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Perfection, a priest discourses G. F.

Perfection in Christ is above Adam's, ii.
116; imperfection pleaded for by profes-
sors, i. 104, 189.

194. Swear not at all, i. 201, 254 to 255. Į
Oath of adjuration, i. 236, tendered to G. | about it, ii. 158.
F. i. 250. His paper against swearing
read in court, i. 254. Oaths and swearing,
ii. 31 to 33, ii. 350; refused by G. F. ii.
28, 85 to 60, &c. being unlawful, ii. 59.
Oaths of allegiance and supremacy, ii.
5, 11, 13, 28, 166. Oath taken falsely
against Friends, ii. 18. Oath tendered to
G. F. ii. 43, 48, 152. Allegiance, where-
in it consists, ii. 57; what G. F. could say
instead of it, ii. 152; and of supremacy, ii.
153, 156, 160.

Offering, the true and the false, ii. 315
to 318, 327, 329, 356.

Old cause, the setting up thereof was
for themselves, i. 392.

Oldenburgh, magistrates and people, a
warning to them, ii. 369, 371.

Openings of G. F.'s, i. 72, 74, 81, 89; of
the things of the creation, i. 85; of physic,
divinity, and law, &c. i. 85.

Opposers of the faithful come to nought,
ii. 364.

Order of Bodmin sessions for the pri-
soners' ease, i. 261.

Order and discipline in the church of
Christ maintained, ii. 286, 287; is of the
Spirit, ii. 308.

Oxford and Cambridge teachers cannot
make ministers of Christ, i. 71, 74.
Oxford scholars' rudeness, i. 302.

P.

Papists, their superstition of consecrat-
ed bread and wine, i. 373, 374; images,
crosses, and relics, i. 372, ii. 8; pray by
beads, i. 436, ii. 314; and sprinkle chil-
dren, ii. 77; their purgatory, ib. and mo-
ther church pretended, ii. 81; a warning to
them, i. 217, 218; and their murdering
false doctrine confuted, ii. 56.

Pardon being offered by the king to G.
F. he could not take it, ii. 165; and was
fairly freed without it, ii. 167.

Parliament-men discoursing G. F.
prison, ii. 58.

in

Parnel, James, convinced, (1653,) i.
182; was at a dispute of G. Fox's against
eight priests, &c. at Drayton, on a hill,
(1654,) i. 204; imprisoned in Colchester
Castle, (1655,) i. 182; is visited by G. F.
in prison, i. 224; the jailer's wife threaten-
ed to have his blood, ib. who died by a
fall from a ladder going up to his prison,
i. 182; of whom professors (to cover their
cruelty) said he fasted himself to death,

ib.

Patience and faith's exercise, i. 344.
People flew like chaff before the dread-
ful power of God, i. 99, 150; people trem-
bled and shook in Carlisle steeple-house,
i. 179. See Shaking.

Persecution judged, i. 163 to 165; testi-
fied against, and persecutors warned, i.
263 to 275; they being blinded, i. 285, 342
to 344, 413; and not knowing what spirit
they are of, i. 411; persecutors to blood, ii.
76; persecutors restrained, ii. 66, 67, 70,
71, 87; persecution violent at London
meeting, ii. 102; testimonies against it, ii.
215, 216, 237, 238, 249, 250, 366, 368; in
its event productive of good, ii. 368. Four
Friends in New England hanged, i. 429,
432, 433.

Physic and letting blood, a priest's re-
medy against a troubled mind, i. 70.
Physicians must be in the wisdom of
God, i. 85.

Pleasures and vain delights denied, i
293, 294.

Plots and fightings, Friends' declaration
against, i. 421 to 425; and denied, ii. 26,
28, 60.

Poland's exiled Protestants, i. 378, 379;
king of Poland, two letters to him from G.
F. ii. 214, 291.

Powers of the earth, i. 372.

Prayers in signs and groans, i. 345, how
to pray, ii. 315.

Preachers, (congregational,) at a meet-
ing with G. F. i. 330.

Premunire of G. F. ii. 52; of two
Friends in Devonshire, ii. 77; Counsellor
Corbet's plea for G. F. in court, ii. 166.

Presbyterian meeting stuffed with bread
and cheese, &c. ii. 72.

Press-masters on board of G. F.'s ves-
sel, ii. 109, 143.

Pride in apparel, i. 216 to 217.

Priests sell the scriptures, i. 93; pray
by form, i. 205; their spirit, i. 93; they are
hirelings, i. 169, 203, &c. tithes-takers, i.
224; robbers of the people, and not minis-
ters of the gospel, ii. 53; plead for sin and
imperfection, i. 100, 105, 119; are con-
founded, i. 128; dreaded the man in
leathern breeches, i. 128; a priest trem-
bles, i. 137; hides himself from G. F. i.
147; are miserable comforters, i. 70; re-
proved by judge Fell, &c. at sessions for
their gross assertions, i. 158; reproved in
the streets, i. 159; Eight priests dispute
against G. F. i. 201; are false prophets
and antichrists, i. 171; one pleads for
adultery, ii. 153; one beat Friends, ii. 85;
is choked by a parsonage, i. 99; and love
a fat benefice, i. 240. ii. 58; so much a
year, i. 399; the devil's lawyers and coun-
sellors, i. 344; oppressors, i. 119; perse-
cutors, i. 282. ii. 67, 103.

Prophecy of R. Jones, vain, i. 198; of
Brown's, see Brown; a woman's prophecy
of the king's coming in, i. 385; prophecy
of priests and professors against the Qua-
kers, vain, i. 190; false prophecies and
false prophets, i. 198.

Prison of George Fox, its badness, ii.
45, 49; and that of Scarborough castle, ii.
56.

Prison keeper struck with terror, i. 98;
prisoners many, i. 381; Friends offer their
bodies one for another, ib. died prisoners,
i. 385, ii. 5, 6, 30, 34, 36, 61, 76.

Prisoners set at liberty by the king, i.
416, ii. 299.

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Rain fell after a meeting in Cheshire, in
a great drought, i. 325.

Ranters confounded, i. 98, 125, 127, 201,
202, 210, 224, 302, 412; a ranting woman
at Loo, ii. 18; their wickedness, and the
judgment fallen on them, ii. 78; G. F. had
a meeting with Ranters in Rhode Island, ii.
127, 128.

Rebellion and plots denied, ii. 285.
Regeneration must be known, to enter
into the kingdom of God, ii. 323 to 326.

S.

Sacrament of bread and wine, the denial
of it objected and answered, i. 307, 309.

Sallee man of war that gave chase to the
vessel that G. F. went in, to America; his
report thereof, ii. 109.

Salutation of George Fox to the council
of Edinburgh, being had before them, i. 353.
Schools set up for Friends' children, one
at Waltham Abbey for boys, ii. 74; and at
Shacklewell, another for girls, ib.

Scots challenging a dispute with Friends,
were overthrown, i. 350; a Scotch officer's
impious sayings, i. 351; Scotch priests'
principles, i. 349; curses, i. 350; blindness,
i. 352.

Scriptures are the words, not the word
of God, i. 171, 187; and understood by the
spirit, i. 89. ii. 265; being given forth by it,
ii. 193.

Scripture knowledge without the life
vain, i. 74. ii. 193.

Seekers, i. 435. ii. 191.

Separation and its spirit, a warning against
it, ii. 180, 183; pleads a liberty, ii. 191; has
the name of truth, but not the nature, ii.
191, 202, 205, 219, 223, 269, 303; unruly
spirits at Reading, ii. 227; in America, Geo.
Fox had a meeting with them, ii. 125.
Serpent speaking in people, i. 80.
Serving men.
See rude.

Sessions at Lancaster, i. 157, 161. ii. 29;
Leicester, ii. 13; Worcester, ii. 151, 158;
Bodmin, i. 261.

Shaking of the house, G. F. praying, i.
82; a meeting of Friends was greatly shak-
Religion, the reformed by tradition, i.en, 84; people shook, i. 179. See steeple-
377; the true one is the life and power of
God, i. 410, ii. 193; the pope's, i. 373; see
Papist.

Repentance of some that had run out,
ii. 7; goes before the gospel, ii. 320, 321.
Reports raised of G. F. falsely, i. 323; at
Nailsworth, ii. 90; of G. F. and Friends at
Barbadoes, ii. 117.

Restitution made of wrong done, i. 95.
Restoration out of the fall into the state
that never fell, ii. 105.

Revelation of John is a sealed book, said
the priest to G. Fox, i. 72; by revelation
God is known, i. 74.

Righteous men are preserved from de-
struction, ii. 309, 311.

Rude people at meetings and inns, i. 321;
in Wales, i. 333, 335; at Manchester, i. 339;
in Scotland, i. 351; fellows by the way side,
i. 356; serving men abusive to Friends in
and out of meeting, i. 162; and to women
going home, i. 404; fellows encompassing
G. F. by the way, i. 301; rude priests, i.
407; rude people, i. 428. ii. 23, 75.
Rule of life, ii. 157.

houses.

Sheriff of Lincoln convinced, i. 200.
Sheriff's to be chosen by Friends, such
as they can give their voices for, ii. 246.
Shipwrecks called God's grace, i. 395.
Sick and afflicted restored. See troubled
in mind, and miracles.

Sign, Thomas Aldam a sign to Oliver
Cromwell, i. 385; Robert Huntingdon, i.
428; some in sackcloth and ashes, ii. 52,
62; another before the fire of London, ib.
another going naked, ib. a woman going
before the parliament, &c. i. 385. See
prophecy. Richard Sale carrying a lan-
tern and candle, i. 428.

Silent meeting, i. 131.

Singing in the spirit with a melodious
sound, i. 357.

Sin, priests preach up for term of life, i.

100.

Sins entail and original cut off, i. 337; pro-
fessors distinguish the guilt and the power
of it, i. 344; and plead for sin, ii. 157; sin's
deceitfulness to be watched against, ii. 260.

Sirrah, and other reproachful nicknames

given by magistrates to prisoners reproved,
ii. 32.

Slander raised by a priest on a meeting
he was at, i. 171.

Socinians, i. 436.

Soldiers, one proffered G. Fox to assist
him, i. 155; others were convinced, and
their wives, at meetings, i. 174, 176, 178;
and at Cranbrook, i, 222; another draws his
sword at a Friend, i. 262; some could not
take the oath to Oliver Cromwell, i. 122;
others took it and fell into danger, ib. a
soldier's wicked saying of Christ, i. 290;
several officers convinced in Scotland, i.
361; some soldiers striking Friends at meet-
ing, i. 397; troopers came to see George
Fox when prisoner, ii. 54; soldiers' testi-
mony of him, ii. 62; lewd soldiers in Ger-
many, ii. 200; blind men are not listed for
soldiers, (neither outward nor inward,) ii.
355.

Somerset house, i. 386.

Soul, a people holding that women have
no souls, i. 94, 95; and leads into all truth,
i. 316; a measure of it is given to every one,
ii. 37; its fruits, if obeyed, ii. 163; a spirit
in the ship and in the steeple-house, i. 123.
ii. 109.

Sports and feastings, i. 71.

Steeple houses and markets, truth
preached in them, i. 342; the sound of its
bell seemed like a market bell, i. 93, 99;
G. F. in the steeple-house at Beverly and
Crantsick, i. 122, 123; Mansfield Wood-
house, the people fall upon him, i. 96;
steeple-house shook, i. 151, 179; Friends
declaring truth in steeple-house, i. 221,
250, 262; others admonished the bowlers,
i. 293.

Streets, truth preached in them, i. 324,
334.

Stone laid in Sion rejected, ii. 229; that
became a great mountain, ii. 321.

Stillness, the mind feels the principle of
God in it, i. 375.

Students at Aberdeen, some convinced,
ii. 169.

Sufferings of George Fox and Friends
for being contrary to the world's ways and
customs, i. 91; George Fox cruelly beaten
by a clerk in the steeple-house, i. 137; by
a rude multitude, i. 156; banished. See
banishments.

Suffered in bad prisons, ii. 45, &c.
Sufferings of Friends for travelling about
their occasions, i. 312; for going to steeple-
houses, &c. i. 342; laid before 0. C. i.
382.

Sufferings of Friends at meetings, i.
385; by imprisonments, ib. ii. 5, 51, 79;
and after the monarchy-men's rising, i.
420; some banished, &c. Dantzic Friends'
sufferings, ii. 214, 219, 291, 343.

Swear not at all, &c. ii. 49; Friends not
swearing how discerned from others not
swearing, ii. 83. Offices served by Friends
without swearing, ii. 350; Justices and
jury, forsworn at Lancaster assizes in
George Fox's case, ii. 44, 48. Three offi-
cers of the court forsworn in the same
case, ii. 53.

Syllogisms and sophistic argument over-
thrown, i. 347.

T.

Talents, i. 318; and the slothful servant,
ii. 360.

Talkers, airy, i. 74, 259.
Tawneys. See Blacks.

Teacher; God was the first teacher in
paradise, ii. 146.

Tempest, great, with thunder and rain,
ii. 66.

Temples made with hands, God dwells
not in, i. 71, 99.

Temptations to despair upon George
Fox, i. 69, 73, 76; for the trial of his faith;
i. 77; was under great temptations some-
times, i. 73.

Thee and thou to a single person, i.
359, 385, 393. ii. 58. See Hat.

Thieves lying hid by the highway in
Scotland, reproved by George Fox, i. 356.

Tithes, Quakers cannot pay, i. 187, 417;
great havoc and spoil made for them by
priests, i. 235, 427; some imprisoned to
death for them, ii. 31, 34; Friends to keep
up the testimony against them, ii. 187;
titles pleaded for by the priests, i. 305.

Tongues and languages the beast has
power over, i. 363.

Toleration prayed against by a priest, i.
429; how to use it, ii. 318.

Two thirsts in man, i. 74.

Thrones on earth contended for, ii. 340.
Trading of Friends increased, people
seeing their honest dealing, i. 191.
Transgression of the life of God, what
it leads to, i. 375, 376.

Travels of George Fox, into
1657 Wales, i. 323, 329.
Scotland, i. 348.
1669 Ireland, ii. 85 to 89.
1671 Barbadoes, ii. 110, 121.
Jamaica, ii. 122.
1672 Maryland, ii. 123.

East and West Jersey, ii. 124, 125.
Long Island, in New England, ii.
125.

Rhode Island, ii. 126.
Jerseys, ii. 130.
Maryland, ii. 131, 132.
Virginia, ii. 135.
Carolina, ii. 135, 136.
Virginia, ii. 136, 137.
1673 Maryland, ii. 138, 140.

Index.

Returning thence to England, he went

over to

1677 Holland, &c.

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Vengeance is the Lord's, i. 431.
Victory and overcoming of temptations
known, i. 74.

Vision of George Fox, of a bear, &c. i.
137; of a desperate creature, i. 346; of
New England sufferings to death, i. 429;
concerning the Turk, ii. 51; of himself to
be taken prisoner, ii. 148; a vision in Ire-
land, ii. 86; and in his voyage for Ameri-
ca, ii. 109; the christians at Jerusalem had
a vision before its destruction, ii. 310.

Voice coming to George Fox, i. 74; see
openings; the voice of the Lord to a troop-
er, i. 113.

393

Voyages of George Fox to Ireland, ii.
85; for England, ii. 91; to Barbadoes, ii.
108, &c.

W.

Waiting upon God, i. 390.

Wales; the Governor of Tenby must
yield to truth, i. 332; and magistrates in
other places, i. 334; the moderation of a
town in Wales, i. 336; a lady and her
preacher send for George Fox, i. 338.

Warrants against George Fox, i. 188,
251, 346, 358, 390, 402, 404; ii. 67, 84,
100; for tithes, ii. 241; warrants against all
Quakers, i. 278.

Wars and fightings denied by George
Fox, i. 69, 111, 112, 116; they arise from
the lusts in the fall, i. 387; none to go
down to Egypt for help, i. 389; it is not
our principle, i. 421; but to testify against
it, ii. 41; and is not becoming christianity,
ii. 381; being a work of darkness, i. 208.

Watches set up in the streets and high-
ways in Cornwall, &c. to stop Friends from
travelling, i. 276, 277, 278, 283.

Weakness of George Fox's body, ii. 68;
by long and close imprisonment, ii. 52, 169,
315; by continual travail, ii. 186; and spent
at meetings, &c. ii. 319; his health being
much impaired, ii. 337; a great exercise
came upon him, ii. 338.

Wicked man plagued, ii. 61, 62.
Worship, the world's, i. 90.

Will-worship, i. 289; the dragon and
the beast's, i. 304; the worship in the spi-
rit, i. 434.

Wrong; see restitution.

Y.

Yea and nay, i. 68, 191; is more binding
than an oath to many, ii. 48, 163, 367.
Z.

Zeal against unrighteousness, many will
God provoke unto, i. 412.

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