CHAPTER 15
In Prison for not Swearing
1662-1665
After I had made some stay in London, and had
cleared myself of those services that at that time lay upon me
there, I went into the country, having with me Alexander Parker and
John Stubbs. We travelled through the Country, visiting Friends'
meetings, till we came to Bristol.
There we understood the officers were likely to
come and break up the meeting; yet on First-day we went to the
meeting at Broadmead, and Alexander Parker standing up first, while
he was speaking the officers came and took him away. After he was
gone, I stood up and declared the everlasting Truth of the Lord God
in His eternal power, which came over all; the meeting was quiet
the rest of the time, and broke up peaceably. I tarried till the
First-day following, visiting Friends, and being visited by
them.
On First-day morning several Friends came to Edward
Pyot's house (where I lay the night before), and used great
endeavours to persuade me not to go to the meeting that day, for
the magistrates, they said, had threatened to take me, and had
raised the trained bands. I wished them to go to the meeting, not
telling them what I intended to do; but I told Edward Pyot I
intended to go, and he sent his son to show me the way from his
house by the fields.
As I went I met diverse Friends who were coming to
me to prevent my going, and who did what they could to stop me.
"What!" said one, "wilt thou go into the mouth of the beast?" "Wilt
thou go into the mouth of the dragon?" said another. I put them by
and went on.
When I came to the meeting Margaret Thomas was
speaking; and when she had done I stood up. I saw a concern and
fear upon Friends for me; but the power of the Lord, in which I
declared, soon struck the fear out of them; life sprang, and a
glorious heavenly meeting we had.
After I had cleared myself of what was upon me from
the Lord to the meeting, I was moved to pray; and after that to
stand up again, and tell Friends how they might see there was a God
in Israel that could deliver.
A very large meeting this was, and very hot; but
Truth was over all, the life was exalted, which carried through
all, and the meeting broke up in peace. The officers and soldiers
had been breaking up another meeting, which had taken up their
time, so that our meeting was ended before they came. But I
understood afterwards they were in great rage because they had
missed me; for they were heard to say one to another before, "I'll
warrant we shall have him;" but the Lord prevented them.
I went from the meeting to Joan Hily's, where many
Friends came to see me, rejoicing and blessing God for our
deliverance. In the evening I had a fine fresh meeting among
Friends at a Friend's house over the water, where we were much
refreshed in the Lord.
From Barnet Hills we came to Swannington, in
Leicestershire, where William Smith and some other Friends visited
me; but they went away towards nights leaving me at a Friend's
house in Swannington.
At night, as I was sitting in the hall speaking to
a widow woman and her daughter, Lord Beaumont came with a company
of soldiers, who, slapping their swords on the door, rushed into
the house with swords and pistols in their hands, crying, "Put out
the candles and make fast the doors." Then they seized upon the
Friends in the house, and asked if there were no more about the
house. The Friends told them there was one man more in the
hall.
There being some Friends out of Derbyshire, one of
whom was named Thomas Fauks, Lord Beaumont, after he had asked all
their names, bid his man set down that man's name as Thomas Fox.
The Friend said, Nay; that his name was not Fox, but Fauks. In the
mean time some of the soldiers came, and fetched me out of the hall
to him. He asked my name. I told him my name was George Fox, and
that I was well known by that name. "Aye," said he, "you are known
all the world over." I said, I was known for no hurt, but for
good.
Then he put his hands into my pockets to search
them, and plucked out my comb-case, and afterwards commanded one of
his officers to search further for letters. I told him I was no
letter-carrier, and asked him why he came amongst a peaceable
people with swords and pistols without a constable, contrary to the
king's proclamation and to the late act. For he could not say there
was a meeting, I being only talking with a poor widow-woman and her
daughter.
By reasoning thus with him, he came somewhat down;
yet, sending for the constables, he gave them charge of us that
night, and told them to bring us before him next morning.
Accordingly the constables set a watch of the townspeople upon us
that night, and had us next morning to his house, about a mile from
Swannington.
When we came before him, he told us that we had met
"contrary to the Act." I desired him to show us the Act.
"Why," says he, "you have it in your pocket." I told him he did not
find us in a meeting. Then he asked whether we would take the oaths
of allegiance and supremacy. I told him I never took any oath in my
life, nor engagement, nor the covenant. Yet still he would force
the oath upon us. I desired him to show us the oath, that we might
see whether we were the persons it was to be tendered to, and
whether it was not for the discovery of popish recusants. At length
he brought a little book, but we called for the statute-book. He
would not show us that, but caused a mittimus to be made, which
mentioned that we "were to have had a meeting." With this mittimus
he delivered us to the constables to convey us to Leicester
jail.
But when the constables had brought us back to
Swannington, it being harvest-time, it was hard to get anybody to
go with us. The people were loth to take their neighbors to prison,
especially in such a busy time. They would have given us our
mittimus to carry ourselves to the jail; for it had been usual for
constables to give Friends their own mittimuses, and they have gone
themselves with them to the jailer. But we told them that, though
our Friends had sometimes done so, we would not take this mittimus;
but some of them should go with us to the jail.
At last they hired a poor labouring man, who was
loth to go, though hired. So we rode to Leicester, being five in
number; some carried their Bibles open in their hands, declaring
Truth to the people as we rode in the fields and through the towns,
and telling them we were prisoners of the Lord Jesus Christ, going
to suffer bonds for His name and Truth. One woman Friend carried
her wheel on her lap to spin on in prison; and the people were
mightily affected.
At Leicester we went to an inn. The master of the
house seemed troubled that we should go to the prison; and being
himself in commission, he sent for lawyers in the town to advise
with, and would have taken up the mittimus, kept us in his own
house, and not have let us go into the jail.
But I told Friends it would be a great charge to
lie at an inn; and many Friends and people would be coming to visit
us, and it might be hard for him to bear our having meetings in his
house. Besides, we had many Friends in the prison already, and we
had rather be with them. So we let the man know that we were
sensible of his kindness, and to prison we went; the poor man that
brought us thither delivering both the mittimus and us to the
jailer.
This jailer had been a very wicked, cruel man. Six
or seven Friends being in prison before we came, he had taken some
occasion to quarrel with them, and had thrust them into the dungeon
amongst the felons, where there was hardly room for them to lie
down. We stayed all that day in the prison-yard, and desired the
jailer to let us have some straw. He surlily answered, "You do not
look like men that would lie on straw."
After a while William Smith, a Friend, came to me,
and he being acquainted in the house, I asked him what rooms there
were in it, and what rooms Friends had usually been put into before
they were put into the dungeon. I asked him also whether the jailer
or his wife was the master. He said that the wife was master; and
that, though she was lame, and sat mostly in her chair, being only
able to go on crutches, yet she would beat her husband when he came
within her reach if he did not do as she would have him.
I considered that probably many Friends might come
to visit us, and that if we had a room to ourselves, it would be
better for them to speak to me, and me to them, as there should be
occasion. Wherefore I desired William Smith to go speak with the
woman, and acquaint her that if she would let us have a room,
suffer our Friends to come out of the dungeon, and leave it to us
to give her what we would, it might be better for her.
He went, and after some reasoning with her, she
consented; and we were put into a room. Then we were told that the
jailer would not suffer us to have any drink out of the town
brought into the prison, but that what beer we drank we must take
of him. I told them I would remedy that, for we would get a pail of
water and a little wormwood once a day, and that might serve us; so
we should have none of his beer, and the water he could not deny
us.
Before we came, when the few Friends that were
prisoners there met together on First-days, if any of them was
moved to pray to the Lord, the jailer would come up with his
quarter-staff in his hand, and his mastiff dog at his heels, and
pluck them down by the hair of the head, and strike them with his
staff; but when he struck Friends, the mastiff dog, instead of
falling upon them, would take the staff out of his hand.
When the First-day came, I spoke to one of my
fellow-prisoners, to carry a stool and set it in the yard, and give
notice to the debtors and felons that there would be a meeting in
the yard, and they that would hear the Word of the Lord declared
might come thither. So the debtors and prisoners gathered in the
yard, and we went down, and had a very precious meeting, the jailer
not meddling.
Thus every First-day we had a meeting as long as we
stayed in prison; and several came in out of the town and country.
Many were convinced, and some there received the Lord's Truth who
have stood faithful witnesses for it ever since.
When the sessions came we were brought before the
justices, with many more Friends, sent to prison whilst we were
there, to the number of about twenty. The jailer put us into the
place where the thieves were put, and then some of the justices
began to tender the oaths of allegiance and supremacy to us. I told
them I never took any oath in my life; and they knew we could not
swear, because Christ and His Apostle forbade it; therefore they
but put it as a snare to us. We told them that if they could prove
that, after Christ and the Apostle had forbidden swearing, they did
ever command Christians to swear, then we would take these oaths;
otherwise we were resolved to obey Christ's command and the
Apostle's exhortation.
They said we must take the oath that we might
manifest our allegiance to the king. I told them I had been
formerly sent up a prisoner by Colonel Hacker, from that town to
London, under pretence that I had held meetings to plot to bring in
King Charles. I also desired them to read our mittimus, which set
forth the cause of our commitment to be that we "were to have a
meeting"; and I said Lord Beaumont could not by that act send us to
jail unless we had been taken at a meeting, and found to be such
persons as the act speaks of; therefore we desired that they would
read the mittimus and see how wrongfully we were imprisoned.
They would not take notice of the mittimus, but
called a jury and indicted us for refusing to take the oaths of
allegiance and supremacy. When the jury was sworn and instructed,
as they were going out, one that had been an alderman of the city
spoke to them, and bade them "have a good conscience"; and one of
the jury, being a peevish man, told the justices there was one
affronted the jury; whereupon they called him up, and tendered him
the oath also, and he took it.
While we were standing where the thieves used to
stand, a cut-purse had his hand in several Friends' pockets.
Friends declared it to the justices, and showed them the man. They
called him up before them, and upon examination he could not deny
it; yet they set him at liberty.
It was not long before the jury returned, and
brought us in guilty; and after some words, the justices whispered
together, and bid the jailer take us to prison again; but the
Lord's power was over them, and His everlasting Truth, which we
declared boldly amongst them. There being a great concourse of
people, most of them followed us; so that the crier and bailiffs
were fain to call the people back again to the court.
We declared the Truth as we went along the streets,
till we came to the jail, the streets being full of people.
When we were in our chamber again, after some time
the jailer came to us and desired all to go forth that were not
prisoners. When they were gone he said, "Gentlemen, it is the
court's pleasure that ye should be set at liberty, except those
that are in for tithes; and you know there are fees due to me; but
I shall leave it to you to give me what you will."
Thus we were all set at liberty on a sudden, and
passed every one into our services. Leonard Fell went with me again
to Swannington.
I had a letter from Lord Hastings, who, hearing of
my imprisonment, had written from London to the justices of the
sessions to set me at liberty. I had not delivered this letter to
the justices; whether any knowledge of his mind received through
another hand made them discharge us so suddenly, I know not. This
letter I carried to Lord Beaumont, who had sent us to prison. When
he had broken it open and read it, he seemed much troubled; but at
last he came a little lower, yet threatened us that if we had any
more meetings at Swannington, he would break them up and send us to
prison again.
But, notwithstanding his threats, we went to
Swannington, and had a meeting with Friends there, and he neither
came nor sent to break it up.
[After travelling through Northamptonshire,
Bedfordshire and Warwickshire, he came again to London.]
I stayed not long in London, but went into Essex,
and so to Norfolk, having great meetings. At Norwich, when I came
to Captain Lawrence's, there was a great threatening of
disturbance; but the meeting was quiet. Passing thence to Sutton,
and into Cambridgeshire, I heard of Edward Burrough's decease.
Being sensible how great a grief and exercise it would be to
Friends to part with him, I wrote the following lines for the
staying and settling of their minds:
"Friends:
"Be still and quiet in your own conditions, and
settled in the Seed of God, that doth not change; that in that ye
may feel dear Edward Burrough among you in the Seed, in which and
by which he begat you to God, with whom he is; and that in the Seed
ye may all see and feel him, in which is the unity with him in the
life; and so enjoy him in the life that doth not change, which is
invisible.
George
Fox."
[Hereupon extensive travels follow, throughout the
eastern counties, then through the southern as far as Land's End,
and again through Wales and the English Lake district. He finally
reaches Swarthmore some time in 1663, and finds that an offer of
twenty-five pounds has been made to any man who would take him. Out
of the experiences of this long, though somewhat uneventful trip we
give only the following discussion, which throws good light on
Fox's "principle of truth":
"Next morning, some of the chief of the town desired to
speak with me, amongst whom was Colonel Rouse. I went, and had a
great deal of 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 or John were written; and it was preached to
every creature, of which a great part might never see nor 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."]
I came over the sands to Swarthmore. There they
told me that Colonel Kirby had sent his lieutenant, who 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. When I came thither I
found the Flemings, and several others of the gentry (so called) of
the country, who were come to take their leave of Colonel Kirby, he
being then about to go up to London to the Parliament. I was taken
into the parlour amongst them; but Colonel Kirby was not then
within, being gone out a little way. They said little to me, nor I
much to them.
After a little while Colonel Kirby came in, and I
told him I came to visit him (understanding he was desirous to see
me) to know what he had to say to me, and whether he had anything
against me.
He said, before all the company, "As I am a
gentleman, I have nothing against you." "But," said he, "Mistress
Fell must not keep great meetings at her house, for they meet
contrary to the Act."
I told him that 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 were his
neighbours, and a peaceable people.
After many words had passed, he shook me by the
hand, and said again that 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 Houlker Hall, where Justice Preston lived,
where they granted a warrant to apprehend me. I heard over night
both of their meeting and of the warrant, and could have gone 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 that there being a noise of a
plot in the north, if I should go away they might fall upon
Friends; but if I gave myself up to be taken, it might prevent
them, and Friends should escape the better. So I gave myself up to
be taken, and prepared for their coming.
Next day an officer came with his sword and pistols
to take me. I told him I knew his errand before, and had given
myself to be taken; for if I would have escaped their imprisonment
I could have been forty miles off before he came; but I was an
innocent man, and so it mattered 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 for that; it was sufficient that
I heard 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
lieutenant to answer such questions as they should propound 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 him, and Margaret Fell
accompanied us to Houlker Stall. 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 said 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 an 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, "I spoke it to you."
With that I struck my hand on the table, and told
him, "I have suffered more than twenty such as thou; more than any
that is here; for I have been cast into Derby dungeon for six
months together, and have suffered much because I would not take up
arms against this King before Worcester fight. I was sent up a
prisoner out of my own country by Colonel Hacker to Oliver
Cromwell, as a plotter to bring in King Charles in the year 1654. I
have nothing but love and good-will to the King, and desire 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.
I said, "Yes, I have 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 had heard of it; but I had never heard of
any such thing in the south, nor till I came into the north. 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 crush the innocent and guilty together; therefore I wrote
against it to clear the Truth and to stop all forward,
foolish spirits from running into such things. I sent copies of it
into Westmoreland, 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, "This man hath great power! "
I said, "Yes, I have 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 welldoing, and away 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, who was a swearer, had taken the oath of supremacy. 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 would have set me at liberty. The rest would not agree to it,
for this was their last snare, and they had no other way to get me
into prison, as all other things had been cleared to them. This was
like the Papists' 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 for that time dismissed me.
I went back with Margaret Fell to Swarthmore, and
soon after Colonel West, who was at that time a justice of the
peace, came to see me. He told us that he had acquainted some of
the rest of the justices that he would come and see Margaret Fell
and me; "but it may be," said he, "some of you will take offense at
it." I asked him, what he thought they would do with me at the
sessions? 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 those
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 the constable told him that 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 Westmoreland to any man
that would apprehend me, for he was a justice both in Westmoreland
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, the concourse of people
great, and way being made for me, I came up to the bar, and stood
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's a
low thing; that's not the honour that I give to magistrates, for
the true honour is from above; which," said I. "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
bade one take off my hat.
After this 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, who had it
from the high-sheriff. They asked me whether I had declared it to
the magistrates. I said, "I 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 is our principle to declare against such things."
They asked me if I knew not of an Act against
meeting. I said I knew there was an Act that took hold of such as
met to the terrifying of the King's subjects, 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 sufficient
experience of swearers, first one way, then another; but I had
never taken any oath in my life.
Then Rawlinson 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 those 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 fulfil 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 bade 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 that 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, the wives of several went to the justices who
had committed their husbands, and told them that 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 to 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 diverse of them still in prison.
I was kept till the assize, and Judge Turner and
Judge Twisden coming that circuit, I was brought before Judge
Twisden, the 14th of the month called March, the latter end of the
year 1663.
When I was brought 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 words, 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 no?" I answered, "I am a Christian, and Christ commands me
not to swear; 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 no." I answered again, "I am neither Turk, Jew, nor heathen, but
a Christian, and should show forth Christianity."
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 that they had had
experience enough, how many had first sworn for the King and then
against him. "But as for me," I said, "I have never taken an oath
in my life. My allegiance doth 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, the King of kings, the Saviour
and Judge of the whole world, saith I must not swear. Now, must I
obey Christ or thee? For it is because of tenderness of conscience,
and in obedience to the command 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 did own 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,"
said I, "why dost thou call me in question, and put me upon taking
an oath, which is a matter of religion; seeing that neither thou
nor any one 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 nicknames to prisoners did not become either his grey 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 nicknames."
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. If my voice were five times louder, I should lift it up and
sound it for Christ's sake. 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, judge thou
whether I ought to obey God or man. If I could take any oath at all
I should take this. 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 that the
mighty power of the Lord was over them all.
The sixteenth day of the same month I was again
brought before Judge Twisden. 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 I not 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.
In the Sixth month, the assizes were again held
at Lancaster, and the same judges, Twisden and Turner, again came
that circuit. 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 also the Judge gazing upon me.
After they had tried several others, they called me
to the bar, and empanelled a jury. Then the Judge asked the
justices whether they had tendered me the oath at the sessions.
They said that they had. Then he said, "Give them the book, that
they may swear they tendered him the oath at the sessions." They
said they had. Then he said, "Give them the book, that they may
swear they tendered him 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 scorn
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.
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
refuse to take the oath? What say you?"
"What wouldst thou have me to say?" said I; "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 into
laughter.
I was grieved to see so much lightness in a court,
where such solemn matters are handled, and thereupon asked them,
"Is this court a play-house? Where is gravity and sobriety," said
I; "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 that I must not speak to the jury,
but he would speak to them; and he told them I had refused to take
the oath at the last assizes; "and," said he, "I can tender the
oath to any man now, and praemunire 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. Thereupon I told
them that both the justices and they had forsworn themselves, and
therefore they had small cause to laugh, as they did a little
before.
Oh, 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 Dell, who had much good service among them; and then the
court broke up near the second hour.
In the afternoon we were brought in again to have
sentence passed upon us. Margaret Fell desired that sentence might
be deferred until the next morning. I desired nothing but law and
justice at his hands, for the thieves had mercy; only I requested
the Judge to send some 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, had said I should be locked up,
and no flesh alive should come to me. The Judge shook his head and
said that when the sentence was given he would leave me to the
favor of the jailer.
Most of the gentry of the country were gathered
together, expecting to hear the sentence; and the noise amongst the
people was that I should be transported. But they were all crossed
at that time, for the sentence was deferred until the next morning,
and I was taken to prison again.
Upon my complaining of the badness of my prison,
some of the justices, with Colonel Kirby, went up to see it. When
they came they hardly durst go in, the floor was so bad and
dangerous, and the place so open to wind and rain. Some that came
up said, "Surely it is 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 that I should be removed ere long to some more
convenient place.
Next day, towards the eleventh hour, we were called
again to hear the sentence; and Margaret Fell, being called first
to the bar, she had counsel to plead, who found many errors in her
indictment. Thereupon, 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 desired 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.
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 but 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."
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 into
the indictment; ye may see that ye have left out the word
'subject'; so not having named me in the indictment as a subject,
ye cannot praemunire me for not taking an oath."
Then they looked over the statute and the
indictment, and saw 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 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 was
the sessions held on?" said I. "On a Tuesday," said they. "Then,"
said I, "look in your almanacs, and see whether there was any
sessions held at Lancaster on the eleventh day of January, so
called."
So they looked, and found that the eleventh day was
the day called Monday, and that the sessions was 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 was no session held in Lancaster that day."
Then the Judge, to cover the matter, asked whether
the sessions did not begin on the eleventh day. But some in the
court answered, "No; the session 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,
stamped, and said, "Who hath done this? Somebody hath done this 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." I asked, "In what year of
the King was the last assize here 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 bade them look whether Margaret Fell's
indictment was so or no. 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 no. "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,'
which is a principal part of the oath, left out of the indictment;
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 ever hath 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 had examples enough yesterday of
swearing and false swearing, both in the justices and in 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 bade
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 were
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; why do ye not imprison the book for saying
so? How comes it that the book (which bids me not swear) is at
liberty amongst you, and yet ye imprison me for doing as the book
bids me?"
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 had never taken 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.
"Oh," said the Judge, "all the world cannot
convince you."
"No," said I, "how is it likely 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 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 the witness 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 bade 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 that hearing but once 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 would you have?"
I said, "Until 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 obstinately and
wilfully refusing to swear; 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, "You speak well; but 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 that they had had sufficient experience
of men's swearing, and he had seen how the justices and jury had
sworn falsely 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 until 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." I was put into a tower where the smoke of the other
prisoners came up so thick 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 as wet as muck 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 I lay all that long, cold winter
till the next assize, in which time I was so starved, and so frozen
with cold and wet with the rain that my body was greatly swelled
and my limbs much benumbed.
The assize began the sixteenth 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 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 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 many errors, and those great ones, were 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 brought to the bar, and the jury called
over to be sworn, the clerk asked me, first, whether I had any
objection to make to 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 to say to it; or whether I had
taken the oath at the last assize.
I told him what I had formerly said to them, as it
now came to my remembrance.
Thereupon 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.
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."
"Then," said I, "look in the indictment, and thou
mayest see the word 'subject' is left out of this indictment also.
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 thus than the Judge cried,
"Take him away, jailer, take him away." So I was presently hurried
away.
The jailer and people expected that 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, as was set forth in
the indictment, and that being the wrong day, I should have proved
the officers of the court forsworn men again, had the Judge
suffered me to plead to the indictment, which was thought to be the
reason he hurried me away so soon.
The Judge had passed sentence of praemunire upon
Margaret Fell before I was brought in; and it seems that when I was
hurried away they recorded me as a praemunired person,
though I was never brought to hear the sentence, or knew of it,
which was very illegal. For they should not only have had me
present to hear the sentence given, but should also 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 overrunning
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.