[338] See Lee, Source-book of English History, pp. 348–352.
[339] See Lee, Source-book of English History, pp. 352–355, for the first writ of ship money.
[340] See above, p. [426], n. 1.
[341] The name Puritan, it should be noted, was applied loosely to the English Protestants, whether Low Churchmen, Presbyterians, or Independents, who aroused the antagonism of their neighbors by advocating a godly life and opposing popular pastimes, especially on Sunday.
[342] Reference, Green, Short History, pp. 595–614. For a contemporary account of Puritans, see Readings, Chapter XXX.
[343] Reference, Lee, Source-book of English History, pp. 355–357.
[344] Reference for Cromwell's early career and his generalship, Green, Short History, pp. 554–559.
[345] For charge against the king, etc., see Lee, Source-book of English History, pp. 364–372.
[346] Reference, Green, Short History, pp. 580–588, 594–600.