shouts out to Margaret Brewster for giving me the new life goal(s) of disturbing congregations, frig
shouts out to Margaret Brewster for giving me the new life goal(s) of disturbing congregations, frightening children, making women swoon, dishonoring god, and being the scandal of religion and the contempt of government—all through the power of my “strange aspect.”Text transcription and source:“Whereas Margaret Brewster, alias Sawyer, did upon the lastLord’s Day, being the twenty first of this instant December, comeinto the Church at Spight’s Bay, in Time of divine Service, with herFace disfigured, her Hair about her Shoulders, and Ashes upon her Head,and Sackcloth upon her upper Garments, and bare-footed, like unto somewild Satyr, or some mad lunatick Person: By which unlooked for strangeAspect the whole Congregation was disturbed, some Children much af-frighted, and several Women were ready to faint, which is to the Dishonourof God, Scandal of Religion, and Contempt of Government: And beingexamined this Day before us, would give no Account for her so doing, bututtering several railing and reproachful Words against the Priests and theirMinistry, and being by us requested to find Sureties for her Appearance atnext Court of Quarter Sessions to be holden at Spight’s Bay, and for her goodAbearing for the future, and having refused to do the same: These are there-fore, in his Majesty’s Name, to will and require you forthwith to take intoyour Custody the Body of the said Margaret Brewster, and safely conveyunto his Majesty’s Common Jail at St. Michael’s Town, and her deliver untothe Keeper thereof, who is hereby required to receive her from you, and herin safe Custody to keep, until she shall find Sureties for her Appearance atnext Court of Quarter Sessions, to be holden at Spight’s Bay, and for her good Abearing for the future, or until she shall be delivered from thence bydue Order of his Majesty’s Laws: Hereof fail not at your Perils. Givenunder our Hands this twenty second Day of December, Anno 1673.”Joseph Besse, A Collection of the Sufferings of the People Called Quakers: For the Testimony of a Good Conscience from the Time of Their Being First Distinguished by that Name in the Year 1650 to the Time of the Act Commonly Called the Act of Toleration Granted to Protestant Dissenters in the First Year of the Reign of King William the Third and Queen Mary in the Year 1689, Volume 2 (L. Hinde, 1753), 319. -- source link
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