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.
—— expected from king James the Second, ii. 200.
—— but is settled by king William in his first parliament, ii. 233.
Licentiousness of the press, a bill for restraining it brought into
parliament, ii. 278.
—— considerations relating to it offered by the Quakers and
given to the members, ii. 278.
Light of Christ, vide i. 73, 133, 187.
Lilburn, John, lieutenant-colonel, reproves the protector, i. 142.
—— his character; imprisoned, tried for treason, acquitted, yet
kept prisoner during the protector’s life, and afterwards
convinced, i. 143, 144.
Lockhart, governor of Dunkirk, i. 232.
—— sends for E. Burrough and S. Fisher, and discourses with
them in a friendly manner, i. 234.
Lodowick, Charles, elector palatine, his kind entertainment of W.
Ames, and his friends, i. 225.
Loe, Thomas, a zealous minister of the gospel; his dying words;
W. Penn convinced by him, ii. 81.
London, F. Howgill and A. Pearson, the first of the Quakers who
held a meeting there, i. 98.
—— meeting-houses built and meetings settled there, i. 101.
—— Quakers are severely persecuted; about 509 of them
imprisoned, i. 374.
—— Many instances of barbarous cruelties, i. 375, 376, 382,
383.
—— pestilence increases; above 8000 people die in one week,
ii. 48.
—— fire breaks out, by which above 1320 houses were burnt, ii.
64.
Love, mutual Christian love amongst friends, i. 229.
Love, John, travels to Leghorn, Venice, Rome, where for his
testimony he is put in the inquisition, and dies, i. 282.
Lower, Thomas, convinced by G. Fox in Launceston jail, i. 153.
—— imprisoned with him at Worcester, ii. 117.
—— set at liberty, pleads for G. Fox, and smartly reprimands Dr.
Crowder, ii. 122.
Lucerne, valley of, protestants there much persecuted, i. 204.
Lurting, Thomas, a fighting sailor, becomes a peaceable
Christian, meets with many troubles by being pressed into
the king’s service: is taken by an Algerine; retakes the ship
without fighting; lands the Turks on the Barbary shore; on
his return, the king being informed of the circumstance,
went and discoursed with the master and mate about it, i.
418 to 428.
Lindy, a blind man of 90, severely used at Bristol, ii. 186.
M.
Magistracy, the end and design of it, i. 212.
—— its degeneracy, i. 212.
—— the Quakers’ opinion concerning it, i. 281.
Magistrates of Boston, in New England, encouraged by the
priests in persecution, i. 219.
Magistrates, make a cruel order, which is cruelly executed, i.
219.
—— good and bad, our duty to each respectively, i. 281.
—— how far their power extendeth, i. 309.
Magna Charta, proceedings against Quakers contrary to it, i.
381.
Malta, English consul accessary to the putting two English
women in the inquisition, i. 324.
—— his death, i. 333.
—— C. Evans writes to its rulers, i. 340.
—— a dreadful tempest and earthquake, i. 341.
Mansfield-Woodhouse, people fall upon G. Fox, in the steeple-
house, and strike him down, &c. a distracted woman
quieted, i. 35.
Marriage, the principle of the Quakers relating thereto, ii. 204.
Marsh, ——, esq. one of the king’s bed-chamber, a friend to G.
Fox, i. 285.
—— his extraordinary respect for him, ii. 64.
—— is made justice of peace, continues kind to G. Fox and
other friends, ii. 78, 79.
Marshal, Charles, convinced, i. 101.
—— travels through the nation in the heat of persecution, yet
none lay hands on him, neither is he fined for preaching, ii.
187.
Marshal, Henry, a persecuting priest, his presumptuous saying
from the pulpit, and sad death, ii. 72.
Marshal, priest, spreads false and slanderous reports of G. Fox,
i. 66.
Marshall, Elizabeth, imprisoned at Bristol, i. 104.
Mass-houses not the houses of God, i. 75.
Meekness and patience, notable instances of them, i. 415.
Meeting, the first great one kept in Nottinghamshire; an
extraordinary one at Mansfield; of professors and others
visited in several places, i. 29, 30.
—— a general, at Swanington in Bedfordshire, and at Skipton, i.
114, 199.
Meetings settled, i. 67.
—— frequently disturbed at London and elsewhere, and persons
cruelly abused, i. 374.
—— Friends beaten and grievously wounded, some even to
death, and when kept by force out of their meeting-houses
they meet in the street, i. 376.
—— a yearly meeting at London, ii. 89.
—— some convinced in silent meetings, ii. 294.
—— meeting-house at Ratcliffe pulled down, ii. 100.
Military employment testified against, i. 107.
Miller, Philip, a volunteer in persecution, disturbing meetings
without authority, i. 377.
Ministers of Christ are made by himself, who gives them gifts, i.
199.
—— so called, in this nation a great grievance to it, ii. 182.
—— of the word, above 60 of them raised among the Quakers,
go out in the service of the gospel; the names of several of
them, i. 98.
Monk, general, gives an order against soldiers disturbing
Friends’ meetings, i. 365.
Motions of the body and mind distinguished, ii. 131.
Muggleton, Lodowick, and John Reeves, their monstrous
blasphemies, a book published against him by R.
Farnsworth, i. 430.
—— to which he replies, i. 430.
Murder, strange account of one at Dublin, i. 130.
Musgrave, sir Philip, a persecutor of Friends, and a violent
prosecutor of F. Howgill, ii. 9.
N.
Nayler, James, convinced by G. Fox, becomes a preacher, i. 58.
—— reproved by G. F. and friends at Bristol, i. 158.
—— his birth and education, &c. i. 159.
—— the beginning of his fall, i. 160.
—— his procession into Bristol, taken up there, examined, and
sent to London to be examined by the parliament, their
resolution and sentence, i. 160, 161.
—— petitions on his behalf, i. 162.
—— public preachers prevail with the Protector not to stop his
punishment, i. 163.
—— sentence executed at London, i. 164.
—— he comes to a true repentance of his transgression, and
publishes several books and papers by way of recantation,
i. 165, 166.
—— extract from the preface of his works.—See Appendix, vol.
i.
—— his crime not owing to the doctrine of which he made
profession, but to his being exalted in his own opinion, i.
179.
—— his dying words, i. 181.
Newcastle, mayor of, troubled for imprisoning M. Halhead; sets
him at liberty, i. 89.
New England, persecution there, i. 181.
—— cruel laws made, i. 217.
—— Nicholas Davis banished on pain of death, i. 251.
—— their deputies come to England to defend their cruelty, but
fearing danger, retreat, i. 314.
—— impious expressions of some of the magistrates, i. 369.
—— a relation of their proceedings published, i. 371.
Nimeguen, the Congress there. The apology and a letter written
in Latin by R Barclay, delivered to each ambassador, &c. ii.
174.
Norton, John, priest at Boston in New England, encourages the
magistrates in persecution, i. 219.
—— he with other priests petition for a law to banish Quakers
on pain of death, i. 222.
—— his sudden and remarkable death, i. 372.
Norwich, R. Hubberthorn and G. Whitehead go thither, by whose
ministry a meeting is settled there, i. 98, 107.
O.
Oaths, reason why the Quakers refuse to take them, &c. and
petition parliament for an affirmation instead of an oath,
vide acts of parliament, ii. 259.
Oath of fidelity to O. Cromwell refused by his soldiers convinced
of the Quakers’ persuasion, who thereupon are disbanded,
i. 97.
—— of abjuration of the pope, refused and why, i. 134.
—— of supremacy, i. 290.
Oaths, on gospel ordinance, a book written by F. Howgill against
oaths, ii. 86.
—— doctrine of the Quakers concerning oaths not absolutely
necessary to government, ii. 302.
Oaths of allegiance and supremacy tendered to Quakers, and by
them refused, the general pretence for persecuting them, i.
351, 352.
Oppressed, God hears them, and brings distress on their
persecutors, i. 283.
Orange, prince of, king William III. the glorious instrument of
establishing liberty of conscience by law, ii. 233.
—— plot against him, and associations thereupon, ii. 274.
—— testimony of the Quakers respecting these associations, ii.
274.
Osborn, Wm. one of the first Scotch preachers of the Quakers, i.
112.
—— from a lieutenant colonel becomes a zealous minister, i.
124.
Oxford, cruel and barbarous usage of Elizabeth Heavens and
Elizabeth Fletcher, so that the latter of whom died soon
after, i. 108.
P.
Paets, Adrian, his argument against revelation, ii. 143.
—— answered by R. Barclay and others, ii. 144 to 160.
Page, John, mayor of Plymouth, his unjust treatment of M.
Halhead, and T. Salthouse, i. 134.
—— makes excuse for it in a letter to general Desborough, who
is little satisfied with it, i. 134.
Papists endeavour to make proselytes of Quakers, i. 315.
—— statutes made against them, executed against Quakers, ii.
19.
Parker, Alexander, an early minister, i. 118.
—— his death and character, ii. 235.
Parnel, James, a youth of sixteen visiting G. Fox in Carlisle
dungeon, is convinced, and afterwards becomes a powerful
minister of the gospel, i. 85.
—— born at Retford, and trained up in literature, i. 124.
—— imprisoned at Cambridge; disputes with the scholars, and is
rudely treated; goes to a fast at Coggeshall; reasons with
and confounds priest Willis, though but about eighteen
years of age; he is sent to Colchester prison, and from
thence to Chelmsford sessions, chained night and day with
felons and murderers, i. 125, 126.
—— is indicted, fined, and sent back to Colchester castle; i. 126.
—— cruelty exercised towards him there, proves the cause of
his death, i. 127.
Pastor, independent, preaching against the Quakers, falls down
as dead, brought again to life, but never to his right senses,
i. 192.
Pattison, M. imprisoned, i. 140.
Peace, the first step thereto is to stand still in the light that
discovers sin and transgressions, i. 73.
Pearson, Anthony, convinced, i. 83.
—— refuses access to G. Fox in Carlisle dungeon, i. 90.
—— one of the first Quakers that preached at London, i. 98.
—— he and T. Aldam visit most of the jails, and get copies of
Friends’ convictions to lay before O. Cromwell, i. 208.
Pembleton, Brian, a New England magistrate, persecutor and
blasphemer, i. 369.
Penn, William, his education and convincement, ii. 77.
—— publishes a book, for which he is committed to the Tower,
ii. 82.
—— is tried with Wm. Mead at the Old Bailey, ii. 101.
—— goes into Holland, and travels into Germany, with R.
Barclay, ii. 161.
—— with whom he visits the princess Elizabeth, and travels
further into Germany, ii. 162.
—— writes to the princess Elizabeth, the countess of Hornes,
and to the elector Palatine, ii. 163.
—— goes to Wiewart where he speaks with Anne Maria
Schurman, the Somerdykes, and Peter Yvon the French
pastor; goes to Embden, where he speaks with the
burgomaster André, ii. 164.
—— his letter to him against persecution, ii. 165.
—— revisits the princess and countess, ii. 267.
—— disputes at Amsterdam, ii. 168.
—— arrives at Harwich, thence goes to London, ii. 170.
—— writes to the princess, ii. 171.
—— Pennsylvania granted to him and his heirs by king Charles
II. ii. 181.
—— his speech to king James II. on his delivering the address
from the yearly meeting, and the king’s answer, ii. 213.
—— blames the turning out of the fellows of Magdalen College,
ii. 216.
—— answers the reflection of his being a Papist, ii. 223.
—— presents an address to queen Anne, ii. 298.
Penn, admiral, sent by the Protector with a fleet to the West
Indies, i. 145.
—— his dying sentiments and advice to his son, ii. 181.
Pennington, Isaac, a prisoner, writes to the king and parliament
of the unreasonableness of persecution, ii. 50.
—— a question proposed by him to both houses of parliament,
ii. 52.
—— short account of his convincement, death, and burial, ii.
175.
—— his account of himself, ii. 287 to 292.
Penry, justice, prosecuted on the act against occasional
conformity, ii. 321.
People of God, a summary account of his raising to himself a
people in this nation, of their great suffering, what he has
done for them, and will do, with an exhortation to patience
and steadfastness, i. 291 to 295.
Perfection, recommended by G. Fox, and defended against
some professors, i. 93.
Perrot, John, travels into Italy with J. Love; is imprisoned at
Rome, and released, i. 282.
—— gives way to vain imaginations, i. 316.
—— and abandons his profession, i. 317.
—— his answers to alderman Brown, i. 378.
—— said to be the author of a paper fathered by Rogers’s party
on E. Burrough, ii. 190.
Persecution at Bristol, i. 102.
—— in New England, i. 180.
—— is contrary to Christ, his apostles, and Christianity, i. 183.
—— inexcusable in the professors of religion, i. 204 to 207.
—— protector and council warned against it, i. 208.
—— in London and elsewhere, i. 214.
—— some stop put to it by change of government, i. 287.
—— is very severe throughout England, i. 374, ii. 30, 40.
—— is at a stand, which displeases some churchmen, ii. 89.
—— is renewed, ii. 93, 98.
—— rages in the country, ii. 100.
—— many instances of it, ii. 110 to 114.
—— a stop put to it, ii. 230.
Persecutors, their dismal fate, ii. 76, 135, 186.
—— excellent advice to them, ii. 221.
—— J. Batt dies penitent, ii. 265.
—— wretched end of Alexander Ruddock, ii. 266.
Petition of the Quakers to king James II. ii. 194.
—— two papers presented to him, in one of which was the
number of prisoners in every county, ii. 197 to 199.
Physicians should be in the wisdom of God, by which the
creatures were made, if they would know their virtues, i.
31.
Pistol, one held to G. Fox’s breast would not go off, and the man
went away trembling, i. 77.
Plain speech required of G. Fox, i. 32.
—— reasons for using it, i. 32, 315.
Plays, shows wakes, May-games, &c. testified against by G. Fox,
i. 34.
Pope, Innocent XI. two letters to him, with queries to him by G.
Fox, ii. 175.
Pope, Blanche, confuted by G. Fox, i. 410.
Popery, the parliament advise the king to suppress the growth
of it, ii. 133.
Popish plot discovered, ii. 174.
Porter, Henry, commits G. Fox to Lancaster prison, i. 274.
Prayer, G. Fox’s paper concerning, ii. 210.
Preachers in 1652, are 25 in number, and every where meet
with opposition, i. 79.
Preaching of the Quakers, at first of what it consisted, i. 26.
Press, Quakers considerations on the bill to restrain it, ii. 278.
Preston, Thomas, his wife makes her servant beat M. Halhead
for passing by her without greeting: she sometime after
dies in a miserable condition, i. 86, 87.
—— her servant much troubled with what he had done; three
years after begs forgiveness, i. 87.
Presumption of the church of Rome, i. 315, 316.
Pretences for imprisoning Quakers groundless and frivolous, i.
135, 136, 148, and sequel.
Pride, a warning to young people against it, ii. 292, 293.
Priests endeavour to persuade people that there is no possibility
of being freed from sin in this life, i. 38.
—— how they deceived the people, i. 55.
—— when they heard of G. Fox’s coming, they would hide
themselves, i. 60.
—— they possess not what they speak of to others, i. 71.
—— have not the word of the Lord, as the prophets and
apostles had, i. 74.
—— fruits of their ministry, i. 78.
—— they stir up to persecution, i. 102, 103, 213.
—— their lives and practices disagree with their doctrine, i. 137.
—— why they are sometimes treated a little roughly, i. 137.
—— their domineering pride and covetousness, ii. 56.
Prince, Thomas, governor of Plymouth, his barbarous expression
concerning the Quakers, i. 248.
Prisoners to lie long in a jail dangerous to their morals, i. 54.
—— some very wicked ones are kind to G. Fox, and become
converts, i. 84.
Professors of the light, Quakers were formerly so called, i. 39.
Prophesy of the priests, that the Quakers would be all gone in
half a year, i. 76.
Prophetical warnings, sayings, and passages, i. 115.
—— of G. Fox to colonel Hacker, i. 116.
—— of B. Blaugdone to judge Pepes at Dublin, i. 131.
—— of a woman before the parliament, i. 207.
—— of Cromwell’s fall, by T. Aldam, i. 208.
—— by E. Burrough, i. 208, 209, 216, 231, 232, 235 to 245.
—— of G. Fox, jun. to the parliament and army, i. 262.
—— of W. Christison to captain Adderton, i. 304.
—— and to the court of Boston, i. 308.
—— of G. Fox, jun. to his friends, i. 307.
—— of C. Evans, i. 321, 329, 332.
—— of F. Howgill, i. 384.
—— of G. Bishop to the king and parliament, ii. 40.
Proselytes, Jesuits endeavour to make them from among the
Quakers, but in vain, i. 316.
Puritans, when so called, i. 17.
Pursloe, captain, rejoices for the spreading of the truth, i. 63.
Pyot, Edward, fellow traveller with G. Fox, is taken into custody
at Ives, i. 148.
—— was formerly a captain, writes to judge Glyn, i. 153.
Q.
Quakers, so called in scorn, i. 18.
—— the reasons for their plain carriage and speech, which
prove the occasion of great trouble and persecution to
them, i. 32.
—— some priests convinced, i. 37.
—— first so called at Derby, the origin of the name, i. 39.
—— given by the independents, i. 118.
—— are falsely charged with denying that Christ suffered at
Jerusalem, i. 53.
—— their first meeting in Swarthmore was in judge Fell’s house,
i. 74.
—— they meet with great and grievous sufferings, i. 77.
—— by patience surmount difficulties, and become numerous, i.
79.
—— they never resist their persecutors, in imitation of the
primitive Christians, i. 86.
—— by what means they became so numerous in early times,
and why they went so frequently to steeple-houses, &c. i.
91.
—— they at first lose their business, but it afterwards increases,
i. 93.
—— meetings settled in most parts of the North, above sixty
ministers are raised among them, they are imprisoned,
whipped, &c. under various pretences, are branded for
witches, i. 97.
—— many books are written against them, which are confuted
by E. Burrough and F. Howgill, i. 101.
—— all manner of insolence and violence used against them at
Bristol, i. 101.
—— charged with being of the Franciscan order, but refute it, i.
105.
—— O. Cromwell’s character of them, i. 117.
—— justices and other officers displaced for owning them, i.
117.
—— offer to lie in prison for their brethren, but refused and
threatened, i. 207.
—— their tongues to be bored through with a hot iron, for
returning a third time to New England, i. 217.
—— their great sufferings, and on what account, i. 230.
—— their charity to the poor commended, i. 274.
—— their mutual Christian love, i. 228.
—— some of their principles, i. 250, 258, 300, 309.
—— why they meet together, i. 281.
—— some of them had before the lords, 700 of them set at
liberty by king Charles II. i. 284.
—— are persecuted afresh on the insurrection of the fifth
monarchy-men, i. 285.
—— are not deterred from doing their duty by any sufferings, ii.
26, 30.
—— stand firm while other dissenters give way, ii. 182.
—— suffer unmoved the spoil of goods, ii. 247.
—— their perseverance and steadfastness till they obtain liberty,
ii. 295.
—— name of Quakers not assumed but given, and how far used
by them, among themselves they are distinguished by that
of Friends, ii. 309.
—— reasons against the schism bill, ii. 322.
—— Yearly meeting Epistle, ii. 328.
Queries of E. Burrough to the friars and nuns at Dunkirk, i. 232.
—— mostly political, proposed to the Quakers, by an eminent
royalist, supposed to be the earl of Clarendon, i. 271.
—— answered by E. Burrough, i. 271.
—— to the Pope and Papists, written by G. Fox, done into Latin
by W. Sewel, and sent to Rome, ii. 178 et. seq.
R.
Rigge, Ambrose, convinced by G. Fox, i. 97.
—— imprisoned at Basingstoke, i. 156.
—— travels, imprisoned at Melcomb Regis, whipped at
Southampton, afterwards imprisoned at Horsham, and
premunired, i. 354.
Ranters, confuted by G. Fox; some of them convinced by him at
Twy Cross, i. 114.
Rawlinson, capt. Wm. his cruelty to M. Halhead, i. 89.
Reckless, John, sheriff at Nottingham, convinced by G. Fox, and
becomes a preacher, i. 35.
Recreations, the principle of the Quakers as to them, ii. 303.
Ree, Richard, one of the first Scotch preachers among the
Quakers, i. 112.
Reformation, small at first, proceeds by degrees, began in
England under king Henry VIII. i. 14, 15.
Regeneration the work of God’s spirit, i. 139.
—— a sermon concerning it, by W. Dewsbury, ii. 225.
Religion imposed by force fills the land with hypocrites, i. 215.
Religion, Christian, depends not alone on the historical
knowledge of Christ, i. 230.
Remorse on a death-bed for cruelly smiting a Quaker, i. 85.
Resurrection, the belief of the Quakers concerning, ii. 308.
Revelation, divine, how it is known to be such, ii. 147.
—— by dreams, ii. 153.
—— in the minds of the prophets by inward inspiration, ii. 152.
—— certain without any outward miraculous demonstration, ii.
153.
Revenge, not desired but refused by the professors of the light,
i. 372.
Rich, Robert, a merchant of London, writes to parliament in
vindication of James Nayler from the guilt of blasphemy, i.
161.
—— his behaviour to him at the execution of his sentence, i.
164.
—— joins John Perrot in his extravagancies, and afterwards
quits his former profession, i. 318.
Ripan, mayor of Lancaster, convinced by G. Fox’s speech at the
sessions there, i. 78.
Robertson, Thomas, and Josiah Coale, imprisoned in Bristol for
attempting to speak in a steeple-house, i. 105.
Robinson, justice, kind to G. Fox, i. 61.
—— colonel, a justice, and a cruel persecutor of the Quakers;
his dreadful exit as he went fanatic hunting, i. 411.
—— George, travels to Jerusalem, his wonderful preservation,
and safe return, i. 195.
—— Thomas refusing the oath of abjuration, is imprisoned and
cruelly used; being released goes to Portsmouth, i. 156.
—— Wm. taken up at Boston, in New England, is cruelly whipt
and banished, but not leaving the country, is again taken
up and imprisoned, i. 250.
—— brought before the court, receives sentence of death, i.
251.
—— his behaviour and execution, i. 255.
—— his and M. Stevenson’s dead bodies used inhumanly, i. 257.
Rogers and Crisp, separatists, ii. 190.
Rome, church of, not led by the good, but by the evil spirit, i.
215.
Rouse, John, his right ear cut off in the house of correction in
Boston, New England, and afterwards whipped, i. 219.
Rudyard, Thomas, a lawyer, is prosecuted for writing a book
showing the right of juries, &c. for pleading the cause of
the oppressed, ii. 109.
Rulers, an expostulation with them touching their duty, i. 169.
S.
Sacrament, that word not found in Scripture. The Quakers’
belief concerning bread and wine, i. 280.
Sale, Richard, so violently thrust into a strait hole, called Little
Ease, in West Chester prison, that he soon after died, i.
228.
Salt, Wm. imprisoned at Ives, i. 148.
Salthouse, Thomas, travels with M. Halhead to Bristol; they are
imprisoned there, i. 131.
—— the cause of it, and are brought to trial, i. 133.
—— fined and sent to Bridewell on false or frivolous pretences,
i. 134.
Salutations. See greetings, i. 32.
Sanders, Mary, convinced, servant to the protector’s wife, i. 100,
183.
Sawyer, Sarah, at her house in Aldersgate street was the first
settled meeting of the Quakers in London, i. 101.
Sawrey, John, a justice, the first persecutor in the north, his
cruelty to G. Fox, i. 76.
—— G. Fox’s prophetical letter to him, i. 80.
—— he is drowned, i. 81.
Scarth, Philip, a priest convinced by G. Fox; becomes a preacher
among the Quakers, i. 60.
Schism bill passed, ii. 322.
Schurman, Anna Maria, some account of her life, ii. 164.
Scoffer, a remarkable judgment upon one, i. 264.
—— others convinced and converted, ii. 294.
Scot, Patience, a girl of eleven years old sent to prison, i. 247.
Scotch priest, who had threatened G. Fox’s life, afterwards
becomes a Quaker, i. 60.
Scotland, visited by M. Halhead and J. Lancaster, and by C.
Evans and S. Cheevers, i. 111.
—— also by S. Crisp, i. 246.
—— meetings settled at Drombowy, Heads, Garshore,
Edinburgh, and Aberdeen, i. 112.
—— first Scotch preachers of the Quakers, i. 179.
—— Quakers persecuted there, ii. 172.
Scriptures, vide i. 31, 78, 281.
Seal, Peter, mayor of Southampton, his cruelty to A. Rigge, soon
after which he dies, i. 156.
Sedbergh, G. Fox preaches in a meeting of Separatists there,
and convinces most of them, i. 67.
Semper Idem, a popish book, so called, answered by Edw.
Burrough, i. 309.
Separation of Wilkinson and Story, the rise and progress of it; it
disappears, ii. 189.
Separatists from the church of England persecuted, afterwards
become persecutors, i. 18.
Several meeting-houses erected at London, i. 101.
Sewel, Jacob Williamson, the author’s father, and Judith
Zinspenning, his mother, convinced by W. Ames, i. 190.
Shattock, William, a shoemaker in Boston in New England,
hauled to the house of correction, cruelly whipped and kept
to work, i. 216.
—— Samuel, banished New England on pain of death,
afterwards carries the king’s mandamus to New England, to
prevent further persecution of the Quakers, i. 306.
Sheriff of Lincoln contending against G. Fox is convinced and
travels with him, i. 113.
Shipwrecks, G. Fox writes respecting the wickedness of making
spoil of them, i. 264.
Signs, T. Aldam, a sign to O. Cromwell, and a broken pitcher to
the parliament, i. 207.
—— R. Huntingdon to Presbyterians and Independents, i. 284.
—— an English woman to the French Protestants at Dieppe, ii.
58.
—— T. Ibbitt to London, ii. 64.
—— S. Eccles to Papists at Galloway, ii. 90.
Sin, a freedom from it, asserted by G. Fox, i. 37.
—— for which he is imprisoned six months, i. 38.
—— the guilt and power of it taken away by Christ, i. 44.
—— pleaded for by professors, i. 45.
Singing psalms scrupled by G. Whitehead, i. 107.
—— reasons against it, i. 108.
—— principle of Quakers concerning singing in churches, ii. 308.
Smith, Humphrey, and others abused and hauled to prison from
a meeting, i. 154.
Snake in the Grass, an anonymous book, written chiefly against
the Quakers, answered by G. Whitehead and J. Wyeth, ii.
279.
Soldiers, one at Nottingham, denying that Christ suffered at
Jerusalem refuted by G. Fox, i. 53.
—— a remarkable passage of some of them, i. 75.
—— one at Ulverstone cruelly beaten for taking part with G.
Fox, i. 76.
Somerdykes, gentlewomen followers of Labadie visited by and
discourse with Wm. Penn, ii. 164.
Souls, some who asserted that women have none, refuted by G.
Fox, i. 24.
Southwick, Laurence and Cassandra, their sufferings, i. 195.
—— two of their children ordered to be sold for their fines, i.
247.
Southwick, Josiah, his Christian magnanimity, is whipped
through three towns and turned into the wilderness, i. 362.
Southwark, meetings disturbed there, i. 385.
Spirit of God wrought gloriously in the martyrs at the
reformation, i. 15.
—— its teaching, &c. owned by them and other reformers, and
by Calvin, i. 15, 16.
—— a measure of it afforded to all men, i. 32.
—— it must be in those who understand the Scriptures, i. 78.
—— who are guided by it, i. 139.
—— how to know if we are led by it, i. 280.
—— thereby we come to believe the Scriptures come from God,
ii. 144.
Staples, Benjamin, see Thomas Goodair.
Stealing goods, &c. not punished with death by the law of God,
i. 418.
Steeple-houses, why public churches are so called by Quakers, i.
75.
—— they are improperly termed churches, i. 289.
—— why the Quakers do not frequent them, ii. 16.
Stephens, Nathaniel, priest of Drayton, i. 21.
—— at his instance the people stone G. Fox and his friends out
of the town, i. 37.
Stevenson, Marmaduke, imprisoned at Boston, and banished, i.
250.
—— again apprehended and imprisoned, i. 251.
—— receives sentence of death; his account of his call to
Boston, i. 252.
—— his execution, i. 255.
Stoddard, Amos, convinced by G. Fox, i. 29.
Stordy, Thomas, resigns an impropriation; his sufferings and
pious end, ii. 193.
Stranger, Hannah, writes extravagant letters to J. Nayler, i. 158.
Stubbs, John, convinced by G. Fox in Carlisle prison, and
becomes a minister, i. 97.
—— meets with W. Caton, i. 120.
—— travels with him, i. 121.
Stubbs, John, and S. Fisher, are at Rome, i. 282.
—— J. S. having been in Turkey returns to England, i. 350.
Sufferings of friends represented to the protector by G. Fox and
S. Pyot, i. 183.
—— by E. Burrough in a letter, i. 184.
—— and by him to R. Cromwell, i. 212.
—— in New England unparalleled, i. 216.
—— account of, published and offered to the parliament, i. 228.
—— a relation of them since the restoration published and
presented to the king and parliament, ii. 180.
—— in Barbadoes, ii. 263.
Sultan, Mahomet IV. favourably receives a message from Mary
Fisher, and dismisses her with respect, i. 283.
Supper, Lord’s, so called, see water-baptism.
Swearing, unlawful for Christians, i. 113, ii. 3.
—— denied by the Waldenses and primitive Christians, ii. 17.
—— arguments against it, ii. 62.
—— a representation of the Quakers’ case of not swearing given
to the members of parliament, ii. 258.
T.
Taylor, bishop, his thoughts respecting heresy, drunkards, &c. i.
318.
Teachers of the world preach for hire, i. 62.
—— described and expostulated with, i. 170.
Temples of God, not churches or steeples so called, but his
people’s hearts, i. 23, 60.
Time-servers no ministers of Christ, ii. 18.
Tithes, R. Widders and thousands more suffer much in their
estates for refusing to pay them, i. 91.
—— that they are now abolished; a dispute; about 100 suffer
for not paying them, i. 140.
—— a motion to abolish them, i. 234.
—— a law concerning them, i. 287.
—— doctrine of the Quakers concerning them, ii. 303.
Tongues and languages, the beast has power over them, i. 198.
Travelling to and fro, the practice of Christ and his apostles in
preaching the word and doing good, i. 140.
Trigg, Hannah, a maid of 15, sentenced to banishment, dies in
prison, ii. 31.
Trinity, the word not found in the Scriptures, i. 133.
Trooper, one at Derby convinced by G. Fox; speaks boldly
among the soldiers, is wonderfully preserved and lays down
his arms, i. 53.
Truth of the Scriptures, how known, i. 281.
Triers of spirits, that know not of what spirit themselves are,
silenced by G. Fox, i. 54.
Trial of John Crook, i. 387.
—— of many prisoners at Worcester, i. 417.
—— of G. Fox, ii. 3.
—— of F. Howgill, ii. 9, 14.
—— of eight friends at Hertford, ii. 26.
—— of W. Penn and W. Mead, ii. 101.
Tumults at Bristol, in which the Quakers suffer greatly, i. 101.
U./V.
Vane, sir Henry, chairman of a commitee where many friends
are tried, i. 214.
—— he is tried, found guilty, and beheaded on Tower-hill, i. 355.
Vickris, Richard, imprisoned at Bristol, i. 290.
Unfaithfulness, the fruit of it, i. 370.
Upshal, Nicholas, member of the church of Boston, in New
England, gives 5s. a week for the liberty of taking victuals
to two Quaker women in prison, i. 182.
—— is fined, imprisoned, and banished, for speaking against
persecution; kindness of an Indian prince to him, i. 182.
Usage of such as for conscience-sake could not follow the
ordinary custom, i. 32.
W.
Wages, such as preach for, are hirelings and false prophets, i.
114.
Waldenses denied all swearing, see swearing.
Ward, captain, convinced by G. Fox, i. 67.
Warfare of a Christian spiritual, i. 224.
Wars, whence they proceed, i. 235.
Warrants, i. 104, 135, 147, 362, 367.
Wastfield, Daniel, a close prisoner 33 days, not suffered to see
his dying child, i. 106.
Waugh, D. see S. Gibbons.
Weapons, carnal, not used by Quakers, i. 224, 235, 286.
West, colonel, G. Fox’s friend, i. 78.
—— refuses to grant a warrant for apprehending him, would
rather hazard all, i. 80.
Whitehead, George, goes to Norwich, i. 107.
—— a short account of his former life, and convincement, i. 107.
—— apprehended, and examined, and imprisoned at Bures in
Suffolk, i. 138.
—— writes against persecution, ii. 25.
—— disputes with W. Burnet and J. Ives about the resurrection,
and with T. Vincent about the trinity, ii. 82.
—— with others, presents an address to king William, ii. 283.
—— another to queen Anne, ii. 297.
—— his speeches to the queen, on presenting an address, ii.
312.
—— another to king George, and his speeches to the prince, ii.
324.
—— another to ditto on suppressing the rebellion, ii. 327.
Whitrow, Susannah, a young woman, her warning to young
people, ii. 292.
Widders, Robert, grievously abused at Coldbeck, dismissed by
justice Briscoe, after a warrant to carry him to jail at
Carlisle, i. 90.
—— goes to several steeple-houses, is sometimes imprisoned,
and sometimes remarkably delivered, i. 91.
—— his death, ii. 211.
William III., see prince of Orange.
Wilkinson and Story, see separation.
Wilson, priest, his insolent behaviour at the execution of William
Robinson and M. Stevenson, i. 258.
—— he makes a ballad on them, i. 258.
Witt, John and Cornelius, their miserable end, ii. 117.
Wits, a caution to conceited ones, ii. 290.
Witness of God within, awakens and reproves what is contrary
to gravity and sobriety, i. 119.
Woman, one foretells the dissolution of parliament, i. 207.
—— miserable end of one who reviled W. Robinson and M.
Stevenson at their death, i. 257.
Women’s preaching, the belief and practice of the Quakers
concerning it, ii. 307.
—— monthly meetings, rise of, ii. 61.
Word, written and unwritten asserted by the Papists, i. 200.
Work of the Lord not to be opposed, i. 88.
Worship, Quakers think public worship an indispensable duty, i.
376.
—— their way of worship, ii. 329.
—— self willed, is barren and unprofitable, i. 92.
—— the end of true worship, ii. 16.
Wrath of God, how felt by profane men as fire, ii. 149.
Wright, Hannah, a girl of about fourteen years of age, travels
some hundred miles to Boston and warns the magistrates
to spill no more innocent blood, i. 370.
Y.
Young, Edward, mayor of Eversham, his cruelties towards the
Quakers, i. 154.
—— his barbarous treatment of two women for visiting the
prisoners, i. 155.
York, duke of, advises the king to severity against G. Fox the
younger, for his letter. The king’s prudent answer, i. 311.
Z.
Zinspenning, Judith, the author’s mother, comes to England, and
speaks in public by an interpreter, and writes a book of
proverbs, i. 429.
—— brief account of her life, ii. 41.
—— her death, ii. 44.
—— her epistle to the friends of truth, ii. 44.
FINIS.
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
Unusual, obsolete, archaic and inconsistent spellings have been left in the book, however
obvious misspellings have been fixed.
Where Greek appears in the book, I have supplied the original text, a transliteration and
if there is no translation in the text, then a translation as well. I find this is necessary
because many devices do not render the Greek alphabet. If you have such a device,
ignore the little boxes where the Greek characters should be.
The year numbers that appear in the chapter (Book) titles and section titles were in the
page headers in the original book. I did my best to place them appropriately in this e-
book.
There is some confusion in the book about whether first month is the month commonly
called January or the month commonly called March. Hence what any other numbered
month refers to is also in question. It is not safe to assume one or the other, unless the
text makes clear the common name of a numbered month. (That being said, in this
book, first day is the day commonly called Sunday and the day numbering follows from
that.)
In the index, I. and J. are mixed as well as U. and V. because this book is old enough
that those letters had not yet been distinguished as separate letters.
Details of changes made to the text are as follows. This list contains the page number,
the original text and context, and the change is shown inside square brackets. Minor
changes to punctuation and hyphenization have not been recorded. The changes are
also indicated in the text like this (where the original will pop-up if you hover your mouse
over the indicated word).
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