FOX'S BOOK OF MARTYRS
CHAPTER XVIII
The Rise, Progress, Persecutions,
and Sufferings of the Quakers
In treating of these people in a
historical manner, we are obliged to have recourse
to much tenderness. That they differ from the
generality of Protestants in some of the capital
points of religion cannot be denied, and yet,
as Protestant dissenters they are included under
the description of the toleration act. It is not
our business to inquire whether people of similar
sentiments had any existence in the primitive
ages of Christianity: perhaps, in some respects,
they had not, but we are to write of them not
as what they were, but what they now are. That
they have been treated by several writers in a
very contemptuous manner is certain; that they
did not deserve such treatment, is equally certain.
The appellation Quakers, was bestowed
upon them as a term of reproach, in consequence
of their apparent convulsions which they labored
under when they delivered their discourses, because
they imagined they were the effect of divine inspiration.
It is not our business, at present,
to inquire whether the sentiments of these people
are agreeable to the Gospel, but this much is
certain, that the first leader of them, as a separate
body, was a man of obscure birth, who had his
first existence in Leicestershire, about the year
1624. In speaking of this man we shall deliver
our own sentiments in a historical manner, and
joining these to what have been said by the Friends
themselves, we shall endeavor to furnish out a
complete narrative.
George Fox was descended of honest
and respected parents, who brought him up in the
national religion: but from a child he appeared
religious, still, solid, and observing, beyond
his years, and uncommonly knowing in divine things.
He was brought up to husbandry, and other country
business, and was particularly inclined to the
solitary occupation of a shepherd; an employment,
that very well suited his mind in several respects,
both for its innocency and solitude; and was a
just emblem of his after ministry and service.
In the year 1646, he entirely forsook the national
Church, in whose tenets he had been brought up,
as before observed; and in 1647, he travelled
into Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire, without any
set purpose of visiting particular places, but
in a solitary manner he walked through several
towns and villages, which way soever his mind
turned. "He fasted much," said Swell, "and walked
often in retired placed, with no other companion
than his Bible." "He visited the most retired
and religious people in those parts," says Penn,
"and some there were, short of few, if any, in
this natiojn, who waited for the consolation of
Israel night and day; as Zacharias, Anna, and
Simeon, did of old time. To these he was sent,
and these he sought out in the neighboring counties,
and among them he sojourned until his more ample
ministry came upon him. At this time he taught,
and was an example of silence, endeavoring to
bring them from self-performances; testifying
of, and turning them to the light of Christ within
them, and encouraging them to wait in patience,
and to feel the power of it to stir in their hearts,
that their knowledge and worship of God might
stand in the power of an endless life, which was
to be found in the light as it was obeyed in the
manifestation of it in man: for in the Word was
life, and that life is the light of men. Life
in the Word, light in men; and life in men too,
as the light is obeyed; the children of the light
living by the life of the Word, by which the Word
begets them again to God, which is the generation
and new birth, without which there is no coming
into the Kingdom of God, and to which whoever
comes is greater than John: that is, than John's
dispensation, which was not that of the Kingdom,
but the consummation of the legal, and forerunning
of the Gospel times, the time of the Kingdom.
Accordingly several meetings were gathering in
those parts; and thus his time was employed for
some years."
In the year 1652, "he had a visitation
of the great work of God in the earth, and of
the way that he was to go forth, in a public ministry,
to begin it." He directed his course northward,
"and in every place where he came, if not before
he came to it, he had his particular exercise
and service shown to him, so that the Lord was
his leader indeed." He made great numbers of converts
to his opinions, and many pious and good men joined
him in his ministry. These were drawn forth especially
to visit the public assemblies to reprove, reform,
and exhort them; sometimes in markets, fairs,
streets, and by the highway-side, "calling people
to repentance, and to return to the Lord, with
their hearts as well as their mouths; directing
them to the light of Christ within them, to see,
examine, and to consider their ways by, and to
eschew the evil, and to do the good and acceptable
will of God."
They were not without opposition
in the work they imagined themselves called to,
being often set in the stocks, stoned, beaten,
whipped and imprisoned, though honest men of good
report, that had left wives, children, houses,
and lands, to visit them with a living call to
repentance. But these coercive methods rather
forwarded than abated their zeal, and in those
parts they brought over many proselytes, and amongst
them several magistrates, and others of the better
sort. They apprehended the Lord had forbidden
them to pull off their hats to anyone, high or
low, and required them to speak to the people,
without distinction, the the language of thou
and thee. They scrupled bidding people good-morrow,
or good-night, nor might they bend the knee to
anyone, even in supreme authority. Both men and
women went in a plain and simple dress, different
from the fashion of the times. They neither gave
nor accepted any titles of respect or honor, nor
would they call any man master on earth. Several
texts of Scripture they quoted in defence of these
singularities; such as, "Swear not at all." "How
can ye believe, which receive honor one of another,
and seek not the honor that cometh from God only?"
etc., etc. They placed the basis of religion in
an inward light, and an extraordinary impulse
of the Holy Spirit.
In 1654, their first separate meeting
in London was held in the house of Robert Dring,
in Watling-street, for by that time they spread
themselves into all parts of the kingdom, and
had in many places set up meetings or assemblies,
particularly in Lancashire, and the adjacent parts,
but they were still exposed to great persecutions
and trials of every kind. One of them in a letter
to the protector, Oliver Cromwell, represents,
though there are no penal laws in force obliging
men to comply with the established religion, yet
the Quakers are exposed upon other accounts; they
are fined and imprisoned for refusing to take
an oath; for not paying their tithes; for disturbing
the public assemblies, and meeting in the streets,
and places of public resort; some of them have
been whipped for vagabonds, and for their plain
speeches to the magistrate.
Under favor of the then toleration,
they opened their meetings at the Bull and Mouth,
in Aldersgate-street, where women, as well as
men, were moved to speak. Their zeal transported
them to some extravagancies, which laid them still
more open to the lash of their enemies, who exercised
various severities opn them throughout the next
reign. Upon the suppression of Venner's mad insurrection,
the government, having published a proclamation,
forbidding the Anabaptists, Quakers, and Fifth
Monarchy Men, to assemble or meet together under
pretence of worshipping God, except it be in some
parochial church, chapel, or in private houses,
by consent of the persons there inhabiting, all
meetings in other places being declared to be
unlawful and riotous, etc., etc., the Quakers
thought it expedient to address the king thereon,
which they did in the following words:
"O King Charles!
"Our desire is, that thou mayest
live forever in the fear of God, and thy council.
We beseech thee and thy council to read these
following lines in tender bowels, and compassion
for our souls, and for your good.
"And this consider, we are about
four hundred imprisoned, in and about this city,
of men and women from their families, besides,
in the county jails, about ten hundred; we desire
that our meetings may not be broken up, but that
all may come to a fair trial, that our innocency
may be cleared up.
"London, 16th day, eleventh month,
1660."
On the twenty-eighth of the same
month, they published the declaration referred
to in their address, entitled, "A declaration
from the harmless and innocent people of God,
called Quakers, against all sedition, plotters,
and fighters in the world, for removing the ground
of jealousy and suspicion, from both magistrates
and people in the kingdom, concerning wars and
fightings." It was presented to the king the twenty-first
day of the eleventh month, 1660, and he promised
them upon his royal word, that they should not
suffer for their opinions as long as they lived
peaceably; but his promises were very little regarded
afterward.
In 1661 they assumed courage to
petition the House of Lords for a toleration of
their religion, and for a dispensation from taking
the oaths, which they held unlawful, not from
any disaffection to the government, or a belief
that they were less obliged by an affirmation,
but from a persuasion that all oaths were unlawful;
and that swearing upon the most solemn occasions
was forbidden in the New Testament. Their petition
was rejected, and instead of granting them relief,
an act was passed against them, the preamble to
which set forth, "That whereas several persons
have taken up an opinion that an oath, even before
a magistrate, is unlawful, and contrary to the
Word of God; and whereas, under pretence of religious
worship, the said persons do assemble in great
numbers in several parts of the kingdom, separating
themselves from the rest of his majesty's subjects,
and the public congregations and usual places
of divine worship; be it therefore enacted, that
if any such persons, after the twenty-fourth of
March, 1661-2, shall refuse to take an oath when
lawfully tendered, or persuade others to do it,
or maintain in writing or otherwise, the unlawfulness
of taking an oath; or if they shall assemble for
religious worship, to the number of five or more,
of the age of fifteen, they shall for the first
offence forfeit five pounds; for the second, ten
pounds; and for the third shall abjure the realm,
or be transported to the plantations: and the
justices of peace at their open sessions may hear
and finally determine in the affair."
This act had a most dreadful effect
upon the Quakers, though it was well known and
notorious that these conscientious persons were
far from sedition or disaffection to the government.
George Fox, in his address to the king, acquaints
him that three thousand and sixty-eight of their
friends had been imprisoned since his majesty's
restoration; that their meetings were daily broken
up by men with clubs and arms, and their friends
thrown into the water, and trampled under foot
until the blood gushed out, which gave rise to
their meeting in the open streets. A relation
was printed, signed by twelve witnesses, which
says that more than four thousand two hundred
Quakers were imprisoned; and of them five hundred
were in and about London, and, the suburbs; several
of whom were dead in the jails.
Six hundred of them, says an account
published at that time, wer ein prison, merely
for religion's sake, of whom several were banished
to the plantations. In short, the Quakers gave
such full employment to the informers, that they
had less leisure to attend the meetings of other
dissenters.
Yet, under all these calamities,
they behaved with patience and modesty towards
the government, and upon occasion of the Ryehouse
plot in 1682, thought proper to declare their
innocence of that sham plot, in an address to
the king, wherein "appealing to the Searcher of
all hearts," they say, "their principles do not
allow them to take up defensive arms, much less
to avenge themselves for the injuries they received
from others: that they continually pray for the
king's safety and preservation; and therefore
take this occasion humbly to beseech his majesty
to compassionate their suffering friends, with
whom the jails are so filled, that they want air,
to the apparent hazard of their lives, and to
the endangering an infection in divers places.
Besides, many houses, shops, barns, and fields
are ransacked, and the goods, corn, and cattle
swept away, to the discouraging trade and husbandry,
and impoverishing great numbers of quiet and industrious
people; and this, for no other cause, but for
the exercise of a tender conscience in the worship
of Almighty God, who is sovereign Lord and King
of men's consciences."
On the accession of James II they
addressed that monarch honestly and plainly, telling
him: "We are come to testify our sorrow for the
death of our good friend Charles, and our joy
for thy being made our governor. We are told thou
art not of the persuasion of the Church of England,
no more than we; therefore we hope thou wilt grant
us the same liberty which thou allowest thyself,
which doing, we wish thee all manner of happiness."
When James, by his dispensing power,
granted liberty to the dissenters, they began
to enjoy some rest from their troubles; and indeed
it was high time, for they were swelled to an
enormous amount. They, the year before this, to
them one of glad release, in a petition to James
for a cessation of their sufferings, set forth,
"that of late above one thousand five hundred
of their friends, both men and women, and that
now there remain one thousand three hundred and
eighty-three; of which two hundred are women,
many under sentence of praemunire; and more than
three hundred near it, for refusing the oath of
allegiance, because they could not swear. Three
hundred and fifty have died in prison since the
year 1680; in London, the jail of Newgate has
been crowded, within these two years sometimes
with near twenty in a room, whereby several have
been suffocated, and others, who have been taken
out sick, have died of malignant fevers within
a few days. Great violences, outrageous distresses,
and woful havoc and spoil, have been made upon
people's goods and estates, by a company of idle,
extravagant, and merciless informers, by persecutions
on the conventicle-act, and others, also on qui
tam writs, and on other processes, for twenty
pounds a month, and two thirds of their estates
seized for the king. Some had not a bed to rest
on, others had no cattle to till the ground, nor
corn for feed or bread, nor tools to work with;
the said informers and bailiffs in some places
breaking into houses, and making great waste and
spoil, under pretence of serving the king and
the Church. Our religious assemblies have been
charged at common law with being rioters and disturbers
of the public peace, whereby great numbers have
been confined in prison without regard to age,
and many confined to holes and dungeons. The seizing
for 20 pounds a month has amounted to many thousands,
and several who have employed some hundreds of
poor people in manufactures, are disabled to do
so any more, by reason of long imprisonment. They
spare neither widow nor fatherless, nor have they
so much as a bed to lie on. The informers are
both witnesses and prosecutors, to the ruin of
great numbers of sober families; and justices
of the peace have been threatened with the forfeiture
of one hundred pounds, if they do not issue out
warrants upon their informations." With this petition
they presented a list of their friends in prison,
in the several counties, amounting to four hundred
and sixty.
During the reign of King James II
these people were, through the intercession of
their friend Mr. Penn, treated with greater indulgence
than ever they had been before. They were now
become extremely numerous in many parts of the
country, and the settlement of Pennsylvania taking
place soon after, many of them went over to America.
There they enjoyed the blessings of a peaceful
government, and cultivated the arts of honest
industry.
As the whole colony was the property
of Mr. Penn, so he invited people of all denominations
to come and settle with him. A universal liberty
of conscience took place; and in this new colony
the natural rights of mankind were, for the first
time, established.
These Friends are, in the present
age, a very harmless, inoffensive body of people;
but of that we shall take more notice hereafter.
By their wise regulations, they not only do honor
to themselves, but they are of vast service to
the community.
It may be necessary here to observe,
that as the Friends, commonly called Quakers,
will not take an oath in a court of justice, so
their affirmation is permitted in all civil affairs;
but they cannot prosecute a criminal, because,
in the English courts of justice, all evidence
must be upon oath.
An Account of the Persecutions
of Friends, Commonly Called Quakers, in the United
States
About the middle of the seventeenth
century, much persecution and suffering were inflicted
on a sect of Protestant dissenters, commonly called
Quakers: a people which arose at that time in
England some of whom sealed their testimony with
their blood.
For an account of the above people,
see Sewell's, or Gough's history of them.
The principal points upon which
their conscientious
nonconformity rendered them obnoxious
to the penalties of the
law, were,
Their conscientious noncompliance
in the preceding particulars, exposed them to
much persecution and suffering, which consisted
in prosecutions, fines, cruel beatings, whippings,
and other corporal punishments; imprisonment,
banishment, and even death.
To relate a particular account of
their persecutions and sufferings, would extend
beyond the limits of this work: we shall therefore
refer, for that information, to the histories
already mentioned, and more particularly to Besse's
Collection of their sufferings; and shall confine
our account here mostly to those who sacrificed
their lives, and evinced, by their disposition
of mind, constancy, patience, and faithful perseverance,
that they were influenced by a sense of religious
duty.
Numerous and repeated were the persecutions
against them; and sometimes for transgressions
or offences which the law did not contemplate
or embrace.
Many of the fines and penalties
exacted of them, were not only unreasonable and
exorbitant, but as they could not consistently
pay them, were sometimes distrained to several
times the value of the demand; whereby many poor
families were greatly distressed, and obliged
to depend on the assistance of their friends.
Numbers were not only cruelly beaten
and whipped in a public manner, like criminals,
but some were branded and others had their ears
cut off.
Great numbers were long confined
in loathsome prisons; in which some ended their
days in consequence thereof.
Many were sentenced to banishment;
and a considerable number were transported. Some
were banished on pain of death; and four were
actually executed by the hands of the hangman,
as we shall here relate, after inserting copies
of some of the laws of the country where they
suffered.
"At a General Court Held at Boston,
the Fourteenth of October, 1656"
"Whereas, there is a cursed sect
of heretics, lately risen up in the world, which
are commonly called Quakers, who take upon them
to be immediately sent from God, and infallibly
assisted by the Spirit, to speak and write blasphemous
opinions, despising government, and the order
of God, in the Church and commonwealth, speaking
evil of dignities, reproaching and reviling magistrates
and ministers, seeking to turn the people from
the faith, and gain proselytes to their pernicious
ways: this court taking into consideration the
premises, and to prevent the like mischief, as
by their means is wrought in our land, doth hereby
order, and by authority of this court, be it ordered
and enacted, that what master or commander of
any ship, bark, pink, or ketch, shall henceforth
bring into any harbor, creek, or cove, within
this jurisdiction, any Quaker or Quakers, or other
blasphemous heretics, shall pay, or cause to be
paid, the fine of one hundred pounds to the treasurer
of the country, except it appear he want true
knowledge or information of their being such;
and, in that case, he hath liberty to clear himself
by his oath, when sufficient proof to the contrary
is wanting: and, for default of good payment,
or good security for it, shall be cast into prison,
and there to continue until the said sum be satisfied
to the treasurer as foresaid.
"And the commander of any ketch,
ship, or vessel, being legally convicted, shall
give in sufficient security to the governor, or
any one or more of the magistrates, who have power
to determine the same, to carry them back to the
place whence he brought them; and, on his refusal
so to do, the governor, or one or more of the
magistrates, are hereby empowered to issue out
his or their warrants to commit such master or
commander to prison, there to continue, until
he give in sufficient security to the content
of the governor, or any of the magistrates, as
aforesaid.
"And it is hereby further ordered
and enacted, that what Quaker soever shall arrive
in this country from foreign parts, or shall come
into this jurisdiction from any parts adjacent,
shall be forthwith committed to the House of Correction;
and, at their entrance, to be severely whipped,
and by the master thereof be kept constantly to
work, and none suffered to converse or speak with
them, during the time of their imprisonment, which
shall be no longer than necessity requires.
"And it is ordered, if any person
shall knowingly import into any harbor of this
jurisdiction, any Quakers' books or writings,
concerning their devilish opinions, shall pay
for such book or writing, being legally proved
against him or them the sum of five pounds; and
whosoever shall disperse or conceal any such book
or writing, and it be found with him or her, or
in his or her house and shall not immediately
deliver the same to the next magistrate, shall
forfeit or pay five pounds, for the dispersing
or concealing of any such book or writing.
"And it is hereby further enacted,
that if any persons within this colony shall take
upon them to defend the heretical opinions of
the Quakers, or any of their books or papers,
shall be fined for the first time forty shillings;
if they shall persist in the same, and shall again
defend it the second time, four pounds; if notwithstanding
they again defend and maintain the said Quakers'
heretical opinions, they shall be committed to
the House of Correction until there be convenient
passage to send them out of the land, being sentenced
by the court of Assistants to banishment.
"Lastly, it is hereby ordered,
that what person or persons soever, shall revile
the persons of the magistrates or ministers, as
is usual with the Quakers, such person or persons
shall be severely whipped or pay the sum of five
pounds.
"This is a true copy of the court's
order, as attests "EDWARD RAWSON, SEC."
"At a General Court Held at Boston,
the Fourteenth of October, 1657"
"As an addition to the late order,
in reference to the coming or bringing of any
of the cursed sect of the Quakers into this jurisdiction,
it is ordered that whosoever shall from henceforth
bring, or cause to be brought, directly, or indirectly,
any known Quaker or Quakers, or other blasphemous
heretics, into this jurisdiction, every such person
shall forfeit the sum of one hundred pounds to
the country, and shall by warrant from any magistrate
be committed to prison, there to remain until
the penalty be satisfied and paid; and if any
person or persons within this jurisdiction, shall
henceforth entertain and conceal any such Quaker
or Quakers, or other blasphemous heretics, knowing
them so to be, every such person shall forfeit
to the country forty shillings for every hour's
entertainment and concealment of any Quaker or
Quaker, etc., as aforesaid, and shall be committed
to prison as aforesaid, until the forfeiture be
fully satisfied and paid.
"And it is further ordered, that
if any Quaker or Quakers shall presume, after
they have once suffered what the law requires,
to come into this jurisdiction, every such male
Quaker shall, for the first offence, have one
of his ears cut off, and be kept at work in the
House of Correction, until he can be sent away
at his own charge; and for the second offence,
shall have his other ear cut off; and every woman
Quaker, that has suffered the law here, that shall
presume to come into this jurisdiction, shall
be severely whipped, and kept at the House of
Correction at work, until she be sent away at
her own charge, and so also for her coming again,
she shall be alike used as aforesaid.
"And for every Quaker, he or
she, that shall a third time herein again offend,
they shall have their tongues bored through with
a hot iron, and be kept at the House of Correction
close to work, until they be sent away at their
own charge.
"And it is further ordered, that
all and every Quaker arising from among ourselves,
shall be dealt with, and suffer the like punishment
as the law provides against foreign Quakers.
"EDWARD RAWSON, Sec."
"An Act Made at a General Court,
Held at Boston, the Twentieth of October,
1658"
Whereas, there is a pernicious
sect, commonly called Quakers, lately risen, who
by word and writing have published and maintained
many dangerous and horrid tenets, and do take
upon them to change and alter the received laudable
customs of our nation, in giving civil respects
to equals, or reverence to superiors; whose actions
tend to undermine the civil government, and also
to destroy the order of the churches, by denying
all established forms of worship, and by withdrawing
from orderly Church fellowship, allowed and approved
by all orthodox professors of truth, and instead
thereof, and in opposition thereunto, frequently
meeting by themselves, insinuating themselves
into the minds of the simple, or such as are at
least affected to the order and government of
church and commonwealth, whereby divers of our
inhabitants have been infected, notwithstanding
all former laws, made upon the experience of their
arrogant and bold obtrusions, to disseminate their
principles amongst us, prohibiting their coming
into this jurisdiction, they have not been deferred
from their impious attempts to undermine our peace,
and hazard our ruin.
"For prevention thereof, this
court doth order and enact, that any person or
persons, of the cursed sect of the Quakers, who
is not an inhabitant of, but is found within this
jurisdiction, shall be apprehended without warrant,
where no magistrate is at hand, by any constable,
commissioner, or selectman, and conveyed from
constable to constable, to the next magistrate,
who shall commit the said person to close prison,
there to remain (without bail) until the next
court of Assistants, where they shall have legal
trial.
"And being convicted to be of
the sect of the Quakers, shall be sentenced to
banishment, on pain of death. And that every inhabitant
of this jurisdiction, being convicted to be of
the aforesaid sect, either by taking up, publishing,
or defending the horrid opinions of the Quakers,
or the stirring up mutiny, sedition, or rebellion
against the government, or by taking up their
abusive and destructive practices, viz. denying
civil respect to equals and superiors, and withdrawing
from the Church assemblies; and instead thereof,
frequenting meetings of their own, in opposition
to our Church order; adhereing to, or approving
of any known Quaker, and the tenets and practices
of Quakers, that are opposite to the orthodox
received opinions of the godly; and endeavoring
to disaffect others to civil government and Church
order, or condemning the practice and proceedings
of this court against the Quakers, manifesting
thereby their complying with those, whose design
is to overthrow the order established in Church
and state: every such person, upon conviction
before the said court of Assistants, in manner
aforesaid, shall be committed to close prison
for one month, and then, unless they choose voluntarily
to depart this jurisdiction, shall give bond for
their good behavior and appear at the next court,
continuing obstinate, and refusing to retract
and reform the aforesaid opinions, they shall
be sentenced to banishment, upon pain of death.
And any one magistrate, upon information given
him of any such person, shall cause him to be
apprehended, and shall commit any such person
to prison, according to his discretion, until
he come to trial as aforesaid."
It appears there were also laws
passed in both of the then colonies of New Plymouth
and New Haven, and in the Dutch settlement at
New Amsterdam, now New York, prohibiting the people
called Quakers, from coming into those places,
under severe penalties; in consequence of which,
some underwent considerable suffering.
The two first who were executed
were William Robinson, merchant, of London, and
Marmaduke Stevenson, a countryman, of Yorkshire.
These coming to Boston, in the beginning of September,
were sent for by the court of Assistants, and
there sentenced to banishment, on pain of death.
This sentence was passed also on Mary Dyar, mentioned
hereafter, and Nicholas Davis, who were both at
Boston. But William Robinson, being looked upon
as a teacher, was also condemned to be whipped
severely; and the constable was commanded to get
an able man to do it. Then Robinson was brought
into the street, and there stripped; and having
his hands put through the holes of the carriage
of a great gun, where the jailer held him, the
executioner gave him twenty stripes, with a threefold
cord whip. Then he and the other prisoners were
shortly after released, and banished, as appears
from the following warrant:
"You are required by these, presently
to set at liberty William Robinson, Marmaduke
Stevenson, Mary Dyar, and Nicholas Davis, who,
by an order of the court and council, had been
imprisoned, because it appeared by their own confession,
words, and actions, that they are Quakers: wherefore,
a sentence was pronounced against them, to depart
this jurisdiction, on pain of death; and that
they must answer it at their peril, if they or
any of them, after the fourteenth of this present
month, September, are found within this jurisdiction,
or any part thereof.
"EDWARD RAWSON"
"Boston, September 12, 1659."
Though Mary Dyar and Nicholas Davis
left that jurisdiction for that time, yet Robinson
and Stevenson, though they departed the town of
Boston, could not yet resolve (not being free
in mind) to depart that jurisdiction, though their
lives were at stake. And so they went to Salem,
and some places thereabouts, to visit and build
up their friends in the faith. But it was not
long before they were taken and put again into
prison at Boston, and chains locked to their legs.
In the next month, Mary Dyar returned also. And
as she stood before the prison, speaking with
one Christopher Holden, who was come thither to
inquire for a ship bound for England, whither
he intended to go, she was also taken into custody.
Thus, they had now three persons,
who, according to their law, had forfeited their
lives. And, on the twentieth of October, these
three were brought into court, where John Endicot
and others were assembled. And being called to
the bar, Endicot commanded the keeper to pull
off their hats; and then said, that they had made
several laws to keep the Quakers from amongst
them, and neither whipping, nor imprisoning, nor
cutting off ears, nor banishment upon pain of
death, would keep them from amongst them. And
further, he said, that he or they desired not
the death of any of them. Yet, notwithstanding,
his following words, without more ado were, "Give
ear, and hearken to your sentence of death." Sentence
of death was also passed upon Marmaduke Stevenson,
Mary Dyar, and William Edrid. Several others were
imprisoned, whipped, and fined.
We have no disposition to justify
the Pilgrims for these proceedings, but we think,
considering the circumstances of the age in which
they lived, their conduct admits of much palliation.
The fathers of New England, endured
incredible hardships in providing for themselves
a home in the wilderness; and to protect themselves
in the undisturbed enjoyment of rights, which
they had purchased at so dear a rate, they sometimes
adopted measures, which, if tried by the more
enlightened and liberal views of the present day,
must at once be pronounced altogether unjustifiable.
But shall they be condemned without mercy for
not acting up to principles which were unacknowledged
and unknown throughout the whole of Christendom?
Shall they alone be held responsible for opinions
and conduct which had become sacred by antiquity,
and which were common to Christians of all other
denominations? Every government then in existence
assumed to itself the right to legislate in matters
of religion; and to restrain heresy by penal statutes.
This right was claimed by rulers, admitted by
subjects, and is sanctioned by the names of Lord
Bacon and Montesquieu, and many others equally
famed for their talents and learning. It is unjust,
then, to 'press upon one poor persecuted sect,
the sins of all Christendom.' The fault of our
fathers was the fault of the age; and though this
cannot justify, it certainly furnishes an extenuation
of their conduct. As well might you condemn them
for not understanding and acting up to the principles
of religious toleration. At the same time, it
is but just to say, that imperfect as were their
views of the rights of conscience, they were nevertheless
far in advance of the age to which they belonged;
and it is to them more than to any other class
of men on earth, the world is indebted for the
more rational views that now prevail on the subject
of civil and religious liberty.
Chapter XIX
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