William Penn, the pretended Quaker discovered to hold a correspondence with the Jesuite's at Rome to which is added A winding sheet for Ann Docwra / by Francis Bugg. Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724? 1700 Approx. 29 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 9 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2007-10 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). A30049 Wing B5399 ESTC R35453 15313263 ocm 15313263 103407 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A30049) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 103407) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1146:5) William Penn, the pretended Quaker discovered to hold a correspondence with the Jesuite's at Rome to which is added A winding sheet for Ann Docwra / by Francis Bugg. Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724? 16 p. s.n., [London? 1700] Imperfect: stained, with print show-through and loss of print. Reproduction of original in the Huntington Library. Created by converting TCP files to TEI P5 using tcp2tei.xsl, TEI @ Oxford. Re-processed by University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. Gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. 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Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Keying and markup guidelines are available at the Text Creation Partnership web site . eng Penn, William, 1644-1718. Docwra, Anne, 1624-1710. Society of Friends -- Controversial literature. 2006-05 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2006-10 SPi Global Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2006-11 Mona Logarbo Sampled and proofread 2006-11 Mona Logarbo Text and markup reviewed and edited 2007-02 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion William Penn , THE Pretended QUAKER , DISCOVERED To hold a Correspondence WITH THE JESUITE's at ROME . To which is Added , A Winding-Sheet FOR Ann Dockwra : By Francis Bugg . ON the 2d . of July , in this present year 1700. Having occasion to be in Company with Mr. Batle , Sub-Dean of the Royal Chappel at White-Hall , I enquired of him the Truth of the Story of that I had heard from others , that he should report of William Penn ; who freely told me as follows . That he being at Rome in the year 1677. Having gone thither from England , Tutor to Mr. Hales ; and having stayed there for some certain time , had one Father James , a Scots Jesuit at Rome to teach him Italian , which was all the occasion he had of Converse with him . And as he was making ready with his Pupil Mr. Hales to return for England , supposing he might have some occasion , to send to Rome for some strings to some Musical Instruments , he ask'd Father James , how he might send a Letter to him that might come safe to his hands to Rome , who answer'd , That if he would put his Letter in Mr. Penn's Packet , it would come safe to him , for Mr. Penn's Packet comes frequently to Rome from London . What , said Mr. Batle , William Penn the Quaker , said Father James , The very same . This Story , the Quakers Report thus , as I heard it from one of them , which I then told to Mr. Batle , that after William Penn had heard that Mr. Batle had so Reported of him at Hartford , he went thither to call him to an Account for it ; and at Meeting , Mr. Batle did own his mistake , that on a better Recollection of his Memory , it was not Mr. Penn , but one Pennynton , a Glover , who was no Quaker , who frequently used to send Gloves to Rome : Mr. Batle replyed , I heard the Quakers so report , but it is utterly false , I said no such thing , there is no mistake in the Name , it was no Mr. Pennynton a Glover , but Mr. Penn , that is , William Penn the Quaker , as Father James told me . Mr. Batle also told me , That after he had reported this at Hartford , Henry Stout , a Quaker at Hartford , came to him and said , Neighbour Batle , Thou hast done thy self a great diskindness by reporting this Story of William Penn , and to be plain with thee , I do not believe it . Mr. Batle , answer'd him , Tell Mr. Penn , If he will come to me , I will Treat him as a Gentleman , but I will say it to his Face , that what I Reported of him is true ; that is , that Father James a Jesuit at Rome told me , If I put my Letter in Mr. Penn's Packet , it would come safe to him , for he sent a Packet frequently from London to Rome . The same Day above-mentioned , Mr. Batle , told me , that Mr. Hockley , Goaler at Hartford , lately Deceased , told him , and divers others at Hartford , that Father Gifford ( then Prisoner at Hartford , who was taken up at the Revolution , being designed by K. James to be made President of St. Magdalen's Colledge in Oxford ) told him , the said Hockley , that he had heard Father Penn say Mass several times : What Father Penn , said Hockley ? William Penn the Quaker ? Yes , said Mr. Gifford , William Penn the Quaker . And Mr. Hockley , has told it to divers Persons of Repute at Hartford , who if asked , will affirm it . All this , Mr. Batle allowed me to put in Print , to Inform the Nation and the Quakers . A Winding-Sheet for Ann Dockwra : Being an Answer to her Scurrilous Pamphlet , Intituled , The Second Part of an Apost . Cons . &c. Friendly Reader , I Am not unsensible , that Negative Evidence , in many Cases , will not Determin the Point in hand ; and therefore it is both Reasonable and Judicious for me , the Accused , to demand Proof , as herein I have done : And then , if this Slanderous Woman cannot produce Proof , I am Acquitted of her groundless Charge . For suppose this Envious Old Woman , in favour of Quakerism , should Publish in Print , that Fran. Bugg , twenty years since Murder'd a Man , Fir'd a House , and Robb'd by the Highway , ( as that she may with as much Truth and Justice , as what in her two Books she has done ) how can I help it ? I only can call upon her to produce her Evidences ; if she do this , I may be thought Guilty ; but if not , I am by the Rules of Justice Discharged ; and she remains Culpable , and ought to make me Satisfaction . But that a Negative Evidence is good , and Vallid in some Cases , I shall Demonstrate ; for Example , suppose this Slanderous Woman shall Charge me with Robbing a House in York City , on the 15th of May last ; if then I can prove by Credible Witnesses , that I was in London the same Day , this will hold , and I should be Acquitted . And to shew that this Simily is not Foreign to our Case in Hand , I shall produce two Instances ( to Name no more ) out of this Book of hers , p. 13.25 The first is this , viz. Fran. Bugg the Elder conveyed his Estate to his Son , Francis Bugg the Younger , who had 700 Pound with his Wife ; and her Friends and Relations , upon Inquiry , doe affirm that it was Settled upon Marriage , &c. Now what is this ? But to suggest , first , That my Son had 700 Pound with his Wife . 2dly . And that I took the Money of him , and in Consideration thereof , Convey'd my Estate to him ; and all this to make good her former lying Story , viz. That I Sold my Estate to my Son , and thereby made him able to Settle a Joynture upon his Wife ; and consequently both Father and Son Knaves ; for I could not be Guilty of this Fraudulent Act , but my Son must Consent to it . And 3dly , That upon the strict Inquiry of her Relations , this Cheat was found out ; and by them affirmed to be so . The last of which I do believe to be a Grand Lye ; and that until she produce the Names of those Relations that so sought , so found out , and so affirm , I shall take it to be so , for no one of them speaks one Word to me of any such thing , nor had they any ground so to do ; the two first I shall disprove by good Evidence , and thereby leave this old Woman in such a Dilemma , out of which she shall never be able to deliver her self , but by Repentance , and Retraction , which is wholly Inconsistent with Quakerism ; for they can neither make Confession of Sins or Trespasses , to God or Man , as their Books do abundantly manifest . First , His ( Fran. Bugg's ) Son had 700 Pound with his Wife . This is false , and a Lye spoken in Hypocrisie , with a design to Deceive ; for 't is plain she would have it believed that my Son had 700 l. in Currant English Money with his Wife , which was not so : and thereby was enabled to Purchase my Estate , to Settle a Jointure upon her : And if so , it would help her out in her former Lye , viz. That I Sold my Estate to my Son. That this is her design , 't is plain ; for 't is no Crime that Francis Bugg's Son got a Wife with 700 l. nor no Sin against his Wife , or her Relations , that I gave my Son such a part of my Estate as I then thought , and did believe , I could Spare ; and consequently no need of such Inquiry , nor of so affirming , &c. Not that hereby I design to Lesson my Daughter-In-Law's Portion , but do grant that she was worth 700 l. and a better Penny when he Married her ; and to this day I never understood any Dissatisfaction , either in my Son , or my self , about her Portion ; nor yet in my Daughter-in-Law ; or in any of her Relations , about what I gave my Son upon Marriage , which was every way Answerable to her Portion . But still , I say , he had not 700 l. No , he had but 300 l. in Money , and 400 l. in House and Land , which had she Dyed without Issue ; that Estate of hers had devolv'd back ; and now , Blessed be God , she hath Issue , which I dearly Love , even as if begot by my own Body ; and wish them all the Blessings of this and the other Life ; yet if they Dye , and their Mother , Then my Son is but a Termer for Life , to that part of it which is Freehoold ; and that too by the Courtesie of England ; for unless a man have the Inheritance of an Estate in fee Simple , it cannot be said to be his own , otherwise then as before described ; for he can neither Sell , Mortgage , nor give it . Thus have I gone further then I needed , or indeed , was willing , did I not believe it necessary to Remove those Evil and Pernicious suggestions , which this dark Spirit of Quakerism would raise against me , for the sake of the Discovery I have made of its Inconsistency with Christianity . But , says this old Woman , Fran. Bugg hath Conveyed his Estate to his Son. In her first Book it was , Fran. Bugg Sold his Estate to his Son. So Jezebel withstood &c. p. 2. from p. 55. of her Apost . &c. So that it is plain , that by conveyance here , she means and would have it believed , that this conveyance was by Deed of Sale , when it was no such thing ; but by Deed of Gift ; not in Consideration of any part of his Wives Portion , to me , or for my use ; But in Consideration of the Natural Love and Affection I had to my only Son , who hath been a Dutiful Child from his Cradle . And to this Day never was Blemish in his Reputation , until this Infamous Woman has attack'd him . But may I not think that this Woman hath still a further design then to render both Father and Son Knaves ? First , In setting my Daughter-in-Law ( whom I Love and Respect as my own Child ) and her Kindred against me ; and not only so ; but if my Son remain Dutiful , as that I have no cause yet to fear ; then to set them and me against each other ; and for this G. Whitehead hath set her a Copy , not only in the case of my self and Wife ; but in the Case of Mr. Crisp , Mr. Mucklow , Mr. Bridgman , and their Wives , and Relations . But to pursue this , and to Illustrate the Jesuitical Practice of her Gentleman Quaker , I have not Room in this Winding-Sheet . Let it suffice then , that I am well satisfied in my Son and Daughter ; and they both are as kind to me as I can desire ; I never yet desired any Kindness of my Daughter-in-Law but she as readily granted it ; and I pray God to Bless them both , and their Offspring , and to give 'em a sight of the Errors of the Quakers ; in which I shall endeavour to be as Instrumental as I can . Again , Secondly , p. 25 Ibid. He Francis Bugg ) suffered the least of any I know , that had Estates to lose ; the Fines were Two , one was 15 l. for an unknown Preacher ; the other was 10 l. for the Poverty of the Man that kept the Meeting at his House : Of this 25 l. he got 15 l. of a near Relation of his by Fraud ; and the Justice that Prosecuted him , gave him 5 l. of the Money again , so that his whole Loss was but five Pounds . Reader , I am Astonished , when I consider the vain Boasts , and high Pretences of this People to Justice , Truth , Equity , Righteousness , Purity , Self denyal , Meekness , yea , to do as they would be done by ; when they so Generally Act the Contrary . You see she says I suffered but two Fines ; that I was the least Sufferer that she knew of , that had Estates to Lose ; that my whole Loss by Fines was but 5 l. And yet says that Sam. Cater suffered 6 years imprisonment together ; and this but one of the 7 or 8 times of his Imprisonement , which I deny . Let her produce Proof if she can . As also that he lost 20 l. and 40 l. or the like . I do still aver , That the Goods Distrain'd for his 20 l. Fine for Phakenham Meeting , was return'd ; and that he had 10 l. sent him from their Fund : And that Papers , or Petitions were sent up and down to assist him , and others ; to support them in their Preaching and Writing against the Christian Religion ; and that these Papers did fly like Briefs , Money , Money , for the Ministry , &c. as in my Pilgrims Progress p. 125. I have made to appear , from W. Rogers ; and Confessed too , by Thomas Elwood ; and Confirmed , by this old Womans own Letters still by me : And why may not the Bishops of the Church give me Recommendations to Support me , to Write in Defence of the Church , as Warrantably as their Teachers gave me Papers formerly , to Collect Money to support them ? which I did . Neither doth the Bishop of Norwich want the Dark-Lanthorn Light of this Crazy Woman , to give him Knowledge how to Act. Well , but to the Matter , Namely , To discover the horrible Lies of this Crack-brain'd Woman . He ( F. Bugg ) Suffer'd ( said she ) the Least of any I knew , &c. But Two Fines : His whole Loss by Fines was but 5l . We have an old Proverb , A Lyar had need to have a good Memory : She should have consider'd this . First , Then I demand of her , in her next , to shew any one Man in the County where I dwelt , that Suffered longer Imprisonment than I did ; that suffer'd more Fines , for the Poverty of others , and for themselves , than I did ; that gave more to the building a Meeting-House than I did ; that Entertain'd their Teachers more than I did ; or that Spent his Estate for the propagation of Quakerism , more then I did ; and of this Service to their cause , there are yet amongst them many Witnesses . First , Then at Ely , I suffered three Ten Pound Fines for the Poverty of G. Thorrowgood , at whose House the Meeting was kept ; beside as many small Fines for my self : And for which I was distrained by Nicholas Rush , Robert Rainer , and others ; in Cloths , Stuffs , Yarn , and Wooll , and others Goods above the value of 50 l. without one Penny or Pennyworth Returned . Ann Rogers , my then Maid , and Thomas Bird , my then Journey-man , and now a Quaker of good Repute amongst them , knew this : Again I was Fined Twenty Pounds for a meeting at my House in Milden-Hall ; which Will. Bennet Preached at , when for refusing to tell his Name and Habitation , the Poor Quakers were Fined for him ; and their Cows driven away and Sold ; so that John Mason , and my self were Constrained to lend them Money , to help to get more , whilst this Infallible Preacher Lost nothing . I also was Fined Ten Pound for another Meeting , for the Poverty of Ja. Webb , at whose House the Meeting was . And besides all these Ten , and Twenty Pound Fines ; four of them for the Poverty of the Dwellers in our Meeting-Houses ; and one Twenty Pound Fine for a Meeting at my own House , I also was Fined Seven or Eight small Fines , insomuch , that I was Distrained at Milden-Hall , ( besides those mention'd at Ely ) in Wooll , Yarn , Stuff , Cloth , and Houshould Goods , to the Value of above 50 l more ; which in all , makes more then 100 l. Loss by Fines , for Meetings . Now , Reader , Had not this Woman a — Forehead well Enlaid with Impudence , how dare she appear in Print with such bare Fac'd Lyes ? As that I suffered the least of any she knew that had Estates to Lose : That I suffered but two Fines : That my whole Loss by Fines was hut 5 l. As for the Fine of 15 l. she mentions , for an unknown Preacher , my Book , Reason against Railing , &c. did so effectually Confute all their false Accusations , as that to this Day they never Reply'd to it , tho' Writ near 20 years since , to which I Refer my Reader . Oh , Cousin Dockwra , for Shame Cover thy Face ; wear a Vail , and sit down and mourn for thy Sins . Till then never pretend more to Religion : Remember Cherry-Hynton , thy former place of Abode . Reader , these two Books of Ann Dockwra's , viz , An Apostate Conscience , &c. and , The Second part of an Apostate Conscience , were both Wrot by the Quakers Spirit of Truth , that cannot Err , being Infallible : Yea , and also approved by the Quaker-Church , i. e. their Second-Day Meeting ; that Infallible Club of Inspired Doctors , with whom she has been in the Unity this 36 years , as she says herself , p. 35. These Books are also Sold by Tacy Sowle , the Quakers Bookseller , as a Sign both of their Approbation , and Unity . The first stands Convicted of 18 Lyes , and in her Second she has not cleared herself of any one of them . And I do now recharge them upon her ; and as many fresh Lyes in this Last ; let her come forth if she thinks she can clear herself , and I am willing also that she take her Gentleman Quaker , G. Whitehead , to her Assistance . Again , I find , in p. 12. Ibid , That rather then she will want Authors for her Villany , she 'll Father her Lyes upon me , viz. He ( Fran. Bugg ) told me so himself . Again , He ( Fran. Bugg ) told me many years ago , that when he bought his House , that his Wives Father help'd to buy it . And made his ( Fran. Bugg's ) Wives Portion better then a 100 l. This he told me : All which I Positively Deny . Indeed my Father-In-Law was very desirous that I should buy the said House ; for I Rode on purpose to Wellingborrow to Consult him ; and thus far he was Assistant , Namely , to hire me ●0 l. of Mr. Thomas Bruce , a Tobacconist , his Neighbour , and was bound with me for it ; and I was in some hopes he would have given it me , but as soon as he had got what some Aim'd at , and what pleas'd him , he so ordered the matter , that Mr. Bruce in little more then a years time , called in his 60 l. which I paid to a Penny. And more of this Nature I could mention , but shall forbear ; nor had I done this , but in Vindication of my own Reputation , avouching still for a Truth what I have said in Jezebel Withstood , &c. p. 2. And which my Brother John , then Living , might have gainsaid if he could : All which shews this Treacherous Womans design , which was to set my Wives Relations and me at Variance : Unless she took me to be such a Tame Fool , as by my silence to say Amen to all her Lies and Forgeries . But her inveterate Malice ends not here , Quakerisme must shew its self exact New Rome , and in this instance exceed her Elder Sister ; for as the Papists took up the Bones of Wickliff , many years after he was laid into his Grave ; and burnt them as a Sacrifice to their Infallible Malice , no more can the Quakers let my Honoured Father alone in his Grave ; But near 40 years after his Death , they must rake in his Ashes , and lay false Imputations to his Charge : And that which Aggravates the Malignity of their Implacable Malice is , he never gave them Cause , he never was concerned in this Controversy : Whereas , in excuse of the Papists Fury , they have this to say , That Wickliff was a Vigorous Warrier against Romish Idolatry ; and had wrote more than two hundred Volumes against their Errors and Superstition . This indeed did Anger the Romish Church , as my self and others have angred her Younger Sister ; yet I never read that the Papists meddled with Wickliff's Father , Grandfather , Yea and Great Grand-father , as the Quakers have done with my Dear Father , Grand-father , and Great Grand-father . For in her first Book , An Apost . Cons . &c. p. 26. She thus saith , Robert Bugg his Father , dwelt with him ( Fran. Bugg ) some years after he Marryed , he rose from Dinner one Day , and went out , and was found Drown'd in Water , where he had no occasion to go ; As Fran. Bugg and his Wife relateth . To this , I replyed in my Book Jezebel Withstood , &c. p. 2. saying , Here is Lye upon Lye , four Story high : First , my Father never dwelt with me a week since I Married , much less some years . 2. He never rose so from Dinner . 3. Nor was so found Drown'd : Nor did I or my Wife so relate . Now instead of clearing herself of these Notorious Lies , she being Fool-hardy , and , filled Brimful with Prejudice against our whole Family for my Sake ; she in her Second Part &c. p. 13. thus enlarges , I heard my Brother Barnadiston speak of it some years after ; That Francis Bugg's Father Drowned himself , as most People believed , &c. Yet this Wicked Woman , in the very next Page Acknowledges to her own Confusion , viz. But the Coroner and Jury did not find it wilful Murder , &c. Now let the World Judge whether this be not meer Malice , in the superlative degree , in this Incendiary . That because her Brother Barnardiston living near 20 Miles distance from my Fathers Dwelling , that upon his telling her ( she knew not when , nay I question whether at all ) that most People talked so ; That therefore she should have the Impudence , near 40 years after this Accident , to take upon her to Try this Tryed Cause de novo ; And by her Infallible Super-abounding Confidence , to Confront both Coroner and Jury , Render them Perjured , who then had the opportunity to hear Witnesses , to examine all Circumstances , and when they found it casual and Accidental , they brought their Verdict in Accordingly : And this she says herself , p. 14. But the Coroner and Jury did not find it Wilful-Murder . And I do now Challenge A●n Docwra to say it was self-Murder , for I deny it , and will to her Face , and to the Faces of all her Approvers and Abbettors ; otherwise to what end have we Courts of Judicature , Judges , Juries and Witnesses ? If every Proud Varlet , and Envious Man , may stir up Strife in Towns and Cities , and charge Persons with Crimes after they are acquitted by Legal Tryals . Neither is it agreeable to the Rules of Law or Justice , to Impeach men afresh , or recharge them after they are cleared , &c. I do acknowledge the Accident was sorrowful enough to my self , and my Fathers Relations and Loving Neighbours . But if my Grandfather who was born Anno 1579 , which was about 50 years before this Crazy Woman was Born ; No , nor yet my Great Grand-father , who was Born many years before him , no Marvel that she now falls upon my Deceased Father , and Reflects upon my Son also ; for Malice is like Quakerisme , it hath no Botom ; nor no Banks can keep it in due bounds ; it s like the Raging Sea , Foaming , out it s own Shame ; casting forth Mire and Dirt ; for suppose it had been as she falsely relates , how could I have helped it , or wherein does the Misfortune of any of my Relations affect the controversie now on Foot. But that I may draw the exact Picture of this old Dissembling Hypocrite Ann Dockwra , as Compleatly , as Father Penn's is drawn in the Quakers Synod ; and set her forth in her proper Dress , with all her Features , see p. 14. ibid , where she thus says , as if she were an Excellent Friend of mine , viz. I Write not this to Vpbraid Fran. Bugg , but to warn those that have Incouraged him in Scribling his Estate away , to be Bountiful to him , &c. Here the Cloven Foot appears , tho' Disguised ; for Malice and Hypocrisie , walk Hand in Hand , under a Quaker-Bonnet , for says she , in her Preface ; It is matter of Admiration ( says she ) to me , that they ( i. e. the Clergy ) should Entertain Fran. Buggs Books , and give Credit to them ; a Man of a Seared Conscience , of Desperate Fortunes , of a Shattered Head , his Seared Conscience Imboldens him to Write all manner of Lyes and Forgeries [ whilst she proves not one ] to get Money like High-way Men ; a Beggar , &c. I think , I need not Comment upon this her Inconsistency . First , In saying , she does not Write to Upbraid me ; whilst she Upbraids me in the Highest Nature the Devil and Malice can Invent. And this I can say , that as no Man ever Incouraged me to Scrible away my Estate : But that from First to Last , I have seen a Necessity to Unmask this Painted Harlot ; so thanks be to God , I can say with a good Conscience , I never Wrot for Money , nor was I ever a Beggar , nor have I wanted a sufficient support to this Day ; but have Lived well in Meat , Drink , and Apparrel , and Maintained my Family with all Necessaries ; I never wanted a good House to Live in , nor a good Horse to Ride on , and Money in my Pocket ; and if I have Applyld my self to the Clergy , that thereby , I might be Inabled to Desend my Christian Profession , against the Powerful Fund of the Quakers ; it is no more then Fox , Whitehead , and other of the Quakers have done , who at first were not able to Print a Book at their own Charge , [ which I did fifteen years together ] without Assistance from their hearers , to whom they apply'd themselves by Papers which did fly like briefs FOR MONEY , MONEY FOR THE MINITSRY . Wherefore Cousin Dockwra , for the Dicision of this Controversie , which on your part is chiefly Personal , and founded upon Charges without Proof , against which in many Cases a Negative Evidence cannot take place , and I being the Party Accused , am willing to put my self upon Tryal . If you will joyn Issue , giving you all the Advantage you can reasonably expect or desire , as also the Assistance of your Gentleman Quaker , viz. Appoint your self any Day or Days , from the first day of October next , to the fifth day of November following , at any convenient Place in Cambridge ; and chuse you six Men where you Please , and upon timely Notice of your Accepting this my Proposition , I will chuse me six Men , and let us both subscribe an Instrument to stand to , and abide by the award of these twelve Men , under what Penalties you Please . And if they cannot agree , then let us both be Obliged to stand to the Award of the Right Worshipful , the Vice Chancellor , and the Right Worshipful the Mayor of the University and Town of Cambridge , for the time being , o● to two Delegates by them two respectively Chosen ; and if you prove the several Charges exhibited against me , in your two Books , I shall freely submit to any Penalty which shall be awarded against me ; but if you fail of Proof , and be found a false Witness , and guilty of a Lying-Tongue , I shall ●xpect your Submission accordingly ; and if I do not prove the Letters mentioned to be yours in my several Book● , to be of your own Hand Writing , as fully , and satisfactory , as any thing of that Nature can be Proved , I shall likewise submit to any Penalty assigned by them . To this , I subscribe my Name , June 29. 1700. Francis Bugg . POSTSCRIPT . REader the Account touching William Penn's having held Correspondence with the Jesuites , in the height of his Quakerism , I Received from a Minister of the Church of England , who is ready to attest it , whereby I find the Truth , of what a Worthy Member of the Honourable House of Commons , said to me the last Session of Parliament , upon my Presenting my Book , A Modest Defence , 〈◊〉 ( i. e. ) The Devil and Jesuitism is at the Bottom of Quakerism , a Fruit in their Doctrine , in A. Dockwra , I have herein briefly Discovered . F. B. FINIS .