ever. He knew and preached the mystery of
Christ revealed, the life and substance, and the power of godliness,
above all shadows and forms. The Lord endued him with a hidden
wisdom and life. He loved peace, and earnestly laboured for
universal love, unity, peace, and good order in the churches of
Christ; and wherever he met with the contrary, it was his great
grief and burthen. He was greatly for the encouragement of faithful
labourers in the Lord’s work; and it was a great offence and grief
to him to have their testimony weakened, or labours slighted,
through prejudice in any professing truth.
And inasmuch as the Lord suffered him not to be delivered up to the
will of his enemies and persecutors, who often heretofore breathed
out cruelty against him, and designed his destruction; but in his
good pleasure so fairly and quietly took him away in his own time,
when his testimony was so blessedly finished, and his work
accomplished: this is all remarkable, and worthy of serious and due
observation, as being by a special and Divine Providence and wisdom
of God; to whom we ascribe the glory of all, and not unto man or
creatures. Though we must needs allow, and own, that good report and
due esteem, which faithful elders, ministers, and servants of God
and Christ have by faith obtained, to the praise of that blessed
Power, that upheld them in every age in their day; many whereof are
even of late taken away from the evil to come, and are at rest in
the Lord, out of the reach of all envy and persecution, where the
wicked cannot trouble them any more.
And we must patiently bear our parting with them, and our loss and
sorrow on that account, with respect to their unspeakable gain; yet
how can we avoid being deeply affected with sadness of spirit, and
brokenness of heart, under the sense and consideration of such loss
and revolutions, which we have cause to believe are ominous of
calamities to the wicked world, though of good to the righteous? Did
the death of plain upright Jacob, namely, Israel (who was as a
prince of God), so deeply affect both his own children and kindred,
as that they made a great and exceeding sore lamentation for him;
and even the Egyptians also, that they bewailed him seventy days?
and the death of Moses so deeply affect the children of Israel, as
that they “did weep and mourn for him in the plain of Moab thirty
days?” and the death of Stephen, that faithful martyr of Jesus, so
deeply affect certain men, fearing God, as “that they made great
lamentation for him?” and the apostle Paul, when taking his leave of
the elders of the church of Ephesus, and telling them, “they should
see his face no more?” If this did so deeply affect them, that they
“wept all abundantly, sorrowing most of all for these words, that
they should see his face no more;” with many more of this kind; how
then can we otherwise choose, but be deeply affected with sorrow and
sadness of heart, though not as those who have no hope, when so many
of our ancient, dear, and faithful brethren, with whom we have had
much sweet society, are removed from us one after another? (We pray
God raise up and increase more such!) Yet must we all contentedly
submit to the good pleasure and wisdom of the Lord our God in all
these things; who taketh away, and none can hinder him, nor may any
say unto him, What doest thou? Yet we have cause to bless the Lord
that he hath of late raised, and is raising up, more to publish his
name in the earth. And we that yet remain have but a short time to
stay after them that are gone; but we shall be gone to them also.
The Lord God of life keep us all faithful in his holy truth, love,
unity, and life, to the end. He hath a great work still to bring
forth in the earth, and great things to bring to pass, in order to
make way for truth and righteousness to take place therein; and that
his seed may come forth and be gathered, and the power and kingdom
of our God and of his Christ made known and exalted in the earth,
unto the ends thereof.
Dear Friends and brethren, be faithful till death, that a crown of
life you may obtain. All dwell in the love of God in Christ Jesus,
in union and peace in him; to whom we tenderly commit you to keep
and strengthen you, bless and preserve you, to the end of your days.
In whose dear and tender love we remain,
Your dear friends and brethren,
STEPHEN CRISP, NICHOLAS GATES, DANIEL MONRO,
GEO. WHITEHEAD, FRANCIS STAMPER, JOHN HEYWOOD,
FRA. CAMFIELD, JOHN VAUGHTON, GEORGE BOWLES,
JAMES PARK, GILBERT LATEY, WILLIAM ROBINSON,
JOHN ELSON, CHARLES MARSHALL, WILLIAM BINGLEY,
PETER PRICE, RICH. NEEDHAM, JOHN BUTCHER,
JOHN FIELD, JAMES MARTIN, BENJAMIN ANTROBUS.
JOHN EDRIDGE,
These names are since added, at the desire of the persons
following:—
AMB. RIGG, SAM. GOODAKER, WILLIAM FALLOWFIELD.
P.S.—Before his death he wrote a little paper, desiring all Friends,
everywhere, that used to write to him about the sufferings and
affairs of Friends in their several countries, should henceforth
write to their several correspondents in London, to be communicated
to the Second-day’s meeting, to take care that they be answered.
THOMAS ELLWOOD’S ACCOUNT OF THAT EMINENT AND HONOURABLE SERVANT OF
THE LORD, GEORGE FOX.[65]
This holy man was raised up by God in an extraordinary manner, for
an extraordinary work, even to awaken the sleeping world, by
proclaiming the mighty day of the Lord to the nations, and
publishing again the everlasting gospel to the inhabitants of the
earth, after the long and dismal night of apostasy and darkness. For
this work the Lord began to prepare him by many and various trials
and exercises from his very childhood; and having fitted and
furnished him for it, he called him into it very young, and made him
instrumental, by the effectual working of the Holy Ghost, through
his ministry, to call many others into the same work, and to turn
many thousands from darkness to the light of Christ, and from the
power of Satan unto God.
I knew him not till the year 1660; from that time to the time of his
death I knew him well, conversed with him often, observed him much,
loved him dearly, and honoured him truly; and upon good experience
can say, he was indeed a heavenly-minded man, zealous for the name
of the Lord, and preferred the honour of God before all things. He
was valiant for the truth, bold in asserting it, patient in
suffering for it, unwearied in labouring in it, steady in his
testimony to it; immovable as a rock. Deep he was in divine
knowledge, clear in opening heavenly mysteries, plain and powerful
in preaching, fervent in prayer. He was richly endued with heavenly
wisdom, quick in discerning, sound in judgment, able and ready in
giving, discreet in keeping counsel; a lover of righteousness, an
encourager of virtue, justice, temperance, meekness, purity,
chastity, modesty, humility, charity, and self-denial in all, both
by word and example. Graceful he was in countenance, manly in
personage, grave in gesture, courteous in conversation, weighty in
communication, instructive in discourse, free from affectation in
speech or carriage; a severe reprover of hard and obstinate sinners;
a mild and gentle admonisher of such as were tender, and sensible of
their failings; not apt to resent personal wrongs; easy to forgive
injuries; but zealously earnest, where the honour of God, the
prosperity of truth, the peace of the church, were concerned; very
tender, compassionate, and pitiful he was to all that were under any
sort of affliction; full of brotherly love, full of fatherly care;
for, indeed, the care of the churches of Christ was daily upon him,
the prosperity and peace whereof he studiously sought. Beloved he
was of God; beloved of God’s people; and (which was not the least
part of his honour) the common butt of all apostates’ envy; whose
good, notwithstanding, he earnestly sought.
He lived to see the desire of his soul, the spreading of that
blessed principle of divine light, through many of the European
nations, and not a few of the American islands and provinces, and
the gathering many thousands into an establishment therein; which
the Lord vouchsafed him the honour to be the first effectual
publisher of, in this latter age of the world. And having fought a
good fight, finished his course, and kept the faith, his righteous
soul, freed from the earthly tabernacle, in which he had led an
exemplary life of holiness, was translated into those heavenly
mansions, where Christ our Lord went to prepare a place for his;
there to possess that glorious crown of righteousness, which is laid
up for, and shall be given by the Lord the righteous judge to all
them that love his appearance.
Ages to come and people yet unborn shall call him blessed, and bless
the Lord for raising him up. And blessed shall we also be, if we so
walk, as we had him for an example; for whom this Testimony lives in
my heart, “He lived and died the SERVANT of the LORD.”
T.E.
-----
Footnote 65:
(It was Thomas Ellwood who first transcribed this Journal for the
press. See note at p. 211, Seventh Edition, vol. ii.)
AN EPISTLE OF GEORGE FOX’S,
WRITTEN WITH HIS OWN HAND, AND LEFT SEALED UP WITH THIS
SUPERSCRIPTION, VIZ., “NOT TO BE OPENED BEFORE THE TIME;” WHICH
AFTER HIS DECEASE BEING OPENED, WAS THOUGHT MEET TO BE PRINTED,
VIZ.:—
“_For the Yearly and Second-day’s Meeting in London, and to all
the Children of God in all places in the world._
_By and from G.F._
“This for all the children of God everywhere, who are led by his
Spirit, and walk in his Light, in which they have life,
unity, and fellowship with the Father, and the Son, and one
with another.
“Keep all your meetings in the name of the Lord Jesus, that be
gathered in his name by his Light, Grace, Truth, Power, and Spirit;
by which you will feel his blessed and refreshing presence among
you, and in you, to your comfort, and God’s glory.
“And now, Friends, all your meetings, both men’s and women’s,
monthly, quarterly, and yearly, &c., were set up by the power, and
Spirit, and wisdom of God: and in them you know, that you have felt
his power, and Spirit, and wisdom, and blessed refreshing presence
among you, and in you, to his praise and glory, and your comfort; so
that you have been ‘a city set on a hill, that cannot be hid.’
“And although many loose and unruly spirits have risen betimes to
oppose you and them, in print and other ways, you have seen how they
have come to nought. The Lord hath blasted them, brought their deeds
to light and made them manifest to be trees without fruit, wells
without water, wandering stars from the firmament of God’s power,
and raging waves of the sea, casting up their mire and dirt; and
many of them are like the dog turned to his old vomit, and the sow
that was washed, turned again to the mire. This hath been the
condition of many, God knoweth, and his people!
“Therefore all stand steadfast in Christ Jesus, your Head, in whom
you are all one, male and female, and know His government, of the
increase of whose government and peace there shall be no end; but
there will be an end of the devil’s, and of all that are out of
Christ, who oppose it and him, whose judgment doth not linger, and
their damnation doth not slumber. Therefore in God and Christ’s
light, life, Spirit, and power, live and walk, that is over all (and
the seed of it) in love, in innocency, and simplicity. In
righteousness and holiness dwell, and in his power and Holy Ghost,
in which God’s kingdom doth stand. All children of New and Heavenly
Jerusalem, that is from above, and is free, with all her holy,
spiritual children, to her keep your eyes.
“As for this spirit of rebellion and opposition, that hath risen
formerly and lately, it is out of the kingdom of God and Heavenly
Jerusalem; and is for judgment and condemnation, with all its books,
words, and works. Therefore Friends are to live and walk in the
power and Spirit of God, that is over it, and in the Seed, that will
bruise and break it to pieces. In which Seed you have joy and peace
with God, and power and authority to judge it; and your unity is in
the power and Spirit of God, that doth judge it: all God’s witnesses
in his tabernacle go out against it, and always have and will.
“Let no man live to self, but to the Lord, as they will die in him;
and seek the peace of the church of Christ, and the peace of all men
in him: for ‘blessed are the peace-makers.’ Dwell in the pure,
peaceable, heavenly wisdom of God, that is gentle, and easy to be
entreated, that is full of mercy; all striving to be of one mind,
heart, soul, and judgment in Christ, having His mind and Spirit
dwelling in you, building up one another in the love of God, which
doth edify the body of Christ, his church, who is the holy Head
thereof. Glory to God through Christ, in this age and all other
ages, who is the Rock and Foundation, the Emmanuel, God with us,
Amen, over all, the Beginning and the Ending. In Him live and walk,
in whom you have life eternal; in whom you will feel me, and I you.
“All children of New Jerusalem, that descends from above, the holy
city, which the Lord and the Lamb is the light of, and is the
temple; in it they are born again of the Spirit; so Jerusalem that
is above, is the mother of them that are born of the Spirit. They
that come, and are come to heavenly Jerusalem, receive Christ; and
he giveth them power to become the sons of God, and they are born
again of the Spirit; so Jerusalem that is above is their mother.
Such come to heavenly Mount Sion, and the innumerable company of
angels, to the spirits of just men made perfect; and to the church
of the Living God written in heaven, and have the name of God, and
of the city of God, written upon them. So here is a new mother, that
bringeth forth a heavenly and spiritual generation.
“There is no schism, no division, no contention, nor strife, in
heavenly Jerusalem, nor in the body of Christ, which is made up of
living stones, a spiritual house. Christ is not divided, for in Him
there is peace. Christ saith, ‘In me you have peace.’ And He is from
above, and not of this world; but in the world below, in the spirit
of it, there is trouble: therefore keep in Christ, and walk in Him.
Amen.
“Jerusalem was the mother of all true Christians before the
apostasy; and since the outward Christians are broken into many
sects, they have got many mothers: but all they that are come out of
the apostasy by the power and Spirit of Christ, Jerusalem that is
above, is their mother (and none below her), who doth nourish all
her spiritual children.”
G.F.
[This epistle was read at the Yearly Meeting in London, 1691.]
----------------------------
THE APPEARANCE OF THE LORD’S EVERLASTING TRUTH,
AND ITS BREAKING FORTH AGAIN IN HIS ETERNAL POWER, IN THIS OUR DAY
AND AGE IN ENGLAND—
Wherein the Lord’s mighty power and word of life hath been richly
and freely preached, to the gathering of many into reconciliation
with God by it; to the exaltation and glory of the great God,
through the bringing forth of the heavenly and spiritual fruits,
from such as have been gathered by his eternal light, power, and
Spirit, unto himself. And by the sowing to the Spirit in the hearts
of people, life eternal hath been reaped; that the flocks have been
gathered, which have the milk of the word plenteously; that the
riches of the word have flourished, and mightily abounded; and God’s
heavenly plough with his spiritual men hath gone on cheerfully, to
the overturning the fallow ground of the hearts, that had not borne
heavenly fruit to God. And God’s heavenly thrashers with his
heavenly flail, have with joy and delight thrashed out the chaff,
and the corruptions, that have been a-top of God’s seed and wheat in
man and woman. And thus have they thrashed in hope, and are made
partakers of their hope, through which God’s seed is come into his
garner.
O! the unutterable glory, and the inexpressible excellency of the
everlasting glorious truth, gospel, and word of life, that the
infinite, invisible, and wise God (who is over all), hath revealed
and manifested! And how have the professors, priests, and powers
risen up in opposition against his children, that are born of the
immortal Seed by the word of God! And, O! how great have the
persecutions, and reproaches, and spoiling of goods been, that have
been executed upon them! But notwithstanding these sufferings from
such as have touched them, and do touch them, which are as dear to
God as the apple of his eye, how hath the Lord manifested himself to
stand by them, in overthrowing powers, priests, and states! What
changes have there been since 1644, and 1650, and 1652! How have the
jails been filled since then in this nation with the heirs of life,
God’s chosen ones, who had no helper in the earth but the Lord and
his Christ! So that truth’s faithful witnesses were scarcely to be
found, but in jails and prisons, where the righteous were numbered
among the transgressors; who had neither staff nor bag from man, but
the staff, the bread of life, and the bag that holds the treasure
that waxes not old. But the Lord Jesus Christ, that sent them forth,
was their exceeding great supporter and upholder by his eternal
power and Spirit, both then and now.
G.F.
A CHRONOLOGICAL REGISTER OF THE PLACES VISITED
BY THE AUTHOR.
1643.—[Vol. I.]
He leaves home and goes to
Lutterworth,
Northampton,
Newport-Pagnell.
1644.
Barnet,
London,
Returns home—goes to
Coventry,
Returns home—goes to
Mancetter.
1645 and 1646.
Tamworth,
Coventry and other places.
1647.
Derbyshire,
Leicestershire,
Nottinghamshire,
Lancashire,
Dukinfield,
Manchester,
Broughton.
1648.
Nottingham,
Mansfield,
Derbyshire,
Leicestershire,
Warwickshire,
Leicester,
Nottinghamshire,
Vale of Beavor,
Nottinghamshire,
Mansfield,
Eaton, near Derby,
Mansfield,
Nottingham,
Clawson, in Vale of Beavor.
1649.
Nottingham, imprisoned,
Mansfield-Woodhouse,
Leicestershire,
Barrow,
Bagworth,
Coventry,
Atherstone,
Market-Bosworth,
Leicestershire,
Twy-Cross,
Derbyshire,
Chesterfield,
Kidsey-Park.
1650.
Derby, imprisoned a year.
1651.
Leicestershire,
Burton-on-Trent,
Bushel-House,
Lichfield,
Nottinghamshire,
Mansfield,
Derbyshire,
Yorkshire,
Doncaster,
Balby,
Wakefield,
Selby,
Beverley,
Cranswick,
York,
Burraby,
Cleveland,
Staithes,
Whitby,
Scarbro’,
Malton,
Pickering,
The Moors,
Cranswick,
Holderness,
Oram [supposed Ottringham],
Patrington,
Hull,
Balby,
Nottinghamshire,
Lincolnshire,
Gainsbro’,
Yorkshire,
Warmsworth,
Balby,
Doncaster,
Tickhill,
Balby.
1652.
Wakefield,
Hightown,
Bradford,
Pendle-Hill,
Wensleydale,
Hawes,
Grisdale,
Dent,
Sedbergh,
Firbank Chapel,
Preston-Patrick,
Kendal,
Underbarrow,
Crook,
Newton in Cartmel,
Lyndale,
Ulverstone,
Swarthmore,
Aldingham,
Rampside,
Swarthmore,
Dalton,
Isle of Walney,
Swarthmore,
Baycliff,
Gleaston,
Swarthmore,
Westmorland,
Kendal,
Grisdale,
Swarthmore,
Underbarrow,
Kellet,
Lancaster,
Kendal,
Underbarrow,
Swarthmore,
Ulverstone,
Swarthmore,
Westmorland,
Crossland,
Lancashire,
Ulverstone,
Swarthmore,
Isle of Walney,
Cockan,
Swarthmore,
Yealand,
Lancaster,
Kellet,
Justice West’s,
Swarthmore,
Westmorland,
Grayrig,
Cartmel.
1653.
Swarthmore,
Gleaston,
Lancashire,
Swarthmore,
Arnside,
Cumberland,
Col. West’s,
Swarthmore,
Cumberland,
Bootle,
Nr. Cockermouth,
Millom-in-Bootle,
Cockermouth,
Brigham,
Coldbeck,
Carlisle, imprisoned,
Coldbeck,
Westmorland,
Strickland-Head,
Swarthmore,
Coldbeck,
Wigton,
Bishoprick,
Northumberland,
Derwent-Water,
Hexham,
Gilsland,
Cumberland,
Langlands,
Brigham.
1654.
Swarthmore,
Lancaster,
Halifax,
T. Taylor’s (Brighouse),
Synderhill-Green
Yorkshire,
Holderness,
Thos. Taylor’s (Brighouse),
Balby,
Lincolnshire,
Derbyshire,
Nottinghamshire,
Skegby,
Kidsey-Park,
Peak Country,
Derbyshire,
Swannington,
Twy-Cross,
Warwickshire,
Drayton,
Swannington,
Leicester,
Whetstone,
Harborough,
London,
Theobald’s, near Waltham,
Whitehall,
Bedfordshire.
1655.
Luton (John Crook’s),
London,
Kent,
Rochester,
Cranbrook,
Rye,
Romney,
Dover,
Canterbury,
Cranbrook,
Sussex,
Horsham,
Steyning,
Reading,
London,
Essex,
Coggeshall,
Colchester,
Ipswich,
Mendlesham,
Norfolk,
Norwich,
Yarmouth,
Lynn,
Sutton, near Isle of Ely,
Cambridge,
Bishop-Stortford,
Hertford,
London,
Bedfordshire,
Northamptonshire,
Wellingborough,
Leicestershire,
Whetstone,
Sileby,
Drayton,
Baddesley,
Nottinghamshire,
Derbyshire,
Warwickshire,
Worcestershire,
Birmingham,
Chattan,
Evesham,
Worcester,
Tewkesbury,
Warwick,
Coventry,
Dun-Cow,
Leicestershire,
Baddesley,
Swannington,
Higham,
Northamptonshire,
Bedfordshire,
Baldock,
Market Street,
Alban’s,
London,
Ryegate,
Binscomb, in Godalming,
Horsham Park,
Arundel,
Chichester,
Portsmouth,
Ringwood,
Poole,
Southampton,
Dorchester,
Weymouth,
Honiton,
Topsham,
Totness,
Plymouth,
Cornwall,
Menheniot,
Penryn,
Helstone,
Market-Jew,
Ives, where he & Edward Pyot are taken into custody and imprisoned
in Launceston jail about eight months.
1656.
Humphrey Lower’s,
Loveday Hambley’s,
Thos. Mounce’s,
Launceston,
Oakhampton,
Exeter,
Collumpton,
Taunton,
Puddimore,
J. Dander’s,
Bristol, E. Pyot’s,
Slaughterford,
N. Crisp’s,
Marlbro’,
Newbury,
Reading,
Kingston-on-Thames,
London,
Buckinghamshire,
Northamptonshire,
Notts,
Lincolnshire,
Huntingdonshire,
Cambridgeshire,
Fen Country,
Crowland,
Boston (Lincolnshire),
Yorkshire,
Holderness,
Leicestershire,
Staffordshire,
Worcestershire,
Warwickshire,
Edge-Hill,
Warwick,
Bagley,
Gloucestershire,
Oxford,
Col. Grimes’s,
Nat. Crisp’s,
Cirencester,
Evesham,
London,
Kent,
Sussex,
Surrey,
Farnham,
Basingstoke,
Bridport,
Portsmouth.
1657.
Poole,
Ringwood,
Weymouth,
Dorchester,
Lyme,
Exeter,
Bristol,
Wales,
The Slone,
Cardiff,
Swansea,
Brecknock,
Pontemoil,
Shrewsbury,
Wm. Gandy’s (Cheshire),
Wales,
Montgomeryshire,
Radnorshire,
Leominster,
Tenby,
Pembrokeshire,
Pembroke,
Haverford-west,
Dolgelly,
Caernarvon,
Beaumaris,
Near Wrexham,
Flintshire,
Wrexham, and through every County in Wales,
West Chester,
Liverpool,
Richard Cubban’s,
Malpas,
Manchester,
Preston,
Lancaster,
Kellet,
Sands-Side,
Swarthmore,
Westmorland,
John Audland’s,
Kendal,
Strickland-Head,
Cumberland,
Gilsland,
Carlisle,
Abbey-Holm,
Langlands,
Pardshaw-Crag,
Scotland,
Dumfries,
Douglas,
Heads,
Badcow,
Highlands,
Heads,
Badcow,
Garshore,
Linlithgow,
Edinburgh,
Leith,
Edinburgh,
Heads,
Glasgow,
Badcow,
Highlands,
Stirling,
Burnt Island,
Johnstons,
Leith,
Edinburgh,
Johnstons,
Edinburgh,
Dunbar,
Berwick,
Morpeth,
Newcastle,
Northumberland,
Bishoprick,
City of Durham,
A. Pearson’s,
Cleveland,
Hull,
Pontefract,
G. Watkinson’s,
Scale-House,
Swarthmore,
Yorkshire,
Cheshire,
Derbyshire.
1658.
Nottinghamshire
Nottingham,
Warwickshire,
Northamptonshire,
Leicestershire,
Bedfordshire,
London,
Kingston,
Hampton-Court,
Kingston,
Isaac Penington’s
London,
Essex,
London,
Twickenham,
Reading.
1659.
London,
Essex,
Suffolk,
Norfolk,
Norwich,
Huntingdonshire,
Cambridgeshire,
London,
Surrey,
Sussex,
Hampshire,
Dorsetshire,
Ringwood,
Poole,
Dorchester,
Somersetshire,
Devonshire,
Plymouth,
Cornwall.
1660.
Land’s End,
Horse-Bridge,
Devonshire,
Somersetshire,
Bristol,
Olveston,
Nailsworth,
Nat. Crisp’s,
Gloucester,
Col. Grimes’s,
Tewkesbury,
Worcester,
Baddesley,
Drayton,
Twy-Cross,
Swannington,
Derbyshire,
Derby,
Nottinghamshire,
Synderhill-Green,
Yorkshire,
Balby,
Warmsworth,
Barton-Abbey,
Thos. Taylor’s (Brighthouse),
Skipton,
Lancaster,
R. Widder’s (Kellet),
Arnside,
Kellet,
Swarthmore, apprehended and imprisoned in Lancaster jail—an Habeas
Corpus is sent down and he is liberated on parole—he visits
Swarthmore,
Lancaster,
Preston,
Wm. Gandy’s (Cheshire),
Staffordshire,
A. Bickley’s Warwickshire,
Nuneaton,
London, appears to the writ, and is liberated by the King.
1661.—Visits
Essex,
Colchester,
Coggeshall,
London.
1662.
Bristol,
Wiltshire,
Berkshire,
London,
Leicestershire,
Skegby,
Barnet-Hills,
Swannington,
Leicester, imprisoned, but soon liberated.
Swannington,
Twy-cross,
Warwickshire,
Northamptonshire,
Bedfordshire,
London,
Essex,
Norfolk,
Norwich,
Sutton,
Cambridgeshire,
Little-Port,
Isle of Ely,
Lincolnshire,
Huntingdonshire.
Fen Country,
Lynn.
1663.—[Vol. II.]
Norfolk,
Suffolk,
Essex,
Hertfordshire,
London,
Kent,
Ashford,
Cranbrook,
Tenterden,
Newick,
Hampshire,
Southampton,
Pouner,
Wiltshire,
Dorsetshire,
Topsham,
Totness,
Kingsbridge,
Plymouth,
Cornwall,
Falmouth,
Penryn,
Helstone,
Land’s End,
Redruth,
Truro,
Stoke,
Horse Bridge,
Devonshire,
Tiverton,
Collumpton,
Wellington,
Taunton,
Street,
Puddimore,
Bristol,
Slaughterford (Wilts),
Gloucestershire,
Herefordshire,
Hereford,
Radnorshire,
Wales,
Shropshire,
Warwickshire,
Derbyshire,
Staffordshire,
Whitehaugh,
Peak Country,
Synderhill-Green,
Holderness,
Scarbro’,
Whitby,
Malton,
York,
Boroughbridge,
Bishoprick,
Stainmoor,
Yorkshire,
Sedbergh,
Westmorland,
Lancashire,
Swarthmore,
Arnside,
Kellet,
Underbarrow,
Grayrig,
Sedbergh,
Strickland-Head,
Northumberland,
Derwent-Water,
Cumberland,
Wigton,
Pardshaw-Crag,
Westmorland,
Keswick,
Cartmel,
Swarthmore,
Kirby-Hall,
Swarthmore,
Holker-Hall,
Swarthmore,
Lancaster, imprisoned.
1664 and 1665.
Removed to Scarbro’ Castle.
1666.
Liberated by the King, after being incarcerated nearly 3 years—he
then goes
To Whitby,
Burlington,
Oram,
Marmaduke Stor’s,
Grace Barwick’s,
Richard Shipton’s,
Malton,
Hull,
Howden-Dyke,
York,
Geo. Watkinson’s,
Thos. Taylor (Brighouse),
Synderhill-Green,
Derbyshire,
Nottinghamshire,
Skegby,
Mansfield,
Nottingham,
Leicester,
Sileby,
John Penford’s,
Warwick,
Baddesley,
Northamptonshire,
Bedfordshire,
Buckinghamshire,
Oxfordshire,
London,
Kingston,
Reading,
Wiltshire,
Bristol,
Nat. Crisp’s,
London,
Essex,
Suffolk,
Norfolk,
Huntingdonshire,
Bedfordshire,
Nottinghamshire,
Lincolnshire,
Nottinghamshire.
1667.
Leicestershire,
Warwickshire,
Derbyshire,
Peak-Hills,
Staffordshire,
Cheshire,
Lancashire,
Sankey, near Warrington,
Jane Milner’s (Cheshire),
Shropshire,
Wales,
Denbighshire,
Montgomeryshire,
Merionethshire,
Shropshire,
Worcestershire,
Pashur,
Worcester,
Droitwich,
Shrewsbury,
Radnorshire,
Herefordshire,
Monmouthshire,
Ross,
Gloucestershire,
Bristol,
Wiltshire,
London,
Hertfordshire,
Baldock,
Waltham,
Shacklewell,
London,
Buckinghamshire,
Weston,
North-Newton, near Banbury,
Gloucestershire,
Monmouthshire.
1668.
Swansea,
Mumbles,
Cardiff,
Newport,
Shipton,
Forest of Dean,
Olveston,
Irb’s Court, Somerset,
Portishead,
Minehead,
Barnstaple,
Appledore,
Stratton,
Truro,
Land’s End,
Tregangeeves,
Devonshire,
Plymouth,
Kingsbridge,
Topsham,
Membury,
Ilchester,
Puddimore,
Somersetshire,
Dorsetshire,
Southampton,
Hampshire,
Farnham,
Surrey,
Sussex,
Kent,
London.
1669.
Surrey,
Sussex,
Warwick,
Birmingham,
Baddesley,
Nottingham,
Balby,
York,
Whitby,
Scarbro’,
Through Yorkshire,
Wolds,
Holderness,
Thos. Taylor’s (Brighouse),
Eldreth,
Staffordshire,
Cheshire,
Wm. Barnes’s (Sankey),
Liverpool,
Ireland,
Dublin,
New-Garden,
Bandon-Bridge,
Land’s End,
Bandon,
Cork,
Dublin,
Liverpool,
Lancashire,
Cheshire,
Gloucestershire,
Nailsworth,
Bristol,
Olveston,
Wiltshire,
Berkshire,
Oxfordshire,
Buckinghamshire,
London,
Essex,
Hertfordshire,
Cambridgeshire,
Huntingdonshire,
Leicestershire,
Derbyshire,
Warwickshire,
London.
1670.
Middlesex,
Buckinghamshire,
Oxfordshire,
Reading,
Banghurst (Hants),
Berkshire,
Surrey,
Guildford,
Sussex,
Kent,
Deal,
Canterbury,
Isle of Sheppy,
Rochester,
Gravesend,
Essex,
Hornchurch,
Stratford,
Gerrard Roberts’s,
Enfield.
1671.
Gerrard Roberts’s,
Shacklewell,
London,
Kingston,
Gravesend,
Downs,
Deal, sails for
Barbadoes,
Jamaica.
1672.
Maryland,
Long Island,
Rhode Island,
Providence,
Narraganset,
Shelter Island,
Long Island,
East Jersey,
Maryland,
Virginia,
Carolina,
Virginia,
Maryland.
1673.
Old England,
Shirehampton,
Bristol,
Gloucestershire,
Wiltshire,
Slaughterford,
Marlborough,
Oare,
Hampshire,
Oxfordshire,
Reading,
Buckinghamshire,
Kingston-on-Thames,
London,
Essex,
Middlesex,
London,
Kingston,
Surrey,
Kingston,
London,
Hendon,
Rickmansworth,
Aylesbury,
Adderbury,
Worcestershire,
Armscott,
Sent to Worcester jail, detained nearly fourteen months; at length
liberated by proclamation.
1674.
London,
Kingston,
London,
Dunstable.
1675.
Newport-Pagnell,
Northampton,
Cossall,
Warrington,
Preston,
Lancashire,
Swarthmore.
1676.
This year he remained at Swarthmore.
1677.
Poolbank (Westmorland),
Camsgill,
Brigflatts,
Sedbergh,
Garsdale,
Wensleydale,
Counterside,
Scarr-House in Langstroth-Dale,
Bishopdale,
Middleham,
Barton,
Bedale,
Northallerton,
Burrowby,
York,
Tadcaster,
Knottingley,
Doncaster,
Balby,
Ballowfield,
Stainsby,
Skegby,
Nottingham,
Wimeswold,
Sileby,
Leicester,
Knighton,
Swannington,
Hartshorn,
Baddesley,
Whittington,
Hartshill,
Dingley,
Adingworth,
Northampton,
Olney,
Turvey,
Kempston,
Ampthill,
Bullock’s-Hill,
Luton,
Market-Street,
Kensworth,
Alban’s,
South-Mims,
Barnet,
Gutterhedge,
Highgate,
London,
Sussex,
Surrey,
Worminghurst,
Worplesdon,
Kingston,
London,
Colchester,
Harwich,—sails for
Holland-lands at
Briel,—goes to
Rotterdam,
Delft,
Leyden,
Haarlem,
Amsterdam,
Buyckslote,
Purmerend,
Alkmaar,
Hoorn,
Enckhuysen,
Friesland,
Workum,
Harlingen,
Leeuwarden,
Dockum,
Strobus,
Groningen,
Appingdalem,
Delfziel,
Embden,
Leer,
Strikehuysen,
Deteren,
Apen,
Oldenburg,
Delmenhorst,
Bremen,
Overdeland,
Fisherholder,
Closeterseven,
Buxtehude,
Hamburg,
Elmshorn,
Itzehoe,
Hogenhorn,
Frederickstadt,
Hamburg,
Bormer-Haven,
Bremen,
Keby,
Oldenburgh,
Leer,
Embden,
Delfziel,
Groningen,
Strobus,
Dockum,
Leeuwarden,
Anderigo,
Gardick,
Leeuwarden,
Franeker,
Harlingen,
Amsterdam,
Landsmeer,
Amsterdam,
Haarlem,
Amsterdam,
Leyden,
Hague,
Delft,
Rotterdam,
Briel,—sails for England, lands at
Harwich,—goes to
Colchester,
Halstead,
Braintree,
Felstead,
Saling,
Chelmsford,
London,
Kingston,
Buckinghamshire,
Amersham,
Hunger-Hill,
Jordans,
Hedgerly,
Wycombe,
Turville-Heath,
Wycombe,
Henley,
Corsham,
Reading,
Berkshire,
Wiltshire,
Bristol,
Winterbourne,
Sudbury,
Tedbury,
Nailsworth,
Finchcomb,
Nailsworth.
1678.
Cirencester,
Crown-Allins,
Cheltenham,
Stoke-Orchard,
Tewkesbury,
Worcester,
Pershore,
Evesham,
Ragley,
Stratford,
Lamcote,
Armscott,
Oxfordshire,
Sibford,
North-Newton,
Banbury,
Adderbury,
Buckinghamshire,
Long-Crendon,
Ilmer,
Mendle,
Weston,
Cholesbury,
Chesham,
Isaac Penington’s,
Hertfordshire,
Chorleywood,
Watford,
Hemel-Hempstead,
Market-Street,
Luton,
Alban’s,
South-Mims,
Barnet,
Hendon,
London,
Hertford,
Rabley-Heath,
Stevenage,
Baldock,
Hitchin,
Ashwell,
Bedfordshire,
Huntingdon,
Ives,
Northamptonshire,
Great-Bowden,
Saddington,
Wigston,
Knighton,
Leicester,
Sileby,
Swannington,
Warwickshire,
Staffordshire,
Monyash,
Yorkshire,
Hill,
Kellet,
Arnside,
Swarthmore, where he remained about a year.
1680.
Westmorland,
Lancashire,
Yorkshire,
York,
Barton,
Nottinghamshire,
Derbyshire,
Leicestershire,
Warwickshire,
Warwick,
Southam,
Radway,
North-Newton,
Banbury,
Gloucestershire,
Northamptonshire,
Biddlesden,
Lillingston-Lovel,
Bugbrook,
Stony-Stratford,
Bedfordshire,
Dunstable,
Market-Street,
Alban’s,
Mims,
Barnet,
Gutterhedge,
London,
Surrey,
Sussex,
Kingston,
Worplesdon,
Guildford,
Esher,
Capel,
Patchgate,
Worminghurst,
Bletchington,
Horsham,
Ifield,
Reigate,
Gatton, Kingston,
Hammersmith,
Battersea,
Wandsworth,
Kensington,
Hendon,
London,
Edmonton,
Hertford,
Waltham-Abbey,
Edmonton,
Shacklewell,
London.
1681.
Kingston-on-Thames,
London,
Waltham-Abbey,
Flamstead-Heath,
Edmonton,
Enfield,
Winchmore-Hill,
London,
Sussex,
London,
Edmonton,
Buckinghamshire,
Henley,
Reading,
Oare,
Oxfordshire,
Warborough,
Ilmer,
Mary Penington’s,
Hunger-Hill,
Watford,
Uxbridge,
Longford,
Staines,
Sunbury,
Kingston,
Wandsworth,
Hammersmith,
London.
1682.
Dalston,
London,
Kingston,
London.
1683.
Kingston-on-Thames,
London,
Guildford,
Worminghurst,
Sussex,
Surrey,
Kingston,
London,
Kingston-on-Thames,
London,
Kingston,
London,
Essex,
Dalston,
London,
Kingston,
London,
Enfield,
London.
1684.
Colchester,
Harwich—sails for
Briel in Holland,
Rotterdam,
Amsterdam,
Friesland,
Leeuwarden,
Franeker,
Harlingen,
Amsterdam,
Osan-over,
Landsmeer,
Amsterdam,
Sardam,
Alkmaar,
Amsterdam,
Haarlem,
Rotterdam,
Briel—sails for
Harwich,
Colchester,
Witham,
Hare Street,
William Mead’s,
Enfield,
Dalston,
London.
1685.
South Street,
Ford-Green,
Enfield,
Waltham-Abbey,
Enfield,
Edmonton-Side,
London,
South Street,
Enfield,
London,
Epping Forest,
London,
Kingston,
Hammersmith,
London,
Bethnal-Green,
London,
Enfield.
1686.
London,
Bethnal-Green,
Enfield,
Chiswick,
London,
Kingston.
1687.
London,
Gooses (Essex),
London,
Edmonton,
South-Street,
Winchmore-Hill,
Bury-Street,
Enfield,
Hertford,
Waltham-Abbey,
Gooses (W. Mead’s),
Wanstead,
Barking,
John Harding’s,
Gooses,
London,
Kingston,
Guildford,
Kingston,
Chiswick,
Hammersmith,
London,
1688.
Enfield,
Barnet,
Waltham-Abbey,
London,
Gooses,
Barking,
Waltham-Abbey,
Hoddesdon,
Enfield,
South-Street,
Ford-Green,
Winchmore-Hill,
London,
Gooses.
1689.
London,
Southgate,
London,
Kingston,
Hammersmith,
London,
Tottenham-High-Cross,
Winchmore-Hill,
Enfield,
London,
Gooses.
1690.
London,
Kingston,
Tottenham-High-Cross,
Ford-Green,
Enfield,
Cheshunt,
Waltham-Abbey,
Enfield,
Tottenham,
Winchmore-Hill,
Hertford,
Ware,
Edmonton,
Tottenham,
London,
Tottenham,
Ford-Green,
Tottenham,
Enfield,
Winchmore-Hill,
Ford-Green,
London, where he died the 13th of 11th Month, 1690, in his 67th
year.
TEXTS OF SCRIPTURE.
OCCURRING IN THIS JOURNAL.
OLD TESTAMENT.
Ch. Ver. Reference.
Genesis.
4 2, ii. 480.
4 7, i. 355.
6 9, ii. 480.
9 20, ii. 480.
13 — ii. 480.
13 16, ii. 447.
15 5, ii. 447.
15 13, 14, ii. 448.
21 12, ii. 481.
22 17, 18, ii. 447.
26 12, 14, ii. 481.
32 28, ii. 477.
46 32, 34, ii. 481.
Exodus.
3 1, 4, ii. 481.
14 13, i. 355.
15 21, ii. 406.
20 1, ii. 157.
20 25, ii. 451.
22 20, ii. 450.
23 18, ii. 451.
Leviticus.
2 13, ii. 418, 452.
21 — ii. 468.
Numbers.
19 — ii. 468.
31 — ii. 469.
Deuteronomy.
19 14, ii. 480.
27 17, ii. 480.
29 5, ii. 496.
Judges.
5 1-31, ii. 406.
1 Samuel.
2 10, ii. 406.
15 22, ii. 453.
17 15, 28, ii. 481.
1 Kings.
19 19, ii. 481.
2 Kings.
22 14, ii. 406.
2 Chronicles.
34 22, ii. 406.
Ezra.
4 2, 3, ii. 452.
Nehemiah.
9 — ii. 226.
Job.
36 10-12, ii. 418.
38 7, ii. 461.
Psalms.
1 5, ii. 468.
19 2, i. 9.
37 28, ii. 447.
51 17, ii. 451.
76 2, ii. 418.
78 51, 60, ii. 418.
82 1, ii. 468.
89 36, ii. 447.
92 13, 14, ii. 478.
93 5, ii. 478.
102 28, ii. 447.
107 22, ii. 451.
141 2, ii. 451.
149 4, ii. 414.
Proverbs.
8 15, ii. 468.
15 8, ii. 452.
15 25, ii. 414.
17 1, ii. 452.
Ecclesiastes.
5 1, ii. 452.
Isaiah.
1 4, ii. 447.
1 11, ii. 452.
2 2, ii. 495.
2 5, ii. 478.
2 12, ii. 414.
5 7, ii. 477.
11 9-12, ii. 494.
19 19, 25, ii. 112.
23 — ii. 421.
32 15, i. 10.
42 1, 6-8, ii. 495.
43 6, ii. 461.
49 6, i. 353, 370.
56 — i. 203; ii.
430.
57 3, 4, ii. 447.
57 6, ii. 421.
57 13, ii. 495.
57 15, ii. 451.
59 20, 21, ii. 448, 494.
60 1, 3, 5, 13, 18, 20, ii. 495.
66 1, 2, 3, ii. 451, 495.
Jeremiah.
2 24, ii. 419.
3 8, 9, ii. 419.
5 — i. 203.
5 7, 31, i. 109; ii.
419.
13 27, ii. 419.
14 — i. 203.
22 29, i. 16.
23 — i. 204.
23 1, ii. 431.
28 — ii. 431.
31 1, ii. 460.
44 — ii. 419.
Lamentations.
1 — ii. 420.
Ezekiel.
13 — i. 203; ii.
431.
14 — i. 203.
16 — ii. 420.
17 20, ii. 420.
23 — ii. 420.
Daniel.
2 44, ii. 467.
Hosea.
1 10, ii. 460.
2 — ii. 420.
4 14, ii. 451.
10 — ii. 420.
Joel.
2 28, i. 351; ii. 406, 462.
Amos.
1 1, ii. 481.
7 13-15, ii. 481.
Jonah.
2 — ii. 451.
Micah.
3 — i. 203; ii.
431.
Malachi.
1 — ii. 451.
4 1, ii. 414.
NEW TESTAMENT.
Ch. Ver. Reference.
Matthew.
3 2, ii. 456.
4 17, ii. 456.
4 18, 19, 21, 22, ii. 481.
5 — i. 523; ii.
227, 423.
5 45, 48, i. 464; ii.
462.
9 9, ii. 482.
9 13, ii. 453.
11 11, i. 32.
12 36, i. 354.
13 38, 39, 43, ii. 461.
16 27, i. 354.
19 29, ii. 466.
20 — i. 355.
23 — i. 175, 203.
23 13, ii. 461.
24 14, ii. 112.
25 15-30, i. 354.
25 40, 45, ii. 471.
26 39, i. 4.
27 46, i. 4.
28 18, 19, i. 349; ii.
449, 467.
Mark.
1 14, 15, ii. 456.
4 11, ii. 461.
6 12, ii. 456.
9 49, 50, ii. 418, 452.
12 33, 34, ii. 451.
13 10, ii. 112.
Luke.
1 20, ii. 157.
1 41-55, ii. 407.
2 36-38, ii. 407.
6 20, ii. 461.
7 28, ii. 461.
11 52, ii. 461.
12 23, ii. 414.
12 32, ii. 461.
13 3, 5, ii. 456.
15 1, 2, 7, 10, ii. 456.
16 16, i. 32; ii.
461.
20 37, 38, ii. 469.
22 19, i. 341.
22 29, ii. 461.
24 10, 11, 22, ii. 407.
24 47, ii. 457.
22 36, i. 495.
John.
1 4, i. 370.
1 9, i. 353.
1 13, 12, ii. 462.
1 29, ii. 156.
3 3, 5, 6, ii. 459.
3 16, 36, ii. 465.
3 18-20, i. 353; ii.
113.
3 34, i. 350.
4 14, ii. 466.
4 23, 24, ii. 423.
5 24, 39, 40, ii. 466.
5 44, i. 38.
5 47, ii. 157.
6 44, ii. 458.
6 27, ii. 466.
8 12, i. 370.
10 — ii. 422.
11 27, ii. 466.
12 36, 46, i. 370.
14 1-3, ii. 477.
14 6, ii. 458.
16 — i. 175.
16 8, 13, 14, i. 351.
17 22, ii. 495.
18 36, ii. 467.
20 17, ii. 406.
21 2-7, ii. 482.
Acts.
2 17, 18, i. 406.
2 31, ii. 439.
2 36, ii. 477.
2 38, ii. 457.
3 22, 23, ii. 156.
5 3, ii. 426.
7 48, i. 91.
9 4, ii. 471.
17 24, i. 91.
17 30, ii. 457.
18 3, ii. 482.
18 26, ii. 406.
20 28, i. 131.
21 9, ii. 275.
26 20, ii. 457.
Romans.
1 — i. 254.
1 4, ii. 449.
1 16, ii. 480.
1 19, i. 351.
2 14, 15, i. 352.
4 15, i. 17.
5 6, i. 395.
5 14, i. 33.
8 2, i. 17.
8 9, 10, i. 354; ii.
423.
8 14-17, ii. 460.
9 16, i. 355.
9 26, ii. 460.
11 11, ii. 495.
12 1, ii. 452.
12 3, i. 354.
14 7-9, ii. 469.
14 11, ii. 407.
15 12, ii. 494.
15 16, ii. 452.
16 1-4, ii. 406.
1 Corinthians.
2 10, 11, ii. 462.
2 14, 15 ii. 425.
5 3, 12, ii. 425.
6 1-4, ii. 426.
6 20, ii. 452.
8 10, ii. 427.
11 5, ii. 406.
11 25, 26, i. 341.
12 7, i. 352.
14 34, ii. 405.
15 47, 69, ii. 469.
2 Corinthians.
4 6, i. 371.
4 7, ii. 469.
5 1, ii. 477.
5 1, 2, 4, ii. 469.
5 15, i. 395.
6 14-16, ii. 427.
6 18, ii. 461.
10 4, ii. 423.
11 — ii. 426.
Galatians.
1 — ii. 427.
2 4, 5, ii. 427.
2 20, ii. 469.
3 28, ii. 407.
4 4-7, ii. 460.
4 25-27, ii. 102.
6 10, ii. 477.
Ephesians.
2 2, i. 353.
2 5, 7, i. 420.
2 8, i. 354.
2 19, ii. 477.
3 9, i. 354.
4 7, i. 353.
4 13, i. 354.
5 2, ii. 453.
Phillipians.
1 15, i. 339.
2 11, ii. 407.
2 15, 16, ii. 462.
4 3, ii. 405.
Colossians.
1 13, ii. 462.
1 26-28, ii. 449.
2 10, ii. 449.
3 6, i. 353.
4 11, ii. 462.
1 Thessalonians.
2 12, ii. 462.
2 2, 3, ii. 440.
1 Timothy.
2 4, ii. 112.
2 9, ii. 413.
2 12, ii. 405.
4 1, ii. 429.
2 Timothy.
2 19, i. 354.
3 — ii. 430.
Titus.
2 3, 4, ii. 405.
11, 12, 15, i. 352, 395.
Hebrews.
1 — ii. 351.
1 1, ii. 179, 200.
2 10, ii. 461.
3 5, ii. 477.
3 15, ii. 201.
4 10, ii. 408.
6 1-6, ii. 430.
12 25, ii. 201.
James.
2 5, ii. 460.
3 — ii. 429.
4 1, 2, 3, i. 495.
5 — i. 523; ii.
227.
5 12, i. 199.
1 Peter.
1 14, 15, ii. 413.
1 23, ii. 460.
2 2, ii. 460.
2 5, ii. 452, 460.
2 9, ii. 477.
2 25, ii. 422.
3 3-5, ii. 412.
4 10, 11, i. 354.
2 Peter.
1 13, 14, ii. 469.
1 19, i. 42.
2 4, 18, 22, ii. 427.
1 John.
1 2, ii. 466.
1 8, 10, ii. 217.
2 26, 27, i. 307.
2 14, ii. 461.
2 27, i. 7.
2 29, ii. 459.
3 1, 2, ii. 459.
3 12, ii. 426.
4 1, ii. 426.
4 7, 8, ii. 459.
5 1, ii. 459.
5 11, 12, ii. 466.
Jude.
4, ii. 113.
6, ii. 426.
Revelation.
2 — ii. 201.
3, ii. 429.
12 — i. 175.
12 1, ii. 437.
17 — ii. 421.
17 4, ii. 414.
18 — i. 175; ii.
421.
18 16, ii. 414.
19 — ii. 421.
19 16, ii. 467.
21 7, ii. 461.
22 18, ii. 157.
PARTICULARS OF THE ENGLISH EDITIONS
OF
THE JOURNAL OF GEORGE FOX.
=A.=—FIRST EDITION, _1694_.—“A JOURNAL or Historical
Account of the Life, Travels, Sufferings, Christian
Experiences and Labour of Love in the =Work of the
Ministry=, of that Ancient, Eminent and Faithful Servant
of JESUS CHRIST, George Fox; Who departed this Life in great
Peace with the LORD, the 13_th_ of the 11_th_ Month, 1690.
=The First Volume.=”[A]
Footnote A:
The Second Vol. was a Collection of Epistles, etc.,
published by Tace Sowle, 1698.
Dan. 12. 3.—“_And they that turn many to Righteousness, shall
shine as the_ Stars _for ever and ever._” Verse 4.—“_Many
shall run to and fro; and Knowledge shall be Encreased._”
2 Tim. 2. 12.—“_If we suffer, we shall also reign with him_;
(i.e. with _Christ_.”)
_LONDON_: Printed for =Thomas Northcott=, in _George-Yard_
in _Lombard-Street_, M DC XCIV. Folio.
Preface 48 pp., Testimonies pp. i-xviii, Journal pp. 1-200,
201_*-288_*, 189-632, and 16 pages of Tables. Total number of
pages 796.
The Tables are (i.) Names of Countries, etc.; (ii.) Names of
Friends, etc.; (iii.) Subject Matters; (iv.) Catalogue of
Epistles.
This edition was edited by Thomas Ellwood and published with and
without the Preface by Wm. Penn (printed by Tace Sowle, 1694).
Most of the copies of this edition extant contain a reprint of
pages 309, 310, which was inserted by request, in place of the
original leaf, soon after publication of the volume.
A circular with proposals for reprinting the Journal, issued in
1708, states that it was “out of Print, and very Scarce these
Four or Five Years past, Advanced to, and sold for 20_s._
_per_ Book, whereas the first Price was but 13_s._”
_B._—SECOND EDITION.—(But not so called on title page), _1709_.
Same title as =A=.
_LONDON_: Printed and Sold by _J. Sowle in White-Hart-Court_ in
_Gracious-street_, 1709. In two parts, 8vo., pt. i., pp.
lxxii, 592., pt. ii., pp. 580 and 36 pages of Tables as in
_A_.
The above-mentioned, 4to. circular of “Proposals for
Re-printing the Journal,” etc., states that the Journal
would be put to the press when the number of subscribers
amounted to 500, and that the price would be Seven Shillings
and Sixpence to subscribers,[B] “bound in Calves Leather.”
The volumes were to be “about the bigness of _R. Barclay’s_
Apology,” and the text “Corrected from some Mistakes which
passed in the former Impression.”
Footnote B:
The advertised price was Ten Shillings.
=C.=—THIRD EDITION, _1765_.—Same title as _A_, but
omitting date of death, and part of Scripture quotations. “The
Third Edition corrected.”
LONDON: Printed by W. RICHARDSON and S. CLARK. Sold by LUKE
HINDE in George-Yard, Lombard-Street, and the Booksellers in
London and Westminster. M.DCC.LXV. Folio, pp. lix., 679 and 27
pages of Indexes as in _A_.
Corrected by Joseph Phipps; and in which a large number of
unnecessary words no longer appear. It is supposed that the
following folio circular, though undated, refers to this
edition, “Proposals for Printing by Subscription, in one
Volume in Folio, a New Edition of the Journal ... of ...
George Fox. ... The Conditions: I. The Book will contain
upwards of Two Hundred Sheets, and shall be printed on a
fine Paper, and with a curious new Letter of this Size. II.
The Price to the Subscribers will be twelve Shillings per
Book in Sheets, fourteen Shillings in half-binding, or
sixteen Shillings neatly bound in Calves Leather and
letter’d on the Back. But in case the Number subscrib’d for
should exceed one Thousand, then the Subscribers shall have
an Abatement of one Shilling per Book. III. Four Shillings
per Book are to be paid at the Time of subscribing, and the
Remainder on the Delivery. Subscriptions are taken in by
LUKE HINDE, in _George-Yard, Lombard-Street_, London; of
whom Proposals may be had.”
=D.=—FOURTH EDITION.—Not known as an English edition, but
see under “American Editions.”
=E.=—FIFTH EDITION (but not so called on title page)
_1827_.—Same title as =A=.
=London=: Printed by W. Phillips, George Yard, Lombard
Street, 1827, _from the First Edition_, printed for Thomas
Northcott, in George Yard, in Lombard Street, 1694. In two
volumes large 8vo., vol. i. pp. lxxiv. 75-506; vol. ii. pp.
452 and 35 pages of Tables as in =A=. Price
Twenty-four Shillings.
=F.=—SIXTH EDITION, _1836_.—Same title as =A=,
with addition of “Sixth Edition—in two Volumes.”
LEEDS: Printed by Anthony Pickard. M DCCC XXXVI. Small 8vo.,
vol. i., pp. I.-VIII., i.-lxxxii., 83-556; vol. ii., pp. 488
and 75 pages of Addenda and Indexes.
Printed for Joshua Kaye and George North Tatham, Leeds.
Edition of 5,000 copies, sold at six shillings per copy.
Contains Advertisement by the Editors, who state it was
collated with the first and third editions. Special work
seems to have been done on the Indexes, which include Texts
of Scripture, Chronological Arrangement, etc.
=G.=—SEVENTH EDITION, _1852_.—Title, “Journal of George
Fox; being an Historical Account of the Life, ... [as
=A=.] Seventh Edition—in two Volumes, with Notes
Biographical and Historical, etc., by Wilson Armistead.”
LONDON: W. and F. G. Cash (late Gilpin), Bishopsgate Street, ...
M DCCCLII. 8vo., vol. i., pp. xiv., 409; vol. ii., pp. ix.,
354, and 58 pages of Appendix and Indexes, but omission of
Catalogue of Epistles, etc.
Printed by W. G. Blackie and Co., Villafield, Glasgow, from
=F=. For the first time divided into chapters and
supplied with Introduction and Table of Contents. Price five
shillings.
=H.1.=—EIGHTH (and Bi-Centenary) EDITION, _1891_.—Title
as =G=, but omitting part of Scripture quotation.
“Eighth (and Bi-Centenary) Edition, in two volumes.”
LONDON: Friends’ Tract Association; Edward Hicks, Junr.,
Publisher, 14, Bishopsgate Street Without, 1891. 8vo., vol.
i., pp. lxii., 537; vol. ii., pp. xvi., 507, and 61 pages of
Appendix and Indexes as =G=.
Carefully collated with the earliest editions; and in other
respects a reprint of =G=. Favouring
circumstances occurring about the time of the two-hundredth
anniversary of the death of George Fox, by the gift of two
Friends deceased, and assistance from others, these volumes
were produced at much less cost to purchasers than would
otherwise have been the case. The whole was printed and
stereotyped by Headley Brothers, Ashford, Kent; and
conducted through the press under the joint supervision of
Daniel Pickard, the revising editor, and of Frederick
Goodall Cash, Hon. Secretary of Friends’ Tract Association,
London. Price five shillings net.
500 copies were printed, and sold at five shillings each.
=H.2.=—EIGHTH EDITION, reprinted _1901_.—Title, “The
Journal of George Fox; being an Historical Account of his
Life, Travels, Sufferings, and Christian Experiences. In two
volumes.”
Published for the Friends’ Tract Association, by Headley
Brothers, 14, Bishopsgate Street Without, London, E.C.,
1901. 8vo. vol. i., pp. lxxii., 537, vol. ii., pp. xvi.,
507, 31 pages of Appendix as =H.1=, and 50 pages
of Particulars of Editions, and Indexes.
The text of this is reprinted by Headley Brothers, Ashford,
Kent, from the stereo plates of =H.1=. slightly
corrected, and has been furnished with greatly extended
Index to Persons and Places, further particulars of previous
editions and a Map, compiled by Norman Penney, Hon. Sec. of
Friends’ Tract Association. 500 copies were printed. Price
per copy five shillings net, including the map six shillings
and sixpence net.
NOTE.—An abridged edition of _The Journal_, under the title
“The Autobiography of George Fox,” edited, with Introduction,
by Henry Stanley Newman, was published in London and
Leominster [1886]. 4to. pp. xxxii, 406 and 16 pages of Index.
PARTICULARS OF THE AMERICAN EDITIONS
OF
THE JOURNAL OF GEORGE FOX.
----------------------------
1.—FOURTH EDITION, _1800_.—Title as _C_, but without Scripture
quotation. “Fourth Edition in two Volumes.”
New York: Printed by Isaac Collins, No. 189, Pearl Street, 1800.
Large 8vo.
It is possible that this, the first American edition, was
styled “Fourth Edition,” in sequence to the “Third Edition,”
published in England.
2.—FIFTH EDITION, _1808_.—Title as _C_. “The Fifth Edition,
corrected. In two volumes.”
Philadelphia. Printed for B. and T. Kite, No. 20, North Third
Street. Fry and Kammerer, Printers, 1808. Large 8vo., vol. i.,
pp. 542, vol. ii., pp. 485 and Index.
This edition rightly follows the Fourth (American) Edition, as
“The Fifth Edition,” but it was apparently not reckoned for,
when the English edition of 1836 was styled the “Sixth
Edition.”
3.—ANOTHER EDITION, _1831_.—Title as _C_. “Corrected by the first
edition.” In two volumes, forming vols. i. and ii. of _The Works
of George Fox_ (in 8 vols.).
Philadelphia: Marcus T. C. Gould, No. 6, North Eighth Street; New
York: Isaac T. Hopper, No. 420, Pearl Street. J. Harding,
Printer,[66] 1831. Large 8vo., vol. i., pp. 437, vol. ii., pp. 384
and 9 pages of Index.
4.—STEREOTYPE EDITION, no date. Title as =C=, but
incorrect reference to “Dan. xii. 1.”
Philadelphia: Published at Friends’ Book Store, No. 84, Mulberry
Street. Large 8vo., pp. liv., 662 and 10 pages of Index.
From a Minute of the Meeting for Sufferings of Philadelphia Yearly
Meeting, under date of 12mo. 25, 1832, it seems that the
stereotype plates of the Journal were so nearly completed that
the Treasurer of the Yearly Meeting was authorised to pay for
same, and in the following 4th month, a bill passed the
Meeting for Sufferings for printing 500 copies of same.
Many of above particulars have been kindly supplied by
Morgan Bunting, George J. Scattergood, and Wm. C. Cowperthwaite,
of Philadelphia.
-----
Footnote 66:
The second volume has “Thomas B. Town and Co., Printers.”
INDEX I.
PERSONS AND PLACES.
-------
[Names of Persons directly connected with G. Fox, and of Places
visited by him, appear in capital letters.
Names of Persons and Places indirectly mentioned in _The Journal_
appear in small letters; indirect references are also preceded by
the word “mentioned.”
Names preceded by a * have footnotes respecting them, the pages on
which such footnotes occur being given in italic letters.
Words within [ ] represent additional information not to be found
in _The Journal_].
---------------------
ABBEY HOLM, i. 392.
*Aberdeen, ii. 233, _234_.
ABRAHAM, DANIEL, step son-in-law of G. Fox, ii. 521.
ABRAHAM, RACHEL, wife of D. Abraham, ii. 521.
_See_ FELL, RACHEL.
*ABRAHAMS, GALENUS, noted Baptist of Amsterdam, disputes with
Friends, ii. _310_;
visited by G. Fox, and partly convinced, ii. 401, 402.
ACTON, i. 15.
ADDERBURY, ii. 204, 319.
ADINGWORTH [ARTHINGWORTH], ii. 260.
ALBAN’S [ST.], i. 259; ii. 260, 319, 345.
ALDAM, JOHN, convinced, i. xlv.
*ALDAM, THOMAS, convinced, ii. 511;
with G. Fox at Warmsworth steeplehouse, i. 103, 106;
visits a Knight in Derbyshire, i. 198;
visits London, i. 213;
visits, with Anthony Pearson, the jails of England, i. 446;
rends his cap as a sign, i. _446_.
Aldborough Castle, ii. 403.
ALDINGHAM, steeplehouse visited, i. 120, ii. 513.
Alexandria, i. 518.
*Algiers, captives at, ii. _346_, 486.
ALGIERS, DEY of, written to, ii. 346.
ALKMAAR, ii. 273, 402;
Friends of, with G. Fox, ii. 268.
[ALLENDALE]. _See_ HUTCHINSON, HUGH.
AMERICA, i. xlviii, 338, ii. 141-196, 517;
written to, i. 1, ii. 98, 234, 345, 491, 501, 502;
Truth springs up, ii. 251, 527;
Friends of, visit London, ii. 404;
mentioned, ii. 133.
AMERSHAM, ii. 315.
AMOROCA RIVER, ii. 191.
AMPTHILL, ii. 260.
AMSTERDAM, ii. 267-272, 284, 290, 291, 292, 400, 402;
meetings for discipline settled, ii. 268, 290, 321, 400;
letters written here, ii. 268, 270, 285, 286, 288, 292, 295,
298;
Jews would not receive visit, ii. 311;
mentioned, ii. 273, 279, 282, 283, 287, 310, 313, 326, 401, 402,
483.
ANAMESSIC, ii. 192.
ANAMESSIC RIVER, ii. 191.
ANDERIGO, ii. 282.
ANDRIES, CORNELIUS, Friend, of Groningen, sufferer at Embden, ii.
282.
ANGLESEA, EARL OF, letter respecting G. Fox’s imprisonment at
Lancaster, ii. 56.
Angrogna Protestants persecuted, i. 434.
Antigua, visited by Thomas Briggs and William Edmundson. ii. 153;
Truth prospers, ii. 321, 504.
ANTROBUS, BENJ. [of London], signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
APPINGDALEM, ii. 275.
*APPLEBY, i. xlviii;
Jas. Naylor and Francis Howgill imprisoned here, i. _113_, 128,
142.
APPLEDORE, ii. 94.
APEN, ii. 276.
ARCHER, JUDGE, marriage trial at Nottingham, i. 520;
præmunires Friends at Exeter, ii. 94;
letter from G. Fox, ii. 94.
ARMINIANS dispute with Friends, i. 516.
ARMSCOTT, meeting in John Halford’s barn, ii. 204;
G. Fox sent hence to Worcester jail, ii. 205, 319.
_See_ CROWDER, DR.
ARNSIDE, i. 158, ii. 335;
general meeting here, i. 470, ii. 15.
ARUNDEL, i. 260.
ASHBURNHAM, JOHN, constable, of Ulverstone, i. 472;
judgment on his wife, ii. 73.
Ashfield, Col. [Richard], justice, of Scotland [and Staines],
convinced, i. 404.
ASHFORD (Kent), ii. 1.
[ASHGROVE]. _See_ FRY [WILLIAM].
ASHLEY, JOHN, friendly lawyer, ii. 224.
ASHWELL, ii. 332.
ASKEW, MARY, convinced at Swarthmore, ii. 513.
ATHERSTONE, chapel visited, i. 48;
dispute with several priests, i. 201-206.
Atherton, Godfrey, sent with letter to Countess of Derby, ii. 25.
Atherton, Oliver, father of above, imprisoned for tithes by
Countess of Derby, died in prison, body carried to Ormskirk for
interment, ii. 25, 26.
Atkins [Atkinson], Christopher, dishonoured Truth at Norwich, but
afterwards repented, i. 233.
ATKINSON, THOMAS, Friend, of Cartmel, ii. 19.
ATKYNS, JUDGE, his clerk visited respecting tithes, ii. 357.
*AUDLAND, JOHN, preacher at Firbank Chapel, i. _113_;
visited by G. Fox, i. 115, 122;
comes out in the ministry, i. xlv, 128, ii. 515, and travels to
Bristol, i. 190;
attends general meeting at Swannington, i. 199;
bids Paul Gwin repent, i. 330;
general meeting at his house, i. 391.
AUDLAND, ANN, wife of J. Audland, her house visited by constables
after G. Fox’s departure, ii. 15.
AYLESBURY, ii. 90, 204.
BADCOW, i. 394;
mentioned, i. 397, 404.
BADDESLEY (BAGLEY), i. 251, 256, 258, 335, 467, ii. 79, 104, 259.
BAGWORTH, steeplehouse visited, i. 47.
BAILY, CHARLES, turns aside from Truth, i. 506.
*BAILY, WM., Baptist teacher convinced, i. _261_;
in Barbadoes, ii. 159.
Baker, Daniel, travels for Smyrna, forsakes Truth, i. 518.
*BAKER, RICHARD, Friend, of Biddlesden, visited, ii. _344_.
BALBY, i. 101, 104, 105, 197, ii. 104, 259;
Richard Farnsworth and others convinced here, i. 79;
yearly meeting held here, i. 476-469, ii. 516.
BALDOCK, ii. 89, 332;
sick woman visited and convinced here, i. 258;
BALDOCK, ——, Baptist, and his wife convinced, i. 258.
BALL, RICHARD, of Whittington, visited, ii. 260.
BALL, NATHANIEL, ministering Friend, of North Newton, visited, ii.
91, 344.
BALLOWFIELD [i. 195], ii. 259.
*BANBURY, i. _79_, ii. 91, 319, 344.
BANDON BRIDGE, mayor’s wife convinced here, ii. 109;
G. Fox sees a vision, ii. 109.
BANGHURST [BAUGHURST], ii. 129.
BAPTISTS come into contact with Friends, i. 19, 25, 46, 69, 108,
166, 168, 179, 212, 228, 229, 231, 251, 254, 258, 261, 263,
399, 400, 409, 516, ii. 103, 125, 203, 269, 278;
they persecute Friends, i. 199, 251, 314, 530; ii. 64.
_See_ ABRAHAMS;
BAILY, WM.;
BALDOCK;
BENNET, COLONEL;
BROWN, CAPT.;
FISHER, SAMUEL;
GRITTON;
GWIN;
HILTON;
JONES, RICE;
OATES;
PACKER;
PICKERING;
WIGGAN.
BARBADOES, Paul Gwin met here, i. 330, ii. 152;
Friends banished to, ii. 68;
Friends here written to, ii. 98, 345, 489;
visited, ii. 144-159;
letters written here, ii. 145, 147, 150, 159;
mentioned, ii. 153, 168, 172, 176, 190, 193;
Friends prosper, ii. 321, 504;
Church order established, ii. 148.
BARBADOES, GOVERNOR OF, visited, ii. 152, 158;
letter to him, ii. 155.
*BARCLAY, ROBERT, disputes with students of Aberdeen, ii. 233;
travels with G. Fox in Holland, ii. 266, 268, 269;
returns to England, ii. _285_.
BARKING, ii. 456, 475.
BARNES, WM., meetings held in his house near Warrington, ii. 82,
106, 114.
BARNET, ii. 261, 319, 345, 473;
spiritual exercises here, i. 3, 4.
BARNET [BARDON] HILLS, i. 529, 530.
BARNSTAPLE, persecution here of Friends on returning from sea, ii.
94;
mayor written to, ii. 94.
BARROW (Leics.), i. 46, 47;
mentioned, i. 529.
BARTON, COL. NATHANIEL, justice and preacher, signs mittimus
committing G. Fox to Derby House of Correction, i. 51;
letters written to him and other justices, i. 53, 54, 65, 73.
BARTON [BURTON], (Lincs.), ii. 344.
BARTON, (Yorks.), ii. 256.
BARTON ABBEY, i. 469.
_See_ MONK BRETTON.
BARWICK, GRACE, general meeting at her house [at Kelk] in
Yorkshire, ii. 75.
[BASFORD]. See HAMMERSLEY, THOS.
BASINGSTOKE, i. 357.
BATEMAN, MILES, disputing at his house at Underbarrow, i. 116;
large meeting at his house, with headings of G. Fox’s address
there, i. 125.
BATHURST, CHARLES, his country house at Epping Forest visited for
rest and air, ii. 415, and letter written there, ii. 415.
BATTERSEA, ii. 346.
_Battledore, The_, written, published, and presented, i. 513.
BATTS, NATHANIEL, captain, ex-governor of Roanoke, visits G. Fox
in Carolina and asks about a woman in Cumberland who was said
to have been healed by G. Fox, ii. 184.
BAXE, RICHARD, meeting at his house [at Capel] in Sussex, ii. 130.
Baxter, Richard, Presbyterian, book by, referred to, ii. 414.
BAYCLIFF [BECKLIFF], i. 121;
Leonard Fell and others convinced here, i. 121.
*BEARD, NICHOLAS [of Rottingdean], convinced, i. _230_.
BEATON, WM., large meetings at his house at Puddimore, i. 328, ii.
95;
general meeting, ii. 12.
BEAUMARIS, visited with John-ap-John, i. 378;
letter to the magistrates, i. 381.
BEAUMONT, LORD, and soldiers arrest G. Fox at Swannington and send
him to prison at Leicester. i. 530-535.
BEAVOR [BELVOIR], VALE OF, many convinced, G. Fox’s spiritual
exercises during some weeks’ stay, i. 26, and his various
“openings” here, i. 29.
[BECKERINGS PARK]. _See_ CROOK, JOHN.
BEDALE, ii. 256.
*BEDFORDSHIRE, i. 225, 250, 258, 417, 536, ii. 79, 81, 260, 319,
332, 345;
magistrates enraged, i. _226_.
BENNET, COL., Baptist teacher, owner of Launceston Castle, i. 284;
releases G. Fox and fellow-prisoners, i. 321, 325.
BENNETT, GERVASE, justice, signs G. Fox’s committal to Derby House
of Correction, i. 51;
written to, i. 52, 54;
first uses the term Quaker, i. 58;
strikes G. Fox, i. 62;
presses him for a soldier, i. 72.
BENNETT, PRIEST, of Cartmel, i. 126, 157.
BENSON, FRANCIS, of Westmorland, visited, ii. 17.
*BENSON, GERVASE, justice, meeting with separated people at his
house, i. 112;
other meetings, i. 122;
his convincement, i. _139_, 142;
protects Friends, i. 156;
mentioned, i. 158, 171;
his wife visits G. Fox at Carlisle jail, she later suffers
imprisonment at York, i. 172;
he writes with Anthony Pearson to Carlisle justices, respecting
G. Fox, i. 177.
BENSON, PRIEST, of Cumberland, G. Fox disputes with, ii. 515.
BENTHAM, cruel treatment of G. Fox here, ii. 56, 57.
BERKSHIRE, i. 528, ii. 119, 130, 317;
monthly meetings settled, ii. 97;
record of a trial, ii. 103;
mentioned, ii. 358.
BERWICK, i. 413.
BETHNAL GREEN, ii. 434;
ancient Friend visited, ii. 419;
paper written here, ii. 419.
BEVERLEY, steeplehouse visited, i. 80;
account thereof given by noted woman of the place, i. 81.
BEWLEY, GEORGE, was darkened through visit to Blanch Pope at Loo,
but again became serviceable, ii. 7.
BEWLEY, THOMAS, visited at his house near Caldbeck, i. 166, 179,
180;
a general meeting at his house, ii. 15.
BICKLIFF [BRICKLEY], ANTHONY, great meeting at his house in
Warwickshire, i. 200;
visited, i. 484.
BIDDLESDEN (Bucks.), large meeting at an old abbey house, attended
by many Friends, ii. 344.
*BILLING, EDWARD, of Leith, his wife’s curious action, i. 399;
she is convinced and reunited to her husband, i. 399;
mentioned, i. _406_.
BILLING, GRACE, convinced during visit to G. Fox and E. Pyot in
Launceston prison, i. 315.
Bindlas, Sir Robert, his servants abuse Friends, i. 146.
*BINGLEY, WM., accompanies G. Fox and party to Holland, ii. 398;
visits Friesland with S. Waldenfield, ii. _400_;
signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
BINSCOMBE, in Godalming, meeting held here, i. 260.
BIRDET, ——, great meeting in his house, i. 95.
BIRKENHEAD, SIR JOHN, master of requests, obtains an order for G.
Fox’s release from Scarbro’ Castle, ii. 69.
BIRKHEAD, ABRAHAM, visited in America, ii. 182.
BIRKHEAD, SERGEANT, meeting at his house at Twickenham, i. 442.
BIRMINGHAM, ii. 104;
several convinced at a meeting here, i. 252.
*BISHOP, GEORGE, captain, of Bristol, at a meeting at Reading, i.
_231_;
interview with the mayor of Bristol, i. 462;
author of _New England Judged_, i. 512.
BISHOPDALE, ii. 256.
BISHOPRICK. _See_ DURHAM (County).
BISHOP-STORTFORD, i. 237.
BLACKMORE, MAJOR, his soldiers sent to apprehend G. Fox, but miss
him, i. 360.
BLACK ROCK, ii. 107.
*BLAKELIN, JOHN, of Drawell in Sedbergh, a kinsman of his visited,
i. 111;
at Firbank Chapel, i. 113, ii. 512;
visited, i. _122_, ii. 15, 255, 256;
comes out in the ministry, ii. 515;
reads a paper by G. Fox to one Otway when ill, i. 391.
BLETCHINGTON [BLETCHINGLEY], ii. 346.
BLOCK ISLAND, ii. 172.
BODMIN, i. 270, 284;
G. Fox and E. Pyot conveyed hither on the way to Launceston
prison, incident at the inn, i. 271.
Bohemia, persecutions in, i. 434.
BOHEMIA RIVER, ii. 165, 178.
*Bolton, i. _207_, ii. 32.
BOLTON, JOHN, and his wife attend a meeting at Binscombe through
frost and snow, i. 260.
BOND, NICHOLAS, discourses with a Jesuit, i. 428.
BOND, THOMAS, a prisoner at Yarmouth, i. 233.
Bonner, Bishop, ii. 51.
BONNER’S CREEK, ii. 184, 186.
Booth, George, insurrectionist, i. 450.
BOOTLE, steeplehouse visited, and rough treatment received, i.
159, 161.
BORMER-HAVEN, ii. 280.
BOROUGHBRIDGE, ii. 14.
Borwick, ii. 72.
Boston (America), i. 509, ii. 190.
BOSTON (Lincs.), i. 334.
BOTTOMLEY [BAUTHUMLEY], JACOB, a great Ranter, i. 199.
BOUSFIELD, MAJOR, visited in the Dales, i. 111.
BOWDEN, GREAT, ii. 332.
BOWLES, GEORGE [of Chalfont St. Giles], signs Testimony to G. Fox,
ii. 525.
BOWLES [EDWARD], priest, spoken to in York Minster, i. 83.
BOYES, PRIEST, of the Moors, accompanies G. Fox, i. 94.
BRADDEN, CAPTAIN, guards G. Fox at Launceston, i. 272, 273;
converses with him, i. 279.
BRADFORD, i. 108.
BRADFORD, ——, cousin of G. Fox, invites him to drink beer, i. 3.
BRADFORD, CAPTAIN, his house in Yorkshire visited, i. 195.
BRADSHAW, JUDGE, favourable to Friends, i. xlvi, 123.
BRAINTREE, ii. 314.
BRAITHWAITE, JOHN, reporter, convinced at Newton in Cartmel, i.
118.
BRASSEY, NATHANIEL, accompanies G. Fox to Holland, ii. 397.
BRECKNOCK, an uproar owing to preaching of Thomas Holmes and
John-ap-John, i. 361.
BREMEN, ii. 276, 350;
spiritual travail at, ii. 281.
BRICKLEY, ANTHONY. _See_ BICKLIFF, ANTHONY.
BRIDGE-TOWN, general meeting here, attended by many and
influential people, ii. 152.
BRIDPORT, i. 358.
BRIEL, THE, ii. 312, 313, 398, 403;
mentioned, ii. 266.
BRIERLIE, JAMES, visited at his home at Olney, ii. 260.
BRIGFLATS, great concourse at a meeting here, ii. 256.
*BRIGGS, THOMAS, convinced, i. _140_;
accompanies G. Fox into Kent and other counties, ii. 1, 2, 10,
to Ireland, ii. 107, 114,
into Hampshire, etc., ii. 129,
to America, ii. 141;
is taken ill in Barbadoes, ii. 153;
where he remains a while, ii. 159.
BRIGHAM, steeplehouse visited, i. 164, 184, ii. 515.
BRISTOL, i. 328, 329, 330, 360, 462, 527. ii. 12, 79, 87, 117,
195, 198, 317, 517, 518;
visited by J. Camm and J. Audland, i. 190;
home of E. Pyot near here, i. 199, 261, 277, 317, 328, 463, 527,
528,
and of G. Bishop, i. 231, 512;
mentioned, i. 301, 327, 329, 479, 529, ii. 93, 209, 219, 517;
its mayor, i. 462.
BRISTOL HARBOUR, ii. 197.
_See_ KINGS ROAD.
BRITLAND, PRIEST, of Chesterfield, partly convinced, i. 49.
BROADSTREET, SIMON, magistrate, of New England, visited in
England, i. 511.
Bromby, Thomas, sufferer in Lincoln prison, i. 225.
BROUGHTON (Leics.), great meeting of Baptists here, i. 19.
BROWN, ——, prophesies of G. Fox and others on his death bed, i.
20.
BROWN, CAPTAIN, a Baptist, of Barrow, his wife convinced, his fear
for her, his own late convincement, i. 529.
BROWN, JOHN, of Weston, men’s monthly meetings established at his
house, ii. 90.
BROWN, RICHARD, visited, ii. 94.
BROWNISTS, meet with Friends, i. 516, ii. 269.
BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, i. 333, 440, ii. 79, 90, 119, 128, 203, 260, 315,
317, 319, 344, 358.
BUGBROOK, ii. 344.
BULLOCKS HILL [PULLOXHILL], ii. 260.
BULL AND MOUTH, THE, ii. 376, 395.
BUNHILL FIELDS, ii. 507, 523.
BURLINGTON (Yorks.), ii. 75.
BURNTISLAND, i. 406.
*BURNYEAT, JOHN, convinced, i. xlv;
arrested in London, ii. 124;
meets with and accompanies G. Fox and party in America, ii.
_163_, 164;
travels in New England and Rhode Island, ii. 169-171;
accompanies G. Fox and others to William Penn’s at Worminghurst,
and with G. Fox answers a book by Roger Williams, ii. 264.
BURRABY (BURROWBY), i. 84, ii. 256-258.
*BURROUGH, EDWARD, reasonings with G. Fox, i. _116_;
begins his ministry, i. xlv, 128, ii. 515;
travels to London, i. 190, _258_;
attends a general meeting at Swannington, i. 199;
discourses with a Jesuit, i. 428;
interviews Charles II respecting the persecutions in New
England, i. 507;
decease, and G. Fox’s letter respecting it, i. 536.
BURTON, JUSTICE, is too late with a warrant to arrest G. Fox, i.
467.
BURTON, PRIEST, of Sedbergh, written to, i. 155.
_See_ SEDBERGH.
BURTON-ON-TRENT, i. 77.
BURY STREET, ii. 455.
BUSHEL-HOUSE, i. 77.
BUSHEL, T., Ranter, his vision of G. Fox, i. 87.
BUTCHER, JOHN, Signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
BUXTEHUDE, ii. 277.
BUYCKSLOTE, ii. 273.
[BUDOCK]. _See_ HODGES, F.
[? CAERLEON]. _See_ SLONE, THE.
CAERNARVON, i. 378.
*CALDBECK, i. 166, ii. 515;
steeplehouse visited, and Robert Widders ill treated, i. _179_.
CALVINISTS, dispute with Friends, i. 516.
CAMBRIDGE, education at University does not make ministers of
Christ, i. 7, 11, 386;
students molest Friends, i. 236;
the mayor and his wife friendly, i. 236, 237, 503, 536,
also the ex-mayor and his wife, i. 536.
CAMBRIDGESHIRE, i. 334, 453, 536, ii. 120.
CAMELFORD, PRIEST, of Newton in Cartmel, his chapel visited, i.
117.
CAMFIELD, FRANCIS, signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
*CAMM, JOHN, comes out as a minister, i. xlv, _128_, ii. 515;
interview with Cromwell, ii. 515;
travels to Bristol, i. 190;
meets G. Fox, i. 256, 335.
*CAMM, THOMAS, visited at his home at Camsgill, ii. _255_.
CAMSGILL, ii. 255.
Canaries, The, ii. 144.
CANNON, RICHARD, of London, appeals for G. Fox’s liberation from
Worcester jail, ii. 217.
CANTERBURY, i. 229, ii. 130;
the Bishop’s opinion of _The Battledore_, i. 513.
CAPEL, ii. [130] 346.
[CAPERNWRAY]. _See_ LEPER, THOMAS.
CARDIFF, ii. 92;
a justice friendly, i. 360.
CARLISLE, i. 159, 162, 392;
G. Fox imprisoned here, i. 166-178, 184, 189, ii. 515;
jailers’ cruelty, i. 171, 179;
Robert Widders imprisoned here, i. 179;
Robert Huntingdon visits the steeplehouse, i. 503;
Musgrave deputy-governor, ii. 16.
CARLISLE BAY, illness at Richard Forstall’s near here, ii. 145.
CAROLINA, ii. 183, 184, 186;
mentioned, ii. 187;
epistle sent to, ii. 491;
governor friendly, ii. 185.
CARTER-FORD, i. 472.
CARTMEL, ii. 512;
Priest Bennett’s steeplehouse visited, i. 157;
meeting at James Taylor’s, ii. 17;
home of Thomas Atkinson, ii. 19;
mentioned, i. 117, ii. 355.
CARTWRIGHT, JOHN, informed against at Droitwich for speaking a few
words before supper at a Friend’s house, ii. 133;
accompanies G. Fox and others to America, ii. 141;
visits Jamaica, ii. 153, 159,
New England, ii. 164, 168, 170,
Rhode Island, ii. 171,
Virginia, and Barbadoes, ii. 193.
CARY, ROBERT, meeting at his house in Plymouth, i. 264.
CASTLE-GREEN. _See_ LAUNCESTON.
*CATON, WILLIAM, convinced at Swarthmore, ii. 513;
travels in Kent, i. 227;
his _Journal_ and other writings, i. 227, ii. _484_;
mentioned, i. xlv.
CEELY, PETER, major and justice, of Cornwall, apprehends G. Fox,
Edward Pyot, and Wm. Salt, and commits them to Launceston jail,
i. 267-271, 276, 284, 476;
his mittimus, i. 277;
his conduct at the trial, i. 276-280, 293, 296, 476.
CHAMBERLAIN, COLONEL, of Barbadoes, visits G. Fox, ii. 145, 146.
CHARING CROSS, i. 485;
imprisonment at the Mermaid here, i. 209, 211, 213, 234.
Charles I., many of his judges executed, i. 485, 500.
CHARLES II. (the Restoration), i. 276, 414, 445, 476, 479, 490,
500, 503, 504, 505, 509, ii. 3, 9, 20, 27, 50, 66, 206, 210,
213, 219, 220, 222, 251, 252, 253, 254, 391, 516;
Friends not opposed to him, i. 476;
though no plotters on his behalf, i. 445, 498, 534, ii. 3, 20,
61, 210, 221;
he orders G. Fox’s release from imprisonment at Lancaster, i.
487, ii. 3;
orders Friends’ release, i. 490, 500, ii. 33, 120, 140;
visited by Margaret Fell and her daughters, i. 493, 500, ii.
120, 228, 516;
and by Thos. Moor, i. 500;
by Edward Burrough, i. 507;
by R. Hubberthorn, i. 490;
Friends present an address, i. 494, 521, ii. 225;
he grants a warrant for travel, i. 517;
stops persecution in New England, i. 507, 510;
receives a copy of _The Battledore_, i. 513, and other papers,
ii. 20, 245, 368.
_See_ JAMES II.
CHARLES, THOMAS, visited at his house at Adingworth, ii. 260.
CHATTAN [? CHARLTON], i. 252.
CHELMSFORD, meeting here attended by many Friend-prisoners, ii.
314.
CHELTENHAM, ii. 318.
[CHEPSTOW]. _See_ SHIPTON.
CHESHAM, ii. 319.
CHESHIRE, i. 363, 416, 484, ii. 83, 106, 114;
general men’s meetings, ii. 82, 374;
mentioned, i. 450;
Friends written to, ii. 374.
CHESHUNT, ii. 499.
CHESTER, i. 380;
mentioned, i. 503.
CHESTER, EDWARD, of Dunstable, visited, ii. 345.
CHESTER RIVER, ii. 165, 178.
CHESTERFIELD, i. 49;
mentioned, ii. 78.
CHETHAM, GEORGE, sheriff of Lancaster, his return to Charles II.
_re_ G. Fox’s imprisonment, i. 487.
*CHEVERS, SARAH, imprisoned in the Inquisition at Malta with
Katherine Evans, and released, i. _524_, 526.
CHICHESTER, i. 260.
China, Friends attempt to reach, i. 517.
CHISWICK, ii. 472;
Friends’ school here, ii. 434.
CHOLESBURY, ii. 319.
CHORLEYWOOD, ii. 319.
CHOWAN RIVER, ii. 184.
_See_ MACOCOMOCOCK RIVER.
CHRISTIANA RIVER, ii. 177.
CIRENCESTER, i. 335, ii. 318.
CLAUS, JACOB, accompanies Friends to Friesland as interpreter, ii.
400.
CLAUS, JOHN, of Amsterdam, interpreter, ii. 267, 274, 401, 402;
accompanies G. Fox and others in Holland, ii. 273, 275, 276,
284;
visits a Baptist teacher, ii. 278;
letters from G. Fox, ii. 326, 483;
his father-in-law’s home at Embden visited, ii. 276, 281.
CLAWSON, i. 29;
mentioned, i. 194.
CLAYPOLE, JAMES, of London, remarkable recovery from illness, ii.
377.
*CLAYPOLE, LADY, written to, i. _432_.
CLAYTON, ANNE, convinced at Swarthmore, ii. 513.
CLEVELAND, i. 84, 415, ii. 83;
Friends of, i. 84, ii. 258.
CLIFFS, THE, ii. 195;
general meeting held here, ii. 164;
and monthly meetings, ii. 164, 190;
another meeting held, attended by people of upper rank, ii. 183.
CLOSTERSEVEN, ii. 276.
COALE, HEZEKIAH, of Winterbourne, visited, ii. 317.
*COALE, WM., of Maryland, people of quality attend meeting at his
house, ii. _182_.
COBB, ——, Ranter, visits G. Fox at Charing Cross, i. 212.
COBB, SIR FRANCIS, visits G. Fox in Scarborough Castle, ii. 58;
asked to assist in G. Fox’s release, ii. 66.
COCK, ——, offers G. Fox tobacco at Kendal, i. 116.
COCKAN, meeting here where G. Fox was threatened with a pistol, i.
134.
COCKERMOUTH, notable meetings in steeplehouses here, i. 161, 163,
ii. 515.
COGGESHALL, meeting of 2,000 people, i. 231;
priest convinced near, i. 518.
COLBURN, CAPTAIN, justice, of Maryland, visited, ii. 191.
*COLCHESTER, i. 232, 518, ii. 265, 313, 314, 397, 398, 403;
mentioned, i. 172, _173_, ii. 313.
_See_ FURLY, BENJ.;
TALLCOAT, WM.
COLE, ——, of Chattan, assists a convinced Independent preacher, i.
252;
large meeting at his house, i. 252.
COLLUMPTON, i. 328, ii. 10, 12.
COMMITTEE OF SAFETY, i. 438, 443, 450, 498, ii. 251.
COMMON-PRAYER-MEN, meeting of, attended by G. Fox, i. 25;
mentioned, i. 95, ii. 116.
CONEY ISLAND, ii. 174.
Connecticut, ii. 171.
*CONWAY, LADY, visited at Ragley, ii. _319_.
COOPER, EDWARD, of Northampton, accompanies G. Fox, ii. 260.
CORBET, THOMAS, counsellor, of London, successfully defends G.
Fox, ii. 229.
CORK, ridden through despite the mayor’s four warrants, ii. 109.
CORNWALL, i. 265, 458, ii. 6, 9, 10, 94, 516;
Truth spreads in, i. 285, 301, 359, 461, ii. 4;
mentioned, i. 326, ii. 79, 91, 205, 207, 209;
G. Fox’s imprisonment in, i. 265-322, 476, ii. 4, 516;
wreckers written to, i. 458.
CORSHAM [CAUSHAM], ii. 317.
COSSALL, ii. 233;
girl reported well in answer to G. Fox’s prayer, ii. 233.
COSSALI [COLESHILL], ii. 207.
*Costrop, Richard, moved to go towards China, dies on shipboard,
i. _505_, 517, 518.
Cotton, Arthur [of Plymouth and Colchester], assists Friends,
prisoners on board ship, ii. 68.
COUNTERSIDE, ii. 256.
COVELL, RICHARD, his ship captured by the Dutch, ii. 195.
COVENTRY, i. 5, 6, 7, 47, 256;
mentioned, ii. 391.
CRADOCK, DR., priest, of Coventry, visited, i. 6;
disputes with G. Fox in Scarboro' Castle, ii. 63.
CRANBROOK, i. 227, 229, ii. 2.
CRANES ISLAND, ii. 180.
CRANSWICK, i. 81, 95.
CRASTON, THOMAS, justice, written to at Carlisle, i. 174.
CRAVEN, ROBERT, ex-sheriff of Lincoln, follows G. Fox to London,
i. 213;
is with him in Cambridgeshire, i. 334.
_See_ Lincoln.
Creed, ii. 205.
CRICKATROUGH, ii. 188.
CRISP [CRIPS], NATHANIEL, ex-justice, meetings at his house at
Tedbury, i. 331, 335, 466, ii. 318;
visited, ii. 79;
monthly meetings settled, ii. 87.
CRISP, STEPHEN, signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
*CROMWELL, OLIVER, Protector, mentioned, i. _68_, 158, 189, 207,
213, 215, 248, 251, 276, 277, 285, 363, 434, 438, 453, 475,
490, 500, 504, ii. 251;
G. Fox sent to him, i. 208, ii. 20, 515, and released, ii. 3,
210, 515;
their interviews, i. xlviii, 210, 234, 332, 333, 401, 432, 440,
476;
addressed by letter, i. 209, 223, 246, 268, 284, 363, 431, 432,
445, 446, ii. 245;
grants liberty of conscience, i. 255, 292;
favourable to Friends, i. 284, 318, 333;
Friends suffer under Commonwealth, i. 490, 522, ii. 251, 252;
warned by Lady Margaret Hambleton, i. 394;
interviewed by J. Camm and F. Howgill, ii. 515;
he is petitioned against Friends, i. 398, ii. 72;
he refuses to release Friends from prison, i. 446;
his death, i. 441, 447.
CROMWELL, RICHARD, Protector, mentioned, i. 441, 490, 522;
Friends petitioned against, ii. 72;
addressed by letter, ii. 245.
*CROOK, JOHN, ex-justice, of Luton [and Beckerings Park], meetings
at his house, i. 225;
also a general yearly meeting, i. 418-427;
accompanies G. Fox, i. _226_, 237, 254,
and visited by him, ii. 319.
CROOK, i. 117.
CROSSLAND [?CROSTHWAITE], i. 128.
CROSSLANDS, SIR JORDAN, governor of Scarborough Castle, visits G.
Fox there, ii. 58;
discharges him, ii. 70;
receives visit from him, ii. 105.
_See_ SCARBOROUGH.
CROUCH, EDWARD, of Stevenage, visited, ii. 382.
CROWDER, DR., priest [of Armscott], threatens Thos. Lower with an
action for defamation, ii. 211;
disputes with Geo. Fox in Worcester jail, ii. 212.
CROWLAND, a very rude place, i. 334.
CROWN-ALLINS [COLNE (SR.) ALWYNS], ii. 318.
CUBBAN [CUBHAM], RICHARD, visited, and his wife convinced, i. 381;
imprisoned for tithes, ii. 26;
dispute with Major Wiggan, ii. 35.
CUMBERLAND, i. 159, 180, 182, 392, ii. 16, 515, 516;
Truth springs up, i. 183, ii. 251;
mentioned, i. 173, 470, ii. 20;
Friends addressed by letter, ii. 83;
woman said to be healed by G. Fox’s prayers, ii. 184;
steeplehouses deserted, i. 392.
CUMMINS, THOMAS, requests of jailer of Lancaster jail a copy of G.
Fox’s mittimus, i. 475.
*CURTIS, THOMAS, of Reading, visits G. Fox in Launceston jail, i.
_326_;
has service in Cornwall, i. 326;
travels with G. Fox, i. 358, 471.
*CURTIS, ANN, wife of T. Curtis, visits G. Fox in Launceston jail,
i. 326;
and in Lancaster Castle, i. 479;
her father, i. _326_, 479.
DALES, THE (Yorks.), i. 110, 111, ii. 512.
DALSTON, epistles written here, ii. 368, 396;
widow Stot visited, ii. 396, 404.
DALTON, steeplehouse visited, i. 121, ii. 513, 514.
DANDER, JOHN, meetings at his house [at Hollowtrow], in
Somersetshire, i. 328, ii. 12.
Dantzic, magistrates written to, ii. 234, 485, and referred to,
ii. 287, 321, 422, 424, 483;
Friends written to, ii. 286, 483;
Friends of, ii. 268, 321, 422, 484;
mentioned, ii. 301, 326, 350.
DARCY, LADY ABIGAIL, convinced, ii. 86;
speaks to G. Fox about her husband, —— Pocock, ii. 86.
DARK-HOUSE, Lancaster jail, G. Fox imprisoned here, i. 474, 479.
D'AUBIGNY, LORD, visited respecting imprisonment of K. Evans and
S. Chevers in Malta, i. 524.
DAVENPORT, CAPTAIN, of Johnstons, visited, and becomes loving to
Friends, i. 409.
*DAVIES, RICHARD, of Welchpool, assists G. Fox in Worcester
imprisonment, ii. 229;
written to, ii. _374_.
DEAL, ii. 130, 142.
DEAN, FOREST OF, ii. 92.
DELAWARE, high-sheriff of, at G. Fox’s meeting, ii. 178.
DELAWARE BAY, ii. 176, 177.
DELAWARE RIVER, ii. 165.
DELFT, ii. 267, 311.
DELFZIEL, ii. 275, 282.
DELMANHORST, ii. 276.
Denbigh, suffering Friends written to, ii. 374.
DENBIGHSHIRE, ii. 83.
DENDRON, steeplehouse visited, ii. 513.
DENMARK, KING OF, ii. 277, 311;
written to, ii. 404.
DENNIS, COLONEL, meeting at his house [in Norfolk], i. 453.
DENT, i. 111.
DERBY, i. 467;
G. Fox imprisoned in House of Correction and common jail, i.
xlviii, 50-77 90, 467, 523, ii. 3, 20, 210, 511, and is
visited by various persons there, i. 56, 58 62, 67, 69, 70,
80;
jailer of, i. 57, convinced, i. 467, 523;
_See_ SHARMAN, THOS.;
letters written here, i. 52-66, 70-76;
mentioned, i. 27, 58, 524.
Derby, Countess of, imprisons Friends for tithes, ii. 25, 26.
DERBYSHIRE, i. 9, 25, 27, 49, 79, 197, 199, 252, 416, 467, ii. 13,
14, 78, 82, 120, 259, 344, 511;
Truth springs up, ii. 251;
mentioned, i. 530.
DERWENT-WATER, i. 181, ii. 15;
“the tall white old man,” aged 122 years, mentioned, ii. 15.
DESBOROUGH, MAJOR-GENERAL, officer concerned with G. Fox’s
imprisonment at Launceston, i. 270, 318-321.
DETEREN, ii. 276.
DEVONSHIRE, Truth spreads in, i. 301, 458, 461, ii. 6, 10, 94;
mentioned, i. 301, 302, 359.
DEVONSHIRE HOUSE, ii. 375.
DEWES, COLONEL, impressed with the Truth, in America, ii. 183.
*DEWSBURY, WM., convinced, with his wife, i. _79_, ii. 511;
his suffering, i. 179;
visited in Northampton prison, i. 209;
accompanies G. Fox, ii. 260;
meets him in Warwickshire, ii. 319, 344;
mentioned, i. xlv, 106.
DICKINSON, JAMES, convinced, i. 117, 122.
DILGER, EMANUEL, magistrate, of Dantzic, written to, ii. 485.
DINGLEY, ii. 260.
DIXON, ALEXANDER, meeting at his house at Grayrigg, i. 156.
DOCKUM, ii. 275, 282.
DODGSON, RICHARD, chief-constable, his death, ii. 73.
DOILY, BRAY, of Adderbury, visited, ii. 204, 206.
DOLGELLY, i. 376.
[DOLOBRAN]. _See_ LLOYD, CHAS.
DONCASTER, i. 79, 104, ii. 259.
*DOOMSDALE, Launceston jail, G. Fox imprisoned here, i. 282,
_283_, 284, 286, 318.
DORCHESTER, i. 261, 359, 457.
DORSETSHIRE, i. 456, ii. 6;
Truth spreads, i. 301;
men’s monthly meetings settled, ii. 95.
DOUGLAS, i. 394, ii. 516.
DOVE, LIEUT., meeting at his house, i. 414.
DOVER, i. 229, ii. 142;
governor of the Castle mentioned, ii. 254.
DOWES, SYBRAND, of Leeuwarden, visited, ii. 275, 282.
DOWNER, ANN, of London, serviceable to G. Fox in Launceston jail,
i. 283.
DOWNING, E., of Edinburgh, clerk of the Council, i. 400.
DOWNS, THE, ii. 141, 142.
DRAKES, JOHN, of Barbadoes, his marriage proposals thwarted by G.
Fox, ii. 146.
DRAPER, HENRY, justice, of Bishoprick, i. 180, ii. 14.
DRAWELL, ii. [15], 255, 256.
DRAYTON-IN-THE-CLAY, G. Fox’s birthplace, i. 1, 5, 200, 251, 277,
467.
DROITWICH, ii. 84;
mentioned, ii. 133.
DRURY, CAPTAIN, takes G. Fox to London from Leicester, i. 208-211.
DRY [ELIZABETH], WIDOW, cares for G. Fox in illness, at Enfield,
ii. 132.
DRY, THOMAS, accompanies G. Fox in Suffolk and Norfolk, ii. 80.
DUBLIN, ii. 108, 113.
DUKINFIELD, i. 18.
DUMFRIES, i. 394.
DUNBAR, i. 410-412.
DUNCAN, ROBERT, Friend, of Mendlesham, i. 233, ii. 265.
DUN-COW [DUNCHURCH], i. 255, 256.
DUNK, CAPTAIN, convinced in Kent, i. 227.
Dunkirk, i. 228.
DUNSTABLE, ii. 233, 345.
DURHAM (County), i. 180, 414, ii. 14, 83, 516;
Truth springs up, i. 183, ii. 251;
mentioned, ii. 20, 258.
DURHAM (City), i. 414, 415, ii. 73.
EAST FRIESLAND, ii. 276.
EAST JERSEY, ii. 166, 175.
EASTON, NICHOLAS, governor of Rhode Island, visited, ii. 168.
EATON, i. 27.
ECCLES, SOLOMON, accompanies G. Fox to America, ii. 141, 159;
left at Jamaica, ii. 160;
returns to Boston and banished to Barbadoes, ii. 190.
EDGE-HILL, i. 335.
EDINBURGH, i. 399, 400, 408, 410;
G. Fox called before the Council and banished from Scotland, i.
400, ii. 516;
Council written to, i. 402;
mentioned, i. 398, 400.
EDMONTON, ii. 346, 348, 354, 358, 409, 454, 500;
Christopher Taylor’s school here, ii. 346, 348.
EDMUNDSON, JOHN, of Maryland, visited, ii. 178, 179.
*EDMUNDSON, WILLIAM, of Ireland, meets G. Fox in Warwickshire, i.
_256_;
accompanies him to America, ii. 141;
visits Antigua and Nevis, ii. 153;
Jamaica, ii. 159;
Virginia, ii. 164;
Shelter Island, ii. 173;
Rhode Island and New England, ii. 190;
returns to Ireland, ii. 190.
EDRIDGE, JOHN, signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
EDWARDS, EDWARD, with G. Fox in Wales, i. 375.
Egypt, i. 189, 518.
ELDRETH [ELDROTH], ii. 105.
*ELIZABETH, Princess of the Rhine, addressed by letter from G.
Fox, ii. 269;
her reply, ii. _272_.
*ELLIS, JOHN, of Land’s End, at a meeting at Exeter, i. _359_;
meeting at his house, ii. 8.
*ELLWOOD, THOMAS, of Hunger-Hill, a disturbed men’s meeting at his
house, ii. _315_;
meeting appointed for the opposers, ii. 315;
his account of G. Fox, ii. _526_.
ELMSHORN, ii. 277.
ELSON, JOHN, of The Peel, meetings at his house, ii. 233, 345;
signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
ELY, ISLE OF, i. 236, 536.
*EMBDEN, ii. 275, 281;
Friends sufferings here, ii. 275, 282, _301_, 321;
magistrates and priests written to, ii. 301;
mentioned, ii. 268, 276;
home of John Claus’s father-in-law, ii. 275, 276, 281, 282.
EMBLETON, ii. 515.
EMS RIVER, ii. 275, 276.
ENCKHUYSEN, ii. 273.
Endicott, John, governor of New England, i. 509, 510.
ENFIELD, ii. 354, 396, 403, 409, 415, 434, 456, 473, 475, 491,
499, 500;
suffering winter spent here at Widow Dry’s, ii. 132-138;
letters and papers written here, ii. 134, 137, 396, 424.
ENGLAND, _passim_.
EPISCOPALIANS, dispute with G. Fox, i. 516.
EPPING FOREST, ii. 415.
ESHER, ii. 346.
ESSEX, i. 231, 441, 451, 518, 536, ii. 1, 80, 120, 131, 203, 314,
396, 450, 456, 475, 479, 491;
mentioned, i. 172.
EUROPE, Kings and rulers of, written to, i. 222;
Truth spreads in, ii. 526.
*EVANS, KATHERINE, imprisoned at Malta with Sarah Chevers, and
released, i. _524_, 526.
EVESHAM, i. 253, 335, ii. 319;
mentioned, ii. 228.
EXETER, i. 327;
Thomas Rawlinson imprisoned here, i. 301;
also James Naylor and others, one of whom died, i. 327,
and two sailor-Friends, one of whom died, ii. 94;
general warrant issued, i. 304;
general meeting here, i. 359.
EYDER, RIVER, ii. 278.
FAIRFAX, LADY, widow, visits G. Fox in Scarborough Castle, ii. 62.
FALCONBRIDGE, LORD, visits G. Fox in Scarborough Castle, ii. 61.
FALKNER ISLAND, ii. 173.
FALLOWFIELD, WILLIAM, signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
FALMOUTH, i. 268, ii. 7.
FAMILISTS, dispute with G. Fox, i. 516.
FARNHAM, i. 357, ii. 96.
*FARNSWORTH, RICHARD, convinced at Balby, i. _79_, ii. 511;
meets G. Fox again in Yorkshire, i. 106, 108, at Swarthmore, i.
123, ii. 513, 514, and Drayton, i. 200;
declares Truth in a steeplehouse, i. 107, with G. Fox in
Wensleydale, i. 110;
mentioned, i. xlv.
FAUKS (FOX), THOMAS, Friend, of Derbyshire, with G. Fox in
Leicestershire, i. 530.
FELL, THOMAS, justice of the Welsh circuit, of Swarthmore, i. 118,
137, 141, 143, 158, 383, 472, ii. 356, 512, 513, 515;
favourable to Friends, i. xlvi, 122, 127, 136, 139;
a meeting at his house many years, i. 123, ii. 18, 514;
daughters [unnamed], i. 231;
his death, ii. 516, 517.
*FELL, MARGARET, wife of Judge Fell, of Swarthmore, her
convincement, i. 119, 121, ii. 512;
mentioned, i, xlvi, 122, 136, 208, 471, 472, ii. 21, 516;
her letter to Lancaster magistrates respecting G. Fox, i. 478;
interviews with Charles II, i. 479, 493, 500, ii. 516;
meets G. Fox in Cornwall, ii. 6, 517, at Bristol, ii. 12, near
Warrington, ii. 83, and at Bristol, where they are married,
ii. 117, _118_, 517;
at Holker Hall, ii. 19;
imprisoned four years at Lancaster, ii. 29, 44, 45, 47, 83, 517,
and praemunired, ii. 53, 517.
_See_ FOX, MARGARET.
[FELL, GEORGE], son of Judge Fell, ill-treated near Ulverstone, i.
132.
*FELL, MARGARET, daughter of Margaret Fell, ii. _198_.
_See_ ROUS, MARGARET.
*FELL, BRIDGET, daughter of Margaret Fell, ii. _198_.
*FELL, ISABEL, daughter of Margaret Fell, ii. _198_.
_See_ YEOMANS, ISABEL;
MORRICE, ISABEL.
FELL, SARAH, daughter of Margaret Fell, convinced, i. 121;
interview with Charles II, on her mother’s behalf, ii. 120, 140;
mentioned, ii. 6, 12, _198_, 233.
_See_ MEAD, SARAH.
*FELL, MARY, daughter of Margaret Fell, ii. 6, 12, _198_.
_See_ LOWER, MARY.
*FELL, SUSAN, daughter of Margaret Fell, ii. _198_, 233.
_See_ INGRAM, SUSANNA.
*FELL, RACHEL, daughter of Margaret Fell, with her mother
accompanies G. Fox, ii. _198_, 203, 204, 207, 209, 219, 256.
_See_ ABRAHAM, RACHEL.
*Fell, Henry, Friend, of Lancashire, ill-treated by soldiers, i.
_491_;
travels abroad, i. 517, 518.
*FELL, LEONARD, convinced at Baycliff, i. 121;
meets G. Fox, ii. 6, 233;
and travels with him, i. 535, ii. 15, 16, 83, 104, 256, _260_.
FELSTEAD, ii. 314.
FEN COUNTRY, i. 334, 537.
FIELD, JOHN, signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
FIFTH-MONARCHY MEN, their rising the cause of Friends’ severe
persecution, i. 314, 490, 493, 500, 505, 516, 519, ii. 103,
516;
written to, i. 516, 517.
Finch, Lord Chancellor, interviewed by M. Fox in London, ii. 518.
FINCHCOMB [? STINCHCOMB], quarterly meeting held here, ii. 318.
FIRBANK CHAPEL, meeting of above a thousand people here, and many
convinced, i. 113, ii. 512.
FISHER, MARTHA, with another, speaks to Chas. II. respecting M.
Fox’s imprisonment, ii. 140.
*FISHER, SAMUEL, Baptist preacher, convinced, as also his wife, i.
227;
travels in the ministry, i. 228, _229_.
FISHERHOLDER, ii. 276.
FISHER’S ISLAND, ii. 172.
FLAMSTEAD HEATH, ii. 354.
Fleetwood, Charles [general], warned by Lady M. Hambleton, i. 394.
FLEMING, JUSTICE DANIEL, offers £5 for apprehension of G. Fox, ii.
17, 22;
commits M. Fell to jail, ii. 29;
a violent persecutor, ii. 29;
written to by Friends in Lancaster jail, ii. 29;
and by G. Fox separately, ii. 33;
death of his wife, ii. 34, 72.
Fleming, Francis, attacked by servants of Sir Robert Bindlas, i.
146.
FLETCHER, ——. convinced in Cumberland, ii. 16.
FLINTSHIRE, i. 380.
FLORIDA, GULF OF, ii. 161.
FLOYD, MORGAN, priest of Wrexham, his messengers, sent to enquire
about Friends, convinced, i. 188;
character of his people, i. 380.
FLUSHING, ii. 167, 174.
FORD GREEN, ii. 409, 475, 499, 500;
letter written here, ii. 501.
FOREST OF DEAN, ii. 92.
FORSTALL, RICHARD, merchant, of Barbadoes, G. Fox ill three weeks
at his house, ii. 145.
FORSTER, THOMAS, captain of the _Industry_, in which G. Fox and
companions sailed to America, ii. 141.
FOSTER, JUDGE, Lord Chief Justice, G. Fox appears before him at
Westminster, i. 485.
FOSTER, LIEUTENANT, visited, i. 410.
FOSTER, WIDOW, of Gracechuroh Street, visited, ii. 387.
FOX, CAPTAIN, governor of Pendennis Castle, i. 269, 270;
ordered by the Protector to enquire into conduct of soldiers
towards Friends, i. 284;
visits G. Fox, i. 314.
FOX, CHRISTOPHER, father of G. Fox, i. xliv, 1, 10, 205.
FOX, MARY, mother of G. Fox, i. xliv, 1, 10;
proposed visit by G. Fox interrupted by his imprisonment, ii.
207, 216;
her death, ii. 216.
_See_ LAGO, MARY.
*FOX, GEORGE, his birth, =1624=, i. xliv, 1;
parentage, i. xliv, 1;
relations, i. 1, 3, 4, 10, 62, 69, 200, 205, 206, 467, ii. 79;
early spiritual experiences, i. 2, 3, 21;
travels to obtain spiritual help =1643=, i. 3-11;
realises whence true help comes, i. 11;
travels in the Midlands, =1647=, i. 18-79;
imprisoned at Nottingham for some months, =1649=, i.
43-45, ii. 511;
and at Derby for a year, =1650-51=, i. xlviii, 50-77, ii. 511;
refuses to bear arms, i. 68;
visits Lichfield, i. xlviii, 77;
travels in the North of England, =1651-52=, i. xlv, 79-101,
102-118, ii. 511;
first visit to Swarthmore, =1652=, i. 118, ii. 512, 514;
trial at Lancaster Sessions, i. 137-142;
some months in Carlisle jail, =1653=, i. 169-179, ii.
515;
resumes work in the North, i. 179-197;
sixty ministers raised up, =1654=, i. 190;
visits his home and the Midlands, i. 197-207, ii. 515;
is arrested by Col. Hacker, and taken to London, i. 207-209, ii.
515;
first interview with Cromwell, who liberates him, i. xlviii,
210, 211;
travels into South and West, i. 259;
arrested in Cornwall and imprisoned about 8 months in Launceston
jail, =1665-56=, i. xlviii, 267-322, ii. 516;
travels Northward, on liberation, i. 325-332;
second interview with Cromwell, i. 332;
continuous travels over England and Wales and return to London,
i. 333-335;
journeys to the South and West and through Wales to Swarthmore,
=1657=, i. 357-383, ii. 516;
visits Scotland, i. xlviii, 393-413, ii. 516;
attends a yearly meeting at John Crook’s in Bedfordshire, i.
418-427;
third interview with Cromwell, =1658=, who dies shortly
afterwards, i. 440;
travels through many counties, i. 451-471;
attends a yearly meeting at Balby, i. 467, ii. 516;
and general meetings at Skipton and Arnside, i. 469, 470;
committed to Lancaster Castle, i. 474-484, 507, ii. 516;
ordered to appear in London and liberated after 20 weeks’
imprisonment, =1660=, i. 484-488;
work in London, i. 489-526;
journey to Bristol, i. 527;
and thence Northward with brief detention in Leicester jail, i.
532-535, ii. 517;
return to London, i. 536;
travels to the West and through Wales to the North, ii. 1-18;
summoned before the magistrates at Holker Hall, =1663=,
ii. 19-21, 517;
and to the Sessions at Lancaster, ii. 22, 23;
committed to Lancaster jail, where he remains a year and a half,
ii. 23-42, 517;
removed to Scarborough Castle and endures over a year’s
imprisonment there, =1665-66=, i. xlviii, ii. 42-73, 517;
returns to London on liberation to find the city in ruins after
the fire, ii. 79;
travels through the nation to recommend the setting up of
Monthly Meetings, ii. 80-106;
visit to Ireland, =1669=, i. xlviii, ii. 107-114, 517;
marriage with Margaret Fell at Bristol, =1669=, ii. 117, 118,
517;
sails for America, =1671=, ii. 141;
letter to the Governor of Barbadoes, ii. 155-158;
returns after extensive travels, =1673=, ii. 198, 518;
arrested on the way to the North of England, and sent to
Worcester jail, i. xlviii, ii. 204-213, 518;
removed to London, ii. 213-215;
and back to Worcester, ii. 215-221;
removed again to London and attends Yearly Meeting, ii. 221;
and is sent back again to Worcester, where illness overtakes
him, ii. 221-229;
removed once more to London and liberated after 14 months’
partial imprisonment, =1674=/5, ii. 229-231, 518;
visits the North and remains about two years at Swarthmore, much
occupied writing books and papers, ii. 232-255, 518;
again in London, =1677=, ii. 261, 518;
several months’ visit to Holland and Germany, =1677=, ii.
264-313, 518;
visit of two of his companions to the Princess Elizabeth, ii.
269-272;
frequent journeying after return to England, ii. 315-335;
spends a year in the North, ii. 335-343, 518;
returns to London, ii. 343-519;
pays another visit to Holland, =1684=, ii. 397-403;
much occupied in and round London, with short stays in the
country on health’s account, i. xlviii, ii. 403-505;
declining health, ii. _403_, 404, 412, 413, 421, 450, 463,
475-477, 479, 483, 489, 491, 518, _see_ next col.;
writes many letters and papers, ii. _396_, 449;
last short illness, ii. 505, 522;
death and burial, =1690/1=, i. 1, ii. 505, 518, 521-523;
Testimonies concerning him, ii. 511-527.
*FOX, GEORGE, his fasts, i. 10, 142, 158;
his “openings,” i. 8, 9, 11-16, 19-24, 26, 28, 29, 34-37;
his discernment of spirits, i. 15, 21, 165, 166, ii. 93, 131,
168;
his temptations, i. 4, 9, 12, 14, 19, 20, 26;
his visions, i. xlv, 106, 109, 391, 528, ii. 109;
his foresight, i. 102, 109, 110, 158, 376, 412, 445, 453, 507;
he hears an inward voice, i. 3, 11, 13, 20, 26, 35, 47, 61, 108,
119;
is charged with blasphemy, i. 51, 101, 137, 169, 452, ii. 515;
but denies that he is Christ, i. 51, 101, 102;
his power in prayer, i. xlvii, 24, 49, 212, 330, 373, ii. 138,
184, 233, 376;
his warnings, i. 27, 39, 49, 52-56, 62-66, 76, 78, 98, 99, 101,
223, 268, 308, ii. 41, 42, 93, 137;
cruelties inflicted on him, i. 39, 45, 62, 84, 103, 105, 132,
134, 136, 160, 171, 180, 268, 472, ii. 51, 69;
his forgiveness for injuries, i. 63, 98, 99, 105, 133, 136, 160,
209, 489, 497, 512, ii. 70, 125;
his narrow escapes from injury or arrest, i. 88, 108, 134-136,
161, 253, 360, 427, 466, 467, 528, ii. 4, 5, 13, 15, 17, 77,
84, 143;
his personal appearance and manner, i. _89_, 98, 167, 172, 214,
264, 268, 380, 473, ii. 28, 401, 526;
his bodily weakness and illness, ii. 51, 54, 56-58, 79, 131,
132, 145-152, 227, 230, 234, 261, 518, _see_ previous col.
*FOX, MARGARET, wife of G. Fox, returns home after marriage, ii.
_118_, 517;
imprisoned for a year at Lancaster, ii. 120, 140;
released by order of Chas. II., ii. 120, 140, 517;
letters from G. Fox, ii. 120, 121, 141, 159, 160, 198, 206, 258,
314, 320;
visits G. Fox in London, ii. 141, 404, 517, in Bristol, ii. 198,
at Kingston, ii. 203, 404, in Worcester, ii. 225, 518;
her long separations from G. Fox, ii. 519;
daughters [unnamed], ii. 198, 519;
travels with G. Fox, ii. 204, 209, 219, 256;
interview with Chas. II., Lord Chancellor Finch, and Judge
North, respecting G. Fox’s imprisonment, ii. 228, 518;
sued for tithes, ii. 355;
her Testimony to her husband, ii. 511-519.
_See_ FELL, MARGARET.
FOX, JOHN, Presbyterian priest, of Mansfield, Wiltshire, taken for
G. Fox, ii. 115;
creates a disturbance, ii. 121.
FOX, JOHN, of Wimeswold, visited, ii. 259.
FOX, THOMAS. _See_ FAUKS, THOMAS.
FRANCE, KING OF, letter to, i. 222.
FRANEKER, ii. 283, 401.
FRATERUS, N., magistrate, of Dantzic, written to, ii. 485.
FRECHEVILLE, LORD, commandant of horse in charge of G. Fox, ii.
57.
FREDERICKSTADT, ii. 278;
business meetings established here, ii. 268;
Friends of, their proposed banishment, ii. 268;
mentioned, ii. 404, 405.
FRETWELL, ELLEN, prophecies respecting her persecutor, ii. 78.
FRETWELL, JOHN, of Stainsby, committed with G. Fox to Derby House
of Correction, i. 51 [ii. 511].
FRETWELL, RALPH, judge, of Barbadoes, convinced, ii. 152.
FRETWELL, SAMUEL, of Hartshorn, visited and a meeting held, ii.
259.
FRIESLAND, ii. 273, 274, 275, 276, 282, 310, 401;
mentioned, ii. 326, 400.
FRIEZEN SEAS, THE, ii. 273.
Frith, Susan, of Chesterfield, warns a justice of Derbyshire, ii.
78.
FRIZBY, JAMES, justice, of America, ii. 181.
FRONDENBERG, ABRAHAM, Friend, of Haarlem, ii. 402.
FROUZEN, WILBERT, burgomaster of Rotterdam, ii. 399.
FRY [WILLIAM, of Ashgrove], Wiltshire, visited and meeting held at
his house, ii. 5.
*FUCE, JOSEPH, ensign, met at Lynn, i. _235_, 236.
FURLY, BENJ., of [Colchester and] Rotterdam, joint-compiler of
_The Battledore_, i. 513;
met and accompanied G. Fox and party on visit to Holland, ii.
266-310;
interpreter, ii. 267, 269.
FURLY, JOHN, of Colchester, visited and meeting held, ii. 265,
398;
he and his brother accompany G. Fox and party to Holland, ii.
266.
GADECKEN, N., magistrate of Dantzic written to, ii. 485.
GAINSBOROUGH, uproar, and opposition, i. 101.
GAMBOLL, THOMAS, of Bullocks Hill, visited, ii. 260.
GANDY, WILLIAM, of Cheshire, large meetings at his house, i. 363,
484;
visited, ii. 114, 233.
GARDICK, ii. 282.
GARDNER’S ISLAND, ii. 172.
Garland, Widow, prisoner at Kendal, ii. 55.
GARSDALE, ii. 256.
GARSHORE, outline of discourse here, i. 394.
Garstang, ii. 25, 26.
GATESHEAD, i. 414.
GATES, NICHOLAS [of Alton], signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
GATTON, ii. 346.
GAUL, ALDERMAN, visits G. Fox at Rotterdam, ii. 399.
GEARY, JOHN, of America, meeting at his house, ii. 189;
visited, ii. 190.
GERMANY, i. xlviii, ii. 518;
mentioned, ii. 325, 350;
Friends of, ii. 268, 310, 400, 504;
emperor of, ii. 292;
priest of, ii. 292;
visited by Friends, ii. 264, 269, 276, 279, 281, 284, 310.
GERRARD, LORD, orders G. Fox’s liberation at Whitehall, i. 492.
GIBB, HENRY, of Pashur, general men’s and monthly meetings at his
house, ii. 83.
GIGGLESWICK, ii. 57.
Gilpin [John], among Friends at Kendal for a short time, i. 188.
GILSLAND, discussion with a priest, i. 182;
a meeting here, i. 392.
GLASGOW, i. 404, ii. 516.
GLEASTON, meeting in a chapel near, i. 122;
another meeting, i. 158.
GLOUCESTER, meeting here and escape from some soldiers, i. 466;
breviat of sufferings delivered to judges at Assizes, ii. 318.
GLOUCESTERSHIRE, i. 335, ii. 13, 87, 91, 114, 202, 317, 344;
mentioned, ii. 121.
GLYNNE, JOHN, Chief Justice, discourses with G. Fox at Launceston
regarding hats, i. 272;
G. Fox writes to him, i. 287.
GODALMING, i. 260.
GOLDNEY, HENRY, G. Fox dies at his house in White-Hart-Court, i.
l, ii. 505, 522.
Goldsmith, Ralph, a Friend, captain of ship, carries Charles II.'s
mandamus to New England, i. 509.
GOODAKER, SAM., signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
*GOODYEAR, THOMAS, of Yorkshire, convinced, i. 79, _106_.
GOOSES, Wm. Mead’s Essex home, ii. [403], 450, 456, 475, 479, 491;
letters and papers written here, ii. 450, 456, 457, 458, 459,
479-483, 491-497.
GOULDNEY, THOMAS, interview with the mayor of Bristol, i. 462.
GOVERNOR’S ISLAND, ii. 174.
_See_ NATTON ISLAND.
GRACECHURCH STREET, ii. 123, 127, 138, 261, 314, 319, 345, 363,
366, 371, 372, 377, 387, 505, 506, 522.
*GRATTON, JOHN, visited at Monyash, ii. _334_.
GRAVE, JOHN, with G. Fox in Scotland, ii. 516.
GRAVESEND, ii. 131, 141, 142.
GRAVESEND (America), ii. 167, 174.
GRAY, RICHARD, master of vessel taking G. Fox and others to
Holland, ii. 398.
GRAYRIGG, i. 156, ii. 15, 512.
GREAT BAY, ii. 180.
GREAT BOWDEN, ii. 332.
GREEN [AGNES], WIDOW, of High Town, opposes G. Fox, i. 108.
GREEN, THOMAS, assists G. Fox during imprisonment at Lancaster, i.
475.
GREGORY, JUDGE, visited at his chambers, ii. 356.
GRIMES, COLONEL, large meetings at his house, i. 335, 466.
GRISDALE, i. 111, 122.
GRITTON, ——, ex-Baptist, dispute with G. Fox and others, i. 226.
GRONINGEN, ii. 275, 282.
GRONINGLAND, ii. 275.
GUILDFORD, ii. 130, 346, 377, 465.
GULL’S ISLAND, ii. 172.
GUTTERHEDGE [GUTTERSHEDGE], ii. 261, 345.
GWIN, PAUL, Baptist, of Bristol, and afterwards of Barbadoes,
opposes G. Fox, i. 329, 330, ii. 152.
HAARLEM, ii. 267, 402;
mentioned, ii. 268, 291, 292, 401.
HACKER, COLONEL, troopers of his regiment arrest G. Fox at
Whetstone (or Leicester), i. 207, and near London, i. 440;
his discourse with G. Fox, i. 207, 208;
he sends him to Cromwell, i. 208, 500, 534, ii. 3, 20, 515;
his wife and his marshal convinced, i. 251;
his son, —— Needham, i. 207, 209;
his death, i. 208, 500.
Haggert, Judge, of Bristol, his wife convinced, i. 301.
HAGUE, THE, ii. 311.
HAINS, ROWLAND, priest, of Hunnington, accompanies Justice Parker,
in arrest of G. Fox at Armscott, ii. 205, 206.
HALE, CHIEF JUSTICE, liberates G. Fox, at King’s Bench, ii. 229,
230, 518.
HALFORD, JOHN, of Armscott, G. Fox and T. Lower arrested at his
house, ii. 204, 206.
*Halhead, Miles, comes forth in the ministry, i. _129_, ii. 515.
HALIFAX, i. 189;
mentioned, i. 195, 196.
HALSTEAD, ii. 314.
[HALTON], Priest Whitehead visited here, i. 124.
HAMBERY, RICHARD, of Pontemoil, meeting held at his house, i. 362;
with his wife accompanies G. Fox, ii. 91.
HAMBLETON, LADY MARGARET, convinced, i. 394;
warns Cromwell and Fleetwood of the day of the Lord, i. 394.
HAMBLEY, LOVEDAY, aunt of Thomas Lower, i. 315;
visited, i. 326;
general meetings at her house, ii. 7, 94.
HAMBOROW, RICHARD. _See_ HAMBERY, RICHARD.
HAMBURG, ii. 277, 279;
Friends of, ii. 268;
woman here acknowledges her error in John Perrot’s time, ii.
277;
G. Fox writes _A Warning_ to the city, ii. 292, 295, and a book
in answer to the priests, ii. 301.
HAMILTON, ii. 516.
HAMMERSLEY, THOMAS [of Basford, Staffs.], a meeting with Ranters,
i. 198;
allowed to serve as foreman of a jury without an oath, and
verdict commended, i. 199;
general men’s meeting, ii. 82.
HAMMERSMITH, ii. 346, 359, 419, 472, 491.
HAMPSHIRE, i. 456, ii. 3, 95, 129, 203;
mentioned, ii. 358;
magistrate and people addressed in a paper, ii. 96.
HAMPTON COURT, Protector visited here, i. 440.
HANDCOCK, EDWARD, of Menheriot, meeting at his house, i. 265.
HARBOROUGH, i. 209.
HARDING, JOHN, meeting at his house in Essex, ii. 456.
HARDY, UNDER-JAILER, of Lancaster, rude and cruel man, i. 474.
HARE STREET, ii. 403.
HARLINGEN, ii. 273, 283, 401;
epistle written here, ii. 301-310;
mentioned, ii. 282, 284.
HARRIS, GEORGE, at his house in Dorset men’s monthly meetings
settled, ii. 95.
HARRIS, JAILER, of Worcester, ii. 228.
HARTIS, GEORGE, of Oram, visited, i. 96.
HARTSHILL, ii. 260.
Hartshorn, Hugh, upholsterer of London, ii. 166.
HARTSHORN, RICHARD, of America, brother of last named, visited,
ii. 166, 175.
HARTSHORN, ii. 259.
HARVEY, ——, a servant of Cromwell, i. 210, 440.
HARWICH, ii. 265, 266, 313, 398, 403.
HARWOOD, ROBERT, of Maryland, visited, ii. 178.
HASTINGS, LORD, writes to G. Fox, i. 535.
HATTON’S ISLAND, ii. 180.
HAVERFORD WEST, i. 373;
mentioned, ii. 91.
[HAWES ?], i. 110.
HAWKINS, GEORGE, of Stoke, visited, ii. 9.
HAYLEY, WIDOW, of Gutterhedge, visited, ii. 261, 345.
HEADS, i. 394, 404, ii. 516.
HEDGERLEY, ii. 315.
HELLEN, JOSEPH, disowned for the matter of Blanch Pope at Loo, ii.
7.
HELSTON, i. 265, ii. 7.
HEMEL-HEMPSTEAD, ii. 319.
HEMPEN-SARMER, LAKE OF, ii. 282.
HENDON, ii. 204, 261, 319, 345, 346.
HENDRICKS, ELIZABETH, visits Friends at Frederickstadt, ii. 404.
HENDRICKS, PETER, Friend, of Amsterdam, with G. Fox in Holland,
ii. 291;
letters from G. Fox, ii. 326, 483, 486;
his wife, ii. 483.
HENLEY, ii. 317, 358.
HEREFORD, ii. 13.
HEREFORDSHIRE, ii. 13, 85, 87.
HERTFORD, i. 237, ii. 330, 347, 456, 499;
letters written here, ii. 331, 332.
HERTFORDSHIRE, i. 258, ii. 1, 89, 120, 204, 319.
HEWES, Priest, of Plymouth, his prayer against toleration, i. 504;
removal at Restoration i. 505.
HEXHAM, i. 181, 182.
HEYWOOD, JOHN, signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
Hicks’s Hall, Sessions held here, ii. 371.
HIGHAM, i. 258.
HIGHGATE, ii. 233, 261.
HIGHLANDS, THE, i. 394, 405.
HIGH-TOWN [in Liversedge], i. 108.
HILEY [HELY], JOAN [of Bristol], visited, i. 528.
HILL, JOHN, English Friend, meets G. Fox at Hamburg, ii. 279, and
travels with him, ii. 280, 281, 282.
HILL, THE, ii. 334.
HILTON, INFORMER, ii. 365, 366.
HITCHIN, ii. 322.
HODDESDON, ii. 475.
HODGES, FRANCIS, of [Budock in] Cornwall, visited, ii. 7.
Hodgson, Dr., informed of a plot, ii. 20.
HODGSON, PETER, of Scarbro, visited, ii. 74.
HOGHENHORN, ii. 278.
*HOLDER, CHRISTOPHER, visits Long Island, ii. _174_.
HOLDERNESS, i. 96, 195, 335, 415, ii. 14, 105, 512.
HOLES SERGEANT, G. Fox removed to his house for awhile, during
Derby imprisonment, i. 72.
HOLKER HALL, residence of Justice Parker, i. 475;
private justices’ meeting here, ii. 18;
G. Fox’s interview with the justices, ii. 19-21, 72, 517.
HOLLAND, Friends travel in, i. 189, 228, 517;
Friends of, ii. 263, 267, 268, 320, 400, 504;
mentioned, ii. 54, 69, 404.
G. Fox sends letters thither, ii. 98, 345,
and visits the country, i. xlviii, ii. 264-313, 401, 518,
and again, ii. 397-403.
Hollingworth, Ralph, priest of Phillingham, persecutor for tithes,
i. 224.
[HOLLOWTROW]. _See_ DANDER, JOHN.
*HOLMES, THOMAS, travels into Wales as a minister, i. _190_;
meets G. Fox there, i. 361;
mentioned, i. xlv.
HOLSTEIN, DUKE OF, persecutor of Friends, ii. 278, 404;
written to by G. Fox, ii. 404.
HONITON, i. 263.
*HOOKES, ELLIS, draws up account of G. Fox’s imprisonment at
Scarborough, ii. _69_.
HOORN, ii. 273.
*HOOTON, ELIZABETH, of Nottingham, meets G. Fox, i. _9_;
accompanies G. Fox and party to America, ii. 141, 159;
her sudden death in Jamaica, ii. 160.
Hornby Castle, i. 479.
HORNCHURCH, ii. 131.
HORSE-BRIDGE, i. 461, ii. 10.
HORSHAM, i. 229, ii. 346.
HORSHAM PARK, i. 260.
Horsleydown, ii. 132.
HOTHAM, JUSTICE, of Yorkshire, a well-wisher of Friends, i. 81,
99, ii. 105;
visited, i. 81, 95, 123, ii. 105.
*Howard, Luke, of Dover, convinced, i. _229_.
HOWDEN-DYKE, ii. 76.
*HOWGILL, FRANCIS, meets with G. Fox at a fair, i. 112, and at
Firbank Chapel, i. _113_;
imprisoned in Appleby jail, i. 128;
commences as a minister, i. xlv, 128, ii. 515;
visits Friends in Cumberland, i. 183;
his work in London, i. 190;
travels from Bristol to great meeting in Leicestershire, i. 199;
with G. Fox at Swarthmore, 99, i. 471;
interview with Cromwell, ii. 515.
HOWSIGOE, THOMAS, Independent preacher near Cranbrook, convinced,
i. 227.
HUBBERSTY, MILES, of Underbarrow, meets G. Fox, i. 117;
travels as a minister, i. 129.
HUBBERSTY, STEPHEN, meets G. Fox at Underbarrow, i. 117.
*HUBBERTHORN, RICHARD, convinced, ii. 515;
comes out as a minister, i. xlv, _129_;
persecuted, i. 146;
accompanies G. Fox, i. 147, 233, 237, 485, 486, 493, 521;
travels toward Norwich, i. 190, 453;
his interview with Charles II, i. _490_.
HULL, i. 101, 415, ii. 76.
HULL, JOHN, goes to America with G. Fox and others, ii. 141.
HULL, PRIEST, referred to in G. Fox’s paper _re_ Cornish wreckers,
i. 460.
HUMBER, River, i. 335.
HUNGER HILL, ii. 315, 358.
HUNGER RIVER, ii. 192.
Hunnington, ii. 205, 206.
HUNTER, JAILER, of Lancaster, persecutor, ii. 56, 73;
his untimely end, ii. 73.
Huntingdon, i. 236;
the mayor visits G. Fox, i. 334, 537.
Huntingdon, Robert, appears in Carlisle steeplehouse as a sign, i.
503.
HUNTINGDONSHIRE, i. 233, 334, 453, 536, ii. 81, 120, 332.
HUTCHINSON, HUGH, Friend in the ministry, of [Allendale]
Northumberland, visited, ii. 15.
HUTCHINSON, JAMES [of Knockballymaher], G. Fox’s discourse at his
house in Ireland, ii. 112.
HUTTON, THOMAS, visited, i. 136.
HYDE PARK, i. 332.
IFIELD, ii. 346.
ILCHESTER, men’s monthly meeting settled here, ii. 95.
ILMER, ii. 319, 358.
*INDEPENDENTS, come into contact with Friends, i. 25, 90, 211,
232, 234, 250, 252, 376, 397, _443_, 503, _507_, 516, ii. 64,
_81_, 103.
_See_ HOWSIGOE;
NAYLOR;
ROBINSON, ANDREW.
*INDIANS, their Emperor, Empress and Kings, etc., attend meetings
in America, ii. 158, 164, 165, 166, 172, 178, 183, 185, 186,
189, 193, 194, 502.
INFORMERS, ii. 16, 124, 133, 361.
_See_ HILTON;
KNIPE, W.;
SHAD.
INGRAM, WILLIAM, stepson-in-law of G. Fox, ii. 521.
INGRAM, SUSANNA, wife of W. Ingram, ii. 521.
_See_ FELL, SUSAN.
*Inquisition, in Rome, Friends preserved from, i. 189, 229;
in Malta, Friends imprisoned in, i. _524_.
IPSWICH, i. 232;
inhabitants written to, i. 232;
visited by Friends, ii. 403.
IRB’S [JOB’S, JUBB’S] COURT, ii. 93.
*IRELAND, Friends of, ii. 257, 321, 421;
visited by Friends, i. 189;
Friends written to by G. Fox, i. 257, ii. 98, 503;
Friends’ sufferings, i. 432, 434, ii. _503_;
mentioned, i. l, 257, ii. 112, 190;
Truth springs up, ii. 251;
visited by G. Fox, i. xlviii, ii. 107-114, 117, 517;
rulers addressed by letter, ii. 351.
ISLE OF ELY, i. 236, 536.
ISLE OF SHEPPEY, ii. 130.
Italy, visited by Friends, i. 189, 228.
ITZEHOE, ii. 277.
IVES [ST.], (Hunts), ii. 332.
IVES [ST.], (Cornwall), i. 267;
G. Fox and others apprehended here, i. 267, 277.
JACKSON, HENRY, meeting at his house in Yorkshire, ii. 105.
JACKUS, PRIEST, opposes G. Fox at Lancaster, i. 138, 141;
mentioned, i. 140.
JACOBS, HESSEL, of Harlingen in Friesland, ii. 274, 283, 284.
JAMAICA, Friends banished hither, ii. 68;
visited by Friends, ii. 153, 159, 162, 190, by G. Fox, ii.
159-162;
mentioned, i. 406, ii. 160;
governor of, ii. 160;
Truth prospers here, ii. 160, 504.
Jamaica (Long Island), visited by Friends, ii. 174.
James I., quoted, ii. 323.
JAMES II., releases Friends from prison, ii. 431.
JAY, JOHN, planter of Barbadoes, accompanies G. Fox, ii. 172;
his injury and remarkable recovery, ii. 176.
JENKIN, WALTER, justice, of Wales, convinced, i. 251;
meets G. Fox, i. 362;
meeting at his house, ii. 87.
JERSEY (America), ii. 174;
written to, ii. 491.
JERSEY, EAST, ii. 166, 175.
JERSEY, New, Friends of, ii. 175, 404;
visited by Friends, ii. 190.
JERSEY, WEST, ii. 166.
JESUITS, disputes with G. Fox and others in London, i. 427-431,
515, ii. 108.
_See_ PAPISTS.
JEWS, come into contact with Friends, ii. 278, 311;
mentioned, i. 16, 397, ii. 27, 64, 136, 204, 291, 403, 428, 457,
462-471.
JOBLIN, JAILER, of Durham, persecutor. cut off, ii. 73.
JOHN, JOHN AP ——, sent from Wrexham to inquire concerning G. Fox,
and is convinced, i. 188;
travels with G. Fox, i. 361, 368, 372-381, ii. 92;
his imprisonment, i. 378, 381.
JOHNSON, RICHARD, of Liverpool, visited, ii. 114.
JOHNSTONS [PERTH], G. Fox and others banished the town, i. 406;
re-visited by G. Fox, i. 409, ii. 516.
JONES, ATTORNEY, defended G. Fox, at Court of King’s Bench, ii.
214.
JONES, JAMES, Friend and justice, of America, visited, ii. 192.
JONES, RICE, of Nottingham, ex-Baptist and Ranter, opposes G. Fox,
i. 194, 416;
his fall, i. 417.
JORDANS, ii. 315.
*JOSE, NICHOLAS [of Sennyn], convinced at Lands End, [i. _458_,
ii. 8.]
KEAT, CAPT., takes G. Fox and E. Pyot to Launceston, i. 269;
abuses his prisoners, i. 270, 284;
his kinsman’s conduct, i. 284.
KEBY, ii. 281.
KEITH, GEORGE, dispute at Aberdeen, ii. 233;
his wife and he with others go with G. Fox to Holland, ii. 266,
268, 269, 313, 401;
travels in Germany, ii. 269, 310;
further mention of his wife, ii. 269, 272, 285.
[KELK]. _See_ BARWICK, GRACE.
KELLET, i. 124, ii. 335, 515;
mentioned, i. 142.
KELLETT, PRIEST, a persecutor, i. 24, 25.
KEMPSTON, ii. 260.
KENDAL, i. 115, 125, 156, ii. 512;
warrant awaits G. Fox here, i. 392;
mentioned, i. 122, 188, ii. 17, 55, 256.
KENSINGTON, ii. 346.
KENSWORTH, ii. 260.
KENT, i. 227, 357, ii. 1, 97, 130;
account of a Kentish woman, ii. 60;
mentioned, ii. 517.
KENT ISLAND, ii. 180, 194.
KENTISH SHORE, ii. 178.
KESWICK, ii. 16.
KIDSEY (KIDSLEY) PARK, i. 50, 198.
KILLAM, JOHN, large yearly meeting in his orchard at Balby, i.
467.
KING’S BENCH, G. Fox’s trials here, i. 486, ii. 213-215, 221, 229,
518;
mentioned, i. 480, 485.
KINGS ROAD, ii. 195.
_See_ BRISTOL HARBOUR.
KINGSBRIDGE, i. 264, ii. 6, 95.
KINGSTON-ON-THAMES, i. 332, 440, ii. 79, 141, 203, 204, 206, 232,
264, 315, 345, 346, 359, 376, 378, 387, 404, 418, 446, 491,
497;
papers written here, ii. 315, 345, 350, 371, 381, 385, 396, 440,
443, 447, 463, 465, 467, 468, 489.
KIRBY, WILLIAM, colonel, of Kirby Hall, visited, ii. 17;
interrupts a meeting at Swarthmore, ii. 22;
visits G. Fox there, ii. 234;
judgment on him noted, ii. 73, 77, 106;
concerned in imprisonment of G. Fox at Lancaster and
Scarborough, ii. 24, 44, 45, 51, 55, 56, 77;
mentioned, ii. 18, 29, 121, 132.
KIRBY-HALL, ii. 17.
KLASSEN, DIRICK, Friend, of Haarlem, ii. 292.
KNIGHTON, ii. 259, 332.
KNIPE, JOHN, cruel treatment of G. Fox, judgment noted, i. 118.
KNIPE, WILLIAM, informer, ii. 19;
judgment noted, ii. 73.
[KNOCKBALLYMAHER]. _See_ HUTCHINSON, JAMES.
KNOTTINGLEY, ii. 259.
LAGO, MARY, afterwards Fox, mother of G. Fox, i. 1.
_See_ FOX, MARY.
LAMBERT [JOHN, general], i. 450, 469.
LAMBOLL, GEORGE, of Reading, meeting in his orchard, i. 230.
LAMCOTE, ii. 319.
LAMPITT, WM., priest, of Ulverstone, discourses with G. Fox, i.
118, 119, 130, ii. 514;
opposes his teaching, i. 122, 126, 130, 131, ii. 514;
mentioned, i. 134;
G. Fox writes to him and his people, i. 149, 152, 153;
his false prophecies and his death, ii. 254.
LAMPLUGH, ii. 515.
LANCASHIRE, i. 117, 130, 158, ii. 14, 82, 114, 335, 343;
fasting woman visited, i. 18;
mentioned, i. 109, 486, ii. 22, 64, 73, 83, 355;
Friends in, i. 161, 383, 470;
Truth springs up, i. 183, ii. 251.
LANCASTER, i. 124, 142, 143, 189, 383, 470, 484, ii. 233, 515;
mentioned, i. 136, 141, 382, ii. 21, 121;
G. Fox at the Sessions and Assizes, i. 137, 140, 143, 480, ii.
22, 26, 39, 42, 51, 515, 517;
mayor of the town, i. 139;
under-sheriff, ii. 73, 233;
G. Fox in the jail, i. 473-484, 487, 488, 507, 513, ii. 23-56,
59, 67, 71, 77, 216, 233, 516, 517;
in which he writes papers, i. 475, 479, 481, 482, 483, ii. 29,
33, 36, 41, 42, 54;
M. Fell and other Friends in the jail, ii. 29, 44, 120, 517.
*LANCASTER, JAMES, of Walney Island, convinced, i. 121;
visited, i. 121, 135;
travels with G. Fox in England, i. 161, 162, ii. 233, in
Scotland, i. 406, ii. 516, in Ireland, ii. 107, 114, in
America, ii. 141, 172, _198_;
visits Jamaica, ii. 153, 159, and New England, ii. 164, and
elsewhere, ii. 168, 170, 174;
his wife’s opposition to G. Fox, and convincement, i. 135, 136.
LANDSMEER, ii. 288, 402;
mentioned, ii. 307.
LANDS END, i. 458, ii. 8, 94;
the seven parishes of, written to, i. 266;
mentioned, i. 359, 458.
LANDS END (Ireland), ii. 109.
LANGLANDS, i. 182, 392.
LANGSTROTH-DALE, ii. 256.
LARKHAM [GEORGE], PRIEST, of Cockermouth, discourses with G. Fox,
i. 163, ii. 515.
*LATEY, GILBERT, asked by a justice to pay G. Fox’s fine, ii. 392;
signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525;
mentioned, i. _103_.
LAUNCESTON, i. 326;
G. Fox imprisoned here, i. xlviii, 269-323, 327, 335, 343, ii.
516;
papers written here, i. 273, 302, 304, 308, 315, 319, 323, 324;
cruelties of jailer, i. 282, 283, and his punishment, i. 318;
the mayor, i. 302;
mentioned, i. 285, ii. 9.
*LAWRENCE, CAPTAIN JOHN [of Wramplingham], Norfolk, i. 233-235,
_536_.
LAWSON, JOHN, of Lancaster, visited, i. 124;
convinced, ii. 515;
mentioned, i. 140.
LAWSON, THOMAS, priest, of Rampside, convinced, i. 120;
visited, i. 136.
LAWSON, WILFRED, high-sheriff, urges G. Fox’s death at Carlisle
Assizes, i. 169.
LAYTHES, THOMAS, of Westmorland, visited, ii. 17.
LEDGER, ALDERMAN, of Newcastle, visited, i. 413, 414.
LEEK, JOHN, of [Selby in] Yorkshire, convinced by visit to G. Fox
in Derby prison, i. 80;
visited, i. 80.
LEER, ii. 276, 281.
LEEUWARDEN, ii. 274, 275, 282, 283, 401;
mentioned, ii. 284.
Leeward Islands, visited by several Friends, ii. 190.
Leghorn, visited by S. Fisher, i. 228.
LEICESTER, i. 25, ii. 79, 259, 332;
G. Fox taken hence to London, i. 207, 209, 251, 500, ii. 210;
imprisoned with others here, i. 531-535, ii. 517;
mentioned, i. 199, 214.
LEICESTERSHIRE, i. 4, 9, 19, 25, 29, 46, 49, 77, 199, 200, 251,
256, 335, 417, 467, 529, 530, ii. 79, 82, 120, 121, 259, 332,
344;
G. Fox’s native county, i. 1, 277, ii. 207, 511, 515;
Truth springs up, ii. 251.
LEITH, much convincement here, i. 399;
visited again, i. 408.
LENTHAL, SIR JOHN, KT., marshal of King’s Bench, i. 488.
LEOMINSTER, great meeting in a field, i. 369-371;
mentioned, ii. 85.
LEPER, THOMAS, meeting at his house [at Capernwray], i. 145.
LEYDEN, ii. 267, 310;
mentioned, ii. 311.
LICHFIELD, a woe pronounced against it, i. xlviii, 77;
Christians martyred here, i. 78.
LIDCOTT, COL., his wife convinced at Leith, i. 399.
Light, John, Friend [of Plymouth], assists Friends imprisoned on
ship board, ii. 68.
LILLINGSTON-LOVEL, ii. 344.
Lincoln, sheriff convinced, i. 197;
and with G. Fox, i. 197, 213,334, ii. 81;
mentioned, i. 225.
_See_ CRAVEN, MORRICE.
LINCOLNSHIRE, i. 101, 197, 333, 536, ii. 81, 344;
convincement in, i. 102, 197, 333.
LINDLEY, ISAAC, letter to G. Fox, ii. 105;
visited [in Yorkshire], ii. 257.
Line, John, constable, judgement on him for persecution, ii. 5.
LINGARD, CAPT., meeting at his house [in Derbyshire], ii. 13, 14.
LINLITHGOW, ii. 516;
inn keeper’s wife convinced, i. 399.
LITTLE CHOPTANK RIVER, ii. 193.
*Little Ease, hole in a rock in Chester prison, Richard Sale
imprisoned here, i. 503, _504_.
LITTLE PORT, i. 536.
LIVERPOOL, i. 381, ii. 107, 114.
LLOYD, CHARLES, general men’s meeting at his house [at Dolobran],
in Wales, ii. 83.
*LODGE, ROBERT, convinced, i. xlv;
travels with G. Fox in Ireland, ii. 107, 114, and Yorkshire, ii.
257, _258_.
LOMBARD STREET, meeting near, i. l.
*LONDON, i. 4, 213, 225, 227, 231, 237, 250, 259, 332, 333, 335,
343, 356, 427, 431, 441, 442, 447, 451, 453, 456, 518, 519,
528, 536, ii. 1, 79, 87, 88, 89, 90, 97, 99, 104, 120, 121,
138, 203, 204, 221, 232, 261, 263, 314, 315, 319, 326, 345,
346, 348, 354, 358, 359, 366, 371, 376, 378, 387, 389, 395,
396, 404, 415, 417, 421, 431, 449, 450, 463, 472, 475, 483,
486, 497, 500, 503, 505, 517, 518, 519;
G. Fox brought hither from Leicester, i. 209, 476, 500, 534, ii.
3;
removed hither from Lancaster, i. 483, 485, ii. 516,
leaves for America, ii. 141,
for Holland, ii. 264, 397,
brought up from Worcester, ii. 213, 229, 230, and returned
hither, ii. 214, 215, 224, 230, 518;
mentioned, i. 160, 174, 208, 381, 414, 479, 480, 535, ii. 17,
18, 66, 96, 127, 141, 146, 205, 207, 208, 209, 222, 224, 229,
356, 362, 391;
Friends visit the city, i. 190, 213, 237, 328, 443, 478, ii. 69,
141, 228;
convincement here, i. 215, 227, 237, 259, 519, ii. 104, 251;
Friends of the city, i. 199, 260, 277, 283, ii. 33, 67, 80, 128,
131, 132, 166, 199, 215, 217, 253, 261, 265, 335, 361, 371;
*Fire of, foreseen, i. 453, ii. 54, _70_, 71, 79, 96;
*the Plague, ii. 34, _67_;
Papers, etc., written here, i. 494, 526, ii. 119, 123, 320, 321,
327, 354, 359, 361-363, 366, 367, 373, 374, 379, 388, 393,
404, 408, 409, 411, 417, 422, 432-440, 449, 453, 473, 475,
477, 487, 488, 497, 503;
Bishop receives copy of _The Battledore_, i. 513;
Yearly Meeting held, ii. 221, 235, 244, 263, 320, 337, 345, 354,
356, 358, 378, 381, 397, 409, 432, 453, 473, 486, 488, 497,
517, 518, 519, 527, 529,
_see_ YEARLY MEETINGS.
LONG-CRENDON, ii. 319.
LONG ISLAND, ii. 166, 167, 173;
mentioned, ii. 174.
LONG, RICHARD, of America, visited, ii. 189.
LONGFORD, ii. 359.
Loo, mentioned, ii. 7.
Love, John, Friend, died in prison at Rome, i. 506.
*LOWER, HUMPHREY, ex-justice, visits G. Fox at Launceston, and is
convinced, i. _280_;
visited, i. 325, ii. 6, 9, 94;
mentioned, i. 359.
*LOWER, THOMAS, stepson-in-law of G. Fox, convinced by visit to G.
Fox at Launceston, i. _314_;
nephew of L. Hambley, i. 315;
at a meeting at Exeter, i. 359;
assists Friends imprisoned on ship-board, ii. 68;
with G. Fox in Cornwall, i. 461, ii. 10, 517, in Bristol, ii.
79, _198_, on his journey north, and imprisonment at
Worcester, ii. 204-213, 219, 225, 518, and at Lancaster and
Swarthmore, ii. 233;
mentioned, ii. 521.
*LOWER, MARY, wife of T. Lower, interview with Charles II, ii.
120, 121, 140;
mentioned, ii. _198_, 204, 207, 233, 517, 521.
_See_ FELL, MARY.
Lower, Dr., brother of Thomas Lower, physician to Charles II,
assists Friends, ii. 208.
Lucerne, mentioned, i. 434.
LUGMER, LAKE, ii. 282.
LUNEBERG, DUKE OF, his country visited, ii. 280.
LUTHERANS, dispute with G. Fox, i. 516.
LUTON, i. 225, ii. 260, 319.
LUTTERWORTH, i. 3.
LYME, i. 359.
LYNDAL, i. 118.
LYNE, COL., of Barbadoes, his love for Friends, ii. 153.
LYNN, G. Fox apprehended on the way to, but liberated, i. 233;
visited, i. 235, 236, 537.
MACHAM, PRIEST, visited, i. 6.
MACKUM, ii. 273.
MACOCOMOCOCK RIVER, ii. 184.
_See_ CHOWAN RIVER.
MAESE, THE, ii. 403.
Maidstone, mentioned, i. 227.
MALLET, THOMAS, judge, visited at his chamber, orders G. Fox’s
liberation, i. 485-488.
MALPAS, i. 381.
Malta, visited by S. Chevers and K. Evans, i. 524.
_See_ Melita.
MALTON, i. 89, 90, ii. 14, 58, 75.
MANCETTER, ancient priest visited, i. 5.
MANCHESTER, i. 18;
rude people oppose, i. 381, 382.
MANN, EDWARD, of Bishopsgate St., London, mentioned, ii. 214;
his country house at Ford Green visited, ii. 491, 499.
_See_ FORD GREEN.
Manningford? _See_ Mansfield, Wiltshire.
MANOKIN, ii. 191.
MANOKIN RIVER, ii. 191.
MANSFIELD, i. 24, 79, ii. 78;
steeplehouses visited, i. 20, 27;
mentioned, i. 51, 194.
MANSFIELD-WOODHOUSE, distracted woman spoken to here, i. 45;
steeplehouse visited, i. 45.
Mansfield [? Marshfield, Glos., or ? Manningford, Wilts.], John
Fox priest here, ii. 115, 116, 121.
[MARATICK RIVER]. _See_ ROANOKE RIVER.
MARAZION, i. 265. _See_ MARKET JEW.
Marcellinus, Pope of Rome, not infallible, ii. 59.
MARKET BOSWORTH, i. 48.
MARKET JEW, G. Fox and G. Pyot called before mayor and high
sheriff, i. 265;
paper written here, i. 266.
MARKET STREET, i. 259, ii. 260, 319, 345.
MARLBOROUGH, i. 331, ii. 203.
*MARSH [MARCHE, RICHARD], ESQUIRE, serviceable to G. Fox and
Friends, i. 485, 486, 487, 491, 492, ii. _66_, 69, 100, 102,
103.
MARSHALL, CHARLES, signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
MARSHALL, PRIEST, of Lancaster, spokesman against G. Fox at
Sessions, i. 137, 138.
MARSHALL, PRIEST, of Wakefield, slanders G. Fox. i. 107.
Marshfield? _See_ Mansfield, Wiltshire.
MARTIN, JAMES, signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
MARYLAND, ii. 160, 162, 163, 176, 183, 188;
visited by Friends, ii. 163, 173, 178;
Friends of, ii. 163, 179, 194, 195, 504;
written to, ii. 491.
MAYLIN, BARTHOLOMEW, of Wiltshire, visited, ii. 203.
MAYOR, JOHN, of America, ii. 190.
*MEAD, WILLIAM, stepson-in-law of G. Fox, famous trial, ii. _127_;
visited at house at Highgate, ii. 261;
with G. Fox, ii. 356, 357, 403;
visited at Gooses in Essex, ii. 403, 450, 456, 475, 479, 491;
mentioned, ii. 371, _372_, 518, 521.
MEAD, SARAH, wife of W. Mead, mentioned, ii. 521.
_See_ FELL, SARAH.
Melita, mentioned, i. 458, 459.
_See_ Malta.
MEMBURY, ii. 95.
MENDLE [MEADLE], ii. 319.
MENDLESHAM, i. 233.
MENHERIOT, i. 265.
MERIONETHSHIRE, ii. 83.
MERMAID INN, THE, i. 209-213, 234.
MERRICK, JAMES, of Ross, visited, ii. 87.
[Mevis.] _See_ Nevis.
MICHAEL’S RIVER, “ST.,” ii. 165, 178.
_See_ MILES RIVER.
MIDDLEHAM, ii. 256.
MIDDLESEX, ii. 128, 203, 204, 261, 345, 359;
mentioned, ii. 102, 486.
MIDDLETON, SIR GEORGE, justice, of [Leighton Hall], Westmorland,
his servants abuse Friends, i. 471;
questions G. Fox at Holker Hall, ii. 19-21.
MIDDLETOWN, ii. 166, 176.
MIDDLETOWN HARBOUR, ii. 175, 176.
MIERS, ELIZABETH, accompanies G. Fox and party to America, ii.
141.
Mile End, Friends of, i. 506.
MILES RIVER, ii. 165, 178.
_See_ “ST.” MICHAEL’S RIVER.
MILFORD HAVEN (America), ii. 189.
MILLOM-IN-BOOTLE, i. 161, ii. 515.
MILNER, JAMES [of Lancashire], his defection and return, i. 158.
MILNER, JANE, of Cheshire, ii. 83.
MIMS, SOUTH, ii. 261, 319, 345.
MINEHEAD, general meeting of Somersetshire Friends near here, a
cheat discovered, ii. 93, 94;
letter written here, ii. 93.
MONK, GEORGE, general, mentioned, i. 453;
he restrains his soldiers from disturbing Friends, i. 465;
G. Fox before him at Edinburgh, ii. 516.
MONK BRETTON, i. 469.
_See_ BARTON ABBEY.
Monmouth, Duke of, lands in the West, ii. 409.
MONMOUTHSHIRE, ii. 87, 91.
MONRO, DANIEL, signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
MONTAGUE, JUDGE, discourse with G. Fox concerning tithes, ii. 357.
MONTAGUE, LADY, convinced in Yorkshire, i. 195;
visited, ii. 76.
MONTGOMERYSHIRE, i. 367, ii. 83.
MONYASH, ii. 334.
MOOR, JOHN, of Eldreth, very large meeting at his house, ii. 105.
MOOR, RICHARD, surgeon, of Shrewsbury, assaulted, ii. 84.
*MOORE, THOMAS, justice, visited [at Hartswood] near Ryegate, i.
260;
often interviews Charles II. on Friends’ behalf, i. _500_, ii.
228.
MOORS, THE, meeting in the steeplehouse here, i. 94.
MOORFIELDS, ii. 124.
MORICE, LEWIS, colonel, of Barbadoes, at a meeting, ii. 152;
visited, ii. 153;
travels with Friends, ii. 153.
MORPETH, i. 413.
MORRICE, ABRAHAM [of Lincoln], stepson-in-law of G. Fox, ii. 521.
MORRICE, ISABEL, wife of A. Morrice, ii. 521.
_See_ FELL, ISABEL;
YEOMANS, ISABEL.
MORRICE, PAUL, Friend, guided G. Fox through Cork, ii. 109.
MORRIS, WM., signs Charles II’smandamus to New England, i. 511.
MOUNCE (MOUNT, MOUNCEY), THOS., at a meeting at Menheriot, i. 265;
general meeting for Cornwall held at his house, i. 326;
visited, ii. 6, 9.
MOUNT, CONSTABLE, of Ulverstone, his opposition, i. 472, 473;
his death, ii. 73.
MUGGLETONIANS, dispute with Friends, i. 516.
MUMBLES, ii. 91.
Munster, Bishop of, his country travelled in, ii. 276;
its inhabitants, ii. 277.
MUSGRAVE, DEPUTY GOVERNOR of Carlisle, a severe man, ii. 16.
MYER, RICHARD, his defection, i. 158;
suddenly cured of lame arm, at Arnside, i. 159;
his disobedience and death, i. 159.
NAILSWORTH, i. 466, ii. 114, 318.
NANCEMOND, ii. 183;
mentioned ii. 189.
NARRAGANSET, great meeting, at a justice’s house here, ii. 171;
visited by Friends, ii. 171.
NATTON ISLAND, ii. 174.
See GOVERNOR’S ISLAND.
*NAYLOR, JAMES, Independent, of Wakefield, convinced, i. 79, 107;
mentioned, i. xlv, ii. 515;
meets G. Fox in Yorkshire, i. 106, at Swarthmore, i. 123, ii.
513, 514, in Walney Island where cruelly treated, i. 134-136,
at Lancaster Sessions of which he writes an account, i.
140-142, in London, i. 237, 259, in Derbyshire where he
disputes with priests, i. 252, at Exeter, i. 327;
imprisoned in Appleby jail, i. 128, and Exeter, i. _327_;
his defection, i. 259, 327, 343, 360, ii. 236;
and return to Truth, i. 328.
NEEDHAM, ——, son of Col. Hacker, speaks against G. Fox, i. 207,
209.
NEEDHAM, RICHARD, signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
Nevis, Friends banished to, ii. 68;
attempted visit by Friends, ii. 153;
the governor a persecutor, ii. 153;
Friends of, ii. 321, 504;
written to, ii. 234.
NEW AMSTERDAM, ii. 177.
_See_ NEWCASTLE (America).
*NEW ENGLAND, persecutions of Friends here, i. 439, 506, _507_,
512, ii. 314, _315_;
visited by G. Fox, ii. 165, and other Friends, ii. 164, 170,
171, 190;
written to, ii. 234, 264, 491;
yearly meeting held, ii. 168, 491;
mentioned, ii. 191;
Friends of, ii. 321, 491, 504.
NEW GARDEN, ii. 109.
New Jersey, Friends of, ii. 175, 404;
visited by Friends, ii. 190.
New York, visited by William Edmundson, ii. 173;
Friends of, ii. 174.
NEWBURY, i. 332.
NEWCASTLE [ON TYNE], i. 413;
priests disturbed and write against Friends, i. 188, 413, 414.
NEWCASTLE (America), ii. 165, 177.
_See_ NEW AMSTERDAM.
NEWICK, ii. 3.
NEWPORT (Mon.), ii. 92.
*NEWPORT, EARL OF, Friends dispute with Jesuits at his house, i.
_427_.
NEWPORT PAGNELL, i. 3, ii. 233.
NEWTON [NEWINGTON], NORTH, ii. 91, 319, 344.
NEWTON IN CARTMEL, i. 117.
NEWTON, NATHANIEL, of Hartshill, visited, ii. 260.
NICHOLAS, SIR EDWARD, KT., signs Charles II’s order for G. Fox’s
release from Lancaster jail, i. 488.
*NICHOLSON, JOSEPH, of Bootle, visited, i. _160_, 161.
NIESON, GERTRUDE DIRICK, of Amsterdam, meetings at her house, ii.
268, 292;
visits the Princess Elizabeth, ii. 272;
visited by Friends, ii. 284, 310;
accompanies G. Fox, ii. 291, 313;
her children, ii. 313;
acts as interpreter, ii. 291.
*Nimeguen, ambassadors gathered here written to, ii. _298_.
NORFOLK, i. 233, 451, 453, 536, ii. 1, 80.
North, Judge, interviewed by M. Fox in London, ii. 518.
NORTH CAROLINA, ii. 186.
NORTH HOLLAND, ii. 273.
NORTH NEWTON [NORTH NEWINGTON], ii. 91, 319, 344.
NORTHALLERTON, ii. 256.
NORTHAMPTON, i. 3, 209, ii. 233, 260.
NORTHAMPTONSHIRE, i. 250, 258, 333, 417, 536, ii. 79, 332, 344.
NORTHUMBERLAND, i. 181, 414, ii. 15, 83, 516;
Truth springs up, i. 183, ii. 251.
*NORWICH, i. 233, _536_;
mentioned, i. 235;
the Mayor issues a warrant to arrest G. Fox, i. 451;
large meeting here, i. 451;
visited by Friends, i. _190_, 453.
NOTTINGHAM, i. 29, 416, ii. 78, 104, 259;
steeplehouse visited, i. 42;
G. Fox imprisoned and brought before mayor and others, i. 43-45,
ii. 511;
the head sheriff friendly, i. 43, ii. 78, 259, _See_ RECKLESS,
JOHN;
Baptist soldier of the town visits G. Fox in Derby dungeon, i.
69;
mentioned, i. 194, 520.
NOTTINGHAMSHIRE, i. 9, 26, 79, 101, 198, 251, 333, 416, 467, 469,
ii. 78, 81, 259, 344, 511, 519;
G. Fox’s “openings” here, i. 19, 23, 26;
Truth springs up, ii. 251;
mentioned, i. 51.
NUNEATON, Priest of, dead, i. 251;
meeting at the house of a priest’s widow, i. 484.
OARE, ii. 203, 358.
OATES [SAMUEL], Baptist teacher meets G. Fox at Barrow, i. 46.
OKINGTON (OAKHAMPTON), i. 326;
the mayor, i. 326.
OLDENBURG, burnt down, ii. 276, 281;
_A Warning_ to the city written, ii. 292.
OLDENBURG, EARL OF, met, ii. 276.
OLNEY, ii. 260.
OLVESTON, i. 466, ii. 93, 118.
ORAM [ULROME], i. 96, ii. 75.
Orange, Prince of, his court at the Hague, ii. 311;
former Prince quoted, ii. 323.
Ormskirk, ii. 25, 26.
OSAN-OVERTON, ii. 401.
OSBURN, WILLIAM, colonel, of Scotland, with G. Fox, i. 393, 399;
visited in the Highlands, i. 394, 404, 405.
OTWAY, ——, disturbs a meeting at John Audland’s, i. 391.
Otway, Sir John, by Charles II’s command orders release of
Margaret Fox, ii. 120.
[OUSTWICK]. _See_ STORR, M.
OVERDELAND, ii. 276.
OVERKIRK, ii. 267.
OVERTON, COL., visited in Yorkshire, i. 98.
OWEN, DR. [JOHN], vice-chancellor of Oxford, with Cromwell at
Whitehall, i. 332.
*OXFORD, i. 335;
education at University does not make ministers of Christ, i. 7,
11, 386;
vice-chancellor of, i. 332;
mentioned, i. _106_, _127_.
OXFORDSHIRE, ii. 79, 91, 119, 128, 203, 204, 206, 317, 319, 344,
358.
OYSTER BAY, ii. 167, 168, 173, 174;
Friends here, ii. 166.
Pachyn, Thomas, dragged out of bed to prison where he died, i.
493.
PACKER, COL., Baptist and justice, of Theobalds, visits G. Fox in
prison at Charing Cross, i. 212.
PAGAN CREEK, ii. 184.
Palatinate, Friends of the, ii. 268.
PALL MALL, i. 490, 491.
*PAPISTS, their contact with Friends, i. 7, 84, 131, 176, 189,
_229_, 515, 516, ii. 59, 60, 100-102, 108, 183, 204, 414, 449.
_See_ D'AUBIGNY;
JESUITS;
POPE, THE.
PARDSHAW CRAG, i. 393, ii. 16, 515.
PARK, JAMES, signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
*PARKER, ALEXANDER, with G. Fox, in Leicestershire, i. _207_, in
London, i. 213, Bedfordshire, i. 226, Cambridgeshire, i. 334,
Scotland, i. 406-410, Bristol, i. 527, ii. 87, Isle of Sheppey,
ii. 131, Holland, ii. 397-403;
mentioned, i. xlv.
PARKER, HENRY, justice, of Evesham, arrests G. Fox at Armscott and
commits him to Worcester jail, ii. 204;
his dealings with him there, ii. 204-220, 228, 518.
PARLIAMENT, LITTLE, writes to Carlisle respecting G. Fox’s
imprisonment, i. 174.
PARLIAMENT, LONG, its dissolution foretold by G. Fox, i. 158;
mentioned, i. 438, ii. 251.
*PARNELL, JAMES, his convincement, ministry and death, i. 172,
_173_, 232;
with G. Fox, i. 201, 232.
PARNELL, THOMAS [of Ripton Regis], visited, i. 537.
PASHUR, ii. 83.
_See_ PERSHORE.
PATCHGATE, ii. 346.
PATCHING, THOMAS, of Binscombe, visited, i. 260.
PATRINGTON, town in uproar, i. 96-100.
PATTISON, GEORGE, accompanies G. Fox to America, ii. 141, 159,
162, 164, 165, 172, and Jamaica, ii. 153, 159;
visits New England, ii. 170.
PATUXENT, ii. 183, 190, 195.
PATUXENT RIVER, ii. 162, 183, 189.
PAUL, WILLIAM, of Frederickstadt, visited, ii. 278.
PAWAW, Indian priest, ii. 186.
PEAK COUNTRY, i. 9, 198, ii. 14, 82.
*PEARSON, ANTHONY, justice, visited, i. 96, 181, 415;
convinced, i. _159_, ii. 515;
with G. Fox in Cumberland, i. 159, and Northumberland, i. 413;
writes to justices respecting G. Fox’s imprisonment at Carlisle,
i. 170, 177;
refused permission to visit G. Fox, i. 171, 177;
visits the dungeon, i. 178;
obtains lists of Friends in various jails, i. 446;
his wife, i. 159, ii. 515.
PEARSON, THOMAS, of Pool Bank, visited, ii. 255.
PEARSON, WILLIAM, visited near Wigton, ii. 16.
PEEL, THE, meeting attended here by G. Fox and others, ii. 345,
371, 372, 387.
PEMBROKE, i. 373.
PEMBROKESHIRE, i. 373.
Pendennis Castle, Captain Fox governor, i. 269, 270, 284, 314.
PENDLE-HILL, mounted and vision seen, i. [xlv], 109;
spring near, i. 109.
PENFORD, JOHN, visited in Leicestershire, ii. 79.
*PENINGTON, ISAAC, visited in Bucks., i. 440, ii. 319;
imprisoned at Reading, ii. 128, _129_.
PENINGTON, MARY, visited, ii. 358.
*PENN, WM., his famous trial, ii. _127_;
with G. Fox in Bristol, ii. 199, in Surrey, ii. 264, in Holland,
ii. 266, 267, 268, 269, 283, 313, 401, in London, ii. 363,
365;
visited, ii. 204, _263_, 264;
travels in Germany, etc., ii. 283, 284, 310, 311;
his Preface to G. Fox’s _Journal_, i. xix-lxii.
Pennsylvania, epistle written to Friends of, ii. 491.
Pennyman, John, his slanderous paper, ii. 154.
PENRYN, i. 265, ii. 7.
*PERROT, JOHN, prisoner in Rome, i. 506;
his apostacy, i. _519_, ii. 42, 80, 236, 277;
papers written respecting him, i. 519, ii. 42.
PERSHORE, ii. 319.
_See_ PASHUR.
[PERTH]. _See_ JOHNSTONS.
PETERS, HUGH, a chaplain of the Protector, refers to G. Fox, i.
285.
PETERS, TIMON, Friend, of Landsmeer, visited, ii. 402.
Phillingham, i. 224.
PHILLIPS [ELIZABETH], WIDOW, of Devonshire, visited, ii. 94.
PICKERING, large meeting with priests and professors, i. 91, 93.
PICKERING, ——, Baptist, of London, uncle of G. Fox, i. 4.
PITT, THE, ii. 403.
PITTAWAY (PITWAY), EDWARD, Friend, of near Evesham, with G. Fox,
i. 253;
secures G. Fox’s greater liberty at Worcester, ii. 228.
PLYMOUTH, i. 264, 458, ii. 6, 94;
mentioned, i. 504, ii. 68, 69;
Friends of, i. 313, 326, 360, 505, ii. 94.
_See_ LIGHT, JOHN.
POCOCK, ——, Presbyterian, of London, husband of Lady Abigail
Darcy, ii. 86.
POINT COMFORT, ii. 188.
POINT JUDITH, ii. 172.
POLAND, i. 434;
a doctor from, discourses with G. Fox, ii. 292, 422.
POLAND, KING OF, letters written to, ii. 321, 326, 422;
mentioned, ii. 287, 485.
POLLEXFEN, HENRY [of West Alvington], justice, imprisoned, i. 302;
visited, ii. 6;
at a general meeting at Exeter, i. 359.
PONTEFRACT, i. 416.
PONTEMOIL, i. 362.
POOL BANK, ii. 255, 512.
POOL, CAPTAIN, of Burntisland, visited, wife and he convinced, i.
406.
POOLE, i. 261, 359, 456;
Friends of, ii. 3.
Pope, Blanch, of Loo, a Ranter, visited by James Hellen and George
Bewley to their hurt, ii. 7.
POPE, THE, written to, i. 222;
book respecting, i. 518;
mentioned, i. 435, ii. 43, 100, 101, 210, 216, 220, 221, 227,
356.
PORTER, HENRY, mayor and justice, arrests G. Fox at Swarthmore, i.
471;
has him before him, i. 473;
commits him to Lancaster jail, i. 474-479, 487, 488;
his fear for himself and family, i. 489;
on the bench at Lancaster Sessions, ii. [22], 72;
his death, ii. 72.
PORTER, JOHN, visited, in America, ii. 188.
PORTER, JUSTICE, visited in Cornwall, ii. 6.
PORTISHEAD, ii. 93.
PORTSMOUTH, i. 260, 359.
POTOMAC RIVER, ii. 189.
POUNER, ii. 3, 4.
*PRESBYTERIANS, their contact with Friends, i. 25, 211, 250, 397,
404, 503, 516, ii. 64, 85, 86, 125.
_See_ Baxter; FOX, JOHN; POCOCK; SIMPSON, JUSTICE; WILKINSON,
WILLIAM.
Prester John, his country [?Malabar], Friends attempt to reach, i.
517.
PRESTON, i. 382, 484, ii. 233;
mentioned, ii. 25.
PRESTON PATRICK, i. 115, ii. 512.
PRESTON, JAMES, Friend, visited in America, ii. 183, 189, 190.
PRESTON, THOMAS, justice, of Holker Hall, grants a warrant to
arrest G. Fox, ii. 18;
questions G. Fox when before him at Holker Hall, ii. 19;
commits M. Fell to prison, ii. 29;
his death, ii. 72;
his wife abusive, i. 475.
PRICE, PETER, justice, of Radnorshire, convinced, i. 251;
signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
PROVIDENCE, ii. 170.
PUDDIMORE, i. 328, ii. 12, 95.
PULLOXHILL. _See_ BULLOCKS HILL.
PURFOY, COL., Nathaniel Stevens speaks to him of G. Fox, i. 48.
PURGATORY, bad boggy place in America, ii. 175.
PURMEREND, ii. 273.
PURSLOE, CAPT., of Cranswick, visited, i. 81, 95;
accompanies G. Fox to steeple-house, i. 81-83.
PYOT, EDWARD, ex-captain of Bristol, attends a meeting at
Swannington, i. 199;
travels with G. Fox in the west, i. 261, 263;
is ill and healed, i. 264;
discourse with the mayor and alderman of Market-Jew, i. 266;
hailed before Major Ceely, i. 267;
arrested with G. Fox and imprisoned at Launceston, i. 267-322,
ii. 516;
his letters to Chief Justice Glynn, i. 287-300, and to
Major-Gen. Desborough, i. 318;
visited by G. Fox, i. 328, 330, 463, 466, 527, 528;
travels with him, i. 330, 332, 333;
interview with the Mayor of Bristol, i. 462;
his wife’s present to him, i. 317, 326.
QUINCE’S ISLAND, ii. 189.
RABLEY HEATH, ii. 332.
RADNORSHIRE, ii. 13, 84;
immense meeting here, i. 367.
_See_ PRICE, PETER.
RADWAY, ii. 344.
RAGLEY, ii. 319.
RAMPSIDE, chapel visited, i. 120, ii. 513.
RANTERS, come in contact with Friends, i. 47, 48, 85-87, 195, 198,
199, 212, 231, 263, 516, 519, ii. 95, 96, 170.
_See_ BOTTOMLEY;
BUSHEL;
COBB;
JONES, RICE;
Pope, B.;
SALMON.
Rantzow, Earl of, monument to, ii. 277.
RAPPAHANNOCK RIVER, ii. 189.
RAWLINS, J., letter to, ii. 326.
RAWLINSON, JUSTICE, chairman of magistrates at Holker Hall, ii.
19, 22, 23;
his death, ii. 72.
RAWLINSON, THOMAS, visits G. Fox at Launceston, is robbed, and
imprisoned at Exeter, i. 301;
with G. Fox in Scotland, i. 409.
*READING, i. 230, 332, ii. 79, 128, 203, 317, 358;
an alderman of, convinced, i. 326;
G. Fox’s exercise of mind here, i. 444-447, 467, 489;
Friends here, i. 456, 479, _534_, ii. 128, 317.
RECKLESS, JOHN, sheriff of Nottingham, visited, i. 43, ii. 78,
259;
his restitution for injury, i. 44;
his wife, i. 43.
_See_ NOTTINGHAM.
RECONOW CREEK, ii. 194.
REDRUTH, i. 268, ii. 8.
REEVES, CAPT., visited in Hampshire, ii. 95.
REIGATE (RYEGATE), i. 260, ii. 346.
RHODE ISLAND, yearly meeting held here during G. Fox’s visit, ii.
168;
Friends of, ii. 168, 169;
visited by Friends, ii. 171, 176, 190;
mentioned, ii. 171, 172, 174.
RICHARDSON, RICHARD, with G. Fox at Swarthmore, i. 471.
RICHMOND, ——, of Durham, visited, ii. 14.
RICKMANSWORTH, ii. 204.
RIGG, AMBROSE, signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
RINGWOOD, i. 260, 359, 456;
mentioned, ii. 3, 4.
RIPAN, MAJOR, mayor of Lancaster, convinced, i. 139.
[RIPTON REGIS]. _See_ PARNELL, THOS.
Roanoke, visited by Wm. Edmundson, ii. 173;
governor of, ii. 184.
ROANOKE RIVER, ii. 185.
*ROBERTS, GERRARD, of London, with G. Fox at Warwick, i. _255_,
Bristol, ii. 199,
and Worcester, ii. 215;
dispute with Papists at his house, i. 515;
visited, i. 515, ii. 127, 132, 138.
*Robertson, Thos., imprisoned at Kendal for tithes, ii. _55_.
ROBINSON, ANDREW, of Scotland, an Independent, his convincement,
i. 398.
ROBINSON, COLONEL, justice, of Cornwall, opposes Friends, his
tragic death, ii. 9.
ROBINSON, GEORGE, of Burrowby, visited, ii. 256.
ROBINSON, JUSTICE, chairman of Sessions at Pickering, visited, i.
92, 95, 123, ii. 76.
ROBINSON, RICHARD, of Counterside, i. 111, 122, ii. 256.
*Robinson, William, put to death in New England, i. _507_, 511;
his father, i. 511.
ROBINSON, WILLIAM, signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
ROCHESTER, i. 227, ii. 131.
ROELOFFS, JOHN, interpreter, of Holland, ii. 285, 483.
*Rome, visited by Friends, i. 228, _229_, 506.
ROMNEY, i. 227.
ROPER, LIEUTENANT, of Yorkshire, visited, i. 106.
ROPER, RICHARD, convinced at Cartmel, i. 158.
ROSS., ii. 87.
ROTTERDAM, ii. 267, 311, 399, 403;
Friends of, ii. 266-268, 312, 313, 326;
papers written here, ii. 311.
*ROUS, JOHN, stepson-in-law of G. Fox, travels with him, ii. 131,
141, _145_, 199;
mentioned, ii. 120, 131, 145, 159, 521;
visited at Kingston, ii. 141, 206, 396, 404, 418, 440, 463, 489.
*ROUS, MARGARET, wife of John Rous, ii. 120, _198_, 489, 521;
her daughter [unnamed], ii. 418.
_See_ FELL, MARGARET.
ROUS, MARGARET, daughter of J. and M. Rous, visited, ii. 396.
*ROUS, THOMAS, of Barbadoes, father of John Rous, ii. _145_, 148,
152, 158.
ROUSE, COLONEL, justice, visits G. Fox at Launceston, i. 281, 282,
and at Truro, ii. 8.
RUSH, JOHN, of Kempston, Bedfordshire, with G. Fox, i. 258, ii.
260.
RYE, i. 227;
its mayor, i. 227.
Rye (America), ii. 174.
RYEGATE (REIGATE), i. 260, ii. 346.
SADDINGTON, ii. 332.
*SALE, RICHARD, constable of near Chester, convinced, carries a
lantern and candle as a sign, his imprisonment and death, i.
503, _504_.
SALING, ii. 314.
SALISBURY, EARL OF, his son visits G. Fox at Worcester, ii. 225.
Sallee, ii. 142, 486.
SALMON, JOSEPH, Ranter, visited in prison at Coventry, i. 48.
SALT, WM., of London, imprisoned with G. Fox at Launceston, i.
277.
*SALTHOUSE, THOMAS, convinced at Swarthmore, i. xlv, ii. 513;
meets G. Fox in Devonshire, ii. _6_.
SAND-SIDE, i. 383.
SANDS, THE, i. 383, 473, ii. 14, 17, 233, 515.
SANDS, ADAM, of Ulverstone, an opposer, written to, i. 153;
his death, i. 154.
SANDS, CAPT., visited, his opposition, i. 122, 123;
his wife and son, i. 118.
SANDS, COLONEL, writes to justices concerning G. Fox, ii. 208.
SARDAM, ii. 402.
SASSAFRAS RIVER, ii. 165, 178.
SAUNDERS, MARY, a Friend, of Cromwell’s household, i. 332.
Savile, Henry, of Charles II.’s bed-chamber, assists in release of
T. Lower from Worcester, ii. 208.
Savoy, Conference, i. 441.
Savoy, Duke of, persecutor, i. 434.
SAVOY, meeting house here, ii. 376, 387, 390.
SAWREY, JOHN, justice, of Ulverstone, his opposition to Friends,
i. 120, 122, 123, 131, 132, 136, 137, 139, 141, 149, ii. 513,
514, 515;
written to, i. 147;
his death, i. 149.
SCAFE, PHILIP, ex-priest, convinced, with G. Fox in Yorkshire, i.
86, ii. 75;
mentioned, i. 88.
*SCALEHOUSE, i. 416, _418_.
SCARBOROUGH, i. 89, ii. 14;
G. Fox imprisoned in the castle, i. xlviii, ii. 58-70, 73, 74,
77, 233, 517;
the governor, ii. 58, 70, 105, _see_ CROSSLANDS, SIR JORDAN.
SCARHOUSE, ii. 256.
SCOTLAND, i. xlviii, 393-413, 469;
G. Fox’s banishment, i. 401;
priests formulate curses, i. 396;
mentioned, i. 180, ii. 351;
Friends of, i. 412, ii. 83, 98, 233, 251, 263, 345;
visited by Friends, i. 189, 215, 398.
SCOTT, JOSEPH, visited in America, ii. 185.
SEDBERGH, ii. 14, 15, 255, 256, 512;
Friends of, i. 110, 112;
the priest of, i. 155, _see_ BURTON, PRIEST.
*SEEKERS, come in contact with Friends, i. _443_, 516, ii. 269.
SELBY, i. 80.
SEVERN (America), ii. 182.
*SHACKLEWELL, girls’ school, ii. _89_, 138, 348.
SHAD [GABRIEL], INFORMER, at a meeting at the Savoy, ii. 390;
his career, ii. 391.
SHARMAN, THOMAS, ex-jailer of Derby, convinced, writes to G. Fox,
i. 523.
_See_ DERBY.
SHARP, PETER, visited in America, ii. 183.
Shattock, Samuel, Friend, of New England, king’s messenger, i.
509.
SHAW, WM., of The Hill, Yorkshire, visited, ii. 334.
SHELTER ISLAND, ii. 171-173.
SHEPPEY, ISLE OF, ii. 130.
SHERMAN, WM., master of vessel bringing G. Fox and others from
Holland, ii. 403.
SHIPTON [CHEPSTOW], ii. 92.
SHIPTON, RICHARD, of Yorkshire, visited, ii. 75, 105.
SHIREHAMPTON, ii. 198.
SHREWSBURY, i. 362, ii. 84.
SHREWSBURY (America), ii. 175.
SHRODER, CHRISTIAN, magistrate of Dantzic, written to, ii. 485.
SHROPSHIRE, ii. 13, 83.
SIBFORD, ii. 319.
SIDON, HENRY, of Baddesley, visited, ii. 259.
SILEBY, i. 251, ii. 79, 259, 332.
SIMCOCK, JOHN, visited, ii. 233.
SIMPSON, JUSTICE, Presbyterian, chairman of Sessions at Worcester,
ii. 209, 211, 212;
his son tried for murder, ii. 224.
SIMPSON, WILLIAM. _See_ SYMPSON, WILLIAM.
SKEGBY, i. 198, 469, 529, ii. 78, 259.
*SKIPTON, general meeting here, i. _418_, 469.
SLAUGHTERFORD, i. 330, ii. 13;
some opposition to women’s meetings, ii. 202, 203.
SLONE, THE [?CAERLEON], i. 360.
SMETHICK, i. 268.
_See_ FALMOUTH.
SMITH, HUGH, visited in America, ii. 184, 186.
*SMITH, HUMPHREY, ex-priest, visited in Evesham prison, i. _253_.
*SMITH, STEPHEN, of Worplesdon, near Guildford, ii. 130, 203, 264;
his sufferings, ii. 264;
with G. Fox, ii. _318_.
*SMITH, WILLIAM, of Sileby, i. 251, ii. _81_, 259;
meets G. Fox, i. 530, 532;
his sufferings, ii. 81.
Smithfield, i. 441.
Smyrna, i. 518.
SNEAD, RICHARD, visited near Bristol, ii. 317;
with G. Fox, ii. 318.
SOCINIANS, meet with Friends, i. 516, ii. 203, 269.
Somerset House, suggested purchase as a meeting house, i. 445.
SOMERSETSHIRE, i. 457, 458, 461;
Truth spreads in, i. 301;
general meetings held, ii. 12, 93, 95.
SOMMERTOWN (SOMERTON), ii. 184, 187.
SOUND, THE (America), ii. 172, 173.
SOUTH MIMS, ii. 261, 319, 345.
SOUTH STREET, ii. 409, 412, 415, 454, 475;
paper written here, ii. 412.
SOUTHAM, ii. 344.
SOUTHAMPTON, i. 261, ii. 3, 95.
SOUTHGATE, ii. 483;
papers written here, ii. 483, 485.
*Southwark, Friends’ sufferings in, i. _229_, ii. 253.
SPAIN, KING OF, letter to, i. 222;
ambassador of, i. 427.
SPEED, THOMAS, interview with the mayor of Bristol, i. 462.
SPENCER, JUSTICE, at Lancaster Sessions, ii. 22.
SPITALFIELDS, ii. 378.
STACEY, THOMAS, of Ballowfield, visited, i. 195, ii. 259.
STAFFORDSHIRE, i. 335, 484, ii. 13, 82, 106, 333;
paper written here, ii. 333.
STAINES, ii. 359.
STAINMOOR, ii. 14.
STAINSBY, ii. 259;
mentioned, i. 51.
STAITHES, meeting with Ranters, i. 86.
STAMPER, FRANCIS, signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
STANLEY, JOHN, of Warwickshire, visited, ii. 319.
STARLING, SAMUEL, mayor of London, persecutor, ii. 125, 127.
STATEN ISLAND, ii. 175.
STAVELY, ii. 512.
STEPHENS, WM., visited in America, ii. 193, 194.
STEVENAGE, ii. 332.
STEVENS (STEPHENS), NATHANIEL, priest of Drayton, visits G. Fox,
i. 5;
meets him at Market Bosworth, i. 48,
and at Drayton, i. 200-206;
mentioned, i. 7, 8, 208.
STEYNING, i. 229.
[STINCHCOMB]. _See_ FINCHCOMB.
STIRLING, i. 405, ii. 516.
STODDARD, AMOR, captain, convinced, i. 24;
with G. Fox, i. 232, 233, 236, 255, 334;
visited by G. Fox at Enfield, ii. 132;
his death, ii. 132.
STOKE, ii. 9.
STOKE ORCHARD, ii. 318.
STONY STRATFORD, ii. 344.
STOOKS, JUSTICE, stops a warrant against G. Fox at Marlborough, i.
331.
STORR, MARMADUKE, visited in Northampton prison, i. 209;
visited [at Oustwick], ii. 75.
*STORY, JOHN, the schismatic, met at Hertford, ii. _347_;
mentioned, ii. 285.
STOT [MARY], WIDOW, of Dalston, visited, ii. 396, 404.
STRATFORD (Essex), ii. 131.
STRATFORD (Warwickshire), ii. 319.
STRATTON, ii. 94.
STREET, ii. 12.
STREET, JUDGE, chairman of Quarter Sessions at Worcester, ii.
219-224.
STRICKLAND HEAD, i. 180, 392, ii. 15.
STRIKEHUYSEN, ii. 276.
STROBUS, ii. 275, 282.
STROUDE, GEORGE, counseller for G. Fox in London, ii. 213, 214.
*STUBBS, JOHN, ex-soldier, convinced, i. xlv, 189;
with G. Fox, i. 527, 529, ii. 107, 131, 141;
his travels, i. 189, 227, _229_, 517, 518, ii. 114, 159, 168,
170, 190;
his sufferings, ii. 30, 31;
his family, ii. 30;
joint compiler of _The Battledore_, i. 513.
STUBBS, THOMAS, with G. Fox at Brigham, i. 184.
STUDHOLM, CUTHBERT, justice, written to, i. 174.
SUDBURY [SODBURY], ii. 318.
SUFFOLK, i. 233, 451, ii. 1, 80.
SUNBURY, ii. 359.
SUNNEMAN, AARENT, visited in Holland respecting his daughters, ii.
399.
SURREY, i. 260, 357, 456, ii. 104, 130, 203, 264, 345, 377, 378;
Friends of, plundered, ii. 96, 264;
men’s meetings settled, ii. 97.
SUSSEX, i. 229, 357, 456, ii. 3, 97, 104, 130, 263, 345, 358, 377;
mentioned, ii. 517;
men’s meetings settled, ii. 97.
SUTTON, i. 236, 536.
SWAN ISLAND, ii. 180.
*SWANNINGTON, i. 199, 207, 258, 467, 530, 535, ii. 259, 332;
general meeting here, i. 199, _469_.
SWANSEA, i. 360, ii. 91.
SWARTHMORE, i. 118, 121, 122, 126, 134, 136, 147, 158, 166, 180,
189, 383, 391, 416, 471, 484, ii. 14, 17, 18, 21, 22, 233,
234-255, 335-343, 512, 516-518;
papers written here, i. 147, 149, 150, 152-155, 384-391, ii.
234-254, 335-343;
mentioned, i. 159, 166, ii. 356, 513.
Sweden, ii. 277.
*SYMPSON, WILLIAM, goes naked and barefoot as a sign, i. _502_;
mentioned, i. xlv, _505_.
*SYNDERHILL-GREEN, i. _189_, 195, 467, ii. _14_, 77.
TADCASTER, ii. 258, 259.
TALLCOAT, WILLIAM [of Colchester], accompanies G. Fox to Holland,
ii. 266.
TAMWORTH, priest visited here, i. 6.
TATHAM, PRIEST, written to, i. 154.
TAUNTON, i. 328, ii. 12.
*TAYLOR, CHRISTOPHER, brother of Thomas Taylor, of Skipton,
convinced, i. _129_, visited at his school, at Edmonton, ii.
346, 348;
papers written at his house, ii. 348.
TAYLOR, JAMES, of Newton in Cartmel, visited, i. 117, ii. 17.
*TAYLOR, JOHN, of York, visited, ii. _257_;
letter written at his house, ii. 258.
*TAYLOR, THOMAS, priest, of Skipton, convinced at Swarthmore, i.
_127_;
travels with G. Fox, i. 128, 201, 369, 371;
mentioned, i. xlv, 129, 469, ii. 105 [?].
TAYLOR, THOMAS, captain, visited near Halifax, i. 189, 195, 196,
ii. 77, 105 [?].
TAYLOR, THOMAS, of America, visited, ii. 194.
TEAGE, THOMAS, of Cornwall, ii. 7.
TEDBURY, ii. 318.
TENBY, i. 371;
the mayor of, and his wife, and others, i. 371, 372;
Friends of, ii. 91.
TENNANT, ——, of the Dales, convinced, i. 111.
TENNANT, WIDOW, of Scarhouse, visited, ii. 256.
TENTERDEN, G. Fox’s detention here, ii. 2, 3.
TEWKESBURY, i. 254, 256, 466, ii. 318.
Thames, River, ii. 179.
THEOBALDS, i. 212, 213.
THOMAS, MARGARET, preaches at Bristol, i. 527.
THOMPSON, JUSTICE, of Lancaster, grants a warrant against G. Fox,
i. 136, 137, 139, ii. 515.
THURSTON, THOMAS, visited, in America, ii. 194.
*TICKELL, HUGH, visited, near Keswick, ii. _16_.
TICKHILL, steeple house visited, i. 104.
TINICUM, UPPER, ii. 177.
TIVERTON, ii. 10.
Toldervey, John, of London, his convincement, defection and
return, i. 259.
TOMBS [JOHN], PRIEST, of Leominster, argues with G. Fox, i.
369-371.
TOPSHAM, i. 263, ii. 6, 95.
TOTNESS, i. 264. ii. 6.
TOTTENHAM, ii. 491, 499, 500, 503;
epistle written here, ii. 501.
TOWNSEND, PRIEST, at G. Fox’s meeting, at Norwich, i. 451.
TREDHAVEN [THIRD HAVEN] CREEK, ii. 165, 179, 194.
Tredington, ii. 205, 219, 222.
TREGANGEEVES, ii. 94.
TRELAWNY, ELIZABETH, of Plymouth [daughter of Sir John Trelawny,
Bart.], convinced, i. 265, 313, 360.
TRENT, i. 101, ii. 81.
TRIPE, NICHOLAS, of Kingsbridge, convinced, with his wife, i. 264.
TRURO, ii. 8, 94.
Turkey, ii. 306.
Turks, referred to, ii. 27, 53, 64, 144, 291, 306, 307, 464, 485.
TURNER, JUDGE, on circuit, at Lancaster, ii. 26;
G. Fox before him at Lancaster, ii. 42, 51,
and at Worcester, ii. 216.
TURVEY, ii. 260.
TURVILLE-HEATH, ii. 315.
TWICKENHAM, i. 442.
TWISDEN, JUDGE, G. Fox before him at Westminster, i. 486,
at Lancaster, ii. 26, 29,
and again at Lancaster, ii. 42, 51-53.
TWITTEY, ——, Clerk of the Peace, at Worcester, ii. 224.
TWO HORSE RACES (America), ii. 172.
TWYCROSS, several visited here, i. 49, 200, 467, 536.
Tyburn, i. 209.
Tynemouth Castle, ii. 57;
its governor visits G. Fox, at Scarborough, ii. 61.
[ULROME]. _See_ ORAM.
ULVERSTONE, i. 118, 119, 130, 133, 471;
steeple house visited, i. 126, 131, ii. 512, 514;
priest and people written to, i. 149, 150, 152, 153;
mentioned, ii. 234, 254, 514.
UNDERBARROW, i. 116, 117, 124, 125, ii. 15, 512.
UPPER TINICUM, ii. 177.
UXBRIDGE, ii. 359.
VALE OF BEAVOR, i. 26, 29.
_See_ BEAVOR, VALE OF.
VANDEWALL, JOHN, visited at Harwich, ii. 266.
*Vane [Sir], Henry, Friends brought before him, in London, i.
_443_.
VAUGHTON, JOHN, signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
*Vice, The, cell in Norwich Castle, Friends imprisoned here, i.
_536_.
VIRGINIA, ii. 183, 188;
Friends written to, ii. 491;
mentioned. ii. 163, 189, 195;
visited by Friends, ii. 164, 173, 193.
WAKEFIELD, i. 79;
steeple house visited, i. 107.
*WALDENFIELD, SAMUEL, accompanies G. Fox to Holland, ii. 398;
goes to Friesland, ii. _400_.
*WALES, i. 360, 362, 363, 367, 371, 380, 381, ii. 13, 83, 92;
visited by Friends, i. _140_, _190_;
Friends of, i. 251, 301, 362, ii. 374,
written to, ii. 374;
mentioned, i. 188, ii. 521.
WALNEY ISLAND, i. 121, 134, ii. 514;
mentioned, i. 136.
Walters, Thomas, of Bolton, imprisoned, ii. 32.
*WALTHAM ABBEY, i. 213, ii. 89, 348, 354, 409, 456, 473, 475, 499;
boys’ school, ii. _89_;
mentioned, i. 212.
WANDSWORTH, ii. 346, 359.
WANSTEAD, ii. 456.
WAPPING, ii. 141.
WARBOROUGH, ii. 358.
WARD, CAPTAIN, convinced, i. 113;
imprisoned, ii. 55.
WARE, ii. 500.
WARMSWORTH, i. 469;
steeplehouse visited, i. 102;
priest obtains warrant against G. Fox, i. 106.
WARRINGTON, ii. 82, 106, 233.
WARWICK, i. 254-256, 335, ii. 344;
Friends in prison visited, ii. 79, 104.
WARWICKSHIRE, i. 5, 25, 200, 252, 256, 335, 417, 484, 536, ii. 13,
82, 120, 207, 259, 319, 333, 344, 511;
mentioned, ii. 205, 206;
Truth springs up, ii. 251.
WATERLAND, ii. 288, 401;
mentioned, ii. 307.
WATFORD, ii. 319, 358.
*WATKINS, MORGAN, meets G. Fox in Radnorshire, i. _368_.
WATKINSON, GEORGE, ex-justice of Pontefract, visited, i. 416, ii.
76.
WATTS, GEORGE, accompanies G. Fox to Holland, ii. 266, 397-403;
visits Ipswich, ii. 403.
WELCH, WM., his wife convinced at Leith, i. 399.
Welchpool, ii. 229.
WELLINGBOROUGH, i. 250.
WELLINGTON (Somerset), ii. 10.
WELLS, WILLIAM, of Knighton, visited, ii. 259.
WENNINGTON, MILES, of Cumberland, visited, i. 159.
WENSLEYDALE, i. 110, ii. 256, 512.
WEST, COLONEL, justice, on the bench at Lancaster Sessions, i.
138, 139, 141, ii. 22;
favourable to Friends, i. 138, 139, 143, 159, 383, ii. 515;
clerk of Assize at Lancaster, i. 143;
coroner, i. 147;
meets G. Fox privately, i. 146, 159, 383, ii. 21.
WEST, MATTHEW, justice, of Borwick, on bench, at Lancaster
Sessions, ii. [22], 72;
his death, ii. 72.
[WEST ALVINGTON]. _See_ POLLEXFEN, HENRY.
[WEST CHESTER]. _See_ CHESTER.
WEST FRIESLAND, ii. 401.
WEST JERSEY, ii. 166.
West Riding, i. 106.
WESTERN SHORE, ii. 182.
WESTMINSTER, i. xlviii, ii., 356, 387, 518.
WESTMORLAND, i. 113, 122, 125, 128, 130, 156, 180, 391, ii. 14,
16, 17, 255, 335, 343, 512, 515;
Friends of, i. 383, 470;
papers sent to, ii. 20, 83, 235;
Truth springs up, i. 183, ii. 251;
mentioned, i. 139, 173, ii. 22, 332.
WESTON, BARON, of London, his bitterness towards G. Fox, and
death, ii. 358.
WESTON (Bucks.), ii. 90, 319.
WEYMOUTH, peaceable meeting here, i. 262, 359.
WHEELER STREET, Meeting attended, ii. 378.
WHETSTONE, G. Fox arrested here, i. 207, 251;
several convinced here, i. 251.
WHISPOOL, ii. 282.
WHITBY, i. 89, ii. 14, 75, 105.
WHITEHALL, Cromwell visited here, i. 210, 213, 214, 332;
mentioned, i. 488, 490, 492, 510, ii. 516, 518.
WHITE-HART-COURT, i. l, ii. 505, 522.
WHITEHAUGH, ii. 13.
*WHITEHEAD, GEORGE, visits Norwich, i. _190_, 453, _536_;
with G. Fox, ii. 131, 320, 332;
signs Testimony to G. Fox, ii. 525.
*WHITEHEAD, JOHN, with G. Fox, ii. _14_, 258;
assists in release of G. Fox from Scarborough Castle, ii. 69,
and carries the order for it to him, ii. 70.
WHITEHEAD, PRIEST, his steeplehouse [at Halton] visited, i. 124.
WHITTINGTON, ii. 260.
WICOMICO, RIVER, ii. 192.
*WIDDERS, ROBERT, of Kellet, convinced, i. xlv, ii. 515;
visited, i. 124, 145, 146, 383, 470, 471, ii. 15, 335;
with G. Fox, i. _179_, 393, 405, 406, 409, 410, 485, 486, ii.
10, 57, 83, 141, 159, 164, 165, 170, 172, 193, 198, 255, 516;
imprisoned in Carlisle, i. 179;
his wife, ii. 255.
WIGGAN, MAJOR, reproved by G. Fox in London, i. 442;
Baptist preacher, imprisoned with G. Fox at Lancaster, ii. 34;
his doings, ii. 34-36;
death of his wife and himself, ii. 34.
WIGSTON, ii. 332.
WIGTON, i. 180, ii. 16.
WILCOCK, HENRY, visited in America, ii. 178.
WILD, JUDGE, G. Fox before him in London, ii. 213, 229;
appealed to on his behalf, ii. 225.
WILD, MAJOR, of Worcester, a persecutor, ii. 84.
*WILKINSON, JOHN, priest, of Cumberland, his steeplehouses
visited, i. 161, 163, 164, 184;
his convincement and death, i. _392_, 393, ii. 515.
*WILKINSON, JOHN, the schismatic, i. _392_, ii. 285.
WILKINSON, WM., a Presbyterian, challenges G. Fox to fight in
Scarborough Castle, ii. 67;
is cut off, ii. 67.
WILLIAMS, EX-CAPTAIN, Friend, of Stratford, G. Fox ill at his
house, ii. 131.
WILLIAMS, ROGER, priest, of New England, writes against Friends,
ii. 264;
is answered, ii. 264.
WILLIAMS, WM., Friend, of Alkmaar, visited, ii. 273, 402.
WILLOUGHBY POINT, ii. 188.
*WILSON, GEORGE, Friend, visited in America, ii. _181_.
*WILSON, WM., prisoner in Lancaster, ii. _30_, 31.
WILTSHIRE, i. 331, 528, ii. 5, 6, 13, 79, 87, 119;
mentioned, ii. 115, 116, 121, 202, 317.
WIMESWOLD, ii. 259.
Winchester, ii. 96.
WINCHMORE HILL, ii. 354, 455, 475, 491, 499, 500.
WINDHAM, JUDGE, speaks against G. Fox at Lancaster Assizes and
issues a warrant, i. 143.
WINDSOR, LORD, lord lieutenant of Worcestershire, written to, ii.
206-208.
WINSMORE, DR., justice, of America, convinced and visited, ii.
193.
WINTERBOURNE, ii. 317.
WINTHROP, GOVERNOR, of New England, visited in England, i. 512;
mentioned, ii. 174.
WITHAM, ii. 403.
WITTY, DR., visits G. Fox, in Scarborough Castle, ii. 61.
WOLDS, THE, i. 89, ii. 105, 512.
WORCESTER, i. 253, 466, ii. 84, 318;
G. Fox imprisoned in the jail, i. xlviii, ii. 206-213, 215-220,
221-229, 234, 318, 518,
where he writes papers, ii. 230, 231;
mentioned, ii. 3, 205, 210, 212, 213, 214, 222, 224.
WORCESTERSHIRE, i. 252, 335, ii. 83, 204;
mentioned, ii. 205, 206.
WORKUM, ii. 273.
WORMINGHURST, ii. 264, 346, 377.
WORPLESDON, ii. 264, 346.
[WRAMPLINGHAM], i. 233, 235, 536.
_See_ LAWRENCE, CAPT.
WREXHAM, i. 380;
mentioned, i. 188.
WREY, SIR JOHN, of Lincolnshire, and his wife convinced, i. 197;
they attend another of G. Fox’s meetings, i. 334.
WREY, SIR RICHARD, of Lincolnshire, convinced, i. 197;
his wife and he attend another of G. Fox’s meetings, when his
wife [?] is convinced, i. 334;
he departs from Truth, i. 197.
WRIGHT, WIDOW, Friend, visited in America, ii. 183, 187.
WYCOMBE, ii. 315, 316.
WYE (America), ii. 194.
WYE RIVER, ii. 165.
YARMOUTH, i. 233.
YARROW, WILLIAM, visited in America, ii. 184.
YEALAND, i. 136, ii. 515;
Friends of, i. 471.
*YEARLY MEETINGS, i. _418_, _469_, 491.
_See_ BALBY;
CROOK, JOHN;
LONDON;
RHODE ISLAND;
YORK.
*YEOMANS, ISABEL, of Bristol, daughter of M. Fell, meets G. Fox at
Bristol, ii. 117, _198_;
travels with him in Holland, ii. 266, 269, 282, 285;
delivers G. Fox’s letter to the Princess Elizabeth, ii. 269.
_See_ FELL, ISABEL;
MORRICE, ISABEL.
YEOMAN, WILLIAM, of Irb’s Court, visited, ii. 93.
YORK, ii. 14, 57, 76, 104, 105, 257, 258, 519;
cathedral visited, i. 83;
Friends in, i. 124, 172, ii. 343, 344, 488, 512;
yearly meetings here, ii. 488;
letter written here, ii. 258;
mentioned, i. 106, 159, 195, 196.
*YORKSHIRE, i. 79, 102, 123, 195, 335, 415, 416, 467, ii. 14, 23,
105, 335, 343, 511, 515, 516, 517;
Truth springs up, i. 183, ii. 251;
Friends of, i. 252, ii. 33, _104_, 334;
mentioned, i. 106, ii. 20, 23, 33, 64.
York, Duke of, his presence saves Henry Fell from death, i. 491.
Young, Peter, told of the doings of Presbyterians in
Herefordshire, ii. 86.
INDEX II.
PRINCIPAL SUBJECTS.
Adam, the first and second, compared, ii. 446;
his state before the fall, attainable, i. 28, 346;
his innocency, a higher state than, even a state in Christ,
attainable, i. 28, 419, ii. 136, 200, 218, 239;
his perfection, a doctrine not endured by professors, i. 34.
Antichrists and false Prophets, discovered, etc., i. 91, 160, 314,
336, ii. 416, 440, 487.
Apostacy, entered since the Apostles’ days, i. 338.
Apostates and Professors, have Scriptures in the form, but not in
the power or Spirit, i. 11, 109;
are censorious judges, ii. 330.
Apostles and Prophets, the power and Spirit of, attainable now, i.
34, 262, 428, 515, ii. 153;
were husbandmen and tradesmen, ii. 480, 481.
Apparel, pride therein testified against, ii. 412.
Apprentices, recommended to be put forth, ii. 119.
Atheists, confounded, i. 26.
Backsliders, their state, ii. 245;
they return and condemn their actions, i. 328, ii. 7, 80, 94,
164, 202, 203.
*Banishment of Friends, ii. 68, _69_, 282, 485.
Baptism of the Spirit, i. 340, 342.
Baptism in water, i. 46, 262, 340;
why permitted to some of the early Christians, i. 340.
_Battledore, The_, a short account of it, i. 513, ii. 19.
Believers, are horn of God, and are freed from sin, i. 7, 56;
are taught by the Anointing, i. 7, 59, 307, 336, ii. 271;
enjoy everlasting life on earth, ii. 466.
Bible. _See_ Scriptures.
Bigamy, disowned, ii. 185.
Birth, the first and second, distinguished, i. 200;
the true one is persecuted, but does not persecute, i. 308, ii.
305.
Blind and deaf men, not enlisted as soldiers, either outwardly or
inwardly, ii. 496.
Blind, not received for sacrifice, ii. 248.
Blood of Christ, seen spiritually, i. 24, 430;
professors will only have it without them, i. 24.
Body and blood of Christ, i. 340, 429.
Body of death and sin, not the outward body, i. 181.
Burial grounds, recommended to be provided, ii. 149.
Capital punishments for small matters, testified against, i. 70,
72.
Ceremonies, Jewish and Heathenish, to be departed from, i. 37, 93;
why permitted for a time under the Gospel, i. 340.
Christ, of the seed of Abraham and the Son of God, i. 254;
his name is called “The Word of God,” i. 306;
his outward appearance, acknowledged, i. 69;
he died for all men, i. 36, 526, ii. 136, 186;
is the Ensign, prophesied of by Isaiah, ii. 494-497;
his coming, reign, and kingdom in the heart, i. 314, ii. 225.
*Christ within, recommended to, i. 50, 102, 104, 108, 161, 167,
335, 341, 418;
known by the Spirit, i. 51, 128, ii. 458;
speaks in man by his Spirit, i. 102, 110, ii. 201;
is preached in his Saints, i. 177;
revealed in us, is our Hope, i. 12;
is the Inward Teacher, i. 59, 81, 82, 85, 87, 91, 101, 104, 107,
109, 110, 112, 114, 115, 121, 125, 161, 162, 164, 167, 232,
262, 265, 331, 378, ii. 172, 199, 200, 201, 294, _see_ God
teaches;
enlightens all men, i. 30, 34, 151, 165, 173, 193, 207, 223,
241, 244, 274, 303, 350, 353, 356, 369, 395, 437, 526, ii.
34, 61, 62, 112, 136, 185;
the Saviour of all who believe in him, i. 110, ii. 112;
his generation is not known by man’s wit, study, or reading
history in his own will, ii. 291;
cuts off the entail of Satan, i. 389;
faith in and worship of, above all historical and man-made
faiths and worships, ii. 336;
a state in him that never fell, attainable, i. 28, 419, ii. 136,
200, 218, 239;
his speaking since his ascension, denied by professors, ii. 200,
201;
the belief of Friends in, stated, ii. _153_, 155, 200;
his power owned, and exercised, i. 242, 258, 281, 309, 333, 335,
344, 385;
his cry on the cross, i. 5;
his life trampled on by professors, i. 20.
Christening of children, an anti-Scriptural practice, i. 37, ii.
100.
*Church, what it is, i. _20_, 25, 99, 112, 131, 182, ii. 65, 437;
is in God, i. 345.
Church order, supported, ii. 417.
Circumcision, etc., permitted to some of the early Christians, and
why, i. 340.
Cloisters and Monasteries anti-Scriptural, i. 428.
Condemnation comes through unbelief, ii. 112.
Conscience is the book out of which man is judged, i. 437.
*Conventicles, seditious, disclaimed, ii. _121_.
Crooked ways, in man’s heart, i. 16.
Cross of Christ is the power of God, i. 18, 191, 312, 345.
Crosses and Images denied, i. 37.
Days and Times not to be observed now, i. 340, ii. 204.
Deceivers, who are the greatest, i. 30, ii. 246.
Declaration against plots and fighting, i. 494.
_See_ CHARLES II.
Devil, not made by God, i. 231, ii. 7.
Differences, how to be terminated, ii. 333.
Disputes, with priests and professors, i. 25, 86-88, 116, 119,
130, 160, 181, 182, 184, 200-206, 252, 285, 369, 376, ii. 60,
62, 185, 212, 217.
Dreams, distinguished and explained, i. 9.
Drinking of healths, testified against, i. 23.
Drinking to excess, reproved, i. 39, 334, 459.
Dwarfs, not to offer on God’s altar, but may eat of the holy
bread, ii. 468, 473, 502.
Election is in Christ, i. 263, ii. 113.
Election and Reprobation, owned and explained, i. 92, ii. 113;
unconditional, priests’ doctrine thereof denied, i. 394, ii.
113.
Evil thoughts, how subdued, i. 58.
Evil natures described, they are within, i. 59, ii. 135.
Faith, stands in the power of God and not in man, ii. 236, 239;
its powerful operation and effect, ii. 236;
stays the mind and gives access to God, i. 15, 397;
in it there is no schism, ii. 238;
without sin, and gives victory over it, i. 397.
Fall, the, state of man therein, opened, i. 32, 125, 345, ii. 136.
False Prophets and Antichrists, their marks, i. 91, 160, 314, 336,
ii. 416, 440, 487.
False Liberty, judged by the Spirit, ii. 329, 417.
Fashions of the world denounced, i. 38, 219, ii. 412, 493.
Fasts, the true and false distinguished, i. 363, 435, ii. 303-305.
Flesh, the, wars against the spirit, i. 18.
*Friends, their belief in Christ and concerning the Scriptures
stated, ii. 155;
excommunicated, i. 404, ii. 64, 65;
prosper through their integrity, i. 186;
kept out of their meeting-houses, ii. 132, 375-377, 387;
their meeting-houses pulled down, ii. 132;
offer to lie in prison for one another, i. 248, 318, 439;
prophesied against, i. _134_, 185, 194, ii. 254;
their faithfulness is said by some to have preserved the nation
from debauchery, ii. 134.
God, has given all a measure of his Spirit, i. 150, ii. 34, 217,
418;
teaches his people himself, i. 48, 82, 84, 118, 120, 125, 150,
152, 211, ii. 281, _see_ Christ the Inward Teacher;
his people are to be like him, in what respects, ii. 458;
his kingdom, measurably witnessed in this life, ii. 459;
his infinite love, i. 14.
God and Christ, dwell in the heart, i. 8, 91;
are known by the Spirit, i. 12, 128, 138, 165, 235, 265, ii.
292, 458;
are not known by study or philosophy, but by revelation in
mental silence, i. 12, 26, ii. 292.
Good works do not of themselves bring salvation, but the grace of
God, ii. 101.
Gospel, not the four books of the Evangelists, i. 350, ii. 9.
Grace of God, teaches those who turn to it, i. 35, 82, 249, 331,
526, ii. 9, 11, 35, 115.
Grace and Truth, are in the heart, i. 35, 331, 336, ii. 359, 408,
455;
are universal and saving, i. 36, 331, 526, ii. 9, 34, 61, 101,
136.
Groans of the flesh and spirit, discerned and distinguished, i.
15.
Hat, keeping it on in public prayer testified against, i. 519.
Hat-honour, denied, i. 38, 92, 272, 275, 285, 290, 357, 401, 443,
485, ii. 22, 27, 306;
Friends suffer for refusing to give it, i. 38, 39, 185, 272,
280, 313, 372, 409, 454, 501, ii. 307.
Hirelings, testified against, i. 42, 75, 93, 202, 203, 207, 245.
Honour, the true and false, distinguished, i. 38, 302, ii. 22.
Imposition denounced, yet practised by schismatics, ii. 328.
*Imprisonment of Friends, for not swearing, i. _106_, 247, _521_,
523, ii. 23, 24, 30, 94;
for refusing to pay tithes, and for going to steeple-houses, i.
224, 503, ii. 25;
for preaching in the streets, i. 373, 378;
for attending meetings, ii. 24;
for opening their shops on the world’s fast-days and holidays,
ii. 204;
for offences not specified, i. 172, 493, 522, ii. 67, 128, 282,
314, 337, 374, 378;
on a praemunire illegal, i. 221;
deaths in prison, i. 173, 232, 327, _504_, 522, 526, ii. 25,
_33_, _67_, 94, 253.
_See_ Steeplehouses; Streets and Markets.
Jerusalem, New, what it is, ii. 135.
Judging, i. 345, 422, 425, ii. 329, 425-431, 487.
*Judgments, pronounced against persons and places, i. 76, 78, 102,
147, 153, ii. 78;
overtake persecutors, i. 102, 118, 136, 149, 154, 189, 196, 197,
209, 211, 318, 391, 398, 408, 417, 457, _458_, 469, 475, 511,
512, ii. 5, 9, 26, 33, 34, 57, 67, 68, 72, 73, 77, 78, 96,
133, 147, 224, 314, 358.
Knowledge, spiritual, learned within, i. 10;
spiritual and fleshly, distinguished, i. 11.
Law, the, its types and shadows only known by the Spirit, i. 33;
what it is, its operation and effect, i. 15, 16, 23;
is written in the heart, i. 246, 349, 355, ii. 270;
is distinguished from the Gospel, i. 16, 17.
Liberty of conscience granted generally, ii. 453.
Light and Darkness, how seen, i. 19.
Light, the, obedience thereto, recommended, i. 65;
is the Law, the Power, and the image of God, i. 193;
is the Covenant, i. 194;
is a Reprover, i. 353, 356, ii. 185;
is a Judge, i. 187, 242, 267, 274, 347, 366, 408, 460, ii. 462;
is a Guide and Leader, i. 187, 435;
is the Life in Christ the Word, i. 333, 377, 397, ii. 35, 466,
497;
gives an understanding of the things of the kingdom, i. 187;
gives a sight and sense of inward mysteries, i. 14, 187, 242,
254, 362, 433;
gives victory over sin, i. 433;
gives the knowledge of the true fast, i. 365, 366;
comes from Christ, i. 254, 321;
convinces and converts, i. 65, 192;
manifests Christ in his various offices, i. 165;
shows us our evil deeds and our Saviour, i. 121, 165, 267;
brings out of the evil state, i. 60;
manifests that which is for judgment, i. 367;
in it God is felt revealing his secrets, and inspiring the mind,
i. 347;
by it Christ is seen, i. 191, 254, 303, 411;
without it none come to Christ, i. 304;
being felt, Christ is felt, i. 223;
those who hate it set up hirelings and idol-temples, i. 151;
they who walk in it come to God’s teaching, i. 16;
they who love it are taught of God, i. 151;
they who oppose it are apostates, i. 347;
believers in it believe in the everlasting covenant, i. 191;
believers in it come to the life of Moses and the Prophets, i.
191;
none are God’s people who are not baptised into this principle,
i. 36, 348.
Light, the, within, is the Light of Christ, i. 384;
is the way to God, i. 36;
its power and efficacy, i. 384, 385;
leads to salvation and the day-star, i. 397.
Light, the, of Christ, directed to, i. 97, 124, 126, 182, 204,
213, 238, 254, 264, 265, 336, 368, 378, 379, 408, 411, 421,
436, 437, 460;
shows Christ to be a Redeemer, and Saviour, and Way to God, i.
110;
gives a sight and sense of sin, i. 97, 121, 151, 303, 379;
makes all things manifest, i. 15, 17, 275, 303;
is not the natural conscience, or a natural created light, i.
333, 370, 377, ii. 35, 463;
its universality denied by professors, i. 350, ii. 34;
in the conscience, a doctrine not endured by priests and
professors but derided by them, i. 204, 254, ii. 463;
they who believe in it are in the Election, i. 396.
Longevity, instances of, ii. 15, 75.
*Marriage, by a priest, anti-Scriptural, ii. 65, 75;
the principle and practice of Friends relative thereto stated,
ii. 399;
of Friends, their mode sanctioned by Scripture examples, ii. 75;
attended by G. Fox, ii. 75, 170;
of Friends, the regulations of the Society thereon, ii. 88,
_89_, 137, 148, 149, 250, 399;
of Friends, questioned at Nottingham Assizes, but declared
valid, i. 520.
Meal time, few words spoken at, informed against, ii. 133.
_See_ CARTWRIGHT, JOHN.
Meditation, how it ought to be exercised, ii. 368.
Meetings of Friends, held and settled, i. 27, 29, 123, 265, 373,
404.
*Meetings for Discipline, established in London and throughout the
nation, i. 469, 470, ii. _80_, 97, 164, 247, 279, 283;
the order and good results thereof, ii. 90, 97;
their settlement opposed by some, ii. 81, 202, 248, 251,
315-318, 327, 331, 347, 436.
Ministers of Christ, preach freely, i. 41, 91, 93, 201, 223, 339,
ii. 65;
not necessarily made at colleges, i. 7, 11, 37, 48, 386, 414,
415, 480-482;
must have his Spirit, i. 17;
advice respecting public opposition to, i. 345.
Ministers, tried and ejected by Commonwealth, i. 223, ii. 86;
ejected by Charles II., i. 504.
Ministry, the true and false distinguished, i. 17.
Miracles, outward, i. 45, 46, 49, 133, 159, 252, 255, 258, ii.
176, 179, 184, 192, 233, 377.
Moses and Christ, compared, ii. 477.
Natures of creatures, seen, i. 19, 28, 125.
*Negroes, exhorted to diligence, etc., and counselled not to
rebel, ii. _149_, 157, 158;
to be instructed and in due time liberated, ii. 157, 158, 502.
News, people are too much busied therewith, ii. 482.
Oaths. _See_ Swearing.
Obedience, known in the Light, i. 384;
to that which convicts of evil, recommended, i. 65;
to the grace of God, the way to receive salvation, ii. 9, 101;
keeps in the Lord’s fear, i. 65;
of faith, destroys imaginations and temptations, i. 61.
Offering, the true and false, distinguished, ii. 450.
Parable of the talents, commented on, i. 353.
Peace, the first step thereto is to stand still in the Light, i.
121, 432.
Perfection in Christ, ii. 218, 449;
in this life attainable, i. 181, 193, 419, 465, ii. 218;
in this life denied by priests and professors to be attainable,
i. 19, 34, 50, 51, 56, 74, 181, 465, ii. 218.
Persecution, judged and exposed, i. 147, 149, 287-303, 334, 387,
403, 434, 481, 522, 526, ii. 24-34, 65, 69, 132, 204, 281, 314,
320, 374-376, 387.
Pleasure and Wantonness denied, i. 323-325.
Plots, denied and declared against, i. 448, 493-500, ii. 216, 348,
415.
_See_ CHARLES II.
Popularity, that which leads to it, denied, ii. 236.
Powers of the earth, not to be meddled with by Friends, i. 426.
Power of the Lord makes priests and professors tremble, i. 89.
Prayer, in man’s will denied, i. 24;
true, defined, i. 205, 390, ii. 303;
false, how discerned, i. 15, 205;
in the Spirit, approved, i. 37, ii. 449, 450.
Priests, declared against, i. 91, 200-206, 210, 223;
their state opened, i. 29, 116;
are miserable comforters, i. 5, 6;
their objections answered, i. 336-343;
are Friends’ chief persecutors, i. 48, 137, 147, 504, ii. 211;
make a Church faith, which is answered by G. Fox, i. 441, _see_
Savoy, Conference;
sell the Scriptures, i. 41, 114;
pray by a form, i. 205;
hunt after a fallen benefice, i. 251;
no other trade comparable to theirs, i. 41;
cannot separate spirit and letter, i. 141;
reproved by the populace, i. 139;
oppose toleration, i. 505;
likened to the Pharisees and Jews of old for their persecutions,
etc., i. 215-219;
cannot endure the doctrine of the Light, i. 254, ii. 463.
_See_ Disputes.
*Prison, life in, i. _283_, _504_, _521_, _524_.
Prisoners in jail, learn wickedness of each other, i. 71;
more speedy justice to them recommended, i. 71.
Professions, the three learned ones, opened, i. 29.
Prophecy by women concerning Chas. II. and parliament, i. 445,
446.
_See_ ALDAM, THOMAS;
BAPTISTS;
BROWN, —-;
FIFTH-MONARCHY MEN;
FOX, G.
*Quakers, a nickname, i. 105, 211, 242, 343, 476;
first called so by Justice Bennet, i. _58_;
the children of Light, i. 501;
not a Sect, but dwell in the power of God, i. 242, 476.
Quaking and trembling, i. 23, 105, 126, 168, 238, 501.
Registers and Records recommended to be kept, ii. 149.
Revelation, immediate and objective, not ceased, i. 34.
Riches warned against, ii. 493.
Righteousness, attainable in this life, i. 2.
Sabbath-day, i. 397, 414, ii. 306.
Sacrament of the Supper (so-called) not a Christian ordinance, i.
340-342 429.
Saints have power to judge in the Church, ii. 327-330.
Sanctification, how effected, i. 50.
*Schools for Friends’ children, ii. _89_, 138, 203, 346, 348, 434.
_See_ CHISWICK,
EDMONTON,
SHACKLEWELL,
WALTHAM ABBEY.
Scriptures, known by the Spirit, i. 33, 34, 128, 138, 162, 165,
235, 362, 377, ii. 217;
profitable to the man of God, but not to the man of sin, i. 349;
not the “more sure word of prophecy,” i. 43;
not the _only_ rule of life, ii. 217;
not “The Word,” nor “The Word of God,” i. 156, 157, 306;
may be called “the _words_ of God,” i. 156, 157, ii. 157;
confirm the Spirit’s convictions, i. 376;
give not the knowledge of God or Christ, without the revelation
of the Spirit, i. 12, 109;
possessed by professors and apostates in form, but not in spirit
or power, i. 11, 109;
how read and understood by professors, i. 32, ii. 440;
given forth by the Light, i. 174;
eternal life is not in them, but in Christ, ii. 466;
the belief of Friends respecting them, set forth, i. 131, ii.
156;
Bible used by Friends when preaching, i. 213, 376, 407, 443,
531.
Sect-makers, they who deny universal grace are such, ii. 101;
love popularity, ii. 236.
Seed, the, is Christ, i. 192, 418, 420, 468;
crucified in professors, i. 445;
is to be felt within, i. 418, 420;
bruises the head of the Serpent, i. 190, 343-345, ii. 335;
the promise is to it, and not to the law of the first covenant,
ii. 335.
Seeds, the two, distinguished, ii. 447.
Seeds-men of the flesh, and of the Spirit, distinguished, i. 387.
*Separation, warned against, i. 519;
appears in the Church, ii. 42, 80, 167, 248, 268, 284, 288, 315,
317, 327, 331, _347_, 368, 369, 393, 435.
Serpent, the, speaks in man, i. 21, 416;
is the false teacher, ii. 199.
Seven states explained, i. 419.
Shadows and figures, not given till after the fall, i. 463;
not understood without the Spirit, i. 33.
Signs to rulers, priests, and people, i. 446, 469, 502, 503, ii.
55, 71, 131.
Silence, in it the Lord speaks, i. 61, 336, 452, ii. 292;
of thoughts, desires, and imaginations recommended, i. 432.
Sin and Imperfection, pleaded for by professors, i. 19;
in true believers is departed from, i. 51, 56;
its power, as well as its guilt, taken away by Christ, i. 51,
442.
Singing in the Spirit, approved, i. 37, 172, 406, 473, ii. 111;
by outward organs, not taught by Christ, ii. 450.
Slanders against Friends, i. 70, 102, 107, 122, 156, 206, 214,
234, 250, 357, 413, 496, ii. 76, 86, 154, 158.
*Sirrah, a term of contempt, ii. 28, _36_.
Slavery. _See_ Negroes.
*Soldiers, disbanded for refusing to swear, i. 189;
their cruelty to Friends, i. 408, 462, 463, 465;
convinced, i. 67, _129_ 163, 167, 189, _231_ 235, _256_ 263,
287, 328, 399, 410, 529, ii. 131,
_see_ BENSON, GERVASE;
BISHOP;
STUBBS;
FUCE;
PYOT;
EDMUNDSON;
HUBBERTHORNE;
BROWN, CAPT.;
WILLIAMS;
mentioned, i. _68_, 171.
Spirit, the, in the inward parts, i. 355, ii. 281;
given to us by measure, but to Christ without measure, i. 351;
tries opinions, religions, and judgments, i. 43;
is still poured out on the Church, i. 428.
Spirit, the, of God, directed unto, i. 91, 94, 101, 114, 128, 162,
164, 213, 330, 331, 377, ii. 21, 277;
gives the true fellowship, i. 138;
the primary and universal rule, ii. 217;
gives the knowledge of good and evil, ii. 367;
gives a knowledge of the things of God, ii. 418.
Spirit, the, of Christ, is the Quakers’ principle, its operation
and effect defined, ii. 225, 226.
Spirit, the, of Truth, leads into all Truth, i. 236, ii. 35;
is a reprover, ii. 35.
*Sports, Diversions, and vain Amusements testified against, i.
_39_ 40, 321, 323-325.
States, Three, and Three Teachers explained, ii. 199.
*Steeplehouses, idolized, i. _20_, 91, 93;
not the Church nor the Temple, i. 99, 112, ii. 64;
their sites not holier than other ground, i. 93, 112, 115.
*Steeple-houses and Chapels, the Truth preached in them by
Friends, i. 25, 27, 42, 45, 47, 48, 80, 82, 83, 85, 86, 89, 90,
93, 98, 99, 101, _102_ 104, 105, 107, 108, 110, 112, 113, 117,
118, 120, 121, 122, 124, 126, 128, 130, 166, 168, 179, 226,
285, 386, 410, 425.
Streets and Markets, Truth declared in them, i. 44, 62, 79, 96,
109, 124, 125, 130, 167, 361, 373, 375-379, 386, 407, 410, 531,
ii. 375.
*Sufferings of Friends, i. 179, 180, 246, 247, 248, 301, 302, 386,
387, 442, 443, 493, 501, 503, 506, 520, _521_, _524_, 530,
_534_, ii. 16, 24-26, 29, _30_, 31, _33_, _69_, 78, 84, 94, 97,
130, 132, 251-254, 263, 282, 314, 348, 361, 374-378, 453.
_See_ Hat-honour; Imprisonments.
Sufferings of Christ, the Prophets, and Apostles were outward, as
well as inward, i. 69.
Swearing, judicial, proscribed, i. 189, 246, 247, 273, 280, 521,
534, ii. 23, 27, 29, 42-50, 63, 94, 209, 216, 227, 357;
a Friend acts as foreman of a jury without an oath, i. 199,
_see_ HAMMERSLEY, THOS.;
declaration offered in lieu of oath, ii. 221;
Friends dispossessed of copyhold lands, i. 446.
Temple where God dwells, what it is, and what it is not, i. 8, 91,
131, 182, 207.
Temptations, how destroyed, i. 61;
not to be looked at, but the Light which discovers them, i. 433.
“Thou” and “Thee,” to a single person enjoined and practised, i.
38, 83, 185, 513, ii. 62.
_See_ Sufferings.
Tithes, testified against, i. 93, 176, 248, 338, 339, ii. 65, 262,
355;
abolished under the Gospel, i. 176, 200, 338, 339, ii. 65;
impropriate, given up by Friends, i. 179.
_See_ Sufferings.
Unjust dealing testified against, i. 39.
Waiting, recommended, i. 13, 15, 85, 112, 187, 188, 193, 452;
in the Light recommended, i. 242, 385, 425, 437.
*War denied and testified against, i. _68_, 72, 209, 448, 450,
494, ii. 298.
Wisdom, the true and the false, distinguished, i. 388;
is received in the Light, i. 192.
Witness of God, is in the heart, i. 244.
*Women’s preaching defended, i. _9_, ii. 405.
Women’s meetings, their settlement opposed, ii. 202, 203, 248-250,
317.
Works of the flesh and of the Spirit, distinguished, i. 17.
Worship, the true declared, i. 514;
the world’s renounced, i. 37;
of the beast and dragon, set up in the apostacy, i. 338.
Yea and Nay, to be kept to, i. 2, 167, 186, ii. 49, 51, 227.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Transcriber’s Note
The handling of hyphenation of compound words across line breaks
is governed by the frequency with which they are hyphenated
midline. ‘Steeple-house’ is nearly always hyphenated in midline,
and the few outliers that were not have been corrected.
‘Steeplehouse’ occurs consistently in the Index.
The punctuation of the various indexes had a number of lapses,
which have been corrected with no further notice here.
As one can see from the list below, the printer was not consistent
in the use of the opening quote mark in long, multi-paragraph
passages. There were also a number of occasions where a closing
quote mark either was missing or illogically added. On rarer
occasions, a single quote was employed matching a double quote
(and vice versa). These have been added where missing, removed
where they were deemed spurious, and corrected where appropriate.
A remark at 103.15 reads more logically if a nested, single-quoted
phrase (‘whether they can swear in any other case, as for their
cow or horse;[’]...) is closed after ‘horse’, rather than two
lines later at 103.17, (...bear witness to the truth.[’]”).
At 429.12, a close paraphrase of Rev. 16-17, is mispunctuated. The
passage is best ‘fixed’ by removing the single quote before
‘wretched, pitiful...’.
At 430.9 a single quote appears to have been misplaced (and
turned). So (...tithes, ‘did...) makes more sense as (...tithes,’
did...).
Also amended: 20.13 “Nay[,”] (added); 20.37 time.[”] (added);
23.20 [“]I (added); 37.6 [“/‘]If (replaced); 101.10 God,[’]
(added); 148.21 evil:[”/’] (replaced); 157.14 [“/‘]Because
(replaced); 159.14 [“]My (added); 159.15 [“]To (added); 199.20
teachers.[”] (added); 213.30 [“]The (added); 213.31 [‘]habeas
(added); 258.46 him.[”] (added); 286.3 [“]Dear (added); 288.9
style.[”] (removed); 294.39 condemnation,[’] (added); 296.30
“[Friends (added); 323.31 all[”/’] (replaced); 325.35 word.[’]
(removed); 355.23 [“]Therefore, (added); 342.26 [“]My (added);
363.5 all;[”/’] (replaced); 370.17 [“]Therefore (added);
370.44 one.[”/’] (replaced); 373.23 [“]Dear (added); 384.45
[“/‘]It (replaced); 385.11 ashamed.[’] (added); 387.25 me[”]
(add—probable); 388.6 [‘/“]Who (replaced); 405.20 silence.[’]
(added); 412.2 [“]I read (added); 414.6 shop;’[”] (added);
414.46 God.[’/”] (replaced); 425.17 [‘]therefore (added);
445.10 land,[’] (removed); 456.25 [‘]The (removed); 469.24
me,[’] (added); 480.21 least;[”/’] (replaced); 491.41 [‘]And
(added); 495.31 [“]Now (added); 496.43 “]Now (added); 501.3
[“]As (added); 501.19 [“]All (added).
At 396.10, the title of a ‘small book’, “The Saints’ heavenly and
spiritual worship, unity, and communion, &c., wherein...”, ends
after a lengthy subtitle beginning with ‘wherein’. The use of
‘&c.’ could seen as an ellision of the title, with the remaining
text simply a description. Modern references replace the ‘&c.’
with ellipses, and end there.
At 406.28, a closing quote has no opening. However, rhe entire
phrase is a close paraphrase of Joel ii. 28, and the quote has
been removed.
At 564.51, an index reference for Francis Howgill includes page
number without an indication of volume: ‘with G. Fox at
Swarthmore, 99, i. 471’. Howgill is not mentioned on page 99 of
either volume.
At 590.14, the index entry for ‘Sufferings’ refers the reader to a
topic (‘Imprisonments’) which does not exist.
At 580.37, an asterisk was added ([*]Vice, The, ...) to denote
that one of the references is to a footnote in Volume I.
When an index topic references footnotes, the page number is
italicized. The following starred page references: (560.45) ii.
198, (565.10) ii. 166, (577.15) i. 149, (589.11) i. 171, (590.9)
i. 530, refer to a page where there is no relevant footnote, but
the topic may be mentioned in the text itself.
At 589.9, an index topic for ‘Soldiers’, includes a reference to
‘Edmundson’. There are two Edmundsons, John and William, neither
of whom are characterized as ex-soldiers, unlike the others in the
list.
Other errors, deemed most likely to be the printer’s, have been
corrected, and are noted here. The references are to the page and
line in the original.
36.42 in his _Dictionary_, vi[x/z]. Replaced.
58.23 wh[e]re I had neither Inserted.
66.14 to get money out of me[?/,] Probable.
87.3 MONMOUTHSHIRE[./,] Replaced.
89.14 may [h/b] referred to Replaced.
89.33 the friends of both[./,] Replaced.
91.20 we passed over th[e] hills Restored.
104.25 where on First[ /-]day we had Replaced.
143.9 he would tack about to[o] Added.
209.5 ended his spee[e/c]h Replaced.
231.2 “We love none but ourselves.[’,/”] Replaced.
259.30 had a meeti[t/n]g there Replaced.
260.29 was pretty large and peaceable[.] Added.
272.28 _Post[s]cript._ Inserted.
314.34 that were not Friends[.\,] Replaced
322.23 not their work, but the angels[,’/’,] Transposed.
378.30 imprisoned at London[.] Added.
380.9 I give thee the th[er/re]shing-floor Tranposed.
406.31 Acts ii[,/.] 17, 18. Replaced.
413.41 e[x]quisite Inserted.
451.20 the blind, [f/l]ame, blemished, or deformed Replaced.
468.6 Prov[,/.] viii. 15. Replaced.
476.33 preserved his[,] faithful to himself Removed.
477.44 where I am[./,] there ye may be also Replaced.
469.32 [“/‘]We have this treasure in earthen Replaced.
vessels,’
514.24 on the First[ /-]day Replaced.
576.3 lantern and candle as a sign[,] Added.
581.23 with G. Fox at Lanc[e/a]ster Replaced.
584.37 [o/i]n him Replaced.Project Gutenberg
The journal of George Fox, vol. 2 of 2 : $b Being an historical account of his life, travels, sufferings, and Christian experiences.
Fox, George
Chimera100
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