[46] Ludlow, ii. 674.

[47] See pamphlets: The Leveller; The Rota; or, Model of a Free State; and Gallicantus seu præcursor Gallicinii Secundus.

[48] State Papers, Dom. Interreg., No. 659.

[49] See prices in Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations, B. I. c. II.

[50] Guizot, ii. 62.

[51] Price says Christmas-day. Hist. of the King's Restoration, 72.

[52] Numerous illustrations of the state of feeling at the time might be culled from these and other pamphlets of the period. Some of them are printed in the Harleian Miscellany. Some are noticed and described in Kennet's Register. A large collection of them may be found in the British Museum.

[53] Price's Mystery and Method of His Majesty's Happy Restoration, 79, 80.

[54] Neal (iv. 238–242) says that when Monk had joined the Presbyterians, and the Independents saw that they were betrayed, they offered to support their friends in Parliament, and to raise four new regiments for the purpose of resisting the General's designs. He further states that Owen and Nye consulted with Whitelocke and St. John, and engaged to procure £100,000 to support the Army, if the Army would again undertake the defence of religious liberty; but he gives no authority for what he relates.

[55] Coverdale's Version.