Page:Devonshire Characters and Strange Events.djvu/712

This page has been validated.
598
DEVONSHIRE CHARACTERS

"That during his Absence above 7 yeers since he left Matthew Lile, a Miller, to read Prayers in Church, and since then Philip Natt, a Taylor.

"That he causeth Dorothie Lang, his daughter, to catechise in Church.

"That being required to baptize a child, he bade the Woman to cast a Dish of Water in the face of the child, and call it John or Joan, in the Name of, etc., and this would be well enough. Which Child lived more than 10 weeks after and died unbaptized.

"That he obtained a Licence to sell Wine, and hath kept a Tavern in the Vicarage for four yeers.

"That a Child being baptized, the Woman that held the Child softly and modestly requested him to put back the Child's Head-covering; he answered, 'Go thy Wayes home, and teach thy Maid to whip her Cat.'

"That being requested by a parent to christen her child, he answered, 'What, wilt thou have me christen thy Old Sow?'

"That he affirms the Book of Canticles to be but a kind of bawdy Song.

"That he never preacheth or catechiseth in the Afternoon on Sabbath Days, but goes to the Alehouse, and makes himself so drunk that he can neither go nor stand." When this was published William Lang was a prisoner in London.

That there is considerable exaggeration in these charges—I have not given all—goes without saying, but that there was a strong case against the vicar nevertheless cannot be doubted. The facts of his legal proceedings against his parishioners were indisputable; the surmises that he had poisoned Mr. and Mrs. Twigg are worthless. That his daughter catechized in church is harmless enough; it is what is done by