To 1773
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | journal |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-journal-1760-to-1773-545 |
| Words | 374 |
17.--One was relating a remarkable story, which I
thought worthy to be remembered. ‘Two years ago, a gentle
man of large fortune in Kent dreamed that he was walking
through the church-yard, and saw a new monument with the
following inscription:
#ert Iits the 33 obp
w Ho DEPARTED THIS LIFE ON SEPTEMBER -. 1772; AGED -. He told his friends in the morning, and was much affected:
But the impression soon wore off. But on that day he did
depart; and a stone was erected with that very inscription. A gentlewoman present added a relation equally surprising,
which she received from the person’s own mouth:--
* Mrs. B , when about fourteen years of age, being at
a boarding-school, a mile or two from her father's, dreamed
she was on the top of the church-steeple, when a man came
up, and threw her down to the roof of the church. Yet she
seemed not much hurt, till he came to her again, and threw
her to the bottom. She thought she looked hard at him,
and said, ‘Now you have hurt me sadly, but I shall hurt you
worse;’ and waked. A week after, she was to go to her
father's. She set out early in the morning. At the entrance
of a little wood, she stopped, and doubted whether she
should not go round, instead of through it. But, knowing
no reason, she went straight through till she came to the other
side. Just as she was going over the style, a man pulled
her back by the hair. She immediately knew it was the
same man whom she had seen in her dream. She fell on her
484 REv. J. wesLEY’s [Dec. 1772. knees, and begged him, ‘For God’s sake, do not hurt me any
more.’ He put his hands round her neck, and squeezed her
so, that she instantly lost her senses. He then stripped her,
carried her a little way, and threw her into a ditch. “Meantime, her father's servant coming to the school, and
hearing she was gone without him, walked back. Coming to
the style, he heard several groans, and looking about, saw
many drops of blood. He traced them to the ditch, whence
the groans came.