«i'«'itVt»ltf*1mttf9fi, **l*l*«ie*_fl*. ,Taaaaiii^-3a!33i3i->fl,s -iaaaa' mmtsm'^i'i'immmmm^mmmm President Wh^te Library, Cornell University. Cornell University Library BX5207 .H52 Diaries and letters of Philip Hen™,M.A olin 3 1924 029 455 619 The original of tliis book is in tlie Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924029455619 PHILIP HENRY DIARIES AND LETTERS OF PHILIP HENRY, M.A. OF BROAD OAK, FLINTSHIRE A.D, 1631-1696 EDITED BY MATTHEW HENRY LEE, M.A. VICAR OF HANMER ' Bene vixit qui bene latuit " Thomas 1 Kempis LONDON KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH & CO., i, PATERNOSTER SQUARE 18S2 c^ 1 he ^ PresiJont White L'brary (jrhe rights of translation and of reproduction are reserved.) PREFACE. It is now nearly sixty years since the Life of Philip Henry — founded upon the account given by his son, Matthew Henry — was written by Sir John Bickerton Williams, F.S.A. It is hoped that the great interest which that volume excited will be extended to the Diaries and Letters, which are now for the first time printed, almost as they stand in the originals. The present phase of public taste is rather to hear what men of note say for themselves, than what others say of them. Philip Henry's motto from Thomas a Kempis, Bene vixit qui bene latuit, will explain why Anthony a Wood does not mention his name ; why people often describe him now as Matthew Henry's father ; why the late Dr. Words- worth should, with a wise instinct, haye included his life in the first edition of the " Ecclesiastical Biographies," and why Churchmen generally should have called for its removal from that series. It cannot be expected that the charm of the little manu- script volumes — of which a friend wrote that he " felt a wish to devour them " — should be transferred to print. The ■ vi PREFACE. interest of diaries is unequal, especially where the same phrases are often repeated. Giraldus de Barri mentions how William de Braose, in the reign of Henry II., " loaded, or rather honoured, his letters with words expressive of the divine indulgence to a degree not only tiresome to his scribe, but even to his auditors ; for as a reward to each of his scribes for concluding his letters with the words ' by divine assistance,' he gave annually a piece of gold in addition to their stipend." To have omitted these expressions from Philip Henry's diaries would very much have altered their character ; they have, therefore, been in a great measure retained. To many persons Philip Henry appears to have been not only a man of very high intellectual ability and culture, but also of a real integrity and virtue, the antique simplicity of which can hardly be admired enough. One gentleman writes : " The name of Philip Henry is ever fragrant and refreshing to those who are acquainted with his beautiful life ;" and a lady — one of the descendants — adds, "We need the devout thoughts of our forefathers to help us in these days of material improvements and material prosperity." Though he could not see his way in the matter of re-ordina- tion, there was nothing about him of a separatist spirit. Both he and his son speak of Mr. George Herbert with reverence and affection, partly, no doubt, as of Lord Pem- broke's family, but far more on account of his well-kno\\n piety. PREFACE. VU At the time that Philip Henry was at Worthenbuiy and Broad Oak, another remarkable person, Trevor Hanmer — afterwards Lady Warner — was living at Bettisfield, not far distant. In her inquiries after truth she was carried in the opposite direction to Philip Henry, and joined the Roman Communion. Bishop Lavington notices that in her life (which is one of painful interest) the religious fervour of the Methodist movement was anticipated by a whole century. One cannot but wish that this lady and Philip Henry had been able to exchange opinions about religious subjects, and thus been preserved — both of them — to the Church of their fathers. The extreme modesty of Philip Henry withheld him from publishing anything ; but this is more than made up to his descendants by the large quantities of manuscript sermons that each branch of the family possesses. He took great pains in preparing these, even when intended for none but his own family circle, for he held strongly to the Scrip- tural rule that he would not offer to the Lord his God of that which cost him nothing ; and having made these notes, he did not think it right to destroy them. The wide dis- persion of the manuscripts applies also to the Diaries, which should extend from 1657 to 1696, but of which, at present, only twenty-two are forthcoming. Several others are known to be in existence, but no clue to their present owners has been found. Any one who has met with them, and can tell where they now are, will confer a favour by doing so. They are, most of them, written with a crowquill in Goldsmith's viii PREFACE. pocket almanacks, which measure four inches by two inches. I am much indebted to those ladies and gentlemen who have entrusted me with diaries and letters for the purposes of this work, and for the kind assistance that I have met with from others. For the loan of Emral manuscripts I have to thank my neighbour, Mr. Puleston. PHILIP HENRY. The ancestry of such a man as Philip Henry can hardly fail to be a matter of interest, both to his numerous de- scendants and to that large number of English-speaking people who honour his memory. It has been assumed, rather hastily, that he was of obscure origin, owing, perhaps, to the conversation that pissed between his future father-in-law and future wife with respect to him. " I do not know where he comes from," said the old gentleman ; but " I know where he is going to," said the lady, " and should like to go with him." From a conversation of a similar kind, Fletcher of Madeley was thought by his wife to be the son of a common soldier, and it was not till many years after their marriage that she accidentally discovered her error. In the case of Philip Henry, we find that in the year 1662 he learned, for the first time, from some papers, that his grandfather's name was Henry Williams, of Briton Ferry, in Glamorganshire, and that his son — the father of Philip Henry — had left home, with a groat in his pocket to make his way as well as he could. There is no evidence to show that any ill will was intended, and we may con- B 2 PHILIP HENRY. elude that John Henry was one of a large and poor family. As the parish registers at Briton Ferry do not begin earlier than 1680, and no wills of any members of the family have been found, there is no information to be gathered from those sources. Briton Ferry itself seems to have belonged to a family, one of whose names was William or Williams, which merged eventually into that of the Earl of Jersey. Mr. G. T. Clark, of Dowlais House, has kindly given me the sketch of the family, beginning with Evan ap Syson = Janet d. of Rees ap Llewelyn. 7 th in descent from lestyn. and though I do not find the name of Henry Williams in it, 'I think it not improbable that this was the source v/hence Philip Henry descended. It would be quite in accordance with the jealousy still existing between North and South Wales, and with Puritan contempt for worldly position, that Philip Henry should be thought to be of humble extraction, and that he should not take the trouble to correct the mistake. He did not either, as it would seem, take any lively interest in antiquarian subjects. Whereas his son Matthew Henry was only prevented by unceasing occupations from devoting much attention to them, we find his father living at Emral and Worthenbury nine years, and at Broad Oak for thirty-four years, without noticing once the great College of Bangor close by, from which flowed forth the Christian teachers, not of Britain only, but of Ireland and Caledonia, and whose last abbot, Dinoth, withstood Austin the monk, at the end of the sixth century, when he came to bring the British Church under the yoke of Rome. That such a ripe scholar as Philip Henry, with so milch time upon his hands, and living in a country that teems with evidences of an early Christianity, should not have had his attention drawn to the subject seems in many PHILIP HENRY. 3 respects a misfortune. Had it been otherwise with him, many a dull hour would have been exchanged for one of keenest interest, as he gathered up information that would have been of the greatest value to us in the present day. It has sometimes been thought that Henry Williams was parson of Briton Ferry. The arms borne subsequently by Philip Henry and by his son throw no light upon their descent. Philip seals with the chequers of the Warrenne family, with a fleur de lis for crest, which will be accounted for afterwards. Matthew Henry bears three battle-axes ppr. per fess upon a field, gules — a shield that I have looked for in vain, in several collections of coat armour. The Welsh custom of taking the father's Christian name for a surname, instead, of the alternative system of "John ap Thomas ap Jenkin," seems to have been generally adopted in the seventeenth century, and will account for the tribes of Evanses, Williamses, Joneses, Prices (ap Rys) that we now have. In the notes to " The Fortunes of Nigel," Sir Walter Scott remarks that in' the seventeenth century pages ceased to be the sons of gentlemen. There were, however, many exceptions to this that will occur at once ; and in the case of royal pages the old rule always held good — that they must be of good birth. The attempt now being made by a lady in South Wales to provide domestic employment for the daughters of poor gentlemen is worthy ■of all praise, though with the present facilities for emigration a. colonial life would seem preferable and more useful. Within the last thirty years farmers' families have left off dining at the same board with their labourers, a distinction which the latter feel, and are disposed to resent. Wealth is the great destroyer of social friendship and goodrwill, . and if we would return to the old-fashioned customs of past centuries we must return to their simple manner of living. 4 PmZIP HENRY. The records of the Chamberlain's Office do not reach back to the year 1650. Mr. J. E. Nightingale thinks "that John Henry might well have been attached to the household of Philip, Earl of Pembroke, in the same way as the elder Massinger was to Philip's elder brother, William,* the third earl, ' serving ' him in the sense of being a private secretary- Philip certainly required this, for, although Chancellor of the University of Oxford, he was no scholar." John Henry was born at Briton Ferry, July 20, 1590, as his son tells us, and it is his death, no doubt, that is recorded at St. Margaret's, Westminster, in the following entry : — " Buried. 165^, March 2. Mr. John Hendrick." Between these dates we have little to record. A letter in the Cecil Papers {^^°\ at Hatfield House '•21 / (for permission to copy which I am indebted to the Marquis of Salisbury), written by the Earl of Shrewsbury to John * In the picture gallery of the Bodleian Library there is a bronze figure of this earl, six feet six inches high and four feet ten inches round the hips, with this inscription : "GuLlELMUS Pemerochie Comes Regnantibus Jacobo et Caeolo Primis, HospiTii Regii Camerarius, ET Senescallus Academi/e Oxoniensis. Hanc Patrui sui Magni effigiem ad formam quam finxit Petrus Paulus Rubens Aere fuso expressam academle oxoniensi D.D. Thomas Pembrochi^ et Montgom. Comes Honorum et Virtutum. H/i:res A.D. MDCCXXin." He was born 1580: made K.G. 1603; Governor of Portsmouth, 7jac. I. r Lord Chamberlain, 15 Jac. I. ; Chancellor of Oxford University, 15 Jac! l! • Lord Steward of king's house, about 1625 ; Warden of Forests south of the ■ Trent, S Car. I. : he died in 1630, leaving no surviving issue by his wife, Mary Talbot, eldest daughter and co-heir of Gilbert, Earl of Shrewsbury. He was- author of a volume of poems published in 1660. For the position he occu- pied, and general character, see Clarendon's " Rebellion," lib. i. FUILIP HENRY. 5 Henry, A.D. 1606, disappoints any expectations that might be raised, for the name of the recipient turns out to be Hercy, not Henry. In 1623, June 12,* there is the burial of a Mrs. Dorothy Henrick at St. Margaret's, who may have been an unmarried sister, or his brother's wife. On December 10, 1623, he was married to Mrs. Magdalen Rochdale. At St. Margaret's Church we find the following entries : — Baptized, i62f, M* i. Ann, dau. of John Herrick. Baptized, i6z9, Ap' 9. Katharine, dau. of John Kenrick. After this there is a gap in the register from March 23, 163J, to January i, 163J, so that Philip's baptism does not appear. He was born on Wednesday, August 24, 1631, in Whitehall. The various spellings of the surname may arise from the scribe's efforts to Latinize the word. As the dates correspond with those given by Philip Henry for the births of his two sisters, we cannot but suppose that they refer, to the same persons in each instance. " Prince Charles and the Duke of York being nearly of his age, he was in his childhood an attendant upon them in their Play : they were often with him at his Father's house, and were wont to tell him what preferment he should have at Court, as soon as he was fit for it. He kept a book to his dying day, which the Duke of York gave him, and I have heard him (says his son) bewail the loss of two curious pictures which he gave him likewise. Archbishop Laud took a particular kindness to him when he was a child, because he would be very officious to attend at the Water-gate (which was part of his father's charge in White-hall) to let the Archbishop through, when he came late from Council, to cross the water to Lambeth ; and when the Archbishop was a * Colonel J. L. Chester kindly gave me these register extracts. 6 PHILIP HENRY. prisoner in the Tower, his father took^ him with him to see him, and he would remember that the Archbishop gave him some new money." From the dates of eight letters written by King Chai-les to foreign princes, of which copies have been preserved among the Henry manuscripts, it would seem that John Henry was in the king's service in 1625. We are told that when. the king in after years was going to Westminster, to that which was called his trial, Mr. John Henry was ready to pay his respects to him, and prayed God to bless his majesty, and to deliver him out of the hands of his enemies, for which the guard had like to have been rough upon him. In 1647 his son mentions that he was in straitened circum- stances, and it is probable that the following order refers to some application made by him for the payment of arrears. Die Saturni, 13° July, 1650. AT THE COUNCELL OF STATE AT WHITEHALL. Ordered, That the PeticOT of Edmund Win-stanley, Edward Jolley, Robert Mansell, and John Henry be referred to the Con- sideracoh of the Coraittee for Whitehall Ex"- GuALTER Frost, sei-. Whatever success attended his petition, he remained at his house in Whitehall until his death, Februaiy 28, 1652, having survived his wife nearly eight years. The following sketch of his family, and of his own life down to the year 1657, is given by Philip Henry in a small book belonging to Joseph H. Lee, Esq., of Redbrook, near to Broad Oak, in the county of Flint, and in a more extended manuscript of the same period belonging to, and kindly lent by, J. H". Rowland, Esq., of Neath, South Wales. My Father, Mr. John Henry, was borne July 10, 1590. He was the son of Henry Williams of Britton's-ferry, not far from PHILIP HENRY. 7 Swansey in Glamorgan-shire ; hee took his father's Christen-name for his Sir-name, after the Welsh* manner; hee left his native- countrey and Father's house very young and never saw it again, that I ever heard of, but his Relations divers of them came up to London to him, and were there by him provided for, particularly a brother Wjlliam and three sisters, Ann, Joan and Jane, Jane by a latter -ft-ife who married one Elliot and hath issue, a son and two daughters, the rest had none unless it were a 4"" sister who was the mother of cosin Michael Mitchel. When hee left his Father hee had from him as I have heard but one groat, which God was pleas'd to multiply to a considerable income before his death, and yet when hee dy'd as hee carry'd nothing with him, so, his debts being payd, hee left little or nothing behind him for provision for his children, but God took them up and they have not wanted. Hee was first a Servant to a Welsh Gentleman, a Courtier whose name was Palmer, there were two Brothers of them, the one James, the other Roger, I think hee serv'd t them both successively, and that they were both knights, Sir Roger a Knight of the Bath, by whom he was preferr'd to Philip, J Earl of Pembrook, * In I. O. Westwood's " Lapidarium Wallife, or Inscribed Stones of Wales," p. no, there is an instance of this in the Cilgerran stone, which stands on the south side of the church, within the churchyard of Cilgerran, two and a quarter miles south-south-east from Cardigan. It is formed of the hard green- stone of the neighbouring Preselen hills, and half of its length was buried in the ground and had to be excavated. It is to be read :— " Treneguffi fili Maciitreni kicjacet. " •" Here lies [the body] of Trenegnffus the son of Mucuirenus." If this last is a composite word, three generations would bear the name of Trenus in different forms. There is a farm-house called Penallt Trede in the parish. t Compare "Antiquities of Myddle Parish, Salop," page 46: "This Sir Vincent Corbett was a very eminent person in this county. In his time he had the sons of Esquires and worthy gentlemen to wayte on him as his servants. " X The Honourable Philip Herbert was made Knight of the Bath at the coronation of King James I., and Gentleman of the King's Bed-chamber, Earl of Montgomery, and Lord Herbert of Shurland in the third year of his reign. " He pretended to no other qualifications than to understand horses and dogs very well, and to be believed honest and generous. . . . The King com- mended him to his son at his death, as a man to be relied on in point of honesty and fidelity ; though it appeared afterwards, that he was not strongly built, nor had sufficient ballast to endure a storm" (Clarendon, " History of Rebellion," i. 128). " About the time of the death of King James he received 8 PHILIP HENRY. whose servant hee was many years, waiting on him in his chamber ; Hee being afterwards Lord Chamberlain of the Kings houshold, hee was preferd by him to bee the King's servant, and was made Keeper of the Orchard at Whitehal, for w"* he had besides a dwelling house at the Garden stairs, with the perquisites of the water-gate and lodgings of considerable yearly value, and y" Profits of y° Orchard, ten groats p. diem standing wages with livery payable out of the Wardrobe, p. annum, insomuch that hee lived plentifully, and in good repute but layd by nothing. Hee was afterwards by like procurement of the sayd Earl made one of the Pages of the Back Stayres to the King's second son James Duke of York, which was of considerable advantage to him while hee enjoy'd it, but having leave granted him by y° King to sell it, hee sold it to one Mr. Howard for 600 lb. which prov'd a great mercy to him and was his mayntenance for several yeares after y° war began, w" his other incomes fayld. My dear Mother Mrs. Magdalen Rochdale, daughter of Henry Rochdale, was baptized at the parish of Martin in the Fields, London, October ig, 1599. (I know little of what Family shee was ; her Mother had a second Husband whose name was Denny) living in the Court where shee had opportunity of enjoying worldly delights extraordinary shee was dead to them, shee look'd wel to the wayes of her houshold, pray'd with them daily, catechis'd her children and brought them daily to publique ordinances. Decemb. 10, 1623. They were married. ■ Jan. 27, Thursday, 162^. My sister Cicely was borne. Feb. 23, Thursday, 162^. My sister Anne was borne. Mar. 28, Saturday, 1629. My sister Katharine was borne. Aug. 24, Wednesday, 1631. I was borne, in Whitehall, near the stafif of lord chamberlain, held before by his brother " (whom he succeeded also as fourth Earl of Pembroke, A.D. 1630), but was "deprived of it by Charles I. in 1641, on account of a quarrel with Lord Mowbray in the House of Lords." " It was fear that induced him to side with the Parliament ; " "he gave himself up into the hands of Lord Say." In 1643 he was one of the twenty- two peers who attended Parliament. In 1644 the Earls of Pembroke and Salisbury were so totally without credit or interest in the Parliament or countiy, that it was no matter which way their inclinations or affections disposed them. " " In 1647, though he had taken an oath to defend the privileges of the University of Oxford (of which he was chancellor), he suffered himself to be made a property in joining with Brent and ^ryn, and two or three other Presbyterian ministers, in retorming its discipline and doctrine " (Clarendon), PHILIP HENRY. 9 the Garden-stayres before mentioned. The witnesses at my baptisme were, the Earl of Pembroke, Philip, who gave mee my name and was kind to mee to the Day of his Death. James Earle •of Carlile. The Countesse of Salisbury. July 22, Tuesday, 1634. My Brother John was borne. Aug. I, Munday, 1636. My Brother William was borne. June 24, Sunday, 1638. My Brother John dyed. Aug. 24, Friday, 1638. My Brother William dyed. June 26, Friday, 1640. My sister Mary was borne. Mar. 28, Munday, 1642. My sister Sarah was borne. Mar. 6, Thursday, 164^. My deare mother dy'd of a con- :sumption, betweene y° howres of twelve & one in the morning, & lyes interred in Margaret Church, Westminster. Note. Shee was a woman of extraordinary piety and prudence, a loving wife, a kind neighbour, a good Mother ; the memory of her virtues remaynes exceeding deare & precious with all that were acquainted with her. My head is in Heaven & my Heart is in Heaven, tis but one step more & I shal bee there too, was her saying a little before her departure. The first latin-school I went to was at St. Martins church under the teaching of one Mr. Bonner, who was very loving to mee, and took paynes with mee. From thence I was remov'd for one summer to Battersey where I tabled at one Mr. Heyborns by ye water side and went to school to one Mr. Wells. Thence to Westminster in the year 1643 where I was admitted in the 4"" Form, under Mr. Tho. Vincent, who was usher there, the most able diligent School-Master that I ever knew ; a while after I was taken to the upper-school under' Mr. Richard Busby. There was at that time and before a daily morning lecture at the Abbey betw. 7 & 8 a clock carr/d on by 7 worthy Ministers in course, Mr. Marschal, Mr. Palmer, Mr. Herl, Dr. Stanton, Mr. Nye, Mr. Whitaker, Mr. Hil ; I was their constant hearer, at the request of my dear Mother to the Master who dispens'd with my absence from school that while, and wrote their sermons as wel as I could. Shee took mee also with her every Thursday to Mr. Tho. Case his lecture at St. Martin's Church, and every monthly Fast to St. Marg''^ Westm' which was our Parish church lO PHILIP HENRY. where preacht the ablest men of Engl'' before the then H. of Commons. One remarkable deliverance I remember while I was at Westm'' School, which was this, lying in the Common-chamber there wee had a custom for one or two or more to sit up y° former p' of the night at study, and at ii or 12 a clock to goe to bed and call others, and they others at 2 or 3, as they were desir'd. My desire was to bee cal'd at 12, and I was so, and being awak'd I desir'd my candle might bee lighted, and I would rise presently, but having stuck the candle to the Beds-head I lay down again and fell asleep, and the candle fel and burnt part of ye bed and bolster ere I awaked, but then having help wee soon quench'd it and I received no harm. The usual severityes of the school I had but smal share of. Once, being Monitor of the Chamber, and being sent forth to seek one that pla/d truant (twas Nath. Bui. afterwards a Master of Pauls school) I found him out where hee had hid hims. and at his earnest request promised I would say I could not find him, which I wickedly did ; the next morning being examin'd by Mr. Busby, where hee was and whefher hee saw mee, hee sayd, yes, hee did, at which I wel remember Mr. Busby turn'd his eye towards mee and sayd koI Sept. 27. I saw my sisters and Friends at london. * In the Oxford " Ten Year Book " this name occurred, as of Christ Church in 1660, and Professor of Moral Philosophy. t The Salop family of De Pyvelesdon received lands in Worthenbury, and especially the demesne of Emral, from King Edward I. , which they resigned, into his hands, A.D. 1279. He bestowed them upon Robert de Crevecceur, who held them till his death in 1317 (Kals. of Exchequer). It is probable, liowever, that they recovered Emral in 1309. John Puleston was made Justice of the Common Pleas after the execution of King Charles I. in 1649. In Foss's "Judges of England," his mother is said to have been Alice, daughter of David Lewis, of Bulcot, Oxon. There are references to Dugd., "Orig.," 220; to Clarendon, iii. 407; to"Whitelock,342,405; and "State Trials," iv. 1249. Foss has some strong words about his want of justice and humanity. He was the grandson of George Puleston, of Emral, Esq. , who was baptized at Hanmer Church, September 30, 1572. % This lady's name was Elizabeth Woliyche, of Dudmaston, Salop. Foss says she was daughter of Sir /. W., but as there is frequent reference to her " sister Grey," viz. Mary, daughter of Sir Francis Wolryche, Bart., and wife of Henry Grey of Enfield, who was grandson of Lord Grey of Groby, she was perhaps the Elizabeth who married for her first husband George Grey, third son of Henry, first Earl of Stamford. This, however, is uncertain ; and since in the Wolryche pedigree to hand there is no mention of an Eleanor who was at Emral in 1644, when it was attacked by the Royalists, Lady Puleston and " sister Grey" may have been cousins. 1 6 PHILIP HENRY. Oct. 21. My sister Mary came to dwell w"" mee at the lady Pulestons. Nov. 22. Mr. John Puleston sickned of y° small-poxe, his danger very great, but God in mercy restor'd him. A signall Answer of prayers. Wee were then at Oxford. Jan. I. Sister Mary came first to live at Emeral. In this month, Thomas Perkins, was (I hope) savingly brought home to God. The Lord make mee faithful and succesfuU ! however faithful. This Thomas Perkins hath since Apostatiz'd. the lord knows them that are his. Feb. 21. I preacht at Wrexham. T. i Cor. vi. ii. Mar. 25. Being surprised with a Distemper, a violent cold, long breeding and supposing it a Pleurisy, I was let bloud, the first time I lost three ounces, 12 hours after I swoon'd. Apr. 22. I went abroad and preacht twice, blessed bee God. June 25. I went towards Oxford, after three weeks I returned. The lord was with mee. I left Mr. John Puleston under y° Tuition of Mr. Esay Ward. O y' God would blesse him indeed ! Sept. II. Deare Mr. Ambrose Lewis and myselfe made entrance upon a monthly exercise at Worthenbury, The Lord owne it. Wee were evill spoken of by some, as if by-ends were in it in ref. to Mr. Fogg, but the Searcher of Hearts knowes there were none. About this time the Brick barn at Emeral was finisht. Oct. 6. The Judge made a Settlement of ;^ioo p. Ann. during my stay at Worthenbury. Lord, I seek not their's but them — give mee the soules, let who'se will take the Goods to themselves. O that God would adde some Scales to my Ministry, that I may know I am sent of God ! Oct. 23. The lady Puleston set forward towards London for advice concern, a sore Breast. At her returne shee brought my sister Sarah along with her. Nov. 6. The Judge, the lady, & their son Roger being all gone to london, I was left alone at Emeral. PHILIP HENRY. 1 7 Nov. 14. I began a monthly exercise at Elsmere, they & Holt* are both destitute of a faithful Pastor. Nov. 27. — A day of secret Fasting and humbling my Soule for Sin, my God accept mee in Christ. Many speciall requests were put up in behalfeof Sundry deare Relations. The lord from heaven give in an Answer of Peace. Decemb. About this time hopes were given of a saving change wrought in Mr. Tho. Puleston the Judge's fourth son. The Lord perfect the work in mercy ! Hee hath since wofully miscarry'd and is become the saddest instance of Apostacy, that ever I knew, wee judge according to appearance but -f lord judges righteous Judgem'. 1656. Jan. I. I mett in communion with the Lord's people in Holt. The day was mostly spent in prayr many requests put up, the lord give in an answer of peace. Jan. 6. One Edward Robert Ralph, a Tenant of Judge Puleston's fell off Bangor-Bridge, and was drown'd ; He was drunk and 'twas the lord's day. 6 ! shall men heare and feare ? Feb. 5. About this time I began Communion with the lord's people at Hanmer in monthly conference and monthly humiliation. I dreamt I was condemn'd to bee crucif/d & in order thereunto had a crosse upon my shoulder in my way to exe- cution with a bible tyed to the end of it. lord fit for tryals. Feb. In our Parish of Worthenbury, there was this observable Providence. At -f Beginning of the month, Mr. John Broughton f dyed, aged 70 y. About the middle, a son of Randle Meredith's aged about 30. Towards the end a child of Mr. Lloyd'f of Halghton, aged 14 months. I see no age secures from the stroke of Death ; hee comes sometimes at midnight ; sometimes at noon, sometimes at Cock-Crowing. Lord, fit us for our change. * There is a letter, without date, upon this subject, addressed by Philip Henry to a friend in Oxford, supposed to be Dr. Owen. t Broughton of Broughton in Worthenbury, and Lloyd of Halghton in Hanmer, were two ancient families, descended from Tudor Trevor, a chieftain who owned the whole of English Maelor in 930. C l8 PHILIP HENRY. Roger Puleston, son of Roger Puleston, of Worthenbury was admitted Student of Ch. Ch. Oxon. The Judge and his lady writt to Dr. Owen in his behalfe, but I desire to look through Instum*" up to God, who proides for those that feare his name, as I hope hee doth. March. I went to Enfield in Stafford-shire, where the lady and my two sisters were. Shortly after my returne, Ap" n, I fell sick of a Burning Ague, which held mee severall dayes in great extremity, but the lord had mercy, to him be Prayse ! — A letter lost, an afflicting providence. Apr. 22. Richard Puleston, the Judges third son dyed at Emeral of the small Pockes, his mother being then absent at Enfield, lord sanctify the stroke to her and the whole family ! 27. the lady came from Enfield, shee brought with her my sister Sarah. May. I bought a study of Bookes of Mrs. Lewis of Estlas in Denbigh-shire, it cost ;^io. June. Great Breaches between Mr. Roger Puleston and his mother, Lord heale them ! for because thereof the Family shakes. Wee began a Day of Conference to bee kept up for edification, lord, set in with thy blessing. July, Uncleanesse discovered between two of the servants of the Family, the one tum'd away before, the other still in the house, lord bring the offenders to repentance, that their soules may bee sav'd in the day of the lord Jesus, and through the Blood of Christ, let Guilt bee wip't off from tlie Family. Amen ! so be it, good lord 1 Mr. John Puleston left the Colledge and came home to his Friends, Our God season his heart with Grace. Sept. 16. R. P. assaulted mee in wrath, wherby my unruly passions being stir'd I strook againe and hurt his face, against the command of our lord Jesus, w* requires the turning of the other cheek, the occasion was, zeale for God, though in circumstances ill manag'd lord, lay no sin to either of o' charge. The day following I preacht at Wrexham. Oct. My chamber took fire, the Hearth of y° chimney * being * The front of Emral seems of the date of Queen Anne ; the side next the . PHI UP HENRY. 19 ill layd, but the lord in mercy prevented the danger. Blessed bee God! Nov. 24. Mr. Fogg* said to mee, that hee was Minister of Worthenbury, lord, what shall I doe ? cleare to mee what the way is wherein thou would'st have mee to walk & cause mee to walk in it! As to the state of my Soule, this yeare now ending, and the yeare before, my sins and failings have been many, even against Convictions and Covenants, wherby my conscience hath been much wounded, and my Peace often broken and my Christ and the spirit griev'd, and my Ministry hindred, but the lord hath recover'd mee by Repentance, and I trust, through the blood of Christ they are all pardon' d, and shall never bee remembered more. Amen, lord ! for sweet Jesus sake ! I think never did poore creature passe through such a mixture of Hope and feare, Joy and Sadness, Assurance and Doubting, downe and up, as I have done for these two last yeares, and still I wayt, that I may see, what the lord may doe with mee. My Foot is taken in a snare, lord save mee for thy mercy sake. As to my labours in the Ministry, I have had much assistance, to him that gave it I returne Prayse, Not unto mee lord !^and for successe, the lord hath given mee a willing people, and I hope there is more seed under the clods then yet appears, the Harvest will come, whether I live to bee the Reaper or not, The will of the lord be done ! moat, where the principal rooms are, is Elizabethan. At Sundome Castle, Salop, there is a picture of a house, supposed to be Emral, with a west frontage •considerably longer than that of the present house. *„The arms of Fogg are given in the Salesbury manuscripts at Wynnstay. See "Annals of Windsor," vol. ii. pp. 169, 170, by Tighe and Davis (London, 1858, 8vo) : " On the 23rd of October, 1642, according to Ashmole, Sir John Seyton having that day seized on Windsor Castle for the Parliament, one Captain Fog came immediately to the College and demanded the keys of the Treasury, but not finding the 3 Key-Keepers, he caused a smith to make strong bars of iron, who with them brake down the stone jambs, forced open 2 doors, and carried thence all the rich chased and other plate made sacred and set apart for the service of God : except two double gilt chalices weighing 62 ounces, and two double gilt Flagons weighing 98 ounces one half."' Ashmole (" Order of Garter ") also states (p. 149) that " Edward IV. 's coat of •mail, richly gilt^ covered over with crimson velvet &c. was carried away by Captain Fogg one of the officers of the Parliamentary forces, on Oct. 23, ■1642." 20 PHILIP HENRY. A volume published by the University of Oxford upoti the peace concluded with Holland in 1654, contains the following verses by Philip Henry. The title of the volume referred to is thus expressed : " Musarum Oxoniensium 'EXato^opi'a, sive, ob foedera auspiciis Serenissimi Oliver! Reipub. Aug. Scot, et Hiber. Domini Protectoris inter Rempub. Britannicam et Ordines Foederatos Belgii feliciter stabilita, Gentis togatse ad vada Isidis Celeusma Metricum. Oxoniae excudebat Leonardus Lichfield, Academiae Typo- graphus: 1654." " Noli timere Musa! quid trepido pede Seazontis instar claudicas ? I, pende ventis carbasa et totos sinus ; Tranquilla jam sunt omnia, Nulli tumultus, nullus hostium furor. Pax undique, et mare liberum est : Mercator avidus, dum silentium videt Serenioris jEquoris, Se somniare putat, et haud credit sibi,. Sollicitus et plenus metu Ne forte fallax error aut evanidae Felicitatis umbra sit ; Gemmas, Smaragdos, orbis alteri'us opes, Nunc ultro secuiiis petit, Et post tot annorum otia, laboris sui Majora sperat praemia, Sperat, coloni more Messem duplicem Post sic peractas ferias. Toto Britannos orbe divisos adliuc Tandem coire vidimus Terrasque pelago separatas arctior Compensat animorum unis ; Et quam negant Terra, juncturam facit Melior Amoris Copula, Bellique lites nuperi (bono online) Pacis redintegratio est, Philip Henry, A.M. ex ^de Christi."' At this point it will be necessary to insert some other documents in order to show the ecclesiastical position of PHILIP HENRY. 21 Worthenbury at that time, and thus to explain how the benevolent designs of Judge Puleston towards Philip Henry were eventually frustrated. The small piece of Flintshire which lies to the east of the Dee was made part of that county, A.D. 1284. During Saxon times it had been divided between Salop and Cheshire, as Domesday Book shows. But the name by which it was known to the Welsh was Maelor Saesneg, or English Maelor. That name it retains to the present day. The word Maelawr means a place of traffic, and there was a district of undefined extent upon the west side of Dee that was called Maelor Cymraeg (Welsh). Upon an island in the river Dee, but with some principal buildings also upon the right bank of the river, lay the ancient Bancornbury, as St. Bede calls it, known generally as Bangor-is-y-coed (the high choir under the trees) or Bangor Monachorum. This was the British Oxford, and from thence Christianity flowed forth far and near. We are told in Domesday Book that in the reign of Edward the Confessor, and before then, it formed part of the see of Lichfield. It is probable that this eastward inclination of Maelor Saesneg is in accordance with historic precedent, for although critics will not allow us to speak any longer of Britannia Secunda, yet from the fact that the " Cornavii of Ptolemy possessed that detached region which adjoins the village of Banchor, all Cheshire, all Shropshire, etc.," we may see that its being made a part of the county of Flint in 1284, and added — with the exception of two districts — to St. Asaph diocese in 1849, was not historically justifiable. It is true that the bulk of the people were of British origin, and spoke Welsh, perhaps, till the reign of Henry VIII., but that would not prove them to be of the same descent as those on the west side of the Dee ; and from Wales being much of a noverca to Maelor Saesneg, and the inhabitants of the latter indig- nantly repudiating any Welsh ancestry, it may at least 22 PHILIP HENRY. be surmised that they came of a different strain. In the year 1288 Pope Nicholas V. granted the tenths to King Edward I. for six years, towards defraying the expenses of an expedition to the Holy Land. Within the deanery of Wye Mauban and Brexins occur the churches of Malus Passus, Tilleston, Codynton, Totenhale, Aldeforde, Hameme, Bankeburn-cum-capella. Whether the capella was Worthen- bury or Overton does not appear. At the Reformation Maelor Saesneg became part of the new diocese of Chester. In the valuation of benefices, A.D. 1600, there are only two parishes in Bangor deanery, Bangor and Hanmer ; and in 1635 Bishop John Bridgeman of Chester gives George Snell, Archdeacon of Chester, authority over the rural deans of Frodsham, Bangor, Malpas, Middle-wich, and Wich Malban. With respect to the advowson of the rectory of Bangor, it belonged generally to the superior lord of the soil. In 1270 this was Gruffudd Maelor, Prince of Powys>. and a sum of money was allowed out of the revenues of the living towards the education of the youngest son, Owain, who was about to take Holy Orders, and to be inducted into the living. He died, however, and the Powys estates being alienated by King Edward I., we find the same process repeated with respect to a son of the Lord St. John. In the diocesan registers at Lichfield, under date 20 April, 29 Edward I., there is "a sequestration of the profits of Bangor Parsonage, that of the same the cure might be dis- charged, and mayntenance given to William, son of John Lord St. John, to bring him up in study, who could not yet be fully admitted to that church, because of his non-age." Upon the death of William St. John, 18 Edward II., the king presents to the living. In 3 Edward III. there is also a vacancy, but it does not appear this time who it was that nominated. From that date, however, till 1653, or soon after, the presentation was in the hands . of the Philip henry. 23 Lestranges, or their successors, the Stanleys. It was then made over, with the manorial rights of the western parts of the English Maelor, to the ancient family of Lloyd of Halghton. At the same time Sir Thomas Hanmer purchased from the Countess of Derby the lordship of the parish of Hanmer, and it is probably owing to this circumstance that the Commissioners were uncertain whether or not he had a share in the patronage of the living of Bangor. From the following papers it will be seen that there had been a long-standing feud between the Emral family and the rectors of Bangor, which was in no way diminished when the incumbent was a Presbyterian. Judge Puleston having secured the consent of Mr. Lloyd, the patron of Bangor, to his exercising the right of nomination to the chapelry of Worthenbury, and finding his hands much strengthened by the report of the Commission, which had been issued doubtless at his instance, thereupon built a house for the Incumbent of Worthenbury, and settled ;£'ioo per annum upon him. The way in which his claims were met at an earlier date, when Bishop John Bridgeman of Chester held also the rectory of Bangor, will show the difficulties of the case. We shall find Philip Henry after-^ wards expressing great doubt as to his own legal position at Worthenbury, Puleston. This Ondenture made the foureteenth day of March in the yeare of our Lord one thousand six hundred fifty & eight Betweene Thomas Lloyde of Halghton in the County of fHynt Esq° of the one part and John Puleston of Emrall in the said County of fflynt Serjeant att Law of the other part. Witnesseth that the said Thomas Lloyd for divors good consideracons him thereunto moveing hath granted released and confirmed, and by these presents -doth grant release and confirme unto the said 24 PHILIP HENRY. John Puleston All the Adwowson and right of patronage of the Parish Church of Worthenbury in the said County of fHynt To have and to hold the said Adwowson and right of patronage of the said Church of Worthenbury to the said John Puleston his heires and assignes forever To the onely use & behoofe of the said John Puleston his heires & assignes for ever, In Witnesse whereof the parties above named have to these presents inter- changably put their hands and seales the day and yeare first above written. Sealed and Delived in the presence of Griffith Jones Thomas Beckett John Holliman. To the Sheriffs of the County of fHint. Whereas wee, and others are appoynted and Authorized by a Comicon out of the High Courte of Chancery dated the iSth of ffebruary 1657, To enquire by the Oathes of good, and lawfuU men of the County of fiflint (amongst other things) how many chappells are belonging to the Parish Church of Bangor and wh"'' are fitt to bee united or divided from the saide Parish Church of Bangor and how the said Church and Chappells are supplied with preachinge Ministers, that course may bee. taken both for preachinge and mainteiince where it shall bee needefull. ^^'ee therefore intendinge to execute the said comicon accordinge to the tenor thereof doe appoynt Monday the Nineteenth day of Aprill next at the dwellinge house of Robert ap Prichard in Bangor in the County of fflint to meete and pceede in th' exe- cucon of the said Comicon. Wee therefore by virtue of the said Comicon require & comand you the Sheriffe of the County of fflint that upon the said 19*^ day of Aprill next by eight of the Clocke in the morninge at the dwellinge house of Robert ap Prichard aforesaid you cause to come before us such and as many honest and able men of yo"^ Bayliewick (as well within liberties as without) by whom the truth in the p'misses may be PHILIP HENRY. 25 knowne and enquired of. In wittnes whereof we have hereunto put our hands, and Seales. John Broughton ( J Owen Barton Richard Basnet Roger Puleston Ow. LLOYD o o o o The execution of this precept appeares in a certain Schedule to this writ annexed. Ra: Hughes Esq'., Sherriffe. The names of the Jury to inquire for His Highness the Lord Rtector touching Ecclesiasticall Emotions. Andrew ElUse of Hanmer gent Thomas ap John of Beachfield g Edward Kinaston of the same g Thomas Young of Croxon g fn: John Aldersey of Bronington g fn: Thomas Jackson of the same g Randle Edowe of Iscoed gen Edward Pal}^! of Haulghton g fn: Randle Key of Willington g John Mathewes of the same g fn: Randle Moyle of Worthenbury g fn: Edward Tona of Bangor g John Lewis of the same g fn: John ap Wm ap Edd of the same g John Price of Overton fforren g fn: Humfrey Shone of the same g fn: Humfrey Rob*" of the same g fn: 26 PHILIP HENRY. William Butler of Tybroughton g fn: Edward ap Robert of Overton g fn: Thomas powell of Knowlton g fn: E(M ap Edn of the same g Edward ap Roger of Arbistock g Griffith Jones of Worthenbury fn: Robert Yale of the same gt fn: Tho: ap Hugh of Owton gent, fn: John Jenings of Willington g fn: Stephen Rudenhurst of the same g fn: Jo. ap Edward of Owton Villa S-io =ro;in yio Ycna Return of the Jury upon the Commission of Ecclesiastical Promotions. The Jurors upon their Oaths say That the Church of Worthenbury in the County of filint is a pish Church to w""" the cure of soules is anexed. And that John Puleston Sergeant at Lawe is seised in his demeafne as of £Fee ot an Auncient Mefsuage called Emerall in Worthenbury in the County of fHint. And of diverse lands, meadows, and pastures thereunto belonginge. And that the said John, and all those whose estate hee hath p'misses by all the tyme whereof the memory of man is not to the contrary, Have collated a Clerke to the said Parish Church of Worthenbury, as oft as the same became voyde (excepting the tyme of the late Ladie Pulefton's Widdowhood) who held the said house of Emerall in dower dureinge her life. And they likewise say that the Clerks soe collated by all the tyme aforesaid have, or ought to have enjoyed the tyeth Hay ariseinge within the said ^ish of Worthenbury, and all the Tithe wooll, Lambe, and other smale Tyeths ariseinge within the said j)ish or a Composicon for the same, w""' Tyeths are worth 20" by the yeare. They further say. That Phillip Henry Master of Artes a learned and diligent preacher of the gospell is Minister and Incumbent of the Church of Worthembury by the collacon of the said John Puleftbn. PHILIP HENRY. 2/ They further find that in the said Parish of Worthembury there is, and by all the tyme whereof the memory of man is not to the contrary hath beene an Ancient Chappell anexed to the ^ish church of Bangor, and that the said John Pulefton and all those whose Estate hee hath in the said Mefsuage of Emerall and p'mifses have had and enjoyed the tyeth corne groweinge within the said ^ish of Worthembury payeinge yearly for the same 20" to the Parfons of Bangor, for the tyme beinge as in right of the said Chappell The said Tyeths being ordinaryly worth 60'' by the yeare. " This is drawn through ' and the following written ' That Rob' ffogg is f minister of Bangor by the sequeftracbn of Mr. H. B. & preaches & officiates there.'" "They likewise find that Mr, Henry Bridgman is pfon of Bangor, and that Robert flFogg Gierke doth serve the Cure and take the Tyeths of Bangour to his own ufe by seques- tracon for the delinquencie of Mr. Henry Bridgman." They find that the Tyeths of the pfonage of Bangor are worth 150" by the yeare.* They find that the church of Worthembury and the chappell in Worthembury are distant two myles from the church of Bangor. And that the chappell of Worthembury is distant from the pish Church of Worthembury about a myle. They likewise say that the Chappell in Worthembury hath cure of soules : and that the pfons of Bangor for ought they can find have not p'formed any divine service there. They also find That Thomas LLoyde Esq'' {sic) is Patron of the Church of Bangor and the Chappell in Worthemburye there- unto anexed. And that John Puleston Sergeant at Law is Patron of the Donative Church of Worthembury. And the Jurors further say that they hold it fitt that the said Chappell in Worthembury, and th6 said pencon of 20" by the yeare should bee sev.ed, and taken from the said Parsonage of Bangor, and bee settled to the Parish Church of Worthembury in the same manner as they were settled and anexed to Bangor. And the said Jurors say that they doe not know of any * Vide infra, where they are said to be worth ;£^200 per annum exclusive of Overton, which was of the value of ;^I20. 28 PHILIP HENRY. ■spirituall or ecclesiasticall benefices, liveings, and Donatives with or without the Cure of Soules within the said Parish of Bangor, or the Limits thereof. Neyther have they any Evidence given them of any other Ecclesiasticall benefices. The case concerning the Parish Church of Worthenbury and ■the Chapellry of Emerall truly stated. John Puleston, Sergeant at law is seised of an ancient Mansion House called Emerall, within the Parish of Worthenbury, and that hee and all those whose Estate hee hath in the said Mansion House have, for all the tyme whereof the memory of man is not to the contrary, collated a fitt Parson to the said church and that the Parsons soe collated have, for all the tyme aforesaid, receaved and enjoyed all the tyeth hay, and all the small tyeths yearly growing within the bounds and precincts of the said parish, the value whereof is not much more than 2ojQ per annum. There is likewise within the said Parish an auncient Chappell belonging to the said Mansion house of Emerall, which Chappell is anexed to the Parson of Bangor and that for tyme out of mynde, the said Parson hath receaved 20;,^ per annum from the said John Puleston and his Predecessors for the tyeth corne of the Parish of Worthen- bury, and for the performeing of Divine service in the said Chappell — ^which service the Incumbent never performed. The Parsonage of Bangor is worth 200;^ per annum and hath anexed to it the Parish Church of Owton, worth i2o_;^ per annum. The desire of the said Mr. Puleston is that the said Chapellry might be reunited to the Parish Church of Worthenbury out of which it was taken, and that the Tyeths worth /^ojQ [?] may be granted and united to the Parson of the Parish Church of Worthenbury and his successors, and that 200,;^ formerly paid to the Parish of Bangor may be extinguished, and that a certayne close called the •Coate or ... in Worthenbury being the Inheritance of the said John Puleston may likewise be settled to the Parson of the said Parish Church of Worthenbury, and his successors for ever, upon which the said John Puleston intends to build all necessary houses for the accomodacon of the said Parson and his successors. John Puleston. PHILIP HENRY. 29 An exemplification of a verdict dated the i6th of January in the 1 6th (or loth) year of King James for John Puleston Esq. against- Prichard Minister of Bangor. Another exemplification of a verdict dated the 1 6th of January in the 15th year of King James betwixt the same partys for takeing the tyeths of Come in Worthenbury. The other papers contain the answers to John Puleston, Wm. Phillips, Thos. Phillips, Edward ap David, John Allarte to a bill of complainte apparently filed by John Bishop of Chester or by Thomas Prichard, Curate of Bangor in his own court respecting the tithes of hay in the Pitties, the two Llanvarreds, and the Tallarne Pasture, and the Bishop's replication to the same. The Bishop's reply maintains that the statements in his bill of complaint are true, denies that there is a Manor of Emerall, except in name, denies the custom alleged, saying that the Tythe was sometimes paid in kind, sometimes sold for different sums of money. A coppy of an instrument dated 1683 from John Bishop of Chester and Thos. Lloyd patron of the Rectory of Bangor for the annexing the House, Gleab land tithes lying and ariseing in the Parish and Township of Worthenbury to the Rector there. 19th Sept 1653. CosiN Palmer, Ye Messeng' w""" brought mee a letf^ fro y" brought y° judg one also fro his Nephew, Mr. Hamlet Puleston. But no motio of a Schoolm'. However I rely so much on y' choice of ye ggjit"™ pposed, y' thers' no need to trouble Mr. H. Puleston. I am content to abate one of y° sermons, hoping hee will pray in y" family, instead thereof, w""" is so easy to a Christian y' hee 's rather lead than drawn therto, and if y° expositions of Chapters or Psalmes bee easyer to him then preaching, I shal like it (as ever I have done) bett' than y° other. Im' confident wee shall not differ heerin ffor I shall eyther wait ffor -f guifts and calling of God in him, (w"'' are w"'out repentance) or wholly indulg him ffiro y° ffor- malities of preaching, praying, &c. — as some use y". please to send him away ffor y° half year ffro y° time hee comes till 26 weekes be 30 PHILIP HENRY. compleat : his allowance shall be half -f revenue pposd, and other accomodations mentiond formerly. This time of probatio will conclude us eyther on a ffarther time, or repayring to Oxford at Spring. . . . Please to keep y° letter ... as an evidence of our bargain. I have delivered -f Bearer ^£, fifor y' Gentleman in part of y" first quarteridg. What y° charge of y° journey takes out of it I will supply at 'f' quarters end when I pay y" rest to make out 15^^. I have sent a horse and a ifootman to wait on him hither. Mr. Roberts is grown a worthy Christian and I greatly value him. if y" have a mind to see what works God hath done in him, y" shall finde him at one Mr. Courtneys Lodging in Milbanck neer Tuttle-Fields. God can do as much ifor Mr. Henry y° know. I pray y" hasten him hyther. If pleas God to give success to -f^ endeavours I shal bee glad. I wish y' Gentlem" to take his journey on Fryday, and rest at my Sister Grayes on Lord's day so hee may bee at Emral on Munday night. I desire a good-journey, ffrancis Palmer (Juni. and Tremeli.) notes upo y' Bible I desire y" to send mee, & y* Bible in Greek w""" y' learned ffriends, Septuagint, translated ffor Ptolemy. I thank y" ffor y' respect and shall ever rest To my much respected Y' welwishing Cosin, Kinsman Mr. Francis Palmer Elizabeth Puleston. a Master of Arts If y" will come to see how at Christ's Church in Oxford wee thrive y" shal bee wel- or in his absence to one Mr. Henry come. My Roger Puleston Master of Art 5z: of y° same House. love to y° & so y° rest. The following letter from Lady Puleston shows plainly what Philip Henry gave up by leaving Oxford, and taking up with such work as he found at Emral and Worthenbury. The reply from Dr. Owen is also given. From Lady Puleston to Dr. Owen, Dean of Christ Church, Oxford. My much Honored Cosin, I was in hopes I should have seen you here as you purposed the last Spring, and am very sorry it fell out otherwise ■ PHIUP HENRY: 31 it hath pleased the lord to lay mee low under his hand, by much payn and many months, sicknesse from a Cancer in my Breast, and I am way ting every.day till my change cometh,,but if we meet no more on earth, I hope wee shall in the Armes of Jesus Christ. There is a friend of iriine whose name is Edward Thomas of Wrexham, who brings his son to your CoUedge, and I request you to countenance him with your Favour, the youth is very hopefull both in learning and Grace, and his Father an ancient Professor of Godlinesse in these parts, and one of approv'd Integrity, and I know. Sir, that such and what concernes them lyes near your Heart upon far greater and better interests then mine, and I persuade my selfe, what your opportunityes will permitt you to doe in his behalfe, you will receive a full recompence of re- ward for from him, who hath promis'd to requite even a cup of cold water given in the name of a Disciple. Mr. H. is here with mee, what my Husband intends concerning him is not yet settled, but I hope shortly it will bee, in the mean time I am loth hee should leave a certainty in the Colledge for an uncertainty here, and doe therefore desire you to continue his Place to him for a while longer, that seeing the lord hath made him willing to lay out himselfe in the work of the Gospel so far remote from his Friends in this poor dark comer of the land, hee may not in any thing bee prejudic'd for our Sakes. My husband is at London or in his way home, wee and cur's are much engag'd to you for your love, and I should have beene very Glad if it might have fallen within the compasse of my Abilityes to make known other then by words my sense of your many Kindnesses ; but 'tis the lords will I should dye your Debtor; With my true unfayned respects and service to your lady and Selfe, I rest Your affectionate Cosin & Friend, E. P. To Lady Puleston wife of John P. one of y° Judges of y" Common Pleas. Madam. Whilst I was in hopes to have waited upon you, and your worthy husband, at your owne house, I reservd my begginge 32 PHILIP HENRY. of your pardon, that I had not made my acknowledgements of y' favour, in owning and minding a relation of kindred, and sundry other respects, unto that season. Being by the providence of God prevented as to those resolutions, I am bold to lay hold on this opportunity, of returning my hea!rty thanks for your kind remem- brances of him, who is in no way able to deserve your respects, though he will at all times owne as hearty and entire an honor and regard to y' Lad" & your noble husband as any person living, I hope you both, with my Cousins your sons, are in health ; and are resolved, (if y° lord please) to see you at y" beginning of the Springe, my wife presents her faithfull service and respects to your Lady" and is glad to hear of your name, for my part, it is some contentment to me, that whilst I am in this place, I have some little opportunity to express a regard to that relation you are pleased to allow me the honor of, by taking the best care I can of him, who bears the name of your family, my young cousin Puleston & humbly begg y" pardon of this trouble, and leave to subscribe myself Madam, y' most humble servant My most humble service and affectionate kinsman & respects to w'"" many thanks John Owen. for his kind invitation, to Your worthy husband. The following diary belongs to Miss Lewis, of Croydon, to whom my best thanks are due for the loan of it, and of other manuscripts. 1657- This was the first yeare in which I began to keep an Account of my Time in this method. If the Lord blesse mee I meane to hold on, and I hope Use will make mee more and more perfect in it, 'tis a pleasing, profitable, heavenly Art. 6 Deus, Doce me numerare dies meos. The Day of a Deliverance is to bee remembred, and God takes it ill when wee doe not remember it. See Psal. 78. 42. ■ PHILIP HENRY. 33 If T am a Reprobate I shall bee damn'd But lam not a Repro- bate, ergo, negatur minor tliou canst not prove it, the Book is kept secret. Though the Godly may by their calling know their Elec- tion, yet none can know in this life their Reprobation. Mr. Ball the Preacher's sons, when y" left the University and came forth to preach, kept a day of Humiliation with their godly freinds in the Country, to implore mercy for their University sins, so, lord, forgive mee my University sins ! I was told of a Godly, faithfull minister of whom the Drunkards made songs, if I doe my Duty, I must look for the same. A Gentleman was wont to repell temptation with this word / am Bapti^d. When a fire is first kindled there's a great deale of smoke and smother that afterw. weares away. So in young Converts, much peevishnesse, frowardnesse, Darknesse. So it hath beene with my soule, and so it is yet in great measure, lord, pity ! don't quench smoking flax, though as yet it doe but smoke. A tree cut up by y" roots yet may have the leaves green upon it a great while. So a people or person devoted by God to ruine may yet retaine many of their oiitward comforts for a time, but y"' are withering. Saul though rejected obtayn'd many victoryes. Luther was a man of a very hot fiery spirit, suteable to the work hee was called out ta . Melancthon was more Slow and moderate and remisse, which very much temper'd lather's Zeale. B'' Jewell a little before his Death, sang the 71^' Psalm. Dr. Willett y° 146. hee dyed of a Fall from off" his horse. Dan. Rogers a man eminently Godly yet somet. would bee very vaine and light as if no grace at all in his heart. Queer. A man makes a vow, upon his Daughter's marriage against his will, never to leave her any thing of his estate. His Daughter afterw. behaves hers, so as to recover his Favour, is hee or may hee bee releas't of his Vow ? Queer. A Gentlewoman having strong affections towards one, and' earnestly desiring him for her husband, suffers y° fire to burne inward and conceales her love. Shortly after, being sick, shee makes a Vow, never to entertayne such thoughts any more; it pleases God, shee recovers and notmthstanding all endeavours D 34 PHILIP HENRY. w'" hers, to the contrary, her affections stir againe, being made knowne to y" Party, hee inclines to have her, qucBrie, may they marry without Breach of vow. the Gentlewoman is under f Government of her Mother, being lilive. Queer, whether it bee lawfull in triviall matters to cast lots. Queer, what am I to doe, if I receive brasse money and know not of whom, may I put it off if I can to others, or must I suffer losse by it ?■ — Suffer. Qucsr. Concerning Private Baptism. Qutzr. Concerning Preaching on Christmas-day. Three things, which if X"""' doe, they may prove mistaken — 1. if they look for that in thems. which is to bee had in another, viz. Righieousnes. 2. if they look for that in the law w* is to be had only in -f Gospel, viz. Mercy. 3. if they look for that on earth w* is to bee only in Heaven. 1/iz. Perfection. Carnall Gospellers are Gospel-Spillers. — Bolton. Non videtur Adam pecasse in Bonaventura. A Speech of Mr. Sam. Hieron's a little before his Death ; I confesse in publike I have been somewhat full in reproof, in admonition, in instruction, but in private my backwardnesse, my bashfulnes, my dastardlinesse hath been intolerable, and I may say that if any th. lyes as a burthen upon my conscience, this is it, but I praise my God, I know upon whose shoulders to cast it with the rest of my Transgressions. A Speech of Mr. Dod's, / would to God I were the worst Minister in England. It was a saying of one of the Kings of France, viewing his Stately buildings, pleasant Gardens &c. These are the things that make men unwilling to dye. July 6. I made addresses to the Presbytery in Shrop-shire for Ordination. They mett at Frees, there were present Mr. Porter,* Prcesident, Mr. Houghton, Mr. Parsons, Mr. Binney, Mr. Steel. \ * Mr. Porter was "bred at Cambridge ;" presented to the living of Han- mer by Sir Thomas Hanmer, Bart., in 1625 ; "was forced to withdraw during J'HILIP HENRY. 35 Inquiry was made. i. concerning the work of grace upon my Heart. Whereunto I reply'd, The Spirit has been dealing with mee while I was very young, not only in the publique Ministry, but by y° private Instructions of a Godly mother also, & I hop'd had convinc't mee of my sin, & discovered to mee my need of X' and bow'd my will in some measure to close with him upon his owne Termes, in sincerity, unfaynedly, and that having taken him to bee mine, I had also resign'd mys. up to him to bee his, to bee guided & governed by him, and resolved by his grace to continue in his wayes unto y° Death. 2. Concerning my skill in the Originall languages of the Scripture. for the Hebrew, I read & construed. Ps. 2. i. 2. for the Greek, I read & construed, luk 16. 1. 2. , 3. for logique, I was askt, guotuplex est Syllogismus ? . I answer'd, vel Categorkus vel Hypotheticus. Item, Probabilis vel Demonstra- tivus. quae sunt leges legitimi Syllogismi. Resp. nihil concluditur nisi altera propositio sit universalis — &c. A. For Philosophy. Quid est elementum? Resp. est sub- stantia pura (potiiis ; est corpus simplex) ex qua omnia fiunt (I should have added, et in quam ultimo resolvuntur). An sit eadem materia cceli et Terrse ? Resp. non. Materia cceli est incorruptib. —Err. An detur elementum ignis ? Imo ! ubi ? sub concavo luns. Ut probas ? quia e. elem. levissim &c. &c. &c. the heat of the wars," and — according to tradition — appointed to Whitchurch ty the Protector in 1650. In 1656 he had a public dispute in Ellesmere Church with one Haggar, an Anabaptist, concerning infant baptism, occasioned by a sermon Mr. Porter had preached on that subject. In " 1653, ffeb. II. Jebes, s. of Tho. Porter, pastor heare," is buried at Whitchurch. In " 1657, Sep. 5. Mary wife of Tho. Porter Min' " is buried ; and in " 1660, Mar. 26. Thomas Porter, the elder, of this par. and Susan Clive of the par. of Baschurch " are married. t Richard Steel of Barthomley; Cheshire, took his M. A. degree at St. John's College, Cambridge, and an "ad eundem" at Oxford, July 5, 1656 (Anthony a Wood). In "Collections for Walker's Suif. of Clergy," Bodleian, vol. i. No. 203, we are told that Mr. Porter placed him at Hanmer, but the date is not given. Newcome visits him there, June 10, 1654, and wishes to imitate his "kindness." He assisted at the ordination of Philip Henry in 1657, and of JMatthew Henry in 1687. 36 PHILIP HENRY. 5. What Authors in Divinity I had read. A. Somet in Wollebius, Amesius, Calvin. Qu. what are the parts of X'" Mediatorship. A. three, his priestly, kingly, prophetic office. Q. w' doth X' doe as prophet ? A teaches his Church. Q. immediately ? A. no. by his Spirit in his word, what are the parts of his Preistly office. A. two. his Death & his Intercession. 6. What was my Judgem' in ref. to Infant-Baptisme, ought any children to bee baptiz'd. A I believe they ought & I am clear in it. 7. what in refer, to y° controversy betw. Presbyterian and Independant. Answ' was made for mee, if I had not approved of the Pres- byt. way, I would not have come thither. I reply' d, in most things according to my present light I did, but I had not had opportunity to search into y° bottom of -f controv. 8. the place of Script propos'd was i Cor. 10. 26. 28. Qu. how come y° same words of the Psalmist to bee a reason why y" should eat & why y°' should not. A. in a different sense, i. you may eat, for the earth is y° lord^ q.d. every creature of God is good if receiVd with Thanksgiving- by y™ y' know y* truth. 2. if your brother bee offended, you may forbear, for y" earth, q.d. there are other th. enough which you may eat freely of without offence. 9. This case of Conscience was propounded. Suppose one should come to you & make complaint of his condition, 6 Sir, I am undone, 'tis to no purp. for mee to wayt upon f meanes of Grace, I am a Reprobate, & if a Reprobate, no salvation. A. I would deny his minor, & endeavour to shew him, that though a man may know his own election yet hee cannot his Reprobation. Ob. Suppose hee should reply, I have y° mark of a reprobate, much guilt, a hard heart, a seared Conscience. A. I would endeavour to convince him, there is nothing which befalls a reprobate but may befall one that is elect before Con- version except the Guilt of y° sin agt y° holy Gh. PHILIP HENRY. 37 10. Concerning church-history I was only askt whether I had read Eusebius &c. I answered, I had, some of him, but not all over. These were the Occurrences of that day's meeting. They gave mee a Qu. to provide a Thesis upon against the next meeting. Qu. an Providentia divina extendat se ad omnia. Aff. There were examin'd the same day Mr. Hall of New-castle in Staffordshire and Mr. Jones of llanarmon in Denbigh-shire. The lord prosper all my undertakings that are accor. to His will ! Aug. 3. I exhibited my Theses upon the aforesaid Question, All Providentia divina extendat se ad omnia, concerning which, Disputation was held for about the space of halfe an houre or more, there oppos'd Mr. Parsons, Mr. Binney, Mr. Houghton, and Mr. Porter moderated ; The maine thing insisted on was If God concur by his Providence to every action, how is hee not then the Author of Sin, to which Answer was given, the materiality of -f Action is from God, but the formality w"'' is y° sinfulnesse of it, is from the sinner himselfe. lord, I desire thou may est have the glory of all my abilityes, naturall, morall, spirituall ; if they were more, thou shouldst have more glory ; and I beg of thee to overlook my failings, especially the Pride and selfishnesse that is often stirring its. in my poor soule for Christ his sake. I left, two Certificates, w"' Mr. Bevan, the Register to the classis. One from Oxford, subscrib'd by Dr. Wilkinson, Dr. langley, Mr. Cornish, Mr. Button, the other subscrib'd by Mr. Steel, Mr. Orl. Fogg, Mr. Jenkyn, both testifying of my conversation &c. the lord forgive mee that it hath not been more exemplary, as it ought, for piety and Industry. Amen, lord ! in Christ. The day for Ordination was appointed to bee, Wednesday, Sept. 16. the place, Prees. I would very faine have been ordain'd at Worthenbury, the place where God hath cast my lott, which I beleeve comes nearest the Institution but it might not bee, rebus publicis sic stantibus — Hopes thereof was one mayn motive to mee to defer being ordayn'd so long. — The lord prosper mee in his works. 38 PHILIP HENRY. Sept. 14. Upon Publication of my intentions to bee ordayn'd Mr. Fogg put in a Caveat against mee, not in reference to the thing its. but in reference to the Place, hee conceiv'd it an in- trenchm* upon his right to Worthenbury and a praejudice to his proceedings for y° recovery of it, in a course of law. — Much was said before the Classis, /n? and con., the result whereof was this, that if I would desire his consent hee would freely give it, I conde- scended for peace sake and it was done in Scriptis in this forme. Whereas the Inhabitants of Worthenbury in the County of Flint, have desired mee Philip Henry to bee their Minister I doe desire the consent of Mr. Fogg rector of Bangor, that I may bee ordajoied thereunto. — P. H. I am contented' that Mr. Phil. Henry doe officiate in the Chappel of Worthenbury, and doe humbly beg a blessing from the lord upon his labours and endeavours there. — R. F. the Original remaynes in the Custody of Mr. Bevan, Scribe to y° Classis. I expect, hee should talk big of my submission to him herein, but I value it not. Sept. 16. I was ordayn'd Minister, being solemnly set apart thereunto by Imposition of Hands. Mr. Porter began the day in Prayer ; Mr. Parsons preacht Text, i Tiin. i. 12. T thank Christ Jesus our lord who hath enabled mee, for tliat hee counted mee faithfull, putting mee into the Ministry. After Sermon they proceeded to Ordination, I was ordayn'd first, Mr. Parsons (according to the Forme) requir'd of mee a Confession of my Faith which I made, and propounded severall Questions to meet to which I gave Answer ; thereupon hee prayed, and in Prayer Hee, and Mr, Porter and Mr. Houghton and Mr. Maiden and Mr. Steel layd their hands on me; and so successively on five more, Mr. Jones of llanarmon, Mr. Dickens of Mortonsay, Mr. Bradley of Nesse, Mr. Hall of Newcastle, Mr. Hanmer * of Whit- * 111 his "Antiquities of Myddle," p. 160, Ridiard Gough says, "John Ellice because he came hither from Hanmer w.ns called EUice of Hanmer, and then Ellice, alias Hanmer. His second son Thomas was brought up to be a good English scholar. Thomas Hanmer had a son [Joseph] who was sent to Oxford, and was at last made Doctor of Divinity, and married a wife [at Whit- church, March 27, 1659] whose maiden name was [Martha] Eddowes, of a good family in Cheshire. Hee was parson of Maurwheale near Wrexham, a good TfflLIP HENRY. 39 well chappell — thereup. Mr. Maiden clos'd the day with an exhortation, directed specially to us, and so dismist the Congre- gation. — They gave us Instrum'' of this in Parchment subscribd with their severall Hands. Mee thoughts I saw much of God in the carrying on of the work of this day, 6 how Good is the lord, hee is Good and hee doth Good, the Remembrance of it I shall never lose, to him bee Glory. I made many promises of Diligence, Industry, faithfulnes, zeale, in some things concerning my selfe, in some concerning my family (when God shall call mee to it) in some concerning my people, but I lay no stresse at all on them, but on the lord's promise to mee, that hee will bee with his Ministers alwayes to the end of the world. Amen, lord, so bee it. make good thy word unto thy servant wherein thou hast caused mee to put my trust. Qui non valet in sere, solvet in corpore. Britannia.* — Brit or Birth, in the old British language signifies blew-coloured, & tania is added for y° Signification of such a region or Country — as lusiiania, Mauritania, Aquitania, So that Britannia is as much as the country of Blew people ; bee. the inhabitants instead of clothes were wont to besmear their bodyes with woad, a thing that dyes blew. Burr, on Hos. i pt. p. 175. January 8. Dr. Roger Puleston dyed suddenly at Chester, lord teach us to number our Dayes ! Jan. 17. I heard two sermons at Bangor, the one from Act. 17. 31. Hee hath appointed a day wherein hee will judge the world. my heart was very dead in hearing, (the lord in mercy forgive it). but the truth made up to mys. is this, I would faine bee certiiyed. Am I ready for that day ? 'twill bee terrible to sinners, benefitt, and hee was a good preacher, but lived a troublesome life being always in the law with his parishoners, especially with the Brougtons. Hee dyed att Maurwheale." There is-a curious letter of his in Harl. manuscript 1971, P- 131- „ . * British traditions say that it was called by one Brutus " Ynys Brut, i.e. Brut Ynys = Brutus' island, and hence Britannia. 40 PHILIP HENRY. 'twill bee comfortable to the Godly, tis not long to it, where shall I then appeare? 6 lord, let mee bee foiind in Christ ! at his right, not at his left hand ! among the sheep, not among the Goats ! Ay mee, I have beene a wandring sheep (if yet a sheep) 6 save mee for thy mercyes sake ! The other from Act 24. 25. Felix trembled, much was spoken that reacht my heart and present condition, as if the lord had sent y° Minisf to preach purposely to mee, blessed bee God ! Tis a dreadful thing to sin against Conviction, and that I have done many a time ; Father, forgive mee ! though I can't say, I knew not what I did ! A convinced person finds a great deale lesse pleasure in sin, then others doe ; I can set my scale to that Truth, and acknowl. mys. theref. so much the more a foole to Transgresse without a cause, sure my sin is the greater. Sins agaiiist Conviction border upon -f sin against the Holy Ghost ; 6 how neare then have I beene to mine ; there hath beene but a step between mee & Death, but God hath had mercy. Saving Convictions melt the Heart, set the soule a-praying, subdue the will to live accor. to y™ — mine this day produc't the two former effects w"" hearty unfayned Resolutions touching y' later, lord, undertake for mee ! I was told, I must not stay till some remarkable time from w"*" to Date my Conversion to God, as many doe, but I must make this day remarkable by doing it now ! After dangerous backslidings, loe ! I come to y" for thou art y° lord my God ! my God in Christ ! Jan. 13. I heard Mr. lewis preach at Worthenbury, bemg the day of our monthly lecture. The lesson from Esa. 48. 1 7 was this. It is the lord that teacheth Ms People to Profit. Hee teacheth by his Spirit in the use of meanes, for though Paul may plant and Apollos water yet tis God alone that gives the increase. lord, I look up to tliee in all my endeavours for the Good of those I preach to, praying thee to concur with thy Blessing, that the work may prosper. PHILIP HENRY. 4I A good Guid doth not only tell y° way, but goes along in the way. the nurse doth not only tell y° child how to goe, but takes it by the Hand. lord, lead mee in thy way. Psal. 27. 11. 26. Min'* matt at Hanmer. y" Question wee disputed of was, An Decretum Dei toUat libertaiem nosfram. Neg. 27. wee mett at our monthly Conference. Qit. what are the Priviledges that Beleevers have right to by J. X'. 30. I was ill, I thought unto death, but the lord had mercy : it was the occasion through inordinate fear & grief of Sist. Mary's fitts of -f Mother, in y° first whereof shee continued near 8 houres, without sign of life. Jan. 4. I preacht at Penley. 10. I preacht at Gresford at the Buryall of Dr. Puleston. 21. I visited John Griffith of Worthenbury being sick & pray'd with him, if the lord restore' him, I am to put him in mind •of promises of new obedience, lord, help him to performe. lord, restore him. 27. Note. It pleas'd the lord hee did Recover, 6 that hee might remember. February. These following sins were in this month sett home with power upon my Conscience. 1. Omissions innumerable, I fall short of Duty in every relation. 2. much frowardnesse upon every occasion which fills my way with thorns & snares, 3. Pride, a veine of it runs throughout my whole Conver- sation, 4. Selfe-seeking, corrupt ends in all I doe applause with men more regarded then the Glory of God, oftentimes. 5. My owne Iniquity, many Bubblings up of Heart — Corrup- tion, and Breakings forth too, 6 lord. Shame hath covered my face, Pardon and Purge for sweet Jesus' sake. The lord in this month shook his Rod over me, i. in a violent T)istemper upon mys. 2. in much danger of life to Sister Mary, .and I have heard, someth. of y^ Voice of it, so that I know partly what it saith. 42 PHILIP HENRY. Lord, help mee to yeeld obedience. I have beene in the Furnace, if I come out againe and leave no drosse behind, it will bee sad, Tis a great losse to lose an Affliction. Feb. lo. I heard Mr. lewis preach at Worthenb. it being the day of our monthly lecture. The lesson from Zech. 7. 13. where God is said to cry upon men, was this, the lord is very affectionately importunate for y' good of poor soules. 6 how often have I heard him cry upon mee in his word and by his Rod, blessed bee his name, hee hath not yet left mee alone. February i. Another violent Fit, it was the Lord's day, towards Evening some Godly Freinds being present, I prayed with them ; lord, hear in heaven. 2. I began to mend, having some ease, but Sister Mary continued ill. — much peevishnesse, it becomes mee not, and which is worse it greives, and vexes the good Spirit of God, lord, pardon and subdue. — 20. Sister Mary very weak and in much danger, the lord bee her support. I doe verily beleive shee is in Christ and therefore best for her to bee with Christ. — her Distemper turned about this time from the ffitts of the mother to a violent Ague. — My sister Kath. wrote to mee, that having overload there was danger lest I should overgreive for usually much Affection brings much Affliction : Twas a seasonable word then when it was written, and may bee of use hereafter. 26. I wrote to Mr. lewis to intreat Mr. Moston to Baptize a child of Robert Bycklys but hee refus'd ; his grounds I know not. February i. I being ill my Freind Mr. lewis having ingagd to spend the Sabb. at Bangor, the peopl of Worthenb. mett early & hee preacht to them before hee went to Bangor and againe in the Evening at the Chappell, after his returne, about which time sister Mary fell ill. 10. Having kept my chamber since friday Jan. 30. this day PHILIP HENRY. 43 being our monthly lecture I went forth & preacht. Text. Ps. 23. /. — ^blessed bee God — 15. wee began the Duty of reading the word in the Family, long omitted, lord Pardon. 17. Sister Mary lett bloud. 20. A day of publike Thanksgiving for the Deliverance of Oliver lord Protector from a Plot to take away his life. March i. Having intermitted Repetition upon the Evening of the Sabbath bee. of winter, this day wee reviv'd it. lord, owne us with Strength an^ a blessing. 3. A child of Robert Byckly's was baptiz'd by Mr. Manwaring of Malpas, the name Philip. I was present & exhorted & pray'd — 6 lord, let this child live in thy sight ! — The more publikely that Ordinance is administred, the better. 17. A child oi Joseph Pidgeway's was baptiz'd by Mr. Keeling of Cockshut* the name Hannah. I was present & preacht, it was at Shocklach.* Lord, let this child also live in thy sight ! Our Baptisme is then made effectuall to us, when wee are baptized with the holy Ghost. 19. a Day of Prayer at Haniner, I was much straitened, no life at all in the Duty, many wandrings; if my Prayers were written downe in a Paper, and then, my vaine distracting Thoughts in time of Duty interlin'd, 6 what incoherent non-sence would there bee ! I am asham'd, lord, I am asham'd ! 6 pity and pardon !' Towards the close of the same day, I mett w"" a Friendly seasonable Admonition, blessed bee God ! my heart was then in somewhat a better frame then Ordinary for y" receiving of it and I hope it hath done mee Good. The lord is very gracious, in that hee followes mee thus from time to time, sure hee is not willing I should perish. The eyes of many are upon mee, some for one end, some for another. Some for good, some for Evill — I had need bee watch- full ; lord, hold up my goings in thy path, that my footsteps slip not ! lord, thou tellest all my wandrings, for Jesus sake, let y"" bee forgotten ! Mar. 4. I heard two Sermons at Bangor. The one from * Cockshute and Shocklach are chapelries — the one in Salop, south-east of EUesmere ; the other in Cheshire, north-west of Malpas. 44 PHILIP HENRY. I John. 3. I. behold, what manner of love the Father hafh bestowed upon us, y' wee should bee called the Sons of God. Tis wonderfull rich mercy that such unworthy Creatures as wee are, should bee taken into so high and glorious Relation, accompanyed with so many choyce and precious Priveledges. Behold/ wee doe not enough consider it, wee can never enough admire it. One Priveledge of sons, I was told is this, the Father will correct them, Ifeb. 12. 6. Blessed be my Father, I have not beene altogether. without chastisem' yet not the thousandth part of what I deserve, I have been very undutifull, very untoward ; All beleevers are Heires yet the Inheritance not diminished. Heires of God, hee gives other th. to others, hims. to them, lord, give mee thy selfe ! The other from Rom. 3. 24. Being Justif/d freely by his Grace. — Grace not Infused, but Imputed, not within us, but with- out us, Inhgerent grace though true yet is not pfect, it shines bright when acted, like Gold, yet put it into the Refining pan and Drosse will appeare. Whereas that upon y'= account of w""" wee are Justifyed, is such as hath no mixture of Drosse, namely, the Righteousness of y" lord Jesus. We may know our Justification by our Sanctification. Justitia mea misericordia tua, Domine. Wee are no where said in Script, to be Justif. hia. -rrpr ttio-tiv but alwayes ry irio-rei. the Spouse in the Canticles came leaning upon her beloved, lord Jesus, my soule leanes upon thee for acceptation with the Father. Mar. 10. I heard Mr. lewis preach at Worthenb. Text. Zech. 7. 13. Doct. there are many men who will not heare God, though hee cry to them. not heare, i.e. not obey. Jer. 7. 23. 24. — 6. 16 &c. Reason from the Corruption of y° will, that refuses the fem-e of the lord — God sets life and death before men, they chuse Death, lord, I chuse life ! A naturall man may doe more y™ hee doth tow. his owne salvation, and that hee doth, hee may doe better, yet not well. No man ever perisht that did his utmost. God leaves every man the Casting Voice, will you or will you not. PHILIP HENRY. 45 Here's our undoing, In all worldly , matters our wills are guided by our understandings ; only in the th. of our soules our underst. are guided by our wills. When wee obey the lords call, that Calling is Effectuall, and tis effectuall calling that evidences our Election. 2 Pet. i. 10. Mar. 17. I heard Mr. Keeling preach at Shockl. Text. Jam. i. 21. — I learnt that sin is a filthy thing, it pollutes the soule, it robs us of our beauty, makes the lord to abhor us, 6 Sin, my greatest enemy, bee. God's'greatest enemy. When the glorious Angels had upon them but one Spot of it, Heaven was no longer a place for them. Lord Jesus, wash mee in thy Bloud, purge mee, cleanse mee, take away all my defilem*^ I abhor mys. I loath mys. much more doth the lord loath mee ! Create in mee a clean heart, 6 God, this heart I have is all dirty, give mee a betteir. I am asham'd to come w"' it into my fathers presence. 23. The Ministers mett at Hanmer. Qu. An usura sit licita ? Neg. I answer'd. Great need of y" Spirit of love and meek- nesse amongst us, in forbearing one another. 31. wee mett in Conference at Worth enb. Qu. lif is it that keepes men from seeking after God, much was said in answer to it, both by my selfe and others ; the lord blesse it to y™ that heard it. A strange Mayd that was present, weeping much, Spake these words, wee read thus Jer. 4. i. If thou wilt return 6 Israel, saith the lord, return unto mee. I replyed nothing to her, as I am wont to doe to. others, w" y" speak in Conference, not approving of her speaking bee. of that of y" Apost. i Tim. 2. 11. 12. i Cor. 14. 34. 35. yet by this meanes a reproach was raysd by those that watch for our baitings, that wee suffer women to speak in the church. Though Quaro— Shee is since turn'd Quaker. Mar. 10. This week Mr. lewis spent w"" us at Emerall. 12. We visited Mrs. Eyton newly recovered from a dangerous sicknesse. 14. Books from Oxford. 25. I began y° Duty of Instructing the Servants in the Family Thursday morning, help lord. At our return from Conference the Judge spake much against it ; my Answeres were not so discreet and convincing as I could 46 PHILIP HENRY. wish they had been, it repents mee, lord, forgive mee for X'' sake. April. A Scripture ground for singing Psalms in familyes may be taken from Ps. ir8. 15. The voice of rejoycing is in the Tabernacle of y" righteous. tis a way to hold forth Godlinesse, lik^ the Scarlet Thread. Josh. 2. 18. to such as passe by our windows. I heard concerning a very old man in the north parts of England, a minister, whose age was very strangely renew'd. About this time, one inquiring of mee concerning the successe of my Ministry in the Place where I am, I am afraid the Pride and Haughtinesse of my Heart discover'd it selfe ; lord pardon & subdue. I am more afraid of y" breakings forth of that sin, then almost any other ; for X' his sake, lord, give mee strength against it Apr. 30. I preacht in Dr. langle/s course in Ch. Ch. Chappel. Blessed bee the lord God of all my Enlargements, and let my faylings in every Duty bee forgiven, 6 my Father, for thy mercy sake. Apr. I. I heard two Sermons at Bangor. The one from fs. 119. 37. quicken thou mee in thy way. In the Prayer before Sermon this confession was put up, which my Heart clos'd with, — lord, wee want wisdome to carry ours, as wee ought in the world, by reason whereof the work of y" Gosp. in our hands is much hindred, 6, my God, bestow upon mee a wise & an understanding heart Doct. Gods people often want quickning in Gods way. I am sure I doe very often. 6 when had I cause to complayn, my heart is dead to the world. Creatures, pleasures, sin, but to duty, praying, preaching, when almost is it otherwise, lord, thou gavest life at first, give more life — The other from Mai. 4. 2. The sun of righteousnesse, S-r. Tis a sign the Sun is tow. setting, i. when wolves are abroad. 2. when workmen are weary. In both resp. tis thus with us this day in England, lord, prevent our Feares & take not away the light from us. Apr. II. I heard a Serm. at Shockl[ELc\i]. Heh. 12. 4 striving against. Sin. a X"""' life is a life of difficulty, wee have hard work PHILIP HENRY, 47. to doe, many mighty enemyes to encounter with, sin especially, y° more a sin is twisted with o' nature, calling^ — &c. — the more we are to strive w"' it, bee. y° more likely 'tis to doe us mischeif. lord, save mee from my Iniquity. Apr.. 14. From Zech. 7. 13. they would not heare. An Hypo- crite may goe very far tow. Grace in underst. & affection, only ■f work stickes at his will, lord, I will, doe thou conquer my unwillingnesse ! Apr. 15. Wrexham. From Gal. 3. 10. Cursed is every one — I clearly saw by what was said from this Text, that I am in my selfe a poor lost undone creature, under many a Curse, lord Jesus I beleeve thou wert made a Curse for mee, help my unbeleef. who shall lay anything to my charge. From Matt. 25. 10. Dod. not a man shall goe to Heaven that is not ready for Heaven. 6 my Soule ! art thou ready for Heaven, what if X' should call this night, is my lamp burning, lord, fit mee for thy appearance, Heaven is ready for them that are ready for it. 21. I set forward from Emral towards Oxford with Mark Loyd. 24; Wee arriVd safe and well at Oxford, blessed bee the lord, many were the mercyes of this Journey ; 6 what want have I of a thankful! Heart. ' Apr. 26. Oxon. — From i Cor. 13. 11. Doct. the state of beleevers in this life is a State of Childhood. & children must bee Humble, 6 that I had an Humble Heart, there's a kind of base, creeping, crouching carriage that's far from true Humility. I am much afraid lest I bee deceiv'd. From Jam. 5. 13. Doct. Singing of Psalmes a Gospel-Duty. I am convinct of it, lord, forgive my past neglect, coldnes, slightnes, deadnesse. I purpose through grace to be more frequent and serious in that performance than ever, both alone & with others. Amen, lord, so be it. Sweet Jesus, undertake for mee. At S' Maryes. From i Pet. i. 8. Doct. Joy unspeakable &> full of Glory is the Fruit 6^ effect of an active faith in Jesus X'. Many that feare God are oftentimes naturally timorous, & that much interrupts their Joy ; The way to keep up Joy is to keep up Faith, also Gosp. Obedience. John 15. 9. 10. 11. Sin will 48 PHILIP HENRY. eat out Joy — ^lord, let mee have the Joy of thy salvation & establish mee with thy free spirit. From Gal. i. 15. when it pleased God. i. Dod. There is a season for conversion. We cannot know it before, wee may know it after. There's our time and God's time, Our time wee may outslip, God's time wee cannot. Psalm, no. 3. 2. Dod. the impulsive cause of Conversion is God's good pleasure. John i. 13. many times when men have given us over. allu. Ps. 27. 10 ~ ! For ever blessed bee my good God, that hath beene pleased to reveal his Son in mee ! From 2Lech. 13. 7. No wonder if God turne his hand upon tJie little ones, when hee deales so severely with the Shepheard : a Sword, a Sword awakened, awakened to Smite, and all this by the lord of Hosts. If this bee done to the green Tree, 6 what shall bee done to such a dry Tree as I am. lord make mee patient under every turne of thy Hand. May. In this month I heard of Dr. Crook formerly Minister of Ammersam, neare london, who being in Ireland, was cal'd to preach there before y" lord Deputy, his Text, behold the day of y° lord Cometh as a Theif in the night; After sermon before Dinner hee dyed. 6 my Soule ! what Preparations art thou in for Dis- solution, what if my lord should come this night ? May 2']. Mr. Jenkins at Penley. From Math. 11. 6. Among many other occasions of Offence at J. X' which were spoken of this was one, from his followers, who for the most part are i. Silly. 2. poor. 3. young. 4. women. 5. wicked formerly. Among many other motives spoken of, not to bee oifended in X' this was one, hee is not offended in us, our poverty, beggaiy, filthinesse, blood, notwithst. these hee loved us. lord, let mee never live to bee an occas. of Offence. May 3. at Corpus X'K From i John 3. 8. ~. jDoct. Tis the mayne end of the manifestation of the Son of God to destroy the workes of the Devil. Great encouragem' to mee, 6 my soule, bestir mys. more vigorously y°" ever in my conflicts with Corruption, the lord Jesus is on my side. I know hee hath already unty'd the. knot betw. my sin and the Curse, and I beleeve and hope in due time hee will untye the knot betw. my sin & my nature, in tlie use of meanes. Amen ! so bee it, lord. PHILIP HENRY. 49 From Rom. 1. 16. Doct. There is a power in the Gosp. to save men, w" God concurs w'" it. it convinces, searches, quickens, humbles, comforts, restraynes, renewes. lord, let it doe all this work in my soule, and in the soules of those I preach to. 'From John 15.4. Tis the great concernem' of the lords people to abide in J. X' to draw strength and virtue from him in every duty, in every condition, hee hath enough for all, and hee hath it purposely to communicate. When wee have done anything in his Strength wee must bee carefuU hee may have the glory, lord, thats the desire of my soule, not unto mee, not unto mee, but to thy name give the praise ! May i,. 2X Brainford. From /2 make onset upon the close of the cathedral, and was taking view of the place from a window opposite, when he was shot in the eye by a chance musket-ball — "a certain man drew a bow at a venture " and hit this Ahab — and he fell dead without speaking a word. Thus on St. Chad's Day, before the cathedral of St. Chad, which he hoped soon to destroy, fell this notorious enemy t». cathedrals. PHILIP HENRY. lO/ in Wilts were suddenly smitten by -f just hand of God, one of them dy'd repenting. Another, one Moulins y* said, To morrow when Ince goes I'le keep y° merryest day — broke his leg by a fall y' morning w""" gangren'd & of it within two or three dayes hee dyed. Capt. Benet another opposer of Mr. Ince assaulting Mr. Dimon a londoner upon y* Road was by him Kild, se defendendo. Mr. Ince said of him not long, before, that hee believed hee would not dye y° common death of other men. Ex libro dicto — ^Annus Mirabilis secundus. Jan. 2. Mrs. Welsh desir'd Prayer, that God would give her Wisedom & Patience in her present condition. The twelve great Companyes of london. MerCers. Grocers. Drapers. Fish-mongers. Goldsmiths, skinners. Taylors. Haberdashers. Salters. Iron mongers. Vintners. Cloth- workers. Non Argus, largus, non Magdalena Methusal. Non Habacuc, lazarus, Caseus iste bonus. The follovsring letters, etc., belong to Dr. Davies Colley, of Newton, Chester, to whom my best thanks are due for permission to use them. June I, 1661. To Mr. Puleston. Sir, if it please you to accept of the motion, I am willing and doe desire, before the Differences betw. us grow greater, and the wound wider then yet it is, to referr it to two Indifferent uncon- cerned p'sons, who may compose and compromise it. Or else my self to give you the meeting when and where you shall appoint this next week : hoping it may yet prove no very difficult matter (if meanes bee used for it) to revive a right underst: between us, for truly. Sir, whatever you may think of mee, I know mys. to bee An unfayned well-wisher to your Person and Family, P. H. refer'd to Sir Thomas Hannier, and My father in law, Mr. Dan. Mathewes." I08 PHILIP HENRY. Mr. Ratcliffe, Recorder of Chester, to whom Mr. Henry had submitted his case, had advised him to com- mence an action against Mr. Puleston for the assertion of his rights, but the above letter was tendered instead as a peace-offering. It was agreed to refer it to the-two parties named, and the following memorandum, the joint compila- tion probably of Mr. Ratcliffe and his client, and in the latter's neat autograph, was to be the basis of settlement from Mr. Henry's point of view : — 1. I desire, the true end and Intent of the meeting may bee stated, and that S'' Thos: Hanmer may declare what power hee hath from Mr. Puleston to conclude and determine. 2. I Desire, before any Proposal be made concerning the Future, that wee may bee at a Poynt concerning the Arrears already Due. This to be insisted on. 3. For the Arrears, there is 100 li. due this Midsummer, which, — I. I desire may bee payd intire, the rather because Mr. Puleston had the whole Corn Tith the last year. 2. If it bee urg'd hee payd 20 //. to Dr. Bridgman (the Judge payd 20 li. p' ann. to Mr. Fogg, while ye 100 was p'd to mee), I answ'r hee might have chosen ; — however I shall yeeld to abate the Half thereof, nay the whole, if ye Half bee not accepted, so ye remaynder bee payd forthwith ; And lower then this I cannot yeild. 4. This being concluded, for time to come, I would first know what proposal they would make. If for mee to quitt the place, whatever the terms bee, I cannot, I dare not, assent. If to give up the Deed, I would know, upon what consideration, and what Mayntenance I shall have instead of it. Here press the Validity & Equity of the Deed ; my leaving the Colledge for it, &c. Pro- pose, what if Mr. Puleston, paying this Hundred pounds, enjoy the Corn-Tith, as formerly, the Reversion should bee secur'd to the Church when the Annuity expires. Going over the ground again, he sends the following instructions to his representative : — I. I can prove the payni't of 20 li. p' ann' for two yeares to Mr. PHILIP HENRY. IO9 Fogg ; as Parson of Bangor, after this hundred pound p' Ann' was confer'd on mee ; which evidences it to be the Judges Intent that I should suffer no prejudice therein by any claim that way. 2. For the future, I would propose, if Mr. P. pleases, — i. That the House & Corn Tithes in reversion, w'n my Annuity determines, accor[ding] to ye Judges intention & Deed . . . fact bee settled on the Church. 2. That Mr. P. may in the mean time enjoy them. 3. That Dr. B. may have ye profit of ye small Tithes. 4. That the hundred pounds p' Ann' may bee payd to mee. 3. Let the Arbitrators pitch vpon any other more equal way, I shall submit to it ; provided it bee not in any case to the giving , up of my Deed, whatever abatem't I make, nor to my voluntary removal, neither of w'ch dare I in conscience yeeld to especially not the latter. 4. Let it bee considered, what I have been inform'd by learned Council, though I were removed, yet the Annuity remaynes payable to mee, whilst I continue unpreferred otherwise. 5. There is further this to be consider'd, that I left my Prsefermt. in Oxon, at ye Judges desire, whose letter I have to shew, to accept of this ; & also, w'n I was put to my choyce by ye Coll[ege], I acqu[ainted] Mr. P. with it, who said, 'stay & w't my Father hath Done, I will make good to the uttermost,' without w'ch promise from him, I think I had not stay'd. 6. Dav: Phil: hath often said, so his Master were eas'd in the Hundred pound, hee did not care though I stayd in the Place. Endorsed on back " Treaty with Mr. P," The document is written on the torn fly-leaf of a letter, which is inscribed with the following address, apparently in the hand of his once brother-parson and neighbour, Mr. Robert Fogg, of Bangor : — ffor his much Esteemed and Reverend good friend Mr. Henry, minister Of Worthenbury, present these. no PHILIP HENRY. The arbitration moved on but slowly, there being little hope from the first of any agreement ; and no wonder, for of the "two Indifferent unconcerned p'sons" who had it in hand, one was the young parson's father-in-law, and the other a sworn friend of Dr. Bridgman and Mr. Puleston, so there was little ground in common between them. The next paper in the series is a set of " Reasons," arranged by Mr. Henry in three columns side by side, under the following heads : — 1. Why I should not yeeld to a composition with Mr. P. 2. Why I should. 3. Why Mr. P. should yeeld to a Composition with mee. These points are very fairly put and reasoned out by the poor parson. There follows a letter, which has not been printed before, addressed, as it would seem, to one of the arbitrators : — Sir, I have considered, the proposal which you were pleas'd to make of endeavouring a Composition for mee with Mr. Puleston by meanes of a Friend of your's, who hath Interest in him ; and doe thankfully acknowledge your very great respect and favour towards [me therein]. The Condition on which you have to effect this is it seemes, no other, than a full and absolute r[esigna]tion of my whole claym and Title both in the Annuity and House also, which if valuable Consideration may bee had for it, I am willing to yeeld to ; and the loss shall be accounted valuable to purchase Peace and his Favo'r ! 'Twas a year and half, within few weekes, that I Officiated, since the last Payment, and for what is future, I shall refer my self to you and your Friend, only desiring, you would but suppose the Case to be your own. For Arguments, I conceive, whilst I have so much Probability of Recovering, 'twill be ap- parently found to bee for Mr. Puleston's Advantage to lighten his estate from the Burthen of such a charge, beside the incident charges of law ; to which I might adde also some kind of obliga- tion that lyes upon him in poynt of Honor, considering the relation PHILIP HENR Y. Ill wherein I stood to him, and that I left my Place at the University upon the Grant of this from his Father: On each of these, Sir, as Occasion is given, I presume your own or your Freind's Prudence may enlarge ; and whatever the success bee, you will acquire the Blessing of a Peace endeavourer, if not a Peace-maker, and withal oblige Your Kinsman and Servant. Worthenb; Jan. 15, 1661, Philip Henry. May 7, 1661. To Dr. Brid[gman]. Sir, At my return from you upon Friday, I found a not- so-soon-expected addition to my family, a son which God hath given mee, which hath occasion'd my hindrance at present in making a Formal Draught of our Agreement as I intended, Never- thelesse for substance, this is it I have yeilded to, and this, God willing, I shall perform ; whereas 100"^ annu™ is conferred on mee by Judge Puleston in consideration of my Preaching at Worthenb: and whereas it is by your favour and Permission that at present I enjoy the liberty of Preaching there, for which liberty given mee you suffer detriment at present in the Tithes & Profits of the Place, I doe hereby promise to allow you, whilst you continue to mee that liberty and whilst you continue to suffer that detriment, the summ of thirty pounds ^ annu" out of the hundred aforesayd, in those proportions as I receive it, which allowance is to com- mence at Midsummer last, you bearing with mee in regard I am to enter suit for it, a proportionable part of the costs & charges incident for the Recovery of it. This I think. Sir, is the whole of what is contayned in the Paper which you drew, and I hope will bee sufficient at least till your return, to satisfy you, if it bee not, I shall be ready to adde what more you shall require to the same intent, for I assure you. Sir, though some have told mee I needed not to doe this being secur'd of my Annuity, though you should remove mee, yet I freely yeeld to it as in equity to you by way of recompence for your losses, so also hoping it may bee a motive for my continuance here, at least in y' second place, for you have told mee you have a higher end in granting, as I also have in desiring it. 1 1 2 PHILIP HENR Y. D" Br. draught of the case. John Puleston of Emerall Esq' about January in the year 1658 signed and sealed a lease and release of all the Tythes both of Come and hay together with an house and Croft thereunto- belonging built by him on purpose for the Minister of Worthen- burye to live in. Mr. John Holyman being then his Clarke drew it and sales it was sealed and left in the Judge's Chamber, and was delivered to Mr. Holyman in the name of the rest of the feoffees, who left it in the said Judge's Chamber amongst the rest of the writeings in a box. It was drawne for the substance of it according to a former ffeoffm' made by the said Judge the yeere before unto the same ffeoffees, viz. John Broughton of Broughton Esq', Thomas Puleston and Edward Puleston sonns of the said Judge, Roger Puleston of Worthenburye, Edward Phillips of Mullsford, and John Holyman,. gent', w""" ffeoffment was by the said Judge Puleston sealed and delivered unto Mr. Roger Puleston, and John Holyman in the name of the rest of th' aforenamed ffeoffees, and was by him comitted to the custody of Phillip Henry minister there, to w* the said Phillip Henry was witnes amongst others, viz. Mr. Roche an Irishman now living at Congleton then the said Judges physitian, D' of physick, and Rob' Berley, serv' to the said Judge, w^ re- mained with the said Phillip Henry, 5 months, viz. from July to Januarie 1658, when the said Judge desiring to confirme it to the Church more strongly call'd for it again, and seal'd the said lease and release that the house whereof Mr. Phillip Henry had before a lease for 60 yeares, if hee so long continue minister of Worthen- burie or did not accept of better p'ferment, might bee the better secur'd to the said Church of Worthenburye for ever, for the Tythes were sufficientHe before secur'd by the said feoffm' though Mr. Ratcliffe the Recorder of Chester having a sight of the Copie of the feoffm' tould Mr. Henry his opinion of it being insufficient as to the house because of the lease in being, it was also insufficient as to the Tythes, ffor that in Law, where two things are conveyed whereof the Conveyor had no power to convey the one, hee invalidated the other if putt into the same deed. John Puleston of Emerall Esq' made a nuncupative will in PHILIP HENRY. II3 w* hee gave 250'" to finish the Vicars House in Worthenburye, and to build out-houses for the same. The Judge dictated the will himselfe, and Mr. Holyman the witnes and the unadvantaged executor wrote it verbatim as hee dictated — This will compared with a lease of the said House to Mr. Philip Henry for 60 years if hee so long continued minister of Worthenburye and not accepted of better preferment, dated and sealed the March before, will evidence that it was the Parsonage of Worthenberye. Yet this House, w* the moneyes intended by Justice Puleston for the Church doth his Son Roger intend to alienate from so pious a use, and to give it to a pot companion, for whom hee saith hee hath land enough, but wants a convenient house for him to bee neare him. Quere, Whether my best course will not bee to make Mr. Roger Puleston to bring in y° lease and release, w* tis more then probable hee has by him, for p'sently after his ffather's decease hee bragged (as Mr. Rob'° Bukley of Worthenburye Serv'° to Mr. Lloyd of Halton, and sometyme bailiffe to the Judge affirmeth) that hee would not for 2 or 300"", but hee had found certain writings, w""" were then comonlie beleived to bee these of the Lease and Release. And in order thereunto Whether it will not bee convenient to send out processe for Mr. Holyman and Mr. Phillips to prove the nuncupative Will. The above document, written in a legal hand, seemed to be founded upon notes supplied by Philip Henry, who writes as follows : — Sir, I have followed your instructions in writing the letter and inclosing this with it, entreating you to make use of them as you shall see cause. I have mentioned no particular summe but surely. Sir, in the whole, lesse then 200"" can hardly be judged a valuable consideration and my Father and Freinds are of the same mind, if both Deeds bee included. And if you find that more may bee had upon Bond within reasonable time then in present pay- ment (as tis probable there may) I shall bee willing to accept of I 114 PHILIP HENR Y. Bond — I would desire also, it may bee brought to as speedy an Issue as may bee, because the Assize drawes on, and twill bee shortly time to prepare for it, if an end may not bee had otherwise, so craving your pardon for my boldness, I rest. Your servant, P. H. Notes 1. that the said R. P. about that time was heard to say&c. &c. 2. that David Phillips, servant to him the said R. P. told one speaking of ye writings' that hee hoped his master would bee so vnse as never to let them see the light again or to that purpose implying as much as if hee knew of his once having the possession ofy™ To prove that it was the intention of the said J. P. in building the said house to bestow it on -f" church for y' use aforesaid, these following Argum*" may bee worthy consideration. 1. That he caus'd the people of y° said place to help him with the carriage of Materials thither, viz. much of y* Brick, Timber, Slates, having declar'd to several of them, that he built it for their minister. 2. that he took to hims. the Cote aforesaid cald the Priests Chamber, and made a lease of it to A. D. for her life, shee paying to him 5" in y" nature of a . . . which hee would not have done but that hee intended this other of his own building in lieu of that for the use of the Min'. 3. That hee actually settled it by Feoffm' aforesaid which had been good if livery & seisin had been executed — the reason it was not was, bee. being sick hee hop'd every day to mend & to goe abroad, and do it hims. but hee never went abroad after. 4. . . . 5. That hee the said John Puleston did write a letter bearing date Nov. 22. 1658. to the Trustees for Uniting and dividing of Parishes, wherein is this passage — I have also built a fayr brick house with necessary Outhouses for y° use of y° Min' which I have likewise granted to the same Feoffees — a copy of which letter is yet producible if there bee occasion. Mem. The reason why the sealing of the lease & release as to -f circumstances of it is so hard to bee made out, is bee. of the rage PHILIP HENR y. 115 of the said Ro. P. threatning to kill any that should offer to speak a word to his Father about it, as also that he would not suffer those to come near him that hee thought likely to promote or further it Persons to bee sworn & examin'd concern, the said writings S" Tho. Hanmer John Holliman Roger Puleston Esq' Roger Puleston John Royden Robert Byckley Edward Philips Katharin Paynter Mr. J. F. Beaver, of Beaumaris, has kindly supplied the following extracts from the diary for 1662. The diary itself seems to be lost, for Mr. Jos. Morris, of Shrewsbury, in a letter of February 13, 1857, to Mr. Beever, says, "I am told that my copy of Mr. Philip Henry's diary for 1662 is unique. Sir John Bickerton Williams had not met with one of that year when he published his work, and he never could find one except mine, which I put into his hands a few years ago." Whether Philip Henry continued his diary this year as usual, or whether the anxieties and troubles which he underwent caused him to neglect it, we cannot say, but it is certainly unfortunate that his records of this year, above all others, should be so meagre. 1662. Jan. 2. My Father sent for me to go to Uncle Edwards of Eyton upon overtures of composition with Mr. Puleston. I took time to consider. 17. 18. I received letters from London of the recovery of Sister Sarah which I have often prayed for, & the Lord hath heard prayers. I will love the Lord because he hath heard the voice of my supplication. Fed. 19. I saw my Father at Bronington & heard of his intentions for London on Friday next, but he himself said nothing to mee of it, nor I to him. I acquainted my dearest with it, whereupon the next day she went to take her leave of him. 1 1 6 J>ffILIP HENR V. March i. Sometime in the night before this day Aunt Adams- departed in a good old age. Shee was not well the day before, but hath several times in appearance been far worse. The first that died in this house. The Lord might have begun at the other end of us & smitten us with a sore breach. 4. Aunt Adams was buried according to her desire in her will, at Malpas. Mr. Bridge preach't — twas the first buryal of which I was supervisor, and I was forc't in some things to submit to custom, tho' against my own inclination. Concerning dole I gave groats apiece to about 20. poor of this parish, and at Malpas gave 20s. to poor there at pence apiece & yet they were not satisfied : many from neighb. parishes went away from the house clamouring w"" I was troubled at. I desired Mr. Bridge shee might be buried before the sermon, but it was not granted. After sermon I was one (with my Uncles) that brought her round to the grave, which it may be did not become me. At Worthen''' in the morning I rather permitted than desired the ringing of the bells, but after a peal or two they were forbidden to proceed by Mr. Hilton, upon what account I know not, Mr. P. came to Malpas & animadverted upon those that accompanyed us thither, as if the same that were my friends could not be his. Let the righteous Lord judge righteous judgment. 6. I took an inventory of Aunt Adam's Goods at Worthenb. & more at Broad Oake. 11. Aunt Adam's goods were prized by John Hughs and Dan. Prichard, the whole whereof, with what ready money she left came to something like £,^0. There were two remarkable events of Providence concerning it. That, as I found afterwards John Howel's goods, her Father, were priz'd upon this very same day March 11, 1635. 2. That when I made my Aunt a new bond of a hundred pound, upon delivering tlie old to my Father this time twelve month, the day nominated in the bond for payment was Mar. i. this present year, & as it fell out upon tliat very day viz. March i, 1662, shee dyed, Lord my times are in Thy hand, & Thou ordereth them as seemeth good in Thine eyes. 12. Cousin Cay & Cousin John Hotchkiss came to see us and lodg'd here two nights. 24. I went with my dear Wife to Whixall to my Cosin : PHILIP HENR Y. 1 1 7 Erayn,* who lies in, having a son the heir of the family named William. We went & came in safety, blessed be God. 25. I rec"" Letters concerning the death of my dear Sister Dickins, who dyed on the is* day of this month. Lord come in her stead to her little ones, and fit us for our change that are left behind. April 2. I went with my dear wife to Whitch: where I visited D' Heylin now parson there, & took leave of him with Cosin Sarah Hotchkis going to London to live with her bro: Thomas — I wrote letters with her to all my sisters there. Lord send me good news from them & let their souls live in Thy light. Wee came home late but safe, blessed be God. II. I went with my dear wife to Cousin John Jennings whose ■dau'r Mary was lately put to bed of two dau'rs. 19. My Father returned from London — I went not to meet him, not because I am not willing to give him all due respect, but because he shows himself not willing to receive it from mee. 21. I went with my dear to Bronington, where wee saw my Father & had common respect & countenance from him & that was all, hee never so much as ask't how the child did, nor how it far'd with mee in my afFayres ; but my Father which is in Heaven careth for us. 23. We went to Cosin John Jennings to rejoice with him in his daughter Mary's mercy to whom the Lord hath given two children at a birth — Lord make them doubly thankful May 21. Saw Cosin Thomas Hotchkis, a Conformist upon •this principle — that whatever our magistrate t commands which the word doth not forbid tis our duty to obey ; which I confess is ■not clear to mee in the th. of God. . August 7. Wee went to Ash, our friends are very loving & respectful towards us, which in some measure countervayls the imkindness of hearer relations. Sept. 9. I went to Eyton, Mr. Wm. Edwards J dyed the night ' This was an ancient family in Whixall and in Myddle (Salop) that had taken the side of the Parliament. t This seems, to use Philip Henry's own expression, verbum super rotas in respect of recent differences (1881). X The Edwards (ap Edward) family, descended from Tudor Trevor, had >extensive estates at Chirk, St. Martin's, Dudleston, Eyton, and PlasflTron. 1 1 8 PHILIP HENR Y. before, leaving all his estate real & personal to a bastard except- ing some few Legacies. Ps. 49. 10. Mr. Lewis came thither at the same time on the same errand, but both too late. 16. I went, to Chester-; hir'd a coach for Sister Mary. 22. Sister Mary set forward from Worthenb. towards London not without much grief of friends at parting ; the little one more than ordinarily apprehensive. 23. She went from Whitch. in the coach — I accompany'd her to Sanford : the Lord be her good speed. October 2. We went to Whitch. on foot, saw our friends & returned refreshed S: in safety. Aunt Hotchkis recover'd as t'were from the grave — Lord unto Thee belong the issues from Death. 3. The child went to Whitch. & Ash where he was much desired & made off. The Lord make him His servant. 4. Sister Mary came safe to London ; blessed be God that hears prayers. 18. About three o'clock this morning my wife was delivered of her second son. He was born before the midwife came, but God was there. We have no reason to call him Benoni — I wish we had not to call him Ichabod. He hath all his parts & is a comely child for in Thy book all his members were written. Lord sanctify him from the womb, and let him be a Jedediah beloved of the Lord — Amen. 19. Mr. Holland preacht at the Chappel. He baptiz'd my son there & I named him Matthew — ^Wee had no God-father for what needed, but he signed him with the Cross, which I could not help, ipse viderit. Nov, 12. Mr. Sadler, Cosin Brayn, Mr. Luke Lloyd &:c. came to see us. 'tis a great mercy we have yet so much liberty, blessed bee God. 18. After long expectation I received a letter from Sister Mary & am glad to hear of the health of my Sisters, blessed bee God. I went to Bronington to see my Father who will not come hither to see us. The lands at Chirk passed by marriage to the Pulestons ; those in Dudleston, inchiding the old house of Kilhendre, to the Morralls. Sir John Edwaixls of Machynlleth, and Sir Herbert Edwardes, C.B., were of this house. PHILIP HENRY. II9 Dei" 2. About this time we heard of the death of my Cosin Joshua Lea, who dy'd in Yorkshire & I believe is at rest in the Lord. 3. I went to Ash where I was much made of, and retum'd the next day refresh'd, & found all well at home, blessed bee God. 17. I went with my dear to Whitchurch: saw Aunt Man- ning, sick, a right Dorcas, the lord spare her, and return'd in safety which was a great mercy considering the slipperiness of the wayes. 22. Cosin Talbot came to see mee. 26. I went to Chester by Malpas, having the company of Uncle Wittar & Cosin Talbot. The Acts of Uniformity are i Elizabeth, c. 2, and 14 Charles II. By the first, if any parson, vicar, or other minister that ought to use the Common Prayer, or to minister the Sacraments, shall refuse to do the same, or shall use any other form, or shall speak anything in dero- gation of the same book, he shall, for the first offence, forfeit to the queen one year's profits of all his spiritual promo- tions and be imprisoned for six months ; for the second offence, be deprived of all his spiritual promotions, and be imprisoned for one year ; and for the third offence be im- prisoned for life. By the same Act, if any person shall in plays, songs, or by other open words speak anything in derogation of the same book or anything therein contained, he shall for the first offence forfeit to the queen a hundred marks, etc., etc. All the Puritan objections to the Church as it existed before the wars remained in full force in 1662 : The Book of Common Prayer remained unchanged, except in a few trifling particulars, which made it in no way more accept- able to its critics ; the use of it was now imperative ; the exercise of free prayer in public assemblies was forbidden ; 120 PHILIP HENRY. no preaching of unordained persons was permitted, and no ordination held valid except by bishops. That they should dislike the liturgy of- the English Church only showed that they were not in their right places in holding various posts which they had seized upon in 1643, and held ever since to the exclusion of their rightful occupants. The indenture made March S, 1657, by,,which the judge assigned him the house at Worthenbury (of which the study still remains and is part of the present rectory), is inserted here, because on September 6th of this year Philip Henry was induced to give it up. It is impossible without emotion to peruse the original deed, endorsed on the back in the well-known hand. One seems brought face to face with the matter, after the interval of more than two centuries, in a very real manner. Puleston. This Indenture made the fift day of March in the yeare of our Lord one thousand six hundred fifty & seaven. Betweene John Puleston of Emerall in the county of Fflint — Sergeant at Lawe of the one part And Phillip Henry of Worthembury in the said County of Fflint Clerk of the other parte. Wittnesseth that the said John Puleston for divers good causes' and consideracons him heemnto moveinge Hath demised granted leased and to farms lett — And by these pr-sents doth demyfe grante, Lease and to farms lett unto the said Phillipp Henry All that his New built Brick house in Worthembury and the Croft whereon the Same now standeth with all, and singular th' appertimses to have & to hold the said house and croft with th' appertimses unto the said Phillip Henry from the makinge heerof for, and dureinge the full end and terme of threescore yeares from thence next ensueinge fully to bee com- pleate and ended (iff the said Phillipp Henry doe or shall soe longe continue minifter at Worthombury aforesaid, and not accept of better prferment) yeldinge and payeinge therefore yearely to the said John Puleston and his heires at the feast of St. Michaell th' archangell the Rent of six pence if it bee demanded In wittnes PHILIP HENRY. 121 whereof the parties above named have to these prsents inter- ■chaingably put their hands & seales the day and yeare first above written. John Puleston. [Outside.] Sealed & dehvered September 6th, 1662. in the p'sence of ifor diverfe good Consideracons mee Edmonde Lev/is 'hereunto moueing I doe surrender hi, & deliver upp thes p'fsent Lease & deuife Robert t Buckley to the use of Roger Pulefton of Emerall mke in the County of fflint Esq' his heires John Holliman & assignes Philip Henry. Witnesse hereof, John Roydon Jo' Carter Thomas Williams (Emral MS.) Articles of agreem' Indented concluded and made between D'' Henry Bridgman rector of Bangor Monach. in y° county of Flint of -f one pt v. Philip Henry of Worthenb. in y' same county ■clerk this 12* day of May a.d. 1662. on the other part. 1. That hee the said Philip Henry shall yeeld Possession to him the said D' Henry Bridgman of the new brick house in Worthenb. aforesayd, wherein hee the said Philip Henry doth at present dwell, & the croft whereon it stands. 2. Whereas an Action is commenc't against him the said Philip Henry concerning the said House and croft by Roger Puleston of Emral Esq° that hee the said D" Henry Bridgman shall save harmless him the said Philip Henry from all expences and charges whatsoever to -f same, or any other on the account ■of the said House and shall enter into sufficient bond so to doe. 3. Whereas, it is hop'd sufficient evidence may be produc'd ■of Y settlem* of -f said house and Croft for the churches use by John Puleston Esq" who built it, that hee, the said D' Henry Bridgman shall prosecute a suit to that purpose, and shall not 122 PHILIP HENRY. make any agreem' or composition about it with Roger Puleston aforesaid or any other person whatsoever, without the Concurrence and Consent of him, the said Philip Henry. 4. That hee the said D' Henry Bridgman shall make unto him the said Philip Henry a good and sufficient lease of the said house and croft under the rent of five shillings yearly for and during the full end and term of 3 yeares next ensuing the date hereof, and for as much longer time afterwards, as till the lawful incumbent of y° said Church of Worthenbury shall come himself in person to inhabit there. The house * of Broad Oak, wrhere Philip Henry and his wife went to live in September, 1662, was the ancient inheritance of the Howell family. It stood on rising ground above the road leading from Whitchurch to Bangor, from which the first range of the Welsh hills is clearly seen. Its situation was very favourable for the exercise of hospitality, to which its owner often refers, and in which he took great pleasure. At that time, as now, it was within the township of Iscoyd in English Maelor, and in the Cheshire parish of Malpas. In the reign of Edward II. it had been included in the parish of Whitchurch, Salop, and in A.D. 1078 it formed, in all probability, a part of the parish of Hanmer. On the north side of the township are names which show that there had been, many centuries before, some ecclesiastical settlement — a colony, no doubt, from Bangor Is-y-coed. The names are Maes y groes (" Field of the Cross ") and H6n grwys (" the Old Crosses "). Their situation above the Wich Valley and the river Elf would be owing to the population drawn together by the salt traffic. * To the west of Broad Oak are some scattered houses to which the name of " The Chequers " attaches. The origin of this may be that when Iscoed was part of the manor of Whitchurch and belonged to the De Warrenne family, some inn stood there, with their arms — the chequers — as its sign. Philip Henry may thus have become possessed of some seal of theirs, and used it commonly. The marriages of the Matthewes so far back as they are known (viz. the time of King Henry V.) were with Welsh ladies. PHILIP HENRY. 12$ Afterwards, when the H6n grwys came to an end, a chapel was built about a mile south, which was called from the salt spring the Wich well or Whitewell Chapel. The ample endowments of the place were lost for the most part in the time of Canute, and this will account for its being attached to three different parishes in succession. The picturesque old black-and-white building where Philip Henry and his wife used to attend was standing in 1830, and fell down when an attempt was made to enlarge it. The fortunes of the manor of Iscoed have been no less varied than its ecclesiastical arrangements. We are told in Welsh history that Maelor, the grandson of King Cunedda (whose date is generally given area 350, and who was the first to endow the Church in 'Wales), had Maeloron — that is, the two Maelors — for his inheritance. When the Saxon counties were fqrmed, English Maelor was divided unequally between Shropshire and Cheshire, and both belonged, at the time that Domesday Book was drawn up in 1078, to Earl Edwin. The Saxon rights were then transferred tcf the Norman Earl of Chester, and he again passed on all the manors in English Maelor which belonged to Cheshire to his natural son, Robert Fitzhugh, Baron of Malpas. Iscoyd-with-Ty- broughton, now a township of Hanmer, formed the manor of Burwardeston. In the unsettled reign of Stephen, Iscoyd was seized by the Warrenne family, and thereby attached to Whitchurch. Meanwhile the house of Powys, princes of the Welsh March, exercised their own hereditary rights, without let or hindrance, down to the year 1281, when, the two young princes being drowned by express order from Edward I., the lordship of Maelor Saesneg, with their other possessions, came into the hands of the king. After temporary grants to the Lestrange family it was finally bestowed upon them, 4 Edward III. From 124 .PHILIP HENRY. them it descended to the Stanleys, who sold the manor of Iscoed to the Breretons of Malpas, 41st Elizabeth, from whom it passed by marriage to Sir Richard Egerton of -Ridley, whose son sold it, with the ancient house of Wolvesacre in Iscoyd, to Bishop John Bridgeman in the year 1635. Besides these manorial rights which had come from the princes of Powys, there were those which belonged to the Norman lord of Malpas in 1087. The Maelor share of those which the Breretons had, by inheritance from the Egertons, passed in marriage to Holford of Holford, and was by Thomas Holford, soon after 1635, sold to Mr. John Adams, of London and Wem. He had married Eleanor Howell, of Broad Oak, great-aunt of Philip Henry's wife, who died at their house in Worthenbury, March i, 1,662. When her sons Walter and John died at Iscoyd Hall in 1670, these also passed into the possession of Sir Orlando Bridgeman, Bart, the son of the bishop. One moiety of the Malpas barony still remains to be noticed, being the inheritance of the Cholmondeleys by direct de- scent. These rights, as regarded lands in Iscoyd and the township of Willington in Hanmer, were exercised in the present century. I hope to enter more fully into these and other kindred subjects in writing, if I am enabled to do so, a history of Maelor Saesneg. That the old house of Broad Oak should be no longer standing is much to be regretted. It was pulled down about 1746, by an agent of Philip Henry Warburton, and the timber in it was sufficient to supply the requirements of four houses now standing, viz. the present farmhouse at Broad Oak, the Maes-llwn house in Bronington — the ancient property of the Matthewes — the Iscoyd Green Farm, called " Eastwick's Tenement," which was bought by Philip Henry from Mr. Lloyd, of the Biyn, and a PHILIP HENRY. 12$ house in the outskirts of Whitechurch, called "The Mount." Only one old oak remains near the place — the prevailing tree being the sycamore — and that one overhangs the lane leading from Whitewell to Whitchurch. It is quite hollow, and has one bough of a different shade of green to the rest. The following report of the Commissioners gives us the state of ecclesiastical affairs in Iscoyd up to the Restora- tion : — ISCOYDE. And the saide Jurors upon their Oaths doe finde that 1. the chappel of Whitewell in the Township of Iscoide is in y' County of fflint, and that y° tithes of y° Township of Iscoide are annexed and belonging to -f pish church of Malpas wh. is in y° County of Chester. 2. And that Mr. Holland and Mr. Manwaring are Jointe or fellow Incumbents of y° s? pish church of malpas. 3. And that y° Lord Breerton and others are patrons thereof 4. And that heretofore the cure of y" said Chappell of White- well was supplied by Curates apointed by y* Parsons of Malpas who had some small salaries for their paines. But that now the said Parsons of Malpas of late placed to bee curate there one Mr. Joseph Hanmer to whom they allow all the tithe corn and hey of y" said Township of Iscoide reserving to themselves y" rest of y° small tithes and a certaine rent of fforty shillings a yeare. 5. And the s" Jurors upon their Oaths doe further finde that y" s* pish of Malpas is a very great pish containing in it 22 town- ships over & besides y" s'' Township of Iscoide, & y° Townships of Bickerton & Broxton (wh. said two townships are lately severed from Malpas & anexed to Harthill). 6. And that the tithes of y° said Parish are worth neare 400" a yeare besides y° said Townships of Iscoied, Bickerton, & Broxton, and that there is at least 50" p. an (besides the Tithes) in Gleabe lands belonging thereunto, & two very faire Parsonages houses thereupon, all now enjoyed by y° s'^ Incumbents. 7. And that y" Tithes of y° s* Township of Iscoide are worth about 50" p. Ann., & y' y° Chappell of Whitewell is three miles or 126 PHILIP HENRY. thereabouts distant from y' said Parish Church of Malpas & that some part of y° said Township of Iscoid is about fower miles dis- tant from y° pish church of Malpas. 8. That there is noe church nor chappell neare whereto it may be anexed, but that therefore they think fitt and convenient that y° said chappell of Whitewell (in y° Township of Iscoide aforesaid in y° County of fflint) bee separated from y° Parish of y* Malpas, and that y° said Chappell of Iscoide be made a Parish Church. And that y° tithes of -f s* Township of Iscoide be anexed to y' s** Parish Church of Whitewell for y° maintenance of a preaching Minister there. g. And further wee find that there is a river called y" river of Elfe * w* another dangerous brooke w""" lieth betweene Iscoid & Malpas whereby -f passage (as it is dangerous) soe often hindreth the Inhabitants of Iscoide from goeing to Malpas to ptake of Ordinances in publique. Luke Lloyd. Owen Barton. Edward Phillips. Roger Puleston. Jo. Eddows. John Madocke. Thomas Price. Thomas Kinaston. D. Hollman. (Emral MS.) At the Restoration Mr. Joseph Hanmer seems to have conformed, and in 1667 obtained the benefice of Marchwiel, near Wrexham. At Malpas, the Presbyterian George Mainwaring rendered back the higher mediety to its former incumbent, Thomas Bridge. Mr. Holland continued at the lower rectory as before. 1663. January i. I heard a marriage sermon at Tilstock Mary Talbot to Richard Chamberlayn of Drayton. T. Eph. 5. 22. &c. Husbands ought to love their wives as Christ loves y° Church, and wives ought to be in subjection to their husbands as y" Church is in subjection to X'. 2. I went to Emeral where I received the remayning ^^50. & payd it to Mrs. Barbour, shee would take no Interest, though more * This name appears to have been derived from the root hal (whence haUn = salt), S^9, sal ; and to have given to Nantwich its Welsh name Najit yr Heledd Wen ( " the Stream of the White Salt-pit "). The epithet ' ' white " is noticeable from the neighbourhood of the Elfe to our White-well. — D. R. Thomas. PHILIP HENRY. 12/ then £^\o. was due but I gave her two Angels of Gold, one for each of her Children. 3. I went to Worthenb. to meet with D"' Br. but missed of him, the place is destitute at present. Jehova-ijreh. 4. Mr Bridg.* preacht at chapel.f T. Ps. 122. 3. not calculated for -f meridian of this Auditory. 5. I went this morning to Emeral, Mr. Roydon told mee, D"' Br. had submitted to Mr. Puleston. & hee must have y° keyes, I s* w' I thought fit in point of conscience & promis'd hee should have them. In y° afternoon I went to Cap' Heneage where was Mr. Talants Mr. laurence, Mr. parsons, Mr. Steel, wee discourst all night, especi. upon this Qu: whether our relation doe yet remayn to our people, in y" close wee were divided in our opinions about it. 6. I came home & went thence to Ash, drowsy & unfit but engag'd by promise. My company is not desireable bee: not profitable. 7. I heard of y° burning of Mr. Delawn's house near lothbury in london, in y° flames whereof perisht hims' wife children & servants to the number of 10. or 12. twas a brick house, the fire began in Y lowest roomes, twas on Dec. 25. at night 9. I read y° K. declaration of Dec. 26. wherein hee promises to mantayn y' Act of oblivion, to govern by law not by sword, to procure liberty from y" Pari, for tender Consciences, to take off sanguinary lawes agt. Papists — II. I went to Tilstock, Mr. Thomas preacht about living by Faith under Afflictions, I had fainted unless I had believed. * Thomas Bridge, incumbent of the higher rectory of Malpas during the troubles of the great rebelUon, was ejected from his living, but restored in 1660. He was also Vicar of St. John's Chester, " rebuilt the parsonage, and gave ;^5o towards erecting the grammar school, and ^50 to the poor." t Philip Henry attended the services at Whitwell Chapel for nearly thirty years after going to live at Broad Oak. His son tells us that he used to stand during the whole service, even while the chapters were read. To this the Rev. W. Turner adds that "he stood up commonly during the prayers." In his family he always prayed kneeling. Cf. Bingham's "Antiquities of the Christian Church," vol. iv. book xiii. chap. viii. sect. iii. : " Standing (in prayer) was the general observation of the whole Church on the Lord's day and the fifty days between Easter and Pentecost, in memory of our Lord's resurrection. This custom may be traced as high as Irenasus, who derives it from apostolical authority." "There was an exception to this rule in the case of penitents" (Bingham, vol. vi. book xviii. chap, ii. 9). 128 PHILIP HENRY. 1 8. Mr. Bridge preacht at chapel. Cant. 5. 8. two sermons- which cost him little, lord if thou hast Interest in him, revive it ; hee hath gifts but if repentance on his part & Mercy on God's, part prevent aiot, they will quickly wither & come to nothing. 19. I went to Worthenb. & deliver'd -f Possession of y' House to Mr. Roydon for Mr. Puleston use, for I could not doe otherwise. .Mrs. Puleston was there & agreed to give me 30' for y* Parler Table. &c. w""" I left there. Tis clear y' settlem' w"" y' Judge made is voyd in law by f statute of mortmain, & besides -f Original Deed is not to bee had. 20. I fell two Ashes & an Oak for implem'' for Husban- dry, in falling one of y° Ashes, it pleased God wonderfully to preserve Daniel Powel y° Son of Marg' Powel, aged 8. years, the Tree fell upon him but hee scapt the body & fell under -f outmost boughs, so that hee received no harm, blessed be y" name of 'f lord. 22. Payd Randall Tanna 6^ 6* being my Fathers share & mine towards y° Muster of one Horse y° last year. 23. My heart condemnes mee that I doe no more for God in y'* place & state of life into w""" I am cast, lord open to mee an effectual door, for there are many adversaryes, within, without 24. Ann Hale deprehended in two or three thefts, a cup, a dish, scollop-work, all trifling matters, yet see y' powere of temptation. 25. Mr. Adams preacht at Whitwel-Chapel in the morning, T. John I. 12. Fatherly correction is a branch of our Priveledge as sons, in the Afternoon wee went farther, to Whitchurch, but far'd worse, only by -f -^scy I had opportunity to instruct & exhort y°' that were in company with us, blessed bee God. 26. Robert Wyn ill, say w' I would I could not fasten on him, lord grant hee may mend y' hee may mend. 27. About this time a great appearance of fire was seen in this neighbourhood & elsewhere,, what it portends God knowes. 28. one about Shrewsb. (they say) foretells three battles this year, one whereof upon Frees heath and I am asked, what I think of it, I answ' I cannot, let the event speak. 29. my Father being again askt to give Acquittance of y° ;^ioo. receiv'd or to endorse y° Bond refus'd. 30. I went to Tilst. to y° humiliation, where I saw & mett with God, blessed be PHILIP HENRY. 1 29 Hs name. 31. an exceeding bitter cold season, the Frost con- tinuing with small intermissions these many weekes. 23. I sent my watch to london by Raph Mansel to change for a clock. February i. no preaching at the chapel, I went to Tilstock. where Mr. Thomas is still preserved in his liberty blessed bee God and the place is a little Sanctuary to us ; the lord continue it soe. 2. I sent 10° to Mr. Taylor of Wem by Thomas Moor, being y° remaynder of what was in my hands of y" money given by • Gen' Venables & Mr. Golborn of Chester — to Mr. Heeling zo" to Mr. laurence. 20'. This day the second year of Tho: Hales' bargain in Br. Oke expiring at his desire to be releas'd it returns into my own hand, the lord bless mee with it & bless it to mee. 4. Mr. Steel Mr. Thomas and Cosin Talbot met & din'd at my house wee had opportunity of talking but not of praying together as I could have wished bee: of Inmates. A motion made by Mr. Hilton concer: Deberah Eddow to her Mother, shee came to advise, but for my p' I could give her no encouragemen' nor did I discourage her but spake the Truth. 6. 7. an extraordinary cold season, sowing & other country work are much put back, yet tending to Fruitfulnes in summer. 8. Mr Adams preacht in the morning at the Chapel, a good sermon ; in the aftern: wee went to Whitch: where preacht Mr. Cole. T. I John. 2. 20. 10. uncle Burroughs son Charles about year & quarter old dyed, long sick — ^hard matter to submit, twas their only child, lord sanctify — 1 1. great talk about the intended Dispute in Parliam* concerning Toleration for Papists by taking off sanguinary lawes, lord over-rule their Counsells. 13. At the request of Lydia Jenkins I went to Shotwick with Cosin W Benet. to move her Brother to doe someth. for her tow. her marriage with Arthur Hincks, but though I believe hee could not, yet hee said hee would not & with that answer wee parted- — 14. At Chester I heard of y° Imprisonm' of Mr. Yates Min"' of Harrington, upon the malicious information of a person of small credit, who swore, hee mov'd him to take up Arms agt. y° King for y' Presbyterians & promis'd him 40^ p. week pay. 14 (cont*") Tis only from Gods Providence holding y° Chayn* that tis not every ones case y' * How very true is this, and how little remembered by Christians ! K I30 PHILIP HENRY. feares God, considering our own impotency to gainsay & the enemyes malice to accuse. Wee came home well & found our familyes well, blessed bee the name of y" lord. 15. I went to Tilstock * where Mr. Thomas preacht in y" morning & in )'' afternoon at Whitch. blessed bee God for y"* libertyes. 16. went to see Mr. Adams of Iscoyd Hall, whose House had been rob'd y" last week. Bacon and Beef taken away. 1 7. morn- ing-prayer with my wife omitted for some weekes, this day reviv'd — lord never let mee alone in sin. I met Mr. Steel at W"" Benets where hee repeated sermons & pray'd, blessed bee God. 18. This day twelve month was y' great wind ; f This day the Parliam' mett again, lord, rule in y° midst of them. ig. I went to Ash,:J: intending to goe further to Stych % to meet Mr. Porter but uncle Benyon's occasions would not permit him to goe with mee, so I returned home y° same night. 20. John Beard of Whitch. bury'd two children of y° small Pox in y° compasse of one week, lord, what mercy is it mine are spar'd. 21. Hathorn-sets planted to hedge in y' Ortyard, lord bee thou a wall of fire round about thy Church, & let not y° wild boar out of y° Forrest devour thy tender plants. Fodder scarce & dear, wee did ill not to provide in Summer for Winter. 22. no preaching at Chapel, the weather wett, in y" morning I exercis'd at home, I hope to edification, in y" afternoon wee went to Whitch: for still 'f gates of Sion are better then all y" dwellings of Jacob. 24. being holy-day,§ hee & others [? not] at work, for mee fear'd being presented. 26. Mr. Hanmer's son Thomas came first to Fenns, I saw him, they say hopeful, hee went this day towards london, having the Kings evil upon his Thigh. I mett Mr. Hilton 1| at my Fathers : * Tilstock and Ash Magna have now churches and districts of their own ; formerly parts of Whitchurch parish. t Evelyn writes, March 24, 1662, " Return'd home to repairc my house, miserably shatter'd by the Tate tempest." X Ash Hall was the seat of the ancient family of Benyon (ap Enyon) ; Styche (which Richard Gough would spell Stits or Stich), of the Clives. § The Saturday half-holiday, the Bank holidays, and the early closing move- ment ought to be so many.proofs to us that our ancestors were wiser than wo in making the various saints' days times of enjoyment and rest from work. II Mr. Richard Hilton, of Christ Church, Oxford, had succeeded Philip Henry at Worthenbury in 1661, and Mr. R. Steel at Hanmer in 1662. The "motion about Cosin Deborah Eddow " seems to have been dropped, for he afterwards married ^frs. Anne Whitehall, of Hanmer ; but his daughter Anne PHILIP HENRY. 131 hee communicated to mee his motion about Cosin Deborah Eddow & askt irty opinion of her, I could say noth: concern: her, yet know not what to think of the thing, hee hath someth. in him y*^ will not let him doe so bad as others. 27. Mr. HoUiman returnd, friends at lond. well, blessed bee God. 28. day of humiliation & pray"' at Tho. Talb. lord hear & have mercy. Talk of a bill for -f Sabb. & agt pluralityes, God grant they may bee to purpose. Feb. 17. At Elsmer. 3. measures of Rye. ii*. 9. A bushel of Oats borrow'd of Ann Mathewes to bee payd in Kind or money when shee calls for it. the price of Oats is now. 7". 21. Three measures of wheat borrowd of Ann Mathewes the market price 4^ 4''. 25. John Cliff 7. dayes work 7. groats.* March i. I went to Tilstock where Mr. Thomas is yet con- tinued ; hee taught of living by Faith, and exhorted to try our Faith, if it bee such as wee may bee like to live by. 2. Trees receiv'd from Mr. Hammond. 6. Apples. 6. Gorans. •6. Goosberryes. 8. Roses, two vines. This day Mrs. Jane Done ■dy'd of Torperly, aged 63. a great support to Gods poor people in y° neighbourhood. 6. Day of Prayer at Mr. Thomas, with many meltings & much Enlargm', lord hear us for thy poor Church wch lyes wast. At my going forth in y" morning my wife spake a seeming hasty "word, wch. y° Devil made use of to distract mee several times y' ■day. Shee went to Whitch. payd scores at Uncle Hotchk. bought malt, Pease. &c. ■ & my heart safely trusteth in her, blessed bee God. 7. William making y= Garden, I spent more time with Jliim then needed, & which might have been better spent, and at night I smarted for it in payn in my Teeth, & the lord is ■married Robert Eddow, by -whom the Gredington estate came with Jane Eddow to Mr. Lloyd Kenyon, father of the Chief Justice. Mr. Hilton built the porch to Hanmer Church, with the chamber over it. * The price of corn and the rate of wage are about half what Macaulay ■mentions in chapter iii. of his " History," as prevailing between the Restoration :and the Revolution. Philip Henry may have given John Cliff his food as well as the seven groats. The wages in Wales may have been lower than in lEngland. 132 PHILIP HENRY. righteous. 8. The Morning at Whitw. chap. John. i. 13. All adopted are also regenerated. The Aftern. at Whitch. where preached Mr. Bowers a Printed sermon of Mr. loves verbatim. I K. 14. 13, 10. I went to Joseph Ridgwayes house at Shock!, where mett mee Mr. Roberts & John Farrar, wee spent 3. or 4. howres in discourse & prayer & that night I slept at Mr. Roberts. II. I went to Wrexham with intentions to sell my mare at the fayr, but could not. It grieves mee very much to see how the Presbyterian Interest there, which I judge the middle between two extreames,* is of late ecclipst & clouded, the cause I judge to bee want of communion amongst them, & y" cause of that, want of a Faithful Min' thereabouts to goe before them ; my spirit was much sadned at y" consideration of it, help lord. 12. Mr. Steel baptiz'd a child of his hims' named Salomon, notwithst. the Inter- dict ; it was more than I durst venture to doe, when Mathew was born, but the truth is, I was surpris'd, & if it were to doe again, I think I should venture far, rather then suffer the <;ross,t though I then judg'd, twas no sin of mine, I being Passive in it, & besides- I was loth to have it done in private y™ if I could have had it done without y" Cross. 1 5. Wee expected Mr. Bridg at ChapeV but in the morning, hee sent word, hee could not come, hee had been sick all night, I heard hee had been drinking y° day before, lord save thy church out of such hands, y° morning wee spent at home, in y" Aftern, I went to Whitch. T. i Cor. 9. 24. so run yet ye may obtayn. 17. I went to see Marget Bedward J sick & tempted. I judge it a melancholy humor prevayling, which the devil workes upon to the disturbing of her peace, shee thought y' Devil pswaded her to give hers^ to him with all y'' heart in her heele, which troubled her worse then before ; I told her, the Devif * The extremes here inlended must be the Episcopalian and the Indepen- dent. The Calvinist would have little scruple in denying the possibility of salvation to a Romanist, nor would he condescend in any way to notice the Quakers — a sect that seemed specially designed to show him, as in a glass, the inconsistencies of his own system. t Because the Papist bowed down before a crucifi.K, the Presbyterian de- nounced the cross. It has taken two centuries to convince men that the cross is the "sign of the Son of man." In the beautiful cemeteries that are to be seen in Scotland, the broken column or broken bough, the jar to receive the ashes of those who have been burned, are common devices, while the embleni of our Chiistianity is most rare. X This name is the English form of ap Edward. PHILIP HENRY. 1 33 was a proud spirit & could not endure to bee so slighted, & it may- bee shea should hear less from him y°" formerly. I pray'd w* her — lord hear prayer. 19. I mett two or three Freinds at Cosin Benets to seek God in behalf of our poor tempted Friend, lord, command y° Messenger Satan to depart from her, & bring good out of it. 20. I first attempted to graft, & try'd two several wayes, accord: to Austins direction. 21. great Oak fallen by y* Turf-house, many yeares, tis likely, scores of yeares growing to that bigness, yet cutt down in a day, though not without much adoe. Ps. 76. 6. hee slips off y" spirit of Princes, as a man would slip off ii flower between his fingers with ease. 22. people mett at Chapel but no Min' my spirit was mov'd to preach, but I forbore — only after a Psalm sung, which Mr. Katheralthe Schoolm'read, 1 spake a few words standing in my seat, w""" it may bee I may hear of again, but chuse it, my heart is fixed, trusting in the lord. 25. I finisht y" reading of y" new Testament in secret, but for want of Meditation with it, it hath profited mee little. The lord pardon ! 28. I visited Marg' Bedward, someth. better, blessed bee God. 29. At Tilstock preacht Mr. Bowers y° same printed sermon of Mr. love's w""" hee preacht at Whitch. this day 3. weekes. April I. I went with my wife to see Mrs. Steel, returning as from the grave, few thought shee would have recovered, but the lord was merciful. 2. I went to Cosin lohn lenings, agreed w'" him for a Cow & Calf, which is to cost ^^3. 14. 8. 5. Mr. Holland preacht at Chapel two good sermons, in y° morning law. Gal. 3. 10. in the afternoon Gospel. John 3. 17. Hee gave notice of a Sacram' at Malpas, my soul thirsts for the Ordinance, but y° gesture & some other circumstances trouble mee, lord w' wilt thou have us to doe. 6. I mett some Freinds at Mr. Thomas, where wee pray'd together, but my heart was out of frame, lord, let not my sin hinder the success of that day, I see y° spirit blowes when & where it listeth. . my Father sent to us for y° remaining ;^ioo. lord thou hast befriended us in 6. & in 7. forsake us not now in this 8"' also. I saw a petition from y" Parliam' to y" K. to banish Popish Preists & Jestiites,* which * In, 1568, November 21, a person named Thomas Heth preached a sermon at the cathedral church of our Enghsh city of Rochester. _ After he had left the pulpit a letter addressed to him (as was afterwards discovered) 134 PHILIP HENRY. swarm amongst. Amen. Fiat. 7. I pay'd 5' for Chimneyes,* 4. of my own, one of Margt. Powels, the next I purpose shee shall pay hers' accord, to y' Act. 10. D' Mathew Fowler came to bee Preacher at Whitch: in the stead of D' Heylin, lik't better then he was if it hold. 13. I walkt to Mr. Steel's where was Cosin Rushworth ; its query'd what's best to doe about the approaching Easter Communion, for mys' I am not free to kneel, yet dare not condemn those that are. 14. hearing of ;^ioo. to bee had w"' W. B. I went to him & had promise of it, accounting it a mercy & that in return of prayers. 19. Wee went to Whitch. — it grieves mee to turn my back upon y" lord's supper. Mr. Steel & many more tendred thems' sitting at Hanmer & received. I borrowed ;^ioo of Will. Butler jun. & gave bond wherein Robt. Bickley is bound with mee to- repay it at Mich, next, I payed it to my Father Math, the last which I owe him, & took up y' bond, which was of 400"'' unindors'd though I had payd him loo"" at Mich, last which was not fayr ; The Lord convince him of all his hard dealing with under a false name, .and signed by Samuel Malt, a Spanish Jesuit, was fomid there by the sexton, in which it was stated that " certain persons familiar to Heth, viz. Hallingham, Coleman, and Benson, had set up a faction among the Gei-man heretics." These three persons are mentioned by Fuller (ix. 9) and Heylyn ("Hist, of Presbyter., "book vi.) as being accounted the chief leadere of the Puritans of the time. On searching Heth's lodgings there were found in his boots certain papers — one being a licence from the Fraternity of Jesuits ; another a bull of Pope Pius V. , authorizing him to preach any doctrine which the Jesuits might direct, for sowing divisions in England (Robert Ware's " Foxes and Firebrands," London, 1682, pp. 31-47). In 1646, above a hundred Romish priests were sent into England to play the part of Independents, Anabaptists, and Presbyterians to foment divisions^ etc. Many of these joined the Parliament's army, and corresponded with other Romanists who were in the king's (Archbishop Bramhall's Works, p. xcvii., ed. Oxford, 1842). Oliver Heywood mentions a case that came under his notice in 1672, where a man ordained by the Presbytery, without knowledge of his previous life, « as supposed from what followed to be a Jesuit (Hunter's " Life of Oliver Hey- wood," page 397, n.). * Pepys writes under date March 3, 1662 : " I am told that this day the Parliament hath voted 2s, per annum for every chimney in England, as a constant revenue for ever to the Crowne;" and on October 15, 1666, " This day . . . one moved that the Chimney money might be taken from the king, and an equal revenue of something else migjht be found for the king, and people be enjoyned to buy off this tax of Chimney money for ever at eight years' purchase, which will raise present money, as they think, 1,600,000, and tlie State be eased of an ill burthen.'' PHILIP HENRY. 1 35 US, and the lord help us out of that Debt into which his unjust exaction hath brought us and in y° mean time establish our hearts by believing, for unto thee 6. God I commit my way. 22. Tho. Halt & his family removed from us to Alghtree ; * I agreed with him &c. though upon hard termes ; better buy peace then want it ; t wee visited Eleanor Ratcliff & Cosin John Madocks sick ; lord spare. 23. Day of Prayer & Preaching at Mr. Adams of North-wood, where were present several of the Congregational way wholly unsatisfy'd about coming to hear y" service book or any that read it. 25. Heifer sent for from Ash, where shee hath been since Twelftide ; a very wett season after a very dry before ; yesterday came two Oxen of Cosin Ann Mathewes, which wee are to keep a while for their work. 26. This day wee have been marry'd three y. blessed bee God. Mr. Thomas threatned at Tilstock by D' Fowler, if hee should bee remov'd twill bee ill not with that place only but w* the neighbour- hood also ; theref spare lord. 27. Dwelling-house I & shore clay'd for John Green, cost. 4' besides windings & my servants work. Mr. Sadler came to see mee, exprest great fear of approaching trouble, the lord prevent if it bee his will. 29. I went to lappington, where I lay all night at Cosin . * This place, generally written "Althrey," is upon the Dee, and about a mile to the north of Bangor Monachorum. The word comes from allt = a steep place, and ikrej' = the town.. Its Latin equivalent is aUa ripa, which has often melted into hmiton, haulton, and haiighton. There is said to have been a giant called Althrey, whose grave is pointed out in the Castle Wood below Gwern- haeled. + As He who said, " Swear not at all," was yet not silent when the high- priest put Him upon oath (St. Matt. xxvi. 63, 64), so when He bids us ' ' not to resist evil," and to "turn the other cheek," He bids us check all personal feelings of hatred and revenge ; those who press the literal expressions ought also to cut off their right hand and right foot, and pluck out their right eye, when these hinder their salvation. A regard for public justice and the welfare of society and of the offender himself may render it necessary to restrain and punish crime — Genesis ix. 6, will always tell us how murderers are to be treated ; and the number of Christian soldiers in the Roman armies shows that the modern idea of " peace at any price " was unknown to them as part of their religion, though exceptional instances to the contrary may be brought forward. X Wattlesborough Castlt, Salop, is supposed to have got its name from this kind of building, which is found still at Penley Hall, in English Maelor, and elsewhere. 136 PHILIP HENRY. Chambers,* visited Mrs. Tristram a good woman long sick & weak. Saw Mr. laurence, who beares witness to the love S: care of our heavenly father providing for him in his present condition beyond expectation. 3. This day my son John is two years old, blessed bee God for the mercy of this day two year to mother & child & mee in them. Mr. Thomas took his farewel of Tilstock, great sadnes & many teares in y* Congreg. lord, let the spirit of life enter again into y" witnesses. I went thence to Ash, where I stayd all night, my Aunt very ill, in y° morning better, I pray'd again with her & parted. 4. Thomas Hale fetcht away more of his goods & brought part of his Rent behind, w* I refus'd, with more anger, I fear, y" needed, bee angry & sin not. his carriage is provoking but mine should bee patient. 5. At 10. a clock I was sent for to Ash, where I came at 11. and found my worthy dear Aunt alive & that was all, wee went to prayer & her life & prayer ended together. Shee was without comparison the best Friend I had in this country ; and tis no small loss to lose such a one ; lord make up y' loss to mee & all her relations, & humble us for sin that Kill-Friend. 6. Randle yongs wife bury'd at Hammer. 7. My dear Aunt Benyon was bury'd at Whitch. Mr. Thomas preacht T. i. Cor. 3. 22. lord take up the children and come in her stead to all her relations and to mee. Ameti. 8. I went to Worthenb. where I visited some of y" cheifest of my Friends, but am sensible of great want of skill to doe in occasional discourse. 10. At Whitch. where preacht Mr. Binny, y" leaves too big for y" fruit. T. Ps. 86. 1 1 : I heard of William Nixon, who yester- day attempted to cut his own throat from discontent at his wife, but escapt alive. I went to Mrs. Figes, where Friends met & pray'd, a sweet day it was, lord hear in heaven. Before wee parted her husband came unexpectedly. 13. A very wett season, wee are well neither full nor fasting. tis not many dayes since y" earth was parcht with drought, now * " The advowson of Myddle Church did formerly belong to the ancient and worthy family of the Chambres of Petton, many of which family are interred in the Chancel there." — R. Cough's " History of Myddle," p. 14. PHILIP HENRY. 1 37 drown'd with water. It is y° lord, let him doe with us as seemeth good in his eyes. 14. I went with Cosin. Nixon & Cosin Benet to see W" Nixon, & found him under terrors, but I fear, not kindly — Wee pray'd w"' him, hear lord — My wife went to Bronn. but my father's coun- tenance was less serene y" of late it hath been, whatever is y" matter, lord lift up the light of thy countenance upon us. 15. I wrote to Mr. Washborn of Orial to befriend Dan. Brown. 16. Day of prayer at John Butters of the wood-houses, m}- heart much out of frame, cumbred with many th. but blessed bee God, wee are under a Coven' of grace. 17. At Whitch. where preacht D'' Fowler concerning the nature & abuse of X""" liberty, Gal. 5. i.j,. asserting y° power of y*" magistrate about Indifferent th. which is p.tly to bee deny'd viz. in sacris. 18. My glass is running and my time hastning into Eternity, but I doe nothing, father glorify thys. by me. 21. I went to light-edge & saw Mrs. Hassal, a vertuous, good woman, to whom I was welcome, but it troubles mee, I do no more good where I goe. 22. I went with my wife to Malpas to the buryal of Richard Palyn, aged 103, as his relations say. Mr. Ralph Weldj cald on mee, I admonisht him to beware of being insnar'd by unprofitable company, lord sett it home for his good, I p.swaded him also to revive their ancient christian fellowship in Wrexham, decay'd. 23. I visited uncle Benyon, unresolved w' to doe, lord bee his comforter, lord bee his counseller, my advice was to contract, not to break up house — letters from london by Cosin John Hotck. sisters well, blessed bee God ; Sarah come from lady Buckhurst. 24. Mr. Adams preacht at chapel in y" morning, in y" aftern. wee went to Whitch. work out your own Salvation. 25. Day of prayer at Mrs. Figes, lord hear in heaven, near .Wrexham lately y°' were surprised, wee have hitherto escaped, Eben-ezer. 26. I went with my dear to Whicksoo to Mr. Sadlers, from thence to Mrs. Braynes, not well ; wee are under engagem*^ to that family, y"" eldest son General W"' Brayn left my wife 1 00'" which I had of her & my father Mathewes of mee. 138 PHILIP HENRY. 28. Great vanity & folly up & down the country at Proces- sions.* Mrs. Welsh came from Wrexham to see us. 29. Thanks-giving day for y° K. return, a mercy in its. for which the lord bee praysed, though I & many more suffer by it — Market kept at Whitch. after sermon, which should not bee.f 31. Mr. Holland at chapel, T. Ps. 30. 6. a prosperous condition a dangerous condition & so it is, prosperity ensnares, entangles, destroyes, lord give mee neither riches nor poverty, but feed mee with food convenient for mee. June I. William brought a mare from Mr. laurences upon tryal, price s"'. 2. I went to Bryn, Mrs. Rushworth near y° time of travel, prayer made for her, lord, hear, motion of marriage made between Mrs. Elizabeth lloyd & Mr. Kirk, now Min' of Acton. Advice sought & given, that whereas y° man though a Conformist yet is hopeful for Godlines, it might bee lawful to proceed, yet with most comfort, if hee allow p' of y^ profits of the place to Mr. Burghal % ejected — lord, counsel & determine -f matter. 3. Min"mett at Br. O. Mr. Steel, Mr. Sadler, Mr. Thomas Mr. Rushworth, wee pray'd together, lord hear & pardon, pardon specially our sins as Min'' & doe not curse our blessings for wee desire to hear & lay to heart & to give glory to thy name. 5. reports of my father's marriage to Jane Eddow — nee mctuo diem nee opto. 9. Seasonable rayn, a great mercy, blessed bee God. 7. Mr. Bridge at chapel T. i John. 2. 15. a playn text a lac't Sermon the matter scarce visible for words ; lord rate y"" * The chief tmies for processions were at funerals, and during the Roga- tion days, when God's blessing was asked upon the crops, and the boundaries of parishes, etc., were marked. "Before 1543 the boundaries of fields "also would be noticed (Owen and Blakeway's " Salop," iv. p. 199). t One might think that prayer and sermon — if people would attend — would be as suitable before market as at any other time ; or is it once more a case of Scylla and Charybdis? Because the Roman Catholic market-woman kneels, at the roadside cross and says her prayer, is the true Protestant to go to market and not to pray ? X Edward Burghall was the Puritan minister of Acton, near Xantwich. His diary of the war is a most interesting document. In "Nonconformity in Cheshire," p. 122, we find, "This aged and eminent servant of Christ did not long survive his ejectment in 1662. Having patiently endured the poverty tc which he was reduced, but which was alleviated by the assistance of sympathizing friends, he died in the year 1665." PHILIP HEA'RY. 1 39 Text in my heart & weed out all inordinate love of y° world & all th. in y° world. In y° aftern. we went to Whitch. D' Fowler preacht, with more playnes's & Eedification Act. 2. i. Mr. Booth cTitertayn'd curate there. Assisted in administring y" Sacram', not ordayn'd.* 8. Motion of marriage betw. Tho. Moyl & Debo. Eddow, her mother came to ask my counsel, I did as I would bee done b}'. I went to Whitch. Fayr, where I bought a black mare, 4. year old, cost s"' 10^ o. 9. Wee return'd, having visited Cosin Wick-stead, old Mr. Hotchkis & other friends by whom we were refreshed but tO' ^vhom our Society is little profitable. 10. I heard of the Death of W" Juxon, Arch''" of Canterbury,. Avho dyed Jun. 4. the same day Mrs. Puleston of Emeral was brought to bed of her first son. 12. I went to Wrexham, saw some Friends, lodged at Mr. lewis discourst with several concern. y° scruples of y" times,t lord thy people are of different p.swasions & apprehensions in many th. lord heal & help. 13. I spake with Mr. Davis of Wrexham concerning Tabling, Cousin Dan. Benyon & two sons of Mrs. Figes, who are to goe to school to Mr. lewis. — I acquainted Mr. lewis with my opinion of Cock-fights. John Jones & others excommunicated for noncon- formity — I came home with my father Mathewes blessed bee y" lord. 14. at Whitch. where preacht D'' Fowler well — Lord keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins. 15. My father bestowed new coats upon y" children cost about 2 0^ I heard of y° death of a mayd in Nantwich who coming from milking fell down with the Bowk \ on her head & dyed. * This seems to indicate a scarcity of clergy, as we know was the case after the ejectment of 1662. During the war, services were held now and again by ministers who went from place to jDlace. "In 1657, after being minister of Coley for seven years, Oliver Heywood is convinced of the duty of restoring the Lord's Supper, which had not been celebrated for fifteen years. " t Oi SiSAffoyres t6v Kcipaira, TTjy Se xd/iiiAov KOToirivoi'Tes. The result of this temperament is a tyrannical contempt for the conscientious scruples of others. The same spirit that forbad the use of the Book of Common Prayer,, either in public or private, in 1644-45, imder heavy penalties, raised its voice in the House of Commons in November, 1874, against Church of England en- dowments to Hertford College, Oxford. t Bowk = milk-pail. There is a surname Bowker. I40 PHILIP HENRY. 19. Mr. Edw" Philips of Mulsford dy'd of y° spotted feavor. 20. Eleanor Ratcliff buryed — wee visited Mrs. Rush worth, lately brought to bed of a Daughter, named Katharin, hee baptized her hims. as I should have done my son Mathew, if I had done well. 21. at Whitch. T. Heb. 4. 13. concer. God's omnisciency, a lesson which I have been long learning but am not yet com'n to 3''^ knowl. thereof. 22. first journey to y" coles with a Team of my own, the lord bee y"'' good speed. 23. they return'd in safety, though w** diffi- -culty by reason of y° fowl wayes. blessed be God. 25. Reports of great mortality in & about Chester, spare us, good lord, spare thy people. Mrs. Row of Barrel being with child -a leaping down from off a horse dyed this week, y° child living in her after shee was dead. 26. sent by Mr. Holliman to sister Mary two Coralls to change, a Diamond ring to sell. 27. new coats given to y' children by my father Mathewes at y° request of Aunt Hochkis, cost 20' 6*. 28. Mr. Holland at chapel. T. luk. 23. 34. 38. a good examp. to love & pray for enemyes in y' prayer of our lord Jesus, Father forgive them for y°' know not what y°' doe. 29. Mrs. Elisab. Puleston now marry'd to AV" Farrar, with Mary Mear &:c. came to see us. Mr. Sam. Edwards, son of my old Christian Freind Edward Thomas being motion'd by mee to Whitch. School, I went with him to y° Feoffees, & hope it may doe well both for y° Town & him. 30. I saw the school-house. Mr. Thomas of ubley hath added is"* p. ann. to y' maintenance with a desire to have certain )oious Orders of his own drawing to bee observed there. July I. Fayr weather after much wett, a great mercy, blessed bee God. 2. Mr. Thomas came to see me, I have begun to teach him * A house in the "Watergalc, Chester, where the plague is said to have stopped, has still inscribed upon it "God's Providence is mine inheritance. A. D. 1652." (It was restored in 1862.) " In 1648, between June 20 and April 20, 2099 people had died of plague. Cabins for the infected were built under the water-tower and in the adjoining salt-marsh." — Ornicrod's " Cheshire," i. 209. PHILIP HENRY. 141 Hebrew, as far as my skill will reach, which though but small, yet I count far better than none. 3. Mr. Edwards sent a messenger w"' a letter to mee to signify, that hee could not accept of Which, school, which I am sorry for, hee motion'd a son of D"' Winter's whom I like not. 4. my wife receiv'd i"" 14^ o'' of my Father for y" Brick meadow, for which I was oflfred by John Mathewes 2"" 5' 8", yet more y™ so much hee would not give, yet had a desire to have it, I know not what to doe, yet chose rather to sit down by ye loss then displease him. 5. at Whitch. T. John 13. 34. 35. J. X'hath loved mee, theref. I ought to love him, theref. I ought to love my Brother. 6. great rayn again; report of much harm done in y" up- countryes by late rayn. 7. day of prayer at Mrs. F. with much sweetness, lord hear & have mercy. Esa. 16. 4. much upon my heart, let my outcasts dwell with y"', Moab. . i. God's people may bee an outcast people, cast out of men's love, out of y''" synagogues, out of y'''' Country. 2. God will own his people w" men cast them out, my outcasts. 3. God will provide a dwelling for his outcast people.. 4. even Moab an enemy shall bee a shelter to God's people when y' lord speakes y° word. 8. This last night Mathew fell out of bed, not hurt, a won- derful preservation, blessed bee God, even our God. I went to see Mrs. Thomas not well, where hapned to bee many Friends without design, wee pray'd together, lord hear in heaven. 9. I went to. speak with Mr. Broughton about sending in a foot-souldier wherewith I am charg'd, thence to Worthenb. where I saw some Freinds, & hope there are yet a few in that place y' have not defil'd their Garments, lord, strengthen, stablish. 10. at home, making hay, ye weather seasonable, blessed bee God. 1 1. Nurse Trim suddenly taken ill this evening at Br, Oke, but God had mercy. Wee know neither time nor place, when, where nor how. 12. At Whitch. T. I John 2. i. a profitable sermon^ lord grant that I sin not. Mr. Booth retayn'd Curate y''". preacht in the aftern. indigested. 142 PJTILIP HENRY. 13. Mr. Adams like to come into trouble for baptizing a child of John Huxley. 14. a child of W™ Taylor, ill of convulsion fits, I went to see him, & 6 what evil is there in sin that produces such effects upon poor Innocent little ones, if this bee done to y° green tree w' shall be done to y" dry. It dyed this night — blessed bee God -f my little ones are in health. 15. Mr. Sadler came to see me ; It rayn'd y"^ morning, being Swithyn's day, it should bode rayn, soe vulg. 40 dayes after, w* I shall observe. For y" 7 or 8 following dayes it did rayn daily more or less, for y" 10 next it miss'd most dayes — enough to show y' vanity of such predictions. 16. Will. Griffith ill of a swelling in his Throat, wee fear'd it was a Squinancy, John Barker lett him bloud. 17. Reports of Bristol's* Impeachm' of y' chancellor, for befriending Papists, misimploying publique moneyes, over-strayning his power, marrying his daughter to ye D. of York, &c. judge's opinion y' it amounts not to Treason, -f K. sides w"" ye Chancellor. 18. William better, blessed bee God. if y' least wheel in our watch bee out of order what trouble is it to all y" Family, 6, what a mercy is health. 19. At Whitch. where preacht Mr. Bridg. Jun"", two empt\, frothy, flashy unprofitable sermons, I am asham'd to give such Epithites to sermons, but truly such they were, lord pity preacher & hearers. 20. I was not well, it held mee like an Ague, my leg sore. Mr. Holliman brought letters from Sister Mary. Coral's chang'd two for one besides half a crown given for exchange. 21. Mr. Steel & Cosin Rushw. presented for baptizing their children thems. 23. Day of Praise & Prayer at Cos. Rushw. Praise for y* safe delivery of his wife. Prayer for Guidance in y* intended remove to Henly. Also in y" Marriage affayr betw. Cosin Elis. Lloyd & Mr. Kirk now preacher at Acton near Nantwich. * This was John, the youngest son of Sir George Digby of Shirebourne, and created Earl of Bristol, September 15, 1662. His friendship with Clarendon during their exile had been lessened since the Restoration by the chancellor's refusal of some grants which Bristol had applied for. The charges that he brought forward on this occasion only damaged his own character irretrievably. PHILIP HENRY. 1 43 24. I went with Mr. Steel and Mrs. Lloyd &c. into Woral to Capt. Shipleyes, wee cal'd at Ches. Saw Mr. Cook, Prison no Prison. This day dy'd Will. Figes. at school at Wrexh. of y" small pox, 'tis not long since their mother brought him thither Naomi, & now returns Marah. 25. wee went to Gayton, to Mr. Glegg's, heard of y" execution of 3. Plotters in Ireland, Tomson, Jephson, Warren, also of y" sad condic'on of many English, turn'd out of house & home. 26. Mr. Green preacht at Nesson. T. John 3. 1. i. y° sum of man's desire, life. 2. y" sum of God's bounty, X'. 3. Y° sum of man's duty. Faith. I believe in -f lord J. X' hoping to obtain by & through him everlasting life. Ill y''' night, tooth-ake — it grieves mee I can doe no more good amongst Freinds. 27. I went to Hawarden, saw & pray'd in secret with Mr. Fogg, lord, hear in heaven, much made of 28. I return'd home, found all well, & pretty well mys. home is home indeed to mee, blessed bee God — my wife is much my helper, present, absent, & my heart doth safely trust in her, the lord's most holy name bee blessed & praysed. 30. Cosin Ashton came to see us from Chester, I have been often welcom to her house. 31. Seasonable hay- weather, all ye week past, a great mercy, blessed bee God. crab-mill still altred, better so y™ worse. The 6-day Math, so called, proves 8-day Math. August I. Hay carry'd in out of ye grelt meadow, three trole- fuls in p' and no harm, blessed bee God. 2. Mr. Bridge Sen"^ preacht at chapel. T. Luk. 21. 19. In 50ur Patience possess yee yo' soules, lord I have need of Patience. 3. much distemper'd with payn in my head & teeth, how seasonable was ye word of yesterday to the Providence of to day, and how good is ye lord that first tells the remedy, & then wounds. 4. I went to Wrexham with Uncle Benyon to see his son Daniel, sick there; lord spare him, I had discourse with him concerning his soul, & hope hee is in X'. I pray'd over him in y° name of y° lord, 6, y' prayer m' save the sick. Mr. Golborn bur}''d, my Freind. 144 PHILIP HENRY. Mr. BostOck sick in Town of a drunken surfet which hee brought with him from ye quarter Sessions at llanroost where y"" Conventiclers, so called, were huspeld. Math. i8. 6. 5. This day I was at Brunn. where I have not been these many dayes, saw my Father whose wart, thought to bee cured, returns again. 6. Cosin Tho. Jackson payd for his p' in y' meadow 1'" 8" 8'' I thought it worth more, hee thought it not worth that by 2' — I would not that 2' should occasion any unkindnes where, I must confess, I am obliged for former courtesyes. 7. I thought to have gone to Wrexh. but was tum'd back by Cosin Talbot, Cosin Dan better, lord spare him. 8. busy at Hay, lord let raee not lose thee or my.s. in that or any business. 9. At Whitch. Mr. Bower — two weak indigested unprofitable sermons, lord help us. 10. Mr. Bridge sent to desire Barn-room for his Tythes in this Township, to which I condescended the Terms to bee determin'd of hereafter, when wee see w' I can spare. 11. great payn in my head these two or three last dayes, from y' time I wak't till towards noon. 12. At Ash, where mett at Mrs. Figes, several Freinds, ]\lr. Por. Mr. St. Mr. Tho. &c. and a comfortable day it was, blessed bee God ! y° partic. occasion was to mourn with her 5'' mourns & to counsel & comfort her. lord grant shee may hear y° rod, judge hers. & justify thee. The meeting was known in To^^^l, welcom y'' will of God. 13. new suit, lord, cloth mee with thy Righteousnes, which is a comely costly lasting everlasting Garm'. 14. Turfes begun to bee carryed — first Pigeons taken of this season. 15. I visited Mr. Adams lately com'n from london. hee hatli brought with him great store of bookes. 16. Mr. Bridg. jun. at chap. T. Col. 3. 2. lord raise up vay Affections from earth to heaven, from y" world to X' who best deserves. 17. This day begins y° Assize at Wrexham & this day Mr. Bostock was buryed, a Persecutor & Prosecutor of those bound PHILIP HENRY. I4S over, but God hath cut him off, so let all thine enemyes perish, 6 lord. 18. If some occasions had not hindred, I should have been this day at J. B's. lord, let them that tarry at home divide the spoyl. 19. a day of great rayn which threatens much harm to the Country, it is y° lord. 20. fayr, & drying weather again, which prevents fears & repayres y" damage blessed bee God. 2 1. the last of my hay was carry'd in. the lord praeserves & provides for y" Cattle for y° service of man, blessed bee his name. 22. I find in noth. more of y° deceitfulnes of my heart y" in secret worship. 6. how hardly am I brought to it & how little sweet- nes & delight doe I find in it for the most part ! lord, I blush & am asham'd before thee ; lord, pity & pardon & help for with my mind I serve the law of God, though with my flesh the law of sin. 23. Mr. Bridg. jun. at chap, two better sermons then ordinary from Rev. 3. 5. & 17. 18. lord Jesus, cloth mee with y* white rayment of grace here, that I may bee clothed with the white rayment of glory hereafter. 24. This day thirty two yeares I was born, this day twelve- month I dyed, that fatal day to y° Godly painful faithful Minist"' of England amongst whom I am not worthy to bee numbred — ^we mourn'd and pray'd before the lord at W. Ben's House, if so bee there may bee hope. Zech. 7 . 3. comp. Jer. i. 3. The Jewes in their captivity fasted in the fifth month, bee. in y" fifth month Jerusalem was carryed away captive, & in y° 7* month, Zech. 7. 5. bee. in y° 7"' month Gedaliah was slayn — -Jer. 41. i. 26. Corn in y° Oak feild divided with Tho. Hale. 7 to 5. in which bargain hee over-reacht mee but I consider Ps. 15. 4. 27. Mathew not well — like as a father pityes his children, so -f lord pityes y"" y' fear him. better at night, thankes bee to God. 28. I heard from london — sister Mary & Sarah & two other Gentlew. walking abroad in y° Even, Horsmen rode over y™, drunk as was suppos'd, Hurt ye two Gentlew. & frightened sister Mary into Mother-fits for several dayes, the lord bee praised it was no worse. 29. a fayr day after a wet night, the lord is pleas'd to inter- change else ye Creatures would bee consumed. L 14$ PHILIP HENRY. 30. at Whitch. Dr. Fowler. T. i John 2. 3, 4. hereby wee know y' wee know him if wee keep his commandments. The lord give mee if not a great yet a good understanding such as 'all they have y' doe thy commandm'*. Amen. 31. a great rayn, a hindrance to harvest, a disappointm'. to niy.s. who thought to have had corn gathered this day, but y° lord is righteous. September i. Cosin Benet reviv'd by good newes in an Affayr which concernes him, gives God ye glory, for hearing Prayers & saith tis not in vayn to see to him, to trust in him, to depend on him, so say I also, blessed bee his name. 2'. Cousin Butler cal'd for ye hundred pound which I owe him', also Mr. Yates for 3o'^ I am in strayts but I wayt upon God. 3. I heard of 100"' which I may have of Robert Benyon's brother — it shall come to pass, before yee call I will answer. 4. Oats inn'd, lord doe not blow upon y""" but bless them, & all the increase of my ground, else what is brought home will come to little. 5. John Green carry'd in his p* of Corn by Cliffe's, which Tho. Hale should have carry'd or I — it prevented strife, which I am glad of who desire peace. 6. D' Fowler at Whitch. i John 2. 5. 6. concer. our union with X' & y° obligacon lying on us to walk as hee walked, bee urg'd wee are no more to imitate his gesture y™ his vesture in y° Sacram'. lord make thy way playn. 8. I was at Bronnington, my Father seemes pleas'd, & I know no cause hee hath to bee otherwise, but God grant I may never have need of him. 9. grSat store of Plums about y° house this year, beyond w' hath been ordinary, lord, make mee as fruitful to thee as ground, trees. &c. are to mee, herein would my father bee glorifyed. 10. I heard of strife at Worthenb. betw. Mr. Puleston & D' Br. about y° Tith of Emeral demeasn, which yet D' Br. took in kind, although with some difficulty. 11. Ill all day, in like manner as formerly, lord forgive sin — better at night, blessed bee God. Cosin Dan Benyon from \Vrexham, recover' d, to him bee praise y' heard prayer. 1 2. Mr. Parsons, Mr. lawrence Mr. Thomas din'd w"" us. PHILIP HENRY. 147 Candles under a Bushel, lord, set us up again y' wee may give light in thy house. In y° afternoon wee visited Mr. Sadler in the same predicam' — They compute above loo. Ministers, y"'" wives & children within few miles. Jehova-ijreh. 13. D' Fowler at Whitch. in y° morning. Act. 2(1. 2^. Shew'd what it is to bee a Christian, to bee annointed as X', to bee a follower of X' lord make mee such an one. In y° aftern. preacht Mr. John Whitehal, a beginner in y° work, lord increase his gifts & make him faithful, and being a Novice lord let him not bee lifted up with pride, lest hee fall into y" condemnacoh of y' Devil. 19. at home in health & peace with Freinds & many comforts about us, blessed bee God. 17. I went with my wife to light-edge, saw Mrs. Hassal, Mr. Thomas & his wife with us, tis much shee is not asham'd of such poor Outcasts, I told her so, & shee answer'd they were y" best guests y' come to her house. 18. This week Cosin Betty lloyd was marry'd to Mr. Kirk, now Preacher at Acton, near Nantwich. 19. The last of my harvest, which was three load of Fitches, brought into y° Barn, blessed bee God who is lord of y*" harvest also. 20. Mr. Holland at chap. — T. Jam. 2. 21. Our psons are justify'd by Faith before God. Our Faith by workes before men. Also luk. 17. 20. TheKingd. of X' in y" world is not with outward pomp & splendour as other kingdoms are. 21. I went with my wife to Brunnington, my Father ownes us & that's all, blessed bee God wee have no need of him. Eddish set to a drove, 16'' a score — drovers lodg'd in -f house, scorners of Godlines, bee. y" know it not, lord pdon. 2 2. meeting about subsidyes — I was return'd y" same w"' Mr. Jenings — 25"" p. ann. Randle Tonna 5o'^ 23. my dear Freind, Jone Bickley bury'd, lord make up y° breach — Mr. Humphryes preacht, better y'" I expected, lord doe good in thy good pleasure to poor Worthenb. 24. at Bryn, where was Capt. Shipley & his wife, Cosin Kirk .& her husband. 25. Mr. Hanmer was mov'd y' y" moneyes collected in this Township for y= poor, might bee bestow'd at least p' on y° poor of the Township. 148 PHILIP HENRY. 26. Roger Burroughs wife bury'd at Malpas, where wee saw y° Register, my wife baptiz'd Apr. 5, 1629.* &: payd the Clerk Arreares. 28. wee went to Ash, where I saw with greif the miss of a good wife, mother, mistris, and doe bless God that all these are yet spared in my family. 30. I was at Bangor at y" muster, being charg'd with a cors- lett, I expected Arms there, but am put to buy for mys. it may bee t'will bee cheaper. I saw the subsidy roll, where I am re- turn'd after y" rate of i"' in land and am to pay 4' for each subsidy. October i,. reports of a Plot. f Mr. lloyd, Mr. Steel secur'd, I am yet at liberty, if trouble come lord thou knowest my innocenc}-^ — hie murus aheneus esto nil conscire sibi. 6. Cosin Benet in fresh trouble about his business, tis ill giving way to carnal base feares, for y" are incroaching — tis my own infirmity, help lord. 7. 8. a very wett season, the lord is angry with us. seedness- hindred. spare us good lord, spare thy people. 9. William went to Wem to buy a pike. 10. This morning I was fetcht to Hanm'' by Randle Milton, who said his Capt. S' John Hanmer must speake with mee. hee brought mee to Susan Croxton's house, an Ale house in y' Town, whether several others were brought also this same day. The praetence is that there is a Plot to rise, the lord knowes I know noth. of any such thing. 11. wee were deny'd liberty to goe to church, wherefore wee spent y" day together in y" prison, as y° lord enabled. 12. my man William Griffith being sent for when I was, came not till this day being from home, which caused suspicion. Mr. Holliman examin'd but not releas'd. 13. 'tis sweet being in any condition w"' a clear Conscience — ^ the sting of Death is sin, & so of Imprisonmen' also. Tis y" iirst * In the eighteenlh century and the nineteenth, there were descendants of Philip Henry born and married almost at the same time as he was, and with the same difference in the ages of husband and wife. t It is little wonder, after such a successful and prolonged rebellion, that rumours of plots should be circulated from time to time, and, the innocent suffer with the guilty. PHILIP HENRY. 1 49 time I was ever a Prisoner, but perhaps may not bee y" last — ^Wee felt no hardship, wee know not what wee may. 14. Wee were cal'd to appear, S' Thomas Hanmer & Mr. W" Hanmer of Fenns were present, S' Tho. told us y° occasion of our confinem'. viz. reports of a Plot, & to mee hee spake of my frequenting conventicles & partic. within y"^ month which I deny'd — then releas'd us, finding verbal security for a fortnight, y' wee shall bee forthcoming within 24 houres after wee are cal'd for. Rob' Byckley past his word for mee & my man & Mr. Holliman. It cost me about 7 or 8. sh. besides Damages at home by trespas. This Evening I return'd to my Tabernacle safe & well, blessed bee God. lord forgive my enemyes & turn their hearts. John Davis was listed to trayn for mee & had Arms, a Pike & a sword, y'' Pike cost 8^ y° sword. 3'. 15. This day dyed S'' Evan lloyd Governo" of Chester, of a drunken surfett, the first wheel, as I hear, in our late trouble, by his instigation of his Cosin S' Tho. Hanmer ; so that men shall say. Verily thou art a God that judgest in y° earth. 18. In y" afternoon I heard Cosin Kirk at Hanmer, con- cerning pleading with God in prayer — ^like to make an able Min'' of y" New Testam', if God bless. 19. The first Corn I ever sold in Market two measures of wheat, at 3' i" y° measure, blessed bee God for such plenty. 20. I went to Bryn to see y' Acts concerning chimneyes, intending, if I can, to get off Marg' Powel. 21. I went to Malpas, procur'd a Certificate of Mr. Holland — &c. 22. I inquir'd of Mr. Hanm'' concer. that wherewith I was charg'd as having Conventicles at my house by night, hee said hee knew nothing, if it had been so, I should neither deny, nor bee asham'd. 23. There being 4"' 19^ charg'd upon this Township for church & poor, Y churchwardens would take all for y'' church & leave for y'^ poor little or noth. I became the poore's advocate, to smal purpose yet — but my reward is with my God. 26. I went to S' Tho. Hanm', spake about y° mear hedge betw. John Rees & mee, hee promis'd to inquire & said I should have no wrong, wee discours'd about y' late Imprisoning us &C. &c ISO PHILIP HENRY. 28. the Queen'reported to bee dead, recovered.* Nov. I. At Whitch. T, i Jolm. i. 7. if I walk in the light as God is in the light, in resp. of sincerity and cordial endeavour, then wee have fellowship one with another, union & communion,. I with him & hee with mee, & y" blood of X' his son cleanseth mee from all sin. 2. 3. I kept y" house ; my distemper is heat of bloud, inclining to y'' Feavour ; lord my times are in thy hand & I am glad in my heart that y"' are so, my time of health & sicknes, my time of life & Death. 4. being threatned with y" Constableship of Tybroughton, w* John Green sh*" have serv'd, but y' hee is thought obnoxious, I went to S' Tho. Hanmer to seek a Repreive, till next year, but twas not absolutely granted. Hee told mee John Rees had been w* him, &; thought y" hedge were mine, several of y° Trees were his, & hee would keep y™ nevertheles, hee promis'd to meet mee y'' to see further. 5. At Malpas. T. Fsal. 9. 11. blessed bee God for y" mercy of y'" day. Conclusion made with y' church-wardens about y° ley for y° poor, 24' accepted of, y* rest in regard y*^ Township had so much allow'd y° last year, & in regard of present extraordinary repayres for y° church they kept (y" whole 4"' 19^) 6. 7. extream payn in my head and Teeth, lord give ease, & in y" mean time patience, much wett. a great judgm'. seednes hindred. 8. Mr. Bridge at chap, in y° morning. T. Rovi. 5. i. a most * See Pei^ys' Diaiy, October 17th: " Some discourse of the Queene's bein"' very sick." October 19th : " Waked with a very high \vind,[and said to my wife, I pray God I hear not of the death of any great person, this wind is so high." " Coming to St. James' I hear that the Queene . . . was so ill as to be shaved and pidgeons put to her feet, and to have the extreme unction given her by the priests who were so long about it that the doctors were angiy. The King they all sky is most fondly disconsolate for her, and weeps by her which makes her weep." October 20th : " The Queene's sickness is the spotted fever, as full of the spots as a leopard." October 22nd: '-This morning hearing that the Queene grows worse I sent to stop the making of my velvet cloak, till I see whether she lives or dies." October 24th : " The Queene is in a good vay of recovery and Sir Francis Pridgeon hath got great honour by it, it being all imputed to his cordial! which in her dispaire did give her rest." October 26th : "Dr. Pierce tells me that the Queene is in a way to be pretty well again, but that her delirium in her head continues still ; that she talks idle not by fits, but always, which in some lasts a week after so high a fever, in some more, and in some for ever," PHILIP HENRY. 151 full Text, a most empty Sermon, in y" aftern. hee came not, Wee stay'd at home, lord, water -f seed ; 111 at night in head & teeth, no rest till after sweating. 9. Bargain made w'" Mr. Tho. Bridg. for Barn-room at 6' S"" a bay. 5' allow"* for Tith-hay, — y" rest to bee pay'd in winter straw, at 8* a threave for thatch. 10. I went to Robert Bickley, my Freind, lord, bless his Family & shew kindness to him & his children for Jesus sake, 12. Wee finisht y° reading of y" old Testam' in y" family. 13. wee began y° reading of -f new T. lord assist, lord ficcept. as for me & my house wee will serve y' lord. 14. winter seedness not finisht till this day. 15. much rayn all day, w* hindered our attendance on publique ordinances, lord meet & bless at home. 16. more rayn, a great judgm' hindring seedness threatning scarcity. 18. I went to Chester with Cosin Jane Benet, y° lord preserv'd us by y° way, alone, double,* blessed bee his name ; I saw Mr. Ratcliff, Mrs. Golborn a widow indeed. 19. Cosin Jane Benet prov'd her father's will, George Mat- thewes, dead long since, but Mr. Hilton put her to it, shee took her oath, shee gave y" lo"" (left to her discretion) to Mr. Steel to dye with him. wee returnd late but safe, thankes bee to God. 22. at Whitch. T. i John 2. 25. this is the promise which hee hath promis'd us (us who continue in y'' th. which wee have heard from y° beginning) even eternal life. Reports of a Plot in Yorkshire, many imprisoned, lord clear up -f inriocency of y' innocent, & let y° sin of y" guilty find them out. 23. 24. at home, not well ! I have had many Items of dis- temper of late, blessed bee God it is not worse. 26. I went to Malpas to see Mrs. Figes, & pray'd with her ; lord bless the meanes & spare her life, to her family, to her friends, to y" Church of God, for thy mercy sake ; y* wayes were very fowl, and I escaped many apparent dangers, blessed bee God. 27. I sent to Mr. Thomas, out of my poverty, a measure of Pease & some verjuice, lord provide for him & all thy poor out- casts throughout the three nations. * Pillions were in common use up to 1820. 1 5 2 PHILIP HENR Y. 28. I bless God for quietness in my house, wlierwith a dry morsel is better then a house full of sacrifices without it. 29. At Whitch. T. r John 2. 26. concerning seducers, what hee meant I know not but I know how I apply it — lord give us Pastors after thine own heart, & keep me & all thy people in y° way of truth- & godliness for ever. 30. Time is running into eternity, 6 what wisedom tis to redeem it, & Jlow much am I wanting in that wisedom. 12. Rec" of W" Benet for a musket w* Mr. Steel gave mee, 8^ December i. Whereas John Green's House should have serv'd y° Constableship for Tybroughton this year, which in regard of John Green's present obnoxiousnes would have been my charge, S'^ Tho. Hanmer was'pleas'd to find out another, but next year John Stocton is to serve, & I am to allow him 5'. 2. I went to Whitch. saw some freinds, particularly old Mr. Hotchkis, Mnason, an old disciple. 3. Servants dressing hemp; blessed bee God for my wife every way my helper. 4. Mr. Holliman from London, where hee saith liberty is in agitation in y" Council, God grant it. 5. The first considerable frost this year. Cattle fodder'd abroad, not taken in yet. 6. Mr. Bridge at chapel in y" morning, only read prayers in y" aftern. I went with my wife to Whitch. in y° evening I taught my family from 2 Pet. i. 4. bless lord. 7. I had an ill fitt this morning. Colique and swooning, but quickly over, blessed bee God. lord, make mee to know my end and the measure of my dayes what it is that I may know how frayl I arii. 8. Uncle Benyon sent us two measures of malt. Cosin Talbot came to see us. lord let all my Freinds bee Freinds to J.'X'.' '9. Mr. Steel's mother dyed, sick but two or three dayes — Mary Powel thought bysome to bee bewitch't, her dame (cal'd Katharin' of y° Pinfold) is said. to have kneel'd down &curst her; it seemes .shee told some storyes of her about stealing — whether true or false doth not yet appear. J'fflLIP HENRY. I S3 10. workmen cropping in Kay. Shon. morris,* that which hath teen growing many yeares is cut down in a moment. 11. nothing troubles mee so much as that I am so unprofitable dn my generation, lord give mee wisedqni, that seeing I may not otherwise, I may preach in all my discourses. 12. I heard of y^ Death of my worthy Fr. Mr. Ambrose Moston, who dy'd y" last week at london, and is now at rest in y° lord being taken away from y° evil to come. 13. Mr. Daxton, of Brasen Nose, an Initiate in Theology, preacht at chapel, many good things but weak utterance, lord thrust forth faithful skilful labourers into the Vineyard — Tis mercy wee have bread, though it be not as it hath been of y" finest of y" wheat. 14. a begging Min'' out of lancashire, who preacjit at Hanmer yesterday, & had a colection cal'd on mee to w"" I gave a mite to make way for a word of reproof & counsel, for I likt not ye narrative of his case. 15. I visited Mr. Adams. Woodroff Eddow of the lower wich buryed at Malpas, a wicked man in his life, & I hear of no dis- coveryes of Repentance at his Death, lord open the eyes of his companions in y"^ their day. 16. Mr. Lewes came to see mee & tarry'd all night, wee had much discourse together of present things. Dr. Griffith B'' of y' Diocese is his Freind & keepes him in salvd, conscientia. 17. I went with him to uncle Benyon's, where wee tarry'd all might, my wife with us, Mathew in Y weaning. 18. wee return'd, all well at home, blessed bee God — lord ■spare my dear wife to mee, for I see what a sad miss there is of any Aiint Benyon at Ash. 19. lord cleanse mee from my Omissions, the world thinkes better of mee then I doe of mys. God knows. 22. hopes of liberty like to come to noth. I expect wee shall tfirst suffer yet harder th. then these, lord fit. for it, •& get thys. •gJory. -,24. As busy as people are to prsepare their houses for christmas, :S0 & niuch more busy should I bee to prsepare my heart for X'. 25.\ No Preaching at chapp. wherefore I stay'd at home, making •^ i.e. field of John Morris. ■ - 1 54 PHILIP HENRY. no Conscience of ye day as a day to bee kept holy, for want of divine Institution.* 26. day of Prayer at W, B. lord hear in heaven & pardon the sins of this good bad time. 27. At Whitch. where preacht D' F. T. i Tim. i. 15. hee prov'd Y Messiah to bee come & that Jesus of Nazareth is hee, which I doe stedfastly believe. 29. I mett Mr. Sadler at Tilst. where wee discourst a while together and blessed bee God wee have so much liberty. 30. I mett Mr. St. at llynbedith f where wee discourst & pray'd together, lord hear in heaven. 31. lord forgive mee all y° sins of this year past in y° bloud of X' & accept of prayses for ye mercyes of this year to mee & mine and to all y°- Israel of God. Amen. Jan. 18. I heard of a woman that continued dumb from ye birth of her first child till ye moment of ye birth of her second & then shee cry'd out, Two mercyes, meaning speech & a child. I understand since, twa's John Gough's wife of Tilstock, whoni I very well know. Agnoscit se Roma ream, non miror, amici Ad cantum Galli poenituisse Petrum upon y' Pope's submission to y" French. Christus dixit quodam loco. Vos non sic, nee dixit joco, Dixit suis, ergo isti, Cujus sunt ? non certe Cliristi ! of y= Pi-£elates. Hee that remembers not to keep y° Christian Sabbath in y^ beginning of the week, will bee in danger to forget before the end of y" week that hee is a Christian. Sir Edw. Turner. Speaker, in his speech at y° Prorogation. July. 27. * There is little more authority in the New Testament for observing the- lirst day of the week. Both come to us by the appointment of the Church, though at different dates. • • + Llynbedydd = lalce of baptism, one of three lakes in Hanmer parish. It is probable that the Bangor monks, and St. Chad, the ^reat missionary in Mercia, and Bishop of Lichfield, brought their converts here for baptism. PHILIP HENRY. I 55 Sept. 14. Reports of a created crop. A feild of Col. Norton'.s near Portsmouth in Hampsh. sown y° last year with barley this year lay fallow, brought forth upon the fallow a Crop of wheat, which being ripened in a fortnight's space, was ground & bakt, & y° bread good. Mr. Sadler told mee of a Hen, near ludlow, which being black before gradually became all white, since Bartholomew — 62. & now lately begins in y" same manner to turn black again. Reports of a puddle of water in lancash. which burns to a coal what stickes and wood are put into it. Mr. Hills man put in his staff & when hee took it out lighted Tobacco with it. Octob. 27. Two only children of Thomas Jlichards of linea one seven yeares old, t'other in y° weaning were drown'd near a Mill, y" former not baptiz'd till ye later was born. John Alcroft an Inn Keeper in Knutsford forct to drink healths by some company in his House (Capt. Needham^ Cornet Stringer &c., as I am inform'd) fell down dead amongst them with y' cup in his hand. Tis obvious to observe, At fowr several times &upon 4. several occasions Min''' have been silenc't & turn'd out of their places, and yet still after a time, more or less, restor'd again.* 1. in Q. Mary's dayes, bee. .they would not close with Popery at y° return of it, but tliat interdict lasted under 5. yeares being taken off upon Q. Elisabeth's coming to the Crown. 2. in Q. Elisabeth's,! K. James' & King Charles' dayes, bee. y" could not conform to y° Hierarchy & Cssremonyes, and this Interdict lasted long, even till the long Pariiam' A. 1640. but was y™ taken off. * "The tendency of the Puritans was to ally themselves with the French and Swiss Calvinists, and with them to make their sole appeal to Scripture, as. interpreted by each man's reason and conscience. This French system has been found in practice to favour mental servitude. For the obedience claimed for the mere letter of a book becomes, ere long, inevitably transferred to the inter- preting of that'book, and the despotism of a Pope — who may at least die — is- replaced by that of an oligarchy whose watchful dogmatism never dies, and whose tyranny leaves open only one way of escape — secession. This the Englishman of the sixteenth century, confused and deafened by the clamour of a Puritanism which could never make up its mind whether to conform or to secede, was not slow to adopt." — Curteis, " Bampton Lectures " for 1871, p. 64. t The Indeijpendents seceded in 1568 from the English Church; the Romanists in 1570 ; the Baptists in 1633. IS 6 PHILIP HENRY. 3. under y" long Parliam' many Min"'^ were sequestred & silenced, for Malignancy & not covenanting.* 4. many others after y° K. death for not engaging, to bee true to the Common-wealth,'f as then establisht, both which restraynts though, much remitted before, yet quite ceas'd at the coming in of the King. A. 1660. And now more Min'! are silenc't \ & with more severity ■f^ ■ever, by the Act of Aug. 24. and who amongst us can tell, for how long. This only I know, hee that hath deliver'd doth deliver .& wee trust also hee will yet deliver. Script. Mar. 31. 1663. The lord is my Protection, I shall not fall what need I fear. The lord is my Portion, I shall not want what need I care. The 6 day math (which prov'd 8 days in y° mowing) yeelded this year 12 good jags of hay, for half whereof I had of Cosin Thomas Jackson & Mr. Thomas together 2"' 3^ A list of my fellow-Prisoners at Hanmer. Oct 10. 1663 — Mr. luke lloyd Nicholas Hemlock Mr. Rich Steel Richard Bloud * It is said that eight thousand episcopal clergy were ejected. This nmiiber is derived from White, the author of the century. Gauden's calculation is founded •on his assertion that "one-half of the clergy were sequestered." Bishop Short thinks a smaller number (Short's " History of Church of England," chap. xiii. p. 443). " Clergymen of respectable character were not only ejected from their ijenefices by thousands, but were frequently exposed to the outrages' of a fanatical rabble " (Macaulay's " History of England," vol. i. chap. ii.). t It is a curious fact that the Presbyterians themselves were in their turn called malignants in and after 1649, and treated accordingly. Reynolds was turned out of the deanery of Christ Church. Prideaux' views of Archbishop Laud underwent a complete change when he had to pass through something of the same kind of treatment as the archbishop. J It is hard to judge correctly of one's own losses. The hint given by Philip Henry has been made the most of by "bicentenary" orators. "A ■careful examination of Calamy's list shows that for all statistical purposes it is worthless. In London he represents the ejectments as amounting to 293, the truth being that on the highest possible computation they only amount to 127. In Essex more than half the cases which stand upon his roll were not true cases of ejectment. In Hertfordshire four-fifths of his list disappear under investigation. In short, . . . unbiassed inquiry would strike off from the cele- brated catalogue of ' two thousand confessors ' no less than twelve hundred aiames" (Curteis, "Bampton Lectures," p. 68, n.). PHILIP HENRY. 1 57 Mr. John Holliman Thomas Bartlam John Haddocks William Philips Thomas Bedward William Griffith John Fletcher Edward Smith a quaker John Green June 12. I heard of a cow in Dyffryn Clwyd, which calved lately fowr calves at once & all alive.* A woman in Wrexham having been long distemper'd & taken much Phisique, took someth. of an Italian Mountebank wh. caus'd her to voyd a worm 7. yardes long, which Mr. lewis told mee hee saw, and shea is since recovered. — Mr. Cook imprison'd in Chester, by letter from y° Bisliop' according to y° Act for uniformity, his fault was repeating in his- House, where many people were present, hee chose -f common Prison, where hee hath liberty to preach every day to ye Prisoners,, his chamber is cal'd y° Freeman's chamber. Mr. Taylor & many more about Wrexham bound over to appear at Quarter-Sessions, for a private meeting in which yei were deprehended. July 14. At quarter-sessions, with much opprobrious language, especially from S'^ Richard Win"f of Guedur, they were bound over to ye great Assize, & to y' good behavior, & some y' being strangers could not find suretyes, for twas at llan-rust, were com- mitted to prison. At y' Assize y" who took y° Oath of Allegiance were acquitted, y° rest imprison'd : Mr. Bostock y" Prosecutor was.bury'd y° first day of y" Assize — Digitus Dei. June 24. This week dyed in Chester a servant to Giovanni, an Italian Mountebank, known by y° name of his Apothecary, who received some blowes about 3. weekes since upon y° stage in Wrex- ham, in a scuffle with Mr. Puleston of Emeral ('twas June 4, y" * This sort of cow is called by country people a " free-martin." Of the calves the males will not procreate, but the females will. t This Sir Richard Wynn succeeded his father Sir Owen Wynn in 1668. By his wife Sara, daughter of Sir Thomas Myddelton, Bart. , of Chirk Castle, he left one child, Mary Wynn, who married Robert Bertie, Duke of Ancaster, and Gwydir thus descended to the Baroness Willoughby d'Eresby. It must have been by Sir Richard Wynn that the Duke of Beaufort — the last but one of the Lords President of the Welsh March — was entertained at Gwydir in 1684. Sir Richard Wynn was chamberlain to Queen Katharine. 158 PHILIP HENRY. day on which his eldest son Roger was born — ) since which hee hath been sick and is now dead. July I. This day William Ball was found dead by y° way side near Malpas not far from his house, snppos'd to have bin drunk. July 2. this week lord Buckhurst & S' Chas. Sidley were arrayn'd at y° King's Bench & fined for Debauchery. Being in Covent Garden at a house known by y° name of Oxford Kate's they had six dishes of meat brought in by six naked women, after dinner y" went forth in their shirts into y" Balcony & there shewing Bottles of wine y" proclaym'd, Ho every one y' thirsteth come yee to ye waters — &c. they drank a health to y° salvation of Judas & another to y° Babe of Bethlehem, after all y°' said, come now let us goe in & make lawes for y° nation, the one or both being, as y'^' say, Parliam' men. This was written in a letter from Mr. Joshua Hotchkis to his Brother in law Ralph Eddow — I hear since, only S'' Charles Sidley was arraign'd & fin'd 4000"', lord Buckhurst having made an escape. This is that lord Buckhurst who, tis said, murther'd y° Tanner last year upon ye road near london *— if so, evil men wax worse & worse. July 27. Parliam' prorogu'd till March & subsidyes given to ye King — two to bee payd November next, two in May. Great expectacSh of an Act about Conformity & Conventicles, but they were not compleated & so not pass'd : An Act call'd an Act for y° Sabbath was made ready, but somehow or other was missing w" ye King should have pass'd it, utrum gaudendum an dolendum nescio, for yei say, it did declare, what sports were to bee accounted lawful on ye Sabbath day. * On February 25, 1664, Pepys writes: "This day in the News-booke I find that my lord Buckhurst and his fellows have printed their case. . . . that they were in pursuit of thieves, and that they took this man for one of them, and so killed him. . . . but I doubt things will be proved otherwise than they say." The character of this Charles Sackville, afterwards sixth Earl of Dorset, is drawn by Prior, and by Johnson in his " Lives of the Poets. " The latter, referring to the scandal in Covent Garden, says that they were intoxicated, and that Sedley was fined five hundred pounds for the misdemeanor, the sentence upon the others being not known. He also adds, "Sedley employed Killigrew and another to procure a remission from the King ; but (mark the friendship of the dissolute) they begged the fine for themselves, and exacted it to the last groat." .See Pepys' Diary for July I, 1663. PHILIP HENRY. 1 59 The contest between the Chancellor & Digby, husht for a time. July 22. Archibald Johnston laird Warton* was executed in Scotland upon a Gibbet two & twenty foot high. An active man in ye time of y° long Parliam', especially in Promoting y° solemn league and Covenant which hee professedly acknowledged at his Death, as appears by his speech, without regret, but for his com- plyance in the usurpation afterwards hee declar'd his sorrow for it & crav'd of God forgivenes for ye same. Aug. 14. Mr. George Bostock of Holt, Justice of Peace, dyed. His death occasioned by a surfet of drink which hee took at ye time of ye -quarter-sessions at llanrust whither hee had bound over certain of ye Inhabitants in & about Wrexham who were depre- hended at y" meeting to their no small trouble ; And now just before ye Assize ye lord took him away by a remarkable stroke for verily hee is a God y' judgeth in the earth; 6 that men might hear & fear, & lord, goe on to plead ye cause of thy poor suffring people in all the three nations for Jesus sake — This Bostock I have heard formerly at Emeral wickedly glorying in his shame & boasting of filthiness which I dare say hee was not guilty of, such a height of ungodlines was hee come to. Sept. 25. Reports of sad inrodes made by ye Turkes upon Germany, Vienna beseig'd and Prague, & Presburgh.f Oct. 26. Reports of ye Death of Queen Katharin it prov'd otherwise. Nov. 9. Mr. Morgan's wife of Whitch. was brought to bed of three sons, baptized Hananiah, Azariah, & Mishael — they all three dy'd within the fortnight — all very like in face to one another. It is reported of the grand Segnior Mahomet the 4"", hearing of ye restitution of Charles y° 2" that hee should say, If hee were to chuse his God or his Religion, hee would chuse the King of England's. It is suppos'd the present expedition into Hungary is like to beQ the fore-runner of great mutations & changes in the Christian world. * See Burnet's " History of his Own Time," vol. i. p. 203, fol. t From l56i to 1664 there was war with Austria for the supremacy of Tran- sylvania. There was a great defeat of the Turks in 1664, but it was not till 1684 that Neuhaussel was recovered. l6o FBI LIP HENRY. Sept. 14. New-hausel was taken upon Articles, after the loss of 17. or 18000 men in two Assaults. Dec. 1 6. Mr. lewis told mee concerning S' Evan lloyd, who- dy'd in October last that not long before his death hee told him in. Wrexham, hee was struck suddenly upon his leg, as he was walking in the feilds, and that hee did beleive it did bode his Death, like as a stroke in y° same place had done his wife's not long before, three weekes before shee dy'd, which came to pass accordingly. May 5. my dear aunt Benyon dy'd. Shee was daughter to Mr. Knight of Shrewsb. & had been marry'd about 27. y. to my uncle Benyon by whom shee had issue now living Daniel, Martha,. Mary, Sarah, Elisabeth : Shee was the fittest wife for him in the world being patient & prudent in opposition to his passion & rash- ness. Shee was, I verily beleive, one that truly feared God, and was taught to doe so from her youth. Shee was of y^ mourners in Sion, laying much to heart y° sins & sufferings of ye times. Shee was provident & diligent in family Affayres, laying her hands to t° spindle, & her hands held ye distaff. Shee was an inward, real, true hearted friend, eminent for humility & self denyal : witness y' expression of her's, w" speaking of her children. I said I did not doubt but God had a kindness in store for y"" for her sake, shee answer'd, for my sake, alas ! poor things if it bee not for another's^ sake then mine y'' are undone. She enjoyn'd mee to-i\Tite to Col. Hunt to bee a Freind to them ; the lord bee their Freind. The diary for 1665, as well as those for 1680-1684, belong to Miss Osborn, of Foregate Street, Worcester, to whom I am much indebted for the loan of them, and of other manuscripts. 1665. Covenants renewed in y» particu: i. by y« lords help & purpose to bee more substantial in secret worship. 2. more sparing of precious time. 3. more constant in reading the scrip, alone & meditating in them. PHILIP HENRY. l6l 4. more careful to improve all opportunityes of doing good to souls, not only taking, but seeking them. 5. less fearful about events, when in a way of duty, in all w'''' I have lately mist it, but y° lord has pardoned mee in X Jesus. When y' flail of Affliction 6: lord is upon mee, let mee not bee as y" chaff that flyes in the face, but as y" Corn that lyes at thy feet. To one complayning of weakness in duty, remember two th. I. That you are not under the law, but under grace. 2. That you are on earth & not in Heaven. Hee that would not dye when hee must & hee y' would dye when hee must not, both these are alike Cowards. Jamcary 8. The Quaestion was, what are good Argum. against Sin? A. I. one sayd, to consider, if I sin I must repent of it, and repentance is made up of shame & sorrow & hath much bitternes in it, et ego not tanti emam poenitere. 2. To consider, sin is against God, & how shall I doe this great wickednes & sin against God, the great God & a great King above all Gods. 3. Another sayd, to consider that sin is pleasing to the Devil, and shall I doe that which gratifyes him, who doth all hee can to destroy mee. 4. Another sayd. To consider y" reflection of sin upon J. X' how it greives, peirces, & openly shames him, my dear redeemer who shed his bloud to redeem & ransom my soul from sin. And of this it was sayd, as of Goliahs sword, none like it. 5. Another sayd, To consider y" vowes of God which are upon us, especi. y° great vow of our Baptism. 6. To consider, though I may not bee damned for this sin here- after, yet I may bee sorely chastned for it here ; as David. 7. The consideration of Death & Judgm' & -f account that must bee rendred w" every secret th. shall bee reveal' d. 8. If it bee a publique Sin, to consider the Scandal of it to Religion, besides y° harm it may doe as a bad example &c. Qusestions in family-Conference Saturday-Evenings. Feb. 4. Q. How far a man may goe tow"'' Heaven and yet fall short. M l62 PHILIP HENRY. A. in general, a great way. Mar. 12. 34. almost. Acts. 26. 28. in particular. 1. A man may have a great deal of knowledge, I Cor. 13. I. 2. even so much as to teach others. Mat. 7. 22. 2. Hee may bee free from many nay from any gross sin. luk.- 18. II. 3. Hee may perform not only some but all manner of external Dutyes of Religion, Pray, Fast, give Almes, Math. 6. 1. 2. &c. 4. Hee may bee a lover of good men — as Herod, Pharoh, Darius. 5. Hee may repent after a sort, as Ahab, and believe after a sort, as Simon Magus. 6. Hee may suffer much for Religion, as no doubt Judas did, whilst a retayner to X'. 1. use. If a man may goe thus far and yet fall short, then what will becom of those that goe not near so far. 2. Then what need have wee to look about us, and to make sure of Regeneration & Sincerity, which are things that certainly accompany Salvation. Feb. II. Q. what are the common Hindrances of mens Salvation ? A. I. Ignorant. John 4. 10. 2. XixHo^a&i—John 5. 40. 3. love of y" world — 2 Tim. 4. 10. 4. Pride — men will not stoop to bee saved by y" righteousnes of X' Rom. 10. 3. nor to bee rul'd by the lawes of X' lu. 19. 14 5. Prsejudice, agt y° wayes of God, & agt y" company that walkes in them, their paucity, their poverty. 6. Prsesumption, upon God's mercy, & upon long life. use. See that none of y^* hinder us, especially now being fore warned. Feb. T 8. Q. what are y° Ingredients of true repentance ? A. I. Inward, hearty sorrow — Zech. 12. 10. 2. Hatred of sin & of self bee. of sin. Job. 42. 6. 3. apprehension of y° mercy of God in X' Math. 3. 2. 4. partic. confession w"' shame & blushing i John. i. 7. 5. a special eye to original sin. Ps. 51. 5. 6. reformation of life. Pr. 28. 13. Heb. 6. i. PHILIP HENRY. 1 63 7. restitution in case of wrong to man. lick. 19. 8. Feb. 25. Q. what motives to Repentance? A. I. the shortnes of life & uncertainty of y° Space, for Repentance. Rev. 2. 21. 2. the misery & danger of Inpoenitency. luk. 13. 3. 5. 3. the command of God. yiirA 17. 30. 31. 4. the goodnes of God. Rom. 2. 4. his readines to forgive us upon our rep. Ps. 86, 5. 5. the Gosp. gracious Invitations of J. X'. Math. 3. 2. 6. there is no other way to ^pdon & reconciliation — tis unica Tabula post naufragiu. Mar. 4. Q. what is it to beleive in J. X' for salvation. A. I. tis to come to 'S^ Math. 11. zZ. John. 6. 37 — 5. 40. by . unbelief wee depart from him. Heb. 3. 12. 2. tis to lean upon X' Cant. 8. 5. forsaking all other leaning stockes whatsoever. 3. tis to look upon X' John. 3. 14. 15. look unto mee & iDee yea saved. 4. tis to receive & accept of X' as hee is offred in y" pro- mise to bee lord & King as well as Preist & Savior, giving ours, to him unrese'Tvedly. 2 Cor. 8. 5. Has. 3. 3. Mar. II. Q. What is required to an acceptable good work? A. I. That -f j)son bee accepted. Math. 12. 34. 2. Sincerity — i. in eyeing the command of God as -f rule. 2. y" glory of God as y° end. i Cor. 10. 31. "habitually if not alwayes actually. 3. faith in J. X' both for Assistance, John 15. 5 and Accept- ;ance. Math. 3. 17. 4. The love of X' 2. Cor. 5. 14. Mar. 18. Q. What evidences of love to God. A. I. Hatred of Sin. Ps. 97. 11. and that esp. bee. it dis- honors him. 2. care to keep his commandm*' John 14. 15. & that of rchoice & with delight, i John. 5. 3. 3. love to the people of God, qua tales, i Joh. 3, 14. 4. willingnes to p' with any th. for his sake. Gen. 22. 12. 5. desire of fellowship w"' him in his Ordinances, Cant. i. 2. 164 PHILIP HENRY. 6. greif w" hee witlidrawes, as one Freind in the absence of another. 7. love & longing for y° appearance of X'. 8. mourning that wee can love him no more. Mar. 25. Q. How to express love to our neighbour? A. I. by praying for him, even for all men. i Tim. 2. i. even for enemyes. Math. 5. 44. 2. by reproving him. lev. 19. 17. unless hee bee a scorner, w"" wee are not rashly to conclude. 3. by not envying him, because either of what hee is, or hath, or doth, I. Cor. 13. 4. but rather rejoycing. Rom. 12. 15. 4. doing to him as we would have him to doe to us. Math. 7. 12. 5. being tender of his name, neither to raise nor receive an ill report agt. liim. Pr. 25. 23. 6. if a superior, wee are to honor &: respect him, if an equal or inferior to bee affable & courteous & condescending tow* him. 7. if good to associate with him. Ps. 16. 2. if bad to pity him & pray for him, but not bee over-familiar with him. see y° rest elsewhere. 1665. January 2. 3 men at work — 500 & 40. Shingles. 5 score & 4 bottoms, and 40. bowk staves, which came to i x'. 4. Cosins with us from Whitch. I have hopes of Cosin M . . . H . . . y' God hath begun a good work in her. 8. Mr. Daxton at chap. T. Act 14. 22. and that wee must through much afHiction enter into the kingdom of God, then the will of the lord bee done ! so that may bee the End of my Journey, let the way bee such as pleases God, nunc deprimuntur electi ut olim assurgant instar palmarum. 9. I visited Mr. Adams, askt him, w" hee meant to preaclv again, hee answer'd, w" y" weather is warmer ; pity, such a Candle should put hims. under, especially now w" so many are put b>- others under a Bushel. PHILIP liENR V. 165. 10. Mr. Edw. Puleston, yongest son of my Patron & Freind Judge Puleston, was buryd this day at Gresford. — hee dy'd /an. 6. his life was bad and his badnes of life hastened his end, not merito- riously only but efficiently. Hee was once a part of my immediate charge and I fear I did not doe my duty towards him, wherein y" lord forgive mee ! 11. I went to Tilstock, purposing to goe thence to Cos. Talbots, but did not, I went to light-each & return'd at night to my own hive, blessed bee God. 14. I went to Whitch. Some smal difference 'tween y" Feoffees and Mr. Edwards, which I endeavour'd to compose. Wee came to Wil. Turners, who had newly Swooned with a prick of an awl in y" palm of his hand & yet escapt with life in Hamilton's invasion though a Bullet were shot through his Body. 15. At Whitch. Dr. Fowler T. i Tim. 3. 16. Seen of angels; blessed bee God for y° Guardianship and all the other Ministryes of the Angels to mee & to all the Elect of God. 16. Wee din'd at Bronn. where was Uncle Hotchkis. Two Kine from Mr. Mainwaring at 7"". 17. exchang'd with Mr. Thomas, my common-place-book, wherein someth. written, for a larger of clean paper. 18. war like to bee with the Dutch, the lord of hosts is the God of Jacob — Capt. Holmes * imprison'd in y° Tower, who tis said began the quarrel at Ginny. 19. New Common-place-bookf ruld and prsepared, wherein I purpose to take paynes — nori sera si seria. " In 1664 Sir Robert Holmes was secretly despatched with a squadron of twenty-two ships to the coast of Africa. He not only expelled the Dutch from Cape Corse, to which the English had some pretensions ; he likewise seized the Dutch settlements of Cape Verde and the Isle of Goree. Going to America, he possessed himself of Nova Belgia, since called New York, a territory which James I. had given by patent to the Earl of Stirling, but which had never been planted but by the Hollanders. When the States complained, the king, un- willing to avow what he could not well justify, pretended to be ignorant of Holmes's enterprise. He likewise confined that admiral to the Tower, but some time after released him. t This book is seventeen inches by eleven and a half. There are 1 264 pages, double columns, and it is about one-third filled with notes in Philip Henry's close handwriting. On the last page are the words, ' ' scribere est agere." It iDelonged till lately to Mrs. Grace Keay Lee, of Redbrook. 1 66 PHILIP HENRY. 20. I heard of f Death of S' Richard Grosvenor,* a bitter enemy unto God's people, in Cheshire — sic omnes inimici. 21. I visited Margt Bedward, who hath layn long under sore buffetings of temtation, and under sad perplexing doubts and feares and will 'not be comforted, lord, doe thou speak peace to her & let y' bones which thou hast broken rejoyce. Shee hath had sometimes blasphemous injections from -f evil spirit, & somet. hath spoken folly w* her tongue but moumes for it afteriv. & I believe hates it, lord, set her free. 22. At Whitch. T. I Tim. 3. 16. preached unto the Gentiles, beleived on in -f world. 6 y' it were so to all y" Gentiles & in all the world. John Madocks, Tho. Kinaston, & Andrew Ridgway, excom- municated at Hanmer. 23. I went with freinds to Alsager, vulg. Auger, near Bar- tomley in Chesh. in safety, blessed bee God & with a full purpose to doe good. 24. Elizabeth Alsager bury'd, y" eldest daughter of f famil)-, aged above 20. Mr. Cawdrey preacht. T. i Thes. 4. 14. lord sanctify this providence for their good. 25. wee return'd safe & well, blessed bee God, though through much danger by reason of Ice — and I trust the lord was pleasd to doe some good by mee in y° Journey, to him be,e the glory. 30. The lord forgive y° sin w* is cald to remembr. this day & let y' Innocency of y" Innocent bee cleared up. 31. John Ratcliff dy'd, I pray'd with him before, but bet knew mee not. February 2. Ann Nixon ill, I am still to seek how to deal effectually with dying people, I could not doe it well heretofore when I had Authority, much less now ; lord, give mee the tongue of y° learned for this purpose as for others. I pray'd with her, 6: y' y" prayer of faith might save the sick ! * Sir R. Grosvenor, second baronet, .had, d^u-ing the lifetime of his father, called out the posse comitatiis in 1644, as sheriff of Cheshire, to oppose the Parliament army under Lord Fairfax. After a series of loyal exertions he was ejected from Eaton, and, having suffered n. sequestration of his estate, was sheltered in the house of a neighbouring gentleman until the Restoration