Page:Life and wonderful prophecies of Donald Cargill (1).pdf/12

12 wheel of his wrath and justice over them altogether.'

Some time after the beginning of the year 1680, he retired toward the FrithFirth [sic] of Forth, where he continued until that scuffle at Queensferry, where worthy Haugh-head was killed.and he sorely wounded. But escaping, a certain woman found him in a private place, to the south of the town, and tieing up his wounds with her head-cloths, conducted him o the house of one Robert Puntens, in Carlowrie, where a surgeon dressed his wounds, and Mrs Punten gave him some warm milk, and he lay in their barn all night. From thence he went to the south, and next Sabbath preached at Cairuhill, somewhere ajacent to LoudonLondon [sic], in his blood and wounds,; for no danger could stop him from going about doing good. His text was in Heb. xi, 32. "And what shall I more say, for time would fail me to tell of Gideon, &c." At night, some persons said to him. We think. Sir, preaching and praying go best with you when your danger and distress are greatest. He said, it had been so, and he hoped it would be so, the more that enemies and others did thurstthrust [sic] at him that he might fall, the more sensibly the Lord had helped him and then (as it had been to himself) he repeated these words. The Lord is my strength and song, and has become my salvation, in the 118th Psalm, which was the psalm he sung upon the scaffold.

After this, he and Mr Richard Cameron met and preached together in Dermeid-mnirmuir [sic], and other places, until that Mr Cameron was slain at Airsmoss, and then he went north, where, in the month