Page:Life and prophecies of Alexander Peden.pdf/12

 and hashing them down, and their blood is running like water!'

11. After this, he was preaching in Galloway-in the forenoon, he prayed earnestly for the prisoners taken at and about Bothwel; but in the afternoon, when he began to pray for them he halted and said, 'Our friends at Edinburgh, the prisoners, have done something to save their lives that shall not do with them, for the sea-billows shall be many of their winding sheets: and the few of them that escape, shall not be useful to God in their generation.' Which was sadly verified thereafter. That which the greatest part of these prisoners did, was the taking of that bond, commonly called the Black Bond, after Bothwel, wherein they acknowledged their appearance in arms, for the defence of the gospel and their own lives to be rebellion; and engaged themselves never to make any more opposition: upon the doing of which, these perfidious enemies promised them life and liberty. This with cursed and subtle arguments and advices of ministers, who went into the New Yard, where they were prisoners, particularly Mr Hugh Kennedy, Mr William Chrichton, Edward Jamieson, and Mr George Johnston; these took their turn in the yard wherowhere [sic] the prisoners were, together with a letter that was sent from that Erastian meeting of ministers,