CHAPTER 9
A Visit to the Southern Counties Which Ends in Launceston
Jail
1655-1656
It came upon me about this time from the Lord to
write a short paper and send it forth as an exhortation and warning
to the Pope, and to all kings and rulers in Europe.
Besides this I was moved to write a letter to the
Protector (so called) to warn him of the mighty work the Lord hath
to do in the nations, and the shaking of them; and to beware of his
own wit, craft, subtilty, and policy, and of seeking any by-ends to
himself.
I travelled till I came to Reading, where I found a
few that were convinced of the way of the Lord. I stayed till the
First-day, and had a meeting in George Lamboll's orchard; and a
great part of the town came to it. A glorious meeting it proved;
great convincement there was, and the people were mightily
satisfied. Thither came two of Judge Fell's daughters to me, and
George Bishop, of Bristol, with his sword by his side, for he was a
captain.
After the meeting many Baptists and Ranters came
privately, reasoning and discoursing; but the Lord's power came
over them. The Ranters pleaded that God made the devil. I denied
it, and told them I was come into the power of God, the seed
Christ, which was before the devil was, and bruised his head; and
he became a devil by going out of truth; and so became a murderer
and a destroyer. I showed them that God did not make him a devil;
for God is a God of truth, and made all things good, and blessed
them; but God did not bless the devil. And the devil is bad, and
was a liar and a murderer from the beginning, and spoke of himself,
and not from God.
So the Truth stopped and bound them, and came over
all the highest notions in the nation, and confounded them. For by
the power of the Lord I was manifest, and sought to be made
manifest to the Spirit of God in all, that by it they might be
turned to God; as many were turned to the Lord Jesus Christ by the
Holy Spirit, and were come to sit under His teaching.
After this I passed to London, where I stayed
awhile, and had large meetings; then went into Essex, and came to
Cogshall, where was a meeting of about two thousand people, as it
was judged, which lasted several hours, and a glorious meeting it
was. The Word of life was freely declared, and people were turned
to the Lord Jesus Christ their Teacher and Saviour, the Way, the
Truth, and the Life.
On the Sixth-day I had a large meeting near
Colchester, to which many professors and the Independent teachers
came. After I had done speaking, and was stepped down from the
place on which I stood, one of the Independent teachers began to
make a jangling; which Amor Stoddart perceiving, said, "Stand up
again, George"; for I was going away, and did not at first hear
them. But when I heard the Independent, I stood up again, and after
awhile the Lord's power came over him and his company; they were
confounded and the Lord's Truth went over all. A great flock of
sheep hath the Lord in that country, that feed in His pastures of
life.
On the First-day following we had a very large
meeting not far from Colchester, wherein the Lord's power was
eminently manifested, and the people were very well satisfied; for,
being turned to the Lord Jesus Christ's free teaching, they
received it gladly. Many of these people were of the stock of the
martyrs.
As I passed through Colchester, I went to visit
James Parnell in prison; but the jailer would hardly let us come in
or stay with him. Very cruel they were to him. The jailer's wife
threatened to have his blood; and in that jail they did destroy
him, as the reader may see in a book printed soon after his death,
giving an account of his life and death; and also in an epistle
printed with his collected books and writings.
We came to Yarmouth, where there was a Friend,
Thomas Bond, in prison for the Truth of Christ, and there stayed a
while. There we had some service; and some were turned to the Lord
in that town.
Thence we rode to another town, about twenty miles
off, where were many tender people; and I was moved of the Lord to
speak to them, as I sat on my horse, in several places as I passed
along. We went to another town about five miles beyond, and put up
our horses at an inn, Richard Hubberthorn and I having travelled
five and forty miles that day. There were some Friendly people in
the town; and we had a tender, broken meeting amongst them, in the
Lord's power.
We bade the hostler have our horses ready by three
in the morning; for we intended to ride to Lynn, about three and
thirty miles, next morning. But when we were in bed at our inn,
about eleven at night, the constable and officers came, with a
great rabble of people, into the inn. They said they were come with
a hue-and-cry from a justice of the peace that lived near the town,
about five miles off, where I had spoken to the people in the
streets, as I rode along. They had been told to search for two
horsemen, that rode upon gray horses, and in gray clothes; a house
having been broken into the Seventh-day before at night. We told
them we were honest, innocent men, and abhorred such things; yet
they apprehended us, and set a guard with halberts and pikes upon
us that night, calling upon some of those Friendly people, with
others, to watch us.
Next morning we were up betimes, and the constable,
with his guard, carried us before a justice of the peace about five
miles off. We took with us two or three of the sufficient men of
the town, who had been with us at the great meeting at Captain
Lawrence's, and could testify that we lay both the Seventh-day
night and the First-day night at Captain Lawrence's; and it was on
the Seventh-day night that they said the house was broken into.
During the time that I was a prisoner at the
Mermaid at Charing-Cross, this Captain Lawrence brought several
Independent justices to see me there, with whom I had much
discourse, at which they took offence. For they pleaded for
imperfection, and to sin as long as they lived; but did not like to
hear of Christ teaching His people Himself, and making people as
clear, whilst here upon the earth, as Adam and Eve were before they
fell. These justices had plotted together this mischief against me
in the country, pretending that a house was broken into, that they
might send their hue-and-cry after me. They were vexed, also, and
troubled, to hear of the great meeting at John Lawrence's
aforesaid; for a colonel was there convinced that day who lived and
died in the Truth.
But Providence so ordered that the constable
carried us to a justice about five miles onward in our way towards
Lynn, who was not an Independent, as the rest were. When we were
brought before him he began to be angry because we did not put off
our hats to him. I told him I had been before the Protector, and he
was not offended at my hat; and why should he be offended at it,
who was but one of his servants? Then he read the hue-and-cry; and
I told him that that night wherein the house was said to have been
broken into, we were at Captain Lawrence's house and that we had
several men present who could testify the truth thereof.
Thereupon the justice, having examined us and them,
said he believed we were not the men that had broken into the
house; but he was sorry, he said, that he had no more against us.
We told him he ought not to be sorry for not having evil against
us, but ought rather to be glad; for to rejoice when he got evil
against people, as for housebreaking or the like, was not a good
mind in him.
It was a good while, however, before he could
resolve whether to let us go or send us to prison, and the wicked
constable stirred him up against us, telling him we had good horses
and that if it pleased him he would carry us to Norwich jail. But
we took hold of the justice's confession that he believed we were
not the men that had broken into the house; and, after we had
admonished him to fear the Lord in his day, the Lord's power came
over him, so that he let us go; so their snare was broken.
A great people was afterwards gathered to the Lord
in that town, where I was moved to speak to them in the street, and
whence the hue-and-cry came.
Being set at liberty, we passed on to Cambridge.
When I came into the town the scholars, hearing of me, were up, and
were exceeding rude. I kept on my horse's back, and rode through
them in the Lord's power; but they unhorsed Amor Stoddart before he
could get to the inn. When we were in the inn they were so rude in
the courts and in the streets that the miners, colliers and carters
could not be ruder. The people of the house asked us what we would
have for supper. "Supper!" said I, "were it not that the Lord's
power is over them, these rude scholars look as if they would pluck
us in pieces and make a supper of us." They knew I was so against
the trade of preaching, which they were there as apprentices to
learn, that they raged as greatly as ever Diana's craftsmen did
against Paul.
At this place John Crook met us. When it was night the mayor
of the town being friendly, came and fetched me to his
house; and as we
walked through the streets there was a bustle in the town; but they
did not know me, it being darkish. They were in a rage, not only
against me, but against the mayor also; so that he was almost
afraid to walk the streets with me for the tumult. We sent for the
Friendly people, and had a fine meeting in the power of God; and I
stayed there all night.
Next morning, having ordered our horses to be ready
by the sixth hour, we passed peaceably out of town. The destroyers
were disappointed: for they thought I would have stayed longer in
the town, and intended to have done us mischief; but our passing
away early in the morning frustrated their evil purposes against
us.
At Evesham I heard that the magistrates had cast
several Friends into diverse prisons, and that, hearing of my
coming, they made a pair of high stocks. I sent for Edward
Pittaway, a Friend that lived near Evesham, and asked him the truth
of the thing. He said it was so. I went that night with him to
Evesham; and in the evening we had a large, precious meeting,
wherein Friends and people were refreshed with the Word of life,
the power of the Lord.
Next morning I rode to one of the prisons, and
visited Friends there, and encouraged them. Then I rode to the
other prison, where were several prisoners. Amongst them was
Humphry Smith, who had been a priest, but was now become a free
minister of Christ. When I had visited Friends at both prisons, and
was turned to go out of the town, I espied the magistrates coming
up the town, intending to seize me in prison. But the Lord
frustrated their intent, the innocent escaped their snare, and
God's blessed power came over them all. But exceeding rude and
envious were the priests and professors about this time in these
parts.
I went from Evesham to Worcester, and had a quiet
and a precious meeting there. From Worcester we went to Tewkesbury,
where in the evening we had a great meeting, to which came the
priest of the town with a great rabble of rude people.
Leaving Tewkesbury, we passed to Warwick, where in
the evening we had a meeting with many sober people at a
widow-woman's house. A precious meeting we had in the Lord's power;
several were convinced and turned to the Lord. After the meeting a
Baptist in the company began to jangle; and the bailiff of the
town, with his officers, came in and said, "What do these people
here at this time of night?" So he secured John Crook, Amor
Stoddart, Gerrard Roberts and me; but we had leave to go to our
inn, and to be forthcoming in the morning.
The next morning many rude people came into the
inn, and into our chambers, desperate fellows; but the Lord's power
gave us dominion over them. Gerrard Roberts and John Crook went to
the bailiff to know what he had to say to us. He said we might go
our ways, for he had little to say to us. As we rode out of town it
lay upon me to ride to his house to let him know that, the
Protector having given forth an instrument of government in which
liberty of conscience was granted, it was very strange that,
contrary to that instrument of government, he would trouble
peaceable people that feared God.
The Friends went with me, but the rude people
gathered about us with stones. One of them took hold of my horse's
bridle and broke it; but the horse, drawing back, threw him under
him. Though the bailiff saw this, yet he did not stop, nor so much
as rebuke the rude multitude; so that it was strange we were not
slain or hurt in the streets; for the people threw stones and
struck at us as we rode along the town.
When we were quite out of the town I told Friends
that it was upon me from the Lord that I must go back into the town
again; and if any one of them felt anything upon him from the Lord
he might follow me; the rest, that did not, might go on to Dun-Cow.
So I passed through the market in the dreadful power of God,
declaring the Word of life to them; and John Crook followed me.
Some struck at me; but the Lord's power was over them, and gave me
dominion over all. I showed them their unworthiness to claim the
name of Christians, and the unworthiness of their teachers, that
had not brought them into more sobriety; and what a shame they were
to Christianity.
Having cleared myself, I turned out of the town
again, and passed to Coventry, where we found the people closed up
with darkness. I went to the house of a professor, where I had
formerly been, and he was drunk; which grieved my soul so that I
did not go into any house in the town; but rode into some of the
streets, and into the market-place. I felt that the power of the
Lord was over the town.
Then I went on to Dun-Cow, and had a meeting in the
evening, and some were turned to the Lord by His Spirit, as some
also were at Warwick and at Tewkesbury. We lay at Dun-Cow that
night; we met with John Camm, a faithful minister of the
everlasting gospel. In the morning there gathered a rude company of
priests and people who behaved more like beasts than men, for some
of them came riding on horseback into the room where we were; but
the Lord gave us dominion over them.
Thence we passed into Leicestershire, and after
that to Baddesley in Warwickshire. Here William Edmundson, who
lived in Ireland, having some drawings upon his spirit to come into
England to see me, met with me; by whom I wrote a few lines to
Friends then convinced in the north of Ireland.
Friends:
In that which convinced you, wait; that you
may have that removed you are convinced of. And all my dear
Friends, dwell in the life, and love, and power, and wisdom of God,
in unity one with another, and with God; and the peace and wisdom
of God fill all your hearts that nothing may rule in you but the
life which stands in the Lord God. G.F.
When these few lines were read amongst the Friends
in Ireland at their meeting, the power of the Lord came upon all in
the room.
From Baddesley we passed to Swannington and Higham,
and so into Northamptonshire and Bedfordshire, having great
meetings; and many were turned to the Lord by His power and
Spirit.
When we came to Baldock in Hertfordshire, I asked
if there was nothing in that town, no profession; and it was
answered me that there were some Baptists, and a Baptist woman who
was sick. John Rush, of Bedfordshire, went with me to visit
her.
When we came in there were many tender people about
her. They told me she was not a woman for this world, but if I had
anything that would comfort her concerning the world to come, I
might speak to her. I was moved of the Lord God to speak to her;
and the Lord raised her up again, to the astonishment of the town
and country. This Baptist woman and her husband, whose name was
Baldock, came to be convinced, and many hundreds of people have met
at their house since. Great meetings and convincements were in
those parts afterwards; many received the Word of life, and sat
down under the teaching of Christ, their Saviour.
When we had visited this sick woman we returned to
our inn, where were two desperate fellows fighting so furiously
that none durst come nigh to part them. But I was moved, in the
Lord's power, to go to them; and when I had loosed their hands, I
held one of them by one hand and the other by the other, showed
them the evil of their doings, and reconciled them one to the
other; and they were so loving and thankful to me that people
marveled at it.
Now, after I had tarried some time in London, and
had visited Friends in their meetings, I went out of town, leaving
James Nayler in the city. As I passed from him I cast my eyes upon
him, and a fear struck me concerning him; but I went away and rode
down to Ryegate, in Surrey, where I had a little meeting. There
the Friends told me of one Thomas Moore, a justice of the peace,
that lived not far from Ryegate, a Friendly, moderate man. I went
to visit him at his house, and he came to be a serviceable man in
Truth.
Thence we went to Dorchester, and alighted at an
inn, a Baptist's house. We sent into the town to the Baptists, to
ask them to let us have their meeting-house to assemble in, and to
invite the sober people to the meeting; but they denied it us. We
sent to them again, to know why they would deny us their
meeting-house, so the thing was noised about in the town. Then we
sent them word that if they would not let us come to their house,
they, or any people that feared God, might come to our inn, if they
pleased; but they were in a great rage. Their teacher and many of
them came up, and slapped their Bibles on the table.
I asked them why they were so angry, -- "Were they
angry with the Bible?" But they fell into a discourse about their
water-baptism. I asked them whether they could say they were sent
of God to baptize people, as John was, and whether they had the
same Spirit and power that the apostles had? They said they had
not.
Then I asked them how many powers there are, --
whether there are any more than the power of God and the power of
the devil. They said there was not any other power than those two.
Then said I, "If you have not the power of God that the apostles
had, you act by the power of the devil." Many sober people were
present, who said they have thrown themselves on their backs. Many
substantial people were convinced that night; a precious service we
had there for the Lord, and His power came over all.
Next morning, as we were passing away, the
Baptists, being in a rage, began to shake the dust off their feet
after us. "What," said I, "in the power of darkness! We, who are in
the power of God, shake off the dust of our feet against you."
Leaving Dorchester, we came to Weymouth; where also
we inquired after sober people; and about fourscore of them
gathered together at a priest's house. Most of them received the
Word of life and were turned to their teacher, Christ Jesus, who
had enlightened them with His divine Light, by which they might see
their sins, and Him who saveth from sin. A blessed meeting we had
with them, and they received the Truth in the love of it, with
gladness of heart.
The meeting held several hours. The state of their
teachers, and their apostasy was opened to them; and the state of
the apostles, and of the Church in their days; and the state of the
law and of the prophets before Christ, and how Christ came to
fulfill them; that He was their teacher in the apostles' days; and
that He was come now to teach His people Himself by His power and
spirit. All was quiet, the meeting broke up peaceably, the people
were very loving; and a meeting is continued in that town to this
day. Many are added to them; and some who had been Ranters came to
own the Truth, and to live very soberly.
There was a captain of horse in the town, who sent
to me, and would fain have had me stay longer; but I was not to
stay. He and his man rode out of town with me about seven miles;
Edward Pyot also being with me. This captain was the fattest,
merriest, cheerfullest man, and the most given to laughter, that
ever I met with: insomuch that I was several times moved to speak
in the dreadful power of the Lord to him; yet it was become so
customary to him that he would presently laugh at anything he saw.
But I still admonished him to come to sobriety, and the fear of the
Lord and sincerity.
We lay at an inn that night, and the next morning I
was moved to speak to him again, when he parted from us. The next
time I saw him he told me that when I spoke to him at parting, the
power of the Lord so struck him that before he got home he was
serious enough, and discontinued his laughing. He afterwards was
convinced, and became a serious and good man, and died in the
Truth.
After this we passed to Totness, a dark town. We
lodged there at an inn; and that night Edward Pyot was sick, but
the Lord's power healed him, so that the next day we got to
Kingsbridge, and at our inn inquired for the sober people of the
town. They directed us to Nicholas Tripe and his wife; and we went
to their house. They sent for the priest, with whom we had some
discourse; but he, being confounded, quickly left us. Nicholas
Tripe and his wife were convinced; and since that time there has
been a good meeting of Friends in that country.
In the evening we returned to our inn. There being
many people drinking in the house, I was moved of the Lord to go
amongst them, and to direct them to the Light with which Christ,
the heavenly man, had enlightened them; by which they might see all
their evil ways, words, and deeds, and by the same Light might also
see Christ Jesus their Saviour.
The innkeeper stood uneasy, seeing it hindered his
guests from drinking; and as soon as the last words were out of my
mouth he snatched up the candle, and said, "Come, here is a light
for you to go into your chamber." Next morning, when he was cool, I
represented to him what an uncivil thing it was for him so to do;
then, warning him of the day of the Lord, we got ready and passed
away.
We came next day to Plymouth, refreshed ourselves
at our inn, and went to Robert Cary's, where we had a very precious
meeting. At this meeting was Elizabeth Trelawny, daughter to a
baronet. She being somewhat thick of hearing, came close up to me,
and clapped her ear very nigh me while I spake; and she was
convinced. After this meeting came in some jangling Baptists; but
the Lord's power came over them, and Elizabeth Trelawny gave
testimony thereto. A fine meeting was settled there in the Lord's
power, which hath continued ever since, where many faithful Friends
have been convinced.
Thence we passed into Cornwall, and came to an inn
in the parish of Menheriot. At night we had a meeting at Edward
Hancock's, to which came Thomas Mounce and a priest, with many
people. We brought the priest to confess that he was a minister
made by the state, and maintained by the state; and he was
confounded and went his way; but many of the people stayed.
I directed them to the Light of Christ, by which
they might see their sins; and their Saviour Christ Jesus, the way
to God, their Mediator, to make peace betwixt God and them; their
Shepherd to feed them, and their Prophet to teach them. I directed
them to the Spirit of God in themselves, by which they might know
the Scriptures, and be led into all Truth; and by the Spirit might
know God, and in it have unity one with another. Many were
convinced at that time, and came under Christ's teaching; and there
are fine gatherings in the name of Jesus in those parts at this
day.
When we came to Ives, Edward Pyot's horse having
cast a shoe, we stayed to have it set; and while he was getting his
horse shod, I walked down to the seaside. When I returned I found
the town in an uproar. They were haling Edward Pyot and the other
Friend before Major Peter Ceely, a major in the army and a justice
of the peace. I followed them into the justice's house, though they
did not lay hands upon me.
When we came in, the house was full of rude people;
whereupon I asked if there were not an officer among them to keep
the people civil. Major Ceely said that he was a magistrate. I told
him that he should then show forth gravity and sobriety, and use
his authority to keep the people civil; for I never saw any people
ruder; the Indians were more like Christians than they.
After a while they brought forth a paper, and asked
whether I would own it.1 I said, Yes. Then he tendered the
oath of abjuration to us; whereupon I put my hand in my pocket and
drew forth the answer to it which I had given to the Protector.
After I had given him that, he examined us severally, one by one.
He had with him a silly young priest, who asked us many frivolous
questions; and amongst the rest he desired to cut my hair, which
was then pretty long; but I was not to cut it, though many times
many were offended at it. I told them I had no pride in it, and it
was not of my own putting on.
At length the justice put us under a guard of
soldiers, who were hard and wild, like the justice himself;
nevertheless we warned the people of the day of the Lord, and
declared the Truth to them. The next day he sent us, guarded by a
party of horse with swords and pistols, to Redruth. On First-day
the soldiers would have taken us away; but we told them it was
their Sabbath, and it was not usual to travel on that day.
Several of the townspeople gathered about us, and
whilst I held the soldiers in discourse, Edward Pyot spoke to the
people; and afterwards he held the soldiers in discourse, whilst I
spoke to the people. In the meantime the other Friend got out the
back way, and went to the steeple-house to speak to the priest and
people. The people were exceedingly desperate, in a mighty rage
against him, and they sorely abused him. The soldiers also, missing
him, were in a great rage, ready to kill us; but I declared the day
of the Lord and the Word of eternal life to the people that
gathered about us.
In the afternoon the soldiers were resolved to take
us away, so we took horse. When we were come to the town's end I
was moved of the Lord to go back again, to speak to the old man of
the house. The soldiers drew out their pistols, and swore I should
not go back. I heeded them not, but rode back, and they rode after
me. I cleared myself to the old man and the people, and then
returned with them, and reproved them for being so rude and
violent.
At night we were brought to a town then called
Smethick, but since known as Falmouth. It being the evening of the
First-day, there came to our inn the chief constable of the place,
and many sober people, some of whom began to inquire concerning us.
We told them we were prisoners for Truth's sake; and much discourse
we had with them concerning the things of God. They were very sober
and loving to us. Some were convinced, and stood faithful ever
after.
When the constable and these people were gone,
others came in, who were also very civil, and went away very
loving. When all were gone, we went to our chamber to go to bed;
and about the eleventh hour Edward Pyot said, "I will shut the
door; it may be some may come to do us mischief." Afterwards we
understood that Captain Keat, who commanded the party, had intended
to do us some injury that night; but the door being bolted, he
missed his design.
Next morning Captain Keat brought a kinsman of his,
a rude, wicked man, and put him into the room; himself standing
without. This evil-minded man walked huffing up and down the room;
I bade him fear the Lord. Thereupon he ran upon me, struck me with
both his hands, and, clapping his leg behind me, would have thrown
me down if he could; but he was not able, for I stood stiff and
still, and let him strike.
As I looked towards the door, I saw Captain Keat
look on, and see his kinsman thus beat and abuse me. I said to him,
"Keat, dost thou allow this?" He said he did. "Is this manly or
civil," said I, "to have us under a guard, and then put a man to
abuse and beat us? Is this manly, civil, or Christian?" I desired
one of our friends to send for the constables, and they came.
Then I desired the Captain to let the constables
see his warrant or order, by which he was to carry us; which he
did. His warrant was to conduct us safe to Captain Fox, governor of
Pendennis Castle; and if the governor should not be at home, he was
to convey us to Launceston jail. I told him he had broken his order
concerning us; for we, who were his prisoners, were to be safely
conducted; but he had brought a man to beat and abuse us; so he
having broken his order, I wished the constable to keep the
warrant. Accordingly he did, and told the soldiers they might go
their ways, for he would take charge of the prisoners; and if it
cost twenty shillings in charges to carry us up, they should not
have the warrant again. I showed the soldiers the baseness of their
carriage towards us; and they walked up and down the house,
pitifully blank and down.
The constables went to the castle, and told the
officers what they had done. The officers showed great dislike of
Captain Keat's base carriage towards us; and told the constables
that Major-General Desborough was coming to Bodmin, and that we
should meet him; and it was likely he would free us. Meanwhile our
old guard of soldiers came by way of entreaty to us, and promised
that they would be civil to us if we would go with them.
Thus the morning was spent till about the eleventh
hour; and then, upon the soldiers' entreaty, and their promise to
be more civil, the constables gave them the order again; and we
went with them.
Great was the civility and courtesy of the
constables and people of that town towards us. They kindly
entertained us, and the Lord rewarded them with His truth; for many
of them have since been convinced thereof, and are gathered into
the name of Jesus, and sit under Christ, their Teacher and
Saviour.
Captain Keat, who commanded our guard,
understanding that Captain Fox, who was governor of Pendennis
Castle, was gone to meet Major-General Desborough, did not
carry us thither; but took us directly to Bodmin, in the way to
Launceston. We met Major-General Desborough on the way. The captain
of his troop, who rode before him, knew me, and said, "Oh, Mr. Fox,
what do you here?" I replied, "I am a prisoner." "Alack," he said,
"for what?" I told him I was taken up as I was travelling. "Then,"
said he, "I will speak to my lord, and he will set you at
liberty."
So he came from the head of his troop, and rode up
to the coach, and spoke to the Major-General. We also gave him an
account of how we were taken. He began to speak against the Light
of Christ; against which I exhorted him. Then he told the soldiers
that they might carry us to Launceston; for he could not stay to
talk with us, lest his horses should take cold.
To Bodmin we were taken that night; and when we
came to our inn Captain Keat, who was in before us, put me into a
room and went his way. When I was come in, there stood a man with a
naked rapier in his hand. Whereupon I turned out again, called for
Captain Keat, and said, "What now, Keat; what trick hast thou
played now, to put me into a room where there is a man with his
naked rapier? What is thy end in this?" "Oh," said he, "pray hold
your tongue; for if you speak to this man, we cannot rule him, he
is so devilish." "Then," said I, "dost thou put me into a room
where there is such a man with a naked rapier that thou sayest you
cannot rule him? What an unworthy, base trick is this? and to put
me single into this room, away from my friends that were
fellow-prisoners with me?" Thus his plot was discovered and the
mischief they intended was prevented.
Afterward we got another room, where we were
together all night; and in the evening we declared the Truth to the
people; but they were dark and hardened. The soldiers,
notwithstanding their fair promises, were very rude and wicked to
us again, and sat up drinking and roaring all night.
Next day we were brought to Launceston, where
Captain Keat delivered us to the jailer. Now was there no Friend,
nor Friendly people, near us; and the people of the town were a
dark, hardened people. The jailer required us to pay seven
shillings a week for our horse-meat, and seven shillings a week
apiece for our diet. After some time several sober persons came to
see us, and some people of the town were convinced, and many
friendly people out of several parts of the country came to visit
us, and were convinced.
Then got up a great rage among the professors and
priests against us. They said, "This people 'Thou' and 'Thee' all
men without respect and will not put off their hats, nor bow the
knee to any man; but we shall see, when the assize comes, whether
they will dare to 'Thou' and 'Thee' the judge, and keep on their
hats before him." They expected we should be hanged at the
assize.
But all this was little to us; for we saw how God
would stain the world's honour and glory; and were commanded not to
seek that honour, nor give it; but knew the honour that cometh from
God only, and sought that.
It was nine weeks from the time of our commitment
to the time of the assizes, to which abundance of people came from
far and near to hear the trial of the Quakers. Captain Bradden lay
there with his troop of horse. His soldiers and the sheriff's men
guarded us to the court through the multitude that filled the
streets; and much ado they had to get us through. Besides, the
doors and windows were filled with people looking upon us.
When we were brought into the court, we stood a
while with our hats on, and all was quiet. I was moved to say,
"Peace be amongst you."
Judge Glynne, a Welshman, then Chief-Justice of
England, said to the jailer, "What be these you have brought here
into the court?" "Prisoners, my lord," said he.
"Why do you not put off your hats?" said the Judge
to us. We said nothing.
"Put off your hats," said the Judge again. Still we
said nothing. Then said the Judge, "The Court commands you to put
off your hats."
Then I spoke, and said, "Where did ever any
magistrate, king, or judge, from Moses to Daniel, command any to
put off their hats, when they came before him in his court, either
amongst the Jews, the people of God, or amongst the heathen? and
if the law of England doth command any such thing, show me that law
either written or printed."
Then the Judge grew very angry, and said, "I do not
carry my law-books on my back." "But," said I, "tell me where it is
printed in any statute-book, that I may read it."
Then said the Judge, "Take him away, prevaricator!
I'll ferk him." So they took us away, and put us among the
thieves.
Presently after he calls to the jailer, "Bring them
up again." "Come," said he, "where had they hats, from Moses to
Daniel; come, answer me: I have you fast now."
I replied, "Thou mayest read in the third of
Daniel, that the three children were cast into the fiery furnace by
Nebuchadnezzar's command, with their coats, their hose, and their
hats on."
This plain instance stopped him: so that, not
having anything else to say to the point, he cried again, "Take
them away, jailer."
Accordingly we were taken away, and thrust in among
the thieves, where we were kept a great while; and then, without
being called again, the sheriff's men and the troopers made way for
us (but we were almost spent) to get through the crowd of people,
and guarded us to the prison again, a multitude of people following
us, with whom we had much discourse and reasoning at the jail.
We had some good books to set forth our principles,
and to inform people of the Truth. The Judge and justices hearing
of this, they sent Captain Bradden for them. He came into the jail
to us, and violently took our books from us, some out of Edward
Pyot's hands, and carried them away; so we never got them
again.
[While in the jail Fox addressed a paper "against
swearing" to the grand and petty juries.]
This paper passing among them from the jury to the
justices, they presented it to the Judge; so that when we were
called before the Judge, he bade the clerk give me that paper, and
then asked me whether that seditious paper was mine. I said to him,
"If they will read it out in open court, that I may hear it, if it
is mine I will own it, and stand by it." He would have had me take
it and look upon it in my own hand; but I again desired that it
might be read, that all the country might hear it, and judge
whether there was any sedition in it or not; for if there were, I
was willing to suffer for it.
At last the clerk of the assize read it, with an
audible voice, that all the people might hear it. When he had done
I told them it was my paper; that I would own it, and so might they
too, unless they would deny the Scripture: for was not this
Scripture language, and the words and commands of Christ, and the
Apostle, which all true Christians ought to obey?
Then they let fall that subject; and the Judge fell
upon us about our hats again, bidding the jailer take them off;
which he did, and gave them to us; and we put them on again. Then
we asked the Judge and the justices, for what cause we had lain in
prison these nine weeks, seeing they now objected to nothing but
our hats. And as for putting off our hats, I told them that that
was the honour which God would lay in the dust, though they made so
much ado about it; the honour which is of men, and which men seek
one of another, and is a mark of unbelievers. For "How can ye
believe," saith Christ, "who receive honour one of another, and
seek not the honour that cometh from God only?" Christ saith, "I
receive not honour from men"; and all true Christians should be of
His mind.
Then the Judge began to make a pompous speech, how
he represented the Lord Protector's person, who made him Lord
Chief-Justice of England, and sent him to come that circuit, etc.
We desired him, then, that he would do us justice for our false
imprisonment which we had suffered nine weeks wrongfully. But
instead of that, they brought an indictment framed against us; so
full of lies that I thought it had been against some of the
thieves, -- "that we came by force and arms, and in a hostile
manner, into the court"; who were brought as aforesaid. I told them
it was all false; and still we cried for justice for our false
imprisonment, being taken up in our journey without cause by Major
Ceely.
Then Peter Ceely said to the Judge, "May it please
you, my lord, this man (pointing to me) went aside with me, and
told me how serviceable I might be for his design; that he could
raise forty thousand men at an hour's warning, involve the nation
in blood, and so bring in King Charles. I would have aided him out
of the country, but he would not go. If it please you, my lord, I
have a witness to swear it."
So he called upon his witness; but the Judge not
being forward to examine the witness, I desired that he would be
pleased to let my mittimus be read in the face of the court and the
country, in which the crime was signified for which I was sent to
prison. The Judge said it should not be read. I said, "It ought to
be, seeing it concerned my liberty and my life." The Judge said
again, "It shall not be read." I said, "It ought to be read; for if
I have done anything worthy of death, or of bonds, let all the
country know it."
Then seeing they would not read it, I spoke to one
of my fellow-prisoners: "Thou hast a copy of it; read it up." "It
shall not be read," said the Judge; "jailer, take him away. I'll
see whether he or I shall be master."
So I was taken away, and awhile after called for
again. I still called to have the mittimus read; for that signified
the cause of my commitment. I again spoke to the Friend, my
fellow-prisoner, to read it up; which he did. The Judge, justices,
and the whole court were silent; for the people were eager to hear
it. It was as followeth:
"Peter Ceely, one of the justices of the
peace of this county, to the keeper of His Highness's jail at
Launceston, or his lawful deputy in that behalf, greeting:
"I send you here withal by the bearers
hereof, the bodies of Edward Pyot, of Bristol, and George Fox, of
Drayton-in-the-Clay, in Leicestershire, and William Salt, of
London, which they pretend to be the places of their habitations,
who go under the notion of Quakers, and acknowledge themselves to
be such; who have spread several papers tending to the disturbance
of the public peace, and cannot render any lawful cause of coming
into those parts, being persons altogether unknown, having no pass
for travelling up and down the country, and refusing to give
sureties for their good behaviour, according to the law in that
behalf provided; and refuse to take oath of abjuration, etc. These
are, therefore, in the name of his highness the Lord Protector, to
will and command you, that when the bodies of the said Edward Pyot,
George Fox, and William Salt, shall be unto you brought, you them
receive, and in His Highness's prison aforesaid you safely keep
them, until by due course of law they shall be delivered. Hereof
fail you not, as you will answer the contrary at your perils. Given
under my hand and seal, at St. Ives, the 18th day of January,
1655.
P. CEELY."
When it was read I spoke thus to the Judge and
justices:
"Thou that sayest thou art Chief-Justice of
England, and you justices, know that, if I had put in sureties, I
might have gone whither I pleased, and have carried on the design
(if I had had one) with which Major Ceely hath charged me. And if I
had spoken those words to him, which he hath here declared, judge
ye whether bail or mainprize could have been taken in that
case."
Then, turning my speech to Major Ceely, I said:
"When or where did I take thee aside? Was not thy
house full of rude people, and thou as rude as any of them, at our
examination; so that I asked for a constable or some other officer
to keep the people civil? But if thou art my accuser, why sittest
thou on the bench? It is not the place of accusers to sit with the
judge. Thou oughtest to come down and stand by me, and look me in
the face.
"Besides, I would ask the Judge and justices
whether Major Ceely is not guilty of this treason, which he charges
against me, in concealing it so long as he hath done? Does he
understand his place, either as a soldier or a justice of the
peace? For he tells you here that I went aside with him, and told
him what a design I had in hand, and how serviceable he might be
for my design: that I could raise forty thousand men in an hour's
time, bring in King Charles, and involve the nation in blood. He
saith, moreover, that he would have aided me out of the country,
but I would not go; and therefore he committed me to prison for
want of sureties for the good behaviour, as the mittimus
declares.
"Now, do you not see plainly that Major Ceely is
guilty of this plot and treason he talks of, and hath made himself
a party to it by desiring me to go out of the country, demanding
bail of me, and not charging me with this pretended treason till
now, nor discovering it? But I deny and abhor his words, and am
innocent of his devilish design."
So that business was let fall; for the Judge saw
clearly enough that instead of ensnaring me, Major Ceely had
ensnared himself.
Major Ceely got up again, and said, "If it please
you, my lord, to hear me: this man struck me, and gave me such a
blow as I never had in my life." At this I smiled in my heart, and
said, "Major Ceely, art thou a justice of the peace, and a major of
a troop of horse, and tellest the Judge, in the face of the court
and country, that I, a prisoner, struck thee and gave thee such a
blow as thou never hadst the like in thy life? What! art thou not
ashamed? Prithee, Major Ceely," said I, "where did I strike thee?
and who is thy witness for that? who was by?"
He said it was in the Castle-Green, and Captain
Bradden was standing by when I struck him. I desired the Judge to
let him produce his witness for that; and called again upon Major
Ceely to come down from the bench, telling him that it was not fit
that the accuser should sit as judge over the accused. When I
called again for his witness he said that Captain Bradden was his
witness.
Then I said, "Speak, Captain Bradden, didst thou
see me give him such a blow, and strike him as he saith?" Captain
Bradden made no answer; but bowed his head towards me. I desired
him to speak up, if he knew any such thing; but he only bowed his
head again. "Nay," said I, "speak up, and let the court and country
hear, and let not bowing of the head serve the turn. If I have done
so, let the law be inflicted on me; I fear not sufferings, nor
death itself, for I am an innocent man concerning all this
charge."
But Captain Bradden never testified to it; and the
Judge, finding those snares would not hold, cried, "Take him away,
jailer;" and then, when we were taken away, he fined us twenty
marks apiece for not putting off our hats; and sentenced us to be
kept in prison till we paid it; so he sent us back to the jail.
At night Captain Bradden came to see us, and seven
or eight justices with him, who were very civil to us, and told us
they believed neither the Judge nor any in the court gave credit to
the charges which Major Ceely had brought forward against me in the
face of the country. And Captain Bradden said that Major Ceely had
an intent to take away my life if he could have got another
witness.
"But," said I, "Captain Bradden, why didst not thou
witness for me, or against me, seeing Major Ceely produced thee for
a witness, that thou saw me strike him? and when I desired thee to
speak either for me or against me, according to what thou saw or
knew, thou wouldst not speak."
"Why," said he, "when Major Ceely and I came by
you, as you were walking in the Castle-Green, he put off his hat to
you, and said, 'How do you do, Mr. Fox? Your servant, Sir.' Then
you said to him, 'Major Ceely, take heed of hypocrisy, and of a
rotten heart: for when came I to be thy master, and thou my
servant? Do servants cast their masters into prison?' This was the
great blow he meant you gave him."
Then I called to mind that they walked by us, and
that he spoke so to me, and I to him; which hypocrisy and
rotten-heartedness he manifested openly, when he complained of this
to the Judge in open court, and in the face of the country; and
would have made them all believe that I struck him outwardly with
my hand.
There came also to see us one Colonel Rouse a
justice of the peace, and a great company with him. He was as full
of words and talk as ever I heard any man in my life, so that there
was no speaking to him. At length I asked him whether he had ever
been at school, and knew what belonged to questions and answers;
(this I said to stop him).
"At school!" said he, "Yes."
"At school!" said the soldiers; "doth he say so to
our colonel, that is a scholar?"
"Then," said I, "if he be so, let him be still and
receive answers to what he hath said."
Then I was moved to speak the Word of life to him
in God's dreadful power; which came so over him that he could not
open his mouth. His face swelled, and was red like a turkey; his
lips moved, and he mumbled something; but the people thought he
would have fallen down. I stepped up to him, and he said he was
never so in his life before: for the Lord's power stopped the evil
power in him; so that he was almost choked.
The man was ever after very loving to Friends, and
not so full of airy words to us; though he was full of pride; but
the Lord's power came over him, and the rest that were with
him.
Another time there came an officer of the army, a
very malicious, bitter professor whom I had known in London. He was
full of his airy talk also, and spoke slightingly of the Light of
Christ, and against the Truth, and against the Spirit of God being
in men, as it was in the apostles' days; till the power of God,
that bound the evil in him, had almost choked him as it did Colonel
Rouse: for he was so full of evil that he could not speak, but
blubbered and stuttered. But from the time that the Lord's power
struck him and came over him, he was ever after more loving to
us.
The assizes being over, and we settled in prison
upon such a commitment that we were not likely to be soon released,
we broke off from giving the jailer seven shillings a week apiece
for our horses, and seven shillings a week for ourselves, and sent
our horses into the country. Upon which he grew very wicked and
devilish, and put us down into Doomsdale, a nasty, stinking place,
where they used to put murderers after they were condemned.
The place was so noisome that it was observed few
that went in did ever come out again in health. There was no house
of office in it; and the excrement of the prisoners that from time
to time had been put there had not been carried out (as we were
told) for many years. So that it was all like mire, and in some
places to the tops of the shoes in water and urine; and he would
not let us cleanse it, nor suffer us to have beds or straw to lie
on.
At night some friendly people of the town brought
us a candle and a little straw; and we burned a little of our straw
to take away the stink. The thieves lay over our heads, and the
head jailer in a room by them, over our heads also. It seems the
smoke went up into the room where the jailer lay; which put him
into such a rage that he took the pots of excrement from the
thieves and poured them through a hole upon our heads in Doomsdale,
till we were so bespattered that we could not touch ourselves nor
one another. And the stink increased upon us; so that what with
stink, and what with smoke, we were almost choked and smothered. We
had the stink under our feet before, but now we had it on our heads
and backs also; and he having quenched our straw with the filth he
poured down, had made a great smother in the place. Moreover, he
railed at us most hideously, calling us hatchet-faced dogs, and
such strange names as we had never heard of. In this manner we were
obliged to stand all night, for we could not sit down, the place
was so full of filthy excrement.
A great while he kept us after this manner before
he would let us cleanse it, or suffer us to have any victuals
brought in but what we got through the grate. One time a girl
brought us a little meat; and he arrested her for breaking his
house, and sued her in the town-court for breaking the prison. A
great deal of trouble he put the young woman to; whereby others
were so discouraged that we had much ado to get water, drink, or
victuals. Near this time we sent for a young woman, Ann Downer,
from London, who could write and take things well in short-hand, to
buy and dress our meat for us; which she was very willing to do, it
being also upon her spirit to come to us in the love of God; and
she was very serviceable to us.
The head-jailer, we were informed, had been a
thief, and was burnt both in the hand and in the shoulder; his
wife, too, had been burnt in the hand. The under-jailer had been
burnt both in the hand and in the shoulder: his wife had been burnt
in the hand also. Colonel Bennet, a Baptist teacher, having
purchased the jail and lands belonging to the castle, had placed
this head-jailer there. The prisoners and some wild people would be
talking of spirits that haunted Doomsdale, and how many had died in
it, thinking perhaps to terrify us therewith. But I told them that
if all the spirits and devils in hell were there, I was over them
in the power of God, and feared no such thing; for Christ, our
Priest, would sanctify the walls of the house to us, He who had
bruised the head of the devil. The priest was to cleanse
the plague out of the walls of the house under the law, which had
been ended by Christ, our Priest, who sanctifies both inwardly and
outwardly the walls of the house, the walls of the heart, and all
things to his people.
By this time the general quarter-sessions drew
nigh; and the jailer still carrying himself basely and wickedly
towards us, we drew up our suffering case, and sent it to the
sessions at Bodmin. On the reading thereof, the justices gave order
that Doomsdale door should be opened, and that we should have
liberty to cleanse it, and to buy our meat in the town. We also
sent a copy of our sufferings to the Protector, setting forth how
we had been taken and committed by Major Ceely; and abused by
Captain Keat as aforesaid, and the rest in order. The Protector
sent down an order to Captain Fox, governor of Pendennis Castle, to
examine the matter about the soldiers abusing us, and striking
me.
There were at that time many of the gentry of the
country at the Castle; and Captain Keat's kinsman, that struck me,
was sent for before them, and much threatened. They told him that
if I should change my principles, I might take the extremity of the
law against him, and might recover sound damages of him. Captain
Keat also was checked, for suffering the prisoners under his charge
to be abused.
This was of great service in the country; for
afterwards Friends might speak in any market or steeple-house
thereabouts, and none would meddle with them. I understood that
Hugh Peters, one of the Protector's chaplains, told him they could
not do George Fox a greater service for the spreading of his
principles in Cornwall, than to imprison him there.
And indeed my imprisonment there was of the Lord,
and for His service in those parts; for after the assizes were
over, and it was known that we were likely to continue prisoners,
several Friends from most parts of the nation came in to the
country to visit us. Those parts of the west were very dark
countries at that time but the Lord's light and truth broke forth,
shone over all, and many were turned from darkness to light, and
from Satan's power unto God. Many were moved to go to the
steeple-houses; and several were sent to prison to us; and a great
convincement began in the country. For now we had liberty to come
out, and to walk in the Castle-Green; and many came to us on
First-days, to whom we declared the Word of life.
Great service we had among them, and many were
turned to God, up and down the country; but great rage possessed
the priests and professors against the Truth and us. One of the
envious professors had collected many Scripture sentences to prove
that we ought to put off our hats to the people; and he invited the
town of Launceston to come into the castle-yard to hear him read
them. Amongst other instances that he there brought, one was that
Saul bowed to the witch of Endor. When he had done, we got a little
liberty to speak; and we showed both him and the people that Saul
was gone from God, and had disobeyed God when he went to the witch
of Endor: that neither the prophets, nor Christ, nor the apostles
ever taught people to bow to a witch.
Another time, about eleven at night, the jailer,
being half drunk, came and told me that he had got a man now to
dispute with me: (this was when we had leave to go a little into
the town). As soon as he spoke these words I felt there was
mischief intended to my body. All that night and the next day I lay
down on a grass-plot to slumber, and felt something still about my
body: I started up, and struck at it in the power of the Lord, and
still it was about my body.
Then I rose and walked into the Castle-Green, and
the under-keeper came and told me that there was a maid would speak
with me in the prison. I felt a snare in his words, too, therefore
I went not into the prison, but to the grate; and looking in, I saw
a man that was lately brought to prison for being a conjurer, who
had a naked knife in his hand. I spoke to him, and he threatened to
cut my chaps; but, being within the jail he could not come at me.
This was the jailer's great disputant.
I went soon after into the jailer's house, and
found him at breakfast; he had then got his conjurer out with him.
I told the jailer his plot was discovered. Then he got up from the
table, and cast his napkin away in a rage; and I left them, and
went to my chamber; for at this time we were out of Doomsdale.
At the time the jailer had said the dispute should
be, I went down and walked in the court (the place appointed) till
about the eleventh hour; but nobody came. Then I went up to my
chamber again; and after awhile heard one call for me. I stepped to
the stairshead, where I saw the jailer's wife upon the stairs, and
the conjurer at the bottom of the stairs, holding his hand behind
his back, and in a great rage.
I asked him, "Man, what hast thou in thy hand
behind thy back? Pluck thy hand before thee," said I; "let's see
thy hand, and what thou hast in it."
Then he angrily plucked forth his hand, with a
naked knife in it. I showed the jailer's wife their wicked design
against me; for this was the man they brought to dispute of the
things of God. But the Lord discovered their plot, and prevented
their evil design; and they both raged, and the conjurer
threatened.
Then I was moved of the Lord to speak sharply to
him in the dreadful power of the Lord; and the Lord's power came
over him, and bound him down; so that he never after durst appear
before me, to speak to me. I saw it was the Lord alone that had
preserved me out of their bloody hands; for the devil had a great
enmity to me, and stirred up his instruments to seek my hurt. But
the Lord prevented them; and my heart was filled with thanksgivings
and praises to him.
In Cornwall, Devonshire, Dorsetshire, and
Somersetshire, Truth began mightily to spread. Many were turned to
Christ Jesus and His free teaching: for many Friends that came to
visit us were drawn to declare the Truth in those counties. This
made the priests and professors rage, and they stirred up the
magistrates to ensnare Friends. They set up watches in the streets
and highways, on pretence of taking up suspicious persons, under
which colour they stopped and took up Friends coming to visit us in
prison; which was done that these Friends might not pass up and
down in the Lord's service.
But that by which they thought to have stopped the
Truth was the means of spreading it so much the more; for then
Friends were frequently moved to speak to one constable and to
another officer, and to the justices before whom they were brought;
which caused the Truth to spread the more in all their parishes.
And when Friends were got among the watches, it would be a
fortnight or three weeks before they could get out of them again;
for no sooner had one constable taken and carried them before the
justices, and these had discharged them, but another would take
them up and carry them before other justices: which put the country
to a great deal of needless trouble and charges.
As Thomas Rawlinson was coming out of the north to
visit us, a constable in Devonshire took him up, and at night took
twenty shillings out of his pocket: and after being thus robbed he
was cast into Exeter jail. They cast into prison in Devonshire,
under pretence of his being a Jesuit, Henry Pollexfen, who had been
a justice of the peace for almost forty years. Many Friends were
cruelly beaten by them; nay, some clothiers that were but going to
mill with their cloth, and others about their outward occasions,
they took up and whipped; though men of about eighty or an hundred
pounds by the year, and not above four or five miles from their
families.
The mayor of Launceston took up all he could, and
cast them into prison. He would search substantial, grave women,
their petticoats and their head-cloths. A young man coming to see
us, I drew up all the gross, inhuman, and unchristian actions of
the mayor, gave it him, and bade him seal it up, and go out again
the back way; and then come into the town through the gates. He did
so, and the watch took him up and carried him before the mayor; who
presently searched his pockets and found the letter. Therein he saw
all his actions characterized; which shamed him so that from that
time he meddled little with the Lord's servants.
While I was in prison here, the Baptists and
Fifth-monarchy men prophesied that this year Christ should come,
and reign upon earth a thousand years. And they looked upon this
reign to be outward: when He was come inwardly in the hearts of His
people, to reign and rule; where these professors would not receive
Him. So they failed in their prophecy and expectation, and had not
the possession of Him. But Christ is come, and doth dwell and reign
in the hearts of His people. Thousands, at the door of
whose hearts He hath been knocking have opened to Him, and He is
come in, and doth sup with them, and they with Him; the heavenly
supper with the heavenly and spiritual man. So many of these
Baptists and Monarchy-people turned the greatest enemies to the
followers of Christ; but He reigns in the hearts of His saints over
all their envy.
At the assize diverse justices came to us, and were
pretty civil, and reasoned of the things of God soberly; expressing
a pity to us. Captain Fox, governor of Pendennis Castle, came and
looked me in the face, and said never a word; but went to his
company and told them he never saw a simpler man in his life. I
called after him, and said, "Stay, man; we will see who is the
simpler man." But he went his way. A light, chaffy person.
Thomas Lower also came to visit us, and
offered us money, which we refused; accepting nevertheless of his
love. He asked us many questions concerning our denying the
Scriptures to be the Word of God; concerning the sacraments, and
such like: to all which he received satisfaction. I spoke
particularly to him; and he afterwards said my words were as a
flash of lightning, they ran so through him. He said he had never
met with such men in his life, for they knew the thoughts of his
heart; and were as the wise master-builders of the assemblies that
fastened their words like nails. He came to be convinced of the
truth, and remains a Friend to this day.
When he came home to his aunt Hambley's, where he
then lived, and made report to her concerning us, she, with her
sister Grace Billing, hearing the report of Truth, came to visit us
in prison, and was convinced also. Great sufferings and spoiling of
goods both he and his aunt have undergone for the Truth's sake.
After the assizes, the sheriff, with some soldiers,
came to guard to execution a woman that was sentenced to die; and
we had much discourse with them. One of them wickedly said, "Christ
was as passionate a man as any that lived upon the earth;" for
which we rebuked him. Another time we asked the jailer what doings
there were at the sessions; and he said, "Small matters; only about
thirty for bastardy." We thought it very strange that they who
professed themselves Christians should make small matters of such
things.
But this jailer was very bad himself; I often
admonished him to sobriety; but he abused people that came to visit
us. Edward Pyot had a cheese sent him from Bristol by his wife; and
the jailer took it from him, and carried it to the mayor, to search
it for treasonable letters, as he said; and though they found no
treason in the cheese, they kept it from us. This jailer might have been
rich -- if he had carried himself civilly; but he sought his own
ruin, which soon after came upon him.
The next year he was turned out of his place, and
for some wickedness cast into the jail himself; and there begged of
our Friends. And for some unruliness in his conduct he was, by the
succeeding jailer, put into Doomsdale, locked in irons, and beaten,
and bidden to remember how he had abused those good men whom he had
wickedly, without any cause, cast into that nasty dungeon; and told
that now he deservedly should suffer for his wickedness; and the
same measure he had meted to others, should be meted out to
himself. He became very poor, and died in prison; and his wife and
family came to misery.
While I was in prison in Launceston, a Friend went
to Oliver Cromwell, and offered himself, body for body, to lie in
Doomsdale in my stead; if he would take him, and let me have
liberty. Which thing so struck him, that he said to his great men
and council, "Which of you would do as much for me if I were in the
same condition?" And though he did not accept of the Friend's
offer, but said he could not do it, for that it was contrary to
law, yet the Truth thereby came mightily over him. A good while
after this he sent down Major-General Desborough, pretending to set
us at liberty. When he came, he offered us our liberty if we would
say we would go home and preach no more; but we could not promise
him. Then he urged that we should promise to go home, if the Lord
permitted.
After this
We understood afterwards that he left the business
to Colonel Bennet, who had the command of the jail. For some time
after Bennet would have set us at liberty if we would have paid his
jailer's fees. But we told him we could give the jailer no fees,
for we were innocent sufferers; and how could they expect fees of
us, who had suffered so long wrongfully? After a while Colonel
Bennet coming to town, sent for us to an inn, and insisted again
upon fees, which we refused. At last the power of the Lord came so
over him, that he freely set us at liberty on the 13th day of the
Seventh month, 1656. We had been prisoners nine weeks at the first
assize, called the Lent-assize, which was in the spring of the
year.