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the ſaid man coming to the family, aſked for Mr Peden, and deſired acceſs to the cave, to ly with him: When in bed, he found Mr Peden ſlumbering, but in a little he awoke, and, naming the man, aſked how he did? The ſoldiers came that night, but miſſed their prey. The next morning, when theſe ſaid men returned, he ſaid, "Lads, it was well I came to this houſe yeſternight, otherwiſe ye had been among their bloody hands this day.
28. In the ſaid year 1685, he came to Welwood, to Captain John Campbell's, he having eſcaped out of Canongate-Tolbooth, in the month of Auguſt 1684. Being in danger every day, he reſolved to go to America, and took farewel of his friends, and went aboard of a ſhip. Mr Peden ſaid to his mother, "Miſtreſs, what is become of John?" She ſaid, "He is gone to America." He ſaid, "No, no! he is not gone; ſend for him, for he will never ſee America" Accordingly it was ſo! a ſtorm aroſe, where he was in great danger, but was preſerved, and is yet alive.
29. Since the publishing, of the former paſſages of Mr Peden's life and death, I received two letters from Sir Alexander Gordon of Earlſtoun, in the year 1725, and 1726, ſince gone to his grave; ſhewing, that he was not only fully ſatisfied, but much refreſhed, with the paſſages, requeſting me not to delay the publiſhing of all that I propoſed; and that he longed to see them before he went off the ſtage: Knowing that my day is far ſpent, being long ſince I was his fellow-priſoner, and taught him from my own experience, how to manage the great weight of irons that was upon his legs; and wiſhing that all the Lord's people, who have any zeal for the ſworn-to and ſealed teſtimony, and ſavoury remembrance of the names of Chriſt's ſlain witneſſes for the ſame, and of the Lord's ſignal manifeſtations of his faithfulneſs and all-ſufficiency to them, in their life and death, would give me all encouragement in ſuch a piece of good and great generation-work, which may be