A True RELATION Of Mr. justice's Cook's passage by Sea from Wexford to Kinsaile, and of the great Storm, and eminent danger that he with others were in, with the wonderful appearance of the power & goodness of God in their deliverance, according as it was revealed to him in A DREAM. As also M. Deedate with other witnesses (in Genevah) opinion concerning Dreams occasioned by a remarkable profettick Dream of a Protestant Marquis Daughter in Poland. All faithfully communicated as received from his own hand in the Year, 1650. They that go down to the Sea in ships: and do their business in great waters: Those see the works of the Lord: and his wonders in the deep, etc. Psal. 107.23.24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32. Acts 27.22, to 26. And now I exhort you to be of good cheer: for there shall be no loss of any man's life among you: For there stood by me this night the Angel of God, whose I am, and whom I serve. Saying fear not Paul thou must be brought be four Caesar, and lot, God hath given thee all them that sail with thee. Wherefore Sirs, be of good cheer: for I believe God, that it shall be even as it was told me. The 2d. Edition, LONDON. Printed and are to be Sold by T. B. at the three Bibles near the West end of Paul's Chrch-Yard. A Relation of Mr. John Cooks passage by Sea from Wexford to Kinsale, being in the great Storm on Jannuary the 5th. The Lord is then best praised, when we acknowledge him to be his own praise. I Annuary the first 1649. We embarked from Wexford in the Hector for Cork, sailed two or three leagues beyond Greenor-bay, but were driven back, the wind turning upon us, upon the Saturday following the wind being fair we got within sight of Dungarvan, that night proved very windy, and about four in the morning, on the Lord's day, a very tempestuous wind arose, and the storm was the greatest that ever any of the Seamen knew (as they said) the wind was at Southeast very thick, we hoped to fetch Cork, being within a mile of the shore, but could not possibly make land: in that distress we put to sea, hoping by that way to save life, the wind continued all that Sabbath day at Southeast, Southeast and by South, and South Southeast, which if the wind had held at southeast as it was in the morning, we could not have doubled the point about the land but had been east upon the rocks: we bore two courses to keep off from the shore all the day, and being as we supposed about the pitch of the Cape Clear, at nine on Sabbath day night we shipped a great Sea which split and carried away our foresail, and so were forced to bring to a foretop fail to keep from the shore, and to here that fore tope-saile till two in the night, in which time we were form to cut our Anchor from the bough to save the ship from foundering, we having at that time five foot water in the hold. The Monday morning we were ten leagues to leeward of the Cape Clear, and the wind was up at South-west, than we made all the sail possible to fetch some harbour, and it pleased God, we made the Cape, hoping to fetch Baltamore, but the wind coming up at Southeast and by east, we were forced to Sea again all the night, the wind continuing at Southeast, Southeast and by South, and South-South-east. Tuesday we made the Misne head, and could fetch no harbour the wind being still at Southeast. Wednesday the wind came up at West, and we made for shore again, and came up as high as Gally-head hoping to fetch Kinsale; about three in the afternoon the wind came up at East Southeast, and then we hoped to recover Castlehaven before night, and made for it, and in our running in, the Wind veared at Southeast and blue very fresh, and we still hoping to gain the harbour, ranin, knowing no other way to save life, the Wind being so contrary, it grew extraordinary thick, reigned and blew much, we fired three or four pieces of Ordnance (for lights) and saw one light from the Castle, as we supposed, and two other lights to the Eastward, which put us to an amazement, not knowing whether they were friends or enemies, and could not possibly see the going into the Harbour, but were in the very breach of the shore, the sight whereof caused a great scrik in the Ship, and thereupon brought our Ship to, hoping thereby to have come to an Anchor, which if we had done, we had been past all hopes of life, the Rock being so near would have cut our Anchor, but God being most merciful in that nick of time, the Seamen despairing of life, the Wind at an instant came up at East, which carried us into the Sea, and yet so great was the danger, that if the Wind did not turn again to the West in less than half an hour, we were dead men, by reason of the Rocks called the Staggs, so we came in a little time within sight of the Rocks, the Wind driving us strongly upon them, and then seeing the Rocks within a Ships length of us, we put our Ship to stay, which she would not, the Sea being so extremely grown, the Seamen being at their wit's end, wishing us to prepare for death: the Lord again at that very instent caused the wind to come up at South-west, which carried us out into the Sea clear from the Rocks, where we had the Wind favourable that night, and blessed be God on Thursday we came into Kinsale, it being the first Harbour that the Lord was pleased to give us, but that which is most admirable is this, that so soon as the Ship was come into Kinsale Harbour, she leaked so very much, that the Seamen came the next morning and told us, that they were almost drowned that night, and could scarce keep the ship alive in the Harbour, and were forced the next tide to bring her to the Key, and at the Ebb to repair her, and had much ado to keep her from sinking. This being the method of Gods dealing with us in our passage. Now concerning the work of God upon my spirit during the storm, thus it was. Towards the evening of the Sabbath day Jannuary the 5. my heart was exceeding sad and sorrowful even unto death a dark night approaching, and the ship taking in much water, my spirit fainted and my heart sunk within me, the sorrows of death caught hold of me, much grieved I was for my poor dear heart who did not express half so much fear as myself, many sweet expressions she used in prayers, wishing me to call earnestly upon God: many words I could not use, but my heart was praying; it almost broke my heart to think what my wives friends would say in England, that I should bring her into Ireland to drown her (though I bless God she never repined at it) troubled I was likewise for my poor servants that came in love along with us; it almost split my heart to think what the Malignants would say in England when they hear that we were drowned (how they would abuse that passage of Paul, Acts 28.4.) That though vengeance hath not overtaken me at Land, yet I was met withal at Sea; much troubled I was at the manner of the death, such extraordinary violent deaths importing the nature of some heavy Judgement, as if the Lord hath been displeased with us, and had not sent us, and Jonahs' storm was much in my thoughts (I having spoken some words of Exhortation to the company out of that Scripture before the storm began) for God sent that great storm, Jonah. 1.4. because Jonah went contrary to his Commands, where I observed, That when a Christian is in God's way, upon God's errand sent to Sea, usually God makes the Wind and the Seas favourable to him; upon such considerations, and many objections made by flesh and blood, I had very much trouble with my unbelieving heart, and could not bring my mind to be willing to die, earnest I had been in secret prayer at the Throne of Grace before, for 16. or 18. hours together, pleading with the Lord, that if it were possible this cup of his indignation might pace over us, that in Judgements he would remember Mercy, however that we might cheerfully submit to his sweet pleasure; the materials of my long suggested prayers were meditations and applications of several Scriptures which mention God's power, wisdom and love in the Seas. God having put it into my mind not long before to note most of the chief places is Scripture concerning the Seas, as proper and useful for a Sea. I pressed my dear Christ not to drown us, for said I, we fight for thy Kingly Office, throw the egyptians and all thy emplacable enemies into the midst of the Sea, but let us be preserved that we may praise thy Name, Exod. 14.27, 30. & 15.1. Lord this is a calamity too heavy for thy poor creatures to bear. Job 6.3 were it not that thou hast cast our sins into the depths of the Seas: Micah 7.19. Lord suffer not the deeps to swallow us up: Psal. 69.15. Let not all thy waves and billows pass over us. We have seen thy wonders in the deep: Psal. 107.23. And if thou save us we shall declare them to the children of men; but if thou make our graves in the Sea, the dead cannot praise thee: Psal. 115.17. thou Lord which leadest thy Servants through the deep, prepare dry Land for us: Lord, why should not the Seas be as favourable to thy servants as the dry Land? Thou layest up the depth in storehouses, Psal. 33.7. Thou Lord canst still the noise of the waves, Psal. 65, 7. Psal. 68.22. was a comfortable place to me, that the Lord promised to bring again his people from the depth of the Sea. Sweet Christ do thy Office and be a Savour to thy people both for Souls and Bodies, thou layest the beams of thy Chambers in the waters 10.4. Psal. 3. and rulest the raging of the Seas. Psal. 89.9. Now Lord the floods have lifted up their voice and their waves: Psal. 93.2. but thou art mightyer than the mighty waves of the Sea. The fishes of the Sea shall shrink at thy presence: but why art thou so angry with thy servants who art sent in thy service? Lord cast the great Dragon into the Bottomless Pit, that old Serpent called the Devil and Satan. Revel. 12.9. but let thy people live to praise thee; thou Lord canst say to the Sea, Be dry: Esa. 44.27. Esa. 50.2, and canst easily bring us safe to land Lord hast not thou made the depths of the Sea a way for thy ransomed ones to pass over? Esa. 51.10. Why must then thy servants be drowned as if they were in this Malefactors? jonah ran away from thee and would not obey thee, being unwilling to be the mouth and proclaimer of thy justice upon Nineveh the head of the Assyrian Empire; and thou sentest out a great wind, and there was a mighty tempest in the Sea, jonah. 4. which was no ordinary wind, but sent as a punishment for his disobedience, yet because he was thy servant, and was not selvish, nor displeased in thy showing mercy for fear of his being thought a false Prophet, but out of zeal for thy glory which he thought was wronged and obscured by that change, and out of his ardent affection to thy people that their enemies should live; and though he said, he did well to be angry, even unto death, they being not words of express rebellion, but of a passionate Spirit blinded with anger, therefore when he prayed unto thee out of the belly of Hell, he was mightily preserved. Now Lord, thou which wast a God so gracious and merciful slow to anger, & of great kindness towards the Heathens in Niveveh shall not we find thy mercy? if thou hast any further work for us to do in our generation, we shall. Lord, it is the wicked that is like the troubled Sea, whose water casts up mire and dirt, Isa. 57.20 Thy Justice was very wonderful and glorious at Wexford, in drowning those Pirates and wicked men in the Sea, that had done so much mischief to thy people in that Element, and what will thy enemies say when the carcases of thy people are given to be food for the Fishes? Lord command this great wind into thy treasure, and bring forth winds serviceable for us that we may have an auspicious gale, and an expeditious fail into some Harbour where it shall please thy Majesty, for thy poor creatures are at their wit's end, and death appears in their faces; thou only canst shut up the Sea with doors, Job. 38.8. Thou makest the deep to boil like a pot, and makest the Sea like a pot of ointment, as if the Sea was hoary by the long white frothy path, Job. 41.31, 32. Sweet Christ, thou hast dominion from Sea to Sea, Psal. 72.8. and thou hast given to the Sea a decree, that the waters pass not thy commands, Prov. 8.29. Therefore though the Sea Roar and threaten to swallow us up, yet unless thou givest it a commission to devour us, it cannot hurt us: sweet Christ, the Sea is unto thee as the dry land, the winds and Seas will obey thee, dear Redeemer wilt not thou speak one word to save the lives of thy own members? Matth. 8.26, 27. and 14.27. Mark 4.29. Peace, Be still, will make a great calm. Lord assure some of thy poor Servants that all shall be well, as thou didst to blessed Paul, Acts 27.23. Give some vision and manifestation of thy love, for it was for thy sake that we committed ourselves to the Sea, let some of thy Servants in the Ship be assured from Heaven that we shall be safe, however Lord let thy will be our wills: with other Scriptures, not now perfectly remembered. Now after long Prayers and meditations, it pleased God about six on the Sabbath day night, that the Lord Jesus Christ began to quiet my Spirit in himself, and I was well persuaded to die, and began to be ravished with the Consideration of the joys of Heaven, how quickly I and my poor heart should be in our Master's joys, that expression of entering into my Master's joy affected me much, that the joy was too big to enter into me, I must be swallowed up in it, and that my Master's joy could be no small joy; thereupon I spoke comfortably to my wife, desiring her to cheer up, for that we should suddenly be in Heaven, if the Lord was pleased thus to take us to himself, who resigned her Soul to God, and we took our leaves solemnly of each other, with our eyes full of tears, which I felt running down her cheeks when I kissed them, saying that all tears shall suddenly be wiped from our eyes in Heaven, and with a great fervour of Spirit I thought several times to this purpose, Sweet Jesus I come to thee, we come not only in this Sea of waters, but Lord we come to thee in a Sea of blood if it shall please thee to call us, the storm still increased, and I grew exceeding heavy and sleepy, but roused myself up, and checked my heart, that I should Jonah like offer to sleep in such a storm: what, be drowned in my sleep! my wife often begged at me not to sleep, but I could not possibly forbear sleep, if it had been to have saved all our lives; so it pleased God, that sitting as upright as I could, I fell into as fast a sleep as ever I was in all my life. And in my sleep I dreamt. THat I was in an upper chamber with my sweet Redeemer Christ Jesus, and that there were many Suitors attended to speak with him, to beseech him to save their Ships and Barks, that they might not perish by the storm. I thought it was a large room, wherein there was a long table with an ordinary Carpet, and two candles standing upon it, two trenchers of Tobacco, and Pipes, and one Man walking up and down by the table, of a middle stature, about thirty years of age, the hairs of his Head long and white as flax, but curling at the end, but the hair of his upper lip brown, in sad coloured , and a cloth broad brimmed hat; I asked him who he was, who said, he waited upon Jesus Christ; I asked him where Jesus Christ was, he pointed to a Curtain, saying, there he is; I beheld and saw a glorious shining, but no person, and methought Jesus Christ spoke to me, and asked me what I would have, I said the lives of all in the Ship; said he, in what ship? said I in the Hector. It is a bad name said he, for such as profess me. Castor and Pollux is for Heathens. I prayed him that we might not die in this manner; says he to me, are not you safe? but good Lord said I, I must return, and I beg life for all in the Ship; who are they said he? I answered, that there was my dear Wife and three servants, Lieutenant Colonel Saunders, Major Bee, Mr. Hews, honest Abraham, and other passengers thy servants, (said Jesus Christ at my naming Lieu. Col. Saunders and some others, it's so much the better that they are there) the Captain and the Seamen are serviceable to thy Cause, and they take wonderful pains to save their own lives and ours, but unless thou speak the word, the Sea will swallow us up. Then methought Jesus Christ asked me why I was not willing to die? I told him, that by this death I could not glorify him, thinking upon that Scripture, Joh. 21.19. and methought I was something impatient that the Lord should surprise us, getting us into a ship at his call for his service, and then to drown us, as if we were Parricides or heinous Malefactors, which by Law were drowned: at that methought Jesus Christ withdrew, as if he was displeased; said I, Lord, if thou drownest those that love thee, what wilt thou do to thine enemies? but could get no answer, whereupon I was sensible of my impatience, and thought that I fell down flat down on the ground, and cried for mercy, saying, Lord, we kiss thy Rod, and turn our naked backs; strike as much as thou pleasest. Lord, I plead nothing but thy free grace; it may be many of us have offended in excessive drinking, and now thou art punishing us in our own Element; however our sins are more than the sands of the Seashore, but let pity move thee to save us; thou sweet Redeemer which hast been at Sea in storms, that art a merciful High Priest, like unto us in all things but sin, Heb. 2.17. and 4.15. take pity upon thine own flesh and blood; what Father but would save his Child from drowning if he could? hast thou no work for any of us to do? I thought the answer was, but little to be done by some of us; (my Wife tells me, that but a little before I slept, I said, certainly God had something for me, and others to do for his service, and therefore we should not die at this time, which I did not remember;) sweet Christ hear us as thou didst thy Disciples, save us quickly or else we perish; and being earnest in prayer, in my dream methought that the man in the room came to me, and told me that this was no natural storm of Gods sending, but an extraordinary tempest raised by Satan (by God's permission) to destroy those which were coming to fight against his servants, and bade me use that argument to his Master. Thereupon I instantly craved leave to speak, and said, Sweet Saviour, if this storm and tempest be raised by Satan the Prince of the air, as in Lapland, and many other places where winds are sold, he works in the children of disobedience, and hath nothing to do with thy poor servants; for though thou mayst justly for our sins give Satan power over us, as thou didst over thy dear servant Job, yet where thou givest a particular faith to be free from Satan's storms and witchcrafts, thou art pleased to grant that which is believed, And in great love it pleased Jesus Christ to give a gracious answer to my spirit, and said, Be not afraid, your lives shall be saved; instantly I replied, Lord, let it be for all the Persons in the ship; he said, be it so; then I pressed for the goods in the ship; Lord said I, there are my L. G. goods, & M. G. goods, Let them be safe; but they are not there, said Jesus Christ; no Lord said I, they are fight thy battles; Jesus Christ answered, the goods shall all be safe, and the ship likewise, and nothing miscarry; then I gave humble thanks, and departed; and as I was going out, I thought Jesus Christ said to me, it is granted for half fifty, go no more to Sea in Winter. I further dreamed that the Devil and his Imps were very earnest with Jesus Christ, to get leave to destroy the Governor of Wexford, by the storm; but the Lord said, it should not be; some there were that had Barks at Wexford, that attended to speak with Jesus Christ; I could not tell what they said, they discoursed much about the Governor, and all that I heard Christ say, was, that winter was not yet come for them at Wexford; then I thought I met with Captain Hairebottel, who had very great respect shown to him, and I thought his prayers did us very much good, and he was very much commended for his tenderness to the sick Soldiers at Wexford. I thought there were other men from Wexford that came for safe passages, and one Officer was very earnest for a ship that he was to come in, and I heard this expression concerning him, we must take special care of his ship, for he was very tender and kind to the poor sick soldiers, and much discourse I heard about sick soldiers. Jesus Christ said, if storms will not do, I have other afflictions to make them more tenderhearted and pitiful; methought the person that so walked in the room, spoke much to this effect, that there would be many storms by reason of much hardheartedness, to break and melt their spirits, since which (blessed be God) Captain Lucus is come safe in the wild Bear, one whom I observed in Wexford to be very liberal, tenderhearted, and compassionate to the poor Soldiers; whereupon I awaked: this dream lasted about two hours, all which time the storm increased; my Wife told me that she jogged me above twenty times to awaken me, and wondered that I should sleep, seeing we were all so near the point of death; said I to her, peace my dear heart, be quiet, we shall all be safe: Jesus Christ hath promised me our lives, be not afraid; and told her all my dream, whereat she was much amazed, but could not believe any safety, and urged me to prayer, being herself well resolved to die, cheerfully submitting to God's good pleasure; but told me she had a strong impression upon her spirit by way of question, as if the Lord had spoken to her, that in case he should be pleased to spare her life at this time, whether she could be content to suffer for him? whereunto she found her heart most ready and willing, by the Lord's assistance, to lay down her life for his glory; but my own heart was then giving thanks, and brimful of comfort. I related my dream to Liutenant Col. Saunders, Major Bee, Ben. and the two Maids that were in the . And sent in for Captain Stoaks, the Master, the Gunner, Bennet, and Marshal, and bid them be of good cheer, and ply their business, for we should be all safe, telling them what I had dreamt; they admired at my confidence, and Captain Stoaks could not believe it, (said he) I know God is very merciful and can do much; but the Ship hath five foot water in the hold, which the Pump could not reach, being choked, and very subject to leaks, being twenty years old, and then it was about nine at night, the storm increasing, and they not knowing where about they were, I told them that I was assured of safety, as if I were on Shore, and one word more I had dreamt, which I told them of; said I to Jesus Christ, what if the Ship should break asunder? He answered me, you shall be as safe as if you were in Cod's boat (a boat at Wexford that we went in towards the ship in the bay, and were driven back several times) or as if you were in the Governor's house in Wexford; what impression it had upon their spirits I know not, but some that were in the great told me that they did verily believe it, and that their hearts were much quieted by what I said. The storm increased, and a great noise was made in the ship, the water came in at the great windows, the ship ready to overset and to founder; many screeks and cries out, now we are gone, and yet my confidence and assurance increased, I bid them pray and be thankful, for they were as safe as if they were on shore; still my poor wife said it could not be; I told her I was sure of it; she must lie still and see the salvation of our God. I confess I much marvelled at the change that was wrought in my own spirit, from a trembling fearfulness to a rejoicing assurance; and considering it was but a dream, I thought I might presume too much in an over-confidence, and was jealous over my own heart lest I should offend, begging the Lords extraordinary assistance suitable to the present danger; but the more I checked my heart of presumption, the more did my faith mount upon the wing as if I had been upon dry ground, and had not so much fear as the thousand part of the weight of a hair: the poor ship worked for her life, and the Seamen took infinite pains, two parts being fallen sick, & the other 30. were continually at it, sometimes they were in a little hopes, sometimes their souls ready to faint; about twelve at night, he that was at the Helm by my said all was broken, the water came in there; a little before they cried out, that the foresail was split and carried away, and the Anchors thrown over board to lighten the ship, yet all this while my spirit was the same, in a thankful admiration for so great a deliverance, and said, all shall be as well as heart could wish; when they spoke of lightning the ship, my wife called to Capt. Stoaks, and bade him if he thought sit to throw over some Trunks which we had in the ship, which I liked very well (as it was in Pauls-storm) in regard of others that were in the ship, but for my own part, I said I would not have any thing thrown over, for I knew all would be well, and (so blessed be the Lord of Seas) about four in the morning, the storm abated, my heart was in a very thankful posture, and that Wednesday night after, when the Seamen said, we were in most danger, entering into Castle-Haven in the dark, that we must have the wind turn twice in half an hour to save us, first to carry us from the breach of the shore to the Staggs, and then to carry us off from them: when we were within a Cables length of the shore, and the Seamen divided, not knowing what to do, Captain Stoakes bad let fall an Anchor, or else we are all dead men, others said, try to get off from shore, and there was a great screek that all was gone, I was not one jot afraid, but told them they were sure to get safe to Land, and the ship to a Harbour, and the Lord shown himself kind to poor sinners. One thing, though it seem to be of small importance, yet it runs much in my mind, and I must needs relate it; I thought that Jesus Christ said to me, that the goods should be all safe, and nothing hurt or lost by the storm, but when we came to look for our things, we missed a looking-glass and a Pistol, the glass-case was all broke and shivered in many pieces by the rolling of the ship, being in one of the Boxes or Cabbin-chests in the great among other things, but the Glass itself was not so much as broken or cracked, and the case, though in eight or ten pieces, yet might easily be joined and glued together, that it is not worse by a farthing, which seems to me very admirable; I told Captain Stoakes of it, and desired him, if possible, to help me to my Pistol, he examined them about it, but it could not be heard of, till the very day the ship was going out of the Harbour, and then somebody that had it, could not be quiet till he brought it out, to let us see how weak our faith and confidence is in the Lord, and that he will perform with his poor servants to a Title of his promise. I know that usually dreams follow men's natural inclination, or their daily conversation, as in Pharaohs Butler and Baker, they dreamt of wine and baskets of meat, matters about which they were ordinarily employed, Gen. 40. and I having been in a continued meditation of Jesus Christ his love, power, bowels of pity towards his members, it was most likely, that if I dreamt of any thing I should dream of him, as many times upon the Sabbath night I have dreamt that I was in the very same company, and at the same exercises as I was upon the day; and indeed the consideration of Christ's humanity, his being at Sea, and his experimental knowledge of our miseries much supported me; how many prayers did we put up for a safe passage, which though they do not move the Lord by any eloquence, as an Orator moves his hearers, yet they move the Lord, as the cries of children make the bowels of their Parents yern towards them; and we must distinguish between shadows and substances; dreams are but the appearances of things which are not; natural dreams are either sinful, deceitful and vain, as Isa. 29.8. the hungry thirsty man dreams, that he eats and drinks, but he awakes, and his soul is faint for food; or else they are representations of things past, which were really done; or things to come, which falls out accordingly; and the matter of the dream is principally to be regarded; some Christians have had difficult places of Scripture expounded to them in their dreams, as they have told me. Therefore although dreams which are natural and ordinary, be of little or no account, yet extraordinary dreams many times prove true; as if one cry in his dream or be so fast asleep that he feels not pinching, when the Imagination is so extraordinarily powerful, and that the party dreaming is confidently persuaded that it will come to pass, it commonly proves accordingly, as that of Katharin de Medicis Queen of France, who dreamt that Hen. the second should be killed at the Tilt, and said she would venture her soul upon it. And so he was killed by a Scots man, Montgomery, as she dreamt. Petrarch in Padova dreamt that a Scorpion stung him to death, that was in one of the Lions that stand before a statue which they fond call Sancta Justina; the next morning he told his dream, went thither and put in his hand into the hole, and out came a Scorpion which poisoned him, whereof he died: the great Soldier Farese the night before he died, dreamt that he was drowned, and that his Saint Christopher could not carry him over the River, and the next day the Ferry-boat sunk, and he was drowned. In 1629. Christina a Protestant Marquis' Daughter in Poland dreamt that Jesus Christ had told her comfortable things for the Protestants, as the good success of the King of Sweden, the death of the Emperor's General Walsten; and that it might be the better believed, she should die four days and revive again; one Minister Coturnius slighted it as a delusion and vain fancy; she told him that God was angry with him, and such a day his only child should die and himself presently after, which both proved true; she likewise fell into a Trance for eight and forty hours, and then revived and foretold victories of the King of Sweden, but that God would take him away, because the people began to make a God of him, and thought him to be invincible. She dreamt that she was married to Jesus Christ, and that she had a Crown of Glory promised her if she could persevere in the faith, and told her she would be mocked and scoffed at by many who would not believe but that such visions proceeded from imagination, melancholy humours, or weakness of brain, but bade her not be discouraged, showing her a cup of blood, which he said he would pour upon those that persecute his servants; and that she prayed very earnestly for the salvation of a dear friend of hers who was in arms against the Protestants, but that she could not prevail for the salvation of any of her friends, but only for herself, and that night the same party died; she likewise in her dream saw two great persons coming to be judged, one a Papist who had prayed much to his St. Francis, and desired to be admitted into Heaven, but Jesus Christ bade him go to Hell to Saint Francis, whither he was immediately dragged; and the other was a Protestant, who argued for his salvation because he fought against the Papists, and the Ministers assured him of Heaven: Jesus Christ, said he, will put out his candle in Germany, for it gives a false light, it shines without, but it is full of filth and self-righteousness within: she likewise saw a man upon a Tree adored by many; and some Lions came to the Tree and plucked it down, and an Eagle was flying away, which the Lions caught, and toar in pieces, and ask Jesus Christ the meaning of that vision, he told, that the man was that horrid beast the Pope of Rome my capital enemy, not a Pastor, but a Wolf, that says, behold I am set aloft, who dare come to touch me? the Lions are the French, English, Swedes, Hollanders, Venetians and others that shall pluck down the proud beast, and pour out my wrath upon her, and her adherents, and that it should begin about 1650. and be complete by 1666. in her sleep she was heard to say; welcome Husband, and laughed hearty, and as she awaked, she said, farewell dear Husband, and she dreamt many things more which fell out accordingly, being a virtuous child, naturally merry. In 1633. she was married in Lesno in Poland, and most of the Ministers in Germany have subscribed to it, for they seriously consulted about it, and sent into Holland and Geneva, for assistance and advice, and the result of the conference (which Mr. Deodate showed me at Geneva) came to this; in Christinaes' dream, they did believe there was a Divine light: for first the young Lady was regenerate, and very zealous for the glory of God, so there was a good life in the person dreaming: Secondly, there was a full persuasion of heart that it was from God, and it would prove true: Thirdly, there was a certitude in the event, the party was not deceived, for it proved so, and it was likewise their judgements, that in a time of general persecution, or some extraordinary eminent danger, God might and did many times speak comfortable things to his people in dreams, as in the late Bohemian Wars, many Calvinists were admonished in their dreams to go to places of security, which they attending, were safe from the enemy; as the Angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream, and bade him flee with Jesus Christ into Egypt, Mat. 2.13. and others that neglected such dreams have afterwards repent it. The Lord keep us all that were made partakers of so great a mercy, in an humble believing and thankful posture, that we may spend the remainder of our new lives in the zeal of his service, as those that having their lives prolonged so extraordinarily are exceedingly obliged more than others to walk answerably to so great a mercy. FINIS.