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-At last they rendezvous at Burford to make head against him. But Cromwell had presently his brother Desborough, and some other regiments, ready to surprise them there in their quarters, before they could get their numbers together; so that above fifteen hundred being scattered and taken, and some slain, the Levellers' war was crushed in the egg."

Page 64. "The king being thus taken out of the way, Cromwell takes on him to be for a Commonwealth, (put all in order to the security of the good people,) till he had removed the other impediments which were yet to be removed; so that the Rump [that is, the rest of the house of commons, whom Cromwell still allowed to sit, after he had turned out the members who displeased him most] presently drew up a form of engagement, to be put upon all men, viz. I do promise to be true and faithful to the Commonwealth, as it is now established without a king or house of lords.' So we must take the Rump for an established Commonwealth, and promise fidelity to them."

In the following pages, Baxter tells us how Cromwell put down the Rump at last, and, page 74, he gives this account of the manner in which he farther laid aside his rusty friends the Anabaptists, who had done him so much service. The sectarian party in his army and elsewhere he [Cromwell] chiefly trusted to and pleased, till, by the people's submission and quietness, he thought himself well settled; and then be began to undermine them, and by degrees to work them out: And though he had 50 often spoken for the Anabaptists, now he findeth them so heady, and so much against any settled government, and so set upon the promoting of their way and party, that he does not only begin to blame their unruliness, but also designeth to settle himself in the people's favour by suppressing them. In Ireland they were grown so high, that the soldiers were, many of them, re-baptized as the way to preferment: And those that opposed them, with that rough and brisk spirit of Cromwell, it would presently have produced all imaginable confusion in the parlia

of their agreement of the people [upon the high republ can plan] which suited not with his designs: And t make them odious, he denominated them Levellers, as i they intended to § level men of all qualities and estates

Did Cromwell absolutely, wrong them when he said this Is it not probable that some of them leaned to the levellinį principles of the headstrong Anabaptists? Was it not wher such Anabaptists were most in favour, that England saw & church without bishops, a parliament without lords and ɛ king without a head? And were not these some important steps taken towards levelling Anabaptistry; though Cromwell's ambition prevented Republicans and Levellers from proceeding any farther, as Baxter soon observes? The reader will be glad to see what Lord Clarendon says of the levelling Agitators.

"The Agitators would not be so dismissed from State affairs, of which they had so pleasant a relish, &c., and therefore, when they were admitted no more to consultations with their officers, they continued their meetings without them, and thought there was as great need to reform their officers as any part of the Church or State. They entered into new associations, and made many propositions to their officers, and to the parliament, to introduce an equality into all conditions, and a party among all men, from whence they had the appellation of Levellers; which appeared a great party. They did not only meet, against the express commands of their officers, but drew very considerable parties of the army to rendezvous, without the order or privity of their superiors; and there persuaded them to enter into such engagements, as would in a short time have dissolved the government of the army, &c. The suppression of this licence put Cromwell to the expense of all his cunning, dexterity, and courage; so that after he had cajoled the parliament, as if the preservation of their authority had been all he cared for, &c., and had sent some false brothers to comply in the coun. sels of the conspirators, by that means having notice of their rendezvous, he was unexpectedly found with an ordinary guard at those meetings; and with a marvellous vivacity, having asked some questions of those whom he observed most active, and receiving insolent answers, he knocked two or three of them on the head with his own hand, and then charged the rest with his troop, and took such a number of them as he thought fit; whereof he presently caused some of them to be hanged, and sent others to London to a more formal trial. By two or three such encounters, [of which that at Burford, mentioned by Baxter, seems to have been one,] for the obstinacy continued long, he totally subdued that spirit in the army, though it continued and increased very much in the kingdom; and if it had not been encountered at that time,

-At last they rendezvous at Burford to make head against him. But Cromwell had presently his brother Desborough, and some other regiments, ready to surprise them there in their quarters, before they could get their numbers together; so that above fifteen hundred being scattered and taken, and some slain, the Levellers' war was crushed in the egg."

Page 64. "The king being thus taken out of the Tay, Cromwell takes on him to be for a Commonwealth, (put all in order to the security of the good people,) till he had removed the other impediments which were yet to be removed; so that the Rump [that is, the rest of the house of commons, whom Cromwell still allowed to sit, after he had turned out the members who displeased him most] presently drew up a form of engagement, to be put upon all men, viz. I do promise to be true and faithful to the Commonwealth, as it is now established vithout a king or house of lords.' So we must take the Rump for an established Commonwealth, and pronise fidelity to them."

In the following pages, Baxter tells us how Cromwell put down the Rump at last, and, page 74, he gives this account of the manner in which he farther laid aside his rusty friends the Anabaptists, who had done him so much service."The sectarian party in his army and elsewhere he [Cromwell] chiefly trusted to and pleased, till, by the people's submission and quietness, he thought himself well settled; and then be began to undermine them, and by degrees to work them out: And though he had 0 often spoken for the Anabaptists, now he findeth them heady, and so much against any settled government, and so set upon the promoting of their way and party, that he does not only begin to blame their unruliness, but also designeth to settle himself in the people's favour by suppressing them. In Ireland they were grown so high, that the soldiers were, many of them, re-baptized as the way to preferment: And those that opposed them, with that rough and brisk spirit of Cromwell, it would presently have produced all imaginable confusion in the parlia

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they crushed with much uncharitable fierceness. suppress these, he sent thither his son Henry Cromwel who so discountenanced the Anabaptists, as yet to de civilly by them, repressing their insolencies; -an Major-general Ludlow, who headed the Anabaptists i Ireland, was fain to draw in his head. In Englanċ Cromwell connived at his old friend Harrison, while h made himself the head of the Anabaptists and fanatic here, till he saw it would be an acceptable thing to th nation to suppress him, and then he does it easily in a trice, and maketh him contemptible, who but yesterday thought himself not much below him."

From this short account of the reign of the Rump, and the craft of Cromwell, it is evident, that the high republican spirit, and the injudicious zeal of sectaries, especially of the Anabaptists and Antinomians, were the chief means by which that ambitious man ascended the scat of supreme power. And I wish, Sir, that your injudicious, well-meant zeal, may not prove a spur, or a saddle, to some ambitious, false patriots, who, under pretence of mounting the great horse Liberty, to fight our battles, and to deliver us from what you call “abject slavery,” will ride over us with as little ceremony as Cromwell did over King Charles, the parliament, and the Rump.

Before I take my leave of Baxter, permit me to transcribe what he says concerning the Origin of Fower; I accidentally found it in turning over his book for the preceding quotations; and his judgment, which exactly coincides with mine, confirms me in the sentiments which I have expressed in the beginning of this letter.

Page 41. "For the parliament's cause, the principal writing was, Observations written by Mr. Parker, a lawyer: But I remember some principles, which, I think, he misapplied, viz. That the king is singulis major, but universis minor; (superior to every one of his subjects, but inferior to the collective body of all ;) that he receiveth his power from the people, &c. For I doubt not to prove, that his power is so immediately from God, as that there is no recipient between God and him, to con

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vey it to him; only, as the King by (his charter) maketh him a Mayor or Bailiff, whom the corporatton chooses; so God (by his law, as an instrument) conveyeth power to that person, or family, whom the people consent to; and their consent is but a conditio sine qua non; and not any proof that they are the fountain of power, or that ever the governing power was in them; and, therefore, for my part, I am satisfied, that all politics err, who tell us of a Majestas realis in the people, as distinct from the Majestas personalis in the governors. And though it be true, that quoad naturalem bonitatem, &c., (with respect to natural goodness, &c.,) the King is universis minor (inferior to the whole body of his subjects)—yet as to governing power (which is the thing in question) the King is, as to the people, universis major, as well as ringulis,-(superior to the whole body of his subjects, as well as to every one of them.) For if the Parliament have any legislative power, it cannot be as they are the body of the people, &c., but it is as the Constitution twisteth them into the government. For, if once Legislation (the chief act of government) be denied to be any part of government at all, and affirmed to belong to the people as such, who are no governors, all government will thereby be overthrown."

If Baxter be right here, (and I believe you cannot prove him to be wrong,) is it not evident, Sir, that when you insinuate, “Every one, who is a free-agent, or has a will of his own, or boils a pot, ought to have a place in the legislature, before he can be properly subjected to taxation, and, of consequence, to the laws," you countenance one of the most dangerous principles of the levelling Anabaptists?-A principle whereby all government may be overthrown by those, who know how to draw just consequences from false premises.

To return:

You say, Sir, that your opponent is a slave because he cheerfully submits to taxation without having a direct Representative in Parliament. But who is the greatest slave; Mr. Wesley, or the tools of lawless patriotism?

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