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Who can make a seperation betwixt ye presh- ous & ye ville amongst you : or who can deserne betwixt ye clean & ye unclean amongst you, for ye word of ye Lord is gon forth & ye decree of ye Lord is sealed, & thus it is fellen out to this wicked & untoward generation whose last estate is worse then their beginning; whose house was
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APPENDIX. 219
once swept and garnished, but a spirit seven times worse is entered into them & ye parfection of wickedness is among them. This is ye word of truth seen & declered in ye light wch tryeth and deserneth all spirits, wheather thay will heer or forbear. Saith ye Lord spacke thou unto them, but thay will not harken unto thee, for thay will not harken unto me, ye light weh reproveth them and woundeth them in ye secrets of their harts, but thay have revolted more & mor & have not greived nor remembred the affection of Joseph but have comitted whordoms against ye Lord and joyned wth ye adulterated spirit weh huntes after ye preshaus life to destroy it. There for yt wch is for destruction to destruction, yt wch is ye sword to ye sword, yt weh is for fier to ye fier. And this shall be the end of them all : he yt is unjust lett him be unjust still : he yt is filthy lett him be filthy still, & he yt is righteous let him be righteous .still, & he yt is holy let him be holy still. And to yt weh yee are joyned to shall yee take yo' portion. And ye reward of yur workes mine eye shall not pitty : or regard yu' crye when in ye bitterness of yu' soules yee cry out for ye extreame anguish & horror weh shall be on yur spirits ; but as I have called & you regarded not, soe shall you call & cry, but I will not answer you wth ye least drope of water or mixtuer of peace to Ease yt spirit, weh shall be tormented, but ye druges & ye cup shall yee drinke, weh is prepared for you w"hout mixtuer. Lett not yu" prists deceive you by spaking peace to you, for
220
APPENDIX.
you & thay shall be cast into ye bed of torment together.
This is ye word of truth to you : Declared in ye Life & power of ye Lord.
JOHN. BURSTOW
Boston Jayell : The First day of yo 4 month
1661.
LETTER FROM JOSIAH SUTHICK, A QUA- KER, TO THE DEPUTIES ASSEMBLED IN THE GENERAL COURT.1
Freinds a few lines I thought good to lay be- fore you, being moved by ye Lord theruuto. . . . O freinds, for so I can call you : I am at enmiti with nothing in you but yt weh sets it selfe agst ye libertie of ye Lords redeemed ones : wch is to serve ye Lord wth ye whole hart & ye spiret, & not in ye leter: whose praise is not of men but of God : what shall I say or how shall I speake unto you : let prejudices & ungrounded jelosies be set aside : and let us reason togeather : . . . take heed you take not ye place of God upon you to judg where God would hav you judg your selvs : for this know yt ye god of heaven, hath searched our harts : & discovered to us ye truth, & for folow- ing & obeying ye truthe are wee made ofenders and transgressors of your lawes & hath rather chose to suffer under ym nor obey ym : because we have sertinly found yt your wills & require- ings have bene contrari unto ye will of our God,
1 Massachusetts Archives, vol. x. pp. 251, 252.
APPENDIX. 221
therfore we dare not submit to ym in obeying ym: . . . Did Christ persecute them yt called him a blasphemer or did he desire ani bodili punish- ment on them yt sayd hee cast out divells by belsebub ye princ of divells : is not his counsell other weise; did not he say love your ene- mies, bless ym y+ curss you, doe good to ym yt hate you, pray for y™ yt despitefully use you and persecute you : yt yee may bee ye children of your father which is in heaven; for he maketh his sun to rise on ye just & on ye unjust : and maketh his rayne to rain on ye evile & on ye good : some have sayd wee were ye persecuters ; but wee know wee are ye persecuted, yet wee can freely say, ye Lord lay not your sin to your charge, for I beleve mani of you know not what you doe: . . . doth not Christ say, hee yt smiteth thee on ye one cheek turn to him ye other also : have you such a spiret in you : . . . is it yt spiret yt doth so rage when it is not honored or bowed too : consider your selvs & deale playnely wth your own harts be not deceivde . . . have you not a law made by weh you can make all doe as you doe & as it were say as you say, or else to ye prisson & whiping poste : . . . . are you not out of ye right way : doe such actions proseed from the spirete of Christ or ye spiret of meek- nes wch ye falen brother is to be recovered with : . . . where Christ sayth doe good, there you doe evil : where hee sayth love, there do you hate : where hee sayth hold your hand, there doe you smite : where hee sayth judg your selvs,
222
APPENDIX.
theire doe yee judg others & leave your selvs unjudged, & with yt spiret wch is unjudged in your selvs, doe yee judg us & condemn us, but it revileth us not, for wee have yt peec you cannot give nor take away : . . . But hee yt knoweth my hart knoweth I desire nothing more then yt you may know him & return unto him you have fought against : for what you doe unto any of Christ's servants, hee looks upon it as don unto himself : let these lines not be slited by you, but what you aprehend is not acording to truthe in ym, let me have a reply derected unto a freind of ye Lord & a prissoner for keeping his com- mands : who am with held from my fameli voca- tions & kept in ye house of opression in boston. Known by name Josiah Suthick . .. From my hart I wish you may doe ye thing yt is right be- fore ye Lord : wch you will doe as his counsell you take : wch in a word is this ; doe unto all men as yee would hav y™ doe unto you : & in yt you will have peace : & wether you heare or forbeare, I am cleer of you before the Lord, the God of my salvation in whom I trust & desire for ever to follow & obey both in prosperiti and in adversity. J. S.
They lust after bloud, it is just with God they should have bloud to drink. From ye house of corection in boston, ye 21 of ye 8 moth 61.
For ye hands of ye Deputies in Generall, at present asembled in Boston. Let this be read amongst you, because it conserns you all.
INDEX.
ALLEN'S (R. H.) New England Tragedies in Prose criticised, 54, 73.
Ambrose, Alice, publicly whipped, 100.
Austin, Ann, arrives in Boston, 34; her arrest and persecu- tion, 35-10.
Barclay, Robert, humiliates him- self, G-8; his views on the Scriptures, 18; on the civil law and magistracy, 26; his qualifications as a writer, 28. Barclay's (Robert) Apology, 17, 28; Catechism, 28; Anarchy of the Ranters, 28.
Batter, Edmund, treasurer of Salem, 50 ; insults a Quaker woman, 51; attempts to sell the Southwicks, 52 ; perse- cutes the Quakers, 96.
Baxter, Richard, ou the Inward Light, 19.
Bellingham, Gov. Richard, con- venes the council for banish- ment of Ann Austin and Mary Fisher, 36; succeeds Endicott, 192 ; death of, 192.
Besse's (Joseph) Collection of Sufferings, 72, 183, 188.
Biddle, John, the father of Eng- lish Unitarians, 4. Bishop's (George) New England Judged, 30, 40, 43, 60, 70, 94, 96, 104, 162, 172, 175, 202. "Body of the Liberties," the, extracts from, 34, 71. Bowers, Barbara, trial of, 200. Brend, William, barbarous treat- ment of, 57, 62-67. Brewster, Margaret, 99, 104 ; trial of, 193-202.
Brigham, Judge William, on the Qnakers in New Plymouth Col- ony, 115.
Brome's (James) Travels over Scotland, England, and Wales, 8, 10.
Bryant and Gay's Popular His- tory of the United States, 103. Burden, Anne, 111 ; imprisoned and banished, 112.
Burrough, Edward, 21, 25; his appeal to the King, 188. Burstow, John, letter of, to his persecutors, 87, 217.
Carlyle's (Thomas) opinion of George Fox, 13.
Charles I., overthrow of, 2. Charles II., King of England, orders laws against the Qua- kers suspended, 55, 189.
Chattam, Catherine, dresses in sackcloth and ashes, 97. Chauncey, Charles, President of Harvard College, 94.
Christison, Wenlock, letter of, 60; sentenced to death, 61; his speech to the court, 87; harbored by Eliakim Ward- well, 100. Coddington, William, 33.
Coercion and persecution under Charles II. and James II., 3. Coit's (Thomas Winthrop) Puri- tunism, 10, 11, 12. Coleman, Ann, torture of, 62, 90. Colonial laws for suppression of the Quakers, 133-132.
Copeland, John, 111; petitions the King in behalf of the Mas- sachusetts Quakers, 183-187. Cotton, Rev. Seaborn, a perse- cutor of the Quakers, 100.
224
INDEX.
Cromwell, Oliver, 3. Cudworth, James, proscribed for entertaining Quakers, 113 ; let- ter of, 114, 162.
.
Dexter's (Rev. H. M.) As to Roger Williams, 61 ; its calum- nies against the Quakers, 73-75. Dyer, Mary, sentenced to death, 58; reprieved and subse- quently executed, 60 ; her let- ter to the General Court, 89; her courageous bearing, 111; letter of, 206.
Early Quakers, doctrines of the, 16-31.
Edwards, Thomas, publishes the Grangraena, 5.
Edmundson's (William) Journal, 97.
Ellis, Rev. George E., his treat- ment of the Quakers consid- ered, 78, 129 ; his inconsisten- cies, 79-82.
Ellis's (Rev. George E.) Massa- chusetts and its Early History, 32, 82, 98, 125.
Ellwood, Thomas, 21.
Endicott, John, Governor of Mas- sachusetts Colony, 33 ; bullies and threatens the Quakers, 43 ; denounced by Mary Prince, 44; fines Upsall, 48 ; defends execution of the Quakers, 59; sentences Christison to death, 62 ; letter of Mary Trask and Margaret Smith to, 84; re- ceives and obeys the King's Missive, 191 ; renews his per- secutions, 191 ; death of, 192. Examination of Quakers in Bos- ton, 157-161.
Fanaticism in the seventeenth century, 6, 9.
Featley, Rev. Dr. Daniel, his tract on the Anabaptists, 11 ; his hostility to Milton, 11. Felton, Benjamin, 96.
Fisher, Mary, arrives in Boston, 34 ; her arrest and persecution, 35-10.
Fourbish, William, put in the stocks, 100.
Fiske's (John) careless repetition of slanders against the Qua- kers, 75-77.
Forster's (John) Statesmen of England, 9.
Fox, George, visits and speaks in steeple - houses, 5; the founder of Quakerismn, 13; opinions of Macaulay and Car- lyle concerning, 13; his par- ents, 14; early religious ex- perience, 14; his mission revealed to him, 15; his views on magistracy, 25.
Gardner's (George) wife fined for absence from church, 128. . Gardner, Hored, whipping of, 116, 172. Gibbons, Sarah, 96. 111, 116. Gough's (John) History of the Quakers, 173.
Gould, Daniel, letter of, to the rulers and people of Boston, 90, 210.
Grahame's (James) History of the Rise and Progress of the United States of North Amer- ica, 72.
Gunning, Dr., Bishop of Ely, 4.
Higginson, Rev. John, of Salem, 94, 95.
Hireling ministry, a, Milton's views concerning, 20.
Holder, Christopher, 111.
Hooten, Elizabeth, 94; barba- rously whipped, 97; the first convert to Quakerism, 97 ; her sufferings, 177.
Hubberthorn, Richard, 26.
Hutchinson, Mrs. Ann, banished, 33. Hutchinson Papers, the, 33, 94.
Inward Light, the, doctrine of, 16, 118, 132. Ivimey's (Joseph) Life and Times of John Milton, 11, 12.
Janney's (Samuel M.) Life of George For, 29.
Jones, Margaret, 39; hanged for witchcraft, 41.
"King's Missive," the, 55, 189- 191.
Kitchin, Elizabeth, insulted by Edmund Batter, 51.
Laud's (Archbishop) abortive at-
225
INDEX.
tempt to reconcile Rome and | Norton, Rev. John, leading min- the Anglican Church, 2; exe- cution of, 2.
Leddra, William, imprisoned and scourged, 62-64 ; put to death, 61 ; letter of, 208.
Lodge's (H. C.) A Short His- tory of the English Colonies in America, 78.
Macaulay's (T. B.) estimate of George Fox, 13.
Marsden's (J. B.) Later Puri- tans, 10.
Massachusetts Archives, the, ex- tracts from, 153-161, 182, 210, 213, 217, 220.
Massachusetts Historical Society, Proceedings of the, 82.
Massachusetts, General Court of, enacts laws against the Qua- kers, 45, 48, 49, 53 ; suspends and reëuacts them, 55 ; employs John Norton to write a refuta- tion of Quaker errors, 120 ; pe- titions to, against the Quakers, 121, 153.
Massachusetts Records, 70, 191- 192 ; extracts from, 183-152, 175-177.
Masson's (David) Life of Milton, 5, 23.
Mather, Cotton, his abuse of the Quakers, 74 ; his Magnalia, 75. Memorial History of Boston, the, 82, 85, 98, 111, 125.
Miles, Mary, trial of, 199.
Milton, John, epigram on the Presbyterians, 3; denounced as a pestilent Anabaptist, 11 ; an- athematizes the Bishops, 11 ; replies to Salmasius's vindica- tion of Charles I., 12; his views on a hireling ministry, 20.
"Minutes of the Magistrates " of Boston, 122.
Mott, Lucretia, 129.
Muggleton, Ludowick, 13.
Munster iniquities, the, 45, 46.
Naylor's (James) fantastic ex- travagances, 29. Neal's (Daniel) History of the Puritans, 2, 8. Newhouse, Thomas, 96, 104. Newland, W., imprisoned, 114. Norton, Humphrey, branded for heresy, 56 ; journal of, 92.
ister of the Massachusetts Col- ony, 33 ; his hatred of the Qua- kers, 57, 58, 67 ; his scriptural argument against them,93,120; recompensed therefor, 121; his defense of Brend's gaoler, 121.
Parker's (Hon. Joel) attack upon early Friends, 74.
Penn's (William) Rise and Prog- ress of the People called Qua- kers, 29.
Petition, for severer laws against the Quakers, 121, 153; to the King for interference, 183-187. Phelps, Nicholas, fined and im- prisoned, 127.
Philanthrophy of the Quakers, 31.
Presbyterians, the, bigotry and cruelty of, 2 ; Milton's epigram on, 3.
Prince, Mary, denounces Endi- cott, 41 ; imprisonment of, 111. Prynne's ridicule of church choirs, 11.
Puritanism, defined, 1; its growth and spread, 2-12; Quakerism an outgrowth of, 123.
Puritans, the English, Scriptural names adopted by, 8, 9; de- spoil churches and cathedrals, 10.
Puritans in Massachusetts, their persecutions of the Quakers, 32-68, 99-104, 126-128 ; their assertion that Quakers had no right to enter the colony re- futed, 69-71 ; their strong and abusive language, 94 ; modern apologies for, 105; their accu- sations against the Quakers, 10S ; their abhorence of Qua- ker opinions the cause of the persecution, 117 ; their denun- cintious of the Inward Light, 118; their intolerance, 119; their plan of government a failure, 131.
" Quaker," a term applied in de- rision, 30.
Quakerism an outgrowth of Puri- tanism, 123.
Quakers, the, their doctrines and beliefs, 16-31; their views on the Inward Light, 16, 118; on
15
226
INDEX
liberty of thought and speech, 16 ; on the Scriptures, 17; on an ordained ministry and church tithes, 19, 20 ; on bap- tism, communion, prayers, and oaths, 22; on the Sabbath, 22 ; on titles, 22 ; on war, 23 ; on marriage, 23 ; a law-abiding people, 25 ; persecution of, 29 ; style themselves Friends, 30 ; their test of membership, 30 ; modes of procedure, 30, 31 ; philanthropy, 31; arrival of Quaker missionaries at Bos- ton, Massachusetts, 32, 34; their arrest, 35; abuse and ban- ishment of, 38-40; arrival of others at Boston, 42 ; more im- prisoned and banished, 42 ; the General Court enacts laws against, 45, 48, 49, 53; women stripped and whipped, 51, 62 ; falsely branded as vagabonds, 53 ; temporarily relieved by the " King's Missive," 55 ; mutilated, hanged, banished, and scourged, 56, 57, 62-66; popular sympathy with, 57-59, 66-68 ; their right to enter the colony, 69, 70 ; four fifths of them residents before the persecution, 71 ; slanders against, 72-74; their treat- ment by modern " histori- ans," 75-82 ; their testimonies considered and vindicated, 82- 91; not guilty as a body, of improper behavior, 91 ; special accusations against examined, 94; the cases of Lydia Ward- well and Deborah Wilson, 99- 104; interruptions of church service, 107 ; their custom of wearing the hat, 109 ; persecu- tion of, in the Plymouth Col- ony, 114; their religious opin- ions the real cause of the persecution, 117 ; their leading tenets common with those of the Puritans, 117 ; radical dif- ferences, 119; summary of pros- ecutions against, in Boston, 122 ; themselves Puritans, 125 ; their final triumph, 128; their religion still an active force, 132 ; colonial laws for their suppression, 133-152 ; examin- ation of, in Boston, 157-161 ;
order of banishment, 182; pe- tition the King to interfere, 183 ; the King's Missive, 189, 190 ; proscriptive laws reën- acted, 191 ; trials of, 193-202 ; letters of William Robinson, Marmaduke Stevenson, Mary Dyer, and other leading
Friends, 202-222.
Rayner, Rev., instigates whip- ping of Quaker women, 100. Religious controversy and debate in England during the seven- teenth century, 3.
Robinson, William, sentenced to death, 58 ; letter of, 202.
Roots, Thomas, 96.
Rouse, John, petitions the King in behalf of the Massachusetts Quakers, 183-187.
Saltonstall, Sir Richard, deplores persecution by the Founders, 33.
Scriptures, the, Quaker views concerning, 17. Scudder, H. E., 124. Sects in the seventeenth century enumerated, 5. Sewall's (Judge Samuel) defini- tion of Quakerism, 75; Diary, 99. Sewel's (William) History of the Quakers, 23, 29, 177, 188, 206, 208.
Shattuck, Samuel, petitions the King in behalf of the Massa- chusetts Quakers, 183.
Skerry, Henry, 96. Smith, Margaret, letter of, to . Governor Endicott, 84, 213. Smith, Richard, 111. Sontheote, Joanna, 13.
Southwick, Consader, 122.
Southwick, Daniel and Provi- ded, ordered to be sold into slavery, 50 ; Provided fined, 127.
Southwick, Josiah, addresses a letter to the General Court, 88, 175, 220.
Southwick (Southick), Laurence and Cassandra, sufferings of, 173; Laurence, letter of, 175. Stevenson, Marmaduke, sen- tenced to death, 58 ; letter of, 202.
227
INDEX.
Temple, Col., endeavors to pre- veut execution of Quakers, 60. Thirstone, Thomas, 111.
Toleration fostered under the Commonwealth, 3.
Tomkins, Mary, publicly whipped, 100.
Trask, Mary, letter of, to Gov- ernor Eudicott, 84, 213.
Upsall, Nicholas, sends provi- sions to imprisoned Quakers, 36 : laments anti-Quaker legis- lation, 47 ; fined and banished, 48.
Vane, Sir Henry, 3, 33. Very, Nathaniel, 129.
Wardwell, Eliakim, 99; put in the stocks, 100.
Wardwell, Lydia, case of, 99- 102; her cruel punishment, 104.
Wardwell, Thomas, 99. Waugh, Dorothy, 96, 111, 116. Whitehead, Mary, 111.
Whiting, John, refutes Cotton Mather's slanders, 76.
Whiting's (John) Truth and In- nocency Defended, 74, 76.
Whittier's (John G. ) lines on Cas- sandra Southwick, 53 : poem on the King's Missive, 189. Williams, Roger, driven into ex- ile, 33.
Wilson, Deborah, the case of, 104. Winthrop, John, Governor of Connecticut, protests against hanging Quakers, 60.
Winthrop, John, Governor of Massachusetts, regrets his per- secution of "heresy," 33.
Winthorp, Samuel, son of Gov. Winthrop, a Quaker, 71. Winthrop's (John) Journal, 40. Wright, Lydia, trial of, 197.
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Charles L. Eastlake.
Hints on Household Taste. Illustrated. Svo, $3.00.
Notes on the Louvre and Brera Galleries. Small 4to, $2.00.
George Eliot. The Spanish Gypsy. A Poem. 16mo, $1.50.
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