[410] The very injudicious Defence of the Old Singing Psalms may be found in the first volume of Beveridge’s Works, collected by Horne.

[411] Life of Kettlewell, 213, 214.

[412] Memoirs, 30.

[413] Whiston’s Life, 162.

[414] Own Time, ii. 215.

[415] Wilson’s Life of De Foe, i. 292.

[416] The following extract indicates the feeling cherished towards Richard Baxter and his admirers:—“His writings furnish great part of the libraries of the young fanatic divines, who have sucked in all the venom and poison of his unhappy writings, in order to propagate them in this city and country.”—From Chas. Goodall to Mr. Strype, June 12, 1701. Brit. Mus. Addl. MSS., 5853, p. 35.

[417] Anecdotes of the Wesley Family, i. 207.

[418] See Kirk’s Mother of the Wesleys, 186, and Tyerman’s Life and Times of Samuel Wesley, 251.

[419] See Ecton’s Liber Valorum.