Dorcas Dole


Dorcas Dole was a Quaker religious pamphleteer from Bristol, England, of whose background and private life little is known for certain. She may have been the Dorcas Dole married to the Bristol silk weaver John Dole, who herself died in 1717.

Quaker emphases

Earlier Quaker preachers and pamphleteers, male and female, had been forthright in their political criticisms, even while they were serving jail sentences, but their approach became more compliant after the Restoration. Quakers became less willing to defend women publicly, for instance if they had disrupted church services.
The exact charges against Dole have yet to be discovered, but she was "harshly treated for praying and preaching in prison." Nonetheless, politics did not enter into an influential pamphlet written by Dole while she was in Bristol's Bridewell Prison: Salutation and Seasonable Exhortation to Children was addressed in 1682 to the children "who kept up the meetings in Bristol when the adult members were in prison." Published in 1683 and reprinted in 1700, its main concern was with disobedience among the Quaker children: "For though you are Young and Tender in Years, you know not how soon the Messenger of Death may come to call you."
Another pamphlet published in Bristol by Dorcas Dole in 1683 and again in 1684 was Once more a Warning to Thee, O England, but more particularly to the inhabitants of the city of Bristol. She was in Newgate Prison, Bristol, at the time and describes her conditions of imprisonment. However, she also argues for obedience to the King. In 1683 Dole was contributing to A Salutation of my Endeared Love by the fellow Quaker sectary Elizabeth Stirredge, and in 1684 published a work of her own under the same title, which was reprinted two years later.

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