"They are both in hiding I am told."
"The wife of Sir Charles Denman hath never been captured then?"
"No, although how she hath escaped is a mystery, for Sir Charles hath fled out of the country."
"And the other sister?" I asked feverishly, for my heart was all aflame.
"Ah, the other sister. God only knows what hath become of her, for it is said that she found favour in the eyes of the king," he replied.
At this I could not speak another word, for it seemed to me that nought was left worth living for. But the old man did not heed my grief, instead he went on speaking.
"Not that I blame the king for all. The episcopal bishops and the popishly inclined clergy have allowed him no rest. My brethren have appealed for justice, but in order to please the clergy, Parliament hath passed one law after another, each more abominable in the sight of God than the other. Our greatest enemies everywhere have been those who have wanted the heresies of the Prayer-book. They have hunted us from place to place, they have given information to the magistrates, and have not been contented until the Nonconformists have either sworn allegiance to the Prayer-book or been thrust into prison. As for the king, he careth more for his pleasures than aught else."
"But if this is all for the good of religion?" I asked presently, although my heart went not with my words.
"Religion!" cried the old man. "Religion! where can we find it? Religion is laughed at on every hand. Those in high places live in open sin, and there are none to say them nay. The Court is turned into a pigsty. Obscene plays are in all the theatres, while vice and profligacy are actually boasted of in the streets of London. Even while we Nonconformists be imprisoned in stinking cells the very worst sins are condoned, excused, and in many places even praised, while the clergy openly proclaim that they would rather have open sin than Nonconformity. But this cannot be for long."
"Why, do you think the king will relent?"