times as much, had been sumptuously lodged in the
palace, had dined on plate and had been clothed in
silk. He clamoured for an increase of his stipend.
Nay, he was even impudent enough to aspire to ecclesiastical
preferment, and thought it hard that, while so many
mitres were distributed, he could not get a deanery,
a prebend, or even a living. He missed no opportunity
of urging his pretensions. He haunted the public
offices and the lobbies of the Houses of Parliament.
He might be seen and heard every day, hurrying, as
fast as his uneven legs would carry him, between Charing
Cross and Westminster Hall, puffing with haste and
self importance, chattering about what he had done
for the good cause, and reviling, in the style of the
boatmen on the river, all the statesmen and divines
whom he suspected of doing him ill offices at Court,
and keeping him back from a bishopric. When he
found that there was no hope for him in the Established
Church, he turned to the Baptists. They, at first,
received him very coldly; but he gave such touching
accounts of the wonderful work of grace which had been
wrought in his soul, and vowed so solemnly, before
Jehovah and the holy angels, to be thenceforth a burning
and shining light, that it was difficult for simple
and well meaning people to think him altogether insincere.
He mourned, he said, like a turtle. On one Lord’s
day he thought he should have died of grief at being
shut out from fellowship with the saints. He
was at length admitted to communion; but before he
had been a year among his new friends they discovered
his true character, and solemnly cast him out as a
hypocrite. Thenceforth he became the mortal enemy
of the leading Baptists, and persecuted them with
the same treachery, the same mendacity, the same effrontery,
the same black malice which had many years before
wrought the destruction of more celebrated victims.
Those who had lately been edified by his account of
his blessed experiences stood aghast to hear him crying
out that he would be revenged, that revenge was God’s
own sweet morsel, that the wretches who had excommunicated
him should be ruined, that they should be forced to
fly their country, that they should be stripped to
the last shilling. His designs were at length
frustrated by a righteous decree of the Court of Chancery,
a decree which would have left a deep stain on the
character of an ordinary man, but which makes no perceptible
addition to the infamy of Titus Oates.195 Through
all changes, however, he was surrounded by a small
knot of hotheaded and foulmouthed agitators, who,
abhorred and despised by every respectable Whig, yet
called themselves Whigs, and thought themselves injured
because they were not rewarded for scurrility and slander
with the best places under the Crown.