[62] A Fountain of Gardens, p. 25.
[63] Theologia mystica, p. 81.
[64] Christopher Walton, in his Notes and Materials (1854), gives a list of eighteen of her books.
[65] Ibid. p. 238.
[66] Op. cit. p. 9. Pordage disliked the Quakers and speaks slightingly of them in Theologia mystica. He also wrote a Treatise against them. See Walton, p. 203.
[67] Important material on this subject may be found in Walton's Notes and Materials, especially pp. 188-258.
[68] The full title-page of Anderdon's book is as follows: One Blow at Babel. In those of the Pepole called Behemnites, whose Foundation is not upon that of the Prophets and Apostles, which shall stand sure and firm forever; but upon their own carnal conceptions, begotten in their Imaginations upon Jacob Behmen's writings: They not knowing the better part, the Teachings of that Spirit that sometime opened some Mysteries of God's Kingdom in Jacob, have chosen the worser part in Esau, according to the predominancy of that Spirit which ruled in them when they made choice of their Religion, as it doth in others the hearts of the children of disobedience.—By John Anderdon. (London, printed in the year 1662, written in 1661).
[69] One Blow at Babel, p. 3.
[70] Ibid. pp. 1 and 6.
[71] One Blow at Babel, pp. 1-2.