. . 5, freeman; 1656, New England Judged, pub-lished in London, in 1703, has the follow-ing with reference to July, 1658: After these came Thomas Harris from RhodeIsland into our colony who Declaring againstyour Pride and Oppression, as we would haveliberty to speak in your meeting place in Boston,after the priest had ended. Warning the peopleof the Dreadful, terrible day of the Lord God,which was coming up on that Town and Country,him, much unlike to Nineveh, you pulled downand halld him by the Hair of his Head out o


. . 5, freeman; 1656, New England Judged, pub-lished in London, in 1703, has the follow-ing with reference to July, 1658: After these came Thomas Harris from RhodeIsland into our colony who Declaring againstyour Pride and Oppression, as we would haveliberty to speak in your meeting place in Boston,after the priest had ended. Warning the peopleof the Dreadful, terrible day of the Lord God,which was coming up on that Town and Country,him, much unlike to Nineveh, you pulled downand halld him by the Hair of his Head out ofyour meeting, and a hand was put on his mouthto keep him from speaking forth, and then hadbefore your Governor and Deputy, with otherMagistrates, and committed to Prison withoutwarrant or mittimus that he saw, and shut up ina close room, none suffered to come to him, norto have provisions for his money; and the nextday whipped with so cruel stripes without shew-ing any law that he had broken, tho he desired itof the Jaylor, and then shut up for Eleven days;:6.


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