SECTION I.
Dress — Quakers distinguished
by their dress from others — great extravagance
in dress in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries — this
extravagance had reached the clergy — but
religious individuals kept to their antient dresses — the
dress which the men of this description wore in those
days — dress of the women of this description
also — George Fox and the Quakers springing
out of these, carried their plain habits with them
into their new society.
I have now explained, in a very ample
manner, the moral education and discipline of the
Quakers. I shall proceed to the explanation of
such customs, as seem peculiar to them as a society
of christians.
The dress of the Quakers is the first
custom of this nature, that I purpose to notice.
They stand distinguished be means of it from all other
religious bodies The men wear neither lace, frills,
ruffles, swords, nor any of the ornaments used by
the fashionable world. The women wear neither
lace, flounces, lappets, rings, bracelets, necklaces,
ear-rings, nor any thing belonging to this class.
Both sexes are also particular in the choice of the
colour of their clothes. All gay colours such
as red, blue, green, and yellow, are exploded.
Dressing in this manner, a Quaker is known by his
apparel through the whole kingdom. This is not
the case with any other individuals of the island,
except the clergy; and these, in consequence of the
black garments worn by persons on account of the death
of their relations, are not always distinguished from
others.
I know of no custom among the Quakers,
which has more excited the curiosity of the world,
than this of their dress, and none, in which they
have been more mistaken in their conjectures concerning
it.
“That hye on horse wylleth
to ride,
In glytter ande gold of great araye,
’I painted and pertred all
in pryde,
No common Knyght may go so gaye;
Chaunge of clothyng every daye,
With golden gyrdles great and small,
As boysterous as is here at baye;
All súche falshed mote nede
fell.”
To this he adds, that many of them
had more than one or two mitres, embellished
with pearls, like the head of a queen, and a staff
of gold set with jewels, as heavy as lead. He
then speaks of their appearing out of doors with broad
bucklers and long swords, or with baldrics about their
necks, instead of stoles, to which their basellards
were attached.
“Bucklers brode and sweardes
longe,
Baudryke with baselards kene.”
He then accuses them with wearing
gay gowns of scarlet and green colours, ornamented
with cut-work, and for the long pykes upon their shoes.
But so late as the year 1652 we have
the following anecdote of the whimsical dress of a
clergyman. John Owen, Dean of Christ church, and
Vice-Chancellor of Oxford, is represented an wearing
a lawn-band, as having his hair powdered and his hat
curiously cocked. He is described also as wearing
Spanish leather-boots with lawn-tops, and snake-bone
band-strings with large tassels, and a large set of
ribbands pointed at his knees with points or tags
at the end. And much about the same time, when
Charles the second was at Newmarket, Nathaniel Vincent,
doctor of divinity, fellow of Clare-hall, and chaplain
in ordinary to his majesty, preached before him.
But the king was so displeased with the foppery of
this preacher’s, dress, that he commanded the
duke of Monmouth, then chancellor of the university,
to cause the statutes concerning decency of apparel
among the clergy to be put into execution, which was
accordingly done. These instances are sufficient
to shew, that the taste for preposterous and extravagant
dress must have operated like a contagion in those
times, or the clergy would scarcely have dressed themselves
in this ridiculous and censurable manner.
But although this extravagance was
found among many orders of society at the time of
the appearance of George Fox, yet many individuals
had set their faces against the fashions of the world.
These consisted principally of religious people of
different denominations, most of whom were in the
middle classes of life. Such persons were found
in plain and simple habits notwithstanding the contagion
of the example of their superiors in rank. The
men of this description generally wore plain round
hats with common crowns. They had discarded the
sugar-loaf hat, and the hat turned up with a silver
clasp on one side, as well as all ornaments belonging
to it, such as pictures, feathers, and bands of various
colours. They had adopted a plain suit of clothes.
They wore cloaks, when necessary, over these.
But both the clothes and the cloaks were of the same
colour. The colour of each of them was either
drab or grey. Other people who followed the fashions,
wore white, red, green, yellow, violet, scarlet, and
other colours, which were expensive, because they
were principally dyed in foreign parts. The drab
consisted of the white wool undyed, and the grey of
the white wool mixed with the black, which was undyed
also. These colours were then the colours of the
clothes, because they were the least expensive, of
the peasants of England, as they are now of those
of Portugal and Spain. They had discarded also,
all ornaments, such as of lace, or bunches of ribbands
at the knees, and their buttons were generally of alchymy,
as this composition was then termed, or of the same
colour as their clothes.
The grave and religious women also,
like the men, had avoided the fashions of their times.
These had adopted the cap, and the black hood for
their headdress. The black hood had been long
the distinguishing mark of a grave matron. All
prostitutes, so early as Edward the third, had been
forbidden to wear it. In after-times it was celebrated
by the epithet of venerable by the poets, and had
been introduced by painters as the representative
of virtue. When fashionable women had discarded
it, which was the case in George Fox’s time,
the more sober, on account of these ancient marks
of its sanctity, had retained it, and it was then
common among them. With respect to the hair of
grave and sober women In those days, it was worn plain,
and covered occasionally by a plain hat or bonnet.
They had avoided by this choice those preposterous
head-dresses and bonnets, which none but those, who
have seen paintings of them, could believe ever to
have been worn. They admitted none of the large
ruffs, that were then in use, but chose the plain handkerchief
for their necks, differing from those of others, which
had rich point, and curious lace. They rejected
the crimson sattin doublet with black velvet skirts,
and contented themselves with a plain gown, generally
of stuff, and of a drab, or grey, or buff, or buffin
colour, as it was called, and faced with buckram.
These colours, as I observed before, were the colours
worn by country people; and were not expensive, because
they were not dyed. To this gown was added a
green apron. Green aprons had been long worn
in England, yet, at the time I allude to, they were
out of fashion, so as to be ridiculed by the gay.
But old fashioned people still retained them.
Thus an idea of gravity was connected with them; and
therefore religious and steady women adopted them,
as the grave and sober garments of ancient times.
It may now be observed that from these
religious persons, habited in this manner, in opposition
to the fashions of the world, the primitive Quakers
generally sprung. George Fox himself wore the
plain grey coat that has been noticed, with alchymy
buttons, and a plain leather girdle about his waist.
When the Quakers therefore first met in religious
union, they met in these simple clothes. They
made no alteration in their dress on account of their
new religion. They prescribed no form or colour
as distinguishing marks of their sect, but they carried
with them the plain habits of their ancestors into
the new society, as the habits of the grave and sober
people of their own times.
SECTION II.
But though George Fox introduced
no new dress into the society, he was not indifferent
on the subject — he recommended simplicity
and plainness — and declaimed against the
fashions of the times — supported by Barclay
and Penn — these explained the objects of
dress — the influence of these explanations — dress
at length incorporated into the discipline — but
no standard fixed either of shape or colour — the
objects of dress only recognized, and simplicity recommended — a
new Era — great variety allowable by the
discipline — Quakers have deviated less from
the dress of their ancestors than other people.
Though George Fox never introduced
any new or particular garments, when he formed the
society, as models worthy of the imitation of those
who joined him, yet, as a religious man, he was not
indifferent upon the subject of dress. Nor could
he, as a reformer, see those extravagant fashions,
which I have shewn to have existed in his time, without
publicly noticing them. We find him accordingly
recommending to his followers simplicity and plainness
of apparel, and bearing his testimony against the
preposterous and fluctuating apparel of the world.
In the various papers, which he wrote
or gave forth upon this subject, he bid it down as
a position, that all ornaments, superfluities, and
unreasonable changes in dress, manifested an earthly
or worldly spirit. He laid it down again, that
such things, being adopted principally for the lust
of the eye, were productive of vanity and pride, and
that, in proportion as men paid attention to these
outward decorations and changes, they suffered some
loss in the value and dignity of their minds.
He considered also all such decorations and changes,
as contrary both to the letter and the spirit of the
scriptures. Isaiah, one of the greatest prophets
under the law, had severely reproved the daughters
of Israel on account of their tinkling ornaments,
cauls, round tires, chains, bracelets, rings, and
ear-rings. St. Paul also and St. Peter had both
of them cautioned the women of their own times, to
adorn themselves in modest apparel, and not with broidered
hair, or gold, or pearls, or costly array. And
the former had spoken to both sexes indiscriminately
not to conform to the world, in which latter expression
he evidently included all those customs of the world,
of whatsoever nature, that were in any manner injurious
to the morality of the minds of those who followed
them.
By the publication of these sentiments,
George Fox shewed to the world, that it was his opinion,
that religion, though it prescribed no particular
form of apparel, was not indifferent as to the general
subject of dress. These sentiments became the
sentiments of his followers. But the society
was coming fast into a new situation. When the
members of it first met in union, they consisted of
grown up persons; of such, as had had their minds
spiritually exercised, and their judgments convinced
in religious matters; of such in fact as had been
Quakers in spirit, before they had become Quakers by
name. All admonitions therefore on the subject
of dress were unnecessary for such persons. But
many of those, who had joined the society, had brought
with them children into it, and from the marriages
of others, children were daily springing up.
To the latter, in a profligate age, where the fashions
were still raging from without, and making an inroad
upon the minds and morals of individuals, some cautions
were necessary for the preservation of their innocence
in such a storm. For these were the reverse of
their parents. Young, in point of age, they were
Quakers by name, before they could become Quakers
in spirit. Robert Barclay therefore, and William
Penn, kept alive the subject of dress, which George
Fox had been the first to notice in the society.
They followed him on his scriptural ground. They
repeated the arguments, that extravagant dress manifested
an earthly spirit, and that it was productive of vanity
and pride. But they strengthened the case by adding
arguments of their own. Among these I may notice,
that they considered what were the objects of dress.
They reduced these to two, to decency, and comfort,
in which latter idea was included protection from the
varied inclemencies of the weather. Every thing
therefore beyond these they considered as superfluous.
Of course all ornaments would become censurable, and
all unreasonable changes indefensible, upon such a
system.
These discussions, however, on this
subject never occasioned the more ancient Quakers
to make any alteration in their dress, for they continued
as when they had come into the society, to be a plain
people. But they occasioned parents to be more
vigilant over their children in this respect, and
they taught the society to look upon dress, as a subject
connected with the christian religion, in any case,
where it could become injurious to the morality of
the mind. In process of time therefore as the
fashions continued to spread, and the youth of the
society began to come under their dominion, the Quakers
incorporated dress among other subjects of their discipline.
Hence no member, after this period, could dress himself
preposterously, or follow the fleeting fashions of
the world, without coming under the authority of friendly
and wholesome admonition. Hence an annual inquiry
began to be made, if parents brought up their children
to dress consistently with their christian profession.
The society, however, recommended only simplicity
and plainness to be attended to on this occasion.
They prescribed no standard, no form, no colour, for
the apparel of their members. They acknowledged
the two great objects of decency and comfort, and left
their members to clothe themselves consistently with
these, as it was agreeable to their convenience or
their disposition.
A new aera commenced from this
period. Persons already in the society, continued
of course in their ancient dresses: if others
had come into it by convincement, who had led gay
lives, they laid aside their gaudy garments, and took
those that were more plain. And the children of
both, from this time, began to be habited from their
youth as their parents were.
But though the Quakers had thus brought
apparel under the disciplinary cognizance of the society,
yet the dress of individuals was not always alike,
nor did it continue always one and the same even with
the primitive Quakers. Nor has it continued one
and the same with their descendants. For decency
and comfort having been declared to be the true and
only objects of dress, such a latitude was given, as
to admit of great variety in apparel. Hence if
we were to see a groupe of modern Quakers before
us, we should probably not find any two of them dressed
alike. Health, we all know, may require alteration
in dress. Simplicity may suggest others.
Convenience again may point out others; and yet all
these various alterations may be consistent with the
objects before specified. And here it may be
observed that the society, during its existence for
a century and a half, has without doubt, in some degree,
imperceptibly followed the world, though not in its
fashions, yet in its improvements of cloathing.
It must be obvious again, that some
people are of a grave, and that others are of a lively
disposition, and that these will probably never dress
alike. Other members again, but particularly the
rich, have a larger intercourse than the rest of them,
or mix more with the world. These again will
probably dress a little differently from others, and
yet, regarding the two great objects of dress, their
cloathing may come within the limits which these allow.
Indeed if there be any, whose apparel would be thought
exceptionable by the society, these would be found
among the rich. Money, in all societies, generally
takes the liberty of introducing exceptions.
Nothing, however is more true, than that, even among
the richest of the Quakers, there is frequently as
much plainness and simplicity in their outward dress,
as among the poor; and where the exceptions exist,
they are seldom carried to an extravagant, and never
to a preposterous extent.
From this account it will be seen,
that the ideas of the world are erroneous on the subject
of the dress of the Quakers; for it has always been
imagined, that, when the early Quakers first met in
religious union, they met to deliberate and fix upon
some standard, which should operate as a political
institution, by which the members should be distinguished
by their apparel from the rest of the world. The
whole history, however, of the shape and colour of
the garments of the Quakers is, as has been related,
namely, that the primitive Quakers dressed like the
sober, steady, and religious people of the age, in
which the society sprung up, and that their descendants
have departed less in a course of time, than others,
from the dress of their ancestors. The mens hats
are nearly the same now, except that they have stays
and loops, and many of their clothes are nearly of
the same shape and colour, as in the days of George
Fox. The dress of the women also is nearly similar.
The black hoods indeed have gone, in a certain degree,
out of use. But many of such women, as are ministers
and elders, and indeed many others of age and gravity
of manners, still retain them. The green apron
also has been nearly, if not wholly laid aside.
There was here and there an ancient woman, who used
it within the last ten years, but I am told that the
last of these died lately. No other reasons can
be given, than those which have been assigned, why
Quaker-women should have been found in the use of
a colour, which is so unlike any other which they now
use in their dress. Upon the whole, if the females
were still to retain the use of the black hood and
the green apron, and the men were to discard the stays
and loops for their hats, we should find that persons
of both sexes in the society, but particularly such
as are antiquated, or as may be deemed old fashioned
in it, would approach very near to the first or primitive
Quakers in their appearance, both as to the sort and
to the shape, and to the colour of their clothes.
Thus has George Fox, by means of the advice he gave
upon this subject, and the general discipline which
he introduced into the society, kept up for a hundred
and fifty years, against the powerful attacks of the
varying fashions of the world, one steady, and uniform,
external appearance among his descendants; an event,
which neither the clergy by means of their sermons,
nor other writers, whether grave or gay, were able
to accomplish during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries,
and which none of their successors have been able
to accomplish from that time to the present.
SECTION III.
The world usually make objections
to the Quaker-dress — the charge is that
there is a preciseness in it which is equivalent to
the worshipping of forms — the truth of this
charge not to be ascertained but by a knowledge of
the heart — but outward facts mate against
it-such as the origin of the Quaker-dress — and
the Quaker-doctrine on dress — doctrine of
christianity on this subject — opinion of
the early christians upon it — reputed advantages
of the Quaker-dress.
I should have been glad to have dismissed
the subject of the Quaker-dress in the last section,
but so many objections are usually made against it,
that I thought it right to stop for a while to consider
them in the present place. Indeed, if I were to
choose a subject, upon which the world had been more
than ordinarily severe on the Quakers, I should select
that of their dress. Almost every body has something
to say upon this point. And as in almost all
cases, where arguments are numerous, many of them
are generally frivolous, so it has happened in this
also. There is one, however, which it is impossible
not to notice upon this subject.
The Quakers, it is confessed by their
adversaries, are not chargeable with the same sort
of pride and vanity, which attach to the characters
of other people, who dress in a gay manner, and who
follow the fashions of the world, but it is contended,
on the other hand, that they are justly chargeable
with a preciseness, that is disgusting, in the little
particularities of their cloathing. This precise
attention to particularities is considered as little
better than the worshipping of lifeless forms, and
is usually called by the world the idolatry of the
Quaker-dress.
This charge, if it were true, would
be serious indeed. It would be serious, because
it would take away from the religion of the Quakers
one of its greatest and best characters. For
how could any people be spiritually minded, who were
the worshippers of lifeless forms? It would be
serious again, because it would shew their religion,
like the box of Pandora, to be pregnant with evils
within itself. For people, who place religion
in particular forms, must unavoidably become superstitious.
It would be serious again, because if parents were
to carry such notions into their families, they would
produce mischief. The young would be dissatisfied,
if forced to cultivate particularities, for which they
see no just or substantial reason. Dissentions
would arise among them. Their morality too would
be confounded, if they were to see these minutiae
idolized at home, but disregarded by persons of known
religious character in the world. Add to which,
that they might adopt erroneous notions of religion.
For they might be induced to lay too much stress upon
the payment of the anise and cummin, and too little
upon the observance of the weightier matters of the
law.
As the charge therefore is unquestionably
a serious one, I shall not allow it to pass without
some comments. And in the first place it maybe
observed that, whether this preciseness, which has
been imputed to some Quakers, amounts to an idolizing
of forms, can never be positively determined, except
we had the power of looking into the hearts of those,
who have incurred the charge. We may form, however,
a reasonable conjecture, whether it does or not by
presumptive evidence, taken from incontrovertible
outward facts.
The first outward fact that presents
itself to us, is the fact of the origin of the Quaker-dress,
if the early Quakers, when they met in religious union,
had met to deliberate and fix upon a form or standard
of apparel for the society, in vain could any person
have expected to repel this charge. But no such
standard was ever fixed. The dress of the Quakers
has descended from father to son in the way that has
been described. There is reason therefore to
suppose, that the Quakers as a religious body, have
deviated less than others front the primitive habits
of their ancestors, rather from a fear of the effects
of unreasonable changes of dress upon the mind, than
from an attachment to lifeless forms.
The second outward fact, which may
be resorted to as furnishing a ground for reasonable
conjecture, is the doctrine of the Quakers upon this
subject. The Quakers profess to follow christianity
in all cases, where its doctrines can be clearly ascertained.
I shall state therefore what christianity says upon
this point. I shall shew that what Quakerism says
is in unison with it. And I shall explain more
at large the principle, that has given birth to the
discipline of the Quakers relative to their dress.
Had christianity approved of the make
or colour of any particular garment, it would have
approved of those of its founder and of his apostles.
We do not, however, know, what any of these illustrious
personages wore. They were probably dressed in
the habits of Judean peasants, and not with any marked
difference from those of the same rank in life.
And that they were dressed plainly, we have every reason
to believe, from the censures, which some of them
passed on the superfluities of apparel. But christianity
has no where recorded these habits as a pattern, nor
has it prescribed to any man any form or colour for
his clothes.
But christianity, though it no where
places religion in particular forms, is yet not indifferent
on the general subject of dress. For in the first
place it discards all ornaments, as appears by the
testimonies of St. Paul and St. Peter before quoted,
and this it does evidently on the ground of morality,
lest these, by puffing up the creature, should be
made to give birth to the censurable passions of vanity
and lust. In the second place it forbids all
unreasonable changes on the plea of conformity with
the fashions of the world: and it sets its face
against these also upon moral grounds; because the
following of the fashions of the world begets a worldly
spirit, and because, in proportion as men indulge
this spirit, they are found to follow the loose and
changeable morality of the world, instead of the strict
and steady morality of the gospel.
That the early christians understood
these to be the doctrines of christianity, there can
be no doubt. The Presbyters and the Asceticks,
I believe, changed the Palluim for the Toga in the
infancy of the christian world; but all other christians
were left undistinguished by their dress. These
were generally clad in the sober manner of their own
times. They observed a medium between costliness
and sordidness. That they had no particular form
for their dress beyond that of other grave people,
we team from Justin Martyr. “They affected
nothing fantastic, says he, but, living among Greeks
and barbarians, they followed the customs of the country,
and in clothes, and in diet, and in all other affairs
of outward life, they shewed the excellent and admirable
constitution of their discipline and conversation.”
That they discarded superfluities and ornaments we
may collect from various authors of those times.
Basil reduced the objects of cloathing to two, namely,
“Honesty and necessity,” that is, to decency
and protection. Tertullian laid it down as a
doctrine that a Christian should not only be chaste,
but that he should appear so outwardly. “The
garments which we should wear, says Clemens of Alexandria,
should be modest and frugal, and not wrought of divers
colours, but plain.” Crysastum commends
Olympias, a lady of birth and fortune, for having
in her garment nothing that was wrought or gaudy.
Jerome praises Paula, another lady of quality, for
the same reason. We find also that an unreasonable
change of cloathing, or a change to please the eye
of the world, was held improper. Cyril says,
“we should not strive for variety, having clothes
for home, and others for ostentation abroad.”
In short the ancient fathers frequently complained
of the abuse of apparel in the ways described.
Exactly in the same manner, and in
no other, have the Quakers considered the doctrines
of Christianity on the subject of dress. They
have never adopted any particular model either as
to form or colour for their clothes. They have
regarded the two objects of decency and comfort.
But they have allowed of various deviations consistently
with these. They have in fact fluctuated in their
dress. The English Quaker wore formerly a round
hat. He wears it now with stays and loops.
But even this fashion is not universal, and seems
rather now on the decline. The American Quaker,
on the other hand, has generally kept to the round
hat. Black hoods were uniformly worn by the Quaker-women,
but the use of these is much less than it was, and
is still decreasing. The Green aprons also were
worn by the females, but they are now wholly out of
use. But these changes could never have taken
place, had there been any fixed standard for the Quaker
dress.
But though the Quakers have no particular
model for their clothing, yet they are not indifferent
to dress where it may be morally injurious. They
have discarded all superfluities and ornaments, because
they may be hurtful to the mind. They have set
their faces also against all unreasonable changes
of forms for the same reasons. They have allowed
other reasons to weigh with them in the latter case.
They have received from, their ancestors a plain suit
of apparel, which has in some little degree followed
the improvements of the world, and they see no good
reason why they should change it; at least they see
in the fashions of the world none but a censurable
reason for a change. And here it may be observed,
that it is not an attachment to forms, but an unreasonable
change or deviation from them, that the Quakers regard.
Upon the latter idea it is, that their discipline
is in a great measure founded, or, in other words,
the Quakers, as a religious body, think it right to
watch in their youth any unreasonable deviation from
the plain apparel of the society.
This they do first, because any change
beyond usefulness must be made upon the plea of conformity
to the fashions of the world.
Secondly, because any such deviation
in their youth is considered to shew, in some measure,
a deviation from simplicity of heart. It bespeaks
the beginning of an unstable mind. It shews there
must have been some improper motive for the change.
Hence it argues a weakness in the deviating persons,
and points them out as objects to be strengthened by
wholesome admonition.
Thirdly, because changes, made without
reasonable motives, would lead, if not watched and
checked, to other still greater changes, and because
an uninterrupted succession of such changes would bring
the minds of their youth under the most imperious
despotisms, the despotism of fashion; in consequence
of which they would cleave to the morality of the
world instead of the morality of the gospel.
And fourthly, because in proportion
as young persons deviate from the plainness and simplicity
of the apparel as worn by the society, they approach
in appearance to the world; they mix with it, and imbibe
its spirit and admit its customs, and come into a
situation which subjects them to be disowned.
And this is so generally true, that of those persons,
whom the society has been obliged to disown, the commencement
of a long progress in irregularity may often be traced
to a deviation from the simplicity of their dress.
And here it may be observed, that an effect has been
produced by this care concerning dress, so beneficial
to the moral interests of the society, that they have
found in it a new reason for new vigilance on this
subject. The effect produced is a general similarity
of outward appearance, in all the members, though
there is a difference both in the form and colour of
their clothing; and this general appearance is such,
as to make a Quaker still known to the world.
The dress therefore of the Quakers, by distinguishing
the members of the society, and making them known
as such to the world, makes the world overseers as
it were of their moral conduct. And that it operates
in this way, or that it becomes a partial check in
favour of morality, there can be no question.
For a Quaker could not be seen either at public races,
or at cock fightings, or at assemblies, or in public
houses, but the fact would be noticed as singular,
and probably soon known among his friends. His
clothes would betray him. Neither could be, if
at a great distance from home, and if quite out of
the eye and observation of persons of the same religious
persuasion, do what many others do. For a Quaker
knows, that many of the customs of the society are
known to the world at large, and that a certain conduct
is expected from a person in a Quakers habit.
The fear therefore of being detected, and at any rate
of bringing infamy on his cloth, if I may use the
expression, would operate so as to keep him out of
many of the vicious customs of the world.
From hence it will be obvious that
there cannot be any solid foundation for the charge,
which has been made against the Quakers on the subject
of dress. They are found in their present dress,
not on the principle of an attachment to any particular
form, or because any one form is more sacred than
another, but on the principle, that an unreasonable
deviation from any simple and useful clothing is both
censurable and hurtful, if made in conformity with
the fashions of the world. These two principles,
though they may produce, if acted upon, a similar outward
appearance in persons, are yet widely distinct as to
their foundation, from one another. The former
is the principle of idolatry. The latter that
of religion. If therefore there are persons in
the society, who adopt the former, they will come
within the reach of the charge described. But
the latter only can be adopted by true Quakers.