Journal
George Fox, the founder of the Society
of Friends, or “Friends of the Truth,”
was born at Drayton, Leicestershire, in July, 1624,
and died in London on January 13, 1691. His “Journal,”
here epitomised, was published in 1694, after
being revised by a committee under the superintendence
of William Penn, and prefaced for the press by
Thomas Ellwood, the Quaker. Fox rejected
all outward shows of religion, and believed in an
inward light and leading. He claimed to be
divinely directed as he wandered, Bible in hand,
through the country, denouncing church-worship,
a paid ministry, religious “profession,”
and advocating a spiritual affiliation with Christ
as the only true religion. He was imprisoned
often and long for “brawling” in
churches and refusing to take oaths then required by
law. Fox wrote in prison many books of religious
exhortation, his style being tantalisingly involved.
The one work that lives is the “Journal,”
a quaintly egotistic record of unquestioning faith
and unconquerable endurance in pursuit of a spiritual
ideal through a rude age.
I.-His Youth and Divine Calling
I was born in the month called July,
1624, at Drayton-in-the-Clay, in Leicestershire.
My father’s name was Christopher Fox; he was
by profession a weaver, an honest man, and there was
a seed of God in him. In my very young years
I had a gravity and staidness of mind and spirit not
usual in children. When I came to eleven years
of age I knew pureness and righteousness. The
Lord taught me to be faithful in all things, inwardly
to God and outwardly to man, and to keep to “Yea”
and “Nay” in all things.
Afterwards, as I grew up, I was put
to a man, a shoemaker by trade, who dealt in wool,
and was a grazier, and sold cattle, and a great deal
went through my hands. I never wronged man or
woman in all that time; for the Lord’s power
was with me, and over me to preserve me. While
I was in that service, it was common saying among
people that knew me, “If George says ‘Verily,’
there is no altering him.”
At the command of God, on the ninth
day of the seventh month, 1643, I left my relations,
and broke off all familiarity or fellowship with old
or young. I went to Barnet in the month called
June, in 1644. Now, during the time that I was
at Barnet a strong temptation to despair came upon
me. Then I thought, because I had forsaken my
relations, I had done amiss against them. I was
about twenty years of age when these exercises came
upon me, and I continued in that condition some years
in great trouble. I went to many a priest to
look for comfort, but found no comfort from them.
Then the priest of Drayton, the town of my birth,
whose name was Nathaniel Stephens, came often to me,
and I went often to him. At that time he would
applaud and speak highly of me to others, and what
I said in discourse to him on the week days he would
preach of on the first days, for which I did not like
him. This priest afterwards became my great persecutor.
After this I went to another ancient
priest at Mancetter, in Warwickshire, and reasoned
with him about the ground of despair and temptations;
but he was ignorant of my condition, he bade me take
tobacco and sing psalms. Tobacco was a thing I
did not love, and psalms I was not in a state to sing.
Then I heard of a priest living about Tamworth, but
I found him only like an empty, hollow cask. Later
I went to another, one Mackam, a priest of high account.
He would needs give me some physic, and I was to have
been let blood. I thought them miserable comforters,
and saw they were all as nothing to me, for they could
not reach my condition. And this struck me, “that
to be bred at Oxford or Cambridge was not enough to
make a man fit to be a minister of Christ.”
So neither these, nor any of the dissenting people,
could I join with, but was a stranger to all, relying
wholly upon the Lord Jesus Christ.
It was now opened in me “that
God, who made the world, did not dwell in temples
made with hands,” but in people’s hearts,
and His people were His temple. During all this
time I was never joined in profession of religion
with any, being afraid both of professor and profane.
For which reason I kept myself much a stranger, seeking
heavenly wisdom and getting knowledge from the Lord.
When all my hopes in them were gone,
then-oh, then-I heard a voice
which said, “There is one, even Christ Jesus,
that can speak to thy condition.” And when
I heard it my heart did leap for joy, and the Lord
stayed my desires upon himself.
II.-Preaching and Persecution
Then came people from far and near
to see me, and I was made to speak and open things
to them. And there was one Brown, who had great
prophecies and sights upon his death-bed of me.
He spoke only of what I should be made instrumental
by the Lord to bring forth. And I had great openings
and prophecies, and spoke of the things of God.
And many who heard me spread the fame
thereof, and the Lord’s power got ground, and
many were turned from the darkness to the light within
the compass of these three years-1646,
1647, and 1648. Moreover, when the Lord sent
me forth, he forbade me to “put off my hat”
to any, high or low. And I was required to “thee”
and “thou” all, men and women, without
any respect to rich or poor, great or small. But,
oh, the rage that then was in the priests, magistrates,
professors, and people of all sorts; but especially
in priests and professors! Oh, the scorn, the
heat and fury that arose! Oh, the blows, punchings,
beatings, and imprisonments that we underwent!
About this time I was sorely exercised
in speaking and writing to judges and justices to
do justly; in warning such as kept public-houses for
entertainment that they should not let people have
more drink than would do them good. In fairs
also and in markets I was made to declare against
their deceitful merchandise, cheating, and cozening;
warning all to deal justly, to speak the truth, to
let their yea be yea, and their nay be nay. Likewise
I was made to warn masters and mistresses, fathers
and mothers in private families, to take care that
their children and servants might be trained up in
the fear of the Lord; and that they themselves should
be therein examples and patterns of sobriety and virtue.
But the earthly spirit of the priests
wounded my life, and when I heard the bell toll to
call people together to the steeple-house it struck
at my life; for it was just like a market-bell to
gather people together, that the priest might set
forth his wares to sale.
III.-In Perils Oft
Now as I went towards Nottingham on
a first-day, when I came on the top of a hill in sight
of the town, I espied the great steeple-house, and
the Lord said unto me, “Thou must go cry against
yonder great idol, and against the worshippers therein.”
When I came there all the people looked like fallow
ground, the priest (like a great lump of earth) stood
in his pulpit above. Now the Lord’s power
was so mighty upon me that I could not hold, but was
made to cry out.
As I spoke, the officers came and
took me away, and put me into a nasty, stinking prison,
the smell whereof got so into my nose and throat that
it very much annoyed me. But that day the Lord’s
power sounded so in their ears that they were amazed
at the voice. At night they took me before the
mayor, aldermen, and sheriffs of the town. They
examined me at large, and I told them how the Lord
had moved me to come. After some discourse between
them and me, they sent me back to prison again; but
some time after the head sheriff sent for me to his
house. I lodged at the sheriff’s, and great
meetings we had in his house. The Lord’s
power was with this friendly sheriff, and wrought
a mighty change in him; and accordingly he went into
the market, and into several streets, and preached
repentance to the people. Hereupon the magistrates
grew very angry, and sent for me from the sheriff’s
house, and committed me to the common prison.
Now, after I was released from Nottingham gaol, where
I had been kept prisoner for some time, I travelled
as before in the work of the Lord.
And while I was at Mansfield-Woodhouse,
I was moved to go to the steeple-house there, and
declare the truth to the priest and people; but the
people fell upon me in great rage, struck me down,
and almost stifled and smothered me; and I was cruelly
beaten and bruised by them with their hands, Bibles,
and sticks. Then they haled me out, though I
was hardly able to stand, and put me into the stocks,
where I sat some hours. After some time they
had me before the magistrate, who, seeing how evilly
I had been used, after much threatening, set me at
liberty. But the rude people stoned me out of
the town for preaching the word.
IV.-A Willing Sufferer
While I was in the house of correction
at Derby as a blasphemer, my relations came to see
me, and being troubled for my imprisonment they went
to the justices that cast me into prison, and desired
to have me home with them, offering to be bound in
one hundred pounds, and others of Derby with them
in fifty pounds each, that I should come no more thither
to declare against the priests. So I was had up
before the justices, and because I would not consent
that they or any should be bound for me-for
I was innocent from any ill-behaviour, and had spoken
the word of life and truth unto them-Justice
Bennett rose up in a rage; and as I was kneeling down
to pray to the Lord to forgive him, he ran upon me,
and struck me with both his hands. Whereupon I
was had again to the prison, and there kept until
six months were expired.
Now the time of my commitment being
nearly ended, the keeper of the house of correction
was commanded to bring me before the commissioners
and soldiers in the market-place, and there they offered
me preferment, as they called it, asking me if I would
take up arms for the commonwealth against Charles
Stuart; but I told them I lived in the virtue of that
life and power that took away the occasion of all wars,
and was come into the covenant of peace which was before
wars and strifes were.
I then passed through the country,
clearing myself amongst the people; and some received
me lovingly, and some slighted me. And some when
I desired lodging and meat, and would pay for it,
would not lodge me except I would go to the constable,
which was the custom, they said, of all lodgers at
inns, if strangers. I told them I should not go,
for that custom was for suspicious persons, but I
was an innocent man.
And I passed in the Lord’s power
into Yorkshire, and came to Tickhill, where I was
moved to go to the steeple-house. But when I began
to speak they fell upon me, and the clerk took up
his Bible and struck me in the face with it, so that
it gushed out with blood, and I bled exceedingly in
the steeple-house. Then the people got me out
and beat me exceedingly, stoning me as they drew me
along, so that I was besmeared all over with blood
and dirt. Yet when I got upon my legs again I
declared to them the word of life. Some moderate
justices, hearing of it, came to hear and examine
the business, and he that shed my blood was afraid
of having his hand cut off for striking me in the church
(as they called it), but I forgave him, and would
not appear against him.
Then I went to Swarthmore to Judge
Fell’s, and from there to Ulverstone, where
the people heard me gladly, until Justice Sawrey-the
first stirrer-up of cruel persecution in the North-incensed
them against me, to hale, beat, and bruise me, and
the rude multitude, some with staves and others with
holly-bushes, beat me on the head, arms, and shoulders
till they deprived me of sense. And my body and
arms were yellow, black, and blue with the blows I
received that day, and I was not able to bear the
shaking of a horse without much pain. And Judge
Fell, coming home, asked me to give him a relation
of my persecution, but I made light of it-as
he told his wife-as a man that had not been
concerned, for, indeed, the Lord’s power healed
me again.
V.-Encounters with Cromwell
When I came to Leicester I was carried
up a prisoner by Captain Drury, one of the Protector’s
life-guards, who brought me to London and lodged me
at the Mermaid, over against the Mews at Charing Cross.
And I was moved of the Lord to write a paper to Oliver
Cromwell, wherein I declared against all violence,
and that I was sent of God to bring the people from
the causes of war and fighting to a peaceable gospel.
After some time Captain Drury brought me before the
Protector himself at Whitehall, and I spoke much to
him of truth and religion, wherein he carried himself
very moderately; and as I spoke he several times said
it was very good and it was truth, and he wished me
no more ill than he did his own soul.
When I went into Cornwall I was seized
and brought to Launceston to be tried, and being settled
in prison upon such a commitment that we were not
likely to be soon released, we were put down into Doomsdale,
a nasty, stinking place where they put murderers after
they were condemned; and we were fain to stand all
night, for we could not sit down, the place was so
filthy. We sent a copy of our sufferings to the
Protector, who sent down General Desborough to offer
us liberty if we would go home and preach no more;
but we could not promise him. At last he freely
set us at liberty, and in Cornwall, Devonshire, Dorsetshire,
and Somersetshire, the truth began to spread mightily.
After a little while Edward Pyot and
I were moved to speak to Oliver Cromwell again concerning
the sufferings of Friends, and we laid them before
him, and directed him to the light of Christ.
Afterwards we passed on through the counties to Wales,
and by Manchester to Scotland; but the Scots, being
a dark, carnal people, gave little heed, and hardly
took notice of what was said.
And when I had returned to London
I was moved to write again to Oliver Cromwell.
There was a rumour about this time of making Cromwell
king, whereupon I warned him against it, and he seemed
to take well what I said to him, and thanked me.
Taking boat to Kingston, and thence to Hampton Court,
to speak with him about the sufferings of Friends,
I met him riding into Hampton Court Park before I
came to him. As he rode at the head of his life-guards,
I felt a waft of death go forth against him, and he
looked like a dead man. After I had warned him,
as I was moved, he bid me come to his house.
But when I came he was sick, so I passed away, and
never saw him more.
After, I was imprisoned in Lancaster,
but when I had been in gaol twenty weeks was released
on King Charles being satisfied of my innocency.
Then I was tried at Leicester and found guilty, but
was set at liberty suddenly. And at Lancaster
I was tried because when they tendered me the oaths
of allegiance and supremacy I would not take any oath
at all, and there I was a prisoner in the castle for
Christ’s sake, but was never called to hear
sentence given, but was removed by an order from the
king and council. And afterwards I lay a year
in Scarborough gaol, but was discharged by order of
the king as a man of peaceable life.
And on the 2nd of the second month
of the year 1674 I was brought to trial at Worcester,
and during my imprisonment there I wrote several books
for the press, and this imprisonment so much weakened
me that I was long before I recovered my natural strength
again, and in later years my body was never able to
bear the closeness of cities long.