Papers of the Winthrop Family, Volume 4
1638-05-22
Blessed be the Father of Spirits in whose hand our breath and wayes are that once more I may be bold to salute you and congratulate your returne from the brinck of the pit of Rottennes! What is man that thou shouldest visit him and trie him etc. Job 7th: You are put of to this tempestuous Sea againe, more stormes await you, the good Lord repaire our leakes, fresh vp the gales of his blessed Spirit steadie our Course by the Compasse of his owne Truth reskue vs from all our spirituall Adversaries not only men, but fiends of warr and assure vs of an harbour at last, euen the bozome of the Lord Jesus.
31Sir you haue many an Eye (I presume) lift vp to the hills of mercy for you: mine might seeme superfluous: yet privately and publikely you haue not bene forgotten and I hope shall not while these Eyes haue sight.
Sir This last night Mr. Allen of Hartford and Lieftenant Holmes lodgd with me, and relate that Mr. Heynes or some chiefe resolved to be with you this weeke So that you may please a litle to stop till their Comming. Lieftenant Homes relates that William Baker who lay hid so long among the Monahiggens and Pequts, for whome he gave bale etc. was hid againe the second time among the same by Okace, but the Lieftenant by a Providence heard of him and returnd him to Hartford where he hath suffred for his much vncleanenes 2 severall whippings. This fellow notorious in villany and strongly affected by those wretches, both studying Revenge, is worthy to be watcht euen by the whole Countrey and to be dispersed from the Pequts, and they each from other according as I haue bene bold to motion formerly.
Sir, we haue bene long aflicted by a young man, boysterous and desperate, Philip Verins Sonn of Salem, who, as he hath refused to heare the word with vs (which we molested him not for) this twelue month, so because he could not draw his wife a gracious and modest woman to the same vngodlines with him, he hath troden her vnder foote tyrannically and brutishly: which she and we long bearing though with his furious blowes she went in danger of life at the last the maior vote of vs discard him from our Civill Freedome, or disfranchize etc. he will haue Justice (as he clamours) at other Courts: I wish he might for a fowle and slanderous and brutish Cariage, which God hath delivered him vp vnto: he will hale his wife with ropes to Salem, where she must needes be troubled and troublesome as differences yet stand. She is willing to stay and live with him or else where, where she may not offend etc. I shall humbly request that this Item be accepted, and he no way countenanced vntill (if need be) I further trouble you: So with due respects to Mrs. Wintrop Mr. Deputie Mr. Belingham etc. I rest Your Wo
W. 2. 109; 4
Collections
, VI. 244–245;
N.C.
, VI. 94–96.
1638-05-25
I know not (worthie Sir) how it hath beene put of and protracted that you haue beene all together neglected of vs, that liue at Accomenticus, and what 32hath beene the cause, whether it was bashfulnesse, as some of vs truly are affrayd to presente a letter into the hande, of so noble and wyse a governor: or whether it was the minister expected the people should wryte, or that the people thought it most fitte the minister should wryte. thus noble Mr. Winthroppes loue, and deare respecte is neglected of vs, and not so much as one of Accomenticus sends him a paper schroule, in waye of acknowledgmente of his faithfulnesse, or in the waye of regratulation or thankfulnesse. yet lest you, in the least measure mighte seeme to bee neglected, whom wee (I speake the truth I lye not, I flatter not) so much honor, and if it mighte stande with gods will, could wish, might still bee governor, I am bolde to wryte theis two or three fewe rude lynes vnto you: for my selfe I cannot but thanke you noble Sir, for your good conceites of mee, a meere straunger to you, and for your testimoniall written to the people in my behalfe. your good conceites were stronge of mee, that carried you to wryte so farre in the behalf of a poore ignorante, stonieharted, faithlesse almost, fruitlesse creature, vnfitte for anie thinge almost, especially vnfitte for so great a busienesse as to carrie Chrysts name, to a sorte of poore creatures, that haue a longe tyme sette in darkenesse and in the region and shaddowe of death: yet if you haue sayd anie thinge of mee, I hope you neede not bee ashamed: and though I bee in my selfe most ignorante, and most vnfitte, yet hath the lord by his grace in some measure fitted mee for my hearers, and his grace, as I hope hath not beene altogether in vaine, for I am persuaded (let god haue the prayse) hee hath wroughte some good by his grace, through my poore endeavors. some grace I saye in some of their soules: some haue prettie knowledge, crye out that they canne gette their harts no more humbled Though cannot refraine teares in the pub
W. 1. 142. For Tompson, see Morison, Founding of Harvard College, 402. In 1642–1643 Tompson preached in Virginia, being one of the clergy sent from Massachusetts in response to the request of “some godly people” there “to be helpfull to them in instructing them in the truth. . . .” Johnson's Wonder-Working Providence, J. Franklin Jameson, Editor (New York, 1910), 265.