Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 32.djvu/319

 1686 Mrs. Lead printed a 'Message to the Philadelphian Society whithersoever dispersed over the whole Earth.' In the following year her disciples drew up a constitution, held meetings at Westmoreland House (Lambeth MSS.), and promised to publish quarterly 'Transactions.' of which only one volume appeared.

In her latter days Mrs. Lead suffered much from poverty and from the jealousies of some of her disciples under the leadership of Gichtel; but a German sympathiser, Baron Kniphausen, allowed her four hundred gulden a year, and she was admitted into one of the almshouses of the Lady Mico at Stepney. In 1702 she published her own 'Funeral Testimony.' and after Easter 1704 she had only brier intervals of consciousness. She died on 19 Aug. 1704, 'in the 81st year of her age, and 65th of her vocation to the inward life.' She was buried on the 22nd in Bunhill Fields, the funeral address being delivered by Roach. A month later, Lee, her faithful attendant to the last, to whose ability she owed much of her popular influence, wrote many epistles to the Countess Kniphausen and others in France and Germany describing her death, and 'The Last Hours of Jane Lead, by an Eye and Ear Witness.' which was at once translated into German. The original does not appear to exist, but a manuscript copy, retranslated from the German, is in the Walton Library (now preserved in Dr. Williams's Library), together with some English translations of Lee's Latin letters, by Canon R. C. Jenkins.

Mrs. Lead's writings were eagerly purchased and read, and are now very rare. Her language is ungrammatical, her style involved, and her imagery fanciful and strained. The titles are: 
 * 1) 'The Heavenly Cloud now breaking. The Lord Christ's Ascension-Ladder sent down.' London, 1681.
 * 2) 'The Revelation of Revelations.' &c., London, 1683.
 * 3) 'The Enochian Walks with God, found out by a Spirituall Traveller, whose Face towards Mount Sion above was set. With an Experimental Account of what was known, seen, and met withal there.' London, 1694.
 * 4) 'The Laws of Paradise given forth by Wisdom to a Translated Spirit.' 1695.
 * 5) 'The Wonders of God's Creation manifested in the variety of Eight Worlds, as they were made known experimentally unto the Author.' London, 1695.
 * 6) 'A Message to the Philadelphian Society whithersoever dispersed over the whole Earth.' London, 1696.
 * 7) 'The Tree of Faith, or the Tree of Life springing up in the Paradise of God, from which all the Wonders of the New Creation must proceed.' 1696.
 * 8) 'The Ark of Faith, a supplement to the Tree of Faith.' 1696.
 * 9) 'A Fountain of Gardens watered by the Rivers of Divine Pleasure, and springing up in all the variety of Spiritual Plants, blown up by the Pure Breath into a Paradise, sending forth their Sweet Savours and Strong Odours, for Soul Refreshing.' 4 vols., London, 1696-1701; reprinted four times.
 * 10) 'A Revelation of the Everlasting Gospel Message.' 1697.
 * 11) 'The Ascent to the Mount of Vision.' n.d. [1698].
 * 12) 'The Signs of the Times: forerunning the Kingdom of Christ, and evidencing when it is to come.' 1699.
 * 13) 'The Wars of David and the Peaceable Reign of Solomon … containing:
 * 14) An Alarm to the Holy Warriors to Fight the Battles of the Lamb.
 * 15) The Glory of Sharon in the Renovation of Nature, introducing the Kingdom of Christ,' with a preface containing autobiographical remarks, 1700.
 * 16) 'A Second and a Third Message to the Philadelphian Society.'
 * 17) 'A Living Funeral Testimony, or Death overcome and drowned in the Life of Christ.' 1702.
 * 18) 'The First Resurrection in Christ.' dictated shortly before her death, and published almost immediately in Amsterdam. She intended to call it 'The Royal Stamp' (see Lee's Letters in the Walton Library).

LEADBEATER, MARY (1758–1826), authoress, daughter of Richard Shackleton (1726–1792) by his second wife, Elizabeth Carleton, and granddaughter of [q. v.], Burke’s schoolmaster, was born at Ballitore, county Kildare, in December 1758. Her parents were quakers. She was thoroughly educated, and her literary studies were aided by Aldborough Wrightson, a man of great ability who had been educated at Ballitore school and had returned to die there. In 1784 she travelled to London with her father and paid several visits to Burke’s town house, where she met Sir. J. Reynolds and George Crabbe. She also went to Beaconsfield, and on her return wrote a poem in praise of the place and its owner, which was acknowledged by Burke, 13 Dec. 1784, in a long and eulogistic letter (printed in Annals of Ballitore, p. 145). On her way home she visited at Selby, Yorkshire, some primitive 