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25)93 
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Lays  o/ 
QuaKerdom 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 


V  "tA.uor-rv/vJS-*^   ^     [£e-'yn.^^,..y->.v6-  O      ]    \.^K^S\ 


LAYS  of 
QUAKERDOM 

By 
"RUTH  PLUMLET" 


Reprinted  from 

The  Knickerbocker 

OF 

1853-54-55 


THE    BIDDLE    PRESS 
Philadelphia 


.PnL5 


I.     The  Execution  of  Mary  Dyer. 

II.     Visit  of  Mary  Fisher  to  the 
Sultan  Mohammed  IV. 

III.     James  Parnell, 

The  Quaker  Proto-Martyr. 


THE  EXECUTION  OF  MARY  DYER, 
AT  BOSTON,  JUNE  FIRST,    1660. 

Mary  Dyer  was  a  respectable  woman,  the  wife 
of  a  reputable  inhabitant  of  Rhode  Island,  and  the 
mother  of  several  children.  Believing  it  to  be  her  duty 
to  accompany  two  friends  to  Boston,  to  induce  the  au- 
thorities to  repeal  the  sanguinary  laws  against  Quakers 
and  other  dissenters,  they  went  there  in  September, 
1659.  The  three  were  arrested  "for  being  Quakers," 
tried  as  heretics,  and  banished  under  pain  of  death, 
being  allowed  two  days  to  depart.  Found  subsequently 
within  the  jurisdiction,  they  were  again  arrested  and 
sentenced  to  death.  The  two  men  were  executed  on 
the  afternoon  of  October  twenty-seventh,  and  their  dead 
bodies  subjected  to  the  most  revolting  indignities; 
denied  burial,  or  coffins,  or  clothing,  they  were  thrown 
naked  into  a  pit,  which  happening  to  fill  with  water, 
alone  protected  them  from  beasts  of  prey. 

Mary  Dyer  was  reprieved  under  the  gallows  at 
the  intercession  of  her  son,  and  sent  home;  but  return- 
ing in  April  following,  she  was  again  arrested,  the 
sentence  confirmed,  and  led  to  execution  on  the  morning 
of  June  first,  i66o. 

The  distance  to  the  gallows  was  one  mile ;  and  the 
drums  were  ordered  to  beat  whenever  she  attempted  to 
speak  on  her  way  thither.  On  the  scaflFold  her  life  was 
again  offered  her,  if  she  would  forever  depart  the  juris- 
diction ;  but  she  could  not  accept  such  conditions. 

Her  meekness,  Christian  endurance,  and  death, 
aroused  great  sympathy  in  the  colonies,  as  well  as  in 
England,  and  she  was  the  last  but  one  of  the  Quakers 
put  to  death  in  America,  for  the  royal  mandamus  of 
Charles  II.,  requiring  their  liberation  from  prison  and 
exemption  from  persecution,  was  signed  by  the  King, 
September  ninth,  1660,  and  proclaimed  in  New  Eng- 
land about  two  months  after;  whereupon  the  Quakers 
held  a  general  thanksgiving  in  Boston. 

History  has  few  examples  of  greater  suffering,  or 
of  higher  heroism,  than  were  endured  and  exhibited 
by  the  early  Quakers  in  various  parts  of  the  world. 


THE  EXECUTION  OF  MARY  DYER, 
AT  BOSTON,  JUNE  FIRST,   1660. 

I. 
il%ITH  his  household,  quaint  and  simple, 
11/    In  his  manly  prime, 

By  the  fire-light  sat  a  Quaker, 

In  the  winter  time ; 
Moved  in  feeling  by  the  pealing 

Of  the  Christmas  chime: 
Little  looked  he  to  the  outward; 

Feasts  and  holy  days, 
To  his  inward  faith  and  worship. 

Were  as  worldly  ways; 
But  he  scoffed  not  at  the  symbols 

Of  the  people's  praise. 
Little  loved  he  art  or  music. 

And  his  fire-light  falls. 
In  fantastic  shape  and  semblance, 

O'er  ungarnished  walls: 
But  he  loved  the  blessed  teaching 

Which  the  chime  recalls. 
All  so  still  he  sate,  and  solemn, 

While  his  own  high  thought. 
Thronged  upon  his  ample  forehead, 

Such  a  stillness  wrought. 
That  the  mystic  spell  of  Silence 

All  around  him  caught. 
Sweetly  looked  they  in  that  circle, 

Wife  and  children  three; 
Two  brave  boys  beside  the  mother 

Hushed  their  boyish  glee; 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

And  a  fair  young  girl  was  kneeling 
At  her  father's  knee. 

II. 

Outward,  with  its  sweet  evangel 

On  the  ear  of  Time, 
Upward  far,  to  meet  the  star-light, 

Swept  the  sounding  chime, 
As  the  centuries  shall  hear  it 

Ever  more,  sublime. 
From  the  ages  dim  and  distant, 

Through  the  pealing  bell, 
Rolled  anew  the  inspirations 

From  His  lips  that  fell. 
On  the  ancient  Mount  of  Olives, 

By  Samaria's  well, 
While  the  echo  star-ward  dying. 

Seemed  each  martyr's  knell. 

HI. 

"Father,  tell  us  of  the  Quakers," 

(Did  the  children  say,) 
"How  the  cruel  Pilgrim  rulers 

Drove  the  Friends  away; 
Tell  us  how  they  whipped  and  killed  them 

In  that  olden  day, 
When  they  hung  poor  Mary  Dyer — 

Cruel  men  were  they." 

IV. 

Fearful  was  the  inward  conflict 

Ere  he  made  reply. 
For  his  nature,  brave  and  martial, 

Broke  so  bold  and  high 

6 


The  Execution  of  Mary  Dyer 

Into  flame  along  his  forehead, 

Lightning  from  his  eye, 
As  the  martyrs  of  his  people 

Passed  in  spirit  by, 
Looked  he  like  a  warrior  waiting 

For  the  battle-cry. 
So  the  fiery  indignation 

Through  his  pulses  ran, 
For  a  moment,  ere  the  Christian 

Triumphed  o'er  the  Man; 
And  his  tones  were  deep  and  thrilling 

As  the  tale  began: 


Sate  the  Puritanic  rulers, 

In  a  stately  row, 
Endicott^  with  scowl  and  scorning 

On  his  lip  and  brow. 
While  a  herd  of  vulgar  bigots 

Thronged  the  court  below; 
Then  came  Michelson  the  Marshal, 

Filled  with  savage  ire. 
Through  the  motley  crowd  of  gazers. 

Thrusting  Mary  Dyer^ 
With  her  quiet,  grave  demeanor. 

In  her  quaint  attire; 
As  the  people  pressed  asunder 

Round  her  foot-steps  close, 
From  the  bar  she  gazed  serenely 

O'er  a  host  of  foes ; 
Then,  the  clerk  commanding  silence, 

Endicott  arose: 


Lays  of  Quaker dom 

VI. 

"Are  you  that  same  Mary  Dyer^ 
With  blasphemous  breath, 

Whom  our  erring  mercy  saving 
From  the  gulf  beneath, 

Banished  from  the  jurisdiction 
Under  pain  of  death?" 

Calm  and  steadfast  then  she  answered; 

"Truly  I  am  she, 
Whom  your  General  Court  appointed 

To  the  gallows-tree. 
Where  ye  sent  our  faithful  martyrs 

When  ye  banished  me. 
Lo!  I  come  again  to  bid  ye 

Set  GoD^s  servants  free !" 

"By  the  council  that  condemned  you 

You  were  fairly  tried ; 
And  we  reaffirm  the  sentence," 

Endicott  replied: 
"In  the  prison  until  morning 

Safely  you  abide; 
Then,  be  hanged  upon  the  gallows 

Where  your  brethren  died. 
Look  not  for  a  second  respite — 

Hope  for  aid  from  none; 
Fixed  the  awful  fate  that  waits  you 

With  to-morrow's  sun." 

"Then,"  replied  she,  slow  and  solemn, 

'^Let  God's  tuill  he  done; 
To  the  power  that  kills  the  body 
8 


The  Execution  of  Mary  Dyer 

He  hath  bid  us  yield; 
Weapons  of  a  carnal  warfare 

Are  not  ours  to  wield; 
He  will  clothe  us  in  His  armor — 

Guard  us  with  His  shield." 

vn. 

Then  she  seemed  to  rise  in  stature, 

And  her  look  was  high ; 
And  there  was  a  light  of  glory 

Beaming  from  her  eye, 
As  she  were  by  angel-presence 

Touched  to  prophecy. 
Startled  by  the  transformation 

Sate  the  rulers  proud ; 
Wondering  at  her  awful  beauty 

Gazed  the  vulgar  crowd; 
While  her  words  went  through  the  stillness, 

Ringing  clear  and  loud. 

vni. 

"Now  I  feel  prophetic  visions 

Filling  all  my  soul : 
In  their  light  the  mists  and  shadows 

From  the  future  roll. 
Lol  I  see  a  power  arising 

Ye  shall  not  control; 
E'en  the  Lord  of  Hosts^  in  mercy, 

Seeking  all  your  land; 
Judge  and  ruler,  priest  and  people, 

In  His  presence  stand; 
And  your  boasted  power  He  holdeth 

In  His  mighty  hand. 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

Cease  your  cruel  persecutions 

Ere  these  days  expire, 
And  He  cometh  in  His  judgments 

With  consuming  fire, 
As  of  old  He  came  to  Edom, 

To  Sidon  and  to  Tyre, 
And  ye  reap  a  bloody  harvest, 

Reap  as  ye  have  sown. 
And  the  lofty  spires  ye  builded 

Reel  and  thunder  down, 
And  the  woe  of  desolation 

Fills  your  ruined  town; 
In  deserted  habitations 

Only  Death  may  dwell 
When  God  leaveth  no  one  living 

Of  His  wrath  to  tell. 
Cease,  oh!  cease  your  persecutions — 

All  may  yet  be  well." 
So  she  ended.    Awe  and  silence 

0*er  the  council  fell. 

IX. 

"And  did  God/'  asked  little  Mary, 
"All  the  town  destroy?" 

"Wait  and  hear  the  story  ended," 

Said  the  elder  boy: 
"If  they  ceased  their  persecutions, 

God  would  not  destroy." 

X. 

Morning  o'er  the  Pilgrim  city 
Breaking  still  and  sweet, 

10 


The  Execution  of  Mary  Dyer 

Heard  the  deep  and  mingled  murmur 

Of  the  hurrying  feet, 
And  the  voices  of  the  people 

Thronging  to  the  street; 
From  afar  the  heavy  rolling 

Of  the  muffled  drum, 
With  the  measured  tread  of  soldiers 

And  the  general  hum, 
Warned  the  captive  in  the  prison 

That  the  hour  had  come. 

All  her  simple  garb  arranging 

With  a  decent  care, 
ICnelt  she  in  a  holy  silence, 

Lost  in  secret  prayer, 
While  her  radiant  face  attested 

God  was  with  her  there. 
At  the  Marshal's  brutal  summons 

Came  she,  firm  and  meek, 
Saying:  "All  this  show  to  escort 

One  so  poor  and  weak?" 
But  they  beat  the  drums  the  louder 

When  they  heard  her  speak. 

XL 

Arms  were  clashing,  eyes  were  flashing. 

In  that  thick  array. 
As  the  Puritan  exulting 

Rode  along  the  way; 
For  he  led  the  hated  Quaker 

To  her  death  that  day. 
Were  they  men,  brave  men,  and  noble, 

Chivalrous  and  high, 
11 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

Marshaled  thus  against  a  Woman, 

And  no  champion  by? 
Were  they  husbands,  sons,   and   fathers, 

And  their  households  nigh. 
When  they  led  a  Wife  and  Mother 

For  her  faith  to  die? 

XII. 
On  the  scaffold  Mary  Dyer 

Standeth  silent  now. 
With  the  martyr's  crown  of  glory 

Kindling  round  her  brow: 
And  her  meek  face  bent  in  pity 

On  the  crowd  below: 
Then  Priest  Wilson^  full  of  scorning, 

Cried:  "Repent!  repent!" 
But  she  answered:  "I  have  sought  you, 

By  our  Father  sent; 
Sought  you,  cruel  persecutors. 

That  you  might  repent." 

"Will  you  leave  us,  leave  us  ever, 

Vex  us  never  more. 
If  your  vagrant  life  we  give  you, 

As  we  gave  before: 
To  your  distant  home  and  kindred 

Once  again  restore?" 

XIII. 
Moved  the  mighty  deep  within  her 

For  a  little  space. 
And  a  surge  of  human  feeling 

Broke  across  her  face ; 

12 


The  Execution  of  Mary  Dyer 

Then  out-shone  the  greater  glory 

Of  the  heavenly  grace, 
As  all  loves  of  earth  descended 

To  their  lower  place, 
Seemed  she  in  transfiguration; 

Such  a  light  was  shed, 
Like  a  halo  from  her  spirit 

Round   about   her  head, 
That  o'er  all  the  ghastly  gibbet 

The  effulgence  spread. 

XIV. 
Then  one  Webb^  the  burly  captain, 

Rising  roughly  said: 
"Mary^  be  your  blood  upon  you; 

Falsely  you  are  led; 
By  the  Law,  which  you  have  broken, 

Not  by  us,  'tis  shed." 
And  he  gave  the  fearful  signal, 

While  she  meekly  bowed: 
Fell  the  fatal  drop  beneath  her; 

Women  shrieked  aloud, 
And  a  cold  and  dismal  shudder 

Ran  through  all  the  crowd. 

XV. 

For  the  people  stood  awe-stricken 
When  the  deed  was  done ; 

Some  who  seemed  to  feel  a  shadow 
Stealing  o'er  the  sun, 

Feared  the  dreaded  day  of  vengeance 
Had  that  hour  begun ; 

Some  believed  they  saw  the  spirit 
13 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

With  their  outward  eyes, 
In  its  shining  shape  and  semblance 

Glorified,  arise. 
With  a  slow  majestic  motion 

Floating  to  the  skies; 
Ever  upward,  upward  ever, 

Star-like,  out  of  view. 
Smiling  as  it  joined  the  angels, 

Smiling  still,  adieu; 
And  all  these  believed  the  martyr*s 

Faith  and  Word  were  true. 

XVI. 

Not  in  vain  had  Mary  Dyer 

Lived  and  prophesied. 
For  the  noble  Pilgrim  people 

Curbed  their  ruler's  pride. 
Though  the  scorned  and  hated  Quakers 

Grew  and  multiplied. 
For  their  faith  one  other  martyr 

Was  the  last  who  died. 


14 


VISIT  OF  MARY  FISHER  TO  THE  SULTAN 

MOHAMMED  IV. 

AT  ADRIANOPLE,    1658. 

Mary  Fisher,  on  her  return  from  New  England, 
where  she  met  severe  treatment,  set  out  on  her  mission  to 
Mohammed  IV.,  then  encamped  with  his  array  without 
Adrianople.  She  reached  Smyrna  by  sea,  but  the  Eng- 
lish Consul  sent  her  back  to  Venice,  no  doubt  believ- 
ing her  to  be  crazy,  as  most  people  are  charitably  sup- 
posed to  be  who  are  in  advance  of  their  times.  From 
Venice  she  made  her  way  by  land,  on  foot,  to  Adria- 
nople, more  than  six  hundred  miles,  through  a  country 
filled  with  soldiers  and  outlaws  of  every  description; 
delivered  her  message  to  the  Sultan,  who  assembled  his 
stafiF,  and  received  her  in  state,  acknowledged  her  "mis- 
sion," and  the  truth  of  what  she  said,  and  requested  her 
to  stay  in  his  dominions.  Upon  her  declining  to  do  so, 
he  offered  her  escort  to  Constantinople,  saying  that  the 
country  was  full  of  danger,  and  he  would  not,  on  any 
account,  harm  should  come  to  her  in  his  kingdom.  She 
declined  his  escort,  and  reached  Constantinople  and 
England  in  safety. 

Some  idea  of  the  peril  and  privation  of  this  journey 
may  be  had  from  Mary  Montague's  letters,  who,  as  the 
wife  of  the  English  Ambassador,  went  to  Adrianople 
nearly  fifty  years  after  Mary  Fisher^s  visit,  and  erron- 
eously states  that  she  was  the  first  Christian  woman 
who  had  made  the  dangerous  journey  since  the  Greek 
Emperors,  and  Pope  bewailed  her  as  one  environed  by 
the  greatest  peril ;  whereas,  the  heroic  Quakeress,  de- 
fended by  no  guard,  under  the  auspices  of  no  Govern- 
ment— save  that  which  is  above  all  kingdoms — made  the 
journey  half  a  century  before;  and  it  may  indicate  how 
contemptuous  must  have  been  the  feeling  at  that  time 
toward  the  Quakers,  seeing  that  this  act  of  true  heroism 
was  not  known  to  Mary  Montague,  even  under  the 
circumstances  of  a  similar  journey  from  the  same  coun- 
try and  city,  and  that  no  contemporaneous  history  re- 
cords it,  or  any  tradition  preserves  it,  save  the  "Memor- 
ials of  the  Meeting,"  if  there  was  any,  to  which  the 
simple  Quaker  returned  her  credentials,  if  she  had  any, 
saying  she  "had  performed  the  service  to  the  peace  and 
satisfaction  of  her  own  mind." 


The  Turkish  power  reached  its  height  in  the 
reign  of  Mohammed  IV.,  at  the  successful  termination 
of  the  siege  of  Candia,  and  began  its  decline  in  the 
same  reign  at  the  Turkish  siege  of  Vienna,  when 
SoBiESKi,  King  of  Poland,  came  to  the  aid  of  Austria, 
and  defeated  the  Turks  with  great  slaughter. 

Mohammed  IV.  was  subsequently  deposed,  and  died 
in  the  Seraglio,  after  five  years'  seclusion.  He  was  a 
great  and  splendid  Monarch,  who  reigned  nearly  fifty 
years,  in  the  early  part  of  which  he  extended  his  do- 
minions and  consolidated  his  power,  reducing  the  jani- 
zaries of  his  kingdom,  so  long  the  dread  of  the  ruler 
and  the  terror  of  the  people.  His  speech  on  the  occasion 
of  his  compulsory  abdication,  is  a  rare  specimen  of  elo- 
quence. 


VISIT  OF  MARY  FISHER  TO  THE 

SULTAN  MOHAMMED  IV. 

AT  ADRIANOPLE,    1658. 

I. 

XT  was  Summer.    Vapors  golden 
Crowning  all  the  regal  hills, 

Hung  like  snowy  veils  of  vestals 

Swaying  o'er  the  singing  rills, 
And  along  the  Orient  glowing 

Drew  their  rosy  curtaining 
Backward  from  the  sun,  advancing 

To  his  Empire  like  a  King. 
On  the  hillside  lay  the  cattle 

Stretching  in  the  golden  glow. 
As  it  passed  to  wake  the  sleepers 

In  the  quiet  vale  below. 
Measured  as  the  march  of  armies. 

Filed  the  shadows  o'er  the  grain 
Bent  beneath  the  spectral  columns; 

Trooping  in  an  endless  train. 
Stately  stood  the  trees,  displaying 

Pearls  upon  their  leafy  stems; 
At  the  zephyrs'  soft  impleading. 

Flinging  down  their  diadems 
To  the  humble  grass  beneath  them 

In  an  ample  wealth  of  gems. 
All  the  air  was  filled  with  fragrance. 

Breathing  through  the  voice  of  song; 
Forth  from  hill,  and  stream,  and  woodland 

Rolled  the  morning  hymn  along. 

19 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

II. 

In  the  country,  calm  and  holy, 

When  the  Summer  days  were  come, 
With  his  household  sat  the  Quaker 

In  their  old  paternal  home ; 
Where  the  earth  his  fathers  nourished 

Long  upon  her  bounteous  breast. 
When  their  simple  lives  were  ended 

Held  them  in  unbroken  rest; 
Where  primeval  trees  the  homestead 

In  their  vast  embraces  fold; 
And  within  their  solid  fibres 

Annals  of  the  ages  hold; 
Ever  to  the  life  around  them 

By  the  leafy  minstrels  told. 
Bending  now,  in  stately  gossip, 

With  the  wandering  Summer  breeze: 
Now  in  nobler  strains  relating 

Stories  of  the  centuries; 
Now,  like  orators,  declaiming, 

Swaying  into  awful  form; 
Toss  their  arms  and  lift  their  voices 

O'er  the  tumult  of  the  storm; 
All  the  day  their  lore  repeating 

In  the  heedless  ear  of  strife; 
All  the  night  the  calm  stars  listen 

To  their  minstrelsy  of  life. 

III. 

To  the  lindens  o'er  the  threshold. 

On  a  glorious  Summer  day. 

Came  the  merry  children  bounding 

Fresh  and  blooming  from  their  play; 
20 


Fisit  of  Mary  Fisher 

Grouping  round  to  hear  their  father 

Tell  another  Quaker  Lay; 
Tell  them  how  brave  Mary  Fisher 

To  the  Sultan  bore  her  word; 
How  the  noble  Turk  received  her 

And  her  Message  from  the  Lord. 
Low  voiced,  from  subdued  emotion, 

Ballad  like,  the  tale  began; 
Sweetly  in  the  Summer  stillness 

Thus  the  simple  story  ran: 

IV. 

The  Sultan  Mahmoud  lay  encamped 

Within  his  guarded  hold; 
Full  fifty  thousand  men  of  war 

Were  with  their  leader  bold. 
Full  fifty  thousand  cimetars 

Flashed  in  the  waning  light, 
And  the  brave  Moslem  only  mourned 

Their  weapons  were  so  bright. 
Flung  out  above  the  royal  camp 

Mohammed's  flag  revealed 
The  shining  crescent's  silver  rim 

Within  its  sacred  field. 
Stretched  in  the  opening  of  his  tent 

The  mighty  Chief  reclined; 
High  purposes  and  vast  designs 

Revolving  in  his  mind. 
The  shadow  of  the  lofty  thought 

Fell  slowly  o'er  his  face, 
And  softened,  in  its  noble  lines. 

The  fierceness  of  his  race. 
On  costly  tapestries  of  the  East 
21 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

His  royal  person  laid; 
And  gleamed  amid  the  Tyrian  dyes 

His  keen  Damascus  blade. 
The  ample  turban  round  his  brow 

Leaned  on  his  swarthy  hand ; 
While  his  unconscious  fingers  plucked 

The  jewels  from  the  band. 
His  eye  was  resting  on  the  flag 

As  in  its  shade  he  lay, 
Pondering  on  Islam* s  vast  renown 

And  wide  extended  sway. 


For  then  the  Crescent's  shining  arch 

Flamed  in  the  tropic  sun, 
And  flashed  where,  up  far  Arctic  nights. 

The  northern  streamers  run. 
From  distant  Asia's  peopled  plains 

And  mountain  steppes,  afar. 
Vast  hordes  of  fierce  believers  came 

To  Islam's  holy  war. 
And  the  Great  Vizier  Kirpuli 

Was  marching  to  his  liege, 
Triumphant  with  the  trophies  won 

At  Candia's  bloody  siege. 
The  armies  of  the  Faithful  held 

Their  undisputed  way. 
And  the  mute  nations  paled  before 

The  Moslem's  dread  array. 

VI. 

The  Sultan  dreamed  of  boundless  power. 
To  wield  his  conquering  sword, 
22 


Visit  of  Mary  Fisher 

And  make  the  unbelievers  own 

The  Prophet  of  the  Lord; 
To  fling  the  banner  of  his  Faith 

O'er  Islam  s  ancient  reign, 
Above  the  valleys  of  Castile, 

The  mountain  heights  of  Spain. 
In  the  great  Temple  of  the  Cross 

Marshal  his  Moslem  force, 
And  make  its  sacred  fane  at  Rome 

A  stable  for  his  horse! 
The  symbol  of  his  perfect  power. 

On  Islam  s  flag  unfurled. 
Behold  the  crescent,  round,  and  rise. 

Full  orbed,  upon  the  world! 


VIL 

As  thus  he  lay,  an  Aga  came, 

With  many  a  low  salaam : 
"What  wouldst  thou  now?"  the  Sultan  said, 

In  accent  deep  and  calm; 
"Shadow  of  God:  without  the  camp 

A  Christian  waits,  abhorred. 
Who  bringeth  from  her  English  home 

'A  Message  from  the  Lord."' 
They  drove  her  thrice  beyond  the  lines; 

Boldly  again  she  came. 
Demanding  audience  calm  and  high, 

In  Allah's  holy  name. 
"A  woman,  saidst  thou  ?"  Mahmoud  rose, 

Still  leaning  on  his  hand : 
"A  woman,  seeking  Islam's  shrine 

From  her  own  Christian  land  ?'* 
23 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

"Most  mighty  Sultan,  one  who  would 

Your  royal  harem  grace: 
Rich  in  the  sweetness  of  her  sex, 

The  beauty  of  her  race; 
But  not  to  Mecca's  holy  shrine 

Her  pilgrim  foot-steps  came: 
To  preach  the  glory  of  the  Cross 

In  her  own  Prophet^s  name; 
Not  at  the  evening  Namas  bowed 

Her  unbelieving  head." 

"And  came  she  to  the  camp  alone?" 

"Alone!"  the  Aga  said. 

"Thus  saith  the  infidel :    Arrived 

At  Smyrna  by  the  sea; 
Captive  they  sent  her  from  the  strand ; 

At  Venice  set  her  free. 
From  thence  on  foot,  two  hundred  leagues, 

Alone  by  night  and  day, 
Her  journey  through  a  war-like  land 

A  weary  distance  lay. 
(Our  boldest  Spahis  could  not  ride 

Safely  along  that  way.) 
Her  Prophet  gave  her  meat  and  drink, 

And  nerved  each  sinking  limb; 
In  clouds  by  day,  by  night  in  fire, 

He  bade  her  follow  him 
To  Adrianople's  royal  camp, 

(So  saith  her  doubtful  word,) 
To  bring  the  Refuge  of  the  world 

'A  Message  from  the  Lord!  " 
24 


Fisit  of  Mary  Fisher 

VIII. 
The  Sultan  mused  awhile,  and  spoke: 

"Caimakin,  God  is  God; 
What  wouldst  thou  with  this  infidel?" 

"Chastise  her  with  the  rod!" 

Up  to  his  feet  the  Sultan  sprung; 

His  glance  was  stern  and  high ; 
The  Aga  and  Caimakin  paled 

Before  his  flashing  eye. 

"Now  by  my  Father's  soul,"  he  said, 

"My  own  right  royal  arm 
Would  from  thy  shoulders  strike  thy  head, 

Shouldst  thou  that  Christian  harm. 
The  Prophet's  self  had  not  inspired 

A  sterner,  loftier  faith 
To  lift  a  woman's  soul  above 

Danger,  and  toil,  and  death. 
She  shall  have  audience.    To  our  stafJ 

Our  royal  mandate  bear ; 
We  shall  await  them  in  our  tent, 

After  the  morning  prayer. 
See  thou  that  noble  Christian,  then, 

Straight  to  our  audience  led ; 
And  for  her  safety  and  repose 

Thou'lt  answer  with  thy  head." 

IX. 
Morning,  beyond  the  eastern  hills 
Her  glorious  march  begun; 
25 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

And  Adrianople's  hoty  mosques 

Stood  glittering  in  the  sun. 
The  loud  Muezzins'  pious  call 

Fell  from  the  minaret; 
Reverent  the  fierce  believers  all 

That  sacred  summons  met. 
The  standard  of  the  Prophet  swung 

Slowly  upon  the  air, 
While  its  defenders  in  the  camp 

Devoutly  knelt  in  prayer. 

X. 

Alone,  amid  that  turbaned  host, 

By  larger  truth  made  free, 
The  Christian,  at  the  call,  withheld 

The  homage  of  her  knee. 
Fierce  bigots,  with  their  eyes  of  fire, 

Saw  her  refuse  to  kneel ; 
And  swarthy  hands,  unclasped  from  prayer 

Convulsive  clutched  the  steel. 
Apart  she  sate,  serene  and  still, 

Within  the  open  tent; 
To  that  devout  delusion  round 

Respectful  pity  lent. 
Her  spirit  through  the  Sacred  Courts 

Its  own  high  path-way  trod, 
In  the  still  temple  of  the  soul 

Communing  with  her  God. 

XI. 

As  thus  she  sate,  the  Aga  came. 

By  the  Caimakin  sent, 
To  bid  her,  in  the  Sultan's  name, 
26 


Visit  of  Mary  Fisher 

Attend  him  In  his  tent. 
The  fiery  warriors,  on  her  way, 

Gathered  in  silent  wrath, 
And,  motionless  as  forms  of  bronze, 

Ranged  them  along  her  path. 
Swarthy  and  grim  on  either  side 

The  breathing  statues  stood; 
Two  lines  of  sabres,  half  unsheathed, 

Seemed  thirsting  for  her  blood. 
With  folded  hands  and  steady  step, 

And  eye  in  quiet,  bent 
Upon  the  savage  throng,  she  passed 

Into  the  royal  tent. 

XII. 
The  Sultan,  on  a  raised  Divan, 

Sat  in  his  splendid  state; 
Grouped  in  a  crescent  round  the  tent 

His  staff  and  escort  wait; 
Warriors  of  grave  and  noble  mien 

Ranged  as  they  ranked  in  fame. 
Who  to  that  audience  with  the  Giaour 

Slow  and  reluctant  came. 
Rich  draperies  of  Damascus  hung 

In  many  an  ample  fold; 
(Old  triumphs  on  their  emerald  ground 

Were  wrought  in  gems  and  gold), 
That  backward  from  the  Sultan's  seat 

Were  looped  on  either  hand; 
The  Mufti  and  Caimakin  stood 

Beside  each  jeweled  band. 
The  Koran  on  a  frame  of  pearl 

Its  sacred  page  displayed; 

27 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

The  Greek  Dragoman,  wafting  near, 
Profound  obeisance  made. 

XIII. 

Amid  the  dazzling  splendor  round, 

In  sweet  and  solemn  mood, 
The  Quaker,  in  her  humble  garb, 

Serene  and  simple  stood, 
Despite  the  Aga's  frequent  sign 

To  make  her  low  salaam  ; 
Respectful,  but  unmoved  remained, 

Silent,  and  firm,  and  calm. 

XIV. 

^'Christian"  at  length  the  Sultan  said, 
"We  wait  to  hear  thy  word : 

Declare  it,  neither  less  nor  more. 

Thy  'Message  from  the  Lord/  " 

So  still  she  stood,  again  he  said: 

"Speak  what  thou  hast  to  say  ; 
If  these  rude  warriors  waken  dread, 

My  staff  alone  shall  stay. 
Speak  freely,  we  have  hearts  to  feel, 

And  ears  prepared  to  hear; 
And  be  thy  message  good  or  ill, 

Speak,  thou  hast  none  to  fear." 

"I  seek,"  she  said,  "the  Life  within. 

Where  strength  and  wisdom  lie, 

To  give  my  utterance  weight,  and  power, 
And  unction,  from  on  high." 

28 


Fisit  of  Mary  Fisher 

Gravely  the  listening  Moslem  heard, 
And  patient  and  sedate; 

Waiting  the  Christian's  farther  word 
The  turbaned  warriors  sate. 

XV. 

Below,  the  encampment  seemed  to  lay, 

That  morning,  hushed  and  still; 
The  distant  chargers'  friendly  neigh 

Came  faintly  up  the  hill. 
With  sound  of  steel  that  peaceful  rung 

From  restless  Spahis  nigh. 
As  some  impatient  horseman  flung 

His  burnished  armor  by. 
The  ancient  Hebrus  rolled  along 

By  the  old  cypress  groves. 
From  whose  deep  shade  the  turtle's  song 

Proclaimed  its  peaceful  loves. 
The  sun-light  fell  in  waves  of  gold 

In  all  that  bounteous  clime. 
Where  melody  and  fragrance  hold 

Perpetual  Summer-time. 
As  Nature  to  that  scene  of  strife 

Her  holiest  influence  lent, 
Subdued,  the  fierce  surrounding  life 

Throbbed  through  the  silent  tent. 

XVI. 

A  light  upon  the  Christian's  face 

From  her  rapt  spirit  broke: 

And  slowly,  with  unconscious  grace 
And  solemn  power,  she  spoke: 


Lays  of  Quaker dom 

XVII. 

"Bold  follower  of  thy  Prophet,  hear 

The  Message  of  the  Lord; 
Ye  men  of  carnal  war,  give  ear 

Unto  his  living  word. 
The  Holy  Spirit  bade  me  leave 

My  home  and  native  land, 
Bearing  God^s  message  in  my  heart, 

My  life  within  my  hand ; 
Led  me  in  fire  through  dreary  nights, 

In  clouds  through  burning  days; 
O'er  pathless  deeps  and  mountain  heights, 

And  by  untraveled  ways; 
To  bid  your  Sultan  in  his  youth 

Seek  an  immortal  crown. 
And  build  in  God^s  eternal  truth 

Your  glory  and  renown: 
To  wield  the  great  and  growing  power, 

Vouchsafed  you  from  above. 
To  help  establish  in  the  earth 

Justice,  and  Truth,  and  Love; 
To  leave  your  heathen  ways,  and  live 

The  husband  and  the  wife. 
Around  the  sacred  hearth  of  home 

A  higher,  holier  life. 
God  made  the  union  of  the  twain 

When  first  the  race  began; 
Forever  shall  His  act  remain 

The  marriage  law  of  man. 
God  bids  thee,  great  and  mighty  King, 

Thy  wars  and  fightings  cease, 
And  thy  victorious  armies  bring 

To  the  pursuits  of  peace; 

30 


Fisit  of  Mary  Fisher 

A  greater  than  thy  Prophet  speaks; 

Hear  thou  His  living  word: 
'Make  of  thy  spear  a  pruning  hook, 

A  plough-share  of  thy  sword. 
Thou  mak'st  a  wilderness  to  howl 

Where  peopled  cities  stood, 
And  marchest  through  the  affrighted  earth 

In  surging  seas  of  blood. 
Before  thee,  horror  and  despair, 

Ruin  and  death  behind; 
Famine  and  pestilence  are  there. 

Thou  scourge  of  human  kind !" 

XVHI. 

Clear  and  distinct  her  utterance  fell 

Upon  the  stillness  round ; 
The  turbaned  warriors  half  uprose 

To  catch  the  startling  sound; 
As  the  Dragoman  passed  her  words 

Into  their  native  tongue, 
To  strike  the  bold  blasphemer  down 

A  score  of  warriors  sprung. 
A  ring  of  quivering  sabres  gleamed, 

Grasped  in  each  swarthy  hand 
But  the  bold  bigots  quailed  before 

The  Sultan's  high  command. 
A  moment,  o'er  the  Christian's  head 

The  flashing  weapons  hung; 
Then  each  within  its  sheath  of  steel 

Keen  and  reluctant  rung. 

Unmoved  and  calm  the  Qw2^|^  stood, 
But  Death,  as  he  arew  nigh, 

31 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

Heightened  the  radiance  of  her  face, 

The  lustre  of  her  eye ; 
Deepened  her  clear  and  thrilling  tone, 

That  o'er  the  turbaned  throng, 
Obedient  to  the  Sultan's  sign, 

Unfaltering,  rolled  along. 

XX. 

"  'Tis  written,  and  forever  makes 

Part  of  God's  holy  Word, 
'Whoso  the  sword  of  warfare  takes 

Shall  perish  by  the  sword.* 
Your  cities  stand  upon  the  dust 

Of  nations  passed  away, 
W^ho  perished  wholly;  for  their  trust 

In  carnal  weapons  lay. 
Israelj  an  alien,  o'er  the  earth 

Wanders  without  a  home ; 
Lo!  where  are  Persia,  Syria  now, 

Egypt,  and  Greece,  and  Rome? 
Forever  lost  to  Time  and  Life! 

Thus  God  fulfills  His  Word; 
'Whoso  shall  take  the  sword  in  strife 

Shall  perish  by  the  sword,' 
Islam  shall  not  escape  the  woe 

Of  those  who  build  by  wrong; 
Strong  as  thou  art,  great  Sultan,  know 

That  God  is  great  and  strong; 
For  principalities,  nor  powers, 

Nor  heights,  nor  depths  untrod ; 
Things  past,  nor  present,  nor  to  come, 

Lii|iit  the  power  of  God. 
Turn  thou  to  peace!  or  God  shall  wring 

32 


Visit  of  Mary  Fisher 

The  sceptre  from  thy  hand, 
And  the  great  woe  of  nations  bring 

Upon  thy  favored  land. 
Then  shall  your  Crescent's  light  go  down 

In  darkness  and  In  blood ; 
Forgot,  your  glory  and  renown. 

Where  once  your  temples  stood." 

XXI. 

She  ceased ;  and  though  above  the  throng 

A  solemn  silence  fell. 
Deep  in  the  hangings  of  the  tent 

Her  utterance  seemed  to  dwell. 
Pale  as  a  prophetess  she  stood; 

Her  eyes  were  filled  with  light; 
Mutely  the  wondering  warriors  gazed. 

The  presence  was  so  bright. 
The  aged  Mufti  stroked  his  beard, 

Pondering  on  what  he  saw: 
"An  infidel!  so  filled  with  power 

Without  His  holy  law!" 

XXII. 

"Christian,"  the  Sultan  said,  "we  see 

The  Great  God  gives  thee  words. 

Dwell  in  our  land;  we  welcome  thee; 
Thy  Message  IS  the  Lord's/* 

"Great  Sultan,  may  thy  people  own 

The  Word  of  Truth  I  brought; 

In  peace  I  leave  you,  and  alone. 

Even  as  your  camp  I  sought." 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

"Escort  to  Stamboul  thou  shalt  have, 
Escort,  the  best  of  mine; 

I  would  not,  for  an  hundred  lives. 

That  harm  should  come  to  thine." 

"Ho!  Kizlar-Aga,  bid  thy  staff 

Send  me  a  thousand  horse! 
The  Spahis  of  our  yellow  flag, 

The   boldest  of   their   force; 
And  bid  them  hither;  Morah,  bring 

My  noble  Arab  mare; 
Brave  Christian,  Morah  will  be  proud 

Courage  like  thine  to  bear." 

XXIII. 
Moved  by  his  generous  words,  she  said: 

"I  thank  thee,  noble  Turk; 
I  do  not  need  thy  men  of  war 

To  do  my  Master  s  work; 
His  arm  is  underneath  me  still ; 

He  is  my  staff  and  guide; 
Legions  of  angels,  at  His  will, 

Shall  gather  to  my  side. 
Now  peace  be  with  you  from  above; 

Peace  in  your  councils  dwell; 
For  in  our  common  Father's  love 

I  bid  you  all — farewell!" 

She  turned,  and,  meekly  and  sedate, 
Passed  slowly  from  the  tent. 

While  the  great  Sultan,  where  he  sate, 
In  salutation  bent. 

Thoughtful,  unconscious  that  his  hand 
34 


Visit  of  Mary  Fisher 

Rested  upon  his  sword, 
He  sate,  revolving  in  his  mind 

The  Christian's  fearless  word. 
Lifting  his  eye,  the  Crescent's  light — 

Kindling  above  him  then — 
Flashed  inward  through  its  quiet  depths. 

And  fired  his  soul  again. 

XXIV. 

Who  seek  to  know,  the  record  tells 

That  Quaker,  traveling  far. 
Went  peaceful  to  her  English  home; 

The  Sultan  went  to  war: 
And  at  Vienna's  fearful  siege, 

On  many  a  dreadful  field, 
Before  the  soldiers  of  the  Cross 

Beheld  his  armies  yield; 
And,  as  without,  relentless  foes 

Humbled  his  power  and  pride; 
Within,  as  stormy  factions  rose. 

Beset  on  every  side,  * 

By  Adrianople's  mosque,  resigned 

His  sceptre  and  his  sword; 
And  dying,  pondered  in  his  mind 

That  Message  from  the  Lord. 

XXV. 

Two  hundred  years!    The  Sultan  rests 
Upon  his  tomb  of  state; 

While  Islam's  Empire  rocks  around 
Upon  the  brink  of  fate. 

Beyond  the  Balkan  mountains  high 
Its  ancient  foemen  throng; 

35 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

Their  drum-note  echoes,  rolling  by, 

Lo!  "God  is  great  and  strong!" 

Around  her  lessening  lines,  and  near 
The  nation's  clashing  swords, 

Repeat  in  Islam's  startled  ear: 

"That  Message  was  the  Lord's!" 

XXVI. 

Two  hundred  years!    The  Quaker  sleeps 

Within  her  nameless  grave; 
But  a  whole  kindred  people  keeps 

Her  memory  pure  and  brave. 
The  while,  her  "Faith  of  Peace  and  Love* 

That  feebly  then  began, 
Grows  with  the  world's  great  life  to  be 

The  common  Faith  of  man. 


36 


JAMES  PARNELL, 

The  ^aker  Proto- Martyr. 

James  Parnell  was  born  in  Nottingham,  England, 
of  humble  parents,  but  he  possessed  good  abilities  and  a 
liberal  education. 

When  George  Fox  was  imprisoned  in  Carlisle,  in 
1653,  Parnell,  then  in  his  seventeenth  year,  was  among 
those  who  visited  the  great  Quaker  in  prison,  and  the 
result  was  the  conversion  of  the  young  visitor  to  the 
faith  of  the  Quakers,  of  which  he  afterward  became  an 
eminent  expounder,  and  for  which  he  was  the  first 
martyr. 

Parnell  began  to  preach  before  he  was  seventeen 
years  old,  and,  in  pursuance  of  his  mission,  went  to 
Cambridge  about  April,  1655,  where  he  was  challenged 
by  the  Baptists  to  public  disputation:  the  fame  of  his 
eloquence  and  power  had  preceded  him. 

The  meeting  was  held,  but  resulted  in  little  discus- 
sion and  much  disturbance,  chiefly  (according  to  Par- 
nell) from  "brutish  scholars  who  plotted  against  me, 
and  from  Baptists  and  Independents  who,  though  bit- 
ter enemies  to  each  other,  were  joined  friends  against 
me." 

He  continued  preaching,  disputing  and  exhorting 
during  fourteen  days,  when  he  was  committed  to  jail 
by  William  Pickering,  Mayor  of  Cambridge,  on  a 
charge  "of  issuing  two  papers,  one  against  the  corrup- 
tions of  the  ministry,  and  one  against  the  corruption  of 
the  magistracy." 

They  kept  him  confined,  and  "tossed  from  prison 
to  dungeon,"  during  two  whole  sessions,  when,  a  jury 
finding  nothing  against  him,  he  was  discharged,  with  a 
"pass"  under  the  title  of  "Rogue,"  and  conducted  three 
miles  out  of  the  city.  Subsequently  he  returned  to  Cam- 
bridge, and  continued  in  that  vicinity  for  about  six 
months,  preaching  to  great  assemblies  of  people,  and, 
through  opposition  and  persecution,  establishing  many 
in  his  faith. 


From  Cambridge  he  went  to  Essex,  to  be  present  at 
a  "public  meeting  and  fast  held  at  Great  Coggeshall 
by  order  of  the  authorities,  to  counteract  the  wicked 
heresies  of  the  Quakers."  There  he  preached  and  ex- 
horted for  about  a  week  to  many  thousands  of  people 
who  thronged  to  hear  him,  until  he  was  arrested  by 
Justice  Wakering,  in  the  name  of  the  Lord  Protector, 
and  committed  to  the  common  jail  as  a  mover  of  sedi- 
tions, and  blasphemer,  near  the  middle  of  July,  1655. 

Here  he  was  closely  confined  for  some  weeks  and 
denied  all  communication  with  his  friends,  until  the 
next  Chelmsford  Assizes,  when  he  was  chained  beside 
one  suspected  of  murder,  on  a  chain  with  five  others, 
where  he  remained  night  and  day,  as  they  marched 
through  the  country  to  the  court,  about  twenty  miles 
distant. 

The  people  were  surprised  at  his  treatment,  and  the 
Court,  to  prevent  the  expression  of  any  sympathy  for 
him,  ordered  the  irons  removed  from  his  hands  when 
he  was  brought  to  trial. 

He  was  then  arraigned,  charged  with  blasphemy 
and  sedition;  and  at  the  trial  his  old  persecutors  in- 
fluenced the  judge  and  jury  by  malicious  statements,  to 
which  he  was  not  allowed  to  reply,  and  upon  his  ac- 
quittal by  the  jury.  Judge  Hills  committed  him  for  con- 
tempt of  magistracy  and  priesthood  and  fined  him 
heavily. 

He  was  then  removed  to  Colchester  Castle,  and  sub- 
jected to  systematic  cruelty  and  outrages  inconceivable 
to  us  at  this  day.  Denied  a  bed,  he  was  obliged  to  lie 
on  the  bare  stones  of  the  prison,  where,  in  wet  weather, 
the  walls  were  dripping  with  water,  and  during  the 
cold  of  winter  he  was  almost  deprived  of  clothing,  fre- 
quently of  food,  beaten  until  he  was  nearly  insensible 
by  the  jailor  and  keeper,  all  his  friends  denied  access 
to  him,  and  not  permitted  to  relieve  his  sufFerings.  He 
was  placed  in  a  "Hole  in  the  wall,"  which  was  prob- 
ably the  recess  of  the  window,  quite  deep,  as  the  walls 
are  nine  feet  thick.  This  "recess"  was  so  high  from 
the  stone  floor,  that  he  was  obliged  to  reach  it  part  way 
by  a  ladder,  which,  being  six  feet  too  short,  a  rope  at 
the  upper  end  aided  him  to  his  wretched  abode.  The 
keeper  would  not  allow  him  a  basket  and  string,  which 
his  friends  desired  to  furnish,  to  draw  his  food  up  to 


him,  and  he  was  therefore  compelled  to  ascend  the  rope 
with  one  hand  and  carry  his  provisions  in  the  other, 
which  he  did  with  great  difficulty,  being  a  person  of 
small  stature  and  feeble  frame,  much  weakened  by  long 
exposure  and  privation. 

On  one  occasion,  when  attempting  to  grasp  the  rope, 
it  eluded  his  hand,  and  he  fell  with  great  force  upon 
the  pavement  below,  by  which  he  was  seriously  injured. 
He  was  then  placed  in  a  recess  nearer  the  ground,  and 
left  to  die. 

His  case  was  powerfully  represented  to  Cromwell's 
government,  and  several  Quakers  oflFered  to  lie  in  his 
place,  but  no  mitigation  of  his  punishment  could  be  ob- 
tained, nor  any  concession  but  the  admission  of  two 
Friends  to  see  him  die,  but  who  were  refused  permission 
to  remove  his  body,  which  was  buried  in  the  castle-yard 
by  the  jailor's  assistants. 

He  died  in  the  spring  of  1656,  after  incredible  suf- 
fering, when  only  nineteen  years  old,  exhorting  his 
friends  to  "keep  the  faith,"  saying  he  had  "seen  great 
things"  and  beseeching  them  in  his  last  moments,  "not 
to  hold  him:  to  let  him  go!" 

So  he  departed,  leaving  his  name  to  be  numbered 
with  tho;  e  who  in  all  ages  have  lived,  and  labored,  and 
suffered  jar  the  spiritual  emancipation  of  man. 


JAMES  PARNELL, 
The  ^aker  Proto- Martyr, 

"^■Tj^T  was  June ;  her  bloom  and  beauty 

I       Then  the  queenly  month  displayed, 
^  And  in  her  rich  robes  of  summer 

All  the  joyous  earth  arrayed. 
Now  the  Quaker,  near  his  homestead, 

In  the  woodland,  on  the  hill. 
Stood  beside  the  stream  proclaiming 

All  its  mission  to  the  mill. 
Busy,  down  beneath  the  chestnuts, 

By  the  meadows  green  and  still, 
There,  the  willows,  o'er  the  water — 

Loving  patrons  of  the  stream — 
Bend  to  see  it  run  and  ramble, 

Or  to  watch  it  sleep  and  dream ; 
Never  weary  of  its  music. 

Glad  to  hear  it  sing  along ; 
All  their  lines  of  grace  and  beauty 

Waving  plaudits  of  the  song. 
But  the  statelier  beech  and  maple 

To  the  hill-side  group  withdrew. 
Where  the  old  oak,  vast  and  rugged, 

In  his  simple  grandeur  grew. 
There  the  pines,  with  solemn  voices, 

Speak  the  oracles  of  Fate, 
And  the  walnuts,  like  old  warders, 

Guard  the  arch-way  of  the  gate; 
And  the  spectral  Lombard  poplars. 

Stately  as  old  gaints  stand, 
Wasting,  with  the  woes  of  exile. 

Slowly,  in  a  foreign  land; 

43 


Lays  of  Quaker dorn 

While  the  aspen,  all  a-tremble 

With  a  trouble  never  told, 
Seeks  the  sweet  acacia,  swaying 

With  its  fringing  bloom  of  gold: 
And  the  elms  above  the  threshold 

Drape  the  old  and  mossy  eaves; 
And  the  maples  feel  the  sunlight 

Streaming  on  their  silver  leaves. 

Now^  beneath  the  stately  arches 

Of  the  old  boughs,  high  and  wide, 
Southward,  as  the  morning  marches, 

Shifting  to  the  shaded  side, 
Calm  and  happy  sat  the  Quaker, 

With  his  ample  forehead  bare, 
Silent,  in  the  softened  sunlight, 

And  the  balmy  summer  air; 
Listening  to  the  ringing  laughter 

Of  his  daughter,  young  and  fair : 
While  the  mother  sat,  serenely 

Smiling  in  maternal  pride 
At  the  elder  brother,  kneeling 

On  the  green  grass  by  her  side. 
With  a  tender,  reverent  feeling 

Gazed  he  on  her  placid  face. 
Where  the  spirits,  outward  looking, 

Had  the  sweet  and  quiet  grace 
Of  a  strong  soul,  gathered  inward 

From  the  storm  of  worldly  strife. 
Never  shaken,  never  drifting 

From  the  centre  of  its  life. 
At  her  feet  the  mastifl  lying. 

Stretched  upon  his  grassy  bed, 
44 


James  Parnell 

Held  the  younger  brother  resting, 
Pillowed  on  his  stately  head. 

Now  the  children,  grouped  in  stillness 

Round  their  father's  ample  chair, 
Waited  for  another  story. 

Promised  when  they  gathered  there; 
How  young  Parnell  preached  and  suffered 

For  the  holy  cause  of  Truth ; 
And,  a  captive,  poor  and  lonely. 

Perished  in  his  early  youth. 
How,  within  his  narrow  prison. 

In  Colchester's  castle- wall. 
Died  the  first  of  Quaker  martyrs. 

And  the  youngest  of  them  all. 

"Autumn,  o*er  the  land  of  England, 

Saw  the  fields  of  ripening  com. 
Waiting  for  the  reaper's  sickle. 

Waving  in  the  breath  of  morn. 
And  it  saw  a  holier  harvest; 

For  the  mighty  Master  then 
Bade  His  own  anointed  reapers 

Gather  in  the  souls  of  men. 
Lo!  the  fields  were  white  already. 

But  the  laborers  were  few; 
And  some  trembled  as  they  entered 

On  that  service,  high  and  new. 
Some  there  were  who,  strong  and  steady, 

Trod  the  narrow  line  of  right ; 
Shining,  in  an  age  of  darkness, 

Sons  and  daughters  of  the  light. 
One  there  was,  a  youth,  and  noble, 

45 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

Though  he  came  of  humble  blood, 
Who,  with  manhood's  high  endurance, 

At  his  post  of  duty  stood. 
Frail  of  form,  and  fair  in  feature, 

On  his  face  the  bloom  of  youth 
Blended  with  the  beauty  breaking 

Outward  from  a  soul  of  truth. 
Learned  he  was,  and  filled  with  wisdom. 

Sweet  and  eloquent  of  tongue; 
And  the  thronging  people  marveled 

At  the  power  of  one  so  young. 
To  them,  all  around  him  swaying 

On  the  still  mid-summer  morn, 
Much  he  spake  of  that  old  Gospel 

To  these  latter  ages  borne. 
Much  he  reasoned,  much  disputed 

With  the  vast  and  heaving  crowd. 
Which  a  furious  priesthood  troubled 

By  its  scorning  fierce  and  loud: 
'Hear  ye  how  this  fellow  raileth 

In  the  very  house  of  prayer? 
Shall  the  Church  of  God  be  sacred  ? 

Are  not  we  his  servants  there? 
See!  this  man  defiles  the  altar: 

At  your  peril  hear  ye  him.'  " 


Then  the  people,  drunk  with  passion, 

Surged  upon  him,  fierce  and  grim; 

But  he  held  their  rage  suspended 

By  the  simple  power  of  truth  ; 

Till,  from  awe,  were  some  who  listened, 
Some,  from  pity  of  his  youth. 
46 


James  Parnell 

Then  his  manly  voice  ascended 

O'er  the  slow-subsiding  din; 
And  he  spake  with  powder  and  freedom 

Of  the  "Glorious  Light  Within." 
Lo!  this  is  the  Christ,  the  Teacher! 

He  will  teach  you  of  His  ways: 
This  is  that  out-pouring  Spirit 

Promised  in  these  latter  days. 
Now  the  old  shall  dwell  in  visions, 

And  the  young  shall  prophesy; 
And  ye  all  may  feel,  ye  people. 

That  the  power  of  God  is  nigh; 
Nigh,  within  your  hearts  and  spirits. 

As  the  great  Apostle  said : 
Save  in  fearful  sin  and  trespass 

Ye  be  reprobate  and  dead. 
Think  you,  in  your  steeple  houses 

God's  eternal  presence  stands? 
Nay!  He  dwelleth  not  in  temples 

Made  by  any  human  hands. 
But  your  bodies  are  His  temples, 

And  His  holy  Church  is  one: 
Every  soul  redeemed  becometh 

In  its  walls  a  living  stone; 
And  His  Spirit  now  ordaineth 

Preachers  of  His  word  again 
Not  your  priesthood,  formed  and  fashioned 

By  the  carnal  wills  of  men; 
Prophets  who  divine  for  money, 

Prieachers  who  do  preach  for  hire ; 
And  (j0D''s  judgments  shall  consume  them, 

Like  the  "chaff  before  the  fire." 
Then  the  angry  priests  and  rulers 

47 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

Cried  again,  in  greater  wrath: 
"Shall  this  babbler  and  blasphemer 

Linger  longer  in  your  path?" 

But  the  people  were  divided, 

Tossed  and  heaving  to  and  fro; 
Some  believed  an  evil  spirit 

Sought  them,  from  the  realms  below. 
Some  believed  a  prophet  risen. 

With  the  power  of  ancient  days; 
These,  amid  the  wild  commqjtion, 

Stood  in  silent  awe  and  praise. 

One,  a  maiden,  with  her  tresses 

From  her  fair  face  backward  flung; 
With  clasped  hands,  and  pale  lips  parted, 

Ever  on  his  accents  hung; 
And  a  matron,  on  whom  rested 

Some  great  sorrow's  sombre  hue, 
Stood  in  light,  as  one  illumined 

By  a  glorious  hope,  and  new; 
And  a  white  haired  peasant  murmured, 

Bowed  by  labor  and  by  years, 
As  his  hard  hand  from  the  furrows 

Of  his  rough  face  brushed  the  tears, 
"Lo!  mine  eyes  have  seen  Thy  glory; 

Now  I  wait  for  my  release; 
In  my  day  Thy  Gospel  liveth ; 

Let  Thy  servant  rest  in  peace." 
Thoughtful,  with  his  bare  arms  folded 

On  his  broad  and  brawny  breast. 
Stood  a  stalwart  yeoman,  kindling 

With  a  dawning  hope  of  rest. 

48 


James  Parnell 

"Can  this  be  the  day  of  promise? 

Will  the  Thousand  Years  begin? 
Shall  this  prophet,  born  among  us, 

Bring  that  glorious  promise  in?" 

"Tut!  man!  but  he  has  a  devil," 

Growled  an  old  and  surly  boor. 
"Devils  do  not,"  said  another, 

"Preach  the  Gospel  to  the  poor." 
"Have  our  herdsmen  grown  to  prophets?" 

Asked  a  proud  and  haughty  dame. 
"Few  of  old,"  the  matron  answered, 

"Of  the  great  and  noble  came." 
"When  ye  follow  this  man's  teaching," 

Said  a  townsman,  worldly  wise, 
"Ye  shall  see  our  nation's  greatness 

Sinking  never  more  to  rise." 

While  among  themselves  disputing, 

Some  in  anger,  rude  and  loud ; 
As,  his  present  mission  ended. 

Slowly  Parnell  left  the  crowd, 
Then  one  Justice  Wakering  to  him 

In  hot  haste  and  passion  came. 
Saying  roughly,  "I  arrest  you 

In  the  Lord  Protector's  name; 
For  you  do  but  sow  seditions 

Where  your  wicked  railings  fall." 
Nothing  moved,  he  only  answered, 

"So  Tertullus  said  of  Paul."" 

Then  they  led  him  to  their  prison — 
To  that  dismal  den  of  sin; 

49 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

He,  so  pure  and  young  and  simple, 

Thurst  with   thieves  and  felons  in. 
Where  a  brutal  herd  around  him 

With  low  scoff  and  cursing  came, 
Jest  obscene  and  ribald  laughter, 

Seeming  lost  to  fear  or  shame. 
"Heigh  oh!  who  is  this  new  comer?" 

Said  one,  ruder  than  the  rest. 
"Room,  ye  gentles!  room  and  welcome 

For  a  new  and  stately  guest. 
Ha !  what  have  we  here  ?  a  Quaker ! 

Quake,  ye  culprits!  quake  for  fear. 
Come,  Sir  Preacher,  give  's  a  sermon  ; 

Marry!  much  we  need  it  here." 
"Silence!"  growled  a  burly  felon; 

"Let  that  puny  boy  alone. 
Can  your  coward  hearts  discover 

No  arms  equal  to  your  own?" 
Then  the  Quaker  saw  the  tumult 

Into  savage  brawling  break; 
But,  intrepid,  sweet,  and  earnest. 

In  their  very  midst  he  spake : 

"Men  and  brethren,  poor  and  sinful. 

Wanderers  from  the  way  of  right, 
Have  ye  nothing  left  to  live  for. 

But  to  swear,  and  brawl,  and  fight? 
Though  ye  seem  of  men  forsaken, 

God  is  dwelling  near  to  you, 
And  He  seeth,  with  your  evil, 

All  the  little  good  ye  do. 
Ever  in  your  souls  His  Spirit 

With  your  sinful  purpose  strives ; 

50 


James  Parnell 

And  He  seeketh  thus  to  win  you 

Back  to  better,  happier  lives. 
Listen  to  His  holy  teaching, 

Ere  your  cups  of  woe  be  full : 
'Though  your  sins  are  as  the  scarlet, 

He  will  make  them  white  as  wool.' 
To  your  low  estates  He  bringeth 

Power  and  pity  from  above, 
Greater  than  all  human  mercy, 

Stronger  than  all  human  love. 
Some  among  ye  may  remember 

When  ye  walked  in  purer  ways ; 
Or  beside  your  mothers  prattled. 

In  your  childhood's  happy  days. 
Ye  must  now  become  as  children. 

And  your  better  lives  begin; 
Then  these  outward  bonds  shall  vanish, 

And  your  stronger  bonds  within." 

Low  and  clear  through  all  the  prison 

Fell  his  sweet  and  simple  word, 
And  the  astonished  felons  round  him 

Ceased  their  brawling  as  they  heard. 
Some  with  half-clenched  hands  suspended 

Held  them  from  the  brutal  blow; 
Some,  by  gentle  accents  melted, 

Bowed  in  silent  sorrow  low. 
Some  did  weep  to  feel  upon  them 

Swift  and  crowning  memories  come; 
Life  mis-spent,  its  treasures  wasted; 

Love  and  peace,  and  hope  and  home. 
"Is  it?"  said  that  burly  felon. 

With  his  tears  upon  his  cheeks, 
51 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

Quivering  lip  and  utterance  broken, 

"Is  it  man  or  angel  speaks?" 
Some  unmoved  and  stony  hearted 

Shrunk  to  angles  of  the  room; 
Still,  but  sullen  and  defiant, 

Crouching  in  their  native  gloom. 
While  the  Quaker,  calm  and  peaceful, 

By  the  heavenly  presence  blest, 
Stretched  him  on  his  prison  pallet, 

To  a  sweet,  unbroken  rest. 

In  that  gloomy  jail,  and  loathsome. 

Many  a  weary  week  he  lay; 
Then  they  led  him  to  his  trial, 

Led  him  with  their  thieves  away. 
In  the  felons'  gang  they  chained  him. 

With  the  vilest  of  the  vile; 
Side  by  side  along  the  highway 

Thus  they  traveled  many  a  mile. 
From  the  base  and  cruel  thraldom, 

Unreleased  by  day  or  night. 
Worn  and  weary  in  the  body, 

But  in  spirit  strong  and  bright. 
So  they  came  to  ancient  Chelmsford, 

Where  in  irons,  day  by  day. 
Waiting  for  the  near  assizes, 

In  the  common  jail  he  lay. 

Now  with  deepening  tints  the  autumn 
Touched  the  old  majestic  wood, 

And  the  sylvan  kings  enfolded 

In  their  dying  drapery  stood, 

Impotent  as  some  old  giant, 
52 


James  Parnell 

Shorn  of  all  his  fiery  hair. 
Bald  and  round  the  sun  ascended 

Through  the  still  and  misty  air, 
With  his  bonds  of  wreathing  vapor 

Struggling  for  his  summer  sway; 
But  pale  flower  and  leaf  enfeebled 

Felt  his  power  had  passed  away. 

Sadder  than  the  waning  season 

Grew  each  manly  spirit  then ; 
Colder,  darker  than  the  vapors 

Bigotries  enshrouded  men. 
To  their  court  they  led  the  Quaker, 

In  his  iron  fetters  bound; 
As  he  passed  the  people  wondered 

At  the  clanking  shackles'  sound. 
"Is  this  man  among  the  felons? 

He  so  simple  and  so  good ; 
Though  he  be  a  canting  Quaker, 

Are  his  hands  imbrued  in  blood  ?" 
Thus  the  pitying  people  murmured 

At  such  outrage  in  their  land, 
Till  the  judges  bade  the  jailer 

Strike  the  shackles  from  his  hand. 

Then  his  cruel  foes  arraigned  him, 

Charged  with  great  and  grievous  crimes: 
Heresies  and  dread  seditions, 

Fearful  in  their  turbid  times. 
"Much,"  they  said,  "he  taught  the  people. 

From  the  Church  to  set  them  free ; 
And  with  deep  and  fierce  invective 

Spake  against  the  powers  that  be." 
53 


Lays  of  Quaker dom 

Round  the  judge  each  persecutor 

Whispered  his  malicious  word, 
And  against  him  court  and  jury 

With  their  savage  hatred  stirred. 
Friend  or  counsel  they  denied  him, 

And  his  simple  right  to  speak ; 
Lone  he  stood,  and  undefended. 

Like  his  Master,  still  and  meek. 

Then  the  jury  found  him  guiltless; 

But  the  judge  in  anger  spake, 
Saying,  "This  man  and  his  people 

Every  law  and  ritual  break. 
For  his  bold  contempt  of  rulers, 

And  his  scoff  at  things  divine, 
We  commit  him  at  discretion 

To  imprisonment  and  fine!" 
Silent  Parnell  heard  the  sentence. 

But  he  looked  so  calm  and  high. 
As  they  led  him  back  to  prison, 

There  to  linger  and  to  die! 
O'er  Colchester  Castle's  threshold 

Then  he  entered  to  his  doom; 
When  again  he  passed  the  portal. 

Passed  he  to  his  nameless  tomb. 

Oh!  it  was  a  shame  and  sorrow. 

When  in  England  people  saw 

Men  for  conscience  sake  imprisoned, 
In  the  name  of  God  and  law. 

They  have  learned  a  better  lesson 
In  these  latter  days  of  light. 

When  the  noble  English  people 
54 


James  Parnell 

Champion  Europe  for  the  right. 
Still  Colchester's  Castle  turrets 

Old  and  gray  in  Essex  stand ; 
Still  in  feudal  isolation, 

Frowning  o'er  the  cultured  land, 
'Leagured  by  those  old  besiegers. 

Winter's  wind  and  summer's  rain ; 
While  around,  the  peaceful  reapers 

Sing  upon  the  wide  domain; 
Undisturbed  the  ivy  clambers 

Over  all  the  massive  towers, 
And  along  the  moat  and  rampart 

Sporting  children  hide  in  flowers. 

But  within  the  same  old  prison 

Yawns  amid  perpetual  gloom, 
With  insatiate  jaws  of  granite. 

Dismal  as  a  living  tomb. 
Since  the  old  days  when  the  Romans 

Held  them  with  imperial  sway. 
In  these  walls  had  many  a  captive 

Breathed  his  wretched  life  away. 
Here  the  loyal  Lucas  perished. 

And  the  brave  and  noble  Llisle  ; 
What  time  Fairfax  with  his  Round-heads 

Tramped  along  the  castle  aisle. 
But  of  all  the  noble  number. 

Who  the  coming  death  defied, 
Never  one  like  Parnell  suffered. 

Never  one  like  Parnell  died. 

When  the  winter  winds  were  sweeping 
Round  the  castle's  massive  walls, 
55 


Lays  of  Quaker dom 

Shrieking  in  at  grated  casements, 

Howling  through  the  antique  halls; 
In  the  vast  and  vaulted  chambers, 

Ever  sighing,  faint  and  low; 
Through  the  close  and  dismal  dungeons, 

Wailing  dirge-like,  sad  and  slow ; 
Still  in  mournful  cadence  blending. 

Like  a  mighty  human  moan, 
As  of  spirits,  yet  imprisoned 

In  the  huge  and  solid  stone; 
With  the  woes  of  all  its  victims 

So  the  castle  seemed  to  groan. 

Sick  and  sleepless  Parnell  lying 

Through  the  mid-night's  chill  and  gloom, 
In  the  winter's  sullen  summons, 

Heard  his  own  approaching  doom. 
Months  had  passed :  no  hope  of  pardon 

To  the  patient  prisoner  came. 
Though  to  rulers  many  a  pleader 

Spake  his  sufferings  and  his  name. 
Never  was  such  intercession 

Made  for  any  in  that  day; 
Of  his  people  some  did  proffer 

In  his  very  stead  to  stay. 
But  the  rulers'  hearts  were  hardened. 

For  the  land  was  filled  with  strife, 
And  the  dread  of  civil  warfare 

Cheapened  every  human  life. 

So  they  heeded  not  the  Quaker, 

Who  with  steadfast  faith  and  love 
Bade  his  suffering  people  gather 


James  Parnell 

Strength  and  counsel  from  above. 
All  the  while  his  persecutors 

Seemed  in  every  torment  skilled, 
And  the  jailer  and  the  keeper 

With  a  fiendish  fury  filled. 
Now  with  brutal  stripes  they  beat  him ; 

Now  his  food  they  bore  away, 
Till  in  sickness,  starved  and  bleeding, 

On  the  stony  floor  he  lay. 
Couch  and  raiment  then  denied  him. 

Though  his  parting  hour  seemed  nigh ; 
Friends  and  kindred  all  excluded, 

Thus  they  left  him  there  to  die. 

But  yet  unsubdued,  his  spirit, 

With  a  calm  and  mighty  will, 
Held  the  body's  failing  pulses, 

Beating  in  their  channels  still : 
Beating  weaker,  beating  slower. 

As  the  great  soul,  day  by  day. 
With  a  sense  of  power  and  triumph. 

Kept  the  gloomy  king  at  bay. 
Thus  in  that  tremendous  conflict 

Wore  his  last  long  night  away. 

Morning  came:  it  cometh  slowly 

Through  the  gloom  of  prison  bars. 
When  all  night  the  captive  keepeth 

His  lone  vigil  of  the  stars. 
Morning  came,  and  over  England 

Brought  the  vapors  on  the  breeze. 
With  a  lazy  motion  rolling 

Inward  from  the  circling  seas ; 
57 


Lays  of  Quakerdom 

Onward,  upward  slowly  drifting, 

Folding  round  the  castle  wall; 
Swathing  massive  tow^er  and  turret, 

Dense  and  heavy,  like  a  pall ; 
Driving  through  the  prison  grating. 

With  a  keen  and  cutting  chill, 
Where,  amid  the  shivering  dampness 

Parnell  lay,  so  weak  and  still  ; 
While  around  the  heavy  vapor, 

(Piercing  feeble  nerve  and  bone), 
Drop  by  drop,  condensed  and  trickled 

Dow^n  the  cold  and  flinty  stone. 
In  the  stifling  air  the  martyr 

Slower  drew  his  laboring  breath, 
And  upon  his  pallid  forehead 

Lay  the  heavy  dews  of  death. 

Then  to  soothe  his  parting  moments 

Loving  friends  in  stillness  came, 
Whom  his  cruel  foes  admitted 

To  his  cell,  for  very  shame. 
On  the  old  familiar  faces 

Sweetly  fell  his  dying  smile, 
As  he  said,  "I  linger  with  you 

But  a  very  little  while; 
Keep  the  faith  and  fight  the  battle. 

For  the  crown  awaits  you:  lo! 
I  behold  the  glory  breaking! 

Do  NOT  HOLD  me! LeT  ME  Go!" 

Then  they  seemed  to  see  the  prison 

With  a  sudden  radiance  bright, 
As  from  some  transcendent  presence, 

58 


James  Parnell 

Passing  in  a  flood  of  light ; 
And  amid  the  awful  splendor, 

Each  pale  watcher  held  his  breath ; 
But  within  the  gloom  returning 

Stood  that  mighty  victor — Death  ! 

So  he  perished — that  young  martyr: 

Save  his  people,  few  beside 
Of  the  busy  world  remember 

That  he  ever  lived  or  died. 
But  a  true  man  lives  forever 

In  the  great  heart  of  the  race, 
With  a  slow  but  certain  justice. 

Finding  his  appointed  place. 
And  in  that  time  when  the  peoples 

Shall  recall  their  great  and  true, 
And  the  dead  of  all  the  ages 

Summon  to  that  high  review ; 
When  the  world  shall  seek  its  jewels. 

For  the  Future's  glorious  crown, 
And  the  hand  of  higher  manhood 

Write  each  noble  story  down; 
In  that  swiftly-coming  era. 

When  it  calls  the  splendid  roll 
Of  all  those  who  lived  and  suffered 

For  the  freedom  of  the  soul; 
Then  in  that  time  with  the  jewels. 

And  in  answer  to  the  call. 
Shall  appear  the  youthful  martyr 

Of  Colchester  s  Castle-wall. 


59 


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