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a rabble of rude fellows, whom he had gathered together, and having his drawn sword in his hand, struck one of the foremost of the bearers with it, commanding them to set down the coffin. But the Friend, who was so stricken, whose name was Thomas Dell, being more concerned for the safety of the dead body than his own, lest it should fall from his shoulder, and any indecency thereupon follow, held the coffin fast; which the Justice observing, and being enraged that his word (how unjust soever) was not forthwith obeyed, set his hand to the coffin, and with a forcible thrust, threw it off from the bearer's shoulders, so that it fell to the ground in the midst of the street, and there we were forced to leave it.

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For immediately thereupon the Justice giving command for the apprehending us, the constables with the rabble fell on us, and drew some, and drove others into the inn, giving thereby an opportunity to the rest to walk away.

Of those that were thus taken, I was one, And being, with many more, put into a room under a guard, we were kept there till another Justice (called Sir Thomas Clayton, whom Justice Benett had sent for to join with him in committing us) was come. And then, being called forth severally before them, they picked out ten of us, and committed us to Aylesbury jail, for what neither we nor they knew: for we were not convicted of having either done or said any thing which the law could take hold of: for they took us up in the open street, (the king's highway,) not doing any unlawful act, but peaceably carrying and accompanying the corpse of our deceased friend, to bury it: which they would not suffer us to do, but caused the body to lie in the open street, and in the cart-way; so that all the travellers that passed by, whether horsemen, coaches, carts, or wagons, were fain to break out of the way to go by it, that they might not drive over it, until it was almost night. And then having caused a grave to be made in the unconsecrated part (as it is accounted) of that which is called the church-yard, they forcibly took the body from the widow, whose right and property it was, and buried it there.

When the Justices had delivered us prisoners to the constable, it being then late in the day, which was the Seventh day of the week, he, not willing to go so far as Aylesbury (nine long miles) with us that night, nor to put the town to the charge of keeping us there that night, and the First day and night following, dismissed us upon our parole to come to him again at a set hour on Second day morning: whereupon we all went home to our respective habitations; and coming to him punctually according to promise, were by him, without guard, conducted to the prison.

The jailer, whose name was Nathaniel Birch, had not long

before behaved himself very wickedly, with great rudeness and cruelty to some of our friends of the lower side of the country, whom he, combining with the clerk of the peace, whose name was Henry Wells, had contrived to get into his jail; and after they were legally discharged in court, detained them in prison, using great violence, and shutting them up close in the common jail among the felons, because they would not give him his unrighteous demand of fees, which they were the more straitened in from his treacherous dealing with them. And they having, through suffering, maintained their freedom, and obtained their liberty, we were the more concerned to keep what they had so hardly gained, and therefore resolved not to make any contract or terms for either chamber rent or fees, but to demand a free prison, which we did.

When we came in, the jailer was ridden out to wait on the judges, who came in that day to begin the assize, and his wife was somewhat at a loss how to deal with us; but being a cunning woman, she treated us with great appearance of courtesy, offering us the choice of all her rooms; and when we asked upon what terms, she still referred us to her husband; telling us that she did not doubt but that he would be very reasonable and civil to us. Thus she endeavoured to have drawn us to take possession of some of her chambers at a venture, and trust to her husband's kind usage. But we, who at the cost of our friends, had a proof of his kindness, were too wary to be drawn in by the fair words of a woman, and therefore told her we would not settle any where till her husband came home, and then would have a free prison wheresoever he put us.

Accordingly, walking all together into the court of the prison, in which was a well of very good water, and having before hand sent to a Friend in the town, a widow woman, whose name was Sarah Lambarn, to bring us some bread and cheese, we sat down upon the ground round about the well; and when we had eaten, we drank of the water out of the well.

Our great concern was for our friend Isaac Penington, because of the tenderness of his constitution; but he was so lively in his spirit, and so cheerfully given up to suffer, that he rather encouraged us, than needed any encouragement from us.

In this posture the jailer, when he came home, found us; and having before he came to us consulted his wife, and by her understood on what terms we stood; when he came to us, he hid his teeth, and putting on a show of kindness, seemed much troubled that we should sit there abroad, especially his old friend Mr. Penington; and thereupon invited us to come in and take what rooms in his house we pleased. We asked upon what terms; letting him know, withal, that we determined to have a free prison.

He, like the sun and wind in the fable, that strove which of them should take from the traveller his cloak, having, (like the wind) tried rough, boisterous, violent means to our friends before, but in vain, resolved now to imitate the sun, and shine as pleasantly as he could upon us: wherefore he told us, we should make the terms ourselves, and be as free as we desired: if we thought fit, when we were released, to give him any thing, he would thank us for it, and if not, he would demand nothing.

Upon these terms we went in and disposed ourselves, some in the dwelling-house, others in the malt-house, where they chose to be.

During the assize, we were brought before Judge Morton, a sour angry man, who very rudely reviled us; but would not hear us or the cause, but referred the matter to the two Justices who had committed us.

They, when the assize was ended, sent for us to be brought before them at their inn, and fined us, as I remember, six shillings and eightpence a piece; which we not consenting to pay, they committed us to prison again for one month from that time, on the act for banishment.

When we had lain there that month, I, with another, went to the jailer to demand our liberty, which he readily granted, telling us the door should be opened when we pleased to go.

This answer of his I reported to the rest of my friends there, and thereupon we raised among us a small sum of money, which they put into my hand for the jailer; whereupon I, taking another with me, went to the jailer with the money in my hand, and reminding him of the terms upon which we accepted the use of his rooms, I told him, that although we could not pay chamber rent or fees, yet, inasmuch as he had now been civil to us, we were willing to acknowledge it by a small token, and thereupon gave him the money. He, putting it into his pocket, said, “I thank you and your friends for it; and to let you see I take it as a gift, not a debt, I will not look on it to see how much it is." The prison door being then set open for us, we went out, and departed to our respective homes.

But before I left the prison, considering one day with myself the different kinds of liberty and confinement, freedom, and bondage, I took my pen, and wrote the following ENIGMA or RIDDLE:

Lo! here a riddle to the wise,
In which a mystery there lies;
Read it, therefore, with that eye,
Which can discern a mystery.

THE RIDDLE.

Some men are free, while they in prison lie;
Others, who ne'er saw prison, captives die.

CAUTION.

He that can receive it, may ;
He that cannot, let him stay
And not be hasty, but suspend

His judgment till he sees the end.

SOLUTION.

He only's free indeed, that's free from sin,
And he is fastest bound, that's bound therein.

CONCLUSION.

This is the liberty I chiefly prize,
The other, without this, I can despise.

Some little time before I went to Aylesbury prison, I was desired by my quondam master, Milton, to take an house for him in the neighborhood where I dwelt, that he might go out of the city, for the safety of himself and his family, the pestilence then growing hot in London. I took a pretty box for him in Giles Chalfont, a mile from me, of which I gave him notice, and intended to have waited on him, and seen him well settled in it, but was prevented by that imprisonment.

But now being released, and returned home, I soon made a visit to him, to welcome him into the country.

After some common discourses had passed between us, he called for a manuscript of his; which being brought, he delivered to me, bidding me take it home with me and read it at my leisure; and when I had so done, return it to him with my judg ment thereupon.

When I came home, and set myself to read it, I found it was that excellent Poem, which he entitled PARADISE LOST. After I had with the best attention read it through, I made him another visit, and returned him his book, with due acknowledgment of the favor he had done me in communicating it to me. He asked me how I liked it, and what I thought of it, which I modestly but freely told him: and after some further discourse about it, I pleasantly said to him, "Thou hast said much here of Paradise Lost, but what hast thou to say of Paradise Found?" He made me no answer, but sat some time in a muse; then brake off that discourse, and fell upon another subject.

After the sickness was over, and the city well cleansed, and become safely habitable again, he returned thither. And when afterwards I went to wait on him there, (which I seldom failed of doing, whenever my occasions drew me to London) he showed me his second Poem, called PARADISE REGAINED, and in a plea

sant tone said to me, "This is owing to you, for you put it into my head by the question you put to me at Chalfont, which before I had not thought of." But from this digression, I return to the family I then lived in.

We had not been long at home, (about a month, perhaps,) before Isaac Penington was taken out of his house in an arbitrary manner, by military force, and carried prisoner to Aylesbury jail again, where he lay three quarters of a year, with great hazard of his life, it being the sickness year, and the plague being not only in the town but in the jail.

Meanwhile his wife and family were turned out of his house, called the Grange at Peter's Chalfont, by them who had seized upon his estate; and the family being by that means broken up, some went one way, others another. Mary Penington herself, with her younger children, went down to her husband at Aylesbury. Guli, with her maid, went to Bristol, to see her former maid, Anne Hersent, who was married to a merchant of that city, whose name was Thomas Biss, and I went to Aylesbury with the children; but not finding the place agreeable to my health, I soon left it, and returning to Chalfont, took a lodging, and was dieted in the house of a friendly man; and after some time went to Bristol to conduct Guli home.

Meanwhile, Mary Penington took lodgings in a farm-house, called Bottrels, in the parish of Giles Chalfont, where, when we returned from Bristol, we found her.

We had been there but a very little time before I was sent to prison again upon this occasion. There was, in those times, a meeting once a month at the house of George Salter, a Friend, of Hedgerly, to which we sometimes went; and Morgan Watkins being with us, he and I, with Guli and her maid, and one Judith Parker, wife of Dr. Parker, one of the College of Physicians at London, with a maiden daughter of theirs, (neither of whom were Quakers, but as acquaintance of Mary Penington, were with her on a visit,) walked over to that meeting, it being about the middle of the First month, and the weather good.

This place was about a mile from the house of Ambrose Benett, the Justice, who the summer before had sent me and some other Friends to Aylesbury prison, from the burial of Edward Parret of Amersham; and he, by what means I know not, getting notice not only of the meeting, but (as was supposed) of our being there, came himself to it; and as he came, catched up a stack wood stick, big enough to have knocked any man down, and brought it with him hidden under his cloak.

Being come to the house, he stood for a while without the door, and out of sight, listening to hear what was said, for Morgan was then speaking in the meeting. But certainly he heard very imperfectly, if it was true which we heard he said after

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