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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Digger Movement in the Days of the
+Commonwealth, by Lewis H. Berens
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Digger Movement in the Days of the Commonwealth
+ As Revealed in the Writings of Gerrard Winstanley, the Digger, Mystic and Rationalist, Communist and Social Reformer
+
+
+Author: Lewis H. Berens
+
+
+
+Release Date: January 8, 2006 [eBook #17480]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DIGGER MOVEMENT IN THE DAYS OF
+THE COMMONWEALTH***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Suzanne Lybarger, Louise Pryor, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/) from
+page images generously made available by the Internet Archive/Canadian
+Libraries (http://www.archive.org/details/toronto)
+
+
+
+Note: Images of the original pages are available through the
+ Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries. See
+ http://www.archive.org/details/diggermovement00bereuoft
+
+Transcriber's notes:
+
+ All material added by the transcriber is surrounded by
+ braces {}.
+
+ The original has a number of inconsistent spellings and
+ punctuation. A few corrections have been made for obvious
+ typographical errors; they have been noted individually.
+ A list of specific items will be found at the end of the
+ file.
+
+ Text in italics in the original is shown between
+ _underlines_, and text in bold between =equal signs=.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DIGGER MOVEMENT IN THE DAYS OF THE COMMONWEALTH
+
+As Revealed in the Writings of Gerrard Winstanley, the Digger
+_Mystic and Rationalist, Communist and Social Reformer_
+
+by
+
+LEWIS H. BERENS
+Author of "Towards the Light"
+Etc. Etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ "Was glänzt ist für den Augenblick geboren;
+ Das Echte bleibt der{1} Nachwelt unverloren."
+ GOETHE.
+
+
+
+
+London
+Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent, & Co. Ltd.
+1906
+
+
+
+
+RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED
+
+TO
+
+THE SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
+(THE CHILDREN OF LIGHT)
+
+TO WHOM THE WORLD OWES MORE THAN IT YET RECOGNISES
+AND
+WHOSE FUNDAMENTAL DOCTRINES
+THE AUTHOR
+HAS LEARNED TO LOVE AND ADMIRE
+WHILST WRITING THIS BOOK
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAP. PAGE
+
+ I. THE REFORMATION IN GERMANY 1
+
+ II. THE REFORMATION IN ENGLAND 12
+
+ III. THE GREAT CIVIL WAR 23
+
+ IV. THE DIGGERS 34
+
+ V. GERRARD WINSTANLEY 41
+
+ VI. WINSTANLEY'S EXPOSITION OF THE QUAKER DOCTRINES 52
+
+ VII. THE NEW LAW OF RIGHTEOUSNESS 68
+
+VIII. LIGHT SHINING IN BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 79
+
+ IX. THE DIGGERS' MANIFESTOES 90
+
+ X. A LETTER TO LORD FAIRFAX, ETC. 100
+
+ XI. A WATCHWORD TO THE CITY OF LONDON, ETC. 112
+
+ XII. A NEW YEAR'S GIFT FOR THE PARLIAMENT AND ARMY 132
+
+XIII. A VINDICATION; A DECLARATION; AND AN APPEAL 146
+
+ XIV. GERRARD WINSTANLEY'S UTOPIA: THE LAW OF FREEDOM 162
+
+ XV. THE SAME CONTINUED 179
+
+ XVI. THE SAME CONTINUED 206
+
+XVII. CONCLUDING REMARKS 228
+
+ APPENDIX A. THE TWELVE ARTICLES OF THE GERMAN
+ PEASANTRY, 1525 235
+
+ " B. CROMWELL ON TOLERATION 241
+
+ " C. WINSTANLEY'S LAWS FOR A FREE COMMONWEALTH 244
+
+ BIBLIOGRAPHY 255
+
+ INDEX 257
+
+
+
+
+THE DIGGER MOVEMENT
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE REFORMATION IN GERMANY
+
+ "Whatever the prejudices of some may suggest, it will be admitted
+ by all unbiassed judges, that the Protestant Reformation was
+ neither more nor less than an open rebellion. Indeed, the mere
+ mention of private judgment, on which it was avowedly based, is
+ enough to substantiate this fact. To establish the right of private
+ judgment, was to appeal from the Church to individuals; it was to
+ increase the play of each man's intellect; it was to test the
+ opinion of the priesthood by the opinions of laymen; it was, in
+ fact, a rising of the scholars against their teachers, of the ruled
+ against their rulers."--BUCKLE.
+
+
+What is known in history as the Reformation is one of those monuments in
+the history of the development of the human mind betokening its entry
+into new territory. Fundamental conceptions and beliefs, cosmological,
+physical, ethical or political, once firmly established, change but
+slowly; the universal tendency is tenaciously to cling to them despite
+all evidence to the contrary. Still men's views do change with their
+intellectual development, as newly discovered facts and newly accepted
+ideas come into conflict with old opinions, and force them to reconsider
+the evidence on which these latter were based. Prior to the Reformation,
+many such conceptions and beliefs, at one time holding undisputed
+dominion over the human mind, had been called into question, their
+authority challenged, undermined, and weakened, and they had commenced
+to yield pride of place to others more in accordance with increased
+knowledge of nature and of life. The revival of classical learning,
+geographical and astronomical discoveries, and more especially, perhaps,
+the invention and rapid spread of the art of printing, had all conspired
+to give an unparalleled impetus to intellectual development,--and the
+Reformation was, in truth, the outward manifestation in the religious
+world of this development.
+
+Prior to the Reformation, wherever a man might turn his steps in Western
+Europe, he found himself confronted with what was proudly termed the
+Universal Church: one hierarchy, one faith, one form of worship, in
+which the officiating priests were assumed to be the indispensable
+mediators between God and man, everywhere confronted him. Religion was
+then much more intimately blended with the life of man than it is now;
+and on all matters of religion, Western Europe seemed to present a
+united front and to be impervious to change. Appearances, however, are
+proverbially deceitful. Beneath this apparent uniformity and general
+conformity, there lurked countless forces, spiritual, intellectual,
+social and political, making for change. Dissent and dissatisfaction,
+with myriads of tiny teeth, had undermined and weakened the stately
+columns that upheld the imposing structure of the Universal Church. Even
+within the Church itself there was seething inquietude, and thousands of
+its purest souls longed, prayed and struggled for its practical
+amendment. To emancipate the Church from the clutches of the autocracy
+of Rome; to remove the abuses that, in the course of centuries, had
+grown round and sullied its primitive purity; to lighten the fiscal
+oppression of the Papacy and to check the rapacity of the Cardinals; to
+reform and discipline the priesthood; even to modify certain doctrines
+and dogmas: such were the aspirations of some of the most devout,
+eminent and cultured sons of the Church. Outside its communion there
+were many forms of heresy, which, though generally regarded as
+disreputable and often treated as criminal, the apparently all-powerful
+Church had never been able entirely to eradicate. And, at first at
+least, both these forces favoured the efforts of the early Lutheran
+Reformers.
+
+The influence of the Reformation, of "the New Learning," on
+theological, ethical, social and political thought can scarcely be
+overestimated. Under the supremacy of the Church of Rome, men, educated
+and uneducated, had come to rely almost entirely on authority and
+precedent, and had lost the habit of self-reliance, of unswerving
+dependence on the dictates of reason, which was one of the
+distinguishing characteristics of the classical philosophers and their
+disciples, as it is of the modern scientific school of thought. In
+short, concerning matters spiritual and temporal, Faith had usurped the
+function of Reason. Hence any innovations, whatever their abstract
+merit, were regarded not only with justifiable suspicion and caution,
+but as entirely unworthy of consideration, unless, of course, they could
+be shown to be in accordance with accepted traditions and doctrines, or
+had received the sanction of the Church. But even the Church itself was
+popularly regarded as bound by tradition and precedent; and when the
+Papacy sanctioned any departure from established custom, it was
+understood to do so in its capacity of infallible expounder of
+unalterable doctrines.
+
+The habits of centuries still enthralled the early Reformers.
+Circumstances compelled them to attack some of the doctrines and customs
+of their Mother Church, of which at first they were inclined to regard
+themselves as dutiful though sorrowful sons. The logic of facts,
+however, soon forced them outside the Church. Then, but then only, for
+the authority of the Church, they substituted the authority of the
+Scriptures. To apply to them Luther's own words, "they had saved others,
+themselves they could not save." In their eyes Reason and Faith were
+still mortal enemies,--as unfortunately they are to this day in the eyes
+of a steadily diminishing number of their followers,--and they did not
+hesitate to demand the sacrifice of reason when it conflicted, or
+appeared to conflict, with the demands of faith: and that, indeed, as
+"the all-acceptablest sacrifice and service that can be offered to God."
+In a sermon in 1546, the last he delivered at Wittenberg, Luther gave
+vent, in language that even one of his modern admirers finds too gross
+for quotation, to his bitter hatred and contempt for reason, at all
+events when it conflicted with his own interpretation of the Scriptures,
+or with any of the fundamental dogmas and doctrines he had himself
+formulated or accepted. While even in milder moments he did not hesitate
+to teach that[4:1]--
+
+ "It is a quality of faith that it wrings the neck of reason and
+ strangles the beast, which else the whole world, with all
+ creatures, could not strangle. But how? It holds to God's word:
+ lets it be right and true, no matter how foolish and impossible it
+ sounds. So did Abraham take his reason captive and slay it....
+ There is no doubt faith and reason mightily fell out in Abraham's
+ heart, yet at last did faith get the better, and overcame and
+ strangled reason, the all-cruelest and most fatal enemy to God. So,
+ too, do all other faithful men who enter with Abraham the gloom and
+ hidden darkness of faith; they strangle reason ... and thereby
+ offer to God the all-acceptablest sacrifice and service that can
+ ever be brought to Him."
+
+However, whatever may have been the personal desires and tendencies of
+those associated with its earlier manifestations, the forces of which
+the Reformation was the outcome were not to be controlled by them. The
+spirit of which they were the product was not to be controlled by any
+fetters they could forge. The Reformation emancipated the intellect of
+Europe from the yoke of tradition and blind obedience to authority; it
+let loose the illuming flood of thought which had been accumulating
+behind the more rigid barriers of the Church, and swept away as things
+of straw the feebler barriers the early Reformers would have erected to
+confine the thoughts of future generations. The futility of all such
+efforts we can gauge, they could not. Blind obedience to authority, in
+matters spiritual and temporal, had been the watchword and animating
+principle of the power against which they had rebelled; liberty and
+reason were the watchwords and animating principles of the movement of
+which they, owing to their rebellion, had temporarily become the
+recognised leaders. The right of private judgement, in other words, the
+supremacy of reason as sole judge and arbiter of all matters, spiritual
+as well as secular, was the essential element of the movement of which
+the Reformation was the outcome; how, then, could they, the children of
+this movement, hope to change its course?
+
+When considering the forces and circumstances that made the Reformation
+possible, when so many equally earnest previous attempts in the same
+direction had failed, we should not lose sight of the favourable
+political situation. Under cover of its religious authority, by means of
+its unrivalled organisation, as well as by its temporal control of large
+areas of the richest and most fertile land in Europe, the Church of Rome
+annually drained into Italy a large part of the surplus wealth of every
+country that recognised its spiritual authority. Such countries were
+impoverished to support not only the resident but an absentee
+priesthood, and to enable the Princes of the Church to maintain a more
+than princely state at Rome. This was a standing grievance even in the
+eyes of many sincerely devout Churchmen, and one which was prone to make
+statesmen and politicians look with a favourable eye on any movement
+which promised to lessen or to abolish it. Germany in this respect had
+special reasons for discontent; as has been well said, "It was the milch
+cow of the Papacy, which at once despised and drained it dry." And, as
+everybody knows, it was in Germany that the standard of revolt against
+the authority of Rome was first successfully raised. The political
+constitution of that country was also peculiarly favourable to the
+protection of the Reformation and of the persons of the early Reformers.
+Although owing a nominal allegiance to the Emperor, or rather to the
+will of the Diet which met annually under the presidency of the Emperor,
+the head of each of the little States into which Germany was divided
+claimed to be independent lord of the territory over which he ruled.
+Hence, when the Ernestine line of Saxon princes took the Reformation and
+the early Reformers under their protection, there was no power ready
+and willing to compel them to relinquish their design. The democratic
+independence of the Free Cities also made them fitting strongholds of
+the new teachings.
+
+Students of history would do well never to lose sight of the fact that
+every religion which attempts to bind or to guide the reason, to direct
+the lives and to determine the conscience of mankind, necessarily has an
+ethical as well as a theological, a social as well as an individual
+side. It concerns itself, not only with the relation of the individual
+to God or the gods, but also with the relations and duties of man to
+man. Hence the close relation and inter-relation of religion and
+politics. Politics is the art or act of regulating the social relations
+of mankind, of determining social or civic rights and duties. It is
+neither more nor less than the practical application of accepted
+abstract ethical, or religious, principles in the domain of social life.
+Hence we cannot be surprised that almost every wide-spread religious
+revival, every renewed application of reason to religion, which almost
+necessarily gives prominence to its ethical or social side, has been
+followed by an uprising of the masses against what they had come to
+regard as the irreligious tyranny and oppression of the ruling
+privileged classes. The teachings of Wyclif in England, in the
+fourteenth century, were followed by the insurrection associated with
+the name of Wat Tyler; the teachings of Luther and his associates, in
+the sixteenth century, by the Peasants' Revolt.
+
+To the economic causes of the unrest of the peasantry and labouring
+classes during the fifteenth and sixteenth century, we can refer only
+very briefly. At the time of the great migration of the fifth century,
+the free barbarian nations were organised on a tribal or village basis.
+By the end of the tenth century, however, what is known as the Feudal
+System had been established all over Europe. "No land without a lord" was
+the underlying principle of the whole Feudal System. Either by conquest
+or usurpation, or by more or less compulsory voluntary agreement, even
+the free primitive communities (_die Markgenossenshaften_) of the
+Teutonic races had been brought under the dominion of the lords,
+spiritual or temporal, claiming suzerainty over the territory in which
+they were situated. The claims of the Feudal Magnates seem ever to have
+been somewhat vague and arbitrary. At first they were comparatively
+light, and may well have been regarded and excused as a return for
+services rendered. The general tendency, however, was for the individual
+power of the lords to extend itself at the cost and to the detriment of
+the rural communities, and for their claims steadily to increase and to
+become more burdensome. During the fourteenth century many causes had
+combined to improve the condition of the industrial classes; and during
+the end of the fourteenth and the early part of the fifteenth century the
+condition of the peasantry and artisans of Northern Europe was better
+than it had ever been before or has ever been since: wages were
+comparatively high, employment plentiful, food and other necessaries of
+life both abundant and cheap.[7:1] At the beginning of the sixteenth
+century, however, the prices of the necessaries of life had risen
+enormously, and there had been no corresponding increase in the earnings
+of the industrial classes. Moreover, the Feudal Magnates had commenced to
+exercise their oppressive power in a hitherto unparalleled manner: old
+rights of pasture, of gathering wood and cutting timber, of hunting and
+fishing, and so on, had been greatly curtailed, in many cases entirely
+abolished, tithes and other manorial dues had been doubled and trebled,
+and many new and onerous burdens, some of them entirely opposed to
+ancient use and wont, had been imposed. In short, the peasantry and
+labouring classes generally were oppressed and impoverished in countless
+different ways.
+
+In Germany, as indeed in most other parts of Feudal Europe, the
+peasantry of the period were of three different kinds. Serfs
+(_Leibeigener_), who were little better than slaves, and who were bought
+and sold with the land they cultivated; villeins (_Höriger_), whose
+services were assumed to be fixed and limited; and the free peasant
+(_die Freier_), whose counterpart in England was the mediæval
+copyholder, who either held his land from some feudal lord, to whom he
+paid a quit-rent in kind or in money, or who paid such a rent for
+permission to retain his holding in the rural community under the
+protection of the lord. To appreciate the state of mind of such folk in
+the times of which we are writing, we should remember that "the good old
+times" of the fifteenth century were still green in their minds, from
+which, indeed, the memory of ancient freedom and primitive communism,
+though little more than a tradition, had never been entirely banished:
+which sufficiently accounts, not only for their impatience of their new
+burdens, but also for their tendency to regard all feudal dues as direct
+infringements of their ancient rights and privileges.
+
+"We will that you free us for ever, us and our lands; and that we be
+never named and held as serfs!" was the demand of the revolting English
+peasant in 1381; and the same words practically summarise the demands of
+the German peasantry in 1525. The famous Twelve Articles in which they
+summarised their wrongs and formulated their demands, forcibly
+illustrate the direct influence of the prevailing religious revival on
+the current social and political thought.[8:1] Briefly, they demanded
+that the gospel should be preached to them pure and undefiled by any
+mere man-made additions. That the rural communities, not the Feudal
+Magnates, should have the power to choose and to dismiss their
+ministers. That the tithes should be regulated in accordance with
+scriptural injunctions, and devoted to the maintenance of ministers and
+to the relief of the poor and distressed, "as we are commanded in the
+Holy Scriptures." That serfdom should be abolished, "since Christ
+redeemed us all with His precious blood, the shepherd as well as the
+noble, the lowest as well as the highest, none being excepted." That the
+claims of the rich to the game, to the fish in the running waters, to
+the woods and forests and other lands, once the common property of the
+community, should be investigated, and their ancient rights restored to
+them, where they had been purchased, with adequate compensation, but
+without compensation where they had been usurped. That arbitrary
+compulsory service should cease, and the use and enjoyment of their
+lands be granted to them in accordance with ancient customs and the
+agreements between lords and peasants. That arbitrary punishments should
+be abolished, as also certain new and oppressive customs. And, finally,
+they desired that all their demands should be tested by Scripture, and
+such as cannot stand this test to be summarily rejected.
+
+That the demands of the peasants, as formulated in the Twelve Articles,
+were reasonable, just and moderate, few to-day would care to deny. That
+they appealed to such of their religious teachers as had some regard for
+the material, as well as for the spiritual, well-being of their fellows,
+may safely be inferred from the leading position taken by some of these
+both prior to and during the uprising. Nor can there be any doubt but
+that at first the peasants looked to Wittenberg for aid, support and
+guidance. Those who had proclaimed the Bible as the sole authority,
+must, they thought, unreservedly support every movement to give
+practical effect to its teachings. Those who had revolted against the
+abuses of the spiritual powers at Rome, must, they thought, sympathise
+with their revolt against far worse abuses at home. They were bitterly
+to be disappointed. From Luther and the band of scholastic Reformers
+that had gathered round him, they were to receive neither aid, guidance
+nor sympathy. The learned and cultured Melanchthon, Luther's right hand,
+denounced their demand that serfdom should be abolished as an insolent
+and violent outrage (_ein Frevel und Gewalt_), and preached passive
+obedience to any and every established authority. "Even if all the
+demands of the peasants were Christian," he said, "the uprising of the
+peasants would not be justified; and that because God commands obedience
+to the authorities." Luther's attitude was much the same. Though a son
+of a peasant, and evidently realising that the demands of the peasants
+were just and moderate, and "not stretched to their advantage," he at
+first assumed a somewhat neutral attitude, which, however, he soon
+relinquished; and in a pamphlet to which his greatest admirers must wish
+he had never put his name, and which shocked even his own times and
+many of his own immediate followers, he proclaimed that to put down the
+revolt all "who can shall destroy, strangle, and stab, secretly or
+openly, remembering that nothing is more poisonous, hurtful and devilish
+than a rebellious man."
+
+The rulers did not fail to better his instruction. In defence of their
+privileges, the German princes, spiritual and temporal, catholic and
+evangelical, united their forces, and the uprising was put down in a sea
+of blood. The peasants, comparatively unarmed, were slaughtered by
+thousands, and the yoke of serfdom was firmly re-fastened on the necks
+of the people, until, some three hundred years later, in 1807, the
+Napoleonic invasion compelled the ruling classes voluntarily to
+relinquish some of their most cherished privileges. From a popular and
+religious, the Reformation in Germany degenerated into a mere political
+movement, and fell almost entirely into the hands of princes and
+politicians to be exploited for their own purposes. The reorganisation
+of the Churches, which the Reformation rendered necessary in those
+States where it was maintained, was for the most part undertaken by the
+secular authorities in accordance with the views of the temporal rulers,
+whose religious belief their unfortunate subjects were assumed to have
+adopted. The activities of the Lutheran Reformers were soon engrossed
+weaving the web of a Protestant scholasticism, strengthening and
+defending their favourite dogma of justification by faith, abusing and
+persecuting such as differed from them on some all-important question of
+dogma or doctrine, framing propositions of passive obedience, and other
+such congenial pursuits.
+
+Of the moral effect of the Reformation, of its effect on the general
+character of the people who came under its influence, which is the one
+test by which every such movement can be judged, we need say but little.
+To put it as mildly as possible, it must be admitted, to use the words
+of one of its modern admirers,[10:1] that "the Reformation did not at
+first carry with it much cleansing force of moral enthusiasm." In the
+hands of men more logical or of a less healthy moral fibre, Luther's
+favourite dogma, of justification by faith alone, led to conclusions
+subversive of all morality. However this may be, enemies and friends
+alike have to admit that the immediate effects of the Reformation were a
+dissolution of morals, a careless neglect of education and learning, and
+a general relaxation of the restraints of religion. In passage after
+passage, Luther himself declared that the last state of things was worse
+than the first; that vice of every kind had increased since the
+Reformation; that the nobles were more greedy, the burghers more
+avaricious, the peasants more brutal; that Christian charity and
+liberality had almost ceased to flow; and that the authorised preachers
+of religion were neither heeded, respected nor supported by the people:
+all of which he characteristically attributed to the workings of the
+devil, a personage who plays a most important part in Luther's theology
+and view of life.
+
+Thus, to judge by its immediate effects, the Reformation appears to have
+been conducive neither to moral, to social, nor to political progress.
+And yet to-day we know that the intellectual movement of which it was
+the outcome contained within itself inspiring conceptions of social
+justice, political equality, economic freedom, aye, even of religious
+toleration and moral purity, unknown to any preceding age, and the full
+fruits of which have yet to be harvested to elevate and to bless
+mankind.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[4:1] Luther's _Works_, ed. Walch, viii. 2043: "Erklärung der Ep. an die
+Galater." Quoted by Beard, _The Reformation of the Sixteenth Century_,
+p. 163.
+
+[7:1] See Thorold Rogers' _Six Centuries of Work and Wages_, p. 389.
+
+[8:1] See Appendix A.
+
+[10:1] Beard, _loc. cit._ p. 146.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE REFORMATION IN ENGLAND
+
+ "It was in the name of faith and religious liberty that, in the
+ sixteenth century, commenced the movement which, from that epoch,
+ suspended at times but ever renewed, has been agitating and
+ exciting the world. The tempest rose first in the human soul: it
+ struck the Church before it reached the State."--GUIZOT.
+
+
+In Germany, as we have seen, from a religious and popular, the
+Reformation degenerated into a mere scholastic and political movement,
+favourable to the pretensions of the ruling and privileged classes,
+opposed to the aspirations of the industrial classes, and conducive
+neither to moral, social, religious, nor political progress. In England,
+on the other hand, it ran a very different course. From a merely
+political, it gradually rose to the height of a truly religious and
+popular movement, infusing new life into the nation and lifting it into
+the very forefront of the van of progress, curbing the insolent
+pretensions of king, priest and noble, purifying the minds of the people
+of time-honoured but degrading conceptions of the functions of Church
+and of State, inspiring and uplifting them with new conceptions of
+political freedom, social justice, moral purity and religious
+toleration, which, despite temporary periods of reaction, have never
+since entirely lost their sway over the hearts nor their influence over
+the destinies of the British nation.
+
+For many centuries prior to the Reformation the English people had been
+jealous and impatient of all ecclesiastical power, as of all foreign
+interference in their national affairs, more especially of the claims
+and pretensions of the Papacy. In England, as in Germany and even in
+France, the idea of a National Church controlled and administered by
+their own countrymen, and freed from the supremacy of the Church and
+Court of Rome, was one familiar even to devout Catholics. Moreover, the
+teachings of Wyclif had sunk deep into the hearts of the people, and
+only awaited a favourable opportunity to yield their fruits: already in
+the fourteenth they had paved the way for the Reformation of the
+sixteenth century. Hence it was that when Henry the Eighth, from purely
+personal and dynastic reasons, became involved in a quarrel with the
+Pope, he found his subjects prepared for greater changes in religious
+matters than any he contemplated or desired. However, by a series of
+legislative enactments, the Church of England, in 1534, was emancipated
+from the superiority of the Church of Rome; the papal authority was
+wholly abolished within the realm; Henry was legally recognised as the
+supreme head of the Church of England; the power of the spiritual
+aristocracy was broken and the whole body of the clergy humbled; the
+monasteries were suppressed; the great wealth and vast territorial
+possessions of the Church became the prey of the Crown, only to be
+dissipated in lavish grants to greedy courtiers: and thus the
+foundations were laid for greater changes in both Church and State than
+those who promoted such measures ever dreamed of.
+
+From its inception the Church of England comprised two opposing and
+apparently irreconcilable elements, namely, those whose sympathies and
+leanings were toward the forms, dogmas and doctrines of Roman
+Catholicism, and those whose sympathies and leanings were toward the
+forms, dogmas and doctrines of the German and Swiss Reformers. Of
+religious toleration both parties were probably equally intolerant. That
+the State was directly concerned with the religious beliefs of the
+people, hence was justified in enforcing conformity to the Church as by
+law established, seems to have been unquestioningly accepted by both.
+The one desired to make use of the temporal power to prevent, the other
+to promote, further changes in Church government, worship and doctrine.
+The result was a compromise, which, like most compromises, satisfied the
+more logical and consistent of neither party. As ultimately
+established, in the reign of Elizabeth, the Church of England occupied
+a sort of middle position between the Church of Rome and the Reformed
+Churches of the Continent; and the attempt to enforce conformity to its
+demands resulted in the separation from it of the extremists of both
+sections. On the one hand, the English Roman Catholics became a distinct
+and persecuted religious body, whose members were generally regarded,
+despite repeated evidence to the contrary, as necessarily enemies of
+England. On the other, despairing of further changes in the direction
+they desired, a large number of the extreme Protestants separated
+themselves from the National Church--though by so doing they rendered
+themselves liable to be accused not only of heresy, but of high treason,
+and to suffer death--and formed themselves into different bodies of
+Separatists or Independents, differing on many points among themselves,
+but united by a common animosity of all outside ecclesiastical control.
+Within the Church the Catholic sentiment crystallised into the
+Episcopalian, the Protestant sentiment into the Presbyterian section of
+the Church of England. During the reign of Elizabeth the Protestant
+element grew steadily stronger, as did also the spirit of political
+independence, as manifested in the debates and divisions of the House of
+Commons. It is a suggestive and noteworthy fact that during the long
+reign of Henry the Eighth the House of Commons only once refused to pass
+a Bill recommended by the Crown. During the reigns of Edward the Sixth
+and of Mary the spirit of political independence commenced to revive;
+and during the reign of Elizabeth the spirit of liberty and sense of
+responsibility manifested by the House of Commons were such as
+repeatedly to thwart the designs and to alter the policy of this
+high-spirited monarch. It was, however, the severity of the policy of
+the last of the Tudors and the first two of the Stuart kings against the
+dissenting Protestants, that identified the struggle for religious
+liberty, for liberty of conscience, with the struggle for political
+liberty, and made these men in a special sense the champions of a more
+or less qualified religious toleration, and of a constitutional
+political freedom.
+
+The growth of extreme Protestantism, more especially perhaps of
+Independency, was greatly quickened during the reigns of both Mary and
+Elizabeth, by the immigration of many thousands of refugees fleeing from
+religious persecutions on the Continent. Amongst these were disciples
+and apostles of many sects that were heretics in the eyes of both the
+Catholic and the Protestant Churches, and who rejected alike the dogmas
+and doctrines of Rome, of Wittenberg, and of Geneva. The one point all
+such sects seem to have had in common was the denial of the sanctity and
+efficacy of infant baptism: hence their inclusion under the general term
+Anabaptists, even though many of them passionately disclaimed any
+connection with this hated, proscribed and persecuted sect. As Gerrard
+Winstanley, the inspirer of the Digger Movement, seems to us to have
+been greatly influenced by the teaching of one of these sects, the
+Familists, or Family of Love, it may be well to give here a brief
+outline of its history and main doctrines.
+
+The founder of the Family of Love was one David George, or Joris, who
+was born at Delft in 1501. In 1530 he was severely punished for
+obstructing a Catholic procession in his native town. In 1534 he joined
+the Anabaptists, but soon left them to found a sect of his own. He seems
+to have interpreted the whole of the Scripture allegorically;[15:1] and
+to have maintained that as Moses had taught hope, and Christ had taught
+faith, it was his mission to teach love. His teachings were propagated
+in Holland by Henry Nicholas, and in England by one Christopher Vittel,
+a joiner, who appears to have undertaken a missionary journey throughout
+the country about the year 1560. According to Fuller,[16:1] in 1578,
+the nineteenth year of the reign of Elizabeth, "The Family of Love began
+now to grow so numerous, factious, and dangerous, that the Privy Council
+thought fit to endeavour their suppression."
+
+The most lucid account of the doctrines of this sect may be gained from
+a beautifully printed little book, entitled _The Displaying of an
+Horrible Sect of Gross and Wicked Heretics naming themselves the Family
+of Love_, published the same year, 1578, and written by one I. R. (Jn.
+Rogers), a bitter but fair-minded opponent of their heresies, a
+Protestant, and a zealous defender of the Lutheran dogma of
+justification by faith alone. In his Preface the author bewails "the
+daily increase of this error," declaring that "in many shires of this
+our country there are meetings and conventicles of this Family of Love."
+Amongst those who have been converted, he tells us, were many who had
+hitherto been "professors of Christ Jesus' gospel according to the
+brightness thereof." He denounces Christopher Vittel, the joiner, as
+"the only man that hath brought our simple people out of the plain ways
+of the Lord our God," and complains how "he driveth the true sense of
+the Holy Ghost into allegories," and contendeth that "otherwise to
+interpret the Holy Scriptures is to stick to the letter." To the Family
+of Love, he tells us, "Christ signifieth anointed." He continues, "I
+pray you mark but this one thing in their teachings, how they drive the
+true sense of the Holy Ghost into allegories. And when any text of Holy
+Scriptures is alleged by any of God's children, they answer that we
+little understand what is meant thereby; and then if they be pressed to
+expound the place, by and by it is drawn into an allegory. For they take
+not the creation of man at the first to be historical (according to the
+letter), but mere allegorical: alleging that Adam signifieth the earthly
+man ... the Serpent to be within man; applying still the allegory, they
+destroy the truth of the history."
+
+The writer's greatest grievance, however, is their rejection of the
+Lutheran dogma of justification by faith, and their agreement "with the
+Papists in extolling works as efficient causes of salvation." "Amongst
+the rest, indeed," he exclaims, "they insinuate a good life, as which
+they pretend to follow, which is as the vizard and cloak to hide all the
+rest of their gross and absurd doctrines, and the hook and bait whereby
+the simple are altogether deceived." He is greatly concerned that "none
+but those who are willingly minded to their doctrines can get a sight of
+their books";[17:1] and that "they are disinclined to disputations and
+conferences with those not inclined to their opinions." He informs his
+readers that "it is a maxim in the Family to deny before men all their
+doctrines, so that they keep the same secret in their hearts"; that
+though they may inwardly reject, yet they will outwardly conform to the
+forms of the Church as by law established; that "they have certain
+sleights amongst them to answer any question that may be demanded of
+them." Thus "they do decree all men to be infants who are under the age
+of thirty years. So that if they be demanded whether infants ought to be
+baptized, they answer yea; meaning thereby that he is an infant until he
+attain to those years at which time they ought to be baptized, and not
+before." However, it may be well to mention here that the writer speaks
+of the Anabaptists and of the Family of Love as if he recognised them to
+be distinct heresies.
+
+From their doctrines as formulated in this pamphlet, based on "A
+Confession made by two of the Family of Love before a worthy and
+worshipful Justice of the Peace, May 28th, 1561," we take the following:
+
+ (_a_) "When any person shall be received into their congregation,
+ they cause all their brethren to assemble, the Bishop or Elder
+ doth declare unto the newly-elected brother, that if he will be
+ content that all his goods shall be in common amongst the rest of
+ all his brethren, he shall be received."
+
+ (_b_) "They may not say God save anything. For they affirm that all
+ things are ruled by Nature, and not directed by God."
+
+ (_c_) "They did prohibit bearing of weapons, but at the length,
+ perceiving themselves to be noted and marked for the same, they
+ have allowed the bearing of staves."
+
+ (_d_) "When a question is demanded of any of them, they do of order
+ stay a great while ere they answer, and commonly their words shall
+ be Surely or So."
+
+ (_e_) "They hold that no man should be baptized before he is of the
+ age of thirty years."
+
+ (_f_) "They hold that heaven and hell are present in this world
+ amongst us, and that there is none other."[18:1]
+
+ (_g_) "They hold the Pope's service and this service now used in
+ the Churches to be naught."
+
+ (_h_) "They hold that all men that are not of their congregation,
+ or that are revolted from them, to be dead."
+
+ (_i_) "They hold that they ought to keep silence amongst
+ themselves, that the liberty they have in the Lord may not be
+ espied of others."
+
+ (_k_) "They hold that no man should be put to death for his
+ opinion: therefore they condemn Master Cranmer and Master Ridley
+ for burning Joan of Kent."
+
+We shall have occasion to refer to some of these doctrines again later
+on. It may be well, however, to mention here that the views that no
+Christian ought to be a magistrate; that magistrates should not meddle
+with religion; that no man ought to be compelled to faith, or put to
+death for his religion; that war is unlawful to Christians; that their
+speech should be yea or nay, without any oath: seem to have been
+accepted by Anabaptists generally, as they were by the primitive
+Christian communists of the fourteenth century.[18:2]
+
+To return to our immediate subject. To the development of religious and
+political thought in England, as to the inevitable struggle due to the
+inherent antagonism of Catholic and Protestant ideals and aspirations,
+we can refer only very briefly. The former can perhaps best be traced in
+the writings of three eminent theological writers, Jewel, Hooker, and
+Chillingworth. Though in 1567 we hear of the first instance of actual
+punishment of Protestant Dissenters, still during the earlier portion of
+the reign of Elizabeth, to the year 1571, there seems to have been a
+gradual growth of national sentiment toward a simpler form of worship,
+resulting in a modification of those rites and usages disliked by
+Protestants of all shades and sects, and against the established policy
+of forcible suppression of religious differences. In 1571, a Bill having
+been introduced imposing a penalty for not receiving the communion, it
+was objected to in the House of Commons on the grounds that "consciences
+ought not to be forced." The same Parliament "refused to bind the clergy
+to subscription to three articles on the Supremacy, the form of Church
+Government, and the power of the Church to ordain rites and ceremonies,
+and favoured the project of reforming the Liturgy by the omission of
+superstitious practices."[19:1] In 1572, however, the appearance of
+Thomas Cartwright's celebrated _Admonition to the Parliament_ stemmed
+the course of religious reform, and produced a reaction of which
+Elizabeth and her Primates were not slow to avail themselves. The
+establishment, in 1583, of the Ecclesiastical Commission as a permanent
+body, wielding the almost unlimited powers of the Crown and creating
+their own tests of doctrine, put an end to the wise spirit of compromise
+which had hitherto characterised Elizabeth's religious policy. The
+"superstitious usages" were encouraged; subscription by the clergy of
+the Three Articles, which the Parliament of 1571 had refused to enforce
+by law, was exacted; and the non-conforming clergy were relentlessly
+harried and persecuted: with the result that the Presbyterians within
+and the Puritans without the National Church were temporarily united by
+the pressure of a common persecution.
+
+It was Cartwright's political rather than his religious views that
+alarmed Elizabeth and her Ministers. As against their theory of a
+State-controlled Church, he advocated a Church-controlled State. In
+fact, the most arrogant and insolent pretensions of the Papacy were
+surpassed by this Presbyterian divine. Of course, all his demands were
+based on the authority of Scripture and the ways and customs of the
+primitive Christian Church. The rule of bishops he denounced as begotten
+of the devil; the absolute rule of presbyters he held to be established
+by the word of God. All other forms of Church government were ruthlessly
+to be suppressed, and heretics were to be punished by death. For the
+ministers of the Church he claimed not only all spiritual power and
+jurisdiction, the decreeing of doctrines, the ordering of ceremonies,
+and so on, but also the supervision of public morals, under which every
+branch of human activities was included. In short, the State, as well as
+the individual, was to be placed beneath the heel of the Church. The
+power of the prince, the secular power, was tolerated only so that it
+might "protect and defend the councils of the clergy, to keep the peace,
+to see their decrees executed, and to punish the contemners of them."
+Such doctrines aroused no responsive echo in the minds of the English
+people. The nation whose revolt against the papal supremacy had made the
+Reformation possible, were not disposed to accept Presbyterian supremacy
+in its place. The national impatience of ecclesiastical power was not
+likely suddenly to be removed by any attempt to re-impose it under a new
+name and in a new garb. In fact, Cartwright's work almost seems as if
+specially written to warn the nation against a possible, if not an
+imminent, danger, to warn them, in truth, that--"New Presbyter is but
+Old Priest writ large."
+
+Cartwright's narrow-minded dogmatism was crushingly answered in Richard
+Hooker's _Ecclesiastical Polity_, the first volume of which appeared in
+1594. This remarkable book forms, indeed, an important landmark in the
+history of English political and religious thought. Its forcible
+exposition of the basic principles of constitutional civil government
+makes many portions of it even to-day most attractive and instructive
+reading. For the first time in the history of religious controversy,
+reason is extolled above any and every authority, and accepted as
+supreme judge and arbiter of spiritual, as well as of temporal, affairs.
+Though Hooker thought it fit that the reason of the individual should
+yield to that of the Church, he did not hesitate to declare "that
+authority should prevail with man either against or above reason, is no
+part of our belief. Companies of learned men, be they never so great and
+reverend, are to yield unto reason." As Buckle well points out,[21:1] if
+we compare this work with Jewel's _Apology for the Church of England_,
+written some thirty years previously,--and ordered, together with the
+Bible and Fox's _Martyrs_, "to be fixed in all parish churches and read
+to the people,"--"we shall at once be struck by the different methods
+these eminent writers employ.... Jewel inculcates the importance of
+faith; Hooker insists on the exercise of reason.... In the same opposite
+spirit do these great writers conduct their defence of their own Church.
+Jewel thinks to settle the whole dispute by crowding together texts from
+the Bible, with the opinions of the commentators upon them.... Hooker's
+defence rests neither upon tradition, nor upon commentators, nor even
+upon revelation; but he is content that the pretensions of the hostile
+parties shall be decided by their applicability to the great exigencies
+of society, and by the ease with which they adapt themselves to the
+general purposes of ordinary life."
+
+The celebrated work by Chillingworth, _The Religion of Protestants, a
+Safe Way to Salvation_, published in 1637, and of which two editions
+were issued within less than five months, also deserves special mention
+here. His fundamental position may be well summarised in one of his own
+sentences--"I am fully assured that God does not, and therefore that man
+ought not to require any more of any man than this, to believe the
+Scriptures to be God's word, to endeavour to find the true sense of it,
+and to live according to it." Even more fully than Hooker,
+Chillingworth accepts reason as the all-sufficient guide of human
+conduct, and admits no reservations that might limit the sacred right of
+private judgement. The essential difference between these three eminent
+writers is admirably summarised by Buckle in the following
+words:[21:2]{2} "These three great men represent the three distinct
+epochs of the three successive generations in which they respectively
+lived. In Jewel, reason is, if I may so say, the superstructure of the
+system; but authority is the basis upon which the superstructure is
+built. In Hooker, authority is only the superstructure, and reason is
+the basis. But in Chillingworth, whose writings were harbingers of the
+coming storm, authority entirely disappears, and the whole fabric of
+religion is made to rest upon the way in which the unaided reason of man
+shall interpret the decrees of an omnipotent God."
+
+In fact, Chillingworth's great work may well be regarded as the last
+word of the Protestant Reformation in England.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[15:1] According to Beard, _The Hibbert Lectures_, 1883, p. 119, "It was
+a mediæval maxim, which no one thought of questioning, that the language
+of the Bible had four senses--the literal, the allegorical, the
+tropological, and the anagogical, of which the last three were mystical
+or spiritual, in contradistinction to the first." The learned Erasmus,
+who lived and died a devout Roman Catholic, seems to have accepted this
+allegorical interpretation of the Scriptures. Of interpreters of the
+Holy Scriptures, he recommends those "who depart as far as possible from
+the letter." Erasmus, _Opp._ (_Enchiridion_), v. 29, B, C, D. Quoted by
+Beard, p. 120.
+
+[16:1] _Church History_, vol. iv. p. 407.
+
+[17:1] When occasion arose, they do not seem to have been averse to
+giving publicity to their opinions. In 1656 a London publisher, Giles
+Calvert, to whom we shall have occasion to refer again, republished _A
+Discourse on the Family of Love, originally presented to the High Court
+of Parliament in the time of Queen Elizabeth_. This Giles Calvert was
+the printer and publisher of nearly all Winstanley's pamphlets, and also
+one of the first authorised printers and publishers for the Children of
+Light, as the Quakers, or Society of Friends, originally styled
+themselves. We have reason to believe that Calvert, as well as many
+other of Winstanley's disciples, joined the Quakers about the time of
+the republication of this pamphlet.
+
+[18:1] "There is no other flame in which the sinner is plagued, and no
+other punishment of hell, than the perpetual anguish of mind which
+accompanies habitual sin."--Erasmus, _Enchiridion_. Quoted by Beard.
+
+[18:2] See _Communism in Central Europe in the Time of the Reformation_,
+by Karl Kautsky, more especially p. 79.
+
+[19:1] Green's _Short History of the English People_, p. 457.
+
+[21:1] _History of Civilisation in England_, vol. i. p. 340.
+
+[21:2] _Ibid._ vol. i. p. 351.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE GREAT CIVIL WAR
+
+ "The lawful power of making laws to command whole politic societies
+ of men, belongeth so properly to the same entire societies, that
+ for any prince or potentate of what kind soever upon earth, to
+ exercise the same of himself, and not either by express commission
+ immediately and personally received from God, or else by authority
+ derived at the first from their consent, upon whose persons they
+ impose laws, it is no better than mere tyranny. Laws they are not
+ therefore which public approbation hath not made so."--HOOKER,
+ _Ecclesiastical Polity_.
+
+
+When Chillingworth's great work was published, in 1637, the last of the
+Tudors, after having outlived her popularity, had passed to her rest, as
+had also her most unworthy successor, whose insolence had outraged, but
+whose weakness had strengthened, the awakening spirit of liberty, and
+who, as Macaulay well expresses it,[23:1] "was, in truth, one of those
+kings whom God seems to send for the express purpose of hastening
+revolutions." To him had succeeded his most worthy son: a king whose
+perfidy and duplicity were only equalled by his self-complacency and
+power of self-deception, who never looked facts in the face, but
+placidly expected them to conform to his own petty desires, and whose
+dignified death failed to atone for a life devoted to ignoble personal
+ends, by crooked ways and treacherous means; a king peculiarly incapable
+of taking a broad statesman-like view of any question, who manifested no
+thought for the interests of the people of whom he regarded himself as
+ruler by right divine, whose futile domestic policy was inspired solely
+by considerations for the advancement of his own personal power, whose
+feeble and shifty foreign policy was determined only by considerations
+for his own family interests, who intrigued with France against Spain,
+with Spain against France, with both against Holland, and with Holland
+against both, and with France, Spain, Holland, and Rome against his own
+subjects, with English Presbyterians against English Independents, with
+English Independents against English Presbyterians, and with Irish
+Catholics and Scotch Presbyterians against both English Presbyterians
+and Independents, and who yet succeeded in deceiving nobody but himself,
+and in satisfying nobody, not even himself; a king whose love was far
+more dangerous than his hate, a worthy patron of a Buckingham, a Goring,
+or of a Laud, but unworthy the genius of a Shaftesbury or the loyal
+services of a Verney, a Montrose, or a Worcester; a king, in short,
+treacherous to his friends, faithless to his word, who went to his
+wedding and came to his throne with a lie on his lips,[24:1] whom, again
+to use the words of Macaulay,[24:2] "no law could bind, and whose whole
+government was one system of wrong," of whom even the conservative and
+partial Hallam is forced to admit[24:3] that "it would be difficult to
+name any violation of law he had not committed." Even the famous
+Petition of Right, to which some nine years previously, in 1628, he had
+given a solemn, though reluctant, consent, had been ruthlessly violated.
+Taxes had been levied by the Royal authority; patents of monopoly had
+been granted; the course of justice had been tampered with, and judges
+arbitrarily deposed; troops had been billeted upon the people; old
+feudal usages had been revived for the express purpose of harassing and
+defrauding the citizens; and, as if to exhaust every means to sap the
+loyalty and wear out the patience of the people, Puritans of every shade
+of opinion had not only been silenced but relentlessly persecuted, while
+High Church bishops preached passive obedience, declaring the persons
+and the property of subjects to be at the absolute disposal of the
+sovereign, and in the name of religion inaugurating a systematic attack
+on the rights and liberties of the nation.
+
+The people whose representatives a quarter of a century previously, in
+1604, had met the insolent claims of James the First with the dignified
+rejoinder, that "your Majesty should be misinformed if any man should
+deliver that the kings of England have any absolute power in themselves
+either to alter religion, or to make any laws concerning the same,
+otherwise than in temporal causes by consent of Parliament,"[25:1] were,
+however, not easily to be intimidated. Despite a Royal order to adjourn,
+the House of Commons of 1629, holding the Speaker by force in the Chair,
+supported the immortal Eliot in his last assertion of English liberty,
+and by successive resolutions declared that whosoever shall bring in
+innovations in religion, or whosoever shall counsel or advise the taking
+and levying of the subsidies of tonnage and poundage, not being granted
+by Parliament, "a capital enemy to this kingdom and commonwealth," and
+any person voluntarily yielding or paying the said subsidies, not being
+granted by Parliament, "a betrayer of the liberty of England, and an
+enemy to the same."[25:2] Having thus flung their defiance in the face
+of the King, the House then voted its own adjournment.
+
+From that time events had marched quickly. Those who had played the most
+prominent parts in that momentous scene, including Holles, Selden, and
+Eliot, had been thrown into prison, the last-named to die there, the
+first martyr to the growing cause of civil freedom and religious
+liberty. In 1637, the year of the publication of Chillingworth's work,
+the whole question of the right to levy taxation was revived by the
+demand on the inland counties for ship-money, and the attention of the
+whole country attracted to it by the trial of Hampden on his refusal to
+pay same. Later in the year, Charles' attempt to alter the
+ecclesiastical constitution and form of public worship in Scotland led,
+first to discontent, then to riot, and finally to open rebellion. As a
+direct consequence, the King, in April 1640, was compelled to call what
+from its brief duration is known as the Short Parliament, in which,
+thanks to the Parliamentary tactics of Hampden, the design of the Court
+Party, to obtain supplies without redressing grievances, was
+constitutionally thwarted. On the manifestation of its determination to
+redress wrongs and to vindicate the laws, this Parliament was at once
+dissolved. The end of the tyranny, however, was fast approaching. In
+August of the same year the King marched northward; the Scotch crossed
+the border to meet him; on their approach the disaffected English army
+was well pleased to fly rather than to fight those whom they were
+inclined to regard as deliverers rather than as enemies; a truce was
+patched up, and to meet the critical situation the King, in November
+1640, found himself compelled to summon his last and most famous
+Parliament, known in history as the Long Parliament.
+
+The temper of the new Parliament, in which Pym and Hampden at first
+exercised a paramount influence, was very different from that of any of
+its predecessors. Recent events had convinced its leading members that
+half measures would be worse than useless. During its first session,
+Strafford and Laud, the two main supporters of absolute government and
+religious tyranny, were impeached and imprisoned; those whom the King
+had employed as instruments of oppression were called to account for
+their conduct; the Star Chamber, the Court of High Commission and the
+Council of York, were abolished; ship-money was declared illegal, and
+the judgement in Hampden's case was annulled; the victims of the recent
+religious persecutions were set at liberty, and conducted through London
+in triumph; old oppressive feudal powers still appertaining to the Crown
+were swept away; the King was made to give the judges patents for life
+or during good behaviour; the Forest and Stannary Courts were reformed;
+Triennial Parliaments were established; and, finally, it was provided
+that the Parliament then sitting should not be prorogued or dissolved
+save by its own consent.
+
+After the recess the difficulties and dangers of the situation
+increased daily. Revolt, popularly regarded as fomented by the Court
+Party, had broken out in Ireland; the King, evidently seeking power and
+opportunity to retract the concessions he had made, was seeking aid in
+all directions--Rome, France, Spain, and was intriguing in Scotland; the
+air was full of rumours of a plot of the Court to bring down the army in
+the North to overawe the Parliament; and the moderate men,--"that is to
+say, men who never go to the bottom of any difficulty," as Gardiner
+expresses it,--by whose aid the above changes had been effected, were
+inclined to pause, if not to retrace their steps. Under these
+circumstances the popular leaders in the House of Commons, in November
+1641, framed and passed the Great Remonstrance, which was practically an
+address to the nation, to justify their past action and to appeal for
+further support. In this famous document all the oppressive and
+arbitrary acts of the past fifteen years were narrated in impressive
+language; a detailed account was given of the necessary work already
+accomplished, of the dangers and difficulties yet to be surmounted,
+declaring the purpose of the House to be, not to abolish Episcopacy, but
+to reduce the power of the bishops; and, finally, indicating the line of
+future constitutional reform by urging that the King should employ no
+Ministers save those in whom the Parliament could place confidence.
+
+Contrary to expectation, the debate on the Remonstrance was long and
+stormy, and the division--it was only carried in a full House by a
+majority of nine--showed plainly that a reaction in favour of the King
+had already begun. Charles had now a final opportunity of regaining the
+confidence of the representatives of the nation, and for a few days it
+seemed as if he were inclined to follow a moderate, dignified and
+constitutional course. But for a few days only. On the 3rd of January
+1642, without giving a hint of his intentions to the constitutional
+Royalists he had so recently called to his councils, and whom he had
+faithfully promised to consult on all matters relating to the House of
+Commons, he sent down his Attorney-General to impeach the leading
+members of the House, Pym, Holles, and Haselrig, at the bar of the
+House of Lords, on a charge of high treason. As Macaulay well
+says,[28:1] "It would be difficult to find in the whole history of
+England such an instance of tyranny, perfidy, and folly." But worse was
+to follow. The Commons refused to surrender their members, and Charles
+resolved on their forcible arrest on the floor of the House. The
+threatened members, however, had been warned, and had taken refuge in
+the City of London; their absence, together with the dignified attitude
+of the remaining members, prevented the outrage ending in bloodshed: in
+a bloodshed the possibility of which it is even to-day impossible to
+contemplate with equanimity.
+
+Though the Militia Bill, which would have given Parliament the control
+of the armed forces of the nation, was the ostensible, this outrage on
+the part of the King was the direct and mediate, cause of the outbreak
+of the Civil War. "To be safe from armed violence," the Commons, as far
+as the rules of the House would permit, placed themselves under the
+protection of the City; and the day previous to the one fixed for their
+return to St. Stephen's under the protection of the trained bands of
+London, the King left Whitehall, to return to it only to pay the dire
+penalty for his past offences. Both sides now actively prepared for the
+inevitable struggle. Owing to Pym's forethought, the Tower was
+blockaded, and the two great arsenals of Hull and Portsmouth secured for
+the Parliament. Owing to the force and boldness of his language, the
+House of Lords was scared out of the policy of obstruction it had taken
+up. On the avowal by Parliament of the refusal of the governor of Hull
+to open the gates to the King, the members of the Royalist party
+withdrew from Westminster; and on August 22nd, 1642, the uplifting of
+Charles' standard on a hill at Nottingham announced the outbreak of the
+Civil War.
+
+On the well-trodden ground of the progress of the war, it is unnecessary
+for our purposes to dwell. The issues involved were truly tremendous.
+The evolution of the English Constitution had left it undecided to whom
+the supreme power in the nation did rightfully accrue: and this was,
+perhaps, the most practical question at issue.[29:1] As between
+Parliament and King, the question was, whether the supreme power was to
+continue to be wielded by a king whose temporal jurisdiction was to be
+limited only by ancient laws interpreted by judges of his own creation
+and removable at his pleasure, or by the representatives of the nation
+in Parliament assembled? It was left to the Model Army to remind the
+members of the Long Parliament that their power, as that of "all future
+representatives of this nation, is inferior only to theirs who choose
+them."[29:2] However, to make both King and Church responsible to
+Parliament was, in truth, the one common aim of the whole Parliamentary
+party; and, as Gardiner well points out,[29:3] "every year which passed
+after the Restoration made it more evident that, for the time at least,
+the most substantial gains of the long conflict had fallen to those who
+had concentrated their efforts on this object."
+
+Keeping in view the reforms secured during the first session of the Long
+Parliament, it may fairly be urged that everything necessary to this end
+had been gained prior to the outbreak of the Civil War, everything, of
+course, save the control of the sword; and this, if the King could have
+been trusted, was not immediately urgent, and would necessarily have
+followed the control of the purse. "If the King could have been
+trusted!" In these words the key to the whole situation is to be found.
+The Parliamentary leaders could not, did not, dared not, trust the
+King: hence the power of the sword had to be wrested from his grasp. It
+was this that made the Civil War inevitable. It was this that rendered
+constitutional government, government by discussion, government by
+compromise, impossible. It was this well-grounded and repeatedly
+confirmed distrust of the King that, after years of war and repeated and
+sincere negotiations, negotiations which only served still further to
+reveal his duplicity, made the execution of the King unavoidable. As the
+judicial Gardiner well says,[30:1] in summing up the causes which led to
+this most solemn, impressive, and instructive event in the whole history
+of England--"The situation, complicated enough already, had been still
+further complicated by Charles' duplicity. Men who would have been
+willing to come to terms with him, despaired of any constitutional
+arrangement in which he was to be a factor; and men who had long been
+alienated from him were irritated into active hostility. By these he was
+regarded with increasing intensity as the one disturbing force with
+which no understanding was possible and no settled order consistent. To
+remove him out of the way appeared, even to those who had no thought of
+punishing him for past offences, to be the only possible road to peace
+for the troubled nation."
+
+The religious issues of the great struggle, however, were by no means so
+simple. Episcopacy, as it had existed, had few supporters in England
+outside the ranks of the bishops. The Laudian coercion had not only
+reawakened slumbering animosities and given renewed vigour to the
+Puritan dislike of the forms and ceremonies of the Anglican Church, but
+had served to fill men's minds with a healthy, vigorous, and deep-rooted
+distrust of ecclesiastical government in any form. To any claims,
+whether of kings or of bishops or of presbyters, to rule by Divine
+right, the ear of the nation was temporarily closed. If Protestants of
+all shades of opinions had learned to distrust Episcopacy, intellectual
+men of all shades of religious beliefs, and of none, equally distrusted
+Presbyterianism, and feared that the free play of intellectual life
+would be as much endangered by the rule of the presbyters as by the
+rule of the bishops. We should, however, do well to remember that at the
+outbreak of the war most of the great Parliamentary leaders, including
+Pym, Hampden, and even Cromwell, had no deep-rooted objection to
+Episcopacy as a form of Church government, provided only that it was
+controlled by Parliament, and allowed the fullest possible liberty of
+conscience. They all shared Pym's expressed conviction that "the
+greatest liberty of the kingdom is religion," and seemed to have
+inclined toward the ideal of Chillingworth, a full liberty of thought
+maintained within the unity of the Church. It was their necessity, not
+their will, the necessity to gain the cordial co-operation of the
+Scotch, that later compelled them to commit themselves to
+Presbyterianism, of their profound distrust of which they gave repeated
+proof. And it is worthy of special note that even in the time of their
+greatest need the English Parliament, to use Gardiner's words,[31:1]
+"was as disinclined as the Tudor kings had ever been to allow the
+establishment in England of a Church system claiming to exist by Divine
+right, or by any right whatever independent of the State."
+
+That religious conformity was a necessary condition of national unity,
+aye, even of national existence, was, however, still accepted as an
+axiomatic truth by those whose mental visions were limited by inherited
+conceptions. To such as these the only question at issue seems to have
+been whether an Episcopalian or a Presbyterian system of Church
+government should prevail. Of the claims of those who would bow the head
+neither to Rome, to Geneva, nor to Canterbury, who refused to entrust
+their conscience to pope, to bishop, or to presbyter, the extreme
+adherents of both these systems were probably equally insensible. And
+yet it was precisely such men who were to come to the front during the
+coming struggle, and who, under the guidance of their great leader, were
+to become the champions of that great democratic principle of
+toleration, of liberty of conscience, which was the one leading
+principle of his life.[31:2] It was precisely such men who were to
+proclaim to the rulers of the nation--"That matters of religion and the
+ways of God's worship are not at all entrusted by us to any human
+power, because therein we cannot remit or exceed a tittle of what our
+consciences dictate to be the mind of God without wilful sin." But who
+themselves were tolerant enough to be willing that "nevertheless the
+public way of instructing the nation (_so it be not compulsive_) is
+referred to their discretion."[32:1]
+
+"So it be not compulsive!" in these words we have the key to the
+position of the great body of sectarians known under the name of
+Independents. They recognised, to use the words of their immortal
+leader, that "it's one thing to love a brother, to bear with and love a
+person of different judgement in matters of religion; and another thing
+to have anybody so far set in the saddle on that account, as to have all
+the rest of his brethren at mercy." So it be not compulsive! in these
+words, too, we have the secret of their subsequent attitude toward the
+Long Parliament and its successors. As Gardiner forcibly expresses
+it--"Men who longed for religious toleration with a stern conviction
+were impatient of parliamentary majorities working for uniformity." To
+their opponents, more especially to those of the strict Presbyterian
+school, toleration may have seemed of the devil, incompatible with
+individual salvation, and injurious alike to Church and to State; to the
+Independents, on the other hand, it was a necessary condition of
+continued existence. They had no desire to establish a State Church of
+their own; they were not prepared to deny that at least "a public way of
+instructing the nation" might be necessary; but they were determined
+that any such Church should be tolerant of the claims of men like
+themselves, who could not conform their conscience to its requirements.
+To create a home of liberty out of the England of the Tudors and the
+Stuarts, of Laud and of Prynne, was a task beyond even their powers. But
+whatever they may have failed to accomplish, they saved England from the
+ecclesiastical tyranny Presbyterianism at that time involved, and raised
+the standard of liberty and toleration, which during the great struggle
+obtained a hold of the mind of the nation such as it never had before,
+but never entirely lost again.
+
+At the very outbreak of the Civil War, Cromwell's aim had been to find
+"men who know what they fight for, and love what they know,--men as had
+the fear of God before them, as made some conscience of what they
+did."[33:1] Such men soon gathered round the great Independent, and he
+moulded them into the famous Ironsides, by whose aid he turned the tide
+of defeat at Marston Moor, and gained the glorious victories of Naseby,
+Preston, Dunbar, and Worcester. Such men stood by his side at the
+momentous Army Council at Windsor, May 1st, 1648, when it was solemnly
+resolved, "not any dissenting," "that it was our duty, if ever the Lord
+brought us back again in peace, to call Charles Stuart, that man of
+blood, to account for the blood he had shed, and mischief he had done to
+his utmost, against the Lord's cause and people in these poor
+nations."[33:2] It was such men who, on December 6th, 1648, to save the
+kingdom from a new war or from a peace destructive of everything they
+had fought for,[33:3] purged the House of Commons of its "malignant"
+members; and who cut the Gordian knot of the difficulties that beset the
+nation by bringing the King, who seemed to them to stand in the way of
+any and every satisfactory settlement, to trial and execution (January
+30th, 1649). Moreover, it was such men who most heartily concurred with
+the resolution of the House of Commons (February 7th, 1649), "That it
+has been found by experience ... that the office of a king in this
+nation, and to have the power thereof in any single person, is
+unnecessary, burdensome, and dangerous to the liberty, safety, and
+public interests of the people of this nation, and therefore ought to be
+abolished." And, finally, it was such men who were the main supporters
+of the Council of State to whom, on February 13th, 1649, under the
+control of the House of Commons, was entrusted full executive authority
+over the home and foreign affairs of the nation.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[23:1] Macaulay's _Essays_, "John Hampden."
+
+[24:1] In 1624, Charles had voluntarily sworn to the House of Commons
+that if he married a Roman Catholic "it should be of no advantage to the
+recusants at home." In the autumn of the same year, on his betrothal to
+Henrietta Maria, sister to the King of France, he solemnly swore to
+grant the very condition he had previously solemnly sworn never to
+concede. He came to the throne early in the following year, 1625.
+
+[24:2] _Loc. cit._
+
+[24:3] _Constitutional History_, vol. ii. p. 81.
+
+[25:1] The Apology of the Commons, 1604. See Gardiner's _History of
+England_, 1603-1642, vol. i. pp. 180-185.
+
+[25:2] _Ibid._ vol. vii. pp. 72-76.
+
+[28:1] _Loc. cit._
+
+[29:1] This was the point of view taken at the time by the Levellers,
+the most active and progressive politicians of the period. In a "Humble
+Petition of thousands of well affected people inhabiting the City of
+London," presented September 11th, 1648, the petitioners address the
+House of Commons as "the supreme authority of England," and desire it so
+to consider itself. They complain that the Commons have declared their
+intention not to alter the ancient government of King, Lords and
+Commons, "not once mentioning, in case of difference, which of them is
+supreme, but leaving that point, which was the chiefest cause of all our
+public differences, disturbances, wars, and miseries, as uncertain as
+ever." See _Clarke Papers_, vol. ii. p. 76.
+
+[29:2] See "The Agreement of the People for a firm and present peace,"
+as presented to the Council of the Army, October 28th, 1647. Reprinted
+at the end of the third volume of Gardiner's _History of the Civil War_.
+
+[29:3] _History of the Civil War_, vol. ii. p. 67.
+
+[30:1] _History of the Civil War_, vol. iv. pp. 327-328.
+
+[31:1] _History of the Civil War_, vol. iii. p. 95.
+
+[31:2] See Appendix B.
+
+[32:1] "The Agreement of the People for a firm and present peace."
+(Italics are ours.)
+
+[33:1] See Carlyle's _Cromwell's Letters and Speeches_, part ii. p. 135,
+and part x. p. 255.
+
+[33:2] See Gardiner's _History of the Civil War_, vol. iv. pp. 120-121.
+
+[33:3] Cromwell seems early to have foreseen and guarded against such a
+contingency. See Gardiner, _ibid._ vol. ii. p. 25.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE DIGGERS
+
+ "The way to cast out Kingly Power is not to cast it out by the
+ Sword; for this doth but set him in more power, and removes him
+ from a weaker to a stronger hand. The only way to cast him out is
+ for the people to leave him to himself, to forsake fighting and all
+ oppression, and to live in love one towards another. The Power of
+ Love is the True Saviour."--WINSTANLEY, _A New Year's Gift for the
+ Parliament and Army_.
+
+
+The Council of State which, on February 13th, 1649, within a month of
+the execution of the King, had been appointed to administer the public
+affairs of England, had scarcely settled down to their work when they
+received the following information of the mysterious doings of "a
+disorderly and tumultuous sort of people" very near to their
+doors:[34:1]
+
+ "INFORMATION OF HENRY SANDERS OF WALTON UPON THAMES.
+
+ "Informeth, that on Sunday was sennight last,[34:2] there was one
+ Everard, once of the army but was cashiered, who termeth himself a
+ prophet, one Stewer and Colten, and two more, all living at Cobham,
+ came to St. George's Hill in Surrey, and began to dig on that side
+ the hill next to Campe Close, and sowed the ground with parsnips,
+ carrots, and beans. On Monday following they were there again,
+ being increased in their number, and on the next day, being
+ Tuesday, they fired the heath, and burned at least forty rood of
+ heath, which is a very great prejudice to the town. On Friday last
+ they came again, between twenty and thirty, and wrought all day at
+ digging. They did then intend to have two or three ploughs at work,
+ but they had not furnished themselves with seed-corn, which they
+ did on Saturday at Kingston. They invite all to come in and help
+ them, and promise them meat, drink, and clothes. They do threaten
+ to pull down and level all park pales, and lay open, and intend to
+ plant there very shortly. They give out they will be four or five
+ thousand within ten days, and threaten the neighbouring people
+ there, that they will make them all come up to the hills and work:
+ and forewarn them suffering their cattle to come near the
+ plantation; if they do, they will cut their legs off. It is feared
+ they have some design in hand.
+
+ "HENRY SANDERS.
+
+ "_16 April 1649._"
+
+The Council of State were sufficiently impressed by this letter to
+forward it the same day to Lord Fairfax, the Lord General of the armed
+forces of the Commonwealth, with the following despatch:
+
+ "THE COUNCIL OF STATE TO LORD FAIRFAX.[35:1]
+
+ "MY LORD,--By the narrative enclosed your Lordship will be informed
+ of what relation hath been made to this Council of a disorderly and
+ tumultuous sort of people assembling themselves together not far
+ from Oatlands, at a place called St. George's Hill; and although
+ the pretence of their being there by them avowed may seem very
+ ridiculous, yet that conflux of people may be a beginning whence
+ things of a greater and more dangerous consequence may grow, to the
+ disturbance of the peace and quiet of the Commonwealth. We
+ therefore recommend it to your Lordship's care that some force of
+ horse may be sent to Cobham in Surrey and thereabouts, with orders
+ to disperse the people so met, and to prevent the like for the
+ future, that a malignant and disaffected party may not under colour
+ of such ridiculous people have any opportunity to rendezvous
+ themselves in order to do a greater mischief.
+
+ "Signed in the name and by order of the Council of State
+ appointed by authority of Parliament,
+
+ "JOHN BRADSHAW, _President_.
+
+ "DERBY HOUSE, _16th April 1649_.
+
+ "For the Right Honourable
+ THOMAS LORD FAIRFAX, Lord General."
+
+
+Acting on his instructions, within a few days Lord Fairfax was in
+possession of the following soldier-like letter from the active
+republican officer to whom he had entrusted the business, and who
+evidently was not so easily frightened as the Council of State:
+
+ "CAPTAIN JOHN GLADMAN TO LORD FAIRFAX.[36:1]
+ (Slightly Abridged.)
+
+ "SIR,--According to your order I marched towards St. Georges Hill
+ and sent four men before to bring certain intelligence to me; as
+ they went they met with Mr. Winstanlie and Mr. Everard (which are
+ the chief men that have persuaded these people to do what they have
+ done). And when I had enquired of them and of the officers that lie
+ at Kingston, I saw there was no need to march any further. I cannot
+ hear that there have been above twenty of them together since they
+ first undertook the business. Mr. Winstanlie and Mr. Everard have
+ engaged both to be with you this day: I believe you will be glad to
+ be rid of them again, especially Everard, who is no other than a
+ mad man. Sir, I intend to go with two or three men to St. Georges
+ Hill this day, and persuade these people to leave this employment
+ if I can, and if then I see no more danger than now I do I shall
+ march back again to London tomorrow.... Indeed the business is not
+ worth the writing nor yet taking notice of: I wonder the Council of
+ State should be so abused with informations....
+
+ "JO. GLADMAN.
+
+ "KINGSTON, _April 19th, 1649_."
+
+As they had undertaken, Winstanley and Everard duly appeared before
+Lord Fairfax at Whitehall, and under date April 20th the following
+account of their interview appears in the ponderous pages of Bulstrode
+Whitelocke's _Memorial of English Affairs_:[37:1]
+
+ "Everard and Winstanley, the chief of those that digged at St.
+ George's Hill in Surrey, came to the General and made a large
+ declaration to justify their proceedings.
+
+ "Everard said he was of the race of the Jews, that all the
+ liberties of the people were lost by the coming in of William the
+ Conqueror, and that ever since the people of God had lived under
+ tyranny and oppression worse than that of our forefathers under the
+ Egyptians.
+
+ "But now the time of deliverance was at hand, and God would bring
+ his people out of this slavery, and restore them to their freedom
+ in enjoying the fruits and benefits of the Earth.
+
+ "And that there had lately appeared to him a vision, which bad him
+ arise and dig and plough the earth, and receive the fruits thereof.
+
+ "That their intent is to restore the Creation to its former
+ condition. That as God had promised to make the barren land
+ fruitful, so now what they did was to restore the ancient community
+ of enjoying the fruits of the Earth, and to distribute the benefits
+ thereof to the poor and needy, and to feed the hungry and to clothe
+ the naked.
+
+ "That they intend not to meddle with any man's property nor to
+ break down any pales or enclosures, but only to meddle with what
+ was common and untilled, and to make it fruitful for the use of
+ man. That the time will suddenly be, when all men shall willingly
+ come in and give up their lands and estates, and submit to this
+ community.
+
+ "And for all those that will come in and work they should have
+ meat, drink, and clothes, which is all that is necessary to the
+ life of man; and that for money, there was not any need of it, nor
+ of clothes more than to cover nakedness.
+
+ "That they will not defend themselves by arms, but will submit unto
+ authority, and wait till the promised opportunity be offered, which
+ they conceive to be at hand. And that as their forefathers lived in
+ tents, so it would be suitable to their condition now to live in
+ the same: and more to the like effect.
+
+ "While they were before the General, they stood with their hats
+ on; and being demanded the reason thereof, they said, 'Because he
+ was but their fellow-creature.' Being asked the meaning of that
+ place, 'Give honour to whom honour is due'; they said that their
+ mouths should be stopped that gave them that offence."
+
+ Whitelocke continues, "I have set down this the more largely
+ because it was the beginning of the appearance of this opinion; and
+ that we might the better understand and avoid these weak
+ persuasions."
+
+"The germ of Quakerism and much else is curiously visible here," is
+Carlyle's shrewd comment on the above incident. But as to how far this
+account of the views of the Diggers is correct, we shall leave to the
+judgement of those who read the pages that are to follow. Though we may
+now believe that, save that he placed Norman in the place of the Saxon
+Lords, William the Conqueror introduced but few innovations into the
+laws and institutions of the country, the very opposite was the accepted
+opinion in the days of Winstanley and his associates.[38:1] It may also
+be well to mention here that, though Everard's name appears, and first
+in order, amongst those who signed the pamphlet, _The True Levellers
+Standard Advanced: or, The State of Community opened and presented to
+the Sons of Men_, which bears date April 26th, 1649, and to which we
+shall presently refer, it does not appear in any of the later
+publications of the Diggers. Whether he died about this time or merely
+dropped out of the movement, we have not been able to ascertain.
+
+However this may be, Lord Fairfax appears to have been somewhat
+impressed by his interview, to which the Diggers themselves always
+referred in most cordial terms; for on his way from Guildford to London
+the following month, he visited them at their work, of which visit we
+take the following account from the pages of a contemporary and
+evidently friendly news-sheet, dated May 31st, 1649:[39:1]
+
+ "The SPEECHES of Lord General FAIRFAX and the Officers of the Army
+ to the Diggers at St. George's Hill in Surrey, and the Diggers'
+ several answers and replies thereunto.
+
+ "As his Excellency the Lord General came from Gilford to London, he
+ went to view the Diggers at St. George's Hill in Surrey, with his
+ Officers and Attendants. They found about twelve of them hard at
+ work, and amongst them one Winstanley was the chief speaker.
+ Several questions were propounded by the Officers, and the Lord
+ General made a short speech by way of admonition to them, and this
+ Winstanley returned sober answers, though they gave little
+ satisfaction (if any at all) in regard of the strangeness of their
+ action. It was urged that the Commons were as justly due to the
+ Lords as any other lands. They answered that these were Crown Lands
+ where they digged, and the King who possessed them by the Norman
+ Conquest being dead, they were returned again to the Common People
+ of England, who might improve them if they would take the pains;
+ that for those who would come dig with them, they should have the
+ benefit equal with them, and eat of their bread; but they would not
+ force any, applying to all the golden rule, to do to others as we
+ would be done unto. Some Officers wished they had no further plot
+ in what they did, and that no more was intended than what they did
+ pretend.
+
+ "As to the barrenness of the ground, which was objected as a
+ discouragement, the Diggers answered they would use their
+ endeavours, and leave the success to God, who had promised to make
+ the barren ground fruitful. They carry themselves civilly and
+ fairly in the country, and have the report of sober, honest men.
+ Some barley is already come up, and other fruits formerly; but was
+ pulled up by some of the envious inhabitants thereabouts, who are
+ not so far convinced as to promise not to injure them for the
+ future. The ground will probably in a short time yield them some
+ fruit of their labour, how contemptible soever they do yet appear
+ to be."
+
+Before following the further adventures of the Diggers, as revealed in
+the numerous pamphlets they left us, from which alone they can now be
+gathered, we deem it best to lay before our readers what we have been
+able to ascertain of Gerrard Winstanley's previous life's history and
+writings. Behind every movement that has ever influenced the thoughts of
+mankind, there is always some master-mind, a Lautze, a Gautama, a Jesus
+of Nazareth, a Wiclif, a John Wesley, a Darwin, a Tolstoy, or a Henry
+George; and it is in the comparatively unknown Gerrard Winstanley that
+we shall find the master-mind, the inspirer and director, of the Digger
+Movement. As Gardiner well says, "It is not only by the immediate
+accomplishment of its aim that the value of honest endeavour is to be
+tested." And the reader's interest in our work may be quickened if we so
+far forestall the pages that are to follow as to indicate that not only
+were Winstanley's earlier theological writings the source whence the
+early Quakers, or the Children of Light, as they at first called
+themselves, drew many of their most characteristic tenets and doctrines,
+but that the fundamental principles which inspired and animated his
+political writings were in all respects identical with those that during
+the past quarter of a century have been so honourably associated with
+the name of Henry George. We are not here called upon to pronounce
+judgement on these principles; but in passing we shall endeavour to
+point out how far the demands and doctrines of the Land Reformers of the
+Seventeenth Century, as revealed in Winstanley's writings, coincide with
+those of their successors in the Twentieth Century. In all cases we
+shall, as far as possible, let Gerrard Winstanley speak for himself.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[34:1] _Clarke Papers_, vol. ii. p. 209. Bulstrode Whitelocke, then
+already a member of the Council of State, in his _Memorial of English
+Affairs_ (p. 396), under date April 17th, 1649, has an entry referring
+to and summarising this letter.
+
+[34:2] That is to say, a week last Sunday, or last Sunday week.
+
+[35:1] _Loc. cit._ vol. ii. p. 210.
+
+[36:1] _Loc. cit._ vol. ii. pp. 211-212.
+
+[37:1] P. 397.
+
+[38:1] A glance at the titles of John Hare's well-known pamphlets, the
+work of a learned, prosaic, diffuse, moderate, and loyal writer,
+suffices to show how widespread this jealousy and impatience of what he
+terms Normanism was. One runs as follows:--"_St. Edwards Ghost or Anti
+Normanism_: Being a pathetical Complaint and Motion, in the behalf of
+our English Nation, against the grand yet neglected grievance
+Normanism." Another, {3}"_Englands Proper and Only Way to an
+Establishment in Honor, Freedom, Peace and Happiness_: Or the Norman
+Yoke once more uncased, and the Necessity, Justice, and Present
+Seasonableness of breaking it in pieces demonstrated, in Eight most
+plain and true Propositions, with their proofs." The pamphlets are
+interesting only as showing the prevalence of the idea that the
+dishonour of the English Nation, and the slavery and impoverishment of
+the masses of the English people, were due to Norman Laws and
+institutions introduced by William the Conqueror.
+
+[39:1] British Museum, Press Mark, E. 530.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+GERRARD WINSTANLEY
+
+ "Your word-divinity darkens knowledge. You talk of a body of
+ Divinity, and of Anatomysing Divinity. O fine language! But when it
+ comes to trial, it is but a husk without the kernel, words without
+ life. The Spirit is in the hearts of the people whom you despise
+ and tread under foot."--WINSTANLEY, _The New Law of Righteousness
+ (1649)_.
+
+
+Gerrard Winstanley, whose strange entry on the stately stage of English
+History we have recorded in the previous chapter, was born at Wigan in
+the County of Lancashire, on October 10th, 1609.[41:1] He was,
+therefore, some ten years younger than his great contemporary Oliver
+Cromwell (born 1599), one year the junior of the immortal Milton (born
+1608), and some fifteen years older than George Fox (born 1624). Of his
+earlier years we know nothing; but, to judge from many passages in his
+writings, he appears to have received a good middle-class education, and
+to have been brought up a dutiful follower of the Church as by law
+established. When arrived at man's estate, he settled as a small trader
+in London, of which City he probably became a freeman; for in a pamphlet
+addressed to the City of London,[41:2] he claims to be "one of thy sons
+by freedom." He then goes on to relate how, "by thy cheating sons in
+the thieving art of buying and selling, and by the burdens of and for
+the soldiery in the beginning of the war," he "had been beaten out of
+both estate and trade," and had been forced "to accept of the good-will
+of friends, crediting of me, to live a country life."
+
+Those who have passed through a similar experience, who have been driven
+from the comparatively comfortable middle-class life to the precarious
+and comfortless existence of the vast majority of the toiling masses,
+will readily realise that under such circumstances Winstanley's mind
+would naturally be full of questionings such as might not have forced
+themselves on his attention under more prosperous conditions. What was
+the aim and object of that incessant struggle out of which he had just
+emerged "beaten out of both estate and trade"? What made it necessary?
+who really benefited by it? For whose benefit was the war being waged,
+the burden of which had fallen so heavily upon him? How was it going to
+advantage the masses of the people? Was it ever intended that it should
+benefit them? was it possible that it should do so? Could any such
+struggle be a means of delivering the great masses of the people, "the
+younger brothers," out of the straits of poverty, with its attendant
+train of ignorance, misery, vice, and crime, to which they had hitherto
+been ruthlessly and hopelessly condemned? Was it, in truth, inevitable,
+was it inherent in the very nature of things, was it God's intention
+that a privileged few, "the elder brothers," should be lords and
+masters, and that the great majority of mankind should for ever remain
+the mere hewers of wood and drawers of water, the slaves and servants of
+an insignificant minority of their fellow-creatures? Were these things
+due to natural causes, to the inscrutable workings of a Divine
+Providence; or were they but the necessary though unforeseen fruits of
+mere man-made laws and institutions the existing generation had
+inherited from a by-gone and ignorant past? Such were the questions
+which vaguely and indistinctly may have passed, and, as we shall see,
+did pass, through the active, original, philosophic and deeply religious
+mind of Winstanley in the quiet solitude of his country life.
+
+His life had drifted from its accustomed moorings; his troubles were
+greater than he could bear; and when he turned to Religion for guidance
+and consolation, alas! he found that the teachings he had imbibed in his
+childhood, and never questioned in his manhood, now failed him in his
+hour of need. Foiled, though not beaten, he turned to the pages of the
+Holy Scriptures themselves for guidance and information, for consolation
+and revelation. In these inspired writings, if anywhere, there surely
+must be found some expression, some revelation, of God's intentions
+towards His children, some indication of His holy will, which, if men
+would wholly follow, would lead them down the path of righteousness to
+happiness and peace. And it was from these pages that Winstanley derived
+those religious and political convictions that find such eloquent and
+forcible expression in his writings, and which he made such heroic
+efforts to proclaim by word and deed to his fellow-men.
+
+What seems to us to give a special charm to the study of Winstanley's
+writings is that they reveal the gradual development of his acute and
+powerful mind. His earlier pamphlets betray the influence of the
+mysticism so prevalent in his days; his last utterance on theological
+questions, as we shall see, might have been penned by an advanced
+thinker of the present day, imbued with modern scientific views, and
+recognising the necessary relation and co-ordination of all the physical
+and psychical phenomena of the universe, "of the several bodies of the
+stars and planets in the heavens above, and the several bodies of the
+earth below, as plants, grass, fishes, beasts, birds, and mankind."
+
+As to how far Winstanley owes the views that find expression in his
+earlier pamphlets--which deal exclusively with cosmological or
+theological speculations--to others, or to the writings of earlier
+mystics, we have no means of knowing.[43:1] From them we gather,
+however, that he had learned or had come to regard the whole Biblical
+narrative as an allegory, of which he gives a most poetical
+interpretation. The Creation is mankind. The Garden of Eden is the mind
+of man, which he describes as originally filled with herbs and pleasant
+plants, "as love, joy, peace, humility, delight, and purity of life."
+The serpent he holds to be self-love, the forbidden fruit to be
+"selfishness," following the promptings of which "the whole garden
+becomes a stinking dunghill of weeds, and brings forth nothing but
+pride, envy, discontent, disobedience, and the whole actings of the
+spirit and power of darkness." And he argues that--"If the creature
+should be honored in this condition, then God would be dishonored,
+because his command would be broken.... And if the creature were utterly
+lost ... then likewise God would suffer dishonor, because his work would
+be spoiled." Hence he maintains that "the curse that was declared to
+Adam was temporary," and that eventually the whole creation, the whole
+of mankind, shall be saved, and "the work of God shall be restored from
+this lost, dead, weedy and enslaved condition."[44:1]
+
+Winstanley, however, regarded the word "God" as too vague satisfactorily
+to denote the supreme spiritual power which pervades, upholds and
+governs the whole universe. He had, he tells us, "been held in darkness
+by that word, as I see many people are."[44:2] And so that neither he
+nor others should "rest longer upon words without knowledge, but
+hereafter may look upon that spiritual power, and know what it is that
+rules them, which doth rule in and over all," he felt himself impelled
+to conceive of and to refer to this spiritual power, which is God, as
+"Reason." He contends that "though men may esteem the word Reason to be
+too mean a name to set forth the Father by, yet it is the highest name
+that can be given to Him. For it is Reason that made all things; and it
+is Reason that governs the whole Creation. If flesh were but subject
+thereunto, that is, to the Spirit of Reason within itself, it would
+never act unrighteously.... For this Spirit of Reason is not without a
+man, but within every man; hence he need not run after others to tell
+him or to teach him; for this Spirit is his maker, he dwells in him, and
+if the flesh were subject thereunto, he would daily find teaching
+therefrom, though he dwelt alone and saw the face of no other
+man."[45:1] "This is the Spirit, or Father, which as he made the Globe
+and every creature, so he dwells in every creature, but supremely in
+man. He it is by whom everyone lives, and moves, and hath his being.
+Perfect man is the eye and face that sees and declares the Father: and
+he is perfect when he is taken up in the Spirit and lives in the light
+of Reason."[45:1] "Reason is that living Power of Light that is in all
+things. It is the salt that savours all things. It is the fire that
+burns up dross, and so restores what is corrupted, and preserves what is
+pure. He is the Lord our Righteousness. It lies in the bottom of love,
+of justice, of wisdom: for if the Spirit Reason did not uphold and
+moderate these, they would be madness; nay, they could not be called by
+their names, for Reason guides them in order and leads them to their
+right end, which is not to preserve a part, but the whole
+Creation."[45:2]
+
+The reason of man, Winstanley regarded but as an emanation of the Divine
+Spirit Reason, as the one true Inward Light, which if men would only and
+wholly follow would lead them to live in peace and harmony, and in
+accordance with the Divine Spirit. "Man's reasoning," he says,[45:2] "is
+a creature which flows from that Spirit to this end, to draw up man into
+himself. It is but a candle lighted by that soul, and this light,
+shining through flesh, is darkened by the imagination of the flesh. So
+that many times men act contrary to reason, though they think they act
+according to Reason.... The Spirit Reason, which I call God, the Maker
+and Ruler of all things, is that spiritual power that guides all men's
+reasoning in right order, and to a right end ... and knite every
+creature together into a oneness, making every creature to be an
+upholder of his fellows; and so everyone is an assistant to preserve the
+whole. And the nearer man's reasoning comes to this, the more spiritual
+they are; the further off they be, the more selfish and fleshy they be."
+
+Winstanley took care to point out,[46:1] however, that "this word Reason
+is not the alone name of this spiritual power; but everyone may give him
+a name according to that spiritual power that they feel and see rules in
+them, carrying them forth in actions to preserve their fellow-creatures
+as well as themselves. Therefore some may call him King of
+Righteousness, or Prince of Peace; some may call him Love, and the like.
+But I can and I do call him Reason, because I see him to be that living,
+powerful light that is in righteousness, making righteousness to be
+righteousness, or justice to be justice, or love to be love. For without
+this moderator and ruler they would be madness; nay, the self-willedness
+of the flesh, and not what we call them."[46:1]
+
+But, he warns his readers,[46:2] "truly let me tell you, that you cannot
+say the Spirit, Reason, is your God, till you see and feel by experience
+that the Spirit doth govern your flesh. For if Envy be the Lord that
+rules your flesh, if Pride and Covetousness rule your flesh, then is
+Envy, Covetousness, or Pride your God. If you fear man so greatly that
+you dare not do righteously for fear of angering men, then slavish fear
+is your God. If rash anger govern your flesh, then is anger your God.
+Therefore deceive not yourselves, but let Reason work within you; and
+examine and see what your flesh is subject to. For whatever doth govern
+in you, that is your God."
+
+Winstanley's characteristic theological doctrines were, then, the
+realisation of the function and importance of the Inward Light, of
+Reason, which he regarded as the necessary and all-sufficient guide for
+human conduct; his keen appreciation of silence as the necessary
+precursor of all real prayer, if not as in itself a form of worship;
+and his intense conviction of the ultimate salvation of the whole of
+mankind. To Winstanley, Reason is the Ruling Spirit of the whole
+Creation, is God, the Spirit of Righteousness, who is ever seated within
+the hearts of men combating the lusts of the flesh, the promptings of
+the brute animal nature of mankind. Disobedient man may know him not,
+because covetous flesh, the promptings of self-love, hath deceived him,
+and "so he looks abroad for a God, and so doth imagine or fancy a God in
+some particular place of glory beyond the skies; or else, if men do look
+for a God within them, yet are they led by the notions of King Flesh,
+and not of King Spirit."[47:1] Reason, in short, is the spark of the
+Divine in man, the Spirit of Light that dwells within and may rule the
+mind and actions of every man. Conscience is but the promptings of
+Reason, inspiring men to right action, to deal justly and brotherly and
+to live in peaceful and harmonious association with their fellows.
+Self-love, covetousness, the desire of the flesh, is ever the enemy of
+Reason. And life is but a continuous struggle between these two powers
+for dominion in the Creation, over the hearts and actions of mankind.
+Self-love ruling the hearts of man, is the Adam that causes him to sin,
+not the crime of the man Adam who lived so many thousand years ago. And
+similarly it is the ruling of the spirit of Jesus Christ, the Inward
+Light, within the hearts of man, not the sufferings of a man Christ
+Jesus, which is the essential condition of individual and social
+salvation. "This is the lightning that shall spread from East to West.
+This is the Kingdom of Heaven within you, dwelling and ruling in your
+flesh. Therefore learn to know Jesus Christ as the Father knows him;
+that is, not after the flesh; but know that the Spirit within the flesh
+is that mighty man Christ Jesus. He within governs the flesh; he within
+laid down the flesh, when he was said to die; he within is to arise, not
+at a distance from man, but he will rise up in men, and manifest himself
+to be the light and life of every man and woman that is saved by
+him."[47:2] By following the desires of the flesh, the promptings of
+selfish covetousness, we can never gain true happiness, which is Heaven,
+for the voice of Reason within us, of our conscience, or the Inward
+Light illumining the inner darkness, will upbraid{4} us and cast us into
+Hell within us. True happiness, complete satisfaction, which is Heaven,
+can only be gained by following the dictates of Reason, by following the
+promptings of the Inward Light. Thus to Winstanley, as to Tolstoy, the
+Kingdom of Heaven, as well as the kingdom of hell, is within men's
+minds, and "there is no other."[48:1] Everything that happens, however,
+is ordained, or rather permitted, by God the Father, "the Ruling Spirit
+of the Whole Creation," for His own ends. He controls the Spirits or
+Powers we call evil, as well as those we call good: all work in
+accordance with His commands, to further His ends. In Winstanley's
+philosophy, unlike that of Luther, there was no room for an independent
+Devil. Though in our blindness we may attribute our sufferings to such a
+personage, yet whatever happens to a man is somehow or other for his own
+good, though in an unregenerate state we may not realise this. All
+suffering, in truth, does but tend to purify the soul from the lust of
+the flesh, to enable the Inward Light to overcome the inward darkness,
+to enable Reason to overcome Self-Love, good to overcome evil: and thus
+to lead men to God. In the end, in the day of Judgement, the good will
+triumph, Reason will cast out Covetousness, Universal Love will cast out
+Self Love, meekness will cast out pride, righteousness will cast out
+unrighteousness: and all men made perfect by the Inward Light, the
+Spirit of Christ within them, will rejoice in the knowledge and glory of
+God.
+
+It is almost impossible to read Winstanley's earlier theological
+pamphlets without being struck by the similarity in thought and doctrine
+with those to-day still held by the Society of Friends, or Quakers,
+whose original name amongst themselves, be it remembered, was the
+Children of Light. And it is interesting to note that during the
+seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the opponents of the Quakers
+repeatedly taunted them with being disciples of Winstanley the
+Leveller.[49:1] Thus the Right Reverend Thomas Coomber, Dean of Durham,
+in a pamphlet significantly entitled _Christianity no Enthusiasm: Or the
+several kinds of inspiration and Revelation pretended to by the Quakers
+tried and found destructive to Holy Scripture and True Religion_,
+published in 1678, wrote as follows:
+
+ "First for their original, it may seem more difficult to discover,
+ where Sects are not called after their Founder, but after some
+ property, etc., it may be harder to trace them to their head. In
+ 1652 their beginning is supposed, and then abouts they were so
+ called and known. John Whitehead fixes it in the year 1648;[49:2]
+ and Hubberthorne in 1660 told the King that they were then twelve
+ years standing.[49:3] In that black year to these kingdoms (1648)
+ their pretended light appeared.[50:1] ... But the very draughts and
+ even body of Quakerism are to be found in the several works of
+ Gerrard Winstanley, a zealous Leveller, wherein he tells us of the
+ arising of new times and dispensations, and challengeth Revelation
+ very much for what he writ."
+
+Coomber proceeds to quote from every one of Winstanley's theological
+pamphlets, and then continues:
+
+ "That these are the Quaker principles is well enough known,
+ allowing for some little alterations, as few Sect-Masters but have
+ their doctrines varied by their Proselytes.... Now, considering
+ these opinions, the year, the country[50:2] (as _The Mystery of
+ God_ is dedicated to his "beloved countrymen of the County of
+ Lancaster"), the printer Giles Calvert, and that several Levellers
+ settled into Quakers, we incline to take them for Winstanley's
+ Disciples and a branch of the Levellers. And what this man writes
+ of--levelling men's estates, of taking in of Commons, that none
+ should have more ground than he was able to till and husband by
+ his labour--proving unpracticable by reason of so many tough old
+ laws which had fixed propriety; yet it is pursued by the Quakers as
+ much as they well can, in thouing everybody, in denying Titles,
+ Civil Respects, and terms of distinction among men, and at first
+ they were for Community."
+
+If Winstanley's writings be really the source whence the early Quakers,
+the Children of Light, drew their most characteristic tenets and
+doctrines, as we ourselves do not doubt, then surely his noble ambition
+has been satisfied: for through them he has, indeed, influenced the
+thought of his country, the thought of the whole world, which owes more
+than we even yet realise to their pure and altruistic teachings.
+However, leaving this most interesting question to be decided by our
+readers, each for himself, we shall now place the chief contents of
+these writings before them, using as far as possible Winstanley's own
+words.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[41:1] Both Gerrard and Winstanley are common names in that part of
+Lancashire which lies between Wigan and Liverpool. In the Wigan Parish
+Register there is an entry under the above date--"Gerrard Winstanlie,
+son of Edward Winstanlie." The first pamphlet he wrote, _The Mystery of
+God concerning the whole Creation_, is dedicated "To my beloved
+countrymen of the County of Lancaster." In his time the term
+"countrymen" had a more contracted meaning than now, and implied a
+common nativity of a Shire or Parish: indeed it still has this meaning
+in some parts of Cheshire.
+
+[41:2] _A Watchword to the City of London._
+
+[43:1] Between the years 1644-1662 the works of the German mystic Jakob
+Boehme were translated into English. All Winstanley's theological
+pamphlets were published in the year 1648-1649, to which year the origin
+of the Quaker doctrines is generally attributed.
+
+[44:1] See _The Mystery of God concerning the whole Creation, Mankind_.
+British Museum, Press Mark, 4377, a. 1. The whole pamphlet consists of
+some 69 closely printed pages.
+
+[44:2] _Truth lifting up its Head above Scandals._ British Museum, Press
+Mark, 4372, a.a. 17.
+
+[45:1] _The Saint's Paradise._ British Museum, Press Mark, E. 2137.
+
+[45:2] _Truth lifting up its Head above Scandals._
+
+[46:1] _Truth lifting up its Head above Scandals._
+
+[46:2] _The Saint's Paradise._
+
+[47:1] _The Saint's Paradise._
+
+[47:2] "That which the people called Quakers lay down as a main
+fundamental in religion, is this, that God, through Christ, hath placed
+a principle in every man, to inform him of his duty, and to enable him
+to do it; and that those who live up to this principle, are the people
+of God; and that those who live in disobedience to it, are not God's
+people, whatever name they bear, or profession they may make of
+religion.... By this principle they understand something that is Divine,
+and though in man, not of man, but of God; it came from Him and leads to
+Him all those who will be led by it ... it is the spirit given to every
+man to profit withal."--William Penn, _Primitive Christianity Revived_
+(1696). Quoted from J. S. Rowntree's _The Society of Friends; its Faith
+and Practice_.
+
+[48:1] Speaking of the early Quakers, Cotton Mather, after attributing
+the origin of this sect "to some fanatics here in our town of Salem,"
+describes the principles of "the old Foxian Quakerism" as follows:
+"There is in every man a certain excusing and condemning _principle_,
+which indeed is nothing but some _remainder_ of the Divine Image left by
+the compassion of God upon the conscience of man after his fall.... They
+scoffed at our imagined God beyond the stars." He also contends that
+"the new turn such ingenuous men as Mr. Penn" had given to Quakerism,
+had made of it "quite a new thing." See his _History of New England_,
+book vii. chap. iv.
+
+[49:1] The Rev. Thos. Bennet, on p. 4 of _An Answer to the Dissenters'
+Pleas for Separation_, published in 1711, referring to the origin of the
+various sorts of dissenters, speaks of the time "when Winstanley
+published the principles of Quakerism, and enthusiasm broke out." In a
+footnote he mentions _The Saint's Paradise_.
+
+[49:2] Gerard Croese in _The General History of the Quakers_, published
+1696, says, "The Quakers themselves date their first rise from the
+forty-ninth year of the present century."
+
+[49:3] See _An account of what passed between the King and Richard
+Hubberthorne, after the delivery of George Fox his letter to the King_,
+which is to be found amongst Thomasson's Pamphlets, British Museum.
+
+[50:1] As our readers will notice, all Winstanley's theological writings
+were written and published in 1648-1649. The Preface to _Truth Lifting
+up its Head above Scandals_ is dated October 16th, 1648; _The Saint's
+Paradise_ bears no date, but was certainly written before _The New Law
+of Righteousness_, the Preface to which is dated January 26th, 1648
+(1649). (At that time the New Year commenced on March 26th.)
+
+[50:2] Coomber had already pointed out that Quakerism arose in the North
+of England, and mainly in Winstanley's native county of Lancashire. His
+reference to Giles Calvert, the printer, is also most suggestive; for
+Calvert published almost all Winstanley's pamphlets, and later was one
+of the first authorised publishers of the official publications of the
+Society of Friends. Calvert's establishment seems to have been the
+source, as well as the depository, of much of the advanced literature of
+his times. In his _Protest against Toleration of Printing Pamphlets
+against Non-Conformists_, Baxter refers to it as follows: "Let all the
+Apothecaries of London have liberty to keep open shop. But O do not
+under that pretence let a man keep an open shop of poisons for all that
+will destroy themselves freely, as Giles Calvert doth for Soul-poisons."
+Calvert was suspected of having provided the funds for one of the later
+risings of the Fifth Monarchy Men. He subsequently joined the Quakers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+WINSTANLEY'S EXPOSITION OF THE QUAKER DOCTRINES (1648-1649)
+
+ "There is nothing more sweet and satisfactory to a man than this,
+ to know and feel that spiritual power of righteousness to rule in
+ him which he calls God.... Wait upon the Lord for teaching. You
+ will never have rest in your soul till He speaks in you. Run after
+ men for teaching, follow your forms with strictness, you will still
+ be at a loss, and be more and more wrapped up in confusion and
+ sorrow of heart. But when once your heart is made subject to
+ Christ, the Law of Righteousness, looking up to Him for
+ instruction, waiting with a meek and quiet spirit till He appear in
+ you: then you shall have peace; then you shall know the truth, and
+ the truth shall make you free."--_The New Law of Righteousness_.
+
+
+_The Mystery of God concerning the whole Creation, Mankind_, is the
+title of Winstanley's first published pamphlet, to which we have already
+referred, and which was written early in the year 1648, probably in
+April or May. As already mentioned, it opens with a Dedicatory Epistle
+to "My beloved countrymen of the County of Lancaster," in which he first
+apologises for venturing into print in the following suggestive words:
+"Dear countrymen, when some of you see my name subscribed to this
+ensuing discourse, you may wonder at it, and it may be despise me in
+your hearts ... but know that God's works are not like men's; He does
+not always take the wise, the learned, the rich of the world to manifest
+Himself in, and through them to others, but He chooses the despised, the
+unlearned, the poor, the nothings of the world, and fills them with the
+good tidings of Himself, whereas He sends the others empty away." He
+further apprehends that his view, that "the curse that was declared to
+Adam was temporary," and that ultimately the curse shall be removed off
+the whole Creation, and the whole of mankind shall be saved, will not
+be favourably received by those whom he is specially addressing. But he
+avows it a necessary truth, and concludes his appeal by saying that
+since the pamphlet was written he had met with "more Scripture to
+confirm it, so that it is not a spirit of private fancy, but it is
+agreeable to the Written Word."
+
+The pamphlet opens with Winstanley's interpretation of the story of the
+fall of Adam, the outline of which we have already given. Subsequently
+he describes his own experiences: how he lay under bondage to the
+serpent self-love, and saw not his bondage; how God had manifested His
+love to him by causing him to see that the things in which he did take
+pleasure were, in truth, his death and his shame. He again repeats his
+contention that in due time God will not lose any of His work, but
+redeem "His own whole Creation to Himself." Though this, he holds, will
+not be done all at once, but in several dispensations, "some whereof are
+passed, some in being, and some yet to come." He quotes largely from the
+Scriptures, more especially from Revelation, in support of this view;
+and argues most vehemently against the objection that if this were true,
+if eventually all will be saved, then men need not trouble about their
+own individual salvation. He also protests against the doctrine of an
+everlasting Hell, as unconfirmed by the Holy Scriptures, as destructive
+of God's work, and as incompatible with His great goodness.
+
+The prevalence of the belief in dispensations, past, present, and
+future, may be gathered from the following extract from one of
+Cromwell's speeches to the Army Council, November 1st, 1647: "Truly, as
+Lieut. Col. Goffe said, God hath in several ages used several
+dispensations, and yet some dispensations more eminently in one age than
+another. I am one of those whose heart God hath drawn out to wait for
+some extraordinary dispensations, according to those promises He hath
+set forth of things to be accomplished in the latter time, and I cannot
+but think that God is beginning of them."[53:1]
+
+The same idea reappears, in fact influences the whole of Winstanley's
+second pamphlet, of some 127 closely printed duodecimo pages, as might
+almost be inferred from its title, _The Breaking of the Day of
+God_,[54:1] which is in itself a revelation of its main contents. The
+Dedicatory Epistle, which is dated May 20th, 1648, some twelve months
+prior to the outbreak of the Digger Movement, already recorded, is the
+most interesting and suggestive portion of this long, wearisome, and
+almost unreadable volume. It is addressed to--"The Despised Sons and
+Daughters of Zion, scattered up and down the Kingdom of England." He
+first reminds them that "they are the object of the world's hatred and
+reproach," "branded as wicked ones," "threatened with ruin and death,"
+"the object of every one's laughter and reproach," "sentenced to be put
+to death under the name of round-heads," and so on. That they "are
+counted the troublers of Kingdoms and Parishes where they dwell, though
+the truth is that they are the only peaceable men in the Kingdom, who
+love the People's peace, the Magistrate's peace, and the Kingdom's
+peace." He continues--"But what's the reason the world doth so storm at
+you, but because you are not of this world, nor cannot walk in the dark
+ways of the world. They hated your Lord Jesus Christ, and they hate you.
+They knew not Him, and they know not you. For if they had known Him,
+they would not have crucified Him; and if they did truly know the power
+of the God that dwells in you, they would not so despise you." "But,
+well," he goes on to say, "these things must be. It is your Father's
+will that it shall be so; the world must lie under darkness for a time;
+that is God's dispensation to them. And you that are the Children of
+Light must lie under the reproach and oppression of the world;[54:2]
+that is God's dispensation to you. But it shall be but for a little
+time. What I have here to say is to bring you glad tidings that your
+redemption draws near."
+
+In the pamphlet itself Winstanley attempts to prove that the coming
+reign of Righteousness, and the overthrow of the Covetous, Self-Seeking
+Power, are entirely in accordance with the prophesies of the Scriptures,
+more especially with Revelation and John. In its final pages he
+vehemently protests against the continued union of Church and State, or
+rather against the continued upholding of the persecuting power of the
+Church by the secular authorities. "The misery of the age" he attributes
+to the fact that men are still striving "to uphold the usurped
+Ecclesiastical Power, which God never made," and that in upholding this
+they are "so mad and ignorant" as "to count Magistracie no government
+unless the Beast reign cheek by chaw with it, as formerly in the days of
+ignorance." This, however, he contends, should not be so, "for
+Magistracie in the Commonwealth must stand, it's God's ordinance. But
+this Ecclesiastical power in and over the Saints must fall." "This
+Ecclesiastical power," he contends, "hath been a great troubler of
+Magistracie ever since the deceived Magistracie set it up." The function
+of Magistracie, "which is God's Ordinance," is "to be a terror to the
+wicked, and to protect them that do well; whereas by this Ecclesiastical
+power, established by deceived Magistracie, the sincere in heart that
+worship God in spirit and truth, according as God hath taught them and
+they understand, these are and have been troubled in Sessions, in
+Courts, and punished by fine and prisons. But the loose-hearted that
+will be of any religion that the most is of, these have their liberty
+without restraint. And so Magistracie hath acted quite backward, in
+punishing them that do well, and protecting in a hypocritical liberty
+them that do evil. O that our Magistrates would let Church-work alone to
+Christ, upon whose shoulders they shall find the government lies, and
+not upon theirs. And then, in the wisdom and strength of Christ, they
+would govern Commonwealths in justice, love, and righteousness more
+peaceably."[55:1]
+
+This pamphlet concludes with the following wise and beautiful thought:
+
+ "All that I shall say in conclusion is this: Wait patiently upon
+ the Lord; let every man that loves God endeavour by the spirit of
+ wisdom, meekness, and love to dry up Euphrates, even this spirit of
+ bitterness, that like a great river hath overflowed the earth of
+ mankind. For it is not revenge, prisons, fines, fightings, that
+ will subdue a tumultuous spirit; but a soft answer, love and
+ meekness, tenderness and justice, to do as we would be done unto:
+ this will appease wrath. When this Sun of Righteousness and Love
+ arises in Magistrates and people, one to another, then these
+ tumultuous national storms will cease, and not till then. This Sun
+ is risen in some; this Sun will rise higher, and must rise higher;
+ and the bright shining of it will be England's liberty."
+
+The next fruit of Winstanley's prolific pen is a volume of some 134
+closely printed pages, entitled _The Saint's Paradise: Or the Father's
+Teaching the only Satisfaction to Waiting Souls_,[56:1] from which in
+the previous chapter we have already quoted somewhat freely. The words
+on its title-page, "The inward testimony is the Soul's strength,"
+indicate the characteristic teachings of this remarkable book, which are
+also admirably suggested by the two biblical quotations that also appear
+thereon. "And they shall teach no more every man his neighbour, and
+every man his brother, saying, Know the Lord: for they shall all know
+me, from the least of them to the greatest of them, saith the Lord"
+(Jer. xxxi. 34). "But the annointing which ye have received of him
+abideth in you; and ye need not that any man teach you: but as the same
+annointing teacheth you all things, and is truth" (1 John ii. 27).
+
+As was his usual custom, Winstanley opens with a Dedicatory letter,
+addressed this time "To my Beloved Friends whose Souls hunger after
+sincere milk," in which he relates his experience of the insufficiency
+of mere traditional, or book, or imparted knowledge, in the following
+words:
+
+ "I myself have known nothing but what I received in tradition from
+ the mouths and pen of others. I worshipped a God, but I neither
+ knew who he was nor where he was, so that I lived in the dark,
+ being blinded by the imagination of my flesh.... I spoke of the
+ name of God, and Lord, and Christ, but I knew not this Lord, God,
+ and Christ. I prayed to a God, but I knew not where he was nor what
+ he was, and so walking by imagination I worshipped the devil, and
+ called him God. By reason whereof my comforts were often shaken to
+ pieces, and at last it was shown to me, that while I builded upon
+ any words or writings of other men, or while I looked after a God
+ without me, I did but build upon the sand, and as yet I knew not
+ the Rock."
+
+He then admonishes his friends that, though they may not as yet be aware
+of it, and though they will probably be offended with him for saying so,
+yet that, in reality, "this ignorant, unsettled condition is yours at
+this time." However, he protests that nevertheless:
+
+ "I do not write anything as to be a teacher of you, for I know you
+ have a teacher within yourselves (which is the Spirit) and when
+ your flesh is made subject to him, he will teach you all things,
+ and bring all things to your remembrance, so that you shall not
+ need to run after men for instruction, for, your eyes being opened,
+ you shall see the King of Righteousness sit upon the throne within
+ yourselves, judging and condemning the unrighteousness of the
+ flesh, filling your face with shame, and your soul with horror,
+ though no man see or be acquainted with your actions or thoughts
+ but yourselves, and justifying your righteous thoughts and actions,
+ and leading you into all ways of truth."
+
+Winstanley then further explains that the Father, the Spirit of
+Righteousness, of Reason, pervades the whole Universe, and "dwells in
+every creature, but supremely in man," and then continues:
+
+ "Truly, Friends, the King of Righteousness within you is a meek,
+ patient, and quiet spirit, and full of love and sincerity.... And
+ when you come to know, feel, and see that the Spirit of
+ Righteousness governs your flesh, then you begin to know your God,
+ to fear your God, to love your God, and to walk humbly before your
+ God, and so to rejoice in Him. Therefore if you would have the
+ peace of God, as you call it, you must know what God it is you
+ serve, which is not a God without you, visible among bodies, but
+ the Spirit within you, invisible in every body to the eye of flesh,
+ yet discernible to the eye of the spirit. And when souls shall have
+ communion with that spirit, then they have peace, and not till
+ then."
+
+In the first chapter Winstanley emphasises the essential difference
+between the teachings of men and the teachings of God in the following
+words:
+
+ "The teachings of men and the teachings of God are much different.
+ The former being but the light of the moon, which shines not of
+ itself, but by the means and through the help of the sun. The
+ latter is the light of the sun, which gives light to all, not by
+ means and helps from others, but immediately from himself.
+
+ "Men's teachings are twofold. First, when men speak to others what
+ they have heard or read of the Scriptures, or books of other men's
+ writings, and have seen nothing from God Himself.... Secondly,
+ others speak from their own experience, of what they have heard and
+ seen from God, and of what great things God hath done for their
+ souls.... It is very possible that a man may attain to a literal
+ knowledge of the Scriptures, of the Prophets and Apostles, and may
+ speak largely of the history thereof, and yet both they that speak
+ and they that hear may be not only unacquainted with, but enemies
+ to that Spirit of truth by which the Prophets and Apostles
+ writ.[58:1] "For it is not the Apostles' writings, but the spirit
+ that dwelt in them, that did inspire their hearts, which gives life
+ and peace to all."
+
+In the second chapter Winstanley consoles those whom he is specially
+addressing by expressing his conviction that though their enemies may
+think to kill all the Saints, and though God may suffer them to kill
+some, yet others of them will necessarily be preserved to keep alive
+their beliefs and to spread abroad their teachings, of the ultimate
+triumph of which he never seemed to doubt. However, in view of the
+perplexity of the times and of the dangers by which they were
+surrounded, he gave them the following somewhat worldly-wise
+advice--"For the appearance of God now is in the Saints that they
+worship the Father in spirit and truth in such a secret manner as the
+eye of the world cannot and does not always see": a practice of which,
+as we have already noticed, the adherents of the Family of Love were
+accused in the reign of Queen Elizabeth.
+
+It is, however, in the fourth and fifth chapters that Winstanley
+concisely and eloquently summarises the fundamental articles of his
+religious faith. In them he again emphatically warns his fellows against
+looking to others for knowledge of Divine revelations, and strongly
+advises them to look into their own hearts. In support of this view he
+quotes the Scripture text--"Light is come into the world, and men love
+darkness rather than light, because their deeds are evil" (John iii.
+19), which he then proceeds to explain as follows:
+
+ "The world is mankind; and every particular man and woman is a
+ perfect creation of himself, a perfect created world. If a
+ particular branch of mankind desire to know what the nature of
+ other men and women are, let him not look abroad, but into his own
+ heart, and he shall see. So that I say, man is the world, a perfect
+ creation, from whose poisoned flesh proceeds the lust of the eye,
+ the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life: these are not of the
+ Father. Now _light is come into the world_; that is, the Spirit of
+ Right Understanding hath taken up his dwelling in this flesh. Hence
+ man is called a reasonable creature, which is a name given to no
+ other creature but man, because the Spirit of Reason appears acting
+ in him, which if men did submit themselves unto, they would act
+ righteously continually: and so man would become lord of all other
+ creatures in righteousness.... But the masculine powers of the
+ poisoned flesh stand it out against the King of Glory till He cast
+ them into the lake of fire, into His own spirit, by which they are
+ tried, and, being found but chaff and not able to endure, are
+ burned and consumed to nothing in the flame."
+
+"No man or woman, however, need be troubled at this," Winstanley
+contends, "for let every man cleanse himself of these wicked powers that
+rule in him, and there speedily will be a harmony of love in the great
+creation, even among all creatures. Therefore let no man look without
+himself, and say, other men will not obey this light that is come into
+mankind; but let him look into his own heart, and he shall find that the
+powers in his heart are those very men of the world that will not submit
+to that Light of Reason that is come into it."[60:1]
+
+Winstanley then proceeds to explain his conception of the resurrection
+of Christ, as follows:
+
+ "Friends, do not mistake the resurrection of Christ. You expect
+ that he shall come in one single person, as he did when he came to
+ suffer and die, and thereby to answer the types of Moses' Law. Let
+ me tell you that if you look for him under the notion of one single
+ man after the flesh, to be your Saviour, you shall never, never
+ taste salvation by him.... If you expect or look for the
+ resurrection of Jesus Christ, you must know that the Spirit within
+ the flesh is the Jesus Christ, and you must see, feel, and know
+ from himself his own resurrection within you, if you expect life
+ and peace by him. For he is the Life of the World, that is, of
+ every particular son and daughter of the Father ... for everyone
+ hath the Light of the Father within himself, which is the mighty
+ man Christ Jesus. And he is now rising and spreading himself in
+ these his sons and daughters, and so rising from one to many
+ persons till he enlighten the whole creation (mankind) in every
+ branch of it, and cover this earth with knowledge as the waters
+ cover the sea.... And this is to be saved by Jesus Christ; for that
+ mighty man of spirit hath taken up his habitation within your
+ body; and your body is his body, and now his spirit is your spirit,
+ and so you are become one with him and with the Father. This is the
+ faith of Christ, when your flesh is subject to the Spirit of
+ Righteousness, as the flesh of Christ was subject. And this is to
+ believe in Christ, when the actings and breathings of your soul are
+ within the centre of the same spirit in which the man Jesus Christ
+ lived, acted, and breathed."
+
+In accordance with this profound, philosophic, and truly spiritual view,
+Winstanley found it incumbent upon him to warn his fellows against
+another generally held belief, as follows:
+
+ "So that you do not look for a God now, as formerly you did, to be
+ a place of glory beyond the sun, moon, and stars, nor imagine a
+ Divine Being you know not where; but you see Him ruling within you;
+ and not only in you, but you see and know Him to be the Spirit or
+ Power that dwells in every man and woman, yea, in every creature,
+ according to his orb, within the globe of the Creation. So that now
+ you see and feel and taste the sweetness of the Spirit ruling in
+ your flesh, who is the Lord and King of Glory in the whole
+ Creation, and you have community with Him who is the Father of all
+ things. Now you are enlightened; now you are saved, and rise higher
+ and higher into life and peace, as this manifestation of the Father
+ increases and spreads within you."[61:1]
+
+As was only to be expected, the publication of the above pamphlets
+brought Winstanley into disrepute with the orthodox Ministers of the
+Church, who accused him of denying God, Christ, Scripture, and the
+Ordinances of God. This accusation gave rise to Winstanley's next
+pamphlet, of some 77 well-printed duodecimo pages, the preface to which
+is dated October 16th, 1648, and which bears the significant
+title--_Truth lifting its Head above Scandals_.[62:1] In this volume
+Winstanley indignantly denies such a charge, and makes use of the
+opportunity to restate his views even more clearly than he had
+previously done. The book opens with a dedicatory letter addressed "To
+the Scholars of Oxford and Cambridge, and to all that call themselves
+Ministers of the Gospel in City or Country," in which he carries the war
+into his enemy's camp in a forcible and masterly manner. He reminds them
+that they are not the only ones who have the right to judge of the
+meaning of the Scriptures, "For the people, having the Scriptures, may
+judge by them as well as you." He then continues:
+
+ "If you say, 'No, the people cannot judge, because they know not
+ the original:' I answer, Neither do you know the original. Though
+ by your learning you may be able to translate a writing out of
+ Hebrew or Greek into our mother-tongue, English, but to say this is
+ the original Scripture you cannot: for those very copies which the
+ Prophets and Apostles writ are not to be seen in your
+ Universities."
+
+He forces home his argument in the following words:
+
+ "You say you have the just copies of their writings. You do not
+ know that but as your Fathers have told you, which may be as well
+ false as true, if you have no other better ground than tradition.
+ You say that the interpretation of Scripture into our mother tongue
+ is according to the mind of the _spirit_. You cannot tell that
+ neither, unless you are able to say that those who did interpret
+ those writings have had the same testimony of spirit as the pen-men
+ of Scripture had. For it is the spirit within that must prove these
+ copies to be true."
+
+He then turns the tables by accusing them of being "the very men that do
+deny God, Scriptures, and the Ordinances of God; and that turn the
+truths of the Spirit into a lie, by leaving the letter, and walking in
+their own inferences"; and also "by holding forth spiritual things by
+the imagination of the flesh, and not by the law and testimony of the
+Spirit within." And he contends that, in truth, he and his fellows are
+"those men that do advance God, Christ, Scriptures, and Ordinances in
+the spirituality of them."
+
+In the opening chapter of the book itself, Winstanley, with more than
+his usual directness, plunges into the heart of his subject in the
+following suggestive words:
+
+ "I have said that whosoever worships God by hearsay, as others tell
+ him, and knows not what God is from light within himself; or that
+ thinks God is in the heavens above the skies, and so prays to that
+ God which he imagines to be there and everywhere, but from any
+ testimony within, he knows not how nor where: this man worships his
+ own imagination, which is the Devil. But he who is a true
+ worshipper must know who God is and how He is to be worshipped,
+ from the Power of Light shining within him, if ever he have true
+ peace."
+
+ "Hence," he continues, "a report is raised, and is frequent in the
+ mouth of the teachers, that I deny God. Therefore, first, I shall
+ give account of what I see and know Him to be; and let the
+ understanding in heart judge me."
+
+Winstanley then endeavours to formulate his theistic views and beliefs
+in a series of questions and answers, from which we feel compelled to
+quote the following:
+
+ "_Q._ What is God?
+
+ "_A._ I answer, He is the incomprehensible Spirit Reason;[63:1]
+ who as He willed the Creation should flow out of Him, so He
+ governs the whole Creation in righteousness, peace, and moderation.
+ And He is called the Father, because as the whole Creation comes
+ out of Him, so He is the life of the whole Creation, by whom every
+ creature doth subsist.
+
+ "_Q._ When can a man call the Father his God?
+
+ "_A._ When he feels and sees, by experience, that the Spirit which
+ made the flesh doth govern and rule king in his flesh. And so can
+ say, I rejoice to feel and see my flesh made subject to the Spirit
+ of Righteousness.
+
+ "_Q._ But may not a man call Him God till he have this experience?
+
+ "_A._ No: for if he do, he lies, and there is no truth in him. For
+ whatsoever rules as king in his flesh, that is his God....
+
+ "_Q._ But I hope that the Father is my Governor, and therefore may
+ I not call Him God?
+
+ "_A._ Hope without ground is the hope of the hypocrite. Thou canst
+ not call Him God till thou be able in pure experience to say thy
+ flesh is subject to Him. For if thy knowledge be no more but
+ imagination or thoughts, it is of the Devil, and not of the Father.
+ Or if thy knowledge be merely from what thou hast read or heard
+ from others, it is of the flesh, not of the spirit.
+
+ "_Q._ When then may I call him God, or the Mighty Governor, and not
+ deceive myself?
+
+ "_A._ When thou art by that Spirit made to see Him rule and govern,
+ not only in thee but in the whole creation.... Wait upon Him till
+ He teach thee. All that read do not understand; the Spirit only
+ sees truth, and lives in it."
+
+Winstanley subsequently explains his views at considerable length. True
+knowledge, he contends, comes from within, not from without. "The whole
+Scriptures," he maintains, "are but a report of spiritual mysteries held
+forth to the eye of the flesh in words." The Gospel he explains to be
+"the Father Himself, that is, the Word and glad tidings that speak peace
+inwardly to pure souls." The writings of the Apostles and the Prophets
+he regards as "the report or declaration of the Gospel, which are to
+cease when the Lord Himself, who is the everlasting Gospel, doth
+manifest Himself to rule in the flesh of sons and daughters." Concerning
+Baptism he says: "I have gone through the ordinance of dipping, which
+the letter of the Scripture doth warrant, yet I do not press anyone
+thereunto, but bid everyone to wait upon the Father, till He teach and
+persuade, and then their submitting will be sound. For I see now that it
+is not the material water, but the water of life; that is, the Spirit in
+which souls are to be dipped, and so drawn forth into the one Spirit;
+and all these outward customs and forms are to cease and pass
+away."[65:1] As regards prayer, he contends that no one should pray
+"until the Power within thee gives words to thy mouth to utter, then
+speak, and thou canst not but speak."[65:2]
+
+It is, however, in a subsequent pamphlet, _The New Law of
+Righteousness_, that Winstanley more fully expounds this characteristic
+Quaker doctrine, and summarises his deeply philosophic views concerning
+silence as the necessary precursor of all true prayer, as follows:
+
+ "All these declare the half-hour's silence that is to be in Heaven
+ (Rev. viii. 1). For all mouths are to be stopped by the power of
+ Reason's law shining within the heart. And this abundance of talk
+ that is amongst people by arguments, by disputes, by declaring
+ expositions upon others' word and writing, by long discourse,
+ called preaching, shall all cease (Jer. xxxi. 34).
+
+ "Some shall not be able to speak, they shall be struck silent with
+ shame by seeing themselves in a loss and in confusion. Neither
+ shall they care to speak till they know by experience within
+ themselves what to speak; but wait with a quiet silence upon the
+ Lord, till He break forth within their hearts, and give them words
+ and power to speak.... Men must leave off teaching one another,
+ and the eyes of all shall look upward to the Father, to be taught
+ of Him. And at this time silence shall be a man's rest and liberty;
+ it is the gathering time, the soul's receiving time: it is the
+ forerunner of pure language.... He that speaks from the original
+ light within can truly say, I know what I say, and I know whom I
+ worship."
+
+Somewhat later he continues:
+
+ "None shall need to turn over books and writings (for indeed all
+ these shall cease too) to get knowledge. But everyone shall be
+ taken off from seeking knowledge from without, and with an humble
+ quiet heart shall wait upon the Lord, till He manifest Himself: for
+ He is a great king, and worthy to be waited upon. His testimony
+ within fills the heart with joy and singing. He first gives
+ experiences; and then power to set forth these experiences. Hence
+ you shall speak to the rejoicing one of another, and to the praise
+ of Him who declares His power in you. But he that speaks his
+ thoughts, studies, and imagination, and stands up to be a teacher
+ of others, shall be judged for his unrighteousness, because he
+ seeks to honor flesh, and does not honor the Lord."
+
+He then somewhat mystically continues:
+
+ "Behold the Annointing, that is to reach all things, is coming to
+ create a new Heaven and a new Earth wherein Righteousness shall
+ dwell, and there shall not be a vessel of humane earth but it shall
+ be filled with Christ. If it were possible to have so many buckets
+ as to contain the whole ocean, every one could be filled with the
+ ocean, and being put all together it would make up the perfect
+ ocean which filled them all. Even so Christ, which is the spreading
+ power, is now beginning to fill every man and woman with Himself.
+ He will dwell and rule in everyone; and the Law of Reason and
+ Equity shall be Christ in them. Every single body is a star shining
+ forth of Him, or rather a body in and out of whom He shines; and He
+ is the ocean of power that fills all. And so the words are true,
+ the Creation, mankind, shall be the fulness of Him that fills all
+ in all. This is the Church, the great Congregation, that, when the
+ mystery is completed, shall be the mystical body of Christ, all set
+ at liberty from inward and outward straits and bondage. And this
+ is called the holy breathing that made all new by Himself and for
+ Himself."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We think we have now dealt sufficiently with Winstanley's exposition of
+the theistical doctrines subsequently adopted, and almost in their
+entirety, by the Society of Friends. In a later chapter (Chap. XVI.) we
+shall show how far he himself modified his earlier views. And in the
+succeeding chapter we shall briefly lay before our readers the practical
+and fundamental social changes Winstanley deemed demanded by the
+dictates of Reason, as forming the necessary first steps towards laying
+the foundations of "a new Earth and a new Heaven wherein Righteousness,
+or Justice, shall dwell."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[53:1] _Clarke Papers_, vol. i. p. 379.
+
+[54:1] British Museum, Press Mark, 4377, a. 2.
+
+[54:2] In 1655, Giles Calvert published "A _Declaration from the
+Children of Light_ (who are by the world scornfully called Quakers)."
+British Museum, Press Mark, E. 838.
+
+[55:1] The full truth of these words comes home to us when we bear in
+mind that the law (_De Comburendo Heretico_) sanctioning the burning of
+heretics was only repealed in the reign of Charles the Second (in 1677),
+the Bishops of the day opposing its repeal almost to a man.
+
+[56:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 2137.
+
+[58:1] "The early Friends were men of prayer, and diligent searchers of
+the Holy Scriptures. Unable to find true rest in the various opinions
+and systems which in that day divided the Christian world, they believed
+that they found the Truth in a more full reception of Christ, not only
+as the living and ever-present Head of the Church in its aggregate
+capacity, but also as the life and light, the spiritual ruler, teacher
+and friend of every individual member."--_Book of Discipline of the
+Society of Friends_. Quoted by J. S. Rowntree, _Society of Friends: its
+Faith and Practice_, p. 24. See also Barclay's _Apology for the true
+Christian Divinity_, p. 1: Second Proposition.
+
+[60:1] "It is the inward master (saith Augustine) that teacheth, it is
+Christ that teacheth, it is inspiration that teacheth: where this
+inspiration and unction is wanting, it is vain that words from without
+are beaten in." And thereafter: "For he that created us, and redeemed
+us, and called us by faith, and dwelleth in us by his Spirit, unless he
+speaketh unto you inwardly, it is needless for us to cry out."--From
+Barclay's _Apology_, p. 13.
+
+[61:1] "If instead of assuming the being of an awful deity, which men,
+though they cannot and dare not deny, are always unwilling, sometimes
+unable, to conceive, we were to show them a near, visible, inevitable,
+but all-beneficent deity, whose presence makes the earth itself a
+heaven, I think there would be fewer deaf children sitting in the
+market-place."--John Ruskin, _Modern Painters_.
+
+[62:1] British Museum, Press Mark, 4372, a.a. 17. Below the title
+appears the following words: "Professors of all forms, behold the
+Bridegroom is coming, your profession will be tried to purpose, your
+hypocricy shall be hid no longer. You shall feed no longer upon the Oil
+that was in other men's Lamps (the Scriptures), for now it is required
+that everyone have Oil in his own Lamp, even the pure testimony of truth
+within himself. For he that wants this, though he have the report of it
+in his book, he shall not enter with the Bridegroom into the chamber of
+peace."
+
+[63:1] "The incomprehensible Spirit Reason!" It is interesting to note
+here that the "Tau" of the great Chinese philosopher, Lau-tsze,--the
+word he uses to denote the Absolute, which, consequently, he wisely
+leaves vague and undefined, and which apparently has no English word
+exactly equivalent to it,--suggests to his translator three English
+words--"the Way, Reason, and the Word." The latter's one objection to
+the word Reason as an equivalent is that to him it "seems to be more
+like a quality or attribute of some conscious being than Tau is." See
+_The Speculations of the old Philosopher Lau-tsze_, by John Chalmers,
+M.A. Introduction.
+
+[65:1] See Barclay's _Apology_ (Concerning Baptism), p. 7.
+
+[65:2] "All true and acceptable worship to God is offered in the
+_inward_ and _immediate_ moving and drawing of his own Spirit, which is
+limited neither to places, times, nor persons. For though we be to
+worship him always, in that we are to fear before him; yet as to the
+outward signification thereof in prayers, praises, or preachings, we
+ought not to do it where and when we will, but where and when we are
+moved by the secret inspiration of his Spirit in our hearts, which God
+heareth and accepteth of, and is never wanting to move us thereunto when
+need is, of which he himself is the alone proper judge."--Barclay's
+_Apology_ (Concerning Worship), p. 6.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE NEW LAW OF RIGHTEOUSNESS
+
+ "The great Lawgiver in Commonwealth's Government is the Spirit of
+ Universal Righteousness dwelling in mankind, now rising up to teach
+ everyone to do to another as he would have another do to him.... If
+ any goes about to build up Commonwealth's Government upon Kingly
+ principles, they will both shame and loose themselves: for there is
+ a plain difference between the two Governments."--WINSTANLEY, _The
+ Law of Freedom_.
+
+
+On January 26th, 1648 (1649), four days prior to the execution of
+Charles the First, the very day the King's death-warrant lay at the
+Painted Chamber, Westminster, awaiting the signatures of some of the
+less resolute among his judges, Winstanley sat down to write the opening
+epistle of the pamphlet we have now to make known to our readers.[68:1]
+They were stirring and momentous times, of which, as it seems to us,
+this pamphlet is in every way worthy. It reveals a most momentous step
+in the development of Winstanley's mind; for in it we see him move from
+the misty regions of cosmological, metaphysical, and theistical
+speculations to the somewhat firmer ground of social thought. From the
+time of its publication, Winstanley leaves the former almost untouched,
+concentrates his mind almost exclusively on the latter, pleads
+eloquently for the recognition of natural law in the social, or
+political world, and steps boldly forward to a life of action, animated
+and inspired by the conclusions concerning the necessary foundations of
+a social state based upon righteousness that his previous reflections
+and meditations, or the Inward Light to which he unhesitatingly
+submitted himself, had revealed unto him.
+
+The only indication that Winstanley was in any way influenced by the
+exciting discussions which under the circumstances must have raged
+everywhere around him, is to be found in his condemnation of Capital
+Punishment, which may here find a fitting place. In accordance with his
+favourite method, he summarises his views in answer to a hypothetical
+question, as follows:
+
+ "But is not this the old rule, He that sheds man's blood by man
+ shall his blood be shed?
+
+ "I answer, It is true, but not as usually it is observed. If any
+ man can say, he can give life, then he hath the power to take away
+ life. But if the power of life and death be only in the hand of the
+ Lord, then surely he is a murderer of the Creation that taketh away
+ the life of his fellow-creature, man, by any law whatsoever.... For
+ if I kill you, I am a murderer; if a third come to kill me for
+ murdering you, he is a murderer of me; and so murder hath been
+ called Justice, when it is but the curse.... Therefore, O thou
+ proud flesh that dares hang or kill thy fellow-creatures that are
+ equal to thee in the Creation, know this, that none hath the power
+ of life and death but the Spirit, and that all punishments that are
+ to be inflicted amongst creatures called men are only such as to
+ make the offender to know his Maker, and to live in the community
+ of the Righteous Law of Love one with the other."
+
+The opening epistle is addressed--"To the Twelve Tribes of Israel that
+are circumcised in heart, and scattered through all the Nations of the
+Earth." In it he admonishes them to be patient, for "this New Law of
+Righteousness and Peace which is raising up is David your King, which
+you have been seeking a long time"; that "He is now coming to reign,
+and the isles and nations of the Earth shall all come in unto Him"; that
+"He will rest everywhere, for this blessing will fill all places." But
+he reminds them that "the swords and counsels of the flesh shall not be
+seen in this work; the arm of the Lord only shall bring these mighty
+things to pass in the day of His power." "Therefore," he continues, "all
+that I can say is this--Though the world, even the seed of the flesh,
+despise you, and call you by reproachful names at their pleasure, yet
+wait patiently upon your King; He is coming; He is rising; the Son is
+up, and His glory will fill the Earth."
+
+In the opening chapter of this pamphlet Winstanley still further
+elucidates his interpretation of the allegorical stories of the Creation
+and the Fall. How in the beginning man was created perfect, and "the
+whole Creation lived in man, and man lived in his Maker." And how man
+fell from this high estate by following the promptings of self-love,
+covetousness, or the desires of the flesh, to which he attributes all
+the misery and suffering men bring upon themselves, and which he
+personifies as the First Adam. "All that this Adam doth," he says, "is
+to advance himself to be the one power. He gets riches and government in
+his hands so that he may lift up himself and suppress the universal
+liberty, which is Christ."
+
+He then continues:
+
+ "And this is the beginning of particular interest, buying and
+ selling the Earth from one particular hand to another, saying 'This
+ is mine,' upholding this particular propriety by a law of
+ government of his own making, and thereby restraining other
+ fellow-creatures from seeking nourishment from their Mother Earth.
+ So that though a man was bred up in a Land, yet he must not work
+ for himself where he would, but for him who had bought part of the
+ Land, or had come to it by inheritance of his deceased parents, and
+ called it his own Land. So that he who had no Land was to work for
+ small wages for those who called the Land theirs. Thereby some are
+ lifted up in the chair of tyranny, and others trod under the
+ footstool of misery, as if the Earth were made for a few, and not
+ for all men."
+
+"As if the Earth were made for a few, and not for all men!" In these
+few pertinent and indignant words Winstanley strikes the keynote of all
+his subsequent writings, as that of those of many other later students
+of social problems, from John Locke,[71:1] who may be regarded as his
+immediate successor, to Thomas Spence, Patrick Edward Dove,[71:2] Thomas
+Paine,[71:3] and Henry George.
+
+He then further emphasises his contention, in words similar to those
+that are to-day resounding throughout the advanced political centres of
+the world, as follows:
+
+ "And let all men say what they will, so long as such are Rulers as
+ call the land theirs, upholding this particular propriety of Mine
+ and Thine, the common people shall never have their liberty, nor
+ the Land be ever freed from troubles, oppressions, and
+ complainings, by reason whereof the Creator of all things is
+ continually provoked. O thou proud, selfish, governing Adam, in
+ this Land called England! know that the cries of the poor, whom
+ thou layeth heavy oppressions upon, are heard."
+
+And in the closing passage of the chapter he formulates his social
+ideals in the following words:
+
+ "This is the unrighteous Adam, that dammed up the water springs of
+ universal liberty, and brought the Creation under the curse of
+ bondage, sorrow, and tears. But when the Earth becomes a Common
+ Treasury, as it was in the beginning, and the King of Righteousness
+ comes to rule in every one's hearts, then He kills the first
+ Adam--for Covetousness thereby is killed.
+
+ "A man shall have meat and drink and clothes by his labour in
+ freedom, and what can he desire more in Earth? Pride and Envy
+ likewise are killed thereby; for everyone shall look upon each
+ other as equal in the Creation, every man, indeed, being a perfect
+ Creation of himself. And so this second Adam, Christ the Restorer,
+ stops or dams up the running of those stinking waters of
+ self-interest, and causes the waters of life and liberty to run
+ plentifully in and through the Creation, making the Earth one Store
+ House, and every man and woman to live in the Law of Righteousness
+ and Peace, members of one household."
+
+In a subsequent chapter (chap. vi.) he returns to this subject, and
+emphasises the differences of the views of the ethical-minded man and
+the ordinary conventional materialist, in the following suggestive
+passage:
+
+ "The man of the flesh judges it a righteous thing that some men who
+ are cloathed with the objects of the Earth, and so called rich men,
+ whether it be got by right or wrong, should be Magistrates to rule
+ over the poor; and that the poor should be servants, nay, rather
+ slaves, to the rich. But the spiritual man, which is Christ, doth
+ judge according to the light of equity and reason, that all mankind
+ ought to have a quiet subsistence and freedom to live upon Earth;
+ and that there should be no bondman nor beggar in all his holy
+ mountain."
+
+For, he contends:
+
+ "Mankind was made to live in the freedom of the spirit, not under
+ the bondage of the flesh. For everyone was made to be a Lord over
+ the creation of the Earth, cattle, fish, fowl, grass, trees, not
+ anyone to be a bond-slave and a beggar under the Creation of his
+ own kind. That so everyone, living in freedom and love in the
+ strength of the Law of Righteousness in him, not under straits of
+ poverty, nor bondage of tyranny one to another, might all rejoice
+ together in righteousness, and so glorify their Maker. For surely
+ this must dishonor the Maker of all men, that some men should be
+ oppressing tyrants, imprisoning, whipping, hanging their
+ fellow-creatures, men, for those very things which those very men
+ themselves are guilty of. Let men's eyes be opened, and it appears
+ clear enough, that the punishers have and do break the Law of
+ Equity and Reason more or as much as those who are punished by
+ them."
+
+But, he adds rejoicingly, just
+
+ "As the powers and wisdom of the flesh hath filled the Earth with
+ injustice, oppression, and complainings, by mowing the Earth into
+ the hands of a few covetous unrighteous men, who assume a lordship
+ over others, declaring themselves thereby to be men of the basest
+ spirits. Even so, when the spreading of wisdom and truth fill the
+ Earth, mankind, he will take off that bondage, and give a universal
+ liberty, and there shall be no more complainings against
+ oppression, poverty, or injustice."
+
+Winstanley, however, warns his readers that "this is not to be done by
+the hands of a few, or by unrighteous men that would pull down the
+tyrannical government out of other men's hands and keep it in their own
+heart, as we feel this to be a burden of our age. But it is to be done
+by the universal spreading of the Divine Power, which is Christ in
+mankind, making them all to act in one spirit, and in and after one law
+of reason and equity."
+
+In the next chapter (chap. viii.) Winstanley describes his peculiar
+state of mind at the time he first arrived at his fundamental
+conclusions, which he evidently regarded as directly revealed to him, in
+the following mystic words:
+
+ "As I was in a trance not long since, divers matters were present
+ to my sight, which here must not be related. Likewise I heard these
+ words--_Work together: Eat bread together: Declare this all
+ abroad_. Likewise I heard these words--_Whosoever it is that labors
+ in the earth--for any person or persons that lift up themselves as
+ Lords and Rulers over others, and that doth not look upon
+ themselves as equal to others in the Creation, the hand of the Lord
+ shall be upon that laborer. I the Lord have spoke it and I will do
+ it. Declare this all abroad._"
+
+He then continues:
+
+ "After I was raised up I was made to remember very fresh what I had
+ seen and heard, and did declare all things to them that were with
+ me, and I was filled with abundance of quiet peace and secret joy.
+ And since that time those words have been like very fruitful seed,
+ that have brought forth increase in my heart, which I am much
+ pressed in spirit to declare all abroad."
+
+He further explains the meaning of this revelation in the following
+words:
+
+ "The poor men by their labors in this time of the first Adam's
+ government, have made the buyers and sellers of land, or rich men,
+ to become tyrants and oppressors over them. But in the time of
+ Israel's restoration, now beginning, when the King of Righteousness
+ himself shall be Governor in every man, none then shall work for
+ hire, neither shall any give hire, but everyone shall work in love,
+ one with and for another, and eat bread together, as being members
+ of one household, the Creation, in whom Reason rules king in
+ perfect glory."
+
+Under these circumstances, he contends:
+
+ "No man shall have any more land than he can labor himself,[74:1]
+ or have others to labor with him in love, working together, and
+ eating bread together, as one of the tribes or families of Israel,
+ neither giving hire nor taking hire."
+
+After having given forcible expression to his profound contempt for all
+mere lip-professions of brotherhood, sympathy, and love, with which
+those whose actions are least in accord with the dictates of
+righteousness, equity, and reason are so often the most profuse, and
+reminding these that--"The talking of love is no love; it is the acting
+of love in righteousness which the Spirit Reason, our Father, delights
+in"; he addressed the following stirring warning to his fellow-workers:
+
+ "Therefore you dust of the earth that are trod under foot, you poor
+ people that make both scholars and rich men your oppressors by your
+ labors, take notice of your privilege, the Law of Righteousness is
+ now declared. If you labor the earth and work for others that live
+ at ease and follow the ways of the flesh, eating the bread which
+ you get by the sweat of your brow, not of their own, know this,
+ that the hand of the Lord shall break out upon every such hireling
+ laborer, and you shall perish with that covetous rich man that hath
+ held and yet doth hold the Creation under the bondage of the
+ curse."
+
+Winstanley then declares his intentions as to the future, which, as we
+shall see, he faithfully carried out, as follows:
+
+ "I have now obeyed the command of the Spirit that bid me declare
+ all this abroad. I have declared it and I will declare it by word
+ of mouth, I have now declared it with my pen. And when the Lord
+ doth show unto me the place and manner, how He will have us that
+ are called common people manure and work upon the common lands, I
+ will then go forth and declare it by my action, to eat my bread by
+ the sweat of my brow, without either giving or taking hire, looking
+ upon the land as freely mine as another's. I have now peace in the
+ Spirit, and I have an inward persuasion that the spirit of the poor
+ shall be drawn forth ere long to act materially this Law of
+ Righteousness."
+
+Winstanley then proceeds to formulate the practical proposals, whereby
+he deemed the disinherited many might reclaim their inheritance, and
+that without infringing on the established rights or the property of the
+rich: proposals, be it remembered, which, if acted on, would have
+altered the whole future economic history of Great Britain. Before
+judging of their efficacy, we should bear in mind that at the time he
+was writing, before the era of Enclosure Acts, over a third of England
+was still common land. However, whatever opinion may be held on this
+point, there can be no denying the lucidity and incisiveness of his
+words: he says:
+
+ "But be it so that some will say, This is my land, and call such
+ and such a parcel of land his own interest.... Therefore, if the
+ rich still hold fast to this propriety of Mine and Thine, let them
+ labor their own lands with their own hands. And let the common
+ people, that say the earth is _ours_, not _mine_, let them labor
+ together, and eat bread together upon the commons, mountains, and
+ hills."
+
+Such, then, was the proposal by which Winstanley deemed the relative
+merits of Individualism and Communism, as a system of social union,
+might best be tested, and which he immediately proceeded to defend in
+the following words:
+
+ "For as the enclosures are called such a man's land, and such a
+ man's land, so the Commons and Heath are called the common
+ people's. And let the world see who labor the Earth in
+ righteousness, and those to whom the Lord gives the blessing, let
+ them be the people that shall inherit the Earth. Whether they that
+ hold a civil propriety, saying, This is mine, which is selfish,
+ devilish, and destructive to the Creation; or those that hold a
+ common right, saying, The Earth is ours, which lifts up the
+ Creation from bondage."
+
+Further, he contends that if his proposals were acted on--
+
+ "None can say their right is taken from them. For let the rich work
+ alone by themselves; and let the poor work together by themselves.
+ The rich in their enclosures, saying, _This is mine_; and the poor
+ upon the Commons, saying, _This is ours, the Earth and its fruits
+ are common_. And who can be offended at the poor for doing this?
+ None but covetous, proud, idle, pampered flesh, that would have the
+ poor work still for this devil (particular interest) to maintain
+ his greatness that he may live at ease."
+
+And after expressing his intense conviction that "Surely the Lord hath
+not revealed this in vain," he summarises the whole train of reasoning
+that had led him to his final conclusion, as follows:
+
+ "Was the Earth made for to preserve a few covetous, proud men to
+ live at ease, and for them to bag and barn up the treasures of the
+ Earth from others, that these may beg or starve in a fruitful land;
+ or was it made to preserve all her children? Let Reason and the
+ Prophets' and Apostles' writings be judge, the Earth is the Lord's,
+ it is not to be confined to particular interests.... Did the light
+ of Reason make the Earth for some men to engross up into bags and
+ barns, that others might be oppressed with poverty? Surely Reason
+ did not make that law. For the Earth is the Lord's; that is, the
+ spreading Power of Righteousness, not the inheritance of covetous,
+ proud flesh that dies. If any man can say that he makes corn or
+ cattle, he may say, _That is mine_. But if the Lord made these for
+ the use of his Creation, surely then the Earth was made by the Lord
+ to be a Common Treasury for all, not a particular treasury for
+ some."
+
+Winstanley then summarises the results of the prevailing system in the
+following terse but telling passage:
+
+ "Divide England into three parts, scarce one part is manured. So
+ that here is land enough to maintain all her children, yet many die
+ of want, or live under a heavy burden of poverty all their days.
+ And this misery the poor people have brought upon themselves by
+ lifting up particular interest by their labors."
+
+This long but most interesting chapter concludes with indicating the
+three steps Winstanley deemed essential for both individual and social
+salvation, with which our notice of this pamphlet may fittingly close:
+
+ "There are yet three doors of hope for England to escape destroying
+ plagues.
+
+ "First, Let everyone leave off running after others for knowledge
+ and comfort, and wait upon the Spirit, Reason, till he break forth
+ out of the clouds of your heart and manifest himself within you.
+ This is to cast off the shadow of learning, to reject covetous,
+ subtile, proud flesh that deceives all by the hearsay and
+ traditional preaching of words, letters, and syllables without the
+ Spirit, and to make choice of the Lord, the true teacher of
+ everyone in their own inward experience.
+
+ "Secondly, Let everyone open his bags and barns, that all may feed
+ upon the crops of the Earth, that the burden of poverty may be
+ removed. Leave off this buying and selling of land, or of the
+ fruits of the Earth, and, as it was in the light of Reason first
+ made, so let it be in action amongst all, a Common Treasury, none
+ enclosing or hedging in any part of the Earth, saying, _This is
+ mine_, which is rebellion and high treason against the King of
+ Righteousness. And let this word of the Lord be acted amongst all:
+ _Work together; Eat bread together._{5}
+
+ "Thirdly, Leave off dominion and lordship one over another; for the
+ whole bulk of mankind are but one living Earth. Leave off
+ imprisoning, whipping, and killing, which are but the actings of
+ the curse. Let those that have hitherto had no land, and have been
+ forced to rob and steal through poverty; henceforth let them
+ quietly enjoy land to work upon, that everyone may enjoy the
+ benefit of his Creation, and eat his own bread with the sweat of
+ his own brows. For surely this particular propriety of mine and
+ thine hath brought in all misery upon people. First, it hath
+ occasioned people to steal one from another. Secondly, it hath made
+ laws to hang those that did steal. It tempts people to do an evil
+ action, and then kills them for doing of it. Let all judge whether
+ this be not a great evil.
+
+ "Well, if everyone would speedily set about the doing of these
+ three particulars I have mentioned, the Creation would thereby be
+ lift up out of bondage, and our Maker should have the glory of the
+ works of His hands."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Before Winstanley found opportunity to declare in action the truths that
+had been revealed unto him, he found time to write yet another pamphlet,
+entitled _Fire in the Bush_.[78:1] In it he still further elucidates his
+interpretation of the story of the Creation, and his conception of the
+Tree of Knowledge and the Tree of Life, and reaffirms his basic
+contention that "All the strivings that are in mankind are for the
+Earth: Who shall have it? Whether some particular persons shall have it,
+and the rest have none; or whether the Earth shall be made a Common
+Treasury to all, without respect of persons?" As it traverses much the
+same ground as the pamphlet from which we have just quoted at such
+length, it really calls for no further notice from us. The following
+verse on its title-page, however, seems to us worth quoting:
+
+ "The Righteous Law a government will give to whole mankind
+ How he should govern all the Earth, and therein true peace find;
+ This government is Reason pure, who will fill man with Love,
+ And wording justice, without deeds, is judged by this Dove."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[68:1] The full title reads--"_The New Law of Righteousness_: Budding
+forth to restore the whole Creation from the Bondage or the Curse. Or a
+glympse of the new Heaven and the new Earth, wherein dwells
+Righteousness. Giving an Alarm to silence all that preach or speak from
+hearsay or imagination." This pamphlet is very scarce. There is no copy
+in the British Museum or in any other of the London Public Libraries,
+nor in the Bodleian. The Jesus College Library, Oxford, however, is
+fortunate enough to possess a copy, which, to judge from its marginal
+notes, was once in the possession of one of Winstanley's followers or
+admirers, and which was courteously placed at our disposal by the
+librarian, Mr. Hazell, to whom we here desire to convey our grateful
+acknowledgement.
+
+[71:1] See his chapter "Of Property" in his classical work on _Civil
+Government_, a chapter which, as the conservative Hallam observes,
+"would be sufficient, if all Locke's other writings had perished, to
+leave him a high name in philosophy."
+
+[71:2] For a short account of the writings of Thomas Spence and Patrick
+Edward Dove, see J. Morrison Davidson's _Four Precursors of Henry
+George_. (Publisher, F. Henderson, London.)
+
+[71:3] See his _Agrarian Justice_.
+
+[74:1] "As much land as a man tills, plants, improves, cultivates, and
+can use the product of, so much is his property."--JOHN LOCKE, _Civil
+Government_. (Of Property.)
+
+[78:1] "_Fire in the Bush_: The Spirit burning, not consuming, but
+purging mankind." Published by Giles Calvert. This pamphlet, too, is
+very scarce. There is no copy in the British Museum, but a copy is to be
+found in the Bodleian Library.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+LIGHT SHINING IN BUCKINGHAMSHIRE
+
+ "O England, England! wouldst thou have thy government sound and
+ healthful? Then cast about and see and search diligently to find
+ out all those burthens that came in by Kings, and remove them; and
+ then will thy Commonwealth's Government arise from under the clods
+ under which as yet it is buried and covered with
+ deformity."--WINSTANLEY, _The Law of Freedom_.
+
+
+The place in the country to which our hero had retired was, we believe,
+the little town of Colnbrook, in the extreme southern end of the county
+of Buckinghamshire, on the borders of Middlesex, and within seven miles
+of St. George's Hill in Surrey. On December 5th, 1648, about a month
+prior to the date attached to the opening epistle of _The New Law of
+Righteousness_, there issued from the press a short pamphlet,[79:1]
+which, seeing that a second edition was printed the following March,
+appears to have had a considerable sale, and the title-page of which ran
+as follows:
+
+ "LIGHT SHINING IN BUCKINGHAMSHIRE:
+
+ OR
+
+ A Discovery of the Main Ground, Original Cause of all the Slavery
+ in the World, but chiefly in England. Presented by way of a
+ Declaration of many of the Well-Affected in that County, to all
+ their poor oppressed Countrymen of England. And also to the
+ consideration of the present Army under the conduct of the Lord
+ Fairfax.
+
+ Arise, O God, judge thou the Earth.
+
+ Printed in the year 1648."
+
+It opens as follows:
+
+ "Jehovah Ellohim created man after his own likeness and image,
+ which image is his son Jesus (Heb. 1. v. 3), who is the image of
+ the invisible God. Now man being made after God's image or
+ likeness, and created by the word of God, which word was made flesh
+ and dwelt amongst us, which word was life, and that life the light
+ of man (John 1. v. 1-4). This light I take to be that pure Spirit
+ in man we call Reason, which we call Conscience. From all which
+ there issued out that Golden Rule or Law, which we call Equity: the
+ sum of which is, saith Jesus, _Whatsoever ye would that men should
+ do to you, do to them: this is the Law and the Prophets._ James
+ calls it the Royal Law; and to live from this principle is called a
+ good conscience."
+
+It then points out the cause why men are disinclined to follow this
+sound principle of harmonious social union, and the consequences
+thereof, as manifested in the prevailing conditions, in the following
+words:
+
+ "But man following his own sensuality became a devourer of the
+ creatures and an encloser, not content that another should enjoy
+ the same privilege as himself, but encloseth all from his brother;
+ so that all the land, trees, beasts, fish, fowl, etc., are enclosed
+ into a few mercenary hands, and all the rest deprived and made
+ their slaves. So if they cut a tree for fire, they are to be
+ punished, or hunt a fowl, it is imprisonment, because it is
+ gentlemen's game, as they say. Neither must they keep cattle, or
+ set up a house, all ground being enclosed, without hiring leave for
+ the one or buying room for the other of the chief encloser, called
+ the Lord of the Manor, or some other wretch as cruel as he.... Now
+ all this slavery of the one and tyranny of the other was at first
+ by murder and cruelty one against the other. And that they might
+ strengthen themselves in their villany against God's Ordinances and
+ their Brother's Freedom and Rights, they had always a
+ Commander-in-Chief, and he became their King."
+
+After emphasising at some length that all special privileges of the few
+and disabilities of the many came in and are maintained by kings, it
+continues:
+
+ "So that observe the king is made by you your god on Earth, as God
+ is the God of Heaven, saith the Lawyers.... Now, Friends, what have
+ we to do with any of these unfruitful works of darkness? Let us
+ take Peter's advice (1 Pet. iv. 3)--_The time past of our lives may
+ suffice that we have wrought the will of the Gentiles, when we
+ walked in lascivious lusts, excess of wine, revellings,
+ banquetting, and abominable idolatry._ And let us not receive the
+ Beast's mark lest that the doom in Revelation (xiv. 9-10) befall
+ us: but let us oppose the Beast's power, and follow the Lamb
+ withersoever he goeth."
+
+The pamphlet then dwells on the chief causes impelling "wicked men," the
+privileged classes and their parasites, to stand up for a king:
+
+ "Rich men cry for a king, so that the Poor should not claim his
+ right, which is his by God's gift.
+
+ "The horseleech Lawyer cries for a king, because else the supreme
+ power will come into the People's representatives lawfully
+ elected....
+
+ "The things, Lords, Barons, etc., cry for a king, else their
+ tyrannical House of Peers falls down, and all their rotten honour,
+ and all Patents and Corporations: their power being derived from
+ him; if he go down, all their tyranny falls too."
+
+But now, it continues:
+
+ "The honest man that would have liberty cries down all interests
+ [or special privileges, as they would be termed to-day] whatsoever;
+ and to this end he desires Common Rights and Equity: which consist
+ of these particulars following:
+
+ "1. A just portion for each man to live, that so none need to beg
+ or steal for want, but everyone may live comfortably.
+
+ "2. A just Rule for each man to go by, which Rule is to be found in
+ Scripture.
+
+ "3. All men alike under the said Rule, which Rule is, to do to one
+ another as another should do to him....
+
+ "4. The government to be by Judges, called Elders, men fearing God
+ and hating Covetousness, to be chosen by the people, and to end all
+ controversies in every town or hamlet, without any other or further
+ trouble or charge."
+
+These, then, were the four points of the People's Charter of 1648; the
+four fundamental reforms which Winstanley, if Winstanley be the author
+of this pamphlet, as we believe, deemed necessary to secure the peace
+and well-being of the masses of the people. The pamphlet then indicates
+where the people are to look for their model, in the following words:
+
+ "And in the Scriptures the Israelite's Common-wealth is an
+ excellent pattern.... Now in Israel if a man were poor, then a
+ public maintenance and stock were to be provided to raise him
+ again. So would all Bishops Lands, Forest Lands, and Crown Lands do
+ in your Land, which the apostate Parliament men give one to
+ another, and to maintain the needless thing called a king. And
+ every seven years the whole Land was for the poor, the fatherless,
+ widows, and strangers, and at every crop a portion allowed them.
+
+ "Mark this, poor people, what the Levellers would do for you. Oh
+ why are you so mad as to cry up a king? It is he and his Court and
+ Patentee-men, as Majors Aldermen, and such creatures, that like
+ cormorants devour what you should enjoy, and set up Whipping-posts
+ and Correcting-houses to enslave you. 'Tis rich men that oppress
+ you, saith James.
+
+ "Now in this right Common-wealth he that had least had no want.
+ Therefore the Scriptures call them a Family or Household of Israel.
+ And amongst those who received the Gospel, they were gathered into
+ a Family, and had all things common (Acts 2. 44); yet so that each
+ one was to labor and get his own bread. And this is Equity as
+ aforesaid. For it is not lawful nor fit for some to work and the
+ others to play; for it's God's command that all work, let all eat.
+ And if all work alike, is it not fit for all to eat alike, have
+ alike, and enjoy alike privileges and freedoms? And he that doth
+ not like this, is not fit to live in a Common-wealth. Therefore
+ weep and howl, ye rich men, by what vain name or title soever, God
+ will visit you for all your oppressions. You live upon other men's
+ labors, giving them bran to eat, extorting extreme rents and taxes
+ from your fellow-creatures. But now what will you do? for the
+ people will no longer be enslaved by you, for the knowledge of the
+ Lord shall enlighten them."
+
+The pamphlet then details the doings of William the Conqueror, contends
+that the Nobility and Gentry owe all their special privileges to his
+innovations, that "their rise was the Country's ruin, and the putting
+them down will be the restitution of our rights again." The very
+existence of Parliaments is attributed to the uprisings of their
+forefathers; and after emphasising the manner in which all power was
+still secured to the King and the House of Peers, it concludes with the
+following exhortation: "So when all Israel saw that the King hearkened
+not unto them, the people answered the King, saying, What portion have
+we in David; neither have we inheritance in the Son of Jesse. To your
+tents, O Israel."
+
+Within a few days of the publication of the second edition of the above
+pamphlet, its author was ready with the second part, which appeared on
+March 30th (1649), and was entitled:
+
+ "MORE LIGHT SHINING IN BUCKINGHAMSHIRE:[83:1]
+
+ Being a Declaration of the State and Condition that all Men are in
+ by Right. Likewise the Slavery all the World are in by their
+ own kind, and this Nation in particular, and by whom. Likewise
+ the Remedies, as Take away the Cause and the Effect will cease.
+
+ Being a Representation unto all the People of England, and to the
+ soldiery under the Lord General Fairfax.
+
+ THE SECOND PART.
+
+ 'Whatsoever doth manifest, is Light.'--EPH. v. 13."
+
+As this pamphlet covers much the same ground as the former, our notice
+of it will be but brief. After emphasising the importance of the
+observance of the Golden Rule, it declares that "All men by God's
+donation are alike free by birth, and have alike privileges by virtue of
+His grant." "So that for any to enclose the creation wholly from his
+kind, to his own use, to the impoverishment of his fellow-creatures,
+whereby they are made his slaves, is altogether unlawful. And it is the
+cause of all oppressions, whereby many thousands are deprived of their
+rights which God hath invested them withal, whereby they are forced to
+beg or steal for want." It then details the various means taken to this
+end, and declares them, as well as the kingly power which its author
+holds, to be their source and origin, to be opposed to the direct
+command of God as expressed in the Holy Scriptures. Hence it denounces
+the oppressing privileged classes as "rebels against God's commands,"
+and as "traitors against God's Annointed, Jesus Christ, who alone is
+Lord and King over men, and all men are equal." The writer contends that
+with the fall of the King, all the special privileges, grants, patents,
+monopolies, etc., created by him, should have fallen also. But since "it
+is apparent that the Grandees of the Parliament intend still to uphold
+them, and to take a large share thereof unto themselves," he finds
+himself forced to appeal "to all our dear Brethren in England and to the
+Soldiers in the Army to stand everyone in his place to oppose all
+Tyranny whatsoever and by whomsoever intended against us."
+
+At the foot of this pamphlet we find the following notice: "Reader, You
+may expect in the Third Part to have an Anatomising of all Powers that
+now are, etc. And in the Fourth Part, the Grounds and Rules that all men
+are to go by. Farewell." Whether these notices refer to some of
+Winstanley's pamphlets, the second seems to point to _The New Law of
+Righteousness_, or not, we have no means of knowing. Nor, indeed,
+whether the above pamphlets were from his pen, though we strongly
+believe them to have been so. In any case they seem to us to have
+sufficient bearing on the Digger Movement to justify our noticing them
+here.
+
+Some six weeks later, on May 10th, yet another pamphlet appeared from
+the same part of the country, entitled:
+
+ "A DECLARATION OF THE WELL-AFFECTED IN THE COUNTY OF
+ BUCKINGHAMSHIRE:[84:1]
+
+ Being a Representation of the Middle Sort of Men within the three
+ Chilterne Hundreds of Disborough, Burnum and Stoke, and part of
+ Ailsbury Hundred, whereby they declare their Resolution and
+ Intentions, with a Removal of their Grievances."
+
+This is a very short pamphlet, of some seven pages, in which these
+"Middle Sort of Men" state that they had waited for eight years for
+redress of their grievances, but finding them still continue, and
+expecting little good from the Parliament and the Grandees of the Army,
+"finding the Grandees of the Army to be the men that hinder both the
+honest soldiery that stand for absolute freedom, and doth imprison and
+put them to death that are for Just Principles of Common Right and
+Equity, so that those honest men are by those proud Commanders
+persecuted by the name of Levellers...."[85:1]
+
+ "Therefore we declare our intentions that the World may take notice
+ of our principles, which are for Common Right and Freedom. And
+ therefore--
+
+ "1. We do protest against all Arbitrary Courts, Terms, Lawyers,
+ Impropriators, Lords of Manors, Patents, Privileges, Customs,
+ Tolls, Monopolisers, Incroachers, Enhancers, etc., or any other
+ interest-parties, whose powers are arbitrary, etc., as not to allow
+ or suffer ourselves to be inslaved by any of those parties, but
+ shall resist, as far as lawfully we can, all their Arbitrary
+ Proceedings.
+
+ "2. We protest against the whole Norman Power, as being too
+ intolerable a burden any longer to bear.
+
+ "3. We protest against paying Tythes, Tolls, Customs, etc.
+
+ "4 We protest against any coming to Westminster Terms, or to give
+ any money to the Lawyers, but will endeavour to have all our
+ Controversies ended by 2, 3 or 12 men of our own neighborhood, as
+ before the Norman Conquest.
+
+ "5. We protest against any trial by a Martial Court as arbitrary,
+ tyrannical and wicked, and not for a Free People to suffer in times
+ of peace.
+
+ "6. We shall help to aid and assist the Poor to the regaining all
+ their Rights, dues, etc., that do belong unto them, and are
+ detained from them by any Tyrant whatsoever.
+
+ "7. And likewise will further and help the said Poor to manure,
+ dig, etc., the said Commons, and to sell those woods growing
+ thereon to help them to a stock, etc.
+
+ "8. All well affected persons that joyn in Community in God's way,
+ as those Acts 2. v. 44, and desire to manure, dig and plant in the
+ waste grounds and commons, shall not be troubled or molested by any
+ of us, but rather furthered therein.
+
+ "We desire to go by the Golden Rule of Equity, viz., To do to all
+ men as we would they should do to us, and no otherwise: and as we
+ would tyrannise over none, so we shall not suffer ourselves to be
+ slaves to any whosoever."
+
+That such views were not restricted to "the Levellers" may be inferred
+from the very similar demands made in "A Petition of the Officers
+engaged for Ireland," and presented to the House of Commons in July of
+the same year (see Whitelocke, p. 413), from which we take the
+following: "That proceedings in law may be in English, cheap, certain,
+etc., and all suits and differences first to be arbitrated by three
+neighbours, and if they cannot determine it, then to certify the Court."
+They also "humbly pray"--"That Tithes may be taken away, and Two
+Shillings in the Pound paid for all lands, out of which the Ministers to
+be maintained and the Poor." This, we should think, was the first
+petition to the House of Commons in favour of the Taxation of Land
+Values.
+
+In fact, religious and political speculation, as well as dissatisfaction
+and discontent, were rife amongst the active and thoughtful of the
+people, as well as in the Army. On the 17th of the previous month, some
+of the soldiers, who, according to Gardiner,[87:1] "had resolved not to
+leave England till the demands of the Levellers [the political
+Levellers] had been granted--300 in Hewson's regiment alone," had
+refused to go to Ireland, and had been promptly cashiered. On April 24th
+a dispute about pay in one of the troops of Whalley's regiment had
+resulted "in some thirty of the soldiers seizing the colours and
+refusing to leave their quarters." It was not till Cromwell and Fairfax
+appeared on the scene that they submitted. Fifteen of their number were
+carried to Whitehall, where, on the 26th, a Court-martial condemned six
+of them to death. "Cromwell, however, pleaded for mercy, and in the end
+all were pardoned with the exception of Robert Lockyer, who was believed
+to have been their leader." Lockyer, Gardiner continues, "though young
+in years, had fought gallantly through the whole of the war. He was a
+thoughtful, religious man, beloved by his comrades, who craved for the
+immediate establishment of liberty and democratic order. As such he had
+stood up for _The Agreement of the People_ on Corkbush Field," when
+another trooper of a similar character, named Arnold, had been shot to
+death, "and he now entertained against his commanding officers a
+prejudice arising from other sources than the mere dispute about pay,
+which influenced natures less noble than his own.... On the 27th,
+Lockyer, firmly believing himself to be a martyr to the cause of right
+and justice, was led up Ludgate Hill to the open space in front of St.
+Paul's, and there, after expostulating with the firing party for their
+obedience to their officers in a deed of murder, he was shot to death."
+
+Lockyer's funeral took place on the 29th, and was the occasion of a
+remarkable demonstration, of which we take the following account from
+the pages of Whitelocke's _Memorial of English Affairs_ (p. 399):
+
+ "Mr. Lockier a Trooper who was shot to death by Sentence of the
+ Court Martial was buried in this manner. About one thousand went
+ before the Corps, and five or six in a file, the Corps was then
+ brought with six Trumpets sounding a Soldier's Knell, then the
+ Trooper's Horse came clothed all over in mourning and led by a
+ Footman. The Corps was adorned with bundles of Rosemary, one half
+ stained with blood, and the Sword of the deceased with them. Some
+ thousands followed in Ranks and Files, all had Sea-green and black
+ Ribbon tied on their Hats and to their Breasts, and the Women
+ brought up the Rear. At the new Church Yard in Westminster some
+ thousands more of the better sort met them, who thought not fit to
+ march through the City. Many looked on this Funeral as an Affront
+ to the Parliament and Army; others called them Levellers, but they
+ took no notice of any of them."
+
+In view of such a manifestation of the state of public opinion, we
+cannot be surprised that Winstanley's eloquent and impressive appeals
+awoke a responsive echo in the minds of many who would have shrunk from
+following his example, or even from publicly avowing his creed.
+Moreover, the miserable condition of the masses of the agricultural
+population, of which we shall give some startling evidence later on,
+must have prepared a soil favourable to his self-imposed mission, to
+awaken them to a knowledge both of their rights and of their duties.
+Especially welcome must have been doctrines in accordance with their
+simple religious beliefs, as well as with their ancient and well-founded
+traditions of certain inalienable rights to the use of the land: rights
+that, as they well knew, had been filched from them under cover of laws
+they had no voice in making, which they did not understand, and which
+were enforced upon them by the power of the sword and gallows. We must
+remember, however, that though the landholders had succeeded in
+impoverishing, they had not yet succeeded in degrading the people; some
+remnant of the old English spirit was still left, and the Civil War had
+re-awakened the old English craving for freedom, liberty, and equity.
+The landholders, in their attempt to emancipate themselves from the
+control of the Crown, had kindled a fire amongst the people before which
+they quailed; small wonder, then, that about this time they began to
+wish, to intrigue and to struggle for the re-establishment of the
+Monarchy. From the time of Henry the Eighth the condition of the English
+labourers had steadily worsened; it was left to the landholders after
+the Restoration to complete their enslavement and degradation. When
+considering Winstanley's or any other similar doctrines, the student
+would do well to bear in mind Professor Thorold Rogers'
+conclusions,[89:1]--conclusions arrived at after a lifelong study of the
+question,--that--"I contend that from 1563 to 1824, a conspiracy,
+concocted by the law and carried out by parties interested in its
+success, was entered into, to cheat the English workmen of his wages, to
+tie him to the soil, to deprive him of hope, and to degrade him into
+irremediable poverty." Or, as he elsewhere expresses it[89:2]--"For more
+than two centuries and a half the English law, and those who
+administered the law, were engaged in grinding down the English workman
+to the lowest pittance, in stamping out every expression or act which
+indicated any organised discontent, and in multiplying penalties upon
+him when he thought of his natural rights."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[79:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark E 475 (11).
+
+[83:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 548 (33).
+
+[84:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 555.
+
+[85:1] About this time, or a little later, there appeared in London an
+interesting manifesto from some of the disbanded soldiers, the copy of
+which in the British Museum (Press Mark, 4152. b.b. 109) bears no date,
+but is addressed as follows: "To the Generals and Captains, Officers and
+Soldiers of this present Army. The Just and Equal Appeal, and the state
+of the Innocent Cause of us, who have been turned out of your Army for
+the exercise of our pure Consciences, who are now persecuted amongst our
+Brethren under the name of Quakers." Wherein they declare that "The
+first cause and ground of our engagement in the late wars against the
+Bishops and Prelates, and against Kings and Lords, and the whole body of
+oppressors: our first engagement, we say, against these was justly and
+truly upon that account of purchasing and obtaining Liberties in Civil
+Rights, and also in matters of Conscience in the exercise of the worship
+of God.... And we can safely say that the Liberty of Conscience and the
+True Freedom of the Nations from all their oppressions was the mark at
+which we aimed, and the harbour for which we hoped and the rest proposed
+in our minds as the absolute end of our long and weary travel."
+
+[87:1] _History of the Protectorate_, vol. i. pp. 50, 51.
+
+[89:1] _Six Centuries of Work and Wages_, p. 398.
+
+[89:2] _Socialism and Land._ Essay in a Quarterly Review, _Subjects of
+the Day_, part ii. p. 52.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE DIGGERS' MANIFESTOES
+
+ "Take notice, That England is not a Free People till the Poor that
+ have no land have a free allowance to dig and labor the Commons,
+ and so live as comfortably as the Land Lords that live in their
+ Inclosures. For the people have not laid out their monies and shed
+ their blood that their Land Lords, the Norman Power, should still
+ have its liberty and freedom to rule in tyranny, but that the
+ Oppressed might be set free, prison doors opened, and the Poor
+ People's heart comforted by an universal consent of making the
+ Earth a Common Treasury, that they may live together united by
+ brotherly love into one spirit, and having a comfortable livelihood
+ in the Community of one Earth their Mother."--WINSTANLEY, _The True
+ Levellers Standard Advanced_.
+
+
+By the publication of his earlier pamphlets, Winstanley seems to have
+attracted a small band of earnest disciples, eager by their actions to
+declare their adherence to the principles he had so fearlessly and
+eloquently proclaimed. However, before taking the steps they had decided
+on, they deemed it necessary openly and frankly to declare their
+intentions to the world, more especially to those whose individual or
+class interests would be likely to be affected thereby. Hence early in
+1649, probably in the last days of March or the beginning of April, they
+issued a pamphlet, signed by some 46 of them, which seems mainly from
+Winstanley's pen, entitled:
+
+ "A DECLARATION FROM THE POOR OPPRESSED PEOPLE OF ENGLAND:[90:1]
+
+ Directed to all that call themselves or are called Lords of Manors
+ through this Nation, that have begun to cut, or that through
+ fear of Covetousness do intend to cut down the woods and trees
+ that grow upon the Commons and Waste Land."
+
+The pamphlet opens with the following vigorous and pertinent words:
+
+ "We whose names are subscribed, do in the name of all the poor
+ oppressed people of England, declare unto you that call yourselves
+ Lords of Manors and Lords of the Land, that, in regard the King of
+ Righteousness, our Maker, hath enlightened our hearts so far as to
+ see that the Earth was not made purposely for you to be Lords of
+ it, and we to be your Slaves, Servants and Beggars, but it was made
+ to be a common livelihood to all.... And further, in regard the
+ King of Righteousness hath made us sensible of our burthens, and
+ the cries and groanings of our hearts are come before Him, we take
+ it as a testimony of love from Him, that our hearts begin to be
+ freed from slavish fear of men such as you are, and that we find
+ Resolutions in us, grounded upon the Inward Law of Love one towards
+ another, to dig and plough up the Commons and Waste Land through
+ England; and that our conversations shall be so unblamable that
+ your Laws shall not reach to oppress us any longer, unless you by
+ your Laws will shed the innocent blood that runs in our veins."
+
+Subsequently they protest against the Lords of Manors controlling the
+use and taking the profit of the Commons, hindering the people from
+supplying their wants as regards "Woods, Heath, Turf or Turfeys in
+places about the Commons," and continue defiantly:
+
+ "Therefore we are resolved to be cheated no longer, nor to be held
+ under the slavish fear of you no longer, seeing the Earth was made
+ for us as well as for you. And if the Common Land belong to us who
+ are the poor oppressed, surely the woods that grow upon the Commons
+ belong to us likewise. Therefore we are resolved to try the
+ uttermost in the light of Reason to know whether we shall be
+ Free-men or Slaves. If we lie still and let you steal away our
+ birthrights, we perish; and if we petition, we perish also, though
+ we have paid taxes, given free-quarter, and have ventured our lives
+ to preserve the Nation's freedom as much as you, and therefore, by
+ the Law of Contract with you, freedom in the land is our portion
+ as well as yours, equal with you. And if we strive for Freedom, and
+ your murdering, governing Laws destroy us, we can but perish."
+
+ "Therefore we require and we resolve to take both Common Land and
+ Common Woods to be a livelihood for us, and look upon you as equal
+ with us, not above us, knowing very well that England, the Land of
+ our Nativity, is to be a Common Treasury of Livelihood to all,
+ without respect of persons.
+
+ "So then, we declare unto you that do intend to cut our Common
+ Woods and Trees, that you shall not do it, unless it be for a stock
+ for us, and we to know of it by a public declaration abroad, that
+ the poor oppressed, who live thereabouts, may take it and employ it
+ for their public use: Therefore take notice, we have demanded it in
+ the name of the Commons of England, and of all the Nations of the
+ world, it being the righteous freedom of the Creation."
+
+They then warn all wood-buyers against purchasing from those who would
+dispose of such wood for their own private advantage, again emphasising
+their contention that they would take it only to provide a common stock
+for all. Then they appeal to the Great Council of England for protection
+and encouragement, urging that august body to fulfil the promises so
+freely made, at the outbreak of the Civil War, to induce them and others
+to espouse the Parliament's cause. Apparently they did not expect much
+from them, as their appeal commences in the following somewhat
+hesitating manner:
+
+ "And we hope we may not doubt (at least we expect) that they that
+ are called the Great Council and Powers of England, who so often
+ have declared themselves by promises and by covenants, and have
+ confirmed them by multitude of fasting days, and devout
+ protestations to make England a free people, upon condition they
+ would pay moneys and adventure their lives against the successor of
+ the Norman Conqueror, under whose oppressing power England was
+ enslaved. And we look upon that freedom promised to be the
+ inheritance of all, without respect of persons. And this cannot be
+ unless the Land of England be freely set at liberty from
+ proprietors and becomes a Common Treasury to all her children, as
+ every portion of the Land of Canaan was the common livelihood of
+ such and such a Tribe, and of every member of that Tribe, without
+ exception, neither hedging in any, nor hedging out.
+
+ "We say we hope we need not doubt of their sincerity to us herein,
+ and that they will not gainsay our determinate course. Howsoever,
+ their actions will prove to the view of all either their sincerity
+ or their hypocrisy. We know what we speak is our privilege and that
+ our cause is righteous; and if they doubt of it, let them but send
+ a child for us to come before them, and we will make it manifest
+ some ways."
+
+They then advance the grounds for their demands in the following
+incisive words:
+
+ "_First_, By the National Covenant, which yet stands in force to
+ bind Parliament and People to be faithful and sincere before the
+ Lord God Almighty, wherein every one in his several place hath
+ covenanted to preserve and seek the liberty each of other without
+ respect of persons.
+
+ "_Secondly_, By the late victory over King Charles we do claim this
+ our privilege to be quietly given us out of the hands of Tyrant
+ Government, as our bargain and contract with them. For the
+ Parliament promised if we would pay taxes, and give free-quarter,
+ and adventure our lives against Charles and his party, whom they
+ called the common enemy, they would make us a free people.[93:1]
+ These three being all done by us, as well as by themselves, we
+ claim this our bargain by the Law of Contract from them, to be a
+ free people with them, they being chosen by us, but for a peculiar
+ work, and for an appointed time, from among us, not to be our
+ oppressing Lords, but servants to succour us. But these two are our
+ weakest proofs. And yet by them, in the light of Reason and Equity
+ that dwells in men's hearts, we shall with ease cast down all those
+ former enslaving, Norman, reiterated Laws, in every King's reign
+ since the Conquest, which are as thorns in our eyes and pricks in
+ our sides, and which are called the Ancient Government of England.
+
+ "_Thirdly_, We shall prove we have a free right to the land of
+ England, being born therein, as well as elder brothers, and that it
+ is our right equal with them and they with us, to have a
+ comfortable livelihood in the Earth, without owning any of our own
+ kind to be either Lords or Land-Lords over us. And this we shall
+ prove by plain text of Scripture, without exposition upon them,
+ which the Scholars and Great Ones generally say is their rule to
+ walk by.
+
+ "_Fourthly_, We shall prove it by the Righteous Law of our
+ Creation, that mankind in all its branches is the Lord of the
+ Earth, and ought not to be in subjection to any of his own kind
+ without him, but to live in the light of the Law of Righteousness
+ and Peace established in his heart."
+
+The pamphlet concludes as follows:
+
+ "Thus in love we have declared the purpose of our hearts plainly,
+ without flattery, expecting love and the same sincerity from you,
+ without grumbling or quarrelling, being Creatures of your own image
+ and mould, intending no other matter herein, but to observe the Law
+ of Righteous Action, endeavouring to shut out of the Creation the
+ accursed thing called Particular Propriety, which is the cause of
+ all wars, bloodshed, theft, and enslaving Laws, that hold the
+ people under misery.
+
+ "Signed for and in the behalf of all the poor oppressed people of
+ England and the whole world--
+
+ "GERARD WINSTANLEY, }
+ JOHN COULTON, }
+ JOHN PALMER, }
+ THOMAS STAR, }
+ SAMUEL WEBB, } and others, forty-six in all.
+ JOHN HAYMAN, }
+ THOMAS EDCER, }
+ WILLIAM HOGRILL," }
+
+A few days after the publication of this declaration, viz., on Sunday,
+April 1st, 1649, the Diggers commenced their labours on the Commons
+around George's Hill, in Surrey, the first results of which we have
+already recorded. Within a few days of Winstanley and Everard's visit to
+Lord Fairfax and his Council of War, they and their followers drafted
+yet another pamphlet, which bears date April 26th, 1649, the very day
+Lockyer, "The Army's Martyr," was condemned to death, and the title-page
+of which reads as follows:
+
+ "THE TRUE LEVELLERS STANDARD ADVANCED:[95:1]
+
+ OR
+
+ THE STATE OF COMMUNITY OPENED AND PRESENTED TO THE SONS OF MEN.
+
+ BY
+
+ WILLIAM EVERARD.
+ JOHN PALMER.
+ JOHN SOUTH.
+ JOHN COURTON.
+ WILLIAM TAYLOR.
+ CHRISTOPHER CLIFFORD.
+ JOHN BARKER.
+ GERRARD WINSTANLEY.
+ RICHARD GOODGROOME.
+ THOMAS STARRE.
+ WILLIAM HOGGRILL.
+ ROBERT SAWYER.
+ THOMAS EDER.
+ HENRY BICKERSTAFFE.
+ JOHN TAYLOR, etc.
+
+ Beginning to plant and manure the Waste Land upon Georges Hill, in
+ the Parish of Walton, in the County of Surrey."
+
+The pamphlet opens with a Preface by a certain John Taylor, whose name
+appears last on the list of signatures attached thereto, and who was
+probably one of Winstanley's more recent converts. In it he states that
+he has had "some conversation with the author of this ensuing
+declaration, and the persons subscribing, and by experience find them
+sweetly acted and guided by the everlasting Spirit, the Prince of Peace,
+to walk in the paths of Righteousness." "Such as these," he declares,
+"shall be partakers of the promise--_Blessed are the meek, for they
+shall inherit the Earth._"
+
+The body of the pamphlet itself is headed:
+
+ "A DECLARATION TO THE POWERS OF ENGLAND, AND TO ALL THE POWERS OF
+ THE WORLD, shewing the cause why the Common People of England
+ have begun and give consent to dig up, manure, and sow corn
+ upon George Hill in Surrey, by those that have subscribed, and
+ thousands more that give consent."
+
+It commences as follows:
+
+ "In the beginning of time the great Creator, Reason, made the Earth
+ to be a Common Treasury to preserve beasts, birds, fishes and man,
+ the Lord who was to govern this Creation. For man had dominion
+ given him over the beasts, birds and fishes; but not one word was
+ spoken in the beginning that one branch of mankind should rule over
+ another.... But since human flesh began to delight himself in the
+ objects of the Creation more than in the Spirit of Reason and
+ Righteousness ... and selfish imagination ruling as King in the
+ room of Reason therein, and working with Covetousness, did set up
+ one man to teach and rule over another; and thereby the Spirit was
+ killed, and Man was brought into bondage and became a greater slave
+ to some of his own kind than the beasts of the field were to him.
+ Hereupon the Earth (which was made to be a Common Treasury of
+ Relief for all, both beasts and men) was hedged into enclosures by
+ the Teachers and Rulers, and the others were made Servants and
+ Slaves. And the Earth, which was made to be a Common Storehouse for
+ all, is bought and sold and kept within the hands of a few, whereby
+ the Great Creator is mightily dishonoured, as if He were a
+ respecter of persons, delighting in the comfortable livelihood of
+ some, and rejoicing in the miserable poverty and straits of
+ others."
+
+Winstanley then makes his appeal to those who had been entrusted with
+the government of the Nation, in the following touching and yet
+suggestive words:
+
+ "O thou Powers of England! though thou hast promised to make this
+ people a Free People, yet thou hast so handled the matter, through
+ thy self-seeking humour, that thou hast wrapped us up more in
+ bondage, and oppression lies heavy upon us.... If some of you will
+ not dare to shed your blood to maintain tyranny and oppression
+ upon the Creation, know this, That our blood and life shall not be
+ unwilling to be delivered up in meekness to maintain Universal
+ Liberty, that so the Curse, on our part, may be taken off the
+ Creation. We shall not do this by force of arms; we abhor it, for
+ it is the work of the Midianites to kill one another, but by
+ obeying the Lord of Hosts, by laboring the Earth in Righteousness
+ together, to earn our bread by the sweat of our brows, neither
+ giving hire nor taking hire, but working together and eating
+ together as one man, or as one house in Israel restored from
+ Bondage. And so by the power of Reason, the Law of Righteousness in
+ us, we endeavour to lift up the Creation from that bondage of Civil
+ Propriety which it groans under."
+
+He again explains the work they are entered upon, and their reasons for
+attempting it, as follows:
+
+ "The work we are going about is this, To dig up Georges Hill and
+ the waste grounds thereabouts, and to sow corn, and to eat our
+ bread together by the sweat of our brows.
+
+ "And the First Reason is this, THAT WE MAY WORK IN RIGHTEOUSNESS,
+ AND LAY THE FOUNDATION OF MAKING THE EARTH A COMMON TREASURY FOR
+ ALL, BOTH RICH AND POOR, THAT EVERYONE THAT IS BORN IN THE LAND MAY
+ BE FED BY THE EARTH HIS MOTHER THAT BROUGHT HIM FORTH, ACCORDING TO
+ THE REASON THAT RULES IN THE CREATION."
+
+Then follows this impressive declaration of the motives inspiring their
+actions:
+
+ "For it is showed us, That so long as we, or any other, do own the
+ Earth to be the peculiar Interest of Lords and Land Lords, and not
+ common to others as well as to them, we own the Curse, and hold the
+ Creation under Bondage. And so long as we or any other do own Land
+ Lords and Tenants, for one to call the land his, or another to hire
+ it of him, or for one to give hire and for another to work for
+ hire: This is to dishonour the work of Creation, as if the
+ righteous Creator should have respect to persons, and therefore
+ made the Earth for some and not for all. So long as we, or any
+ other, maintain this Civil Propriety, we consent still to hold the
+ Creation in that bondage it groans under; and so we should hinder
+ the Work of Restoration, and sin against the Light that is given
+ into us, and so, through fear of the flesh man, lose our peace."
+
+And the pamphlet concludes with the following somewhat mystic words:
+
+ "Thus you Powers of England, and of the whole World, we have
+ declared our Reasons why we have begun to dig upon George Hill in
+ Surrey. One thing I must tell you more, which I received in voice
+ likewise at another time; and when I received it my eye was set
+ towards you. The words were these--_Let Israel go free._
+
+ "Surely as Israel lay four hundred and thirty years under Pharaoh's
+ bondage, before Moses was sent to fetch them out, even so Israel
+ (the Elect Spirit spread in Sons and Daughters) hath lain three
+ times so long already.... But now the time of Deliverance hath
+ come.... For now the King of Righteousness is arising to rule in
+ and over the Earth.... Therefore once more, _Let Israel go free_,
+ that the Poor may labour the waste land, and suck the Breasts of
+ their Mother Earth, that they starve not. In so doing thou wilt
+ keep the Sabbath Day, which is a Day of Rest, sweetly enjoying the
+ Peace of the Spirit of Righteousness, and find Peace by living
+ among a people that live in Peace: This will be a Day of Rest which
+ thou never knew yet.
+
+ "But I do not entreat thee, for thou art not to be entreated. But
+ in the Name of the Lord, that hath drawn me forth to speak to thee,
+ I, yea I say, I command thee, _To let Israel go free, and quietly
+ to gather together into the place where I shall appoint; and hold
+ them, no longer in bondage_.... But if you will not, but
+ Pharaoh-like cry, _Who is the Lord that we should obey him?_ and
+ endeavour to oppose, then know, that He that delivered Israel from
+ Pharaoh of old is the same Power still, in whom we trust, and whom
+ we serve. For this, Conquest over thee shall be got, _not by Sword
+ or Weapon, but by my Spirit, saith the Lord of Hosts._"
+
+Such, then, were the first "official pronouncements" of the body of men
+known in the History of England as the Diggers, whose proud privilege it
+was to be the first in our native land, as against the rights of
+property, boldly to proclaim the rights of man. Poor in worldly goods
+they may have been, but they were rich in hope and in love, in broad
+thoughts and elevating ideals, in a firm belief in the power and
+ultimate triumph of the Inward Light of Equity and Reason, and in
+unflinching resolution, not only to proclaim the steps necessary to
+social salvation, but to adventure their lives and persons to lay the
+foundations of a better, of a more equitable and beneficial, social
+state than ever they knew. Certain it is that they were inspired by the
+highest motives that impel men to action; hence even those who may deem
+their views erroneous should not withhold from the men themselves their
+meed of respect, admiration, and sympathy. To those who deem their views
+true, we need make no appeal. Monuments are erected in stone, in marble,
+or in gold, to those whose actions in peace or in war commend themselves
+to their own generation; the monuments to those in advance of their
+times and of our times, are to be found only in the hearts of thinkers.
+It was but yesterday, after some two hundred and fifty years, that
+public sentiment tolerated the erection of a public monument to the
+memory of the man who delivered his country from under the tyranny of
+Kings. Before another similar period has passed away, a similar tribute
+may be paid to the memory of those who, during the same tumultuous but
+inspiring times, would have saved all future generations of their
+countrymen from under the tyranny of Land-Lords.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[90:1] British Museum, Press Mark, 1027, i. 16 (3). We say "mainly from
+Winstanley's pen," for though the arguments are his, the style of the
+pamphlet, with its long, involved, never-ending sentences, so unlike
+Winstanley's crisp, epigrammatic, vigorous style, suggests to us that
+the writing was probably left to some other member of his company, or
+probably to a Committee appointed for the purpose.
+
+[93:1] This fairly represents the general spirit and feeling prevailing
+in the Model Army, who repeatedly contended, to quote the words of the
+Declaration of the Army of June 14th, 1647, that--"We are not a mere
+mercenary army hired to serve any arbitrary power of a State, but called
+forth and conjured by the several Declarations of Parliament to the
+defence of our own and the people's just Rights and Liberties; and so we
+took up arms in judgment and conscience to those ends, and have so
+continued in them, and are resolved according to your first just desires
+in your Declarations, and such principles as we have received from your
+frequent informations, and our own common sense concerning those our
+fundamental rights and liberties, to assert and vindicate the just power
+and rights of this Kingdom in Parliament for those common ends promised
+against all arbitrary power, violence and oppression, and against all
+particular parties or interests whatsoever."
+
+[95:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 552. In the
+British Museum Catalogue the Preface is attributed to John Taylor the
+Water Poet; but, to judge from his other writings, this is probably an
+error.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+A LETTER TO LORD FAIRFAX AND HIS COUNCIL OF WAR; AND AN APPEAL TO THE
+HOUSE OF COMMONS
+
+ "For you must either establish Commonwealth's Freedom in power,
+ making provision for everyone's peace, which is Righteousness, or
+ else you must set up Monarchy again. Monarchy is twofold, either
+ for one king to reign, or for many to rule by kingly principles.
+ For the king's power lies in his laws, not in his name. And if
+ either one king rule, or many rule by kingly principles, much
+ murmuring, grudges, troubles, and quarrels may and will arise among
+ the oppressed people upon every gained opportunity."--WINSTANLEY,
+ _The Law of Freedom_.
+
+
+Within a few days of Lord Fairfax's visit to the Diggers, already
+recorded, and about two months after the publication of _The True
+Levellers Standard Advanced_, Winstanley, on June 9th, 1649, again made
+his appearance at the headquarters of the Army, the bearer of a letter,
+which, as he tells us, he himself delivered to the Lord General, "who
+very mildly promised to read it and consider of it":
+
+ "A LETTER TO LORD FAIRFAX AND HIS COUNCIL OF WAR:[100:1]
+
+ With divers questions to the Lawyers and Ministers: Proving it an
+ undeniable equity that the Common People ought to dig, plow,
+ plant and dwell upon the Commons without hiring them or paying
+ Rent to any.
+
+ Delivered to the General and his Chief Officers, June 9th, 1649, by
+ Gerrard Winstanley in the behalf of those who have begun to dig
+ upon George Hill in Surrey."
+
+The letter opens as follows:
+
+ "Our digging and ploughing upon George Hill in Surrey is not
+ unknown to you, since you have seen some of our persons, and heard
+ us speak in defence thereof; and we did receive kindness and
+ moderation from you and your Council of War, both when some of us
+ were at Whitehall before you, and when you came in person to George
+ Hill to view our works. We endeavour to lay open the bottom and
+ intent of our business as much as can be, that none may be troubled
+ with doubtful imaginations about us, but may be satisfied in the
+ sincerity and universal righteousness of the work."
+
+It then continues:
+
+ "We understand that our digging upon that Common is the talk of the
+ whole Land, some approving, some disowning; some are friends filled
+ with love, and see that the work intends good to the Nation, the
+ peace whereof is that which we seek after; others are enemies
+ filled with fury, who falsely report of us that we have intent to
+ fortify ourselves, and afterwards to fight against others and take
+ away their goods from them, which is a thing we abhor. And many
+ other slanders we rejoice over, because we know ourselves clear,
+ our endeavour being no otherwise but to improve the Commons, and to
+ call off that oppression and outward bondage which the Creation
+ groans under, as much as in us lies, and to lift up and preserve
+ the purity thereof."
+
+Winstanley then declares that their opponents were but "one or two
+covetous freeholders that would have all the Commons to themselves, and
+that would uphold the Norman tyranny," and still further explains his
+position, as follows:
+
+ "We told you, upon a question you put to us, that we were not
+ against any that would have Magistrates and Laws to govern, as the
+ Nations of the World are governed, but that, for our own parts, we
+ shall need neither the one nor the other in that nature of
+ government. For as our land is common, so our cattle is to be
+ common, and our corn and fruits of the earth common, and are not to
+ be bought and sold among us, but to remain a standing portion of
+ livelihood to us and our children, without that cheating
+ entanglement of buying and selling; and we shall not arrest one
+ another. And then what need have we of imprisoning, whipping or
+ hanging laws to bring one another into bondage? And we know that
+ none of those that are subject to this righteous law dares arrest
+ or enslave his brother for or about the objects of the Earth,
+ because the Earth is made by our Creator to be a Common Treasury of
+ Livelihood to one equal with another, without respect of
+ persons.... What need have we of any outward, selfish, confused
+ laws, made to uphold the Power of Covetousness, when we have the
+ Righteous Law written in our hearts, teaching us to walk purely in
+ the Creation."
+
+Winstanley then complains of the action of some of the soldiers, but
+expresses the desire that they should not be punished, only cautioned
+not to offend again; and states the readiness of himself and companions
+to come to headquarters "upon a bare letter." He reiterates his
+contention that their demand is only to enjoy freedom "according to the
+law of contract between you and us"; freedom to till the common land,
+not to trespass upon any enclosures. He continues:
+
+ "We desire that your Lawyers may consider these questions, which we
+ affirm to be truths, and which give good assurance, by the law of
+ the land, that we that are the younger brothers, or common people,
+ have a true right to dig, plow up and dwell upon the Commons, as we
+ have declared."
+
+ QUESTIONS TO THE LAWYERS.
+
+ "1. Did not William the Conqueror dispossess the English, and thus
+ cause them to be servants to him?
+
+ "2. Was not King Charles the direct successor of William the First?
+
+ "3. Whether Lords of the Manor were not the successors of the chief
+ officers of William the First, holding their rights to the Commons
+ by the power of the sword?
+
+ "4. Whether Lords of the Manor have not lost their royalty to the
+ common land by the recent victories?
+
+ "5. Whether any laws since the coming in of kings have been made in
+ the light of the righteous law of our Creation, _respecting all
+ alike_, or have not been grounded upon selfish principles in fear
+ or flattery of their king, to uphold freedom in the gentry and
+ clergy, and to hold the common people under bondage still, and so
+ respecting persons?
+
+ "6. Whether all laws that are not grounded upon equity and reason,
+ not giving an universal freedom to all, but respecting persons,
+ ought not to be cut off with the king's head? We affirm they ought.
+ If all laws be grounded upon equity and reason, then the whole land
+ of England is to be a Common Treasury to everyone born in the Land.
+
+ "7. Whether everyone without exception, by the Law of Contract,
+ ought not to have liberty to enjoy the earth for his livelihood,
+ and to settle his dwelling in any part of the Commons of England,
+ without buying or renting land of any, seeing that everyone by
+ agreement and covenant among themselves have paid taxes, given
+ free-quarter, and adventured their lives to recover England out of
+ bondage? We affirm they ought.[103:1]
+
+ "8. Whether the laws that were made in the days of the king do give
+ freedom to any but the gentry and clergy?"
+
+Winstanley then puts a string of similar questions to Public Preachers,
+"that say they preach the Righteous Law," from which, however, we need
+only quote the following:
+
+ "QUESTIONS TO PUBLIC PREACHERS.
+
+ "First we demand, Yea or No, Whether the Earth, with her fruits,
+ was made to be bought and sold from one to another; And whether one
+ part of mankind was made to be a Lord of the Land, and another part
+ a servant, by the Law of Creation before the Fall?
+
+ "I affirm (and I challenge you to disprove) that the Earth was made
+ to be a Common Treasury of Livelihood for all, without respect of
+ persons, and was not made to be bought and sold.... And this being
+ a truth, as it is, then none ought to be Lords and Land Lords over
+ another, but the Earth is free to every son and daughter of mankind
+ to live upon."
+
+And the letter concludes with the following eloquent and heart-stirring
+words:
+
+ "Thus I have declared to you and to all the world what that Power
+ of Life is that is in me; and knowing that the Spirit of
+ Righteousness doth appear to many in this Land, I desire all of you
+ seriously, in love and humility, to consider of this business of
+ Public Community, which I am carried forth in the Power of Love and
+ clear light of Universal Righteousness to advance as much as I can;
+ and I can do no other, the Law of Love in my heart does so
+ constrain me; by reason whereof I am called fool and madman, and
+ have many slanderous reports cast upon me, and meet with much fury
+ from some covetous people; under all of which my spirit is made
+ patient and is guarded with joy and peace. I hate none, I love all,
+ I delight to see everyone live comfortably, I would have none live
+ in poverty, straits and sorrows; therefore if you find any
+ selfishness in this work, or discover anything that is destructive
+ of the whole Creation [Mankind], that you would open your hearts as
+ freely to me, in declaring my weakness to me, as I have been
+ open-hearted in declaring that which I find and feel much life and
+ strength in. But if you see Righteousness in it, and that it holds
+ forth the strength of Universal Love to all, without respect to
+ persons, so that our Creator is honored in the work of His hand,
+ then own it and justify it, and let the Power of Love have his
+ freedom and glory."
+
+In his interview with the Diggers, Lord Fairfax had expressed his
+intention to leave them to "the Gentlemen of the County and the Law of
+the Land." The former soon put the latter in motion, and on July 11th,
+1649, the day before Cromwell set out with much pomp and ceremony for
+his notorious expedition to Ireland, Winstanley, under circumstances
+that will presently be revealed, found himself compelled to address an
+eloquent appeal for protection to the House of Commons, long extracts
+from which we feel impelled to place before our readers. It appeared in
+pamphlet form with the following title-page:
+
+ "AN APPEAL TO THE HOUSE OF COMMONS:[105:1]
+
+ Desiring their answer whether the Common People shall have the
+ quiet enjoyment of the Commons and Waste Land; or whether they
+ shall be under the will of Lords of Manors still. Occasioned by
+ an Arrest made by Thomas Lord Wenman, Ralph Verney Knight, and
+ Richard Winwood Esq. upon the Author hereof, for a Trespass in
+ Digging upon the Common Land at Georges Hill in Surrey.
+
+ BY GERRARD WINSTANLEY, JOHN BARKER AND THOMAS STAR.
+
+ In the name of all the poor oppressed in the Land of England.
+
+ Unrighteous oppression kindles a flame, but love, righteousness and
+ tenderness of heart quenches it again."
+
+With more than his usual directness, Winstanley at once states the
+subject of his appeal in the following manner:
+
+ "SIRS,--The cause of this our presentment before you is, an Appeal
+ to you desiring you to demonstrate to us, and the whole Land, the
+ equity or non-equity of our cause. And that you would either cast
+ us by just reason under the feet of those we call Task Masters, or
+ Lords of Manors, or else to deliver us out of their tyrannical
+ hands: In whose hands by way of Arrest we are for the present, for
+ a Trespass to them, as they say, in digging upon the Common Land.
+ The settling whereof according to Equity and Reason will quiet the
+ minds of the oppressed people; it will be a keeping of our
+ National Covenant; it will be a peace to yourselves, and make
+ England the most flourishing and strongest Land in the world, and
+ the first of Nations that shall begin to give up their Crown and
+ Scepter, their dominion and government, into the hands of Jesus
+ Christ.[106:1]
+
+ "The cause is this, we amongst others of the common people, that
+ have ever been friends to the Parliament, as we are assured our
+ enemies will witness to it, have ploughed and digged upon Georges
+ Hill in Surrey, to sow corn for the succour of man, offering no
+ offence to any, but do carry ourselves in love and peace towards
+ all, having no intent to meddle with any man's enclosures or
+ property till it be freely given to us by themselves, but only to
+ improve the Commons and waste lands to our best advantage, for the
+ relief of ourselves and others, being moved thereunto by the reason
+ hereafter following, not expecting any to be much offended, in
+ regard the cause is so just and upright.
+
+ "Yet notwithstanding, there be three men (called by the people
+ Lords of Manors), viz., Thomas Lord Wenman, Ralph Verney Knight,
+ and Richard Winwood Esq., have arrested us for a trespass in
+ digging upon the Commons, and upon the arrest we made our
+ appearance in Kingstone Court, where we understood we were arrested
+ for meddling with other men's rights; and, secondly, they were
+ encouraged to arrest us upon your Act of Parliament (as they tell
+ us) to maintain the old laws. We desired to plead our own cause,
+ the Court denied us, and to fee a lawyer we cannot, for divers
+ reasons, as we may show hereafter.
+
+ "Now, Sirs, our case is this, for we appeal to you, for you are the
+ only men that we are to deal withal in this business: Whether the
+ common people, after all their taxes, free-quarter and loss of
+ blood to recover England from under the Norman yoke, shall have the
+ freedom to improve the Commons and Waste Lands free to themselves,
+ as freely their own as the Enclosures are the propriety of the
+ elder brothers? Or whether the Lords of Manors shall have them,
+ according to their old custom, from the King's will and grant, and
+ so remain Task Masters still over us, which was the people's
+ slavery under conquest?
+
+ "We have made our appeal to you to settle this matter in the Equity
+ and Reason of it, and to pass the sentence of freedom to us, you
+ being the men with whom we have to do in this business, in whose
+ hands there is power to settle it, for no Court can end this
+ controversy but your Court of Parliament, as the case of this
+ Nation now stands."
+
+After emphasising his fundamental contention that in Equity and by the
+Law of Righteousness all should have the freedom of the Earth granted
+unto them, he summarises the causes that have conspired to place the
+Members of the House of Commons in power, as follows:
+
+ "You of the Gentry, as well as we of the Commonalty, all groaned
+ under the burden of the bad government and burdening laws of the
+ late King Charles, who was the last successor of William the
+ Conqueror. You and we cried for a Parliament, and a Parliament was
+ called, and wars, you know, presently began between the king that
+ represented William the Conqueror and the body of the English
+ people that were enslaved. We looked upon you to be our Chief
+ Council to agitate business for us, though you were summonsed by
+ the king's writ, and choosen by the Freeholders, who are the
+ successors of William the Conqueror's soldiers. You saw the danger
+ so great that without a war England was likely to be more enslaved,
+ therefore you called upon us to assist you with plate, taxes,
+ free-quarter and our persons: and you promised us, in the name of
+ the Almighty, to make us a Free People. Thereupon you and we took
+ the National Covenant with joint consent, to endeavour the freedom,
+ peace, and safety of the people of England. And you and we joined
+ person and purse together in the common cause, and Will. the
+ Conqueror's successor, which was Charles, was cast out; thereby we
+ have recovered ourselves from under that Norman yoke. And now
+ unless you and we be merely besotted with covetousness, pride and
+ slavish fear of men, it is and will be our wisdom to cast out all
+ those enslaving laws which was the tyrannical power the king
+ pressed us down by.[108:1] O shut not your eyes against the light;
+ darken not knowledge by dispute about particular men's privileges,
+ when Universal Freedom is brought to be tried before you; dispute
+ no further when truth appears, but be silent and practice it. Stop
+ not your ears against the secret moanings of the oppressed, under
+ these expressions, lest the Lord see it and be offended, and shut
+ His eyes against your cries, and work a deliverance for His waiting
+ people some other way than by you."
+
+He then summarises the prevailing ills, and indicates their manifest and
+immediate duty, as follows:
+
+ "The main thing that you should look upon is the Land, which calls
+ upon her children to be free from the entanglements of the Norman
+ Taskmasters. For one third part lies waste and barren, and her
+ children starve for want, in regard the Lords of Manors will not
+ suffer the poor to manure it.... The power is in your hands, the
+ Nations Representative, O let the first thing you do be this, to
+ set the land free. Let the Gentry have their enclosures free from
+ all enslaving entanglements whatsoever, and let the Common People
+ have the Commons and Waste Lands set free to them from all Norman
+ enslaving Lords of Manors. That so both Elder and Younger Brother,
+ as we spring successively one from another, may live free and quiet
+ one by and with another in this Land of our Nativity." "This
+ thing," he then boldly declares, "you are bound to see done, or at
+ least to endeavour it, before another Representative force you;
+ otherwise you cannot discharge your trust to God and man." And the
+ Appeal concludes with the following words: "Set the Land free from
+ oppression, and righteousness will be the Laws, Government, and
+ Strength of that People."
+
+The Long Parliament, however, were too busy carrying English
+civilisation into Ireland to heed his words. And yet surely there was
+work enough for them to do in their own country, in which, as we have
+already pointed out, since the reign of Henry the Seventh the condition
+of the masses of the people had steadily worsened, and, as a natural
+consequence, the number of beggars, "rogues and vagrants," despite
+barbarous laws, involving their wholesale hanging, had steadily
+increased. During the reign of James the First, in a pamphlet entitled
+_Grievous Groans of the Poor_, published 1622, we hear the complaint
+that "the number of the poor do daily increase." The only remedy the
+then wise men of England could devise was to make the laws against them
+still more severe. Consequently it was ordered that the first time such
+people were apprehended they should be branded with the letter R, and if
+subsequently again found begging or wandering they were "to suffer death
+without benefit of Clergy." Yet such was their obstinacy that they still
+increased in numbers; and that for the simple reason that the economic
+or social causes of which they were but the inevitable outcome were not
+removed.
+
+During all this period, however, the country was developing, its
+industry and commerce expanding, and its wealth increasing by leaps and
+bounds; but in all this the "meaner sort," the Younger Brothers, the
+disinherited masses, had neither lot nor share. Though Clarendon may
+speak of the growing economical prosperity of the country during the
+time of which we are writing, yet there be no doubt of the truth of
+Thorold Rogers' contention, that[109:1]--"I am convinced from the
+comparison I have been able to make between wages, rents and prices,
+that it was a period of excessive misery among the mass of the people
+and the tenants, a time in which a few might have become rich, while the
+many were crushed down into hopeless and almost permanent indigence."
+And yet the facts are such as to compel him, when speaking of the
+Restoration, to point out that[110:1]--"the labourers, as far as the
+will went, were better off under the rule of the Saints than under that
+of the sinners."
+
+The English land-system, as we know it to-day, really began with the
+Restoration, when the very memory of Winstanley and his doctrines was
+swept away, when the men of the Model Army found themselves powerless,
+while "the great and wise men" of the nation "set up Monarchy again,"
+humbly prostrating themselves at the feet of a licentious, cynical
+debauchee, and the Landocracy, new and old, found themselves in the
+saddle with far greater political power than they had ever before
+enjoyed. They soon found means of fastening their yoke more firmly than
+ever on the necks of the people, and of making short work of any claims
+of an independent yeomanry to any right to the soil of their native
+country apart from their good-will and pleasure. After some effort, they
+passed a Statute under which the estates of such of the free-holders as
+had no documentary evidence by which to support their titles, were
+confiscated and turned into tenancies at will. By means of Enclosure
+Acts they still further plundered and impoverished the peasantry, by
+appropriating to themselves millions of acres of land over which these
+still had some right, some enjoyment. By means of the Law of Parochial
+Settlement, as Thorold Rogers repeatedly points out,[110:2] they
+"consummated the degradation of the labourer"; and made him, as it has
+left him, what the same impartial authority well terms "the most
+portentous phenomenon in agriculture, a serf without land." By means of
+their Financial Policy they rid themselves of the duties which
+originally accompanied the privilege of land-holding, viz. to provide
+the necessary public revenues for all defence purposes, and converted
+themselves from Land Holders into Land Owners, by shifting the burden
+of taxation to the food, industry, and handicraft of those they had
+despoiled and disinherited. And, finally, for the first time in the
+history of England, they passed a Corn Law artificially to increase
+their rents, at the cost and to the detriment, often to the starvation,
+of the masses of the people. From the effect of these laws the people of
+Great Britain have not yet been able entirely to recover themselves,
+though since 1824 they have made heroic steps to do so. With this
+portion of the history, we had almost written of the martyrdom, of the
+English people we are not here directly concerned. Manifestly it would
+have been very different had the Long Parliament listened to
+Winstanley's appeal, or had his self-sacrificing efforts been crowned
+with the success they so well deserved.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[100:1] Thomasson's Tracts. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 560 (1).
+Reprinted in the _Harleian Miscellany_, vol. ii. p. 485.
+
+[103:1] Others, in far more influential positions than Winstanley and
+his comrades, gave forcible expression to much the same views. In the
+debates of the Army Council on the Agreement of the People, on November
+1647, Edward Sexby, the Agitator or Representative of the private
+soldiers, an able, daring, and energetic man, replying to Ireton, on the
+question of the right to vote, said: "We have engaged in this kingdom
+and ventured our lives, and it was all for this: to recover our
+birthrights and privileges as Englishmen; and by the arguments urged,
+there are none. There are many thousands of us soldiers that have
+ventured our lives, we have had little propriety in the kingdom as to
+our estates, yet we have had a birthright. But it seems now that except
+a man hath a fixed estate in this kingdom, he hath no right in this
+kingdom. I wonder we were so deceived. If we had not a right to the
+kingdom, we were mere mercenary soldiers. There are men in my position,
+it may be little estate they have at present, and yet they have as much
+a birthright as those two who are their law-givers, or as any in this
+place." During the same debate Colonel Rainborrow said: "I think that
+the poorest he that is in England hath a life to live as the greatest
+he." And, also in reply to Ireton, he subsequently declared: "Sir, I see
+that it is impossible to have liberty but all property must be taken
+away.... If you will say it, it must be so. But I would fain know what
+the soldier hath fought for all this while? He hath fought to enslave
+himself, to give power to men of riches, to men of estate, and to make
+himself a perpetual slave."--See _Clarke Papers_, vol. i. pp. 322-323,
+325.
+
+[105:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 564. Also at
+the Guildhall Library. The Ralph Verney mentioned is the hero of _The
+Verney Memoirs_: there is, however, no mention of this incident therein.
+
+[106:1] This argument would scarcely have appealed to Ireton, who during
+the debate of the Army Council frankly declared that in his opinion--"It
+was not the business of Jesus Christ, when he came into the world, to
+create Kingdoms of the World, and Magistracies and Monarchies, or to
+give the rule of them, positive or negative."--See _Clarke Papers_, vol.
+ii. p. 101.
+
+[108:1] Colonel Rainborrow, who with Sexby and Wildman represented on
+the Army Council the private soldiers of the Model Army, during the
+debate on the right of voting, gave expression to the view that some
+fundamental changes in the laws of the Land were both necessary and
+justifiable, in the following words: "I hear it said, 'It's a huge
+alteration it's a bringing in of new laws.' ... If writings be true,
+there hath been many scuttlings between the honest men of England and
+those that have tyrannised over them. And if what I have read be true,
+there is none of those just and equitable laws that the people of
+England are born to, but were once intrenchments [but were once
+innovations]. But if they [the existing laws] were those which the
+people have been always under, if the people find that they are not
+suitable to freeman, I know no reason that should deter me, either in
+what I must answer before God or the world, from endeavouring by all
+means to gain anything that might be of more advantage to them than the
+government under which they live."--_Clarke Papers_, vol. i. p. 247.
+
+[109:1] _Economic Interpretation of History_, p. 138.
+
+[110:1] _Economic Interpretation of History_, p. 241.
+
+[110:2] _Six Centuries of Work and Wages_, pp. 432-433.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+A WATCHWORD TO THE CITY OF LONDON, ETC.
+
+ "All men have stood for Freedom; thou hast kept fasting-days and
+ prayed in the morning exercises for Freedom; thou hast given thanks
+ for victories because hopes of Freedom; plenty of Petitions and
+ Promises thereupon have been made for Freedom. But now the common
+ enemy is gone, you are all like men in a mist seeking for Freedom,
+ but know not where nor what it is.... Assure yourselves, if you
+ pitch not now upon the right point of Freedom in action, as your
+ Covenant hath it in words, you will wrap up your children in
+ greater slavery than ever you were in."--WINSTANLEY, _A Watchword
+ to the City of London_.
+
+
+The House of Commons, as we have seen, took no notice of Winstanley's
+dignified appeal, hence, within a week of its publication in pamphlet
+form, Winstanley, on August 26th, 1649, addressed himself to the City of
+London, at that time the stronghold of advanced political and religious
+thought. The pamphlet, which is one of the most interesting he ever
+wrote, appeared the following month: the title-page reads as follows:
+
+ "A WATCHWORD TO THE CITY OF LONDON AND THE ARMY:[112:1]
+
+ Wherein you may see that England's Freedom, which should be the
+ result of all our Victories, is sinking deeper under the Norman
+ Power, as appears by this Relation of the unrighteous
+ proceedings of Kingston Court against some of the Diggers at
+ George Hill, under colour of law; but yet thereby the cause of
+ the Diggers is more brightened and strengthened, so that every
+ one singly may truly say what his Freedom is and where it lies.
+
+ BY JERRARD WINSTANLEY.
+
+ When these clay bodies are in grave, and children stand in place,
+ This shows we stood for truth and peace and freedom in our days;
+ And true-born sons we shall appear of England that's our Mother,
+ No Priests nor Lawyers wiles t'embrace, their slavery we'll discover."
+
+This pamphlet, too, commences with a Dedicatory Letter, which opens as
+follows:
+
+ "TO THE CITY OF LONDON,--Freedom and Peace desired,--{6}Thou City
+ of London, I am one of thy sons by freedom, and I do truly love thy
+ peace. While I had an estate in thee, I was free to offer my Mite
+ into thy Public Treasury, Guildhall, for a preservation to thee and
+ to the whole Land. But by thy cheating sons in the thieving art of
+ buying and selling, and by the burdens of and for the soldiery in
+ the beginning of the War, I was beaten out of both estate and
+ trade, and forced to accept of the good-will of friends, crediting
+ of me, to live a Country life. There likewise by the burthen of
+ Taxes and much Free Quarter my weak back found the burthen heavier
+ than I could bear. Yet in all the passages of these eight years
+ troubles, I have been willing to lay out what my talent was, to
+ procure England's peace inward and outward; and yet all along I
+ have found such as in words have professed the same cause to be
+ enemies to me."
+
+It then briefly summarises Winstanley's past actions, as well as the
+causes that inspired them, and the position in which he finds himself in
+consequence thereof, as follows:
+
+ "Not a full year since, being quiet at my work, my heart was filled
+ with sweet thoughts, and many things were revealed to me which I
+ never read in books, nor heard from the mouth of any flesh. When I
+ began to speak of them some people could not bear my words. Amongst
+ these revelations this was one, _That the Earth shall be made a
+ Common Treasury of Livelihood to whole mankind without respect of
+ persons._
+
+ "And I had a voice within me that bade me declare it by word all
+ abroad, which I did obey, for I declared it by word of mouth
+ wheresoever I came. Then I was made to write a little book called
+ the New Law of Righteousness, and therein I declared it. Yet my
+ mind was not at rest, because nothing was acted; and thoughts ran
+ in me that words and writings were all nothing and must die; for
+ action is the life of all, and if thou dost not act, thou dost
+ nothing.
+
+ "Within a little time I was made obedient to the word in that
+ particular likewise. For I took my spade and went and broke the
+ ground upon George Hill in Surrey, thereby declaring Freedom to the
+ Creation, and that the Earth must be set free from entanglement of
+ Lords and Land Lords, and that it shall become a Common Treasury to
+ all, as it was first made and given to the sons of men.
+
+ "For which doing ... the old Norman Prerogative Lord of that Manor
+ caused me to be arrested for a trespass against him in digging upon
+ that barren Heath. And the unrighteous proceedings of Kingston
+ Court I have declared to thee and to the whole Land that you may
+ consider the case England is in."
+
+The Dedicatory Letter concludes as follows:
+
+ "I have declared this truth to the Army and Parliament, and now I
+ have declared it to thee likewise, that none of you that are the
+ fleshy strength of this Land may be left without excuse: for now
+ you have been all spoken to. And because I have obeyed the voice of
+ the Lord in this thing, therefore do the Freeholders and Lords of
+ Manors seek to oppress me in the outward livelihood of the world,
+ but I am in peace. And London, nay England, look to thy Freedom. I
+ assure you thou art very near to be cheated of it, and if thou lose
+ it now after all thy boasting, truly thy posterity will curse thee
+ for thy unfaithfulness to them. Everyone talks of Freedom, but
+ there are but few that act for Freedom, and the actors for Freedom
+ are oppressed by the talkers and verbal professors of Freedom. If
+ thou wouldst know what true Freedom is, read over this and other of
+ my writings, and thou shalt see it lies in the Community in Spirit
+ and Community in the Earthly Treasury; and this is Christ, the true
+ manchild, spread abroad in the Creation, restoring all things unto
+ himself. And so I leave thee, Being a free Denizon of thee, and a
+ true lover of thy peace.
+
+ JERRARD WINSTANLEY.
+ "_August 26th, 1649._"
+
+The pamphlet commences with a short and business-like account of the
+proceedings at Kingston Court, as follows:
+
+ "Whereas we, Henry Bickerstaffe, Thomas Star and Jerrard
+ Winstanley, were arrested into Kingston Court by Thomas Wenman,
+ Ralph Verney, and Richard Winwood, for a trespass in digging upon
+ George Hill in Surrey, being the right of Mr. Drake, Lord of that
+ Manor, as they say, we all three did appear the first Court-day of
+ our arrest, and demanded of the Court, What was laid to our
+ charge? and to give answer thereunto ourselves. But the answer of
+ your Court was this, that you would not tell us what the trespass
+ was, unless we would fee an Attorney to speak for us. We told them
+ we were to plead our own cause, for we knew no Lawyer that we could
+ trust with this business. We desired a copy of the Declaration, and
+ profered to pay for it, but still you denied us unless we would fee
+ an Attorney. But in conclusion the Recorder of your Court told us
+ that the cause was not entered. We appeared two Court-days after
+ this, and desired to see the Declaration, and still you denied us
+ unless we would fee an Attorney, so greedy are these Attornies
+ after money, more than to justify a righteous cause. We told them
+ that we could not fee any unless we would wilfully break our
+ National Covenant, which both Parliament and People have taken
+ jointly together to effect a Reformation. And unless we would be
+ professed Traitors to the Nation and Common-wealth of England, by
+ upholding the old Norman tyrannical and destructive Laws, when they
+ are to be cast out of equity, and reason to be the Moderator.
+
+ "Then seeing that you would not suffer us to speak, one of us
+ brought the following writing into Court, that you might read our
+ answer. Because we would acknowledge all righteous proceedings in
+ Law, though some slander us and say we deny all Law, because we
+ deny the corruption of Law, and endeavour a Reformation in our
+ place and calling, according to that National Covenant. And we know
+ if your Laws were built upon equity and reason, you ought both to
+ have heard us speak, and to have read our answer. For that is no
+ righteous Law, whereby to keep a Common-wealth in peace, when one
+ sort shall be suffered to speak and not another, as you deal with
+ us, to pass sentence and execution upon us, before both sides be
+ heard to speak. This principle in the forehead of your Laws
+ foretells destruction to this Common-wealth. For it declares that
+ the Laws that follow such refusal are selfish and thievish and full
+ of murder, protecting all that get money by their Laws, and
+ crushing all others.
+
+ "The writer hereof does require Mr. Drake, and he is a Parliament
+ man, therefore a man counted able to speak rationally, to plead
+ this cause of digging with me.[115:1] And if he show a just and
+ rational title that Lords of Manors have to the Commons, and that
+ they have a just power from God to call it their right, shutting
+ out others, then I will write as much against it as ever I wrote
+ for this cause. [A heavy forfeit, truly!] But if I show by the Law
+ of Righteousness that the poorest man hath as good a title and just
+ right to the Land as the richest man, and that undeniably the Earth
+ ought to be a Common Treasury of Livelihood for all without
+ respecting persons; then I shall require no more of Mr. Drake but
+ that he would justify our cause of digging, and declare abroad that
+ the Commons ought to be free to all sorts, and that it is a great
+ trespass before the Lord God Almighty for one to hinder another of
+ his liberty to dig the earth, that he might feed and clothe himself
+ with the fruits of his labor thereupon freely, without owning any
+ Land Lord or paying any Rent to any person of his own kind."
+
+After this perfectly safe challenge, he continues:
+
+ "I sent this following answer to the Arrest in writing into
+ Kingston Court:
+
+ "In four passages your Court hath gone contrary to the
+ righteousness of your own Statute Laws. For, _First_, it is
+ mentioned in 36 Edward III. 15 that no Process, Warrant or Arrest
+ should be served till after the cause was recorded and entered. But
+ your Bailiff either could not or would not tell us the cause when
+ he arrested us, and Mr. Rogers, your Recorder, told us the first
+ Court-day we appeared that our cause was not entered.
+
+ "_Secondly_, We appeared two other Court-days, and desired a copy
+ of the Declaration, and profered to pay for it, and you denied us.
+ This is contrary to equity and reason, which is the foundation your
+ Laws are or should be built upon, if you would have England to be a
+ Common-wealth, and stand in peace.
+
+ "_Thirdly_, We desired to plead our own cause, and you denied us,
+ but told us we must fee an Attorney to speak for us, or else you
+ would mark us in default for not appearance. This is contrary to
+ your own Laws likewise, for in 28 Edward I. chapter ii. there is
+ freedom given to a man to speak for himself, or else he may choose
+ his father, friend or neighbour to speak for him, without the help
+ of any other Lawyer.
+
+ "_Fourthly_, You have granted a judgement against us, and are
+ proceeding to an execution, and this is contrary likewise to your
+ own laws, which say that no plaint ought to be received or
+ judgement passed, till the cause be heard, and witnesses present,
+ to testify the plaint to be true, as Sir Edward Coke, 2nd part of
+ Institutes upon the 29 chap. of Magna Charta, fol. 51-53. The
+ Mirror of Justice."
+
+Then, as if ashamed of appealing to mere conventional man-made Laws, he
+at once acknowledges what he and his comrades have done, and justifies
+their action in the following dignified words:
+
+ "But that all men may see that we are neither ashamed nor afraid to
+ justify that cause we are arrested for, neither to refuse to answer
+ to it in a righteous way, therefore we have here delivered this up
+ in writing, and we leave it in your hands, disavowing the
+ proceedings of your Court, because you uphold prerogative
+ oppression, though the kingly office be taken away, and the
+ Parliament hath declared England a Common-wealth, so that
+ prerogative cannot be in force, unless you be besotted by your
+ covetousness and envy.
+
+ "We deny that we have trespassed against those three men, or Mr.
+ Drake either, or that we should trespass against any, if we should
+ dig up and plough for a livelihood upon any of the waste land in
+ England. For thereby we break no particular Law made by any Act of
+ Parliament, but only an ancient custom bred in the strength of
+ kingly prerogative, which is that old Law or Custom by which Lords
+ of Manors lay claim to the Commons, which is of no force now to
+ bind the people of England, since the kingly power and office was
+ cast out. And the Common People who have cast out the oppressor, by
+ their purse and person, have not authorised any as yet to give away
+ from them their purchased freedom; and if any assume a power to
+ give away or withhold this purchased freedom, they are Traitors to
+ this Common-wealth of England; and if they imprison, oppress, or
+ put to death any for standing to maintain this purchased freedom,
+ they are murderers and thieves, and no just rulers.
+
+ "Therefore in the light of Reason and Equity, and in the light of
+ the National Covenant which Parliament and People have taken with
+ joint consent, all such prerogative customs, which by experience we
+ have found to burden the Nation, ought to be cast out with the
+ kingly office, and the Land of England now ought to be a Free Land
+ and a Common Treasury to all her children, otherwise it cannot
+ properly be called a Common-wealth."
+
+He then continues:
+
+ "Therefore we justify our act of digging upon that Hill to make the
+ Earth a Common Treasury. First, because the Earth was made by
+ Almighty God to be a Common Treasury of Livelihood to the whole of
+ mankind in all its branches, without respect of persons....
+ Secondly, because all sorts of people have lent assistance of purse
+ and person to cast out the kingly order as being a burden that
+ England groaned under. Therefore those from whom money and blood
+ were received, ought to obtain freedom in the Land to themselves
+ and posterity, by the Law of Contract between Parliament and
+ People. But all sorts, poor as well as rich, Tenant as well as Land
+ Lord, have paid taxes, free-quarter, excise, or adventured their
+ lives to cast out the kingly office. Therefore all sorts of people
+ ought to have freedom in this the Land of their Nativity, without
+ respecting persons, now that kingly power is cast out by their
+ joint assistance.... Therefore, in that we do dig upon that Hill,
+ we do not thereby take away other men's rights, nor demand of this
+ Court, nor from the Parliament, what is theirs and not ours. But we
+ demand our own to be set free to us, and to them, out of the
+ tyrannical oppression of ancient customs of kingly prerogative; and
+ let us have no more gods to rule over us, but the King of
+ Righteousness only.
+
+ "Therefore, as the Freeholders claim a quietness and freedom in
+ their enclosures, as it is fit they should have, so we that are
+ younger brothers, or the poor oppressed, we claim our freedom in
+ the Commons; that so elder and younger brother may live quietly and
+ in peace, together freed from the straits of poverty and oppression
+ in this Land of our Nativity."
+
+His written address to the Court at Kingston concludes as follows:
+
+ "Thus we have in writing declared in effect what we should say, if
+ we had liberty to speak before you, declaring withal that your
+ Court cannot end this controversy in that equity and reason of it
+ which we stand to maintain. Therefore we have appealed to the
+ Parliament, who have received our Appeal and promised an answer,
+ and we wait for it. And we leave this with you, and let Reason and
+ Righteousness be our Judge. Therefore we hope you will do nothing
+ rashly, but seriously consider of this cause before you proceed to
+ execution upon us."
+
+Of course, the Court paid no heed to his pleadings, and he details the
+subsequent proceedings in the following business-like manner:
+
+ "Well, this same writing was delivered into their Court, but they
+ cast it out again, and would not read it, and all because I would
+ not fee an Attorney. And then the Court-day following, before there
+ was any trial of our cause, for there was none suffered to speak
+ but the Plaintiff, they passed a judgement, and after that an
+ execution. Now their Jury was made of rich Freeholders, and such as
+ stand strongly for the Norman power. And though our digging upon
+ that barren Common hath done the Common good, yet this Jury brings
+ in damages of £10 a man, and the charges of the Plaintiff in their
+ Court, twenty-nine shillings and a penny: and this was their
+ sentence and the passing of the execution upon us."
+
+Winstanley then mentions one instance descriptive of the way he and his
+comrades were "boycotted" by his neighbours, and of the men responsible
+therefor. He says:
+
+ "Before the report of our digging was much known, I bought three
+ acres of grass from a Lord of the Manor, whom I will not here name
+ because I know the counsel of others made him prove false to me.
+ For when the time came to mow, I brought money to pay him
+ beforehand, but he answered me that I should not have it, and sold
+ it to another before my face. This was because his Parish Priest
+ and the Surrey Ministers have bid the people neither to buy nor to
+ sell us, but to beat us, imprison us, or to banish us."
+
+He then relates that two days later "they sent to execute the execution,
+and they put Harry Bickerstaffe in prison, but after three days Mr.
+Drake released him again, Bickerstaffe not knowing of it till the
+release came. They seek after Thomas Star to imprison his body, who is
+a poor man, not worth ten pounds." He continues:
+
+ "Then they came privately by day to Gerrard Winstanley's house and
+ drove away four cows, I not knowing of it. They took away the cows
+ which were my livelihood, and beat them with their clubs that the
+ cows' heads and sides did swell, which grieved tender hearts to
+ see. And yet," he pathetically but somewhat humourously adds,
+ "these cows never were upon George Hill, nor never digged upon that
+ ground, and yet the poor beasts must suffer because they gave milk
+ to feed me. But strangers made rescue of those cows, and drove them
+ astray out of the Bailiffs' hands, so that the Bailiffs lost them.
+ But before the Bailiffs had lost the cows, I, hearing of it, went
+ to them and said--'Here is my body, take me, that I may speak to
+ those Normans that have stolen our land from us; and let the cows
+ go, for they are none of mine.' After some time, they telling me
+ they had nothing against my body, it was my goods they were to
+ have. Then said I, 'Take my goods, for the cows are not mine.'"
+
+Here follows one of the most touching passages to which Winstanley ever
+set pen:
+
+ "And so I went away and left them, being quiet in my heart, and
+ filled with comfort within myself, that the King of Righteousness
+ would cause this to work for the advancing of His own cause, which
+ I prefer above estate and livelihood. Saying within my heart as I
+ went along, that if I could not get meat to eat, I would feed upon
+ bread, milk and cheese. And if they take the cows, and I cannot
+ feed on this, or hereby make a breach between me and him that owns
+ the cows, then I'll feed upon bread and beer, till the King of
+ Righteousness clears up my innocency and the justice of His own
+ cause. And if this be taken from me for maintaining His cause, then
+ I'll stand still and see what He will do with me; for as yet I know
+ not.
+
+ "Saying likewise within my heart as I was walking along--O thou
+ King of Righteousness, show thy power and do thy work thyself, and
+ free thy people now from under this heavy bondage of misery. And
+ the answer in my heart was satisfactory, and full of sweet joy and
+ peace: and so I said, Father, do what thou wilt, for this cause is
+ thine, and thou knowest that the love to righteousness makes me do
+ what I do."
+
+He then continues:
+
+ "I was made to appeal to the Father of Life in the speakings of my
+ heart likewise thus--Father, thou knowst that what I have writ or
+ spoken concerning this light, that the Earth should be restored and
+ become a Common Treasury for all mankind, without respect of
+ persons, was thy free revelation to me, I never read it in any
+ book, I heard it from no mouth of flesh, till I understood it from
+ thy teaching first within me. I did not study nor imagine the
+ conceit of it; self-love to my own particular body does not carry
+ me along in the managing of this business; but the power of love
+ flowing forth to the liberty and peace of thy whole Creation, to
+ enemies as well as to friends: nay, towards those who oppress me,
+ endeavouring to make me a beggar to them. And since I did obey thy
+ voice, to speak and act this truth, I am hated, reproached and
+ oppressed on every side. Such as make professions of thee, yet
+ revile me. And though they see I cannot fight with fleshy weapons,
+ yet they will strive with me by that power. And so I see, Father,
+ that England yet doth choose rather to fight with the Sword of Iron
+ and Covetousness than with the Sword of the Spirit, which is Love.
+ And what thy purpose is with this Land or with my body, I know not,
+ but establish thy power in me, and then do what pleases thee.
+
+ "These and such like sweet thoughts dwelt in my heart as I went
+ along; and I feel myself now like a man in a storm, standing under
+ shelter upon a hill in peace, waiting till the storm be over to see
+ the end of it, and of many other things that my eye is fixed upon."
+
+The pamphlet concludes as follows:
+
+ "You have arrested us for digging upon the common land, you have
+ executed your unrighteous power, in destraining cattle, imprisoning
+ our bodies, and yet our cause was never publicly heard, neither can
+ it be proved that we broke any Law that is built upon equity and
+ reason. Therefore we wonder whence you had your power to rule over
+ us by will, more than we to rule over you by our will.... We
+ request that you would let us have a fair open trial.... let your
+ Ministers plead with us in the Scriptures, and let your Lawyers
+ plead with us as to the equity and reason of your own Law. And if
+ you prove us transgressors, then we shall lay down our work and
+ acknowledge that we have trespassed against you in digging upon the
+ Commons, and then punish us. But if we prove by Scripture and
+ Reason that undeniably the Land belongs to one as well as another,
+ then you shall own our work, justify our cause, and declare that
+ you have done wrong to Christ, who you say is your Lord and Master,
+ in abusing us His servants and your fellow-creatures, while we are
+ doing His work. Therefore, knowing you to be men of moderation in
+ outward show, I desire that your actions towards your
+ fellow-creatures may not be like one beast to another, but carry
+ yourselves like man to man, for your proceeding in your pretence of
+ Law hitherto against us is both unrighteous, beastly, and devilish,
+ and nothing of the spirit of man seen in it. You Attornies and
+ Lawyers, you say you are Ministers of Justice, and we know that
+ equity and reason is or ought to be the foundation of Law. If so,
+ then plead not for money altogether, but stand for Universal
+ Justice and Equity: then you will have peace; otherwise both you
+ and the corrupt Clergy will be cast out as unsavoury salt."
+
+As will have been seen from the above, and as we shall show more fully
+later on, the little company of Diggers were having a rather troublesome
+time. Within two days of the delivery of their first letter to Lord
+Fairfax, on June 11th, some of them were grievously assaulted by two of
+the local freeholders, accompanied by men in women's garments; but,
+according to their own account, they made no attempt to defend
+themselves.[122:1] In November of the same year the agitation against
+their doings was revived, or became more acute, and early in December
+they found themselves compelled again to appeal to Lord Fairfax for
+protection.[122:2] After having recapitulated their main arguments, this
+letter continues:
+
+ "Now, Sirs, divers repulses we have had from some of the Lords of
+ Manors and their servants, with whom we are patient and loving, not
+ doubting but at last they will grant liberty quietly to live by
+ them. And though your tenderness hath moved us to be requesting
+ your protection against them, yet we have forborne, and rather
+ waited upon God with patience till he quell their unruly
+ spirits.... In regard likewise the soldiers did not molest us, for
+ that you told us when some of us were before you, that you had
+ given command to your soldiers not to meddle with us, but resolved
+ to leave us to the Gentlemen of the County and to the Law of the
+ Land to deal with us, which we were satisfied with, and for this
+ half-year past your soldiers have not meddled with us.
+
+ "But now, Sirs, this last week, upon the 28th of November, there
+ came a party of soldiers commanded by a Cornet, and some of them of
+ your own regiment, and by their threatening words forced three
+ labouring men to help them to pull down our two houses, and carried
+ away the wood in a cart to a Gentleman's house, who hath been a
+ Cavalier all our time of war, and cast two or three old people out
+ who lived in those houses to lie in the open fields this cold
+ weather (an act more becoming Turks to deal with Christians than
+ for one Christian to deal with another). But if you inquire into
+ the business you will find that the Gentlemen who set the soldiers
+ on are enemies to you, for some of the chief had hands in the
+ Kentish rising against the Parliament, and we know, and you will
+ find it true if you trust them so far, that they love you but from
+ the teeth outward.
+
+ "Therefore our request to you is this, that you would call your
+ soldiers to account for attempting to abuse us without your
+ commission, that the Country may know that you had no hand in such
+ an unrighteous and cruel act. Likewise we desire that you would
+ continue your former kindness and promise to give commission to
+ your soldiers not to meddle with us without your order."
+
+As we shall presently see, nothing more discouraged the little company
+of Diggers than the assistance given to their enemies by the soldiery.
+Lord Fairfax, however, had no free hand in this matter; the Council of
+State had again received information of what was termed "a tumultuous
+meeting at Cobham," which the ordinary power at the disposal of the
+local Justices of the Peace "was not sufficient to disperse," and had
+consequently sent Lord Fairfax definite instructions to send "such horse
+as you may think fit to march to that place."[124:1] This information
+had evidently come to Winstanley's knowledge. He had not signed the
+foregoing letter, so felt himself at liberty to supplement it by another
+and more forcible one, which opens as follows:
+
+ "WINSTANLEY'S SECOND LETTER TO LORD FAIRFAX.[124:2]
+
+ "TO MY LORD GENERAL AND HIS COUNCIL OF WAR.
+
+ "SIR,--I understand that Mr. Parson Platt with some other gentlemen
+ have made report to you and the Council of State that we that are
+ called Diggers are a riotous people, and that we will not be ruled
+ by the Justices, and that we hold a man's house by violence from
+ him, and that we have four guns in it to secure ourselves, and that
+ we are drunkards, and Cavaliers waiting an opportunity to bring in
+ the Prince, and such like. Truly, Sir, these are all untrue
+ reports, and as false as those which Hamaan of old brought against
+ sincere-hearted Mordecai to incense king Ahasuerus against him. The
+ conversation of the Diggers is not such as they report; we are
+ peaceable men and walk in the light of righteousness to the utmost
+ of our power."
+
+He then expounds their aims, and justifies their action in the manner
+with which our readers will by now be familiar, and continues:
+
+ "We know that England cannot be a free Common-wealth, unless all
+ the poor Commoners have a free use and benefit of the land. For if
+ this freedom be not granted, we that are the poor commoners are in
+ a worse case than we were in the King's days; for then we had some
+ estate about us, though we were under oppression, but now our
+ estates are spent to purchase freedom, and we are under oppression
+ still of Lords of Manors tyranny. Therefore unless we that are poor
+ commoners have some part of the land to live upon freely, as well
+ as the Gentry, it cannot be a Common-wealth, neither can the kingly
+ power be removed so long as this kingly power in the hands of Lords
+ of Manors rules over us.
+
+ "Now, Sir, if you and the Council will quietly grant us this
+ freedom, which is our own right, and set us free from the kingly
+ power of Lords of Manors, that violently now as in the king's days
+ hold the commons from us (as if we had obtained no conquest at all
+ over the kingly power), then the poor that lie under the great
+ burden of poverty, and are always complaining for want, and their
+ miseries increase because they see no means of relief found out,
+ and therefore cry out continually to you and the Parliament for
+ relief, and to make good your promises, will be quieted.
+
+ "We desire no more of you than freedom to work, and to enjoy the
+ benefit of our labors--for here is waste land enough and to spare
+ to supply all our wants. But if you deny this freedom, then in
+ righteousness we must raise collections for the poor out of the
+ estates, and a mass of money will not supply their wants. Many are
+ in want that are ashamed to take collection money, and therefore
+ they are desperate, and would rather rob and steal and disturb the
+ land, and others that are ashamed to beg would do any work for to
+ live, as it is the case of many of our Diggers, who have been good
+ housekeepers. But if this freedom were granted to improve the
+ common lands, then there would be a supply to answer everyone's
+ inquire, and the murmurings of the people against you and the
+ Parliament would cease, and within a few years we should have no
+ beggars nor idle persons in the land.
+
+ "_Secondly_, Hereby England would be enriched with all commodities
+ within itself which they each would afford. And truly this is a
+ stain to Christian religion in England [a stain not yet removed]
+ that we have so much land lie waste and so many starve for want.
+ Further, if this freedom be granted, the whole Land will be united
+ in love and strength, that if a foreign enemy, like an army of rats
+ and mice, come to take our inheritance from us, we shall all rise
+ as one man to defend it.
+
+ "Then, lastly, if you will grant the poor commoners this quiet
+ freedom to improve the common land for our livelihood, we shall
+ rejoice in you and the Army in protecting our work, and we and our
+ work will be ready to secure that, and we hope that there will not
+ be any kingly power over us, to rule at will and we to be slaves,
+ as the power has been, but that you will rule in love as Moses and
+ Joshua did the children of Israel before any kingly power came in,
+ and that the Parliament will be as the elders of Israel, chosen
+ freely by the people to advise for and to assist both you and us.
+
+ "And thus in the name of the rest of those called Diggers and
+ Commoners through the land, I have in short declared our mind and
+ cause to you in the light of righteousness, which will prove all
+ these reports made against us to be false and destructive to the
+ uniting of England into peace.
+
+ "Per me Gerrard Winstanley, for myself and in the behalf of my
+ fellow commoners.
+
+ "_December the 8th, 1649._"
+
+Amongst Winstanley's disciples was one Robert Coster, who appears to
+have been the poet of the Digger Movement, and the next pamphlet which
+issued from their camp, on December 18th, some ten days after the date
+affixed to the above vigorous letter, was from his pen. It is entitled:
+
+ "_A Mite cast into the Common Treasury_:[126:1] Or Queries
+ propounded (for all Men to consider of) by him who desireth to
+ advance the work of Public Community. By Robert Coster."
+
+In it Coster first recapitulates Winstanley's main arguments and
+contentions, and then shows that he for one fully realised their
+far-reaching scope, by indicating their probable effects in the
+following words:
+
+ "As, 1. If men would do as aforesaid rather than to go with cap in
+ hand and bended knee to Gentlemen and Farmers, begging and
+ entreating to work with them for 8d. or 10d. a day, which doth give
+ them an occasion to tyrannise over poor people, who are their
+ fellow-creatures; if poor men would not go in such a slavish
+ posture, but do as aforesaid, the rich Farmers would be weary of
+ renting so much land of the Lords of Manors.
+
+ "2. If the Lords of Manors and other Gentlemen who covet after so
+ much land, could not let it out by parcels, but must be constrained
+ to keep it in their own hands, then would they want those great
+ bags of money (which do maintain pride, idleness and fullness of
+ bread) which are carried in to them by the Tenants, who go in as
+ slavish a posture as well may be, namely, with cap in hand and
+ bended knee, crouching and creeping from corner to corner, while
+ his Lord (rather Tyrant) walks up and down the room with his proud
+ looks, and with great swelling words questions him about his
+ holding.
+
+ "3. If the Lords of Manors and other Gentlemen had not those great
+ bags of money brought to them, then down would fall the lordliness
+ of their spirits, and then poor men might speak to them, and there
+ might be an acknowledging of one another to be Fellow-Creatures.
+
+ "For what is the reason that great gentlemen covet after so much
+ land? Is it not because Farmers and others creep to them in a
+ slavish manner, profering them so much money for such and such
+ parcels of it, which doth give them occasion to tyrannise over
+ their Fellow-Creatures, which they call their Inferiors?
+
+ "And what is the reason that Farmers and others are so greedy to
+ rent land of the Lords of Manors? Is it not because they expect
+ great gains, and because poor men are so foolish and slavish as to
+ creep to them for employment, although they will not give them
+ money enough to maintain themselves and their families comfortably?
+ All which do give them an occasion to tyrannise over their
+ Fellow-Creatures, which they call their Inferiors.
+
+ "All which considered, if poor men which want employment and others
+ which work for little wages would go to dress and improve the
+ Commons and Waste Lands, whether it would not bring down the price
+ of Land, which doth principally cause all things to be dear?"
+
+The pamphlet concludes with the following lines:
+
+ "The Nation is in such a state as this,
+ to honor rich men because they are rich;
+ And poor men, because poor, most do them hate.
+ O, but this is a very cursed state;
+ But those who act from love which is sincere,
+ will honor truth wherever it doth appear.
+ And no respecting of persons will be with such,
+ but tyranny they will abhor in poor and rich.
+ And in this state is he whose name is here,
+ your very loving friend, Robert Costeer."
+
+By way of appendix the author adds a long poem, of nine verses, entitled
+"A Digger's Ballad," of which the following verse, the last one, will
+give our readers a sufficient idea:
+
+ "The glorious state
+ which I do relate
+ Unspeakable comfort shall bring,
+ The corn will be green
+ and the flowers seen,
+ Our Storehouses they will be filled.
+ The birds will rejoice
+ with a merry voice,
+ All things shall yield sweet increase.
+ Then let us all sing
+ and joy in our King,
+ Who causeth all sorrows to cease."
+
+As will be seen in the following chapter, the time the above pamphlet
+was published was one of great anxiety in the brave little community
+which had ventured so much to lay the foundations of a better society
+than ever they knew, of a Social State based upon Justice, in which all
+should equally enjoy the benefits of their Creation. They had thrown
+their little possessions into a Common Treasury; they had taken
+possession of their birthright, the Commons of England; they had
+patiently endured all possible wrongs, injuries and insults, and had
+still remained steadfast to the Law of Reason and Love, to the express
+command of their acknowledged Master and King--Resist not evil. However,
+though their courage and endurance remained unabated, their little stock
+of provisions was becoming exhausted, and the end of their high
+endeavour was in sight. However this may be, it was about this time,
+during the bleak winter months, that they composed two Christmas Carols
+to sing round their camp-fires, which were given to the world the
+following April in a little book bearing the following title:
+
+ "THE DIGGERS MIRTH:[129:1]
+
+ OR
+
+ Certain Verses composed and fitted to tunes, for the delight and
+ recreation of all those that dig, or own that work, in the
+ Commonwealth of England.
+
+ Wherein is shewed how the Kingly Power doth still reign in several
+ sorts of men.
+
+ With a hint of that Freedom which shall come,
+ When the Father shall reign alone in His Son.
+
+ Set forth by those who were the original of that so righteous a
+ work, and continue still successful therein at Cobham in Surrey.
+
+ LONDON.
+
+ Printed in the year 1650."
+
+It contains but two long pieces, both of which merit more than a passing
+notice. The first, probably from the pen of Robert Coster, entitled "The
+Diggers Christmasse Caroll," contains some twenty-eight verses of six
+lines each. The view and hopes of the Diggers, as well as references to
+recent public events, are amusingly related, and in conclusion the
+reader is reminded that--"Freedom is not won, neither by sword nor gun,"
+and therefore entreated to discard his faith in the efficacy of force,
+of Money and the Sword, and to share their belief in the power of Love,
+Righteousness, and Co-operative Labour, for the satisfaction of the
+needs and desires of all.
+
+The second piece, which we suspect to be from Winstanley's pen, is
+headed:
+
+ "A hint of that Freedom which shall come,
+ When the Father shall reign alone in His Son,"
+
+and the first two verses seem to us worthy of being given in full. They
+run as follows:
+
+ "The Father He is God alone,
+ nothing besides Him is;
+ All things are folded in that one,
+ by Him all things subsist.
+
+ He is our Light, our Life, our Peace,
+ whereby we our being have;
+ From Him all things have their increase,
+ the Tyrant and the Slave."
+
+It was probably also about this time that Winstanley composed the
+following much more lively piece, which is to be found in the _Clarke
+Papers_,[130:1] and which may here find a fitting place:
+
+ "THE DIGGERS SONG.
+
+ "You noble Diggers all, stand up now, stand up now,
+ You noble Diggers all, stand up now,
+ The waste land to maintain, seeing Cavaliers by name
+ Your digging do disdain and persons all defame.
+ Stand up now, stand up now.
+
+ Your houses they pull down, stand up now, stand up now,
+ Your houses they pull down, stand up now;
+ Your houses they pull down to fright poor men in town,
+ But the Gentry must come down, and the poor shall wear the crown.
+ Stand up now, Diggers all!
+
+ With spades and hoes and plowes, stand up now, stand up now,
+ With spades and hoes and plowes, stand up now;
+ Your freedom to uphold, seeing Cavaliers are bold
+ To kill you if they could, and rights from you withhold.
+ Stand up now, Diggers all!
+
+ Their self-will is their law, stand up now, stand up now,
+ Their self-will is their law, stand up now;
+ Since tyranny came in, they count it now no sin
+ To make a goal a gin, to starve poor men therein.
+ Stand up now, stand up now.
+
+ The Gentry are all round, stand up now, stand up now,
+ The Gentry are all round, stand up now;
+ The Gentry are all round, on each side they are found,
+ Their wisdom's so profound to cheat us of our ground.
+ Stand up now, stand up now.
+
+ The Lawyers they conjoin, stand up now, stand up now,
+ The Lawyers they conjoin, stand up now;
+ To arrest you they advise, such fury they devise,
+ The devil in them lies, and hath blinded both their eyes.
+ Stand up now, stand up now.
+
+ The Clergy they come in, stand up now, stand up now,
+ The Clergy they come in, stand up now;
+ The Clergy they come in, and say it is a sin
+ That we should now begin our freedom for to win.
+ Stand up now, Diggers all!
+
+ The tithes they yet will have, stand up now, stand up now,
+ The tithes they yet will have, stand up now;
+ The tithes they yet will have, and Lawyers their fees crave,
+ And this they say is brave, to make the poor their slave.
+ Stand up now, Diggers all!
+
+ 'Gainst Lawyers and 'gainst Priests, stand up now, stand up now,
+ 'Gainst Lawyers and 'gainst Priests, stand up now;
+ For tyrants they are both, even flat against their oath,
+ To grant us they are loath, free meat and drink and cloth.
+ Stand up now, Diggers all!
+
+ The club is all their law, stand up now, stand up now,
+ The club is all their law, stand up now;
+ The club is all their law, to keep poor men in awe;
+ But they no vision saw to maintain such a law.
+ Stand up now, Diggers all!
+
+ The Cavaliers are foes, stand up now, stand up now,
+ The Cavaliers are foes, stand up now;
+ The Cavaliers are foes, themselves they do disclose
+ By verses, not in prose, to please the singing boys.
+ Stand up now, Diggers all!
+
+ To conquer them by love, come in now, come in now,
+ To conquer them by love, come in now;
+ To conquer them by love, as it does you behove,
+ For He is King above, no Power is like to Love.
+ Glory here, Diggers all!"
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[112:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 573. Also at
+the Guildhall Library.
+
+[115:1] Mr. Drake was the Lord of the Manor, and the patron of Parson
+Platt. He was made an Ejector for the County of Surrey by Cromwell, and
+Platt made Lay Ejector.
+
+[122:1] See _A Declaration of the Bloody and Unchristian Acting of
+William Star and John Taylor of Walton, with divers men in women's
+apparell, in opposition to those that dig upon St. Georges Hill_. King's
+Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 561.
+
+[122:2] _Clarke Papers_, vol. ii. pp. 215-217. No date is attached; but
+Winstanley's second letter, which immediately follows it, is dated
+December 8th, 1649.
+
+[124:1] See _Calendar of State Papers_, Domestic, 1649-1650, p. 335.
+
+[124:2] _Clarke Papers_, vol. ii. pp. 217-220.
+
+[126:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 585.
+
+[129:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 1365.
+
+[130:1] Vol. ii. p. 221.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+A NEW YEAR'S GIFT FOR THE PARLIAMENT AND ARMY
+
+ "Hear, O thou Righteous Spirit of the Whole Creation, and judge,
+ who is the thief, he who takes away the Freedom of the Common Earth
+ from me, which is my Creation Right; Or I, who take the Common
+ Earth to plant upon for my free livelihood, endeavouring to live as
+ a Free Commoner, in a Free Common-wealth, in Righteousness and
+ Peace."--WINSTANLEY, _The Law of Freedom_.
+
+
+It was probably during the anxious times that beset the little community
+of Diggers during the winter of 1649-1650, that Winstanley wrote the
+long and bitter pamphlet, to which is attached a detailed list of the
+injuries inflicted upon them, and which early in 1650 appeared in book
+form under the following title:
+
+ "A NEW YEAR'S GIFT FOR THE PARLIAMENT AND ARMY:[132:1]
+
+ Showing what the Kingly Power is; and that the Cause of those they
+ call Diggers is the Life and Marrow of that Cause the
+ Parliament hath declared for and the Army fought for. The
+ perfecting of which work will prove England to be the First of
+ Nations, or the Tenth Part of the City Babylon, that falls off
+ from the Beast first, and that sets the Crown upon Christ's
+ head, to govern the World in Righteousness.
+
+ By JERRARD WINSTANLEY,
+ A Lover of England's Freedom and Peace.
+
+ Die Pride and Envy; Flesh take the Poor's advice.
+ Covetousness begone: Come Truth and Love arise.
+ Patience take the Crown; throw Anger out of doors:
+ Cast out Hypocrisy, and Lust, and mere invented Laws.[133:1]
+ Then England sit in rest; Thy Sorrows will have end;
+ Thy Sons will live in Peace, and each will be a friend.
+
+ LONDON.
+ Printed for Giles Calvert, 1650."
+
+Winstanley first gives a rapid sketch of recent events, as follows:
+
+ "Gentlemen of the Parliament and Army; You and the Common People
+ have assisted each other to cast out the head of oppression, which
+ was Kingly Power seated in one man's hand, and that work is now
+ done, and till that work was done you called upon the people to
+ assist you to deliver this distressed, bleeding, dying Nation out
+ of bondage. And the people came and failed you not, counting
+ neither purse nor blood too dear to part with to effect this work.
+
+ "The Parliament after this have made an Act to cast out Kingly
+ Power and to make England a free Common-wealth. These Acts the
+ people are much rejoiced with, as being words forerunning their
+ freedom, and they wait for their accomplishment that their joy may
+ be full. For as words without actions are a cheat, and kill the
+ comfort of a righteous spirit, so words performed in action do
+ comfort and nourish the life thereof.
+
+ "Now, Sirs, wheresoever we spy out Kingly Power, no man I hope
+ shall be troubled to declare it, nor afraid to cast it out, having
+ both Act of Parliament, the Soldier's Oath, and the Common People's
+ Consent on his side. For Kingly Power is like a great spread tree;
+ if you lop the head or top bough and let the other branches and
+ root stand, it will grow again and recover fresher strength.
+
+ "If any ask me, what Kingly Power is? I answer, there is a twofold
+ Kingly Power. The one is the Kingly Power of Righteousness, and
+ this is the power of the Almighty God, ruling the whole Creation in
+ Peace, and keeping it together. And this is the Power of Universal
+ Love, leading people unto all truth, teaching everyone to do as he
+ would be done unto.... But the other Kingly Power is the power of
+ Unrighteousness.... This Kingly Power is the Power of Self Love,
+ ruling in one or in many men over others, and enslaving those who
+ in the Creation are their equals; nay, who are in the strictness of
+ equity rather their masters. And this Kingly Power is usually set
+ in the Chair of Government, under the name of Prerogative, when he
+ rules in one over another; and in the name of State Privilege of
+ Parliament, when he rules in many over others.... While this Kingly
+ Power ruled in a man called Charles, all sorts of people complained
+ of oppression, both Gentry and Common People, because their lands,
+ enclosures and copyholds were entangled, and because their Trade
+ was destroyed by Monopolising Patentees, and your troubles were
+ that you could not live free from oppression in the earth.
+ Thereupon you that were the Gentry, when you were assembled in
+ Parliament, you called upon the Common People to come and help you
+ to cast out oppression: and you that complained are helped and
+ freed, and that top-bough is lopped off the Tree of Tyranny, and
+ Kingly Power in that one particular is cast out. But, alas!
+ oppression is a great tree still, and keeps off the Sun of Freedom
+ from the poor Commons still. He hath many branches and great roots
+ which must be grubbed up, before everyone can sing Zion's song in
+ peace."
+
+After again praising the two Acts of Parliament--"the one to cast out
+Kingly Power; the other to make England a free Common-wealth"--and
+detailing his grievances against the Tything Priests and Lords of
+Manors, he continues:
+
+ "Search all your Laws, and I'll adventure my life, for I have
+ little else to lose, that all Lords of Manors hold Title to the
+ Commons by no stronger hold than the King's Will, whose head is cut
+ off; and the King held title as he was a Conqueror. Now if you cast
+ off the King who was the head of that power, surely the power of
+ Lords of Manors is the same. Therefore perform your own Act of
+ Parliament, and cast out that part of the Kingly Power likewise,
+ that the People may see that you understand what you say and do,
+ and that you are faithful. For truly the Kingly Power reigns
+ strongly in the Lords of Manors over the Poor. For my own
+ particular, I have in other writings, as well as in this, declared
+ my reasons why the Common Land is the Poor People's propriety; and
+ I have digged upon the Commons; and I hope in time to obtain the
+ freedom to get food and raiment therefrom by righteous labour:
+ which is all I desire. And for so doing the supposed Lord of that
+ Manor hath arrested me twice. First in an Action of £20 trespass
+ for plowing upon the Commons, which I never did.... And now they
+ have arrested me again in an Action of £4 trespass for digging upon
+ the Commons, which I did, and own the work to be righteous and no
+ trespass to any. This was the Attorney at Kingstone's advice,
+ either to get money from both sides ... or else that I should not
+ remove the action to a Higher Court, but that the cause might be
+ tried there. For they know how to please Lords of Manors, that have
+ resolved to spend hundreds of pounds but they will hinder the Poor
+ from enjoying the Commons."
+
+Then he gives utterance to the sense of indignation which filled his
+heart in the following bitter and contemptuous words:
+
+ "Do these men obey the Parliament's Acts, to throw down Kingly
+ Power? O no! The same unrighteous doing that was complained of in
+ King Charles' days, the same doing is among them still. Money will
+ buy and sell Justice still. And is our eight years' war come round
+ about to lay us down again in the Kennel of Injustice as much or
+ more than before? Are we no farther learned yet? O ye Rulers of
+ England, when must we turn over a new leaf? Will you always hold us
+ in one lesson? Surely you will make Dunces of us; then all the Boys
+ in other Lands will laugh at us! Come, I pray, let us take forth
+ and go forward in our learning!"
+
+Winstanley's zeal for the cause he had espoused was, however, too real
+to allow him to continue long in this strain, so he immediately adopts a
+more persuasive tone, as follows:
+
+ "You blame us who are the Common People as though we would have no
+ government. Truly, Gentlemen, we desire a righteous government with
+ all our hearts. But the Government we have gives freedom and
+ livelihood to the Gentry, to have abundance, and to lock up
+ Treasures of the Earth from the Poor; so that rich men may have
+ chests full of gold and silver, and houses full of corn and goods
+ to look upon, while the Poor who work to get it can hardly live;
+ and if they cannot work like slaves, then they must starve. Thus
+ the Law gives all the Land to some part of mankind, whose
+ predecessors got it by conquest, and denies it to others, who by
+ the Righteous Law of Creation may claim an equal portion. And yet
+ you say this is a Righteous Government, but surely it is no other
+ than selfishness."
+
+His indignation again gets the mastery of him, and he continues
+bitterly:
+
+ "England is a prison; the varieties of subtilties in the Laws
+ preserved by the Sword are the bolts, bars and doors of the prison;
+ the Lawyers are the Jailers; and Poor Men are the prisoners. For
+ let a man fall into the hands of any, from the Bailiff to the
+ Judge, and he is either undone or weary of his life. Surely this
+ power, the Law, which is the great Idol that people dote upon, is
+ the burden of the Creation, a nursery of idleness, luxury and
+ cheating, the only enemy of Christ, the King of Righteousness! For
+ though it pretends Justice, yet the Judges and Law Officers buy and
+ sell Justice for money, and say it is my calling, and never are
+ troubled at it."
+
+He then makes the following manly appeal to his persecutors:
+
+ "You Gentlemen of Surrey, and Lords of Manors, and you Mr. Parson
+ Platt especially ... my advice to you is this, hereafter to lie
+ still and cherish the Diggers, for they love you and would not have
+ your finger ache if they could help it, then why should you be so
+ bitter against them? O let them live beside you. Some of them have
+ been Soldiers, and some Countrymen that were always friends to the
+ Parliament's cause, by whose hardships and means you enjoy the
+ creatures about you in peace. And will you now destroy part of them
+ that have preserved your lives? O do not do so; be not so besotted
+ with the Kingly Power.... Bid them go and plant the Commons. This
+ will be your honor and your comfort; for assure yourselves that you
+ can never have true comfort till you be friends with the Poor.
+ Therefore, come, come, love the Diggers, make restitution of their
+ land you hold from them; for what would you do if you had not such
+ laboring men to work for you?"
+
+A pertinent question, truly, and one which those whom he addressed, as
+well as those who are to-day in their places, would find it somewhat
+inconvenient to answer.
+
+He then appeals to the Officers of the Army in the following bold and
+manly words:
+
+ "And you, great Officers of the Army and Parliament, love your
+ common Soldiers (I plead for Equity and Reason) and do not force
+ them, by long delay of payment, to sell you their dearly bought
+ Debentures for a thing of nought, and then to go and buy our Common
+ Land, and Crown Land, and other Land that is the spoil, one of
+ another therewith. Remember you are Servants to the Commons of
+ England, and you were volunteers in the Wars, and the Common People
+ have paid you for your pains largely.... As soon as you have freed
+ the Earth from one entanglement of Kingly Power, will you entangle
+ it more? I pray you consider what you do, and do righteously. We
+ that are the Poor Commons, that paid our money and gave you
+ free-quarter, have as much right in those Crown Lands and Lands of
+ the spoil as you. Therefore we give no consent that you should buy
+ and sell our Crown Lands and Waste Lands; for it is our purchased
+ inheritance from under oppression! it is our own, even the poor
+ Common People's of England.... We paid you your wages to help us
+ recover it, but not to take it yourselves and turn us out, and to
+ buy and sell it among yourselves.... If you do so, you uphold the
+ Kingly Power, and so disobey both Acts of Parliament, and break
+ your Oath; and you will live in the breach of these two
+ commandments, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, by denying
+ us the Earth which is our livelihood, and thereby killing us by a
+ lingering death."
+
+Winstanley then summarises his contentions, as follows:
+
+ "Well, the end of all my speech is to point out the Kingly Power
+ where I spy it out. And you see it remains strongly in the hands of
+ Lords of Manors, who have dealt so discourteously with some who are
+ sincere in heart, though there have some come among the Diggers
+ that have caused scandal, but we disown their ways.[137:1]
+
+ "The Lords of Manors have sent to beat us, to pull down our houses,
+ spoil our labours; yet we are patient, and never offered any
+ violence to them again these forty weeks past, but wait upon God
+ with love till their hearts thereby be softened. All that we
+ desire is but to live quietly in the Land of our Nativity by our
+ righteous labour upon the Common Land, which is our own; but as yet
+ the Lords of the Manors, so formerly called, will not suffer us,
+ but abuse us. Is not that part of the Kingly Power? In that which
+ follows I shall clearly prove it is; for it appears so clear that
+ the understanding of a child does say, 'It is tyranny; it is the
+ Kingly Power of Darkness.' Therefore we expect that you will grant
+ us the benefit of your Act of Parliament, so that we may say--Truly
+ England is a Common-wealth, and a Free People indeed."
+
+Winstanley then declares that despite all their trouble and anxiety the
+Diggers were still "mightily cheerful," and resolved "to wait upon God
+to see what He will do ... taking it a great happiness to be persecuted
+for righteousness' sake by the Priests and Professors that are the
+successors of Judas and the bitter spirited Pharisees that put the man
+Christ to death." He then again advances the reasons on which he bases
+the equal claims of all to the use of the earth, denounces the sources
+whence the exclusive claims of the few have sprung, more especially the
+tyrannical claims of Lords of Manors, boldly claiming that from this
+tyranny of man to man England should have been freed by the recent
+casting out of kingly power--and continues:
+
+ "Therefore I say, the Common Land is my own Land, equal with my
+ Fellow Commoners; and our true propriety by the Law of Creation.
+ _It is every ones, but not one single ones._ Yea, the Commons are
+ as truly ours by the last excellent two Acts of Parliament, the
+ foundation of England's new Righteous Government aimed at, as the
+ Elder Brothers can say the Enclosures are theirs. For they ventured
+ their lives and covenanted with us to help them preserve their
+ Freedom; and we adventured our lives and they covenanted with us to
+ purchase and to give us our Freedom, that hath been hundreds of
+ years kept from us."
+
+The first part of this pamphlet concludes as follows:
+
+ "_Damona non Armis sed Morte subegit Jesus._
+
+ "By patient sufferings, not by Death,
+ Christ did the devil kill:
+ And by the same still to this day,
+ His foes he conquers still.
+
+ "True Religion and undefiled is this: To make Restitution of the
+ Earth, which hath been taken and held from the Common People by the
+ power of Conquests formerly, and to set the oppressed free. Do not
+ all strive to enjoy the land? The Gentry strive for land; the
+ Clergy strive for land; the Common People strive for land; and
+ Buying and Selling is an Art whereby People endeavour to cheat one
+ another of the land. Now, if any can prove from the Law of
+ Righteousness that the land was made peculiar to him and his
+ successively, shutting others out, he shall enjoy it freely for my
+ part. But I affirm, it was made for all; and true Religion is to
+ let everyone enjoy it. Therefore you Rulers of England, make
+ restitution of the Land which the Kingly Power holds from us. Set
+ the Oppressed free; and come in and honor Christ, who is the
+ Restoring Power, and you shall find rest."
+
+In the opening of the second part of this pamphlet Winstanley reverts
+somewhat to his earlier mystical style, and still further expounds the
+eternal struggle between the Spirit of Self Love and the Spirit of
+Universal Love, denouncing the former as the source of all social ills,
+extolling the latter as the source and inspirer of peaceful and
+equitable social life. "In our present experience," he contends,
+"Darkness or Self Love goes before, and Light or Universal Love follows
+after"; and hence "Darkness and Bondage doth oppress Liberty and Light."
+He illustrates this contention, as well as the essential difference of
+the spirits animating the Diggers and their opponents, by relating how
+one of the Colonels of the Army told him--"That the Diggers did work
+upon Georges Hill for no other end than to draw a company of people into
+arms; and that our knavery was found out, because it takes not that
+effect": on which Winstanley comments as follows:
+
+ "Truly thou Colonel, I tell thee, thy knavish imagination is
+ thereby discovered, which hinders the effecting of that Freedom
+ which by Oath and Covenant thou hast engaged to maintain. For my
+ part and the rest, we had no such thought. We abhor fighting for
+ Freedom; it is acting of the Curse, and lifting him up higher. Do
+ thou uphold it by the Sword; we will not. We will conquer by Love
+ and Patience, or else we count it no Freedom. Freedom gotten by the
+ Sword is an established Bondage to some part or other of the
+ Creation. This we have declared publicly enough. Therefore thy
+ imagination told thee a lie, and will deceive thee in a greater
+ matter, if Love doth not kill him. VICTORY THAT IS GOTTEN BY THE
+ SWORD IS A VICTORY SLAVES GET ONE OVER ANOTHER; BUT VICTORY
+ OBTAINED BY LOVE IS A VICTORY FOR A KING!"
+
+Surely, surely, if all other writings of Winstanley had perished, this
+one passage would have given us sufficient insight into his philosophy,
+into the noble principles animating his life, to entitle him to our
+admiration and respect.
+
+He then continues:
+
+ "This is your very inward principle, O ye present Powers of
+ England, you do not study how to advance Universal Love. If you did
+ it would appear in action. But Imagination and Self Love mightily
+ disquiet your mind, and makes you to call up all the Powers of
+ Darkness to come forth and help you to set the Crown upon the head
+ of Self, which is that Kingly Power you have oathed and vowed
+ against, but yet uphold it in your hands.... All this falling out
+ and quarrelling among mankind is about the Earth, and who shall,
+ and who shall not enjoy it, when indeed it is the portion of
+ everyone, and ought not to be striven for, nor bought, nor sold,
+ whereby some are hedged in and others are hedged out. Far better
+ not to have had a body than to be debarred the fruit of the Earth
+ to feed and clothe it. And if every one did but quietly enjoy the
+ Earth for food and raiment, there would be no wars, prisons, nor
+ gallows, and this action which men call theft would be no sin. For
+ Universal Love never made it a sin, but the Power of Covetousness
+ made it a sin, and made Laws to punish it, though he himself lives
+ in that sin in a higher manner than those he hangs and punishes....
+ Well, He that made the Earth for us as well as for you will set us
+ free, though you will not. When will the Veil of Darkness be drawn
+ off your faces? Will you not be wise, O ye Rulers?"
+
+After further expatiating on the blessings inherent in Righteousness and
+Universal Love, and on the inevitable evil consequences of Self Love or
+Covetousness, he indicates the practical steps by which these evils
+might be removed, as follows:
+
+ "If ever the Creation is to be restored, this is the way, which
+ lies in this two-fold power:
+
+ "First, Community of Mankind, which is comprised in the Unity of
+ the Spirit of Love, which is called Christ within you, or the Law
+ written in the Heart, leading Mankind unto all Truth, and to be of
+ one heart and one mind.
+
+ "The Second is Community of the Earth, for the quiet livelihood in
+ food and raiment, without using force or restraining one another.
+
+ "These Two Communities, or rather one in two branches, is that true
+ Levelling which Christ shall work at His more glorious appearance.
+ FOR JESUS CHRIST, THE SAVIOUR OF ALL MEN, IS THE GREATEST, FIRST
+ AND TRUEST LEVELLER THAT EVER WAS SPOKEN OF IN THE WORLD."
+
+ "Therefore you Rulers of England, be not afraid nor ashamed of
+ Levellers, hate them not; Christ comes to you riding upon these
+ clouds. Look not upon other Lands to be your pattern. All Lands in
+ the World lie under Darkness, so doth England yet, though the
+ nearest to Light and Freedom than any other. Therefore let no other
+ Land take your Crown....
+
+ "At this very day poor people are forced to work, in some places
+ for 4, 5, and 6 pence a day, in other places for 8, 10, and 12
+ pence a day, for such small prices that now, corn being dear, their
+ earnings cannot find them bread for their families. Yet if they
+ steal for maintenance, the murdering Law will hang them.... Well
+ this shows that if this be Law, it is not the Law of Righteousness.
+ It is a murderer; it is the Law of Covetousness and Self Love. And
+ this Law that frights people and forces people to obey it by
+ prisons, whips and gallows, is the very Kingdom of the Devil and
+ Darkness, which the Creation groans under at this day."
+
+After this characteristic outburst, he gives them the following equally
+characteristic advice:
+
+ "Come, make peace with the Cavaliers, your enemies, and let the
+ oppressed go free, and let them have a livelihood. Love your
+ enemies, and do to them as you would have had them do to you, if
+ they had conquered you. Well, let them go in peace, and let Love
+ wear the Crown. For I tell you and your Preachers, that Scripture
+ which saith 'The Poor shall inherit the Earth,' is really and
+ materially to be fulfilled. For the Earth is to be restored from
+ the bondage of Sword-propriety, and is to become a Common Treasury
+ in reality to the whole of mankind. For this is the work for the
+ true Saviour to do, who is the true and faithful Leveller, even the
+ Spirit and Power of Universal Love, that is now rising to spread
+ itself in the whole Creation, who is the Blessing, who will spread
+ as far as the Curse has spread, to take it off and cast it out, and
+ who will set the Creation in peace."
+
+The pamphlet then concludes with the following words:
+
+ "The time is very near when the people generally shall loathe and
+ be ashamed of your Kingly Power, in your preaching, in your Laws,
+ in your Councils, as now you are ashamed of the Levellers. I tell
+ you Jesus Christ, who is that powerful Spirit of Love, is the Head
+ Leveller: and as He is lifted up, He will draw all men after Him,
+ and leave you naked and bare.... This Great Leveller, Christ our
+ King of Righteousness in us, shall cause men to beat their swords
+ into plough-shares, their spears into pruning-hooks, and Nations
+ shall learn war no more. Everyone shall delight to let each other
+ enjoy the pleasures of the Earth, and shall hold each other no more
+ in bondage. Then what will become of your power? Truly he must be
+ cast out as a murderer. I pity you for the torment your spirit must
+ go through, if you be not fore-armed as you are abundantly
+ fore-warned from all places. But I look on you as part of the
+ Creation that must be restored; and the Spirit may give you wisdom
+ to fore-see a danger, as he hath admonished divers of your rank
+ already to leave those high places and to lie quiet and wait for
+ the breaking forth of the powerful day of the Lord. Farewell, once
+ more, Let Israel go free."
+
+As a sort of appendix to this pamphlet there appears the following
+interesting document:
+
+ "A BILL OF ACCOUNT OF THE MOST REMARKABLE SUFFERINGS THAT THE
+ DIGGERS HAVE MET WITH SINCE APRIL 1ST, 1649, which was the
+ first day they began to dig and to take possession of the
+ Commons for the Poor on George Hill in Surrey.
+
+ "1. The first time divers of the Diggers were carried prisoners
+ into Walton Church, where some of them were struck in the Church
+ by the bitter Professors and rude multitude; but after some time
+ they were freed by a Justice.
+
+ "2. They were fetched by above a hundred rude people, whereof John
+ Taylor was the leader, who took away their spades, and some of them
+ they never had again: and carried them first to prison in Walton,
+ and then to a Justice in Kingston, who presently dismissed them.
+
+ "3. The enemy pulled down a house which the Diggers had built upon
+ George Hill, and cut their spades and hoes to pieces.
+
+ "4. Two Troops of Horse were sent from the General to fetch us
+ before the Council of War, to give account of our Digging.
+
+ "5. We had another House pulled down, and our Spades cut to pieces.
+
+ "6. One of the Diggers had his head sore wounded, and a Boy beaten,
+ and his clothes taken from him: divers being by.
+
+ "7. We had a Cart and Wheels cut in pieces, and a Mare cut over the
+ back with a Bill when we went to fetch a load of wood from Stoak
+ Common, to build a house upon George Hill.
+
+ "8. Divers of the Diggers were beaten upon the Hill, by William
+ Star and John Taylor, and by men in women's apparel, and so sore
+ wounded that some of them were fetched home in a Cart.
+
+ "9. We had another House pulled down, and the Wood they carried to
+ Walton in a Cart.
+
+ "10. They arrested some of us, and some they cast into Prison, and
+ from others they went about to take away their Goods, but that the
+ Goods proved another man's, which one of the Diggers was servant
+ to.
+
+ "11. And indeed at divers times besides, we had all our corn
+ spoiled. For the enemy were so mad that they tumbled the earth up
+ and down, and would suffer no Corn to grow.
+
+ "12. Another Cart and Wheels were cut to pieces, and some of our
+ Tools taken by force from us, which we never had again.
+
+ "13. Some of the Diggers were beaten by the Gentlemen, the Sheriff
+ looking on, and afterwards five of them were carried to White Lion
+ Prison, and kept there about five weeks, and then let out.
+
+ "14. The Sheriff, with the Lords of Manors and Soldiers standing
+ by, caused two or three poor men to pull down another House: and
+ divers things were stolen from them.
+
+ "15. The next day two Soldiers and two or three Countrymen, sent
+ by Parson Platt, pulled down another House, and turned a poor old
+ man and his wife out of doors to lie in the fields in a cold
+ night."
+
+ "And this is the last hitherto. And so you Priests, as you were the
+ last that had a hand in our persecution, so it may be that our
+ misery may rest in your hand. For assure yourselves God in Christ
+ will not be mocked by such Hypocrites that pretend to be His
+ nearest and dearest Servants, as you do, and yet will not suffer
+ His hungry and naked and houseless members to live quiet by you in
+ the Earth, by whose Blood and Monies in the Wars you are in peace.
+
+ "And now those Diggers that remain have made little Hutches to lie
+ in, like Calf-cribs, and are cheerful, taking the spoiling of their
+ Goods patiently, and rejoicing that they are counted worthy to
+ suffer persecution for Righteousness' sake. And they follow their
+ work close, and have planted divers acres of Wheat and Rye, which
+ is come up and promises a very plentiful crop, and have resolved to
+ preserve it by all the diligence they can. And nothing shall make
+ them slack but want of food, which is not much now, they being all
+ poor people, and having suffered so much in one expense or other
+ since they began. For Poverty is their greatest burthen; and if
+ anything do break them from the Work, it will be that."
+
+After this confession of their weakness, and of the probable end of
+their work, Winstanley again bursts out into verse as follows:
+
+ "You Lordly Foes, you will rejoice
+ this news to hear and see.
+ Do so, go on; but we'll rejoice
+ much more the Truth to see.
+ For by our hands Truth is declared,
+ and nothing is kept back;
+ Our faithfulness much joy doth bring,
+ though victuals we may lack,
+ This trial may our God see good,
+ to try, not us, but you;
+ That your profession of the Truth
+ may prove either false or true."
+
+And after another and much worse specimen of his poetry, which we will
+spare our readers, he concludes as follows:
+
+ "And here I end, having put my Arm as far as my strength will go
+ to advance Righteousness. I have writ; I have acted; I have Peace.
+ And now I must wait to see the Spirit do His own work in the hearts
+ of others; and whether England shall be the first Land, or some
+ other, wherein Truth shall sit down in triumph.
+
+ "But, O England, England, would God thou didst know the things that
+ belong to thy peace before they be hid from thine eyes. The Spirit
+ of Righteousness hath striven with thee, and doth yet strive with
+ thee, and yet there is hope. Come in thou England, submit to
+ righteousness before the voice go out, my Spirit shall strive no
+ longer with flesh, and let not Covetousness make thee oppress the
+ poor....
+
+ "Gentlemen of the Army, we have spoken to you; we have appealed to
+ the Parliament; we have declared our Cause with all humility to you
+ all; and we are Englishmen, your friends that stuck to you in your
+ miseries, when those Lords of Manors that oppose us were wavering
+ on both sides. Yet you have heard them, and answered their request
+ to beat us off; and yet you would not afford us an answer.
+
+ "Yet Love and Patience shall lie down and suffer; let Pride and
+ Covetousness stretch themselves upon their beds of ease, and forget
+ the afflictions of Joseph, and persecute us for Righteousness'
+ sake, yet we will wait to see the issue. The Power of Righteousness
+ is our God; the Globe runs round; the longest sunshine day ends in
+ a dark night. Therefore to Thee, O Thou King of Righteousness, we
+ do commit our cause. Judge Thou between us and them that strive
+ against us, and those that deal treacherously with Thee and us; and
+ do Thine own work, and help weak flesh in whom the Spirit is
+ willing."
+
+"To thee, O thou King of Righteousness, we do commit our cause. Judge
+Thou, and help weak flesh in whom the Spirit is willing." At this very
+hour the same prayer, the same cry for Justice, is still ascending to
+the throne of the King of Righteousness from the disinherited masses, on
+whose shoulders the weight of our civilisation rests, and whom it
+presses down to helpless poverty, misery, and wretchedness, and who are
+still suffering from the same fundamental injustice against which, as we
+have seen, Gerrard Winstanley protested so eloquently over two hundred
+and fifty years ago.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[132:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 587.
+
+[133:1] In deference to prevailing conventionalities, we have ventured
+to alter this line.
+
+[137:1] In the next chapter we shall learn something of those "Diggers
+that have caused scandal," and whose actions and views Winstanley found
+it necessary to disown.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+A VINDICATION; A DECLARATION; AND AN APPEAL
+
+ "There is but one way to remove an evil--and that is to remove its
+ cause. Poverty deepens as wealth increases, and wages are forced
+ down while productive power grows, because land, which is the
+ source of all wealth and the field of all labour, is monopolised.
+ To extirpate poverty, to make wages what justice demands they
+ should be, the full earnings of the labourer, we must therefore
+ substitute for the individual ownership of land a common ownership.
+ Nothing else will go to the cause of the evil--in nothing else is
+ there the slightest hope."--HENRY GEORGE, 1877-1878.
+
+
+In the pamphlet we have considered in the previous chapter we heard that
+"there have some come among the Diggers that have caused scandal," and
+whose ways were disowned by Winstanley and his associates. A few weeks
+subsequent to its publication, Winstanley judged it necessary publicly
+and formally to dissociate himself and his companions from them, which
+he did, in a manner quite in accordance with his own principles, in a
+small pamphlet of some eight pages, which was published under the title:
+
+ "A VINDICATION OF THOSE WHOSE ENDEAVOURS IS ONLY TO MAKE THE EARTH
+ A COMMON TREASURY, CALLED DIGGERS: Or Some Reasons given by
+ them against the immoderate use of creatures, or the excessive
+ community of women, called Ranting or rather Renting,"[146:1]
+
+which, after a long condemnation of "the Ranting Practice," runs as
+follows:
+
+ "There are only two things I must speak as an advice in Love.
+
+ "First, Let everyone that intends to live in peace set themselves
+ with diligent labour to till, dig and plow the common and barren
+ land, to get them bread with righteous, moderate working, among a
+ moderate-minded people; this prevents the evil of idleness, and the
+ danger of the Ranting power.
+
+ "Secondly, Let none go about to suppress that Ranting power by the
+ punishing hand; for it is the work of the Righteous and Rational
+ Spirit within, not thy hand without, that must suppress it. But if
+ thou wilt need be punishing, then see thou be without sin thyself,
+ and then cast the first stone at the Ranter. Let not sinners punish
+ others for sin, but let the power of thy reason and righteous
+ action shame and so beat down their unrational actings. Wouldst
+ thou live in peace, then look to thy own ways, mind thy own Kingdom
+ within.... Let everyone alone to stand or fall their own Master;
+ for thou being a sinner and striving to suppress sinners by force,
+ thou wilt thereby but increase their rage and thine own trouble.
+ But do thou keep close to the Law of Righteous Reason, and thou
+ shalt presently see a return of the Ranters: for that Spirit within
+ must shame them and turn them and pull them out of darkness."
+
+After emphasising the fact that such evil actions must necessarily bring
+evil on those who indulge in them, the pamphlet concludes with the
+following words:
+
+ "This I was made to write as a Vindication of the Diggers, who are
+ slandered with the Ranting action. My end is only to advance the
+ Kingdom of Peace in and among mankind, which is and will be torn in
+ pieces by the Ranting power, if Reason do not kill this
+ fine-hearted or sensitive Beast. All you that are merely civil and
+ that are of a loving and flexible disposition, wanting the strength
+ of Reason, and the Life of Universal Love, leading you forth to
+ seek the peace and preservation of every single body as of one's
+ self, you are the people that are likely to be tempted, and set
+ upon and torn into pieces by this devouring Beast, the Ranting
+ Power.
+ "GERRARD WINSTANLEY.
+ "_Feb. this 20, 1649 (1650)._"
+
+On March 4th he adds the following interesting postscript:
+
+ "I am told there are some people going up and down the country
+ among such as are friends to the Diggers, gathering monies in
+ their name. And they have a note wherein my name and divers others
+ are subscribed. This is to certify that I never subscribed my name
+ to any such note. Neither have we that are called Diggers received
+ any money by any such collections. Therefore to prevent this cheat,
+ we desire, if any are willing to cast a gift in to further our work
+ of digging upon the Commons, that they would send it to our own
+ hands by some trusty friends of their own."
+
+If others could get monies in their name, the Diggers evidently thought
+that they might themselves take advantage of the same means to maintain
+the public work on which they were engaged. For we gather the following
+from a contemporary news-sheet,[148:1] _A Perfect Diurnal_, April 1-8:
+
+ "_April 4 (Thursday)._--THE TRUE COPY OF A LETTER taken at
+ Wellingborough, Northamptonshire, with some men that were there
+ apprehended for going about to incite people to Digging, and
+ under such pretence gathered money of the well-affected for
+ their assistance.
+
+ "These are to certify all that are Friends to Universal Freedom,
+ and that look upon the Digging and Planting of the Commons to be
+ the first springing up of Freedom: To make the Earth a Common
+ Treasury that everyone may enjoy food and raiment freely by his
+ labour upon the Earth, without paying Rents or Homage to any
+ Fellow-creature of his own kind; that everyone may be delivered
+ from the Tyranny of the Conquering Power, and to rise up out of
+ that Bondage to enjoy the benefit of his Creation: This, I say, is
+ to certify all such that those Men that have begun to lay the First
+ Stone in the Foundation of this Freedom (by digging upon Georges
+ Hill on the Common called Little Heath in Cobham) in regard of the
+ great opposition hitherto from the Enemy, by reason whereof they
+ lost the last Summer's work, yet, through inward faithfulness to
+ advance Freedom, they keep the field still, ... but in regard to
+ poverty their work is like to flag and drop: Therefore if the
+ hearts of any be stirred up to drop anything into this Treasury, to
+ buy victuals to keep the men alive, and to buy Corn to cast into
+ the ground, it will keep alive the Spirit of Public Freedom to the
+ whole Land, which otherwise is ready to die again for want of help.
+ And if you hear hereafter that there was a people appeared to stand
+ up to advance Public Freedom, and struggled with the Opposing Power
+ of the Land, for that they begin to let them alone, and yet these
+ men and their public work were crushed, because they wanted
+ assistance of food and corn to keep them alive: I say, if you hear
+ this, it will be trouble to you when it is too late, that you had
+ monies in your hand, and would not part with any of it to purchase
+ Freedom, therefore you deservedly groan under Tyranny, and no
+ Saviour appears. But let your Reason weigh the excellency of this
+ work, and I am sure you will cast in something.
+
+ "And because there were some treacherous persons drew up a note and
+ subscribed our names to it, and by that moved some friends to give
+ money to this work of ours, when as we know of no such note, nor
+ subscribed our names to any, nor ever received any money from such
+ collection. Therefore to prevent such a cheat, I have mentioned a
+ word or two in the end of a printed book against that treachery,
+ that neither we nor our friends may be cheated. And I desire if any
+ be willing to communicate of their substance unto our work, that
+ they would make a collection among themselves, and send that money
+ to Cobham to the Diggers' own hands, by some trusty friend of your
+ own, and so neither you nor we shall be cheated.
+
+ "The Bearers hereof, Thomas Haydon and Adam Knight, can relate by
+ word of mouth more largely the condition of the Diggers and their
+ work, and so we leave this to you to do as you are moved.
+
+ "Jacob Heard, Jo. South junior, Henry Barton, Tho. Barnard, Tho.
+ Adams, Will Hitchcocke, Anthony Wren, Robert Draper, William Smith,
+ Robert Coster, Gerrard Winstanley, Jo. South, Tho. Heydon, Jo.
+ Palmer, Tho. South, Henry Handcocke, Jo. Batt, Dan Ireland, Jo.
+ Hayman, Robert Sawyer, Tho. Starre, Tho. Edcer, besides their wives
+ and families, and many more if there were food for them."
+
+Then follows this detailed account of their travels:
+
+ "A COPY OF THEIR TRAVELS, that was taken with the four men at
+ Wellingborow.
+
+ "Out of Buckinghamshire into Surrey; from Surrey to Middlesex, from
+ thence to Hartfordshire, to Bedfordshire, again to Buckinghamshire,
+ so to Berkshire, and then to Surrey, thence to Middlesex, and so to
+ Hartfordshire, and to Bedfordshire, thence into Huntingdonshire,
+ from thence to Bedfordshire, and so into Northamptonshire, and
+ there they were apprehended.
+
+ "They visited these towns to promote the business: Colebrook,
+ Hanworth, Hounslow, Harrowhill, Watford, Redburn, Dunstable,
+ Barton, Amersley, Bedford, Kempson, North Crawley, Cranfield,
+ Newport, Stony Stratford, Winslow, Wendover, Wickham, Windsor,
+ Cobham, London, Whetston, Mine, Wellin, Dunton, Putney, Royston,
+ St. Needs, Godmanchester, Wetne, Stanton, Warbays, Kimolton, from
+ Kimolton to Wellingborrow."
+
+Before this date, however, some of the inhabitants of Wellingborrow had
+followed the example of their brothers in Surrey. From a beautifully
+printed broadsheet,[150:1] bearing date March 12th, 1649 (1650), and
+issued by Giles Calvert, we find the following account of their doings,
+which incidentally reveals the terrible state of the rural working
+population at the time it was written:
+
+ "A DECLARATION OF THE GROUNDS AND REASONS why we the poor
+ inhabitants of the Town of Wellinborrow, in the County of
+ Northampton, have begun and give consent to dig up, manure and
+ sow corn upon the Commons and Waste Ground called Bareshanke,
+ belonging to the inhabitants of Wellinborrow, by those that
+ have subscribed and hundreds more that give consent.
+
+ "1. We find in the word of God that God made the Earth for the use
+ and comfort of all mankind, and sat him in it to till and dress it,
+ and said, That in the sweat of his brow he should eat his bread.
+ And also we find that God never gave it to any sort of people that
+ they should have it all to themselves, and shut out all the rest,
+ but He saith, The Earth hath He given to the children of men, which
+ is every man.
+
+ "2. We find that no creature that ever God made was ever deprived
+ of the benefit of the Earth, but Mankind; and that it is nothing
+ but covetousness, pride and hardness of heart that hath caused man
+ so far to degenerate.
+
+ "3. We find in the Scriptures, that the Prophets and Apostles have
+ left it upon record, That in the last day the oppressor and proud
+ man shall cease, and God will restore the waste places of the Earth
+ to the use and comfort of man, and that none shall hurt nor destroy
+ in all His Holy Mountain.
+
+ "4. We have great encouragement from these two righteous Acts,
+ which the Parliament of England have set forth, the one against
+ Kingly Power and the other to make England a Free Common-wealth.
+
+ "5. We are necessitated from our present necessity to do this, and
+ we hope that our actions will justify us in the gate, when all men
+ shall know the truth of our necessity:
+
+ "We are in Wellinborrow in one parish 1169 persons that receive
+ alms, as the Officers have made it appear at the Quarter Sessions
+ last. We have made our case known to the Justices; the Justices
+ have given order that the Town should raise a stock to set us on
+ work, and that the Hundred should be enjoyned to assist them. But
+ as yet we see nothing is done, nor any man that goeth about it. We
+ have spent all we have; our trading is decayed; our wives and
+ children cry for bread; our lives are a burden to us, divers of us
+ having 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 in family, and we cannot get bread for one of
+ them by our labor. Rich men's hearts are hardened; they will not
+ give us if we beg at their doors. If we steal, the Law will end our
+ lives. Divers of the poor are starved to death already; and it were
+ better for us that are living to die by the Sword than by the
+ Famine. And now we consider that the Earth is our Mother; and that
+ God hath given it to the children of men; and that the Common and
+ Waste Grounds belong to the poor; and that we have a right to the
+ common ground both from the Law of the Land, Reason and Scriptures.
+ Therefore we have begun to bestow our righteous labor upon it, and
+ we shall trust the Spirit for a blessing upon our labor, resolving
+ not to dig up any man's propriety until they freely give us it. And
+ truly we have great comfort already through the goodness of our
+ God, that some of those rich men amongst us that have had the
+ greatest profit upon the Common have freely given us their share
+ in it ... and the country farmers have profered, divers of them, to
+ give us seed to sow it; and so we find that God is persuading
+ Japhet to dwell in the tents of Shem. And truly those that we find
+ most against us are such as have been constant enemies to the
+ Parliament Cause from first to last.
+
+ "Now at last our desire is, That some that approve of this work of
+ Righteousness would but spread this our Declaration before the
+ great Council of the Land; that so they may be pleased to give us
+ more encouragement to go on; that so they may be found amongst the
+ small number of those that consider the poor and needy; that so the
+ Lord may deliver them in the time of their troubles ... and our
+ lives shall bless them, so shall good men stand by them, and evil
+ men shall be afraid of them, and they shall be counted the
+ Repairers of our Breaches, and the Restorers of our Paths to dwell
+ in. And thus we have declared the truth of our necessity, and
+ whosoever will come in to labor with us, shall have part with us,
+ and we with them, and we shall all of us endeavour to walk
+ righteously and peaceably in the Land of our Nativity.
+
+ "Richard Smith, John Avery, Thomas Fardin,
+ Richard Pendred, James Pitman, Roger Tuis,
+ Joseph Hitchcock, John Pye, Edward Turner.
+
+ _March 12th, 1649 (1650)._"
+
+By some means or other this Declaration seems to have reached the
+Council of State; for we find the following reference to it in
+Whitelocke, p. 448, under date April:
+
+ "A Letter sent from the Diggers and Planters of Commons for
+ Universal Freedom, to make the Earth a Common Treasury, that
+ everyone may enjoy food and raiment freely by his labor upon the
+ Earth, without paying Rents or Homage to any Fellow Creature of his
+ own kind, that everyone may be delivered from the Tyranny of the
+ Conquering Power, and so rise up out of that Bondage to enjoy the
+ Benefit of his Creation.
+
+ "The Letters were to get money to buy food for them, and corn to
+ sow the land which they had digged."
+
+Presently we shall lay some evidence before our readers of the view the
+Council of State, influenced as it was by men who had recently enriched
+themselves by land-grabbing, took of such proceedings, the trend of
+which they fully recognised. However, whatever view the Council of State
+were likely to take of this touching Declaration, there can be little
+doubt but that it appealed most strongly to Winstanley, who within a
+fortnight of its issue, on March 26th, replied to it in the following
+high-spirited, almost triumphal, address, which also appeared in the
+form of a broadsheet:[153:1]
+
+ "AN APPEAL TO ALL ENGLISHMEN TO JUDGE BETWEEN BONDAGE AND FREEDOM:
+ Sent from those that began to dig upon George Hill in Surrey,
+ but now are carrying on that public work upon the little heath
+ in the Parish of Cobham, near unto George Hill, wherein it
+ appears that the work of Digging upon the Commons is not only
+ warranted by Scripture, but by the Law of the Common-wealth of
+ England likewise.
+
+ "Behold, behold all Englishmen, The Land of England now is your
+ free inheritance: all Kingly and Lordly entanglements are declared
+ against by our Army and Parliament. The Norman Power is beaten in
+ the field, and his head is cut off. And that oppressing Conquest,
+ that hath reigned over you by King and House of Lords, for about
+ 600 years past, is now cast out by the Armies' Swords, the
+ Parliament's Acts and Laws, and the Common-wealth's Engagement.
+
+ "Therefore let not sottish covetousness in the Gentry deny the poor
+ or younger bretheren their just Freedom to build and plant corn
+ upon the common waste land; nor let slavish fear possess the heart
+ of the poor to stand in fear of the Norman yoke any longer, seeing
+ that it is broke. Come, those that are free within, turn your
+ Swords into Ploughshares, and Spears into Pruning Hooks, and take
+ Plow and Spade, and break up the Common Land, build your houses,
+ sow corn and take possession of your own Land, which you have
+ recovered out of the hands of the Norman oppressor.
+
+ "The common Land hath laid unmanured all the days of his Kingly and
+ Lordly power over you, by reason whereof both you and your fathers
+ (many of you) have been burthened with poverty. And that land which
+ would have been fruitful with corn, hath brought forth nothing but
+ heath, moss, turfeys, and the curse, according to the words of the
+ Scriptures: A fruitful land is made barren because of the
+ unrighteousness of the people that ruled therein, and would not
+ suffer it to be planted, because they would keep the poor under
+ bondage, to maintain their own Lordly Power and conquering
+ covetousness.
+
+ "But what hinders you now? Will you be Slaves and Beggars still
+ when you may be Freemen? Will you live in straits and die in
+ poverty when you may live comfortably? Will you always make a
+ profession of the words of Christ and Scripture, the sum whereof is
+ this--Do as you would be done unto, and live in love? And now it is
+ come to the point of fulfilling that Righteous Law, will you not
+ rise up and act? I do not mean act by the Sword, for that must be
+ left. But come, take plow and spade, build and plant, and make the
+ waste land fruitful, that there may be no beggar or idle person
+ among you. For if the waste land of England were manured by her
+ children, it would become in a few years the richest, the
+ strongest, and the most flourishing Land in the world, and all
+ Englishmen would live in peace and comfort. And this Freedom is
+ hindered by such as yet are full of the Norman base blood, who
+ would be Free-men themselves, but would have all others bond-men
+ and servants, nay Slaves to them....
+
+ "Well Englishmen, the Law of the Scriptures gives you a free and
+ full warrant to plant the Earth, and to live comfortably and in
+ love, doing as you would be done by, and condemns that covetous
+ kingly and lordly power of darkness in men, that makes some men
+ seek their freedom in the Earth and deny others that freedom. And
+ the Scriptures do establish this Law, to cast out kingly and lordly
+ self-willed and oppressing power, and to make every Nation in the
+ World a Free Common-wealth. So that you have the Scriptures to
+ protect you in making the Earth a Common Treasury for the
+ comfortable livelihood of your bodies, while you live upon Earth.
+
+ "Secondly, you have both what the Army and the Parliament have done
+ to protect you.... Our Common-wealth's Army have fought against the
+ Norman Conquest, and have cast him out, and keeps the field.... And
+ by this victory England is made a Free Common-wealth; and the
+ common land belongs to the younger brother, as the enclosures to
+ the elder brother, without restraint.... The Parliament since this
+ victory have made an Act or Law to make England a Free
+ Common-wealth. And by this Act they have set the people free from
+ King and House of Lords that ruled as conquerors over them, and
+ have abolished their self-will and murdering Laws with them that
+ made them. Likewise they have made another Act or Law, to cast out
+ Kingly Power, wherein they free the people from yielding obedience
+ to the King, or to any that holds claiming under the King. Now all
+ Lords of Manors, Tything Priests and Impropriators hold claiming or
+ title under the King, but by this Act of Parliament we are freed
+ from their power.
+
+ "Then, lastly, the Parliament have made an engagement to maintain
+ this present Common-wealth's government comprised within those Acts
+ or Laws against King and House of Lords. And called upon all
+ officers, tenants, and all sort of people to subscribe to it,
+ declaring that those that refuse to subscribe shall have no
+ privilege in the Common-wealth of England, nor protection from the
+ Law.
+
+ "Now behold all Englishmen, that by virtue of these two Laws and
+ the Engagement, the Tenants of Copyhold are free from obedience to
+ their Lords of Manors, and all poor people may build upon and plant
+ the Commons, and Lords of Manors break the Laws of the Land, and
+ still uphold the Kingly and Lordly Norman Power, if they hinder
+ them, or seek to beat them off from planting the Commons. Nor can
+ the Lords of Manors compel their Tenants of Copyholds to come to
+ their Court Barons, nor to be of their Juries, nor to take an oath
+ to be true to them, nor to pay fines, heriots, quit-rents, nor any
+ homage as formerly while the Kings and Lords were in their power.
+ And if the Tenants stand up to maintain their freedom against their
+ Lords' oppressing power, the Tenants forfeit nothing, but are
+ protected by the Laws and Engagement of the Land.
+
+ "And if so be that any poor men build them houses and sow corn upon
+ the Commons, the Lords of Manors cannot compel their Tenants to
+ beat them off: and if the Tenants refuse to beat them off, they
+ forfeit nothing, but are protected by the Laws and Engagement of
+ the Land. But if so be that any fearful or covetous Tenant do obey
+ their Court Barons, and will be of their Jury, and will still pay
+ fines, heriots, quit-rents, or any homage as formerly, or take new
+ oaths to be true to their Lords, or at the command of their Lords
+ do beat the poor men off from planting the Commons, then they have
+ broke the Engagement and Law of the Land, and both Lords and
+ Tenants are conspiring to uphold or bring in the Kingly or Lordly
+ Power again, and declare themselves to the Army, and to the
+ Parliament, and are Traitors to the Commonwealth of England. And if
+ so be that they are to have no protection of the Law that refused
+ to take the Engagement, surely they have lost their protection by
+ breaking their Engagement, and stand liable to answer for this
+ their offence to their great charge and trouble if any will
+ prosecute against them.
+
+ "Therefore you Englishmen, whether Tenants or Labouring-men, do not
+ enter into a new bond of slavery, now you are come to the point
+ that you may be free, if you will but stand up for freedom. For the
+ Army hath purchased your freedom. The Parliament hath declared for
+ your freedom. And all the Laws of the Commonwealth are your
+ protection. So that nothing is wanting on your part but courage and
+ faithfulness to put those Laws in execution, and so take possession
+ of your own Land, which the Norman power took from you and hath
+ kept from you about 600 years, and which you have now recovered out
+ of his hand.
+
+ "And if any say that the old Laws and Customs of the Land are
+ against the Tenant and the poor, and entitle the land only to Lords
+ of Manors still, I answer, all the old Laws are of no force, for
+ they were abolished when the King and House of Lords were cast out.
+ And if any say, I, but the Parliament made an Act to establish the
+ old Laws, I answer, this was to prevent a sudden rising upon the
+ cutting off the King's head; but afterwards they made these two
+ Laws, to cast out the Kingly Power, and to make England a
+ Common-wealth. And they have confirmed these two by the Engagement,
+ which the people now generally do own and subscribe: Therefore by
+ these Acts of Freedom they have abolished that Act that held up
+ bondage.
+
+ "Well, by these you may see your freedom; and we hope the Gentry
+ hereafter will cheat the poor no longer of their Land; and we hope
+ the Ministers hereafter will not tell the poor they have no right
+ to the Land. For now the Land of England is and ought to be a
+ Common Treasury to all Englishmen, as the several portions of the
+ Land of Canaan were the common livelihood to such and such a Tribe,
+ both to elder and younger Brother, without respect of persons. If
+ you do deny this, you deny the Scriptures. And now we shall give
+ you some few encouragements out of many to move you to stand up for
+ your freedom in the Land by acting with plow and spade upon the
+ Commons:
+
+ "(1) By this means, within a short time, there will be no beggar
+ or idle person in England, which will be the glory of England, and
+ the glory of that Gospel which England seems to profess in words.
+
+ "(2) The waste and common land being improved will bring in plenty
+ of all commodities, and prevent famine, and pull down the price of
+ corn, to 12d. a bushel, or less.
+
+ "(3) It will prove England to be the first of Nations which falls
+ off from the covetous beastly government first; and that sets the
+ Crown of Freedom on Christ's head, to rule over the Nations of the
+ World, and to declare him to be the joy and blessing of all
+ Nations. This should move all Governors to strive who shall be the
+ first that shall cast down their Crowns, Sceptres and Government at
+ Christ's feet: and they that will not give Christ his own glory
+ shall be shamed.
+
+ "(4) This Commonwealth's Freedom will unite the hearts of
+ Englishmen together in love; so that if a foreign enemy endeavour
+ to come in, we shall all with joint consent rise up together to
+ defend our inheritance, and shall be true one to another. Whereas
+ now the poor see if they fight and should conquer the enemy, yet
+ either they or their children are like to be slaves still, for the
+ Gentry will have all. And this is the cause why many run away and
+ fail our Armies in the time of need. And so through the Gentry's
+ hardness of heart against the Poor, the Land may be left to a
+ foreign enemy for want of the Poor's love sticking to them. For say
+ they, we can as well live under a foreign enemy, working for day
+ wages, as under our own bretheren, with whom we ought to have equal
+ freedom by the Law of Righteousness.
+
+ "(5) This freedom in planting the common land will prevent robbing,
+ stealing and murdering, and prisons will not so mightily be filled
+ with prisoners; and thereby we shall prevent that heart-breaking
+ spectacle of seeing so many hanged every Session as there are. And
+ surely this imprisoning and hanging of men is the Norman Power
+ still, and cannot stand with the freedom of the Commonwealth, nor
+ warranted by the Engagement. For by the Laws and Engagement of the
+ Commonwealth, none ought to be hanged nor put to death, for other
+ punishment may be found out. And those that do hang or put to death
+ their fellow Englishmen, under colour of Laws, do break the Laws
+ and Engagements by so doing, and cast themselves from under the
+ protection of the Commonwealth, and are Traitors to England's
+ Freedom, and upholders of the kingly, murdering power.
+
+ "(6) This Freedom in the Common Earth is the Poor's Right by the
+ Law of Creation and Equity of the Scriptures. For the Earth was not
+ made for a few, but for whole mankind; for God is no respecter of
+ persons."
+
+Winstanley then concludes as follows:
+
+ "Now these few considerations we offer to all England, and we
+ appeal to the judgement of all rational and righteous men whether
+ this we speak be not that substantial truth brought forth into
+ action, which Ministers have preached up, and all Religious Men
+ have made profession of. For certainly God, who is the King of
+ Righteousness, is not a God of words only, but of deeds; for it is
+ the badge of hypocrisy for man to say and not to do. Therefore we
+ leave this with you all, having peace in our hearts by declaring
+ faithfully to you this Light that is in us, and which we do not
+ only speak and write, but which we do easily act and practice.
+
+ "Likewise we write it as a letter of congratulation and
+ encouragement to our dear Fellow Englishmen that have begun to dig
+ upon the Commons, thereby taking possession of their Freedom, in
+ Wellinborow in Northamptonshire, and at Cox Hall in Kent, waiting
+ to see the chains of slavish fear to break and fall off from the
+ hearts of others in other countries till at last the whole Land is
+ filled with the knowledge and righteousness of the Restoring Power,
+ which is Christ Himself, Abraham's seed, who will spread Himself
+ till He become the joy of all Nations.
+
+ "Jerrard Winstanley, Richard Maidley, Thomas James, John Dickins,
+ John Palmer, John South, _Elder_, Nathaniel Halcomb, Thomas Edcer,
+ Henry Barton, John Smith, Jacob Heard, Thomas Barnet, Anthony Wren,
+ John Hayman, William Hitchcock, Henry Hancocke, John Batty, Thomas
+ Starre, Thomas Adams, John Coulton, Thomas South, Robert Sawyer,
+ Daniel Ireland, Robert Draper, Robert Coster, and divers others
+ that were not present when this went to the Presse.
+
+ "_March 26th, 1650._"
+
+We are afraid that the enterprise at Wellinborrow did not have a very
+long life; for in the _Calendar of State Papers_, Domestic, Green, p.
+106, under date April 15th, 1650, we note the following letter, which
+seems to us to show that the Rulers of England were fully alive to "the
+mischief these designs tend to," and to prove that it was the theories
+of the Diggers, not their actions, that filled the breasts of the
+privileged classes with the determination to nip their enterprise in the
+bud, before it had time to influence the life and thought of the Nation:
+
+ "COUNCIL OF STATE to Mr. PENTLOW, Justice of Peace for County
+ Northampton.
+
+ "We approve your proceedings with the Levellers in those parts, and
+ doubt not you are sensible of the mischief those designs tend to,
+ and of the necessity to proceed effectually against them. If the
+ laws in force against those who intrude upon other men's
+ properties, and that forbid and direct the punishing of all riotous
+ assemblies and seditious and tumultuous meetings, be put in
+ execution, there will not want means to preserve the public peace
+ against the attempts of this sort of people. Let those men be
+ effectually proceeded against at the next Sessions, _and if any
+ that ought to be instrumental to bring them to punishment fail in
+ their duty, signify the same to us_, that we may require of them an
+ account of their neglect; but till we find the ordinary means
+ unable to preserve the peace, we would not have recourse to any
+ other."
+
+The sentence we have italicised seems to show that even amongst the
+Justices of the Peace and Officers of the Land the doctrines of the
+Diggers had found sympathisers, who were unwilling that they should be
+proceeded against. Nor can we be surprised at this when we bear in mind
+the terrible state of the rural population of the "meaner sort" at the
+time. Some idea of same may be gathered in the Declaration from
+Wellinborrow, which is more than fully confirmed in the pages of
+Whitelocke, from which we take the following brief entries:
+
+ (P. 398.) Under date April 30th, 1649:
+
+ "Letters from Lancashire of their want of bread, so that many
+ families were starved."
+
+ (P. 399.) Under date May 1649:
+
+ "Letters from Newcastle that many in Cumberland and Westmoreland
+ died in the Highways for want of bread, and divers left their
+ habitations, travelling with their wives and children to other
+ parts to get Relief, but could have none. That the Committees and
+ Justices of the Peace of Cumberland signed a certificate, that
+ there were Thirty Thousand Families that had neither seed nor bread
+ corn, nor money to buy either, and they desired a collection for
+ them, which was made, but much too little to relieve so great a
+ multitude."
+
+ (P. 404.) Under date May 1649:
+
+ "Letters from Lancashire of great scarcity of corn, and that the
+ famine was sore among them, after which the plague overspread
+ itself in many parts of the country, taking away whole families
+ together, and few escaped where any house was visited, and that the
+ Levellers got into arms, but were suppressed speedily by the
+ Governor."
+
+ (P. 421.) Under date August 1649:
+
+ "Letters of great complaints of the taxes in Lancashire: and that
+ the meaner sort threaten to leave their habitations, and their
+ wives and children to be maintained by the Gentry; that they can no
+ longer bear the oppression, to have the bread taken out of the
+ mouths of their wives and children by taxes; and that if an army of
+ the Turks came to relieve them, they will join them."
+
+Under such circumstances we cannot be surprised that Winstanley's
+revolutionary, though to our mind eternally true, doctrines, upholding
+the equal claim of all to the use of the land, proclaimed as they were
+with all the eloquence, zeal and fire of his noble spirit, should have
+awakened an echo in the hearts of the more thoughtful, as well as of the
+more necessitous, of his fellow-citizens. But all in vain. In his time,
+as in our time, the Inward Light could not overcome the Outward
+Darkness, nor Universal Love, which is Justice and Righteousness,
+overcome Self Love, which is Covetousness. Then, as now, the Spirit of
+Equity, of Reason and of Love was impotent when opposed by the power of
+the Sword, of Force. And yet, and yet--more especially in view of the
+thought to-day stirring advanced political circles in every
+constitutionally governed country in the world--who dare maintain that
+Winstanley lived in vain!
+
+About a fortnight after the publication of his _Appeal to all
+Englishmen_, Winstanley issued yet another pamphlet, of which, as it
+contains nothing save what he had already better expressed in his other
+writings, we need only quote the suggestive title-page, with which this
+chapter may fittingly close: it reads as follows:
+
+ "AN HUMBLE REQUEST TO THE MINISTERS OF BOTH UNIVERSITIES, AND TO
+ ALL LAWYERS OF EVERY INNS-A-COURT:[161:1] to consider of the
+ Scriptures and Points of Law herein mentioned, and to give a
+ rational and Christian answer, whereby the difference may be
+ composed in peace, between the Poor Men in England who have
+ begun to dig, plow and build upon the Common Land, claiming it
+ their own by right of Creation,
+
+ AND
+
+ The Lords of Manors that trouble them, who have no other claimings
+ to Commons than from the King's will, or from the Power of the
+ Conquest,
+
+ AND
+
+ If neither Minister nor Lawyer will undertake a Reconciliation in
+ this case. Then we appeal to the Stone, Timber and Dust of the
+ Earth you tread upon, to hold forth the light of this business,
+ questioning not but that Power that dwells everywhere will
+ cause Light to spring out of Darkness, and Freedom out of
+ Bondage."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[146:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 1365.
+
+[148:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 534. We have to
+thank the late Rev. Thomas Hancock, of Harrow on the Hill, for this
+reference. Mr. Hancock's profound knowledge of the Commonwealth times
+was well known to every student of the period, at whose disposal he
+gladly placed the wonderful store of information he had collected. We
+would here acknowledge our indebtedness to him for this and other
+information.
+
+[150:1] British Museum, under Wellingborrow, Press Mark, S. Sh. fol. 669
+f., 15 (21).
+
+[153:1] British Museum, Press Mark, S. Sh. fol. 669 f., 15 (23).
+
+[161:1] There is no copy of this pamphlet at the British Museum, nor in
+the Bodleian; but a copy is to be found in the Dyce and Forster Library,
+South Kensington Museum, London, W.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+GERRARD WINSTANLEY'S UTOPIA: THE LAW OF FREEDOM
+
+ "And when reason's voice,
+ Loud as the voice of nature, shall have waked
+ The nations; and mankind perceives that vice
+ Is discord, war and misery; that virtue
+ Is peace, and happiness and harmony;
+ When man's maturer nature shall disdain
+ The playthings of its childhood;--kingly glare
+ Will lose its power to dazzle; its authority
+ Will silently pass by; the gorgeous{7} throne
+ Shall stand unnoticed in the regal hall,
+ Fast falling to decay; whilst falsehood's trade
+ Shall be as hateful and unprofitable
+ As that of truth is now."--SHELLEY.
+
+
+The above words of Shelley might have been written purposely to serve as
+a preface to Winstanley's final work, the main contents of which we now
+propose to lay before our readers. It happened to be the first of
+Winstanley's works that fell into our hands, when, many years since, in
+consequence of Carlyle's somewhat patronising reference to them, we
+first determined to ascertain what the views and aims of the Diggers
+really were. Its perusal{8} convinced us, and our subsequent
+investigations have only served to strengthen the belief, that
+Winstanley was, in truth, one of the most courageous, far-seeing and
+philosophic preachers of social righteousness that England has given to
+the world. And yet how unequally Fame bestows her rewards. More's
+_Utopia_ has secured its author a world-wide renown; it is spoken of,
+even if not read, in every civilised country in the world. Gerrard
+Winstanley's Utopia is unknown even to his own countrymen. Yet let any
+impartial student compare the ideal society conceived by Sir Thomas
+More--a society based upon slavery, and extended by wars carried on by
+hireling, mercenary soldiers--with the simple, peaceful, rational and
+practical social ideal pictured by Gerrard Winstanley, and it is to the
+latter that he will be forced to assign the laurel crown.
+
+From internal evidence we gather that the book was written some time
+before it was published. Winstanley had come to realise that the real
+power of the Country was in the hands of the Army, of its trusted
+officers and leaders. Hence it is, probably, that the opening epistle is
+addressed to Oliver Cromwell, who at the time was Commander in Chief of
+the Army, and the man to whom all England was looking with wonder and
+admiration, not unmixed with anxious forebodings. The years that had
+elapsed between the conception and the publication of Winstanley's book
+had been momentous ones in this great man's career. Owing to Lord
+Fairfax's reluctance to invade Scotland, the command of the
+Commonwealth's Army had devolved on him: and right good use had the hero
+of Naseby made of his opportunities. In September 1651 he won the
+decisive battle of Dunbar; and in the same month of the following year
+he won the even more decisive battle of Worcester, which, to use
+Gardiner's words, manifested to the world that England refused "to be
+ruled by a king who came in as an invader."[163:1] In the following
+November, when Winstanley was sitting down to write his Dedicatory
+Epistle, Cromwell was already back in his seat in Parliament,
+endeavouring "to use the patriotic fervour called out by the invasion to
+settle the Commonwealth on a broader basis," and agitating for "a time
+to be fixed for the dissolution of the existing Parliament and for the
+calling of a new one."[163:2] And in February 1652, when the book was
+published, political and religious excitement in England was probably at
+the greatest height to which it ever attained even in the stirring days
+of the Commonwealth, and Cromwell may be regarded as standing at the
+dividing line of his wonderful career.
+
+The title-page of the book reads as follows:
+
+ "THE LAW OF FREEDOM IN A PLATFORM:[164:1]
+
+ OR
+
+ TRUE MAGISTRACY RESTORED.
+
+ Humbly presented to Oliver Cromwel, General of the Commonwealth's
+ Army in England, Scotland and Ireland. And to all English-men
+ my Bretheren, whether in Church Fellowship or not in Church
+ Fellowship,[164:2] both sorts walking as they conceive
+ according to the order of the Gospel: and from them to all the
+ Nations of the World.
+
+ Wherein is declared, What is Kingly Government, and What is
+ Commonwealth's Government.
+
+ BY GERRARD WINSTANLEY.
+
+ In thee, O England, is the Law arising up to shine,
+ If thou receive and practice it, the Crown it will be thine.
+ If thou reject, and still remain a froward Son to be,
+ Another Land will it receive, and take the Crown from thee.
+
+ REV. 11-15. DAN. 7. 27.
+
+ LONDON.
+
+ Printed for the Author, and are to be sold by Giles Calvert at the
+ Black Spred-Eagle at the West end of Pauls."
+
+As already mentioned, it opens with a Dedicatory Letter--
+
+ "To His Excellency OLIVER CROMWEL, General of the Commonwealth's
+ Army in England, Scotland and Ireland"--
+
+which commences as follows:
+
+ "SIR,--God hath honored you with the highest honor of any man since
+ Moses' time, to be the head of a People who have cast out an
+ oppressing Pharaoh. For when the Norman Power had conquered our
+ forefathers, he took the free use of our English Ground from them,
+ and made them his servants. And God hath made you a successful
+ instrument to cast out that Conqueror, and to recover our Land and
+ Liberties again, by your Victories, out of that Norman hand."
+
+Winstanley then indicates Cromwell's duty, as well as the alternative
+ways open to him, in the following words:
+
+ "That which is wanting on your part to be done is this, To see the
+ Oppressor's Power be cast out with his person; and to see that the
+ free possession of the Land and Liberties be put into the hands of
+ the Oppressed Commoners of England. For the Crown of Honor cannot
+ be yours, neither can these Victories be called victories on your
+ part, till the Land and Freedom won be possessed by them that
+ adventured person and purse for them.
+
+ "Now you know, Sir, that the Kingly Conqueror was not beaten by you
+ only, as you are a single man, nor by the Officers of the Army
+ joined to you; but by the hand and assistance of the Commoners,
+ whereof some came in person and adventured their lives with you,
+ others stayed at home and planted the Earth, and paid Taxes and
+ gave Free Quarter to maintain you that went to war.... And now you
+ have the Power of the Land in your hand, you must do one of these
+ two things: First, either set the Land free to the Oppressed
+ Commoners who assisted you ... and so take possession of your
+ deserved honor. Or, secondly, you must only remove the Conqueror's
+ power out of the King's hand into other men's, maintaining the old
+ laws still; and then your wisdom and honor will be blasted for
+ ever, and you will either lose yourself, or lay the foundation of
+ greater slavery to posterity than you ever knew."
+
+A marvellous prophecy, truly! Cromwell could see nothing in Winstanley's
+demands save that they tended "to make the Tenant as liberal a fortune
+as the Land-lord,"[165:1] which did not conform to his sense of the
+eternal fitness of things. Winstanley then continues:
+
+ "You know that while the King was in the height of his oppressing
+ power, the People only whispered in private chambers against him;
+ but afterwards it was preached upon the house-tops, that he was a
+ Tyrant, a Traitor to England's Peace: and he had his overturn.
+
+ "The Righteous Power in the Creation is the same still. If you and
+ those in power with you should be found walking in the King's
+ steps, can you secure yourselves or posterities from an overturn?
+ Surely No.
+
+ "The Spirit of the whole Creation (who is God) is about the
+ Reformation of the World, and he will go forward in his
+ work.[166:1] For if he would not spare Kings, who have sat so long
+ at his right hand, governing the world, neither will he regard you,
+ unless your ways be found more righteous than the King's.... Lose
+ not your Crown; take it up and wear it. But know that it is no
+ Crown of Honor till promises and engagements made by you be
+ performed to your friends. _He that continues to the end, shall
+ receive the Crown._ Now you do not see the end of your work unless
+ the Kingly Law and Power be removed as well as his person."
+
+
+THE COMPLAINTS OF THE PEOPLE.
+
+He subsequently returns to his original subject, as follows:
+
+ "It may be you will say to me, _What shall I do?_ I answer, You are
+ in place and power to see all Burthens taken off from your friends
+ the Commoners of England. You will say, _What are those burthens?_
+
+ "I will instance in some, both which I know in my own experience,
+ and which I hear the people daily complaining of and groaning
+ under, looking upon you and waiting for deliverance.
+
+ "Most people cry, We have paid taxes, given free-quarter, wasted
+ our estates, and lost our friends in the wars, and the Task-masters
+ multiply over us more than formerly. I have asked divers this
+ question, _Why do you say so?_
+
+ "Some have answered me that promises, oaths and engagements have
+ been made, as a motive to draw us to assist in the wars, that
+ Privileges of Parliament and Liberties of Subjects should be
+ preserved, and that all Popery and Episcopacy and Tyranny should be
+ rooted out. And these promises are not performed. Now there is an
+ opportunity to perform them.
+
+ "For first, say they, the current of succeeding Parliaments is
+ stopped, which is one of the greatest privileges (and people's
+ liberties) for safety and peace. And if that continue stopped, we
+ shall be more offended by an hereditary Parliament than we were
+ oppressed by an hereditary King.
+
+ "And for the Commoners, who were called Subjects while the Kingly
+ Conqueror was in power, they have not as yet their Liberties
+ granted them. I will instance them in order, according as the
+ common whisperings are among the people."
+
+
+THE POWER OF THE CLERGY.
+
+ "For say they, The Burthens of the Clergy remain still upon us, in
+ a threefold nature.
+
+ "_First_, If any man declare his judgement in the things of God
+ contrary to the Clergy's report, or the minds of some high
+ Officers, they are cashiered, imprisoned, crushed and undone, and
+ made sinners for a word, as they were in the Popes and Bishops
+ days; so that though their names be cast out, yet their High
+ Commission Court Power remains still, persecuting men for
+ conscience sake, when their actions are unblamable.
+
+ "_Secondly_,{9} In many Parishes there are old, formal, ignorant
+ Episcopal Priests established; and some Ministers, who are bitter
+ enemies to Commonwealth's Freedom, and friends to Monarchy, are
+ established preachers, and are continually buzzing their subtle
+ principles into the minds of the people, to undermine the peace of
+ our declared Commonwealth, causing a disaffection of spirit among
+ neighbours, who otherwise would live in peace.
+
+ "_Thirdly_, The burthen of Tythes remains still upon our estates,
+ which was taken from us by the Kings and given to the Clergy to
+ maintain them by our labors. So that though their preaching fill
+ the minds of many with madness, contention and unsatisfied
+ doubting, because their imaginary and ungrounded doctrines cannot
+ be understood by them, yet we must pay them large Tythes for so
+ doing: this is Oppression."
+
+
+THE POWER OF THE LAWYERS.
+
+ "_Fourthly_, If we go to the Lawyer, we find him to sit in the
+ Conqueror's Chair, though the King be removed, maintaining the
+ King's power to the height....
+
+ "_Fifthly_, Say they, if we look upon the Customs of the Law
+ itself, it is the same it was in the King's days, only the name is
+ altered; as if the Commoners of England had paid their taxes, given
+ free-quarter, and shed their blood, not to reform, but to baptize
+ the Law with a new name, from Kingly Law to State Law....[168:1]
+ And so as the Sword pulls down Kingly Power with one hand, the
+ King's Old Law builds up Monarchy again with the other."
+
+
+THE MAIN WORK OF REFORMATION.
+
+ "AND INDEED THE MAIN WORK OF REFORMATION LIES IN THIS, TO REFORM
+ THE CLERGY, LAWYERS AND LAW; FOR ALL THE COMPLAINTS OF THE LAND ARE
+ WRAPPED UP WITHIN THEM THREE, NOT IN THE PERSON OF A KING."
+
+ "_Sixthly_, If we look into Parishes, the burthens there are many."
+
+
+AND OF LORDS OF MANORS.
+
+ "_First_, For the Power of Lords of Manors remains still over their
+ Bretheren, requiring Fines and Heriots, beating them off the free
+ use of the Common Land, unless their Bretheren will pay them Rent,
+ exacting obedience as much as they did, and more, when the King was
+ in power.
+
+ "Now saith the People, By what Power do these maintain their Title
+ over us? Formerly they held Title from the King, as he was the
+ Conqueror's successor. But have not the Commoners cast out the
+ King, and broken the band of that Conquest? Therefore in equity
+ they are free from the slavery of that Lordly Power.
+
+ "_Secondly_, In Parishes where Commons lie, the rich Norman
+ Free-holders, or the new (more covetous) Gentry, overstock the
+ Commons with sheep and cattle, so that the inferior Tenants and
+ poor Labourers can hardly keep a cow, but half starve her. So that
+ the poor are kept poor still, and the Common Freedom of the Earth
+ is kept from them, and the poor have no more relief than they had
+ when the King (or Conqueror) was in power....
+
+ "Now saith the whisperings of the People, the inferior Tenants and
+ Laborers bear all the burthens, in laboring the Earth, in paying
+ Taxes and Free-quarter above their strength, and in furnishing the
+ Armies with soldiers, who bear the greatest burden of the War; and
+ yet the Gentry, who oppress them and live idle upon their labors,
+ carry away all the comfortable livelihood of the Earth.
+
+ "For is not this a common speech among the People, We have parted
+ with our estates, we have lost our friends in the wars, which we
+ willingly gave up because Freedom was promised us; and now in the
+ end we have new Task-masters, and our old burthens are increased.
+ And though all sorts of people have taken an engagement to cast out
+ Kingly Power, yet Kingly Power remains in power still in the hands
+ of those who have no more right to the Earth than ourselves.
+
+ "For say the people, If the Lords of Manors and our Task-masters
+ hold Title to the Earth over us from the old Kingly Power, behold
+ that power is broken and cast out. And two Acts of Parliament have
+ been made. The one to cast out Kingly Power, backed by the
+ Engagement against King and the House of Lords. The other to make
+ England a Free Commonwealth."
+
+He then still further supports his fundamental contention in the
+following unanswerable manner:
+
+ "If Lords of Manors lay claim to the Earth over us from the Army's
+ Victories over the King; then we have as much right to the Land as
+ they, because our labors and blood and death of friends, were the
+ purchasers of the Earth's Freedom as well as theirs. And is not
+ this a slavery, say the people, that though there be land enough in
+ England to maintain ten times as many people as are in it, yet some
+ must beg of their bretheren, or work in hard drudgery for day wages
+ for them, or starve, or steal, and so be hanged out of the way, as
+ men not fit to live on the Earth? Before they are suffered to plant
+ the waste land for a livelihood, they must pay rent to their
+ bretheren for it. Well, this is a burthen the Creation groans
+ under; and the subjects (so-called) have not their birth-right
+ freedom granted them from their bretheren, who hold it from them by
+ Club-Law, but not by Righteousness."
+
+
+WHAT IS TO RULE?
+
+ "And who now must we be subject to, seeing the Conqueror is gone? I
+ answer, We must either be subject to a law or to men's wills. If to
+ a law, then _all_ men in England are subject, or ought to be,
+ thereunto.... You will say, We must be subject to the Rulers. This
+ is true, but not to suffer the Rulers to call the Earth theirs and
+ not ours; for by so doing they betray their trust and run into the
+ line of tyranny, and we lose our freedom, and from thence enmity
+ and wars arise. A Ruler is worthy double honor when he rules well;
+ that is, when he himself is subject to the Law, and requires all
+ others to be subject thereunto, and makes it his work to see the
+ Law obeyed, and not his own will; and such Rulers are faithful, and
+ they are to be subjected unto us therein: For all Commonwealth's
+ Rulers are Servants to, not Lords and Kings over the
+ people."[170:1]
+
+
+THE LAND QUESTION.
+
+ "But you will say, Is not the land your brother's? and you cannot
+ take away another man's right by claiming a share therein with him.
+ I answer, It is his either by Creation Right or by Right of
+ Conquest. If by Creation Right he calls the Earth his and not mine,
+ then it is mine as well as his; for the Spirit of the whole
+ Creation, who made us both, is no respecter of persons. And if by
+ Conquest he calls the Earth his and not mine, it must be either by
+ the conquest of the King over the Commoners or by the conquest of
+ the Commoners over the King. If he claim the Earth to be his from
+ the King's Conquest, the Kings are beaten and cast out, and that
+ title is undone. If he claim title to the Earth to be his from the
+ conquest of the Commoners over the Kings, then I have right to the
+ land as well as my brother; for my brother without me, nor I
+ without my brother, did not cast out the Kings; but both together
+ assisting, with purse and person, we prevailed, so that I have by
+ this victory as equal a share in the Earth which is now redeemed as
+ my brother, by the Law of Righteousness.
+
+ "If my brother still say he will be Land Lord (through his covetous
+ ambition) and I must pay him rent, or else I shall not live in the
+ Land, then does he take my right from me, which I have purchased by
+ my money in taxes, free-quarter and blood. And O thou Spirit of the
+ Whole Creation, who hath this title to be called King of
+ Righteousness and King of Peace, judge thou between my brother and
+ me, Whether this be Righteous, etc.
+
+ "And now say the people, Is not this a grievous thing, that our
+ bretheren that will be Land Lords, right or wrong, will make Laws,
+ and call for a Law to be made to imprison, crush, nay put to death
+ any that denies God, Christ and Scripture; and yet they will not
+ practice that Golden Rule, _Do to another as thou wouldst have
+ another do to thee_, which God, Christ and Scripture have enacted
+ for a Law? Are not these men guilty of death by their own Law,
+ which is the word of their own mouth? Is it not a flat denial of
+ God and Scripture?"
+
+Winstanley then gives some interesting details of the history of this
+pamphlet, as follows:
+
+ "Thus, Sir, I have reckoned up some of those burdens which the
+ people groan under. And I being sensible hereof was moved in myself
+ to present this Platform of Commonwealth's Government unto you,
+ wherein I have declared a full Commonwealth's Freedom, according to
+ the Rule of Righteousness, which is God's Word. It was intended for
+ your view about two years ago, but the disorder of the times caused
+ me to lay it aside, with a thought never to bring it to light.
+ Likewise I hearing that Mr. Peters and some others propounded this
+ request--That the Word of God might be consulted with to find out a
+ healing Government, which I liked well, and waited to see such a
+ Rule come forth, for there are good Rules in the Scripture if they
+ were obeyed and practised.
+
+ "I laid aside this in silence, and said I would not make it public;
+ but this word was like fire in my bones ever and anon--_Thou shalt
+ not bury thy talent in the earth_. Thereupon I was stirred to give
+ it a resurrection, and to pick together as many of my scattered
+ papers as I could find, and to compile them into this method, which
+ I do here present to you, and do quiet my own spirit. And now I
+ have set the candle at your door; for you have power in your hand
+ to act for Common Freedom if you will: I have no power."
+
+He then continues to indicate his own views, as also the outlines of the
+scheme the details of which are unfolded in the body of his work, and
+warns Cromwell that--
+
+ "It may be here are some things inserted which you may not like,
+ yet other things you may like; therefore I pray you read it, and be
+ as the industrious bee, suck out the honey and cast away the weeds.
+ Though this Platform be like a piece of timber rough-hewed, yet the
+ discreet workman may take it and frame a handsome building out of
+ it."
+
+
+OF COMPENSATION.
+
+ "It may be you will say, If Tythe be taken from the Priests and
+ Impropriators, and Copyhold Services from Lords of Manors, how
+ shall they be provided for again; for is it not unrighteous to take
+ their estates from them?
+
+ "I answer, When Tythes were first enacted, and Lordly Power drawn
+ over the backs of the oppressed, the Kings and Conquerors made no
+ scruple of conscience to take it, though the people lived in sore
+ bondage of poverty for want of it; and can there be scruple of
+ conscience to make restitution of this which hath been so long
+ stolen goods? It is no scruple arising from the Righteous Law, but
+ from Covetousness, who goes away sorrowful to hear he must part
+ with all to follow Righteousness and Peace."
+
+He then explains that under his scheme even the privileged classes would
+not be injured, since they would share with the rest of the community.
+
+
+OF RICHES.
+
+ "But shall not one man be richer than another?
+
+ "There is no need for that; for riches make men vainglorious,
+ proud, and to oppress their bretheren, and are the occasion of
+ wars. No man can be rich but he must be rich either by his own
+ labors, or by the labors of other men helping him. If a man have no
+ help from his neighbors, he shall never gather an estate of
+ hundreds and thousands a year. If other men help him to work, then
+ are those riches his neighbors' as well as his; for they be the
+ fruits of other men's labors as well as his own. But all rich men
+ live at ease, feeding and clothing themselves by the labors of
+ other men, not by their own, which is their shame and not their
+ nobility; for it is a more blessed thing to give than to receive.
+ But rich men receive all they have from the laborer's hand, and
+ what they give, they give away other men's labors, not their own.
+ Therefore they are not righteous actors in the Earth."
+
+
+TITLES OF HONOUR.
+
+ "But shall not one man have more Titles of Honor than another?
+
+ "Yes: As a man goes through offices, he rises to Titles of Honor,
+ till he comes to the highest nobility, to be a faithful
+ Commonwealth's Man in a Parliament House. Likewise he who finds out
+ any secret in Nature shall have a Title of Honor given him, though
+ he be a young man. But no man shall have any Title of Honor till he
+ win it by industry, or come to it by age or Office-bearing. Every
+ man that is fifty years of age shall have respect as a man of honor
+ from all others that are younger, as is shown hereafter."
+
+
+OF FAMILY LIFE.
+
+ "Shall every man count his neighbour's house as his own, and live
+ together as one family?
+
+ "No; though the Earth and Storehouses be common to every Family,
+ yet every Family shall live apart as they do; and every man's
+ house, wife, children and furniture for ornament of his house, or
+ anything he hath fetched in from the Storehouses, or provided for
+ the necessary use of his family, is all a propriety unto that
+ Family, for the peace thereof. And if any man offer to take away a
+ man's wife, children, or furniture of his house, without his
+ consent, or disturb the peace of his dwelling, he shall suffer
+ punishment as an enemy to the Commonwealth's Government, as is
+ mentioned in the Platform following."
+
+
+OF LAW AND LAWYERS.
+
+ "Shall we have no Lawyers?
+
+ "There shall be no need of them, for there is to be no buying and
+ selling, neither any need to expound Laws; for the bare letter of
+ the Law shall be both Judge and Lawyer, trying every man's actions.
+ And seeing we shall have successive Parliaments every year, there
+ will be rules made for every action that a man can do.
+
+ "But there are to be Officers chosen yearly in every Parish, to see
+ the Laws executed according to the letter of the Laws; so that
+ there will be no long work in trying of offences, as it is under
+ Kingly Government, to get the Lawyers money, and to enslave the
+ Commoners to the Conqueror's Prerogative Law or Will. The sons of
+ contention, Simeon and Levi, must not bear rule in a Free
+ Commonwealth."
+
+
+PLEA FOR CONSIDERATION.
+
+ "At the first view you may say, 'This is a strange government.' But
+ I pray you judge nothing before trial. Lay this Platform of
+ Commonwealth's Government in one scale, and lay Monarchy, or Kingly
+ Government, in the other scale, and see which gives true weight to
+ Righteous Freedom and Peace. _There is no middle path between
+ these two; for a man must either be a free and true Commonwealth
+ man, or a Monarchial Tyrannical Royalist._"
+
+
+ANSWERS TO FURTHER OBJECTIONS.
+
+ "If any say this will bring poverty, surely they mistake: for there
+ will be plenty of all Earthly Commodities, with less labor and
+ trouble then now it is under Monarchy. There will be no want; for
+ every man may keep as plentiful a house as he will, and never run
+ into debt, for common stock pays for all.
+
+ "If you say, Some will live idle; I answer, No. It will make idle
+ persons to become workers, as is declared in the Platform: There
+ shall be neither Beggar nor Idle Person.
+
+ "If you say, This will make men quarrel and fight; I answer, No. It
+ will turn Swords into Ploughshares, and settle such a peace in the
+ Earth as Nations shall learn war no more. Indeed, the Government of
+ Kings is a breeder of wars, because men being put into the straits
+ of poverty, are moved to fight for Liberty, and to take one
+ another's estates from them, and to obtain Mastery. Look into all
+ Armies and see what they do more, but make some poor, some rich,
+ put some into freedom others into bondage: and is not this a plague
+ among mankind?
+
+ "Well I question not but what Objections can be raised against this
+ Commonwealth's Government, they shall find an answer in this
+ Platform following. I have been something large, because I could
+ not contract myself into a lesser volume, having so many things to
+ speak of."
+
+
+THE ONE THING NECESSARY.
+
+ "I do not say nor desire that everyone shall be compelled to
+ practice this Commonwealth's Government; for the spirits of some
+ will be enemies at first, though afterwards they will prove the
+ most cordial and true friends thereunto. Yet I desire that the
+ Commonwealth's Land ... may be set free to all that have lent
+ assistance{10} either of person or purse to obtain it, and to all
+ that are willing to come in to the practice of this Government, and
+ be obedient to the Laws thereof. And for others who are not
+ willing, let them stay in the way of buying and selling, which is
+ the Law of the Conqueror, till they be willing."
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+ "And so I leave this in your hand, humbly prostrating myself and it
+ before you, and remain, A true lover of Commonwealth's Government,
+ Peace and Freedom.
+ "GERRARD WINSTANLEY.
+ "_November 5th, 1651._"
+
+
+
+
+TO THE FRIENDLY AND UNBIASSED READER.
+
+The somewhat long, though comprehensive, letter to Cromwell is followed
+by one addressed "To the Friendly and Unbiassed Reader," in which a very
+different tone is adopted, and which runs as follows:
+
+ "READER,--It was the Apostle's advice formerly to try all things,
+ and to hold fast that which is best. This Platform of Government
+ which I offer is the original Righteousness and Peace in the Earth,
+ though he hath been buried under the clod of Kingly Covetousness,
+ Pride and Oppression a long time. Now he begins to have his
+ Resurrection, despise it not while it is small; though thou
+ understand it not at the first sight, yet open the door and look
+ into the house; for thou mayst see that which will satisfy thy
+ heart in quiet rest."
+
+
+SUMMARY OF THE RESULTS OF HIS PLAN.
+
+ "To prevent thy hasty rashness, I have given thee a short
+ compendium of the whole.
+
+ "_First_, Thou knowst that the Earth in all Nations is governed by
+ buying and selling, for all the Laws of Kings hath relation
+ thereunto. Now this Platform following declares to thee the
+ Government of the Earth without buying and selling, and the Laws
+ are the Laws of a free and peaceable Commonwealth....
+
+ "Every family shall live apart, as now they do; every man shall
+ enjoy his own wife, and every woman her own husband, as now they
+ do: every Trade shall be improved to more excellency than now it
+ is; all children shall be educated and trained up in subjection to
+ parents and elder persons more than now they are: The Earth shall
+ be planted and the fruits reaped and carried into Storehouses by
+ common assistance of every family: The Riches of the Storehouses
+ shall be the common stock to every Family: There shall be no idle
+ person nor beggar in the Land."
+
+
+COMMONWEALTH GOVERNMENT AND KINGLY GOVERNMENT.
+
+ "The Commonwealth's Government unites all people in a Land into one
+ heart and mind. And it was this Government which made Moses to call
+ Abraham's seed one House of Israel, though there were many Tribes
+ and many Families. And it may be said, Blessed is the People whose
+ Earthly Government is the Law of Common Righteousness....
+
+ "The Government of Kings is the Government of the Scribes and
+ Pharisees, who count it no freedom unless they be the Lords of the
+ Earth and of their Bretheren. But Commonwealth's Government is the
+ Government of Righteousness and Peace, who is no respecter of
+ persons."
+
+
+FINAL APPEAL TO THE READER.
+
+ "Therefore, Reader, here is a trial for thy sincerity. Thou shalt
+ have no want of food, raiment or freedom among bretheren in this
+ way propounded. See now if thou canst be content, as the Scriptures
+ say, Having food and raiment therewith be content, and grudge not
+ to let thy brother have the same with thee.
+
+ "Dost thou pray and fast for Freedom, and give God thanks again for
+ it? Why, know that God is not partial. For if thou pray, it must be
+ for Freedom to all; and if thou give thanks, it must be because
+ Freedom covers all people: for this will prove a lasting peace.
+
+ "Everyone is ready to say, They fight for their Country, and what
+ they do, they do it is for the good of their Country. Well, let it
+ appear now that thou hast fought and acted for thy Country's
+ Freedom. But if when thou hast power to settle Freedom in thy
+ Country, thou takest the possession of the Earth into thy own
+ particular hands, and makest thy Brother work for thee, as the
+ Kings did, thou hast fought and acted for thyself, not for thy
+ Country, and here thy inside hypocrisy is discovered.
+
+ "But here take notice, That Common Freedom, which is the Rule I
+ would have practiced and not talked on, was thy pretence, but
+ particular Freedom to thyself was thy intent. Amend, or else thou
+ wilt be shamed, when Knowledge doth spread to cover the Earth, even
+ as the waters cover the Seas. And so Farewell.
+ J. W."
+
+To-day knowledge is commencing "to spread to cover the Earth even as the
+waters cover the Seas"; and the thinkers of our times are rapidly coming
+to realise, to use Shelley's words, that--"The most fatal error that
+ever happened in the world was the separation of political and ethical
+science": a separation against which, as we have seen, Winstanley in his
+time protested so vigorously. Hence it is, probably, that the teachings
+of our modern seers and prophets, of the leaders and inspirers of the
+advanced thought of to-day, of Ruskin, Tolstoy, and even of Henry
+George, almost seem to us but as the echoes of those of their great
+forerunner in the stirring days of the Commonwealth.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[163:1] _History of the Commonwealth_, vol. i. p. 446.
+
+[163:2] _Ibid._ p. 471.
+
+[164:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 655. Also at
+the Guildhall Library and the Bodleian.
+
+[164:2] At the very time this book was being written, some of the new
+settlements in America were making Church Fellowship a necessary
+condition of civil rights.
+
+[165:1] See Carlyle's _Letters and Speeches_, Speech II., Sept. 4th,
+1654, part viii. p. 20.
+
+[166:1] This argument would have appealed strongly to Cromwell, who, in
+one of his Speeches to his First Parliament, said: "If I had not a hope
+fixed in me that this cause and this business was of God, I would many
+years ago have run from it. If it be of God, He will bear it up. If it
+be of man, it will tumble; as everything that hath been of man since the
+world began hath done. And what are all our Histories and other
+Traditions of Actions in former times but God manifesting Himself, that
+He hath shaken and tumbled down, and trampled upon everything that He
+had not planted."--Carlyle, _Letters and Speeches_, part viii. p. 89.
+
+[168:1] With this contention, too, Cromwell would have found himself in
+complete sympathy. For "the truth of it is, There are wicked and
+abominable laws which will be in your power to alter," he said to one of
+his Parliaments on Sept. 17th, 1656. "To hang a man for
+Six-and-eight-pence, and I know not what; to hang for a trifle and
+acquit murder,--is in the ministration of the Law, through the ill
+framing of it. I have known in my experience abominable murders
+acquitted. And to see men lose their lives for petty matters: this is a
+thing God will reckon for. And I wish it may not lie upon this Nation a
+day longer than you have an opportunity to give a remedy; and I hope I
+shall cheerfully join with you in it. This hath been a great grief to
+many honest hearts and conscientious people; and I hope it is in all
+your hearts to rectify it."
+
+[170:1] "And truly this is matter of praise to God:--and it hath some
+instruction in it, To own men who are religious and godly. And so many
+of them as are peaceable and honestly and quietly disposed to live
+within Government, and will be subject to those Gospel rules of obeying
+Magistrates and living under Authority. I reckon no Godliness without
+that circle! Without that spirit, let it pretend what it will, it is
+diabolical, it is devilish," and so on. See Cromwell's Speech to his
+Second Parliament, April 13th, 1657 (Carlyle, part x. p. 250). It would
+almost seem as if Winstanley had written the above paragraph to answer
+this explosive utterance of Cromwell, some six years before it took
+place. As a matter of fact, of course, he was only answering an
+objection which every little conventional upholder of existing abuses,
+in his time as in our time, would be sure to make in one form or other.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+GERRARD WINSTANLEY'S UTOPIA
+
+THE LAW OF FREEDOM (_continued_)
+
+ "Look on yonder earth:
+ The golden harvests spring; the unfailing sun
+ Sheds light and life; the fruits, the flowers, the trees,
+ Arise in due succession; all things speak
+ Peace, harmony and love.... Is Mother Earth
+ A step-dame to her numerous sons, who earn
+ Her unshared gifts with unremitting toil;
+ A mother only to those puling babes
+ Who, nursed in ease and luxury, make men
+ The playthings of their babyhood, and mar,
+ In self-important childishness, that peace
+ Which men alone appreciate?"--SHELLEY.
+
+
+"The end of law," says Locke, "is not to abolish or restrain, but to
+preserve and enlarge freedom." Winstanley evidently held the same view;
+for he commences this, his last and greatest book, as follows:
+
+ "WHERE TRUE FREEDOM LIES.
+
+ "The great searching of heart in these days is to find out where
+ true Freedom lies, that the Commonwealth of England might be
+ established in peace. Some say, It lies in the free use of Trading,
+ and to have all Patents, Licenses and Restraints removed: But this
+ is a Freedom under the Will of a Conqueror. Others say, It is true
+ Freedom to have Ministers to preach, and for people to hear whom
+ they will, without being restrained or compelled from or to any
+ form of worship: But this is an unsettled Freedom.... Others say,
+ It is true Freedom that the Elder Brother shall be Land Lord of the
+ Earth, and the Younger Brother a Servant: And this is but a half
+ Freedom, and begets murmurings, wars and quarrels.
+
+ "All these, and such like, are Freedoms; but they lead to Bondage,
+ and are not the true Foundation-Freedom which settles a
+ Commonwealth in Peace.
+
+
+ "TRUE COMMONWEALTH'S FREEDOM LIES IN THE FREE ENJOYMENT OF THE
+ EARTH.
+
+ "True Freedom lies where a man receives his nourishment and
+ preservation, and that is in the use of the Earth.... All that a
+ man labors for, saith Solomon, is this, That he may enjoy the free
+ use of the Earth with the fruits thereof (Eccles. 2. 24). Do not
+ the Ministers preach for maintenance in the Earth? The Lawyers
+ plead causes to get the possessions of the Earth? Doth not the
+ Soldier fight for the Earth? And doth not the Land Lord require
+ Rent that he may live in the fullness of the Earth by the labor of
+ his Tenants? And so from the Thief upon the Highway to the King who
+ sits upon the Throne, does not everyone strive, either by force of
+ Arms or secret Cheats, to get the possessions of the Earth one from
+ another, because they see their Freedom lies in plenty, and their
+ Bondage lies in Poverty?"
+
+Then occurs this eternally true passage:
+
+ "Surely, then, oppressing Lords of Manors, exacting Land-lords and
+ Tythe-takers, may as well say their Bretheren shall not breathe in
+ the air, nor enjoy warmth in their bodies, nor have the moist
+ waters to fall upon them in showers, unless they will pay them rent
+ for it, as to say their Bretheren shall not work upon Earth, nor
+ eat the fruits thereof, unless they will hire that liberty of them.
+ For he that takes upon him to restrain his Brother from the liberty
+ of the one, may upon the same ground restrain him from the liberty
+ of all four, viz., Fire, Water, Earth and Air.
+
+ "A man had better to have had no body than to have no food for it.
+ Therefore this restraining of the Earth from Bretheren by Bretheren
+ is oppression and bondage; but the free enjoyment thereof is true
+ Freedom."
+
+
+INWARD AND OUTWARD BONDAGE.
+
+ "I speak now in relation between the Oppressor and the Oppressed,
+ the Inward Bondages I meddle not with in this place, though I am
+ assured that if it be rightly searched into, the inward bondages of
+ the mind, as covetousness, pride, hypocrisy, envy, sorrow, fears,
+ desperation and madness, are all occasioned by the outward bondage
+ that one sort of people lay upon another. And thus far natural
+ experience makes it good, THAT TRUE FREEDOM LIES IN THE FREE
+ ENJOYMENT OF THE EARTH."
+
+
+ "WHAT IS GOVERNMENT IN GENERAL?
+
+ "Government is a wise and free ordering of the Earth and of the
+ Manners of Mankind by observation of particular Laws or Rules, so
+ that all the inhabitants may live peaceably in plenty and freedom
+ in the Land where they are born and bred."
+
+With this most suggestive, philosophic and beautiful definition of
+Government, Winstanley opens his second chapter, and immediately
+elucidates his views on this all-important subject by drawing what we
+regard as a true and just comparison between what he well terms Kingly
+Government and Commonwealth's Government, or, what would now be termed,
+Aristocracy and Democracy, as follows:
+
+
+ "WHAT IS KINGLY GOVERNMENT?
+
+ "There is a twofold Government: a Kingly Government and a
+ Commonwealth's Government.
+
+ "Kingly Government governs the Earth by that cheating art of buying
+ and selling, and thereby becomes a man of contention, his hand is
+ against every man, and every man's hand against him ... and if it
+ had not a Club Law to support it, there would be no order in it,
+ because it is but the covetous and proud will of a Conqueror
+ enslaving a conquered people.... Indeed, this Government may well
+ be called the Government of Highwaymen, who hath stolen the Earth
+ from the Younger Bretheren by force and holds it from them by
+ force.... The great Lawgiver of this Kingly Government is
+ Covetousness, ruling in the hearts of mankind, making one Brother
+ to covet a full possession of the Earth, and a Lordly Rule over
+ another Brother.... The Rise of Kingly Government is attributable
+ to a politic wit in drawing the people out of Common Freedom into
+ a way of Common Bondage: FOR SO LONG AS THE EARTH IS A COMMON
+ TREASURY TO ALL MEN, KINGLY COVETOUSNESS CAN NEVER REIGN AS KING.
+
+
+ "WHAT IS COMMONWEALTH'S GOVERNMENT?
+
+ "Commonwealth's Government governs the Earth without buying and
+ selling, and thereby becomes a man of peace, and the Restorer of
+ Ancient Peace and Freedom. He makes provision for the oppressed,
+ the weak and the simple, as well as for the rich, the wise and the
+ strong.... All slavery and Oppressions ... are cast out by this
+ Government, _if it be right in power as well as in name_ ... IF
+ ONCE COMMONWEALTH'S GOVERNMENT BE SET UPON THE THRONE, THEN NO
+ TYRANNY OR OPPRESSION CAN LOOK HIM IN THE FACE AND LIVE.{11}
+
+ "If true Commonwealth's Freedom lies in the free enjoyment of the
+ Earth, as it doth, then whatsoever Law or Custom doth deprive
+ Bretheren of their Freedom in the Earth is to be cast out as
+ unsavoury salt."
+
+And after reminding his readers that "the great Lawgiver in
+Commonwealth's Government is the Spirit of Universal Righteousness," and
+warning them of the evils that would necessarily attend their posterity
+if they heeded not His dictates, he continues:
+
+ "If you do not run in the right channel of Freedom, you must, nay,
+ you will as you do, face about and turn back again to Egyptian
+ Monarchy; and so your names in the days of posterity shall be
+ blasted with abhorred infamy for your unfaithfulness to Common
+ Freedom; and the evil effects will be sharp upon the backs of
+ posterity.
+
+ "Therefore, seeing England is declared to be a Free Commonwealth,
+ and the name thereof established by a Law; surely then the greatest
+ work is now to be done; and that is, to escape all Kingly cheats in
+ setting up a Commonwealth's Government, so that the power and the
+ name may agree together; so that all the inhabitants may live in
+ peace, plenty and freedom.... For oppression was always the
+ occasion why the spirit of freedom in the people desired change of
+ government.... And the oppressions of the Kingly Government have
+ made this age of the world to desire a Commonwealth's Government
+ and the removal of the Kings: for the Spirit of Light in man loves
+ Freedom and hates Bondage."
+
+
+ "WHERE BEGAN THE FIRST ORIGINAL OF GOVERNMENT IN THE EARTH AMONG
+ MANKIND?"
+
+In the third chapter, under the above heading, Winstanley first points
+out that--"The original root of Magistracy is Common Preservation; and
+it rose up first in a private family," and then continues:
+
+
+COMMON PRESERVATION.
+
+ "There are two roots whence Laws do spring. The first root is
+ Common Preservation, when there is a principle in every one to seek
+ the good of others as himself, without respecting persons: and this
+ is the root of the tree Magistracy, and the Law of Righteousness
+ and Peace: and all particular Laws found out by experience
+ necessary to be practiced for common preservation, are the boughs
+ and branches of that tree."
+
+
+THE INWARD LIGHT.
+
+ "And because among the variety of mankind ignorance may grow up,
+ therefore this Original Law is written in the hearts of every man,
+ to be his guide and leader; so that if an Officer be blinded by
+ covetousness and pride, and ignorance rule in him, yet an inferior
+ man may tell him when he goes astray. For COMMON PRESERVATION AND
+ PEACE IS THE FOUNDATION-RULE OF ALL GOVERNMENT: therefore if any
+ will preach or practice Fundamental Truths, or Doctrine, here you
+ may see where the foundation thereof lies."
+
+
+SELF-PRESERVATION.
+
+ "The second root is Self-Preservation: when particular Officers
+ seek their own preservation, ease, honor, riches, and freedom in
+ the Earth, and do respect persons that are in power and riches with
+ them, and regard not the peace, freedom, and preservation of the
+ weak and foolish among Bretheren."
+
+
+THE ROOT OF THE TREE TYRANNY.
+
+ "This is the root of the tree Tyranny, and the Law of
+ Unrighteousness; and all particular Kingly Laws found out by
+ Covetous Policy to enslave one Brother to another, whereby bondage,
+ tears, sorrows and poverty are brought upon many men, are all but
+ the boughs and branches of that tree Tyranny.... Indeed, this
+ Tyranny is the cause of all wars and troubles, of the removal of
+ the Government of the Earth out of one hand into another so often
+ as it is in all Nations. For if Magistrates had a care to cherish
+ the peace and liberties of the common people, and to see them set
+ free from oppression, they might sit in the Chair of Government and
+ never be disturbed. But when their sitting is altogether to advance
+ their own interest, and to forget the afflictions of their
+ Bretheren who are under bondage: this is the forerunner of their
+ own downfall, and oftentimes proves the plague of the whole Land.
+
+ "Therefore the work of all true Magistrates is to maintain the
+ Common Law, which is the root of right government, and preservation
+ and peace to everyone; and to cast out all self-ended principles
+ and interests, which is Tyranny and Oppression, and which breaks
+ common peace. For surely the disorderly actings of Officers break
+ the peace of the Commonwealth more than any men whatsoever."
+
+
+ "ALL OFFICERS IN A TRUE MAGISTRACY OF A COMMONWEALTH ARE TO BE
+ CHOSEN OFFICERS.
+
+ "He who is a true Commonwealth's officer is not to step into the
+ place of Magistracy by policy or violent force, as all Kings and
+ Conquerors do, and so become oppressing Tyrants, by promoting their
+ self-ended Interests, or Machiavilian Cheats, that they may live in
+ plenty and rule as Lords over their Bretheren. But a true
+ Commonwealth's Officer is to be a chosen one by them who are in
+ necessity and who judge him fit for that work....
+
+ "When the people have chosen all Officers, to preserve a right
+ order in government of earth among them, then doth the same
+ necessity of common peace move the people to say to their Overseers
+ and Officers--'_Do you see our Laws observed for our preservation
+ and peace, and we will assist and protect you._' And these words
+ _assist_ and _protect_ imply the rising up of the people by force
+ of arms to defend their Laws and Officers against any Invasion,
+ Rebellion or Resistance: yea, to beat down the turbulency of any
+ foolish or self-ended spirit that endeavours to break their common
+ peace."
+
+
+FAITHFUL OFFICERS AND FAITHLESS OFFICERS.
+
+ "So that all true Officers are chosen Officers, and when they act
+ to satisfy the necessities of them who chose them, then they are
+ faithful and righteous servants to that Commonwealth, and then
+ there is a rejoicing in the City. But when Officers do take the
+ possessions of the Earth into their own hands, lifting themselves
+ up thereby to be Lords over their Masters, the people who choose
+ them, and will not suffer the people to plant the Earth and reap
+ the fruits for their livelihood unless they will hire the land of
+ them, or work for day wages for them, that they may live in ease
+ and plenty and not work: These Officers are fallen from true
+ Magistracy of a Commonwealth, and they do not act righteously, and
+ because of this sorrow and tears, poverty and bondages are known
+ among mankind, and now that City mourns."
+
+
+ "ALL OFFICERS IN A COMMONWEALTH ARE TO BE CHOSEN NEW ONES EVERY
+ YEAR."
+
+Winstanley believed that power of any sort, more especially if long
+enjoyed, tends to corrupt and to deteriorate. He therefore advocates,
+and shows surprisingly good reasons for his advocacy, that new Officers
+should be appointed every year. He says:
+
+ "When public Officers remain long in places of Judicature, they
+ will degenerate from the bounds of humility, honesty and tender
+ care of bretheren, in regard the heart of man is so subject to be
+ overspread with the clouds of covetousness, pride and vain-glory.
+ For though at the first entrance into places of Rule they be of
+ public spirits, seeking the Freedom of others as their own; yet
+ continuing long in such a place, where honors and greatness come
+ in, they become selfish, seeking themselves, and not Common
+ Freedom; as experience proves it true in these days, according to
+ this common proverb--'_Great offices in a Land and Army have
+ changed the disposition of many sweet spirited men._'
+
+ "And Nature tells us, that if water stand long, it corrupts;
+ whereas running water keeps sweet and is fit for common use.
+
+ "Therefore, as the necessity of Common Preservation moves the
+ people to frame a Law and to choose Officers to see the Law
+ obeyed, that they may live in peace: So doth the same necessity bid
+ the people, and cries aloud in the ears and eyes of England, to
+ choose new Officers, and to remove the old ones, and to choose
+ State Officers every year: and that for these reasons:
+
+ "_First_, To prevent their own evils: for when pride and fulness
+ take hold of an Officer, his eyes are so blinded therewith that he
+ forgets he is a servant to the Commonwealth, and strives to lift up
+ himself high above his Bretheren, and oftentimes his fall prove
+ very great: witness the fall of oppressing Kings, Bishops and other
+ State Officers.
+
+ "_Secondly_,{12} To prevent the creeping of oppression into the
+ Commonwealth again. For when Officers grow proud and full, they
+ will maintain their greatness, though it be in the poverty, ruin
+ and hardship of their Bretheren: Witness the practice of Kings and
+ their Laws, that have crushed the Commoners of England a long time.
+ And have we not experience in these days that some Officers of the
+ Commonwealth have grown so mossy for want of removing that they
+ will hardly speak to an old acquaintance, if he be an inferior man,
+ though they were very familiar before these wars began? And what
+ hath occasioned this distance among friends and bretheren, but long
+ continuance in places of honor, greatness and riches?"
+
+ "_Thirdly_, Let Officers be chosen new every year in love to our
+ posterity. For if burdens and oppressions should grow up in our
+ Laws and in our Officers for want of removing, as moss and weeds
+ grow in some land for want of stirring, surely it will be a
+ foundation of misery not easily to be removed by our posterity, and
+ then will they curse the time when we their forefathers had
+ opportunities to set things to rights for their ease, and would not
+ do it.
+
+ "_Fourthly_, To remove Officers of State every year will make them
+ truly faithful, knowing that others are coming after who will look
+ into their ways, and if they do not do things justly, they must be
+ ashamed when the next Officers succeed. And when Officers deal
+ faithfully with the Government of the Commonwealth, they will not
+ be unwilling to remove: the peace of London is much preserved by
+ removing their Officers yearly.
+
+ "_Fifthly_, It is good to remove Officers every year, that whereas
+ many have their portions to obey, so many may have their turn to
+ rule. And this will encourage all men to advance righteousness and
+ good manners in hopes of honor; but when money and riches bear all
+ the sway in the Rulers' hearts, there is nothing but tyranny in
+ such ways.
+
+ "_Sixthly_, The Commonwealth hereby will be furnished with able and
+ experienced men, fit to govern, which will mightily advance the
+ honor and peace of our Land, occasion the more watchful care in the
+ education of children, and in time will make our Commonwealth of
+ England the Lily among the Nations of the Earth.
+
+
+ "WHO ARE FIT TO CHOOSE, AND FIT TO BE CHOSEN OFFICERS IN A
+ COMMONWEALTH.
+
+ "All uncivil livers, as drunkards, quarrellers, fearful ignorant
+ men, who dare not speak truth less they anger other men; likewise
+ all who are wholly given to pleasure and sports, or men who are
+ full of talk: all these are empty of substance and cannot be
+ experienced men, therefore not fit to be chosen Officers in a
+ Commonwealth--yet they may have a voice in the choosing.
+
+ "_Secondly_, All those who are interested in the Monarchial Power
+ and Government, ought neither to choose nor to be chosen Officers
+ to manage Commonwealth's affairs; for these cannot be friends to
+ Common Freedom.... But seeing that few of the Parliament's friends
+ understand their Common Freedom, though they own the name
+ Commonwealth, therefore the Parliament's Party ought to bear with
+ the ignorance of the King's Party, because they are Bretheren, and
+ not make them servants, though for the present they be suffered
+ neither to choose nor be chosen Officers, lest that ignorant spirit
+ of revenge break out in them to interrupt our common peace.
+
+ "Moreover, All those who have been so hasty to buy and sell the
+ Commonwealth's Land, and so to entangle it upon a new accompt,
+ ought neither to choose nor be chosen Officers. For hereby they
+ declare themselves either to be for kingly interest, or else are
+ ignorant of Commonwealth's Freedom, or both, therefore unfit to
+ make Laws to govern a Free Commonwealth, or to be Overseers to see
+ those laws executed. What greater injury could be done to the
+ Commoners of England than to sell away their Land so hastily,
+ before the people knew where they were, or what Freedom they had
+ got by such cost and bloodshed as they were at? And what greater
+ ignorance could be declared by Officers than to sell away the
+ purchased Land from the purchasers, or from part of them, into the
+ hands of particular men to uphold Monarchial Principles?
+
+ "But though this be a fault, let it be borne withal, it was
+ ignorance of Bretheren; for England hath lain so long under kingly
+ slavery that few knew what Common Freedom was; and let a
+ restoration of this redeemed land be speedily made by those who
+ have possession of it. For there is neither Reason nor Equity that
+ a few men should go away with that Land and Freedom which the whole
+ Commoners have paid taxes, free-quarter, and wasted their estates,
+ healths and blood, to purchase out of bondage, and many of them are
+ in want of a comfortable livelihood.
+
+ "Well, these are the men that take away other men's rights from
+ them, and they are members of the covetous generation of
+ self-seekers, therefore unfit to be chosen Officers or to choose.
+
+
+ "WHO THEN ARE FIT TO BE CHOSEN OFFICERS?
+
+ "Why truly choose such as have a long time given testimony by their
+ actions to be promoters of Common Freedom, whether they be Members
+ in Church Fellowship, or not in Church Fellowship, for all are one
+ in Christ.
+
+ "Choose such as are men of peaceable spirits, and of a peaceable
+ conversation.
+
+ "Choose such as have suffered under Kingly Oppression, for they
+ will be fellow-feelers of others' bondages.
+
+ "Choose such as have adventured the loss of their estates and lives
+ to redeem the Land from bondage, and who have remained constant.
+
+ "Choose men of courage, who are not afraid to speak the truth; for
+ this is the shame of many in England at this day, they are drowned
+ in the dung-hill mud of slavish fear of men.
+
+ "Choose Officers out of the number of those men that are above
+ forty years of age, for these are most likely to be experienced
+ men, and to be men of courage, dealing truly and hating
+ covetousness."
+
+
+PAYMENT OF REPRESENTATIVES.
+
+ "And if you choose men thus principled who are poor men, as times
+ go, for the Conqueror's Power hath made many a righteous man a
+ poor man, then allow them a yearly maintenance from the Common
+ Stock, until such time as a Commonwealth's Freedom is established,
+ for then there will be no need of such allowances."
+
+
+THE MAIN SOURCE OF IGNORANCE.
+
+ "What is the reason that most men are so ignorant of their
+ Freedoms, and so few fit to be chosen Commonwealth's Officers?
+
+ "Because the old Kingly Clergy, that are seated in Parishes for
+ lucre of Tythes, are continually distilling their blind principles
+ into the people, and do thereby nurse up ignorance to them. For
+ they observe the bent of the people's minds, and make sermons to
+ please the sickly minds of ignorant people, to preserve their own
+ riches and esteem among a charmed, befooled and besotted people."
+
+After this passing shot at his old adversaries, Winstanley proceeds to
+consider the Offices and Institutions suitable for his ideal community,
+for a Free Commonwealth. He first summarises their function as a whole,
+and of the special duty incumbent on all public officials, as follows:
+
+ "All the Offices in a Commonwealth are like links of a chain; they
+ arise from one and the same root, which is necessity of Common
+ Peace; therefore they are to assist each other, and all others are
+ to assist them, as need requires, upon pain of punishment by the
+ breach of the Laws. The Rule of Right Government being thus
+ observed, may make a whole Land, nay the whole Fabric of the Earth,
+ to become one Family of Mankind, and one well-governed
+ Commonwealth."
+
+
+THE WORK OF A FATHER OR MASTER OF A FAMILY.
+
+ "A Father is to cherish his children till they grow wise and
+ strong; and then as a Master he is to instruct them in reading, in
+ learning languages, Arts and Sciences, or to bring them up to
+ labor, or employ them in some Trade or other, or cause them to be
+ instructed therein, according as is shown hereafter in the
+ Education of Mankind. A Father is to have a care that all his
+ children do assist to plant the Earth, or by other Trades provide
+ necessaries; so he shall see that every one have a comfortable
+ livelihood, not respecting one before another. He is to command
+ them their work, and see they do it, and not suffer them to live
+ idle; he is either to reprove by words, or whip those that offend;
+ for the Rod is prepared to bring the unreasonable ones to
+ experience and moderation. That so children may not quarrel like
+ beasts, but live in Peace, like rational men, experienced in
+ yielding obedience to the Law and Officers of the Commonwealth:
+ every one doing to another as he would have another do to him."
+
+
+THE WORK OF A PEACEMAKER.
+
+ "In a Parish or Town may be chosen three, four or six Peacemakers,
+ according to the bigness of the place: and their work is twofold.
+ _First_, In general to sit in Council to order the affairs of the
+ Parish, to prevent troubles, and to preserve common peace.
+ _Secondly_, If there arise any matters of offence between man and
+ man, the offending parties shall be brought by the Soldiers
+ [Policemen] before any one or more of these Peacemakers, who shall
+ hear the matter, and endeavour to reconcile the parties and make
+ peace, and so put a stop to the rigour of the Law, and go no
+ further. But if the Peacemaker cannot persuade or reconcile the
+ parties, then he shall command them to appear at the Judges' Court
+ at the time appointed to receive the Judgement of the Law.
+
+ "If any matter of public concernment fall out wherein the Peace of
+ the City, Town or Country is concerned, then the Peacemakers in
+ every town thereabouts shall meet and consult about it; and from
+ them, or any six of them, if need require, shall issue forth any
+ orders to inferior Officers. But if the matter concern only the
+ limits of a Town or City, then the Peacemakers of that Town shall
+ from their Court send forth orders to inferior Officers for the
+ performing of any public service within their limits.
+
+ "_Thirdly_, If any proof be given that any Officer neglects his
+ duty, a Peacemaker is to tell that Officer, between them two, of
+ his neglect. If the Officer continue negligent after this reproof,
+ the Peacemaker shall acquaint either the County Senate, or the
+ National Parliament therewith, that from them the offender may
+ receive condign punishment.
+
+ "AND IT IS ALL TO THIS END THAT THE LAWS BE OBEYED; FOR A CAREFUL
+ EXECUTION OF LAWS IS THE LIFE OF GOVERNMENT."
+
+
+THE WORK OF AN OVERSEER.
+
+Winstanley then details at some length the functions of Overseers, of
+which the following will, we think, give our readers sufficient insight:
+
+ "In a Parish or Town there is to be a four-fold degree of
+ Overseers, which are to be chosen yearly. The first is an Overseer
+ to preserve peace, in case of any quarrels that may fall out
+ between man and man.... The second office of Overseer is for
+ Trades. This Overseer is to see that young people be put to
+ Masters, to be instructed in some labour, trade, service, or to be
+ waiters in Storehouses, that none may be idly brought up in any
+ family within his circuit.... Truly the Government of the Halls and
+ Companies in London is a very rational and well-ordered government;
+ and the Overseers for Trades may well be called Masters, Wardens,
+ and Assistants of such and such a Company, for such and such a
+ particular Trade.... Likewise this Overseer for Trades shall see
+ that no man shall be a Housekeeper and have servants under him till
+ he hath served under a Master seven years, and hath learned his
+ Trade: and the reason is, that every Family may be governed by
+ staid and experienced Masters, and not by wanton youth. And this
+ Office of Overseer keeps all people within a peaceful harmony of
+ Trades, Sciences, or Works, that there be neither Beggar nor Idle
+ Person in the Commonwealth.
+
+ "The third Office of Overseership is to see particular Tradesmen
+ bring in their work to the Storehouses and Shops, and to see that
+ the waiters in Storehouses do their duty.... And if any Keeper of a
+ Shop or Storehouse neglect the duty of his place ... the Overseer
+ shall admonish him and reprove him. If he amend, all is well; if he
+ doth not, the Overseer shall give orders to the Soldiers to carry
+ him before the Peacemaker's Court, and if he reform upon the
+ reproof of that Court, all is well. But if he doth not reform, he
+ shall be sent by the Officers to appear before the Judge's Court,
+ and the Judge shall pass sentence--That he shall be put out of that
+ House and Employment, and sent among the Husbandmen to work in the
+ Earth: and some other shall have his place and house till he be
+ reformed."
+
+ "Fourthly, all ancient men, above sixty years of age, are General
+ Overseers. And wheresoever they go and see things amiss in any
+ Officer or Tradesmen, they shall call any Officer or others to
+ account for their neglect of duty to the Commonwealth's Peace; and
+ they are called Elders."
+
+
+THE OFFICE OF A SOLDIER.
+
+ "A Soldier is a Magistrate as well as any other Officer; and indeed
+ all State Officers are Soldiers, for they represent power; and if
+ there were not power in the hands of Officers, the spirit of
+ rudeness would not be obedient to any Law or Government, but their
+ own wills. Therefore every year shall be chosen a Soldier, like
+ unto a Marshall of a City, and, being the Chief, he shall have
+ divers soldiers under him at his command to assist in case of need.
+ The work of a Soldier in times of peace is to fetch in Offenders,
+ and to bring them before either Officer or Court, and to be a
+ protector to the Officers against all disturbances."
+
+
+THE WORK OF A TASK-MASTER.
+
+ "The Work or Office of a Task-master is to take those into his
+ oversight as are sentenced by the Judge to loose their Freedom, to
+ appoint them their work, and to see they do it."
+
+
+THE WORK OF A JUDGE.
+
+ "THE LAW ITSELF IS THE JUDGE OF ALL MEN'S ACTIONS; yet he who is
+ chosen to pronounce the Law is called Judge, because he is the
+ mouth of the Law: for no single man ought to judge or to interpret
+ the Law. Because the Law itself, as it is left us in the letter, is
+ the mind and determination of the Parliament and of the people of
+ the Land, to be their Rule to walk by and to be the touch-stone of
+ all actions. And the man who takes upon him to interpret the Law,
+ doth either darken the sense of the Law, and so make it confused
+ and hard to be understood, or else puts another meaning upon it,
+ and so lifts up himself above the Parliament, above the Law, and
+ above all people in the Land.
+
+ "Therefore the work of that man who is called Judge is to hear any
+ matter that is brought before him; and in all cases of difference
+ between man and man, he shall see the parties on both sides before
+ him, and shall hear each man speak for himself, without a fee'd
+ Lawyer; likewise he is to examine any witness who is to prove a
+ matter on trial before him. And then he is to pronounce the bare
+ letter of the Law concerning such a thing: for he hath his name
+ Judge, not because his will or mind is to judge the actions of
+ offenders before him, but because he is the mouth to pronounce the
+ Law, who, indeed, is the true Judge: Therefore to this Law and to
+ this Testimony let everyone have regard who intends to live in
+ Peace in the Commonwealth."
+
+Then occurs a passage that shows how carefully Winstanley had watched
+the public affairs of his own times, more especially the prolonged
+attempt of the late King to govern England under cover of ancient
+obsolete Laws interpreted by Judges removable at his will. He continues:
+
+ "For hence hath arisen much misery in the Nations under Kingly
+ Government, in that the man called the Judge hath been suffered to
+ interpret the Law. And when the mind of the Law, the Judgement of
+ the Parliament and the Government of the Land, is resolved into the
+ breasts of the Judges, this hath occasioned much complaining of
+ Injustice in Judges, in Courts of Justice, in Lawyers, and in the
+ course of the Law itself, as if it were an evil Rule. Because the
+ Law which was a certain Rule was varied, according to the will of a
+ covetous, envious or proud Judge. Therefore no marvel though the
+ Kingly Laws be so intricate, and though few know which way the
+ course of the Law goes, because the sentence lies many times in the
+ breast of a Judge, and not in the letter of the Law. And so the
+ good Laws made by an industrious Parliament are like good eggs laid
+ by a silly goose, and as soon as she hath laid them, she goes her
+ way and lets others take them, and never looks after them more, so
+ that if you lay a stone in her nest, she will sit upon it as if it
+ were an egg. And so, though the Laws be good, yet if they be left
+ to the will of a Judge to interpret, the execution hath many times
+ proved bad."
+
+
+ "WHAT IS THE JUDGE'S COURT?
+
+ "In a County or Shire there are to be chosen--A Judge, the
+ Peacemakers of every Town within that Circuit, the Overseers, and a
+ band of Soldiers attending thereupon: and this is called the
+ Judge's Court or the County Senate. The Court shall sit four times
+ in the year, or oftener if need be.... If any disorder break in
+ among the people, this Court shall set things to right. If any be
+ bound over to appear at this Court, the Judge shall hear the
+ matter, and pronounce the letter of the Law, according to the
+ nature of the offence. So that the alone work of the Judge is to
+ pronounce the Sentence and mind of the Law: and all this is but to
+ see the Law executed and the Peace of the Commonwealth preserved."
+
+
+ "WHAT IS THE WORK OF A COMMONWEALTH'S PARLIAMENT IN GENERAL?"
+
+Winstanley then sketches, first in broad outline and then in detail,
+what he deemed the work of a Commonwealth's Parliament should be; and
+for our own part we know not where to find a higher ideal of the duties
+incumbent upon the chosen Representatives of the People: an ideal that
+no Parliament to this day has ever attained, and which probably is only
+attainable when there shall be a strong body of educated public opinion,
+loving Justice and deserving Justice, inspiring and supporting their
+endeavours. He commences as follows:
+
+ "A Parliament is the highest Court of Equity in a Land; and it is
+ to be chosen every year.... This Court is to oversee all other
+ Courts, Officers, persons, and actions, and to have a full power,
+ being the Representative of the whole Land, to remove all
+ grievances, and to ease the people that are oppressed."
+
+
+A PARLIAMENT IS THE FATHER OF THE COMMONWEALTH.
+
+ "A Parliament hath its rise from the lowest Office in a
+ Commonwealth, viz., from the Father in a Family. For as a Father's
+ tender care is to remove all grievances from the oppressed
+ children, not respecting one before another; so a Parliament are to
+ remove all burdens from the people of the Land, and are not to
+ respect persons who are great before those who are weak; but their
+ eye and care must be principally to relieve the oppressed ones, who
+ groan under the Tyrant's Laws and Powers: the strong, or such as
+ have the Tyrant's Power to support them, need no help.
+
+ "But though a Parliament be the Father of a Land, yet by the
+ Covetousness and Cheats of Kingly Government the heart of this
+ Father hath been alienated from the children of the Land, or else
+ so overawed by the frowns of a Kingly Tyrant, that they could not
+ or durst not act for the weaker children's ease. For hath not
+ Parliament sat and rose again, and made Laws to strengthen the
+ Tyrant in his Throne, and to strengthen the rich and the strong by
+ those Laws, and left Oppression upon the backs of the oppressed
+ still?"
+
+
+HIS HOPES FOR THE FUTURE.
+
+Here Winstanley checks himself, and continues:
+
+ "But I'll not reap up former weaknesses, but rather rejoice in hope
+ of amendment, seeing our present Parliament hath declared England
+ to be a Free Commonwealth, and to cast out Kingly Power: and upon
+ this ground I rejoice in hope that succeeding Parliaments will be
+ tender-hearted Fathers to the oppressed children of the Land. And
+ not only dandle us upon the knee with good words and promises till
+ particular men's turn be served, but will feed our bellies and
+ clothe our backs with good actions of Freedom, and give to the
+ oppressed children's children their birthright portion, which is
+ Freedom in the Commonwealth's Land, which the Kingly Law and Power,
+ our cruel step-fathers and step-mothers, have kept from us and our
+ fathers for many years past.
+
+
+ "THE PARTICULAR WORK OF A PARLIAMENT IS FOUR-FOLD--FIRSTLY,
+
+ "As a tender Father, a Parliament is to empower Officers and give
+ orders for the free planting and reaping of the Commonwealth's
+ Land, that all who have been oppressed, and kept back from the free
+ use thereof by Conquerors, Kings, and their Tyrant Laws, may now be
+ set at liberty to plant in Freedom for food and raiment, and are to
+ be a protection to them who labor the Earth, and a punisher of them
+ who are idle.
+
+ "But some may say, What is that I call Commonwealth's Land? I
+ answer, All that land which hath been withheld from the inhabitants
+ by the Conqueror, or Tyrant Kings, and is now recovered out of the
+ hands of that oppression by the joint assistance of the persons and
+ purses of the Commoners of the Land. For this Land is the price of
+ their blood. It is their birthright to them and to their posterity,
+ and ought not to be converted into particular hands again by the
+ Laws of a Free Commonwealth. In particular, this Land is all Abbey
+ Lands, formerly recovered out of the Pope's Power by the blood of
+ the Commoners of England, though the Kings withheld their rights
+ therein from them. So likewise all Crown Lands, Bishops' Lands,
+ with all Parks, Forests, Chases, now of late recovered out of the
+ hand of the Kingly Tyrants, who have set Lords of Manors and
+ Taskmasters over the Commoners, to withhold the free use of the
+ land from them. So likewise all the Commons and Waste Lands, which
+ are called Commons because the Poor was to have part therein. But
+ this is withheld from the Commoners, either by Lords of Manors
+ requiring quit-rents, and overseeing the poor so narrowly that none
+ dares build him a house upon this Common Land, or plant thereupon,
+ without his leave, but must pay him rents, fines, and heriots, and
+ homage as unto a Conqueror. Or else the benefit of this Common Land
+ is taken away from the Younger Bretheren by the rich Land Lords and
+ Freeholders, who overstock the Commons with sheep and cattle, so
+ that the Poor in many places are not able to keep a Cow unless they
+ steal grass for her.
+
+ "And this is the bondage the Poor complain of, that they are kept
+ poor in a Land where there is so much plenty for everyone, if
+ Covetousness and Pride did not rule as King in one Brother over
+ another: and Kingly Government occasions all this. Now it is the
+ work of a Parliament to break the Tyrant's bands, to abolish all
+ their oppressing Laws, and to give orders, encouragements and
+ directions unto the poor oppressed people of the Land, that they
+ forthwith plant and manure this their own Land, for the free and
+ comfortable livelihood of themselves and posterities. And to
+ declare to them, it is their own Creation-Rights, faithfully and
+ courageously recovered by their diligence, purses and blood from
+ under the Kingly Tyrant's and Oppressor's Power.
+
+
+ "THE WORK OF A PARLIAMENT--SECONDLY,
+
+ "Is to abolish all old Laws and Customs which have been the
+ strength of the Oppressor, and to prepare and then to enact new
+ Laws for the ease and freedom of the people, but yet not without
+ the people's knowledge.[197:1]
+
+ "For the work of a Parliament herein is three-fold:
+
+ "_First_, When old Laws and Customs of the Kings do burden the
+ people, and the people desire the remove of them, and the
+ establishment of more easy Laws: it is now the work of a Parliament
+ to search into Reason and Equity, how relief may be found for the
+ people in such a case, and to preserve a Common Peace. And when
+ they have found a way by debate of counsel among themselves,
+ whereby the people may be relieved, they are not presently to
+ establish their conclusions for a Law. But in the next place they
+ are to make a public declaration thereof to the people of the Land,
+ who choose them, for their approbation. And if no objection come in
+ from the people within one month, they may then take the people's
+ silence as a consent thereto. And then, in the third place, they
+ are to enact it for a Law, to be a binding rule to the whole Land.
+ For as the remove of the old Laws and Customs is by the people's
+ consent, which is proved by their frequent petitionings and
+ requests; so the enacting of new Laws must be by the people's
+ consent and knowledge likewise. And here they are to require the
+ consent, not of men interested in the old oppressing Laws and
+ Customs,[197:2] as Kings used to do, but of them who have been
+ oppressed. And the reason is this: Because the people must be all
+ subject to the Law, under pain of punishment, therefore it is all
+ reason that they should know it before it be enacted, so that if
+ there be anything of the Counsel of Oppression in it, it may be
+ discovered and amended."
+
+
+ANSWERS TO TWO OBJECTIONS.
+
+ "But you will say, If it must be so, then will men so differ in
+ their judgements that we shall never agree.
+
+ "I answer: There is but Bondage and Freedom, _particular_ Interest
+ or _common_ Interest; and he who pleads to bring in particular
+ interest into a Free Commonwealth, will presently be seen and cast
+ out, as one bringing in Kingly Slavery again.
+
+ "Moreover, men in place and office, where greatness and honor is
+ coming in, may sooner be corrupted to bring in particular interest
+ than a whole Land can be, who must either suffer sorrow under a
+ burdensome Law, or rejoice under a Law of Freedom. And surely those
+ men who are not willing to enslave the people will be unwilling to
+ consent hereunto.
+
+
+ "THE WORK OF A PARLIAMENT--THIRDLY,
+
+ "Is to see all those burdens removed actually, which have hindered
+ or do hinder the oppressed People from the enjoyment of their
+ Birth-Rights.
+
+ "If their Common Lands be under the oppression of Lords of Manors,
+ they are to see the Land freed from that slavery.
+
+ "If the Commonwealth Land be sold by the hasty counsel of subtle,
+ covetous and ignorant Officers, who act for their own particular
+ interest, and so hath entangled the Commoners' Land again, under
+ colour of being bought and sold: then a Parliament is to examine
+ what authority any had to sell or buy the Commonwealth's Land
+ without a general consent of the People: FOR IT IS NOT ANY ONE'S,
+ BUT EVERY ONE'S BIRTH-RIGHT. And if some through covetousness and
+ self-interest gave consent privately, yet a Parliament, who is the
+ Father of the Land, ought not to give consent to buy and sell that
+ Land which is all the children's birth-right, and the price of
+ their labors, moneys and blood.
+
+ "They are to declare likewise that the Bargain is unrighteous; and
+ that the Buyers and Sellers are Enemies to the Peace and Freedom of
+ the Commonwealth. For indeed the necessity of the People chose a
+ Parliament to help them in their weakness. Hence when they see a
+ danger like to impoverish or enslave one part of the people to
+ another, they are to give warning and so prevent that danger. For
+ they are the Eyes of the Land: and surely those are blind eyes that
+ lead the People into Bogs to be entangled in Mud again, after they
+ are once pulled out. =And when the Land is once freed from the
+ Oppressor's Power and Laws, the Parliament is to keep it so, and
+ not suffer it by their consent to have it bought or sold, and so
+ entangled in Bondage upon a new account.=
+
+ "For their faithfulness herein to the People, the People are
+ engaged in love and faithfulness to cleave close to them in defence
+ and protection. But when a Parliament have no care herein, the
+ hearts of the People run away from them like sheep who have no
+ Shepherd."
+
+
+THE CAUSE OF ALL GRIEVANCES.
+
+ "All grievances are occasioned either by the covetous wills of
+ State Officers, who neglect their obedience to the good Laws, and
+ then prefer their own ease, honor, and riches before the ease and
+ freedom of the oppressed people. A Parliament is to cashier and
+ punish those Officers, and place others who are men of public
+ spirit in their rooms.
+
+ "Or else the People's grievances arise from the practice and power
+ that the King's Laws have given to Lords of Manors, covetous
+ Landlords, Tythe Takers, or unbounded Lawyers, being all
+ strengthened in their oppressions over the people by that Kingly
+ Law. And when the People are burthened herewith, and groan waiting
+ for deliverance, as the oppressed People of England do at this day,
+ it is then the work of a Parliament to see the People delivered,
+ and that they enjoy their Creation's Freedom in the Earth. They are
+ not to dally with them, but as a father is ready to help his
+ children out of misery when they either see them in misery, or when
+ the children cry for help, so should they do for the oppressed
+ people.
+
+ "And surely for this end, and no other, is the Parliament chosen.
+ =For the necessity for Common Preservation and Peace is the
+ Fundamental Law both to Officers and People.=
+
+
+ "THE WORK OF A PARLIAMENT--FOURTHLY,
+
+ "Is this: If there be occasion to raise an Army to wage war, either
+ against an Invasion of a Foreign Enemy, or against an Insurrection
+ at home, it is the work of a Parliament to manage that business for
+ to preserve Common Peace.
+
+ "And here their work is three-fold:
+
+ "_First_, To acquaint the People plainly with the cause of the
+ War, and to show them the danger of such an Invasion or
+ Insurrection. And so from that cause require their assistance in
+ person, for the preservation of the Laws, Liberties and Peace of
+ the Commonwealth, according to their engagement when they were
+ chosen, which was this: _Do you protect our Laws and Liberties, and
+ we will protect and assist you._
+
+ "_Secondly_, A Parliament is to make choice of understanding, able
+ and public-spirited men to be Leaders of an Army in this case, and
+ to give them Commissions and Power, in the name of the
+ Commonwealth, to manage the work of an Army.
+
+ "_Thirdly_, A Parliament's work in this case is either to send
+ Ambassadors to another Nation which has invaded our Land, or that
+ intends to invade, to agree upon terms of peace, or to proclaim
+ war; or else to receive and hear Ambassadors from other Lands for
+ the same business, or about any other business concerning the peace
+ and honor of the Land.
+
+ "For a Parliament is the Head of a Commonwealth's Power; or, as it
+ may be said, it is the great Council of an Army, from whom
+ originally all Orders do issue forth to any Officer or Soldier. For
+ if so be a Parliament had not an Army to protect them, the rudeness
+ of the people would not obey their proceedings; and if a Parliament
+ were not the representative of the People, who indeed is the body
+ of all power, the Army would not obey their orders.
+
+ "So then a Parliament is the Head of Power in a Commonwealth. It is
+ their work to manage public affairs in times of War and in times of
+ Peace; not to promote the interests of particular men, but for the
+ Peace and Freedom of the whole Body of the Land, viz., of every
+ particular man, that none be deprived of his Creation Eights,
+ unless he hath lost his Freedom by transgression, as by the Laws is
+ expressed."[200:1]
+
+With this admirable summary of the functions of a Parliament, our
+author brings his consideration of their work to a conclusion, and
+somewhat later proceeds to consider the source and function of a true
+Commonwealth's Army, which he evidently regards as a necessary evil,
+capable of much harm as well as of some good. He says:
+
+
+THE RISE OF A COMMONWEALTH'S ARMY.
+
+ "After that the necessity of a People in a Parish, in a County and
+ in a Land, hath moved the People to choose Officers to preserve
+ common peace, the same necessity causeth the People to say to their
+ Officers--_Do you see our Laws observed for our common
+ preservation, and we will assist and protect you._
+
+ "These words, _assist_ and _protect_, implies the rising of the
+ People by force of arms to defend their Laws and Officers, who rule
+ well, against any invasion, insurrection or rebellion of selfish
+ Officers or rude people: yea, to beat down the turbulency of any
+ foolish spirit that shall arise to break our common peace. So that
+ the same Law of Necessity of Common Peace, which moved the People
+ to choose Officers, and to compose a Law to be a Rule of
+ Government: the same Law of Necessity of Protection doth raise an
+ Army. So that an Army, as well as other Officers in a Commonwealth,
+ spring from one and the same root, viz., from the necessity of
+ Common Preservation."
+
+
+AN ARMY IS TWO-FOLD: VIZ., A RULING ARMY, OR A FIGHTING ARMY.
+
+ "A Ruling Army is called Magistracy in times of Peace, keeping that
+ Land and Government in Peace by Execution of the Laws, which the
+ Fighting Army did purchase in the field by their blood out of the
+ hands of Oppression. All Officers, from the Father in a Family to
+ the Parliament in a Land, are but the heads and leaders of an Army;
+ and all people arising to protect and assist their Officers, in
+ defence of a right-ordered Government, are but the body of an Army.
+ And this Magistracy is called the Rejoicing of all Nations, when
+ the foundations thereof are Laws of Common Equity, whereby every
+ single man may enjoy the fruits of his labor, in the free use of
+ the Earth, without being restrained or oppressed by the hands of
+ others.
+
+ "Secondly, A Fighting Army, called Soldiers in the Field, when the
+ necessity of preservation, by reason of a foreign invasion, or
+ inbred Oppression, doth move the people to arise in an Army to cut
+ and tear to pieces either degenerate Officers, or rude people, who
+ seek their own interests, and not Common Freedom, and through
+ treachery do endeavour to destroy the Laws of Common Freedom, and
+ to enslave both the Land and the People of the Commonwealth to
+ their particular wills and lusts.... The use or work of a Fighting
+ Army in a Commonwealth is to beat down all who arise to endeavour
+ to destroy the Liberties of the Commonwealth. For as in the days of
+ the Monarchy an Army was used to subdue all who rebelled against
+ Kingly Propriety, so in the days of a Free Commonwealth, an Army is
+ to be made use of to resist or destroy all who endeavour to keep up
+ or bring in Kingly Bondage again.... Therefore, you Army of
+ England's Commonwealth, look to it. The Enemy could not beat you in
+ the field, but they may be too hard for you by Policy in Counsel,
+ if you do not stick close to see Common Freedom established. For if
+ so be that Kingly Authority is set up in your Laws again, King
+ Charles has conquered you and your posterity by policy, though you
+ seemingly have cut off his head. For the Strength of a King lies
+ not in the visible Appearance of his Body, but in his Will, Laws,
+ and Authority, which is called Monarchial Government. But if you
+ remove Kingly Government, and set up true and free Commonwealth's
+ Government, then you gain your Crown and keep it, and leave peace
+ to your posterity: otherwise not. And thus doing makes a War either
+ lawful or unlawful."
+
+Then follows this bold, manly challenge of the conduct of the Grandees
+of the Army:
+
+
+ "AN ARMY MAY BE MURTHERERS AND UNLAWFUL.
+
+ "If an Army be raised to cast out Kingly Oppression, and if the
+ Heads of that Army promise a Commonwealth's Freedom to the
+ oppressed people, in case they will assist in person and purse, and
+ if the people do assist and prevail over the Tyrant, those Officers
+ are bound by the Law of Justice (who is God) to make good their
+ engagements. And if they do not set the Land free from the
+ branches of the Kingly Oppression, but reserve some part of the
+ Kingly Power to advance their own particular interest, whereby some
+ of their friends are left under as great slavery to them as they
+ were under the Kings, those Officers are not faithful
+ Commonwealth's Soldiers, they are worse Thieves and Tyrants than
+ the Kings they cast out, and that Honor they seemed to get by their
+ Victories over the Commonwealth's Oppressor, they lose again by
+ breaking Promise and Engagement to their oppressed friends who did
+ assist them.
+
+ "For what difference is there between a professed Tyrant, who
+ declares himself a Tyrant in words, laws and deeds, as all
+ Conquerors do, and him who promises to free me from the power of
+ the Tyrant if I'll assist him; and when I have spent my estate and
+ blood, and the health of my body, and expect my bargain by his
+ engagements to me, he sits himself down in the Tyrant's Chair, and
+ takes the possession of the Land to himself, and calls it his and
+ none of mine, and tells me he cannot in conscience let me enjoy the
+ Freedom of the Earth with him, because it is another man's right."
+
+
+HIS ACCOUNT OF HIS OWN CIRCUMSTANCES.
+
+ "And now my health and estate is decayed and I grow in age, I must
+ either beg or work for day-wages, which I was never brought up to,
+ for another; when the Earth is as freely my Inheritance and
+ Birth-Right as his whom I must work for. And if I cannot live by my
+ weak labors, but take where I need, as Christ sent and took the
+ Asses Colt in his need, there is no dispute, but by the Kings and
+ Laws, he will hang me for a thief."
+
+
+THE TRUE FUNCTION OF A COMMONWEALTH ARMY.
+
+ "A Monarchial Army lifts up mountains and makes valleys, viz.,
+ advances Tyrants and treads the oppressed in the barren lanes of
+ poverty. But a Commonwealth's Army is like John the Baptist, who
+ levels the Mountains to the Valleys, pulls down the Tyrant, and
+ lifts up the Oppressed: and so makes way for the Spirit of Peace
+ and Freedom to come in to rule and inherit the Earth.
+
+ "By this which has been spoken an Army may see wherein they may do
+ well and wherein they may do hurt."
+
+
+THE OFFICE OF THE POST-MASTER.
+
+Under this heading Winstanley describes an office by which he evidently
+thought the social bonds uniting the whole Nation might be strengthened
+and all parts thereof be brought into closer and more intimate relations
+one with the other. He describes its functions as follows:
+
+ "In every Parish throughout the Commonwealth shall be chosen two
+ men (at the time when the other Officers are chosen), and these
+ shall be called Post-Masters. And whereas there are four parts of
+ the Land, East, West, North, South, there shall be chosen in the
+ chief City two men to receive what the Post-Master of the East
+ Country brings in"; and so on. "Now the work of a Country
+ Post-master shall be this: They shall every month bring up or send
+ by tidings from their respective Parishes to the chief City, of
+ what accidents or passages fall out, which is either to the honor
+ or dishonor, hurt or profit, of the Commonwealth. And if nothing
+ have fallen out in that month worth observation, then they shall
+ write down peace or good order in such a Parish.
+
+ "When these respective Post-masters have brought up their Bills or
+ Certificates from all parts of the Land, the Receiver of these
+ Bills shall write down everything in order from Parish to Parish in
+ the nature of a Weekly Bill of Observation. And those eight
+ Receivers shall cause the Affairs of the Four Quarters of the Land
+ to be printed in one Book with what speed may be, and deliver to
+ every Post-master a Book, that as they bring up the affairs of one
+ Parish in writing, they may carry down in print the Affairs of the
+ Whole Land."
+
+
+ITS BENEFITS.
+
+ "The benefit lies here, that if any part of the Land be visited
+ with Plague, Famine, Invasion or Insurrection, or any casualties,
+ the other parts of the Land may have speedy knowledge, and send
+ relief. And if any accident fall out through unreasonable action,
+ or careless neglect, other parts of the Land may thereby be made
+ watchful to prevent like dangers. Or if any through industry or
+ through ripeness of understanding have found out any secret in
+ Nature, or new invention in any Art or Trade, or in the tillage of
+ the Earth, or such like, whereby the Commonwealth may more
+ flourish in peace and plenty, for which virtues those persons
+ received honor in the places where they dwelt; then, when other
+ parts of the Land hear of it, many thereby will be encouraged to
+ employ their Reason and Industry to do the like; that so in time
+ there will not be any Secret in Nature, which now lies hid (by
+ reason of the iron age of Kingly Oppressing Government) but by some
+ or other will be brought to light, to the beauty of our
+ Commonwealth."
+
+With this suggestive passage this chapter may fittingly close. Like his
+great successor in the Nineteenth Century, Winstanley evidently realised
+that "Liberty means Justice, and Justice is the Natural Law--the law of
+health and symmetry and strength, of fraternity and co-operation."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[197:1] Law Reform was at that time very popular, and undoubtedly much
+needed. The month previous to the publication of the book we are now
+considering, in January 1652, a Law Reform Commission consisting of
+twenty-one members had been appointed. It evidently went to work in a
+very thorough manner. For, according to a modern Lawyer, Mr. Inderwick
+(see his book _The Interregnum_, referred to by Gardiner), it appears
+that of eight draft Acts proposed on March 23rd, 1652, one became Law in
+1833, one in 1846, and a third in 1885.
+
+[197:2] "Things of this world," says Locke (_Of Civil Government_, part
+ii. chap. xiii. § 157), "are in so constant a flux, that nothing remains
+long in the same state.... But ... private interest often keeps up
+customs and privileges when the reasons of them are ceased."
+
+[200:1] In his great work _Of Civil Government_, John Locke takes
+practically the same view as Winstanley of the duties of Parliaments and
+of the function of Law. In chapter ix. (part ii.) he says: "The
+legislative or supreme power of any Commonwealth, is bound to govern by
+established _standing laws_, promulgated and known to the people, and
+not by extemporary decrees; by indifferent [impartial] and upright
+judges, who are to decide controversies by those laws; and to employ the
+force of the community at home, _only in the execution of such laws_, or
+abroad, to prevent or redress foreign injuries, and secure the community
+from inroads and invasion. _And all this to be directed to no other end,
+but the peace, safety, and public good of the people._" Italics are
+ours.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+GERRARD WINSTANLEY'S UTOPIA
+
+THE LAW OF FREEDOM (_concluded_)
+
+ "Day unto day utters speech--
+ Be wise, O ye Nations! and hear
+ What yesterday telleth to-day,
+ What to-day to the morrow will preach.
+ A change cometh over our sphere,
+ And the old goeth down to decay.
+ A new light hath dawned on the darkness of yore,
+ And men shall be slaves and oppressors no more."
+ CHARLES MACKAY.
+
+
+It is in the chapter we have just been considering, the fourth chapter
+of "The Law of Freedom," that we find Winstanley's last recorded
+utterances on cosmological and theological problems. Nothing seems to us
+more strikingly to show the broadening and development of his powerful
+mind than a comparison of the views here expressed with those contained
+in his earlier writings on the subject. True, the underlying ideas are
+practically the same: he still realises the existence of a Divine
+Spirit, the Spirit of Reason and of Love, of Righteousness and of Peace,
+animating, inspiring, pervading and governing the whole Creation; he
+still holds to his doctrine of the Inward Light, the spark of the Divine
+Spirit of Reason, within man, prompting each and all to act righteously
+and equitably one toward the other. Yet he is decidedly less mystical.
+He lays emphasis on the necessity to study the works of God rather than
+the Word of God; and has evidently become less anthropomorphic and more
+spiritual, less mystical and more rational, less religious and more
+ethical, less theological and more philosophic, less scholastic and more
+scientific. However, we had better let him speak for himself.
+Immediately after his reflections on the duties and functions of a
+Commonwealth's Parliament, he proceeds to consider the work of a
+Commonwealth's Ministry, as follows:
+
+
+ "THE WORK OF A COMMONWEALTH'S MINISTRY, AND WHY ONE DAY IN SEVEN
+ MAY BE A DAY OF REST FROM LABOR.
+
+ "If there were good Laws and the People be ignorant of them, it
+ would be as bad for the Commonwealth as if there were no Laws at
+ all. Therefore it is very rational and good that one day in seven
+ be still set apart, for three reasons:
+
+ "_First_, That the People in such a Parish may generally meet
+ together to see one another's faces, and beget or preserve
+ fellowship in friendly love.
+
+ "_Secondly_, To be a day of rest, or cessation from labor; so that
+ they may have some bodily rest for themselves and cattle.
+
+ "_Thirdly_, That he who is chosen Minister (for that year) in that
+ Parish may read to the People three things. First, the affairs of
+ the whole Land, as it is brought in by the Post-Master. Secondly,
+ to read the Law of the Common-wealth, not only to strengthen the
+ memory of the ancients, but that the young people also, who are not
+ grown up to ripeness of experience, may be instructed to know when
+ they do well and when they do ill. For the Law of a Land hath the
+ power of Freedom and Bondage, life and death, in its hand,
+ therefore the necessary knowledge to be known; and he is the best
+ Prophet that acquaints men therewith, that as men grow up in years
+ they may be able to defend the Laws and Government of the Land. But
+ these Laws shall not be expounded by the Reader; for to expound a
+ plain Law, as if a man would put a better meaning than the letter
+ itself, produces two evils: First, the pure Law and the minds of
+ the people will be thereby confounded, for multitude of words
+ darken knowledge. Secondly, the reader will be puffed up in pride
+ to contemn the Law-makers, and in time that will prove the father
+ and nurse of tyranny, as at this day is manifested by our
+ Ministry."
+
+
+WHAT SHALL BE SPOKEN OF.
+
+ "But because the minds of people generally love discourses,
+ therefore, that the wits of men, both old and young, may be
+ exercised, there may be speeches made in a threefold nature:
+
+ "_First_, To declare the acts and passages of former ages and
+ governments, setting forth the benefit of freedom by well-ordered
+ Governments, as in Israel's Commonwealth, and the troubles and
+ bondage which hath always attended oppression and oppressors, as
+ the State of Pharaoh and other tyrant kings, who said the Earth and
+ People were theirs, and only at their disposal.
+
+ "_Secondly_, Speeches may be made of all Arts and Sciences, some
+ one day some another, as in Physics, Chyrurgery, Astrology,
+ Astronomy, Navigation, Husbandry, and such like. And in these
+ speeches may be unfolded the nature of all herbs and plants, from
+ the Hysop to the Cedar, as Solomon writ of. Likewise men may come
+ to see into the nature of the fixed and wandering Stars, those
+ great powers of God in the heavens above. And hereby men will come
+ to know the secrets of Nature and Creation, within which all true
+ knowledge is wrapped up, and the light in man must arise to search
+ it out.
+
+ "_Thirdly_, Speeches may be made sometimes of the nature of
+ mankind, of his darkness and of his light, of his weakness and of
+ his strength, of his love and of his envy, of his inward and
+ outward bondages, of his inward and outward freedoms, etc. And this
+ is that at which the ministry of Churches generally aim; but only
+ that they confound their knowledge by imaginary study.... And thus
+ to speak, or thus to read the Law of Nature (or God) as He hath
+ written His name in every body, is to speak a pure language, and
+ this is to speak the truth as Jesus Christ spake it, giving to
+ everything its own weight and measure. By this means in time men
+ shall attain to the practical knowledge of God truly, that they may
+ serve Him in spirit and in truth: and this knowledge will not
+ deceive a man."
+
+
+HIS ANSWER TO OBJECTIONS.
+
+Then follows a passage which even to-day would bring down the wrath of
+"zealous but ignorant professors" upon the head of any author
+acknowledging it, if within their sphere of influence. He continues:
+
+ "'I,' but saith the zealous but ignorant Professor, 'this is a low
+ and carnal Ministry indeed; this leads men to know nothing but the
+ knowledge of the earth and the secrets of nature; but we are to
+ look after spiritual and heavenly things.'
+
+ "I answer: 'To know the secrets of nature is to know the works of
+ God; and to know the works of God within the Creation, is to know
+ God himself; for God dwells in every visible work or body. Indeed,
+ if you would know spiritual things, it is to know how the Spirit or
+ Power of Wisdom and Life, causing motion or growth, dwells within
+ and governs both the several bodies of the stars and planets in the
+ heavens above, and the several bodies of the earth below, as grass,
+ plants, fishes, beasts, birds and mankind. For to reach God beyond
+ the Creation, or to know what he will be to a man after the man is
+ dead, if any otherwise than to scatter him into his essences of
+ fire, water, earth and air, of which he is composed, is a knowledge
+ beyond the line or capacity of man to attain to while he lives in
+ his compounded body. And if a man should go to imagine what God is
+ beyond the Creation, or what he will be in a spiritual
+ demonstration after a man is dead, he doth, as the proverb saith,
+ but build castles in the air, or tells us of a world beyond the
+ Moon or beyond the Sun, merely to blind the reason of man.
+
+ "'I'll appeal to yourself in this question, What other knowledge
+ have you of God but what you have within the circle of the
+ Creation? For if the Creation in all its dimensions be the fullness
+ of Him that fills all with Himself; and if you yourself be part of
+ this Creation: where can you find God but in that line or station
+ wherein you stand? God manifests Himself in actual Knowledge, not
+ in Imagination. He is still in motion, either in bodies upon earth
+ or in the bodies in the heavens, or in both; in the night and in
+ the day, in Winter, in Summer, in cold, in heat, in growth or not
+ in growth.'"
+
+
+THE CAUSE OF IGNORANCE, EVIL AND SORROWS.
+
+ "But when a studying imagination comes into man, which is the
+ devil, for it is the cause of all evil and sorrows in the world;
+ that is he who puts out the eyes of man's knowledge, and tells him
+ he must believe what others have writ or spoke, and must not trust
+ to his own experience. And when this bewitching fancy sits in the
+ Chair of Government, there is nothing but saying and unsaying,
+ frowardness, covetousness, fears, confused thoughts, and
+ unsatisfied doubtings, all the days of that man's reign in the
+ heart."
+
+
+EXAMINE THE WAYS OF MEN, NOT ONLY THEIR PRECEPTS.
+
+ "Or, secondly, examine yourself and look likewise into the ways of
+ all Professors, and you shall find that the enjoyment of the earth
+ below, which you call a low and a carnal knowledge, is that which
+ you and all Professors (as well as the men of the world, as you
+ call them) strive and seek after. Wherefore are you so covetous
+ after the world, in buying and selling, counting yourself a happy
+ man if you be rich, and a miserable man if you be poor? And though
+ you say, _Heaven after death is a place of glory where you shall
+ enjoy God face to face_, yet you are loth to leave the earth and go
+ thither.
+
+ "Do not your Ministers preach for to enjoy the earth? Do not
+ professing Lawyers, as well as others, buy and sell the Conquerer's
+ justice that they may enjoy the earth? Do not professing Soldiers
+ fight for the earth, and seat themselves in that Land which is the
+ birth-right of others, as well as theirs, shutting others out? Do
+ not all Professors strive to get earth, that they may live in
+ plenty by other men's labors? Do you not make the earth your very
+ rest? Doth not the enjoying of the earth please the spirit in you?
+ and then you say God is pleased with your ways and blesseth you. If
+ you want earth, and become poor, do you not say, God is angry with
+ you? Why do you heap up riches? why do you eat and drink, and wear
+ clothes? Are not all these carnal and low things of the earth? and
+ do you not live in them and covet them as much as any, nay more
+ than many which you call men of the world?
+
+ "It being thus with you, what other spiritual and heavenly things
+ do you seek after more than others? What is in you more than in
+ others? If you say there is, then surely you should leave these
+ earthly things alone to the men of the world, as you call them,
+ whose portions these are, and keep you within the compass of your
+ own sphere, that others seeing you live a life above the world in
+ peace and freedom, neither working yourselves, nor deceiving, nor
+ compelling others to work for you, they may be drawn to embrace the
+ same spiritual life by your single hearted conversation. Well I
+ have done here."
+
+
+ "LET US NOW EXAMINE YOUR DIVINITY."
+
+Winstanley then carries the war into the camp of his clerical opponents,
+and that in so forcible a manner that we cannot refrain from quoting at
+length. He says:
+
+ "Let us now examine your Divinity, which you call heavenly and
+ spiritual things; for herein speeches are made, not to advance
+ knowledge, but to destroy the true knowledge of God. For Divinity
+ does not speak the truth, as it is hid in everybody, but it leaves
+ the motional knowledge of a thing as it is, and imagines, studies
+ or thinks what may be, and so runs the hazard of true or false.
+ This Divinity is always speaking words to deceive the simple, that
+ he may make them work for him and maintain him, but he never comes
+ to action himself, to do as he would be done by; for he is a
+ monster who is all tongue and no hand.
+
+ "This Divining Doctrine, which you call spiritual and heavenly
+ things, is the thief and the robber, he comes to spoil the Vineyard
+ of a man's peace, and does not enter in at the door, but he climbs
+ up another way. And this Doctrine is two-fold: First, it takes upon
+ him to tell you the meaning of other men's words and writings, by
+ his studying or imagining what another man's knowledge might be,
+ and by thus doing darkens knowledge, and wrongs the spirit of the
+ Authors who did write and speak those things which he takes upon
+ him to interpret. Secondly, he takes upon him to foretell what
+ shall befall a man after he is dead, and what that world is beyond
+ the Sun and beyond the Moon, etc. And if any man tell him there is
+ no reason for what you say, he answers, you must not judge of
+ heavenly and spiritual things by reason, but you must believe what
+ is told you, whether it be reason or no."
+
+
+WHEREIN IT IS WANTING.
+
+ "There is a three-fold discovery of falsehood in this Doctrine.
+ First, it is a Doctrine of a sickly and weak spirit, who hath lost
+ his understanding in the knowledge of the Creation, and of the
+ temper of his own heart and nature, and so runs into fancies,
+ either of joy or sorrow. If the passion of joy predominate, then he
+ fancies to himself a personal God, personal Angels, and a local
+ place of glory, which he saith, he, and all who believe what he
+ hath, shall go to after they are dead. If sorrow predominate, then
+ he fancies to himself a personal Devil, and a local place of
+ torment that he shall go to after he is dead: and this he speaks
+ with great confidence.
+
+ "_Secondly_, This is the doctrine of a subtle running spirit, to
+ make an ungrounded wise man mad.... For many times when a wise
+ understanding heart is assaulted with this Doctrine of a God, a
+ Devil, a Heaven and a Hell, Salvation and Damnation after a man is
+ dead, his spirit being not strongly grounded in the knowledge of
+ the Creation nor in the temper of his own heart, he strives and
+ stretches his brain to find out the depth of that doctrine and
+ cannot attain to it. For, indeed, it is not knowledge, but
+ imagination. And so by poring and puzzling himself in it, he loses
+ that wisdom he had, and becomes distracted and mad. If the passion
+ of joy predominate, then he is merry, and sings, and laughs, and is
+ ripe in the expression of his words and will speak strange things:
+ but all by imagination. But if the passion of sorrow predominate,
+ then he is heavy and sad, crying out, _He is damned; God hath
+ forsaken him, and he must go to Hell when he dies; he cannot make
+ his calling and election sure._ And in that distemper many times a
+ man doth hang, kill or drown himself. So this Divining Doctrine,
+ which you call spiritual and heavenly things, torments people
+ always when they are weak, sickly or under any distemper. Therefore
+ it cannot be the Doctrine of Christ the Saviour.
+
+ "Or, _thirdly_, This Doctrine is made a cloak of policy by the
+ subtle Elder Brother, to cheat his simpler Younger Brother of the
+ Freedoms of the Earth. For, saith the Elder Brother, 'The Earth is
+ mine, and not yours, Brother; and you must not work upon it, unless
+ you will hire it of me; and you must not take the fruits of it,
+ unless you will buy them of me, by that which I pay you for your
+ labor. For if you should do otherwise, God will not love you, and
+ you shall not go to Heaven when you die, but the Devil will have
+ you, and you must be damned in Hell.'
+
+ "If the Younger reply, and say--'The Earth is my Birth-Right as
+ well as yours, and God who made us both is no Respecter of persons.
+ Therefore there is no reason but I should enjoy the Freedoms of the
+ Earth for my comfortable livelihood, as well as you, Brother.'
+
+ "'I,' but saith the Elder Brother, 'You must not trust to your own
+ Reason and Understanding, but you must believe what is written and
+ what is told you; and if you will not believe, your Damnation will
+ be the greater.'
+
+ "'I cannot believe,' saith the Younger Brother, 'that our Righteous
+ Creator should be so partial in his Dispensations of the Earth,
+ seeing our bodies cannot live upon Earth without the use of the
+ Earth.'
+
+ "The Elder Brother replies, 'What, will you be an Atheist, and a
+ factious man, will you not believe God?'
+
+ "'Yes,' saith the Younger Brother, 'if I knew God said so, I should
+ believe, for I desire to serve Him.'
+
+ "'Why,' saith the Elder Brother, 'this is His Word, and if you will
+ not believe it, you must be damned; but if you will believe it, you
+ will go to Heaven.'
+
+ "Well, the Younger Brother, being weak in spirit, and not having a
+ grounded knowledge of the Creation, nor of himself, is terrified,
+ and lets go his hold in the Earth, and submits himself to be a
+ Slave to his Brother, for fear of damnation in Hell after death,
+ and in hopes to get Heaven thereby after he is dead. And so his
+ eyes are put out, and his Reason is blinded. So that this divining
+ spiritual doctrine is a cheat. For while men are gazing up to
+ Heaven, imagining after a happiness, or fearing a Hell after they
+ are dead, their eyes are put out, that they see not what are their
+ Birth-Rights, nor what is to be done by them here on Earth while
+ they are living. This is the filthy Dreamer and the Cloud without
+ rain. And indeed the subtle Clergy do know that if they can but
+ charm the people by this their divining doctrine, to look after
+ riches, Heaven and Glory when they are dead, that then they shall
+ easily be the inheritors of the Earth, and have the deceived people
+ to be their Servants.
+
+ "For my own part," he continues, "my spirit hath waded deep to find
+ the bottom of this divining spiritual Doctrine; and the more I
+ searched, the more I was at a loss. I never came to quiet rest and
+ to know God in my spirit, till I came to the knowledge of the
+ things in this Book. And let me tell you, They who preach this
+ divining doctrine are the murderers of many a poor heart, who is
+ bashful and simple, and who cannot speak for himself, but who keeps
+ his thoughts to himself."
+
+Such, then, was Winstanley's final attack on the body of teachings he,
+rightly or wrongly, hated and despised as the main supporter of the
+prevailing social injustice. Correct thought he realised to be the
+necessary precursor of right action; and he knew that correct thought is
+impossible so long as old, inherited false ideas are unquestioningly
+accepted and hold undisputed dominion over the human mind. Winstanley
+seems to us to have realised that it was the ignorance of the many that,
+in truth, maintained the privileges of the few; that the masses
+themselves forge the fetters for their own enslavement, which, though
+apparently as strong as iron bands, are, in truth, but things of
+gossamer, easily to be broken by those who themselves have forged and
+who themselves still maintain them.
+
+In the next chapter (chap. v.) Winstanley briefly summarises his views
+on education, and outlines the means by which he deemed both the
+production and the distribution of wealth could be carried on without
+having recourse to "the thieving art of buying and selling." It
+commences as follows:
+
+
+OF EDUCATION.
+
+ "Mankind in the days of his youth is like a young colt, wanton and
+ foolish, till he be broken in by education and correction; the
+ neglect of this care, or the want of wisdom in the performance of
+ it, hath been and is the cause of much division and trouble in the
+ world. Therefore the Law of a Common-wealth doth require that not
+ only a Father, but that all Overseers and Officers should make it
+ their work to educate children in good manners, and to see them
+ brought up in some trade or other, and to suffer no children in any
+ Parish to live in idleness and youthful pleasures all their days,
+ as many have been; but that they may be brought up like men and not
+ like beasts. That so the Commonwealth may be planted with laborious
+ and wise experienced men, and not with idle fools."
+
+He continues his reflections as follows:
+
+ "Mankind may be considered in a four-fold degree, his childhood,
+ youth, manhood, and old age. His childhood and his youth may be
+ considered from his birth till forty years of age. Within this
+ compass of time, after he is weaned from his mother, his parents
+ shall teach him a civil and humble behaviour towards all men. Then
+ send him to school, to learn to read the Laws of the Common-wealth,
+ to ripen his wits from his childhood, and so to proceed with his
+ learning till he be acquainted with all Arts and Languages.... But
+ one sort of children shall not be trained up only to book-learning,
+ and to no other employment, called Scholars, as they are in the
+ Government of Monarchy. For then through idleness they spend their
+ time to find out policies to advance themselves to be Lords and
+ Masters over their laboring bretheren, which occasions all the
+ trouble in the world."
+
+After again indicating the source of all real knowledge, he continues:
+
+ "Therefore, to prevent idleness and the danger of Machivilian
+ cheats, it is profitable for the Commonwealth that children be
+ trained up in trades and some bodily employment, as well as in
+ learning languages or the histories of former ages. And as boys are
+ trained up in learning and in trades, so all maids shall be trained
+ up in reading, sewing, kniting, spinning of linnen and woollen,
+ music, and all other easy neat works, either for to furnish
+ Storehouses with linnen and wooll cloth, or for the ornament of
+ particular houses with needlework. If this course were taken, there
+ would be no idle person or beggar in the Land, and much work would
+ be done by that now lazy generation for the enlarging of the Common
+ Treasury."
+
+
+INVENTION TO BE ENCOURAGED.
+
+ "In the managing of any trade let no young wit be crushed in his
+ invention. If any man desire to make a new trial of his skill in
+ any trade or science, the Overseer shall not injure him but
+ encourage him therein; that so the Spirit of Knowledge may have his
+ full growth in man, to find out the secrets in every art. And let
+ everyone who finds out a new invention have a deserved honor given
+ him; and certainly when men are sure of food and raiment, their
+ reason will be ripe and ready to dive into the secrets of the
+ Creation, that they may learn to see and know God (the Spirit of
+ the whole Creation) in all his works. For fear of want and care to
+ pay Rent to Task-Masters hath hindered many rare inventions. So
+ that Kingly Power hath crushed the Spirit of Knowledge, and would
+ not suffer it to rise up in its beauty and fullness, but by his
+ Club Law hath preferred the Spirit of Imagination, which is a
+ deceiver, before it.
+
+
+ "THERE SHALL BE NO BUYING AND SELLING OF THE EARTH, NOR OF THE
+ FRUITS THEREOF.
+
+ "For by the Government under Kings the cheaters hereby have cozened
+ the plain-hearted of their Creation Birth-rights, and have
+ possessed themselves in the Earth, and call it theirs, and not the
+ others, and so have brought in that poverty and misery which lies
+ upon many men. And whereas the wise should help the foolish, and
+ the strong help the weak, the wise and strong destroy the weak and
+ simple ... and so the Proverb is made true--_Plain dealing is a
+ jewel, but he who uses it shall die a beggar._ And why? Because
+ this buying and selling is the nursery of cheats; it is the Law of
+ the Conqueror, the Righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees....
+ And these cunning cheaters commonly become the Rulers of the
+ Earth.... For not the wise poor man, but the cunning rich man was
+ always made an Officer and a Ruler; such a one as by his stolen
+ interests in the Earth would be sure to hold others in bondage of
+ poverty and servitude to him and his party. Therefore there shall
+ be no buying and selling in a free Common-wealth, neither shall
+ anyone hire his Brother to work for him."
+
+From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs:
+such, then, was Winstanley's ideal; such was the Communistic
+Commonwealth he evidently imagined would naturally evolve if only the
+equal claims of all to the use of the Earth were once recognised and
+respected. He was, however, much too shrewd to think for a moment that
+any such State could be ushered in all at once, or created by Act of
+Parliament. For he continues:
+
+ "If the Common-wealth might be governed without buying and selling,
+ here is a Platform of Government for it, which is the ancientest
+ Law of Righteousness to Mankind in the use of the Earth, and which
+ is the very height of Earthly Freedom. But if the minds of the
+ people, through covetousness and proud ignorance, will have the
+ Earth governed by buying and selling still, this same Platform,
+ with some few things subtracted, declares an easy way of Government
+ of the Earth for the quiet of people's minds, and the preserving of
+ peace in the Land.
+
+
+ "HOW MUST THE EARTH BE PLANTED?
+
+ "The Earth is to be planted and the fruits reaped and carried into
+ Barns and Storehouses by the assistance of every family. If any man
+ or family want corn or other provisions, they may go to the
+ Storehouses and fetch without money. If they want a horse to ride,
+ go into the fields in Summer, or to the Common Stables in Winter,
+ and receive one from the Keepers, and when your journey is
+ performed, bring him where you had him, without money. If any want
+ food or victuals, they may either go to the butchers' shops and
+ receive what they want without money, or else go to the flocks of
+ sheep or herds of cattle, and take and kill what meat is needful
+ for their families, without buying and selling. The reason why all
+ the riches of the Earth are a Common Stock is this: Because the
+ Earth and the labors thereupon are managed by common assistance of
+ every family, without buying and selling, as is shown more largely
+ in the Office of Overseers for Trades and the Law for Storehouses.
+ The Laws for the right ordering thereof, and the Officers to see
+ the Laws executed, to preserve the peace of every family, and to
+ improve and promote every trade, is shown in the work of Officers
+ and the Laws following."
+
+
+WHO ALONE WILL OBJECT.
+
+ "None will be an enemy to this Freedom, which, indeed, is to do to
+ another as a man would have another do to him, but Covetousness and
+ Pride, the spirit of the old grudging, snapping Pharisees, who give
+ God abundant of good words in their sermons, in their prayers, in
+ their fasts, and in their thanksgivings, as though none should be
+ more faithful servants to Him than they. Nay, they will shun the
+ company, imprison, and kill every one that will not worship God,
+ they are so zealous. Well now, God and Christ hath enacted an
+ everlasting Law, which is Love, not only one another of your own
+ mind, but love your enemies too, such as are not of your mind: and
+ having food and raiment therewith be content. Now here is a trial
+ for you, whether you will be faithful to God and Christ in obeying
+ His Laws; or whether you will destroy the man-child of true
+ Freedom, Righteousness and Peace, in his resurrection. And now thou
+ wilt either give us the tricks of a Soldier, face about, and return
+ to Egypt, and so declare thyself to be part of the Serpent's seed
+ that must bruise the heel of Christ. Or else to be one of the
+ plain-hearted Sons of Promise, or Members of Christ, who shall help
+ to bruise the Serpent's head, which is Kingly Oppression, and so
+ bring in everlasting Righteousness and Peace into the Earth. Well,
+ the eye is now open."
+
+
+ "STOREHOUSES SHALL BE BUILT AND APPOINTED IN ALL PLACES AND BE THE
+ COMMON STOCK.
+
+ "There shall be Storehouses in all places, both in the Country and
+ in Cities, to which all the fruits of the Earth, and other works
+ made by Tradesmen, shall be brought, and thence delivered out again
+ to particular Families, and to every one as they want for their
+ use; or else to be transplanted by ships to other Lands to exchange
+ for those things which our Land will not or does not afford. For
+ all the labors of Husbandmen and Tradesmen within the Land, or by
+ Navigation to or from other Lands, shall be upon the Common Stock.
+ And as everyone works to advance the Common Stock, so everyone
+ shall have a free use of any commodity in the Storehouse for his
+ pleasure and comfortable livelihood, without buying or selling or
+ restraint from any. Having food and raiment, lodging, and the
+ comfortable societies of his own kind, what can a man desire more
+ in these days of his travel? Indeed, covetous, proud, and beastly
+ minded men desire more, either to lay by them to look upon, or else
+ to waste and spoil it upon their lusts, while other Bretheren live
+ in straits for the want of the use thereof. But the Laws and
+ Faithful Officers of a Free Commonwealth do regulate the irrational
+ conduct of such men.
+
+
+ "THERE ARE TWO SORTS OF STOREHOUSES, GENERAL AND PARTICULAR.
+
+ "The general Storehouses are such houses as receive in all
+ commodities in the gross.... And these general Storehouses shall be
+ filled and preserved by the common labor and assistance of every
+ Family, as is mentioned in the Office for Overseer for Trades. And
+ from these Public Houses, which are the general stock of the Land,
+ all particular Tradesmen may fetch materials for their particular
+ work as they need, or to furnish their particular dwellings with
+ any commodities.
+
+ "_Secondly_, There are particular Storehouses, or Shops, to which
+ the Tradesmen shall bring their particular works; as all
+ instruments of iron to the Iron-shops, hats to the shops appointed
+ for them, and so on.... They shall receive in, as into a
+ Storehouse, and deliver out again freely, as out of a Common
+ Storehouse, when particular persons or families come for everything
+ they need, as now they do by buying and selling under Kingly
+ Government. For as particular Families and Tradesmen do make
+ several works more than they can make use of ... and do carry their
+ particular works to Storehouses; so it is all Reason and Equity
+ that they should go to other Storehouses to fetch any other
+ commodity which they want and cannot make. For as other men partake
+ of their labors, so it is reason they should partake of other
+ men's."
+
+It should be scarcely necessary to pause to point out that what
+Winstanley here describes is exactly what is taking place, in his time
+as in our times, all the world over. Commodities of every description
+are continuously being produced, and being brought to the Storehouses,
+wholesale and retail, thence to be redistributed to those who require
+them. The Social Problem, of Winstanley's time and of our time, is how
+to secure to each co-operating worker his fair share of the returns to
+the labours of all. And manifestly this is impossible so long as some
+can command any share thereof without having in any way shared in the
+toil or rendered any equivalent counter-service. In 1905, as in 1652, an
+ever increasing portion and proportion of the wealth thus harvested and
+garnered constantly gravitates towards those who, under the prevailing
+"kingly laws," claim to control the use of the land, whence alone it can
+be derived. This was the basic social injustice, the parent source of
+innumerable other social ills and injustices, which Winstanley was one
+of the first clearly to apprehend, and to combat which he devoted his
+life.
+
+Winstanley, moreover, fully and clearly realised that:
+
+ "THE KING'S OLD LAWS CANNOT SERVE A FREE COMMONWEALTH."
+
+And this formed the heading of his next chapter, in which in a specially
+lively manner he first points out that the Laws of a Monarchy--which,
+being based upon inequality, necessarily tend to produce inequality, and
+whose main function is to legalise and to maintain privileges--are
+necessarily essentially different from those suitable to a Free
+Commonwealth--which, being based upon the recognition of the equality of
+rights, would necessarily tend to produce an equality of social
+conditions; and whose main function would be to establish and to
+legalise Justice, equal rights and equal duties, to maintain and to
+enforce the equal claims of all to the use of the earth, to life, to
+liberty, and to the pursuit of happiness. It commences as follows:
+
+
+OF KINGLY LAWS.
+
+ "The King's Old Laws cannot govern in times of Bondage and in times
+ of Freedom too. They have indeed served many masters, Papish and
+ Protestant. They are like old Soldiers, who will but change their
+ name, and turn about, and as they were. The Reason is because they
+ are the prerogative will of those, under any Religion, who count it
+ no Freedom to them unless they be Lords over the minds, persons and
+ labors of their bretheren.
+
+ "They are called the King's Laws, because they are made by the
+ King. If any say they were made by the Commoners, it is answered,
+ They were not made by the Commoners as the Commoners of a Free
+ Commonwealth are to make Laws. For in the days of the King none
+ were to choose or be chosen Parliament Men, or Law Makers, but
+ Lords of Manors, and Freeholders, such as held title to their
+ Enclosures of Land, or Charters for their Liberties in Trades,
+ under the King, who called the Land his, as he was the Conqueror or
+ his successor. All inferior people were neither to choose nor be
+ chosen. And the reason was because all Freeholders of Land and such
+ as held their Liberties by Charter, were all of the King's
+ interest; and the inferior people were successively of the rank of
+ the conquered ones, and servants and slaves from the time of the
+ Conquest.
+
+ "Further, when a Parliament was chosen in that manner, yet if any
+ Parliament Man, in the uprightness of his heart, did endeavour to
+ promote any freedom contrary to the King's will or former customs
+ from the Conquest, he was either committed to prison by the King or
+ by the House of Lords, who were his ancient Norman successive
+ Council of War; or else the Parliament was dissolved and broke up
+ by the King. So that the old Laws were made in times under Kingly
+ Slavery, not under the liberty of Commonwealth's Freedom, because
+ Parliament Men had to have regard to the King's prerogative
+ interest to uphold his conquest, or else endanger themselves. As
+ sometimes it is in these days, some Officers dare not speak against
+ the minds of those men who are the chief in power, nor a Private
+ Soldier against the mind of his Officer, lest they be cashiered
+ their places and livelihood. And so long as the promoting of the
+ King's will and prerogative was to be in the eye of the Law Makers,
+ the oppressed Commoners could never enjoy Commonwealth's Freedom
+ thereby. Yet by the wisdom, courage, faithfulness and industry of
+ some Parliament Men, the Commoners have received here a line and
+ there a line of freedom inserted into their Laws: as those good
+ lines of freedom in Magna Charta were obtained by much hardship and
+ industry.
+
+ "_Secondly_, They were the King's Laws, because the King's own
+ creatures made the Laws: Lords of Manors, Freeholders, etc., were
+ successors of the Norman soldiers from the Conquest, therefore they
+ could do no other but maintain their own and the King's interest.
+ Do we not see that all Laws were made in the days of the King to
+ ease the rich Landlord? The poor laborers were left under bondage
+ still; they were to have no freedom in the earth by those
+ pharisaical Laws. For when Laws were made and Parliaments broke up,
+ the poor oppressed Commoners had no relief; the power of Lords of
+ Manors, withholding the free use of the Common-land from them,
+ remained still. For none durst make any use of any Common-land but
+ at the Lord's leave, according to the will and law of the
+ Conqueror. Therefore the old Laws were called King's Laws."
+
+
+OF COMMONWEALTH'S LAWS.
+
+ "These old Laws cannot govern a Free Commonwealth; because the Land
+ is now to be set free from the slavery of the Norman Conquest, and
+ the power of Lords of Manors and Norman Freeholders is to be taken
+ away. Or else the Commoners are but where they were, if not fallen
+ lower into straits than they were. The Old Laws cannot look with
+ any other face than they did; though they be washed with
+ Commonwealth's water, their countenance is still withered.
+ Therefore it was not for nothing that the Kings would have all
+ their Laws written in French and Latin, and not in English; partly
+ in honor to the Norman Race, and partly to keep the Common People
+ ignorant of their Creation Freedom lest they should rise to redeem
+ themselves. And if those Laws should be writ in English, yet if the
+ same Kingly Principles remain in them, the English language would
+ not advantage us anything, but rather increase our sorrow by our
+ knowledge of our bondage."
+
+
+ "WHAT IS LAW IN GENERAL?"
+
+Winstanley then proceeds to consider the question, What is Law? and to
+emphasise the essential difference between customary, conventional or
+written Law and that unwritten Law, proceeding from the Inward Light of
+Reason, that inspires men, in action as in words, to do as they would be
+done unto. He first gives the following clear, rational and sufficient
+definition of Law:
+
+ "Law is a Rule, whereby men and other creatures are governed in
+ their actions for the preservation of Common Peace."
+
+Then follows a most philosophic consideration of the whole question,
+which seems to us to reveal that Winstanley was groping, and by no means
+so blindly as many who succeeded him, after some Natural Law, some
+unalterable and immutable principle, which should serve as a basis, as
+well as the test and touchstone, of all man-made customs, laws and
+institutions. He continues:
+
+
+THE TWO-FOLD NATURE OF LAW.
+
+ "This Law is two-fold: First, it is the power of Life (called the
+ Law of Nature within the Creatures) which doth move both man and
+ beast in their actions, or that causes grass, trees, corn and all
+ plants to grow in their several seasons. And whatsoever anybody
+ does, he does it as he is moved by this inward Law. And this Law of
+ Nature moves two-fold, viz., irrationally or rationally."
+
+
+THE LAW OF THE FLESH.
+
+ "A man by this inward Law is guided to actions of present content,
+ rashly, through a greedy self-love, without any consideration, like
+ foolish children, or like the brute beasts. By reason whereof much
+ hurt many times follows the body. And this may be called the Law of
+ the Members warring against the Law of the Mind."
+
+
+THE LAW OF THE MIND.
+
+ "Or where there is an inward watchful oversight of all motions to
+ action, considering the end and effect of those actions, so that
+ there be no excess in diet, in speech, or in action break forth, to
+ the prejudice of a man's self or others: and this may be called the
+ Light in Man, the Reasonable Power, or the Law of the Mind. And
+ this rises up in the heart by an experimental observation of that
+ peace or trouble which such and such words, thoughts and actions
+ bring the man into. And this is called the Record on High; for it
+ is a record in a man's heart above the former unreasonable power:
+ and it may be called the witness or testimony of a man's own
+ conscience: and this moderate watchfulness is still the Law of
+ Nature, but in a higher resurrection than the former. It hath many
+ terms, which for brevity sake I let pass."
+
+
+THEIR STRUGGLE FOR SUPREMACY.
+
+ "This two-fold work of the Law within man strive to bring forth
+ themselves in writing to beget numbers of bodies on their sides.
+ That power which begets the bigger number always rules as King or
+ Lord in the creature and in the Creation, till the other side
+ overtop him: even as light and darkness strive in day and night to
+ succeed each other. Or as it is said--"The strong man armed keeps
+ the heart of man till a stronger than he came and cast him out."
+
+
+THE WRITTEN LAW.
+
+ "This written Law, proceeding either from reason or
+ unreasonableness, is called the Letter, whereby the creation of
+ mankind, beasts and earth are governed, according to the will of
+ that power which rules.... As for example, if the experienced, wise
+ and strong man bears rule, then he writes down his mind to curb the
+ unreasonable Law of Covetousness and Pride in inexperienced man, to
+ preserve Peace in the Commonwealth. This is called the Historical
+ or Traditional Law, because it is conveyed from one generation to
+ another by writing: as the Laws of Israel's Commonwealth were writ
+ in a book by Moses, and so conveyed to posterity. And this outward
+ Law is a bridle to unreasonableness; or as Solomon writ, It is a
+ whip for the fool's back, for whom only it was added."
+
+
+ITS CORRUPTION.
+
+ "_Secondly_, Since Moses' time the power of unreasonable
+ covetousness and pride hath sometimes risen up and corrupted that
+ Traditional Law. For since the power of the sword rises up in
+ Nations to conquer, the Written Law hath not been to advance Common
+ Freedom and to beat down the unreasonable self-will in mankind, but
+ it hath been framed to uphold the self-will of the Conqueror, right
+ or wrong, not respecting the Freedom of the Commonwealth, but the
+ Freedom of the Conqueror and his friends only. By reason whereof
+ much slavery hath been laid on the backs of the plain-dealing men;
+ and men of public spirit, as Moses was, have been crushed, and
+ their spirits damped thereby: which hath bred first discontents,
+ and then more wars in the Nations.... But hereby the true nature of
+ a well-governed Commonwealth hath been ruined; the will of Kings
+ set up for a Law; and the Law of Righteousness, the Law of Liberty,
+ trod under foot and killed. This Traditional Law of Kings is that
+ Letter at this day which kills true freedom and is the fomenter of
+ wars and persecutions.
+
+ "This is the soldier who cut Christ's garments into pieces, which
+ was to remain uncut and without seam. This law moves the people to
+ fight one against the other for those pieces; viz., for the several
+ enclosures of the Earth, who shall possess the Earth, and who shall
+ be Rulers over others."
+
+
+THE EVERLASTING LAW.
+
+ "But the true ancient Law of God is a Covenant of Peace to the
+ whole of mankind. This sets the Earth free to all. This unites both
+ Jew and Gentile into one Brotherhood, and rejects none. This makes
+ Christ's garment whole again; and makes the Kingdoms of the World
+ to become Commonwealths again. It is the Inward Power of Right
+ Understanding, which is the True Law that teaches people in action,
+ as well as in words, to do as they would be done unto."
+
+Winstanley then contends that, as far as written laws are concerned--
+
+ "SHORT AND PITHY LAWS ARE BEST TO GOVERN A COMMONWEALTH,"
+
+and defends this conclusion as follows:
+
+ "The Laws of Israel's Commonwealth were few, short and pithy; and
+ the Government thereof was established in peace so long as Officers
+ and People were obedient thereunto. But those many Laws in the days
+ of the Kings of England, which were made some in times of Popery
+ and some in times of Protestantism, and the proceedings of the Laws
+ being in French and Latin, hath produced two great evils in
+ England. First, it hath occasioned much ignorance among the people,
+ and much contention. And the people have mightily erred through
+ want of knowledge, and thereby they have run into great expense of
+ money by suits of Law; or else many have been imprisoned, whipped,
+ banished, lost their estates and lives by that Law which they were
+ ignorant of till the scourge thereof was on their backs. This is a
+ sore evil among the people.
+
+ "_Secondly_, The people's ignorance of the laws hath bred many sons
+ of contention. For when any difference falls out between man and
+ man, they neither of them know which offends the other; therefore,
+ both of them thinking their cause is good, they delight to make use
+ of the Law; and then they go and give a Lawyer money to tell them
+ which of them was the offender. The Lawyer, being glad to maintain
+ his own trade, sets them together by the ears till all their money
+ be near spent; and then bids them refer the business to their
+ neighbors to make them friends, which might have been done at the
+ first. So that the course of the Law and Lawyers hath been a mere
+ snare to entrap the people and to pull their estates from them by
+ craft. For the Lawyers do uphold the Conqueror's Interest and the
+ People's Slavery; so that the King, seeing this, did put all the
+ affairs of Judicature into their hands: and all this must be called
+ Justice, but it is a sore evil.
+
+ "But now if the Laws were few and short, and often read, it would
+ prevent those evils. Everyone, knowing when they did well and when
+ ill, would be very cautious of their words and actions, and thus
+ would escape the Lawyer's craft. As Moses' Law in Israel's
+ Commonwealth: '_The People did talk of them when they lay down and
+ when they rose up, and as they walked by the way, and bound them as
+ bracelets upon their hands_:' so that they were an understanding
+ people in the Laws wherein their peace did depend. But it is a sign
+ that England is a blinded and snared generation; their Leaders,
+ through pride and covetousness, have caused them to err, yea and
+ perish too, for want of the knowledge of the Laws, which hath the
+ Power of Life and Death, Freedom and Bondage in its hand. But I
+ hope better things hereafter."
+
+Winstanley, then, we regret to say, was ambitious enough to attempt to
+formulate a whole series of rigid artificial laws, which he evidently
+deemed adapted to promote the prosperity and preserve the happiness of
+his ideal Commonwealth: laws for the planting of the Earth, for
+Navigation, Trade, Marriage, etc. etc. The curious reader will find them
+almost in full in Appendix C. Many of them may seem to us unnecessary,
+but then we should remember that we have at our command a greater store
+of economic knowledge, and more accurate economic reasoning, than were
+available to Winstanley. Many of his laws will appear to us
+unnecessarily severe; but if we compare them with those prevailing for
+many, many years after his time, they will appear, by comparison, both
+mild and humane. As it seems to us, Winstanley intended to formulate
+suggestions rather than Laws in the accepted sense of the term:
+suggestions by following which the Earth could be planted and harvested,
+and all handicraft, trade, commerce and industries carried on, and the
+fruits of the united labours of all equitably distributed amongst all
+according to their needs, without having recourse to "the thieving art
+of buying and selling" either the Earth or the fruits thereof.
+
+The pamphlet concludes with the following quaint and yet philosophic
+lines, with which our notice of it may also fittingly close:
+
+ "Here is the Righteous Law, Man wilt thou it maintain?
+ It may be, as hath still, in the World been slain.
+ Truth appears in Light, Falsehood rules in Power;
+ To see these things to be, is cause of grief each hour.
+ Knowledge, Why didst thou come, to wound and not to cure?
+ I sent not for thee, thou didst me inlure.
+ Where knowledge does increase, there sorrows multiply,
+ To see the great deceit which in the World doth lie.
+ Man saying one thing now, unsaying it anon,
+ Breaking all Engagements, when deeds for him are done.
+ O Power where art thou? thou must mend things amiss;
+ Come, change the heart of Man, and make him Truth to kiss:
+ O Death, where art thou? wilt thou not tidings send?
+ I fear thee not, thou art my loving friend.
+ Come take this body, and scatter it in the Four,
+ That I may dwell in One, and rest in peace once more."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+CONCLUDING REMARKS
+
+ "While God gave to man a capacity to labour, He also gave him a
+ right to the object (the earth) on which that labour must be
+ employed to produce the necessaries of life. This gift of God is to
+ all men alike. No compact or consent or legislation on the part of
+ one portion of the community, can ever justly deprive another
+ portion of the community of their right of their share of the
+ earth, and of its natural productions. No arrangement or agreement
+ or legislation of men now dead, can justly deprive the present
+ inhabitants of the earth, or any portion of those inhabitants, of
+ their right to labour, and to labour for their own profit, on some
+ portion of the earth which God has given to man."--PATRICK EDWARD
+ DOVE, _Elements of Political Science_. 1854.
+
+ "Our postulates are the primary perceptions of human reason, the
+ fundamental teachings of the Christian faith. We hold: That--This
+ world is the creation of God. The men brought into it for the brief
+ period of their earthly lives are the equal creatures of His
+ bounty, the equal subjects of His provident care.... Being the
+ equal creatures of the Creator, equally entitled under His
+ providence to live their lives and satisfy their needs, men are
+ equally entitled to the use of land, and any adjustment that denies
+ this equal use of land is morally wrong."--HENRY GEORGE, _An Open
+ Letter to Pope Leo XIII_. 1891.[228:1]
+
+
+Here, then, we must bid farewell to Gerrard Winstanley. We are uncertain
+as to the place and year of his birth; we know not where he lived, nor
+where or when he died; yet his words still appeal to us, prompting us to
+cast off the blinding and distorting spectacles of convention and
+custom, to look the facts of social life fairly and squarely in the
+face, and boldly to proclaim whatever social truths reflection and study
+may reveal to us. Such are the lessons which his life and teachings seem
+to us to inculcate.
+
+What Winstanley regarded, and what a steadily increasing number of
+earnest students to-day regard, as a fundamental social truth was
+revealed to him; and right well he gave expression, by words and deeds,
+to his strong and well-grounded conviction of the equal claim of all to
+the use of Mother Earth, to the use of the nation's natural home,
+workhouse and storehouse, whence, by labour, everything necessary to
+life and comfort can alone be derived. Winstanley realised, as they
+to-day realise, that to admit in the abstract the Fatherhood of God and
+the Brotherhood of Man, to admit the equal claim of all to life, and yet
+to deny the equal claim of all to the use of God's Earth, to share in
+those blessings which the great Father of all men has lavished upon His
+children, and which form the only means by which life can be maintained,
+is but hypocrisy and cant. The "rights of property," the financial
+interests of the privileged classes, the Elder Brothers, the so-called
+"power of the capitalists," may be based on and involved in the
+recognition of the claim of the few to control the use of the Earth. But
+the rights of man, the material, moral and spiritual interests of the
+masses of mankind, their emancipation from the unjust economic
+conditions to-day enthralling and impoverishing them, narrowing and
+degrading their lives, depriving them of all real enjoyment of the
+present, as of all hope for the future, hindering the advance of the
+race to a nobler civilisation, to a higher plane of individual and
+social life, depend upon our recognising and enforcing the claim of all
+to the use of the Earth, and to share in the bounties of Nature, upon
+equitable terms. What Winstanley discovered and proclaimed in the
+Seventeenth Century, Henry George rediscovered and again proclaimed in
+the Nineteenth Century, and that in tones which are still reverberating
+and producing their effects on social thought throughout the length and
+breadth of the civilised world, promising ultimately to produce a change
+in social conditions compared with which the abolition of slavery sinks
+into comparative insignificance. It is no longer a question of the
+emancipation of a few chattel slaves, but of the whole human race.
+
+Fundamental social laws and institutions, based upon inequality of
+rights, must necessarily produce inequality of conditions. And all who
+impartially consider the question will be forced to admit that both
+Winstanley and Henry George trace the prevailing social inequality, the
+debauching wealth of the few and the degrading poverty of the many, to
+its true cause. Nor can there be any doubt but that if Winstanley's
+practical and efficacious remedy had been adopted, if the use of the
+Common Land had been secured to the Common People on equitable terms,
+the economic condition of the masses of the generations which succeeded
+him, the whole subsequent economic, social and political history of the
+English People, would have been very different; and they would not now,
+in the Twentieth Century, be fighting for, or more often whispering with
+bated breath concerning, those very reforms he so strenuously advocated
+over two hundred and fifty years ago.
+
+Winstanley's writings met with the fate that awaits all thought much in
+advance of the times in which it is given to the world. They have been
+ignored and forgotten; and till very recently even his memory had
+vanished from the minds of his fellow-countrymen, to whose emancipation
+he unstintedly devoted his life. Nor can we be surprised at this, when
+we consider the circumstances. There can be little doubt but that his
+earlier writings were the quiver whence the early Quakers derived many
+of their arrows, their most pointed and consequently by their opponents
+most hated doctrines. And yet the highly philosophic and rational
+attitude toward cosmological and theological speculations Winstanley
+attained to in his last pamphlet, placed before our readers in Chapter
+XVI., seems to us sufficiently to account for his having been ignored
+even by those who may have availed themselves of his earlier works, and
+hence that these, too, should have been gradually forgotten.
+
+That the same fate should have befallen his political writings, his
+noble and yet simple and practical political ideals and aspirations, is
+also not surprising. After the Restoration, when, as we have already
+shown, Winstanley's bitter opponents, the old and new landholders, were
+in the saddle, and made unsparing, we had almost written unscrupulous,
+use of their opportunities, such doctrines as his were little likely to
+commend themselves to the privileged, cultured and educated classes.
+Prior to the Reformation, education, at least the knowledge of reading,
+writing and arithmetic, was undoubtedly more widely diffused amongst the
+masses of the people than it was subsequently--at all events, till very
+recent times. From the Restoration to within our own times, education,
+even the knowledge of reading, was as a very general rule only within
+the reach of the few, of the privileged classes and those more or less
+dependent on their favour, with whom such ideals as those voiced by
+Winstanley would naturally meet with but scant consideration. Moreover,
+though we may be accused of pessimism or cynicism for saying so, it
+seems to us that the main reason why teachings such as Winstanley's must
+necessarily remain specially unpalatable and unwelcome so long as social
+and political privileges are allowed to continue, is that they are too
+simple and direct, and the path toward their realisation too clearly
+indicated, to be acceptable or welcome to those who benefit, or think
+they benefit, by the continuance of social injustice. Winstanley's
+proposals, as the proposals of his great modern representative, Henry
+George, are, indeed, a test of sincerity. It is easy to express approval
+of Freedom, Justice, Honesty, Equality of Opportunities, Brotherhood, of
+the Equal Right of All to Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness,
+and so on, _in the abstract_, and to talk about the necessity for men,
+_other men_, dealing honestly, equitably and righteously one toward the
+other. It is difficult, though but a test of our own honesty and
+sincerity, to give practical support to unpopular doctrines and
+proposals which would tend to make these noble and elevating conceptions
+into real, living realities, and to enforce us to act honestly,
+equitably and righteously ourselves. Hence it is that even to-day those
+who advocate any such doctrines, any such social change, are either
+dismissed as impossible, utopian dreamers, or denounced as revolutionary
+demagogues, as "prophets of iniquity," "preachers of immorality,"
+"advocates of villany," as enemies of society, and so on; and if this
+fails of its desired effects, other means are found by which their
+influence is undermined and their teachings discredited in the minds of
+those who more or less blindly follow in the wake of the "superior
+classes," the privileged few and their more or less direct dependents.
+Thus Society continues its troubled slumbers until--until the necessary
+changes denied to peaceful reformers, to the thinkers of the race, may
+be demanded, by revolutionary methods, by force, by those who know
+themselves injured and oppressed, though they may be ignorant of the
+means by which they are wronged.
+
+It was, however, as a sincere and unswerving advocate of peaceful,
+practical reforms, as a courageous and unflinching opponent of the use
+of force, of the sword, even for righteous ends, that Winstanley
+appealed to his own generation, as Henry George, Ruskin and Tolstoy
+appeal to the present. Nor can there be any doubt but that his teachings
+found far more general acceptance than is to be gathered from modern
+histories of the troubled times in which his lot was cast. For not only
+was there sufficient demand to warrant the publication of at least two
+editions of _The Law of Freedom_, as of several of his other pamphlets,
+but additional testimony is to be gathered from the fact that his
+writings were immediately pirated and issued under new titles by other
+publishers:[232:1] than which no better evidence can be had of the
+popularity of any writer.
+
+However this may be, new and less earnest and less strenuous generations
+arose which knew not Winstanley, and heeded not his teachings; and till
+very recent years both he and his teachings have remained utterly
+forgotten. And yet we write the closing lines of our work with the same
+conviction with which we commenced it some five years ago, that not only
+was Gerrard Winstanley a man worthy to be recalled to the memory of his
+fellow-countrymen, as one who deserved well of his day, of his
+generation and of his country, but that the intrinsic merits of his
+writings and teachings make them worthy of our most careful study, of
+our highest admiration, and of our most profound respect.
+
+True, they have hitherto received but scant consideration; but this need
+neither surprise nor disturb us. The man in whose heart a new truth is
+born may be a benefactor of his species; but, as all history teaches us,
+if he have courage to proclaim it to the world, he must be prepared to
+meet the hatred, scoffing and abuse of the ignorant, the sneering
+contempt, if not bitter persecution, of the learned and highly placed
+upholders of already accepted beliefs and superstitions. More especially
+is this true of a social truth, of a truth which threatens the
+continuance of society in its accustomed paths, which threatens the
+continuance of some vested social wrong, of some deep-rooted and
+time-honoured social injustice, which, though it may be poisoning the
+springs of social life, necessarily finds favour in the eyes of those
+who are advantaged, or think they are advantaged, thereby. It was such a
+truth that meditation and reflection revealed to Gerrard Winstanley;
+and, as we have seen, he too met with the fate awaiting those who find
+themselves in advance of their times. As already pointed out, his memory
+has passed away, his teachings have remained unheeded. The seed he
+planted fell upon barren soil; but though so hardened by the withering
+frosts of ignorance, of that ignorance which is indeed "the curse of
+God," as to seem but as a dead stone, the vivifying sun of knowledge may
+yet stir its dormant potency, recalling it to life, to spring up and to
+develop into a stately tree, yielding its life-giving fruits, offering
+the welcome protection of its branches to all seeking rest and shelter
+beneath its shade. To-day the thought that inspired Winstanley has again
+been proclaimed by one greater than Winstanley, and is slowly but surely
+remoulding the social thought of the world. Thanks to the genius of
+Henry George, the more thoughtful and ethical-minded of our race are
+gradually coming to realise that, to use Winstanley's words--"True
+Commonwealth's Freedom lies in the free enjoyment of the Earth"; and
+that if they would remove those remediable social ills which harass,
+haunt and warp our advancing civilisation, the use of the Earth and a
+share in the bounties and blessings of Nature must be secured to each
+and all upon equitable terms and conditions. Hence it is that we feel
+impelled to close our notice of the great Apostle of Social Justice and
+Economic Freedom of the Seventeenth Century with the following eloquent
+and soul-stirring words of his still greater successor of the Nineteenth
+Century, words which almost seem but as an echo of his own, even though
+many of us even to-day may have yet to learn to appreciate their full
+force, meaning and truth:
+
+ "In our time, as in times before, creep on the insidious forces
+ that, producing inequality, destroy Liberty. On the horizon the
+ clouds begin to lower. Liberty calls to us again. We must follow
+ her further; we must trust her fully. Either we must wholly accept
+ her or she will not stay. It is not enough that men should vote; it
+ is not enough that they should be theoretically equal before the
+ law. They must have liberty to avail themselves of the
+ opportunities and means of life; they must stand on equal terms
+ with reference to the bounties of nature. Either this, or Liberty
+ withdraws her light! Either this, or darkness comes on, and the
+ very forces that progress has evolved turn to powers that work
+ destruction. This is the universal law. This is the lesson of the
+ centuries. Unless its foundations be laid in justice the social
+ structure cannot stand."
+
+
+END.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[228:1] Published under the title, _The Condition of Labour_ (Swan,
+Sonnenschein & Co., London).
+
+[232:1] The following are some of such pirated publications: _Articles
+of High Treason._ British Museum, Press Mark, E. 521. _A Declaration for
+Freedom._ E. 321. _The Levellers Remonstrance._ E. 652. 12.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX A
+
+THE FUNDAMENTAL AND JUST CHIEF ARTICLES OF ALL THE PEASANTRY AND
+VILLEINS BY WHICH THEY DEEM THEMSELVES OPPRESSED
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+To the Christian Reader, Peace and the Grace of God through
+Christ,--There are many Anti-Christians who now take occasion to libel
+the Gospel on account of the assembled peasantry, saying these be the
+fruits of the New Gospel, to obey none, to raise rebellion in all
+places, to rush to arms to reform, to root out, and perhaps to destroy
+all spiritual and temporal authority. All such godless and wicked
+judgements the Articles here written do answer; in the first place, so
+that the shame may be lifted off the word of God; in the second, to
+excuse in a Christian manner this uprising of the peasants.
+
+In the first place, the Gospel is no cause of any uprising, seeing that
+it is the word of Christ, the promised Messiah, whose word and life
+teach naught save love, peace, patience and unity; so all who believe in
+this Christ should be loving, peaceful, patient and united. The object
+of all the Articles of the Peasants, when once clearly apprehended, is
+that they may hear the Gospel and live according to the Gospel. How then
+can Anti-Christians denounce the Gospel as a cause of rebellion and
+disobedience? But that Anti-Christians and Enemies of the Gospel should
+rise up against such requirements, of this the Gospel is not the cause,
+but the Devil, the most hurtful enemy of the Gospel, who arouses
+infidelity in his followers, so that the word of God, which teaches
+peace and unity, may be trodden down and taken away.
+
+In the second place, the following show clearly that the peasants in
+their Articles demand the Gospel for teaching and for life; therefore
+they cannot be called disobedient or rebellious. But should God hear the
+peasants, who sincerely desire to live according to His word: Who will
+oppose the will of God? (Rom. xi.). Who will impeach His judgment? (Isa.
+xi.). Who dare resist His majesty? (Rom. viii.). Did He not hear the
+Children of Israel when they called on Him, and delivered them out of
+the hand of Pharaoh (II Moses 3. 7), and can He not to-day also save His
+own? Aye, He will save them, and that speedily (Luke xviii. 8).
+Therefore, Christian Reader, read the following Articles sedulously, and
+then judge.
+
+
+FIRST ARTICLE.
+
+It is our humble request and desire, as also our will and intention,
+that henceforth the community itself shall have power to choose their
+Pastor, as also to dismiss him should he be found unsuitable. The Pastor
+so chosen shall preach to us the Gospel clearly and purely, free from
+all man-made additions, teachings and ordinances. For whoever preaches
+to us the true Faith giveth us reason to pray to God for His mercy, and
+to call up within us and confirm us in the true Faith. For if we do not
+enjoy His grace, we remain mere flesh and blood, which profiteth not. It
+is clearly written in the Scriptures that it is only through the true
+Faith that we can come to God, and only through His mercy that we can be
+saved. Therefore it is that we require such a Pastor and Minister.
+
+
+SECOND ARTICLE.
+
+_Secondly_, As the just tithe was established in the Old Testament, and
+in the New covered all dues, so we will gladly furnish the just tithe of
+corn, but only in a seemly manner, according to which it should be given
+to God, and divided among His servants. It is the due of a Pastor, as
+the Word of God clearly proclaims. Therefore it is our will that the
+Church Overseers, such as are appointed by the Community, shall collect
+and receive this tithe, and therefrom shall give to the Pastor, who
+shall be chosen by the Community, suitable and sufficient subsistence
+for him and his, as the whole Community may deem just. The surplus shall
+be devoted to the use of the poor and needy, as we are instructed in the
+Holy Scriptures. And so that no general tax shall be levied on the poor,
+their share of such taxation shall be defrayed out of such surplus.
+
+In villages where the right to the tithe has been sold, out of sheer
+necessity, the buyers shall lose nothing, but their rights shall be
+redeemed in a seemly manner. But those who have not bought the right to
+the tithe from the village, but who or whose fathers have simply usurped
+it to themselves, we will not and we should not give them anything. We
+owe such men nothing; but we are willing out of the proceeds of such
+tithe to support our chosen Pastor, and to relieve the needy as we are
+commanded in the Holy Scriptures.
+
+The small tithe we will not give. For God the Lord hath created the
+beasts free to mankind (Gen. i.). It is only a mere human invention that
+we should pay tithe on them. Therefore we shall not pay such tithe for
+the future.
+
+
+THIRD ARTICLE.
+
+_Thirdly_, It has hitherto been the custom that we should be held as
+serfs, which is deplorable, since Christ redeemed us all with His
+precious blood, the shepherd as well as the noble, the lowest as well as
+the highest, none being excepted. Therefore it accords with Scripture
+that we should be free; and we will be free. Not that we are absolutely
+free, or desire to be free from all authority: this God does not teach
+us. We are to live according to His commandments, not according to the
+promptings of the flesh; but shall love God as our Master, and recognise
+Him as the one nearest to us. And everything He has commanded we shall
+do; and His commands do not instruct us to disobey the orders of the
+Authorities. On the contrary, not only before the Authorities, but
+before all men we are to be humble; so that in all matters fitting and
+Christian we shall gladly obey the orders of those who have been chosen
+or have been set up over us. And doubtless, as true and honest
+Christians, you will gladly abolish serfdom, or prove it to be in
+accordance with the Gospel.
+
+
+FOURTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Fourthly_, It has hitherto been the custom that no poor man should have
+any right to the game, the birds, or to the fish in the running waters.
+This seems to us unseemly and unbrotherly, and not to be in accordance
+with the Word of God. Moreover, in some places the authorities let the
+game increase to our injury and mighty undoing, since we have to permit
+that which God has caused to grow for the use of man to be unavailingly
+devoured by the beasts; and we have to hold our peace concerning this,
+which is against God and our neighbours. When our Lord God created
+mankind, He gave him power over all creatures, over the birds in the air
+and the fish in the waters. Therefore as regards those who control the
+running waters, and who can show us documents to prove that they
+purchased it with money, we do not desire to take it away from such men
+by force, but to come to some Christian agreement with them in brotherly
+love. Those who have no such documents shall share with the community in
+a seemly manner.
+
+
+FIFTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Fifthly_, We find ourselves oppressed as regards the woods. For our
+Lords have taken to themselves all the woods; and when poor men require
+any wood, they have to buy it with money. Our view is that such woods,
+whether claimed by spiritual or by temporal Lords, as have not been
+purchased, should return to the community, and be free to all in a
+seemly manner. So that those who require wood for firing shall be free
+to take same without payment, as also if they require any for
+carpentering: but, of course, always with the knowledge of the chosen
+Authorities of the community. But where there are no woods save those as
+have been honestly purchased, with such we will arrange the matter in a
+brotherly and Christian spirit. And in cases where the land was first
+appropriated and afterwards sold, we will also come to an agreement with
+the buyers according to the circumstances of the case, and with regard
+to brotherly love and the Holy Writings.
+
+
+SIXTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Sixthly_, The burden of service presses heavily upon us, and is daily
+increased. We desire that this matter shall be looked into, and that we
+be not so heavily burdened, but shall be mercifully dealt with herein;
+that we should serve but as our fathers have served, but only according
+to the Word of God.
+
+
+SEVENTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Seventhly_, Henceforth we will no longer allow ourselves to be
+oppressed by the Lords, but according as a Lord hath granted the land,
+so shall it be held, according to the agreement between the Lord and the
+peasant. The Lord shall not force him to render more service for naught;
+so that the peasant shall enjoy his holding in peace and unoppressed.
+But if the Lord hath need of service, the peasant shall be willing and
+obedient to him before others; but it shall be at the hour and the time
+when it shall not injure the peasant, and at a proper remuneration.
+
+
+EIGHTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Eighthly_, Many of us are oppressed in that we hold lands that will not
+bear the price placed on them, so that the peasant thereby is ruined and
+undone. Our desire is that the Lord shall allow such land to be seen by
+honourable men, so that the price shall be fixed in such a manner that
+the peasant shall not have his labour in vain: for every labourer is
+worthy of his hire (Matt. x.).
+
+
+NINTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Ninthly_, We suffer greatly because of the new punishments that are
+continually laid upon us. Not that they punish us according to the
+circumstances of the case, but at times spitefully and at other times
+favourably. We would be punished according to the old written
+punishments, and not arbitrarily.
+
+
+TENTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Tenthly_, We suffer in that some have taken to themselves meadows and
+arable land that belong to the community. Such land we would take once
+more into the hands of our communities wheresoever they have not been
+honestly purchased. But where they have been purchased, then shall the
+case be agreed upon in peace and brotherly love, according to the
+circumstances of the case.
+
+
+ELEVENTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Eleventhly_, We would have the custom called the death-due entirely
+abolished. We will never suffer nor permit that widows and orphans shall
+be disgraced and robbed of their own, contrary to God and honour, as has
+happened in many cases and in many ways. Those who would protect and
+shelter them, they have abused and injured, and when these have had
+some little property, even this they have taken. Such things God will no
+longer suffer, they shall be abolished. For such things no man shall
+henceforth be compelled to give aught, be it little or much.
+
+
+TWELFTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Twelfthly_, It is our resolve and final decision that if any of the
+Articles here set forth be not according to the Word of God, we will,
+whenever they are shown to be against the Word of God, at once withdraw
+therefrom. Yea, even though certain articles were now granted and it
+should hereafter be found that they are unjust, from that hour they
+shall be null and void and of no effect. The same shall happen if there
+should with truth be found in the Scriptures yet more Articles which
+were held to be against God and a stumbling-block to our neighbours,
+even though we should have determined to preserve such for ourselves.
+For we have determined and resolved to practice ourselves in all
+Christian doctrines. Therefore we pray God the Lord who can grant us the
+same, and none other. The Peace of Christ be with you all. Amen.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX B
+
+TOLERATION
+
+
+The statement that toleration was the one leading principle of
+Cromwell's life, may seem somewhat exaggerated to those who have not
+carefully studied his career. By his own words let him be judged.
+Writing to Major Crawford as early as March 1643 (1644) he plainly tells
+him--"Sir, the State, in choosing men to serve it, takes no notice of
+their opinions; if they be willing faithfully to serve it, that
+satisfies." After Naseby, under date June 14th, 1645, in his dispatch to
+the Speaker, he tells the Presbyterian House of Commons--"Honest men
+served you faithfully in this action. Sir, they are trusty; I beseech
+you in the name of God not to discourage them.... _He that ventures his
+life for the liberty of the country, I wish he trust God for the liberty
+of his conscience, and you for the liberty he fights for._" The meaning
+of these words was not lost to the House, so when sending his dispatch
+to the press, they carefully omitted this paragraph.
+
+After the siege of Bristol, Cromwell is still more outspoken. Under date
+September 14th, 1645, he writes to the Speaker as follows--"Presbyterians,
+Independents, all have here the same spirit of faith and prayer; the same
+presence and answer; they agree here, have no names of difference; pity
+it should be otherwise anywhere--_for, bretheren, in things of the mind
+we look for no compulsion but that of light and reason_." This dispatch,
+too, the House of Commons took care to mutilate before sending it to the
+press.
+
+As he advanced in his career, Cromwell became still more outspoken. In
+his opening speech to his first Parliament, after having given
+expression to his view that the Lord had given them the victory for the
+common good of all, "for the good of the whole flock," he
+continues--"Therefore I beseech you--but I think I need not--have a care
+of the whole flock! Love the sheep, love the lambs; love all, tender
+all, cherish and countenance all, in all things that are good. _And if
+the poorest Christian, the most mistaken Christian, shall desire to live
+peaceably and quietly under you--I say, if any shall desire but to lead
+a life of godliness and honesty, let him be protected._"
+
+Again, when dissolving his first Parliament (Speech IV.), he expresses
+the same thought in the following words--"Is there not yet upon the
+spirits of men a strange itch? Nothing will satisfy them unless they can
+press their finger upon their bretheren's consciences, to pinch them
+there. To do this was no part of the contest we had with the common
+adversary. For religion was not the thing at first contended for, but
+God brought it to that issue at last; and gave it unto us by way of
+redundancy; and at last it proved to be that which was most dear to us.
+And wherein consisted this more than in obtaining that liberty from the
+tyranny of the Bishops to all species of Protestants to worship God
+according to their own light and consciences? ... And was it fit for them
+to sit heavy upon others? Is it ingenuous to ask liberty and not to give
+it? What greater hypocrisy than for those who were oppressed by the
+Bishops to become the greatest oppressors themselves, so soon as their
+yoke was removed? I could wish that they who call for liberty now also
+had not too much of that spirit, if the power were in their hands."
+
+Cromwell, in short, had no deep-rooted objection either to a moderate
+Episcopacy or to a tolerant Presbyterianism, though, as he somewhere
+says, "both are a hard choice," provided only there was sufficient
+consideration for those who could not reconcile their consciences to the
+demands of the established State Church. His great desire was "for union
+and right understanding" between Protestants of all shades, in fact
+between "godley" (religious or moral) people of all races, countries and
+denominations, "Scots, English, Jews, Gentiles, Presbyterians,
+Independents, Anabaptists, and all." (See his letter to Hammond, _Clarke
+Papers_, vol. ii. p. 49.) His aim was to reconcile, or rather to stand
+as mediator between all the opposing sects. "Fain," he writes to one of
+his most devoted adherent (see _Cromwell's Letters and Speeches_,
+Carlyle, part vii. p. 363), "would I have my service accepted of the
+Saints, if the Lord will;--but it is not so. Being of different
+judgements, and those of each sort seeking most to propagate their own,
+that spirit of kindness that is to them all is hardly accepted of any. I
+hope I can say it, My life has been a willing sacrifice,--and I
+hope--for them all. Yet it much falls out as when the two Hebrews were
+rebuked: you know upon whom they turned their displeasure."
+
+In short, Cromwell's attitude toward all honest, sincere, "godley" men
+was the same as his attitude toward George Fox. "Come again to my
+house," he said, when dismissing the sturdy Quaker, "for if thou and I
+were but an hour a day together we should be nearer one to the other. I
+wish you no more ill than I do to my own soul."
+
+On November 17th, 1645, "the Dissenting Bretheren," the representatives
+of the Independents in the Westminster Assembly, declared for a full
+liberty of conscience. "They expressed themselves," as Baillie, the
+Scotch Presbyterian commissioner, wrote sadly, "for toleration, not only
+to themselves, but to all sects." In February of the same year, the
+Oxford Clergy, who had been consulted by the King as to the limits of
+possible concession, gave strong evidence that the pressure of events
+were forcing them to move, even though slowly, in the same direction.
+(See Gardiner, _History of the Civil War_, vol. ii. pp. 125-126.)
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX C
+
+WHAT MAY BE THOSE PARTICULAR LAWS, OR SUCH A METHOD OF LAWS, WHEREBY A
+COMMONWEALTH MAY BE GOVERNED?
+
+
+1. The bare letter of the Law established by Act of Parliament shall be
+the Rule for Officers and People, and the chief Judge of all actions.
+
+2. He or they who add or diminish from the Law, excepting in the Court
+of Parliament, shall be cashiered his Office, and never bear Office
+more.
+
+3. No man shall administer the Law for Money or Reward. He that doth
+shall die as a Traitor to the Commonwealth. For when Money must buy and
+sell Justice, and bear all the sway, there is nothing but Oppression to
+be expected.
+
+ [Here, as also in other Laws yet to follow, Winstanley, and as it
+ seems to us without sufficient grounds, gives up the position taken
+ up in The New Law of Righteousness, that capital punishment was
+ absolutely unjustifiable.]
+
+4. The Laws shall be read by the Minister to the People four times in
+the year, viz., every quarter; that everyone may know whereunto they are
+to yield obedience, that none may die for want of knowledge.
+
+5. No accusation shall be taken against any man unless it be proved by
+two or three witnesses, or his own confession.
+
+6. No man shall suffer any punishment but for matter of fact or reviling
+words. But no man shall be troubled for his judgement or practice in the
+things of his God, so he live quiet in the Land.
+
+7. The accuser and the accused shall always appear face to face before
+any Officer; that both sides may be heard, and no wrong to either party.
+
+8. If any Judge execute his own will contrary to the Law, or where there
+is no Law to warrant him in, he shall be cashiered, and never bear
+Office more.
+
+9. He who raises an accusation against any man, and cannot prove it,
+shall suffer the same punishment as the other should, if proved. An
+accusation is, when one man complains of another to an Officer, all
+other accusations the Law takes no notice of.
+
+10. He who strikes his neighbor shall be struck himself by the
+executioner, blow for blow, and shall lose eye for eye, tooth for tooth,
+limb for limb, life for life. And the reason is that men should be
+tender of one another's bodies, doing as they would be done by.
+
+11. If any man strike an Officer, he shall be made a servant under the
+Task-master for a whole year.
+
+12. He who endeavours to stir up contention among neighbors, by
+tale-bearing or false reports, shall the first time be reproved openly
+by the Overseers among the people. The second time he shall be whipped.
+The third time he shall be a servant under the Task-master for three
+months. And if he continue, he shall be a servant for ever, and lose his
+Freedom in the Commonwealth.
+
+13. If any give reviling or provoking words, whereby his neighbor's
+spirit is burdened, if complaint be made to the Overseers, they shall
+admonish the offender privately to forbear. If he continue to offend his
+neighbor, the next time he shall be openly reproved and admonished
+before the Congregation when met together. If he continue, the third
+time he shall be whipped; the fourth time, if proof be made by
+witnesses, he shall be a servant under the Task-master for twelve
+months.
+
+14. He who will rule as a Lord over his Brother, unless he be an Officer
+commanding obedience to the Law, he shall be admonished as aforesaid,
+and receive like punishment, if he continue.
+
+
+LAWS FOR THE PLANTING OF THE EARTH.
+
+15. Every household shall keep all instruments and tools fit for the
+tillage of the Earth, either for planting, reaping or threshing. Some
+households, which have many men in them, shall keep ploughs, carts,
+harrows, and such like. Other households shall keep spades, pick-axes,
+pruning hooks, and such like, according as every family is furnished
+with men to work therewith. And if any Master or Father of a Family be
+negligent herein, the Overseer for that Circuit shall admonish him
+between them two. If he continue negligent, the Overseer shall reprove
+him before all the people. And if he utterly refuse, then the ordering
+of that Family shall be given to another, and he shall be Servant under
+the Task-master till he reform.
+
+16. Every Family shall come into the field with sufficient assistance at
+seed time, to plough, dig and plant, and at harvest time to reap the
+fruits of the Earth, and to carry them into the Storehouses, as the
+Overseers order the work and the number of workmen. If any refuse to
+assist in the work, the Overseer shall ask the reason; and if it be
+sickness or any distemper that hinders them, they are freed from such
+service; if mere idleness keep them back, they are to suffer punishment
+according to the Laws against Idleness.
+
+
+LAWS AGAINST IDLENESS.
+
+17. If any refuse to learn a trade, or refuse to work in seed-time, or
+refuse to be a waiter in storehouses, and yet will feed and clothe
+himself with other men's labors, the Overseer shall first admonish him
+privately. If he continue idle, he shall be reproved openly before all
+the people by the Overseer, and shall be forbore with a month after this
+reproof. If he still continue idle, he shall be whipped, and let go at
+liberty for a month longer. If still he continue idle, he shall be
+delivered into the Task-master's hand, who shall set him to work for
+twelve months, or till he submit to right order. The reason why every
+young man shall be trained up in some work or other, is to prevent pride
+and contention; it is for the health of their bodies; it is a pleasure
+to the mind to be free in labors one with another; and it provides
+plenty of food and all necessaries for the Commonwealth.
+
+
+LAWS FOR STOREHOUSES.
+
+18. In every Town and City shall be appointed Storehouses for flax,
+wood, leather, cloth, and for all such commodities as come from beyond
+seas. These shall be called General Storehouses, whence every particular
+Family may fetch such commodities as they want, either for their own use
+in their house, or for to work in their trades, or to carry into the
+Country Storehouses.
+
+19. Every particular house and shop in a town or city shall be a
+particular Storehouse or Shop, as now they be. And these shops shall
+either be furnished by the particular labor of that family according to
+the trade that family is of, or by the labor of other lesser families of
+the same trade, as all shops in every town are now furnished.
+
+20. The waiters in Storehouses shall deliver the goods in their charge
+without receiving any money, as they shall receive in their goods
+without paying any money.
+
+21. If any waiter in a Storehouse neglect his Office, upon a just
+complaint, the Overseers shall acquaint the Judge's Court therewith; and
+from thence he shall receive his sentence, to be discharged that house
+and office, to be appointed some other work under the Task-master; and
+another shall have his place. For he who may live in Freedom and will
+not, is to taste of servitude.
+
+
+LAWS FOR OVERSEERS.
+
+22. The only work of every Overseer is to see the Laws executed. For the
+Law is the True Magistracy of the land.
+
+23. If any Overseer favour any in their idleness and neglect the
+execution of the Laws, he shall be reproved, the first time by the
+Judge's Court; the second time cashiered his Office, and shall never
+bear Office more, but fall back into the ranks of young people and
+servants to be a worker.
+
+24. New Overseers, at their first entrance into their office, shall look
+back upon the actions of the Old Overseers of the last year, to see if
+they have been faithful in their places, and consented to no breach of
+Law, whereby Kingly Bondage should in any way be brought in.
+
+25. The Overseers for Trades shall see every Family to lend assistance
+to plant and reap the fruits of the Earth, to work in their Trades, and
+to furnish the Storehouses. And to see that the Waiters in Storehouses
+be diligent to receive in and deliver out any goods, without buying and
+selling, to any man whatsoever.
+
+26. While any Overseer is in performance of his place, every one shall
+assist him, upon pain of open reproof (or cashiered if he be another
+Officer) or forfeiture of freedom, according to the nature of the
+business in hand, in which he refused his assistance.
+
+
+LAWS AGAINST BUYING AND SELLING.
+
+27. If any man entice another to buy and sell, and he who is enticed
+does not yield, but makes it known to the Overseer, the enticer shall
+lose his freedom for twelve months, and the Overseer shall give words of
+commendation of him that refused the enticement before all the
+Congregation, for his faithfulness to the Commonwealth's Peace.
+
+
+THE UNPARDONABLE SIN!
+
+28. If any do buy and sell the Earth, or the fruits thereof, unless it
+be to or with strangers of another Nation, according to the Law of
+Navigation, they shall be both put to death as Traitors to the Peace of
+the Commonwealth. Because it brings in Kingly Bondage again, and is the
+occasion of all quarrels and oppressions.
+
+29. He, or she, who calls the Earth his, and not his brother's, shall be
+set upon a stool, with those words written in his forehead, before all
+the Congregation, and afterwards be made a Servant for twelve months
+under the Task-master. If he quarrel, or seek by secret persuasion or
+open rising in arms to set up such a Kingly Propriety, he shall be put
+to death.
+
+30. The Storehouses shall be every man's subsistence, and not any ones.
+
+31. No man shall either give hire or take hire for his work; for this
+brings in Kingly Bondage. If any Freeman want help, there are young
+people, or such as are common servants, to do it by the Overseer's
+appointment. He that gives and he that hires for work, shall both lose
+their freedom and become Servants for twelve months under the
+Task-master.
+
+
+LAWS FOR NAVIGATION.
+
+32. Because other Nations as yet own Monarchy, and will buy and sell,
+therefore it is convenient for the peace of our Commonwealth, that our
+ships do transport our English goods and exchange for theirs, and
+conform to the customs of other Nations in buying and selling: Always
+provided that what goods our ships carry out, they shall be the
+Commonwealth's goods; and all their trading with other Nations shall be
+upon the Common Stock, to enrich the Storehouses.
+
+
+LAWS FOR SILVER AND GOLD.
+
+33. As Silver and Gold is either found out in mines in our own Land, or
+brought by shipping from beyond Sea, it shall not be coined with a
+Conqueror's stamp upon it, to set up buying and selling under his name,
+or by his leave. For there shall be no other use for it in the
+Commonwealth than to make dishes and other necessaries for the ornament
+of houses, as now there is use made of brass, pewter and iron, or any
+other metal in their use. But in case other Nations whose commodities we
+want, will not exchange with us unless we give them money, then pieces
+of silver and gold may be stamped with the Commonwealth's Arms upon
+them, for the same use and no otherwise.
+
+For where money bears all the sway, there is no regard of that Golden
+Rule, "_Do as you would be done by_." Justice is bought and sold; nay,
+Injustice is sometimes bought for money; and it is the cause of all wars
+and oppressions. Certainly the Righteous Spirit of the Whole Creation
+did never enact a Law that his weak and simple men should go from
+England to the East Indies and fetch silver and gold to bring in their
+hands to their bretheren, and give it them for their good-will to let
+them plant the Earth, and live and enjoy their livelihood therein.
+
+
+LAWS TO CHOOSE OFFICERS.
+
+34. All Overseers and State Officers shall be chosen new every year, to
+prevent the rise of Ambition and Covetousness. For the Nations have
+smarted sufficiently by suffering Officers to continue long in an
+Office, or to remain in an Office by hereditary succession.
+
+35. A man who is of a turbulent spirit, given to quarrelling and
+provoking words to his neighbor, shall not be chosen any Officer while
+he so continues.
+
+36. All men of twenty years of age upwards shall have freedom of voice
+to choose Officers, unless they be such as lie under sentence of the
+Law.
+
+37. Such shall be chosen Officers as are rational men of moderate
+conversation, and who have experience in the Laws of the Commonwealth.
+
+38. All men from forty years of age upwards shall be capable to be
+chosen State Officers, and none younger, unless any one by his industry
+and moderate conversation doth move the people to choose him.
+
+39. If any man make suit to move the people to choose him an Officer,
+that man shall not be chosen at all that time. If another man shall
+persuade the people to choose him that made suit for himself, they shall
+both loose their freedom at that time, viz., they shall neither have a
+voice to choose another, nor be chosen themselves.
+
+
+LAWS AGAINST TREACHERY.
+
+40. He who professes the service of a righteous God by preaching and
+prayer, and makes a trade to get the possessions of the Earth, shall be
+put to death for a Witch and a Cheater.
+
+41. He who pretends one thing in words, and his actions declare his
+intent was another thing, shall never bear Office in the Commonwealth.
+
+
+WHAT IS FREEDOM?
+
+Every Freeman shall have a Freedom in the Earth, to plant or build, to
+fetch from the Storehouses anything he wants, and shall enjoy the fruits
+of his labor without restraint from any. He shall not pay Rent to any
+Landlord. He shall be capable of being chosen Officer, so he be above
+forty years of age, and he shall have a voice to choose Officers though
+he be under forty years of age. If he want any young men to be
+assistants to him in his trade or household employment, the Overseers
+shall appoint him young men or maids to be his servants in his family.
+
+
+LAWS FOR SUCH AS HAVE LOST THEIR FREEDOM.
+
+42. All those who have lost their freedom shall be clothed in white
+woollen cloth, that they may be distinguished from others.
+
+43. They shall be under the government of a Task-master, who shall
+appoint them to be porters or laborers, to do any work that any Freeman
+wants to be done.
+
+44. They shall do all kinds of labor without exception, but their
+constant work shall be carriers or carters, to carry corn or other
+provision from Storehouse to Storehouse, from Country to Cities, and
+thence to Countries.
+
+45. If any of these refuse to do such work, the Task-master shall see
+them whipped, and shall feed them with coarse diet. And what hardship is
+this? For Freemen work the easiest work, and these shall work the
+hardest work. And to what end is this but to kill their Pride and
+Unreasonableness, that they may become useful men in the Commonwealth?
+
+46. The wife or children of such as have lost their Freedom shall not be
+as slaves till they have lost their Freedom as their parents and
+husbands have done.
+
+47. He who breaks any laws shall be the first time reproved in words in
+private or in public, as is shown before; the next time whipped; the
+third time lose his Freedom, either for a short time or for ever, and
+not to be any Officer.
+
+48. He who hath lost his Freedom shall be a common servant to any
+Freeman who comes to the Task-master and requires one to do any work for
+him. Always provided, that after one Freeman hath by the consent of the
+Task-master appointed him his work, another Freeman shall not call him
+thence till that work be done.
+
+49. If any of these offenders revile the Laws by words, they shall be
+soundly whipped and fed with coarse diet. If they raise weapons against
+the Laws, they shall die as Traitors.
+
+
+LAWS TO RESTORE SLAVES TO FREEDOM.
+
+50. When any Slaves [_i.e._ those who have lost their Freedom] give open
+testimony of their humility and diligence, and of their care to observe
+the Laws of the Commonwealth, they are then capable to be restored to
+their Freedom, when the time of servitude has expired, according to the
+Judge's sentence. But if they continue opposite to the Laws, they shall
+continue slaves for another term of time.
+
+51. None shall be restored to Freedom till they have been a twelve month
+laboring servants to the Commonwealth; for they shall winter and summer
+in that condition.
+
+52. When any is restored to Freedom, the Judge at the Senator's Court
+shall pronounce his Freedom, and give liberty to him to be clothed in
+what other coloured garments he will.
+
+53. If any person be sick or wounded, the Chyrurgeons, who are trained
+up in the knowledge of Herbs and Minerals, and know how to apply
+plasters or physick, shall go when they are sent for to any who need
+their help, but require no reward, because the Common Stock is the
+public pay for every man's labor.
+
+54. When a dead person is to be buried, the Officers of the Parish and
+neighbors shall go along with the corpse to the grave, and see it laid
+therein in a civil manner; but the public Minister nor any other shall
+have any hand in reading or exhortation.
+
+ [Whatever we may think of this latter proviso, certain it is that
+ it would put an end to many unseemly squabblings at a time when
+ they are specially to be avoided.]
+
+55. When a man hath learned his Trade, and the time of his seven years
+Apprenticeship has expired, he shall have his Freedom to become Master
+of a Family, and the Overseers shall appoint him such young people to be
+his servants as they think fit, whether he marry or live a single life.
+
+
+LAWS FOR MARRIAGE.
+
+56. Every man and woman shall have the free liberty to marry whom they
+love, if they can obtain the love and liking of that party whom they
+would marry, and neither birth nor portion shall hinder the match. For
+we are all of one blood, mankind, and for portion, the Common
+Storehouses are every man and maid's portion, as free to one as to
+another.
+
+57. If any man lie with a maid and beget a child, he shall marry her.
+
+58. If a man lie with a woman forcibly, and she cry out and give no
+consent; if this be proved by two witnesses, or the man's confession, he
+shall be put to death, and the woman let go free: it is robbery of a
+woman's bodily freedom.
+
+59. If any man by violence endeavour to take another man's wife, the
+first time of such violent offer he shall be reproved before the
+Congregation by the Peacemaker; the second time he shall be made a
+Servant under the Task-master for twelve months; and if he forcibly lie
+with another man's wife, and she cry out, as is the case when, a maid is
+forced, the man shall be put to death.
+
+60. When any man or woman have consented to live together in marriage,
+they shall acquaint all the Overseers in the Circuit therewith, and some
+other neighbors. And being all met together, the man shall declare with
+his own mouth before them all that he takes that woman to be his wife,
+and the woman shall say the same, and desire the Overseers to be
+witnesses.
+
+
+LAWS TO SECURE ECONOMY.
+
+61. No Master of a Family shall suffer more meat to be dressed at a
+dinner or supper than will be spent and eaten by his household or
+company present, or within such a time after before it be spoilt. If
+there be any spoil constantly made in a family of the food of man, the
+Overseer shall reprove the Master for it privately; if that abuse be
+continued in his family, through his neglect of family government, he
+shall be openly reproved by the Peacemaker before all the people, and
+ashamed for his folly; the third time he shall be made a servant for
+twelve months under the Task-master, so that he may know what it is to
+get food, and another shall have the oversight of his house for the
+time.
+
+62. No man shall be suffered to keep house and have servants under him
+till he hath served seven years under command to a Master himself. The
+reason is that a man may be of age and of rational carriage before he be
+made a Governor of a Family, that the peace of the Commonwealth may be
+preserved.
+
+
+
+
+BIBLIOGRAPHY
+
+COMPLETE LIST OF "DIGGER" PUBLICATIONS.
+
+
+WINSTANLEY, The Mystery of God concerning the Whole Creation,
+ Mankind.--April 1648. (British Museum, Press Mark, 4377, a. 1.)
+
+ " The Breaking of the Day of God.--May 1648. (British Museum, P. M.,
+ 4377, a. 2.)
+
+ " The Saints' Paradise: Or the Father's Teaching the Only Satisfaction
+ to Waiting Souls.--August or September 1648. (British Museum, P. M.,
+ E. 2137.)
+
+ " Truth Lifting up its Head above Scandals.--October 1648. (British
+ Museum, P. M., 4372, a.a. 17.)
+
+ " (?) Light Shining in Buckinghamshire.--December 1648. (British
+ Museum, P. M., E. 475 (11).)
+
+ " (?) More Light Shining in Buckinghamshire.--March 1649. (British
+ Museum, P. M., E. 548 (33).)
+
+ " (?) A Declaration from the Well Affected in the County of
+ Buckinghamshire.--May 1649. (British Museum, P. M., E. 555.)
+
+ " The New Law of Righteousness.--January 1649. (Jesus College Library,
+ Oxford.)
+
+ " Fire in the Bush: The Spirit burning, not consuming but purging,
+ Mankind.--March 1649. (Bodleian Library.)
+
+ " A Declaration from the Poor Oppressed People of England.--March
+ 1649. (British Museum, Press Mark, 1027, i. 16 (3).)
+
+ " The True Levellers' Standard Advanced: Or the State of Community
+ opened and presented to the Sons of Men.--April 1649. (British
+ Museum, P. M., E. 552.)
+
+ " A Declaration of the Bloody and Unchristian Acting of William Star
+ and John Taylor of Walton, with diverse men in women's apparel, in
+ opposition to those that dig upon St. Georges Hill.--June 1649.
+ (British Museum, Press Mark, E. 561.)
+
+ " A Letter to Lord Fairfax and his Council of War.--June 1649.
+ (British Museum, P. M., E. 560 (1).)
+
+ " An Appeal to the House of Commons.--July 1649. (British Museum,
+ P. M., E. 564. Also at the Guildhall Library.)
+
+ " A Watchword to the City of London.--August 1649. (British Museum,
+ P. M., E. 573. Also at the Guildhall Library.)
+
+ " A Second Letter to Lord Fairfax.--December 1649. (Clarke Papers,
+ vol. ii. pp. 217-220.)
+
+
+COSTER, ROBERT, A Mite cast into the Common Treasury.--December 1649.
+ (British Museum, P. M., E. 585.)
+
+ " The Diggers' Mirth. (British Museum, P. M., E. 1365.)
+
+ " The Diggers' Song. (Clarke Papers, vol. ii. p. 218.)
+
+
+WINSTANLEY, A New Year's Gift for the Parliament and Army.--January
+ 1650. (British Museum, P. M., E. 587.)
+
+ " A Vindication of Those whose Endeavour it is only to make the Earth
+ a Common Treasury, called Diggers.--February 1650. (British Museum,
+ P. M., E. 1365.)
+
+ " An Appeal for Money.--April 1650. (See "A Perfect Diurnal," British
+ Museum, P. M., E. 534.)
+
+ " A Declaration from Wellingborrow, in the County of Northampton.--
+ March 1650. (British Museum, under Wellinborrow, P. M., S. Sh.
+ fol. 669 f., 15. 21.)
+
+ " An Appeal to all Englishmen to Judge between Bondage and
+ Freedom.--March 1650. (British Museum, P. M., S. Sh. fol. 669 f.,
+ 15. 23.)
+
+ " An Humble Request to the Ministers of Both Universities and to all
+ Lawyers of every Inns-a-Court.--April 1650. (Dyce and Forster's
+ Library, South Kensington Museum.)
+
+ " The Law of Freedom in a Platform: Or True Magistracie
+ Restored.--February 1652. (British Museum, P. M., E. 655. Also at
+ the Guildhall and Bodleian Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+Agreement of the People, 29, 32, 87, 103.
+
+Anabaptists, 15, 18.
+
+Army, the Model, Views of, 29;
+ Declaration of (1647), 93 (note).
+
+Army Council, Resolution of, 33;
+ Debate of, 103, 108.
+
+
+Baptism, Winstanley on, 64.
+
+Barclay (Apology), quoted, 58, 60, 65.
+
+Baxter (Thos.), quoted, 50 (note).
+
+Beard (Hibbert Lectures, 1883), quoted, 4, 10, 15, 18.
+
+Buckle, quoted, 1, 21, 22.
+
+
+Capital Punishment, Winstanley on, 69.
+
+Carlyle, quoted, 38, 165, 166, 168, 170.
+
+Cartwright, Thos., quoted, 20.
+
+Chalmers, John, quoted, 63.
+
+Chillingworth, quoted, 21.
+
+Clarke Papers, quoted, 29, 34, 35, 36, 53, 103, 106, 108, 122, 124, 130.
+
+Clergy, Winstanley on, 62, 167, 189.
+
+Coomber, Thos., quoted, 49.
+
+Coster, Robert, 126.
+
+Council of State, Letter to Fairfax, 35;
+ to Mr. Pentlow, 159.
+
+Croese, Gerrard, quoted, 49 (note).
+
+Cromwell, Oliver, quoted, 32, 33, 53, 165, 166, 168, 170;
+ Open Letter to, 164.
+
+
+Diggers, Information against, 34;
+ Fairfax's visit to, 39;
+ Mirth, 129;
+ Declaration of, 91;
+ Sufferings of, 143;
+ Travels, 150.
+
+Dispensations, Winstanley on, 53;
+ Cromwell on, 53.
+
+Doctrines, Family of Love, 16, 18;
+ Presbyterian, 20, 32;
+ Model Army, 29;
+ Independent, 31, 32;
+ Children of Light, 52, 65;
+ Anabaptists, 15, 18.
+
+Dove, Patrick Edward, quoted, 228.
+
+
+Earth, Right to use of, Winstanley on, 70, 74, 76, 80, 83, 90, 96, 104,
+118, 132, 170, 180, 213.
+
+England, Reformation in, 12;
+ Church of, 13.
+
+Erasmus, quoted, 15, 18.
+
+Everard, 36, 38.
+
+
+Fairfax, Lord, Council of State to, 35;
+ Gladman to, 39;
+ Visit to Diggers, 39;
+ Winstanley's letters to, 100, 124.
+
+Fall, the, Winstanley on, 44, 53, 70.
+
+Family of Love, History of, 15;
+ Doctrines of, 16, 18.
+
+Freedom, Winstanley on, 100, 112, 114, 179.
+
+Fuller on Family of Love, 16.
+
+
+Gardiner, quoted, 25, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 87, 163.
+
+George, Henry, quoted, 146, 205, 228, 234.
+
+Golden Rule, Winstanley on the, 39, 56, 80, 81, 86, 141, 154, 171, 190,
+217, 225.
+
+Government, Winstanley on, 68, 101, 177;
+ Definition of, 181.
+
+
+Hallam, quoted, 24.
+
+Hare's pamphlets, 38.
+
+Hooker, quoted, 21, 23.
+
+House of Commons, Apology of, 25;
+ Remonstrance of, 27;
+ Officers' Petition to, 86;
+ Appeal to, 105.
+
+
+Independents, Origin of, 14;
+ Growth of, 33;
+ Doctrines of, 31.
+
+Ireton, quoted, 106 (note).
+
+Israel's Commonwealth, Winstanley on, 82, 93, 225.
+
+
+Kingly Power, Winstanley on, 34, 100, 130, 168, 177, 202, 220.
+
+
+Land Question, Winstanley on the, 70, 71, 124, 138, 156, 171, 175, 180.
+
+Law, Winstanley on, 102, 136, 141, 168, 171, 183, 192, 197, 220;
+ Definition of, 222.
+
+Lawyers, Questions to, 102;
+ Power of, 168, 225.
+
+Light, The Inward, 45, 46, 52, 57, 59, 60, 63, 66, 77, 141, 183, 225;
+ Children of, 17, 49, 54.
+
+Locke, John, quoted, 74, 179, 197 (note), 200 (note).
+
+Lockyer, Execution and burial of, 87.
+
+Love, The Everlasting Law of, 217;
+ Family of, 15, 16, 18.
+
+Luther, quoted, 4, 10.
+
+
+Macaulay, quoted, 23, 24, 28.
+
+Mackay, Charles, quoted, 207.
+
+Mather, Cotton, on origin of Quakers, 48.
+
+Melanchthon, quoted, 9.
+
+Ministry, Winstanley on the work of, 207.
+
+
+Officers, Petition of, 86;
+ Winstanley on functions of, 184.
+
+
+Parliament, The Short and Long, 26;
+ Winstanley on work of, 194, 197.
+
+Peasantry, Demands of German, 8;
+ Condition of English, 126, 141, 151, 159.
+
+Penn, William, on Quaker Doctrines, 48 (note).
+
+People, Agreement of, 29, 32, 87, 103;
+ Condition of, 126, 141, 151, 159.
+
+Politics, Influence of religion on, 8.
+
+Prayer, Winstanley on, 63, 65.
+
+Presbyterianism, Doctrines of, 20, 32.
+
+
+Quakers, Doctrines of, 47 (note);
+ Coomber on origin of, 49;
+ Cotton Mather on, 48 (note);
+ Thos. Bennet on, 49 (note);
+ a Declaration from, 54 (note);
+ Appeal of Army, 85 (note).
+
+
+Rainborrow, Colonel, Views of, 103, 108.
+
+Ranters, Winstanley on the, 147.
+
+Reason, Luther on, 4;
+ Hooker on, 21;
+ Winstanley on, 44, 48, 59, 76.
+
+Reformation, influence of the, 3, 10, 12.
+
+Religion, Dual nature of, 6;
+ Winstanley, Definition of, 139.
+
+Restoration, the, Legislation of, 110.
+
+Resurrection, the, Winstanley on, 47, 60, 66.
+
+Revolt, The Peasants', 6, Appendix A.
+
+Riches, Winstanley on, 173.
+
+Rogers, Thorold, quoted, 7, 89, 109, 110.
+
+Rowntree, J. S., quoted, 48, 58.
+
+Ruskin, John, quoted, 61 (note).
+
+
+Sexby, Edward, Views of, 103.
+
+Shelley, quoted, 162, 178, 179.
+
+Silence, the Law of, Winstanley on, 65.
+
+
+Teachings, Human and divine, 52, 57, 59, 209, 211.
+
+Tithes, 85, 167, 173.
+
+Toleration, 13, 19, 31, 32, Appendix B.
+
+
+Vagrants, Laws against, 109.
+
+
+Wellingborrow, declaration from, 150.
+
+Whitelocke, quoted, 37, 86, 87, 152, 159.
+
+Wyclif, teachings of, 6, 13.
+
+Winstanley, on Baptism, 64;
+ Capital Punishment, 69;
+ Clergy, 62, 167, 189;
+ Dispensations, 53;
+ Earth, rights to use of, 70, 74, 76, 80, 83, 90, 96, 104, 118, 132,
+ 170, 180, 213;
+ Ecclesiastical Power, 55;
+ Education, 214;
+ Fall, the, 44, 53, 70;
+ Freedom, 100, 112, 114, 179;
+ Golden Rule, the, 39, 56, 80, 81, 86, 141, 154, 171, 190, 217, 225;
+ Government, 68, 101, 177, 181;
+ Israel's Commonwealth, 82, 93, 225;
+ Kingdom of Heaven, 47, 48, 61, 66, 211;
+ Kingly Power, 34, 100, 133, 168, 177, 202, 220;
+ Land Question, 70, 71, 124, 138, 156, 171, 175, 180;
+ Law, 102, 136, 141, 168, 171, 183, 192, 197, 220, 222;
+ Lawyers, questions to, 102;
+ power of, 168, 225;
+ Light, the Inward, 45, 46, 52, 57, 60, 63, 66, 77, 141, 183, 225;
+ Love, the Law of, 217;
+ Ministry, work of a, 207;
+ Officers, work of, 184;
+ Parliament, work of, 194, 197;
+ Prayer, 63, 65;
+ Reason, 44, 48, 59, 76;
+ Religion, 137;
+ Resurrection, the, 47, 60, 66;
+ Riches, 173;
+ Silence, the Law of, 65;
+ Teachings, human and divine, 52, 57, 59, 209, 211;
+ Tithes, 167, 173;
+ Titles of Honour, 173.
+
+
+
+
+_Printed by_
+MORRISON & GIBB LIMITED
+_Edinburgh_
+
+
+
+
+BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
+
+LATEST ADDITION TO
+THE SOCIAL SCIENCE SERIES.
+
+
+=TOWARD THE LIGHT:=
+_ELEMENTARY STUDIES IN ETHICS AND ECONOMICS._
+
+BY
+
+=LEWIS H. BERENS=,
+Co-Author "The Story of My Dictatorship," "Government by the People,"
+etc.
+
+_=Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 2s. 6d.=_
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ I. Preliminary Remarks.
+ II. Why do men work?
+ III. Co-operation and Division of Labour.
+ IV. Productive and Unproductive Labour.
+ V. The Same continued.
+ VI. Elements of Production.
+ VII. The Auxiliaries of Production.
+ VIII. Barter, Trade, and Commerce.
+ IX. Conflicting Tendencies.
+ X. Ethics and Economics.
+ XI. Social Ethics.
+ XII. The Institution of Property.
+ XIII. Of Wages.
+ XIV. Of Rent.
+ XV. Principles of Taxation.
+ XVI. Of Interest.
+ XVII. The Same continued.
+XVIII. Of Money.
+ XIX. Of Government.
+ XX. The Way Out.
+ XXI. Social Evolution.
+ XXII. Democracy.
+
+
+=PRESS NOTICES.=
+
+"This is an admirable book that may be read by everybody with
+advantage."--_Sunday Special._
+
+"It is clearly the thinking of a man who has personally grappled with
+the grave questions of his time, and who sees the light beyond, to which
+he would lead all men."--_Echo_ (London).
+
+"The book forms an appropriate addition to the Social Science Series, in
+which it appears."--_Scotsman._
+
+"A work of ripe thought, full of interest to all to whom the question of
+the people of England is vital."--_New Age_ (London).
+
+"Earnest and instructive."--_Literary Guide._
+
+"Mr. Berens treats of ethics and economics from the standpoint of one
+who wishes to see the evolution of a social system on the basis of the
+golden rule of righteousness, the law of equal freedom."--_Nottingham
+Guardian._
+
+"'Toward the Light' is a volume for all students of present day politics
+and economics."--_Co-operative News._
+
+"A volume which will be welcomed as an honest and tolerant attempt to
+humanise economics, and to point the way to a freer, worthier
+life."--_Young Oxford._
+
+"A book to be read by all enthusiastic social reformers; in fact, they
+cannot afford to be without it."--_Echo_ (London).
+
+"Mr. Berens' book is one which, by reason of its sincerity and its
+fair-minded discussion of a great problem, we should read, mark, learn,
+and inwardly digest.... It seems to me the ablest and most effective
+work in support of the Taxation of Land Values that has appeared since
+the death of Henry George."--_Public_ (Chicago, U.S.A.).
+
+"Those who are uncertain about various knotty points in Political
+Economy will find their perplexities stated and explained, in simple and
+lucid illustration and argument."--_Single Tax Review_ (New York,
+U.S.A.)
+
+_=To be had of all Booksellers.=_
+
+SWAN SONNENSCHEIN & CO. LTD., LONDON.
+CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, NEW YORK.
+
+
+
+
+=BOOKS EVERY STUDENT OF THE LAND QUESTION SHOULD READ.=
+
+ * * * * *
+
+="SIX CENTURIES OF WORK AND WAGES."=
+ The History of English Labour. By JAMES E. THOROLD ROGERS. Sixth
+ Edition. (Published, 10s. 6d.) 5s. per copy, post free.
+
+="THE LAND AND THE COMMUNITY."=
+ By the Rev. S. W. THACKERAY, M.A., LL.D. With Preface by HENRY GEORGE.
+ Cloth, 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+="PROGRESS AND POVERTY."=
+ By HENRY GEORGE. An Enquiry into the Cause of Industrial Depressions,
+ and of Increase of Want with Increase of Wealth. The Remedy.
+ 8vo, cloth, 1s. 6d.; paper covers, 1s.
+
+="SOCIAL PROBLEMS."=
+ By the Same. Cloth, 1s. 6d.; paper covers, 1s.
+
+="PROTECTION OR FREE TRADE."=
+ An Examination of the Tariff Question, with special regard to the
+ Interests of Labour. By the Same. Cloth, 1s. 6d. The League's Special
+ Edition, paper covers, 6d.; post free, 9d.
+
+="THE CONDITION OF LABOUR."=
+ Reply to the Pope's Encyclical on Labour. By the Same. New Edition.
+ Cloth, 1s.; paper covers, 6d.
+
+="A PERPLEXED PHILOSOPHER."=
+ Being an Examination of Mr. HERBERT SPENCER'S various utterances on the
+ Land Question. By the Same. Cloth, 1s. 6d.; paper covers, 1s.
+
+[=The Five above Books=, by HENRY GEORGE. In red cloth, post free, 5s.
+6d.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=THE SCIENCE OF POLITICAL ECONOMY.=
+ By HENRY GEORGE. Library Edition, 6s.
+
+="LIFE OF HENRY GEORGE."=
+ By his SON. (Published, 7s. 6d.) 5s. 8d.; post free, 6s.
+
+=THE MENACE OF PRIVILEGE.=
+ By HENRY GEORGE, Jun. 6s.
+
+="THE LAND QUESTION: What it is, and how only it can be settled."=
+ By HENRY GEORGE. Post free, 4d.
+
+
+="THE PEER AND THE PROPHET."=
+ Articles by the DUKE OF ARGYLL and HENRY GEORGE. 6d.; post free, 7d.
+
+="TOWARD THE LIGHT."=
+ Elementary Studies in Ethics and Economics. By LEWIS H. BERENS.
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+ By PRINCE KROPOTKIN. New and Cheaper Edition. Cloth, 1s.; paper
+ covers, 6d.
+
+="THE STORY OF MY DICTATORSHIP: A _Vade Mecum_ on the Land Question."=
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+="A GREAT INIQUITY."=
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+
+ * * * * *
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+
+ * * * * *
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+TO BE HAD OF--
+ENGLISH LEAGUE FOR THE TAXATION OF LAND VALUES,
+376 AND 377 STRAND, LONDON, W.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+=(Monthly Organ, "LAND VALUES," posted to every Member annually
+subscribing 2s. 6d. or more to the League Funds.)=
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+Transcriber's notes:
+
+ 1. Original reads 'bleibt den Nachwelt'; changed to
+ 'bleibt der Nachwelt'.
+
+ 2. Footnote marker missing in original. Footnote appears on
+ page 21, but refers to a quotation on page 22.
+
+ 3. Original has no opening double quotation mark before
+ '_Englands Proper and Only Way_'.
+
+ 4. Original reads 'will upraid us'; changed to 'will upbraid us'.
+
+ 5. Original has closing double quotation mark after '_Work
+ together; Eat bread together._'
+
+ 6. Original has an opening double quotation mark before 'Thou
+ City of London'.
+
+ 7. Original reads 'georgeous throne'; changed to 'gorgeous throne'.
+
+ 8. Original reads 'Its perusual convinced us'; changed to 'Its
+ perusal convinced us'.
+
+ 9. Original has no opening double quotation mark before '_Secondly_'.
+
+ 10. Original has 'all that have lent asssistance'; changed to
+ 'all that have lent assistance'.
+
+ 11. Original has closing double quotation mark at the end of this
+ paragraph.
+
+ 12. Original has no opening double quotation mark before
+ '_Secondly_'.
+
+
+
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+<body>
+<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Digger Movement in the Days of the
+Commonwealth, by Lewis H. Berens</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: The Digger Movement in the Days of the Commonwealth</p>
+<p> As Revealed in the Writings of Gerrard Winstanley, the Digger, Mystic and Rationalist, Communist and Social Reformer</p>
+<p>Author: Lewis H. Berens</p>
+<p>Release Date: January 8, 2006 [eBook #17480]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DIGGER MOVEMENT IN THE DAYS OF THE COMMONWEALTH***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h4>E-text prepared by Suzanne Lybarger, Louise Pryor,<br />
+ and the
+ <a href="http://www.pgdp.net/">Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team</a><br />
+ from page images generously made available by the<br />
+ <a href="http://www.archive.org/details/toronto">Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries</a></h4>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="10" style="background-color: #ccccff;">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="pg">
+ Note:
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ Images of the original pages are available through the
+ Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries. See
+ <a href="http://www.archive.org/details/diggermovement00bereuoft">
+ http://www.archive.org/details/diggermovement00bereuoft</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="transnote"> <p class="center">Transcriber's note</p>
+<p>The original has a number of inconsistent spellings and
+punctuation. A few <a href="#corrections" >corrections</a> have been
+made for obvious typographical errors; they have been noted
+individually. A list of specific items will be found at the end of the
+file.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+<h1>
+THE DIGGER MOVEMENT<br />
+<span class="littlest">IN THE</span><br />
+DAYS OF THE COMMONWEALTH
+</h1>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center biggap biggest">THE DIGGER MOVEMENT</p>
+<p class="center little">IN THE</p>
+<p class="center biggest">DAYS OF THE COMMONWEALTH</p>
+
+<p class="center little gap">AS REVEALED IN THE WRITINGS OF</p>
+<p class="center big">GERRARD WINSTANLEY, THE DIGGER</p>
+<p class="center little"><i>MYSTIC AND RATIONALIST, COMMUNIST AND SOCIAL REFORMER</i></p>
+
+<p class="center littler gap">BY</p>
+<p class="center big">LEWIS H. BERENS</p>
+<p class="center littler">AUTHOR OF &ldquo;TOWARDS THE LIGHT&rdquo;
+ETC. ETC.
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem gap" style="margin-left:30%;"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Was gl&auml;nzt ist f&uuml;r den Augenblick geboren;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Das Echte bleibt <a name="cm1" id="cm1"></a><a href="#corr1" class="correction" title="Original reads 'den'">der</a> Nachwelt unverloren.&rdquo;</span>
+</div></div>
+<p class="toright" style="margin-right:30%;"><span class="smcap">Goethe</span>.</p>
+
+<hr class="biggap"/>
+<p class="center">
+LONDON<br />
+SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, HAMILTON, KENT, &amp; CO. LTD.<br />
+1906
+</p>
+
+
+<hr class="gapbelow" />
+
+<p class="center biggap littler">
+RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED<br /><br />
+TO<br /><br />
+<span class="bigger">THE SOCIETY OF FRIENDS</span><br />
+(THE CHILDREN OF LIGHT)<br /><br />
+TO WHOM THE WORLD OWES MORE THAN IT YET RECOGNISES<br /><br />
+AND<br /><br />
+WHOSE FUNDAMENTAL DOCTRINES<br /><br />
+THE AUTHOR<br /><br />
+HAS LEARNED TO LOVE AND ADMIRE<br /><br />
+WHILST WRITING THIS BOOK
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr />
+<h2><a name="pgii" id="pgii"></a><span class="pagenum">ii</span> <a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table summary="Table of contents">
+ <tr><td class="toright"><span class="little">CHAP.</span></td><td></td><td class="toright"><span class="little">PAGE</span></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright">I.</td><td>THE REFORMATION IN GERMANY </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg1">1</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright">II.</td><td>THE REFORMATION IN ENGLAND </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg12">12</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright">III.</td><td>THE GREAT CIVIL WAR </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg23">23</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright">IV.</td><td>THE DIGGERS </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg34">34</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright">V.</td><td>GERRARD WINSTANLEY </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg41">41</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright">VI.</td><td>WINSTANLEY&rsquo;S EXPOSITION OF THE QUAKER DOCTRINES </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg52">52</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright">VII.</td><td>THE NEW LAW OF RIGHTEOUSNESS </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg68">68</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright">VIII.</td><td>LIGHT SHINING IN BUCKINGHAMSHIRE </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg79">79</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright">IX.</td><td>THE DIGGERS&rsquo; MANIFESTOES </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg90">90</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright">X.</td><td>A LETTER TO LORD FAIRFAX, ETC. </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg100">100</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright">XI.</td><td>A WATCHWORD TO THE CITY OF LONDON, ETC.</td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg112">112</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright">XII.</td><td>A NEW YEAR&rsquo;S GIFT FOR THE PARLIAMENT AND ARMY </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg132">132</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright">XIII.</td><td>A VINDICATION; A DECLARATION; AND AN APPEAL </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg146">146</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright"> XIV.</td><td>GERRARD WINSTANLEY&rsquo;S UTOPIA: THE LAW OF FREEDOM </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg162">162</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright"> XV.</td><td>THE SAME CONTINUED </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg179">179</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright"> XVI.</td><td>THE SAME CONTINUED </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg206">206</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="toright">XVII.</td><td>CONCLUDING REMARKS </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg228">228</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td></td><td> APPENDIX A. THE TWELVE ARTICLES OF THE GERMAN PEASANTRY, 1525 </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg235"> 235</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td></td><td> APPENDIX B. CROMWELL ON TOLERATION </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg241">241</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td></td><td> APPENDIX C. WINSTANLEY&rsquo;S LAWS FOR A FREE COMMONWEALTH </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg244">244</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td></td><td> BIBLIOGRAPHY </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg255">255</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td></td><td> INDEX </td><td class="toright"><a href="#pg257">257</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr />
+<h1><a name="pg1" id="pg1"></a><span class="pagenum">1</span><a name="THE_DIGGER_MOVEMENT" id="THE_DIGGER_MOVEMENT"></a>THE DIGGER MOVEMENT</h1>
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I<br /><br />
+THE REFORMATION IN GERMANY</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot chaphead">
+<p>&ldquo;Whatever the prejudices of some may suggest, it will be admitted by
+all unbiassed judges, that the Protestant Reformation was neither more
+nor less than an open rebellion. Indeed, the mere mention of private
+judgment, on which it was avowedly based, is enough to substantiate
+this fact. To establish the right of private judgment, was to appeal from
+the Church to individuals; it was to increase the play of each man&rsquo;s
+intellect; it was to test the opinion of the priesthood by the opinions of
+laymen; it was, in fact, a rising of the scholars against their teachers, of
+the ruled against their rulers.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Buckle</span>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>What is known in history as the Reformation is one of those
+monuments in the history of the development of the human
+mind betokening its entry into new territory. Fundamental
+conceptions and beliefs, cosmological, physical, ethical or
+political, once firmly established, change but slowly; the
+universal tendency is tenaciously to cling to them despite all
+evidence to the contrary. Still men&rsquo;s views do change with
+their intellectual development, as newly discovered facts and
+newly accepted ideas come into conflict with old opinions, and
+force them to reconsider the evidence on which these latter
+were based. Prior to the Reformation, many such conceptions
+and beliefs, at one time holding undisputed dominion over the
+human mind, had been called into question, their authority
+challenged, undermined, and weakened, and they had commenced
+to yield pride of place to others more in accordance
+<a name="pg2" id="pg2"></a><span class="pagenum">2</span>
+with increased knowledge of nature and of life. The revival
+of classical learning, geographical and astronomical discoveries,
+and more especially, perhaps, the invention and rapid spread
+of the art of printing, had all conspired to give an unparalleled
+impetus to intellectual development,&mdash;and the
+Reformation was, in truth, the outward manifestation in
+the religious world of this development.</p>
+
+<p>Prior to the Reformation, wherever a man might turn his
+steps in Western Europe, he found himself confronted with
+what was proudly termed the Universal Church: one hierarchy,
+one faith, one form of worship, in which the officiating priests
+were assumed to be the indispensable mediators between God
+and man, everywhere confronted him. Religion was then
+much more intimately blended with the life of man than it is
+now; and on all matters of religion, Western Europe seemed
+to present a united front and to be impervious to change.
+Appearances, however, are proverbially deceitful. Beneath
+this apparent uniformity and general conformity, there lurked
+countless forces, spiritual, intellectual, social and political,
+making for change. Dissent and dissatisfaction, with myriads
+of tiny teeth, had undermined and weakened the stately
+columns that upheld the imposing structure of the Universal
+Church. Even within the Church itself there was seething
+inquietude, and thousands of its purest souls longed, prayed
+and struggled for its practical amendment. To emancipate
+the Church from the clutches of the autocracy of Rome; to
+remove the abuses that, in the course of centuries, had grown
+round and sullied its primitive purity; to lighten the fiscal
+oppression of the Papacy and to check the rapacity of the
+Cardinals; to reform and discipline the priesthood; even to
+modify certain doctrines and dogmas: such were the aspirations
+of some of the most devout, eminent and cultured sons
+of the Church. Outside its communion there were many
+forms of heresy, which, though generally regarded as disreputable
+and often treated as criminal, the apparently all-powerful
+Church had never been able entirely to eradicate. And, at
+first at least, both these forces favoured the efforts of the
+early Lutheran Reformers.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg3" id="pg3"></a><span class="pagenum">3</span>
+The influence of the Reformation, of &ldquo;the New Learning,&rdquo;
+on theological, ethical, social and political thought can scarcely
+be overestimated. Under the supremacy of the Church of Rome,
+men, educated and uneducated, had come to rely almost entirely
+on authority and precedent, and had lost the habit of
+self-reliance, of unswerving dependence on the dictates of
+reason, which was one of the distinguishing characteristics
+of the classical philosophers and their disciples, as it is of the
+modern scientific school of thought. In short, concerning
+matters spiritual and temporal, Faith had usurped the
+function of Reason. Hence any innovations, whatever their
+abstract merit, were regarded not only with justifiable suspicion
+and caution, but as entirely unworthy of consideration,
+unless, of course, they could be shown to be in accordance
+with accepted traditions and doctrines, or had received the
+sanction of the Church. But even the Church itself was
+popularly regarded as bound by tradition and precedent; and
+when the Papacy sanctioned any departure from established
+custom, it was understood to do so in its capacity of infallible
+expounder of unalterable doctrines.</p>
+
+<p>The habits of centuries still enthralled the early Reformers.
+Circumstances compelled them to attack some of the doctrines
+and customs of their Mother Church, of which at first they
+were inclined to regard themselves as dutiful though sorrowful
+sons. The logic of facts, however, soon forced them outside
+the Church. Then, but then only, for the authority of the
+Church, they substituted the authority of the Scriptures. To
+apply to them Luther&rsquo;s own words, &ldquo;they had saved others,
+themselves they could not save.&rdquo; In their eyes Reason and
+Faith were still mortal enemies,&mdash;as unfortunately they are
+to this day in the eyes of a steadily diminishing number of
+their followers,&mdash;and they did not hesitate to demand the
+sacrifice of reason when it conflicted, or appeared to conflict,
+with the demands of faith: and that, indeed, as &ldquo;the all-acceptablest
+sacrifice and service that can be offered to God.&rdquo;
+In a sermon in 1546, the last he delivered at Wittenberg,
+Luther gave vent, in language that even one of his modern
+admirers finds too gross for quotation, to his bitter hatred and
+<a name="pg4" id="pg4"></a><span class="pagenum">4</span>
+contempt for reason, at all events when it conflicted with his
+own interpretation of the Scriptures, or with any of the
+fundamental dogmas and doctrines he had himself formulated
+or accepted. While even in milder moments he did not
+hesitate to teach
+that<a name="fnm4_1_1" id="fnm4_1_1"></a><a href="#fn4_1_1" class="fnnum">4:1</a>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;It is a quality of faith that it wrings the neck of reason
+and strangles the beast, which else the whole world, with all
+creatures, could not strangle. But how? It holds to God&rsquo;s
+word: lets it be right and true, no matter how foolish and
+impossible it sounds. So did Abraham take his reason captive
+and slay it.... There is no doubt faith and reason mightily
+fell out in Abraham&rsquo;s heart, yet at last did faith get the
+better, and overcame and strangled reason, the all-cruelest
+and most fatal enemy to God. So, too, do all other faithful
+men who enter with Abraham the gloom and hidden darkness
+of faith; they strangle reason ... and thereby offer to God
+the all-acceptablest sacrifice and service that can ever be
+brought to Him.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>However, whatever may have been the personal desires
+and tendencies of those associated with its earlier manifestations,
+the forces of which the Reformation was the outcome
+were not to be controlled by them. The spirit of which they
+were the product was not to be controlled by any fetters they
+could forge. The Reformation emancipated the intellect of
+Europe from the yoke of tradition and blind obedience to
+authority; it let loose the illuming flood of thought which
+had been accumulating behind the more rigid barriers of the
+Church, and swept away as things of straw the feebler barriers
+the early Reformers would have erected to confine the
+thoughts of future generations. The futility of all such
+efforts we can gauge, they could not. Blind obedience to
+authority, in matters spiritual and temporal, had been the
+watchword and animating principle of the power against
+which they had rebelled; liberty and reason were the watchwords
+and animating principles of the movement of which
+<a name="pg5" id="pg5"></a><span class="pagenum">5</span>
+they, owing to their rebellion, had temporarily become the
+recognised leaders. The right of private judgement, in other
+words, the supremacy of reason as sole judge and arbiter of
+all matters, spiritual as well as secular, was the essential
+element of the movement of which the Reformation was the
+outcome; how, then, could they, the children of this movement,
+hope to change its course?</p>
+
+<p>When considering the forces and circumstances that made
+the Reformation possible, when so many equally earnest
+previous attempts in the same direction had failed, we
+should not lose sight of the favourable political situation.
+Under cover of its religious authority, by means of its unrivalled
+organisation, as well as by its temporal control of
+large areas of the richest and most fertile land in Europe,
+the Church of Rome annually drained into Italy a large part
+of the surplus wealth of every country that recognised its
+spiritual authority. Such countries were impoverished to
+support not only the resident but an absentee priesthood,
+and to enable the Princes of the Church to maintain a more
+than princely state at Rome. This was a standing grievance
+even in the eyes of many sincerely devout Churchmen, and
+one which was prone to make statesmen and politicians look
+with a favourable eye on any movement which promised to
+lessen or to abolish it. Germany in this respect had special
+reasons for discontent; as has been well said, &ldquo;It was the
+milch cow of the Papacy, which at once despised and drained
+it dry.&rdquo; And, as everybody knows, it was in Germany that
+the standard of revolt against the authority of Rome was
+first successfully raised. The political constitution of that
+country was also peculiarly favourable to the protection of
+the Reformation and of the persons of the early Reformers.
+Although owing a nominal allegiance to the Emperor, or
+rather to the will of the Diet which met annually under the
+presidency of the Emperor, the head of each of the little
+States into which Germany was divided claimed to be independent
+lord of the territory over which he ruled. Hence,
+when the Ernestine line of Saxon princes took the Reformation
+and the early Reformers under their protection, there was
+<a name="pg6" id="pg6"></a><span class="pagenum">6</span>
+no power ready and willing to compel them to relinquish their
+design. The democratic independence of the Free Cities also
+made them fitting strongholds of the new teachings.</p>
+
+<p>Students of history would do well never to lose sight of
+the fact that every religion which attempts to bind or to
+guide the reason, to direct the lives and to determine the
+conscience of mankind, necessarily has an ethical as well as
+a theological, a social as well as an individual side. It concerns
+itself, not only with the relation of the individual to
+God or the gods, but also with the relations and duties of
+man to man. Hence the close relation and inter-relation of
+religion and politics. Politics is the art or act of regulating
+the social relations of mankind, of determining social or civic
+rights and duties. It is neither more nor less than the
+practical application of accepted abstract ethical, or religious,
+principles in the domain of social life. Hence we cannot
+be surprised that almost every wide-spread religious revival,
+every renewed application of reason to religion, which almost
+necessarily gives prominence to its ethical or social side, has
+been followed by an uprising of the masses against what they
+had come to regard as the irreligious tyranny and oppression
+of the ruling privileged classes. The teachings of Wyclif in
+England, in the fourteenth century, were followed by the
+insurrection associated with the name of Wat Tyler; the
+teachings of Luther and his associates, in the sixteenth century,
+by the Peasants&rsquo; Revolt.</p>
+
+<p>To the economic causes of the unrest of the peasantry and
+labouring classes during the fifteenth and sixteenth century,
+we can refer only very briefly. At the time of the great
+migration of the fifth century, the free barbarian nations were
+organised on a tribal or village basis. By the end of the
+tenth century, however, what is known as the Feudal System
+had been established all over Europe. &ldquo;No land without a
+lord&rdquo; was the underlying principle of the whole Feudal
+System. Either by conquest or usurpation, or by more or
+less compulsory voluntary agreement, even the free primitive
+communities (<i>die Markgenossenshaften</i>) of the Teutonic
+races had been brought under the dominion of the lords,
+<a name="pg7" id="pg7"></a><span class="pagenum">7</span>
+spiritual or temporal, claiming suzerainty over the territory
+in which they were situated. The claims of the Feudal
+Magnates seem ever to have been somewhat vague and
+arbitrary. At first they were comparatively light, and may
+well have been regarded and excused as a return for services
+rendered. The general tendency, however, was for the
+individual power of the lords to extend itself at the
+cost and to the detriment of the rural communities, and
+for their claims steadily to increase and to become more
+burdensome. During the fourteenth century many causes
+had combined to improve the condition of the industrial
+classes; and during the end of the fourteenth and the early
+part of the fifteenth century the condition of the peasantry
+and artisans of Northern Europe was better than it
+had ever been before or has ever been since: wages were
+comparatively high, employment plentiful, food and other
+necessaries of life both abundant and
+cheap.<a name="fnm7_1_2" id="fnm7_1_2"></a><a href="#fn7_1_2" class="fnnum">7:1</a>
+At the beginning
+of the sixteenth century, however, the prices of the
+necessaries of life had risen enormously, and there had
+been no corresponding increase in the earnings of the industrial
+classes. Moreover, the Feudal Magnates had commenced
+to exercise their oppressive power in a hitherto
+unparalleled manner: old rights of pasture, of gathering
+wood and cutting timber, of hunting and fishing, and so on,
+had been greatly curtailed, in many cases entirely abolished,
+tithes and other manorial dues had been doubled and trebled,
+and many new and onerous burdens, some of them entirely
+opposed to ancient use and wont, had been imposed. In
+short, the peasantry and labouring classes generally were
+oppressed and impoverished in countless different ways.</p>
+
+<p>In Germany, as indeed in most other parts of Feudal
+Europe, the peasantry of the period were of three different
+kinds. Serfs (<i>Leibeigener</i>), who were little better than slaves,
+and who were bought and sold with the land they cultivated;
+villeins (<i>H&ouml;riger</i>), whose services were assumed to be fixed and
+limited; and the free peasant (<i>die Freier</i>), whose counterpart
+in England was the medi&aelig;val copyholder, who either held his
+<a name="pg8" id="pg8"></a><span class="pagenum">8</span>
+land from some feudal lord, to whom he paid a quit-rent in
+kind or in money, or who paid such a rent for permission to
+retain his holding in the rural community under the protection
+of the lord. To appreciate the state of mind of such folk in
+the times of which we are writing, we should remember that
+&ldquo;the good old times&rdquo; of the fifteenth century were still green
+in their minds, from which, indeed, the memory of ancient
+freedom and primitive communism, though little more than a
+tradition, had never been entirely banished: which sufficiently
+accounts, not only for their impatience of their new burdens,
+but also for their tendency to regard all feudal dues as direct
+infringements of their ancient rights and privileges.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We will that you free us for ever, us and our lands; and
+that we be never named and held as serfs!&rdquo; was the demand
+of the revolting English peasant in 1381; and the same words
+practically summarise the demands of the German peasantry
+in 1525. The famous Twelve Articles in which they
+summarised their wrongs and formulated their demands,
+forcibly illustrate the direct influence of the prevailing
+religious revival on the current social and political
+thought.<a name="fnm8_1_3" id="fnm8_1_3"></a><a href="#fn8_1_3" class="fnnum">8:1</a>
+Briefly, they demanded that the gospel should be preached to
+them pure and undefiled by any mere man-made additions.
+That the rural communities, not the Feudal Magnates, should
+have the power to choose and to dismiss their ministers. That
+the tithes should be regulated in accordance with scriptural
+injunctions, and devoted to the maintenance of ministers and
+to the relief of the poor and distressed, &ldquo;as we are commanded
+in the Holy Scriptures.&rdquo; That serfdom should be abolished,
+&ldquo;since Christ redeemed us all with His precious blood, the
+shepherd as well as the noble, the lowest as well as the
+highest, none being excepted.&rdquo; That the claims of the rich to
+the game, to the fish in the running waters, to the woods and
+forests and other lands, once the common property of the
+community, should be investigated, and their ancient rights
+restored to them, where they had been purchased, with
+adequate compensation, but without compensation where they
+had been usurped. That arbitrary compulsory service should
+<a name="pg9" id="pg9"></a><span class="pagenum">9</span>
+cease, and the use and enjoyment of their lands be granted to
+them in accordance with ancient customs and the agreements
+between lords and peasants. That arbitrary punishments
+should be abolished, as also certain new and oppressive
+customs. And, finally, they desired that all their demands
+should be tested by Scripture, and such as cannot stand this
+test to be summarily rejected.</p>
+
+<p>That the demands of the peasants, as formulated in the
+Twelve Articles, were reasonable, just and moderate, few
+to-day would care to deny. That they appealed to such of
+their religious teachers as had some regard for the material,
+as well as for the spiritual, well-being of their fellows, may
+safely be inferred from the leading position taken by some of
+these both prior to and during the uprising. Nor can there
+be any doubt but that at first the peasants looked to
+Wittenberg for aid, support and guidance. Those who had
+proclaimed the Bible as the sole authority, must, they thought,
+unreservedly support every movement to give practical effect
+to its teachings. Those who had revolted against the abuses
+of the spiritual powers at Rome, must, they thought,
+sympathise with their revolt against far worse abuses at
+home. They were bitterly to be disappointed. From Luther
+and the band of scholastic Reformers that had gathered round
+him, they were to receive neither aid, guidance nor sympathy.
+The learned and cultured Melanchthon, Luther&rsquo;s right hand,
+denounced their demand that serfdom should be abolished
+as an insolent and violent outrage (<i>ein Frevel und Gewalt</i>),
+and preached passive obedience to any and every established
+authority. &ldquo;Even if all the demands of the peasants were
+Christian,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the uprising of the peasants would not
+be justified; and that because God commands obedience to
+the authorities.&rdquo; Luther&rsquo;s attitude was much the same.
+Though a son of a peasant, and evidently realising that the
+demands of the peasants were just and moderate, and &ldquo;not
+stretched to their advantage,&rdquo; he at first assumed a somewhat
+neutral attitude, which, however, he soon relinquished; and in
+a pamphlet to which his greatest admirers must wish he had
+never put his name, and which shocked even his own times
+<a name="pg10" id="pg10"></a><span class="pagenum">10</span>
+and many of his own immediate followers, he proclaimed that
+to put down the revolt all &ldquo;who can shall destroy, strangle,
+and stab, secretly or openly, remembering that nothing is
+more poisonous, hurtful and devilish than a rebellious man.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The rulers did not fail to better his instruction. In defence
+of their privileges, the German princes, spiritual and temporal,
+catholic and evangelical, united their forces, and the uprising
+was put down in a sea of blood. The peasants, comparatively
+unarmed, were slaughtered by thousands, and the yoke of
+serfdom was firmly re-fastened on the necks of the people,
+until, some three hundred years later, in 1807, the Napoleonic
+invasion compelled the ruling classes voluntarily to relinquish
+some of their most cherished privileges. From a popular and
+religious, the Reformation in Germany degenerated into a
+mere political movement, and fell almost entirely into the
+hands of princes and politicians to be exploited for their own
+purposes. The reorganisation of the Churches, which the
+Reformation rendered necessary in those States where it was
+maintained, was for the most part undertaken by the secular
+authorities in accordance with the views of the temporal rulers,
+whose religious belief their unfortunate subjects were assumed
+to have adopted. The activities of the Lutheran Reformers were
+soon engrossed weaving the web of a Protestant scholasticism,
+strengthening and defending their favourite dogma of justification
+by faith, abusing and persecuting such as differed from
+them on some all-important question of dogma or doctrine,
+framing propositions of passive obedience, and other such
+congenial pursuits.</p>
+
+<p>Of the moral effect of the Reformation, of its effect on the
+general character of the people who came under its influence,
+which is the one test by which every such movement can be
+judged, we need say but little. To put it as mildly as possible,
+it must be admitted, to use the words of one of its modern
+admirers,<a name="fnm10_1_4" id="fnm10_1_4"></a><a href="#fn10_1_4" class="fnnum">10:1</a>
+that &ldquo;the Reformation did not at first carry with
+it much cleansing force of moral enthusiasm.&rdquo; In the hands
+of men more logical or of a less healthy moral fibre, Luther&rsquo;s
+favourite dogma, of justification by faith alone, led to conclusions
+<a name="pg11" id="pg11"></a><span class="pagenum">11</span>
+subversive of all morality. However this may be,
+enemies and friends alike have to admit that the immediate
+effects of the Reformation were a dissolution of morals, a
+careless neglect of education and learning, and a general
+relaxation of the restraints of religion. In passage after
+passage, Luther himself declared that the last state of things
+was worse than the first; that vice of every kind had increased
+since the Reformation; that the nobles were more greedy, the
+burghers more avaricious, the peasants more brutal; that
+Christian charity and liberality had almost ceased to flow;
+and that the authorised preachers of religion were neither
+heeded, respected nor supported by the people: all of which
+he characteristically attributed to the workings of the devil,
+a personage who plays a most important part in Luther&rsquo;s
+theology and view of life.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, to judge by its immediate effects, the Reformation
+appears to have been conducive neither to moral, to social, nor to
+political progress. And yet to-day we know that the intellectual
+movement of which it was the outcome contained within itself
+inspiring conceptions of social justice, political equality,
+economic freedom, aye, even of religious toleration and moral
+purity, unknown to any preceding age, and the full fruits of
+which have yet to be harvested to elevate and to bless mankind.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn4_1_1" id="fn4_1_1"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm4_1_1">4:1</a></span>
+Luther&rsquo;s <i>Works</i>, ed. Walch, viii. 2043: &ldquo;Erkl&auml;rung der Ep. an die
+Galater.&rdquo; Quoted by Beard, <i>The Reformation of the Sixteenth Century</i>,
+p. 163.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn7_1_2" id="fn7_1_2"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm7_1_2">7:1</a></span>
+See Thorold Rogers&rsquo; <i>Six Centuries of Work and Wages</i>, p. 389.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn8_1_3" id="fn8_1_3"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm8_1_3">8:1</a></span>
+See <a href="#APPENDIX_A" >Appendix A</a>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn10_1_4" id="fn10_1_4"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm10_1_4">10:1</a></span>
+Beard, <i>loc. cit.</i> p. 146.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg12" id="pg12"></a><span class="pagenum">12</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II<br /><br />
+THE REFORMATION IN ENGLAND</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot chaphead">
+<p>&ldquo;It was in the name of faith and religious liberty that, in the sixteenth
+century, commenced the movement which, from that epoch, suspended at
+times but ever renewed, has been agitating and exciting the world. The
+tempest rose first in the human soul: it struck the Church before it
+reached the State.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Guizot</span>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>In Germany, as we have seen, from a religious and popular, the
+Reformation degenerated into a mere scholastic and political
+movement, favourable to the pretensions of the ruling and
+privileged classes, opposed to the aspirations of the industrial
+classes, and conducive neither to moral, social, religious, nor
+political progress. In England, on the other hand, it ran a
+very different course. From a merely political, it gradually
+rose to the height of a truly religious and popular movement,
+infusing new life into the nation and lifting it into the very
+forefront of the van of progress, curbing the insolent pretensions
+of king, priest and noble, purifying the minds of the people of
+time-honoured but degrading conceptions of the functions of
+Church and of State, inspiring and uplifting them with new
+conceptions of political freedom, social justice, moral purity
+and religious toleration, which, despite temporary periods of
+reaction, have never since entirely lost their sway over the
+hearts nor their influence over the destinies of the British
+nation.</p>
+
+<p>For many centuries prior to the Reformation the English
+people had been jealous and impatient of all ecclesiastical
+power, as of all foreign interference in their national affairs,
+more especially of the claims and pretensions of the Papacy.
+In England, as in Germany and even in France, the idea of a
+<a name="pg13" id="pg13"></a><span class="pagenum">13</span>
+National Church controlled and administered by their own
+countrymen, and freed from the supremacy of the Church and
+Court of Rome, was one familiar even to devout Catholics.
+Moreover, the teachings of Wyclif had sunk deep into the
+hearts of the people, and only awaited a favourable opportunity
+to yield their fruits: already in the fourteenth they had paved
+the way for the Reformation of the sixteenth century. Hence
+it was that when Henry the Eighth, from purely personal and
+dynastic reasons, became involved in a quarrel with the Pope,
+he found his subjects prepared for greater changes in religious
+matters than any he contemplated or desired. However, by a
+series of legislative enactments, the Church of England, in
+1534, was emancipated from the superiority of the Church
+of Rome; the papal authority was wholly abolished within the
+realm; Henry was legally recognised as the supreme head of
+the Church of England; the power of the spiritual aristocracy
+was broken and the whole body of the clergy humbled; the
+monasteries were suppressed; the great wealth and vast
+territorial possessions of the Church became the prey of the
+Crown, only to be dissipated in lavish grants to greedy
+courtiers: and thus the foundations were laid for greater
+changes in both Church and State than those who promoted
+such measures ever dreamed of.</p>
+
+<p>From its inception the Church of England comprised two
+opposing and apparently irreconcilable elements, namely, those
+whose sympathies and leanings were toward the forms, dogmas
+and doctrines of Roman Catholicism, and those whose sympathies
+and leanings were toward the forms, dogmas and doctrines of
+the German and Swiss Reformers. Of religious toleration both
+parties were probably equally intolerant. That the State was
+directly concerned with the religious beliefs of the people, hence
+was justified in enforcing conformity to the Church as by law
+established, seems to have been unquestioningly accepted by
+both. The one desired to make use of the temporal power to
+prevent, the other to promote, further changes in Church
+government, worship and doctrine. The result was a compromise,
+which, like most compromises, satisfied the more
+logical and consistent of neither party. As ultimately
+<a name="pg14" id="pg14"></a><span class="pagenum">14</span>
+established, in the reign of Elizabeth, the Church of England
+occupied a sort of middle position between the Church of
+Rome and the Reformed Churches of the Continent; and the
+attempt to enforce conformity to its demands resulted in the
+separation from it of the extremists of both sections. On the
+one hand, the English Roman Catholics became a distinct and
+persecuted religious body, whose members were generally
+regarded, despite repeated evidence to the contrary, as
+necessarily enemies of England. On the other, despairing of
+further changes in the direction they desired, a large number
+of the extreme Protestants separated themselves from the
+National Church&mdash;though by so doing they rendered themselves
+liable to be accused not only of heresy, but of high treason,
+and to suffer death&mdash;and formed themselves into different
+bodies of Separatists or Independents, differing on many
+points among themselves, but united by a common animosity
+of all outside ecclesiastical control. Within the Church
+the Catholic sentiment crystallised into the Episcopalian,
+the Protestant sentiment into the Presbyterian section
+of the Church of England. During the reign of Elizabeth
+the Protestant element grew steadily stronger, as did also
+the spirit of political independence, as manifested in the
+debates and divisions of the House of Commons. It is a
+suggestive and noteworthy fact that during the long reign of
+Henry the Eighth the House of Commons only once refused to
+pass a Bill recommended by the Crown. During the reigns
+of Edward the Sixth and of Mary the spirit of political
+independence commenced to revive; and during the reign of
+Elizabeth the spirit of liberty and sense of responsibility manifested
+by the House of Commons were such as repeatedly to
+thwart the designs and to alter the policy of this high-spirited
+monarch. It was, however, the severity of the policy of the last
+of the Tudors and the first two of the Stuart kings against the
+dissenting Protestants, that identified the struggle for religious
+liberty, for liberty of conscience, with the struggle for political
+liberty, and made these men in a special sense the champions
+of a more or less qualified religious toleration, and of a
+constitutional political freedom.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg15" id="pg15"></a><span class="pagenum">15</span>
+The growth of extreme Protestantism, more especially
+perhaps of Independency, was greatly quickened during the
+reigns of both Mary and Elizabeth, by the immigration of many
+thousands of refugees fleeing from religious persecutions on
+the Continent. Amongst these were disciples and apostles of
+many sects that were heretics in the eyes of both the Catholic
+and the Protestant Churches, and who rejected alike the dogmas
+and doctrines of Rome, of Wittenberg, and of Geneva. The one
+point all such sects seem to have had in common was the
+denial of the sanctity and efficacy of infant baptism: hence
+their inclusion under the general term Anabaptists, even
+though many of them passionately disclaimed any connection
+with this hated, proscribed and persecuted sect. As Gerrard
+Winstanley, the inspirer of the Digger Movement, seems to us
+to have been greatly influenced by the teaching of one of these
+sects, the Familists, or Family of Love, it may be well to give
+here a brief outline of its history and main doctrines.</p>
+
+<p>The founder of the Family of Love was one David
+George, or Joris, who was born at Delft in 1501. In
+1530 he was severely punished for obstructing a Catholic
+procession in his native town. In 1534 he joined the
+Anabaptists, but soon left them to found a sect of his own.
+He seems to have interpreted the whole of the Scripture
+allegorically;<a name="fnm15_1_5" id="fnm15_1_5"></a><a href="#fn15_1_5" class="fnnum">15:1</a>
+and to have maintained that as Moses
+had taught hope, and Christ had taught faith, it was his
+mission to teach love. His teachings were propagated in
+Holland by Henry Nicholas, and in England by one Christopher
+Vittel, a joiner, who appears to have undertaken
+a missionary journey throughout the country about the year
+<a name="pg16" id="pg16"></a><span class="pagenum">16</span>
+1560. According to
+Fuller,<a name="fnm16_1_6" id="fnm16_1_6"></a><a href="#fn16_1_6" class="fnnum">16:1</a>
+in 1578, the nineteenth year of
+the reign of Elizabeth, &ldquo;The Family of Love began now to
+grow so numerous, factious, and dangerous, that the Privy
+Council thought fit to endeavour their suppression.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The most lucid account of the doctrines of this sect may
+be gained from a beautifully printed little book, entitled <i>The
+Displaying of an Horrible Sect of Gross and Wicked Heretics
+naming themselves the Family of Love</i>, published the same
+year, 1578, and written by one I. R. (Jn. Rogers), a bitter
+but fair-minded opponent of their heresies, a Protestant,
+and a zealous defender of the Lutheran dogma of justification
+by faith alone. In his Preface the author bewails
+&ldquo;the daily increase of this error,&rdquo; declaring that &ldquo;in many
+shires of this our country there are meetings and conventicles
+of this Family of Love.&rdquo; Amongst those who have been converted,
+he tells us, were many who had hitherto been &ldquo;professors
+of Christ Jesus&rsquo; gospel according to the brightness
+thereof.&rdquo; He denounces Christopher Vittel, the joiner, as
+&ldquo;the only man that hath brought our simple people out of the
+plain ways of the Lord our God,&rdquo; and complains how &ldquo;he
+driveth the true sense of the Holy Ghost into allegories,&rdquo; and
+contendeth that &ldquo;otherwise to interpret the Holy Scriptures is
+to stick to the letter.&rdquo; To the Family of Love, he tells us,
+&ldquo;Christ signifieth anointed.&rdquo; He continues, &ldquo;I pray you mark
+but this one thing in their teachings, how they drive the
+true sense of the Holy Ghost into allegories. And when any
+text of Holy Scriptures is alleged by any of God&rsquo;s children,
+they answer that we little understand what is meant thereby;
+and then if they be pressed to expound the place, by and by it
+is drawn into an allegory. For they take not the creation of
+man at the first to be historical (according to the letter), but
+mere allegorical: alleging that Adam signifieth the earthly
+man ... the Serpent to be within man; applying still the
+allegory, they destroy the truth of the history.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The writer&rsquo;s greatest grievance, however, is their rejection
+of the Lutheran dogma of justification by faith, and their
+agreement &ldquo;with the Papists in extolling works as efficient
+<a name="pg17" id="pg17"></a><span class="pagenum">17</span>
+causes of salvation.&rdquo; &ldquo;Amongst the rest, indeed,&rdquo; he exclaims,
+&ldquo;they insinuate a good life, as which they pretend to follow,
+which is as the vizard and cloak to hide all the rest of their
+gross and absurd doctrines, and the hook and bait whereby the
+simple are altogether deceived.&rdquo; He is greatly concerned that
+&ldquo;none but those who are willingly minded to their doctrines
+can get a sight of their
+books&rdquo;;<a name="fnm17_1_7" id="fnm17_1_7"></a><a href="#fn17_1_7" class="fnnum">17:1</a>
+and that &ldquo;they are disinclined
+to disputations and conferences with those not inclined to their
+opinions.&rdquo; He informs his readers that &ldquo;it is a maxim in the
+Family to deny before men all their doctrines, so that they
+keep the same secret in their hearts&rdquo;; that though they may
+inwardly reject, yet they will outwardly conform to the forms
+of the Church as by law established; that &ldquo;they have certain
+sleights amongst them to answer any question that may be
+demanded of them.&rdquo; Thus &ldquo;they do decree all men to be
+infants who are under the age of thirty years. So that if
+they be demanded whether infants ought to be baptized, they
+answer yea; meaning thereby that he is an infant until he
+attain to those years at which time they ought to be baptized,
+and not before.&rdquo; However, it may be well to mention here
+that the writer speaks of the Anabaptists and of the Family
+of Love as if he recognised them to be distinct heresies.</p>
+
+<p>From their doctrines as formulated in this pamphlet, based
+on &ldquo;A Confession made by two of the Family of Love before
+a worthy and worshipful Justice of the Peace, May 28th,
+1561,&rdquo; we take the following:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>(<i>a</i>) &ldquo;When any person shall be received into their congregation,
+<a name="pg18" id="pg18"></a><span class="pagenum">18</span>
+they cause all their brethren to assemble, the Bishop
+or Elder doth declare unto the newly-elected brother, that if
+he will be content that all his goods shall be in common
+amongst the rest of all his brethren, he shall be received.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>(<i>b</i>) &ldquo;They may not say God save anything. For they affirm
+that all things are ruled by Nature, and not directed by God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>(<i>c</i>) &ldquo;They did prohibit bearing of weapons, but at the
+length, perceiving themselves to be noted and marked for the
+same, they have allowed the bearing of staves.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>(<i>d</i>) &ldquo;When a question is demanded of any of them, they
+do of order stay a great while ere they answer, and commonly
+their words shall be Surely or So.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>(<i>e</i>) &ldquo;They hold that no man should be baptized before he is
+of the age of thirty years.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>(<i>f</i>) &ldquo;They hold that heaven and hell are present in this
+world amongst us, and that there is none
+<span class="together">other.&rdquo;<a name="fnm18_1_8" id="fnm18_1_8"></a><a href="#fn18_1_8" class="fnnum">18:1</a></span></p>
+
+<p>(<i>g</i>) &ldquo;They hold the Pope&rsquo;s service and this service now
+used in the Churches to be naught.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>(<i>h</i>) &ldquo;They hold that all men that are not of their congregation,
+or that are revolted from them, to be dead.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>(<i>i</i>) &ldquo;They hold that they ought to keep silence amongst
+themselves, that the liberty they have in the Lord may not be
+espied of others.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>(<i>k</i>) &ldquo;They hold that no man should be put to death for his
+opinion: therefore they condemn Master Cranmer and Master
+Ridley for burning Joan of Kent.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>We shall have occasion to refer to some of these doctrines
+again later on. It may be well, however, to mention here that
+the views that no Christian ought to be a magistrate; that
+magistrates should not meddle with religion; that no man
+ought to be compelled to faith, or put to death for his religion;
+that war is unlawful to Christians; that their speech should
+be yea or nay, without any oath: seem to have been accepted
+by Anabaptists generally, as they were by the primitive
+Christian communists of the fourteenth
+century.<a name="fnm18_2_9" id="fnm18_2_9"></a><a href="#fn18_2_9" class="fnnum">18:2</a></p>
+
+<p>To return to our immediate subject. To the development
+<a name="pg19" id="pg19"></a><span class="pagenum">19</span>
+of religious and political thought in England, as to the inevitable
+struggle due to the inherent antagonism of Catholic
+and Protestant ideals and aspirations, we can refer only very
+briefly. The former can perhaps best be traced in the writings
+of three eminent theological writers, Jewel, Hooker, and
+Chillingworth. Though in 1567 we hear of the first instance
+of actual punishment of Protestant Dissenters, still during
+the earlier portion of the reign of Elizabeth, to the year 1571,
+there seems to have been a gradual growth of national sentiment
+toward a simpler form of worship, resulting in a
+modification of those rites and usages disliked by Protestants
+of all shades and sects, and against the established policy of
+forcible suppression of religious differences. In 1571, a Bill
+having been introduced imposing a penalty for not receiving
+the communion, it was objected to in the House of Commons
+on the grounds that &ldquo;consciences ought not to be forced.&rdquo;
+The same Parliament &ldquo;refused to bind the clergy to subscription
+to three articles on the Supremacy, the form of
+Church Government, and the power of the Church to ordain
+rites and ceremonies, and favoured the project of reforming
+the Liturgy by the omission of superstitious
+practices.&rdquo;<a name="fnm19_1_10" id="fnm19_1_10"></a><a href="#fn19_1_10" class="fnnum">19:1</a>
+In
+1572, however, the appearance of Thomas Cartwright&rsquo;s
+celebrated <i>Admonition to the Parliament</i> stemmed the
+course of religious reform, and produced a reaction of which
+Elizabeth and her Primates were not slow to avail themselves.
+The establishment, in 1583, of the Ecclesiastical Commission
+as a permanent body, wielding the almost unlimited powers
+of the Crown and creating their own tests of doctrine, put an
+end to the wise spirit of compromise which had hitherto
+characterised Elizabeth&rsquo;s religious policy. The &ldquo;superstitious
+usages&rdquo; were encouraged; subscription by the clergy of the
+Three Articles, which the Parliament of 1571 had refused to
+enforce by law, was exacted; and the non-conforming clergy
+were relentlessly harried and persecuted: with the result
+that the Presbyterians within and the Puritans without the
+National Church were temporarily united by the pressure
+of a common persecution.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg20" id="pg20"></a><span class="pagenum">20</span>
+It was Cartwright&rsquo;s political rather than his religious
+views that alarmed Elizabeth and her Ministers. As against
+their theory of a State-controlled Church, he advocated a
+Church-controlled State. In fact, the most arrogant and
+insolent pretensions of the Papacy were surpassed by this
+Presbyterian divine. Of course, all his demands were based
+on the authority of Scripture and the ways and customs of
+the primitive Christian Church. The rule of bishops he denounced
+as begotten of the devil; the absolute rule of
+presbyters he held to be established by the word of God. All
+other forms of Church government were ruthlessly to be
+suppressed, and heretics were to be punished by death. For
+the ministers of the Church he claimed not only all spiritual
+power and jurisdiction, the decreeing of doctrines, the ordering
+of ceremonies, and so on, but also the supervision of public
+morals, under which every branch of human activities was
+included. In short, the State, as well as the individual, was
+to be placed beneath the heel of the Church. The power of
+the prince, the secular power, was tolerated only so that it
+might &ldquo;protect and defend the councils of the clergy, to keep
+the peace, to see their decrees executed, and to punish the
+contemners of them.&rdquo; Such doctrines aroused no responsive
+echo in the minds of the English people. The nation whose
+revolt against the papal supremacy had made the Reformation
+possible, were not disposed to accept Presbyterian supremacy
+in its place. The national impatience of ecclesiastical power
+was not likely suddenly to be removed by any attempt to
+re-impose it under a new name and in a new garb. In fact,
+Cartwright&rsquo;s work almost seems as if specially written to warn
+the nation against a possible, if not an imminent, danger, to
+warn them, in truth, that&mdash;&ldquo;New Presbyter is but Old Priest
+writ large.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cartwright&rsquo;s narrow-minded dogmatism was crushingly
+answered in Richard Hooker&rsquo;s <i>Ecclesiastical Polity</i>, the
+first volume of which appeared in 1594. This remarkable
+book forms, indeed, an important landmark in the history of
+English political and religious thought. Its forcible exposition
+of the basic principles of constitutional civil government
+<a name="pg21" id="pg21"></a><span class="pagenum">21</span>
+makes many portions of it even to-day most attractive and
+instructive reading. For the first time in the history of
+religious controversy, reason is extolled above any and every
+authority, and accepted as supreme judge and arbiter of
+spiritual, as well as of temporal, affairs. Though Hooker
+thought it fit that the reason of the individual should yield
+to that of the Church, he did not hesitate to declare &ldquo;that
+authority should prevail with man either against or above
+reason, is no part of our belief. Companies of learned men,
+be they never so great and reverend, are to yield unto reason.&rdquo;
+As Buckle well points
+out,<a name="fnm21_1_11" id="fnm21_1_11"></a><a href="#fn21_1_11" class="fnnum">21:1</a>
+if we compare this work with
+Jewel&rsquo;s <i>Apology for the Church of England</i>, written some
+thirty years previously,&mdash;and ordered, together with the Bible
+and Fox&rsquo;s <i>Martyrs</i>, &ldquo;to be fixed in all parish churches and
+read to the people,&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;we shall at once be struck by the different
+methods these eminent writers employ.... Jewel inculcates
+the importance of faith; Hooker insists on the exercise of
+reason.... In the same opposite spirit do these great writers
+conduct their defence of their own Church. Jewel thinks to
+settle the whole dispute by crowding together texts from the
+Bible, with the opinions of the commentators upon them....
+Hooker&rsquo;s defence rests neither upon tradition, nor upon commentators,
+nor even upon revelation; but he is content that
+the pretensions of the hostile parties shall be decided by their
+applicability to the great exigencies of society, and by the ease
+with which they adapt themselves to the general purposes of
+ordinary life.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The celebrated work by Chillingworth, <i>The Religion of
+Protestants, a Safe Way to Salvation</i>, published in 1637, and
+of which two editions were issued within less than five months,
+also deserves special mention here. His fundamental position
+may be well summarised in one of his own sentences&mdash;&ldquo;I am
+fully assured that God does not, and therefore that man ought
+not to require any more of any man than this, to believe the
+Scriptures to be God&rsquo;s word, to endeavour to find the true
+sense of it, and to live according to it.&rdquo; Even more fully than
+<a name="pg22" id="pg22"></a><span class="pagenum">22</span>
+Hooker, Chillingworth accepts reason as the all-sufficient
+guide of human conduct, and admits no reservations that
+might limit the sacred right of private judgement. The
+essential difference between these three eminent writers is
+admirably summarised by Buckle in the following
+<span class="together"><a name="cm2" id="cm2"></a><a href="#corr2" class="correction" title="Footnote marker missing in original.">words</a>:<a name="fnm21_2_12" id="fnm21_2_12"></a><a href="#fn21_2_12" class="fnnum">21:2</a></span>
+&ldquo;These three great men represent the three distinct epochs of
+the three successive generations in which they respectively
+lived. In Jewel, reason is, if I may so say, the superstructure
+of the system; but authority is the basis upon which the
+superstructure is built. In Hooker, authority is only the
+superstructure, and reason is the basis. But in Chillingworth,
+whose writings were harbingers of the coming storm, authority
+entirely disappears, and the whole fabric of religion is made
+to rest upon the way in which the unaided reason of man
+shall interpret the decrees of an omnipotent God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In fact, Chillingworth&rsquo;s great work may well be regarded
+as the last word of the Protestant Reformation in England.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn15_1_5" id="fn15_1_5"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm15_1_5">15:1</a></span>
+According to Beard, <i>The Hibbert Lectures</i>, 1883, p. 119, &ldquo;It was a
+medi&aelig;val maxim, which no one thought of questioning, that the language
+of the Bible had four senses&mdash;the literal, the allegorical, the tropological,
+and the anagogical, of which the last three were mystical or spiritual, in
+contradistinction to the first.&rdquo; The learned Erasmus, who lived and died
+a devout Roman Catholic, seems to have accepted this allegorical interpretation
+of the Scriptures. Of interpreters of the Holy Scriptures, he
+recommends those &ldquo;who depart as far as possible from the letter.&rdquo;
+Erasmus, <i>Opp. (Enchiridion)</i>, v. 29, B, C, D. Quoted by Beard, p. 120.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn16_1_6" id="fn16_1_6"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm16_1_6">16:1</a></span>
+<i>Church History</i>, vol. iv. p. 407.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn17_1_7" id="fn17_1_7"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm17_1_7">17:1</a></span>
+When occasion arose, they do not seem to have been averse to giving
+publicity to their opinions. In 1656 a London publisher, Giles Calvert,
+to whom we shall have occasion to refer again, republished <i>A Discourse
+on the Family of Love, originally presented to the High Court of Parliament
+in the time of Queen Elizabeth</i>. This Giles Calvert was the printer and
+publisher of nearly all Winstanley&rsquo;s pamphlets, and also one of the first
+authorised printers and publishers for the Children of Light, as the
+Quakers, or Society of Friends, originally styled themselves. We have
+reason to believe that Calvert, as well as many other of Winstanley&rsquo;s
+disciples, joined the Quakers about the time of the republication of this
+pamphlet.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn18_1_8" id="fn18_1_8"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm18_1_8">18:1</a></span>
+&ldquo;There is no other flame in which the sinner is plagued, and no
+other punishment of hell, than the perpetual anguish of mind which
+accompanies habitual sin.&rdquo;&mdash;Erasmus, <i>Enchiridion</i>. Quoted by Beard.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn18_2_9" id="fn18_2_9"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm18_2_9">18:2</a></span>
+See <i>Communism in Central Europe in the Time of the Reformation</i>, by
+Karl Kautsky, more especially p. 79.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn19_1_10" id="fn19_1_10"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm19_1_10">19:1</a></span>
+Green&rsquo;s <i>Short History of the English People</i>, p. 457.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn21_1_11" id="fn21_1_11"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm21_1_11">21:1</a></span>
+<i>History of Civilisation in England</i>, vol. i. p. 340.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn21_2_12" id="fn21_2_12"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm21_2_12">21:2</a></span>
+<i>Ibid.</i> vol. i. p. 351.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg23" id="pg23"></a><span class="pagenum">23</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III<br /><br />
+THE GREAT CIVIL WAR</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot chaphead">
+<p>&ldquo;The lawful power of making laws to command whole politic societies
+of men, belongeth so properly to the same entire societies, that for any
+prince or potentate of what kind soever upon earth, to exercise the same of
+himself, and not either by express commission immediately and personally
+received from God, or else by authority derived at the first from their
+consent, upon whose persons they impose laws, it is no better than mere
+tyranny. Laws they are not therefore which public approbation hath
+not made so.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Hooker</span>,
+<i>Ecclesiastical Polity</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>When Chillingworth&rsquo;s great work was published, in 1637, the
+last of the Tudors, after having outlived her popularity, had
+passed to her rest, as had also her most unworthy successor,
+whose insolence had outraged, but whose weakness had
+strengthened, the awakening spirit of liberty, and who, as
+Macaulay well expresses
+it,<a name="fnm23_1_13" id="fnm23_1_13"></a><a href="#fn23_1_13" class="fnnum">23:1</a>
+&ldquo;was, in truth, one of those kings
+whom God seems to send for the express purpose of hastening
+revolutions.&rdquo; To him had succeeded his most worthy son: a
+king whose perfidy and duplicity were only equalled by his
+self-complacency and power of self-deception, who never
+looked facts in the face, but placidly expected them to conform
+to his own petty desires, and whose dignified death failed
+to atone for a life devoted to ignoble personal ends, by crooked
+ways and treacherous means; a king peculiarly incapable of
+taking a broad statesman-like view of any question, who
+manifested no thought for the interests of the people of whom
+he regarded himself as ruler by right divine, whose futile
+domestic policy was inspired solely by considerations for the
+advancement of his own personal power, whose feeble and
+shifty foreign policy was determined only by considerations
+<a name="pg24" id="pg24"></a><span class="pagenum">24</span>
+for his own family interests, who intrigued with France
+against Spain, with Spain against France, with both against
+Holland, and with Holland against both, and with France,
+Spain, Holland, and Rome against his own subjects, with
+English Presbyterians against English Independents, with
+English Independents against English Presbyterians, and with
+Irish Catholics and Scotch Presbyterians against both English
+Presbyterians and Independents, and who yet succeeded in
+deceiving nobody but himself, and in satisfying nobody, not
+even himself; a king whose love was far more dangerous than
+his hate, a worthy patron of a Buckingham, a Goring, or of a
+Laud, but unworthy the genius of a Shaftesbury or the loyal
+services of a Verney, a Montrose, or a Worcester; a king, in
+short, treacherous to his friends, faithless to his word, who
+went to his wedding and came to his throne with a lie on
+his
+lips,<a name="fnm24_1_14" id="fnm24_1_14"></a><a href="#fn24_1_14" class="fnnum">24:1</a>
+whom, again to use the words of
+Macaulay,<a name="fnm24_2_15" id="fnm24_2_15"></a><a href="#fn24_2_15" class="fnnum">24:2</a>
+&ldquo;no law could bind, and whose whole government was one
+system of wrong,&rdquo; of whom even the conservative and partial
+Hallam is forced to
+admit<a name="fnm24_3_16" id="fnm24_3_16"></a><a href="#fn24_3_16" class="fnnum">24:3</a>
+that &ldquo;it would be difficult to name
+any violation of law he had not committed.&rdquo; Even the famous
+Petition of Right, to which some nine years previously, in
+1628, he had given a solemn, though reluctant, consent, had
+been ruthlessly violated. Taxes had been levied by the Royal
+authority; patents of monopoly had been granted; the course
+of justice had been tampered with, and judges arbitrarily
+deposed; troops had been billeted upon the people; old feudal
+usages had been revived for the express purpose of harassing
+and defrauding the citizens; and, as if to exhaust every means
+to sap the loyalty and wear out the patience of the people,
+Puritans of every shade of opinion had not only been silenced
+but relentlessly persecuted, while High Church bishops preached
+<a name="pg25" id="pg25"></a><span class="pagenum">25</span>
+passive obedience, declaring the persons and the property of
+subjects to be at the absolute disposal of the sovereign, and in
+the name of religion inaugurating a systematic attack on the
+rights and liberties of the nation.</p>
+
+<p>The people whose representatives a quarter of a century
+previously, in 1604, had met the insolent claims of James the
+First with the dignified rejoinder, that &ldquo;your Majesty should
+be misinformed if any man should deliver that the kings of
+England have any absolute power in themselves either to alter
+religion, or to make any laws concerning the same, otherwise
+than in temporal causes by consent of
+Parliament,&rdquo;<a name="fnm25_1_17" id="fnm25_1_17"></a><a href="#fn25_1_17" class="fnnum">25:1</a>
+were,
+however, not easily to be intimidated. Despite a Royal order
+to adjourn, the House of Commons of 1629, holding the
+Speaker by force in the Chair, supported the immortal Eliot
+in his last assertion of English liberty, and by successive
+resolutions declared that whosoever shall bring in innovations
+in religion, or whosoever shall counsel or advise the
+taking and levying of the subsidies of tonnage and poundage,
+not being granted by Parliament, &ldquo;a capital enemy to this
+kingdom and commonwealth,&rdquo; and any person voluntarily
+yielding or paying the said subsidies, not being granted by
+Parliament, &ldquo;a betrayer of the liberty of England, and an
+enemy to the
+same.&rdquo;<a name="fnm25_2_18" id="fnm25_2_18"></a><a href="#fn25_2_18" class="fnnum">25:2</a>
+Having thus flung their defiance in the
+face of the King, the House then voted its own adjournment.</p>
+
+<p>From that time events had marched quickly. Those who
+had played the most prominent parts in that momentous
+scene, including Holles, Selden, and Eliot, had been thrown
+into prison, the last-named to die there, the first martyr to
+the growing cause of civil freedom and religious liberty. In
+1637, the year of the publication of Chillingworth&rsquo;s work, the
+whole question of the right to levy taxation was revived
+by the demand on the inland counties for ship-money, and
+the attention of the whole country attracted to it by the trial
+of Hampden on his refusal to pay same. Later in the year,
+Charles&rsquo; attempt to alter the ecclesiastical constitution and form
+<a name="pg26" id="pg26"></a><span class="pagenum">26</span>
+of public worship in Scotland led, first to discontent, then to
+riot, and finally to open rebellion. As a direct consequence,
+the King, in April 1640, was compelled to call what from its
+brief duration is known as the Short Parliament, in which,
+thanks to the Parliamentary tactics of Hampden, the design
+of the Court Party, to obtain supplies without redressing
+grievances, was constitutionally thwarted. On the manifestation
+of its determination to redress wrongs and to vindicate the
+laws, this Parliament was at once dissolved. The end of the
+tyranny, however, was fast approaching. In August of the
+same year the King marched northward; the Scotch crossed
+the border to meet him; on their approach the disaffected
+English army was well pleased to fly rather than to fight those
+whom they were inclined to regard as deliverers rather than
+as enemies; a truce was patched up, and to meet the critical
+situation the King, in November 1640, found himself compelled
+to summon his last and most famous Parliament, known in
+history as the Long Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>The temper of the new Parliament, in which Pym and
+Hampden at first exercised a paramount influence, was very
+different from that of any of its predecessors. Recent events
+had convinced its leading members that half measures would
+be worse than useless. During its first session, Strafford and
+Laud, the two main supporters of absolute government and
+religious tyranny, were impeached and imprisoned; those whom
+the King had employed as instruments of oppression were
+called to account for their conduct; the Star Chamber, the
+Court of High Commission and the Council of York, were
+abolished; ship-money was declared illegal, and the judgement
+in Hampden&rsquo;s case was annulled; the victims of the recent
+religious persecutions were set at liberty, and conducted
+through London in triumph; old oppressive feudal powers
+still appertaining to the Crown were swept away; the King
+was made to give the judges patents for life or during good
+behaviour; the Forest and Stannary Courts were reformed;
+Triennial Parliaments were established; and, finally, it was
+provided that the Parliament then sitting should not be
+prorogued or dissolved save by its own consent.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg27" id="pg27"></a><span class="pagenum">27</span>
+After the recess the difficulties and dangers of the situation
+increased daily. Revolt, popularly regarded as fomented by
+the Court Party, had broken out in Ireland; the King, evidently
+seeking power and opportunity to retract the concessions he
+had made, was seeking aid in all directions&mdash;Rome, France,
+Spain, and was intriguing in Scotland; the air was full of
+rumours of a plot of the Court to bring down the army in the
+North to overawe the Parliament; and the moderate men,&mdash;&ldquo;that
+is to say, men who never go to the bottom of any
+difficulty,&rdquo; as Gardiner expresses it,&mdash;by whose aid the above
+changes had been effected, were inclined to pause, if not
+to retrace their steps. Under these circumstances the popular
+leaders in the House of Commons, in November 1641, framed
+and passed the Great Remonstrance, which was practically an
+address to the nation, to justify their past action and to appeal
+for further support. In this famous document all the oppressive
+and arbitrary acts of the past fifteen years were narrated in
+impressive language; a detailed account was given of the
+necessary work already accomplished, of the dangers and
+difficulties yet to be surmounted, declaring the purpose of the
+House to be, not to abolish Episcopacy, but to reduce the
+power of the bishops; and, finally, indicating the line of future
+constitutional reform by urging that the King should employ
+no Ministers save those in whom the Parliament could place
+confidence.</p>
+
+<p>Contrary to expectation, the debate on the Remonstrance
+was long and stormy, and the division&mdash;it was only carried
+in a full House by a majority of nine&mdash;showed plainly that a
+reaction in favour of the King had already begun. Charles had
+now a final opportunity of regaining the confidence of the
+representatives of the nation, and for a few days it seemed as
+if he were inclined to follow a moderate, dignified and constitutional
+course. But for a few days only. On the 3rd of
+January 1642, without giving a hint of his intentions to the
+constitutional Royalists he had so recently called to his councils,
+and whom he had faithfully promised to consult on all matters
+relating to the House of Commons, he sent down his Attorney-General
+to impeach the leading members of the House, Pym,
+<a name="pg28" id="pg28"></a><span class="pagenum">28</span>
+Holles, and Haselrig, at the bar of the House of Lords, on a
+charge of high treason. As Macaulay well
+says,<a name="fnm28_1_19" id="fnm28_1_19"></a><a href="#fn28_1_19" class="fnnum">28:1</a>
+&ldquo;It would be
+difficult to find in the whole history of England such an
+instance of tyranny, perfidy, and folly.&rdquo; But worse was to
+follow. The Commons refused to surrender their members,
+and Charles resolved on their forcible arrest on the floor of the
+House. The threatened members, however, had been warned,
+and had taken refuge in the City of London; their absence,
+together with the dignified attitude of the remaining members,
+prevented the outrage ending in bloodshed: in a bloodshed the
+possibility of which it is even to-day impossible to contemplate
+with equanimity.</p>
+
+<p>Though the Militia Bill, which would have given Parliament
+the control of the armed forces of the nation, was the
+ostensible, this outrage on the part of the King was the
+direct and mediate, cause of the outbreak of the Civil War.
+&ldquo;To be safe from armed violence,&rdquo; the Commons, as far as the
+rules of the House would permit, placed themselves under the
+protection of the City; and the day previous to the one fixed
+for their return to St. Stephen&rsquo;s under the protection of the
+trained bands of London, the King left Whitehall, to return to it
+only to pay the dire penalty for his past offences. Both sides
+now actively prepared for the inevitable struggle. Owing to
+Pym&rsquo;s forethought, the Tower was blockaded, and the two great
+arsenals of Hull and Portsmouth secured for the Parliament.
+Owing to the force and boldness of his language, the House
+of Lords was scared out of the policy of obstruction it had
+taken up. On the avowal by Parliament of the refusal of the
+governor of Hull to open the gates to the King, the members of
+the Royalist party withdrew from Westminster; and on August
+22nd, 1642, the uplifting of Charles&rsquo; standard on a hill at
+Nottingham announced the outbreak of the Civil War.</p>
+
+<p>On the well-trodden ground of the progress of the war, it is
+unnecessary for our purposes to dwell. The issues involved
+were truly tremendous. The evolution of the English
+Constitution had left it undecided to whom the supreme
+power in the nation did rightfully accrue: and this was,
+<a name="pg29" id="pg29"></a><span class="pagenum">29</span>
+perhaps, the most practical question at
+issue.<a name="fnm29_1_20" id="fnm29_1_20"></a><a href="#fn29_1_20" class="fnnum">29:1</a>
+As between
+Parliament and King, the question was, whether the supreme
+power was to continue to be wielded by a king whose temporal
+jurisdiction was to be limited only by ancient laws interpreted
+by judges of his own creation and removable at his pleasure,
+or by the representatives of the nation in Parliament
+assembled? It was left to the Model Army to remind the
+members of the Long Parliament that their power, as that of
+&ldquo;all future representatives of this nation, is inferior only to
+theirs who choose
+them.&rdquo;<a name="fnm29_2_21" id="fnm29_2_21"></a><a href="#fn29_2_21" class="fnnum">29:2</a>
+However, to make both King and
+Church responsible to Parliament was, in truth, the one
+common aim of the whole Parliamentary party; and, as
+Gardiner well points
+out,<a name="fnm29_3_22" id="fnm29_3_22"></a><a href="#fn29_3_22" class="fnnum">29:3</a>
+&ldquo;every year which passed after the
+Restoration made it more evident that, for the time at least, the
+most substantial gains of the long conflict had fallen to those
+who had concentrated their efforts on this object.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Keeping in view the reforms secured during the first session
+of the Long Parliament, it may fairly be urged that everything
+necessary to this end had been gained prior to the outbreak
+of the Civil War, everything, of course, save the control of the
+sword; and this, if the King could have been trusted, was not
+immediately urgent, and would necessarily have followed the
+control of the purse. &ldquo;If the King could have been trusted!&rdquo;
+In these words the key to the whole situation is to be found.
+The Parliamentary leaders could not, did not, dared not, trust
+<a name="pg30" id="pg30"></a><span class="pagenum">30</span>
+the King: hence the power of the sword had to be wrested from
+his grasp. It was this that made the Civil War inevitable. It
+was this that rendered constitutional government, government
+by discussion, government by compromise, impossible. It was
+this well-grounded and repeatedly confirmed distrust of the
+King that, after years of war and repeated and sincere negotiations,
+negotiations which only served still further to reveal his
+duplicity, made the execution of the King unavoidable. As the
+judicial Gardiner well
+says,<a name="fnm30_1_23" id="fnm30_1_23"></a><a href="#fn30_1_23" class="fnnum">30:1</a>
+in summing up the causes which
+led to this most solemn, impressive, and instructive event in
+the whole history of England&mdash;&ldquo;The situation, complicated
+enough already, had been still further complicated by Charles&rsquo;
+duplicity. Men who would have been willing to come to
+terms with him, despaired of any constitutional arrangement
+in which he was to be a factor; and men who had long been
+alienated from him were irritated into active hostility. By
+these he was regarded with increasing intensity as the one
+disturbing force with which no understanding was possible
+and no settled order consistent. To remove him out of the
+way appeared, even to those who had no thought of punishing
+him for past offences, to be the only possible road to peace for
+the troubled nation.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The religious issues of the great struggle, however, were by
+no means so simple. Episcopacy, as it had existed, had few
+supporters in England outside the ranks of the bishops. The
+Laudian coercion had not only reawakened slumbering animosities
+and given renewed vigour to the Puritan dislike of
+the forms and ceremonies of the Anglican Church, but had
+served to fill men&rsquo;s minds with a healthy, vigorous, and deep-rooted
+distrust of ecclesiastical government in any form. To
+any claims, whether of kings or of bishops or of presbyters, to
+rule by Divine right, the ear of the nation was temporarily
+closed. If Protestants of all shades of opinions had learned
+to distrust Episcopacy, intellectual men of all shades of
+religious beliefs, and of none, equally distrusted Presbyterianism,
+and feared that the free play of intellectual life
+would be as much endangered by the rule of the presbyters
+<a name="pg31" id="pg31"></a><span class="pagenum">31</span>
+as by the rule of the bishops. We should, however, do well to
+remember that at the outbreak of the war most of the great
+Parliamentary leaders, including Pym, Hampden, and even
+Cromwell, had no deep-rooted objection to Episcopacy as a form
+of Church government, provided only that it was controlled
+by Parliament, and allowed the fullest possible liberty of
+conscience. They all shared Pym&rsquo;s expressed conviction that
+&ldquo;the greatest liberty of the kingdom is religion,&rdquo; and seemed
+to have inclined toward the ideal of Chillingworth, a full liberty
+of thought maintained within the unity of the Church. It
+was their necessity, not their will, the necessity to gain the
+cordial co-operation of the Scotch, that later compelled them to
+commit themselves to Presbyterianism, of their profound
+distrust of which they gave repeated proof. And it is worthy of
+special note that even in the time of their greatest need the
+English Parliament, to use Gardiner&rsquo;s
+words,<a name="fnm31_1_24" id="fnm31_1_24"></a><a href="#fn31_1_24" class="fnnum">31:1</a>
+&ldquo;was as disinclined
+as the Tudor kings had ever been to allow the establishment
+in England of a Church system claiming to exist by Divine
+right, or by any right whatever independent of the State.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>That religious conformity was a necessary condition of
+national unity, aye, even of national existence, was, however,
+still accepted as an axiomatic truth by those whose mental
+visions were limited by inherited conceptions. To such as
+these the only question at issue seems to have been whether an
+Episcopalian or a Presbyterian system of Church government
+should prevail. Of the claims of those who would bow the
+head neither to Rome, to Geneva, nor to Canterbury, who
+refused to entrust their conscience to pope, to bishop, or to
+presbyter, the extreme adherents of both these systems were
+probably equally insensible. And yet it was precisely such
+men who were to come to the front during the coming struggle,
+and who, under the guidance of their great leader, were to
+become the champions of that great democratic principle of
+toleration, of liberty of conscience, which was the one leading
+principle of his
+life.<a name="fnm31_2_25" id="fnm31_2_25"></a><a href="#fn31_2_25" class="fnnum">31:2</a>
+It was precisely such men who were to
+proclaim to the rulers of the nation&mdash;&ldquo;That matters of religion
+and the ways of God&rsquo;s worship are not at all entrusted by us to
+<a name="pg32" id="pg32"></a><span class="pagenum">32</span>
+any human power, because therein we cannot remit or exceed a
+tittle of what our consciences dictate to be the mind of God without
+wilful sin.&rdquo; But who themselves were tolerant enough to
+be willing that &ldquo;nevertheless the public way of instructing the
+nation (<i>so it be not compulsive</i>) is referred to their
+discretion.&rdquo;<a name="fnm32_1_26" id="fnm32_1_26"></a><a href="#fn32_1_26" class="fnnum">32:1</a></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;So it be not compulsive!&rdquo; in these words we have the
+key to the position of the great body of sectarians known
+under the name of Independents. They recognised, to use the
+words of their immortal leader, that &ldquo;it&rsquo;s one thing to love a
+brother, to bear with and love a person of different judgement
+in matters of religion; and another thing to have anybody so
+far set in the saddle on that account, as to have all the rest of
+his brethren at mercy.&rdquo; So it be not compulsive! in these
+words, too, we have the secret of their subsequent attitude
+toward the Long Parliament and its successors. As Gardiner
+forcibly expresses it&mdash;&ldquo;Men who longed for religious toleration
+with a stern conviction were impatient of parliamentary
+majorities working for uniformity.&rdquo; To their opponents, more
+especially to those of the strict Presbyterian school, toleration
+may have seemed of the devil, incompatible with individual
+salvation, and injurious alike to Church and to State; to the
+Independents, on the other hand, it was a necessary condition
+of continued existence. They had no desire to establish a
+State Church of their own; they were not prepared to deny
+that at least &ldquo;a public way of instructing the nation&rdquo; might
+be necessary; but they were determined that any such Church
+should be tolerant of the claims of men like themselves, who
+could not conform their conscience to its requirements. To
+create a home of liberty out of the England of the Tudors and
+the Stuarts, of Laud and of Prynne, was a task beyond even
+their powers. But whatever they may have failed to accomplish,
+they saved England from the ecclesiastical tyranny
+Presbyterianism at that time involved, and raised the standard
+of liberty and toleration, which during the great struggle
+obtained a hold of the mind of the nation such as it never had
+before, but never entirely lost again.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg33" id="pg33"></a><span class="pagenum">33</span>
+At the very outbreak of the Civil War, Cromwell&rsquo;s aim had
+been to find &ldquo;men who know what they fight for, and love
+what they know,&mdash;men as had the fear of God before them,
+as made some conscience of what they
+did.&rdquo;<a name="fnm33_1_27" id="fnm33_1_27"></a><a href="#fn33_1_27" class="fnnum">33:1</a>
+Such men soon
+gathered round the great Independent, and he moulded them
+into the famous Ironsides, by whose aid he turned the tide of
+defeat at Marston Moor, and gained the glorious victories of
+Naseby, Preston, Dunbar, and Worcester. Such men stood
+by his side at the momentous Army Council at Windsor,
+May 1st, 1648, when it was solemnly resolved, &ldquo;not any
+dissenting,&rdquo; &ldquo;that it was our duty, if ever the Lord brought us
+back again in peace, to call Charles Stuart, that man of blood,
+to account for the blood he had shed, and mischief he had done
+to his utmost, against the Lord&rsquo;s cause and people in these
+poor
+nations.&rdquo;<a name="fnm33_2_28" id="fnm33_2_28"></a><a href="#fn33_2_28" class="fnnum">33:2</a>
+It was such men who, on December 6th,
+1648, to save the kingdom from a new war or from a peace
+destructive of everything they had fought
+for,<a name="fnm33_3_29" id="fnm33_3_29"></a><a href="#fn33_3_29" class="fnnum">33:3</a>
+purged the
+House of Commons of its &ldquo;malignant&rdquo; members; and who cut
+the Gordian knot of the difficulties that beset the nation by
+bringing the King, who seemed to them to stand in the way of
+any and every satisfactory settlement, to trial and execution
+(January 30th, 1649). Moreover, it was such men who most
+heartily concurred with the resolution of the House of Commons
+(February 7th, 1649), &ldquo;That it has been found by experience ...
+that the office of a king in this nation, and to have the power
+thereof in any single person, is unnecessary, burdensome, and
+dangerous to the liberty, safety, and public interests of the
+people of this nation, and therefore ought to be abolished.&rdquo;
+And, finally, it was such men who were the main supporters of
+the Council of State to whom, on February 13th, 1649, under the
+control of the House of Commons, was entrusted full executive
+authority over the home and foreign affairs of the nation.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn23_1_13" id="fn23_1_13"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm23_1_13">23:1</a></span>
+Macaulay&rsquo;s <i>Essays</i>, &ldquo;John Hampden.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn24_1_14" id="fn24_1_14"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm24_1_14">24:1</a></span>
+In 1624, Charles had voluntarily sworn to the House of Commons
+that if he married a Roman Catholic &ldquo;it should be of no advantage to
+the recusants at home.&rdquo; In the autumn of the same year, on his betrothal
+to Henrietta Maria, sister to the King of France, he solemnly swore to
+grant the very condition he had previously solemnly sworn never to
+concede. He came to the throne early in the following year, 1625.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn24_2_15" id="fn24_2_15"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm24_2_15">24:2</a></span>
+<i>Loc. cit.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn24_3_16" id="fn24_3_16"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm24_3_16">24:3</a></span>
+<i>Constitutional History</i>, vol. ii. p. 81.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn25_1_17" id="fn25_1_17"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm25_1_17">25:1</a></span>
+The Apology of the Commons, 1604. See Gardiner&rsquo;s <i>History of
+England</i>, 1603-1642, vol. i. pp. 180-185.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn25_2_18" id="fn25_2_18"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm25_2_18">25:2</a></span>
+<i>Ibid.</i> vol. vii. pp. 72-76.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn28_1_19" id="fn28_1_19"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm28_1_19">28:1</a></span>
+<i>Loc. cit.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn29_1_20" id="fn29_1_20"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm29_1_20">29:1</a></span>
+This was the point of view taken at the time by the Levellers, the
+most active and progressive politicians of the period. In a &ldquo;Humble
+Petition of thousands of well affected people inhabiting the City of
+London,&rdquo; presented September 11th, 1648, the petitioners address the
+House of Commons as &ldquo;the supreme authority of England,&rdquo; and desire it
+so to consider itself. They complain that the Commons have declared
+their intention not to alter the ancient government of King, Lords and
+Commons, &ldquo;not once mentioning, in case of difference, which of them is
+supreme, but leaving that point, which was the chiefest cause of all our
+public differences, disturbances, wars, and miseries, as uncertain as ever.&rdquo;
+See <i>Clarke Papers</i>, vol. ii. p. 76.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn29_2_21" id="fn29_2_21"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm29_2_21">29:2</a></span>
+See &ldquo;The Agreement of the People for a firm and present peace,&rdquo;
+as presented to the Council of the Army, October 28th, 1647. Reprinted
+at the end of the third volume of Gardiner&rsquo;s <i>History of the Civil War</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn29_3_22" id="fn29_3_22"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm29_3_22">29:3</a></span>
+<i>History of the Civil War</i>, vol. ii. p. 67.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn30_1_23" id="fn30_1_23"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm30_1_23">30:1</a></span>
+<i>History of the Civil War</i>, vol. iv. pp. 327-328.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn31_1_24" id="fn31_1_24"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm31_1_24">31:1</a></span>
+<i>History of the Civil War</i>, vol. iii. p. 95.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn31_2_25" id="fn31_2_25"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm31_2_25">31:2</a></span>
+See <a href="#APPENDIX_B" >Appendix B</a>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn32_1_26" id="fn32_1_26"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm32_1_26">32:1</a></span>
+&ldquo;The Agreement of the People for a firm and present peace.&rdquo;
+(Italics are ours.)</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn33_1_27" id="fn33_1_27"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm33_1_27">33:1</a></span>
+See Carlyle&rsquo;s <i>Cromwell&rsquo;s Letters and Speeches</i>, part ii. p. 135, and part
+x. p. 255.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn33_2_28" id="fn33_2_28"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm33_2_28">33:2</a></span>
+See Gardiner&rsquo;s <i>History of the Civil War</i>, vol. iv. pp. 120-121.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn33_3_29" id="fn33_3_29"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm33_3_29">33:3</a></span>
+Cromwell seems early to have foreseen and guarded against such a
+contingency. See Gardiner, <i>ibid.</i> vol. ii. p. 25.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg34" id="pg34"></a><span class="pagenum">34</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV<br /><br />
+THE DIGGERS</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot chaphead">
+<p>&ldquo;The way to cast out Kingly Power is not to cast it out by the
+Sword; for this doth but set him in more power, and removes him from
+a weaker to a stronger hand. The only way to cast him out is for the
+people to leave him to himself, to forsake fighting and all oppression, and
+to live in love one towards another. The Power of Love is the True
+Saviour.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Winstanley</span>,
+<i>A New Year&rsquo;s Gift for the Parliament and
+Army</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The Council of State which, on February 13th, 1649, within a
+month of the execution of the King, had been appointed to
+administer the public affairs of England, had scarcely settled
+down to their work when they received the following information
+of the mysterious doings of &ldquo;a disorderly and tumultuous
+sort of people&rdquo; very near to their
+doors:<a name="fnm34_1_30" id="fnm34_1_30"></a><a href="#fn34_1_30" class="fnnum">34:1</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;Information of Henry Sanders of Walton upon
+Thames.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Informeth, that on Sunday was sennight
+last,<a name="fnm34_2_31" id="fnm34_2_31"></a><a href="#fn34_2_31" class="fnnum">34:2</a> there was
+one Everard, once of the army but was cashiered, who termeth
+himself a prophet, one Stewer and Colten, and two more, all
+living at Cobham, came to St. George&rsquo;s Hill in Surrey, and
+began to dig on that side the hill next to Campe Close, and
+sowed the ground with parsnips, carrots, and beans. On
+<a name="pg35" id="pg35"></a><span class="pagenum">35</span>
+Monday following they were there again, being increased in
+their number, and on the next day, being Tuesday, they fired
+the heath, and burned at least forty rood of heath, which is a
+very great prejudice to the town. On Friday last they came
+again, between twenty and thirty, and wrought all day at
+digging. They did then intend to have two or three ploughs
+at work, but they had not furnished themselves with seed-corn,
+which they did on Saturday at Kingston. They invite all to
+come in and help them, and promise them meat, drink, and
+clothes. They do threaten to pull down and level all park
+pales, and lay open, and intend to plant there very shortly.
+They give out they will be four or five thousand within
+ten days, and threaten the neighbouring people there, that
+they will make them all come up to the hills and work: and
+forewarn them suffering their cattle to come near the plantation;
+if they do, they will cut their legs off. It is feared they
+have some design in hand.</p>
+
+<p class="signature">&ldquo;Henry Sanders.</p>
+
+<p class="date">&ldquo;<i>16 April 1649.</i>&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Council of State were sufficiently impressed by this
+letter to forward it the same day to Lord Fairfax, the Lord
+General of the armed forces of the Commonwealth, with the
+following despatch:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;The Council of State to Lord Fairfax.<a name="fnm35_1_32" id="fnm35_1_32"></a><a href="#fn35_1_32" class="fnnum">35:1</a></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">My Lord</span>,&mdash;By the narrative enclosed your Lordship will
+be informed of what relation hath been made to this Council
+of a disorderly and tumultuous sort of people assembling
+themselves together not far from Oatlands, at a place called
+St. George&rsquo;s Hill; and although the pretence of their being
+there by them avowed may seem very ridiculous, yet that
+conflux of people may be a beginning whence things of a
+greater and more dangerous consequence may grow, to the
+disturbance of the peace and quiet of the Commonwealth.
+We therefore recommend it to your Lordship&rsquo;s care that some
+force of horse may be sent to Cobham in Surrey and thereabouts,
+with orders to disperse the people so met, and to
+prevent the like for the future, that a malignant and disaffected
+party may not under colour of such ridiculous people
+<a name="pg36" id="pg36"></a><span class="pagenum">36</span>
+have any opportunity to rendezvous themselves in order
+to do a greater mischief.</p>
+
+<p class="date">
+&ldquo;Signed in the name and by order of the Council of State<br />
+appointed by authority of Parliament,</p>
+<p class="signature">
+&ldquo;John Bradshaw, <i>President</i>.</p>
+<p class="date">&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Derby House</span>, <i>16th April 1649</i>.</p>
+<p class="date">
+&ldquo;For the Right Honourable<br />
+<span class="smcap">Thomas Lord Fairfax</span>, Lord General.&rdquo;
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Acting on his instructions, within a few days Lord Fairfax
+was in possession of the following soldier-like letter from the
+active republican officer to whom he had entrusted the business,
+and who evidently was not so easily frightened as the
+Council of State:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;Captain John Gladman to Lord Fairfax.<a name="fnm36_1_33" id="fnm36_1_33"></a><a href="#fn36_1_33" class="fnnum">36:1</a><br />
+<span style="font-variant: normal;">(Slightly Abridged.)</span></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;According to your order I marched towards St.
+Georges Hill and sent four men before to bring certain intelligence
+to me; as they went they met with Mr. Winstanlie
+and Mr. Everard (which are the chief men that have persuaded
+these people to do what they have done). And when I had enquired
+of them and of the officers that lie at Kingston, I saw
+there was no need to march any further. I cannot hear that
+there have been above twenty of them together since they first
+undertook the business. Mr. Winstanlie and Mr. Everard
+have engaged both to be with you this day: I believe you will
+be glad to be rid of them again, especially Everard, who is no
+other than a mad man. Sir, I intend to go with two or three
+men to St. Georges Hill this day, and persuade these people
+to leave this employment if I can, and if then I see no more
+danger than now I do I shall march back again to London tomorrow....
+Indeed the business is not worth the writing nor
+yet taking notice of: I wonder the Council of State should be
+so abused with informations....</p>
+
+<p class="signature">
+&ldquo;Jo. Gladman.</p>
+<p class="date">
+<span class="smcap">&ldquo;Kingston</span>, <i>April 19th, 1649</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>As they had undertaken, Winstanley and Everard duly
+<a name="pg37" id="pg37"></a><span class="pagenum">37</span> appeared before Lord Fairfax at Whitehall, and under date
+April 20th the following account of their interview appears in
+the ponderous pages of Bulstrode Whitelocke&rsquo;s <i>Memorial of
+English Affairs</i>:<a name="fnm37_1_34" id="fnm37_1_34"></a><a href="#fn37_1_34" class="fnnum">37:1</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Everard and Winstanley, the chief of those that digged at
+St. George&rsquo;s Hill in Surrey, came to the General and made a
+large declaration to justify their proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Everard said he was of the race of the Jews, that all the
+liberties of the people were lost by the coming in of William
+the Conqueror, and that ever since the people of God had
+lived under tyranny and oppression worse than that of our
+forefathers under the Egyptians.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But now the time of deliverance was at hand, and God
+would bring his people out of this slavery, and restore them
+to their freedom in enjoying the fruits and benefits of the
+Earth.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And that there had lately appeared to him a vision,
+which bad him arise and dig and plough the earth, and receive
+the fruits thereof.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That their intent is to restore the Creation to its former
+condition. That as God had promised to make the barren
+land fruitful, so now what they did was to restore the ancient
+community of enjoying the fruits of the Earth, and to distribute
+the benefits thereof to the poor and needy, and to feed the
+hungry and to clothe the naked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That they intend not to meddle with any man&rsquo;s property
+nor to break down any pales or enclosures, but only to meddle
+with what was common and untilled, and to make it fruitful for
+the use of man. That the time will suddenly be, when all
+men shall willingly come in and give up their lands and
+estates, and submit to this community.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And for all those that will come in and work they
+should have meat, drink, and clothes, which is all that is
+necessary to the life of man; and that for money, there was
+not any need of it, nor of clothes more than to cover
+nakedness.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That they will not defend themselves by arms, but will
+submit unto authority, and wait till the promised opportunity
+be offered, which they conceive to be at hand. And that as
+their forefathers lived in tents, so it would be suitable to their
+condition now to live in the same: and more to the like effect.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg38" id="pg38"></a><span class="pagenum">38</span>
+&ldquo;While they were before the General, they stood with
+their hats on; and being demanded the reason thereof, they
+said, &lsquo;Because he was but their fellow-creature.&rsquo; Being asked
+the meaning of that place, &lsquo;Give honour to whom honour is
+due&rsquo;; they said that their mouths should be stopped that gave
+them that offence.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Whitelocke continues, &ldquo;I have set down this the more
+largely because it was the beginning of the appearance of this
+opinion; and that we might the better understand and avoid
+these weak persuasions.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The germ of Quakerism and much else is curiously visible
+here,&rdquo; is Carlyle&rsquo;s shrewd comment on the above incident.
+But as to how far this account of the views of the Diggers is
+correct, we shall leave to the judgement of those who read the
+pages that are to follow. Though we may now believe that,
+save that he placed Norman in the place of the Saxon
+Lords, William the Conqueror introduced but few innovations
+into the laws and institutions of the country, the very opposite
+was the accepted opinion in the days of Winstanley and his
+associates.<a name="fnm38_1_35" id="fnm38_1_35"></a><a href="#fn38_1_35" class="fnnum">38:1</a> It may also be well to mention here that, though
+Everard&rsquo;s name appears, and first in order, amongst those who
+signed the pamphlet, <i>The True Levellers Standard Advanced:
+or, The State of Community opened and presented to the Sons
+of Men</i>, which bears date April 26th, 1649, and to which we
+shall presently refer, it does not appear in any of the later
+<a name="pg39" id="pg39"></a><span class="pagenum">39</span>
+publications of the Diggers. Whether he died about this time
+or merely dropped out of the movement, we have not been
+able to ascertain.</p>
+
+<p>However this may be, Lord Fairfax appears to have been
+somewhat impressed by his interview, to which the Diggers
+themselves always referred in most cordial terms; for on
+his way from Guildford to London the following month,
+he visited them at their work, of which visit we take the
+following account from the pages of a contemporary and
+evidently friendly news-sheet, dated May 31st, 1649:<a name="fnm39_1_36" id="fnm39_1_36"></a><a href="#fn39_1_36" class="fnnum">39:1</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;The <span class="smcap">Speeches</span> of Lord General <span class="smcap">Fairfax</span> and the Officers of
+the Army to the Diggers at St. George&rsquo;s Hill in Surrey,
+and the Diggers&rsquo; several answers and replies thereunto.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;As his Excellency the Lord General came from Gilford to
+London, he went to view the Diggers at St. George&rsquo;s Hill in
+Surrey, with his Officers and Attendants. They found about
+twelve of them hard at work, and amongst them one
+Winstanley was the chief speaker. Several questions were
+propounded by the Officers, and the Lord General made
+a short speech by way of admonition to them, and this
+Winstanley returned sober answers, though they gave little
+satisfaction (if any at all) in regard of the strangeness of their
+action. It was urged that the Commons were as justly due
+to the Lords as any other lands. They answered that these
+were Crown Lands where they digged, and the King who
+possessed them by the Norman Conquest being dead, they
+were returned again to the Common People of England, who
+might improve them if they would take the pains; that for
+those who would come dig with them, they should have the
+benefit equal with them, and eat of their bread; but they
+would not force any, applying to all the golden rule, to do to
+others as we would be done unto. Some Officers wished they
+had no further plot in what they did, and that no more was
+intended than what they did pretend.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;As to the barrenness of the ground, which was objected as
+a discouragement, the Diggers answered they would use their
+endeavours, and leave the success to God, who had promised
+to make the barren ground fruitful. They carry themselves
+civilly and fairly in the country, and have the report of sober,
+<a name="pg40" id="pg40"></a><span class="pagenum">40</span>
+honest men. Some barley is already come up, and other
+fruits formerly; but was pulled up by some of the envious
+inhabitants thereabouts, who are not so far convinced as
+to promise not to injure them for the future. The ground
+will probably in a short time yield them some fruit of their
+labour, how contemptible soever they do yet appear to be.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Before following the further adventures of the Diggers, as
+revealed in the numerous pamphlets they left us, from which
+alone they can now be gathered, we deem it best to lay before
+our readers what we have been able to ascertain of Gerrard
+Winstanley&rsquo;s previous life&rsquo;s history and writings. Behind
+every movement that has ever influenced the thoughts of
+mankind, there is always some master-mind, a Lautze, a
+Gautama, a Jesus of Nazareth, a Wiclif, a John Wesley, a
+Darwin, a Tolstoy, or a Henry George; and it is in the
+comparatively unknown Gerrard Winstanley that we shall
+find the master-mind, the inspirer and director, of the Digger
+Movement. As Gardiner well says, &ldquo;It is not only by the
+immediate accomplishment of its aim that the value of honest
+endeavour is to be tested.&rdquo; And the reader&rsquo;s interest in our
+work may be quickened if we so far forestall the pages that
+are to follow as to indicate that not only were Winstanley&rsquo;s
+earlier theological writings the source whence the early
+Quakers, or the Children of Light, as they at first called
+themselves, drew many of their most characteristic tenets and
+doctrines, but that the fundamental principles which inspired
+and animated his political writings were in all respects
+identical with those that during the past quarter of a century
+have been so honourably associated with the name of Henry
+George. We are not here called upon to pronounce judgement
+on these principles; but in passing we shall endeavour to
+point out how far the demands and doctrines of the Land
+Reformers of the Seventeenth Century, as revealed in
+Winstanley&rsquo;s writings, coincide with those of their successors
+in the Twentieth Century. In all cases we shall, as far as
+possible, let Gerrard Winstanley speak for himself.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn34_1_30" id="fn34_1_30"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm34_1_30">34:1</a></span>
+<i>Clarke Papers</i>, vol. ii. p. 209. Bulstrode Whitelocke, then already
+a member of the Council of State, in his <i>Memorial of English Affairs</i>
+(p. 396), under date April 17th, 1649, has an entry referring to and
+summarising this letter.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn34_2_31" id="fn34_2_31"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm34_2_31">34:2</a></span>
+That is to say, a week last Sunday, or last Sunday week.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn35_1_32" id="fn35_1_32"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm35_1_32">35:1</a></span>
+<i>Loc. cit.</i> vol. ii. p. 210.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn36_1_33" id="fn36_1_33"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm36_1_33">36:1</a></span>
+<i>Loc. cit.</i> vol. ii. pp. 211-212.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn37_1_34" id="fn37_1_34"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm37_1_34">37:1</a></span>
+P. 397.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn38_1_35" id="fn38_1_35"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm38_1_35">38:1</a></span>
+A glance at the titles of John Hare&rsquo;s well-known pamphlets, the
+work of a learned, prosaic, diffuse, moderate, and loyal writer, suffices to
+show how widespread this jealousy and impatience of what he terms
+Normanism was. One runs as follows:&mdash;&ldquo;<i>St. Edwards Ghost or Anti
+Normanism</i>: Being a pathetical Complaint and Motion, in the behalf
+of our English Nation, against the grand yet neglected grievance
+Normanism.&rdquo; Another, &ldquo;<i><a name="cm3" id="cm3"></a><a href="#corr3" class="correction" title="Original has no opening double quotation mark">Englands</a> Proper and Only Way to an Establishment
+in Honor, Freedom, Peace and Happiness</i>: Or the Norman Yoke
+once more uncased, and the Necessity, Justice, and Present Seasonableness
+of breaking it in pieces demonstrated, in Eight most plain and true
+Propositions, with their proofs.&rdquo; The pamphlets are interesting only as
+showing the prevalence of the idea that the dishonour of the English
+Nation, and the slavery and impoverishment of the masses of the English
+people, were due to Norman Laws and institutions introduced by William
+the Conqueror.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn39_1_36" id="fn39_1_36"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm39_1_36">39:1</a></span>
+British Museum, Press Mark, E. 530.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg41" id="pg41"></a><span class="pagenum">41</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V<br /><br />
+GERRARD WINSTANLEY</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot chaphead">
+<p>&ldquo;Your word-divinity darkens knowledge. You talk of a body of
+Divinity, and of Anatomysing Divinity. O fine language! But when it
+comes to trial, it is but a husk without the kernel, words without life.
+The Spirit is in the hearts of the people whom you despise and tread
+under foot.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Winstanley</span>, <i>The New Law of Righteousness (1649)</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Gerrard Winstanley, whose strange entry on the stately
+stage of English History we have recorded in the previous
+chapter, was born at Wigan in the County of Lancashire, on
+October 10th, 1609.<a name="fnm41_1_37" id="fnm41_1_37"></a><a href="#fn41_1_37" class="fnnum">41:1</a> He was, therefore, some ten years younger
+than his great contemporary Oliver Cromwell (born 1599), one
+year the junior of the immortal Milton (born 1608), and some
+fifteen years older than George Fox (born 1624). Of his
+earlier years we know nothing; but, to judge from many
+passages in his writings, he appears to have received a good
+middle-class education, and to have been brought up a dutiful
+follower of the Church as by law established. When arrived
+at man&rsquo;s estate, he settled as a small trader in London, of
+which City he probably became a freeman; for in a pamphlet
+addressed to the City of London,<a name="fnm41_2_38" id="fnm41_2_38"></a><a href="#fn41_2_38" class="fnnum">41:2</a> he claims to be &ldquo;one of thy
+sons by freedom.&rdquo; He then goes on to relate how, &ldquo;by thy
+<a name="pg42" id="pg42"></a><span class="pagenum">42</span>
+cheating sons in the thieving art of buying and selling, and by
+the burdens of and for the soldiery in the beginning of the
+war,&rdquo; he &ldquo;had been beaten out of both estate and trade,&rdquo; and
+had been forced &ldquo;to accept of the good-will of friends, crediting
+of me, to live a country life.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Those who have passed through a similar experience, who
+have been driven from the comparatively comfortable middle-class
+life to the precarious and comfortless existence of the
+vast majority of the toiling masses, will readily realise that
+under such circumstances Winstanley&rsquo;s mind would naturally
+be full of questionings such as might not have forced themselves
+on his attention under more prosperous conditions.
+What was the aim and object of that incessant struggle out of
+which he had just emerged &ldquo;beaten out of both estate and
+trade&rdquo;? What made it necessary? who really benefited by
+it? For whose benefit was the war being waged, the burden
+of which had fallen so heavily upon him? How was it going
+to advantage the masses of the people? Was it ever intended
+that it should benefit them? was it possible that it should
+do so? Could any such struggle be a means of delivering
+the great masses of the people, &ldquo;the younger brothers,&rdquo; out
+of the straits of poverty, with its attendant train of ignorance,
+misery, vice, and crime, to which they had hitherto been ruthlessly
+and hopelessly condemned? Was it, in truth, inevitable,
+was it inherent in the very nature of things, was it God&rsquo;s intention
+that a privileged few, &ldquo;the elder brothers,&rdquo; should be
+lords and masters, and that the great majority of mankind
+should for ever remain the mere hewers of wood and drawers
+of water, the slaves and servants of an insignificant minority
+of their fellow-creatures? Were these things due to natural
+causes, to the inscrutable workings of a Divine Providence; or
+were they but the necessary though unforeseen fruits of mere
+man-made laws and institutions the existing generation had
+inherited from a by-gone and ignorant past? Such were the
+questions which vaguely and indistinctly may have passed,
+and, as we shall see, did pass, through the active, original,
+philosophic and deeply religious mind of Winstanley in the
+quiet solitude of his country life.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg43" id="pg43"></a><span class="pagenum">43</span>
+His life had drifted from its accustomed moorings; his
+troubles were greater than he could bear; and when he turned
+to Religion for guidance and consolation, alas! he found that
+the teachings he had imbibed in his childhood, and never
+questioned in his manhood, now failed him in his hour of need.
+Foiled, though not beaten, he turned to the pages of the Holy
+Scriptures themselves for guidance and information, for consolation
+and revelation. In these inspired writings, if anywhere,
+there surely must be found some expression, some
+revelation, of God&rsquo;s intentions towards His children, some
+indication of His holy will, which, if men would wholly follow,
+would lead them down the path of righteousness to happiness
+and peace. And it was from these pages that Winstanley
+derived those religious and political convictions that find such
+eloquent and forcible expression in his writings, and which he
+made such heroic efforts to proclaim by word and deed to his
+fellow-men.</p>
+
+<p>What seems to us to give a special charm to the study of
+Winstanley&rsquo;s writings is that they reveal the gradual development
+of his acute and powerful mind. His earlier pamphlets
+betray the influence of the mysticism so prevalent in his days;
+his last utterance on theological questions, as we shall see,
+might have been penned by an advanced thinker of the present
+day, imbued with modern scientific views, and recognising the
+necessary relation and co-ordination of all the physical and
+psychical phenomena of the universe, &ldquo;of the several bodies
+of the stars and planets in the heavens above, and the several
+bodies of the earth below, as plants, grass, fishes, beasts, birds,
+and mankind.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As to how far Winstanley owes the views that find expression
+in his earlier pamphlets&mdash;which deal exclusively with
+cosmological or theological speculations&mdash;to others, or to the
+writings of earlier mystics, we have no means of knowing.<a name="fnm43_1_39" id="fnm43_1_39"></a><a href="#fn43_1_39" class="fnnum">43:1</a>
+From them we gather, however, that he had learned or had
+<a name="pg44" id="pg44"></a><span class="pagenum">44</span>
+come to regard the whole Biblical narrative as an allegory,
+of which he gives a most poetical interpretation. The
+Creation is mankind. The Garden of Eden is the mind of
+man, which he describes as originally filled with herbs and
+pleasant plants, &ldquo;as love, joy, peace, humility, delight, and
+purity of life.&rdquo; The serpent he holds to be self-love, the
+forbidden fruit to be &ldquo;selfishness,&rdquo; following the promptings
+of which &ldquo;the whole garden becomes a stinking dunghill of
+weeds, and brings forth nothing but pride, envy, discontent,
+disobedience, and the whole actings of the spirit and power of
+darkness.&rdquo; And he argues that&mdash;&ldquo;If the creature should be
+honored in this condition, then God would be dishonored,
+because his command would be broken.... And if the
+creature were utterly lost ... then likewise God would suffer
+dishonor, because his work would be spoiled.&rdquo; Hence he
+maintains that &ldquo;the curse that was declared to Adam was
+temporary,&rdquo; and that eventually the whole creation, the whole
+of mankind, shall be saved, and &ldquo;the work of God shall be
+restored from this lost, dead, weedy and enslaved condition.&rdquo;<a name="fnm44_1_40" id="fnm44_1_40"></a><a href="#fn44_1_40" class="fnnum">44:1</a></p>
+
+<p>Winstanley, however, regarded the word &ldquo;God&rdquo; as too
+vague satisfactorily to denote the supreme spiritual power
+which pervades, upholds and governs the whole universe. He
+had, he tells us, &ldquo;been held in darkness by that word, as I
+see many people are.&rdquo;<a name="fnm44_2_41" id="fnm44_2_41"></a><a href="#fn44_2_41" class="fnnum">44:2</a> And so that neither he nor others
+should &ldquo;rest longer upon words without knowledge, but
+hereafter may look upon that spiritual power, and know what
+it is that rules them, which doth rule in and over all,&rdquo;
+he felt himself impelled to conceive of and to refer to this
+spiritual power, which is God, as &ldquo;Reason.&rdquo; He contends
+that &ldquo;though men may esteem the word Reason to be
+too mean a name to set forth the Father by, yet it is the
+highest name that can be given to Him. For it is Reason
+that made all things; and it is Reason that governs the
+<a name="pg45" id="pg45"></a><span class="pagenum">45</span>
+whole Creation. If flesh were but subject thereunto, that is,
+to the Spirit of Reason within itself, it would never act
+unrighteously.... For this Spirit of Reason is not without
+a man, but within every man; hence he need not run after
+others to tell him or to teach him; for this Spirit is his
+maker, he dwells in him, and if the flesh were subject thereunto,
+he would daily find teaching therefrom, though he
+dwelt alone and saw the face of no other man.&rdquo;<a name="fnm45_1_42" id="fnm45_1_42"></a><a href="#fn45_1_42" class="fnnum">45:1</a> &ldquo;This is
+the Spirit, or Father, which as he made the Globe and every
+creature, so he dwells in every creature, but supremely in
+man. He it is by whom everyone lives, and moves, and hath
+his being. Perfect man is the eye and face that sees and
+declares the Father: and he is perfect when he is taken up
+in the Spirit and lives in the light of Reason.&rdquo;<a href="#fn45_1_42" class="fnnum">45:1</a> &ldquo;Reason is
+that living Power of Light that is in all things. It is the
+salt that savours all things. It is the fire that burns up
+dross, and so restores what is corrupted, and preserves what
+is pure. He is the Lord our Righteousness. It lies in the
+bottom of love, of justice, of wisdom: for if the Spirit
+Reason did not uphold and moderate these, they would be
+madness; nay, they could not be called by their names,
+for Reason guides them in order and leads them to their
+right end, which is not to preserve a part, but the whole
+Creation.&rdquo;<a name="fnm45_2_43" id="fnm45_2_43"></a><a href="#fn45_2_43" class="fnnum">45:2</a></p>
+
+<p>The reason of man, Winstanley regarded but as an
+emanation of the Divine Spirit Reason, as the one true
+Inward Light, which if men would only and wholly follow
+would lead them to live in peace and harmony, and in accordance
+with the Divine Spirit. &ldquo;Man&rsquo;s reasoning,&rdquo; he says,<a href="#fn45_2_43" class="fnnum">45:2</a>
+&ldquo;is a creature which flows from that Spirit to this end, to
+draw up man into himself. It is but a candle lighted by
+that soul, and this light, shining through flesh, is darkened
+by the imagination of the flesh. So that many times men
+act contrary to reason, though they think they act according
+to Reason.... The Spirit Reason, which I call God, the
+Maker and Ruler of all things, is that spiritual power that
+<a name="pg46" id="pg46"></a><span class="pagenum">46</span>
+guides all men&rsquo;s reasoning in right order, and to a right end
+... and knite every creature together into a oneness, making
+every creature to be an upholder of his fellows; and so
+everyone is an assistant to preserve the whole. And the
+nearer man&rsquo;s reasoning comes to this, the more spiritual
+they are; the further off they be, the more selfish and fleshy
+they be.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Winstanley took care to point out,<a name="fnm46_1_44" id="fnm46_1_44"></a><a href="#fn46_1_44" class="fnnum">46:1</a> however, that &ldquo;this
+word Reason is not the alone name of this spiritual power;
+but everyone may give him a name according to that
+spiritual power that they feel and see rules in them, carrying
+them forth in actions to preserve their fellow-creatures as
+well as themselves. Therefore some may call him King of
+Righteousness, or Prince of Peace; some may call him Love,
+and the like. But I can and I do call him Reason, because I
+see him to be that living, powerful light that is in righteousness,
+making righteousness to be righteousness, or justice to be
+justice, or love to be love. For without this moderator and
+ruler they would be madness; nay, the self-willedness of the
+flesh, and not what we call them.&rdquo;<a href="#fn46_1_44" class="fnnum">46:1</a></p>
+
+<p>But, he warns his readers,<a name="fnm46_2_45" id="fnm46_2_45"></a><a href="#fn46_2_45" class="fnnum">46:2</a> &ldquo;truly let me tell you, that
+you cannot say the Spirit, Reason, is your God, till you see
+and feel by experience that the Spirit doth govern your
+flesh. For if Envy be the Lord that rules your flesh, if Pride
+and Covetousness rule your flesh, then is Envy, Covetousness,
+or Pride your God. If you fear man so greatly that you
+dare not do righteously for fear of angering men, then slavish
+fear is your God. If rash anger govern your flesh, then is
+anger your God. Therefore deceive not yourselves, but let
+Reason work within you; and examine and see what your
+flesh is subject to. For whatever doth govern in you, that
+is your God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Winstanley&rsquo;s characteristic theological doctrines were, then,
+the realisation of the function and importance of the Inward
+Light, of Reason, which he regarded as the necessary and all-sufficient
+guide for human conduct; his keen appreciation of
+silence as the necessary precursor of all real prayer, if not as
+<a name="pg47" id="pg47"></a><span class="pagenum">47</span>
+in itself a form of worship; and his intense conviction of the
+ultimate salvation of the whole of mankind. To Winstanley,
+Reason is the Ruling Spirit of the whole Creation, is God, the
+Spirit of Righteousness, who is ever seated within the hearts
+of men combating the lusts of the flesh, the promptings of
+the brute animal nature of mankind. Disobedient man may
+know him not, because covetous flesh, the promptings of
+self-love, hath deceived him, and &ldquo;so he looks abroad for a
+God, and so doth imagine or fancy a God in some particular
+place of glory beyond the skies; or else, if men do look for a
+God within them, yet are they led by the notions of King
+Flesh, and not of King Spirit.&rdquo;<a name="fnm47_1_46" id="fnm47_1_46"></a><a href="#fn47_1_46" class="fnnum">47:1</a> Reason, in short, is the spark
+of the Divine in man, the Spirit of Light that dwells within
+and may rule the mind and actions of every man. Conscience
+is but the promptings of Reason, inspiring men to right action,
+to deal justly and brotherly and to live in peaceful and
+harmonious association with their fellows. Self-love, covetousness,
+the desire of the flesh, is ever the enemy of Reason.
+And life is but a continuous struggle between these two powers
+for dominion in the Creation, over the hearts and actions of
+mankind. Self-love ruling the hearts of man, is the Adam that
+causes him to sin, not the crime of the man Adam who lived
+so many thousand years ago. And similarly it is the ruling of
+the spirit of Jesus Christ, the Inward Light, within the hearts
+of man, not the sufferings of a man Christ Jesus, which is the
+essential condition of individual and social salvation. &ldquo;This
+is the lightning that shall spread from East to West. This is
+the Kingdom of Heaven within you, dwelling and ruling in
+your flesh. Therefore learn to know Jesus Christ as the
+Father knows him; that is, not after the flesh; but know that
+the Spirit within the flesh is that mighty man Christ Jesus.
+He within governs the flesh; he within laid down the flesh,
+when he was said to die; he within is to arise, not at a distance
+from man, but he will rise up in men, and manifest himself to
+be the light and life of every man and woman that is saved
+by him.&rdquo;<a name="fnm47_2_47" id="fnm47_2_47"></a><a href="#fn47_2_47" class="fnnum">47:2</a> By following the desires of the flesh, the promptings
+<a name="pg48" id="pg48"></a><span class="pagenum">48</span>
+of selfish covetousness, we can never gain true happiness,
+which is Heaven, for the voice of Reason within us, of our
+conscience, or the Inward Light illumining the inner darkness,
+will <a name="cm4" id="cm4"></a><a href="#corr4" class="correction" title="Original reads 'upraid'">upbraid</a> us and cast us into Hell within us. True happiness,
+complete satisfaction, which is Heaven, can only be
+gained by following the dictates of Reason, by following the
+promptings of the Inward Light. Thus to Winstanley, as to
+Tolstoy, the Kingdom of Heaven, as well as the kingdom of
+hell, is within men&rsquo;s minds, and &ldquo;there is no other.&rdquo;<a name="fnm48_1_48" id="fnm48_1_48"></a><a href="#fn48_1_48" class="fnnum">48:1</a> Everything
+that happens, however, is ordained, or rather permitted,
+by God the Father, &ldquo;the Ruling Spirit of the Whole Creation,&rdquo;
+for His own ends. He controls the Spirits or Powers we call
+evil, as well as those we call good: all work in accordance
+with His commands, to further His ends. In Winstanley&rsquo;s
+philosophy, unlike that of Luther, there was no room for an
+independent Devil. Though in our blindness we may attribute
+our sufferings to such a personage, yet whatever happens to a
+man is somehow or other for his own good, though in an
+unregenerate state we may not realise this. All suffering, in
+truth, does but tend to purify the soul from the lust of the
+<a name="pg49" id="pg49"></a><span class="pagenum">49</span>
+flesh, to enable the Inward Light to overcome the inward
+darkness, to enable Reason to overcome Self-Love, good to
+overcome evil: and thus to lead men to God. In the end, in
+the day of Judgement, the good will triumph, Reason will cast
+out Covetousness, Universal Love will cast out Self Love,
+meekness will cast out pride, righteousness will cast out
+unrighteousness: and all men made perfect by the Inward
+Light, the Spirit of Christ within them, will rejoice in the
+knowledge and glory of God.</p>
+
+<p>It is almost impossible to read Winstanley&rsquo;s earlier theological
+pamphlets without being struck by the similarity in
+thought and doctrine with those to-day still held by the
+Society of Friends, or Quakers, whose original name amongst
+themselves, be it remembered, was the Children of Light.
+And it is interesting to note that during the seventeenth and
+eighteenth centuries the opponents of the Quakers repeatedly
+taunted them with being disciples of Winstanley the
+Leveller.<a name="fnm49_1_49" id="fnm49_1_49"></a><a href="#fn49_1_49" class="fnnum">49:1</a>
+Thus the Right Reverend Thomas Coomber, Dean of Durham,
+in a pamphlet significantly entitled <i>Christianity no Enthusiasm:
+Or the several kinds of inspiration and Revelation
+pretended to by the Quakers tried and found destructive
+to Holy Scripture and True Religion</i>, published in 1678,
+wrote as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;First for their original, it may seem more difficult to
+discover, where Sects are not called after their Founder, but
+after some property, etc., it may be harder to trace them to
+their head. In 1652 their beginning is supposed, and then
+abouts they were so called and known. John Whitehead
+fixes it in the year 1648;<a name="fnm49_2_50" id="fnm49_2_50"></a><a href="#fn49_2_50" class="fnnum">49:2</a> and Hubberthorne in 1660 told the
+King that they were then twelve years standing.<a name="fnm49_3_51" id="fnm49_3_51"></a><a href="#fn49_3_51" class="fnnum">49:3</a> In that
+<a name="pg50" id="pg50"></a><span class="pagenum">50</span> black year to these kingdoms (1648) their pretended light
+appeared.<a name="fnm50_1_52" id="fnm50_1_52"></a><a href="#fn50_1_52" class="fnnum">50:1</a> ... But the very draughts and even body of
+Quakerism are to be found in the several works of Gerrard
+Winstanley, a zealous Leveller, wherein he tells us of the arising
+of new times and dispensations, and challengeth Revelation
+very much for what he writ.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Coomber proceeds to quote from every one of Winstanley&rsquo;s
+theological pamphlets, and then continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;That these are the Quaker principles is well enough
+known, allowing for some little alterations, as few Sect-Masters
+but have their doctrines varied by their Proselytes.... Now,
+considering these opinions, the year, the country<a name="fnm50_2_53" id="fnm50_2_53"></a><a href="#fn50_2_53" class="fnnum">50:2</a> (as <i>The
+Mystery of God</i> is dedicated to his &ldquo;beloved countrymen of
+the County of Lancaster&rdquo;), the printer Giles Calvert, and that
+several Levellers settled into Quakers, we incline to take them
+for Winstanley&rsquo;s Disciples and a branch of the Levellers.
+And what this man writes of&mdash;levelling men&rsquo;s estates, of
+taking in of Commons, that none should have more ground
+<a name="pg51" id="pg51"></a><span class="pagenum">51</span>
+than he was able to till and husband by his labour&mdash;proving
+unpracticable by reason of so many tough old laws which had
+fixed propriety; yet it is pursued by the Quakers as much as
+they well can, in thouing everybody, in denying Titles, Civil
+Respects, and terms of distinction among men, and at first
+they were for Community.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>If Winstanley&rsquo;s writings be really the source whence
+the early Quakers, the Children of Light, drew their most
+characteristic tenets and doctrines, as we ourselves do not
+doubt, then surely his noble ambition has been satisfied: for
+through them he has, indeed, influenced the thought of his
+country, the thought of the whole world, which owes more
+than we even yet realise to their pure and altruistic teachings.
+However, leaving this most interesting question to be decided
+by our readers, each for himself, we shall now place the chief
+contents of these writings before them, using as far as possible
+Winstanley&rsquo;s own words.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn41_1_37" id="fn41_1_37"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm41_1_37">41:1</a></span>
+Both Gerrard and Winstanley are common names in that part of
+Lancashire which lies between Wigan and Liverpool. In the Wigan
+Parish Register there is an entry under the above date&mdash;&ldquo;Gerrard
+Winstanlie, son of Edward Winstanlie.&rdquo; The first pamphlet he wrote,
+<i>The Mystery of God concerning the whole Creation</i>, is dedicated &ldquo;To my beloved
+countrymen of the County of Lancaster.&rdquo; In his time the term
+&ldquo;countrymen&rdquo; had a more contracted meaning than now, and implied a
+common nativity of a Shire or Parish: indeed it still has this meaning in
+some parts of Cheshire.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn41_2_38" id="fn41_2_38"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm41_2_38">41:2</a></span>
+<i>A Watchword to the City of London.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn43_1_39" id="fn43_1_39"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm43_1_39">43:1</a></span>
+Between the years 1644-1662 the works of the German mystic
+Jakob Boehme were translated into English. All Winstanley&rsquo;s theological
+pamphlets were published in the year 1648-1649, to which year the
+origin of the Quaker doctrines is generally attributed.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn44_1_40" id="fn44_1_40"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm44_1_40">44:1</a></span>
+See <i>The Mystery of God concerning the whole Creation, Mankind</i>.
+British Museum, Press Mark, 4377, a. 1. The whole pamphlet consists of
+some 69 closely printed pages.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn44_2_41" id="fn44_2_41"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm44_2_41">44:2</a></span>
+<i>Truth lifting up its Head above Scandals.</i> British Museum, Press
+Mark, 4372, a.a. 17.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn45_1_42" id="fn45_1_42"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm45_1_42">45:1</a></span>
+<i>The Saint&rsquo;s Paradise.</i> British Museum, Press Mark, E. 2137.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn45_2_43" id="fn45_2_43"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm45_2_43">45:2</a></span>
+<i>Truth lifting up its Head above Scandals.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn46_1_44" id="fn46_1_44"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm46_1_44">46:1</a></span>
+<i>Truth lifting up its Head above Scandals.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn46_2_45" id="fn46_2_45"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm46_2_45">46:2</a></span>
+<i>The Saint&rsquo;s Paradise.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn47_1_46" id="fn47_1_46"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm47_1_46">47:1</a></span>
+<i>The Saint&rsquo;s Paradise.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn47_2_47" id="fn47_2_47"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm47_2_47">47:2</a></span>
+&ldquo;That which the people called Quakers lay down as a main fundamental
+in religion, is this, that God, through Christ, hath placed a
+principle in every man, to inform him of his duty, and to enable him to
+do it; and that those who live up to this principle, are the people of
+God; and that those who live in disobedience to it, are not God&rsquo;s people,
+whatever name they bear, or profession they may make of religion.... By
+this principle they understand something that is Divine, and though in
+man, not of man, but of God; it came from Him and leads to Him all
+those who will be led by it ... it is the spirit given to every man to
+profit withal.&rdquo;&mdash;William Penn, <i>Primitive Christianity Revived</i> (1696).
+Quoted from J. S. Rowntree&rsquo;s <i>The Society of Friends; its Faith and
+Practice</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn48_1_48" id="fn48_1_48"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm48_1_48">48:1</a></span>
+Speaking of the early Quakers, Cotton Mather, after attributing the
+origin of this sect &ldquo;to some fanatics here in our town of Salem,&rdquo; describes
+the principles of &ldquo;the old Foxian Quakerism&rdquo; as follows: &ldquo;There
+is in every man a certain excusing and condemning <i>principle</i>, which
+indeed is nothing but some <i>remainder</i> of the Divine Image left by the
+compassion of God upon the conscience of man after his fall.... They
+scoffed at our imagined God beyond the stars.&rdquo; He also contends that
+&ldquo;the new turn such ingenuous men as Mr. Penn&rdquo; had given to Quakerism,
+had made of it &ldquo;quite a new thing.&rdquo; See his <i>History of New England</i>,
+book vii. chap. iv.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn49_1_49" id="fn49_1_49"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm49_1_49">49:1</a></span>
+The Rev. Thos. Bennet, on p. 4 of <i>An Answer to the Dissenters&rsquo;
+Pleas for Separation</i>, published in 1711, referring to the origin of the
+various sorts of dissenters, speaks of the time &ldquo;when Winstanley
+published the principles of Quakerism, and enthusiasm broke out.&rdquo; In a
+footnote he mentions <i>The Saint&rsquo;s Paradise</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn49_2_50" id="fn49_2_50"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm49_2_50">49:2</a></span>
+Gerard Croese in <i>The General History of the Quakers</i>, published 1696,
+says, &ldquo;The Quakers themselves date their first rise from the forty-ninth
+year of the present century.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn49_3_51" id="fn49_3_51"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm49_3_51">49:3</a></span>
+See <i>An account of what passed between the King and Richard Hubberthorne,
+after the delivery of George Fox his letter to the King</i>, which is to
+be found amongst Thomasson&rsquo;s Pamphlets, British Museum.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn50_1_52" id="fn50_1_52"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm50_1_52">50:1</a></span>
+As our readers will notice, all Winstanley&rsquo;s theological writings were
+written and published in 1648-1649. The Preface to <i>Truth Lifting up its
+Head above Scandals</i> is dated October 16th, 1648; <i>The Saint&rsquo;s Paradise</i>
+bears no date, but was certainly written before <i>The New Law of Righteousness</i>,
+the Preface to which is dated January 26th, 1648 (1649). (At that
+time the New Year commenced on March 26th.)</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn50_2_53" id="fn50_2_53"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm50_2_53">50:2</a></span>
+Coomber had already pointed out that Quakerism arose in the North
+of England, and mainly in Winstanley&rsquo;s native county of Lancashire.
+His reference to Giles Calvert, the printer, is also most suggestive; for
+Calvert published almost all Winstanley&rsquo;s pamphlets, and later was one
+of the first authorised publishers of the official publications of the
+Society of Friends. Calvert&rsquo;s establishment seems to have been the
+source, as well as the depository, of much of the advanced literature of
+his times. In his <i>Protest against Toleration of Printing Pamphlets against
+Non-Conformists</i>, Baxter refers to it as follows: &ldquo;Let all the Apothecaries
+of London have liberty to keep open shop. But O do not under
+that pretence let a man keep an open shop of poisons for all that
+will destroy themselves freely, as Giles Calvert doth for Soul-poisons.&rdquo;
+Calvert was suspected of having provided the funds for one of the later
+risings of the Fifth Monarchy Men. He subsequently joined the
+Quakers.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg52" id="pg52"></a><span class="pagenum">52</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI<br /><br />
+WINSTANLEY&rsquo;S EXPOSITION OF THE QUAKER
+DOCTRINES (1648-1649)</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot chaphead">
+<p>&ldquo;There is nothing more sweet and satisfactory to a man than this, to
+know and feel that spiritual power of righteousness to rule in him which
+he calls God.... Wait upon the Lord for teaching. You will never
+have rest in your soul till He speaks in you. Run after men for teaching,
+follow your forms with strictness, you will still be at a loss, and be more
+and more wrapped up in confusion and sorrow of heart. But when once
+your heart is made subject to Christ, the Law of Righteousness, looking
+up to Him for instruction, waiting with a meek and quiet spirit till He
+appear in you: then you shall have peace; then you shall know the truth,
+and the truth shall make you free.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>The New Law of Righteousness</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p><i>The Mystery of God concerning the whole Creation, Mankind</i>,
+is the title of Winstanley&rsquo;s first published pamphlet, to
+which we have already referred, and which was written early
+in the year 1648, probably in April or May. As already
+mentioned, it opens with a Dedicatory Epistle to &ldquo;My
+beloved countrymen of the County of Lancaster,&rdquo; in which he
+first apologises for venturing into print in the following
+suggestive words: &ldquo;Dear countrymen, when some of you see
+my name subscribed to this ensuing discourse, you may wonder
+at it, and it may be despise me in your hearts ... but know
+that God&rsquo;s works are not like men&rsquo;s; He does not always
+take the wise, the learned, the rich of the world to manifest
+Himself in, and through them to others, but He chooses the
+despised, the unlearned, the poor, the nothings of the world,
+and fills them with the good tidings of Himself, whereas He
+sends the others empty away.&rdquo; He further apprehends that
+his view, that &ldquo;the curse that was declared to Adam was
+temporary,&rdquo; and that ultimately the curse shall be removed off
+<a name="pg53" id="pg53"></a><span class="pagenum">53</span>
+the whole Creation, and the whole of mankind shall be saved,
+will not be favourably received by those whom he is specially
+addressing. But he avows it a necessary truth, and concludes
+his appeal by saying that since the pamphlet was written he
+had met with &ldquo;more Scripture to confirm it, so that it is not
+a spirit of private fancy, but it is agreeable to the Written
+Word.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The pamphlet opens with Winstanley&rsquo;s interpretation of
+the story of the fall of Adam, the outline of which we have
+already given. Subsequently he describes his own experiences:
+how he lay under bondage to the serpent self-love,
+and saw not his bondage; how God had manifested His love
+to him by causing him to see that the things in which he did
+take pleasure were, in truth, his death and his shame. He
+again repeats his contention that in due time God will not
+lose any of His work, but redeem &ldquo;His own whole Creation
+to Himself.&rdquo; Though this, he holds, will not be done all at
+once, but in several dispensations, &ldquo;some whereof are passed,
+some in being, and some yet to come.&rdquo; He quotes largely
+from the Scriptures, more especially from Revelation, in
+support of this view; and argues most vehemently against
+the objection that if this were true, if eventually all will be
+saved, then men need not trouble about their own individual
+salvation. He also protests against the doctrine of an everlasting
+Hell, as unconfirmed by the Holy Scriptures, as
+destructive of God&rsquo;s work, and as incompatible with His
+great goodness.</p>
+
+<p>The prevalence of the belief in dispensations, past, present,
+and future, may be gathered from the following extract from
+one of Cromwell&rsquo;s speeches to the Army Council, November
+1st, 1647: &ldquo;Truly, as Lieut. Col. Goffe said, God hath in several
+ages used several dispensations, and yet some dispensations
+more eminently in one age than another. I am one of those
+whose heart God hath drawn out to wait for some extraordinary
+dispensations, according to those promises He hath
+set forth of things to be accomplished in the latter time, and
+I cannot but think that God is beginning of
+them.&rdquo;<a name="fnm53_1_54" id="fnm53_1_54"></a><a href="#fn53_1_54" class="fnnum">53:1</a></p>
+
+<p><a name="pg54" id="pg54"></a><span class="pagenum">54</span>
+The same idea reappears, in fact influences the whole of
+Winstanley&rsquo;s second pamphlet, of some 127 closely printed
+duodecimo pages, as might almost be inferred from its title,
+<i>The Breaking of the Day of God</i>,<a name="fnm54_1_55" id="fnm54_1_55"></a><a href="#fn54_1_55" class="fnnum">54:1</a> which is in itself a
+revelation of its main contents. The Dedicatory Epistle,
+which is dated May 20th, 1648, some twelve months prior to
+the outbreak of the Digger Movement, already recorded, is
+the most interesting and suggestive portion of this long,
+wearisome, and almost unreadable volume. It is addressed
+to&mdash;&ldquo;The Despised Sons and Daughters of Zion, scattered up
+and down the Kingdom of England.&rdquo; He first reminds them
+that &ldquo;they are the object of the world&rsquo;s hatred and reproach,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;branded as wicked ones,&rdquo; &ldquo;threatened with ruin and death,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;the object of every one&rsquo;s laughter and reproach,&rdquo; &ldquo;sentenced
+to be put to death under the name of round-heads,&rdquo; and so on.
+That they &ldquo;are counted the troublers of Kingdoms and Parishes
+where they dwell, though the truth is that they are the only
+peaceable men in the Kingdom, who love the People&rsquo;s peace,
+the Magistrate&rsquo;s peace, and the Kingdom&rsquo;s peace.&rdquo; He
+continues&mdash;&ldquo;But what&rsquo;s the reason the world doth so storm
+at you, but because you are not of this world, nor cannot walk
+in the dark ways of the world. They hated your Lord Jesus
+Christ, and they hate you. They knew not Him, and they
+know not you. For if they had known Him, they would not
+have crucified Him; and if they did truly know the power of
+the God that dwells in you, they would not so despise you.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;But, well,&rdquo; he goes on to say, &ldquo;these things must be. It is
+your Father&rsquo;s will that it shall be so; the world must lie
+under darkness for a time; that is God&rsquo;s dispensation to them.
+And you that are the Children of Light must lie under the
+reproach and oppression of the
+world;<a name="fnm54_2_56" id="fnm54_2_56"></a><a href="#fn54_2_56" class="fnnum">54:2</a> that is God&rsquo;s dispensation
+to you. But it shall be but for a little time. What I have
+here to say is to bring you glad tidings that your redemption
+draws near.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg55" id="pg55"></a><span class="pagenum">55</span>
+In the pamphlet itself Winstanley attempts to prove that
+the coming reign of Righteousness, and the overthrow of the
+Covetous, Self-Seeking Power, are entirely in accordance with
+the prophesies of the Scriptures, more especially with
+Revelation and John. In its final pages he vehemently
+protests against the continued union of Church and State, or
+rather against the continued upholding of the persecuting
+power of the Church by the secular authorities. &ldquo;The misery
+of the age&rdquo; he attributes to the fact that men are still striving
+&ldquo;to uphold the usurped Ecclesiastical Power, which God never
+made,&rdquo; and that in upholding this they are &ldquo;so mad and
+ignorant&rdquo; as &ldquo;to count Magistracie no government unless the
+Beast reign cheek by chaw with it, as formerly in the days of
+ignorance.&rdquo; This, however, he contends, should not be so, &ldquo;for
+Magistracie in the Commonwealth must stand, it&rsquo;s God&rsquo;s
+ordinance. But this Ecclesiastical power in and over the
+Saints must fall.&rdquo; &ldquo;This Ecclesiastical power,&rdquo; he contends,
+&ldquo;hath been a great troubler of Magistracie ever since the
+deceived Magistracie set it up.&rdquo; The function of Magistracie,
+&ldquo;which is God&rsquo;s Ordinance,&rdquo; is &ldquo;to be a terror to the wicked,
+and to protect them that do well; whereas by this Ecclesiastical
+power, established by deceived Magistracie, the sincere in heart
+that worship God in spirit and truth, according as God hath
+taught them and they understand, these are and have been
+troubled in Sessions, in Courts, and punished by fine and
+prisons. But the loose-hearted that will be of any religion
+that the most is of, these have their liberty without restraint.
+And so Magistracie hath acted quite backward, in punishing
+them that do well, and protecting in a hypocritical liberty
+them that do evil. O that our Magistrates would let Church-work
+alone to Christ, upon whose shoulders they shall find the
+government lies, and not upon theirs. And then, in the
+wisdom and strength of Christ, they would govern Commonwealths
+in justice, love, and righteousness more
+peaceably.&rdquo;<a name="fnm55_1_57" id="fnm55_1_57"></a><a href="#fn55_1_57" class="fnnum">55:1</a></p>
+
+<p><a name="pg56" id="pg56"></a><span class="pagenum">56</span>
+This pamphlet concludes with the following wise and
+beautiful thought:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;All that I shall say in conclusion is this: Wait patiently
+upon the Lord; let every man that loves God endeavour by
+the spirit of wisdom, meekness, and love to dry up Euphrates,
+even this spirit of bitterness, that like a great river hath overflowed
+the earth of mankind. For it is not revenge, prisons,
+fines, fightings, that will subdue a tumultuous spirit; but a
+soft answer, love and meekness, tenderness and justice, to do
+as we would be done unto: this will appease wrath. When
+this Sun of Righteousness and Love arises in Magistrates and
+people, one to another, then these tumultuous national storms
+will cease, and not till then. This Sun is risen in some; this
+Sun will rise higher, and must rise higher; and the bright
+shining of it will be England&rsquo;s liberty.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The next fruit of Winstanley&rsquo;s prolific pen is a volume of
+some 134 closely printed pages, entitled <i>The Saint&rsquo;s Paradise:
+Or the Father&rsquo;s Teaching the only Satisfaction to Waiting
+Souls</i>,<a name="fnm56_1_58" id="fnm56_1_58"></a><a href="#fn56_1_58" class="fnnum">56:1</a> from which in the previous chapter we have
+already quoted somewhat freely. The words on its title-page,
+&ldquo;The inward testimony is the Soul&rsquo;s strength,&rdquo; indicate
+the characteristic teachings of this remarkable book,
+which are also admirably suggested by the two biblical
+quotations that also appear thereon. &ldquo;And they shall teach
+no more every man his neighbour, and every man his brother,
+saying, Know the Lord: for they shall all know me, from the
+least of them to the greatest of them, saith the Lord&rdquo; (Jer.
+xxxi. 34). &ldquo;But the annointing which ye have received of
+him abideth in you; and ye need not that any man teach
+you: but as the same annointing teacheth you all things, and
+is truth&rdquo; (1 John ii. 27).</p>
+
+<p>As was his usual custom, Winstanley opens with a
+Dedicatory letter, addressed this time &ldquo;To my Beloved Friends
+whose Souls hunger after sincere milk,&rdquo; in which he relates
+his experience of the insufficiency of mere traditional, or book,
+or imparted knowledge, in the following words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;I myself have known nothing but what I received in
+<a name="pg57" id="pg57"></a><span class="pagenum">57</span>
+tradition from the mouths and pen of others. I worshipped
+a God, but I neither knew who he was nor where he was, so
+that I lived in the dark, being blinded by the imagination of
+my flesh.... I spoke of the name of God, and Lord, and
+Christ, but I knew not this Lord, God, and Christ. I prayed
+to a God, but I knew not where he was nor what he was, and
+so walking by imagination I worshipped the devil, and called
+him God. By reason whereof my comforts were often shaken
+to pieces, and at last it was shown to me, that while I builded
+upon any words or writings of other men, or while I looked
+after a God without me, I did but build upon the sand, and as
+yet I knew not the Rock.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He then admonishes his friends that, though they may not
+as yet be aware of it, and though they will probably be offended
+with him for saying so, yet that, in reality, &ldquo;this ignorant,
+unsettled condition is yours at this time.&rdquo; However, he
+protests that nevertheless:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;I do not write anything as to be a teacher of you, for I
+know you have a teacher within yourselves (which is the Spirit)
+and when your flesh is made subject to him, he will teach you
+all things, and bring all things to your remembrance, so that you
+shall not need to run after men for instruction, for, your eyes
+being opened, you shall see the King of Righteousness sit upon
+the throne within yourselves, judging and condemning the
+unrighteousness of the flesh, filling your face with shame, and
+your soul with horror, though no man see or be acquainted
+with your actions or thoughts but yourselves, and justifying
+your righteous thoughts and actions, and leading you into all
+ways of truth.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then further explains that the Father, the
+Spirit of Righteousness, of Reason, pervades the whole Universe,
+and &ldquo;dwells in every creature, but supremely in man,&rdquo; and
+then continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;Truly, Friends, the King of Righteousness within you is
+a meek, patient, and quiet spirit, and full of love and sincerity....
+And when you come to know, feel, and see that the Spirit
+of Righteousness governs your flesh, then you begin to know
+your God, to fear your God, to love your God, and to walk
+<a name="pg58" id="pg58"></a><span class="pagenum">58</span>
+humbly before your God, and so to rejoice in Him. Therefore
+if you would have the peace of God, as you call it, you
+must know what God it is you serve, which is not a God
+without you, visible among bodies, but the Spirit within
+you, invisible in every body to the eye of flesh, yet discernible
+to the eye of the spirit. And when souls shall have communion
+with that spirit, then they have peace, and not till
+then.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In the first chapter Winstanley emphasises the essential
+difference between the teachings of men and the teachings of
+God in the following words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;The teachings of men and the teachings of God are much
+different. The former being but the light of the moon, which
+shines not of itself, but by the means and through the help of
+the sun. The latter is the light of the sun, which gives light
+to all, not by means and helps from others, but immediately
+from himself.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Men&rsquo;s teachings are twofold. First, when men speak to
+others what they have heard or read of the Scriptures, or books
+of other men&rsquo;s writings, and have seen nothing from God
+Himself.... Secondly, others speak from their own experience,
+of what they have heard and seen from God, and of what
+great things God hath done for their souls.... It is very
+possible that a man may attain to a literal knowledge of the
+Scriptures, of the Prophets and Apostles, and may speak largely
+of the history thereof, and yet both they that speak and they
+that hear may be not only unacquainted with, but enemies to
+that Spirit of truth by which the Prophets and Apostles
+writ.<a name="fnm58_1_59" id="fnm58_1_59"></a><a href="#fn58_1_59" class="fnnum">58:1</a> &ldquo;For it is not the Apostles&rsquo; writings, but the spirit
+that dwelt in them, that did inspire their hearts, which gives
+life and peace to all.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="pg59" id="pg59"></a><span class="pagenum">59</span>
+In the second chapter Winstanley consoles those whom he
+is specially addressing by expressing his conviction that though
+their enemies may think to kill all the Saints, and though God
+may suffer them to kill some, yet others of them will necessarily
+be preserved to keep alive their beliefs and to spread abroad
+their teachings, of the ultimate triumph of which he never
+seemed to doubt. However, in view of the perplexity of the
+times and of the dangers by which they were surrounded, he
+gave them the following somewhat worldly-wise advice&mdash;&ldquo;For
+the appearance of God now is in the Saints that they worship
+the Father in spirit and truth in such a secret manner as the
+eye of the world cannot and does not always see&rdquo;: a practice
+of which, as we have already noticed, the adherents of the
+Family of Love were accused in the reign of Queen Elizabeth.</p>
+
+<p>It is, however, in the fourth and fifth chapters that
+Winstanley concisely and eloquently summarises the fundamental
+articles of his religious faith. In them he again
+emphatically warns his fellows against looking to others for
+knowledge of Divine revelations, and strongly advises them to
+look into their own hearts. In support of this view he quotes
+the Scripture text&mdash;&ldquo;Light is come into the world, and men
+love darkness rather than light, because their deeds are evil&rdquo;
+(John iii. 19), which he then proceeds to explain as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;The world is mankind; and every particular man and
+woman is a perfect creation of himself, a perfect created
+world. If a particular branch of mankind desire to know
+what the nature of other men and women are, let him not look
+abroad, but into his own heart, and he shall see. So that I
+say, man is the world, a perfect creation, from whose poisoned
+flesh proceeds the lust of the eye, the lust of the flesh, and the
+pride of life: these are not of the Father. Now <i>light is come
+into the world</i>; that is, the Spirit of Right Understanding hath
+taken up his dwelling in this flesh. Hence man is called a
+reasonable creature, which is a name given to no other creature
+but man, because the Spirit of Reason appears acting in him,
+which if men did submit themselves unto, they would act
+righteously continually: and so man would become lord of all
+other creatures in righteousness.... But the masculine powers
+of the poisoned flesh stand it out against the King of Glory
+<a name="pg60" id="pg60"></a><span class="pagenum">60</span>
+till He cast them into the lake of fire, into His own spirit, by
+which they are tried, and, being found but chaff and not able
+to endure, are burned and consumed to nothing in the flame.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No man or woman, however, need be troubled at this,&rdquo;
+Winstanley contends, &ldquo;for let every man cleanse himself of
+these wicked powers that rule in him, and there speedily will
+be a harmony of love in the great creation, even among all
+creatures. Therefore let no man look without himself, and
+say, other men will not obey this light that is come into mankind;
+but let him look into his own heart, and he shall find
+that the powers in his heart are those very men of the world
+that will not submit to that Light of Reason that is come into
+it.&rdquo;<a name="fnm60_1_60" id="fnm60_1_60"></a><a href="#fn60_1_60" class="fnnum">60:1</a></p>
+
+<p>Winstanley then proceeds to explain his conception of the
+resurrection of Christ, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;Friends, do not mistake the resurrection of Christ. You
+expect that he shall come in one single person, as he did when
+he came to suffer and die, and thereby to answer the types of
+Moses&rsquo; Law. Let me tell you that if you look for him under the
+notion of one single man after the flesh, to be your Saviour,
+you shall never, never taste salvation by him.... If you expect
+or look for the resurrection of Jesus Christ, you must
+know that the Spirit within the flesh is the Jesus Christ, and
+you must see, feel, and know from himself his own resurrection
+within you, if you expect life and peace by him. For he is the
+Life of the World, that is, of every particular son and daughter
+of the Father ... for everyone hath the Light of the Father
+within himself, which is the mighty man Christ Jesus. And
+he is now rising and spreading himself in these his sons and
+daughters, and so rising from one to many persons till he enlighten
+the whole creation (mankind) in every branch of it,
+and cover this earth with knowledge as the waters cover the
+sea.... And this is to be saved by Jesus Christ; for that
+<a name="pg61" id="pg61"></a><span class="pagenum">61</span>
+mighty man of spirit hath taken up his habitation within your
+body; and your body is his body, and now his spirit is your
+spirit, and so you are become one with him and with the Father.
+This is the faith of Christ, when your flesh is subject to the
+Spirit of Righteousness, as the flesh of Christ was subject. And
+this is to believe in Christ, when the actings and breathings of
+your soul are within the centre of the same spirit in which the
+man Jesus Christ lived, acted, and breathed.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In accordance with this profound, philosophic, and truly
+spiritual view, Winstanley found it incumbent upon him to
+warn his fellows against another generally held belief, as
+follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;So that you do not look for a God now, as formerly you
+did, to be a place of glory beyond the sun, moon, and stars,
+nor imagine a Divine Being you know not where; but you see
+Him ruling within you; and not only in you, but you see and
+know Him to be the Spirit or Power that dwells in every man
+and woman, yea, in every creature, according to his orb, within
+the globe of the Creation. So that now you see and feel and
+taste the sweetness of the Spirit ruling in your flesh, who is
+the Lord and King of Glory in the whole Creation, and you
+have community with Him who is the Father of all things.
+Now you are enlightened; now you are saved, and rise higher
+and higher into life and peace, as this manifestation of the
+Father increases and spreads within
+you.&rdquo;<a name="fnm61_1_61" id="fnm61_1_61"></a><a href="#fn61_1_61" class="fnnum">61:1</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>As was only to be expected, the publication of the above
+pamphlets brought Winstanley into disrepute with the orthodox
+Ministers of the Church, who accused him of denying God,
+Christ, Scripture, and the Ordinances of God. This accusation
+gave rise to Winstanley&rsquo;s next pamphlet, of some 77
+well-printed duodecimo pages, the preface to which is dated
+October 16th, 1648, and which bears the significant
+title&mdash;<i><a name="pg62" id="pg62"></a><span class="pagenum">62</span>
+Truth
+lifting its Head above
+Scandals</i>.<a name="fnm62_1_62" id="fnm62_1_62"></a><a href="#fn62_1_62" class="fnnum">62:1</a> In this volume Winstanley
+indignantly denies such a charge, and makes use of
+the opportunity to restate his views even more clearly than
+he had previously done. The book opens with a dedicatory
+letter addressed &ldquo;To the Scholars of Oxford and Cambridge,
+and to all that call themselves Ministers of the Gospel in City
+or Country,&rdquo; in which he carries the war into his enemy&rsquo;s camp
+in a forcible and masterly manner. He reminds them that they
+are not the only ones who have the right to judge of the meaning
+of the Scriptures, &ldquo;For the people, having the Scriptures, may
+judge by them as well as you.&rdquo; He then continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;If you say, &lsquo;No, the people cannot judge, because they know
+not the original:&rsquo; I answer, Neither do you know the original.
+Though by your learning you may be able to translate a writing
+out of Hebrew or Greek into our mother-tongue, English, but
+to say this is the original Scripture you cannot: for those very
+copies which the Prophets and Apostles writ are not to be seen
+in your Universities.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He forces home his argument in the following words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;You say you have the just copies of their writings. You
+do not know that but as your Fathers have told you, which
+may be as well false as true, if you have no other better
+ground than tradition. You say that the interpretation of
+Scripture into our mother tongue is according to the mind of
+the <i>spirit</i>. You cannot tell that neither, unless you are able
+to say that those who did interpret those writings have had
+the same testimony of spirit as the pen-men of Scripture had.
+For it is the spirit within that must prove these copies to be
+true.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He then turns the tables by accusing them of being &ldquo;the
+very men that do deny God, Scriptures, and the Ordinances of
+<a name="pg63" id="pg63"></a><span class="pagenum">63</span>
+God; and that turn the truths of the Spirit into a lie, by
+leaving the letter, and walking in their own inferences&rdquo;; and
+also &ldquo;by holding forth spiritual things by the imagination of the
+flesh, and not by the law and testimony of the Spirit within.&rdquo;
+And he contends that, in truth, he and his fellows are &ldquo;those
+men that do advance God, Christ, Scriptures, and Ordinances
+in the spirituality of them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In the opening chapter of the book itself, Winstanley, with
+more than his usual directness, plunges into the heart of his
+subject in the following suggestive words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;I have said that whosoever worships God by hearsay, as
+others tell him, and knows not what God is from light within
+himself; or that thinks God is in the heavens above the skies,
+and so prays to that God which he imagines to be there and
+everywhere, but from any testimony within, he knows not how
+nor where: this man worships his own imagination, which is
+the Devil. But he who is a true worshipper must know who
+God is and how He is to be worshipped, from the Power of
+Light shining within him, if ever he have true peace.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hence,&rdquo; he continues, &ldquo;a report is raised, and is frequent
+in the mouth of the teachers, that I deny God. Therefore,
+first, I shall give account of what I see and know Him to
+be; and let the understanding in heart judge me.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then endeavours to formulate his theistic views
+and beliefs in a series of questions and answers, from which we
+feel compelled to quote the following:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<i>Q.</i> What is God?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>A.</i> I answer, He is the incomprehensible Spirit
+Reason;<a name="fnm63_1_63" id="fnm63_1_63"></a><a href="#fn63_1_63" class="fnnum">63:1</a>
+<a name="pg64" id="pg64"></a><span class="pagenum">64</span>
+who as He willed the Creation should flow out of Him, so He
+governs the whole Creation in righteousness, peace, and moderation.
+And He is called the Father, because as the whole
+Creation comes out of Him, so He is the life of the whole
+Creation, by whom every creature doth subsist.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Q.</i> When can a man call the Father his God?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>A.</i> When he feels and sees, by experience, that the Spirit
+which made the flesh doth govern and rule king in his flesh.
+And so can say, I rejoice to feel and see my flesh made subject
+to the Spirit of Righteousness.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Q.</i> But may not a man call Him God till he have this
+experience?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>A.</i> No: for if he do, he lies, and there is no truth in
+him. For whatsoever rules as king in his flesh, that is his
+God....</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Q.</i> But I hope that the Father is my Governor, and therefore
+may I not call Him God?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>A.</i> Hope without ground is the hope of the hypocrite.
+Thou canst not call Him God till thou be able in pure experience
+to say thy flesh is subject to Him. For if thy knowledge
+be no more but imagination or thoughts, it is of the Devil, and
+not of the Father. Or if thy knowledge be merely from what
+thou hast read or heard from others, it is of the flesh, not of
+the spirit.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Q.</i> When then may I call him God, or the Mighty Governor,
+and not deceive myself?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>A.</i> When thou art by that Spirit made to see Him rule
+and govern, not only in thee but in the whole creation....
+Wait upon Him till He teach thee. All that read do not
+understand; the Spirit only sees truth, and lives in it.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley subsequently explains his views at considerable
+length. True knowledge, he contends, comes from within, not
+from without. &ldquo;The whole Scriptures,&rdquo; he maintains, &ldquo;are
+but a report of spiritual mysteries held forth to the eye of the
+flesh in words.&rdquo; The Gospel he explains to be &ldquo;the Father
+Himself, that is, the Word and glad tidings that speak peace
+inwardly to pure souls.&rdquo; The writings of the Apostles and
+the Prophets he regards as &ldquo;the report or declaration of the
+Gospel, which are to cease when the Lord Himself, who is the
+everlasting Gospel, doth manifest Himself to rule in the flesh
+of sons and daughters.&rdquo; Concerning Baptism he says: &ldquo;I
+<a name="pg65" id="pg65"></a><span class="pagenum">65</span>
+have gone through the ordinance of dipping, which the letter
+of the Scripture doth warrant, yet I do not press anyone
+thereunto, but bid everyone to wait upon the Father, till He
+teach and persuade, and then their submitting will be sound.
+For I see now that it is not the material water, but the water
+of life; that is, the Spirit in which souls are to be dipped, and
+so drawn forth into the one Spirit; and all these outward
+customs and forms are to cease and pass
+away.&rdquo;<a name="fnm65_1_64" id="fnm65_1_64"></a><a href="#fn65_1_64" class="fnnum">65:1</a> As regards
+prayer, he contends that no one should pray &ldquo;until the Power
+within thee gives words to thy mouth to utter, then speak,
+and thou canst not but speak.&rdquo;<a name="fnm65_2_65" id="fnm65_2_65"></a><a href="#fn65_2_65" class="fnnum">65:2</a></p>
+
+<p>It is, however, in a subsequent pamphlet, <i>The New Law
+of Righteousness</i>, that Winstanley more fully expounds this
+characteristic Quaker doctrine, and summarises his deeply
+philosophic views concerning silence as the necessary precursor
+of all true prayer, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;All these declare the half-hour&rsquo;s silence that is to be in
+Heaven (Rev. viii. 1). For all mouths are to be stopped by
+the power of Reason&rsquo;s law shining within the heart. And this
+abundance of talk that is amongst people by arguments,
+by disputes, by declaring expositions upon others&rsquo; word and
+writing, by long discourse, called preaching, shall all cease
+(Jer. xxxi. 34).</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Some shall not be able to speak, they shall be struck
+silent with shame by seeing themselves in a loss and in
+confusion. Neither shall they care to speak till they know by
+experience within themselves what to speak; but wait with
+a quiet silence upon the Lord, till He break forth within their
+hearts, and give them words and power to speak.... Men
+<a name="pg66" id="pg66"></a><span class="pagenum">66</span>
+must leave off teaching one another, and the eyes of all shall
+look upward to the Father, to be taught of Him. And at this
+time silence shall be a man&rsquo;s rest and liberty; it is the
+gathering time, the soul&rsquo;s receiving time: it is the forerunner
+of pure language.... He that speaks from the original light
+within can truly say, I know what I say, and I know whom I
+worship.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Somewhat later he continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;None shall need to turn over books and writings (for
+indeed all these shall cease too) to get knowledge. But everyone
+shall be taken off from seeking knowledge from without,
+and with an humble quiet heart shall wait upon the Lord, till
+He manifest Himself: for He is a great king, and worthy to be
+waited upon. His testimony within fills the heart with joy
+and singing. He first gives experiences; and then power to
+set forth these experiences. Hence you shall speak to the
+rejoicing one of another, and to the praise of Him who declares
+His power in you. But he that speaks his thoughts, studies,
+and imagination, and stands up to be a teacher of others, shall
+be judged for his unrighteousness, because he seeks to honor
+flesh, and does not honor the Lord.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He then somewhat mystically continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;Behold the Annointing, that is to reach all things, is
+coming to create a new Heaven and a new Earth wherein
+Righteousness shall dwell, and there shall not be a vessel of
+humane earth but it shall be filled with Christ. If it were
+possible to have so many buckets as to contain the whole
+ocean, every one could be filled with the ocean, and being put
+all together it would make up the perfect ocean which filled
+them all. Even so Christ, which is the spreading power, is
+now beginning to fill every man and woman with Himself.
+He will dwell and rule in everyone; and the Law of Reason
+and Equity shall be Christ in them. Every single body is a
+star shining forth of Him, or rather a body in and out of
+whom He shines; and He is the ocean of power that fills all.
+And so the words are true, the Creation, mankind, shall be
+the fulness of Him that fills all in all. This is the Church, the
+great Congregation, that, when the mystery is completed, shall
+be the mystical body of Christ, all set at liberty from inward
+<a name="pg67" id="pg67"></a><span class="pagenum">67</span>
+and outward straits and bondage. And this is called the holy
+breathing that made all new by Himself and for Himself.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>We think we have now dealt sufficiently with Winstanley&rsquo;s
+exposition of the theistical doctrines subsequently adopted,
+and almost in their entirety, by the Society of Friends. In
+a later chapter (Chap. XVI.) we shall show how far he himself
+modified his earlier views. And in the succeeding chapter
+we shall briefly lay before our readers the practical and
+fundamental social changes Winstanley deemed demanded by
+the dictates of Reason, as forming the necessary first steps
+towards laying the foundations of &ldquo;a new Earth and a new
+Heaven wherein Righteousness, or Justice, shall dwell.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn53_1_54" id="fn53_1_54"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm53_1_54">53:1</a></span>
+<i>Clarke Papers</i>, vol. i. p. 379.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn54_1_55" id="fn54_1_55"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm54_1_55">54:1</a></span>
+British Museum, Press Mark, 4377, a. 2.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn54_2_56" id="fn54_2_56"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm54_2_56">54:2</a></span>
+In 1655, Giles Calvert published &ldquo;A <i>Declaration from the Children of
+Light</i> (who are by the world scornfully called Quakers).&rdquo; British Museum,
+Press Mark, E. 838.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn55_1_57" id="fn55_1_57"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm55_1_57">55:1</a></span>
+The full truth of these words comes home to us when we bear in
+mind that the law (<i>De Comburendo Heretico</i>) sanctioning the burning of
+heretics was only repealed in the reign of Charles the Second (in 1677),
+the Bishops of the day opposing its repeal almost to a man.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn56_1_58" id="fn56_1_58"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm56_1_58">56:1</a></span>
+King&rsquo;s Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 2137.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn58_1_59" id="fn58_1_59"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm58_1_59">58:1</a></span>
+&ldquo;The early Friends were men of prayer, and diligent searchers of
+the Holy Scriptures. Unable to find true rest in the various opinions
+and systems which in that day divided the Christian world, they believed
+that they found the Truth in a more full reception of Christ, not only as
+the living and ever-present Head of the Church in its aggregate capacity,
+but also as the life and light, the spiritual ruler, teacher and friend of
+every individual member.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Book of Discipline of the Society of Friends</i>.
+Quoted by J. S. Rowntree, <i>Society of Friends: its Faith and Practice</i>,
+p. 24. See also Barclay&rsquo;s <i>Apology for the true Christian Divinity</i>, p. 1:
+Second Proposition.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn60_1_60" id="fn60_1_60"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm60_1_60">60:1</a></span>
+&ldquo;It is the inward master (saith Augustine) that teacheth, it is Christ
+that teacheth, it is inspiration that teacheth: where this inspiration and
+unction is wanting, it is vain that words from without are beaten in.&rdquo;
+And thereafter: &ldquo;For he that created us, and redeemed us, and called us
+by faith, and dwelleth in us by his Spirit, unless he speaketh unto you
+inwardly, it is needless for us to cry out.&rdquo;&mdash;From Barclay&rsquo;s <i>Apology</i>, p. 13.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn61_1_61" id="fn61_1_61"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm61_1_61">61:1</a></span>
+&ldquo;If instead of assuming the being of an awful deity, which men,
+though they cannot and dare not deny, are always unwilling, sometimes
+unable, to conceive, we were to show them a near, visible, inevitable, but
+all-beneficent deity, whose presence makes the earth itself a heaven, I
+think there would be fewer deaf children sitting in the market-place.&rdquo;&mdash;John
+Ruskin, <i>Modern Painters</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn62_1_62" id="fn62_1_62"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm62_1_62">62:1</a></span>
+British Museum, Press Mark, 4372, a.a. 17. Below the title appears
+the following words: &ldquo;Professors of all forms, behold the Bridegroom is
+coming, your profession will be tried to purpose, your hypocricy shall
+be hid no longer. You shall feed no longer upon the Oil that was in
+other men&rsquo;s Lamps (the Scriptures), for now it is required that everyone
+have Oil in his own Lamp, even the pure testimony of truth within himself.
+For he that wants this, though he have the report of it in his book,
+he shall not enter with the Bridegroom into the chamber of peace.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn63_1_63" id="fn63_1_63"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm63_1_63">63:1</a></span>
+&ldquo;The incomprehensible Spirit Reason!&rdquo; It is interesting to note
+here that the &ldquo;Tau&rdquo; of the great Chinese philosopher, Lau-tsze,&mdash;the
+word he uses to denote the Absolute, which, consequently, he wisely
+leaves vague and undefined, and which apparently has no English word
+exactly equivalent to it,&mdash;suggests to his translator three English words&mdash;&ldquo;the
+Way, Reason, and the Word.&rdquo; The latter&rsquo;s one objection to the
+word Reason as an equivalent is that to him it &ldquo;seems to be more like
+a quality or attribute of some conscious being than Tau is.&rdquo; See <i>The
+Speculations of the old Philosopher Lau-tsze</i>, by John Chalmers, M.A.
+Introduction.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn65_1_64" id="fn65_1_64"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm65_1_64">65:1</a></span>
+See Barclay&rsquo;s <i>Apology</i> (Concerning Baptism), p. 7.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn65_2_65" id="fn65_2_65"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm65_2_65">65:2</a></span>
+&ldquo;All true and acceptable worship to God is offered in the <i>inward</i>
+and <i>immediate</i> moving and drawing of his own Spirit, which is limited
+neither to places, times, nor persons. For though we be to worship him
+always, in that we are to fear before him; yet as to the outward signification
+thereof in prayers, praises, or preachings, we ought not to do it
+where and when we will, but where and when we are moved by the
+secret inspiration of his Spirit in our hearts, which God heareth and
+accepteth of, and is never wanting to move us thereunto when need is,
+of which he himself is the alone proper judge.&rdquo;&mdash;Barclay&rsquo;s <i>Apology</i>
+(Concerning Worship), p. 6.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg68" id="pg68"></a><span class="pagenum">68</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII<br /><br />
+THE NEW LAW OF RIGHTEOUSNESS</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot chaphead">
+<p>&ldquo;The great Lawgiver in Commonwealth&rsquo;s Government is the Spirit of
+Universal Righteousness dwelling in mankind, now rising up to teach
+everyone to do to another as he would have another do to him.... If
+any goes about to build up Commonwealth&rsquo;s Government upon Kingly
+principles, they will both shame and loose themselves: for there is a
+plain difference between the two Governments.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Winstanley</span>, <i>The Law
+of Freedom</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>On January 26th, 1648 (1649), four days prior to the execution
+of Charles the First, the very day the King&rsquo;s death-warrant lay
+at the Painted Chamber, Westminster, awaiting the signatures
+of some of the less resolute among his judges, Winstanley sat
+down to write the opening epistle of the pamphlet we have
+now to make known to our
+readers.<a name="fnm68_1_66" id="fnm68_1_66"></a><a href="#fn68_1_66" class="fnnum">68:1</a> They were stirring and
+momentous times, of which, as it seems to us, this pamphlet is
+in every way worthy. It reveals a most momentous step in
+the development of Winstanley&rsquo;s mind; for in it we see him
+move from the misty regions of cosmological, metaphysical,
+and theistical speculations to the somewhat firmer ground of
+<a name="pg69" id="pg69"></a><span class="pagenum">69</span>
+social thought. From the time of its publication, Winstanley
+leaves the former almost untouched, concentrates his mind
+almost exclusively on the latter, pleads eloquently for the
+recognition of natural law in the social, or political world, and
+steps boldly forward to a life of action, animated and inspired
+by the conclusions concerning the necessary foundations of a
+social state based upon righteousness that his previous reflections
+and meditations, or the Inward Light to which he
+unhesitatingly submitted himself, had revealed unto him.</p>
+
+<p>The only indication that Winstanley was in any way
+influenced by the exciting discussions which under the circumstances
+must have raged everywhere around him, is to
+be found in his condemnation of Capital Punishment, which
+may here find a fitting place. In accordance with his favourite
+method, he summarises his views in answer to a hypothetical
+question, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;But is not this the old rule, He that sheds man&rsquo;s blood
+by man shall his blood be shed?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I answer, It is true, but not as usually it is observed. If
+any man can say, he can give life, then he hath the power to
+take away life. But if the power of life and death be only in
+the hand of the Lord, then surely he is a murderer of the
+Creation that taketh away the life of his fellow-creature, man,
+by any law whatsoever.... For if I kill you, I am a
+murderer; if a third come to kill me for murdering you, he is
+a murderer of me; and so murder hath been called Justice,
+when it is but the curse.... Therefore, O thou proud flesh
+that dares hang or kill thy fellow-creatures that are equal to
+thee in the Creation, know this, that none hath the power of
+life and death but the Spirit, and that all punishments that
+are to be inflicted amongst creatures called men are only such
+as to make the offender to know his Maker, and to live in the
+community of the Righteous Law of Love one with the other.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The opening epistle is addressed&mdash;&ldquo;To the Twelve Tribes
+of Israel that are circumcised in heart, and scattered through
+all the Nations of the Earth.&rdquo; In it he admonishes them to
+be patient, for &ldquo;this New Law of Righteousness and Peace
+which is raising up is David your King, which you have been
+<a name="pg70" id="pg70"></a><span class="pagenum">70</span>
+seeking a long time&rdquo;; that &ldquo;He is now coming to reign, and
+the isles and nations of the Earth shall all come in unto Him&rdquo;;
+that &ldquo;He will rest everywhere, for this blessing will fill all
+places.&rdquo; But he reminds them that &ldquo;the swords and counsels
+of the flesh shall not be seen in this work; the arm of the
+Lord only shall bring these mighty things to pass in the day
+of His power.&rdquo; &ldquo;Therefore,&rdquo; he continues, &ldquo;all that I can say
+is this&mdash;Though the world, even the seed of the flesh, despise
+you, and call you by reproachful names at their pleasure, yet
+wait patiently upon your King; He is coming; He is rising;
+the Son is up, and His glory will fill the Earth.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In the opening chapter of this pamphlet Winstanley still
+further elucidates his interpretation of the allegorical stories
+of the Creation and the Fall. How in the beginning man was
+created perfect, and &ldquo;the whole Creation lived in man, and
+man lived in his Maker.&rdquo; And how man fell from this high
+estate by following the promptings of self-love, covetousness,
+or the desires of the flesh, to which he attributes all the
+misery and suffering men bring upon themselves, and which
+he personifies as the First Adam. &ldquo;All that this Adam
+doth,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;is to advance himself to be the one power.
+He gets riches and government in his hands so that he
+may lift up himself and suppress the universal liberty, which
+is Christ.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He then continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;And this is the beginning of particular interest, buying
+and selling the Earth from one particular hand to another,
+saying &lsquo;This is mine,&rsquo; upholding this particular propriety by
+a law of government of his own making, and thereby
+restraining other fellow-creatures from seeking nourishment
+from their Mother Earth. So that though a man was bred up
+in a Land, yet he must not work for himself where he would,
+but for him who had bought part of the Land, or had come to
+it by inheritance of his deceased parents, and called it his
+own Land. So that he who had no Land was to work for small
+wages for those who called the Land theirs. Thereby some are
+lifted up in the chair of tyranny, and others trod under the
+footstool of misery, as if the Earth were made for a few, and
+not for all men.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="pg71" id="pg71"></a><span class="pagenum">71</span>
+&ldquo;As if the Earth were made for a few, and not for all
+men!&rdquo; In these few pertinent and indignant words Winstanley
+strikes the keynote of all his subsequent writings, as that of
+those of many other later students of social problems, from
+John Locke,<a name="fnm71_1_67" id="fnm71_1_67"></a><a href="#fn71_1_67" class="fnnum">71:1</a> who may be regarded as his immediate successor,
+to Thomas Spence, Patrick Edward Dove,<a name="fnm71_2_68" id="fnm71_2_68"></a><a href="#fn71_2_68" class="fnnum">71:2</a> Thomas Paine,<a name="fnm71_3_69" id="fnm71_3_69"></a><a href="#fn71_3_69" class="fnnum">71:3</a>
+and Henry George.</p>
+
+<p>He then further emphasises his contention, in words similar
+to those that are to-day resounding throughout the advanced
+political centres of the world, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;And let all men say what they will, so long as such are
+Rulers as call the land theirs, upholding this particular propriety
+of Mine and Thine, the common people shall never
+have their liberty, nor the Land be ever freed from troubles,
+oppressions, and complainings, by reason whereof the Creator
+of all things is continually provoked. O thou proud, selfish,
+governing Adam, in this Land called England! know that the
+cries of the poor, whom thou layeth heavy oppressions upon,
+are heard.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>And in the closing passage of the chapter he formulates his
+social ideals in the following words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;This is the unrighteous Adam, that dammed up the water
+springs of universal liberty, and brought the Creation under
+the curse of bondage, sorrow, and tears. But when the Earth
+becomes a Common Treasury, as it was in the beginning, and
+the King of Righteousness comes to rule in every one&rsquo;s hearts,
+then He kills the first Adam&mdash;for Covetousness thereby is
+killed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;A man shall have meat and drink and clothes by his
+labour in freedom, and what can he desire more in Earth?
+<a name="pg72" id="pg72"></a><span class="pagenum">72</span>
+Pride and Envy likewise are killed thereby; for everyone
+shall look upon each other as equal in the Creation, every man,
+indeed, being a perfect Creation of himself. And so this
+second Adam, Christ the Restorer, stops or dams up the
+running of those stinking waters of self-interest, and causes
+the waters of life and liberty to run plentifully in and through
+the Creation, making the Earth one Store House, and every man
+and woman to live in the Law of Righteousness and Peace,
+members of one household.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In a subsequent chapter (chap. vi.) he returns to this
+subject, and emphasises the differences of the views of the
+ethical-minded man and the ordinary conventional materialist,
+in the following suggestive passage:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;The man of the flesh judges it a righteous thing that
+some men who are cloathed with the objects of the Earth, and
+so called rich men, whether it be got by right or wrong,
+should be Magistrates to rule over the poor; and that the poor
+should be servants, nay, rather slaves, to the rich. But the
+spiritual man, which is Christ, doth judge according to the
+light of equity and reason, that all mankind ought to have a
+quiet subsistence and freedom to live upon Earth; and that
+there should be no bondman nor beggar in all his holy
+mountain.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>For, he contends:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;Mankind was made to live in the freedom of the spirit,
+not under the bondage of the flesh. For everyone was made
+to be a Lord over the creation of the Earth, cattle, fish, fowl,
+grass, trees, not anyone to be a bond-slave and a beggar under
+the Creation of his own kind. That so everyone, living in
+freedom and love in the strength of the Law of Righteousness
+in him, not under straits of poverty, nor bondage of tyranny
+one to another, might all rejoice together in righteousness, and
+so glorify their Maker. For surely this must dishonor the
+Maker of all men, that some men should be oppressing tyrants,
+imprisoning, whipping, hanging their fellow-creatures, men, for
+those very things which those very men themselves are guilty
+of. Let men&rsquo;s eyes be opened, and it appears clear enough,
+that the punishers have and do break the Law of Equity and
+Reason more or as much as those who are punished by them.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="pg73" id="pg73"></a><span class="pagenum">73</span>
+But, he adds rejoicingly, just</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;As the powers and wisdom of the flesh hath filled the
+Earth with injustice, oppression, and complainings, by mowing
+the Earth into the hands of a few covetous unrighteous men,
+who assume a lordship over others, declaring themselves
+thereby to be men of the basest spirits. Even so, when the
+spreading of wisdom and truth fill the Earth, mankind, he will
+take off that bondage, and give a universal liberty, and there
+shall be no more complainings against oppression, poverty, or
+injustice.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley, however, warns his readers that &ldquo;this is not
+to be done by the hands of a few, or by unrighteous men that
+would pull down the tyrannical government out of other men&rsquo;s
+hands and keep it in their own heart, as we feel this to be a
+burden of our age. But it is to be done by the universal
+spreading of the Divine Power, which is Christ in mankind,
+making them all to act in one spirit, and in and after one law
+of reason and equity.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In the next chapter (chap. viii.) Winstanley describes his
+peculiar state of mind at the time he first arrived at his
+fundamental conclusions, which he evidently regarded as
+directly revealed to him, in the following mystic words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;As I was in a trance not long since, divers matters were
+present to my sight, which here must not be related. Likewise
+I heard these words&mdash;<i>Work together: Eat bread together:
+Declare this all abroad</i>. Likewise I heard these words&mdash;<i>Whosoever
+it is that labors in the earth&mdash;for any person or persons
+that lift up themselves as Lords and Rulers over others, and that
+doth not look upon themselves as equal to others in the Creation,
+the hand of the Lord shall be upon that laborer. I the Lord
+have spoke it and I will do it. Declare this all abroad.</i>&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He then continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;After I was raised up I was made to remember very
+fresh what I had seen and heard, and did declare all things
+to them that were with me, and I was filled with abundance
+of quiet peace and secret joy. And since that time those
+<a name="pg74" id="pg74"></a><span class="pagenum">74</span> words have been like very fruitful seed, that have brought
+forth increase in my heart, which I am much pressed in spirit
+to declare all abroad.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He further explains the meaning of this revelation in the
+following words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;The poor men by their labors in this time of the first
+Adam&rsquo;s government, have made the buyers and sellers of land,
+or rich men, to become tyrants and oppressors over them.
+But in the time of Israel&rsquo;s restoration, now beginning, when
+the King of Righteousness himself shall be Governor in every
+man, none then shall work for hire, neither shall any give
+hire, but everyone shall work in love, one with and for
+another, and eat bread together, as being members of one
+household, the Creation, in whom Reason rules king in perfect
+glory.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Under these circumstances, he contends:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;No man shall have any more land than he can labor
+himself,<a name="fnm74_1_70" id="fnm74_1_70"></a><a href="#fn74_1_70" class="fnnum">74:1</a> or have others to labor with him in love, working
+together, and eating bread together, as one of the tribes or
+families of Israel, neither giving hire nor taking hire.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>After having given forcible expression to his profound contempt
+for all mere lip-professions of brotherhood, sympathy,
+and love, with which those whose actions are least in accord
+with the dictates of righteousness, equity, and reason are so
+often the most profuse, and reminding these that&mdash;&ldquo;The
+talking of love is no love; it is the acting of love in righteousness
+which the Spirit Reason, our Father, delights in&rdquo;; he
+addressed the following stirring warning to his fellow-workers:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;Therefore you dust of the earth that are trod under foot,
+you poor people that make both scholars and rich men your
+oppressors by your labors, take notice of your privilege, the
+Law of Righteousness is now declared. If you labor the
+earth and work for others that live at ease and follow the
+ways of the flesh, eating the bread which you get by the sweat
+<a name="pg75" id="pg75"></a><span class="pagenum">75</span>
+of your brow, not of their own, know this, that the hand of the
+Lord shall break out upon every such hireling laborer, and
+you shall perish with that covetous rich man that hath held
+and yet doth hold the Creation under the bondage of the
+curse.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then declares his intentions as to the future,
+which, as we shall see, he faithfully carried out, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;I have now obeyed the command of the Spirit that bid
+me declare all this abroad. I have declared it and I will
+declare it by word of mouth, I have now declared it with
+my pen. And when the Lord doth show unto me the place
+and manner, how He will have us that are called common
+people manure and work upon the common lands, I will then
+go forth and declare it by my action, to eat my bread by the
+sweat of my brow, without either giving or taking hire, looking
+upon the land as freely mine as another&rsquo;s. I have now peace
+in the Spirit, and I have an inward persuasion that the spirit
+of the poor shall be drawn forth ere long to act materially this
+Law of Righteousness.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then proceeds to formulate the practical proposals,
+whereby he deemed the disinherited many might
+reclaim their inheritance, and that without infringing on the
+established rights or the property of the rich: proposals, be it
+remembered, which, if acted on, would have altered the
+whole future economic history of Great Britain. Before
+judging of their efficacy, we should bear in mind that at the
+time he was writing, before the era of Enclosure Acts, over
+a third of England was still common land. However, whatever
+opinion may be held on this point, there can be no
+denying the lucidity and incisiveness of his words: he says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;But be it so that some will say, This is my land, and call
+such and such a parcel of land his own interest.... Therefore,
+if the rich still hold fast to this propriety of Mine and
+Thine, let them labor their own lands with their own hands.
+And let the common people, that say the earth is <i>ours</i>, not
+<i>mine</i>, let them labor together, and eat bread together upon
+the commons, mountains, and hills.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Such, then, was the proposal by which Winstanley deemed
+the relative merits of Individualism and Communism, as a
+<a name="pg76" id="pg76"></a><span class="pagenum">76</span>
+system of social union, might best be tested, and which he
+immediately proceeded to defend in the following words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;For as the enclosures are called such a man&rsquo;s land, and
+such a man&rsquo;s land, so the Commons and Heath are called the
+common people&rsquo;s. And let the world see who labor the
+Earth in righteousness, and those to whom the Lord gives
+the blessing, let them be the people that shall inherit the
+Earth. Whether they that hold a civil propriety, saying,
+This is mine, which is selfish, devilish, and destructive to the
+Creation; or those that hold a common right, saying, The
+Earth is ours, which lifts up the Creation from bondage.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Further, he contends that if his proposals were acted on&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;None can say their right is taken from them. For let
+the rich work alone by themselves; and let the poor work
+together by themselves. The rich in their enclosures, saying,
+<i>This is mine</i>; and the poor upon the Commons, saying, <i>This
+is ours, the Earth and its fruits are common</i>. And who can
+be offended at the poor for doing this? None but covetous,
+proud, idle, pampered flesh, that would have the poor work
+still for this devil (particular interest) to maintain his greatness
+that he may live at ease.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>And after expressing his intense conviction that &ldquo;Surely
+the Lord hath not revealed this in vain,&rdquo; he summarises the
+whole train of reasoning that had led him to his final conclusion,
+as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;Was the Earth made for to preserve a few covetous, proud
+men to live at ease, and for them to bag and barn up the
+treasures of the Earth from others, that these may beg or
+starve in a fruitful land; or was it made to preserve all her
+children? Let Reason and the Prophets&rsquo; and Apostles&rsquo; writings
+be judge, the Earth is the Lord&rsquo;s, it is not to be confined to
+particular interests.... Did the light of Reason make the
+Earth for some men to engross up into bags and barns, that
+others might be oppressed with poverty? Surely Reason did
+not make that law. For the Earth is the Lord&rsquo;s; that is, the
+spreading Power of Righteousness, not the inheritance of
+covetous, proud flesh that dies. If any man can say that
+<a name="pg77" id="pg77"></a><span class="pagenum">77</span>
+he makes corn or cattle, he may say, <i>That is mine</i>. But if
+the Lord made these for the use of his Creation, surely then
+the Earth was made by the Lord to be a Common Treasury
+for all, not a particular treasury for some.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then summarises the results of the prevailing
+system in the following terse but telling passage:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;Divide England into three parts, scarce one part is
+manured. So that here is land enough to maintain all her
+children, yet many die of want, or live under a heavy burden
+of poverty all their days. And this misery the poor people
+have brought upon themselves by lifting up particular interest
+by their labors.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>This long but most interesting chapter concludes with
+indicating the three steps Winstanley deemed essential for
+both individual and social salvation, with which our notice
+of this pamphlet may fittingly close:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;There are yet three doors of hope for England to escape
+destroying plagues.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;First, Let everyone leave off running after others for
+knowledge and comfort, and wait upon the Spirit, Reason, till
+he break forth out of the clouds of your heart and manifest
+himself within you. This is to cast off the shadow of learning,
+to reject covetous, subtile, proud flesh that deceives all by
+the hearsay and traditional preaching of words, letters, and
+syllables without the Spirit, and to make choice of the Lord,
+the true teacher of everyone in their own inward experience.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Secondly, Let everyone open his bags and barns, that
+all may feed upon the crops of the Earth, that the burden
+of poverty may be removed. Leave off this buying and selling
+of land, or of the fruits of the Earth, and, as it was in the
+light of Reason first made, so let it be in action amongst all,
+a Common Treasury, none enclosing or hedging in any part
+of the Earth, saying, <i>This is mine</i>, which is rebellion and high
+treason against the King of Righteousness. And let this
+word of the Lord be acted amongst all: <i>Work together; Eat
+bread <a name="cm5" id="cm5"></a><a href="#corr5" class="correction" title="Original has closing double quotation mark">together.</a></i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Thirdly, Leave off dominion and lordship one over
+another; for the whole bulk of mankind are but one living
+<a name="pg78" id="pg78"></a><span class="pagenum">78</span>
+Earth. Leave off imprisoning, whipping, and killing, which
+are but the actings of the curse. Let those that have hitherto
+had no land, and have been forced to rob and steal through
+poverty; henceforth let them quietly enjoy land to work
+upon, that everyone may enjoy the benefit of his Creation,
+and eat his own bread with the sweat of his own brows. For
+surely this particular propriety of mine and thine hath
+brought in all misery upon people. First, it hath occasioned
+people to steal one from another. Secondly, it hath made laws
+to hang those that did steal. It tempts people to do an evil
+action, and then kills them for doing of it. Let all judge
+whether this be not a great evil.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, if everyone would speedily set about the doing of
+these three particulars I have mentioned, the Creation would
+thereby be lift up out of bondage, and our Maker should have
+the glory of the works of His hands.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Before Winstanley found opportunity to declare in action
+the truths that had been revealed unto him, he found time
+to write yet another pamphlet, entitled <i>Fire in the Bush</i>.<a name="fnm78_1_71" id="fnm78_1_71"></a><a href="#fn78_1_71" class="fnnum">78:1</a>
+In it he still further elucidates his interpretation of the story
+of the Creation, and his conception of the Tree of Knowledge
+and the Tree of Life, and reaffirms his basic contention that
+&ldquo;All the strivings that are in mankind are for the Earth:
+Who shall have it? Whether some particular persons shall
+have it, and the rest have none; or whether the Earth shall
+be made a Common Treasury to all, without respect of
+persons?&rdquo; As it traverses much the same ground as the
+pamphlet from which we have just quoted at such length, it
+really calls for no further notice from us. The following verse
+on its title-page, however, seems to us worth quoting:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;The Righteous Law a government will give to whole mankind<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">How he should govern all the Earth, and therein true peace find;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">This government is Reason pure, who will fill man with Love,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And wording justice, without deeds, is judged by this Dove.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn68_1_66" id="fn68_1_66"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm68_1_66">68:1</a></span> The full title reads&mdash;&ldquo;<i>The New Law of Righteousness</i>: Budding forth
+to restore the whole Creation from the Bondage or the Curse. Or a
+glympse of the new Heaven and the new Earth, wherein dwells Righteousness.
+Giving an Alarm to silence all that preach or speak from hearsay
+or imagination.&rdquo; This pamphlet is very scarce. There is no copy in the
+British Museum or in any other of the London Public Libraries, nor in
+the Bodleian. The Jesus College Library, Oxford, however, is fortunate
+enough to possess a copy, which, to judge from its marginal notes, was once
+in the possession of one of Winstanley&rsquo;s followers or admirers, and which
+was courteously placed at our disposal by the librarian, Mr. Hazell, to
+whom we here desire to convey our grateful acknowledgement.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn71_1_67" id="fn71_1_67"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm71_1_67">71:1</a></span> See his chapter &ldquo;Of Property&rdquo; in his classical work on <i>Civil
+Government</i>, a chapter which, as the conservative Hallam observes, &ldquo;would
+be sufficient, if all Locke&rsquo;s other writings had perished, to leave him a
+high name in philosophy.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn71_2_68" id="fn71_2_68"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm71_2_68">71:2</a></span> For a short account of the writings of Thomas Spence and Patrick
+Edward Dove, see J. Morrison Davidson&rsquo;s <i>Four Precursors of Henry George</i>.
+(Publisher, F. Henderson, London.)</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn71_3_69" id="fn71_3_69"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm71_3_69">71:3</a></span> See his <i>Agrarian Justice</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn74_1_70" id="fn74_1_70"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm74_1_70">74:1</a></span> &ldquo;As much land as a man tills, plants, improves, cultivates, and can
+use the product of, so much is his property.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">John Locke</span>, <i>Civil
+Government</i>. (Of Property.)</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn78_1_71" id="fn78_1_71"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm78_1_71">78:1</a></span> &ldquo;<i>Fire in the Bush</i>: The Spirit burning, not consuming, but purging
+mankind.&rdquo; Published by Giles Calvert. This pamphlet, too, is very
+scarce. There is no copy in the British Museum, but a copy is to be
+found in the Bodleian Library.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg79" id="pg79"></a><span class="pagenum">79</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII<br /><br />
+LIGHT SHINING IN BUCKINGHAMSHIRE</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot chaphead">
+<p>&ldquo;O England, England! wouldst thou have thy government sound and
+healthful? Then cast about and see and search diligently to find out
+all those burthens that came in by Kings, and remove them; and then
+will thy Commonwealth&rsquo;s Government arise from under the clods under
+which as yet it is buried and covered with deformity.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Winstanley</span>,
+<i>The Law of Freedom</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The place in the country to which our hero had retired was,
+we believe, the little town of Colnbrook, in the extreme
+southern end of the county of Buckinghamshire, on the
+borders of Middlesex, and within seven miles of St. George&rsquo;s
+Hill in Surrey. On December 5th, 1648, about a month prior
+to the date attached to the opening epistle of <i>The New Law of
+Righteousness</i>, there issued from the press a short pamphlet,<a name="fnm79_1_72" id="fnm79_1_72"></a><a href="#fn79_1_72" class="fnnum">79:1</a>
+which, seeing that a second edition was printed the following
+March, appears to have had a considerable sale, and the title-page
+of which ran as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="subject">&ldquo;LIGHT SHINING IN BUCKINGHAMSHIRE:</p>
+
+<p class="center little">OR</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">A Discovery of the Main Ground, Original Cause of all the
+Slavery in the World, but chiefly in England. Presented
+by way of a Declaration of many of the Well-Affected in
+that County, to all their poor oppressed Countrymen of
+England. And also to the consideration of the present
+Army under the conduct of the Lord Fairfax.</p>
+
+<p class="center little">Arise, O God, judge thou the Earth.</p>
+
+<p class="center">Printed in the year 1648.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="pg80" id="pg80"></a><span class="pagenum">80</span>
+It opens as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Jehovah Ellohim created man after his own likeness and
+image, which image is his son Jesus (Heb. 1. v. 3), who is the
+image of the invisible God. Now man being made after God&rsquo;s
+image or likeness, and created by the word of God, which word
+was made flesh and dwelt amongst us, which word was life,
+and that life the light of man (John 1. v. 1-4). This light I
+take to be that pure Spirit in man we call Reason, which
+we call Conscience. From all which there issued out that
+Golden Rule or Law, which we call Equity: the sum of which
+is, saith Jesus, <i>Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you,
+do to them: this is the Law and the Prophets.</i> James calls it
+the Royal Law; and to live from this principle is called a good
+conscience.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It then points out the cause why men are disinclined to
+follow this sound principle of harmonious social union, and
+the consequences thereof, as manifested in the prevailing
+conditions, in the following words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;But man following his own sensuality became a devourer
+of the creatures and an encloser, not content that another
+should enjoy the same privilege as himself, but encloseth all
+from his brother; so that all the land, trees, beasts, fish, fowl,
+etc., are enclosed into a few mercenary hands, and all the
+rest deprived and made their slaves. So if they cut a tree for
+fire, they are to be punished, or hunt a fowl, it is imprisonment,
+because it is gentlemen&rsquo;s game, as they say. Neither must
+they keep cattle, or set up a house, all ground being enclosed,
+without hiring leave for the one or buying room for the other
+of the chief encloser, called the Lord of the Manor, or some
+other wretch as cruel as he.... Now all this slavery of the
+one and tyranny of the other was at first by murder and
+cruelty one against the other. And that they might strengthen
+themselves in their villany against God&rsquo;s Ordinances and their
+Brother&rsquo;s Freedom and Rights, they had always a Commander-in-Chief,
+and he became their King.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>After emphasising at some length that all special privileges
+of the few and disabilities of the many came in and are maintained
+by kings, it continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><a name="pg81" id="pg81"></a><span class="pagenum">81</span>
+&ldquo;So that observe the king is made by you your god on
+Earth, as God is the God of Heaven, saith the Lawyers....
+Now, Friends, what have we to do with any of these unfruitful
+works of darkness? Let us take Peter&rsquo;s advice (1 Pet. iv. 3)&mdash;<i>The
+time past of our lives may suffice that we have wrought the
+will of the Gentiles, when we walked in lascivious lusts, excess
+of wine, revellings, banquetting, and abominable idolatry.</i> And
+let us not receive the Beast&rsquo;s mark lest that the doom in
+Revelation (xiv. 9-10) befall us: but let us oppose the
+Beast&rsquo;s power, and follow the Lamb withersoever he goeth.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The pamphlet then dwells on the chief causes impelling
+&ldquo;wicked men,&rdquo; the privileged classes and their parasites, to
+stand up for a king:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Rich men cry for a king, so that the Poor should not
+claim his right, which is his by God&rsquo;s gift.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The horseleech Lawyer cries for a king, because else the
+supreme power will come into the People&rsquo;s representatives
+lawfully elected....</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The things, Lords, Barons, etc., cry for a king, else their
+tyrannical House of Peers falls down, and all their rotten
+honour, and all Patents and Corporations: their power being
+derived from him; if he go down, all their tyranny falls too.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>But now, it continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;The honest man that would have liberty cries down all
+interests [or special privileges, as they would be termed to-day]
+whatsoever; and to this end he desires Common Rights
+and Equity: which consist of these particulars following:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;1. A just portion for each man to live, that so none
+need to beg or steal for want, but everyone may live comfortably.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;2. A just Rule for each man to go by, which Rule is to
+be found in Scripture.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;3. All men alike under the said Rule, which Rule is, to
+do to one another as another should do to him....</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;4. The government to be by Judges, called Elders, men
+fearing God and hating Covetousness, to be chosen by the
+people, and to end all controversies in every town or hamlet,
+without any other or further trouble or charge.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>These, then, were the four points of the People&rsquo;s Charter
+<a name="pg82" id="pg82"></a><span class="pagenum">82</span> of 1648; the four fundamental reforms which Winstanley, if
+Winstanley be the author of this pamphlet, as we believe, deemed
+necessary to secure the peace and well-being of the masses
+of the people. The pamphlet then indicates where the people
+are to look for their model, in the following words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;And in the Scriptures the Israelite&rsquo;s Common-wealth is
+an excellent pattern.... Now in Israel if a man were poor,
+then a public maintenance and stock were to be provided to
+raise him again. So would all Bishops Lands, Forest Lands,
+and Crown Lands do in your Land, which the apostate Parliament
+men give one to another, and to maintain the needless
+thing called a king. And every seven years the whole Land
+was for the poor, the fatherless, widows, and strangers, and at
+every crop a portion allowed them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mark this, poor people, what the Levellers would do for
+you. Oh why are you so mad as to cry up a king? It is he
+and his Court and Patentee-men, as Majors Aldermen, and
+such creatures, that like cormorants devour what you should
+enjoy, and set up Whipping-posts and Correcting-houses to
+enslave you. &rsquo;Tis rich men that oppress you, saith James.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now in this right Common-wealth he that had least had
+no want. Therefore the Scriptures call them a Family or
+Household of Israel. And amongst those who received the
+Gospel, they were gathered into a Family, and had all things
+common (Acts 2. 44); yet so that each one was to labor
+and get his own bread. And this is Equity as aforesaid. For
+it is not lawful nor fit for some to work and the others to play;
+for it&rsquo;s God&rsquo;s command that all work, let all eat. And if all
+work alike, is it not fit for all to eat alike, have alike, and
+enjoy alike privileges and freedoms? And he that doth not
+like this, is not fit to live in a Common-wealth. Therefore
+weep and howl, ye rich men, by what vain name or title soever,
+God will visit you for all your oppressions. You live
+upon other men&rsquo;s labors, giving them bran to eat, extorting
+extreme rents and taxes from your fellow-creatures. But now
+what will you do? for the people will no longer be enslaved
+by you, for the knowledge of the Lord shall enlighten them.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The pamphlet then details the doings of William the
+Conqueror, contends that the Nobility and Gentry owe all
+their special privileges to his innovations, that &ldquo;their rise
+<a name="pg83" id="pg83"></a><span class="pagenum">83</span> was the Country&rsquo;s ruin, and the putting them down will be
+the restitution of our rights again.&rdquo; The very existence of
+Parliaments is attributed to the uprisings of their forefathers;
+and after emphasising the manner in which all power was still
+secured to the King and the House of Peers, it concludes with
+the following exhortation: &ldquo;So when all Israel saw that the
+King hearkened not unto them, the people answered the King,
+saying, What portion have we in David; neither have we
+inheritance in the Son of Jesse. To your tents, O Israel.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Within a few days of the publication of the second edition
+of the above pamphlet, its author was ready with the second
+part, which appeared on March 30th (1649), and was entitled:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;MORE LIGHT SHINING IN BUCKINGHAMSHIRE:<a name="fnm83_1_73" id="fnm83_1_73"></a><a href="#fn83_1_73" class="fnnum">83:1</a></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Being a Declaration of the State and Condition that all Men
+are in by Right. Likewise the Slavery all the World
+are in by their own kind, and this Nation in particular,
+and by whom. Likewise the Remedies, as Take away
+the Cause and the Effect will cease.</p>
+
+<p class="center">Being a Representation unto all the People of England,<br />
+and to the soldiery under the Lord General Fairfax.</p>
+
+<p class="center little">THE SECOND PART.</p>
+
+<p class="center little">&lsquo;Whatsoever doth manifest, is Light.&rsquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Eph</span>. v. 13.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>As this pamphlet covers much the same ground as the
+former, our notice of it will be but brief. After emphasising
+the importance of the observance of the Golden Rule, it
+declares that &ldquo;All men by God&rsquo;s donation are alike free by
+birth, and have alike privileges by virtue of His grant.&rdquo; &ldquo;So
+that for any to enclose the creation wholly from his kind,
+to his own use, to the impoverishment of his fellow-creatures,
+whereby they are made his slaves, is altogether unlawful.
+And it is the cause of all oppressions, whereby many
+thousands are deprived of their rights which God hath
+invested them withal, whereby they are forced to beg or
+steal for want.&rdquo; It then details the various means taken to
+<a name="pg84" id="pg84"></a><span class="pagenum">84</span> this end, and declares them, as well as the kingly power which
+its author holds, to be their source and origin, to be opposed
+to the direct command of God as expressed in the Holy
+Scriptures. Hence it denounces the oppressing privileged
+classes as &ldquo;rebels against God&rsquo;s commands,&rdquo; and as
+&ldquo;traitors against God&rsquo;s Annointed, Jesus Christ, who alone
+is Lord and King over men, and all men are equal.&rdquo; The
+writer contends that with the fall of the King, all the
+special privileges, grants, patents, monopolies, etc., created by
+him, should have fallen also. But since &ldquo;it is apparent that
+the Grandees of the Parliament intend still to uphold them,
+and to take a large share thereof unto themselves,&rdquo; he finds
+himself forced to appeal &ldquo;to all our dear Brethren in England
+and to the Soldiers in the Army to stand everyone in his
+place to oppose all Tyranny whatsoever and by whomsoever
+intended against us.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>At the foot of this pamphlet we find the following
+notice: &ldquo;Reader, You may expect in the Third Part to have
+an Anatomising of all Powers that now are, etc. And in
+the Fourth Part, the Grounds and Rules that all men are
+to go by. Farewell.&rdquo; Whether these notices refer to some
+of Winstanley&rsquo;s pamphlets, the second seems to point to <i>The
+New Law of Righteousness</i>, or not, we have no means of
+knowing. Nor, indeed, whether the above pamphlets were
+from his pen, though we strongly believe them to have been
+so. In any case they seem to us to have sufficient bearing
+on the Digger Movement to justify our noticing them here.</p>
+
+<p>Some six weeks later, on May 10th, yet another pamphlet
+appeared from the same part of the country, entitled:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;A DECLARATION OF THE WELL-AFFECTED IN THE
+COUNTY OF BUCKINGHAMSHIRE:<a name="fnm84_1_74" id="fnm84_1_74"></a><a href="#fn84_1_74" class="fnnum">84:1</a></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Being a Representation of the Middle Sort of Men within the
+three Chilterne Hundreds of Disborough, Burnum and
+Stoke, and part of Ailsbury Hundred, whereby they
+declare their Resolution and Intentions, with a Removal
+of their Grievances.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="pg85" id="pg85"></a><span class="pagenum">85</span>
+This is a very short pamphlet, of some seven pages, in
+which these &ldquo;Middle Sort of Men&rdquo; state that they had
+waited for eight years for redress of their grievances, but
+finding them still continue, and expecting little good from
+the Parliament and the Grandees of the Army, &ldquo;finding the
+Grandees of the Army to be the men that hinder both the
+honest soldiery that stand for absolute freedom, and doth
+imprison and put them to death that are for Just Principles
+of Common Right and Equity, so that those honest men are
+by those proud Commanders persecuted by the name of
+Levellers....&rdquo;<a name="fnm85_1_75" id="fnm85_1_75"></a><a href="#fn85_1_75" class="fnnum">85:1</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Therefore we declare our intentions that the World may
+take notice of our principles, which are for Common Right
+and Freedom. And therefore&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;1. We do protest against all Arbitrary Courts, Terms,
+Lawyers, Impropriators, Lords of Manors, Patents, Privileges,
+Customs, Tolls, Monopolisers, Incroachers, Enhancers, etc., or
+any other interest-parties, whose powers are arbitrary, etc.,
+as not to allow or suffer ourselves to be inslaved by any of
+those parties, but shall resist, as far as lawfully we can, all
+their Arbitrary Proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;2. We protest against the whole Norman Power, as being
+too intolerable a burden any longer to bear.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg86" id="pg86"></a><span class="pagenum">86</span>
+&ldquo;3. We protest against paying Tythes, Tolls, Customs, etc.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;4 We protest against any coming to Westminster Terms,
+or to give any money to the Lawyers, but will endeavour to
+have all our Controversies ended by 2, 3 or 12 men of our
+own neighborhood, as before the Norman Conquest.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;5. We protest against any trial by a Martial Court as
+arbitrary, tyrannical and wicked, and not for a Free People
+to suffer in times of peace.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;6. We shall help to aid and assist the Poor to the regaining
+all their Rights, dues, etc., that do belong unto them,
+and are detained from them by any Tyrant whatsoever.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;7. And likewise will further and help the said Poor to
+manure, dig, etc., the said Commons, and to sell those woods
+growing thereon to help them to a stock, etc.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;8. All well affected persons that joyn in Community in
+God&rsquo;s way, as those Acts 2. v. 44, and desire to manure,
+dig and plant in the waste grounds and commons, shall not
+be troubled or molested by any of us, but rather furthered
+therein.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We desire to go by the Golden Rule of Equity, viz., To
+do to all men as we would they should do to us, and no otherwise:
+and as we would tyrannise over none, so we shall not
+suffer ourselves to be slaves to any whosoever.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>That such views were not restricted to &ldquo;the Levellers&rdquo; may
+be inferred from the very similar demands made in &ldquo;A
+Petition of the Officers engaged for Ireland,&rdquo; and presented to
+the House of Commons in July of the same year (see
+Whitelocke, p. 413), from which we take the following:
+&ldquo;That proceedings in law may be in English, cheap, certain,
+etc., and all suits and differences first to be arbitrated by
+three neighbours, and if they cannot determine it, then to
+certify the Court.&rdquo; They also &ldquo;humbly pray&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;That Tithes
+may be taken away, and Two Shillings in the Pound paid for
+all lands, out of which the Ministers to be maintained and
+the Poor.&rdquo; This, we should think, was the first petition to the
+House of Commons in favour of the Taxation of Land Values.</p>
+
+<p>In fact, religious and political speculation, as well as
+dissatisfaction and discontent, were rife amongst the active
+and thoughtful of the people, as well as in the Army. On the
+17th of the previous month, some of the soldiers, who,
+<a name="pg87" id="pg87"></a><span class="pagenum">87</span> according to Gardiner,<a name="fnm87_1_76" id="fnm87_1_76"></a><a href="#fn87_1_76" class="fnnum">87:1</a> &ldquo;had resolved not to leave England
+till the demands of the Levellers [the political Levellers]
+had been granted&mdash;300 in Hewson&rsquo;s regiment alone,&rdquo; had
+refused to go to Ireland, and had been promptly cashiered.
+On April 24th a dispute about pay in one of the troops of
+Whalley&rsquo;s regiment had resulted &ldquo;in some thirty of the
+soldiers seizing the colours and refusing to leave their quarters.&rdquo;
+It was not till Cromwell and Fairfax appeared on the scene
+that they submitted. Fifteen of their number were carried to
+Whitehall, where, on the 26th, a Court-martial condemned six
+of them to death. &ldquo;Cromwell, however, pleaded for mercy,
+and in the end all were pardoned with the exception of
+Robert Lockyer, who was believed to have been their leader.&rdquo;
+Lockyer, Gardiner continues, &ldquo;though young in years, had
+fought gallantly through the whole of the war. He was a
+thoughtful, religious man, beloved by his comrades, who craved
+for the immediate establishment of liberty and democratic
+order. As such he had stood up for <i>The Agreement of the
+People</i> on Corkbush Field,&rdquo; when another trooper of a similar
+character, named Arnold, had been shot to death, &ldquo;and he now
+entertained against his commanding officers a prejudice arising
+from other sources than the mere dispute about pay, which
+influenced natures less noble than his own.... On the 27th,
+Lockyer, firmly believing himself to be a martyr to the cause
+of right and justice, was led up Ludgate Hill to the open space
+in front of St. Paul&rsquo;s, and there, after expostulating with the
+firing party for their obedience to their officers in a deed of
+murder, he was shot to death.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Lockyer&rsquo;s funeral took place on the 29th, and was the
+occasion of a remarkable demonstration, of which we take the
+following account from the pages of Whitelocke&rsquo;s <i>Memorial of
+English Affairs</i> (p. 399):</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Mr. Lockier a Trooper who was shot to death by Sentence
+of the Court Martial was buried in this manner. About one
+thousand went before the Corps, and five or six in a file, the
+Corps was then brought with six Trumpets sounding a Soldier&rsquo;s
+Knell, then the Trooper&rsquo;s Horse came clothed all over in
+<a name="pg88" id="pg88"></a><span class="pagenum">88</span> mourning and led by a Footman. The Corps was adorned with
+bundles of Rosemary, one half stained with blood, and the
+Sword of the deceased with them. Some thousands followed
+in Ranks and Files, all had Sea-green and black Ribbon tied
+on their Hats and to their Breasts, and the Women brought
+up the Rear. At the new Church Yard in Westminster some
+thousands more of the better sort met them, who thought not
+fit to march through the City. Many looked on this Funeral
+as an Affront to the Parliament and Army; others called them
+Levellers, but they took no notice of any of them.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In view of such a manifestation of the state of public
+opinion, we cannot be surprised that Winstanley&rsquo;s eloquent
+and impressive appeals awoke a responsive echo in the minds
+of many who would have shrunk from following his example,
+or even from publicly avowing his creed. Moreover, the
+miserable condition of the masses of the agricultural population,
+of which we shall give some startling evidence later
+on, must have prepared a soil favourable to his self-imposed
+mission, to awaken them to a knowledge both of their rights
+and of their duties. Especially welcome must have been
+doctrines in accordance with their simple religious beliefs, as
+well as with their ancient and well-founded traditions of
+certain inalienable rights to the use of the land: rights that,
+as they well knew, had been filched from them under cover of
+laws they had no voice in making, which they did not understand,
+and which were enforced upon them by the power of
+the sword and gallows. We must remember, however, that
+though the landholders had succeeded in impoverishing, they
+had not yet succeeded in degrading the people; some remnant
+of the old English spirit was still left, and the Civil War had
+re-awakened the old English craving for freedom, liberty, and
+equity. The landholders, in their attempt to emancipate
+themselves from the control of the Crown, had kindled a fire
+amongst the people before which they quailed; small wonder,
+then, that about this time they began to wish, to intrigue and to
+struggle for the re-establishment of the Monarchy. From the
+time of Henry the Eighth the condition of the English labourers
+had steadily worsened; it was left to the landholders after the
+<a name="pg89" id="pg89"></a><span class="pagenum">89</span> Restoration to complete their enslavement and degradation.
+When considering Winstanley&rsquo;s or any other similar doctrines,
+the student would do well to bear in mind Professor Thorold
+Rogers&rsquo; conclusions,<a name="fnm89_1_77" id="fnm89_1_77"></a><a href="#fn89_1_77" class="fnnum">89:1</a>&mdash;conclusions arrived at after a lifelong
+study of the question,&mdash;that&mdash;&ldquo;I contend that from 1563 to
+1824, a conspiracy, concocted by the law and carried out by
+parties interested in its success, was entered into, to cheat the
+English workmen of his wages, to tie him to the soil, to deprive
+him of hope, and to degrade him into irremediable poverty.&rdquo; Or,
+as he elsewhere expresses it<a name="fnm89_2_78" id="fnm89_2_78"></a><a href="#fn89_2_78" class="fnnum">89:2</a>&mdash;&ldquo;For more than two centuries
+and a half the English law, and those who administered the
+law, were engaged in grinding down the English workman
+to the lowest pittance, in stamping out every expression or act
+which indicated any organised discontent, and in multiplying
+penalties upon him when he thought of his natural
+rights.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn79_1_72" id="fn79_1_72"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm79_1_72">79:1</a></span> King&rsquo;s Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark E 475 (11).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn83_1_73" id="fn83_1_73"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm83_1_73">83:1</a></span> King&rsquo;s Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 548 (33).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn84_1_74" id="fn84_1_74"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm84_1_74">84:1</a></span> King&rsquo;s Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 555.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn85_1_75" id="fn85_1_75"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm85_1_75">85:1</a></span> About this time, or a little later, there appeared in London an
+interesting manifesto from some of the disbanded soldiers, the copy of
+which in the British Museum (Press Mark, 4152. b.b. 109) bears no date,
+but is addressed as follows: &ldquo;To the Generals and Captains, Officers and
+Soldiers of this present Army. The Just and Equal Appeal, and the
+state of the Innocent Cause of us, who have been turned out of your
+Army for the exercise of our pure Consciences, who are now persecuted
+amongst our Brethren under the name of Quakers.&rdquo; Wherein they declare
+that &ldquo;The first cause and ground of our engagement in the late wars
+against the Bishops and Prelates, and against Kings and Lords, and the
+whole body of oppressors: our first engagement, we say, against these was
+justly and truly upon that account of purchasing and obtaining Liberties
+in Civil Rights, and also in matters of Conscience in the exercise of the
+worship of God.... And we can safely say that the Liberty of Conscience
+and the True Freedom of the Nations from all their oppressions
+was the mark at which we aimed, and the harbour for which we hoped
+and the rest proposed in our minds as the absolute end of our long and
+weary travel.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn87_1_76" id="fn87_1_76"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm87_1_76">87:1</a></span> <i>History of the Protectorate</i>, vol. i. pp. 50, 51.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn89_1_77" id="fn89_1_77"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm89_1_77">89:1</a></span> <i>Six Centuries of Work and Wages</i>, p. 398.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn89_2_78" id="fn89_2_78"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm89_2_78">89:2</a></span> <i>Socialism and Land.</i> Essay in a Quarterly Review, <i>Subjects of the
+Day</i>, part ii. p. 52.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg90" id="pg90"></a><span class="pagenum">90</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX<br /><br />
+THE DIGGERS&rsquo; MANIFESTOES</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot chaphead">
+<p>&ldquo;Take notice, That England is not a Free People till the Poor that
+have no land have a free allowance to dig and labor the Commons, and
+so live as comfortably as the Land Lords that live in their Inclosures.
+For the people have not laid out their monies and shed their blood that
+their Land Lords, the Norman Power, should still have its liberty and
+freedom to rule in tyranny, but that the Oppressed might be set free,
+prison doors opened, and the Poor People&rsquo;s heart comforted by an
+universal consent of making the Earth a Common Treasury, that they
+may live together united by brotherly love into one spirit, and having a
+comfortable livelihood in the Community of one Earth their Mother.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Winstanley</span>,
+<i>The True Levellers Standard Advanced</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>By the publication of his earlier pamphlets, Winstanley seems
+to have attracted a small band of earnest disciples, eager by
+their actions to declare their adherence to the principles he
+had so fearlessly and eloquently proclaimed. However, before
+taking the steps they had decided on, they deemed it necessary
+openly and frankly to declare their intentions to the world,
+more especially to those whose individual or class interests
+would be likely to be affected thereby. Hence early in 1649,
+probably in the last days of March or the beginning of April,
+they issued a pamphlet, signed by some 46 of them, which
+seems mainly from Winstanley&rsquo;s pen, entitled:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;A DECLARATION FROM THE POOR OPPRESSED
+PEOPLE OF ENGLAND:<a name="fnm90_1_79" id="fnm90_1_79"></a><a href="#fn90_1_79" class="fnnum">90:1</a></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Directed to all that call themselves or are called Lords of
+Manors through this Nation, that have begun to cut, or
+that through fear of Covetousness do intend to cut down
+the woods and trees that grow upon the Commons and
+Waste Land.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="pg91" id="pg91"></a><span class="pagenum">91</span>
+The pamphlet opens with the following vigorous and
+pertinent words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;We whose names are subscribed, do in the name of all the
+poor oppressed people of England, declare unto you that call
+yourselves Lords of Manors and Lords of the Land, that, in
+regard the King of Righteousness, our Maker, hath enlightened
+our hearts so far as to see that the Earth was not made purposely
+for you to be Lords of it, and we to be your Slaves,
+Servants and Beggars, but it was made to be a common livelihood
+to all.... And further, in regard the King of Righteousness
+hath made us sensible of our burthens, and the cries and
+groanings of our hearts are come before Him, we take it as a
+testimony of love from Him, that our hearts begin to be freed
+from slavish fear of men such as you are, and that we find
+Resolutions in us, grounded upon the Inward Law of Love one
+towards another, to dig and plough up the Commons and
+Waste Land through England; and that our conversations
+shall be so unblamable that your Laws shall not reach to
+oppress us any longer, unless you by your Laws will shed the
+innocent blood that runs in our veins.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Subsequently they protest against the Lords of Manors
+controlling the use and taking the profit of the Commons,
+hindering the people from supplying their wants as regards
+&ldquo;Woods, Heath, Turf or Turfeys in places about the Commons,&rdquo;
+and continue defiantly:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Therefore we are resolved to be cheated no longer, nor to
+be held under the slavish fear of you no longer, seeing the
+Earth was made for us as well as for you. And if the Common
+Land belong to us who are the poor oppressed, surely the
+woods that grow upon the Commons belong to us likewise.
+Therefore we are resolved to try the uttermost in the light of
+Reason to know whether we shall be Free-men or Slaves. If
+we lie still and let you steal away our birthrights, we perish;
+and if we petition, we perish also, though we have paid taxes,
+given free-quarter, and have ventured our lives to preserve the
+Nation&rsquo;s freedom as much as you, and therefore, by the Law of
+<a name="pg92" id="pg92"></a><span class="pagenum">92</span> Contract with you, freedom in the land is our portion as well
+as yours, equal with you. And if we strive for Freedom, and
+your murdering, governing Laws destroy us, we can but
+perish.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Therefore we require and we resolve to take both
+Common Land and Common Woods to be a livelihood
+for us, and look upon you as equal with us, not above us,
+knowing very well that England, the Land of our Nativity, is
+to be a Common Treasury of Livelihood to all, without respect
+of persons.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;So then, we declare unto you that do intend to cut our
+Common Woods and Trees, that you shall not do it, unless it
+be for a stock for us, and we to know of it by a public declaration
+abroad, that the poor oppressed, who live thereabouts, may
+take it and employ it for their public use: Therefore take notice,
+we have demanded it in the name of the Commons of England,
+and of all the Nations of the world, it being the righteous
+freedom of the Creation.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>They then warn all wood-buyers against purchasing from
+those who would dispose of such wood for their own private
+advantage, again emphasising their contention that they would
+take it only to provide a common stock for all. Then they
+appeal to the Great Council of England for protection and encouragement,
+urging that august body to fulfil the promises
+so freely made, at the outbreak of the Civil War, to induce
+them and others to espouse the Parliament&rsquo;s cause. Apparently
+they did not expect much from them, as their appeal
+commences in the following somewhat hesitating manner:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;And we hope we may not doubt (at least we expect) that
+they that are called the Great Council and Powers of England,
+who so often have declared themselves by promises and by
+covenants, and have confirmed them by multitude of fasting
+days, and devout protestations to make England a free people,
+upon condition they would pay moneys and adventure their lives
+against the successor of the Norman Conqueror, under whose
+oppressing power England was enslaved. And we look upon
+that freedom promised to be the inheritance of all, without
+respect of persons. And this cannot be unless the Land of
+England be freely set at liberty from proprietors and becomes a
+Common Treasury to all her children, as every portion of the
+<a name="pg93" id="pg93"></a><span class="pagenum">93</span> Land of Canaan was the common livelihood of such and such a
+Tribe, and of every member of that Tribe, without exception,
+neither hedging in any, nor hedging out.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We say we hope we need not doubt of their sincerity to
+us herein, and that they will not gainsay our determinate
+course. Howsoever, their actions will prove to the view of all
+either their sincerity or their hypocrisy. We know what we
+speak is our privilege and that our cause is righteous; and if
+they doubt of it, let them but send a child for us to come
+before them, and we will make it manifest some ways.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>They then advance the grounds for their demands in the
+following incisive words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<i>First</i>, By the National Covenant, which yet stands in
+force to bind Parliament and People to be faithful and sincere
+before the Lord God Almighty, wherein every one in his several
+place hath covenanted to preserve and seek the liberty each of
+other without respect of persons.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Secondly</i>, By the late victory over King Charles we do
+claim this our privilege to be quietly given us out of the hands
+of Tyrant Government, as our bargain and contract with them.
+For the Parliament promised if we would pay taxes, and give
+free-quarter, and adventure our lives against Charles and his
+party, whom they called the common enemy, they would make
+us a free people.<a name="fnm93_1_80" id="fnm93_1_80"></a><a href="#fn93_1_80" class="fnnum">93:1</a> These three being all done by us, as well as
+by themselves, we claim this our bargain by the Law of Contract
+from them, to be a free people with them, they being
+chosen by us, but for a peculiar work, and for an appointed
+<a name="pg94" id="pg94"></a><span class="pagenum">94</span> time, from among us, not to be our oppressing Lords, but
+servants to succour us. But these two are our weakest proofs.
+And yet by them, in the light of Reason and Equity that dwells
+in men&rsquo;s hearts, we shall with ease cast down all those former
+enslaving, Norman, reiterated Laws, in every King&rsquo;s reign
+since the Conquest, which are as thorns in our eyes and pricks
+in our sides, and which are called the Ancient Government of
+England.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Thirdly</i>, We shall prove we have a free right to the land
+of England, being born therein, as well as elder brothers, and
+that it is our right equal with them and they with us, to have
+a comfortable livelihood in the Earth, without owning any of
+our own kind to be either Lords or Land-Lords over us. And
+this we shall prove by plain text of Scripture, without exposition
+upon them, which the Scholars and Great Ones generally
+say is their rule to walk by.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Fourthly</i>, We shall prove it by the Righteous Law of our
+Creation, that mankind in all its branches is the Lord of the
+Earth, and ought not to be in subjection to any of his own
+kind without him, but to live in the light of the Law of
+Righteousness and Peace established in his heart.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The pamphlet concludes as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Thus in love we have declared the purpose of our hearts
+plainly, without flattery, expecting love and the same sincerity
+from you, without grumbling or quarrelling, being Creatures
+of your own image and mould, intending no other matter
+herein, but to observe the Law of Righteous Action, endeavouring
+to shut out of the Creation the accursed thing
+called Particular Propriety, which is the cause of all wars,
+bloodshed, theft, and enslaving Laws, that hold the people
+under misery.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Signed for and in the behalf of all the poor oppressed
+people of England and the whole world&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table summary="List of signatories">
+ <tr><td class="smcap">Gerard Winstanley, </td>
+ <td rowspan="8"><img src="images/bracket1.png" height="100%" width="22" alt="long bracket" /></td>
+ <td rowspan="8" >and others, forty-six in all.</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="smcap">John Coulton, </td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="smcap">John Palmer, </td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="smcap">Thomas Star, </td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="smcap">Samuel Webb, </td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="smcap">John Hayman, </td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="smcap">Thomas Edcer, </td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="smcap">William Hogrill,&rdquo; </td></tr>
+ </table>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="pg95" id="pg95"></a><span class="pagenum">95</span>
+ A few days after the publication of this declaration, viz.,
+on Sunday, April 1st, 1649, the Diggers commenced their
+labours on the Commons around George&rsquo;s Hill, in Surrey, the
+first results of which we have already recorded. Within a
+few days of Winstanley and Everard&rsquo;s visit to Lord Fairfax
+and his Council of War, they and their followers drafted yet
+another pamphlet, which bears date April 26th, 1649, the
+very day Lockyer, &ldquo;The Army&rsquo;s Martyr,&rdquo; was condemned to
+death, and the title-page of which reads as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+ <p class="subject">&ldquo;THE TRUE LEVELLERS STANDARD ADVANCED:<a name="fnm95_1_81" id="fnm95_1_81"></a><a href="#fn95_1_81" class="fnnum">95:1</a></p>
+
+<p class="smcap little center">or<br />
+The state of Community Opened and Presented to the Sons
+of Men.<br />
+by</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table summary="list of signatories" class="smcap">
+ <tr><td class="center">&mdash;&mdash;</td><td>Gerrard Winstanley.</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>William Everard.</td><td>Richard Goodgroome.</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>John Palmer.</td><td>Thomas Starre.</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>John South.</td><td>William Hoggrill.</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>John Courton.</td><td>Robert Sawyer.</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>William Taylor.</td><td>Thomas Eder.</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>Christopher Clifford.</td><td>Henry Bickerstaffe.</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>John Barker.</td><td>John Taylor</td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Beginning to plant and manure the Waste Land upon Georges
+Hill, in the Parish of Walton, in the County of Surrey.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The pamphlet opens with a Preface by a certain John
+Taylor, whose name appears last on the list of signatures
+attached thereto, and who was probably one of Winstanley&rsquo;s
+more recent converts. In it he states that he has had &ldquo;some
+conversation with the author of this ensuing declaration, and
+the persons subscribing, and by experience find them sweetly
+acted and guided by the everlasting Spirit, the Prince of
+Peace, to walk in the paths of Righteousness.&rdquo; &ldquo;Such as
+these,&rdquo; he declares, &ldquo;shall be partakers of the promise&mdash;<i>Blessed
+are the meek, for they shall inherit the Earth.</i>&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg96" id="pg96"></a><span class="pagenum">96</span>
+The body of the pamphlet itself is headed:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="hanging">&ldquo;<span class="smcap">A Declaration to the Powers of England, and to all
+the Powers of the World</span>, shewing the cause why the
+Common People of England have begun and give consent
+to dig up, manure, and sow corn upon George Hill in
+Surrey, by those that have subscribed, and thousands
+more that give consent.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It commences as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;In the beginning of time the great Creator, Reason, made
+the Earth to be a Common Treasury to preserve beasts, birds,
+fishes and man, the Lord who was to govern this Creation.
+For man had dominion given him over the beasts, birds and
+fishes; but not one word was spoken in the beginning that
+one branch of mankind should rule over another.... But since
+human flesh began to delight himself in the objects of the
+Creation more than in the Spirit of Reason and Righteousness ... and
+selfish imagination ruling as King in the
+room of Reason therein, and working with Covetousness, did
+set up one man to teach and rule over another; and thereby
+the Spirit was killed, and Man was brought into bondage and
+became a greater slave to some of his own kind than the
+beasts of the field were to him. Hereupon the Earth (which
+was made to be a Common Treasury of Relief for all, both
+beasts and men) was hedged into enclosures by the Teachers
+and Rulers, and the others were made Servants and Slaves.
+And the Earth, which was made to be a Common Storehouse
+for all, is bought and sold and kept within the hands of a few,
+whereby the Great Creator is mightily dishonoured, as if He
+were a respecter of persons, delighting in the comfortable
+livelihood of some, and rejoicing in the miserable poverty and
+straits of others.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then makes his appeal to those who had
+been entrusted with the government of the Nation, in the
+following touching and yet suggestive words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;O thou Powers of England! though thou hast promised
+to make this people a Free People, yet thou hast so handled
+the matter, through thy self-seeking humour, that thou hast
+wrapped us up more in bondage, and oppression lies heavy
+upon us.... If some of you will not dare to shed your
+<a name="pg97" id="pg97"></a><span class="pagenum">97</span> blood to maintain tyranny and oppression upon the Creation,
+know this, That our blood and life shall not be unwilling to
+be delivered up in meekness to maintain Universal Liberty, that
+so the Curse, on our part, may be taken off the Creation. We
+shall not do this by force of arms; we abhor it, for it is the work
+of the Midianites to kill one another, but by obeying the Lord
+of Hosts, by laboring the Earth in Righteousness together,
+to earn our bread by the sweat of our brows, neither giving
+hire nor taking hire, but working together and eating together
+as one man, or as one house in Israel restored from
+Bondage. And so by the power of Reason, the Law of
+Righteousness in us, we endeavour to lift up the Creation
+from that bondage of Civil Propriety which it groans
+under.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He again explains the work they are entered upon, and
+their reasons for attempting it, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;The work we are going about is this, To dig up Georges
+Hill and the waste grounds thereabouts, and to sow corn, and
+to eat our bread together by the sweat of our brows.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And the First Reason is this, <span class="smcap">That we may work in
+righteousness, and lay the Foundation of making the
+Earth a Common Treasury for All, both Rich and Poor,
+That everyone that is born in the Land may be Fed by the
+Earth his Mother that brought him forth, according to
+the Reason that rules in the Creation</span>.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Then follows this impressive declaration of the motives
+inspiring their actions:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;For it is showed us, That so long as we, or any other, do
+own the Earth to be the peculiar Interest of Lords and Land
+Lords, and not common to others as well as to them, we own
+the Curse, and hold the Creation under Bondage. And so
+long as we or any other do own Land Lords and Tenants, for
+one to call the land his, or another to hire it of him, or for
+one to give hire and for another to work for hire: This is to dishonour
+the work of Creation, as if the righteous Creator should
+have respect to persons, and therefore made the Earth for
+some and not for all. So long as we, or any other, maintain
+this Civil Propriety, we consent still to hold the Creation in
+that bondage it groans under; and so we should hinder the
+<a name="pg98" id="pg98"></a><span class="pagenum">98</span> Work of Restoration, and sin against the Light that is given
+into us, and so, through fear of the flesh man, lose our peace.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>And the pamphlet concludes with the following somewhat
+mystic words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Thus you Powers of England, and of the whole World,
+we have declared our Reasons why we have begun to dig
+upon George Hill in Surrey. One thing I must tell you
+more, which I received in voice likewise at another time;
+and when I received it my eye was set towards you. The
+words were these&mdash;<i>Let Israel go free.</i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Surely as Israel lay four hundred and thirty years under
+Pharaoh&rsquo;s bondage, before Moses was sent to fetch them out,
+even so Israel (the Elect Spirit spread in Sons and Daughters)
+hath lain three times so long already.... But now the time
+of Deliverance hath come.... For now the King of Righteousness
+is arising to rule in and over the Earth.... Therefore
+once more, <i>Let Israel go free</i>, that the Poor may labour the
+waste land, and suck the Breasts of their Mother Earth, that
+they starve not. In so doing thou wilt keep the Sabbath
+Day, which is a Day of Rest, sweetly enjoying the Peace of
+the Spirit of Righteousness, and find Peace by living among
+a people that live in Peace: This will be a Day of Rest
+which thou never knew yet.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But I do not entreat thee, for thou art not to be entreated.
+But in the Name of the Lord, that hath drawn me forth to
+speak to thee, I, yea I say, I command thee, <i>To let Israel go
+free, and quietly to gather together into the place where I shall
+appoint; and hold them, no longer in bondage</i>.... But if you
+will not, but Pharaoh-like cry, <i>Who is the Lord that we should
+obey him?</i> and endeavour to oppose, then know, that He that
+delivered Israel from Pharaoh of old is the same Power still,
+in whom we trust, and whom we serve. For this, Conquest
+over thee shall be got, <i>not by Sword or Weapon, but by my
+Spirit, saith the Lord of Hosts.</i>&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Such, then, were the first &ldquo;official pronouncements&rdquo; of
+the body of men known in the History of England as the
+Diggers, whose proud privilege it was to be the first in our
+native land, as against the rights of property, boldly to proclaim
+the rights of man. Poor in worldly goods they may
+have been, but they were rich in hope and in love, in broad
+<a name="pg99" id="pg99"></a><span class="pagenum">99</span> thoughts and elevating ideals, in a firm belief in the power
+and ultimate triumph of the Inward Light of Equity and
+Reason, and in unflinching resolution, not only to proclaim
+the steps necessary to social salvation, but to adventure their
+lives and persons to lay the foundations of a better, of a
+more equitable and beneficial, social state than ever they
+knew. Certain it is that they were inspired by the highest
+motives that impel men to action; hence even those who
+may deem their views erroneous should not withhold from
+the men themselves their meed of respect, admiration, and
+sympathy. To those who deem their views true, we need
+make no appeal. Monuments are erected in stone, in marble,
+or in gold, to those whose actions in peace or in war commend
+themselves to their own generation; the monuments to those in
+advance of their times and of our times, are to be found only in
+the hearts of thinkers. It was but yesterday, after some two
+hundred and fifty years, that public sentiment tolerated the
+erection of a public monument to the memory of the man
+who delivered his country from under the tyranny of Kings.
+Before another similar period has passed away, a similar
+tribute may be paid to the memory of those who, during
+the same tumultuous but inspiring times, would have saved
+all future generations of their countrymen from under the
+tyranny of Land-Lords.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn90_1_79" id="fn90_1_79"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm90_1_79">90:1</a></span> British Museum, Press Mark, 1027, i. 16 (3). We say &ldquo;mainly from
+Winstanley&rsquo;s pen,&rdquo; for though the arguments are his, the style of the
+pamphlet, with its long, involved, never-ending sentences, so unlike
+Winstanley&rsquo;s crisp, epigrammatic, vigorous style, suggests to us that the
+writing was probably left to some other member of his company, or
+probably to a Committee appointed for the purpose.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn93_1_80" id="fn93_1_80"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm93_1_80">93:1</a></span> This fairly represents the general spirit and feeling prevailing in
+the Model Army, who repeatedly contended, to quote the words of the
+Declaration of the Army of June 14th, 1647, that&mdash;&ldquo;We are not a mere
+mercenary army hired to serve any arbitrary power of a State, but called
+forth and conjured by the several Declarations of Parliament to the
+defence of our own and the people&rsquo;s just Rights and Liberties; and so we
+took up arms in judgment and conscience to those ends, and have so
+continued in them, and are resolved according to your first just desires in
+your Declarations, and such principles as we have received from your
+frequent informations, and our own common sense concerning those our
+fundamental rights and liberties, to assert and vindicate the just power
+and rights of this Kingdom in Parliament for those common ends promised
+against all arbitrary power, violence and oppression, and against all
+particular parties or interests whatsoever.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn95_1_81" id="fn95_1_81"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm95_1_81">95:1</a></span> King&rsquo;s Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 552. In the
+British Museum Catalogue the Preface is attributed to John Taylor the
+Water Poet; but, to judge from his other writings, this is probably an
+error.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg100" id="pg100"></a><span class="pagenum">100</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X<br /><br />
+
+A LETTER TO LORD FAIRFAX AND HIS COUNCIL
+OF WAR; AND AN APPEAL TO THE HOUSE
+OF COMMONS</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot chaphead">
+<p>&ldquo;For you must either establish Commonwealth&rsquo;s Freedom in power,
+making provision for everyone&rsquo;s peace, which is Righteousness, or else
+you must set up Monarchy again. Monarchy is twofold, either for one
+king to reign, or for many to rule by kingly principles. For the king&rsquo;s
+power lies in his laws, not in his name. And if either one king rule,
+or many rule by kingly principles, much murmuring, grudges, troubles,
+and quarrels may and will arise among the oppressed people upon every
+gained opportunity.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Winstanley</span>, <i>The Law of Freedom</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Within a few days of Lord Fairfax&rsquo;s visit to the Diggers,
+already recorded, and about two months after the publication
+of <i>The True Levellers Standard Advanced</i>, Winstanley, on
+June 9th, 1649, again made his appearance at the headquarters
+of the Army, the bearer of a letter, which, as he
+tells us, he himself delivered to the Lord General, &ldquo;who very
+mildly promised to read it and consider of it&rdquo;:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="subject">&ldquo;A Letter to Lord Fairfax and his Council of War:<a name="fnm100_1_82" id="fnm100_1_82"></a><a href="#fn100_1_82" class="fnnum">100:1</a></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">With divers questions to the Lawyers and Ministers:
+Proving it an undeniable equity that the Common People
+ought to dig, plow, plant and dwell upon the Commons
+without hiring them or paying Rent to any.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Delivered to the General and his Chief Officers, June 9th,
+1649, by Gerrard Winstanley in the behalf of those who
+have begun to dig upon George Hill in Surrey.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="pg101" id="pg101"></a><span class="pagenum">101</span>
+The letter opens as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Our digging and ploughing upon George Hill in Surrey
+is not unknown to you, since you have seen some of our
+persons, and heard us speak in defence thereof; and we did
+receive kindness and moderation from you and your Council
+of War, both when some of us were at Whitehall before you,
+and when you came in person to George Hill to view our
+works. We endeavour to lay open the bottom and intent of
+our business as much as can be, that none may be troubled
+with doubtful imaginations about us, but may be satisfied in
+the sincerity and universal righteousness of the work.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It then continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;We understand that our digging upon that Common is
+the talk of the whole Land, some approving, some disowning;
+some are friends filled with love, and see that the work intends
+good to the Nation, the peace whereof is that which we seek
+after; others are enemies filled with fury, who falsely report
+of us that we have intent to fortify ourselves, and afterwards
+to fight against others and take away their goods from them,
+which is a thing we abhor. And many other slanders we
+rejoice over, because we know ourselves clear, our endeavour
+being no otherwise but to improve the Commons, and to call
+off that oppression and outward bondage which the Creation
+groans under, as much as in us lies, and to lift up and preserve
+the purity thereof.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then declares that their opponents were but
+&ldquo;one or two covetous freeholders that would have all the
+Commons to themselves, and that would uphold the Norman
+tyranny,&rdquo; and still further explains his position, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;We told you, upon a question you put to us, that we
+were not against any that would have Magistrates and Laws
+to govern, as the Nations of the World are governed, but
+that, for our own parts, we shall need neither the one nor the
+other in that nature of government. For as our land is
+common, so our cattle is to be common, and our corn and fruits
+of the earth common, and are not to be bought and sold among
+us, but to remain a standing portion of livelihood to us and
+our children, without that cheating entanglement of buying
+and selling; and we shall not arrest one another. And then
+<a name="pg102" id="pg102"></a><span class="pagenum">102</span> what need have we of imprisoning, whipping or hanging laws
+to bring one another into bondage? And we know that none
+of those that are subject to this righteous law dares arrest or
+enslave his brother for or about the objects of the Earth,
+because the Earth is made by our Creator to be a Common
+Treasury of Livelihood to one equal with another, without
+respect of persons.... What need have we of any outward,
+selfish, confused laws, made to uphold the Power of Covetousness,
+when we have the Righteous Law written in our hearts,
+teaching us to walk purely in the Creation.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then complains of the action of some of the
+soldiers, but expresses the desire that they should not be
+punished, only cautioned not to offend again; and states the
+readiness of himself and companions to come to headquarters
+&ldquo;upon a bare letter.&rdquo; He reiterates his contention that their
+demand is only to enjoy freedom &ldquo;according to the law of
+contract between you and us&rdquo;; freedom to till the common
+land, not to trespass upon any enclosures. He continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;We desire that your Lawyers may consider these questions,
+which we affirm to be truths, and which give good
+assurance, by the law of the land, that we that are the younger
+brothers, or common people, have a true right to dig, plow up
+and dwell upon the Commons, as we have declared.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="subject">Questions to the Lawyers.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;1. Did not William the Conqueror dispossess the English,
+and thus cause them to be servants to him?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;2. Was not King Charles the direct successor of William
+the First?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;3. Whether Lords of the Manor were not the successors
+of the chief officers of William the First, holding their rights
+to the Commons by the power of the sword?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;4. Whether Lords of the Manor have not lost their
+royalty to the common land by the recent victories?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;5. Whether any laws since the coming in of kings have
+been made in the light of the righteous law of our Creation,
+<i>respecting all alike</i>, or have not been grounded upon selfish
+principles in fear or flattery of their king, to uphold freedom
+in the gentry and clergy, and to hold the common people
+under bondage still, and so respecting persons?</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg103" id="pg103"></a><span class="pagenum">103</span>
+&ldquo;6. Whether all laws that are not grounded upon equity
+and reason, not giving an universal freedom to all, but respecting
+persons, ought not to be cut off with the king&rsquo;s head? We
+affirm they ought. If all laws be grounded upon equity and
+reason, then the whole land of England is to be a Common
+Treasury to everyone born in the Land.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;7. Whether everyone without exception, by the Law of
+Contract, ought not to have liberty to enjoy the earth for his
+livelihood, and to settle his dwelling in any part of the
+Commons of England, without buying or renting land of any,
+seeing that everyone by agreement and covenant among
+themselves have paid taxes, given free-quarter, and adventured
+their lives to recover England out of bondage? We affirm
+they ought.<a name="fnm103_1_83" id="fnm103_1_83"></a><a href="#fn103_1_83" class="fnnum">103:1</a></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;8. Whether the laws that were made in the days of the
+king do give freedom to any but the gentry and clergy?&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then puts a string of similar questions to
+Public Preachers, &ldquo;that say they preach the Righteous Law,&rdquo;
+from which, however, we need only quote the following:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject"><a name="pg104" id="pg104"></a><span class="pagenum">104</span>&ldquo;Questions to Public Preachers.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;First we demand, Yea or No, Whether the Earth, with
+her fruits, was made to be bought and sold from one to
+another; And whether one part of mankind was made to be
+a Lord of the Land, and another part a servant, by the Law
+of Creation before the Fall?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I affirm (and I challenge you to disprove) that the
+Earth was made to be a Common Treasury of Livelihood for
+all, without respect of persons, and was not made to be bought
+and sold.... And this being a truth, as it is, then none ought
+to be Lords and Land Lords over another, but the Earth is
+free to every son and daughter of mankind to live upon.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>And the letter concludes with the following eloquent and
+heart-stirring words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Thus I have declared to you and to all the world what
+that Power of Life is that is in me; and knowing that the
+Spirit of Righteousness doth appear to many in this Land, I
+desire all of you seriously, in love and humility, to consider
+of this business of Public Community, which I am carried forth
+in the Power of Love and clear light of Universal Righteousness
+to advance as much as I can; and I can do no other, the
+Law of Love in my heart does so constrain me; by reason
+whereof I am called fool and madman, and have many
+slanderous reports cast upon me, and meet with much fury
+from some covetous people; under all of which my spirit is
+made patient and is guarded with joy and peace. I hate none,
+I love all, I delight to see everyone live comfortably, I would
+have none live in poverty, straits and sorrows; therefore if
+you find any selfishness in this work, or discover anything
+that is destructive of the whole Creation [Mankind], that you
+would open your hearts as freely to me, in declaring my weakness
+to me, as I have been open-hearted in declaring that
+which I find and feel much life and strength in. But if you
+see Righteousness in it, and that it holds forth the strength of
+Universal Love to all, without respect to persons, so that our
+Creator is honored in the work of His hand, then own it and
+justify it, and let the Power of Love have his freedom and
+glory.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In his interview with the Diggers, Lord Fairfax had expressed
+his intention to leave them to &ldquo;the Gentlemen of the
+<a name="pg105" id="pg105"></a><span class="pagenum">105</span> County and the Law of the Land.&rdquo; The former soon put
+the latter in motion, and on July 11th, 1649, the day before
+Cromwell set out with much pomp and ceremony for his
+notorious expedition to Ireland, Winstanley, under circumstances
+that will presently be revealed, found himself compelled
+to address an eloquent appeal for protection to the House of
+Commons, long extracts from which we feel impelled to place
+before our readers. It appeared in pamphlet form with the
+following title-page:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;AN APPEAL TO THE HOUSE OF COMMONS:<a name="fnm105_1_84" id="fnm105_1_84"></a><a href="#fn105_1_84" class="fnnum">105:1</a></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Desiring their answer whether the Common People shall have
+the quiet enjoyment of the Commons and Waste Land; or
+whether they shall be under the will of Lords of Manors
+still. Occasioned by an Arrest made by Thomas Lord
+Wenman, Ralph Verney Knight, and Richard Winwood
+Esq. upon the Author hereof, for a Trespass in Digging
+upon the Common Land at Georges Hill in Surrey.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">By Gerrard Winstanley, John Barker and Thomas Star.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center nogap">In the name of all the poor oppressed in the Land of
+England.</p>
+
+<p class="center little">Unrighteous oppression kindles a flame, but love, righteousness and
+tenderness of heart quenches it again.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>With more than his usual directness, Winstanley at once
+states the subject of his appeal in the following manner:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Sirs</span>,&mdash;The cause of this our presentment before you is,
+an Appeal to you desiring you to demonstrate to us, and the
+whole Land, the equity or non-equity of our cause. And that
+you would either cast us by just reason under the feet of those
+we call Task Masters, or Lords of Manors, or else to deliver us
+out of their tyrannical hands: In whose hands by way of
+Arrest we are for the present, for a Trespass to them, as they
+say, in digging upon the Common Land. The settling whereof
+according to Equity and Reason will quiet the minds of the
+<a name="pg106" id="pg106"></a><span class="pagenum">106</span> oppressed people; it will be a keeping of our National
+Covenant; it will be a peace to yourselves, and make England
+the most flourishing and strongest Land in the world, and the
+first of Nations that shall begin to give up their Crown and
+Scepter, their dominion and government, into the hands of
+Jesus Christ.<a name="fnm106_1_85" id="fnm106_1_85"></a><a href="#fn106_1_85" class="fnnum">106:1</a></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The cause is this, we amongst others of the common
+people, that have ever been friends to the Parliament, as we
+are assured our enemies will witness to it, have ploughed and
+digged upon Georges Hill in Surrey, to sow corn for the
+succour of man, offering no offence to any, but do carry
+ourselves in love and peace towards all, having no intent to
+meddle with any man&rsquo;s enclosures or property till it be freely
+given to us by themselves, but only to improve the Commons
+and waste lands to our best advantage, for the relief of
+ourselves and others, being moved thereunto by the reason
+hereafter following, not expecting any to be much offended, in
+regard the cause is so just and upright.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yet notwithstanding, there be three men (called by the
+people Lords of Manors), viz., Thomas Lord Wenman, Ralph
+Verney Knight, and Richard Winwood Esq., have arrested us
+for a trespass in digging upon the Commons, and upon the
+arrest we made our appearance in Kingstone Court, where
+we understood we were arrested for meddling with other men&rsquo;s
+rights; and, secondly, they were encouraged to arrest us upon
+your Act of Parliament (as they tell us) to maintain the old
+laws. We desired to plead our own cause, the Court denied
+us, and to fee a lawyer we cannot, for divers reasons, as we
+may show hereafter.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, Sirs, our case is this, for we appeal to you, for you
+are the only men that we are to deal withal in this business:
+Whether the common people, after all their taxes, free-quarter
+and loss of blood to recover England from under the
+Norman yoke, shall have the freedom to improve the Commons
+and Waste Lands free to themselves, as freely their own as the
+Enclosures are the propriety of the elder brothers? Or
+<a name="pg107" id="pg107"></a><span class="pagenum">107</span> whether the Lords of Manors shall have them, according to
+their old custom, from the King&rsquo;s will and grant, and so remain
+Task Masters still over us, which was the people&rsquo;s slavery
+under conquest?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We have made our appeal to you to settle this matter in the
+Equity and Reason of it, and to pass the sentence of freedom to
+us, you being the men with whom we have to do in this
+business, in whose hands there is power to settle it, for no
+Court can end this controversy but your Court of Parliament,
+as the case of this Nation now stands.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>After emphasising his fundamental contention that in
+Equity and by the Law of Righteousness all should have the
+freedom of the Earth granted unto them, he summarises the
+causes that have conspired to place the Members of the House
+of Commons in power, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;You of the Gentry, as well as we of the Commonalty, all
+groaned under the burden of the bad government and burdening
+laws of the late King Charles, who was the last successor
+of William the Conqueror. You and we cried for a Parliament,
+and a Parliament was called, and wars, you know, presently
+began between the king that represented William the
+Conqueror and the body of the English people that were
+enslaved. We looked upon you to be our Chief Council to
+agitate business for us, though you were summonsed by the
+king&rsquo;s writ, and choosen by the Freeholders, who are the successors
+of William the Conqueror&rsquo;s soldiers. You saw the
+danger so great that without a war England was likely to be
+more enslaved, therefore you called upon us to assist you
+with plate, taxes, free-quarter and our persons: and you
+promised us, in the name of the Almighty, to make us a
+Free People. Thereupon you and we took the National
+Covenant with joint consent, to endeavour the freedom,
+peace, and safety of the people of England. And you and
+we joined person and purse together in the common cause,
+and Will. the Conqueror&rsquo;s successor, which was Charles,
+was cast out; thereby we have recovered ourselves from
+under that Norman yoke. And now unless you and we be
+merely besotted with covetousness, pride and slavish fear
+of men, it is and will be our wisdom to cast out all those
+enslaving laws which was the tyrannical power the king
+<a name="pg108" id="pg108"></a><span class="pagenum">108</span> pressed us down by.<a name="fnm108_1_86" id="fnm108_1_86"></a><a href="#fn108_1_86" class="fnnum">108:1</a> O shut not your eyes against the light;
+darken not knowledge by dispute about particular men&rsquo;s
+privileges, when Universal Freedom is brought to be tried
+before you; dispute no further when truth appears, but be
+silent and practice it. Stop not your ears against the secret
+moanings of the oppressed, under these expressions, lest the
+Lord see it and be offended, and shut His eyes against your
+cries, and work a deliverance for His waiting people some other
+way than by you.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He then summarises the prevailing ills, and indicates their
+manifest and immediate duty, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;The main thing that you should look upon is the Land,
+which calls upon her children to be free from the entanglements
+of the Norman Taskmasters. For one third part lies waste and
+barren, and her children starve for want, in regard the Lords
+of Manors will not suffer the poor to manure it.... The
+power is in your hands, the Nations Representative, O let the
+first thing you do be this, to set the land free. Let the Gentry
+have their enclosures free from all enslaving entanglements
+whatsoever, and let the Common People have the Commons
+and Waste Lands set free to them from all Norman enslaving
+Lords of Manors. That so both Elder and Younger Brother, as
+we spring successively one from another, may live free and
+quiet one by and with another in this Land of our Nativity.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;This thing,&rdquo; he then boldly declares, &ldquo;you are bound to see
+<a name="pg109" id="pg109"></a><span class="pagenum">109</span> done, or at least to endeavour it, before another Representative
+force you; otherwise you cannot discharge your trust to God
+and man.&rdquo; And the Appeal concludes with the following
+words: &ldquo;Set the Land free from oppression, and righteousness
+will be the Laws, Government, and Strength of that People.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Long Parliament, however, were too busy carrying
+English civilisation into Ireland to heed his words. And yet
+surely there was work enough for them to do in their own
+country, in which, as we have already pointed out, since
+the reign of Henry the Seventh the condition of the masses
+of the people had steadily worsened, and, as a natural consequence,
+the number of beggars, &ldquo;rogues and vagrants,&rdquo;
+despite barbarous laws, involving their wholesale hanging, had
+steadily increased. During the reign of James the First, in
+a pamphlet entitled <i>Grievous Groans of the Poor</i>, published
+1622, we hear the complaint that &ldquo;the number of the poor do
+daily increase.&rdquo; The only remedy the then wise men of
+England could devise was to make the laws against them still
+more severe. Consequently it was ordered that the first time
+such people were apprehended they should be branded with
+the letter R, and if subsequently again found begging or
+wandering they were &ldquo;to suffer death without benefit of
+Clergy.&rdquo; Yet such was their obstinacy that they still increased
+in numbers; and that for the simple reason that the
+economic or social causes of which they were but the inevitable
+outcome were not removed.</p>
+
+<p>During all this period, however, the country was developing,
+its industry and commerce expanding, and its wealth
+increasing by leaps and bounds; but in all this the &ldquo;meaner
+sort,&rdquo; the Younger Brothers, the disinherited masses, had
+neither lot nor share. Though Clarendon may speak of the
+growing economical prosperity of the country during the time
+of which we are writing, yet there be no doubt of the truth
+of Thorold Rogers&rsquo; contention, that<a name="fnm109_1_87" id="fnm109_1_87"></a><a href="#fn109_1_87" class="fnnum">109:1</a>&mdash;&ldquo;I am convinced from
+the comparison I have been able to make between wages, rents
+and prices, that it was a period of excessive misery among the
+<a name="pg110" id="pg110"></a><span class="pagenum">110</span> mass of the people and the tenants, a time in which a few
+might have become rich, while the many were crushed down
+into hopeless and almost permanent indigence.&rdquo; And yet the
+facts are such as to compel him, when speaking of the
+Restoration, to point out that<a name="fnm110_1_88" id="fnm110_1_88"></a><a href="#fn110_1_88" class="fnnum">110:1</a>&mdash;&ldquo;the labourers, as far as
+the will went, were better off under the rule of the Saints
+than under that of the sinners.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The English land-system, as we know it to-day, really
+began with the Restoration, when the very memory of
+Winstanley and his doctrines was swept away, when the men of
+the Model Army found themselves powerless, while &ldquo;the great
+and wise men&rdquo; of the nation &ldquo;set up Monarchy again,&rdquo; humbly
+prostrating themselves at the feet of a licentious, cynical
+debauchee, and the Landocracy, new and old, found themselves
+in the saddle with far greater political power than they
+had ever before enjoyed. They soon found means of fastening
+their yoke more firmly than ever on the necks of the
+people, and of making short work of any claims of an
+independent yeomanry to any right to the soil of their native
+country apart from their good-will and pleasure. After some
+effort, they passed a Statute under which the estates of such of
+the free-holders as had no documentary evidence by which to
+support their titles, were confiscated and turned into tenancies
+at will. By means of Enclosure Acts they still further
+plundered and impoverished the peasantry, by appropriating
+to themselves millions of acres of land over which these still
+had some right, some enjoyment. By means of the Law of
+Parochial Settlement, as Thorold Rogers repeatedly points
+out,<a name="fnm110_2_89" id="fnm110_2_89"></a><a href="#fn110_2_89" class="fnnum">110:2</a> they &ldquo;consummated the degradation of the labourer&rdquo;;
+and made him, as it has left him, what the same impartial
+authority well terms &ldquo;the most portentous phenomenon in
+agriculture, a serf without land.&rdquo; By means of their Financial
+Policy they rid themselves of the duties which originally
+accompanied the privilege of land-holding, viz. to provide the
+necessary public revenues for all defence purposes, and converted
+themselves from Land Holders into Land Owners, by
+<a name="pg111" id="pg111"></a><span class="pagenum">111</span> shifting the burden of taxation to the food, industry, and
+handicraft of those they had despoiled and disinherited. And,
+finally, for the first time in the history of England, they passed
+a Corn Law artificially to increase their rents, at the cost and
+to the detriment, often to the starvation, of the masses of the
+people. From the effect of these laws the people of Great
+Britain have not yet been able entirely to recover themselves,
+though since 1824 they have made heroic steps to do so. With
+this portion of the history, we had almost written of the martyrdom,
+of the English people we are not here directly concerned.
+Manifestly it would have been very different had the Long
+Parliament listened to Winstanley&rsquo;s appeal, or had his self-sacrificing
+efforts been crowned with the success they so well
+deserved.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn100_1_82" id="fn100_1_82"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm100_1_82">100:1</a></span> Thomasson&rsquo;s Tracts. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 560 (1).
+Reprinted in the <i>Harleian Miscellany</i>, vol. ii. p. 485.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn103_1_83" id="fn103_1_83"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm103_1_83">103:1</a></span> Others, in far more influential positions than Winstanley and his
+comrades, gave forcible expression to much the same views. In the
+debates of the Army Council on the Agreement of the People, on
+November 1647, Edward Sexby, the Agitator or Representative of the
+private soldiers, an able, daring, and energetic man, replying to Ireton,
+on the question of the right to vote, said: &ldquo;We have engaged in this
+kingdom and ventured our lives, and it was all for this: to recover our
+birthrights and privileges as Englishmen; and by the arguments urged,
+there are none. There are many thousands of us soldiers that have
+ventured our lives, we have had little propriety in the kingdom as to our
+estates, yet we have had a birthright. But it seems now that except a
+man hath a fixed estate in this kingdom, he hath no right in this kingdom.
+I wonder we were so deceived. If we had not a right to the kingdom, we
+were mere mercenary soldiers. There are men in my position, it may be
+little estate they have at present, and yet they have as much a birthright as
+those two who are their law-givers, or as any in this place.&rdquo; During the
+same debate Colonel Rainborrow said: &ldquo;I think that the poorest he that is
+in England hath a life to live as the greatest he.&rdquo; And, also in reply to
+Ireton, he subsequently declared: &ldquo;Sir, I see that it is impossible to have
+liberty but all property must be taken away.... If you will say it, it
+must be so. But I would fain know what the soldier hath fought for all
+this while? He hath fought to enslave himself, to give power to men of
+riches, to men of estate, and to make himself a perpetual slave.&rdquo;&mdash;See
+<i>Clarke Papers</i>, vol. i. pp. 322-323, 325.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn105_1_84" id="fn105_1_84"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm105_1_84">105:1</a></span> King&rsquo;s Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 564. Also at
+the Guildhall Library. The Ralph Verney mentioned is the hero of <i>The
+Verney Memoirs</i>: there is, however, no mention of this incident therein.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn106_1_85" id="fn106_1_85"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm106_1_85">106:1</a></span> This argument would scarcely have appealed to Ireton, who during
+the debate of the Army Council frankly declared that in his opinion&mdash;&ldquo;It
+was not the business of Jesus Christ, when he came into the world, to
+create Kingdoms of the World, and Magistracies and Monarchies, or to
+give the rule of them, positive or negative.&rdquo;&mdash;See <i>Clarke Papers</i>, vol. ii.
+p. 101.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn108_1_86" id="fn108_1_86"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm108_1_86">108:1</a></span> Colonel Rainborrow, who with Sexby and Wildman represented
+on the Army Council the private soldiers of the Model Army, during
+the debate on the right of voting, gave expression to the view that some
+fundamental changes in the laws of the Land were both necessary and
+justifiable, in the following words: &ldquo;I hear it said, &lsquo;It&rsquo;s a huge alteration
+it&rsquo;s a bringing in of new laws.&rsquo; ... If writings be true, there hath been
+many scuttlings between the honest men of England and those that have
+tyrannised over them. And if what I have read be true, there is none of
+those just and equitable laws that the people of England are born to,
+but were once intrenchments [but were once innovations]. But if they
+[the existing laws] were those which the people have been always under, if
+the people find that they are not suitable to freeman, I know no reason
+that should deter me, either in what I must answer before God or the
+world, from endeavouring by all means to gain anything that might be of
+more advantage to them than the government under which they live.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Clarke
+Papers</i>, vol. i. p. 247.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn109_1_87" id="fn109_1_87"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm109_1_87">109:1</a></span> <i>Economic Interpretation of History</i>, p. 138.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn110_1_88" id="fn110_1_88"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm110_1_88">110:1</a></span> <i>Economic Interpretation of History</i>, p. 241.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn110_2_89" id="fn110_2_89"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm110_2_89">110:2</a></span> <i>Six Centuries of Work and Wages</i>, pp. 432-433.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg112" id="pg112"></a><span class="pagenum">112</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI<br />
+<br />
+A WATCHWORD TO THE CITY OF LONDON, ETC.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot chaphead">
+<p>&ldquo;All men have stood for Freedom; thou hast kept fasting-days and
+prayed in the morning exercises for Freedom; thou hast given thanks for
+victories because hopes of Freedom; plenty of Petitions and Promises
+thereupon have been made for Freedom. But now the common enemy
+is gone, you are all like men in a mist seeking for Freedom, but know
+not where nor what it is.... Assure yourselves, if you pitch not
+now upon the right point of Freedom in action, as your Covenant hath
+it in words, you will wrap up your children in greater slavery than ever
+you were in.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Winstanley</span>, <i>A Watchword to the City of London</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The House of Commons, as we have seen, took no notice
+of Winstanley&rsquo;s dignified appeal, hence, within a week of its
+publication in pamphlet form, Winstanley, on August 26th,
+1649, addressed himself to the City of London, at that time
+the stronghold of advanced political and religious thought. The
+pamphlet, which is one of the most interesting he ever wrote,
+appeared the following month: the title-page reads as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;A WATCHWORD TO THE CITY OF LONDON AND
+THE ARMY:<a name="fnm112_1_90" id="fnm112_1_90"></a><a href="#fn112_1_90" class="fnnum">112:1</a></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Wherein you may see that England&rsquo;s Freedom, which should
+be the result of all our Victories, is sinking deeper under
+the Norman Power, as appears by this Relation of the
+unrighteous proceedings of Kingston Court against some
+of the Diggers at George Hill, under colour of law; but
+yet thereby the cause of the Diggers is more brightened
+and strengthened, so that every one singly may truly say
+what his Freedom is and where it lies.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By Jerrard Winstanley</span>.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">When these clay bodies are in grave, and children stand in place,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">This shows we stood for truth and peace and freedom in our days;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And true-born sons we shall appear of England that&rsquo;s our Mother,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No Priests nor Lawyers wiles t&rsquo;embrace, their slavery we&rsquo;ll discover.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="pg113" id="pg113"></a><span class="pagenum">113</span>
+This pamphlet, too, commences with a Dedicatory Letter,
+which opens as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">To the City of London</span>,&mdash;Freedom and Peace desired,&mdash;<a name="cm6" id="cm6"></a><a href="#corr6" class="correction" title="Original has opening double quotation mark">Thou</a>
+City of London, I am one of thy sons by freedom, and
+I do truly love thy peace. While I had an estate in thee, I
+was free to offer my Mite into thy Public Treasury, Guildhall,
+for a preservation to thee and to the whole Land. But by thy
+cheating sons in the thieving art of buying and selling, and by
+the burdens of and for the soldiery in the beginning of the
+War, I was beaten out of both estate and trade, and forced to
+accept of the good-will of friends, crediting of me, to live a
+Country life. There likewise by the burthen of Taxes and
+much Free Quarter my weak back found the burthen heavier
+than I could bear. Yet in all the passages of these eight years
+troubles, I have been willing to lay out what my talent was, to
+procure England&rsquo;s peace inward and outward; and yet all along
+I have found such as in words have professed the same cause
+to be enemies to me.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It then briefly summarises Winstanley&rsquo;s past actions, as
+well as the causes that inspired them, and the position in which
+he finds himself in consequence thereof, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Not a full year since, being quiet at my work, my heart
+was filled with sweet thoughts, and many things were revealed
+to me which I never read in books, nor heard from the mouth
+of any flesh. When I began to speak of them some people
+could not bear my words. Amongst these revelations this was
+one, <i>That the Earth shall be made a Common Treasury of
+Livelihood to whole mankind without respect of persons.</i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And I had a voice within me that bade me declare it by
+word all abroad, which I did obey, for I declared it by word of
+mouth wheresoever I came. Then I was made to write a little
+book called the New Law of Righteousness, and therein I
+declared it. Yet my mind was not at rest, because nothing
+was acted; and thoughts ran in me that words and writings
+were all nothing and must die; for action is the life of all,
+and if thou dost not act, thou dost nothing.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Within a little time I was made obedient to the word in
+that particular likewise. For I took my spade and went and
+broke the ground upon George Hill in Surrey, thereby
+declaring Freedom to the Creation, and that the Earth must
+<a name="pg114" id="pg114"></a><span class="pagenum">114</span> be set free from entanglement of Lords and Land Lords, and
+that it shall become a Common Treasury to all, as it was first
+made and given to the sons of men.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For which doing ... the old Norman Prerogative Lord
+of that Manor caused me to be arrested for a trespass against
+him in digging upon that barren Heath. And the unrighteous
+proceedings of Kingston Court I have declared to thee and
+to the whole Land that you may consider the case England
+is in.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Dedicatory Letter concludes as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;I have declared this truth to the Army and Parliament,
+and now I have declared it to thee likewise, that none of you
+that are the fleshy strength of this Land may be left without
+excuse: for now you have been all spoken to. And because I
+have obeyed the voice of the Lord in this thing, therefore do the
+Freeholders and Lords of Manors seek to oppress me in the
+outward livelihood of the world, but I am in peace. And
+London, nay England, look to thy Freedom. I assure you
+thou art very near to be cheated of it, and if thou lose it now
+after all thy boasting, truly thy posterity will curse thee for thy
+unfaithfulness to them. Everyone talks of Freedom, but there
+are but few that act for Freedom, and the actors for Freedom
+are oppressed by the talkers and verbal professors of Freedom.
+If thou wouldst know what true Freedom is, read over this
+and other of my writings, and thou shalt see it lies in the
+Community in Spirit and Community in the Earthly Treasury;
+and this is Christ, the true manchild, spread abroad in the
+Creation, restoring all things unto himself. And so I leave
+thee, Being a free Denizon of thee, and a true lover of thy
+peace.</p>
+
+<p class="signature">Jerrard Winstanley.</p>
+
+<p class="date">&ldquo;<i>August 26th, 1649.</i>&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The pamphlet commences with a short and business-like
+account of the proceedings at Kingston Court, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Whereas we, Henry Bickerstaffe, Thomas Star and
+Jerrard Winstanley, were arrested into Kingston Court by
+Thomas Wenman, Ralph Verney, and Richard Winwood, for a
+trespass in digging upon George Hill in Surrey, being the
+right of Mr. Drake, Lord of that Manor, as they say, we all
+three did appear the first Court-day of our arrest, and
+<a name="pg115" id="pg115"></a><span class="pagenum">115</span> demanded of the Court, What was laid to our charge? and to
+give answer thereunto ourselves. But the answer of your
+Court was this, that you would not tell us what the trespass
+was, unless we would fee an Attorney to speak for us. We
+told them we were to plead our own cause, for we knew no
+Lawyer that we could trust with this business. We desired a
+copy of the Declaration, and profered to pay for it, but still
+you denied us unless we would fee an Attorney. But in
+conclusion the Recorder of your Court told us that the cause
+was not entered. We appeared two Court-days after this, and
+desired to see the Declaration, and still you denied us unless
+we would fee an Attorney, so greedy are these Attornies after
+money, more than to justify a righteous cause. We told them
+that we could not fee any unless we would wilfully break our
+National Covenant, which both Parliament and People have
+taken jointly together to effect a Reformation. And unless
+we would be professed Traitors to the Nation and Common-wealth
+of England, by upholding the old Norman tyrannical
+and destructive Laws, when they are to be cast out of equity,
+and reason to be the Moderator.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then seeing that you would not suffer us to speak, one of
+us brought the following writing into Court, that you might
+read our answer. Because we would acknowledge all righteous
+proceedings in Law, though some slander us and say we deny
+all Law, because we deny the corruption of Law, and endeavour
+a Reformation in our place and calling, according to that
+National Covenant. And we know if your Laws were built
+upon equity and reason, you ought both to have heard us
+speak, and to have read our answer. For that is no righteous
+Law, whereby to keep a Common-wealth in peace, when one
+sort shall be suffered to speak and not another, as you deal
+with us, to pass sentence and execution upon us, before both
+sides be heard to speak. This principle in the forehead of
+your Laws foretells destruction to this Common-wealth. For
+it declares that the Laws that follow such refusal are selfish
+and thievish and full of murder, protecting all that get money
+by their Laws, and crushing all others.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The writer hereof does require Mr. Drake, and he is a
+Parliament man, therefore a man counted able to speak
+rationally, to plead this cause of digging with me.<a name="fnm115_1_91" id="fnm115_1_91"></a><a href="#fn115_1_91" class="fnnum">115:1</a> And if he
+<a name="pg116" id="pg116"></a><span class="pagenum">116</span> show a just and rational title that Lords of Manors have to
+the Commons, and that they have a just power from God to
+call it their right, shutting out others, then I will write as
+much against it as ever I wrote for this cause. [A heavy
+forfeit, truly!] But if I show by the Law of Righteousness
+that the poorest man hath as good a title and just right to the
+Land as the richest man, and that undeniably the Earth ought
+to be a Common Treasury of Livelihood for all without
+respecting persons; then I shall require no more of Mr. Drake
+but that he would justify our cause of digging, and declare
+abroad that the Commons ought to be free to all sorts, and
+that it is a great trespass before the Lord God Almighty for
+one to hinder another of his liberty to dig the earth, that he
+might feed and clothe himself with the fruits of his labor
+thereupon freely, without owning any Land Lord or paying
+any Rent to any person of his own kind.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>After this perfectly safe challenge, he continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;I sent this following answer to the Arrest in writing into
+Kingston Court:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;In four passages your Court hath gone contrary to the
+righteousness of your own Statute Laws. For, <i>First</i>, it is
+mentioned in 36 Edward <span class="smcap">III</span>. 15 that no Process, Warrant or
+Arrest should be served till after the cause was recorded and
+entered. But your Bailiff either could not or would not tell
+us the cause when he arrested us, and Mr. Rogers, your
+Recorder, told us the first Court-day we appeared that our
+cause was not entered.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Secondly</i>, We appeared two other Court-days, and desired
+a copy of the Declaration, and profered to pay for it, and you
+denied us. This is contrary to equity and reason, which is
+the foundation your Laws are or should be built upon, if you
+would have England to be a Common-wealth, and stand in
+peace.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Thirdly</i>, We desired to plead our own cause, and you
+denied us, but told us we must fee an Attorney to speak for
+us, or else you would mark us in default for not appearance.
+This is contrary to your own Laws likewise, for in 28 Edward
+<span class="smcap">I</span>. chapter ii. there is freedom given to a man to speak for
+himself, or else he may choose his father, friend or neighbour
+to speak for him, without the help of any other Lawyer.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Fourthly</i>, You have granted a judgement against us, and
+are proceeding to an execution, and this is contrary likewise to
+<a name="pg117" id="pg117"></a><span class="pagenum">117</span> your own laws, which say that no plaint ought to be received
+or judgement passed, till the cause be heard, and witnesses
+present, to testify the plaint to be true, as Sir Edward Coke,
+2nd part of Institutes upon the 29 chap. of Magna Charta,
+fol. 51-53. The Mirror of Justice.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Then, as if ashamed of appealing to mere conventional man-made
+Laws, he at once acknowledges what he and his comrades
+have done, and justifies their action in the following dignified
+words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;But that all men may see that we are neither ashamed
+nor afraid to justify that cause we are arrested for, neither to
+refuse to answer to it in a righteous way, therefore we have
+here delivered this up in writing, and we leave it in your hands,
+disavowing the proceedings of your Court, because you uphold
+prerogative oppression, though the kingly office be taken away,
+and the Parliament hath declared England a Common-wealth,
+so that prerogative cannot be in force, unless you be besotted
+by your covetousness and envy.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We deny that we have trespassed against those three
+men, or Mr. Drake either, or that we should trespass
+against any, if we should dig up and plough for a livelihood
+upon any of the waste land in England. For thereby we
+break no particular Law made by any Act of Parliament, but
+only an ancient custom bred in the strength of kingly prerogative,
+which is that old Law or Custom by which Lords of
+Manors lay claim to the Commons, which is of no force now
+to bind the people of England, since the kingly power and
+office was cast out. And the Common People who have cast
+out the oppressor, by their purse and person, have not authorised
+any as yet to give away from them their purchased freedom;
+and if any assume a power to give away or withhold this purchased
+freedom, they are Traitors to this Common-wealth of
+England; and if they imprison, oppress, or put to death any
+for standing to maintain this purchased freedom, they are
+murderers and thieves, and no just rulers.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Therefore in the light of Reason and Equity, and in the
+light of the National Covenant which Parliament and People
+have taken with joint consent, all such prerogative customs,
+which by experience we have found to burden the Nation,
+ought to be cast out with the kingly office, and the Land of
+England now ought to be a Free Land and a Common Treasury
+<a name="pg118" id="pg118"></a><span class="pagenum">118</span> to all her children, otherwise it cannot properly be called a
+Common-wealth.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He then continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Therefore we justify our act of digging upon that Hill
+to make the Earth a Common Treasury. First, because the
+Earth was made by Almighty God to be a Common Treasury of
+Livelihood to the whole of mankind in all its branches, without
+respect of persons.... Secondly, because all sorts of people
+have lent assistance of purse and person to cast out the kingly
+order as being a burden that England groaned under. Therefore
+those from whom money and blood were received, ought
+to obtain freedom in the Land to themselves and posterity, by
+the Law of Contract between Parliament and People. But
+all sorts, poor as well as rich, Tenant as well as Land Lord,
+have paid taxes, free-quarter, excise, or adventured their lives
+to cast out the kingly office. Therefore all sorts of people
+ought to have freedom in this the Land of their Nativity,
+without respecting persons, now that kingly power is cast out
+by their joint assistance.... Therefore, in that we do dig upon
+that Hill, we do not thereby take away other men&rsquo;s rights, nor
+demand of this Court, nor from the Parliament, what is theirs
+and not ours. But we demand our own to be set free to us,
+and to them, out of the tyrannical oppression of ancient
+customs of kingly prerogative; and let us have no more gods
+to rule over us, but the King of Righteousness only.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Therefore, as the Freeholders claim a quietness and freedom
+in their enclosures, as it is fit they should have, so we
+that are younger brothers, or the poor oppressed, we claim
+our freedom in the Commons; that so elder and younger
+brother may live quietly and in peace, together freed from
+the straits of poverty and oppression in this Land of our
+Nativity.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>His written address to the Court at Kingston concludes as
+follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Thus we have in writing declared in effect what we
+should say, if we had liberty to speak before you, declaring
+withal that your Court cannot end this controversy in that
+equity and reason of it which we stand to maintain. Therefore
+we have appealed to the Parliament, who have received our
+<a name="pg119" id="pg119"></a><span class="pagenum">119</span> Appeal and promised an answer, and we wait for it. And we
+leave this with you, and let Reason and Righteousness be our
+Judge. Therefore we hope you will do nothing rashly, but
+seriously consider of this cause before you proceed to execution
+upon us.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Of course, the Court paid no heed to his pleadings, and he
+details the subsequent proceedings in the following business-like
+manner:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Well, this same writing was delivered into their Court,
+but they cast it out again, and would not read it, and all because
+I would not fee an Attorney. And then the Court-day
+following, before there was any trial of our cause, for there
+was none suffered to speak but the Plaintiff, they passed a
+judgement, and after that an execution. Now their Jury was
+made of rich Freeholders, and such as stand strongly for the
+Norman power. And though our digging upon that barren
+Common hath done the Common good, yet this Jury brings in
+damages of &pound;10 a man, and the charges of the Plaintiff in their
+Court, twenty-nine shillings and a penny: and this was their
+sentence and the passing of the execution upon us.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then mentions one instance descriptive of the
+way he and his comrades were &ldquo;boycotted&rdquo; by his neighbours,
+and of the men responsible therefor. He says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Before the report of our digging was much known, I
+bought three acres of grass from a Lord of the Manor, whom
+I will not here name because I know the counsel of others
+made him prove false to me. For when the time came to
+mow, I brought money to pay him beforehand, but he answered
+me that I should not have it, and sold it to another before my
+face. This was because his Parish Priest and the Surrey
+Ministers have bid the people neither to buy nor to sell us,
+but to beat us, imprison us, or to banish us.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He then relates that two days later &ldquo;they sent to execute
+the execution, and they put Harry Bickerstaffe in prison, but
+after three days Mr. Drake released him again, Bickerstaffe
+not knowing of it till the release came. They seek after
+<a name="pg120" id="pg120"></a><span class="pagenum">120</span> Thomas Star to imprison his body, who is a poor man, not
+worth ten pounds.&rdquo; He continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Then they came privately by day to Gerrard Winstanley&rsquo;s
+house and drove away four cows, I not knowing of it. They
+took away the cows which were my livelihood, and beat them
+with their clubs that the cows&rsquo; heads and sides did swell,
+which grieved tender hearts to see. And yet,&rdquo; he pathetically
+but somewhat humourously adds, &ldquo;these cows never were
+upon George Hill, nor never digged upon that ground, and
+yet the poor beasts must suffer because they gave milk to feed
+me. But strangers made rescue of those cows, and drove them
+astray out of the Bailiffs&rsquo; hands, so that the Bailiffs lost them.
+But before the Bailiffs had lost the cows, I, hearing of it, went
+to them and said&mdash;&lsquo;Here is my body, take me, that I may
+speak to those Normans that have stolen our land from us;
+and let the cows go, for they are none of mine.&rsquo; After some
+time, they telling me they had nothing against my body, it
+was my goods they were to have. Then said I, &lsquo;Take my
+goods, for the cows are not mine.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Here follows one of the most touching passages to which
+Winstanley ever set pen:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;And so I went away and left them, being quiet in my
+heart, and filled with comfort within myself, that the King of
+Righteousness would cause this to work for the advancing of
+His own cause, which I prefer above estate and livelihood.
+Saying within my heart as I went along, that if I could not
+get meat to eat, I would feed upon bread, milk and cheese.
+And if they take the cows, and I cannot feed on this, or hereby
+make a breach between me and him that owns the cows,
+then I&rsquo;ll feed upon bread and beer, till the King of Righteousness
+clears up my innocency and the justice of His own cause.
+And if this be taken from me for maintaining His cause, then
+I&rsquo;ll stand still and see what He will do with me; for as yet I
+know not.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Saying likewise within my heart as I was walking along&mdash;O
+thou King of Righteousness, show thy power and do thy
+work thyself, and free thy people now from under this heavy
+bondage of misery. And the answer in my heart was satisfactory,
+and full of sweet joy and peace: and so I said,
+Father, do what thou wilt, for this cause is thine, and thou
+<a name="pg121" id="pg121"></a><span class="pagenum">121</span> knowest that the love to righteousness makes me do what I
+do.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He then continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;I was made to appeal to the Father of Life in the
+speakings of my heart likewise thus&mdash;Father, thou knowst that
+what I have writ or spoken concerning this light, that the
+Earth should be restored and become a Common Treasury for
+all mankind, without respect of persons, was thy free revelation
+to me, I never read it in any book, I heard it from no mouth
+of flesh, till I understood it from thy teaching first within me.
+I did not study nor imagine the conceit of it; self-love to
+my own particular body does not carry me along in the
+managing of this business; but the power of love flowing
+forth to the liberty and peace of thy whole Creation, to
+enemies as well as to friends: nay, towards those who oppress
+me, endeavouring to make me a beggar to them. And since
+I did obey thy voice, to speak and act this truth, I am hated,
+reproached and oppressed on every side. Such as make
+professions of thee, yet revile me. And though they see I
+cannot fight with fleshy weapons, yet they will strive with me
+by that power. And so I see, Father, that England yet doth
+choose rather to fight with the Sword of Iron and Covetousness
+than with the Sword of the Spirit, which is Love. And what
+thy purpose is with this Land or with my body, I know not,
+but establish thy power in me, and then do what pleases thee.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;These and such like sweet thoughts dwelt in my heart as
+I went along; and I feel myself now like a man in a storm,
+standing under shelter upon a hill in peace, waiting till the
+storm be over to see the end of it, and of many other things
+that my eye is fixed upon.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The pamphlet concludes as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;You have arrested us for digging upon the common land,
+you have executed your unrighteous power, in destraining
+cattle, imprisoning our bodies, and yet our cause was never
+publicly heard, neither can it be proved that we broke any
+Law that is built upon equity and reason. Therefore we
+wonder whence you had your power to rule over us by will,
+more than we to rule over you by our will.... We request
+that you would let us have a fair open trial.... let your
+Ministers plead with us in the Scriptures, and let your Lawyers
+<a name="pg122" id="pg122"></a><span class="pagenum">122</span> plead with us as to the equity and reason of your own Law.
+And if you prove us transgressors, then we shall lay down our
+work and acknowledge that we have trespassed against you in
+digging upon the Commons, and then punish us. But if we
+prove by Scripture and Reason that undeniably the Land
+belongs to one as well as another, then you shall own our
+work, justify our cause, and declare that you have done wrong
+to Christ, who you say is your Lord and Master, in abusing us
+His servants and your fellow-creatures, while we are doing
+His work. Therefore, knowing you to be men of moderation
+in outward show, I desire that your actions towards your
+fellow-creatures may not be like one beast to another, but
+carry yourselves like man to man, for your proceeding in your
+pretence of Law hitherto against us is both unrighteous, beastly,
+and devilish, and nothing of the spirit of man seen in it. You
+Attornies and Lawyers, you say you are Ministers of Justice, and
+we know that equity and reason is or ought to be the foundation
+of Law. If so, then plead not for money altogether, but
+stand for Universal Justice and Equity: then you will have
+peace; otherwise both you and the corrupt Clergy will be cast
+out as unsavoury salt.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>As will have been seen from the above, and as we shall
+show more fully later on, the little company of Diggers were
+having a rather troublesome time. Within two days of the
+delivery of their first letter to Lord Fairfax, on June 11th,
+some of them were grievously assaulted by two of the local
+freeholders, accompanied by men in women&rsquo;s garments; but,
+according to their own account, they made no attempt to
+defend themselves.<a name="fnm122_1_92" id="fnm122_1_92"></a><a href="#fn122_1_92" class="fnnum">122:1</a> In November of the same year the
+agitation against their doings was revived, or became more
+acute, and early in December they found themselves compelled
+again to appeal to Lord Fairfax for protection.<a name="fnm122_2_93" id="fnm122_2_93"></a><a href="#fn122_2_93" class="fnnum">122:2</a> After having
+recapitulated their main arguments, this letter continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><a name="pg123" id="pg123"></a><span class="pagenum">123</span>
+&ldquo;Now, Sirs, divers repulses we have had from some of the
+Lords of Manors and their servants, with whom we are patient
+and loving, not doubting but at last they will grant liberty
+quietly to live by them. And though your tenderness hath
+moved us to be requesting your protection against them, yet we
+have forborne, and rather waited upon God with patience till he
+quell their unruly spirits.... In regard likewise the soldiers
+did not molest us, for that you told us when some of us were
+before you, that you had given command to your soldiers not
+to meddle with us, but resolved to leave us to the Gentlemen of
+the County and to the Law of the Land to deal with us, which
+we were satisfied with, and for this half-year past your soldiers
+have not meddled with us.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But now, Sirs, this last week, upon the 28th of November,
+there came a party of soldiers commanded by a Cornet, and
+some of them of your own regiment, and by their threatening
+words forced three labouring men to help them to pull down
+our two houses, and carried away the wood in a cart to a
+Gentleman&rsquo;s house, who hath been a Cavalier all our time of
+war, and cast two or three old people out who lived in those
+houses to lie in the open fields this cold weather (an act more
+becoming Turks to deal with Christians than for one Christian
+to deal with another). But if you inquire into the business
+you will find that the Gentlemen who set the soldiers on are
+enemies to you, for some of the chief had hands in the Kentish
+rising against the Parliament, and we know, and you will find
+it true if you trust them so far, that they love you but from
+the teeth outward.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Therefore our request to you is this, that you would call
+your soldiers to account for attempting to abuse us without
+your commission, that the Country may know that you had no
+hand in such an unrighteous and cruel act. Likewise we
+desire that you would continue your former kindness and
+promise to give commission to your soldiers not to meddle
+with us without your order.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>As we shall presently see, nothing more discouraged the
+little company of Diggers than the assistance given to their
+enemies by the soldiery. Lord Fairfax, however, had no free
+hand in this matter; the Council of State had again received
+information of what was termed &ldquo;a tumultuous meeting at
+Cobham,&rdquo; which the ordinary power at the disposal of the
+<a name="pg124" id="pg124"></a><span class="pagenum">124</span> local Justices of the Peace &ldquo;was not sufficient to disperse,&rdquo;
+and had consequently sent Lord Fairfax definite instructions
+to send &ldquo;such horse as you may think fit to march to that
+place.&rdquo;<a name="fnm124_1_94" id="fnm124_1_94"></a><a href="#fn124_1_94" class="fnnum">124:1</a> This information had evidently come to Winstanley&rsquo;s
+knowledge. He had not signed the foregoing letter, so felt
+himself at liberty to supplement it by another and more
+forcible one, which opens as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Winstanley&rsquo;s Second Letter to Lord Fairfax.</span><a name="fnm124_2_95" id="fnm124_2_95"></a><a href="#fn124_2_95" class="fnnum">124:2</a></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&ldquo;<span class="smcap">To my Lord General and his Council of War.</span></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;I understand that Mr. Parson Platt with some other
+gentlemen have made report to you and the Council of State
+that we that are called Diggers are a riotous people, and that we
+will not be ruled by the Justices, and that we hold a man&rsquo;s house
+by violence from him, and that we have four guns in it to
+secure ourselves, and that we are drunkards, and Cavaliers
+waiting an opportunity to bring in the Prince, and such like.
+Truly, Sir, these are all untrue reports, and as false as those
+which Hamaan of old brought against sincere-hearted Mordecai
+to incense king Ahasuerus against him. The conversation of
+the Diggers is not such as they report; we are peaceable men
+and walk in the light of righteousness to the utmost of our
+power.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He then expounds their aims, and justifies their action in
+the manner with which our readers will by now be familiar,
+and continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;We know that England cannot be a free Common-wealth,
+unless all the poor Commoners have a free use and benefit of
+the land. For if this freedom be not granted, we that are the
+poor commoners are in a worse case than we were in the King&rsquo;s
+days; for then we had some estate about us, though we were
+under oppression, but now our estates are spent to purchase
+freedom, and we are under oppression still of Lords of Manors
+tyranny. Therefore unless we that are poor commoners have
+<a name="pg125" id="pg125"></a><span class="pagenum">125</span> some part of the land to live upon freely, as well as the
+Gentry, it cannot be a Common-wealth, neither can the kingly
+power be removed so long as this kingly power in the hands of
+Lords of Manors rules over us.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, Sir, if you and the Council will quietly grant us
+this freedom, which is our own right, and set us free from the
+kingly power of Lords of Manors, that violently now as in the
+king&rsquo;s days hold the commons from us (as if we had obtained
+no conquest at all over the kingly power), then the poor that
+lie under the great burden of poverty, and are always complaining
+for want, and their miseries increase because they see
+no means of relief found out, and therefore cry out continually
+to you and the Parliament for relief, and to make good your
+promises, will be quieted.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We desire no more of you than freedom to work, and
+to enjoy the benefit of our labors&mdash;for here is waste land
+enough and to spare to supply all our wants. But if you
+deny this freedom, then in righteousness we must raise
+collections for the poor out of the estates, and a mass of
+money will not supply their wants. Many are in want that
+are ashamed to take collection money, and therefore they are
+desperate, and would rather rob and steal and disturb the
+land, and others that are ashamed to beg would do any work
+for to live, as it is the case of many of our Diggers, who have
+been good housekeepers. But if this freedom were granted to
+improve the common lands, then there would be a supply to
+answer everyone&rsquo;s inquire, and the murmurings of the people
+against you and the Parliament would cease, and within a few
+years we should have no beggars nor idle persons in the
+land.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Secondly</i>, Hereby England would be enriched with all
+commodities within itself which they each would afford.
+And truly this is a stain to Christian religion in England
+[a stain not yet removed] that we have so much land lie
+waste and so many starve for want. Further, if this freedom
+be granted, the whole Land will be united in love and strength,
+that if a foreign enemy, like an army of rats and mice, come
+to take our inheritance from us, we shall all rise as one man
+to defend it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then, lastly, if you will grant the poor commoners this
+quiet freedom to improve the common land for our livelihood,
+we shall rejoice in you and the Army in protecting our work,
+and we and our work will be ready to secure that, and we hope
+<a name="pg126" id="pg126"></a><span class="pagenum">126</span> that there will not be any kingly power over us, to rule at will
+and we to be slaves, as the power has been, but that you will
+rule in love as Moses and Joshua did the children of Israel
+before any kingly power came in, and that the Parliament
+will be as the elders of Israel, chosen freely by the people to
+advise for and to assist both you and us.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And thus in the name of the rest of those called Diggers
+and Commoners through the land, I have in short declared our
+mind and cause to you in the light of righteousness, which
+will prove all these reports made against us to be false
+and destructive to the uniting of England into peace.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Per me Gerrard Winstanley, for myself and in the behalf
+of my fellow commoners.</p>
+
+<p class="date">&ldquo;<i>December the 8th, 1649.</i>&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Amongst Winstanley&rsquo;s disciples was one Robert Coster, who
+appears to have been the poet of the Digger Movement, and
+the next pamphlet which issued from their camp, on December
+18th, some ten days after the date affixed to the above
+vigorous letter, was from his pen. It is entitled:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<i>A Mite cast into the Common Treasury</i>:<a name="fnm126_1_96" id="fnm126_1_96"></a><a href="#fn126_1_96" class="fnnum">126:1</a> Or Queries propounded
+(for all Men to consider of) by him who desireth
+to advance the work of Public Community. By Robert
+Coster.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In it Coster first recapitulates Winstanley&rsquo;s main arguments
+and contentions, and then shows that he for one fully realised
+their far-reaching scope, by indicating their probable effects
+in the following words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;As, 1. If men would do as aforesaid rather than to go
+with cap in hand and bended knee to Gentlemen and Farmers,
+begging and entreating to work with them for 8d. or 10d. a
+day, which doth give them an occasion to tyrannise over
+poor people, who are their fellow-creatures; if poor men would
+not go in such a slavish posture, but do as aforesaid, the rich
+Farmers would be weary of renting so much land of the Lords
+of Manors.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg127" id="pg127"></a><span class="pagenum">127</span>
+&ldquo;2. If the Lords of Manors and other Gentlemen who
+covet after so much land, could not let it out by parcels, but
+must be constrained to keep it in their own hands, then would
+they want those great bags of money (which do maintain pride,
+idleness and fullness of bread) which are carried in to them by
+the Tenants, who go in as slavish a posture as well may be,
+namely, with cap in hand and bended knee, crouching and
+creeping from corner to corner, while his Lord (rather Tyrant)
+walks up and down the room with his proud looks, and with
+great swelling words questions him about his holding.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;3. If the Lords of Manors and other Gentlemen had not
+those great bags of money brought to them, then down would
+fall the lordliness of their spirits, and then poor men might
+speak to them, and there might be an acknowledging of one
+another to be Fellow-Creatures.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For what is the reason that great gentlemen covet after
+so much land? Is it not because Farmers and others creep
+to them in a slavish manner, profering them so much money
+for such and such parcels of it, which doth give them occasion
+to tyrannise over their Fellow-Creatures, which they call their
+Inferiors?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And what is the reason that Farmers and others are so
+greedy to rent land of the Lords of Manors? Is it not because
+they expect great gains, and because poor men are so foolish
+and slavish as to creep to them for employment, although they
+will not give them money enough to maintain themselves
+and their families comfortably? All which do give them an
+occasion to tyrannise over their Fellow-Creatures, which they
+call their Inferiors.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All which considered, if poor men which want employment
+and others which work for little wages would go to dress and
+improve the Commons and Waste Lands, whether it would not
+bring down the price of Land, which doth principally cause
+all things to be dear?&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The pamphlet concludes with the following lines:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;The Nation is in such a state as this,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">to honor rich men because they are rich;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And poor men, because poor, most do them hate.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">O, but this is a very cursed state;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But those who act from love which is sincere,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">will honor truth wherever it doth appear.<br /></span>
+<a name="pg128" id="pg128"></a><span class="pagenum">128</span> <span class="i0">And no respecting of persons will be with such,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">but tyranny they will abhor in poor and rich.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And in this state is he whose name is here,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">your very loving friend, Robert Costeer.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>By way of appendix the author adds a long poem, of nine
+verses, entitled &ldquo;A Digger&rsquo;s Ballad,&rdquo; of which the following
+verse, the last one, will give our readers a sufficient idea:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;The glorious state<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">which I do relate<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Unspeakable comfort shall bring,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The corn will be green<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">and the flowers seen,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our Storehouses they will be filled.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The birds will rejoice<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">with a merry voice,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All things shall yield sweet increase.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then let us all sing<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">and joy in our King,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who causeth all sorrows to cease.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>As will be seen in the following chapter, the time the
+above pamphlet was published was one of great anxiety in the
+brave little community which had ventured so much to lay
+the foundations of a better society than ever they knew, of a
+Social State based upon Justice, in which all should equally
+enjoy the benefits of their Creation. They had thrown their
+little possessions into a Common Treasury; they had taken
+possession of their birthright, the Commons of England;
+they had patiently endured all possible wrongs, injuries and
+insults, and had still remained steadfast to the Law of Reason
+and Love, to the express command of their acknowledged
+Master and King&mdash;Resist not evil. However, though their
+courage and endurance remained unabated, their little stock
+of provisions was becoming exhausted, and the end of their
+high endeavour was in sight. However this may be, it was
+about this time, during the bleak winter months, that they
+composed two Christmas Carols to sing round their camp-fires,
+which were given to the world the following April in a little
+book bearing the following title:</p>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject"><a name="pg129" id="pg129"></a><span class="pagenum">129</span>
+&ldquo;THE DIGGERS MIRTH:<a name="fnm129_1_97" id="fnm129_1_97"></a><a href="#fn129_1_97" class="fnnum">129:1</a></p>
+
+<p class="center little">OR</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Certain Verses composed and fitted to tunes, for the delight
+and recreation of all those that dig, or own that work, in
+the Commonwealth of England.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Wherein is shewed how the Kingly Power doth still reign in
+several sorts of men.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">With a hint of that Freedom which shall come,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When the Father shall reign alone in His Son.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="hanging">Set forth by those who were the original of that so righteous a
+work, and continue still successful therein at Cobham in
+Surrey.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">London</span>.<br />
+Printed in the year 1650.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It contains but two long pieces, both of which merit more
+than a passing notice. The first, probably from the pen of
+Robert Coster, entitled &ldquo;The Diggers Christmasse Caroll,&rdquo;
+contains some twenty-eight verses of six lines each. The view
+and hopes of the Diggers, as well as references to recent public
+events, are amusingly related, and in conclusion the reader is
+reminded that&mdash;&ldquo;Freedom is not won, neither by sword nor
+gun,&rdquo; and therefore entreated to discard his faith in the
+efficacy of force, of Money and the Sword, and to share their
+belief in the power of Love, Righteousness, and Co-operative
+Labour, for the satisfaction of the needs and desires of all.</p>
+
+<p>The second piece, which we suspect to be from Winstanley&rsquo;s
+pen, is headed:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;A hint of that Freedom which shall come,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When the Father shall reign alone in His Son,&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and the first two verses seem to us worthy of being given in
+full. They run as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;The Father He is God alone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">nothing besides Him is;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All things are folded in that one,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">by Him all things subsist.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<a name="pg130" id="pg130"></a><span class="pagenum">130</span> <span class="i0">He is our Light, our Life, our Peace,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">whereby we our being have;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From Him all things have their increase,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">the Tyrant and the Slave.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It was probably also about this time that Winstanley
+composed the following much more lively piece, which is to
+be found in the <i>Clarke Papers</i>,<a name="fnm130_1_98" id="fnm130_1_98"></a><a href="#fn130_1_98" class="fnnum">130:1</a> and which may here find a
+fitting place:</p>
+
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;THE DIGGERS SONG.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;You noble Diggers all, stand up now, stand up now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">You noble Diggers all, stand up now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The waste land to maintain, seeing Cavaliers by name<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Your digging do disdain and persons all defame.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Stand up now, stand up now.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Your houses they pull down, stand up now, stand up now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Your houses they pull down, stand up now;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Your houses they pull down to fright poor men in town,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But the Gentry must come down, and the poor shall wear the crown.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Stand up now, Diggers all!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">With spades and hoes and plowes, stand up now, stand up now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">With spades and hoes and plowes, stand up now;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Your freedom to uphold, seeing Cavaliers are bold<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To kill you if they could, and rights from you withhold.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Stand up now, Diggers all!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Their self-will is their law, stand up now, stand up now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Their self-will is their law, stand up now;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Since tyranny came in, they count it now no sin<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To make a goal a gin, to starve poor men therein.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Stand up now, stand up now.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The Gentry are all round, stand up now, stand up now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The Gentry are all round, stand up now;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Gentry are all round, on each side they are found,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Their wisdom&rsquo;s so profound to cheat us of our ground.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Stand up now, stand up now.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The Lawyers they conjoin, stand up now, stand up now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The Lawyers they conjoin, stand up now;<br /></span>
+<a name="pg131" id="pg131"></a><span class="pagenum">131</span> <span class="i0">To arrest you they advise, such fury they devise,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The devil in them lies, and hath blinded both their eyes.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Stand up now, stand up now.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The Clergy they come in, stand up now, stand up now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The Clergy they come in, stand up now;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Clergy they come in, and say it is a sin<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That we should now begin our freedom for to win.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Stand up now, Diggers all!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The tithes they yet will have, stand up now, stand up now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The tithes they yet will have, stand up now;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The tithes they yet will have, and Lawyers their fees crave,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And this they say is brave, to make the poor their slave.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Stand up now, Diggers all!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&rsquo;Gainst Lawyers and &rsquo;gainst Priests, stand up now, stand up now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">&rsquo;Gainst Lawyers and &rsquo;gainst Priests, stand up now;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For tyrants they are both, even flat against their oath,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To grant us they are loath, free meat and drink and cloth.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Stand up now, Diggers all!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The club is all their law, stand up now, stand up now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The club is all their law, stand up now;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The club is all their law, to keep poor men in awe;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But they no vision saw to maintain such a law.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Stand up now, Diggers all!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The Cavaliers are foes, stand up now, stand up now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The Cavaliers are foes, stand up now;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Cavaliers are foes, themselves they do disclose<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By verses, not in prose, to please the singing boys.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Stand up now, Diggers all!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">To conquer them by love, come in now, come in now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">To conquer them by love, come in now;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To conquer them by love, as it does you behove,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For He is King above, no Power is like to Love.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Glory here, Diggers all!&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn112_1_90" id="fn112_1_90"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm112_1_90">112:1</a></span> King&rsquo;s Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 573. Also at
+the Guildhall Library.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn115_1_91" id="fn115_1_91"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm115_1_91">115:1</a></span> Mr. Drake was the Lord of the Manor, and the patron of Parson
+Platt. He was made an Ejector for the County of Surrey by Cromwell,
+and Platt made Lay Ejector.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn122_1_92" id="fn122_1_92"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm122_1_92">122:1</a></span> See <i>A Declaration of the Bloody and Unchristian Acting of William
+Star and John Taylor of Walton, with divers men in women&rsquo;s apparell, in
+opposition to those that dig upon St. Georges Hill</i>. King&rsquo;s Pamphlets.
+British Museum, Press Mark, E. 561.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn122_2_93" id="fn122_2_93"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm122_2_93">122:2</a></span> <i>Clarke Papers</i>, vol. ii. pp. 215-217. No date is attached; but Winstanley&rsquo;s
+second letter, which immediately follows it, is dated December
+8th, 1649.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn124_1_94" id="fn124_1_94"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm124_1_94">124:1</a></span> See <i>Calendar of State Papers</i>, Domestic, 1649-1650, p. 335.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn124_2_95" id="fn124_2_95"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm124_2_95">124:2</a></span> <i>Clarke Papers</i>, vol. ii. pp. 217-220.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn126_1_96" id="fn126_1_96"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm126_1_96">126:1</a></span> King&rsquo;s Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 585.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn129_1_97" id="fn129_1_97"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm129_1_97">129:1</a></span> King&rsquo;s Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 1365.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn130_1_98" id="fn130_1_98"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm130_1_98">130:1</a></span> Vol. ii. p. 221.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg132" id="pg132"></a><span class="pagenum">132</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII<br />
+<br />
+A NEW YEAR&rsquo;S GIFT FOR THE PARLIAMENT
+AND ARMY</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot chaphead">
+<p>&ldquo;Hear, O thou Righteous Spirit of the Whole Creation, and judge, who
+is the thief, he who takes away the Freedom of the Common Earth from
+me, which is my Creation Right; Or I, who take the Common Earth
+to plant upon for my free livelihood, endeavouring to live as a Free
+Commoner, in a Free Common-wealth, in Righteousness and Peace.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Winstanley</span>,
+<i>The Law of Freedom</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>It was probably during the anxious times that beset the little
+community of Diggers during the winter of 1649-1650, that
+Winstanley wrote the long and bitter pamphlet, to which is
+attached a detailed list of the injuries inflicted upon them,
+and which early in 1650 appeared in book form under the
+following title:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;A NEW YEAR&rsquo;S GIFT FOR THE PARLIAMENT AND
+ARMY:<a name="fnm132_1_99" id="fnm132_1_99"></a><a href="#fn132_1_99" class="fnnum">132:1</a></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Showing what the Kingly Power is; and that the Cause of
+those they call Diggers is the Life and Marrow of that
+Cause the Parliament hath declared for and the Army
+fought for. The perfecting of which work will prove
+England to be the First of Nations, or the Tenth Part of
+the City Babylon, that falls off from the Beast first, and
+that sets the Crown upon Christ&rsquo;s head, to govern the
+World in Righteousness.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By <span class="smcap">Jerrard Winstanley</span>,<br />
+A Lover of England&rsquo;s Freedom and Peace.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Die Pride and Envy; Flesh take the Poor&rsquo;s advice.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Covetousness begone: Come Truth and Love arise.<br /></span>
+<a name="pg133" id="pg133"></a><span class="pagenum">133</span> <span class="i0">Patience take the Crown; throw Anger out of doors:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Cast out Hypocrisy, and Lust, and mere invented <span class="together">Laws.<a name="fnm133_1_100" id="fnm133_1_100"></a><a href="#fn133_1_100" class="fnnum">133:1</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then England sit in rest; Thy Sorrows will have end;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy Sons will live in Peace, and each will be a friend.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">London</span>.<br />
+Printed for Giles Calvert, 1650.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley first gives a rapid sketch of recent events, as
+follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Gentlemen of the Parliament and Army; You and the
+Common People have assisted each other to cast out the head
+of oppression, which was Kingly Power seated in one man&rsquo;s
+hand, and that work is now done, and till that work was done
+you called upon the people to assist you to deliver this distressed,
+bleeding, dying Nation out of bondage. And the
+people came and failed you not, counting neither purse nor
+blood too dear to part with to effect this work.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Parliament after this have made an Act to cast out
+Kingly Power and to make England a free Common-wealth.
+These Acts the people are much rejoiced with, as being words
+forerunning their freedom, and they wait for their accomplishment
+that their joy may be full. For as words without actions
+are a cheat, and kill the comfort of a righteous spirit, so words
+performed in action do comfort and nourish the life thereof.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, Sirs, wheresoever we spy out Kingly Power, no man
+I hope shall be troubled to declare it, nor afraid to cast it out,
+having both Act of Parliament, the Soldier&rsquo;s Oath, and the
+Common People&rsquo;s Consent on his side. For Kingly Power is
+like a great spread tree; if you lop the head or top bough and
+let the other branches and root stand, it will grow again and
+recover fresher strength.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If any ask me, what Kingly Power is? I answer, there is
+a twofold Kingly Power. The one is the Kingly Power of
+Righteousness, and this is the power of the Almighty God,
+ruling the whole Creation in Peace, and keeping it together.
+And this is the Power of Universal Love, leading people
+unto all truth, teaching everyone to do as he would be done
+unto.... But the other Kingly Power is the power of Unrighteousness....
+This Kingly Power is the Power of Self
+<a name="pg134" id="pg134"></a><span class="pagenum">134</span> Love, ruling in one or in many men over others, and enslaving
+those who in the Creation are their equals; nay, who are in
+the strictness of equity rather their masters. And this Kingly
+Power is usually set in the Chair of Government, under the
+name of Prerogative, when he rules in one over another; and
+in the name of State Privilege of Parliament, when he rules in
+many over others.... While this Kingly Power ruled in a
+man called Charles, all sorts of people complained of oppression,
+both Gentry and Common People, because their lands, enclosures
+and copyholds were entangled, and because their
+Trade was destroyed by Monopolising Patentees, and your
+troubles were that you could not live free from oppression in
+the earth. Thereupon you that were the Gentry, when you
+were assembled in Parliament, you called upon the Common
+People to come and help you to cast out oppression: and you
+that complained are helped and freed, and that top-bough is
+lopped off the Tree of Tyranny, and Kingly Power in that one
+particular is cast out. But, alas! oppression is a great tree
+still, and keeps off the Sun of Freedom from the poor
+Commons still. He hath many branches and great roots
+which must be grubbed up, before everyone can sing Zion&rsquo;s
+song in peace.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>After again praising the two Acts of Parliament&mdash;&ldquo;the
+one to cast out Kingly Power; the other to make England
+a free Common-wealth&rdquo;&mdash;and detailing his grievances against
+the Tything Priests and Lords of Manors, he continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Search all your Laws, and I&rsquo;ll adventure my life, for I
+have little else to lose, that all Lords of Manors hold Title to
+the Commons by no stronger hold than the King&rsquo;s Will, whose
+head is cut off; and the King held title as he was a Conqueror.
+Now if you cast off the King who was the head of that power,
+surely the power of Lords of Manors is the same. Therefore
+perform your own Act of Parliament, and cast out that part
+of the Kingly Power likewise, that the People may see that
+you understand what you say and do, and that you are faithful.
+For truly the Kingly Power reigns strongly in the Lords of
+Manors over the Poor. For my own particular, I have in
+other writings, as well as in this, declared my reasons why the
+Common Land is the Poor People&rsquo;s propriety; and I have
+digged upon the Commons; and I hope in time to obtain the
+freedom to get food and raiment therefrom by righteous labour:
+<a name="pg135" id="pg135"></a><span class="pagenum">135</span> which is all I desire. And for so doing the supposed Lord of
+that Manor hath arrested me twice. First in an Action of
+&pound;20 trespass for plowing upon the Commons, which I never
+did.... And now they have arrested me again in an Action
+of &pound;4 trespass for digging upon the Commons, which I did, and
+own the work to be righteous and no trespass to any. This
+was the Attorney at Kingstone&rsquo;s advice, either to get money
+from both sides ... or else that I should not remove the
+action to a Higher Court, but that the cause might be tried
+there. For they know how to please Lords of Manors, that
+have resolved to spend hundreds of pounds but they will
+hinder the Poor from enjoying the Commons.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Then he gives utterance to the sense of indignation which
+filled his heart in the following bitter and contemptuous words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Do these men obey the Parliament&rsquo;s Acts, to throw down
+Kingly Power? O no! The same unrighteous doing that was
+complained of in King Charles&rsquo; days, the same doing is among
+them still. Money will buy and sell Justice still. And is our
+eight years&rsquo; war come round about to lay us down again in the
+Kennel of Injustice as much or more than before? Are we no
+farther learned yet? O ye Rulers of England, when must we
+turn over a new leaf? Will you always hold us in one lesson?
+Surely you will make Dunces of us; then all the Boys in other
+Lands will laugh at us! Come, I pray, let us take forth and
+go forward in our learning!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley&rsquo;s zeal for the cause he had espoused was, however,
+too real to allow him to continue long in this strain, so
+he immediately adopts a more persuasive tone, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;You blame us who are the Common People as though we
+would have no government. Truly, Gentlemen, we desire a
+righteous government with all our hearts. But the Government
+we have gives freedom and livelihood to the Gentry, to have
+abundance, and to lock up Treasures of the Earth from the
+Poor; so that rich men may have chests full of gold and silver,
+and houses full of corn and goods to look upon, while the Poor
+who work to get it can hardly live; and if they cannot work
+like slaves, then they must starve. Thus the Law gives all the
+Land to some part of mankind, whose predecessors got it
+<a name="pg136" id="pg136"></a><span class="pagenum">136</span> by conquest, and denies it to others, who by the Righteous
+Law of Creation may claim an equal portion. And yet you
+say this is a Righteous Government, but surely it is no other
+than selfishness.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>His indignation again gets the mastery of him, and he
+continues bitterly:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;England is a prison; the varieties of subtilties in the Laws
+preserved by the Sword are the bolts, bars and doors of the
+prison; the Lawyers are the Jailers; and Poor Men are the
+prisoners. For let a man fall into the hands of any, from the
+Bailiff to the Judge, and he is either undone or weary of his
+life. Surely this power, the Law, which is the great Idol that
+people dote upon, is the burden of the Creation, a nursery of
+idleness, luxury and cheating, the only enemy of Christ, the
+King of Righteousness! For though it pretends Justice, yet
+the Judges and Law Officers buy and sell Justice for money,
+and say it is my calling, and never are troubled at it.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He then makes the following manly appeal to his persecutors:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;You Gentlemen of Surrey, and Lords of Manors, and you
+Mr. Parson Platt especially ... my advice to you is this,
+hereafter to lie still and cherish the Diggers, for they love you
+and would not have your finger ache if they could help it,
+then why should you be so bitter against them? O let them
+live beside you. Some of them have been Soldiers, and some
+Countrymen that were always friends to the Parliament&rsquo;s
+cause, by whose hardships and means you enjoy the creatures
+about you in peace. And will you now destroy part of them
+that have preserved your lives? O do not do so; be not so
+besotted with the Kingly Power.... Bid them go and plant
+the Commons. This will be your honor and your comfort;
+for assure yourselves that you can never have true comfort till
+you be friends with the Poor. Therefore, come, come, love the
+Diggers, make restitution of their land you hold from them; for
+what would you do if you had not such laboring men to work
+for you?&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>A pertinent question, truly, and one which those whom he
+addressed, as well as those who are to-day in their places,
+would find it somewhat inconvenient to answer.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg137" id="pg137"></a><span class="pagenum">137</span>
+He then appeals to the Officers of the Army in the following
+bold and manly words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;And you, great Officers of the Army and Parliament, love
+your common Soldiers (I plead for Equity and Reason) and do
+not force them, by long delay of payment, to sell you their
+dearly bought Debentures for a thing of nought, and then to
+go and buy our Common Land, and Crown Land, and other
+Land that is the spoil, one of another therewith. Remember
+you are Servants to the Commons of England, and you were
+volunteers in the Wars, and the Common People have paid
+you for your pains largely.... As soon as you have freed the
+Earth from one entanglement of Kingly Power, will you entangle
+it more? I pray you consider what you do, and do
+righteously. We that are the Poor Commons, that paid our
+money and gave you free-quarter, have as much right in those
+Crown Lands and Lands of the spoil as you. Therefore we
+give no consent that you should buy and sell our Crown Lands
+and Waste Lands; for it is our purchased inheritance from
+under oppression! it is our own, even the poor Common
+People&rsquo;s of England.... We paid you your wages to help
+us recover it, but not to take it yourselves and turn us out,
+and to buy and sell it among yourselves.... If you do so,
+you uphold the Kingly Power, and so disobey both Acts of
+Parliament, and break your Oath; and you will live in the
+breach of these two commandments, Thou shalt not kill, Thou
+shalt not steal, by denying us the Earth which is our livelihood,
+and thereby killing us by a lingering death.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then summarises his contentions, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Well, the end of all my speech is to point out the Kingly
+Power where I spy it out. And you see it remains strongly
+in the hands of Lords of Manors, who have dealt so discourteously
+with some who are sincere in heart, though there
+have some come among the Diggers that have caused scandal,
+but we disown their ways.<a name="fnm137_1_101" id="fnm137_1_101"></a><a href="#fn137_1_101" class="fnnum">137:1</a></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Lords of Manors have sent to beat us, to pull down
+our houses, spoil our labours; yet we are patient, and never
+offered any violence to them again these forty weeks past, but
+wait upon God with love till their hearts thereby be softened.
+<a name="pg138" id="pg138"></a><span class="pagenum">138</span> All that we desire is but to live quietly in the Land of our
+Nativity by our righteous labour upon the Common Land,
+which is our own; but as yet the Lords of the Manors,
+so formerly called, will not suffer us, but abuse us. Is not
+that part of the Kingly Power? In that which follows I shall
+clearly prove it is; for it appears so clear that the understanding
+of a child does say, &lsquo;It is tyranny; it is the Kingly Power
+of Darkness.&rsquo; Therefore we expect that you will grant us the
+benefit of your Act of Parliament, so that we may say&mdash;Truly
+England is a Common-wealth, and a Free People indeed.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then declares that despite all their trouble and
+anxiety the Diggers were still &ldquo;mightily cheerful,&rdquo; and resolved
+&ldquo;to wait upon God to see what He will do ... taking
+it a great happiness to be persecuted for righteousness&rsquo; sake by
+the Priests and Professors that are the successors of Judas and
+the bitter spirited Pharisees that put the man Christ to death.&rdquo;
+He then again advances the reasons on which he bases the
+equal claims of all to the use of the earth, denounces the
+sources whence the exclusive claims of the few have sprung,
+more especially the tyrannical claims of Lords of Manors,
+boldly claiming that from this tyranny of man to man England
+should have been freed by the recent casting out of kingly
+power&mdash;and continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Therefore I say, the Common Land is my own Land, equal
+with my Fellow Commoners; and our true propriety by the
+Law of Creation. <i>It is every ones, but not one single ones.</i> Yea,
+the Commons are as truly ours by the last excellent two Acts of
+Parliament, the foundation of England&rsquo;s new Righteous Government
+aimed at, as the Elder Brothers can say the Enclosures are
+theirs. For they ventured their lives and covenanted with us
+to help them preserve their Freedom; and we adventured our
+lives and they covenanted with us to purchase and to give us
+our Freedom, that hath been hundreds of years kept from us.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The first part of this pamphlet concludes as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;<i>Damona non Armis sed Morte subegit Jesus.</i><br /></span>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;By patient sufferings, not by Death,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Christ did the devil kill:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And by the same still to this day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">His foes he conquers still.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><a name="pg139" id="pg139"></a><span class="pagenum">139</span>
+&ldquo;True Religion and undefiled is this: To make Restitution
+of the Earth, which hath been taken and held from the Common
+People by the power of Conquests formerly, and to set the
+oppressed free. Do not all strive to enjoy the land? The
+Gentry strive for land; the Clergy strive for land; the Common
+People strive for land; and Buying and Selling is an Art
+whereby People endeavour to cheat one another of the land.
+Now, if any can prove from the Law of Righteousness that the
+land was made peculiar to him and his successively, shutting
+others out, he shall enjoy it freely for my part. But I affirm,
+it was made for all; and true Religion is to let everyone
+enjoy it. Therefore you Rulers of England, make restitution
+of the Land which the Kingly Power holds from us. Set
+the Oppressed free; and come in and honor Christ, who is
+the Restoring Power, and you shall find rest.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In the opening of the second part of this pamphlet
+Winstanley reverts somewhat to his earlier mystical style, and
+still further expounds the eternal struggle between the Spirit
+of Self Love and the Spirit of Universal Love, denouncing the
+former as the source of all social ills, extolling the latter as
+the source and inspirer of peaceful and equitable social life.
+&ldquo;In our present experience,&rdquo; he contends, &ldquo;Darkness or Self
+Love goes before, and Light or Universal Love follows after&rdquo;;
+and hence &ldquo;Darkness and Bondage doth oppress Liberty
+and Light.&rdquo; He illustrates this contention, as well as the
+essential difference of the spirits animating the Diggers and
+their opponents, by relating how one of the Colonels of the
+Army told him&mdash;&ldquo;That the Diggers did work upon Georges
+Hill for no other end than to draw a company of people into
+arms; and that our knavery was found out, because it takes not
+that effect&rdquo;: on which Winstanley comments as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Truly thou Colonel, I tell thee, thy knavish imagination
+is thereby discovered, which hinders the effecting of that
+Freedom which by Oath and Covenant thou hast engaged to
+maintain. For my part and the rest, we had no such thought.
+We abhor fighting for Freedom; it is acting of the Curse,
+and lifting him up higher. Do thou uphold it by the Sword;
+we will not. We will conquer by Love and Patience, or else
+we count it no Freedom. Freedom gotten by the Sword is an
+<a name="pg140" id="pg140"></a><span class="pagenum">140</span> established Bondage to some part or other of the Creation.
+This we have declared publicly enough. Therefore thy imagination
+told thee a lie, and will deceive thee in a greater matter,
+if Love doth not kill him. <span class="smcap">Victory that is gotten by the
+Sword is a Victory Slaves get one over another; but
+Victory obtained by Love is a Victory for a King!</span>&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Surely, surely, if all other writings of Winstanley had
+perished, this one passage would have given us sufficient
+insight into his philosophy, into the noble principles animating
+his life, to entitle him to our admiration and respect.</p>
+
+<p>He then continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;This is your very inward principle, O ye present Powers
+of England, you do not study how to advance Universal Love.
+If you did it would appear in action. But Imagination and
+Self Love mightily disquiet your mind, and makes you to call
+up all the Powers of Darkness to come forth and help you to
+set the Crown upon the head of Self, which is that Kingly
+Power you have oathed and vowed against, but yet uphold
+it in your hands.... All this falling out and quarrelling
+among mankind is about the Earth, and who shall, and who
+shall not enjoy it, when indeed it is the portion of everyone,
+and ought not to be striven for, nor bought, nor sold, whereby
+some are hedged in and others are hedged out. Far better
+not to have had a body than to be debarred the fruit of the
+Earth to feed and clothe it. And if every one did but quietly
+enjoy the Earth for food and raiment, there would be no wars,
+prisons, nor gallows, and this action which men call theft
+would be no sin. For Universal Love never made it a sin,
+but the Power of Covetousness made it a sin, and made Laws
+to punish it, though he himself lives in that sin in a higher
+manner than those he hangs and punishes.... Well, He that
+made the Earth for us as well as for you will set us free,
+though you will not. When will the Veil of Darkness be
+drawn off your faces? Will you not be wise, O ye Rulers?&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>After further expatiating on the blessings inherent in
+Righteousness and Universal Love, and on the inevitable evil
+consequences of Self Love or Covetousness, he indicates the
+practical steps by which these evils might be removed, as
+follows:</p>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><a name="pg141" id="pg141"></a><span class="pagenum">141</span>
+&ldquo;If ever the Creation is to be restored, this is the way,
+which lies in this two-fold power:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;First, Community of Mankind, which is comprised in the
+Unity of the Spirit of Love, which is called Christ within you,
+or the Law written in the Heart, leading Mankind unto all
+Truth, and to be of one heart and one mind.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Second is Community of the Earth, for the quiet
+livelihood in food and raiment, without using force or
+restraining one another.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;These Two Communities, or rather one in two branches,
+is that true Levelling which Christ shall work at His more
+glorious appearance. <span class="smcap">For Jesus Christ, the Saviour of all
+Men, is the greatest, first and truest Leveller that ever
+was spoken of in the world.</span>&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Therefore you Rulers of England, be not afraid nor
+ashamed of Levellers, hate them not; Christ comes to you
+riding upon these clouds. Look not upon other Lands to be your
+pattern. All Lands in the World lie under Darkness, so doth
+England yet, though the nearest to Light and Freedom than
+any other. Therefore let no other Land take your Crown....</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;At this very day poor people are forced to work, in some
+places for 4, 5, and 6 pence a day, in other places for 8, 10,
+and 12 pence a day, for such small prices that now, corn being
+dear, their earnings cannot find them bread for their families.
+Yet if they steal for maintenance, the murdering Law will
+hang them.... Well this shows that if this be Law, it is not
+the Law of Righteousness. It is a murderer; it is the Law
+of Covetousness and Self Love. And this Law that frights
+people and forces people to obey it by prisons, whips and
+gallows, is the very Kingdom of the Devil and Darkness,
+which the Creation groans under at this day.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>After this characteristic outburst, he gives them the
+following equally characteristic advice:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Come, make peace with the Cavaliers, your enemies, and
+let the oppressed go free, and let them have a livelihood.
+Love your enemies, and do to them as you would have had
+them do to you, if they had conquered you. Well, let them
+go in peace, and let Love wear the Crown. For I tell you and
+your Preachers, that Scripture which saith &lsquo;The Poor shall
+inherit the Earth,&rsquo; is really and materially to be fulfilled. For
+the Earth is to be restored from the bondage of Sword-propriety,
+<a name="pg142" id="pg142"></a><span class="pagenum">142</span> and is to become a Common Treasury in reality to
+the whole of mankind. For this is the work for the true
+Saviour to do, who is the true and faithful Leveller, even the
+Spirit and Power of Universal Love, that is now rising to
+spread itself in the whole Creation, who is the Blessing, who
+will spread as far as the Curse has spread, to take it off and
+cast it out, and who will set the Creation in peace.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The pamphlet then concludes with the following words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;The time is very near when the people generally shall
+loathe and be ashamed of your Kingly Power, in your
+preaching, in your Laws, in your Councils, as now you are
+ashamed of the Levellers. I tell you Jesus Christ, who is that
+powerful Spirit of Love, is the Head Leveller: and as He is
+lifted up, He will draw all men after Him, and leave you
+naked and bare.... This Great Leveller, Christ our King of
+Righteousness in us, shall cause men to beat their swords into
+plough-shares, their spears into pruning-hooks, and Nations
+shall learn war no more. Everyone shall delight to let each
+other enjoy the pleasures of the Earth, and shall hold each
+other no more in bondage. Then what will become of your
+power? Truly he must be cast out as a murderer. I pity you
+for the torment your spirit must go through, if you be not
+fore-armed as you are abundantly fore-warned from all places.
+But I look on you as part of the Creation that must be
+restored; and the Spirit may give you wisdom to fore-see a
+danger, as he hath admonished divers of your rank already to
+leave those high places and to lie quiet and wait for the
+breaking forth of the powerful day of the Lord. Farewell,
+once more, Let Israel go free.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>As a sort of appendix to this pamphlet there appears the
+following interesting document:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="hanging">&ldquo;<span class="smcap">A Bill of Account of the most remarkable Sufferings
+that the Diggers have met with since April 1st, 1649</span>,
+which was the first day they began to dig and to take
+possession of the Commons for the Poor on George Hill
+in Surrey.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;1. The first time divers of the Diggers were carried prisoners
+into Walton Church, where some of them were struck in the
+<a name="pg143" id="pg143"></a><span class="pagenum">143</span> Church by the bitter Professors and rude multitude; but after
+some time they were freed by a Justice.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;2. They were fetched by above a hundred rude people,
+whereof John Taylor was the leader, who took away their
+spades, and some of them they never had again: and carried
+them first to prison in Walton, and then to a Justice in
+Kingston, who presently dismissed them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;3. The enemy pulled down a house which the Diggers had
+built upon George Hill, and cut their spades and hoes to
+pieces.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;4. Two Troops of Horse were sent from the General to
+fetch us before the Council of War, to give account of our
+Digging.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;5. We had another House pulled down, and our Spades
+cut to pieces.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;6. One of the Diggers had his head sore wounded, and a
+Boy beaten, and his clothes taken from him: divers being by.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;7. We had a Cart and Wheels cut in pieces, and a Mare
+cut over the back with a Bill when we went to fetch a load of
+wood from Stoak Common, to build a house upon George Hill.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;8. Divers of the Diggers were beaten upon the Hill, by
+William Star and John Taylor, and by men in women&rsquo;s
+apparel, and so sore wounded that some of them were fetched
+home in a Cart.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;9. We had another House pulled down, and the Wood
+they carried to Walton in a Cart.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;10. They arrested some of us, and some they cast into
+Prison, and from others they went about to take away their
+Goods, but that the Goods proved another man&rsquo;s, which one of
+the Diggers was servant to.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;11. And indeed at divers times besides, we had all our
+corn spoiled. For the enemy were so mad that they tumbled
+the earth up and down, and would suffer no Corn to grow.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;12. Another Cart and Wheels were cut to pieces, and
+some of our Tools taken by force from us, which we never had
+again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;13. Some of the Diggers were beaten by the Gentlemen,
+the Sheriff looking on, and afterwards five of them were carried
+to White Lion Prison, and kept there about five weeks, and
+then let out.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;14. The Sheriff, with the Lords of Manors and Soldiers
+standing by, caused two or three poor men to pull down
+another House: and divers things were stolen from them.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg144" id="pg144"></a><span class="pagenum">144</span>
+&ldquo;15. The next day two Soldiers and two or three Countrymen,
+sent by Parson Platt, pulled down another House, and
+turned a poor old man and his wife out of doors to lie in the
+fields in a cold night.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And this is the last hitherto. And so you Priests, as you
+were the last that had a hand in our persecution, so it may be
+that our misery may rest in your hand. For assure yourselves
+God in Christ will not be mocked by such Hypocrites that
+pretend to be His nearest and dearest Servants, as you do, and
+yet will not suffer His hungry and naked and houseless members
+to live quiet by you in the Earth, by whose Blood and Monies
+in the Wars you are in peace.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And now those Diggers that remain have made little
+Hutches to lie in, like Calf-cribs, and are cheerful, taking the
+spoiling of their Goods patiently, and rejoicing that they are
+counted worthy to suffer persecution for Righteousness&rsquo; sake.
+And they follow their work close, and have planted divers
+acres of Wheat and Rye, which is come up and promises a very
+plentiful crop, and have resolved to preserve it by all the
+diligence they can. And nothing shall make them slack but
+want of food, which is not much now, they being all poor
+people, and having suffered so much in one expense or other
+since they began. For Poverty is their greatest burthen; and
+if anything do break them from the Work, it will be that.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>After this confession of their weakness, and of the probable
+end of their work, Winstanley again bursts out into verse as
+follows:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;You Lordly Foes, you will rejoice<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">this news to hear and see.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Do so, go on; but we&rsquo;ll rejoice<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">much more the Truth to see.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For by our hands Truth is declared,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">and nothing is kept back;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our faithfulness much joy doth bring,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">though victuals we may lack,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">This trial may our God see good,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">to try, not us, but you;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That your profession of the Truth<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">may prove either false or true.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And after another and much worse specimen of his poetry,
+which we will spare our readers, he concludes as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><a name="pg145" id="pg145"></a><span class="pagenum">145</span>
+&ldquo;And here I end, having put my Arm as far as my strength
+will go to advance Righteousness. I have writ; I have acted;
+I have Peace. And now I must wait to see the Spirit do His
+own work in the hearts of others; and whether England shall
+be the first Land, or some other, wherein Truth shall sit down
+in triumph.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But, O England, England, would God thou didst know the
+things that belong to thy peace before they be hid from thine
+eyes. The Spirit of Righteousness hath striven with thee, and
+doth yet strive with thee, and yet there is hope. Come in thou
+England, submit to righteousness before the voice go out, my
+Spirit shall strive no longer with flesh, and let not Covetousness
+make thee oppress the poor....</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Gentlemen of the Army, we have spoken to you; we
+have appealed to the Parliament; we have declared our
+Cause with all humility to you all; and we are Englishmen,
+your friends that stuck to you in your miseries, when those
+Lords of Manors that oppose us were wavering on both
+sides. Yet you have heard them, and answered their
+request to beat us off; and yet you would not afford us an
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yet Love and Patience shall lie down and suffer; let Pride
+and Covetousness stretch themselves upon their beds of ease,
+and forget the afflictions of Joseph, and persecute us for
+Righteousness&rsquo; sake, yet we will wait to see the issue. The
+Power of Righteousness is our God; the Globe runs round; the
+longest sunshine day ends in a dark night. Therefore to Thee,
+O Thou King of Righteousness, we do commit our cause.
+Judge Thou between us and them that strive against us, and
+those that deal treacherously with Thee and us; and do Thine
+own work, and help weak flesh in whom the Spirit is willing.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>&ldquo;To thee, O thou King of Righteousness, we do commit our
+cause. Judge Thou, and help weak flesh in whom the Spirit is
+willing.&rdquo; At this very hour the same prayer, the same cry for
+Justice, is still ascending to the throne of the King of
+Righteousness from the disinherited masses, on whose shoulders
+the weight of our civilisation rests, and whom it presses down
+to helpless poverty, misery, and wretchedness, and who are still
+suffering from the same fundamental injustice against which,
+as we have seen, Gerrard Winstanley protested so eloquently
+over two hundred and fifty years ago.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn132_1_99" id="fn132_1_99"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm132_1_99">132:1</a></span> King&rsquo;s Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 587.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn133_1_100" id="fn133_1_100"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm133_1_100">133:1</a></span> In deference to prevailing conventionalities, we have ventured to
+alter this line.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn137_1_101" id="fn137_1_101"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm137_1_101">137:1</a></span> In the next chapter we shall learn something of those &ldquo;Diggers that
+have caused scandal,&rdquo; and whose actions and views Winstanley found it
+necessary to disown.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg146" id="pg146"></a><span class="pagenum">146</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII<br />
+<br />
+A VINDICATION; A DECLARATION; AND AN
+APPEAL</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot chaphead">
+<p>&ldquo;There is but one way to remove an evil&mdash;and that is to remove its
+cause. Poverty deepens as wealth increases, and wages are forced down
+while productive power grows, because land, which is the source of all
+wealth and the field of all labour, is monopolised. To extirpate poverty,
+to make wages what justice demands they should be, the full earnings of
+the labourer, we must therefore substitute for the individual ownership
+of land a common ownership. Nothing else will go to the cause of the
+evil&mdash;in nothing else is there the slightest hope.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Henry George</span>,
+1877-1878.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>In the pamphlet we have considered in the previous chapter we
+heard that &ldquo;there have some come among the Diggers that have
+caused scandal,&rdquo; and whose ways were disowned by Winstanley
+and his associates. A few weeks subsequent to its publication,
+Winstanley judged it necessary publicly and formally
+to dissociate himself and his companions from them, which he
+did, in a manner quite in accordance with his own principles,
+in a small pamphlet of some eight pages, which was published
+under the title:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="hanging">&ldquo;<span class="smcap">A Vindication of those whose endeavours is only to
+make the Earth a common Treasury, called Diggers</span>:
+Or Some Reasons given by them against the immoderate
+use of creatures, or the excessive community of women,
+called Ranting or rather Renting,&rdquo;<a name="fnm146_1_102" id="fnm146_1_102"></a><a href="#fn146_1_102" class="fnnum">146:1</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>which, after a long condemnation of &ldquo;the Ranting Practice,&rdquo;
+runs as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;There are only two things I must speak as an advice
+in Love.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;First, Let everyone that intends to live in peace set
+<a name="pg147" id="pg147"></a><span class="pagenum">147</span> themselves with diligent labour to till, dig and plow the
+common and barren land, to get them bread with righteous,
+moderate working, among a moderate-minded people; this
+prevents the evil of idleness, and the danger of the Ranting
+power.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Secondly, Let none go about to suppress that Ranting
+power by the punishing hand; for it is the work of the
+Righteous and Rational Spirit within, not thy hand without,
+that must suppress it. But if thou wilt need be punishing,
+then see thou be without sin thyself, and then cast the first
+stone at the Ranter. Let not sinners punish others for sin,
+but let the power of thy reason and righteous action shame
+and so beat down their unrational actings. Wouldst thou
+live in peace, then look to thy own ways, mind thy own
+Kingdom within.... Let everyone alone to stand or fall their
+own Master; for thou being a sinner and striving to suppress
+sinners by force, thou wilt thereby but increase their rage and
+thine own trouble. But do thou keep close to the Law of
+Righteous Reason, and thou shalt presently see a return of the
+Ranters: for that Spirit within must shame them and turn
+them and pull them out of darkness.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>After emphasising the fact that such evil actions must
+necessarily bring evil on those who indulge in them, the
+pamphlet concludes with the following words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;This I was made to write as a Vindication of the Diggers,
+who are slandered with the Ranting action. My end is only
+to advance the Kingdom of Peace in and among mankind,
+which is and will be torn in pieces by the Ranting power, if
+Reason do not kill this fine-hearted or sensitive Beast. All
+you that are merely civil and that are of a loving and flexible
+disposition, wanting the strength of Reason, and the Life of
+Universal Love, leading you forth to seek the peace and
+preservation of every single body as of one&rsquo;s self, you are
+the people that are likely to be tempted, and set upon and
+torn into pieces by this devouring Beast, the Ranting Power.</p>
+
+<p class="signature">Gerrard Winstanley.</p>
+
+<p class="date">
+&ldquo;<i>Feb. this 20, 1649 (1650).</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>On March 4th he adds the following interesting postscript:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;I am told there are some people going up and down the
+country among such as are friends to the Diggers, gathering
+<a name="pg148" id="pg148"></a><span class="pagenum">148</span> monies in their name. And they have a note wherein my
+name and divers others are subscribed. This is to certify
+that I never subscribed my name to any such note. Neither
+have we that are called Diggers received any money by any
+such collections. Therefore to prevent this cheat, we desire,
+if any are willing to cast a gift in to further our work of
+digging upon the Commons, that they would send it to our
+own hands by some trusty friends of their own.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>If others could get monies in their name, the Diggers
+evidently thought that they might themselves take advantage
+of the same means to maintain the public work on which
+they were engaged. For we gather the following from a contemporary
+news-sheet,<a name="fnm148_1_103" id="fnm148_1_103"></a><a href="#fn148_1_103" class="fnnum">148:1</a> <i>A Perfect Diurnal</i>, April 1-8:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="hanging">&ldquo;<i>April 4 (Thursday).</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">The true Copy of a Letter</span> taken at
+Wellingborough, Northamptonshire, with some men that
+were there apprehended for going about to incite people
+to Digging, and under such pretence gathered money of
+the well-affected for their assistance.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;These are to certify all that are Friends to Universal
+Freedom, and that look upon the Digging and Planting of the
+Commons to be the first springing up of Freedom: To make
+the Earth a Common Treasury that everyone may enjoy food
+and raiment freely by his labour upon the Earth, without
+paying Rents or Homage to any Fellow-creature of his own
+kind; that everyone may be delivered from the Tyranny of
+the Conquering Power, and to rise up out of that Bondage to
+enjoy the benefit of his Creation: This, I say, is to certify
+all such that those Men that have begun to lay the First
+Stone in the Foundation of this Freedom (by digging upon
+Georges Hill on the Common called Little Heath in Cobham)
+in regard of the great opposition hitherto from the Enemy, by
+<a name="pg149" id="pg149"></a><span class="pagenum">149</span> reason whereof they lost the last Summer&rsquo;s work, yet, through
+inward faithfulness to advance Freedom, they keep the field
+still, ... but in regard to poverty their work is like to flag
+and drop: Therefore if the hearts of any be stirred up to drop
+anything into this Treasury, to buy victuals to keep the men
+alive, and to buy Corn to cast into the ground, it will keep
+alive the Spirit of Public Freedom to the whole Land, which
+otherwise is ready to die again for want of help. And if you
+hear hereafter that there was a people appeared to stand up
+to advance Public Freedom, and struggled with the Opposing
+Power of the Land, for that they begin to let them alone, and
+yet these men and their public work were crushed, because
+they wanted assistance of food and corn to keep them alive:
+I say, if you hear this, it will be trouble to you when it is too
+late, that you had monies in your hand, and would not part
+with any of it to purchase Freedom, therefore you deservedly
+groan under Tyranny, and no Saviour appears. But let your
+Reason weigh the excellency of this work, and I am sure you
+will cast in something.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And because there were some treacherous persons drew
+up a note and subscribed our names to it, and by that moved
+some friends to give money to this work of ours, when as we
+know of no such note, nor subscribed our names to any, nor
+ever received any money from such collection. Therefore
+to prevent such a cheat, I have mentioned a word or two in
+the end of a printed book against that treachery, that neither
+we nor our friends may be cheated. And I desire if any be
+willing to communicate of their substance unto our work, that
+they would make a collection among themselves, and send that
+money to Cobham to the Diggers&rsquo; own hands, by some trusty
+friend of your own, and so neither you nor we shall be
+cheated.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Bearers hereof, Thomas Haydon and Adam Knight,
+can relate by word of mouth more largely the condition of the
+Diggers and their work, and so we leave this to you to do as
+you are moved.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Jacob Heard, Jo. South junior, Henry Barton, Tho. Barnard,
+Tho. Adams, Will Hitchcocke, Anthony Wren, Robert Draper,
+William Smith, Robert Coster, Gerrard Winstanley, Jo. South,
+Tho. Heydon, Jo. Palmer, Tho. South, Henry Handcocke, Jo.
+Batt, Dan Ireland, Jo. Hayman, Robert Sawyer, Tho. Starre,
+Tho. Edcer, besides their wives and families, and many more
+if there were food for them.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="pg150" id="pg150"></a><span class="pagenum">150</span>
+Then follows this detailed account of their travels:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="center">&ldquo;<span class="smcap">A Copy of their Travels</span>, that was taken with the four men
+at Wellingborow.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Out of Buckinghamshire into Surrey; from Surrey to
+Middlesex, from thence to Hartfordshire, to Bedfordshire,
+again to Buckinghamshire, so to Berkshire, and then to Surrey,
+thence to Middlesex, and so to Hartfordshire, and to Bedfordshire,
+thence into Huntingdonshire, from thence to Bedfordshire,
+and so into Northamptonshire, and there they were
+apprehended.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They visited these towns to promote the business:
+Colebrook, Hanworth, Hounslow, Harrowhill, Watford,
+Redburn, Dunstable, Barton, Amersley, Bedford, Kempson,
+North Crawley, Cranfield, Newport, Stony Stratford, Winslow,
+Wendover, Wickham, Windsor, Cobham, London, Whetston,
+Mine, Wellin, Dunton, Putney, Royston, St. Needs, Godmanchester,
+Wetne, Stanton, Warbays, Kimolton, from Kimolton
+to Wellingborrow.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Before this date, however, some of the inhabitants of
+Wellingborrow had followed the example of their brothers in
+Surrey. From a beautifully printed broadsheet,<a name="fnm150_1_104" id="fnm150_1_104"></a><a href="#fn150_1_104" class="fnnum">150:1</a> bearing date
+March 12th, 1649 (1650), and issued by Giles Calvert, we find
+the following account of their doings, which incidentally reveals
+the terrible state of the rural working population at the time
+it was written:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="hanging">&ldquo;<span class="smcap">A Declaration of the Grounds and Reasons</span> why we the
+poor inhabitants of the Town of Wellinborrow, in the
+County of Northampton, have begun and give consent
+to dig up, manure and sow corn upon the Commons and
+Waste Ground called Bareshanke, belonging to the inhabitants
+of Wellinborrow, by those that have subscribed
+and hundreds more that give consent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;1. We find in the word of God that God made the Earth
+for the use and comfort of all mankind, and sat him in it to
+till and dress it, and said, That in the sweat of his brow he
+should eat his bread. And also we find that God never gave
+it to any sort of people that they should have it all to themselves,
+<a name="pg151" id="pg151"></a><span class="pagenum">151</span> and shut out all the rest, but He saith, The Earth hath
+He given to the children of men, which is every man.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;2. We find that no creature that ever God made was ever
+deprived of the benefit of the Earth, but Mankind; and that
+it is nothing but covetousness, pride and hardness of heart
+that hath caused man so far to degenerate.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;3. We find in the Scriptures, that the Prophets and
+Apostles have left it upon record, That in the last day the
+oppressor and proud man shall cease, and God will restore
+the waste places of the Earth to the use and comfort of man,
+and that none shall hurt nor destroy in all His Holy Mountain.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;4. We have great encouragement from these two righteous
+Acts, which the Parliament of England have set forth, the one
+against Kingly Power and the other to make England a Free
+Common-wealth.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;5. We are necessitated from our present necessity to do
+this, and we hope that our actions will justify us in the gate,
+when all men shall know the truth of our necessity:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We are in Wellinborrow in one parish 1169 persons that
+receive alms, as the Officers have made it appear at the
+Quarter Sessions last. We have made our case known to the
+Justices; the Justices have given order that the Town should
+raise a stock to set us on work, and that the Hundred should
+be enjoyned to assist them. But as yet we see nothing is done,
+nor any man that goeth about it. We have spent all we have;
+our trading is decayed; our wives and children cry for bread;
+our lives are a burden to us, divers of us having 5, 6, 7, 8,
+9 in family, and we cannot get bread for one of them by
+our labor. Rich men&rsquo;s hearts are hardened; they will not
+give us if we beg at their doors. If we steal, the Law will
+end our lives. Divers of the poor are starved to death already;
+and it were better for us that are living to die by the Sword
+than by the Famine. And now we consider that the Earth
+is our Mother; and that God hath given it to the children of
+men; and that the Common and Waste Grounds belong to
+the poor; and that we have a right to the common ground
+both from the Law of the Land, Reason and Scriptures. Therefore
+we have begun to bestow our righteous labor upon it,
+and we shall trust the Spirit for a blessing upon our labor,
+resolving not to dig up any man&rsquo;s propriety until they freely
+give us it. And truly we have great comfort already through
+the goodness of our God, that some of those rich men amongst
+us that have had the greatest profit upon the Common have
+<a name="pg152" id="pg152"></a><span class="pagenum">152</span> freely given us their share in it ... and the country farmers
+have profered, divers of them, to give us seed to sow it; and
+so we find that God is persuading Japhet to dwell in the tents
+of Shem. And truly those that we find most against us are
+such as have been constant enemies to the Parliament Cause
+from first to last.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now at last our desire is, That some that approve of this
+work of Righteousness would but spread this our Declaration
+before the great Council of the Land; that so they may be pleased
+to give us more encouragement to go on; that so they may be
+found amongst the small number of those that consider the
+poor and needy; that so the Lord may deliver them in the
+time of their troubles ... and our lives shall bless them, so
+shall good men stand by them, and evil men shall be afraid of
+them, and they shall be counted the Repairers of our Breaches,
+and the Restorers of our Paths to dwell in. And thus we have
+declared the truth of our necessity, and whosoever will come
+in to labor with us, shall have part with us, and we with
+them, and we shall all of us endeavour to walk righteously
+and peaceably in the Land of our Nativity.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging" style="margin-left: 50%;">&ldquo;Richard Smith, John Avery, Thomas Fardin, Richard
+Pendred, James Pitman, Roger Tuis, Joseph
+Hitchcock, John Pye, Edward Turner.</p>
+
+<p class="date"><i>March 12th, 1649 (1650).</i>&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>By some means or other this Declaration seems to have
+reached the Council of State; for we find the following
+reference to it in Whitelocke, p. 448, under date April:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;A Letter sent from the Diggers and Planters of Commons
+for Universal Freedom, to make the Earth a Common
+Treasury, that everyone may enjoy food and raiment freely
+by his labor upon the Earth, without paying Rents or
+Homage to any Fellow Creature of his own kind, that
+everyone may be delivered from the Tyranny of the Conquering
+Power, and so rise up out of that Bondage to enjoy the
+Benefit of his Creation.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Letters were to get money to buy food for them, and
+corn to sow the land which they had digged.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Presently we shall lay some evidence before our readers
+of the view the Council of State, influenced as it was by men
+<a name="pg153" id="pg153"></a><span class="pagenum">153</span> who had recently enriched themselves by land-grabbing, took
+of such proceedings, the trend of which they fully recognised.
+However, whatever view the Council of State were likely to
+take of this touching Declaration, there can be little doubt
+but that it appealed most strongly to Winstanley, who within
+a fortnight of its issue, on March 26th, replied to it in the
+following high-spirited, almost triumphal, address, which also
+appeared in the form of a broadsheet:<a name="fnm153_1_105" id="fnm153_1_105"></a><a href="#fn153_1_105" class="fnnum">153:1</a></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="hanging">&ldquo;<span class="smcap">An Appeal to all Englishmen to Judge between Bondage
+and Freedom:</span> Sent from those that began to dig upon
+George Hill in Surrey, but now are carrying on that public
+work upon the little heath in the Parish of Cobham,
+near unto George Hill, wherein it appears that the work
+of Digging upon the Commons is not only warranted
+by Scripture, but by the Law of the Common-wealth of
+England likewise.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Behold, behold all Englishmen, The Land of England
+now is your free inheritance: all Kingly and Lordly entanglements
+are declared against by our Army and Parliament. The
+Norman Power is beaten in the field, and his head is cut off.
+And that oppressing Conquest, that hath reigned over you by
+King and House of Lords, for about 600 years past, is now cast
+out by the Armies&rsquo; Swords, the Parliament&rsquo;s Acts and Laws,
+and the Common-wealth&rsquo;s Engagement.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Therefore let not sottish covetousness in the Gentry deny
+the poor or younger bretheren their just Freedom to build and
+plant corn upon the common waste land; nor let slavish fear
+possess the heart of the poor to stand in fear of the Norman
+yoke any longer, seeing that it is broke. Come, those that
+are free within, turn your Swords into Ploughshares, and
+Spears into Pruning Hooks, and take Plow and Spade, and
+break up the Common Land, build your houses, sow corn and
+take possession of your own Land, which you have recovered
+out of the hands of the Norman oppressor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The common Land hath laid unmanured all the days of
+his Kingly and Lordly power over you, by reason whereof both
+you and your fathers (many of you) have been burthened with
+poverty. And that land which would have been fruitful with
+corn, hath brought forth nothing but heath, moss, turfeys, and
+<a name="pg154" id="pg154"></a><span class="pagenum">154</span> the curse, according to the words of the Scriptures: A fruitful
+land is made barren because of the unrighteousness of the
+people that ruled therein, and would not suffer it to be planted,
+because they would keep the poor under bondage, to maintain
+their own Lordly Power and conquering covetousness.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But what hinders you now? Will you be Slaves and
+Beggars still when you may be Freemen? Will you live in
+straits and die in poverty when you may live comfortably?
+Will you always make a profession of the words of Christ and
+Scripture, the sum whereof is this&mdash;Do as you would be done
+unto, and live in love? And now it is come to the point of
+fulfilling that Righteous Law, will you not rise up and act? I
+do not mean act by the Sword, for that must be left. But
+come, take plow and spade, build and plant, and make the
+waste land fruitful, that there may be no beggar or idle person
+among you. For if the waste land of England were manured
+by her children, it would become in a few years the richest,
+the strongest, and the most flourishing Land in the world, and
+all Englishmen would live in peace and comfort. And this
+Freedom is hindered by such as yet are full of the Norman base
+blood, who would be Free-men themselves, but would have all
+others bond-men and servants, nay Slaves to them....</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well Englishmen, the Law of the Scriptures gives you a
+free and full warrant to plant the Earth, and to live comfortably
+and in love, doing as you would be done by, and
+condemns that covetous kingly and lordly power of darkness
+in men, that makes some men seek their freedom in the
+Earth and deny others that freedom. And the Scriptures do
+establish this Law, to cast out kingly and lordly self-willed and
+oppressing power, and to make every Nation in the World a
+Free Common-wealth. So that you have the Scriptures to
+protect you in making the Earth a Common Treasury for the
+comfortable livelihood of your bodies, while you live upon Earth.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Secondly, you have both what the Army and the Parliament
+have done to protect you.... Our Common-wealth&rsquo;s
+Army have fought against the Norman Conquest, and have
+cast him out, and keeps the field.... And by this victory
+England is made a Free Common-wealth; and the common
+land belongs to the younger brother, as the enclosures to the
+elder brother, without restraint.... The Parliament since
+this victory have made an Act or Law to make England a Free
+Common-wealth. And by this Act they have set the people
+free from King and House of Lords that ruled as conquerors
+<a name="pg155" id="pg155"></a><span class="pagenum">155</span> over them, and have abolished their self-will and murdering
+Laws with them that made them. Likewise they have made
+another Act or Law, to cast out Kingly Power, wherein they
+free the people from yielding obedience to the King, or to any
+that holds claiming under the King. Now all Lords of Manors,
+Tything Priests and Impropriators hold claiming or title under
+the King, but by this Act of Parliament we are freed from
+their power.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then, lastly, the Parliament have made an engagement to
+maintain this present Common-wealth&rsquo;s government comprised
+within those Acts or Laws against King and House of
+Lords. And called upon all officers, tenants, and all sort of
+people to subscribe to it, declaring that those that refuse to
+subscribe shall have no privilege in the Common-wealth of
+England, nor protection from the Law.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now behold all Englishmen, that by virtue of these two
+Laws and the Engagement, the Tenants of Copyhold are free
+from obedience to their Lords of Manors, and all poor people
+may build upon and plant the Commons, and Lords of Manors
+break the Laws of the Land, and still uphold the Kingly and
+Lordly Norman Power, if they hinder them, or seek to beat
+them off from planting the Commons. Nor can the Lords of
+Manors compel their Tenants of Copyholds to come to their
+Court Barons, nor to be of their Juries, nor to take an oath to
+be true to them, nor to pay fines, heriots, quit-rents, nor any
+homage as formerly while the Kings and Lords were in their
+power. And if the Tenants stand up to maintain their freedom
+against their Lords&rsquo; oppressing power, the Tenants forfeit
+nothing, but are protected by the Laws and Engagement of
+the Land.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And if so be that any poor men build them houses and sow
+corn upon the Commons, the Lords of Manors cannot compel
+their Tenants to beat them off: and if the Tenants refuse to
+beat them off, they forfeit nothing, but are protected by the
+Laws and Engagement of the Land. But if so be that any
+fearful or covetous Tenant do obey their Court Barons, and will
+be of their Jury, and will still pay fines, heriots, quit-rents, or
+any homage as formerly, or take new oaths to be true to their
+Lords, or at the command of their Lords do beat the poor men
+off from planting the Commons, then they have broke the
+Engagement and Law of the Land, and both Lords and
+Tenants are conspiring to uphold or bring in the Kingly or
+Lordly Power again, and declare themselves to the Army, and
+<a name="pg156" id="pg156"></a><span class="pagenum">156</span> to the Parliament, and are Traitors to the Commonwealth of
+England. And if so be that they are to have no protection of
+the Law that refused to take the Engagement, surely they have
+lost their protection by breaking their Engagement, and stand
+liable to answer for this their offence to their great charge and
+trouble if any will prosecute against them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Therefore you Englishmen, whether Tenants or Labouring-men,
+do not enter into a new bond of slavery, now you are
+come to the point that you may be free, if you will but stand
+up for freedom. For the Army hath purchased your freedom.
+The Parliament hath declared for your freedom. And all the
+Laws of the Commonwealth are your protection. So that
+nothing is wanting on your part but courage and faithfulness
+to put those Laws in execution, and so take possession of your
+own Land, which the Norman power took from you and hath
+kept from you about 600 years, and which you have now
+recovered out of his hand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And if any say that the old Laws and Customs of the
+Land are against the Tenant and the poor, and entitle the land
+only to Lords of Manors still, I answer, all the old Laws
+are of no force, for they were abolished when the King and
+House of Lords were cast out. And if any say, I, but the
+Parliament made an Act to establish the old Laws, I answer,
+this was to prevent a sudden rising upon the cutting off
+the King&rsquo;s head; but afterwards they made these two Laws, to
+cast out the Kingly Power, and to make England a Common-wealth.
+And they have confirmed these two by the Engagement,
+which the people now generally do own and subscribe:
+Therefore by these Acts of Freedom they have abolished that
+Act that held up bondage.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, by these you may see your freedom; and we hope
+the Gentry hereafter will cheat the poor no longer of their
+Land; and we hope the Ministers hereafter will not tell the poor
+they have no right to the Land. For now the Land of England
+is and ought to be a Common Treasury to all Englishmen, as
+the several portions of the Land of Canaan were the common
+livelihood to such and such a Tribe, both to elder and younger
+Brother, without respect of persons. If you do deny this, you
+deny the Scriptures. And now we shall give you some few
+encouragements out of many to move you to stand up for your
+freedom in the Land by acting with plow and spade upon the
+Commons:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;(1) By this means, within a short time, there will be no
+<a name="pg157" id="pg157"></a><span class="pagenum">157</span> beggar or idle person in England, which will be the glory of
+England, and the glory of that Gospel which England seems to
+profess in words.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;(2) The waste and common land being improved will
+bring in plenty of all commodities, and prevent famine, and
+pull down the price of corn, to 12d. a bushel, or less.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;(3) It will prove England to be the first of Nations which
+falls off from the covetous beastly government first; and that
+sets the Crown of Freedom on Christ&rsquo;s head, to rule over the
+Nations of the World, and to declare him to be the joy and
+blessing of all Nations. This should move all Governors to
+strive who shall be the first that shall cast down their Crowns,
+Sceptres and Government at Christ&rsquo;s feet: and they that will
+not give Christ his own glory shall be shamed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;(4) This Commonwealth&rsquo;s Freedom will unite the hearts
+of Englishmen together in love; so that if a foreign enemy
+endeavour to come in, we shall all with joint consent rise up
+together to defend our inheritance, and shall be true one to
+another. Whereas now the poor see if they fight and should
+conquer the enemy, yet either they or their children are like
+to be slaves still, for the Gentry will have all. And this is the
+cause why many run away and fail our Armies in the time of
+need. And so through the Gentry&rsquo;s hardness of heart against
+the Poor, the Land may be left to a foreign enemy for want of
+the Poor&rsquo;s love sticking to them. For say they, we can as
+well live under a foreign enemy, working for day wages, as
+under our own bretheren, with whom we ought to have equal
+freedom by the Law of Righteousness.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;(5) This freedom in planting the common land will prevent
+robbing, stealing and murdering, and prisons will not so
+mightily be filled with prisoners; and thereby we shall
+prevent that heart-breaking spectacle of seeing so many
+hanged every Session as there are. And surely this imprisoning
+and hanging of men is the Norman Power still, and cannot
+stand with the freedom of the Commonwealth, nor warranted
+by the Engagement. For by the Laws and Engagement of the
+Commonwealth, none ought to be hanged nor put to death, for
+other punishment may be found out. And those that do hang
+or put to death their fellow Englishmen, under colour of Laws,
+do break the Laws and Engagements by so doing, and cast
+themselves from under the protection of the Commonwealth,
+and are Traitors to England&rsquo;s Freedom, and upholders of the
+kingly, murdering power.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg158" id="pg158"></a><span class="pagenum">158</span>
+&ldquo;(6) This Freedom in the Common Earth is the Poor&rsquo;s
+Right by the Law of Creation and Equity of the Scriptures.
+For the Earth was not made for a few, but for whole mankind;
+for God is no respecter of persons.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then concludes as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Now these few considerations we offer to all England,
+and we appeal to the judgement of all rational and righteous
+men whether this we speak be not that substantial truth
+brought forth into action, which Ministers have preached up,
+and all Religious Men have made profession of. For certainly
+God, who is the King of Righteousness, is not a God of words
+only, but of deeds; for it is the badge of hypocrisy for man to
+say and not to do. Therefore we leave this with you all,
+having peace in our hearts by declaring faithfully to you this
+Light that is in us, and which we do not only speak and write,
+but which we do easily act and practice.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Likewise we write it as a letter of congratulation and
+encouragement to our dear Fellow Englishmen that have
+begun to dig upon the Commons, thereby taking possession of
+their Freedom, in Wellinborow in Northamptonshire, and at
+Cox Hall in Kent, waiting to see the chains of slavish fear to
+break and fall off from the hearts of others in other countries
+till at last the whole Land is filled with the knowledge
+and righteousness of the Restoring Power, which is Christ
+Himself, Abraham&rsquo;s seed, who will spread Himself till He
+become the joy of all Nations.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Jerrard Winstanley, Richard Maidley, Thomas James,
+John Dickins, John Palmer, John South, <i>Elder</i>, Nathaniel
+Halcomb, Thomas Edcer, Henry Barton, John Smith, Jacob
+Heard, Thomas Barnet, Anthony Wren, John Hayman,
+William Hitchcock, Henry Hancocke, John Batty, Thomas
+Starre, Thomas Adams, John Coulton, Thomas South, Robert
+Sawyer, Daniel Ireland, Robert Draper, Robert Coster, and
+divers others that were not present when this went to the
+Presse.</p>
+
+<p class="date">&ldquo;<i>March 26th, 1650.</i>&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>We are afraid that the enterprise at Wellinborrow did not
+have a very long life; for in the <i>Calendar of State Papers</i>,
+Domestic, Green, p. 106, under date April 15th, 1650, we note
+the following letter, which seems to us to show that the Rulers
+<a name="pg159" id="pg159"></a><span class="pagenum">159</span> of England were fully alive to &ldquo;the mischief these designs
+tend to,&rdquo; and to prove that it was the theories of the Diggers,
+not their actions, that filled the breasts of the privileged
+classes with the determination to nip their enterprise in the
+bud, before it had time to influence the life and thought of
+the Nation:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Council of State</span> to Mr. <span class="smcap">Pentlow</span>, Justice of Peace
+for County Northampton.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We approve your proceedings with the Levellers in those
+parts, and doubt not you are sensible of the mischief those
+designs tend to, and of the necessity to proceed effectually
+against them. If the laws in force against those who intrude
+upon other men&rsquo;s properties, and that forbid and direct the
+punishing of all riotous assemblies and seditious and tumultuous
+meetings, be put in execution, there will not want means
+to preserve the public peace against the attempts of this sort
+of people. Let those men be effectually proceeded against at
+the next Sessions, <i>and if any that ought to be instrumental to
+bring them to punishment fail in their duty, signify the same to
+us</i>, that we may require of them an account of their neglect;
+but till we find the ordinary means unable to preserve the
+peace, we would not have recourse to any other.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The sentence we have italicised seems to show that even
+amongst the Justices of the Peace and Officers of the Land the
+doctrines of the Diggers had found sympathisers, who were
+unwilling that they should be proceeded against. Nor can we
+be surprised at this when we bear in mind the terrible state
+of the rural population of the &ldquo;meaner sort&rdquo; at the time.
+Some idea of same may be gathered in the Declaration from
+Wellinborrow, which is more than fully confirmed in the
+pages of Whitelocke, from which we take the following brief
+entries:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>(P. 398.) Under date April 30th, 1649:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Letters from Lancashire of their want of bread, so that
+many families were starved.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>(P. 399.) Under date May 1649:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Letters from Newcastle that many in Cumberland and
+<a name="pg160" id="pg160"></a><span class="pagenum">160</span> Westmoreland died in the Highways for want of bread, and
+divers left their habitations, travelling with their wives and
+children to other parts to get Relief, but could have none.
+That the Committees and Justices of the Peace of Cumberland
+signed a certificate, that there were Thirty Thousand Families
+that had neither seed nor bread corn, nor money to buy either,
+and they desired a collection for them, which was made, but
+much too little to relieve so great a multitude.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>(P. 404.) Under date May 1649:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Letters from Lancashire of great scarcity of corn, and
+that the famine was sore among them, after which the plague
+overspread itself in many parts of the country, taking away
+whole families together, and few escaped where any house was
+visited, and that the Levellers got into arms, but were suppressed
+speedily by the Governor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>(P. 421.) Under date August 1649:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Letters of great complaints of the taxes in Lancashire:
+and that the meaner sort threaten to leave their habitations,
+and their wives and children to be maintained by the Gentry;
+that they can no longer bear the oppression, to have the bread
+taken out of the mouths of their wives and children by taxes;
+and that if an army of the Turks came to relieve them, they
+will join them.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Under such circumstances we cannot be surprised that
+Winstanley&rsquo;s revolutionary, though to our mind eternally true,
+doctrines, upholding the equal claim of all to the use of the
+land, proclaimed as they were with all the eloquence, zeal and
+fire of his noble spirit, should have awakened an echo in the
+hearts of the more thoughtful, as well as of the more necessitous,
+of his fellow-citizens. But all in vain. In his time, as in
+our time, the Inward Light could not overcome the Outward
+Darkness, nor Universal Love, which is Justice and
+Righteousness, overcome Self Love, which is Covetousness.
+Then, as now, the Spirit of Equity, of Reason and of Love was
+impotent when opposed by the power of the Sword, of Force.
+And yet, and yet&mdash;more especially in view of the thought to-day
+stirring advanced political circles in every constitutionally
+governed country in the world&mdash;who dare maintain that
+Winstanley lived in vain!</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg161" id="pg161"></a><span class="pagenum">161</span>
+About a fortnight after the publication of his <i>Appeal to
+all Englishmen</i>, Winstanley issued yet another pamphlet, of
+which, as it contains nothing save what he had already better
+expressed in his other writings, we need only quote the
+suggestive title-page, with which this chapter may fittingly
+close: it reads as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="hanging">&ldquo;<span class="smcap">An humble Request to the Ministers of both Universities,
+And to all Lawyers of every Inns-a-Court</span>:<a name="fnm161_1_106" id="fnm161_1_106"></a><a href="#fn161_1_106" class="fnnum">161:1</a> to consider
+of the Scriptures and Points of Law herein mentioned,
+and to give a rational and Christian answer, whereby the
+difference may be composed in peace, between the Poor
+Men in England who have begun to dig, plow and build
+upon the Common Land, claiming it their own by right of
+Creation,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">and</span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">The Lords of Manors that trouble them, who have no other
+claimings to Commons than from the King&rsquo;s will, or from
+the Power of the Conquest,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">and</span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">If neither Minister nor Lawyer will undertake a Reconciliation
+in this case. Then we appeal to the Stone, Timber and
+Dust of the Earth you tread upon, to hold forth the light
+of this business, questioning not but that Power that
+dwells everywhere will cause Light to spring out of
+Darkness, and Freedom out of Bondage.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn146_1_102" id="fn146_1_102"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm146_1_102">146:1</a></span> King&rsquo;s Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 1365.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn148_1_103" id="fn148_1_103"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm148_1_103">148:1</a></span> King&rsquo;s Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 534. We have
+to thank the late Rev. Thomas Hancock, of Harrow on the Hill, for this
+reference. Mr. Hancock&rsquo;s profound knowledge of the Commonwealth
+times was well known to every student of the period, at whose disposal
+he gladly placed the wonderful store of information he had collected.
+We would here acknowledge our indebtedness to him for this and other
+information.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn150_1_104" id="fn150_1_104"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm150_1_104">150:1</a></span> British Museum, under Wellingborrow, Press Mark, S. Sh. fol.
+669 f., 15 (21).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn153_1_105" id="fn153_1_105"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm153_1_105">153:1</a></span> British Museum, Press Mark, S. Sh. fol. 669 f., 15 (23).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn161_1_106" id="fn161_1_106"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm161_1_106">161:1</a></span> There is no copy of this pamphlet at the British Museum, nor
+in the Bodleian; but a copy is to be found in the Dyce and Forster
+Library, South Kensington Museum, London, W.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg162" id="pg162"></a><span class="pagenum">162</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV<br />
+<br />
+GERRARD WINSTANLEY&rsquo;S UTOPIA:
+THE LAW OF FREEDOM</h2>
+
+<div class="poem chaphead"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">&ldquo;And when reason&rsquo;s voice,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Loud as the voice of nature, shall have waked<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The nations; and mankind perceives that vice<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Is discord, war and misery; that virtue<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Is peace, and happiness and harmony;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When man&rsquo;s maturer nature shall disdain<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The playthings of its childhood;&mdash;kingly glare<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Will lose its power to dazzle; its authority<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Will silently pass by; the <a name="cm7" id="cm7"></a><a href="#corr7" class="correction" title="Original reads 'georgeous'">gorgeous</a> throne<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shall stand unnoticed in the regal hall,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fast falling to decay; whilst falsehood&rsquo;s trade<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shall be as hateful and unprofitable<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As that of truth is now.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Shelley</span>.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>The above words of Shelley might have been written purposely
+to serve as a preface to Winstanley&rsquo;s final work, the
+main contents of which we now propose to lay before our
+readers. It happened to be the first of Winstanley&rsquo;s works
+that fell into our hands, when, many years since, in consequence
+of Carlyle&rsquo;s somewhat patronising reference to them,
+we first determined to ascertain what the views and aims of
+the Diggers really were. Its <a name="cm8" id="cm8"></a><a href="#corr8" class="correction" title="Original reads 'perusual'">perusal</a> convinced us, and our
+subsequent investigations have only served to strengthen the
+belief, that Winstanley was, in truth, one of the most courageous,
+far-seeing and philosophic preachers of social righteousness
+that England has given to the world. And yet how unequally
+Fame bestows her rewards. More&rsquo;s <i>Utopia</i> has secured its
+author a world-wide renown; it is spoken of, even if not read,
+in every civilised country in the world. Gerrard Winstanley&rsquo;s
+<a name="pg163" id="pg163"></a><span class="pagenum">163</span> Utopia is unknown even to his own countrymen. Yet let any
+impartial student compare the ideal society conceived by Sir
+Thomas More&mdash;a society based upon slavery, and extended
+by wars carried on by hireling, mercenary soldiers&mdash;with the
+simple, peaceful, rational and practical social ideal pictured by
+Gerrard Winstanley, and it is to the latter that he will be
+forced to assign the laurel crown.</p>
+
+<p>From internal evidence we gather that the book was
+written some time before it was published. Winstanley had
+come to realise that the real power of the Country was in the
+hands of the Army, of its trusted officers and leaders. Hence
+it is, probably, that the opening epistle is addressed to Oliver
+Cromwell, who at the time was Commander in Chief of the
+Army, and the man to whom all England was looking with
+wonder and admiration, not unmixed with anxious forebodings.
+The years that had elapsed between the conception and the
+publication of Winstanley&rsquo;s book had been momentous ones in
+this great man&rsquo;s career. Owing to Lord Fairfax&rsquo;s reluctance to
+invade Scotland, the command of the Commonwealth&rsquo;s Army
+had devolved on him: and right good use had the hero of Naseby
+made of his opportunities. In September 1651 he won the
+decisive battle of Dunbar; and in the same month of the
+following year he won the even more decisive battle of
+Worcester, which, to use Gardiner&rsquo;s words, manifested to the
+world that England refused &ldquo;to be ruled by a king who came
+in as an invader.&rdquo;<a name="fnm163_1_107" id="fnm163_1_107"></a><a href="#fn163_1_107" class="fnnum">163:1</a> In the following November, when
+Winstanley was sitting down to write his Dedicatory Epistle,
+Cromwell was already back in his seat in Parliament, endeavouring
+&ldquo;to use the patriotic fervour called out by the
+invasion to settle the Commonwealth on a broader basis,&rdquo; and
+agitating for &ldquo;a time to be fixed for the dissolution of the
+existing Parliament and for the calling of a new one.&rdquo;<a name="fnm163_2_108" id="fnm163_2_108"></a><a href="#fn163_2_108" class="fnnum">163:2</a> And
+in February 1652, when the book was published, political and
+religious excitement in England was probably at the greatest
+height to which it ever attained even in the stirring days of
+the Commonwealth, and Cromwell may be regarded as standing
+at the dividing line of his wonderful career.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg164" id="pg164"></a><span class="pagenum">164</span>
+The title-page of the book reads as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="center">&ldquo;THE LAW OF FREEDOM IN A PLATFORM:<a name="fnm164_1_109" id="fnm164_1_109"></a><a href="#fn164_1_109" class="fnnum">164:1</a></p>
+
+<p class="center little">OR</p>
+
+<p class="center">TRUE MAGISTRACY RESTORED.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Humbly presented to Oliver Cromwel, General of the
+Commonwealth&rsquo;s Army in England, Scotland and Ireland.
+And to all English-men my Bretheren, whether in Church
+Fellowship or not in Church Fellowship,<a name="fnm164_2_110" id="fnm164_2_110"></a><a href="#fn164_2_110" class="fnnum">164:2</a> both sorts
+walking as they conceive according to the order of the
+Gospel: and from them to all the Nations of the
+World.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Wherein is declared, What is Kingly Government, and What
+is Commonwealth&rsquo;s Government.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By Gerrard Winstanley</span>.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">In thee, O England, is the Law arising up to shine,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">If thou receive and practice it, the Crown it will be thine.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">If thou reject, and still remain a froward Son to be,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Another Land will it receive, and take the Crown from thee.<br /></span>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="smcap" style="margin-top: -0.5em;">
+<span style="float: left;">Rev. 11-15.</span> <span style="float: right;">Dan. 7. 27.</span>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<p class="center smcap">London.
+</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Printed for the Author, and are to be sold by Giles Calvert
+at the Black Spred-Eagle at the West end of Pauls.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>As already mentioned, it opens with a Dedicatory Letter&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="hanging">&ldquo;To His Excellency <span class="smcap">Oliver Cromwel</span>, General of the Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+Army in England, Scotland and Ireland&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>which commences as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;God hath honored you with the highest honor of
+any man since Moses&rsquo; time, to be the head of a People who
+<a name="pg165" id="pg165"></a><span class="pagenum">165</span> have cast out an oppressing Pharaoh. For when the Norman
+Power had conquered our forefathers, he took the free
+use of our English Ground from them, and made them his
+servants. And God hath made you a successful instrument
+to cast out that Conqueror, and to recover our Land
+and Liberties again, by your Victories, out of that Norman
+hand.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then indicates Cromwell&rsquo;s duty, as well as the
+alternative ways open to him, in the following words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;That which is wanting on your part to be done is this,
+To see the Oppressor&rsquo;s Power be cast out with his person;
+and to see that the free possession of the Land and Liberties
+be put into the hands of the Oppressed Commoners of England.
+For the Crown of Honor cannot be yours, neither can these
+Victories be called victories on your part, till the Land and
+Freedom won be possessed by them that adventured person
+and purse for them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now you know, Sir, that the Kingly Conqueror was not
+beaten by you only, as you are a single man, nor by the Officers
+of the Army joined to you; but by the hand and assistance of
+the Commoners, whereof some came in person and adventured
+their lives with you, others stayed at home and planted the
+Earth, and paid Taxes and gave Free Quarter to maintain you
+that went to war.... And now you have the Power of the Land
+in your hand, you must do one of these two things: First,
+either set the Land free to the Oppressed Commoners who
+assisted you ... and so take possession of your deserved
+honor. Or, secondly, you must only remove the Conqueror&rsquo;s
+power out of the King&rsquo;s hand into other men&rsquo;s, maintaining
+the old laws still; and then your wisdom and honor will be
+blasted for ever, and you will either lose yourself, or lay the
+foundation of greater slavery to posterity than you ever
+knew.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>A marvellous prophecy, truly! Cromwell could see nothing
+in Winstanley&rsquo;s demands save that they tended &ldquo;to make the
+Tenant as liberal a fortune as the Land-lord,&rdquo;<a name="fnm165_1_111" id="fnm165_1_111"></a><a href="#fn165_1_111" class="fnnum">165:1</a> which did not
+conform to his sense of the eternal fitness of things.
+Winstanley then continues:</p>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><a name="pg166" id="pg166"></a><span class="pagenum">166</span>
+&ldquo;You know that while the King was in the height of
+his oppressing power, the People only whispered in private
+chambers against him; but afterwards it was preached upon
+the house-tops, that he was a Tyrant, a Traitor to England&rsquo;s
+Peace: and he had his overturn.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Righteous Power in the Creation is the same still.
+If you and those in power with you should be found walking
+in the King&rsquo;s steps, can you secure yourselves or posterities
+from an overturn? Surely No.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Spirit of the whole Creation (who is God) is about
+the Reformation of the World, and he will go forward in
+his work.<a name="fnm166_1_112" id="fnm166_1_112"></a><a href="#fn166_1_112" class="fnnum">166:1</a> For if he would not spare Kings, who have sat
+so long at his right hand, governing the world, neither will
+he regard you, unless your ways be found more righteous
+than the King&rsquo;s.... Lose not your Crown; take it up and
+wear it. But know that it is no Crown of Honor till
+promises and engagements made by you be performed to
+your friends. <i>He that continues to the end, shall receive the
+Crown.</i> Now you do not see the end of your work unless
+the Kingly Law and Power be removed as well as his person.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="subject">The Complaints of the People.</p>
+
+
+<p>He subsequently returns to his original subject, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;It may be you will say to me, <i>What shall I do?</i> I
+answer, You are in place and power to see all Burthens taken
+off from your friends the Commoners of England. You will
+say, <i>What are those burthens?</i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I will instance in some, both which I know in my own
+experience, and which I hear the people daily complaining of
+and groaning under, looking upon you and waiting for
+deliverance.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg167" id="pg167"></a><span class="pagenum">167</span>
+&ldquo;Most people cry, We have paid taxes, given free-quarter,
+wasted our estates, and lost our friends in the wars, and the
+Task-masters multiply over us more than formerly. I have
+asked divers this question, <i>Why do you say so?</i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Some have answered me that promises, oaths and engagements
+have been made, as a motive to draw us to assist in
+the wars, that Privileges of Parliament and Liberties of
+Subjects should be preserved, and that all Popery and
+Episcopacy and Tyranny should be rooted out. And these
+promises are not performed. Now there is an opportunity
+to perform them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For first, say they, the current of succeeding Parliaments
+is stopped, which is one of the greatest privileges (and people&rsquo;s
+liberties) for safety and peace. And if that continue stopped,
+we shall be more offended by an hereditary Parliament than
+we were oppressed by an hereditary King.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And for the Commoners, who were called Subjects while
+the Kingly Conqueror was in power, they have not as yet
+their Liberties granted them. I will instance them in
+order, according as the common whisperings are among the
+people.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Power of the Clergy.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;For say they, The Burthens of the Clergy remain still
+upon us, in a threefold nature.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>First</i>, If any man declare his judgement in the things of
+God contrary to the Clergy&rsquo;s report, or the minds of some
+high Officers, they are cashiered, imprisoned, crushed and
+undone, and made sinners for a word, as they were in the
+Popes and Bishops days; so that though their names be cast
+out, yet their High Commission Court Power remains still,
+persecuting men for conscience sake, when their actions are
+unblamable.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i><a name="cm9" id="cm9"></a><a href="#corr8" class="correction" title="Original has no opening double quotation mark">Secondly</a></i>, In many Parishes there are old, formal, ignorant
+Episcopal Priests established; and some Ministers, who are
+bitter enemies to Commonwealth&rsquo;s Freedom, and friends to
+Monarchy, are established preachers, and are continually
+buzzing their subtle principles into the minds of the people,
+to undermine the peace of our declared Commonwealth,
+causing a disaffection of spirit among neighbours, who otherwise
+would live in peace.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Thirdly</i>, The burthen of Tythes remains still upon our
+estates, which was taken from us by the Kings and given to
+<a name="pg168" id="pg168"></a><span class="pagenum">168</span> the Clergy to maintain them by our labors. So that though
+their preaching fill the minds of many with madness, contention
+and unsatisfied doubting, because their imaginary
+and ungrounded doctrines cannot be understood by them, yet
+we must pay them large Tythes for so doing: this is
+Oppression.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="subject">The Power of the Lawyers.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<i>Fourthly</i>, If we go to the Lawyer, we find him to sit
+in the Conqueror&rsquo;s Chair, though the King be removed, maintaining
+the King&rsquo;s power to the height....</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Fifthly</i>, Say they, if we look upon the Customs of the
+Law itself, it is the same it was in the King&rsquo;s days, only the
+name is altered; as if the Commoners of England had paid
+their taxes, given free-quarter, and shed their blood, not to
+reform, but to baptize the Law with a new name, from Kingly
+Law to State Law....<a name="fnm168_1_113" id="fnm168_1_113"></a><a href="#fn168_1_113" class="fnnum">168:1</a> And so as the Sword pulls down
+Kingly Power with one hand, the King&rsquo;s Old Law builds up
+Monarchy again with the other.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="subject">The Main Work of Reformation.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">And indeed the main work of reformation lies in this,
+To reform the Clergy, Lawyers and Law; for all the
+complaints of the Land are wrapped up within them three,
+not in the person of a King</span>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Sixthly</i>, If we look into Parishes, the burthens there
+are many.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject"><a name="pg169" id="pg169"></a><span class="pagenum">169</span> And of Lords of Manors.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<i>First</i>, For the Power of Lords of Manors remains still
+over their Bretheren, requiring Fines and Heriots, beating
+them off the free use of the Common Land, unless their
+Bretheren will pay them Rent, exacting obedience as much
+as they did, and more, when the King was in power.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now saith the People, By what Power do these maintain
+their Title over us? Formerly they held Title from the
+King, as he was the Conqueror&rsquo;s successor. But have not
+the Commoners cast out the King, and broken the band of
+that Conquest? Therefore in equity they are free from the
+slavery of that Lordly Power.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Secondly</i>, In Parishes where Commons lie, the rich
+Norman Free-holders, or the new (more covetous) Gentry,
+overstock the Commons with sheep and cattle, so that the
+inferior Tenants and poor Labourers can hardly keep a cow,
+but half starve her. So that the poor are kept poor still,
+and the Common Freedom of the Earth is kept from them,
+and the poor have no more relief than they had when the
+King (or Conqueror) was in power....</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now saith the whisperings of the People, the inferior
+Tenants and Laborers bear all the burthens, in laboring the
+Earth, in paying Taxes and Free-quarter above their strength,
+and in furnishing the Armies with soldiers, who bear the
+greatest burden of the War; and yet the Gentry, who
+oppress them and live idle upon their labors, carry away all
+the comfortable livelihood of the Earth.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For is not this a common speech among the People, We
+have parted with our estates, we have lost our friends in the
+wars, which we willingly gave up because Freedom was
+promised us; and now in the end we have new Task-masters,
+and our old burthens are increased. And though all sorts of
+people have taken an engagement to cast out Kingly Power,
+yet Kingly Power remains in power still in the hands of those
+who have no more right to the Earth than ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For say the people, If the Lords of Manors and our Task-masters
+hold Title to the Earth over us from the old Kingly
+Power, behold that power is broken and cast out. And two
+Acts of Parliament have been made. The one to cast out
+Kingly Power, backed by the Engagement against King
+and the House of Lords. The other to make England a Free
+Commonwealth.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="pg170" id="pg170"></a><span class="pagenum">170</span>
+He then still further supports his fundamental contention
+in the following unanswerable manner:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;If Lords of Manors lay claim to the Earth over us from
+the Army&rsquo;s Victories over the King; then we have as much
+right to the Land as they, because our labors and blood and
+death of friends, were the purchasers of the Earth&rsquo;s Freedom
+as well as theirs. And is not this a slavery, say the people,
+that though there be land enough in England to maintain ten
+times as many people as are in it, yet some must beg of their
+bretheren, or work in hard drudgery for day wages for them, or
+starve, or steal, and so be hanged out of the way, as men not
+fit to live on the Earth? Before they are suffered to plant
+the waste land for a livelihood, they must pay rent to their
+bretheren for it. Well, this is a burthen the Creation groans
+under; and the subjects (so-called) have not their birth-right
+freedom granted them from their bretheren, who hold it from
+them by Club-Law, but not by Righteousness.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">What is to Rule?</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;And who now must we be subject to, seeing the Conqueror
+is gone? I answer, We must either be subject to a law
+or to men&rsquo;s wills. If to a law, then <i>all</i> men in England are
+subject, or ought to be, thereunto.... You will say, We must
+be subject to the Rulers. This is true, but not to suffer the
+Rulers to call the Earth theirs and not ours; for by so doing
+they betray their trust and run into the line of tyranny, and
+we lose our freedom, and from thence enmity and wars arise.
+A Ruler is worthy double honor when he rules well; that is,
+when he himself is subject to the Law, and requires all others
+to be subject thereunto, and makes it his work to see the Law
+obeyed, and not his own will; and such Rulers are faithful,
+and they are to be subjected unto us therein: For all Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+Rulers are Servants to, not Lords and Kings over the
+people.&rdquo;<a name="fnm170_1_114" id="fnm170_1_114"></a><a href="#fn170_1_114" class="fnnum">170:1</a></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject"><a name="pg171" id="pg171"></a><span class="pagenum">171</span> The Land Question.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;But you will say, Is not the land your brother&rsquo;s? and you
+cannot take away another man&rsquo;s right by claiming a share therein
+with him. I answer, It is his either by Creation Right or by
+Right of Conquest. If by Creation Right he calls the Earth
+his and not mine, then it is mine as well as his; for the Spirit
+of the whole Creation, who made us both, is no respecter of
+persons. And if by Conquest he calls the Earth his and not
+mine, it must be either by the conquest of the King over the
+Commoners or by the conquest of the Commoners over the
+King. If he claim the Earth to be his from the King&rsquo;s
+Conquest, the Kings are beaten and cast out, and that title is
+undone. If he claim title to the Earth to be his from the conquest
+of the Commoners over the Kings, then I have right to the
+land as well as my brother; for my brother without me, nor I
+without my brother, did not cast out the Kings; but both
+together assisting, with purse and person, we prevailed, so that
+I have by this victory as equal a share in the Earth which is
+now redeemed as my brother, by the Law of Righteousness.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If my brother still say he will be Land Lord (through
+his covetous ambition) and I must pay him rent, or else I shall
+not live in the Land, then does he take my right from me,
+which I have purchased by my money in taxes, free-quarter
+and blood. And O thou Spirit of the Whole Creation, who
+hath this title to be called King of Righteousness and King of
+Peace, judge thou between my brother and me, Whether this
+be Righteous, etc.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And now say the people, Is not this a grievous thing,
+that our bretheren that will be Land Lords, right or wrong, will
+make Laws, and call for a Law to be made to imprison, crush,
+nay put to death any that denies God, Christ and Scripture;
+and yet they will not practice that Golden Rule, <i>Do to another
+as thou wouldst have another do to thee</i>, which God, Christ and
+Scripture have enacted for a Law? Are not these men guilty
+of death by their own Law, which is the word of their own
+mouth? Is it not a flat denial of God and Scripture?&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="pg172" id="pg172"></a><span class="pagenum">172</span>
+Winstanley then gives some interesting details of the
+history of this pamphlet, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Thus, Sir, I have reckoned up some of those burdens which
+the people groan under. And I being sensible hereof was
+moved in myself to present this Platform of Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+Government unto you, wherein I have declared a full
+Commonwealth&rsquo;s Freedom, according to the Rule of Righteousness,
+which is God&rsquo;s Word. It was intended for your view
+about two years ago, but the disorder of the times caused me
+to lay it aside, with a thought never to bring it to light.
+Likewise I hearing that Mr. Peters and some others propounded
+this request&mdash;That the Word of God might be
+consulted with to find out a healing Government, which I liked
+well, and waited to see such a Rule come forth, for there are
+good Rules in the Scripture if they were obeyed and practised.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I laid aside this in silence, and said I would not make it
+public; but this word was like fire in my bones ever and anon&mdash;<i>Thou
+shalt not bury thy talent in the earth</i>. Thereupon I
+was stirred to give it a resurrection, and to pick together as
+many of my scattered papers as I could find, and to compile
+them into this method, which I do here present to you, and do
+quiet my own spirit. And now I have set the candle at your
+door; for you have power in your hand to act for Common
+Freedom if you will: I have no power.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He then continues to indicate his own views, as also the
+outlines of the scheme the details of which are unfolded in the
+body of his work, and warns Cromwell that&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;It may be here are some things inserted which you may
+not like, yet other things you may like; therefore I pray you
+read it, and be as the industrious bee, suck out the honey and
+cast away the weeds. Though this Platform be like a piece of
+timber rough-hewed, yet the discreet workman may take it and
+frame a handsome building out of it.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Of Compensation.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;It may be you will say, If Tythe be taken from the Priests
+and Impropriators, and Copyhold Services from Lords of
+Manors, how shall they be provided for again; for is it not
+unrighteous to take their estates from them?</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg173" id="pg173"></a><span class="pagenum">173</span>
+&ldquo;I answer, When Tythes were first enacted, and Lordly
+Power drawn over the backs of the oppressed, the Kings and
+Conquerors made no scruple of conscience to take it, though
+the people lived in sore bondage of poverty for want of it; and
+can there be scruple of conscience to make restitution of this
+which hath been so long stolen goods? It is no scruple arising
+from the Righteous Law, but from Covetousness, who goes
+away sorrowful to hear he must part with all to follow
+Righteousness and Peace.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He then explains that under his scheme even the privileged
+classes would not be injured, since they would share with the
+rest of the community.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Of Riches.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;But shall not one man be richer than another?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There is no need for that; for riches make men vainglorious,
+proud, and to oppress their bretheren, and are the
+occasion of wars. No man can be rich but he must be rich
+either by his own labors, or by the labors of other men
+helping him. If a man have no help from his neighbors, he
+shall never gather an estate of hundreds and thousands a year.
+If other men help him to work, then are those riches his
+neighbors&rsquo; as well as his; for they be the fruits of other men&rsquo;s
+labors as well as his own. But all rich men live at ease,
+feeding and clothing themselves by the labors of other men,
+not by their own, which is their shame and not their nobility;
+for it is a more blessed thing to give than to receive. But
+rich men receive all they have from the laborer&rsquo;s hand, and
+what they give, they give away other men&rsquo;s labors, not their
+own. Therefore they are not righteous actors in the Earth.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Titles of Honour.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;But shall not one man have more Titles of Honor than
+another?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes: As a man goes through offices, he rises to Titles of
+Honor, till he comes to the highest nobility, to be a faithful
+Commonwealth&rsquo;s Man in a Parliament House. Likewise he who
+finds out any secret in Nature shall have a Title of Honor
+given him, though he be a young man. But no man shall have
+any Title of Honor till he win it by industry, or come to it
+<a name="pg174" id="pg174"></a><span class="pagenum">174</span> by age or Office-bearing. Every man that is fifty years of age
+shall have respect as a man of honor from all others that are
+younger, as is shown hereafter.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Of Family Life.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Shall every man count his neighbour&rsquo;s house as his own,
+and live together as one family?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No; though the Earth and Storehouses be common to
+every Family, yet every Family shall live apart as they do;
+and every man&rsquo;s house, wife, children and furniture for ornament
+of his house, or anything he hath fetched in from the
+Storehouses, or provided for the necessary use of his family,
+is all a propriety unto that Family, for the peace thereof.
+And if any man offer to take away a man&rsquo;s wife, children,
+or furniture of his house, without his consent, or disturb the
+peace of his dwelling, he shall suffer punishment as an enemy
+to the Commonwealth&rsquo;s Government, as is mentioned in the
+Platform following.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Of Law and Lawyers.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Shall we have no Lawyers?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There shall be no need of them, for there is to be no
+buying and selling, neither any need to expound Laws; for
+the bare letter of the Law shall be both Judge and Lawyer,
+trying every man&rsquo;s actions. And seeing we shall have successive
+Parliaments every year, there will be rules made for
+every action that a man can do.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But there are to be Officers chosen yearly in every
+Parish, to see the Laws executed according to the letter of
+the Laws; so that there will be no long work in trying of
+offences, as it is under Kingly Government, to get the Lawyers
+money, and to enslave the Commoners to the Conqueror&rsquo;s
+Prerogative Law or Will. The sons of contention, Simeon
+and Levi, must not bear rule in a Free Commonwealth.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Plea for Consideration.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;At the first view you may say, &lsquo;This is a strange
+government.&rsquo; But I pray you judge nothing before trial.
+Lay this Platform of Commonwealth&rsquo;s Government in one
+scale, and lay Monarchy, or Kingly Government, in the
+other scale, and see which gives true weight to Righteous
+<a name="pg175" id="pg175"></a><span class="pagenum">175</span> Freedom and Peace. <i>There is no middle path between these
+two; for a man must either be a free and true Commonwealth
+man, or a Monarchial Tyrannical Royalist.</i>&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Answers to further Objections.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;If any say this will bring poverty, surely they mistake:
+for there will be plenty of all Earthly Commodities, with less
+labor and trouble then now it is under Monarchy. There
+will be no want; for every man may keep as plentiful a
+house as he will, and never run into debt, for common stock
+pays for all.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If you say, Some will live idle; I answer, No. It will
+make idle persons to become workers, as is declared in the
+Platform: There shall be neither Beggar nor Idle Person.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If you say, This will make men quarrel and fight; I
+answer, No. It will turn Swords into Ploughshares, and
+settle such a peace in the Earth as Nations shall learn war
+no more. Indeed, the Government of Kings is a breeder of
+wars, because men being put into the straits of poverty, are
+moved to fight for Liberty, and to take one another&rsquo;s estates
+from them, and to obtain Mastery. Look into all Armies
+and see what they do more, but make some poor, some rich,
+put some into freedom others into bondage: and is not this
+a plague among mankind?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well I question not but what Objections can be raised
+against this Commonwealth&rsquo;s Government, they shall find an
+answer in this Platform following. I have been something
+large, because I could not contract myself into a lesser
+volume, having so many things to speak of.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The One Thing Necessary.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;I do not say nor desire that everyone shall be compelled
+to practice this Commonwealth&rsquo;s Government; for the spirits
+of some will be enemies at first, though afterwards they will
+prove the most cordial and true friends thereunto. Yet I
+desire that the Commonwealth&rsquo;s Land ... may be set free to
+all that have lent <a name="cm10" id="cm10"></a><a href="#corr10" class="correction" title="Original reads 'asssistance'">assistance</a> either of person or purse to obtain
+it, and to all that are willing to come in to the practice of
+this Government, and be obedient to the Laws thereof. And
+for others who are not willing, let them stay in the way of
+<a name="pg176" id="pg176"></a><span class="pagenum">176</span> buying and selling, which is the Law of the Conqueror, till
+they be willing.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Conclusion.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;And so I leave this in your hand, humbly prostrating
+myself and it before you, and remain, A true lover of Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+Government, Peace and Freedom.</p>
+
+<p class="signature">
+&ldquo;Gerrard Winstanley.</p>
+
+<p class="date">
+&ldquo;<i>November 5th, 1651.</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">To The Friendly And Unbiassed Reader.</p>
+
+<p>The somewhat long, though comprehensive, letter to
+Cromwell is followed by one addressed &ldquo;To the Friendly and
+Unbiassed Reader,&rdquo; in which a very different tone is adopted,
+and which runs as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Reader</span>,&mdash;It was the Apostle&rsquo;s advice formerly to try
+all things, and to hold fast that which is best. This Platform
+of Government which I offer is the original Righteousness
+and Peace in the Earth, though he hath been buried under
+the clod of Kingly Covetousness, Pride and Oppression a long
+time. Now he begins to have his Resurrection, despise it not
+while it is small; though thou understand it not at the first
+sight, yet open the door and look into the house; for thou
+mayst see that which will satisfy thy heart in quiet rest.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Summary of the Results of his Plan.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;To prevent thy hasty rashness, I have given thee a short
+compendium of the whole.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>First</i>, Thou knowst that the Earth in all Nations is
+governed by buying and selling, for all the Laws of Kings hath
+relation thereunto. Now this Platform following declares to
+thee the Government of the Earth without buying and
+selling, and the Laws are the Laws of a free and peaceable
+Commonwealth....</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Every family shall live apart, as now they do; every
+man shall enjoy his own wife, and every woman her own
+husband, as now they do: every Trade shall be improved to
+more excellency than now it is; all children shall be educated
+<a name="pg177" id="pg177"></a><span class="pagenum">177</span> and trained up in subjection to parents and elder persons
+more than now they are: The Earth shall be planted and
+the fruits reaped and carried into Storehouses by common
+assistance of every family: The Riches of the Storehouses
+shall be the common stock to every Family: There shall be
+no idle person nor beggar in the Land.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Commonwealth Government and Kingly Government.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;The Commonwealth&rsquo;s Government unites all people in
+a Land into one heart and mind. And it was this Government
+which made Moses to call Abraham&rsquo;s seed one House
+of Israel, though there were many Tribes and many Families.
+And it may be said, Blessed is the People whose Earthly
+Government is the Law of Common Righteousness....</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Government of Kings is the Government of the
+Scribes and Pharisees, who count it no freedom unless they be
+the Lords of the Earth and of their Bretheren. But Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+Government is the Government of Righteousness and
+Peace, who is no respecter of persons.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Final Appeal to the Reader.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Therefore, Reader, here is a trial for thy sincerity.
+Thou shalt have no want of food, raiment or freedom among
+bretheren in this way propounded. See now if thou canst
+be content, as the Scriptures say, Having food and raiment
+therewith be content, and grudge not to let thy brother have
+the same with thee.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Dost thou pray and fast for Freedom, and give God
+thanks again for it? Why, know that God is not partial.
+For if thou pray, it must be for Freedom to all; and if thou
+give thanks, it must be because Freedom covers all people:
+for this will prove a lasting peace.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Everyone is ready to say, They fight for their Country,
+and what they do, they do it is for the good of their Country.
+Well, let it appear now that thou hast fought and acted for
+thy Country&rsquo;s Freedom. But if when thou hast power to
+settle Freedom in thy Country, thou takest the possession of
+the Earth into thy own particular hands, and makest thy
+Brother work for thee, as the Kings did, thou hast fought
+and acted for thyself, not for thy Country, and here thy
+inside hypocrisy is discovered.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg178" id="pg178"></a><span class="pagenum">178</span>
+&ldquo;But here take notice, That Common Freedom, which is
+the Rule I would have practiced and not talked on, was thy
+pretence, but particular Freedom to thyself was thy intent.
+Amend, or else thou wilt be shamed, when Knowledge doth
+spread to cover the Earth, even as the waters cover the Seas.
+And so Farewell.</p>
+
+<p class="signature">J. W.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>To-day knowledge is commencing &ldquo;to spread to cover the
+Earth even as the waters cover the Seas&rdquo;; and the thinkers
+of our times are rapidly coming to realise, to use Shelley&rsquo;s
+words, that&mdash;&ldquo;The most fatal error that ever happened in the
+world was the separation of political and ethical science&rdquo;: a
+separation against which, as we have seen, Winstanley in his
+time protested so vigorously. Hence it is, probably, that the
+teachings of our modern seers and prophets, of the leaders and
+inspirers of the advanced thought of to-day, of Ruskin, Tolstoy,
+and even of Henry George, almost seem to us but as the echoes
+of those of their great forerunner in the stirring days of the
+Commonwealth.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn163_1_107" id="fn163_1_107"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm163_1_107">163:1</a></span> <i>History of the Commonwealth</i>, vol. i. p. 446.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn163_2_108" id="fn163_2_108"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm163_2_108">163:2</a></span> <i>Ibid.</i> p. 471.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn164_1_109" id="fn164_1_109"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm164_1_109">164:1</a></span> King&rsquo;s Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 655. Also at the
+Guildhall Library and the Bodleian.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn164_2_110" id="fn164_2_110"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm164_2_110">164:2</a></span> At the very time this book was being written, some of the new
+settlements in America were making Church Fellowship a necessary
+condition of civil rights.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn165_1_111" id="fn165_1_111"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm165_1_111">165:1</a></span> See Carlyle&rsquo;s <i>Letters and Speeches</i>, Speech II., Sept. 4th, 1654,
+part viii. p. 20.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn166_1_112" id="fn166_1_112"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm166_1_112">166:1</a></span> This argument would have appealed strongly to Cromwell, who,
+in one of his Speeches to his First Parliament, said: &ldquo;If I had not a
+hope fixed in me that this cause and this business was of God, I would
+many years ago have run from it. If it be of God, He will bear it up.
+If it be of man, it will tumble; as everything that hath been of man
+since the world began hath done. And what are all our Histories and
+other Traditions of Actions in former times but God manifesting Himself,
+that He hath shaken and tumbled down, and trampled upon everything
+that He had not planted.&rdquo;&mdash;Carlyle, <i>Letters and Speeches</i>, part viii.
+p. 89.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn168_1_113" id="fn168_1_113"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm168_1_113">168:1</a></span> With this contention, too, Cromwell would have found himself in
+complete sympathy. For &ldquo;the truth of it is, There are wicked and
+abominable laws which will be in your power to alter,&rdquo; he said to one of
+his Parliaments on Sept. 17th, 1656. &ldquo;To hang a man for Six-and-eight-pence,
+and I know not what; to hang for a trifle and acquit murder,&mdash;is
+in the ministration of the Law, through the ill framing of it. I have
+known in my experience abominable murders acquitted. And to see
+men lose their lives for petty matters: this is a thing God will reckon
+for. And I wish it may not lie upon this Nation a day longer than you
+have an opportunity to give a remedy; and I hope I shall cheerfully
+join with you in it. This hath been a great grief to many honest hearts
+and conscientious people; and I hope it is in all your hearts to
+rectify it.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn170_1_114" id="fn170_1_114"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm170_1_114">170:1</a></span> &ldquo;And truly this is matter of praise to God:&mdash;and it hath some
+instruction in it, To own men who are religious and godly. And so
+many of them as are peaceable and honestly and quietly disposed to
+live within Government, and will be subject to those Gospel rules
+of obeying Magistrates and living under Authority. I reckon no Godliness
+without that circle! Without that spirit, let it pretend what it will,
+it is diabolical, it is devilish,&rdquo; and so on. See Cromwell&rsquo;s Speech to his
+Second Parliament, April 13th, 1657 (Carlyle, part x. p. 250). It
+would almost seem as if Winstanley had written the above paragraph to
+answer this explosive utterance of Cromwell, some six years before it
+took place. As a matter of fact, of course, he was only answering an
+objection which every little conventional upholder of existing abuses, in
+his time as in our time, would be sure to make in one form or other.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg179" id="pg179"></a><span class="pagenum">179</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV<br />
+<br />
+GERRARD WINSTANLEY&rsquo;S UTOPIA</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">The Law of Freedom</span> (<i>continued</i>)</p>
+
+<div class="poem chaphead"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">&ldquo;Look on yonder earth:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The golden harvests spring; the unfailing sun<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sheds light and life; the fruits, the flowers, the trees,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Arise in due succession; all things speak<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Peace, harmony and love.... Is Mother Earth<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A step-dame to her numerous sons, who earn<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Her unshared gifts with unremitting toil;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A mother only to those puling babes<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who, nursed in ease and luxury, make men<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The playthings of their babyhood, and mar,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In self-important childishness, that peace<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Which men alone appreciate?&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Shelley</span>.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>&ldquo;The end of law,&rdquo; says Locke, &ldquo;is not to abolish or restrain,
+but to preserve and enlarge freedom.&rdquo; Winstanley evidently
+held the same view; for he commences this, his last and
+greatest book, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;Where true Freedom lies.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The great searching of heart in these days is to find out
+where true Freedom lies, that the Commonwealth of England
+might be established in peace. Some say, It lies in the free
+use of Trading, and to have all Patents, Licenses and Restraints
+removed: But this is a Freedom under the Will of a Conqueror.
+Others say, It is true Freedom to have Ministers
+to preach, and for people to hear whom they will, without
+being restrained or compelled from or to any form of worship:
+But this is an unsettled Freedom.... Others say, It is true
+Freedom that the Elder Brother shall be Land Lord of the
+<a name="pg180" id="pg180"></a><span class="pagenum">180</span> Earth, and the Younger Brother a Servant: And this is but a
+half Freedom, and begets murmurings, wars and quarrels.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All these, and such like, are Freedoms; but they lead to
+Bondage, and are not the true Foundation-Freedom which
+settles a Commonwealth in Peace.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;True Commonwealth&rsquo;s Freedom lies in the free
+Enjoyment of the Earth.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;True Freedom lies where a man receives his nourishment
+and preservation, and that is in the use of the Earth....
+All that a man labors for, saith Solomon, is this, That he may
+enjoy the free use of the Earth with the fruits thereof (Eccles.
+2. 24). Do not the Ministers preach for maintenance in the
+Earth? The Lawyers plead causes to get the possessions of the
+Earth? Doth not the Soldier fight for the Earth? And doth
+not the Land Lord require Rent that he may live in the fullness
+of the Earth by the labor of his Tenants? And so from the Thief
+upon the Highway to the King who sits upon the Throne, does
+not everyone strive, either by force of Arms or secret Cheats,
+to get the possessions of the Earth one from another, because
+they see their Freedom lies in plenty, and their Bondage lies
+in Poverty?&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Then occurs this eternally true passage:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Surely, then, oppressing Lords of Manors, exacting Land-lords
+and Tythe-takers, may as well say their Bretheren shall not
+breathe in the air, nor enjoy warmth in their bodies, nor have
+the moist waters to fall upon them in showers, unless they will
+pay them rent for it, as to say their Bretheren shall not work
+upon Earth, nor eat the fruits thereof, unless they will hire
+that liberty of them. For he that takes upon him to restrain
+his Brother from the liberty of the one, may upon the same
+ground restrain him from the liberty of all four, viz., Fire,
+Water, Earth and Air.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;A man had better to have had no body than to have no
+food for it. Therefore this restraining of the Earth from
+Bretheren by Bretheren is oppression and bondage; but the
+free enjoyment thereof is true Freedom.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Inward and Outward Bondage.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;I speak now in relation between the Oppressor and the
+Oppressed, the Inward Bondages I meddle not with in this
+<a name="pg181" id="pg181"></a><span class="pagenum">181</span> place, though I am assured that if it be rightly searched into,
+the inward bondages of the mind, as covetousness, pride,
+hypocrisy, envy, sorrow, fears, desperation and madness, are
+all occasioned by the outward bondage that one sort of people
+lay upon another. And thus far natural experience makes it
+good, <span class="smcap">that true Freedom lies in the free Enjoyment of
+the Earth</span>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;What is Government in General?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Government is a wise and free ordering of the Earth and
+of the Manners of Mankind by observation of particular
+Laws or Rules, so that all the inhabitants may live peaceably
+in plenty and freedom in the Land where they are born and
+bred.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>With this most suggestive, philosophic and beautiful
+definition of Government, Winstanley opens his second
+chapter, and immediately elucidates his views on this all-important
+subject by drawing what we regard as a true
+and just comparison between what he well terms Kingly
+Government and Commonwealth&rsquo;s Government, or, what would
+now be termed, Aristocracy and Democracy, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;What is Kingly Government?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There is a twofold Government: a Kingly Government
+and a Commonwealth&rsquo;s Government.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Kingly Government governs the Earth by that cheating
+art of buying and selling, and thereby becomes a man of contention,
+his hand is against every man, and every man&rsquo;s hand
+against him ... and if it had not a Club Law to support it,
+there would be no order in it, because it is but the covetous and
+proud will of a Conqueror enslaving a conquered people....
+Indeed, this Government may well be called the Government
+of Highwaymen, who hath stolen the Earth from the Younger
+Bretheren by force and holds it from them by force....
+The great Lawgiver of this Kingly Government is Covetousness,
+ruling in the hearts of mankind, making one Brother to covet
+a full possession of the Earth, and a Lordly Rule over another
+Brother.... The Rise of Kingly Government is attributable
+to a politic wit in drawing the people out of Common Freedom
+<a name="pg182" id="pg182"></a><span class="pagenum">182</span> into a way of Common Bondage: <span class="smcap">for so long as the Earth
+is a common Treasury to all Men, Kingly Covetousness
+can never reign as King</span>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;What is Commonwealth&rsquo;s Government?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Commonwealth&rsquo;s Government governs the Earth without
+buying and selling, and thereby becomes a man of peace, and
+the Restorer of Ancient Peace and Freedom. He makes
+provision for the oppressed, the weak and the simple, as well as
+for the rich, the wise and the strong.... All slavery and
+Oppressions ... are cast out by this Government, <i>if it be
+right in power as well as in name</i> ... <span class="smcap">if once Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+Government be set upon the Throne, then no
+Tyranny or Oppression can look him in the face and <a name="cm11" id="cm11"></a><a href="#corr11" class="correction" title="Original has closing double quotation mark">live</a></span>.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If true Commonwealth&rsquo;s Freedom lies in the free enjoyment
+of the Earth, as it doth, then whatsoever Law or Custom
+doth deprive Bretheren of their Freedom in the Earth is to be
+cast out as unsavoury salt.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>And after reminding his readers that &ldquo;the great Lawgiver
+in Commonwealth&rsquo;s Government is the Spirit of Universal
+Righteousness,&rdquo; and warning them of the evils that would
+necessarily attend their posterity if they heeded not His
+dictates, he continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;If you do not run in the right channel of Freedom, you
+must, nay, you will as you do, face about and turn back again
+to Egyptian Monarchy; and so your names in the days of
+posterity shall be blasted with abhorred infamy for your
+unfaithfulness to Common Freedom; and the evil effects will
+be sharp upon the backs of posterity.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Therefore, seeing England is declared to be a Free
+Commonwealth, and the name thereof established by a Law;
+surely then the greatest work is now to be done; and that is,
+to escape all Kingly cheats in setting up a Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+Government, so that the power and the name may agree
+together; so that all the inhabitants may live in peace, plenty
+and freedom.... For oppression was always the occasion
+why the spirit of freedom in the people desired change of
+government.... And the oppressions of the Kingly Government
+have made this age of the world to desire a Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+Government and the removal of the Kings: for the
+Spirit of Light in man loves Freedom and hates Bondage.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject"><a name="pg183" id="pg183"></a><span class="pagenum">183</span> &ldquo;Where began the first original of Government in the
+Earth among Mankind?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In the third chapter, under the above heading, Winstanley
+first points out that&mdash;&ldquo;The original root of Magistracy is
+Common Preservation; and it rose up first in a private
+family,&rdquo; and then continues:</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Common Preservation.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;There are two roots whence Laws do spring. The first
+root is Common Preservation, when there is a principle in
+every one to seek the good of others as himself, without
+respecting persons: and this is the root of the tree Magistracy,
+and the Law of Righteousness and Peace: and all particular
+Laws found out by experience necessary to be practiced for
+common preservation, are the boughs and branches of that
+tree.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Inward Light.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;And because among the variety of mankind ignorance
+may grow up, therefore this Original Law is written in the
+hearts of every man, to be his guide and leader; so that if an
+Officer be blinded by covetousness and pride, and ignorance
+rule in him, yet an inferior man may tell him when he goes
+astray. For <span class="smcap">Common Preservation and Peace is the
+Foundation-Rule of all Government</span>: therefore if any will
+preach or practice Fundamental Truths, or Doctrine, here you
+may see where the foundation thereof lies.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Self-Preservation.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;The second root is Self-Preservation: when particular
+Officers seek their own preservation, ease, honor, riches, and
+freedom in the Earth, and do respect persons that are in power
+and riches with them, and regard not the peace, freedom, and
+preservation of the weak and foolish among Bretheren.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Root of the Tree Tyranny.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;This is the root of the tree Tyranny, and the Law of
+Unrighteousness; and all particular Kingly Laws found
+<a name="pg184" id="pg184"></a><span class="pagenum">184</span> out by Covetous Policy to enslave one Brother to another,
+whereby bondage, tears, sorrows and poverty are brought upon
+many men, are all but the boughs and branches of that tree
+Tyranny.... Indeed, this Tyranny is the cause of all wars
+and troubles, of the removal of the Government of the Earth
+out of one hand into another so often as it is in all Nations.
+For if Magistrates had a care to cherish the peace and liberties
+of the common people, and to see them set free from oppression,
+they might sit in the Chair of Government and never be
+disturbed. But when their sitting is altogether to advance
+their own interest, and to forget the afflictions of their
+Bretheren who are under bondage: this is the forerunner of
+their own downfall, and oftentimes proves the plague of the
+whole Land.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Therefore the work of all true Magistrates is to maintain
+the Common Law, which is the root of right government,
+and preservation and peace to everyone; and to cast out all
+self-ended principles and interests, which is Tyranny and
+Oppression, and which breaks common peace. For surely the
+disorderly actings of Officers break the peace of the Commonwealth
+more than any men whatsoever.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;All Officers in a true Magistracy of a Commonwealth
+are to be chosen Officers.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He who is a true Commonwealth&rsquo;s officer is not to step
+into the place of Magistracy by policy or violent force, as all
+Kings and Conquerors do, and so become oppressing Tyrants,
+by promoting their self-ended Interests, or Machiavilian
+Cheats, that they may live in plenty and rule as Lords over
+their Bretheren. But a true Commonwealth&rsquo;s Officer is to be
+a chosen one by them who are in necessity and who judge him
+fit for that work....</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;When the people have chosen all Officers, to preserve a
+right order in government of earth among them, then doth
+the same necessity of common peace move the people to say
+to their Overseers and Officers&mdash;&lsquo;<i>Do you see our Laws observed
+for our preservation and peace, and we will assist and protect you.</i>&rsquo;
+And these words <i>assist</i> and <i>protect</i> imply the rising up of the
+people by force of arms to defend their Laws and Officers
+against any Invasion, Rebellion or Resistance: yea, to beat
+down the turbulency of any foolish or self-ended spirit that
+endeavours to break their common peace.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject"><a name="pg185" id="pg185"></a><span class="pagenum">185</span> Faithful Officers and Faithless Officers.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;So that all true Officers are chosen Officers, and when
+they act to satisfy the necessities of them who chose them,
+then they are faithful and righteous servants to that Commonwealth,
+and then there is a rejoicing in the City. But when
+Officers do take the possessions of the Earth into their own
+hands, lifting themselves up thereby to be Lords over their
+Masters, the people who choose them, and will not suffer the
+people to plant the Earth and reap the fruits for their
+livelihood unless they will hire the land of them, or work for
+day wages for them, that they may live in ease and plenty and
+not work: These Officers are fallen from true Magistracy of a
+Commonwealth, and they do not act righteously, and because
+of this sorrow and tears, poverty and bondages are known
+among mankind, and now that City mourns.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;All Officers in a Commonwealth are to be chosen new
+Ones every Year.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley believed that power of any sort, more especially
+if long enjoyed, tends to corrupt and to deteriorate. He therefore
+advocates, and shows surprisingly good reasons for his
+advocacy, that new Officers should be appointed every year.
+He says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;When public Officers remain long in places of Judicature,
+they will degenerate from the bounds of humility, honesty and
+tender care of bretheren, in regard the heart of man is so
+subject to be overspread with the clouds of covetousness, pride
+and vain-glory. For though at the first entrance into places
+of Rule they be of public spirits, seeking the Freedom of others
+as their own; yet continuing long in such a place, where honors
+and greatness come in, they become selfish, seeking themselves,
+and not Common Freedom; as experience proves it true in these
+days, according to this common proverb&mdash;&lsquo;<i>Great offices in a
+Land and Army have changed the disposition of many sweet
+spirited men.</i>&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And Nature tells us, that if water stand long, it corrupts;
+whereas running water keeps sweet and is fit for common use.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Therefore, as the necessity of Common Preservation
+moves the people to frame a Law and to choose Officers to see
+<a name="pg186" id="pg186"></a><span class="pagenum">186</span> the Law obeyed, that they may live in peace: So doth the
+same necessity bid the people, and cries aloud in the ears and
+eyes of England, to choose new Officers, and to remove the old
+ones, and to choose State Officers every year: and that for
+these reasons:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>First</i>, To prevent their own evils: for when pride and
+fulness take hold of an Officer, his eyes are so blinded therewith
+that he forgets he is a servant to the Commonwealth,
+and strives to lift up himself high above his Bretheren, and
+oftentimes his fall prove very great: witness the fall of
+oppressing Kings, Bishops and other State Officers.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i><a name="cm12" id="cm12"></a><a href="#corr12" class="correction" title="Original has no opening double quotation mark">Secondly</a></i>, To prevent the creeping of oppression into the
+Commonwealth again. For when Officers grow proud and
+full, they will maintain their greatness, though it be in the
+poverty, ruin and hardship of their Bretheren: Witness the
+practice of Kings and their Laws, that have crushed the
+Commoners of England a long time. And have we not experience
+in these days that some Officers of the Commonwealth
+have grown so mossy for want of removing that they will
+hardly speak to an old acquaintance, if he be an inferior man,
+though they were very familiar before these wars began? And
+what hath occasioned this distance among friends and bretheren,
+but long continuance in places of honor, greatness and riches?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Thirdly</i>, Let Officers be chosen new every year in love to
+our posterity. For if burdens and oppressions should grow up
+in our Laws and in our Officers for want of removing, as moss
+and weeds grow in some land for want of stirring, surely it
+will be a foundation of misery not easily to be removed by our
+posterity, and then will they curse the time when we their
+forefathers had opportunities to set things to rights for their
+ease, and would not do it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Fourthly</i>, To remove Officers of State every year will
+make them truly faithful, knowing that others are coming
+after who will look into their ways, and if they do not do
+things justly, they must be ashamed when the next Officers
+succeed. And when Officers deal faithfully with the
+Government of the Commonwealth, they will not be unwilling
+to remove: the peace of London is much preserved by removing
+their Officers yearly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Fifthly</i>, It is good to remove Officers every year, that
+whereas many have their portions to obey, so many may have
+their turn to rule. And this will encourage all men to
+advance righteousness and good manners in hopes of honor;
+<a name="pg187" id="pg187"></a><span class="pagenum">187</span> but when money and riches bear all the sway in the Rulers&rsquo;
+hearts, there is nothing but tyranny in such ways.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Sixthly</i>, The Commonwealth hereby will be furnished
+with able and experienced men, fit to govern, which will
+mightily advance the honor and peace of our Land, occasion
+the more watchful care in the education of children, and in
+time will make our Commonwealth of England the Lily among
+the Nations of the Earth.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;Who are fit to choose, and fit to be chosen
+Officers in a Commonwealth.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All uncivil livers, as drunkards, quarrellers, fearful
+ignorant men, who dare not speak truth less they anger
+other men; likewise all who are wholly given to pleasure and
+sports, or men who are full of talk: all these are empty of
+substance and cannot be experienced men, therefore not fit to
+be chosen Officers in a Commonwealth&mdash;yet they may have a
+voice in the choosing.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Secondly</i>, All those who are interested in the Monarchial
+Power and Government, ought neither to choose nor to be
+chosen Officers to manage Commonwealth&rsquo;s affairs; for these
+cannot be friends to Common Freedom.... But seeing that
+few of the Parliament&rsquo;s friends understand their Common
+Freedom, though they own the name Commonwealth, therefore
+the Parliament&rsquo;s Party ought to bear with the ignorance of
+the King&rsquo;s Party, because they are Bretheren, and not make
+them servants, though for the present they be suffered neither
+to choose nor be chosen Officers, lest that ignorant spirit of
+revenge break out in them to interrupt our common peace.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Moreover, All those who have been so hasty to buy and
+sell the Commonwealth&rsquo;s Land, and so to entangle it upon a
+new accompt, ought neither to choose nor be chosen Officers.
+For hereby they declare themselves either to be for kingly interest,
+or else are ignorant of Commonwealth&rsquo;s Freedom, or both,
+therefore unfit to make Laws to govern a Free Commonwealth,
+or to be Overseers to see those laws executed. What greater
+injury could be done to the Commoners of England than to
+sell away their Land so hastily, before the people knew where
+they were, or what Freedom they had got by such cost and
+bloodshed as they were at? And what greater ignorance
+could be declared by Officers than to sell away the purchased
+<a name="pg188" id="pg188"></a><span class="pagenum">188</span> Land from the purchasers, or from part of them, into the
+hands of particular men to uphold Monarchial Principles?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But though this be a fault, let it be borne withal, it was
+ignorance of Bretheren; for England hath lain so long under
+kingly slavery that few knew what Common Freedom was;
+and let a restoration of this redeemed land be speedily made
+by those who have possession of it. For there is neither Reason
+nor Equity that a few men should go away with that Land and
+Freedom which the whole Commoners have paid taxes, free-quarter,
+and wasted their estates, healths and blood, to
+purchase out of bondage, and many of them are in want of a
+comfortable livelihood.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, these are the men that take away other men&rsquo;s
+rights from them, and they are members of the covetous
+generation of self-seekers, therefore unfit to be chosen Officers
+or to choose.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;Who then are fit to be chosen Officers?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why truly choose such as have a long time given
+testimony by their actions to be promoters of Common
+Freedom, whether they be Members in Church Fellowship,
+or not in Church Fellowship, for all are one in Christ.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Choose such as are men of peaceable spirits, and of a
+peaceable conversation.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Choose such as have suffered under Kingly Oppression,
+for they will be fellow-feelers of others&rsquo; bondages.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Choose such as have adventured the loss of their estates
+and lives to redeem the Land from bondage, and who have
+remained constant.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Choose men of courage, who are not afraid to speak the
+truth; for this is the shame of many in England at this day,
+they are drowned in the dung-hill mud of slavish fear of men.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Choose Officers out of the number of those men that are
+above forty years of age, for these are most likely to be
+experienced men, and to be men of courage, dealing truly
+and hating covetousness.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Payment of Representatives.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;And if you choose men thus principled who are poor men,
+as times go, for the Conqueror&rsquo;s Power hath made many a
+<a name="pg189" id="pg189"></a><span class="pagenum">189</span> righteous man a poor man, then allow them a yearly maintenance
+from the Common Stock, until such time as a
+Commonwealth&rsquo;s Freedom is established, for then there
+will be no need of such allowances.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Main Source of Ignorance.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;What is the reason that most men are so ignorant of
+their Freedoms, and so few fit to be chosen Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+Officers?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Because the old Kingly Clergy, that are seated in Parishes
+for lucre of Tythes, are continually distilling their blind
+principles into the people, and do thereby nurse up ignorance
+to them. For they observe the bent of the people&rsquo;s minds,
+and make sermons to please the sickly minds of ignorant
+people, to preserve their own riches and esteem among a
+charmed, befooled and besotted people.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>After this passing shot at his old adversaries, Winstanley
+proceeds to consider the Offices and Institutions suitable for
+his ideal community, for a Free Commonwealth. He first
+summarises their function as a whole, and of the special duty
+incumbent on all public officials, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;All the Offices in a Commonwealth are like links of a
+chain; they arise from one and the same root, which is necessity
+of Common Peace; therefore they are to assist each other,
+and all others are to assist them, as need requires, upon pain
+of punishment by the breach of the Laws. The Rule of Right
+Government being thus observed, may make a whole Land,
+nay the whole Fabric of the Earth, to become one Family
+of Mankind, and one well-governed Commonwealth.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Work of a Father or Master of a Family.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;A Father is to cherish his children till they grow wise and
+strong; and then as a Master he is to instruct them in reading,
+in learning languages, Arts and Sciences, or to bring them up
+to labor, or employ them in some Trade or other, or cause
+them to be instructed therein, according as is shown hereafter
+in the Education of Mankind. A Father is to have a care that
+all his children do assist to plant the Earth, or by other Trades
+<a name="pg190" id="pg190"></a><span class="pagenum">190</span> provide necessaries; so he shall see that every one have a
+comfortable livelihood, not respecting one before another. He
+is to command them their work, and see they do it, and not
+suffer them to live idle; he is either to reprove by words, or
+whip those that offend; for the Rod is prepared to bring the
+unreasonable ones to experience and moderation. That so
+children may not quarrel like beasts, but live in Peace, like
+rational men, experienced in yielding obedience to the Law
+and Officers of the Commonwealth: every one doing to another
+as he would have another do to him.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Work of a Peacemaker.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;In a Parish or Town may be chosen three, four or six
+Peacemakers, according to the bigness of the place: and their
+work is twofold. <i>First</i>, In general to sit in Council to order
+the affairs of the Parish, to prevent troubles, and to preserve
+common peace. <i>Secondly</i>, If there arise any matters of offence
+between man and man, the offending parties shall be brought
+by the Soldiers [Policemen] before any one or more of these
+Peacemakers, who shall hear the matter, and endeavour to
+reconcile the parties and make peace, and so put a stop to the
+rigour of the Law, and go no further. But if the Peacemaker
+cannot persuade or reconcile the parties, then he shall
+command them to appear at the Judges&rsquo; Court at the time
+appointed to receive the Judgement of the Law.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If any matter of public concernment fall out wherein the
+Peace of the City, Town or Country is concerned, then the
+Peacemakers in every town thereabouts shall meet and consult
+about it; and from them, or any six of them, if need require,
+shall issue forth any orders to inferior Officers. But if the
+matter concern only the limits of a Town or City, then the
+Peacemakers of that Town shall from their Court send forth
+orders to inferior Officers for the performing of any public
+service within their limits.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Thirdly</i>, If any proof be given that any Officer neglects
+his duty, a Peacemaker is to tell that Officer, between them
+two, of his neglect. If the Officer continue negligent after
+this reproof, the Peacemaker shall acquaint either the County
+Senate, or the National Parliament therewith, that from them
+the offender may receive condign punishment.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">And it is all to this end that the Laws be obeyed; for
+a careful execution of Laws is the life of Government.</span>&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject"><a name="pg191" id="pg191"></a><span class="pagenum">191</span> The Work of an Overseer.</p>
+
+<p>Winstanley then details at some length the functions of
+Overseers, of which the following will, we think, give our
+readers sufficient insight:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;In a Parish or Town there is to be a four-fold degree
+of Overseers, which are to be chosen yearly. The first is an
+Overseer to preserve peace, in case of any quarrels that may
+fall out between man and man.... The second office of
+Overseer is for Trades. This Overseer is to see that young
+people be put to Masters, to be instructed in some labour,
+trade, service, or to be waiters in Storehouses, that none
+may be idly brought up in any family within his circuit....
+Truly the Government of the Halls and Companies
+in London is a very rational and well-ordered government;
+and the Overseers for Trades may well be called Masters,
+Wardens, and Assistants of such and such a Company, for
+such and such a particular Trade.... Likewise this Overseer
+for Trades shall see that no man shall be a Housekeeper and
+have servants under him till he hath served under a Master
+seven years, and hath learned his Trade: and the reason is,
+that every Family may be governed by staid and experienced
+Masters, and not by wanton youth. And this Office of Overseer
+keeps all people within a peaceful harmony of Trades, Sciences,
+or Works, that there be neither Beggar nor Idle Person in the
+Commonwealth.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The third Office of Overseership is to see particular
+Tradesmen bring in their work to the Storehouses and Shops,
+and to see that the waiters in Storehouses do their duty....
+And if any Keeper of a Shop or Storehouse neglect
+the duty of his place ... the Overseer shall admonish him
+and reprove him. If he amend, all is well; if he doth not, the
+Overseer shall give orders to the Soldiers to carry him before
+the Peacemaker&rsquo;s Court, and if he reform upon the reproof
+of that Court, all is well. But if he doth not reform, he shall
+be sent by the Officers to appear before the Judge&rsquo;s Court, and
+the Judge shall pass sentence&mdash;That he shall be put out of
+that House and Employment, and sent among the Husbandmen
+to work in the Earth: and some other shall have his
+place and house till he be reformed.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Fourthly, all ancient men, above sixty years of age, are
+General Overseers. And wheresoever they go and see things
+<a name="pg192" id="pg192"></a><span class="pagenum">192</span> amiss in any Officer or Tradesmen, they shall call any Officer
+or others to account for their neglect of duty to the Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+Peace; and they are called Elders.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Office of a Soldier.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;A Soldier is a Magistrate as well as any other Officer;
+and indeed all State Officers are Soldiers, for they represent
+power; and if there were not power in the hands of Officers,
+the spirit of rudeness would not be obedient to any Law or
+Government, but their own wills. Therefore every year shall
+be chosen a Soldier, like unto a Marshall of a City, and, being
+the Chief, he shall have divers soldiers under him at his
+command to assist in case of need. The work of a Soldier in
+times of peace is to fetch in Offenders, and to bring them
+before either Officer or Court, and to be a protector to the
+Officers against all disturbances.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Work of a Task-master.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;The Work or Office of a Task-master is to take those
+into his oversight as are sentenced by the Judge to loose their
+Freedom, to appoint them their work, and to see they do it.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Work of a Judge.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">The Law itself is the Judge of all Men&rsquo;s Actions</span>;
+yet he who is chosen to pronounce the Law is called Judge,
+because he is the mouth of the Law: for no single man ought
+to judge or to interpret the Law. Because the Law itself, as
+it is left us in the letter, is the mind and determination of the
+Parliament and of the people of the Land, to be their Rule to
+walk by and to be the touch-stone of all actions. And the
+man who takes upon him to interpret the Law, doth either
+darken the sense of the Law, and so make it confused and
+hard to be understood, or else puts another meaning upon it,
+and so lifts up himself above the Parliament, above the Law,
+and above all people in the Land.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Therefore the work of that man who is called Judge is
+to hear any matter that is brought before him; and in all
+cases of difference between man and man, he shall see the
+parties on both sides before him, and shall hear each man
+speak for himself, without a fee&rsquo;d Lawyer; likewise he is to
+<a name="pg193" id="pg193"></a><span class="pagenum">193</span> examine any witness who is to prove a matter on trial before
+him. And then he is to pronounce the bare letter of the Law
+concerning such a thing: for he hath his name Judge, not
+because his will or mind is to judge the actions of offenders
+before him, but because he is the mouth to pronounce the
+Law, who, indeed, is the true Judge: Therefore to this Law
+and to this Testimony let everyone have regard who intends to
+live in Peace in the Commonwealth.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Then occurs a passage that shows how carefully Winstanley
+had watched the public affairs of his own times, more especially
+the prolonged attempt of the late King to govern
+England under cover of ancient obsolete Laws interpreted
+by Judges removable at his will. He continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;For hence hath arisen much misery in the Nations under
+Kingly Government, in that the man called the Judge hath
+been suffered to interpret the Law. And when the mind of the
+Law, the Judgement of the Parliament and the Government of
+the Land, is resolved into the breasts of the Judges, this hath
+occasioned much complaining of Injustice in Judges, in Courts
+of Justice, in Lawyers, and in the course of the Law itself, as
+if it were an evil Rule. Because the Law which was a certain
+Rule was varied, according to the will of a covetous, envious
+or proud Judge. Therefore no marvel though the Kingly
+Laws be so intricate, and though few know which way the
+course of the Law goes, because the sentence lies many times
+in the breast of a Judge, and not in the letter of the Law.
+And so the good Laws made by an industrious Parliament
+are like good eggs laid by a silly goose, and as soon as she
+hath laid them, she goes her way and lets others take them,
+and never looks after them more, so that if you lay a stone in
+her nest, she will sit upon it as if it were an egg. And so,
+though the Laws be good, yet if they be left to the will of a
+Judge to interpret, the execution hath many times proved
+bad.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;What is the Judge&rsquo;s Court?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;In a County or Shire there are to be chosen&mdash;A Judge,
+the Peacemakers of every Town within that Circuit, the
+Overseers, and a band of Soldiers attending thereupon: and
+this is called the Judge&rsquo;s Court or the County Senate. The
+<a name="pg194" id="pg194"></a><span class="pagenum">194</span> Court shall sit four times in the year, or oftener if need be....
+If any disorder break in among the people, this
+Court shall set things to right. If any be bound over to
+appear at this Court, the Judge shall hear the matter, and
+pronounce the letter of the Law, according to the nature of
+the offence. So that the alone work of the Judge is to pronounce
+the Sentence and mind of the Law: and all this is but
+to see the Law executed and the Peace of the Commonwealth
+preserved.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;What is the Work of a Commonwealth&rsquo;s Parliament
+in General?&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then sketches, first in broad outline and then
+in detail, what he deemed the work of a Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+Parliament should be; and for our own part we know not
+where to find a higher ideal of the duties incumbent upon the
+chosen Representatives of the People: an ideal that no
+Parliament to this day has ever attained, and which probably
+is only attainable when there shall be a strong body of educated
+public opinion, loving Justice and deserving Justice, inspiring
+and supporting their endeavours. He commences as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;A Parliament is the highest Court of Equity in a Land;
+and it is to be chosen every year.... This Court is to oversee
+all other Courts, Officers, persons, and actions, and to
+have a full power, being the Representative of the whole
+Land, to remove all grievances, and to ease the people that
+are oppressed.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">A Parliament is the Father of the Commonwealth.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;A Parliament hath its rise from the lowest Office in a
+Commonwealth, viz., from the Father in a Family. For as a
+Father&rsquo;s tender care is to remove all grievances from the
+oppressed children, not respecting one before another; so a
+Parliament are to remove all burdens from the people of the
+Land, and are not to respect persons who are great before
+those who are weak; but their eye and care must be principally
+to relieve the oppressed ones, who groan under the
+Tyrant&rsquo;s Laws and Powers: the strong, or such as have the
+Tyrant&rsquo;s Power to support them, need no help.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg195" id="pg195"></a><span class="pagenum">195</span> &ldquo;But though a Parliament be the Father of a Land, yet
+by the Covetousness and Cheats of Kingly Government the
+heart of this Father hath been alienated from the children of
+the Land, or else so overawed by the frowns of a Kingly
+Tyrant, that they could not or durst not act for the weaker
+children&rsquo;s ease. For hath not Parliament sat and rose again,
+and made Laws to strengthen the Tyrant in his Throne, and
+to strengthen the rich and the strong by those Laws, and left
+Oppression upon the backs of the oppressed still?&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">His Hopes for the Future.</p>
+
+<p>Here Winstanley checks himself, and continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;But I&rsquo;ll not reap up former weaknesses, but rather
+rejoice in hope of amendment, seeing our present Parliament
+hath declared England to be a Free Commonwealth, and to
+cast out Kingly Power: and upon this ground I rejoice in
+hope that succeeding Parliaments will be tender-hearted
+Fathers to the oppressed children of the Land. And not only
+dandle us upon the knee with good words and promises till
+particular men&rsquo;s turn be served, but will feed our bellies and
+clothe our backs with good actions of Freedom, and give to
+the oppressed children&rsquo;s children their birthright portion,
+which is Freedom in the Commonwealth&rsquo;s Land, which the
+Kingly Law and Power, our cruel step-fathers and step-mothers,
+have kept from us and our fathers for many years
+past.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;The particular Work of a Parliament is Four-fold&mdash;Firstly,</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;As a tender Father, a Parliament is to empower Officers
+and give orders for the free planting and reaping of the
+Commonwealth&rsquo;s Land, that all who have been oppressed, and
+kept back from the free use thereof by Conquerors, Kings,
+and their Tyrant Laws, may now be set at liberty to plant
+in Freedom for food and raiment, and are to be a protection
+to them who labor the Earth, and a punisher of them who
+are idle.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But some may say, What is that I call Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+Land? I answer, All that land which hath been withheld
+from the inhabitants by the Conqueror, or Tyrant Kings, and
+<a name="pg196" id="pg196"></a><span class="pagenum">196</span> is now recovered out of the hands of that oppression by the
+joint assistance of the persons and purses of the Commoners
+of the Land. For this Land is the price of their blood. It
+is their birthright to them and to their posterity, and ought
+not to be converted into particular hands again by the Laws
+of a Free Commonwealth. In particular, this Land is all
+Abbey Lands, formerly recovered out of the Pope&rsquo;s Power
+by the blood of the Commoners of England, though the Kings
+withheld their rights therein from them. So likewise all
+Crown Lands, Bishops&rsquo; Lands, with all Parks, Forests, Chases,
+now of late recovered out of the hand of the Kingly Tyrants,
+who have set Lords of Manors and Taskmasters over the
+Commoners, to withhold the free use of the land from them.
+So likewise all the Commons and Waste Lands, which are
+called Commons because the Poor was to have part therein.
+But this is withheld from the Commoners, either by Lords of
+Manors requiring quit-rents, and overseeing the poor so
+narrowly that none dares build him a house upon this Common
+Land, or plant thereupon, without his leave, but must pay
+him rents, fines, and heriots, and homage as unto a Conqueror.
+Or else the benefit of this Common Land is taken
+away from the Younger Bretheren by the rich Land Lords and
+Freeholders, who overstock the Commons with sheep and
+cattle, so that the Poor in many places are not able to keep
+a Cow unless they steal grass for her.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And this is the bondage the Poor complain of, that
+they are kept poor in a Land where there is so much plenty
+for everyone, if Covetousness and Pride did not rule as
+King in one Brother over another: and Kingly Government
+occasions all this. Now it is the work of a Parliament to
+break the Tyrant&rsquo;s bands, to abolish all their oppressing Laws,
+and to give orders, encouragements and directions unto the
+poor oppressed people of the Land, that they forthwith plant
+and manure this their own Land, for the free and comfortable
+livelihood of themselves and posterities. And to declare
+to them, it is their own Creation-Rights, faithfully and
+courageously recovered by their diligence, purses and blood
+from under the Kingly Tyrant&rsquo;s and Oppressor&rsquo;s Power.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;The Work of a Parliament&mdash;Secondly,</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is to abolish all old Laws and Customs which have been
+the strength of the Oppressor, and to prepare and then to
+<a name="pg197" id="pg197"></a><span class="pagenum">197</span> enact new Laws for the ease and freedom of the people, but
+yet not without the people&rsquo;s knowledge.<a name="fnm197_1_115" id="fnm197_1_115"></a><a href="#fn197_1_115" class="fnnum">197:1</a></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For the work of a Parliament herein is three-fold:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>First</i>, When old Laws and Customs of the Kings do
+burden the people, and the people desire the remove of them,
+and the establishment of more easy Laws: it is now the work
+of a Parliament to search into Reason and Equity, how relief
+may be found for the people in such a case, and to preserve
+a Common Peace. And when they have found a way by
+debate of counsel among themselves, whereby the people may
+be relieved, they are not presently to establish their conclusions
+for a Law. But in the next place they are to make
+a public declaration thereof to the people of the Land, who
+choose them, for their approbation. And if no objection come
+in from the people within one month, they may then take the
+people&rsquo;s silence as a consent thereto. And then, in the third
+place, they are to enact it for a Law, to be a binding rule to
+the whole Land. For as the remove of the old Laws and
+Customs is by the people&rsquo;s consent, which is proved by their
+frequent petitionings and requests; so the enacting of new
+Laws must be by the people&rsquo;s consent and knowledge likewise.
+And here they are to require the consent, not of men interested
+in the old oppressing Laws and Customs,<a name="fnm197_2_116" id="fnm197_2_116"></a><a href="#fn197_2_116" class="fnnum">197:2</a> as Kings used to
+do, but of them who have been oppressed. And the reason is
+this: Because the people must be all subject to the Law, under
+pain of punishment, therefore it is all reason that they should
+know it before it be enacted, so that if there be anything of
+the Counsel of Oppression in it, it may be discovered and
+amended.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject"><a name="pg198" id="pg198"></a><span class="pagenum">198</span> Answers to two Objections.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But you will say, If it must be so, then will men so differ
+in their judgements that we shall never agree.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I answer: There is but Bondage and Freedom, <i>particular</i>
+Interest or <i>common</i> Interest; and he who pleads to bring in
+particular interest into a Free Commonwealth, will presently
+be seen and cast out, as one bringing in Kingly Slavery again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Moreover, men in place and office, where greatness and
+honor is coming in, may sooner be corrupted to bring in
+particular interest than a whole Land can be, who must either
+suffer sorrow under a burdensome Law, or rejoice under a Law
+of Freedom. And surely those men who are not willing to
+enslave the people will be unwilling to consent hereunto.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;The Work of a Parliament&mdash;Thirdly,</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Is to see all those burdens removed actually, which have
+hindered or do hinder the oppressed People from the enjoyment
+of their Birth-Rights.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If their Common Lands be under the oppression of Lords
+of Manors, they are to see the Land freed from that slavery.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If the Commonwealth Land be sold by the hasty counsel
+of subtle, covetous and ignorant Officers, who act for their own
+particular interest, and so hath entangled the Commoners&rsquo;
+Land again, under colour of being bought and sold: then a
+Parliament is to examine what authority any had to sell or
+buy the Commonwealth&rsquo;s Land without a general consent of
+the People: <span class="smcap">For it is not any one&rsquo;s, but every one&rsquo;s Birth-Right</span>.
+And if some through covetousness and self-interest
+gave consent privately, yet a Parliament, who is the Father
+of the Land, ought not to give consent to buy and sell that
+Land which is all the children&rsquo;s birth-right, and the price
+of their labors, moneys and blood.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They are to declare likewise that the Bargain is unrighteous;
+and that the Buyers and Sellers are Enemies to
+the Peace and Freedom of the Commonwealth. For indeed
+the necessity of the People chose a Parliament to help them
+in their weakness. Hence when they see a danger like to
+impoverish or enslave one part of the people to another, they
+are to give warning and so prevent that danger. For they
+are the Eyes of the Land: and surely those are blind eyes that
+lead the People into Bogs to be entangled in Mud again, after
+<a name="pg199" id="pg199"></a><span class="pagenum">199</span> they are once pulled out. <b>And when the Land is once freed
+from the Oppressor&rsquo;s Power and Laws, the Parliament is to keep
+it so, and not suffer it by their consent to have it bought or sold,
+and so entangled in Bondage upon a new account.</b></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For their faithfulness herein to the People, the People
+are engaged in love and faithfulness to cleave close to them
+in defence and protection. But when a Parliament have no
+care herein, the hearts of the People run away from them like
+sheep who have no Shepherd.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Cause of all Grievances.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;All grievances are occasioned either by the covetous wills
+of State Officers, who neglect their obedience to the good Laws,
+and then prefer their own ease, honor, and riches before the
+ease and freedom of the oppressed people. A Parliament is
+to cashier and punish those Officers, and place others who are
+men of public spirit in their rooms.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Or else the People&rsquo;s grievances arise from the practice
+and power that the King&rsquo;s Laws have given to Lords of Manors,
+covetous Landlords, Tythe Takers, or unbounded Lawyers,
+being all strengthened in their oppressions over the people by
+that Kingly Law. And when the People are burthened herewith,
+and groan waiting for deliverance, as the oppressed
+People of England do at this day, it is then the work of a
+Parliament to see the People delivered, and that they enjoy
+their Creation&rsquo;s Freedom in the Earth. They are not to dally
+with them, but as a father is ready to help his children out of
+misery when they either see them in misery, or when the
+children cry for help, so should they do for the oppressed
+people.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And surely for this end, and no other, is the Parliament
+chosen. <b>For the necessity for Common Preservation and Peace
+is the Fundamental Law both to Officers and People.</b></p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;The Work of a Parliament&mdash;Fourthly,</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is this: If there be occasion to raise an Army to wage
+war, either against an Invasion of a Foreign Enemy, or against
+an Insurrection at home, it is the work of a Parliament to
+manage that business for to preserve Common Peace.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And here their work is three-fold:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>First</i>, To acquaint the People plainly with the cause of
+<a name="pg200" id="pg200"></a><span class="pagenum">200</span> the War, and to show them the danger of such an Invasion or
+Insurrection. And so from that cause require their assistance
+in person, for the preservation of the Laws, Liberties and Peace
+of the Commonwealth, according to their engagement when
+they were chosen, which was this: <i>Do you protect our Laws
+and Liberties, and we will protect and assist you.</i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Secondly</i>, A Parliament is to make choice of understanding,
+able and public-spirited men to be Leaders of an Army
+in this case, and to give them Commissions and Power, in
+the name of the Commonwealth, to manage the work of an
+Army.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Thirdly</i>, A Parliament&rsquo;s work in this case is either to send
+Ambassadors to another Nation which has invaded our Land,
+or that intends to invade, to agree upon terms of peace, or to
+proclaim war; or else to receive and hear Ambassadors from
+other Lands for the same business, or about any other business
+concerning the peace and honor of the Land.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For a Parliament is the Head of a Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+Power; or, as it may be said, it is the great Council of an
+Army, from whom originally all Orders do issue forth to any
+Officer or Soldier. For if so be a Parliament had not an Army
+to protect them, the rudeness of the people would not obey
+their proceedings; and if a Parliament were not the representative
+of the People, who indeed is the body of all power, the
+Army would not obey their orders.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;So then a Parliament is the Head of Power in a Commonwealth.
+It is their work to manage public affairs in times of
+War and in times of Peace; not to promote the interests of
+particular men, but for the Peace and Freedom of the whole
+Body of the Land, viz., of every particular man, that none be
+deprived of his Creation Eights, unless he hath lost his
+Freedom by transgression, as by the Laws is expressed.&rdquo;<a name="fnm200_1_117" id="fnm200_1_117"></a><a href="#fn200_1_117" class="fnnum">200:1</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><a name="pg201" id="pg201"></a><span class="pagenum">201</span>
+With this admirable summary of the functions of a
+Parliament, our author brings his consideration of their work
+to a conclusion, and somewhat later proceeds to consider
+the source and function of a true Commonwealth&rsquo;s Army,
+which he evidently regards as a necessary evil, capable of
+much harm as well as of some good. He says:</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Rise of a Commonwealth&rsquo;s Army.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;After that the necessity of a People in a Parish, in a
+County and in a Land, hath moved the People to choose
+Officers to preserve common peace, the same necessity causeth
+the People to say to their Officers&mdash;<i>Do you see our Laws
+observed for our common preservation, and we will assist and
+protect you.</i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;These words, <i>assist</i> and <i>protect</i>, implies the rising of the
+People by force of arms to defend their Laws and Officers,
+who rule well, against any invasion, insurrection or rebellion
+of selfish Officers or rude people: yea, to beat down the
+turbulency of any foolish spirit that shall arise to break
+our common peace. So that the same Law of Necessity of
+Common Peace, which moved the People to choose Officers,
+and to compose a Law to be a Rule of Government: the same
+Law of Necessity of Protection doth raise an Army. So that
+an Army, as well as other Officers in a Commonwealth, spring
+from one and the same root, viz., from the necessity of Common
+Preservation.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">An Army is Two-fold: viz., a Ruling Army, or a
+Fighting Army.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;A Ruling Army is called Magistracy in times of Peace,
+keeping that Land and Government in Peace by Execution of
+the Laws, which the Fighting Army did purchase in the field
+by their blood out of the hands of Oppression. All Officers,
+from the Father in a Family to the Parliament in a Land,
+are but the heads and leaders of an Army; and all people
+arising to protect and assist their Officers, in defence of a
+right-ordered Government, are but the body of an Army.
+And this Magistracy is called the Rejoicing of all Nations,
+when the foundations thereof are Laws of Common Equity,
+whereby every single man may enjoy the fruits of his labor,
+<a name="pg202" id="pg202"></a><span class="pagenum">202</span> in the free use of the Earth, without being restrained or
+oppressed by the hands of others.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Secondly, A Fighting Army, called Soldiers in the Field,
+when the necessity of preservation, by reason of a foreign
+invasion, or inbred Oppression, doth move the people to arise
+in an Army to cut and tear to pieces either degenerate
+Officers, or rude people, who seek their own interests, and
+not Common Freedom, and through treachery do endeavour to
+destroy the Laws of Common Freedom, and to enslave both the
+Land and the People of the Commonwealth to their particular
+wills and lusts.... The use or work of a Fighting Army in a
+Commonwealth is to beat down all who arise to endeavour
+to destroy the Liberties of the Commonwealth. For as in
+the days of the Monarchy an Army was used to subdue all
+who rebelled against Kingly Propriety, so in the days of a
+Free Commonwealth, an Army is to be made use of to resist
+or destroy all who endeavour to keep up or bring in Kingly
+Bondage again.... Therefore, you Army of England&rsquo;s
+Commonwealth, look to it. The Enemy could not beat you
+in the field, but they may be too hard for you by Policy in
+Counsel, if you do not stick close to see Common Freedom
+established. For if so be that Kingly Authority is set up in
+your Laws again, King Charles has conquered you and your
+posterity by policy, though you seemingly have cut off his
+head. For the Strength of a King lies not in the visible
+Appearance of his Body, but in his Will, Laws, and Authority,
+which is called Monarchial Government. But if you remove
+Kingly Government, and set up true and free Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+Government, then you gain your Crown and keep it, and
+leave peace to your posterity: otherwise not. And thus
+doing makes a War either lawful or unlawful.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Then follows this bold, manly challenge of the conduct of
+the Grandees of the Army:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;An Army may be Murtherers and Unlawful.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If an Army be raised to cast out Kingly Oppression, and if
+the Heads of that Army promise a Commonwealth&rsquo;s Freedom
+to the oppressed people, in case they will assist in person and
+purse, and if the people do assist and prevail over the Tyrant,
+those Officers are bound by the Law of Justice (who is God)
+to make good their engagements. And if they do not set
+<a name="pg203" id="pg203"></a><span class="pagenum">203</span> the Land free from the branches of the Kingly Oppression,
+but reserve some part of the Kingly Power to advance their
+own particular interest, whereby some of their friends are left
+under as great slavery to them as they were under the Kings,
+those Officers are not faithful Commonwealth&rsquo;s Soldiers, they
+are worse Thieves and Tyrants than the Kings they cast out,
+and that Honor they seemed to get by their Victories over
+the Commonwealth&rsquo;s Oppressor, they lose again by breaking
+Promise and Engagement to their oppressed friends who did
+assist them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For what difference is there between a professed Tyrant,
+who declares himself a Tyrant in words, laws and deeds, as all
+Conquerors do, and him who promises to free me from the
+power of the Tyrant if I&rsquo;ll assist him; and when I have spent
+my estate and blood, and the health of my body, and expect
+my bargain by his engagements to me, he sits himself down in
+the Tyrant&rsquo;s Chair, and takes the possession of the Land to
+himself, and calls it his and none of mine, and tells me he
+cannot in conscience let me enjoy the Freedom of the Earth
+with him, because it is another man&rsquo;s right.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">His Account of his own Circumstances.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;And now my health and estate is decayed and I grow in
+age, I must either beg or work for day-wages, which I was
+never brought up to, for another; when the Earth is as freely
+my Inheritance and Birth-Right as his whom I must work for.
+And if I cannot live by my weak labors, but take where I
+need, as Christ sent and took the Asses Colt in his need, there
+is no dispute, but by the Kings and Laws, he will hang me
+for a thief.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The true Function of a Commonwealth Army.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;A Monarchial Army lifts up mountains and makes valleys,
+viz., advances Tyrants and treads the oppressed in the barren
+lanes of poverty. But a Commonwealth&rsquo;s Army is like John
+the Baptist, who levels the Mountains to the Valleys, pulls
+down the Tyrant, and lifts up the Oppressed: and so makes
+way for the Spirit of Peace and Freedom to come in to rule
+and inherit the Earth.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;By this which has been spoken an Army may see wherein
+they may do well and wherein they may do hurt.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="subject"><a name="pg204" id="pg204"></a><span class="pagenum">204</span> The Office of the Post-Master.</p>
+
+<p>Under this heading Winstanley describes an office by
+which he evidently thought the social bonds uniting the whole
+Nation might be strengthened and all parts thereof be brought
+into closer and more intimate relations one with the other.
+He describes its functions as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;In every Parish throughout the Commonwealth shall be
+chosen two men (at the time when the other Officers are
+chosen), and these shall be called Post-Masters. And whereas
+there are four parts of the Land, East, West, North, South,
+there shall be chosen in the chief City two men to receive
+what the Post-Master of the East Country brings in&rdquo;; and so
+on. &ldquo;Now the work of a Country Post-master shall be this:
+They shall every month bring up or send by tidings from their
+respective Parishes to the chief City, of what accidents or
+passages fall out, which is either to the honor or dishonor, hurt
+or profit, of the Commonwealth. And if nothing have fallen
+out in that month worth observation, then they shall write
+down peace or good order in such a Parish.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;When these respective Post-masters have brought up
+their Bills or Certificates from all parts of the Land, the
+Receiver of these Bills shall write down everything in order
+from Parish to Parish in the nature of a Weekly Bill of
+Observation. And those eight Receivers shall cause the
+Affairs of the Four Quarters of the Land to be printed in one
+Book with what speed may be, and deliver to every Post-master
+a Book, that as they bring up the affairs of one Parish
+in writing, they may carry down in print the Affairs of the
+Whole Land.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Its Benefits.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;The benefit lies here, that if any part of the Land be
+visited with Plague, Famine, Invasion or Insurrection, or any
+casualties, the other parts of the Land may have speedy knowledge,
+and send relief. And if any accident fall out through
+unreasonable action, or careless neglect, other parts of the
+Land may thereby be made watchful to prevent like dangers.
+Or if any through industry or through ripeness of understanding
+have found out any secret in Nature, or new invention
+in any Art or Trade, or in the tillage of the Earth, or such
+<a name="pg205" id="pg205"></a><span class="pagenum">205</span> like, whereby the Commonwealth may more flourish in peace
+and plenty, for which virtues those persons received honor in
+the places where they dwelt; then, when other parts of the
+Land hear of it, many thereby will be encouraged to employ
+their Reason and Industry to do the like; that so in time
+there will not be any Secret in Nature, which now lies hid (by
+reason of the iron age of Kingly Oppressing Government) but
+by some or other will be brought to light, to the beauty of our
+Commonwealth.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>With this suggestive passage this chapter may fittingly
+close. Like his great successor in the Nineteenth Century,
+Winstanley evidently realised that &ldquo;Liberty means Justice,
+and Justice is the Natural Law&mdash;the law of health and
+symmetry and strength, of fraternity and co-operation.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn197_1_115" id="fn197_1_115"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm197_1_115">197:1</a></span> Law Reform was at that time very popular, and undoubtedly much
+needed. The month previous to the publication of the book we are now
+considering, in January 1652, a Law Reform Commission consisting of
+twenty-one members had been appointed. It evidently went to work
+in a very thorough manner. For, according to a modern Lawyer, Mr.
+Inderwick (see his book <i>The Interregnum</i>, referred to by Gardiner), it
+appears that of eight draft Acts proposed on March 23rd, 1652, one
+became Law in 1833, one in 1846, and a third in 1885.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn197_2_116" id="fn197_2_116"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm197_2_116">197:2</a></span> &ldquo;Things of this world,&rdquo; says Locke (<i>Of Civil Government</i>, part ii.
+chap. xiii. &sect; 157), &ldquo;are in so constant a flux, that nothing remains long in
+the same state.... But ... private interest often keeps up customs
+and privileges when the reasons of them are ceased.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn200_1_117" id="fn200_1_117"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm200_1_117">200:1</a></span> In his great work <i>Of Civil Government</i>, John Locke takes practically
+the same view as Winstanley of the duties of Parliaments and of the
+function of Law. In chapter ix. (part ii.) he says: &ldquo;The legislative or
+supreme power of any Commonwealth, is bound to govern by established
+<i>standing laws</i>, promulgated and known to the people, and not by extemporary
+decrees; by indifferent [impartial] and upright judges, who
+are to decide controversies by those laws; and to employ the force of
+the community at home, <i>only in the execution of such laws</i>, or abroad, to
+prevent or redress foreign injuries, and secure the community from
+inroads and invasion. <i>And all this to be directed to no other end, but the
+peace, safety, and public good of the people.</i>&rdquo; Italics are ours.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg206" id="pg206"></a><span class="pagenum">206</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI<br />
+<br />
+GERRARD WINSTANLEY&rsquo;S UTOPIA</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">The Law of Freedom</span> (<i>concluded</i>)</p>
+
+<div class="poem chaphead"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">&ldquo;Day unto day utters speech&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Be wise, O ye Nations! and hear<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">What yesterday telleth to-day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">What to-day to the morrow will preach.<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">A change cometh over our sphere,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And the old goeth down to decay.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A new light hath dawned on the darkness of yore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And men shall be slaves and oppressors no more.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+<p class="signature">Charles Mackay.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>It is in the chapter we have just been considering, the fourth
+chapter of &ldquo;The Law of Freedom,&rdquo; that we find Winstanley&rsquo;s
+last recorded utterances on cosmological and theological
+problems. Nothing seems to us more strikingly to show the
+broadening and development of his powerful mind than a comparison
+of the views here expressed with those contained in
+his earlier writings on the subject. True, the underlying ideas
+are practically the same: he still realises the existence of a
+Divine Spirit, the Spirit of Reason and of Love, of Righteousness
+and of Peace, animating, inspiring, pervading and governing
+the whole Creation; he still holds to his doctrine of the
+Inward Light, the spark of the Divine Spirit of Reason, within
+man, prompting each and all to act righteously and equitably
+one toward the other. Yet he is decidedly less mystical. He
+lays emphasis on the necessity to study the works of God
+rather than the Word of God; and has evidently become less
+anthropomorphic and more spiritual, less mystical and more
+<a name="pg207" id="pg207"></a><span class="pagenum">207</span> rational, less religious and more ethical, less theological and
+more philosophic, less scholastic and more scientific. However,
+we had better let him speak for himself. Immediately
+after his reflections on the duties and functions of a Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+Parliament, he proceeds to consider the work of a
+Commonwealth&rsquo;s Ministry, as follows:</p>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;The Work of a Commonwealth&rsquo;s Ministry, and why
+one Day in Seven may be a Day of Rest from Labor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If there were good Laws and the People be ignorant of
+them, it would be as bad for the Commonwealth as if there
+were no Laws at all. Therefore it is very rational and good
+that one day in seven be still set apart, for three reasons:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>First</i>, That the People in such a Parish may generally
+meet together to see one another&rsquo;s faces, and beget or preserve
+fellowship in friendly love.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Secondly</i>, To be a day of rest, or cessation from labor; so
+that they may have some bodily rest for themselves and
+cattle.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Thirdly</i>, That he who is chosen Minister (for that year)
+in that Parish may read to the People three things. First,
+the affairs of the whole Land, as it is brought in by the Post-Master.
+Secondly, to read the Law of the Common-wealth,
+not only to strengthen the memory of the ancients, but that
+the young people also, who are not grown up to ripeness of
+experience, may be instructed to know when they do well and
+when they do ill. For the Law of a Land hath the power of
+Freedom and Bondage, life and death, in its hand, therefore
+the necessary knowledge to be known; and he is the best
+Prophet that acquaints men therewith, that as men grow up
+in years they may be able to defend the Laws and Government
+of the Land. But these Laws shall not be expounded by the
+Reader; for to expound a plain Law, as if a man would put
+a better meaning than the letter itself, produces two evils:
+First, the pure Law and the minds of the people will be
+thereby confounded, for multitude of words darken knowledge.
+Secondly, the reader will be puffed up in pride to contemn
+the Law-makers, and in time that will prove the father and
+nurse of tyranny, as at this day is manifested by our
+Ministry.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject"><a name="pg208" id="pg208"></a><span class="pagenum">208</span>
+What shall be spoken of.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;But because the minds of people generally love discourses,
+therefore, that the wits of men, both old and young, may be
+exercised, there may be speeches made in a threefold nature:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>First</i>, To declare the acts and passages of former ages
+and governments, setting forth the benefit of freedom by well-ordered
+Governments, as in Israel&rsquo;s Commonwealth, and the
+troubles and bondage which hath always attended oppression
+and oppressors, as the State of Pharaoh and other tyrant
+kings, who said the Earth and People were theirs, and only at
+their disposal.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Secondly</i>, Speeches may be made of all Arts and Sciences,
+some one day some another, as in Physics, Chyrurgery,
+Astrology, Astronomy, Navigation, Husbandry, and such like.
+And in these speeches may be unfolded the nature of all herbs
+and plants, from the Hysop to the Cedar, as Solomon writ of.
+Likewise men may come to see into the nature of the fixed and
+wandering Stars, those great powers of God in the heavens above.
+And hereby men will come to know the secrets of Nature and
+Creation, within which all true knowledge is wrapped up, and
+the light in man must arise to search it out.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Thirdly</i>, Speeches may be made sometimes of the nature
+of mankind, of his darkness and of his light, of his weakness
+and of his strength, of his love and of his envy, of his inward
+and outward bondages, of his inward and outward freedoms,
+etc. And this is that at which the ministry of Churches
+generally aim; but only that they confound their knowledge
+by imaginary study.... And thus to speak, or thus to read
+the Law of Nature (or God) as He hath written His name in
+every body, is to speak a pure language, and this is to speak
+the truth as Jesus Christ spake it, giving to everything its
+own weight and measure. By this means in time men shall
+attain to the practical knowledge of God truly, that they may
+serve Him in spirit and in truth: and this knowledge will not
+deceive a man.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">His Answer to Objections.</p>
+
+<p>Then follows a passage which even to-day would bring
+down the wrath of &ldquo;zealous but ignorant professors&rdquo; upon the
+head of any author acknowledging it, if within their sphere of
+influence. He continues:</p>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><a name="pg209" id="pg209"></a><span class="pagenum">209</span>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;I,&rsquo; but saith the zealous but ignorant Professor, &lsquo;this is a
+low and carnal Ministry indeed; this leads men to know
+nothing but the knowledge of the earth and the secrets of
+nature; but we are to look after spiritual and heavenly
+things.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I answer: &lsquo;To know the secrets of nature is to know the
+works of God; and to know the works of God within the
+Creation, is to know God himself; for God dwells in every
+visible work or body. Indeed, if you would know spiritual
+things, it is to know how the Spirit or Power of Wisdom and
+Life, causing motion or growth, dwells within and governs both
+the several bodies of the stars and planets in the heavens above,
+and the several bodies of the earth below, as grass, plants,
+fishes, beasts, birds and mankind. For to reach God beyond
+the Creation, or to know what he will be to a man after the
+man is dead, if any otherwise than to scatter him into his
+essences of fire, water, earth and air, of which he is composed,
+is a knowledge beyond the line or capacity of man to attain to
+while he lives in his compounded body. And if a man should
+go to imagine what God is beyond the Creation, or what he
+will be in a spiritual demonstration after a man is dead, he
+doth, as the proverb saith, but build castles in the air, or tells
+us of a world beyond the Moon or beyond the Sun, merely to
+blind the reason of man.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I&rsquo;ll appeal to yourself in this question, What other
+knowledge have you of God but what you have within the
+circle of the Creation? For if the Creation in all its dimensions
+be the fullness of Him that fills all with Himself; and if
+you yourself be part of this Creation: where can you find God
+but in that line or station wherein you stand? God manifests
+Himself in actual Knowledge, not in Imagination. He is
+still in motion, either in bodies upon earth or in the bodies in
+the heavens, or in both; in the night and in the day, in Winter,
+in Summer, in cold, in heat, in growth or not in growth.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Cause of Ignorance, Evil and Sorrows.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;But when a studying imagination comes into man, which
+is the devil, for it is the cause of all evil and sorrows in the
+world; that is he who puts out the eyes of man&rsquo;s knowledge,
+and tells him he must believe what others have writ or spoke,
+and must not trust to his own experience. And when this
+bewitching fancy sits in the Chair of Government, there is
+<a name="pg210" id="pg210"></a><span class="pagenum">210</span> nothing but saying and unsaying, frowardness, covetousness,
+fears, confused thoughts, and unsatisfied doubtings, all the days
+of that man&rsquo;s reign in the heart.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Examine the Ways of Men, not only their Precepts.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Or, secondly, examine yourself and look likewise into the
+ways of all Professors, and you shall find that the enjoyment of
+the earth below, which you call a low and a carnal knowledge,
+is that which you and all Professors (as well as the men of
+the world, as you call them) strive and seek after. Wherefore
+are you so covetous after the world, in buying and selling,
+counting yourself a happy man if you be rich, and a miserable
+man if you be poor? And though you say, <i>Heaven after death is
+a place of glory where you shall enjoy God face to face</i>, yet you
+are loth to leave the earth and go thither.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do not your Ministers preach for to enjoy the earth?
+Do not professing Lawyers, as well as others, buy and sell the
+Conquerer&rsquo;s justice that they may enjoy the earth? Do
+not professing Soldiers fight for the earth, and seat themselves
+in that Land which is the birth-right of others, as
+well as theirs, shutting others out? Do not all Professors
+strive to get earth, that they may live in plenty by other men&rsquo;s
+labors? Do you not make the earth your very rest? Doth
+not the enjoying of the earth please the spirit in you? and
+then you say God is pleased with your ways and blesseth you.
+If you want earth, and become poor, do you not say, God
+is angry with you? Why do you heap up riches? why do
+you eat and drink, and wear clothes? Are not all these
+carnal and low things of the earth? and do you not live in
+them and covet them as much as any, nay more than many
+which you call men of the world?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It being thus with you, what other spiritual and heavenly
+things do you seek after more than others? What is
+in you more than in others? If you say there is, then
+surely you should leave these earthly things alone to the
+men of the world, as you call them, whose portions these are,
+and keep you within the compass of your own sphere, that
+others seeing you live a life above the world in peace and
+freedom, neither working yourselves, nor deceiving, nor compelling
+others to work for you, they may be drawn to embrace
+the same spiritual life by your single hearted conversation.
+Well I have done here.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject"><a name="pg211" id="pg211"></a><span class="pagenum">211</span> &ldquo;Let us now examine your Divinity.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Winstanley then carries the war into the camp of his
+clerical opponents, and that in so forcible a manner that we
+cannot refrain from quoting at length. He says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Let us now examine your Divinity, which you call
+heavenly and spiritual things; for herein speeches are made,
+not to advance knowledge, but to destroy the true knowledge
+of God. For Divinity does not speak the truth, as it is hid
+in everybody, but it leaves the motional knowledge of a thing
+as it is, and imagines, studies or thinks what may be, and so
+runs the hazard of true or false. This Divinity is always
+speaking words to deceive the simple, that he may make them
+work for him and maintain him, but he never comes to action
+himself, to do as he would be done by; for he is a monster
+who is all tongue and no hand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This Divining Doctrine, which you call spiritual and
+heavenly things, is the thief and the robber, he comes to
+spoil the Vineyard of a man&rsquo;s peace, and does not enter in at
+the door, but he climbs up another way. And this Doctrine
+is two-fold: First, it takes upon him to tell you the meaning
+of other men&rsquo;s words and writings, by his studying or imagining
+what another man&rsquo;s knowledge might be, and by thus doing
+darkens knowledge, and wrongs the spirit of the Authors who
+did write and speak those things which he takes upon him
+to interpret. Secondly, he takes upon him to foretell what
+shall befall a man after he is dead, and what that world is
+beyond the Sun and beyond the Moon, etc. And if any man
+tell him there is no reason for what you say, he answers,
+you must not judge of heavenly and spiritual things by reason,
+but you must believe what is told you, whether it be reason
+or no.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Wherein it is Wanting.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;There is a three-fold discovery of falsehood in this
+Doctrine. First, it is a Doctrine of a sickly and weak spirit,
+who hath lost his understanding in the knowledge of the
+Creation, and of the temper of his own heart and nature, and
+so runs into fancies, either of joy or sorrow. If the passion of
+joy predominate, then he fancies to himself a personal God,
+personal Angels, and a local place of glory, which he saith, he,
+<a name="pg212" id="pg212"></a><span class="pagenum">212</span> and all who believe what he hath, shall go to after they are dead.
+If sorrow predominate, then he fancies to himself a personal
+Devil, and a local place of torment that he shall go to after
+he is dead: and this he speaks with great confidence.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Secondly</i>, This is the doctrine of a subtle running spirit,
+to make an ungrounded wise man mad.... For many
+times when a wise understanding heart is assaulted with
+this Doctrine of a God, a Devil, a Heaven and a Hell, Salvation
+and Damnation after a man is dead, his spirit being not
+strongly grounded in the knowledge of the Creation nor in the
+temper of his own heart, he strives and stretches his brain to
+find out the depth of that doctrine and cannot attain to it.
+For, indeed, it is not knowledge, but imagination. And so by
+poring and puzzling himself in it, he loses that wisdom he had,
+and becomes distracted and mad. If the passion of joy predominate,
+then he is merry, and sings, and laughs, and is ripe
+in the expression of his words and will speak strange things:
+but all by imagination. But if the passion of sorrow predominate,
+then he is heavy and sad, crying out, <i>He is damned;
+God hath forsaken him, and he must go to Hell when he dies; he
+cannot make his calling and election sure.</i> And in that distemper
+many times a man doth hang, kill or drown himself. So this
+Divining Doctrine, which you call spiritual and heavenly things,
+torments people always when they are weak, sickly or under
+any distemper. Therefore it cannot be the Doctrine of Christ
+the Saviour.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Or, <i>thirdly</i>, This Doctrine is made a cloak of policy by
+the subtle Elder Brother, to cheat his simpler Younger
+Brother of the Freedoms of the Earth. For, saith the Elder
+Brother, &lsquo;The Earth is mine, and not yours, Brother; and you
+must not work upon it, unless you will hire it of me; and you
+must not take the fruits of it, unless you will buy them of me,
+by that which I pay you for your labor. For if you should
+do otherwise, God will not love you, and you shall not go to
+Heaven when you die, but the Devil will have you, and you
+must be damned in Hell.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If the Younger reply, and say&mdash;&lsquo;The Earth is my
+Birth-Right as well as yours, and God who made us both is
+no Respecter of persons. Therefore there is no reason but I
+should enjoy the Freedoms of the Earth for my comfortable
+livelihood, as well as you, Brother.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I,&rsquo; but saith the Elder Brother, &lsquo;You must not trust to
+your own Reason and Understanding, but you must believe
+<a name="pg213" id="pg213"></a><span class="pagenum">213</span> what is written and what is told you; and if you will not
+believe, your Damnation will be the greater.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I cannot believe,&rsquo; saith the Younger Brother, &lsquo;that our
+Righteous Creator should be so partial in his Dispensations
+of the Earth, seeing our bodies cannot live upon Earth without
+the use of the Earth.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Elder Brother replies, &lsquo;What, will you be an Atheist,
+and a factious man, will you not believe God?&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; saith the Younger Brother, &lsquo;if I knew God said so,
+I should believe, for I desire to serve Him.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Why,&rsquo; saith the Elder Brother, &lsquo;this is His Word, and if
+you will not believe it, you must be damned; but if you will
+believe it, you will go to Heaven.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, the Younger Brother, being weak in spirit, and not
+having a grounded knowledge of the Creation, nor of himself,
+is terrified, and lets go his hold in the Earth, and submits
+himself to be a Slave to his Brother, for fear of damnation in
+Hell after death, and in hopes to get Heaven thereby after he
+is dead. And so his eyes are put out, and his Reason is
+blinded. So that this divining spiritual doctrine is a cheat.
+For while men are gazing up to Heaven, imagining after a
+happiness, or fearing a Hell after they are dead, their eyes
+are put out, that they see not what are their Birth-Rights,
+nor what is to be done by them here on Earth while they are
+living. This is the filthy Dreamer and the Cloud without
+rain. And indeed the subtle Clergy do know that if they can
+but charm the people by this their divining doctrine, to look
+after riches, Heaven and Glory when they are dead, that then
+they shall easily be the inheritors of the Earth, and have the
+deceived people to be their Servants.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For my own part,&rdquo; he continues, &ldquo;my spirit hath waded
+deep to find the bottom of this divining spiritual Doctrine;
+and the more I searched, the more I was at a loss. I never
+came to quiet rest and to know God in my spirit, till I came
+to the knowledge of the things in this Book. And let me tell
+you, They who preach this divining doctrine are the murderers
+of many a poor heart, who is bashful and simple, and who
+cannot speak for himself, but who keeps his thoughts to
+himself.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Such, then, was Winstanley&rsquo;s final attack on the body of
+teachings he, rightly or wrongly, hated and despised as the
+main supporter of the prevailing social injustice. Correct
+<a name="pg214" id="pg214"></a><span class="pagenum">214</span> thought he realised to be the necessary precursor of right
+action; and he knew that correct thought is impossible so long
+as old, inherited false ideas are unquestioningly accepted and
+hold undisputed dominion over the human mind. Winstanley
+seems to us to have realised that it was the ignorance of the
+many that, in truth, maintained the privileges of the few;
+that the masses themselves forge the fetters for their own
+enslavement, which, though apparently as strong as iron
+bands, are, in truth, but things of gossamer, easily to be
+broken by those who themselves have forged and who themselves
+still maintain them.</p>
+
+<p>In the next chapter (chap. v.) Winstanley briefly summarises
+his views on education, and outlines the means by which
+he deemed both the production and the distribution of wealth
+could be carried on without having recourse to &ldquo;the thieving
+art of buying and selling.&rdquo; It commences as follows:</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Of Education.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Mankind in the days of his youth is like a young colt,
+wanton and foolish, till he be broken in by education and
+correction; the neglect of this care, or the want of wisdom in
+the performance of it, hath been and is the cause of much
+division and trouble in the world. Therefore the Law of a
+Common-wealth doth require that not only a Father, but that
+all Overseers and Officers should make it their work to
+educate children in good manners, and to see them brought
+up in some trade or other, and to suffer no children in any
+Parish to live in idleness and youthful pleasures all their days,
+as many have been; but that they may be brought up like
+men and not like beasts. That so the Commonwealth may be
+planted with laborious and wise experienced men, and not
+with idle fools.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He continues his reflections as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Mankind may be considered in a four-fold degree, his
+childhood, youth, manhood, and old age. His childhood and
+his youth may be considered from his birth till forty years of
+age. Within this compass of time, after he is weaned from
+his mother, his parents shall teach him a civil and humble
+<a name="pg215" id="pg215"></a><span class="pagenum">215</span> behaviour towards all men. Then send him to school, to
+learn to read the Laws of the Common-wealth, to ripen his wits
+from his childhood, and so to proceed with his learning till he
+be acquainted with all Arts and Languages.... But one sort
+of children shall not be trained up only to book-learning, and
+to no other employment, called Scholars, as they are in the
+Government of Monarchy. For then through idleness they
+spend their time to find out policies to advance themselves to
+be Lords and Masters over their laboring bretheren, which
+occasions all the trouble in the world.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>After again indicating the source of all real knowledge, he
+continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Therefore, to prevent idleness and the danger of
+Machivilian cheats, it is profitable for the Commonwealth that
+children be trained up in trades and some bodily employment,
+as well as in learning languages or the histories of former
+ages. And as boys are trained up in learning and in trades,
+so all maids shall be trained up in reading, sewing, kniting,
+spinning of linnen and woollen, music, and all other easy neat
+works, either for to furnish Storehouses with linnen and
+wooll cloth, or for the ornament of particular houses with
+needlework. If this course were taken, there would be no idle
+person or beggar in the Land, and much work would be done
+by that now lazy generation for the enlarging of the
+Common Treasury.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Invention to be encouraged.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;In the managing of any trade let no young wit be crushed
+in his invention. If any man desire to make a new trial of
+his skill in any trade or science, the Overseer shall not injure
+him but encourage him therein; that so the Spirit of Knowledge
+may have his full growth in man, to find out the secrets
+in every art. And let everyone who finds out a new invention
+have a deserved honor given him; and certainly when men are
+sure of food and raiment, their reason will be ripe and ready
+to dive into the secrets of the Creation, that they may learn to
+see and know God (the Spirit of the whole Creation) in all
+his works. For fear of want and care to pay Rent to Task-Masters
+hath hindered many rare inventions. So that Kingly
+Power hath crushed the Spirit of Knowledge, and would not
+<a name="pg216" id="pg216"></a><span class="pagenum">216</span> suffer it to rise up in its beauty and fullness, but by his Club
+Law hath preferred the Spirit of Imagination, which is a
+deceiver, before it.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;There shall be no buying and selling of the Earth,
+nor of the fruits thereof.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For by the Government under Kings the cheaters hereby
+have cozened the plain-hearted of their Creation Birth-rights,
+and have possessed themselves in the Earth, and call it theirs,
+and not the others, and so have brought in that poverty and
+misery which lies upon many men. And whereas the wise
+should help the foolish, and the strong help the weak, the wise
+and strong destroy the weak and simple ... and so the
+Proverb is made true&mdash;<i>Plain dealing is a jewel, but he who uses
+it shall die a beggar.</i> And why? Because this buying and
+selling is the nursery of cheats; it is the Law of the Conqueror,
+the Righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees.... And these
+cunning cheaters commonly become the Rulers of the Earth....
+For not the wise poor man, but the cunning rich man was
+always made an Officer and a Ruler; such a one as by his
+stolen interests in the Earth would be sure to hold others in
+bondage of poverty and servitude to him and his party.
+Therefore there shall be no buying and selling in a free
+Common-wealth, neither shall anyone hire his Brother to work
+for him.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>From each according to his ability, to each according to his
+needs: such, then, was Winstanley&rsquo;s ideal; such was the
+Communistic Commonwealth he evidently imagined would
+naturally evolve if only the equal claims of all to the use of
+the Earth were once recognised and respected. He was,
+however, much too shrewd to think for a moment that any
+such State could be ushered in all at once, or created by Act
+of Parliament. For he continues:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;If the Common-wealth might be governed without buying
+and selling, here is a Platform of Government for it, which is
+the ancientest Law of Righteousness to Mankind in the use of
+the Earth, and which is the very height of Earthly Freedom.
+But if the minds of the people, through covetousness and
+proud ignorance, will have the Earth governed by buying and
+<a name="pg217" id="pg217"></a><span class="pagenum">217</span> selling still, this same Platform, with some few things
+subtracted, declares an easy way of Government of the Earth
+for the quiet of people&rsquo;s minds, and the preserving of peace in
+the Land.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;How must the Earth be planted?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Earth is to be planted and the fruits reaped
+and carried into Barns and Storehouses by the assistance of
+every family. If any man or family want corn or other
+provisions, they may go to the Storehouses and fetch without
+money. If they want a horse to ride, go into the fields in
+Summer, or to the Common Stables in Winter, and receive one
+from the Keepers, and when your journey is performed,
+bring him where you had him, without money. If any want
+food or victuals, they may either go to the butchers&rsquo; shops and
+receive what they want without money, or else go to the
+flocks of sheep or herds of cattle, and take and kill what meat
+is needful for their families, without buying and selling. The
+reason why all the riches of the Earth are a Common Stock
+is this: Because the Earth and the labors thereupon are
+managed by common assistance of every family, without
+buying and selling, as is shown more largely in the Office of
+Overseers for Trades and the Law for Storehouses. The Laws
+for the right ordering thereof, and the Officers to see the
+Laws executed, to preserve the peace of every family, and to
+improve and promote every trade, is shown in the work of
+Officers and the Laws following.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Who alone will object.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;None will be an enemy to this Freedom, which, indeed, is
+to do to another as a man would have another do to him, but
+Covetousness and Pride, the spirit of the old grudging,
+snapping Pharisees, who give God abundant of good words in
+their sermons, in their prayers, in their fasts, and in their
+thanksgivings, as though none should be more faithful servants
+to Him than they. Nay, they will shun the company, imprison,
+and kill every one that will not worship God, they are
+so zealous. Well now, God and Christ hath enacted an
+everlasting Law, which is Love, not only one another of your
+own mind, but love your enemies too, such as are not of your
+mind: and having food and raiment therewith be content.
+<a name="pg218" id="pg218"></a><span class="pagenum">218</span> Now here is a trial for you, whether you will be faithful to
+God and Christ in obeying His Laws; or whether you will
+destroy the man-child of true Freedom, Righteousness and
+Peace, in his resurrection. And now thou wilt either give us
+the tricks of a Soldier, face about, and return to Egypt, and
+so declare thyself to be part of the Serpent&rsquo;s seed that must
+bruise the heel of Christ. Or else to be one of the plain-hearted
+Sons of Promise, or Members of Christ, who shall help
+to bruise the Serpent&rsquo;s head, which is Kingly Oppression, and
+so bring in everlasting Righteousness and Peace into the
+Earth. Well, the eye is now open.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;Storehouses shall be built and appointed in all
+Places and be the Common Stock.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There shall be Storehouses in all places, both in the
+Country and in Cities, to which all the fruits of the Earth,
+and other works made by Tradesmen, shall be brought, and
+thence delivered out again to particular Families, and to
+every one as they want for their use; or else to be transplanted
+by ships to other Lands to exchange for those things
+which our Land will not or does not afford. For all the labors
+of Husbandmen and Tradesmen within the Land, or by
+Navigation to or from other Lands, shall be upon the Common
+Stock. And as everyone works to advance the Common
+Stock, so everyone shall have a free use of any commodity in
+the Storehouse for his pleasure and comfortable livelihood,
+without buying or selling or restraint from any. Having
+food and raiment, lodging, and the comfortable societies of his
+own kind, what can a man desire more in these days of his
+travel? Indeed, covetous, proud, and beastly minded men
+desire more, either to lay by them to look upon, or else to
+waste and spoil it upon their lusts, while other Bretheren live
+in straits for the want of the use thereof. But the Laws and
+Faithful Officers of a Free Commonwealth do regulate the
+irrational conduct of such men.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;There are two Sorts of Storehouses, General
+and Particular.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The general Storehouses are such houses as receive in all
+commodities in the gross.... And these general Storehouses
+shall be filled and preserved by the common labor and assistance
+<a name="pg219" id="pg219"></a><span class="pagenum">219</span> of every Family, as is mentioned in the Office for
+Overseer for Trades. And from these Public Houses, which
+are the general stock of the Land, all particular Tradesmen
+may fetch materials for their particular work as they need, or
+to furnish their particular dwellings with any commodities.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Secondly</i>, There are particular Storehouses, or Shops, to
+which the Tradesmen shall bring their particular works; as all
+instruments of iron to the Iron-shops, hats to the shops
+appointed for them, and so on.... They shall receive in, as
+into a Storehouse, and deliver out again freely, as out of a
+Common Storehouse, when particular persons or families come
+for everything they need, as now they do by buying and
+selling under Kingly Government. For as particular Families
+and Tradesmen do make several works more than they can
+make use of ... and do carry their particular works to
+Storehouses; so it is all Reason and Equity that they should
+go to other Storehouses to fetch any other commodity which
+they want and cannot make. For as other men partake of
+their labors, so it is reason they should partake of other
+men&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It should be scarcely necessary to pause to point out that
+what Winstanley here describes is exactly what is taking
+place, in his time as in our times, all the world over. Commodities
+of every description are continuously being produced,
+and being brought to the Storehouses, wholesale and retail,
+thence to be redistributed to those who require them. The
+Social Problem, of Winstanley&rsquo;s time and of our time, is how to
+secure to each co-operating worker his fair share of the returns
+to the labours of all. And manifestly this is impossible so
+long as some can command any share thereof without having
+in any way shared in the toil or rendered any equivalent
+counter-service. In 1905, as in 1652, an ever increasing
+portion and proportion of the wealth thus harvested and
+garnered constantly gravitates towards those who, under the
+prevailing &ldquo;kingly laws,&rdquo; claim to control the use of the land,
+whence alone it can be derived. This was the basic social
+injustice, the parent source of innumerable other social ills and
+injustices, which Winstanley was one of the first clearly to
+apprehend, and to combat which he devoted his life.</p>
+
+<p>Winstanley, moreover, fully and clearly realised that:</p>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject"><a name="pg220" id="pg220"></a><span class="pagenum">220</span>
+&ldquo;The King&rsquo;s Old Laws cannot serve a Free Commonwealth.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>And this formed the heading of his next chapter, in which
+in a specially lively manner he first points out that the
+Laws of a Monarchy&mdash;which, being based upon inequality,
+necessarily tend to produce inequality, and whose main function
+is to legalise and to maintain privileges&mdash;are necessarily
+essentially different from those suitable to a Free Commonwealth&mdash;which,
+being based upon the recognition of the
+equality of rights, would necessarily tend to produce an equality
+of social conditions; and whose main function would be to
+establish and to legalise Justice, equal rights and equal duties,
+to maintain and to enforce the equal claims of all to the use
+of the earth, to life, to liberty, and to the pursuit of happiness.
+It commences as follows:</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Of kingly Laws.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;The King&rsquo;s Old Laws cannot govern in times of Bondage
+and in times of Freedom too. They have indeed served many
+masters, Papish and Protestant. They are like old Soldiers,
+who will but change their name, and turn about, and as they
+were. The Reason is because they are the prerogative will of
+those, under any Religion, who count it no Freedom to them
+unless they be Lords over the minds, persons and labors of
+their bretheren.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They are called the King&rsquo;s Laws, because they are made
+by the King. If any say they were made by the Commoners,
+it is answered, They were not made by the Commoners as the
+Commoners of a Free Commonwealth are to make Laws. For
+in the days of the King none were to choose or be chosen
+Parliament Men, or Law Makers, but Lords of Manors, and
+Freeholders, such as held title to their Enclosures of Land, or
+Charters for their Liberties in Trades, under the King, who
+called the Land his, as he was the Conqueror or his successor.
+All inferior people were neither to choose nor be chosen. And
+the reason was because all Freeholders of Land and such as
+held their Liberties by Charter, were all of the King&rsquo;s interest;
+and the inferior people were successively of the rank of the
+<a name="pg221" id="pg221"></a><span class="pagenum">221</span> conquered ones, and servants and slaves from the time of the
+Conquest.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Further, when a Parliament was chosen in that manner,
+yet if any Parliament Man, in the uprightness of his heart,
+did endeavour to promote any freedom contrary to the King&rsquo;s
+will or former customs from the Conquest, he was either
+committed to prison by the King or by the House of Lords,
+who were his ancient Norman successive Council of War; or
+else the Parliament was dissolved and broke up by the King.
+So that the old Laws were made in times under Kingly
+Slavery, not under the liberty of Commonwealth&rsquo;s Freedom,
+because Parliament Men had to have regard to the King&rsquo;s
+prerogative interest to uphold his conquest, or else endanger
+themselves. As sometimes it is in these days, some Officers
+dare not speak against the minds of those men who are the
+chief in power, nor a Private Soldier against the mind of his
+Officer, lest they be cashiered their places and livelihood.
+And so long as the promoting of the King&rsquo;s will and prerogative
+was to be in the eye of the Law Makers, the oppressed
+Commoners could never enjoy Commonwealth&rsquo;s Freedom
+thereby. Yet by the wisdom, courage, faithfulness and
+industry of some Parliament Men, the Commoners have
+received here a line and there a line of freedom inserted into
+their Laws: as those good lines of freedom in Magna Charta
+were obtained by much hardship and industry.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Secondly</i>, They were the King&rsquo;s Laws, because the King&rsquo;s
+own creatures made the Laws: Lords of Manors, Freeholders,
+etc., were successors of the Norman soldiers from the Conquest,
+therefore they could do no other but maintain their own and
+the King&rsquo;s interest. Do we not see that all Laws were made
+in the days of the King to ease the rich Landlord? The poor
+laborers were left under bondage still; they were to have no
+freedom in the earth by those pharisaical Laws. For when
+Laws were made and Parliaments broke up, the poor oppressed
+Commoners had no relief; the power of Lords of Manors,
+withholding the free use of the Common-land from them,
+remained still. For none durst make any use of any Common-land
+but at the Lord&rsquo;s leave, according to the will and law of
+the Conqueror. Therefore the old Laws were called King&rsquo;s
+Laws.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Of Commonwealth&rsquo;s Laws.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;These old Laws cannot govern a Free Commonwealth;
+because the Land is now to be set free from the slavery of the
+<a name="pg222" id="pg222"></a><span class="pagenum">222</span> Norman Conquest, and the power of Lords of Manors and
+Norman Freeholders is to be taken away. Or else the
+Commoners are but where they were, if not fallen lower into
+straits than they were. The Old Laws cannot look with any
+other face than they did; though they be washed with
+Commonwealth&rsquo;s water, their countenance is still withered.
+Therefore it was not for nothing that the Kings would have
+all their Laws written in French and Latin, and not in English;
+partly in honor to the Norman Race, and partly to keep
+the Common People ignorant of their Creation Freedom lest
+they should rise to redeem themselves. And if those Laws
+should be writ in English, yet if the same Kingly Principles
+remain in them, the English language would not advantage us
+anything, but rather increase our sorrow by our knowledge of
+our bondage.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;What is Law in general?&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then proceeds to consider the question, What
+is Law? and to emphasise the essential difference between
+customary, conventional or written Law and that unwritten
+Law, proceeding from the Inward Light of Reason, that
+inspires men, in action as in words, to do as they would be
+done unto. He first gives the following clear, rational and
+sufficient definition of Law:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;Law is a Rule, whereby men and other creatures are
+governed in their actions for the preservation of Common
+Peace.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Then follows a most philosophic consideration of the whole
+question, which seems to us to reveal that Winstanley was
+groping, and by no means so blindly as many who succeeded
+him, after some Natural Law, some unalterable and immutable
+principle, which should serve as a basis, as well as the test
+and touchstone, of all man-made customs, laws and institutions.
+He continues:</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Two-fold Nature of Law.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;This Law is two-fold: First, it is the power of Life
+(called the Law of Nature within the Creatures) which doth
+<a name="pg223" id="pg223"></a><span class="pagenum">223</span> move both man and beast in their actions, or that causes
+grass, trees, corn and all plants to grow in their several seasons.
+And whatsoever anybody does, he does it as he is moved by
+this inward Law. And this Law of Nature moves two-fold,
+viz., irrationally or rationally.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Law of the Flesh.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;A man by this inward Law is guided to actions of
+present content, rashly, through a greedy self-love, without
+any consideration, like foolish children, or like the brute
+beasts. By reason whereof much hurt many times follows the
+body. And this may be called the Law of the Members
+warring against the Law of the Mind.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Law of the Mind.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;Or where there is an inward watchful oversight of all
+motions to action, considering the end and effect of those
+actions, so that there be no excess in diet, in speech, or in
+action break forth, to the prejudice of a man&rsquo;s self or others:
+and this may be called the Light in Man, the Reasonable
+Power, or the Law of the Mind. And this rises up in the
+heart by an experimental observation of that peace or trouble
+which such and such words, thoughts and actions bring the
+man into. And this is called the Record on High; for it is
+a record in a man&rsquo;s heart above the former unreasonable
+power: and it may be called the witness or testimony of a
+man&rsquo;s own conscience: and this moderate watchfulness is still
+the Law of Nature, but in a higher resurrection than the
+former. It hath many terms, which for brevity sake I
+let pass.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Their Struggle for Supremacy.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;This two-fold work of the Law within man strive to
+bring forth themselves in writing to beget numbers of bodies
+on their sides. That power which begets the bigger number
+always rules as King or Lord in the creature and in the
+Creation, till the other side overtop him: even as light and
+darkness strive in day and night to succeed each other. Or
+as it is said&mdash;&ldquo;The strong man armed keeps the heart of man
+till a stronger than he came and cast him out.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject"><a name="pg224" id="pg224"></a><span class="pagenum">224</span> The Written Law.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;This written Law, proceeding either from reason or
+unreasonableness, is called the Letter, whereby the creation
+of mankind, beasts and earth are governed, according to the
+will of that power which rules.... As for example, if the
+experienced, wise and strong man bears rule, then he writes
+down his mind to curb the unreasonable Law of Covetousness
+and Pride in inexperienced man, to preserve Peace in the
+Commonwealth. This is called the Historical or Traditional
+Law, because it is conveyed from one generation to another by
+writing: as the Laws of Israel&rsquo;s Commonwealth were writ in
+a book by Moses, and so conveyed to posterity. And this
+outward Law is a bridle to unreasonableness; or as Solomon
+writ, It is a whip for the fool&rsquo;s back, for whom only it was
+added.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Its Corruption.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Secondly</i>, Since Moses&rsquo; time the power of unreasonable
+covetousness and pride hath sometimes risen up and corrupted
+that Traditional Law. For since the power of the sword rises
+up in Nations to conquer, the Written Law hath not been to
+advance Common Freedom and to beat down the unreasonable
+self-will in mankind, but it hath been framed to uphold the
+self-will of the Conqueror, right or wrong, not respecting the
+Freedom of the Commonwealth, but the Freedom of the
+Conqueror and his friends only. By reason whereof much
+slavery hath been laid on the backs of the plain-dealing men;
+and men of public spirit, as Moses was, have been crushed, and
+their spirits damped thereby: which hath bred first discontents,
+and then more wars in the Nations.... But
+hereby the true nature of a well-governed Commonwealth
+hath been ruined; the will of Kings set up for a Law; and
+the Law of Righteousness, the Law of Liberty, trod under foot
+and killed. This Traditional Law of Kings is that Letter at
+this day which kills true freedom and is the fomenter of wars
+and persecutions.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This is the soldier who cut Christ&rsquo;s garments into
+pieces, which was to remain uncut and without seam. This
+law moves the people to fight one against the other for those
+pieces; viz., for the several enclosures of the Earth, who shall
+possess the Earth, and who shall be Rulers over others.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="subject"><a name="pg225" id="pg225"></a><span class="pagenum">225</span> The everlasting Law.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;But the true ancient Law of God is a Covenant of Peace
+to the whole of mankind. This sets the Earth free to all.
+This unites both Jew and Gentile into one Brotherhood, and
+rejects none. This makes Christ&rsquo;s garment whole again; and
+makes the Kingdoms of the World to become Commonwealths
+again. It is the Inward Power of Right Understanding,
+which is the True Law that teaches people in action, as well
+as in words, to do as they would be done unto.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley then contends that, as far as written laws are
+concerned&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="subject">&ldquo;Short and pithy Laws are best to govern a
+Commonwealth,&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>and defends this conclusion as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;The Laws of Israel&rsquo;s Commonwealth were few, short and
+pithy; and the Government thereof was established in peace
+so long as Officers and People were obedient thereunto. But
+those many Laws in the days of the Kings of England, which
+were made some in times of Popery and some in times of
+Protestantism, and the proceedings of the Laws being in
+French and Latin, hath produced two great evils in England.
+First, it hath occasioned much ignorance among the people,
+and much contention. And the people have mightily erred
+through want of knowledge, and thereby they have run into
+great expense of money by suits of Law; or else many have
+been imprisoned, whipped, banished, lost their estates and
+lives by that Law which they were ignorant of till the scourge
+thereof was on their backs. This is a sore evil among the
+people.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Secondly</i>, The people&rsquo;s ignorance of the laws hath bred
+many sons of contention. For when any difference falls out
+between man and man, they neither of them know which
+offends the other; therefore, both of them thinking their cause
+is good, they delight to make use of the Law; and then they
+go and give a Lawyer money to tell them which of them
+was the offender. The Lawyer, being glad to maintain his
+own trade, sets them together by the ears till all their money
+be near spent; and then bids them refer the business to their
+<a name="pg226" id="pg226"></a><span class="pagenum">226</span> neighbors to make them friends, which might have been done
+at the first. So that the course of the Law and Lawyers
+hath been a mere snare to entrap the people and to pull their
+estates from them by craft. For the Lawyers do uphold the
+Conqueror&rsquo;s Interest and the People&rsquo;s Slavery; so that the
+King, seeing this, did put all the affairs of Judicature into
+their hands: and all this must be called Justice, but it is a
+sore evil.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But now if the Laws were few and short, and often read,
+it would prevent those evils. Everyone, knowing when they
+did well and when ill, would be very cautious of their words
+and actions, and thus would escape the Lawyer&rsquo;s craft. As
+Moses&rsquo; Law in Israel&rsquo;s Commonwealth: &lsquo;<i>The People did talk
+of them when they lay down and when they rose up, and as they
+walked by the way, and bound them as bracelets upon their hands</i>:&rsquo;
+so that they were an understanding people in the Laws wherein
+their peace did depend. But it is a sign that England is a
+blinded and snared generation; their Leaders, through pride
+and covetousness, have caused them to err, yea and perish too,
+for want of the knowledge of the Laws, which hath the Power
+of Life and Death, Freedom and Bondage in its hand. But I
+hope better things hereafter.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Winstanley, then, we regret to say, was ambitious enough
+to attempt to formulate a whole series of rigid artificial laws,
+which he evidently deemed adapted to promote the prosperity
+and preserve the happiness of his ideal Commonwealth: laws
+for the planting of the Earth, for Navigation, Trade, Marriage,
+etc. etc. The curious reader will find them almost in full
+in <a href="#APPENDIX_C" >Appendix C</a>. Many of them may seem to us unnecessary,
+but then we should remember that we have at our command
+a greater store of economic knowledge, and more accurate
+economic reasoning, than were available to Winstanley.
+Many of his laws will appear to us unnecessarily severe; but
+if we compare them with those prevailing for many, many
+years after his time, they will appear, by comparison, both
+mild and humane. As it seems to us, Winstanley intended
+to formulate suggestions rather than Laws in the accepted
+sense of the term: suggestions by following which the Earth
+could be planted and harvested, and all handicraft, trade,
+<a name="pg227" id="pg227"></a><span class="pagenum">227</span> commerce and industries carried on, and the fruits of the
+united labours of all equitably distributed amongst all according
+to their needs, without having recourse to &ldquo;the thieving art of
+buying and selling&rdquo; either the Earth or the fruits thereof.</p>
+
+<p>The pamphlet concludes with the following quaint and
+yet philosophic lines, with which our notice of it may also
+fittingly close:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Here is the Righteous Law, Man wilt thou it maintain?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">It may be, as hath still, in the World been slain.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Truth appears in Light, Falsehood rules in Power;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To see these things to be, is cause of grief each hour.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Knowledge, Why didst thou come, to wound and not to cure?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I sent not for thee, thou didst me inlure.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where knowledge does increase, there sorrows multiply,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To see the great deceit which in the World doth lie.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Man saying one thing now, unsaying it anon,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Breaking all Engagements, when deeds for him are done.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">O Power where art thou? thou must mend things amiss;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Come, change the heart of Man, and make him Truth to kiss:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">O Death, where art thou? wilt thou not tidings send?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I fear thee not, thou art my loving friend.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Come take this body, and scatter it in the Four,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That I may dwell in One, and rest in peace once more.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg228" id="pg228"></a><span class="pagenum">228</span>
+<a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII<br />
+<br />
+CONCLUDING REMARKS</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot chaphead">
+<p>&ldquo;While God gave to man a capacity to labour, He also gave him a
+right to the object (the earth) on which that labour must be employed
+to produce the necessaries of life. This gift of God is to all men alike.
+No compact or consent or legislation on the part of one portion of the
+community, can ever justly deprive another portion of the community of
+their right of their share of the earth, and of its natural productions. No
+arrangement or agreement or legislation of men now dead, can justly
+deprive the present inhabitants of the earth, or any portion of those
+inhabitants, of their right to labour, and to labour for their own profit,
+on some portion of the earth which God has given to man.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Patrick
+Edward Dove</span>, <i>Elements of Political Science</i>. 1854.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Our postulates are the primary perceptions of human reason, the
+fundamental teachings of the Christian faith. We hold: That&mdash;This
+world is the creation of God. The men brought into it for the brief
+period of their earthly lives are the equal creatures of His bounty, the
+equal subjects of His provident care.... Being the equal creatures of
+the Creator, equally entitled under His providence to live their lives and
+satisfy their needs, men are equally entitled to the use of land, and any
+adjustment that denies this equal use of land is morally wrong.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Henry
+George</span>, <i>An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII</i>. 1891.<a name="fnm228_1_118" id="fnm228_1_118"></a><a href="#fn228_1_118" class="fnnum">228:1</a></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Here, then, we must bid farewell to Gerrard Winstanley.
+We are uncertain as to the place and year of his birth; we
+know not where he lived, nor where or when he died; yet
+his words still appeal to us, prompting us to cast off the blinding
+and distorting spectacles of convention and custom, to look
+the facts of social life fairly and squarely in the face, and
+boldly to proclaim whatever social truths reflection and study
+may reveal to us. Such are the lessons which his life and
+teachings seem to us to inculcate.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg229" id="pg229"></a><span class="pagenum">229</span>
+What Winstanley regarded, and what a steadily increasing
+number of earnest students to-day regard, as a fundamental
+social truth was revealed to him; and right well he gave
+expression, by words and deeds, to his strong and well-grounded
+conviction of the equal claim of all to the use of Mother
+Earth, to the use of the nation&rsquo;s natural home, workhouse
+and storehouse, whence, by labour, everything necessary to
+life and comfort can alone be derived. Winstanley realised,
+as they to-day realise, that to admit in the abstract the
+Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood of Man, to admit the
+equal claim of all to life, and yet to deny the equal claim
+of all to the use of God&rsquo;s Earth, to share in those blessings
+which the great Father of all men has lavished upon His
+children, and which form the only means by which life can
+be maintained, is but hypocrisy and cant. The &ldquo;rights of
+property,&rdquo; the financial interests of the privileged classes, the
+Elder Brothers, the so-called &ldquo;power of the capitalists,&rdquo; may
+be based on and involved in the recognition of the claim
+of the few to control the use of the Earth. But the rights of
+man, the material, moral and spiritual interests of the masses
+of mankind, their emancipation from the unjust economic conditions
+to-day enthralling and impoverishing them, narrowing
+and degrading their lives, depriving them of all real enjoyment
+of the present, as of all hope for the future, hindering the
+advance of the race to a nobler civilisation, to a higher plane
+of individual and social life, depend upon our recognising
+and enforcing the claim of all to the use of the Earth, and to
+share in the bounties of Nature, upon equitable terms. What
+Winstanley discovered and proclaimed in the Seventeenth
+Century, Henry George rediscovered and again proclaimed in
+the Nineteenth Century, and that in tones which are still
+reverberating and producing their effects on social thought
+throughout the length and breadth of the civilised world,
+promising ultimately to produce a change in social conditions
+compared with which the abolition of slavery sinks into
+comparative insignificance. It is no longer a question of the
+emancipation of a few chattel slaves, but of the whole human
+race.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg230" id="pg230"></a><span class="pagenum">230</span> Fundamental social laws and institutions, based upon
+inequality of rights, must necessarily produce inequality of
+conditions. And all who impartially consider the question
+will be forced to admit that both Winstanley and Henry
+George trace the prevailing social inequality, the debauching
+wealth of the few and the degrading poverty of the many,
+to its true cause. Nor can there be any doubt but that if
+Winstanley&rsquo;s practical and efficacious remedy had been
+adopted, if the use of the Common Land had been secured
+to the Common People on equitable terms, the economic
+condition of the masses of the generations which succeeded
+him, the whole subsequent economic, social and political history
+of the English People, would have been very different; and
+they would not now, in the Twentieth Century, be fighting
+for, or more often whispering with bated breath concerning,
+those very reforms he so strenuously advocated over two
+hundred and fifty years ago.</p>
+
+<p>Winstanley&rsquo;s writings met with the fate that awaits all
+thought much in advance of the times in which it is given to
+the world. They have been ignored and forgotten; and till
+very recently even his memory had vanished from the minds
+of his fellow-countrymen, to whose emancipation he unstintedly
+devoted his life. Nor can we be surprised at this, when we
+consider the circumstances. There can be little doubt but
+that his earlier writings were the quiver whence the early
+Quakers derived many of their arrows, their most pointed and
+consequently by their opponents most hated doctrines. And
+yet the highly philosophic and rational attitude toward
+cosmological and theological speculations Winstanley attained
+to in his last pamphlet, placed before our readers in
+Chapter XVI., seems to us sufficiently to account for his having
+been ignored even by those who may have availed themselves
+of his earlier works, and hence that these, too, should have
+been gradually forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>That the same fate should have befallen his political
+writings, his noble and yet simple and practical political ideals
+and aspirations, is also not surprising. After the Restoration,
+when, as we have already shown, Winstanley&rsquo;s bitter opponents,
+<a name="pg231" id="pg231"></a><span class="pagenum">231</span> the old and new landholders, were in the saddle, and made
+unsparing, we had almost written unscrupulous, use of their
+opportunities, such doctrines as his were little likely to
+commend themselves to the privileged, cultured and educated
+classes. Prior to the Reformation, education, at least the
+knowledge of reading, writing and arithmetic, was undoubtedly
+more widely diffused amongst the masses of the people than
+it was subsequently&mdash;at all events, till very recent times.
+From the Restoration to within our own times, education,
+even the knowledge of reading, was as a very general rule only
+within the reach of the few, of the privileged classes and
+those more or less dependent on their favour, with whom such
+ideals as those voiced by Winstanley would naturally meet with
+but scant consideration. Moreover, though we may be accused
+of pessimism or cynicism for saying so, it seems to us that
+the main reason why teachings such as Winstanley&rsquo;s must
+necessarily remain specially unpalatable and unwelcome so
+long as social and political privileges are allowed to continue,
+is that they are too simple and direct, and the path toward
+their realisation too clearly indicated, to be acceptable or
+welcome to those who benefit, or think they benefit, by the
+continuance of social injustice. Winstanley&rsquo;s proposals, as the
+proposals of his great modern representative, Henry George,
+are, indeed, a test of sincerity. It is easy to express approval
+of Freedom, Justice, Honesty, Equality of Opportunities,
+Brotherhood, of the Equal Right of All to Life, Liberty and
+the Pursuit of Happiness, and so on, <i>in the abstract</i>, and to
+talk about the necessity for men, <i>other men</i>, dealing honestly,
+equitably and righteously one toward the other. It is difficult,
+though but a test of our own honesty and sincerity,
+to give practical support to unpopular doctrines and proposals
+which would tend to make these noble and elevating conceptions
+into real, living realities, and to enforce us to act honestly,
+equitably and righteously ourselves. Hence it is that even
+to-day those who advocate any such doctrines, any such
+social change, are either dismissed as impossible, utopian
+dreamers, or denounced as revolutionary demagogues, as
+&ldquo;prophets of iniquity,&rdquo; &ldquo;preachers of immorality,&rdquo; &ldquo;advocates
+<a name="pg232" id="pg232"></a><span class="pagenum">232</span> of villany,&rdquo; as enemies of society, and so on; and if this fails
+of its desired effects, other means are found by which their
+influence is undermined and their teachings discredited in the
+minds of those who more or less blindly follow in the wake
+of the &ldquo;superior classes,&rdquo; the privileged few and their more
+or less direct dependents. Thus Society continues its troubled
+slumbers until&mdash;until the necessary changes denied to peaceful
+reformers, to the thinkers of the race, may be demanded,
+by revolutionary methods, by force, by those who know themselves
+injured and oppressed, though they may be ignorant
+of the means by which they are wronged.</p>
+
+<p>It was, however, as a sincere and unswerving advocate of
+peaceful, practical reforms, as a courageous and unflinching
+opponent of the use of force, of the sword, even for righteous
+ends, that Winstanley appealed to his own generation, as
+Henry George, Ruskin and Tolstoy appeal to the present.
+Nor can there be any doubt but that his teachings found far
+more general acceptance than is to be gathered from modern
+histories of the troubled times in which his lot was cast. For
+not only was there sufficient demand to warrant the publication
+of at least two editions of <i>The Law of Freedom</i>, as of several
+of his other pamphlets, but additional testimony is to be
+gathered from the fact that his writings were immediately
+pirated and issued under new titles by other publishers:<a name="fnm232_1_119" id="fnm232_1_119"></a><a href="#fn232_1_119" class="fnnum">232:1</a>
+than which no better evidence can be had of the popularity
+of any writer.</p>
+
+<p>However this may be, new and less earnest and less
+strenuous generations arose which knew not Winstanley, and
+heeded not his teachings; and till very recent years both he
+and his teachings have remained utterly forgotten. And yet
+we write the closing lines of our work with the same conviction
+with which we commenced it some five years ago, that not only
+was Gerrard Winstanley a man worthy to be recalled to the
+memory of his fellow-countrymen, as one who deserved well
+of his day, of his generation and of his country, but that the
+<a name="pg233" id="pg233"></a><span class="pagenum">233</span> intrinsic merits of his writings and teachings make them
+worthy of our most careful study, of our highest admiration,
+and of our most profound respect.</p>
+
+<p>True, they have hitherto received but scant consideration;
+but this need neither surprise nor disturb us. The man in
+whose heart a new truth is born may be a benefactor of his
+species; but, as all history teaches us, if he have courage to
+proclaim it to the world, he must be prepared to meet the
+hatred, scoffing and abuse of the ignorant, the sneering contempt,
+if not bitter persecution, of the learned and highly
+placed upholders of already accepted beliefs and superstitions.
+More especially is this true of a social truth, of a truth which
+threatens the continuance of society in its accustomed paths,
+which threatens the continuance of some vested social wrong,
+of some deep-rooted and time-honoured social injustice, which,
+though it may be poisoning the springs of social life, necessarily
+finds favour in the eyes of those who are advantaged, or think
+they are advantaged, thereby. It was such a truth that
+meditation and reflection revealed to Gerrard Winstanley;
+and, as we have seen, he too met with the fate awaiting
+those who find themselves in advance of their times. As
+already pointed out, his memory has passed away, his
+teachings have remained unheeded. The seed he planted fell
+upon barren soil; but though so hardened by the withering
+frosts of ignorance, of that ignorance which is indeed &ldquo;the
+curse of God,&rdquo; as to seem but as a dead stone, the vivifying
+sun of knowledge may yet stir its dormant potency, recalling
+it to life, to spring up and to develop into a stately tree,
+yielding its life-giving fruits, offering the welcome protection
+of its branches to all seeking rest and shelter beneath its shade.
+To-day the thought that inspired Winstanley has again been
+proclaimed by one greater than Winstanley, and is slowly but
+surely remoulding the social thought of the world. Thanks to
+the genius of Henry George, the more thoughtful and ethical-minded
+of our race are gradually coming to realise that, to use
+Winstanley&rsquo;s words&mdash;&ldquo;True Commonwealth&rsquo;s Freedom lies in
+the free enjoyment of the Earth&rdquo;; and that if they would
+remove those remediable social ills which harass, haunt and
+<a name="pg234" id="pg234"></a><span class="pagenum">234</span> warp our advancing civilisation, the use of the Earth and a
+share in the bounties and blessings of Nature must be secured
+to each and all upon equitable terms and conditions.
+Hence it is that we feel impelled to close our notice of the
+great Apostle of Social Justice and Economic Freedom of
+the Seventeenth Century with the following eloquent and
+soul-stirring words of his still greater successor of the Nineteenth
+Century, words which almost seem but as an echo of
+his own, even though many of us even to-day may have yet
+to learn to appreciate their full force, meaning and truth:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;In our time, as in times before, creep on the insidious
+forces that, producing inequality, destroy Liberty. On the
+horizon the clouds begin to lower. Liberty calls to us again.
+We must follow her further; we must trust her fully. Either
+we must wholly accept her or she will not stay. It is not
+enough that men should vote; it is not enough that they
+should be theoretically equal before the law. They must have
+liberty to avail themselves of the opportunities and means of
+life; they must stand on equal terms with reference to the
+bounties of nature. Either this, or Liberty withdraws her
+light! Either this, or darkness comes on, and the very forces
+that progress has evolved turn to powers that work destruction.
+This is the universal law. This is the lesson of the centuries.
+Unless its foundations be laid in justice the social structure
+cannot stand.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center biggap">END.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn228_1_118" id="fn228_1_118"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm228_1_118">228:1</a></span> Published under the title, <i>The Condition of Labour</i> (Swan, Sonnenschein
+&amp; Co., London).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn232_1_119" id="fn232_1_119"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm232_1_119">232:1</a></span> The following are some of such pirated publications: <i>Articles of
+High Treason.</i> British Museum, Press Mark, E. 521. <i>A Declaration for
+Freedom.</i> E. 321. <i>The Levellers Remonstrance.</i> E. 652. 12.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg235" id="pg235"></a><span class="pagenum">235</span>
+<a name="APPENDIX_A" id="APPENDIX_A"></a>APPENDIX A<br />
+<br />
+THE FUNDAMENTAL AND JUST CHIEF ARTICLES
+OF ALL THE PEASANTRY AND VILLEINS
+BY WHICH THEY DEEM THEMSELVES OPPRESSED</h2>
+
+<p class="subject">Introduction.</p>
+
+
+<p>To the Christian Reader, Peace and the Grace of God through
+Christ,&mdash;There are many Anti-Christians who now take
+occasion to libel the Gospel on account of the assembled
+peasantry, saying these be the fruits of the New Gospel, to
+obey none, to raise rebellion in all places, to rush to arms to
+reform, to root out, and perhaps to destroy all spiritual and
+temporal authority. All such godless and wicked judgements
+the Articles here written do answer; in the first place, so that
+the shame may be lifted off the word of God; in the second,
+to excuse in a Christian manner this uprising of the peasants.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, the Gospel is no cause of any uprising,
+seeing that it is the word of Christ, the promised Messiah,
+whose word and life teach naught save love, peace, patience
+and unity; so all who believe in this Christ should be loving,
+peaceful, patient and united. The object of all the Articles of
+the Peasants, when once clearly apprehended, is that they may
+hear the Gospel and live according to the Gospel. How then
+can Anti-Christians denounce the Gospel as a cause of rebellion
+and disobedience? But that Anti-Christians and Enemies of
+the Gospel should rise up against such requirements, of this
+the Gospel is not the cause, but the Devil, the most hurtful
+enemy of the Gospel, who arouses infidelity in his followers,
+so that the word of God, which teaches peace and unity, may
+be trodden down and taken away.</p>
+
+<p>In the second place, the following show clearly that the
+peasants in their Articles demand the Gospel for teaching and
+<a name="pg236" id="pg236"></a><span class="pagenum">236</span> for life; therefore they cannot be called disobedient or rebellious.
+But should God hear the peasants, who sincerely
+desire to live according to His word: Who will oppose the
+will of God? (Rom. xi.). Who will impeach His judgment?
+(Isa. xi.). Who dare resist His majesty? (Rom. viii.). Did He
+not hear the Children of Israel when they called on Him, and
+delivered them out of the hand of Pharaoh (II Moses 3. 7),
+and can He not to-day also save His own? Aye, He will save
+them, and that speedily (Luke xviii. 8). Therefore, Christian
+Reader, read the following Articles sedulously, and then judge.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">First Article.</p>
+
+<p>It is our humble request and desire, as also our will and
+intention, that henceforth the community itself shall have
+power to choose their Pastor, as also to dismiss him should he
+be found unsuitable. The Pastor so chosen shall preach to us
+the Gospel clearly and purely, free from all man-made additions,
+teachings and ordinances. For whoever preaches to us the
+true Faith giveth us reason to pray to God for His mercy, and
+to call up within us and confirm us in the true Faith. For if
+we do not enjoy His grace, we remain mere flesh and blood,
+which profiteth not. It is clearly written in the Scriptures
+that it is only through the true Faith that we can come to
+God, and only through His mercy that we can be saved.
+Therefore it is that we require such a Pastor and Minister.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Second Article.</p>
+
+<p><i>Secondly</i>, As the just tithe was established in the Old
+Testament, and in the New covered all dues, so we will gladly
+furnish the just tithe of corn, but only in a seemly manner,
+according to which it should be given to God, and divided
+among His servants. It is the due of a Pastor, as the Word of
+God clearly proclaims. Therefore it is our will that the
+Church Overseers, such as are appointed by the Community,
+shall collect and receive this tithe, and therefrom shall give to
+the Pastor, who shall be chosen by the Community, suitable
+and sufficient subsistence for him and his, as the whole
+Community may deem just. The surplus shall be devoted to
+the use of the poor and needy, as we are instructed in the Holy
+Scriptures. And so that no general tax shall be levied on the
+poor, their share of such taxation shall be defrayed out of such
+surplus.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg237" id="pg237"></a><span class="pagenum">237</span>
+In villages where the right to the tithe has been sold, out
+of sheer necessity, the buyers shall lose nothing, but their
+rights shall be redeemed in a seemly manner. But those who
+have not bought the right to the tithe from the village, but
+who or whose fathers have simply usurped it to themselves,
+we will not and we should not give them anything. We owe
+such men nothing; but we are willing out of the proceeds of
+such tithe to support our chosen Pastor, and to relieve the
+needy as we are commanded in the Holy Scriptures.</p>
+
+<p>The small tithe we will not give. For God the Lord hath
+created the beasts free to mankind (Gen. i.). It is only a mere
+human invention that we should pay tithe on them. Therefore
+we shall not pay such tithe for the future.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Third Article.</p>
+
+<p><i>Thirdly</i>, It has hitherto been the custom that we should be
+held as serfs, which is deplorable, since Christ redeemed us all
+with His precious blood, the shepherd as well as the noble, the
+lowest as well as the highest, none being excepted. Therefore
+it accords with Scripture that we should be free; and we will
+be free. Not that we are absolutely free, or desire to be free
+from all authority: this God does not teach us. We are to
+live according to His commandments, not according to the
+promptings of the flesh; but shall love God as our Master,
+and recognise Him as the one nearest to us. And everything
+He has commanded we shall do; and His commands do not
+instruct us to disobey the orders of the Authorities. On the
+contrary, not only before the Authorities, but before all men
+we are to be humble; so that in all matters fitting and
+Christian we shall gladly obey the orders of those who have
+been chosen or have been set up over us. And doubtless, as
+true and honest Christians, you will gladly abolish serfdom, or
+prove it to be in accordance with the Gospel.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Fourth Article.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fourthly</i>, It has hitherto been the custom that no poor man
+should have any right to the game, the birds, or to the fish in
+the running waters. This seems to us unseemly and unbrotherly,
+and not to be in accordance with the Word of God.
+Moreover, in some places the authorities let the game increase
+to our injury and mighty undoing, since we have to permit
+<a name="pg238" id="pg238"></a><span class="pagenum">238</span> that which God has caused to grow for the use of man to be
+unavailingly devoured by the beasts; and we have to hold our
+peace concerning this, which is against God and our neighbours.
+When our Lord God created mankind, He gave him power
+over all creatures, over the birds in the air and the fish in the
+waters. Therefore as regards those who control the running
+waters, and who can show us documents to prove that they
+purchased it with money, we do not desire to take it away
+from such men by force, but to come to some Christian agreement
+with them in brotherly love. Those who have no such
+documents shall share with the community in a seemly
+manner.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Fifth Article.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fifthly</i>, We find ourselves oppressed as regards the woods.
+For our Lords have taken to themselves all the woods; and
+when poor men require any wood, they have to buy it with
+money. Our view is that such woods, whether claimed by
+spiritual or by temporal Lords, as have not been purchased,
+should return to the community, and be free to all in a seemly
+manner. So that those who require wood for firing shall be
+free to take same without payment, as also if they require any
+for carpentering: but, of course, always with the knowledge of
+the chosen Authorities of the community. But where there
+are no woods save those as have been honestly purchased, with
+such we will arrange the matter in a brotherly and Christian
+spirit. And in cases where the land was first appropriated
+and afterwards sold, we will also come to an agreement with
+the buyers according to the circumstances of the case, and with
+regard to brotherly love and the Holy Writings.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Sixth Article.</p>
+
+<p><i>Sixthly</i>, The burden of service presses heavily upon us, and
+is daily increased. We desire that this matter shall be looked
+into, and that we be not so heavily burdened, but shall be
+mercifully dealt with herein; that we should serve but as our
+fathers have served, but only according to the Word of God.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Seventh Article.</p>
+
+<p><i>Seventhly</i>, Henceforth we will no longer allow ourselves to
+be oppressed by the Lords, but according as a Lord hath
+<a name="pg239" id="pg239"></a><span class="pagenum">239</span> granted the land, so shall it be held, according to the agreement
+between the Lord and the peasant. The Lord shall not
+force him to render more service for naught; so that the
+peasant shall enjoy his holding in peace and unoppressed.
+But if the Lord hath need of service, the peasant shall be
+willing and obedient to him before others; but it shall be at
+the hour and the time when it shall not injure the peasant,
+and at a proper remuneration.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Eighth Article.</p>
+
+<p><i>Eighthly</i>, Many of us are oppressed in that we hold lands
+that will not bear the price placed on them, so that the peasant
+thereby is ruined and undone. Our desire is that the Lord
+shall allow such land to be seen by honourable men, so that
+the price shall be fixed in such a manner that the peasant
+shall not have his labour in vain: for every labourer is worthy
+of his hire (Matt. x.).</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Ninth Article.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ninthly</i>, We suffer greatly because of the new punishments
+that are continually laid upon us. Not that they punish us
+according to the circumstances of the case, but at times spitefully
+and at other times favourably. We would be punished
+according to the old written punishments, and not arbitrarily.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Tenth Article.</p>
+
+<p><i>Tenthly</i>, We suffer in that some have taken to themselves
+meadows and arable land that belong to the community. Such
+land we would take once more into the hands of our communities
+wheresoever they have not been honestly purchased.
+But where they have been purchased, then shall the case be
+agreed upon in peace and brotherly love, according to the
+circumstances of the case.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Eleventh Article.</p>
+
+<p><i>Eleventhly</i>, We would have the custom called the death-due
+entirely abolished. We will never suffer nor permit that
+widows and orphans shall be disgraced and robbed of their own,
+contrary to God and honour, as has happened in many cases
+and in many ways. Those who would protect and shelter
+<a name="pg240" id="pg240"></a><span class="pagenum">240</span> them, they have abused and injured, and when these have had
+some little property, even this they have taken. Such things
+God will no longer suffer, they shall be abolished. For such
+things no man shall henceforth be compelled to give aught, be
+it little or much.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Twelfth Article.</p>
+
+<p><i>Twelfthly</i>, It is our resolve and final decision that if any of
+the Articles here set forth be not according to the Word of God,
+we will, whenever they are shown to be against the Word of
+God, at once withdraw therefrom. Yea, even though certain
+articles were now granted and it should hereafter be found that
+they are unjust, from that hour they shall be null and void and
+of no effect. The same shall happen if there should with truth
+be found in the Scriptures yet more Articles which were held
+to be against God and a stumbling-block to our neighbours,
+even though we should have determined to preserve such for
+ourselves. For we have determined and resolved to practice
+ourselves in all Christian doctrines. Therefore we pray God
+the Lord who can grant us the same, and none other. The
+Peace of Christ be with you all. Amen.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="pg241" id="pg241"></a><span class="pagenum">241</span>
+<a name="APPENDIX_B" id="APPENDIX_B"></a>APPENDIX B<br />
+<br />
+TOLERATION</h2>
+
+
+<p>The statement that toleration was the one leading principle of
+Cromwell&rsquo;s life, may seem somewhat exaggerated to those who
+have not carefully studied his career. By his own words let
+him be judged. Writing to Major Crawford as early as March
+1643 (1644) he plainly tells him&mdash;&ldquo;Sir, the State, in choosing
+men to serve it, takes no notice of their opinions; if they be
+willing faithfully to serve it, that satisfies.&rdquo; After Naseby,
+under date June 14th, 1645, in his dispatch to the Speaker, he
+tells the Presbyterian House of Commons&mdash;&ldquo;Honest men
+served you faithfully in this action. Sir, they are trusty; I
+beseech you in the name of God not to discourage them....
+<i>He that ventures his life for the liberty of the country, I wish he
+trust God for the liberty of his conscience, and you for the liberty
+he fights for.</i>&rdquo; The meaning of these words was not lost to the
+House, so when sending his dispatch to the press, they carefully
+omitted this paragraph.</p>
+
+<p>After the siege of Bristol, Cromwell is still more outspoken.
+Under date September 14th, 1645, he writes to the Speaker as
+follows&mdash;&ldquo;Presbyterians, Independents, all have here the same
+spirit of faith and prayer; the same presence and answer;
+they agree here, have no names of difference; pity it should be
+otherwise anywhere&mdash;<i>for, bretheren, in things of the mind we
+look for no compulsion but that of light and reason</i>.&rdquo; This
+dispatch, too, the House of Commons took care to mutilate
+before sending it to the press.</p>
+
+<p>As he advanced in his career, Cromwell became still more
+outspoken. In his opening speech to his first Parliament, after
+having given expression to his view that the Lord had given
+them the victory for the common good of all, &ldquo;for the good of
+the whole flock,&rdquo; he continues&mdash;&ldquo;Therefore I beseech you&mdash;but
+I think I need not&mdash;have a care of the whole flock! Love
+<a name="pg242" id="pg242"></a><span class="pagenum">242</span> the sheep, love the lambs; love all, tender all, cherish and
+countenance all, in all things that are good. <i>And if the poorest
+Christian, the most mistaken Christian, shall desire to live peaceably
+and quietly under you&mdash;I say, if any shall desire but to
+lead a life of godliness and honesty, let him be protected.</i>&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Again, when dissolving his first Parliament (Speech IV.), he
+expresses the same thought in the following words&mdash;&ldquo;Is there
+not yet upon the spirits of men a strange itch? Nothing will
+satisfy them unless they can press their finger upon their
+bretheren&rsquo;s consciences, to pinch them there. To do this was
+no part of the contest we had with the common adversary.
+For religion was not the thing at first contended for, but God
+brought it to that issue at last; and gave it unto us by way of
+redundancy; and at last it proved to be that which was most
+dear to us. And wherein consisted this more than in obtaining
+that liberty from the tyranny of the Bishops to all species of
+Protestants to worship God according to their own light and
+consciences?... And was it fit for them to sit heavy upon
+others? Is it ingenuous to ask liberty and not to give it?
+What greater hypocrisy than for those who were oppressed by
+the Bishops to become the greatest oppressors themselves, so
+soon as their yoke was removed? I could wish that they who
+call for liberty now also had not too much of that spirit, if the
+power were in their hands.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cromwell, in short, had no deep-rooted objection either to
+a moderate Episcopacy or to a tolerant Presbyterianism, though,
+as he somewhere says, &ldquo;both are a hard choice,&rdquo; provided only
+there was sufficient consideration for those who could not reconcile
+their consciences to the demands of the established
+State Church. His great desire was &ldquo;for union and right
+understanding&rdquo; between Protestants of all shades, in fact
+between &ldquo;godley&rdquo; (religious or moral) people of all races,
+countries and denominations, &ldquo;Scots, English, Jews, Gentiles,
+Presbyterians, Independents, Anabaptists, and all.&rdquo; (See his
+letter to Hammond, <i>Clarke Papers</i>, vol. ii. p. 49.) His aim
+was to reconcile, or rather to stand as mediator between all
+the opposing sects. &ldquo;Fain,&rdquo; he writes to one of his most
+devoted adherent (see <i>Cromwell&rsquo;s Letters and Speeches</i>, Carlyle,
+part vii. p. 363), &ldquo;would I have my service accepted of the
+Saints, if the Lord will;&mdash;but it is not so. Being of different
+judgements, and those of each sort seeking most to propagate
+their own, that spirit of kindness that is to them all is hardly
+accepted of any. I hope I can say it, My life has been a willing
+<a name="pg243" id="pg243"></a><span class="pagenum">243</span> sacrifice,&mdash;and I hope&mdash;for them all. Yet it much falls out
+as when the two Hebrews were rebuked: you know upon
+whom they turned their displeasure.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In short, Cromwell&rsquo;s attitude toward all honest, sincere,
+&ldquo;godley&rdquo; men was the same as his attitude toward George
+Fox. &ldquo;Come again to my house,&rdquo; he said, when dismissing the
+sturdy Quaker, &ldquo;for if thou and I were but an hour a day
+together we should be nearer one to the other. I wish you
+no more ill than I do to my own soul.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>On November 17th, 1645, &ldquo;the Dissenting Bretheren,&rdquo; the
+representatives of the Independents in the Westminster
+Assembly, declared for a full liberty of conscience. &ldquo;They
+expressed themselves,&rdquo; as Baillie, the Scotch Presbyterian
+commissioner, wrote sadly, &ldquo;for toleration, not only to themselves,
+but to all sects.&rdquo; In February of the same year, the
+Oxford Clergy, who had been consulted by the King as to the
+limits of possible concession, gave strong evidence that the
+pressure of events were forcing them to move, even though
+slowly, in the same direction. (See Gardiner, <i>History of the
+Civil War</i>, vol. ii. pp. 125-126.)</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="pg244" id="pg244"></a><span class="pagenum">244</span>
+<a name="APPENDIX_C" id="APPENDIX_C"></a>APPENDIX C<br />
+<br />
+WHAT MAY BE THOSE PARTICULAR LAWS, OR
+SUCH A METHOD OF LAWS, WHEREBY A
+COMMONWEALTH MAY BE GOVERNED?</h2>
+
+
+<p>1. The bare letter of the Law established by Act of Parliament
+shall be the Rule for Officers and People, and the chief
+Judge of all actions.</p>
+
+<p>2. He or they who add or diminish from the Law, excepting
+in the Court of Parliament, shall be cashiered his
+Office, and never bear Office more.</p>
+
+<p>3. No man shall administer the Law for Money or Reward.
+He that doth shall die as a Traitor to the Commonwealth. For
+when Money must buy and sell Justice, and bear all the sway,
+there is nothing but Oppression to be expected.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>[Here, as also in other Laws yet to follow, Winstanley,
+and as it seems to us without sufficient grounds, gives up
+the position taken up in The New Law of Righteousness,
+that capital punishment was absolutely unjustifiable.]</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>4. The Laws shall be read by the Minister to the
+People four times in the year, viz., every quarter; that everyone
+may know whereunto they are to yield obedience, that
+none may die for want of knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>5. No accusation shall be taken against any man unless
+it be proved by two or three witnesses, or his own confession.</p>
+
+<p>6. No man shall suffer any punishment but for matter
+of fact or reviling words. But no man shall be troubled for
+his judgement or practice in the things of his God, so he live
+quiet in the Land.</p>
+
+<p>7. The accuser and the accused shall always appear face
+to face before any Officer; that both sides may be heard, and
+no wrong to either party.</p>
+
+<p>8. If any Judge execute his own will contrary to the
+Law, or where there is no Law to warrant him in, he shall be
+cashiered, and never bear Office more.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg245" id="pg245"></a><span class="pagenum">245</span>
+9. He who raises an accusation against any man, and cannot
+prove it, shall suffer the same punishment as the other should,
+if proved. An accusation is, when one man complains of
+another to an Officer, all other accusations the Law takes no
+notice of.</p>
+
+<p>10. He who strikes his neighbor shall be struck himself by
+the executioner, blow for blow, and shall lose eye for eye, tooth
+for tooth, limb for limb, life for life. And the reason is that
+men should be tender of one another&rsquo;s bodies, doing as they
+would be done by.</p>
+
+<p>11. If any man strike an Officer, he shall be made a
+servant under the Task-master for a whole year.</p>
+
+<p>12. He who endeavours to stir up contention among
+neighbors, by tale-bearing or false reports, shall the first
+time be reproved openly by the Overseers among the people.
+The second time he shall be whipped. The third time he shall
+be a servant under the Task-master for three months. And
+if he continue, he shall be a servant for ever, and lose his
+Freedom in the Commonwealth.</p>
+
+<p>13. If any give reviling or provoking words, whereby
+his neighbor&rsquo;s spirit is burdened, if complaint be made to the
+Overseers, they shall admonish the offender privately to
+forbear. If he continue to offend his neighbor, the next
+time he shall be openly reproved and admonished before the
+Congregation when met together. If he continue, the third
+time he shall be whipped; the fourth time, if proof be made
+by witnesses, he shall be a servant under the Task-master
+for twelve months.</p>
+
+<p>14. He who will rule as a Lord over his Brother, unless
+he be an Officer commanding obedience to the Law, he shall
+be admonished as aforesaid, and receive like punishment, if
+he continue.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Laws for the Planting of the Earth.</p>
+
+<p>15. Every household shall keep all instruments and tools
+fit for the tillage of the Earth, either for planting, reaping
+or threshing. Some households, which have many men in
+them, shall keep ploughs, carts, harrows, and such like.
+Other households shall keep spades, pick-axes, pruning hooks,
+and such like, according as every family is furnished with
+men to work therewith. And if any Master or Father of a
+Family be negligent herein, the Overseer for that Circuit shall
+<a name="pg246" id="pg246"></a><span class="pagenum">246</span>
+admonish him between them two. If he continue negligent,
+the Overseer shall reprove him before all the people. And if
+he utterly refuse, then the ordering of that Family shall be
+given to another, and he shall be Servant under the Task-*master
+till he reform.</p>
+
+<p>16. Every Family shall come into the field with sufficient
+assistance at seed time, to plough, dig and plant, and at
+harvest time to reap the fruits of the Earth, and to carry them
+into the Storehouses, as the Overseers order the work and the
+number of workmen. If any refuse to assist in the work, the
+Overseer shall ask the reason; and if it be sickness or any
+distemper that hinders them, they are freed from such service;
+if mere idleness keep them back, they are to suffer punishment
+according to the Laws against Idleness.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Laws Against Idleness.</p>
+
+<p>17. If any refuse to learn a trade, or refuse to work in
+seed-time, or refuse to be a waiter in storehouses, and yet will
+feed and clothe himself with other men&rsquo;s labors, the Overseer
+shall first admonish him privately. If he continue idle, he
+shall be reproved openly before all the people by the Overseer,
+and shall be forbore with a month after this reproof. If he
+still continue idle, he shall be whipped, and let go at liberty
+for a month longer. If still he continue idle, he shall be delivered
+into the Task-master&rsquo;s hand, who shall set him to
+work for twelve months, or till he submit to right order.
+The reason why every young man shall be trained up in some
+work or other, is to prevent pride and contention; it is for the
+health of their bodies; it is a pleasure to the mind to be free
+in labors one with another; and it provides plenty of food and
+all necessaries for the Commonwealth.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Laws for Storehouses.</p>
+
+<p>18. In every Town and City shall be appointed Storehouses
+for flax, wood, leather, cloth, and for all such commodities
+as come from beyond seas. These shall be called
+General Storehouses, whence every particular Family may
+fetch such commodities as they want, either for their own use
+in their house, or for to work in their trades, or to carry into
+the Country Storehouses.</p>
+
+<p>19. Every particular house and shop in a town or city
+shall be a particular Storehouse or Shop, as now they be. And
+<a name="pg247" id="pg247"></a><span class="pagenum">247</span>
+these shops shall either be furnished by the particular labor of
+that family according to the trade that family is of, or by the
+labor of other lesser families of the same trade, as all shops in
+every town are now furnished.</p>
+
+<p>20. The waiters in Storehouses shall deliver the goods in
+their charge without receiving any money, as they shall
+receive in their goods without paying any money.</p>
+
+<p>21. If any waiter in a Storehouse neglect his Office,
+upon a just complaint, the Overseers shall acquaint the Judge&rsquo;s
+Court therewith; and from thence he shall receive his sentence,
+to be discharged that house and office, to be appointed some
+other work under the Task-master; and another shall have
+his place. For he who may live in Freedom and will not, is
+to taste of servitude.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Laws for Overseers.</p>
+
+<p>22. The only work of every Overseer is to see the Laws
+executed. For the Law is the True Magistracy of the land.</p>
+
+<p>23. If any Overseer favour any in their idleness and
+neglect the execution of the Laws, he shall be reproved, the
+first time by the Judge&rsquo;s Court; the second time cashiered his
+Office, and shall never bear Office more, but fall back into the
+ranks of young people and servants to be a worker.</p>
+
+<p>24. New Overseers, at their first entrance into their
+office, shall look back upon the actions of the Old Overseers
+of the last year, to see if they have been faithful in their
+places, and consented to no breach of Law, whereby Kingly
+Bondage should in any way be brought in.</p>
+
+<p>25. The Overseers for Trades shall see every Family to
+lend assistance to plant and reap the fruits of the Earth, to
+work in their Trades, and to furnish the Storehouses. And to
+see that the Waiters in Storehouses be diligent to receive in
+and deliver out any goods, without buying and selling, to any
+man whatsoever.</p>
+
+<p>26. While any Overseer is in performance of his place, every
+one shall assist him, upon pain of open reproof (or cashiered if he
+be another Officer) or forfeiture of freedom, according to the
+nature of the business in hand, in which he refused his assistance.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Laws against Buying and Selling.</p>
+
+<p>27. If any man entice another to buy and sell, and he
+who is enticed does not yield, but makes it known to the
+<a name="pg248" id="pg248"></a><span class="pagenum">248</span>
+Overseer, the enticer shall lose his freedom for twelve months,
+and the Overseer shall give words of commendation of him
+that refused the enticement before all the Congregation, for his
+faithfulness to the Commonwealth&rsquo;s Peace.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">The Unpardonable Sin!</p>
+
+<p>28. If any do buy and sell the Earth, or the fruits
+thereof, unless it be to or with strangers of another Nation,
+according to the Law of Navigation, they shall be both put to
+death as Traitors to the Peace of the Commonwealth. Because
+it brings in Kingly Bondage again, and is the occasion of all
+quarrels and oppressions.</p>
+
+<p>29. He, or she, who calls the Earth his, and not his brother&rsquo;s,
+shall be set upon a stool, with those words written in his
+forehead, before all the Congregation, and afterwards be
+made a Servant for twelve months under the Task-master.
+If he quarrel, or seek by secret persuasion or open rising in
+arms to set up such a Kingly Propriety, he shall be put to
+death.</p>
+
+<p>30. The Storehouses shall be every man&rsquo;s subsistence,
+and not any ones.</p>
+
+<p>31. No man shall either give hire or take hire for his
+work; for this brings in Kingly Bondage. If any Freeman
+want help, there are young people, or such as are common
+servants, to do it by the Overseer&rsquo;s appointment. He that
+gives and he that hires for work, shall both lose their freedom
+and become Servants for twelve months under the Task-master.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Laws for Navigation.</p>
+
+<p>32. Because other Nations as yet own Monarchy, and will
+buy and sell, therefore it is convenient for the peace of our
+Commonwealth, that our ships do transport our English goods
+and exchange for theirs, and conform to the customs of other
+Nations in buying and selling: Always provided that what
+goods our ships carry out, they shall be the Commonwealth&rsquo;s
+goods; and all their trading with other Nations shall be upon
+the Common Stock, to enrich the Storehouses.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Laws for Silver and Gold.</p>
+
+<p>33. As Silver and Gold is either found out in mines in
+our own Land, or brought by shipping from beyond Sea, it
+<a name="pg249" id="pg249"></a><span class="pagenum">249</span>
+shall not be coined with a Conqueror&rsquo;s stamp upon it, to set
+up buying and selling under his name, or by his leave. For
+there shall be no other use for it in the Commonwealth than
+to make dishes and other necessaries for the ornament of
+houses, as now there is use made of brass, pewter and iron, or
+any other metal in their use. But in case other Nations
+whose commodities we want, will not exchange with us unless
+we give them money, then pieces of silver and gold may be
+stamped with the Commonwealth&rsquo;s Arms upon them, for the
+same use and no otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>For where money bears all the sway, there is no regard
+of that Golden Rule, &ldquo;<i>Do as you would be done by</i>.&rdquo; Justice
+is bought and sold; nay, Injustice is sometimes bought for
+money; and it is the cause of all wars and oppressions.
+Certainly the Righteous Spirit of the Whole Creation did
+never enact a Law that his weak and simple men should go
+from England to the East Indies and fetch silver and gold to
+bring in their hands to their bretheren, and give it them for
+their good-will to let them plant the Earth, and live and enjoy
+their livelihood therein.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Laws to choose Officers.</p>
+
+<p>34. All Overseers and State Officers shall be chosen new
+every year, to prevent the rise of Ambition and Covetousness.
+For the Nations have smarted sufficiently by suffering Officers
+to continue long in an Office, or to remain in an Office by
+hereditary succession.</p>
+
+<p>35. A man who is of a turbulent spirit, given to quarrelling
+and provoking words to his neighbor, shall not be chosen
+any Officer while he so continues.</p>
+
+<p>36. All men of twenty years of age upwards shall have
+freedom of voice to choose Officers, unless they be such as lie
+under sentence of the Law.</p>
+
+<p>37. Such shall be chosen Officers as are rational men of
+moderate conversation, and who have experience in the Laws
+of the Commonwealth.</p>
+
+<p>38. All men from forty years of age upwards shall be
+capable to be chosen State Officers, and none younger, unless
+any one by his industry and moderate conversation doth move
+the people to choose him.</p>
+
+<p>39. If any man make suit to move the people to choose him
+an Officer, that man shall not be chosen at all that time. If
+<a name="pg250" id="pg250"></a><span class="pagenum">250</span>
+another man shall persuade the people to choose him that
+made suit for himself, they shall both loose their freedom at
+that time, viz., they shall neither have a voice to choose
+another, nor be chosen themselves.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Laws against Treachery.</p>
+
+<p>40. He who professes the service of a righteous God by
+preaching and prayer, and makes a trade to get the possessions
+of the Earth, shall be put to death for a Witch and a Cheater.</p>
+
+<p>41. He who pretends one thing in words, and his actions
+declare his intent was another thing, shall never bear Office in
+the Commonwealth.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">What is Freedom?</p>
+
+<p>Every Freeman shall have a Freedom in the Earth, to
+plant or build, to fetch from the Storehouses anything he
+wants, and shall enjoy the fruits of his labor without restraint
+from any. He shall not pay Rent to any Landlord. He shall
+be capable of being chosen Officer, so he be above forty years
+of age, and he shall have a voice to choose Officers though he
+be under forty years of age. If he want any young men to be
+assistants to him in his trade or household employment, the
+Overseers shall appoint him young men or maids to be his
+servants in his family.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Laws for such as have lost their Freedom.</p>
+
+<p>42. All those who have lost their freedom shall be
+clothed in white woollen cloth, that they may be distinguished
+from others.</p>
+
+<p>43. They shall be under the government of a Task-master,
+who shall appoint them to be porters or laborers, to do any
+work that any Freeman wants to be done.</p>
+
+<p>44. They shall do all kinds of labor without exception,
+but their constant work shall be carriers or carters, to carry
+corn or other provision from Storehouse to Storehouse, from
+Country to Cities, and thence to Countries.</p>
+
+<p>45. If any of these refuse to do such work, the Task-master
+shall see them whipped, and shall feed them with
+coarse diet. And what hardship is this? For Freemen work
+the easiest work, and these shall work the hardest work. And
+<a name="pg251" id="pg251"></a><span class="pagenum">251</span>
+to what end is this but to kill their Pride and Unreasonableness,
+that they may become useful men in the Commonwealth?</p>
+
+<p>46. The wife or children of such as have lost their
+Freedom shall not be as slaves till they have lost their
+Freedom as their parents and husbands have done.</p>
+
+<p>47. He who breaks any laws shall be the first time reproved
+in words in private or in public, as is shown before; the next
+time whipped; the third time lose his Freedom, either for a
+short time or for ever, and not to be any Officer.</p>
+
+<p>48. He who hath lost his Freedom shall be a common
+servant to any Freeman who comes to the Task-master and
+requires one to do any work for him. Always provided, that
+after one Freeman hath by the consent of the Task-master
+appointed him his work, another Freeman shall not call him
+thence till that work be done.</p>
+
+<p>49. If any of these offenders revile the Laws by words,
+they shall be soundly whipped and fed with coarse diet. If
+they raise weapons against the Laws, they shall die as
+Traitors.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Laws to restore Slaves to Freedom.</p>
+
+<p>50. When any Slaves [<i>i.e.</i> those who have lost their
+Freedom] give open testimony of their humility and diligence,
+and of their care to observe the Laws of the Commonwealth,
+they are then capable to be restored to their Freedom, when
+the time of servitude has expired, according to the Judge&rsquo;s
+sentence. But if they continue opposite to the Laws, they
+shall continue slaves for another term of time.</p>
+
+<p>51. None shall be restored to Freedom till they have been
+a twelve month laboring servants to the Commonwealth; for
+they shall winter and summer in that condition.</p>
+
+<p>52. When any is restored to Freedom, the Judge at the
+Senator&rsquo;s Court shall pronounce his Freedom, and give liberty
+to him to be clothed in what other coloured garments he
+will.</p>
+
+<p>53. If any person be sick or wounded, the Chyrurgeons,
+who are trained up in the knowledge of Herbs and Minerals,
+and know how to apply plasters or physick, shall go when
+they are sent for to any who need their help, but require no
+reward, because the Common Stock is the public pay for every
+man&rsquo;s labor.</p>
+
+<p>54. When a dead person is to be buried, the Officers of
+<a name="pg252" id="pg252"></a><span class="pagenum">252</span>
+the Parish and neighbors shall go along with the corpse to
+the grave, and see it laid therein in a civil manner; but the
+public Minister nor any other shall have any hand in reading
+or exhortation.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>[Whatever we may think of this latter proviso, certain
+it is that it would put an end to many unseemly
+squabblings at a time when they are specially to be
+avoided.]</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>55. When a man hath learned his Trade, and the time of
+his seven years Apprenticeship has expired, he shall have his
+Freedom to become Master of a Family, and the Overseers shall
+appoint him such young people to be his servants as they
+think fit, whether he marry or live a single life.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">Laws for Marriage.</p>
+
+<p>56. Every man and woman shall have the free liberty to
+marry whom they love, if they can obtain the love and liking
+of that party whom they would marry, and neither birth nor
+portion shall hinder the match. For we are all of one blood,
+mankind, and for portion, the Common Storehouses are every
+man and maid&rsquo;s portion, as free to one as to another.</p>
+
+<p>57. If any man lie with a maid and beget a child, he shall
+marry her.</p>
+
+<p>58. If a man lie with a woman forcibly, and she cry out
+and give no consent; if this be proved by two witnesses, or
+the man&rsquo;s confession, he shall be put to death, and the woman
+let go free: it is robbery of a woman&rsquo;s bodily freedom.</p>
+
+<p>59. If any man by violence endeavour to take another man&rsquo;s
+wife, the first time of such violent offer he shall be reproved
+before the Congregation by the Peacemaker; the second time
+he shall be made a Servant under the Task-master for twelve
+months; and if he forcibly lie with another man&rsquo;s wife, and
+she cry out, as is the case when, a maid is forced, the man
+shall be put to death.</p>
+
+<p>60. When any man or woman have consented to live
+together in marriage, they shall acquaint all the Overseers in
+the Circuit therewith, and some other neighbors. And being
+all met together, the man shall declare with his own mouth
+before them all that he takes that woman to be his wife, and
+the woman shall say the same, and desire the Overseers to be
+witnesses.</p>
+
+
+<p class="subject">
+<a name="pg253" id="pg253"></a><span class="pagenum">253</span>
+Laws to secure Economy.</p>
+
+<p>61. No Master of a Family shall suffer more meat to be
+dressed at a dinner or supper than will be spent and eaten by
+his household or company present, or within such a time after
+before it be spoilt. If there be any spoil constantly made in a
+family of the food of man, the Overseer shall reprove the
+Master for it privately; if that abuse be continued in his
+family, through his neglect of family government, he shall be
+openly reproved by the Peacemaker before all the people, and
+ashamed for his folly; the third time he shall be made a servant
+for twelve months under the Task-master, so that he may know
+what it is to get food, and another shall have the oversight of
+his house for the time.</p>
+
+<p>62. No man shall be suffered to keep house and have
+servants under him till he hath served seven years under
+command to a Master himself. The reason is that a man may
+be of age and of rational carriage before he be made a Governor
+of a Family, that the peace of the Commonwealth may be
+preserved.<a name="pg254" id="pg254"></a><span class="pagenum">254</span>
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="pg255" id="pg255"></a><span class="pagenum">255</span>
+<a name="BIBLIOGRAPHY" id="BIBLIOGRAPHY"></a>BIBLIOGRAPHY</h2>
+
+
+<p class="subject">COMPLETE LIST OF &ldquo;DIGGER&rdquo; PUBLICATIONS.</p>
+
+<div class="biblio">
+<ul class="bib">
+<li><span class="smcap">Winstanley</span>, The Mystery of God concerning the Whole Creation, Mankind.&mdash;April 1648. (British Museum, Press Mark, 4377, a. 1.)</li>
+<li>
+ <span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> The Breaking of the Day of God.&mdash;May 1648. (British Museum, P. M., 4377, a. 2.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> The Saints&rsquo; Paradise: Or the Father&rsquo;s Teaching the Only Satisfaction to Waiting Souls.&mdash;August or September 1648. (British Museum, P. M., E. 2137.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> Truth Lifting up its Head above Scandals.&mdash;October 1648. (British Museum, P. M., 4372, a.a. 17.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> (?) Light Shining in Buckinghamshire.&mdash;December 1648. (British Museum, P. M., E. 475 (11).)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> (?) More Light Shining in Buckinghamshire.&mdash;March 1649. (British Museum, P. M., E. 548 (33).)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> (?) A Declaration from the Well Affected in the County of Buckinghamshire.&mdash;May 1649. (British Museum, P. M., E. 555.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> The New Law of Righteousness.&mdash;January 1649. (Jesus College Library, Oxford.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> Fire in the Bush: The Spirit burning, not consuming but purging, Mankind.&mdash;March 1649. (Bodleian Library.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> A Declaration from the Poor Oppressed People of England.&mdash;March 1649. (British Museum, Press Mark, 1027, i. 16 (3).)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> The True Levellers&rsquo; Standard Advanced: Or the State of Community opened and presented to the Sons of Men.&mdash;April 1649. (British Museum, P. M., E. 552.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> A Declaration of the Bloody and Unchristian Acting of William Star and John Taylor of Walton, with diverse men in women&rsquo;s apparel, in opposition to those that dig upon St. Georges Hill.&mdash;June 1649. (British Museum, Press Mark, E. 561.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> A Letter to Lord Fairfax and his Council of War.&mdash;June 1649. (British Museum, P. M., E. 560 (1).)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> An Appeal to the House of Commons.&mdash;July 1649. (British Museum, P. M., E. 564. Also at the Guildhall Library.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> A Watchword to the City of London.&mdash;August 1649. (British Museum, P. M., E. 573. Also at the Guildhall Library.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> A Second Letter to Lord Fairfax.&mdash;December 1649. (Clarke Papers, vol. ii. pp. 217-220.)</li>
+</ul><ul class="bib">
+<li>
+
+
+<span class="smcap">Coster, Robert</span>, A Mite cast into the Common Treasury.&mdash;December 1649. (British Museum, P. M., E. 585.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> The Diggers&rsquo; Mirth. (British Museum, P. M., E. 1365.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> The Diggers&rsquo; Song. (Clarke Papers, vol. ii. p. 218.)</li>
+</ul><ul class="bib">
+<li>
+
+
+<span class="smcap">Winstanley</span>, A New Year&rsquo;s Gift for the Parliament and Army.&mdash;January 1650. (British Museum, P. M., E. 587.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> A Vindication of Those whose Endeavour it is only to make the Earth a Common Treasury, called Diggers.&mdash;February 1650. (British Museum, P. M., E. 1365.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> An Appeal for Money.&mdash;April 1650. (See &ldquo;A Perfect Diurnal,&rdquo; British Museum, P. M., E. 534.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> A Declaration from Wellingborrow, in the County of Northampton.&mdash;March 1650. (British Museum, under Wellinborrow, P. M., S. Sh. fol. 669 f., 15. 21.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> An Appeal to all Englishmen to Judge between Bondage and Freedom.&mdash;March 1650. (British Museum, P. M., S. Sh. fol. 669 f., 15. 23.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> An Humble Request to the Ministers of Both Universities and to all Lawyers of every Inns-a-Court.&mdash;April 1650. (Dyce and Forster&rsquo;s Library, South Kensington Museum.)</li>
+<li>
+
+<span class="ditto">&rdquo;</span> The Law of Freedom in a Platform: Or True Magistracie Restored.&mdash;February 1652. (British Museum, P. M., E. 655. Also at the Guildhall and Bodleian Libraries.)</li>
+
+ </ul>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="pg257" id="pg257"></a><span class="pagenum">257</span>
+<a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX</h2>
+
+<div class="index">
+
+ <ul class="IX">
+ <li>
+Agreement of the People, <a href="#pg29">29</a>, <a href="#pg32">32</a>, <a href="#pg87">87</a>, <a href="#pg103">103</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Anabaptists, <a href="#pg15">15</a>, <a href="#pg18">18</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Army, the Model, Views of, <a href="#pg29">29</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Declaration of (1647), <a href="#fn93_1_80">93 (note)</a>.</li></ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Army Council, Resolution of, <a href="#pg33">33</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Debate of, <a href="#pg103">103</a>, <a href="#pg108">108</a>.</li></ul></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Baptism, Winstanley on, <a href="#pg64">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barclay (Apology), quoted, <a href="#pg58">58</a>, <a href="#pg60">60</a>, <a href="#pg65">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Baxter (Thos.), quoted, <a href="#fn50_2_53">50 (note)</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Beard (Hibbert Lectures, 1883), quoted, <a href="#pg4">4</a>, <a href="#pg10">10</a>, <a href="#pg15">15</a>, <a href="#pg18">18</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Buckle, quoted, <a href="#pg1">1</a>, <a href="#pg21">21</a>, <a href="#pg22">22</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Capital Punishment, Winstanley on, <a href="#pg69">69</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carlyle, quoted, <a href="#pg38">38</a>, <a href="#pg165">165</a>, <a href="#pg166">166</a>, <a href="#pg168">168</a>, <a href="#pg170">170</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cartwright, Thos., quoted, <a href="#pg20">20</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chalmers, John, quoted, <a href="#pg63">63</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chillingworth, quoted, <a href="#pg21">21</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clarke Papers, quoted, <a href="#pg29">29</a>, <a href="#pg34">34</a>, <a href="#pg35">35</a>, <a href="#pg36">36</a>, <a href="#pg53">53</a>, <a href="#pg103">103</a>, <a href="#pg106">106</a>, <a href="#pg108">108</a>, <a href="#pg122">122</a>, <a href="#pg124">124</a>, <a href="#pg130">130</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clergy, Winstanley on, <a href="#pg62">62</a>, <a href="#pg167">167</a>, <a href="#pg189">189</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Coomber, Thos., quoted, <a href="#pg49">49</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Coster, Robert, <a href="#pg126">126</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Council of State, Letter to Fairfax, <a href="#pg35">35</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>to Mr. Pentlow, <a href="#pg159">159</a>.</li></ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Croese, Gerrard, quoted, <a href="#fn49_2_50">49 (note)</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cromwell, Oliver, quoted, <a href="#pg32">32</a>, <a href="#pg33">33</a>, <a href="#pg53">53</a>, <a href="#pg165">165</a>, <a href="#pg166">166</a>, <a href="#pg168">168</a>, <a href="#pg170">170</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Open Letter to, <a href="#pg164">164</a>.</li></ul></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Diggers, Information against, <a href="#pg34">34</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Fairfax&rsquo;s visit to, <a href="#pg39">39</a>;</li>
+ <li>Mirth, <a href="#pg129">129</a>;</li>
+ <li>Declaration of, <a href="#pg91">91</a>;</li>
+ <li>Sufferings of, <a href="#pg143">143</a>;</li>
+ <li>Travels, <a href="#pg150">150</a>.</li></ul></li>
+
+<li>Dispensations, Winstanley on, <a href="#pg53">53</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Cromwell on, <a href="#pg53">53</a>.</li></ul></li>
+
+<li>Doctrines, Family of Love, <a href="#pg16">16</a>, <a href="#pg18">18</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Presbyterian, <a href="#pg20">20</a>, <a href="#pg32">32</a>;</li>
+ <li>Model Army, <a href="#pg29">29</a>;</li>
+ <li>Independent, <a href="#pg31">31</a>, <a href="#pg32">32</a>;</li>
+ <li>Children of Light, <a href="#pg52">52</a>, <a href="#pg65">65</a>;</li>
+ <li>Anabaptists, <a href="#pg15">15</a>, <a href="#pg18">18</a>.</li></ul></li>
+
+<li>Dove, Patrick Edward, quoted, <a href="#pg228">228</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Earth, Right to use of, Winstanley on, <a href="#pg70">70</a>, <a href="#pg74">74</a>, <a href="#pg76">76</a>, <a href="#pg80">80</a>, <a href="#pg83">83</a>, <a href="#pg90">90</a>, <a href="#pg96">96</a>, <a href="#pg104">104</a>, <a href="#pg118">118</a>, <a href="#pg132">132</a>, <a href="#pg170">170</a>, <a href="#pg180">180</a>, <a href="#pg213">213</a>.</li>
+
+<li>England, Reformation in, <a href="#pg12">12</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Church of, <a href="#pg13">13</a>.</li></ul></li>
+
+<li>Erasmus, quoted, <a href="#pg15">15</a>, <a href="#pg18">18</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Everard, <a href="#pg36">36</a>, <a href="#pg38">38</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Fairfax, Lord, Council of State to, <a href="#pg35">35</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Gladman to, <a href="#pg39">39</a>;</li></ul></li>
+ <li>Visit to Diggers, <a href="#pg39">39</a>;</li>
+ <li>Winstanley&rsquo;s letters to, <a href="#pg100">100</a>, <a href="#pg124">124</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fall, the, Winstanley on, <a href="#pg44">44</a>, <a href="#pg53">53</a>, <a href="#pg70">70</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Family of Love, History of, <a href="#pg15">15</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Doctrines of, <a href="#pg16">16</a>, <a href="#pg18">18</a>.</li></ul></li>
+
+<li>Freedom, Winstanley on, <a href="#pg100">100</a>, <a href="#pg112">112</a>, <a href="#pg114">114</a>, <a href="#pg179">179</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fuller on Family of Love, <a href="#pg16">16</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Gardiner, quoted, <a href="#pg25">25</a>, <a href="#pg29">29</a>, <a href="#pg30">30</a>, <a href="#pg31">31</a>, <a href="#pg32">32</a>, <a href="#pg33">33</a>, <a href="#pg87">87</a>, <a href="#pg163">163</a>.</li>
+
+<li>George, Henry, quoted, <a href="#pg146">146</a>, <a href="#pg205">205</a>, <a href="#pg228">228</a>, <a href="#pg234">234</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Golden Rule, Winstanley on the, <a href="#pg39">39</a>, <a href="#pg56">56</a>, <a href="#pg80">80</a>, <a href="#pg81">81</a>, <a href="#pg86">86</a>, <a href="#pg141">141</a>, <a href="#pg154">154</a>, <a href="#pg171">171</a>, <a href="#pg190">190</a>, <a href="#pg217">217</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Government, Winstanley on, <a href="#pg68">68</a>, <a href="#pg101">101</a>, <a href="#pg177">177</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Definition of, <a href="#pg181">181</a>.</li></ul></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li><a name="pg258" id="pg258"></a><span class="pagenum">258</span>Hallam, quoted, <a href="#pg24">24</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hare&rsquo;s pamphlets, <a href="#pg38">38</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hooker, quoted, <a href="#pg21">21</a>, <a href="#pg23">23</a>.</li>
+
+<li>House of Commons, Apology of, <a href="#pg25">25</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Remonstrance of, <a href="#pg27">27</a>;</li>
+ <li>Officers&rsquo; Petition to, <a href="#pg86">86</a>;</li>
+ <li>Appeal to, <a href="#pg105">105</a>.</li></ul></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Independents, Origin of, <a href="#pg14">14</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Growth of, <a href="#pg33">33</a>;</li>
+ <li>Doctrines of, <a href="#pg31">31</a>.</li></ul></li>
+
+<li>Ireton, quoted, <a href="#fn106_1_85">106 (note)</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Israel&rsquo;s Commonwealth, Winstanley on, <a href="#pg82">82</a>, <a href="#pg93">93</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Kingly Power, Winstanley on, <a href="#pg34">34</a>, <a href="#pg100">100</a>, <a href="#pg130">130</a>, <a href="#pg168">168</a>, <a href="#pg177">177</a>, <a href="#pg202">202</a>, <a href="#pg220">220</a>.
+</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Land Question, Winstanley on the, <a href="#pg70">70</a>, <a href="#pg71">71</a>, <a href="#pg124">124</a>, <a href="#pg138">138</a>, <a href="#pg156">156</a>, <a href="#pg171">171</a>, <a href="#pg175">175</a>, <a href="#pg180">180</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Law, Winstanley on, <a href="#pg102">102</a>, <a href="#pg136">136</a>, <a href="#pg141">141</a>, <a href="#pg168">168</a>, <a href="#pg171">171</a>, <a href="#pg183">183</a>, <a href="#pg192">192</a>, <a href="#pg197">197</a>, <a href="#pg220">220</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Definition of, <a href="#pg222">222</a>.</li></ul></li>
+
+<li>Lawyers, Questions to, <a href="#pg102">102</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Power of, <a href="#pg168">168</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>.</li></ul></li>
+
+<li>Light, The Inward, <a href="#pg45">45</a>, <a href="#pg46">46</a>, <a href="#pg52">52</a>, <a href="#pg57">57</a>, <a href="#pg59">59</a>, <a href="#pg60">60</a>, <a href="#pg63">63</a>, <a href="#pg66">66</a>, <a href="#pg77">77</a>, <a href="#pg141">141</a>, <a href="#pg183">183</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Children of, <a href="#pg17">17</a>, <a href="#pg49">49</a>, <a href="#pg54">54</a>.</li></ul></li>
+
+<li>Locke, John, quoted, <a href="#pg74">74</a>, <a href="#pg179">179</a>, <a href="#fn197_2_116">197 (note)</a>, <a href="#fn200_1_117">200 (note)</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lockyer, Execution and burial of, <a href="#pg87">87</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Love, The Everlasting Law of, <a href="#pg217">217</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Family of, <a href="#pg15">15</a>, <a href="#pg16">16</a>, <a href="#pg18">18</a>.</li></ul></li>
+
+<li>Luther, quoted, <a href="#pg4">4</a>, <a href="#pg10">10</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Macaulay, quoted, <a href="#pg23">23</a>, <a href="#pg24">24</a>, <a href="#pg28">28</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mackay, Charles, quoted, <a href="#pg207">207</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mather, Cotton, on origin of Quakers, <a href="#pg48">48</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Melanchthon, quoted, <a href="#pg9">9</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ministry, Winstanley on the work of, <a href="#pg207">207</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Officers, Petition of, <a href="#pg86">86</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Winstanley on functions of, <a href="#pg184">184</a>.</li></ul></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Parliament, The Short and Long, <a href="#pg26">26</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Winstanley on work of, <a href="#pg194">194</a>, <a href="#pg197">197</a>.</li></ul></li>
+
+<li>Peasantry, Demands of German, <a href="#pg8">8</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Condition of English, <a href="#pg126">126</a>, <a href="#pg141">141</a>, <a href="#pg151">151</a>, <a href="#pg159">159</a>.</li></ul></li>
+
+<li>Penn, William, on Quaker Doctrines, <a href="#fn48_1_48">48 (note)</a>.</li>
+
+<li>People, Agreement of, <a href="#pg29">29</a>, <a href="#pg32">32</a>, <a href="#pg87">87</a>, <a href="#pg103">103</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Condition of, <a href="#pg126">126</a>, <a href="#pg141">141</a>, <a href="#pg151">151</a>, <a href="#pg159">159</a>.</li></ul></li>
+
+<li>Politics, Influence of religion on, <a href="#pg8">8</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Prayer, Winstanley on, <a href="#pg63">63</a>, <a href="#pg65">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Presbyterianism, Doctrines of, <a href="#pg20">20</a>, <a href="#pg32">32</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Quakers, Doctrines of, <a href="#fn47_2_47">47 (note)</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Coomber on origin of, <a href="#pg49">49</a>;</li>
+ <li>Cotton Mather on, <a href="#fn48_1_48">48 (note)</a>;</li>
+ <li>Thos. Bennet on, <a href="#fn49_1_49">49 (note)</a>;</li>
+ <li>a Declaration from, <a href="#fn54_2_56">54 (note)</a>;</li>
+ <li>Appeal of Army, <a href="#fn85_1_75">85 (note)</a>.</li></ul></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Rainborrow, Colonel, Views of, <a href="#pg103">103</a>, <a href="#pg108">108</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ranters, Winstanley on the, <a href="#pg147">147</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Reason, Luther on, <a href="#pg4">4</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Hooker on, <a href="#pg21">21</a>;</li>
+ <li>Winstanley on, <a href="#pg44">44</a>, <a href="#pg48">48</a>, <a href="#pg59">59</a>, <a href="#pg76">76</a>.</li></ul></li>
+
+<li>Reformation, influence of the, <a href="#pg3">3</a>, <a href="#pg10">10</a>, <a href="#pg12">12</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Religion, Dual nature of, <a href="#pg6">6</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Winstanley, Definition of, <a href="#pg139">139</a>.</li></ul></li>
+
+<li>Restoration, the, Legislation of, <a href="#pg110">110</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Resurrection, the, Winstanley on, <a href="#pg47">47</a>, <a href="#pg60">60</a>, <a href="#pg66">66</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Revolt, The Peasants&rsquo;, <a href="#pg6">6</a>, <a href="#APPENDIX_A" >Appendix A</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Riches, Winstanley on, <a href="#pg173">173</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rogers, Thorold, quoted, <a href="#pg7">7</a>, <a href="#pg89">89</a>, <a href="#pg109">109</a>, <a href="#pg110">110</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rowntree, J. S., quoted, <a href="#pg48">48</a>, <a href="#pg58">58</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ruskin, John, quoted, <a href="#fn61_1_61">61 (note)</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Sexby, Edward, Views of, <a href="#pg103">103</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Shelley, quoted, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href="#pg178">178</a>, <a href="#pg179">179</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Silence, the Law of, Winstanley on, <a href="#pg65">65</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Teachings, Human and divine, <a href="#pg52">52</a>, <a href="#pg57">57</a>, <a href="#pg59">59</a>, <a href="#pg209">209</a>, <a href="#pg211">211</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tithes, <a href="#pg85">85</a>, <a href="#pg167">167</a>, <a href="#pg173">173</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Toleration, <a href="#pg13">13</a>, <a href="#pg19">19</a>, <a href="#pg31">31</a>, <a href="#pg32">32</a>, <a href="#APPENDIX_B" >Appendix B</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Vagrants, Laws against, <a href="#pg109">109</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX"><li>Wellingborrow, declaration from, <a href="#pg150">150</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Whitelocke, quoted, <a href="#pg37">37</a>, <a href="#pg86">86</a>, <a href="#pg87">87</a>, <a href="#pg152">152</a>, <a href="#pg159">159</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wyclif, teachings of, <a href="#pg6">6</a>, <a href="#pg13">13</a>.</li>
+
+<li><a name="pg259" id="pg259"></a><span class="pagenum">259</span>Winstanley, on Baptism, <a href="#pg64">64</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>Capital Punishment, <a href="#pg69">69</a>;</li>
+ <li>Clergy, <a href="#pg62">62</a>, <a href="#pg167">167</a>, <a href="#pg189">189</a>;</li>
+ <li>Dispensations, <a href="#pg53">53</a>;</li>
+ <li>Earth, rights to use of, <a href="#pg70">70</a>, <a href="#pg74">74</a>, <a href="#pg76">76</a>, <a href="#pg80">80</a>, <a href="#pg83">83</a>, <a href="#pg90">90</a>, <a href="#pg96">96</a>, <a href="#pg104">104</a>, <a href="#pg118">118</a>, <a href="#pg132">132</a>, <a href="#pg170">170</a>, <a href="#pg180">180</a>, <a href="#pg213">213</a>;</li>
+ <li>Ecclesiastical Power, <a href="#pg55">55</a>;</li>
+ <li>Education, <a href="#pg214">214</a>;</li>
+ <li>Fall, the, <a href="#pg44">44</a>, <a href="#pg53">53</a>, <a href="#pg70">70</a>;</li>
+ <li>Freedom, <a href="#pg100">100</a>, <a href="#pg112">112</a>, <a href="#pg114">114</a>, <a href="#pg179">179</a>;</li>
+ <li>Golden Rule, the, <a href="#pg39">39</a>, <a href="#pg56">56</a>, <a href="#pg80">80</a>, <a href="#pg81">81</a>, <a href="#pg86">86</a>, <a href="#pg141">141</a>, <a href="#pg154">154</a>, <a href="#pg171">171</a>, <a href="#pg190">190</a>, <a href="#pg217">217</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>;</li>
+ <li>Government, <a href="#pg68">68</a>, <a href="#pg101">101</a>, <a href="#pg177">177</a>, <a href="#pg181">181</a>;</li>
+ <li>Israel&rsquo;s Commonwealth, <a href="#pg82">82</a>, <a href="#pg93">93</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>;</li>
+ <li>Kingdom of Heaven, <a href="#pg47">47</a>, <a href="#pg48">48</a>, <a href="#pg61">61</a>, <a href="#pg66">66</a>, <a href="#pg211">211</a>;</li>
+ <li>Kingly Power, <a href="#pg34">34</a>, <a href="#pg100">100</a>, <a href="#pg133">133</a>, <a href="#pg168">168</a>, <a href="#pg177">177</a>, <a href="#pg202">202</a>, <a href="#pg220">220</a>;</li>
+ <li>Land Question, <a href="#pg70">70</a>, <a href="#pg71">71</a>, <a href="#pg124">124</a>, <a href="#pg138">138</a>, <a href="#pg156">156</a>, <a href="#pg171">171</a>, <a href="#pg175">175</a>, <a href="#pg180">180</a>;</li>
+ <li>Law, <a href="#pg102">102</a>, <a href="#pg136">136</a>, <a href="#pg141">141</a>, <a href="#pg168">168</a>, <a href="#pg171">171</a>, <a href="#pg183">183</a>, <a href="#pg192">192</a>, <a href="#pg197">197</a>, <a href="#pg220">220</a>, <a href="#pg222">222</a>;</li>
+ <li>Lawyers, questions to, <a href="#pg102">102</a>;</li>
+ <li> power of, <a href="#pg168">168</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>;</li>
+ <li>Light, the Inward, <a href="#pg45">45</a>, <a href="#pg46">46</a>, <a href="#pg52">52</a>, <a href="#pg57">57</a>, <a href="#pg60">60</a>, <a href="#pg63">63</a>, <a href="#pg66">66</a>, <a href="#pg77">77</a>, <a href="#pg141">141</a>, <a href="#pg183">183</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>;</li>
+ <li>Love, the Law of, <a href="#pg217">217</a>;</li>
+ <li>Ministry, work of a, <a href="#pg207">207</a>;</li>
+ <li>Officers, work of, <a href="#pg184">184</a>;</li>
+ <li>Parliament, work of, <a href="#pg194">194</a>, <a href="#pg197">197</a>;</li>
+ <li>Prayer, <a href="#pg63">63</a>, <a href="#pg65">65</a>;</li>
+ <li>Reason, <a href="#pg44">44</a>, <a href="#pg48">48</a>, <a href="#pg59">59</a>, <a href="#pg76">76</a>;</li>
+ <li>Religion, <a href="#pg137">137</a>;</li>
+ <li>Resurrection, the, <a href="#pg47">47</a>, <a href="#pg60">60</a>, <a href="#pg66">66</a>;</li>
+ <li>Riches, <a href="#pg173">173</a>;</li>
+ <li>Silence, the Law of, <a href="#pg65">65</a>;</li>
+ <li>Teachings, human and divine, <a href="#pg52">52</a>, <a href="#pg57">57</a>, <a href="#pg59">59</a>, <a href="#pg209">209</a>, <a href="#pg211">211</a>;</li>
+ <li>Tithes, <a href="#pg167">167</a>, <a href="#pg173">173</a>;</li>
+ <li>Titles of Honour, <a href="#pg173">173</a>.</li></ul></li>
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="biggap" />
+
+
+<p class="center little">
+<i>Printed by</i><br />
+
+<span class="smcap">Morrison &amp; Gibb Limited</span><br />
+
+<i>Edinburgh</i>
+</p>
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center bigger biggap underline"><a name="BY_THE_SAME_AUTHOR" id="BY_THE_SAME_AUTHOR"></a>BY THE SAME AUTHOR.</p>
+
+<p class="center sans"><span class="smcap">Latest Addition to</span></p>
+
+<p class="center sans big">THE SOCIAL SCIENCE SERIES.</p>
+
+<hr class="narrow" />
+
+<p class="center biggest nogapbelow"><b>TOWARD THE LIGHT:</b></p>
+
+<p class="center nogap"><i>ELEMENTARY STUDIES IN ETHICS AND
+ECONOMICS.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center littler">BY</p>
+
+<p class="center big nogapbelow"><b>LEWIS H. BERENS</b>,</p>
+
+<p class="center little nogap">Co-Author &ldquo;The Story of My Dictatorship,&rdquo; &ldquo;Government by the
+People,&rdquo; etc.</p>
+
+<hr class="nogapbelow narrow" />
+
+<p class="center"><i><b>Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 2s. 6d.</b></i></p>
+
+<hr class="nogap narrow" />
+
+<div class="center">
+<table summary="Table of contents for 'Toward the Light'" class="little">
+ <tr><td colspan="4" class="center">
+CONTENTS.</td></tr>
+
+ <tr><td class="toright">I.</td><td>Preliminary Remarks.</td>
+ <td class="toright">XII.</td><td>The Institution of Property.</td></tr>
+
+ <tr><td class="toright">II.</td><td>Why do men work?</td>
+ <td class="toright">XIII.</td><td>Of Wages.</td></tr>
+
+ <tr><td class="toright">III.</td><td>Co-operation and Division of Labour.</td>
+ <td class="toright">XIV.</td><td>Of Rent.</td></tr>
+
+ <tr><td class="toright">IV.</td><td>Productive and Unproductive Labour.</td>
+ <td class="toright">XV.</td><td>Principles of Taxation.</td></tr>
+
+ <tr><td class="toright">V.</td><td>The Same continued.</td>
+ <td class="toright">XVI.</td><td>Of Interest.</td></tr>
+
+ <tr><td class="toright">VI.</td><td>Elements of Production.</td>
+ <td class="toright">XVII.</td><td>The Same continued.</td></tr>
+
+ <tr><td class="toright">VII.</td><td>The Auxiliaries of Production.</td>
+<td class="toright">XVIII.</td><td>Of Money.</td></tr>
+
+ <tr><td class="toright">VIII.</td><td>Barter, Trade, and Commerce.</td>
+ <td class="toright">XIX.</td><td>Of Government.</td></tr>
+
+ <tr><td class="toright">IX.</td><td>Conflicting Tendencies.</td>
+ <td class="toright">XX.</td><td>The Way Out.</td></tr>
+
+ <tr><td class="toright">X.</td><td>Ethics and Economics.</td>
+ <td class="toright">XXI.</td><td>Social Evolution.</td></tr>
+
+ <tr><td class="toright">XI.</td><td>Social Ethics.</td>
+ <td class="toright">XXII.</td><td>Democracy.</td></tr>
+
+ </table>
+ </div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center big"><b>PRESS NOTICES.</b></p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot little" style="margin-left: 0; margin-right: 0;">
+<p>&ldquo;This is an admirable book that may be read by everybody with
+advantage.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Sunday Special.</i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It is clearly the thinking of a man who has personally grappled
+with the grave questions of his time, and who sees the light beyond,
+to which he would lead all men.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Echo</i> (London).</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The book forms an appropriate addition to the Social Science
+Series, in which it appears.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Scotsman.</i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;A work of ripe thought, full of interest to all to whom the
+question of the people of England is vital.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>New Age</i> (London).</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Earnest and instructive.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Literary Guide.</i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Berens treats of ethics and economics from the standpoint
+of one who wishes to see the evolution of a social system on the
+basis of the golden rule of righteousness, the law of equal freedom.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Nottingham
+Guardian.</i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Toward the Light&rsquo; is a volume for all students of present day
+politics and economics.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Co-operative News.</i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;A volume which will be welcomed as an honest and tolerant
+attempt to humanise economics, and to point the way to a freer,
+worthier life.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Young Oxford.</i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;A book to be read by all enthusiastic social reformers; in fact,
+they cannot afford to be without it.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Echo</i> (London).</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Berens&rsquo; book is one which, by reason of its sincerity and
+its fair-minded discussion of a great problem, we should read, mark,
+learn, and inwardly digest.... It seems to me the ablest and
+most effective work in support of the Taxation of Land Values that
+has appeared since the death of Henry George.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Public</i> (Chicago,
+U.S.A.).</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Those who are uncertain about various knotty points in Political
+Economy will find their perplexities stated and explained, in simple
+and lucid illustration and argument.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Single Tax Review</i> (New
+York, U.S.A.)</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="nogapbelow narrow" />
+
+<p class="center"><i><b>To be had of all Booksellers.</b></i></p>
+
+<hr class="nogap narrow" />
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center">SWAN SONNENSCHEIN &amp; CO. LTD., LONDON.<br />
+CHARLES SCRIBNER&rsquo;S SONS, NEW YORK.</p>
+
+
+<hr />
+<p class="center bigger"><b>
+BOOKS EVERY STUDENT OF THE
+LAND QUESTION SHOULD READ.</b></p>
+
+<hr class="narrow" />
+
+<p><b>&ldquo;SIX CENTURIES OF WORK AND WAGES.&rdquo;</b></p>
+
+<p class="blurb">The History of English Labour. By <span class="smcap">James E. Thorold
+Rogers</span>. Sixth Edition. (Published, 10s. 6d.) 5s. per
+copy, post free.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>&ldquo;THE LAND AND THE COMMUNITY.&rdquo;</b></p>
+
+<p class="blurb">By the Rev. <span class="smcap">S. W. Thackeray</span>, M.A., LL.D. With Preface
+by <span class="smcap">Henry George</span>. Cloth, 3s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<hr class="narrow" />
+
+<p><b>&ldquo;PROGRESS AND POVERTY.&rdquo;</b></p>
+
+<p class="blurb">By <span class="smcap">Henry George</span>. An Enquiry into the Cause of Industrial
+Depressions, and of Increase of Want with Increase of Wealth.
+The Remedy. 8vo, cloth, 1s. 6d.; paper covers, 1s.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>&ldquo;SOCIAL PROBLEMS.&rdquo;</b></p>
+
+<p class="blurb">By the Same. Cloth, 1s. 6d.; paper covers, 1s.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>&ldquo;PROTECTION OR FREE TRADE.&rdquo;</b></p>
+
+<p class="blurb">An Examination of the Tariff Question, with special regard
+to the Interests of Labour. By the Same. Cloth, 1s. 6d.
+The League&rsquo;s Special Edition, paper covers, 6d.; post free, 9d.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>&ldquo;THE CONDITION OF LABOUR.&rdquo;</b></p>
+
+<p class="blurb">Reply to the Pope&rsquo;s Encyclical on Labour. By the Same.
+New Edition. Cloth, 1s.; paper covers, 6d.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>&ldquo;A PERPLEXED PHILOSOPHER.&rdquo;</b></p>
+
+<p class="blurb">Being an Examination of Mr. <span class="smcap">Herbert Spencer&rsquo;s</span> various
+utterances on the Land Question. By the Same. Cloth,
+1s. 6d.; paper covers, 1s.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<b>The Five above Books,</b> by <span class="smcap">Henry George.</span> In red cloth,
+post free, 5s. 6d.]</p>
+
+
+
+
+<p><b>THE SCIENCE OF POLITICAL ECONOMY.</b></p>
+
+<p class="blurb">By <span class="smcap">Henry George</span>. Library Edition, 6s.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>&ldquo;LIFE OF HENRY GEORGE.&rdquo;</b></p>
+
+<p class="blurb">By his <span class="smcap">Son</span>. (Published, 7s. 6d.) 5s. 8d.; post free, 6s.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>THE MENACE OF PRIVILEGE.</b></p>
+
+<p class="blurb">By <span class="smcap">Henry George</span>, Jun. 6s.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>&ldquo;THE LAND QUESTION: What it is, and how only
+it can be settled.&rdquo;</b></p>
+<p class="blurb">By <span class="smcap">Henry George</span>. Post free, 4d.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>&ldquo;THE PEER AND THE PROPHET.&rdquo;</b> </p>
+
+<p class="blurb">Articles by the
+<span class="smcap">Duke of Argyll</span> and <span class="smcap">Henry George</span>. 6d.; post free, 7d.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>&ldquo;TOWARD THE LIGHT.&rdquo;</b></p>
+
+<p class="blurb">Elementary Studies in Ethics and Economics. By <span class="smcap">Lewis H.
+Berens</span>. Post free, 2s. 6d.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>&ldquo;FIELDS, FACTORIES, AND WORKSHOPS.&rdquo;</b></p>
+
+<p class="blurb">By <span class="smcap">Prince Kropotkin</span>. New and Cheaper Edition. Cloth,
+1s.; paper covers, 6d.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>&ldquo;THE STORY OF MY DICTATORSHIP: A <i>Vade Mecum</i>
+on the Land Question.&rdquo;</b> </p>
+
+<p class="blurb">Original Edition. Post free,
+2s. 6d.</p>
+
+
+<p><b>&ldquo;A GREAT INIQUITY.&rdquo;</b></p>
+
+<p class="blurb">By <span class="smcap">Leo Tolstoy</span>. With Portrait. Green Cover, 4d.; post
+free, 5d.</p>
+
+<hr class="narrow nogapbelow" />
+
+<p class="center"><i><b>Complete Set of Pamphlets on the Question, post free, 2s.</b></i></p>
+
+<hr class="narrow nogap" />
+
+
+<p class="little"><span class="smcap">To be had of</span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">ENGLISH LEAGUE FOR THE TAXATION OF LAND VALUES,<br />
+<span class="smcap">376 and 377 Strand, London, W.C.</span></p>
+
+<hr class="narrow" />
+
+<p class="center little" style="margin-bottom: 5em;"><b>(Monthly Organ, &ldquo;LAND VALUES,&rdquo; posted to every Member annually
+subscribing 2s. 6d. or more to the League Funds.)</b></p>
+
+<hr class="gapbelow" />
+
+<div class="transnote">
+<p> <a name="corrections" id="corrections"></a>The following corrections were made:</p>
+
+<ol>
+<li><a name="corr1" id="corr1"></a>Original reads &lsquo;bleibt den Nachwelt&rsquo;; changed to &lsquo;bleibt <a href="#cm4" >der</a> Nachwelt&rsquo;.</li>
+
+<li><a name="corr2" id="corr2"></a>Footnote marker missing in original. <a href="#fn21_2_12" >Footnote</a> appears on page 21,
+but refers to a <a href="#cm2" >quotation</a> on page 22.</li>
+
+<li><a name="corr3" id="corr3"></a>Original has no opening double quotation mark before &lsquo;<i><a href="#cm3" >Englands</a> Proper
+and Only Way</i>&rsquo;.</li>
+
+<li><a name="corr4" id="corr4"></a>Original reads &lsquo;will upraid us&rsquo;; changed to &lsquo;will <a href="#cm4" >upbraid</a> us&rsquo;.</li>
+
+<li><a name="corr5" id="corr5"></a>Original has closing double quotation mark after &lsquo;<i>Work together; Eat
+bread <a href="#cm5" >together.</a></i>&rsquo;</li>
+
+<li><a name="corr6" id="corr6"></a>Original has an opening double quotation mark before &lsquo;<a href="#cm6" >Thou</a> City of London&rsquo;.</li>
+
+<li><a name="corr7" id="corr7"></a>Original reads &lsquo;georgeous throne&rsquo;; changed to &lsquo;<a href="#cm7" >gorgeous</a> throne&rsquo;.</li>
+
+<li><a name="corr8" id="corr8"></a>Original reads &lsquo;Its perusual convinced us&rsquo;; changed to &lsquo;Its <a href="#cm8" >perusal</a> convinced us&rsquo;.</li>
+
+<li><a name="corr9" id="corr9"></a>Original has no opening double quotation mark before &lsquo;<i><a href="#cm9" >Secondly</a></i>&rsquo;.</li>
+
+<li><a name="corr10" id="corr10"></a>Original reads &lsquo;all that have lent asssistance&rsquo;; changed to &lsquo;all that have lent <a href="#cm10" >assistance</a>&rsquo;.</li>
+
+<li><a name="corr11" id="corr11"></a>Original has closing double quotation mark at the end of this <a href="#cm11" >paragraph</a>.</li>
+
+<li><a name="corr12" id="corr12"></a>Original has no opening double quotation mark before &lsquo;<i><a href="#cm12" >Secondly</a></i>&rsquo;.</li>
+</ol>
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DIGGER MOVEMENT IN THE DAYS OF THE COMMONWEALTH***</p>
+<p>******* This file should be named 17480-h.txt or 17480-h.zip *******</p>
+<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br />
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/7/4/8/17480">http://www.gutenberg.org/1/7/4/8/17480</a></p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Digger Movement in the Days of the
+Commonwealth, by Lewis H. Berens
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Digger Movement in the Days of the Commonwealth
+ As Revealed in the Writings of Gerrard Winstanley, the Digger, Mystic and Rationalist, Communist and Social Reformer
+
+
+Author: Lewis H. Berens
+
+
+
+Release Date: January 8, 2006 [eBook #17480]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DIGGER MOVEMENT IN THE DAYS OF
+THE COMMONWEALTH***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Suzanne Lybarger, Louise Pryor, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/) from
+page images generously made available by the Internet Archive/Canadian
+Libraries (http://www.archive.org/details/toronto)
+
+
+
+Note: Images of the original pages are available through the
+ Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries. See
+ http://www.archive.org/details/diggermovement00bereuoft
+
+Transcriber's notes:
+
+ All material added by the transcriber is surrounded by
+ braces {}.
+
+ The original has a number of inconsistent spellings and
+ punctuation. A few corrections have been made for obvious
+ typographical errors; they have been noted individually.
+ A list of specific items will be found at the end of the
+ file.
+
+ Text in italics in the original is shown between
+ _underlines_, and text in bold between =equal signs=.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DIGGER MOVEMENT IN THE DAYS OF THE COMMONWEALTH
+
+As Revealed in the Writings of Gerrard Winstanley, the Digger
+_Mystic and Rationalist, Communist and Social Reformer_
+
+by
+
+LEWIS H. BERENS
+Author of "Towards the Light"
+Etc. Etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ "Was glaenzt ist fuer den Augenblick geboren;
+ Das Echte bleibt der{1} Nachwelt unverloren."
+ GOETHE.
+
+
+
+
+London
+Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent, & Co. Ltd.
+1906
+
+
+
+
+RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED
+
+TO
+
+THE SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
+(THE CHILDREN OF LIGHT)
+
+TO WHOM THE WORLD OWES MORE THAN IT YET RECOGNISES
+AND
+WHOSE FUNDAMENTAL DOCTRINES
+THE AUTHOR
+HAS LEARNED TO LOVE AND ADMIRE
+WHILST WRITING THIS BOOK
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAP. PAGE
+
+ I. THE REFORMATION IN GERMANY 1
+
+ II. THE REFORMATION IN ENGLAND 12
+
+ III. THE GREAT CIVIL WAR 23
+
+ IV. THE DIGGERS 34
+
+ V. GERRARD WINSTANLEY 41
+
+ VI. WINSTANLEY'S EXPOSITION OF THE QUAKER DOCTRINES 52
+
+ VII. THE NEW LAW OF RIGHTEOUSNESS 68
+
+VIII. LIGHT SHINING IN BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 79
+
+ IX. THE DIGGERS' MANIFESTOES 90
+
+ X. A LETTER TO LORD FAIRFAX, ETC. 100
+
+ XI. A WATCHWORD TO THE CITY OF LONDON, ETC. 112
+
+ XII. A NEW YEAR'S GIFT FOR THE PARLIAMENT AND ARMY 132
+
+XIII. A VINDICATION; A DECLARATION; AND AN APPEAL 146
+
+ XIV. GERRARD WINSTANLEY'S UTOPIA: THE LAW OF FREEDOM 162
+
+ XV. THE SAME CONTINUED 179
+
+ XVI. THE SAME CONTINUED 206
+
+XVII. CONCLUDING REMARKS 228
+
+ APPENDIX A. THE TWELVE ARTICLES OF THE GERMAN
+ PEASANTRY, 1525 235
+
+ " B. CROMWELL ON TOLERATION 241
+
+ " C. WINSTANLEY'S LAWS FOR A FREE COMMONWEALTH 244
+
+ BIBLIOGRAPHY 255
+
+ INDEX 257
+
+
+
+
+THE DIGGER MOVEMENT
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE REFORMATION IN GERMANY
+
+ "Whatever the prejudices of some may suggest, it will be admitted
+ by all unbiassed judges, that the Protestant Reformation was
+ neither more nor less than an open rebellion. Indeed, the mere
+ mention of private judgment, on which it was avowedly based, is
+ enough to substantiate this fact. To establish the right of private
+ judgment, was to appeal from the Church to individuals; it was to
+ increase the play of each man's intellect; it was to test the
+ opinion of the priesthood by the opinions of laymen; it was, in
+ fact, a rising of the scholars against their teachers, of the ruled
+ against their rulers."--BUCKLE.
+
+
+What is known in history as the Reformation is one of those monuments in
+the history of the development of the human mind betokening its entry
+into new territory. Fundamental conceptions and beliefs, cosmological,
+physical, ethical or political, once firmly established, change but
+slowly; the universal tendency is tenaciously to cling to them despite
+all evidence to the contrary. Still men's views do change with their
+intellectual development, as newly discovered facts and newly accepted
+ideas come into conflict with old opinions, and force them to reconsider
+the evidence on which these latter were based. Prior to the Reformation,
+many such conceptions and beliefs, at one time holding undisputed
+dominion over the human mind, had been called into question, their
+authority challenged, undermined, and weakened, and they had commenced
+to yield pride of place to others more in accordance with increased
+knowledge of nature and of life. The revival of classical learning,
+geographical and astronomical discoveries, and more especially, perhaps,
+the invention and rapid spread of the art of printing, had all conspired
+to give an unparalleled impetus to intellectual development,--and the
+Reformation was, in truth, the outward manifestation in the religious
+world of this development.
+
+Prior to the Reformation, wherever a man might turn his steps in Western
+Europe, he found himself confronted with what was proudly termed the
+Universal Church: one hierarchy, one faith, one form of worship, in
+which the officiating priests were assumed to be the indispensable
+mediators between God and man, everywhere confronted him. Religion was
+then much more intimately blended with the life of man than it is now;
+and on all matters of religion, Western Europe seemed to present a
+united front and to be impervious to change. Appearances, however, are
+proverbially deceitful. Beneath this apparent uniformity and general
+conformity, there lurked countless forces, spiritual, intellectual,
+social and political, making for change. Dissent and dissatisfaction,
+with myriads of tiny teeth, had undermined and weakened the stately
+columns that upheld the imposing structure of the Universal Church. Even
+within the Church itself there was seething inquietude, and thousands of
+its purest souls longed, prayed and struggled for its practical
+amendment. To emancipate the Church from the clutches of the autocracy
+of Rome; to remove the abuses that, in the course of centuries, had
+grown round and sullied its primitive purity; to lighten the fiscal
+oppression of the Papacy and to check the rapacity of the Cardinals; to
+reform and discipline the priesthood; even to modify certain doctrines
+and dogmas: such were the aspirations of some of the most devout,
+eminent and cultured sons of the Church. Outside its communion there
+were many forms of heresy, which, though generally regarded as
+disreputable and often treated as criminal, the apparently all-powerful
+Church had never been able entirely to eradicate. And, at first at
+least, both these forces favoured the efforts of the early Lutheran
+Reformers.
+
+The influence of the Reformation, of "the New Learning," on
+theological, ethical, social and political thought can scarcely be
+overestimated. Under the supremacy of the Church of Rome, men, educated
+and uneducated, had come to rely almost entirely on authority and
+precedent, and had lost the habit of self-reliance, of unswerving
+dependence on the dictates of reason, which was one of the
+distinguishing characteristics of the classical philosophers and their
+disciples, as it is of the modern scientific school of thought. In
+short, concerning matters spiritual and temporal, Faith had usurped the
+function of Reason. Hence any innovations, whatever their abstract
+merit, were regarded not only with justifiable suspicion and caution,
+but as entirely unworthy of consideration, unless, of course, they could
+be shown to be in accordance with accepted traditions and doctrines, or
+had received the sanction of the Church. But even the Church itself was
+popularly regarded as bound by tradition and precedent; and when the
+Papacy sanctioned any departure from established custom, it was
+understood to do so in its capacity of infallible expounder of
+unalterable doctrines.
+
+The habits of centuries still enthralled the early Reformers.
+Circumstances compelled them to attack some of the doctrines and customs
+of their Mother Church, of which at first they were inclined to regard
+themselves as dutiful though sorrowful sons. The logic of facts,
+however, soon forced them outside the Church. Then, but then only, for
+the authority of the Church, they substituted the authority of the
+Scriptures. To apply to them Luther's own words, "they had saved others,
+themselves they could not save." In their eyes Reason and Faith were
+still mortal enemies,--as unfortunately they are to this day in the eyes
+of a steadily diminishing number of their followers,--and they did not
+hesitate to demand the sacrifice of reason when it conflicted, or
+appeared to conflict, with the demands of faith: and that, indeed, as
+"the all-acceptablest sacrifice and service that can be offered to God."
+In a sermon in 1546, the last he delivered at Wittenberg, Luther gave
+vent, in language that even one of his modern admirers finds too gross
+for quotation, to his bitter hatred and contempt for reason, at all
+events when it conflicted with his own interpretation of the Scriptures,
+or with any of the fundamental dogmas and doctrines he had himself
+formulated or accepted. While even in milder moments he did not hesitate
+to teach that[4:1]--
+
+ "It is a quality of faith that it wrings the neck of reason and
+ strangles the beast, which else the whole world, with all
+ creatures, could not strangle. But how? It holds to God's word:
+ lets it be right and true, no matter how foolish and impossible it
+ sounds. So did Abraham take his reason captive and slay it....
+ There is no doubt faith and reason mightily fell out in Abraham's
+ heart, yet at last did faith get the better, and overcame and
+ strangled reason, the all-cruelest and most fatal enemy to God. So,
+ too, do all other faithful men who enter with Abraham the gloom and
+ hidden darkness of faith; they strangle reason ... and thereby
+ offer to God the all-acceptablest sacrifice and service that can
+ ever be brought to Him."
+
+However, whatever may have been the personal desires and tendencies of
+those associated with its earlier manifestations, the forces of which
+the Reformation was the outcome were not to be controlled by them. The
+spirit of which they were the product was not to be controlled by any
+fetters they could forge. The Reformation emancipated the intellect of
+Europe from the yoke of tradition and blind obedience to authority; it
+let loose the illuming flood of thought which had been accumulating
+behind the more rigid barriers of the Church, and swept away as things
+of straw the feebler barriers the early Reformers would have erected to
+confine the thoughts of future generations. The futility of all such
+efforts we can gauge, they could not. Blind obedience to authority, in
+matters spiritual and temporal, had been the watchword and animating
+principle of the power against which they had rebelled; liberty and
+reason were the watchwords and animating principles of the movement of
+which they, owing to their rebellion, had temporarily become the
+recognised leaders. The right of private judgement, in other words, the
+supremacy of reason as sole judge and arbiter of all matters, spiritual
+as well as secular, was the essential element of the movement of which
+the Reformation was the outcome; how, then, could they, the children of
+this movement, hope to change its course?
+
+When considering the forces and circumstances that made the Reformation
+possible, when so many equally earnest previous attempts in the same
+direction had failed, we should not lose sight of the favourable
+political situation. Under cover of its religious authority, by means of
+its unrivalled organisation, as well as by its temporal control of large
+areas of the richest and most fertile land in Europe, the Church of Rome
+annually drained into Italy a large part of the surplus wealth of every
+country that recognised its spiritual authority. Such countries were
+impoverished to support not only the resident but an absentee
+priesthood, and to enable the Princes of the Church to maintain a more
+than princely state at Rome. This was a standing grievance even in the
+eyes of many sincerely devout Churchmen, and one which was prone to make
+statesmen and politicians look with a favourable eye on any movement
+which promised to lessen or to abolish it. Germany in this respect had
+special reasons for discontent; as has been well said, "It was the milch
+cow of the Papacy, which at once despised and drained it dry." And, as
+everybody knows, it was in Germany that the standard of revolt against
+the authority of Rome was first successfully raised. The political
+constitution of that country was also peculiarly favourable to the
+protection of the Reformation and of the persons of the early Reformers.
+Although owing a nominal allegiance to the Emperor, or rather to the
+will of the Diet which met annually under the presidency of the Emperor,
+the head of each of the little States into which Germany was divided
+claimed to be independent lord of the territory over which he ruled.
+Hence, when the Ernestine line of Saxon princes took the Reformation and
+the early Reformers under their protection, there was no power ready
+and willing to compel them to relinquish their design. The democratic
+independence of the Free Cities also made them fitting strongholds of
+the new teachings.
+
+Students of history would do well never to lose sight of the fact that
+every religion which attempts to bind or to guide the reason, to direct
+the lives and to determine the conscience of mankind, necessarily has an
+ethical as well as a theological, a social as well as an individual
+side. It concerns itself, not only with the relation of the individual
+to God or the gods, but also with the relations and duties of man to
+man. Hence the close relation and inter-relation of religion and
+politics. Politics is the art or act of regulating the social relations
+of mankind, of determining social or civic rights and duties. It is
+neither more nor less than the practical application of accepted
+abstract ethical, or religious, principles in the domain of social life.
+Hence we cannot be surprised that almost every wide-spread religious
+revival, every renewed application of reason to religion, which almost
+necessarily gives prominence to its ethical or social side, has been
+followed by an uprising of the masses against what they had come to
+regard as the irreligious tyranny and oppression of the ruling
+privileged classes. The teachings of Wyclif in England, in the
+fourteenth century, were followed by the insurrection associated with
+the name of Wat Tyler; the teachings of Luther and his associates, in
+the sixteenth century, by the Peasants' Revolt.
+
+To the economic causes of the unrest of the peasantry and labouring
+classes during the fifteenth and sixteenth century, we can refer only
+very briefly. At the time of the great migration of the fifth century,
+the free barbarian nations were organised on a tribal or village basis.
+By the end of the tenth century, however, what is known as the Feudal
+System had been established all over Europe. "No land without a lord" was
+the underlying principle of the whole Feudal System. Either by conquest
+or usurpation, or by more or less compulsory voluntary agreement, even
+the free primitive communities (_die Markgenossenshaften_) of the
+Teutonic races had been brought under the dominion of the lords,
+spiritual or temporal, claiming suzerainty over the territory in which
+they were situated. The claims of the Feudal Magnates seem ever to have
+been somewhat vague and arbitrary. At first they were comparatively
+light, and may well have been regarded and excused as a return for
+services rendered. The general tendency, however, was for the individual
+power of the lords to extend itself at the cost and to the detriment of
+the rural communities, and for their claims steadily to increase and to
+become more burdensome. During the fourteenth century many causes had
+combined to improve the condition of the industrial classes; and during
+the end of the fourteenth and the early part of the fifteenth century the
+condition of the peasantry and artisans of Northern Europe was better
+than it had ever been before or has ever been since: wages were
+comparatively high, employment plentiful, food and other necessaries of
+life both abundant and cheap.[7:1] At the beginning of the sixteenth
+century, however, the prices of the necessaries of life had risen
+enormously, and there had been no corresponding increase in the earnings
+of the industrial classes. Moreover, the Feudal Magnates had commenced to
+exercise their oppressive power in a hitherto unparalleled manner: old
+rights of pasture, of gathering wood and cutting timber, of hunting and
+fishing, and so on, had been greatly curtailed, in many cases entirely
+abolished, tithes and other manorial dues had been doubled and trebled,
+and many new and onerous burdens, some of them entirely opposed to
+ancient use and wont, had been imposed. In short, the peasantry and
+labouring classes generally were oppressed and impoverished in countless
+different ways.
+
+In Germany, as indeed in most other parts of Feudal Europe, the
+peasantry of the period were of three different kinds. Serfs
+(_Leibeigener_), who were little better than slaves, and who were bought
+and sold with the land they cultivated; villeins (_Hoeriger_), whose
+services were assumed to be fixed and limited; and the free peasant
+(_die Freier_), whose counterpart in England was the mediaeval
+copyholder, who either held his land from some feudal lord, to whom he
+paid a quit-rent in kind or in money, or who paid such a rent for
+permission to retain his holding in the rural community under the
+protection of the lord. To appreciate the state of mind of such folk in
+the times of which we are writing, we should remember that "the good old
+times" of the fifteenth century were still green in their minds, from
+which, indeed, the memory of ancient freedom and primitive communism,
+though little more than a tradition, had never been entirely banished:
+which sufficiently accounts, not only for their impatience of their new
+burdens, but also for their tendency to regard all feudal dues as direct
+infringements of their ancient rights and privileges.
+
+"We will that you free us for ever, us and our lands; and that we be
+never named and held as serfs!" was the demand of the revolting English
+peasant in 1381; and the same words practically summarise the demands of
+the German peasantry in 1525. The famous Twelve Articles in which they
+summarised their wrongs and formulated their demands, forcibly
+illustrate the direct influence of the prevailing religious revival on
+the current social and political thought.[8:1] Briefly, they demanded
+that the gospel should be preached to them pure and undefiled by any
+mere man-made additions. That the rural communities, not the Feudal
+Magnates, should have the power to choose and to dismiss their
+ministers. That the tithes should be regulated in accordance with
+scriptural injunctions, and devoted to the maintenance of ministers and
+to the relief of the poor and distressed, "as we are commanded in the
+Holy Scriptures." That serfdom should be abolished, "since Christ
+redeemed us all with His precious blood, the shepherd as well as the
+noble, the lowest as well as the highest, none being excepted." That the
+claims of the rich to the game, to the fish in the running waters, to
+the woods and forests and other lands, once the common property of the
+community, should be investigated, and their ancient rights restored to
+them, where they had been purchased, with adequate compensation, but
+without compensation where they had been usurped. That arbitrary
+compulsory service should cease, and the use and enjoyment of their
+lands be granted to them in accordance with ancient customs and the
+agreements between lords and peasants. That arbitrary punishments should
+be abolished, as also certain new and oppressive customs. And, finally,
+they desired that all their demands should be tested by Scripture, and
+such as cannot stand this test to be summarily rejected.
+
+That the demands of the peasants, as formulated in the Twelve Articles,
+were reasonable, just and moderate, few to-day would care to deny. That
+they appealed to such of their religious teachers as had some regard for
+the material, as well as for the spiritual, well-being of their fellows,
+may safely be inferred from the leading position taken by some of these
+both prior to and during the uprising. Nor can there be any doubt but
+that at first the peasants looked to Wittenberg for aid, support and
+guidance. Those who had proclaimed the Bible as the sole authority,
+must, they thought, unreservedly support every movement to give
+practical effect to its teachings. Those who had revolted against the
+abuses of the spiritual powers at Rome, must, they thought, sympathise
+with their revolt against far worse abuses at home. They were bitterly
+to be disappointed. From Luther and the band of scholastic Reformers
+that had gathered round him, they were to receive neither aid, guidance
+nor sympathy. The learned and cultured Melanchthon, Luther's right hand,
+denounced their demand that serfdom should be abolished as an insolent
+and violent outrage (_ein Frevel und Gewalt_), and preached passive
+obedience to any and every established authority. "Even if all the
+demands of the peasants were Christian," he said, "the uprising of the
+peasants would not be justified; and that because God commands obedience
+to the authorities." Luther's attitude was much the same. Though a son
+of a peasant, and evidently realising that the demands of the peasants
+were just and moderate, and "not stretched to their advantage," he at
+first assumed a somewhat neutral attitude, which, however, he soon
+relinquished; and in a pamphlet to which his greatest admirers must wish
+he had never put his name, and which shocked even his own times and
+many of his own immediate followers, he proclaimed that to put down the
+revolt all "who can shall destroy, strangle, and stab, secretly or
+openly, remembering that nothing is more poisonous, hurtful and devilish
+than a rebellious man."
+
+The rulers did not fail to better his instruction. In defence of their
+privileges, the German princes, spiritual and temporal, catholic and
+evangelical, united their forces, and the uprising was put down in a sea
+of blood. The peasants, comparatively unarmed, were slaughtered by
+thousands, and the yoke of serfdom was firmly re-fastened on the necks
+of the people, until, some three hundred years later, in 1807, the
+Napoleonic invasion compelled the ruling classes voluntarily to
+relinquish some of their most cherished privileges. From a popular and
+religious, the Reformation in Germany degenerated into a mere political
+movement, and fell almost entirely into the hands of princes and
+politicians to be exploited for their own purposes. The reorganisation
+of the Churches, which the Reformation rendered necessary in those
+States where it was maintained, was for the most part undertaken by the
+secular authorities in accordance with the views of the temporal rulers,
+whose religious belief their unfortunate subjects were assumed to have
+adopted. The activities of the Lutheran Reformers were soon engrossed
+weaving the web of a Protestant scholasticism, strengthening and
+defending their favourite dogma of justification by faith, abusing and
+persecuting such as differed from them on some all-important question of
+dogma or doctrine, framing propositions of passive obedience, and other
+such congenial pursuits.
+
+Of the moral effect of the Reformation, of its effect on the general
+character of the people who came under its influence, which is the one
+test by which every such movement can be judged, we need say but little.
+To put it as mildly as possible, it must be admitted, to use the words
+of one of its modern admirers,[10:1] that "the Reformation did not at
+first carry with it much cleansing force of moral enthusiasm." In the
+hands of men more logical or of a less healthy moral fibre, Luther's
+favourite dogma, of justification by faith alone, led to conclusions
+subversive of all morality. However this may be, enemies and friends
+alike have to admit that the immediate effects of the Reformation were a
+dissolution of morals, a careless neglect of education and learning, and
+a general relaxation of the restraints of religion. In passage after
+passage, Luther himself declared that the last state of things was worse
+than the first; that vice of every kind had increased since the
+Reformation; that the nobles were more greedy, the burghers more
+avaricious, the peasants more brutal; that Christian charity and
+liberality had almost ceased to flow; and that the authorised preachers
+of religion were neither heeded, respected nor supported by the people:
+all of which he characteristically attributed to the workings of the
+devil, a personage who plays a most important part in Luther's theology
+and view of life.
+
+Thus, to judge by its immediate effects, the Reformation appears to have
+been conducive neither to moral, to social, nor to political progress.
+And yet to-day we know that the intellectual movement of which it was
+the outcome contained within itself inspiring conceptions of social
+justice, political equality, economic freedom, aye, even of religious
+toleration and moral purity, unknown to any preceding age, and the full
+fruits of which have yet to be harvested to elevate and to bless
+mankind.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[4:1] Luther's _Works_, ed. Walch, viii. 2043: "Erklaerung der Ep. an die
+Galater." Quoted by Beard, _The Reformation of the Sixteenth Century_,
+p. 163.
+
+[7:1] See Thorold Rogers' _Six Centuries of Work and Wages_, p. 389.
+
+[8:1] See Appendix A.
+
+[10:1] Beard, _loc. cit._ p. 146.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE REFORMATION IN ENGLAND
+
+ "It was in the name of faith and religious liberty that, in the
+ sixteenth century, commenced the movement which, from that epoch,
+ suspended at times but ever renewed, has been agitating and
+ exciting the world. The tempest rose first in the human soul: it
+ struck the Church before it reached the State."--GUIZOT.
+
+
+In Germany, as we have seen, from a religious and popular, the
+Reformation degenerated into a mere scholastic and political movement,
+favourable to the pretensions of the ruling and privileged classes,
+opposed to the aspirations of the industrial classes, and conducive
+neither to moral, social, religious, nor political progress. In England,
+on the other hand, it ran a very different course. From a merely
+political, it gradually rose to the height of a truly religious and
+popular movement, infusing new life into the nation and lifting it into
+the very forefront of the van of progress, curbing the insolent
+pretensions of king, priest and noble, purifying the minds of the people
+of time-honoured but degrading conceptions of the functions of Church
+and of State, inspiring and uplifting them with new conceptions of
+political freedom, social justice, moral purity and religious
+toleration, which, despite temporary periods of reaction, have never
+since entirely lost their sway over the hearts nor their influence over
+the destinies of the British nation.
+
+For many centuries prior to the Reformation the English people had been
+jealous and impatient of all ecclesiastical power, as of all foreign
+interference in their national affairs, more especially of the claims
+and pretensions of the Papacy. In England, as in Germany and even in
+France, the idea of a National Church controlled and administered by
+their own countrymen, and freed from the supremacy of the Church and
+Court of Rome, was one familiar even to devout Catholics. Moreover, the
+teachings of Wyclif had sunk deep into the hearts of the people, and
+only awaited a favourable opportunity to yield their fruits: already in
+the fourteenth they had paved the way for the Reformation of the
+sixteenth century. Hence it was that when Henry the Eighth, from purely
+personal and dynastic reasons, became involved in a quarrel with the
+Pope, he found his subjects prepared for greater changes in religious
+matters than any he contemplated or desired. However, by a series of
+legislative enactments, the Church of England, in 1534, was emancipated
+from the superiority of the Church of Rome; the papal authority was
+wholly abolished within the realm; Henry was legally recognised as the
+supreme head of the Church of England; the power of the spiritual
+aristocracy was broken and the whole body of the clergy humbled; the
+monasteries were suppressed; the great wealth and vast territorial
+possessions of the Church became the prey of the Crown, only to be
+dissipated in lavish grants to greedy courtiers: and thus the
+foundations were laid for greater changes in both Church and State than
+those who promoted such measures ever dreamed of.
+
+From its inception the Church of England comprised two opposing and
+apparently irreconcilable elements, namely, those whose sympathies and
+leanings were toward the forms, dogmas and doctrines of Roman
+Catholicism, and those whose sympathies and leanings were toward the
+forms, dogmas and doctrines of the German and Swiss Reformers. Of
+religious toleration both parties were probably equally intolerant. That
+the State was directly concerned with the religious beliefs of the
+people, hence was justified in enforcing conformity to the Church as by
+law established, seems to have been unquestioningly accepted by both.
+The one desired to make use of the temporal power to prevent, the other
+to promote, further changes in Church government, worship and doctrine.
+The result was a compromise, which, like most compromises, satisfied the
+more logical and consistent of neither party. As ultimately
+established, in the reign of Elizabeth, the Church of England occupied
+a sort of middle position between the Church of Rome and the Reformed
+Churches of the Continent; and the attempt to enforce conformity to its
+demands resulted in the separation from it of the extremists of both
+sections. On the one hand, the English Roman Catholics became a distinct
+and persecuted religious body, whose members were generally regarded,
+despite repeated evidence to the contrary, as necessarily enemies of
+England. On the other, despairing of further changes in the direction
+they desired, a large number of the extreme Protestants separated
+themselves from the National Church--though by so doing they rendered
+themselves liable to be accused not only of heresy, but of high treason,
+and to suffer death--and formed themselves into different bodies of
+Separatists or Independents, differing on many points among themselves,
+but united by a common animosity of all outside ecclesiastical control.
+Within the Church the Catholic sentiment crystallised into the
+Episcopalian, the Protestant sentiment into the Presbyterian section of
+the Church of England. During the reign of Elizabeth the Protestant
+element grew steadily stronger, as did also the spirit of political
+independence, as manifested in the debates and divisions of the House of
+Commons. It is a suggestive and noteworthy fact that during the long
+reign of Henry the Eighth the House of Commons only once refused to pass
+a Bill recommended by the Crown. During the reigns of Edward the Sixth
+and of Mary the spirit of political independence commenced to revive;
+and during the reign of Elizabeth the spirit of liberty and sense of
+responsibility manifested by the House of Commons were such as
+repeatedly to thwart the designs and to alter the policy of this
+high-spirited monarch. It was, however, the severity of the policy of
+the last of the Tudors and the first two of the Stuart kings against the
+dissenting Protestants, that identified the struggle for religious
+liberty, for liberty of conscience, with the struggle for political
+liberty, and made these men in a special sense the champions of a more
+or less qualified religious toleration, and of a constitutional
+political freedom.
+
+The growth of extreme Protestantism, more especially perhaps of
+Independency, was greatly quickened during the reigns of both Mary and
+Elizabeth, by the immigration of many thousands of refugees fleeing from
+religious persecutions on the Continent. Amongst these were disciples
+and apostles of many sects that were heretics in the eyes of both the
+Catholic and the Protestant Churches, and who rejected alike the dogmas
+and doctrines of Rome, of Wittenberg, and of Geneva. The one point all
+such sects seem to have had in common was the denial of the sanctity and
+efficacy of infant baptism: hence their inclusion under the general term
+Anabaptists, even though many of them passionately disclaimed any
+connection with this hated, proscribed and persecuted sect. As Gerrard
+Winstanley, the inspirer of the Digger Movement, seems to us to have
+been greatly influenced by the teaching of one of these sects, the
+Familists, or Family of Love, it may be well to give here a brief
+outline of its history and main doctrines.
+
+The founder of the Family of Love was one David George, or Joris, who
+was born at Delft in 1501. In 1530 he was severely punished for
+obstructing a Catholic procession in his native town. In 1534 he joined
+the Anabaptists, but soon left them to found a sect of his own. He seems
+to have interpreted the whole of the Scripture allegorically;[15:1] and
+to have maintained that as Moses had taught hope, and Christ had taught
+faith, it was his mission to teach love. His teachings were propagated
+in Holland by Henry Nicholas, and in England by one Christopher Vittel,
+a joiner, who appears to have undertaken a missionary journey throughout
+the country about the year 1560. According to Fuller,[16:1] in 1578,
+the nineteenth year of the reign of Elizabeth, "The Family of Love began
+now to grow so numerous, factious, and dangerous, that the Privy Council
+thought fit to endeavour their suppression."
+
+The most lucid account of the doctrines of this sect may be gained from
+a beautifully printed little book, entitled _The Displaying of an
+Horrible Sect of Gross and Wicked Heretics naming themselves the Family
+of Love_, published the same year, 1578, and written by one I. R. (Jn.
+Rogers), a bitter but fair-minded opponent of their heresies, a
+Protestant, and a zealous defender of the Lutheran dogma of
+justification by faith alone. In his Preface the author bewails "the
+daily increase of this error," declaring that "in many shires of this
+our country there are meetings and conventicles of this Family of Love."
+Amongst those who have been converted, he tells us, were many who had
+hitherto been "professors of Christ Jesus' gospel according to the
+brightness thereof." He denounces Christopher Vittel, the joiner, as
+"the only man that hath brought our simple people out of the plain ways
+of the Lord our God," and complains how "he driveth the true sense of
+the Holy Ghost into allegories," and contendeth that "otherwise to
+interpret the Holy Scriptures is to stick to the letter." To the Family
+of Love, he tells us, "Christ signifieth anointed." He continues, "I
+pray you mark but this one thing in their teachings, how they drive the
+true sense of the Holy Ghost into allegories. And when any text of Holy
+Scriptures is alleged by any of God's children, they answer that we
+little understand what is meant thereby; and then if they be pressed to
+expound the place, by and by it is drawn into an allegory. For they take
+not the creation of man at the first to be historical (according to the
+letter), but mere allegorical: alleging that Adam signifieth the earthly
+man ... the Serpent to be within man; applying still the allegory, they
+destroy the truth of the history."
+
+The writer's greatest grievance, however, is their rejection of the
+Lutheran dogma of justification by faith, and their agreement "with the
+Papists in extolling works as efficient causes of salvation." "Amongst
+the rest, indeed," he exclaims, "they insinuate a good life, as which
+they pretend to follow, which is as the vizard and cloak to hide all the
+rest of their gross and absurd doctrines, and the hook and bait whereby
+the simple are altogether deceived." He is greatly concerned that "none
+but those who are willingly minded to their doctrines can get a sight of
+their books";[17:1] and that "they are disinclined to disputations and
+conferences with those not inclined to their opinions." He informs his
+readers that "it is a maxim in the Family to deny before men all their
+doctrines, so that they keep the same secret in their hearts"; that
+though they may inwardly reject, yet they will outwardly conform to the
+forms of the Church as by law established; that "they have certain
+sleights amongst them to answer any question that may be demanded of
+them." Thus "they do decree all men to be infants who are under the age
+of thirty years. So that if they be demanded whether infants ought to be
+baptized, they answer yea; meaning thereby that he is an infant until he
+attain to those years at which time they ought to be baptized, and not
+before." However, it may be well to mention here that the writer speaks
+of the Anabaptists and of the Family of Love as if he recognised them to
+be distinct heresies.
+
+From their doctrines as formulated in this pamphlet, based on "A
+Confession made by two of the Family of Love before a worthy and
+worshipful Justice of the Peace, May 28th, 1561," we take the following:
+
+ (_a_) "When any person shall be received into their congregation,
+ they cause all their brethren to assemble, the Bishop or Elder
+ doth declare unto the newly-elected brother, that if he will be
+ content that all his goods shall be in common amongst the rest of
+ all his brethren, he shall be received."
+
+ (_b_) "They may not say God save anything. For they affirm that all
+ things are ruled by Nature, and not directed by God."
+
+ (_c_) "They did prohibit bearing of weapons, but at the length,
+ perceiving themselves to be noted and marked for the same, they
+ have allowed the bearing of staves."
+
+ (_d_) "When a question is demanded of any of them, they do of order
+ stay a great while ere they answer, and commonly their words shall
+ be Surely or So."
+
+ (_e_) "They hold that no man should be baptized before he is of the
+ age of thirty years."
+
+ (_f_) "They hold that heaven and hell are present in this world
+ amongst us, and that there is none other."[18:1]
+
+ (_g_) "They hold the Pope's service and this service now used in
+ the Churches to be naught."
+
+ (_h_) "They hold that all men that are not of their congregation,
+ or that are revolted from them, to be dead."
+
+ (_i_) "They hold that they ought to keep silence amongst
+ themselves, that the liberty they have in the Lord may not be
+ espied of others."
+
+ (_k_) "They hold that no man should be put to death for his
+ opinion: therefore they condemn Master Cranmer and Master Ridley
+ for burning Joan of Kent."
+
+We shall have occasion to refer to some of these doctrines again later
+on. It may be well, however, to mention here that the views that no
+Christian ought to be a magistrate; that magistrates should not meddle
+with religion; that no man ought to be compelled to faith, or put to
+death for his religion; that war is unlawful to Christians; that their
+speech should be yea or nay, without any oath: seem to have been
+accepted by Anabaptists generally, as they were by the primitive
+Christian communists of the fourteenth century.[18:2]
+
+To return to our immediate subject. To the development of religious and
+political thought in England, as to the inevitable struggle due to the
+inherent antagonism of Catholic and Protestant ideals and aspirations,
+we can refer only very briefly. The former can perhaps best be traced in
+the writings of three eminent theological writers, Jewel, Hooker, and
+Chillingworth. Though in 1567 we hear of the first instance of actual
+punishment of Protestant Dissenters, still during the earlier portion of
+the reign of Elizabeth, to the year 1571, there seems to have been a
+gradual growth of national sentiment toward a simpler form of worship,
+resulting in a modification of those rites and usages disliked by
+Protestants of all shades and sects, and against the established policy
+of forcible suppression of religious differences. In 1571, a Bill having
+been introduced imposing a penalty for not receiving the communion, it
+was objected to in the House of Commons on the grounds that "consciences
+ought not to be forced." The same Parliament "refused to bind the clergy
+to subscription to three articles on the Supremacy, the form of Church
+Government, and the power of the Church to ordain rites and ceremonies,
+and favoured the project of reforming the Liturgy by the omission of
+superstitious practices."[19:1] In 1572, however, the appearance of
+Thomas Cartwright's celebrated _Admonition to the Parliament_ stemmed
+the course of religious reform, and produced a reaction of which
+Elizabeth and her Primates were not slow to avail themselves. The
+establishment, in 1583, of the Ecclesiastical Commission as a permanent
+body, wielding the almost unlimited powers of the Crown and creating
+their own tests of doctrine, put an end to the wise spirit of compromise
+which had hitherto characterised Elizabeth's religious policy. The
+"superstitious usages" were encouraged; subscription by the clergy of
+the Three Articles, which the Parliament of 1571 had refused to enforce
+by law, was exacted; and the non-conforming clergy were relentlessly
+harried and persecuted: with the result that the Presbyterians within
+and the Puritans without the National Church were temporarily united by
+the pressure of a common persecution.
+
+It was Cartwright's political rather than his religious views that
+alarmed Elizabeth and her Ministers. As against their theory of a
+State-controlled Church, he advocated a Church-controlled State. In
+fact, the most arrogant and insolent pretensions of the Papacy were
+surpassed by this Presbyterian divine. Of course, all his demands were
+based on the authority of Scripture and the ways and customs of the
+primitive Christian Church. The rule of bishops he denounced as begotten
+of the devil; the absolute rule of presbyters he held to be established
+by the word of God. All other forms of Church government were ruthlessly
+to be suppressed, and heretics were to be punished by death. For the
+ministers of the Church he claimed not only all spiritual power and
+jurisdiction, the decreeing of doctrines, the ordering of ceremonies,
+and so on, but also the supervision of public morals, under which every
+branch of human activities was included. In short, the State, as well as
+the individual, was to be placed beneath the heel of the Church. The
+power of the prince, the secular power, was tolerated only so that it
+might "protect and defend the councils of the clergy, to keep the peace,
+to see their decrees executed, and to punish the contemners of them."
+Such doctrines aroused no responsive echo in the minds of the English
+people. The nation whose revolt against the papal supremacy had made the
+Reformation possible, were not disposed to accept Presbyterian supremacy
+in its place. The national impatience of ecclesiastical power was not
+likely suddenly to be removed by any attempt to re-impose it under a new
+name and in a new garb. In fact, Cartwright's work almost seems as if
+specially written to warn the nation against a possible, if not an
+imminent, danger, to warn them, in truth, that--"New Presbyter is but
+Old Priest writ large."
+
+Cartwright's narrow-minded dogmatism was crushingly answered in Richard
+Hooker's _Ecclesiastical Polity_, the first volume of which appeared in
+1594. This remarkable book forms, indeed, an important landmark in the
+history of English political and religious thought. Its forcible
+exposition of the basic principles of constitutional civil government
+makes many portions of it even to-day most attractive and instructive
+reading. For the first time in the history of religious controversy,
+reason is extolled above any and every authority, and accepted as
+supreme judge and arbiter of spiritual, as well as of temporal, affairs.
+Though Hooker thought it fit that the reason of the individual should
+yield to that of the Church, he did not hesitate to declare "that
+authority should prevail with man either against or above reason, is no
+part of our belief. Companies of learned men, be they never so great and
+reverend, are to yield unto reason." As Buckle well points out,[21:1] if
+we compare this work with Jewel's _Apology for the Church of England_,
+written some thirty years previously,--and ordered, together with the
+Bible and Fox's _Martyrs_, "to be fixed in all parish churches and read
+to the people,"--"we shall at once be struck by the different methods
+these eminent writers employ.... Jewel inculcates the importance of
+faith; Hooker insists on the exercise of reason.... In the same opposite
+spirit do these great writers conduct their defence of their own Church.
+Jewel thinks to settle the whole dispute by crowding together texts from
+the Bible, with the opinions of the commentators upon them.... Hooker's
+defence rests neither upon tradition, nor upon commentators, nor even
+upon revelation; but he is content that the pretensions of the hostile
+parties shall be decided by their applicability to the great exigencies
+of society, and by the ease with which they adapt themselves to the
+general purposes of ordinary life."
+
+The celebrated work by Chillingworth, _The Religion of Protestants, a
+Safe Way to Salvation_, published in 1637, and of which two editions
+were issued within less than five months, also deserves special mention
+here. His fundamental position may be well summarised in one of his own
+sentences--"I am fully assured that God does not, and therefore that man
+ought not to require any more of any man than this, to believe the
+Scriptures to be God's word, to endeavour to find the true sense of it,
+and to live according to it." Even more fully than Hooker,
+Chillingworth accepts reason as the all-sufficient guide of human
+conduct, and admits no reservations that might limit the sacred right of
+private judgement. The essential difference between these three eminent
+writers is admirably summarised by Buckle in the following
+words:[21:2]{2} "These three great men represent the three distinct
+epochs of the three successive generations in which they respectively
+lived. In Jewel, reason is, if I may so say, the superstructure of the
+system; but authority is the basis upon which the superstructure is
+built. In Hooker, authority is only the superstructure, and reason is
+the basis. But in Chillingworth, whose writings were harbingers of the
+coming storm, authority entirely disappears, and the whole fabric of
+religion is made to rest upon the way in which the unaided reason of man
+shall interpret the decrees of an omnipotent God."
+
+In fact, Chillingworth's great work may well be regarded as the last
+word of the Protestant Reformation in England.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[15:1] According to Beard, _The Hibbert Lectures_, 1883, p. 119, "It was
+a mediaeval maxim, which no one thought of questioning, that the language
+of the Bible had four senses--the literal, the allegorical, the
+tropological, and the anagogical, of which the last three were mystical
+or spiritual, in contradistinction to the first." The learned Erasmus,
+who lived and died a devout Roman Catholic, seems to have accepted this
+allegorical interpretation of the Scriptures. Of interpreters of the
+Holy Scriptures, he recommends those "who depart as far as possible from
+the letter." Erasmus, _Opp._ (_Enchiridion_), v. 29, B, C, D. Quoted by
+Beard, p. 120.
+
+[16:1] _Church History_, vol. iv. p. 407.
+
+[17:1] When occasion arose, they do not seem to have been averse to
+giving publicity to their opinions. In 1656 a London publisher, Giles
+Calvert, to whom we shall have occasion to refer again, republished _A
+Discourse on the Family of Love, originally presented to the High Court
+of Parliament in the time of Queen Elizabeth_. This Giles Calvert was
+the printer and publisher of nearly all Winstanley's pamphlets, and also
+one of the first authorised printers and publishers for the Children of
+Light, as the Quakers, or Society of Friends, originally styled
+themselves. We have reason to believe that Calvert, as well as many
+other of Winstanley's disciples, joined the Quakers about the time of
+the republication of this pamphlet.
+
+[18:1] "There is no other flame in which the sinner is plagued, and no
+other punishment of hell, than the perpetual anguish of mind which
+accompanies habitual sin."--Erasmus, _Enchiridion_. Quoted by Beard.
+
+[18:2] See _Communism in Central Europe in the Time of the Reformation_,
+by Karl Kautsky, more especially p. 79.
+
+[19:1] Green's _Short History of the English People_, p. 457.
+
+[21:1] _History of Civilisation in England_, vol. i. p. 340.
+
+[21:2] _Ibid._ vol. i. p. 351.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE GREAT CIVIL WAR
+
+ "The lawful power of making laws to command whole politic societies
+ of men, belongeth so properly to the same entire societies, that
+ for any prince or potentate of what kind soever upon earth, to
+ exercise the same of himself, and not either by express commission
+ immediately and personally received from God, or else by authority
+ derived at the first from their consent, upon whose persons they
+ impose laws, it is no better than mere tyranny. Laws they are not
+ therefore which public approbation hath not made so."--HOOKER,
+ _Ecclesiastical Polity_.
+
+
+When Chillingworth's great work was published, in 1637, the last of the
+Tudors, after having outlived her popularity, had passed to her rest, as
+had also her most unworthy successor, whose insolence had outraged, but
+whose weakness had strengthened, the awakening spirit of liberty, and
+who, as Macaulay well expresses it,[23:1] "was, in truth, one of those
+kings whom God seems to send for the express purpose of hastening
+revolutions." To him had succeeded his most worthy son: a king whose
+perfidy and duplicity were only equalled by his self-complacency and
+power of self-deception, who never looked facts in the face, but
+placidly expected them to conform to his own petty desires, and whose
+dignified death failed to atone for a life devoted to ignoble personal
+ends, by crooked ways and treacherous means; a king peculiarly incapable
+of taking a broad statesman-like view of any question, who manifested no
+thought for the interests of the people of whom he regarded himself as
+ruler by right divine, whose futile domestic policy was inspired solely
+by considerations for the advancement of his own personal power, whose
+feeble and shifty foreign policy was determined only by considerations
+for his own family interests, who intrigued with France against Spain,
+with Spain against France, with both against Holland, and with Holland
+against both, and with France, Spain, Holland, and Rome against his own
+subjects, with English Presbyterians against English Independents, with
+English Independents against English Presbyterians, and with Irish
+Catholics and Scotch Presbyterians against both English Presbyterians
+and Independents, and who yet succeeded in deceiving nobody but himself,
+and in satisfying nobody, not even himself; a king whose love was far
+more dangerous than his hate, a worthy patron of a Buckingham, a Goring,
+or of a Laud, but unworthy the genius of a Shaftesbury or the loyal
+services of a Verney, a Montrose, or a Worcester; a king, in short,
+treacherous to his friends, faithless to his word, who went to his
+wedding and came to his throne with a lie on his lips,[24:1] whom, again
+to use the words of Macaulay,[24:2] "no law could bind, and whose whole
+government was one system of wrong," of whom even the conservative and
+partial Hallam is forced to admit[24:3] that "it would be difficult to
+name any violation of law he had not committed." Even the famous
+Petition of Right, to which some nine years previously, in 1628, he had
+given a solemn, though reluctant, consent, had been ruthlessly violated.
+Taxes had been levied by the Royal authority; patents of monopoly had
+been granted; the course of justice had been tampered with, and judges
+arbitrarily deposed; troops had been billeted upon the people; old
+feudal usages had been revived for the express purpose of harassing and
+defrauding the citizens; and, as if to exhaust every means to sap the
+loyalty and wear out the patience of the people, Puritans of every shade
+of opinion had not only been silenced but relentlessly persecuted, while
+High Church bishops preached passive obedience, declaring the persons
+and the property of subjects to be at the absolute disposal of the
+sovereign, and in the name of religion inaugurating a systematic attack
+on the rights and liberties of the nation.
+
+The people whose representatives a quarter of a century previously, in
+1604, had met the insolent claims of James the First with the dignified
+rejoinder, that "your Majesty should be misinformed if any man should
+deliver that the kings of England have any absolute power in themselves
+either to alter religion, or to make any laws concerning the same,
+otherwise than in temporal causes by consent of Parliament,"[25:1] were,
+however, not easily to be intimidated. Despite a Royal order to adjourn,
+the House of Commons of 1629, holding the Speaker by force in the Chair,
+supported the immortal Eliot in his last assertion of English liberty,
+and by successive resolutions declared that whosoever shall bring in
+innovations in religion, or whosoever shall counsel or advise the taking
+and levying of the subsidies of tonnage and poundage, not being granted
+by Parliament, "a capital enemy to this kingdom and commonwealth," and
+any person voluntarily yielding or paying the said subsidies, not being
+granted by Parliament, "a betrayer of the liberty of England, and an
+enemy to the same."[25:2] Having thus flung their defiance in the face
+of the King, the House then voted its own adjournment.
+
+From that time events had marched quickly. Those who had played the most
+prominent parts in that momentous scene, including Holles, Selden, and
+Eliot, had been thrown into prison, the last-named to die there, the
+first martyr to the growing cause of civil freedom and religious
+liberty. In 1637, the year of the publication of Chillingworth's work,
+the whole question of the right to levy taxation was revived by the
+demand on the inland counties for ship-money, and the attention of the
+whole country attracted to it by the trial of Hampden on his refusal to
+pay same. Later in the year, Charles' attempt to alter the
+ecclesiastical constitution and form of public worship in Scotland led,
+first to discontent, then to riot, and finally to open rebellion. As a
+direct consequence, the King, in April 1640, was compelled to call what
+from its brief duration is known as the Short Parliament, in which,
+thanks to the Parliamentary tactics of Hampden, the design of the Court
+Party, to obtain supplies without redressing grievances, was
+constitutionally thwarted. On the manifestation of its determination to
+redress wrongs and to vindicate the laws, this Parliament was at once
+dissolved. The end of the tyranny, however, was fast approaching. In
+August of the same year the King marched northward; the Scotch crossed
+the border to meet him; on their approach the disaffected English army
+was well pleased to fly rather than to fight those whom they were
+inclined to regard as deliverers rather than as enemies; a truce was
+patched up, and to meet the critical situation the King, in November
+1640, found himself compelled to summon his last and most famous
+Parliament, known in history as the Long Parliament.
+
+The temper of the new Parliament, in which Pym and Hampden at first
+exercised a paramount influence, was very different from that of any of
+its predecessors. Recent events had convinced its leading members that
+half measures would be worse than useless. During its first session,
+Strafford and Laud, the two main supporters of absolute government and
+religious tyranny, were impeached and imprisoned; those whom the King
+had employed as instruments of oppression were called to account for
+their conduct; the Star Chamber, the Court of High Commission and the
+Council of York, were abolished; ship-money was declared illegal, and
+the judgement in Hampden's case was annulled; the victims of the recent
+religious persecutions were set at liberty, and conducted through London
+in triumph; old oppressive feudal powers still appertaining to the Crown
+were swept away; the King was made to give the judges patents for life
+or during good behaviour; the Forest and Stannary Courts were reformed;
+Triennial Parliaments were established; and, finally, it was provided
+that the Parliament then sitting should not be prorogued or dissolved
+save by its own consent.
+
+After the recess the difficulties and dangers of the situation
+increased daily. Revolt, popularly regarded as fomented by the Court
+Party, had broken out in Ireland; the King, evidently seeking power and
+opportunity to retract the concessions he had made, was seeking aid in
+all directions--Rome, France, Spain, and was intriguing in Scotland; the
+air was full of rumours of a plot of the Court to bring down the army in
+the North to overawe the Parliament; and the moderate men,--"that is to
+say, men who never go to the bottom of any difficulty," as Gardiner
+expresses it,--by whose aid the above changes had been effected, were
+inclined to pause, if not to retrace their steps. Under these
+circumstances the popular leaders in the House of Commons, in November
+1641, framed and passed the Great Remonstrance, which was practically an
+address to the nation, to justify their past action and to appeal for
+further support. In this famous document all the oppressive and
+arbitrary acts of the past fifteen years were narrated in impressive
+language; a detailed account was given of the necessary work already
+accomplished, of the dangers and difficulties yet to be surmounted,
+declaring the purpose of the House to be, not to abolish Episcopacy, but
+to reduce the power of the bishops; and, finally, indicating the line of
+future constitutional reform by urging that the King should employ no
+Ministers save those in whom the Parliament could place confidence.
+
+Contrary to expectation, the debate on the Remonstrance was long and
+stormy, and the division--it was only carried in a full House by a
+majority of nine--showed plainly that a reaction in favour of the King
+had already begun. Charles had now a final opportunity of regaining the
+confidence of the representatives of the nation, and for a few days it
+seemed as if he were inclined to follow a moderate, dignified and
+constitutional course. But for a few days only. On the 3rd of January
+1642, without giving a hint of his intentions to the constitutional
+Royalists he had so recently called to his councils, and whom he had
+faithfully promised to consult on all matters relating to the House of
+Commons, he sent down his Attorney-General to impeach the leading
+members of the House, Pym, Holles, and Haselrig, at the bar of the
+House of Lords, on a charge of high treason. As Macaulay well
+says,[28:1] "It would be difficult to find in the whole history of
+England such an instance of tyranny, perfidy, and folly." But worse was
+to follow. The Commons refused to surrender their members, and Charles
+resolved on their forcible arrest on the floor of the House. The
+threatened members, however, had been warned, and had taken refuge in
+the City of London; their absence, together with the dignified attitude
+of the remaining members, prevented the outrage ending in bloodshed: in
+a bloodshed the possibility of which it is even to-day impossible to
+contemplate with equanimity.
+
+Though the Militia Bill, which would have given Parliament the control
+of the armed forces of the nation, was the ostensible, this outrage on
+the part of the King was the direct and mediate, cause of the outbreak
+of the Civil War. "To be safe from armed violence," the Commons, as far
+as the rules of the House would permit, placed themselves under the
+protection of the City; and the day previous to the one fixed for their
+return to St. Stephen's under the protection of the trained bands of
+London, the King left Whitehall, to return to it only to pay the dire
+penalty for his past offences. Both sides now actively prepared for the
+inevitable struggle. Owing to Pym's forethought, the Tower was
+blockaded, and the two great arsenals of Hull and Portsmouth secured for
+the Parliament. Owing to the force and boldness of his language, the
+House of Lords was scared out of the policy of obstruction it had taken
+up. On the avowal by Parliament of the refusal of the governor of Hull
+to open the gates to the King, the members of the Royalist party
+withdrew from Westminster; and on August 22nd, 1642, the uplifting of
+Charles' standard on a hill at Nottingham announced the outbreak of the
+Civil War.
+
+On the well-trodden ground of the progress of the war, it is unnecessary
+for our purposes to dwell. The issues involved were truly tremendous.
+The evolution of the English Constitution had left it undecided to whom
+the supreme power in the nation did rightfully accrue: and this was,
+perhaps, the most practical question at issue.[29:1] As between
+Parliament and King, the question was, whether the supreme power was to
+continue to be wielded by a king whose temporal jurisdiction was to be
+limited only by ancient laws interpreted by judges of his own creation
+and removable at his pleasure, or by the representatives of the nation
+in Parliament assembled? It was left to the Model Army to remind the
+members of the Long Parliament that their power, as that of "all future
+representatives of this nation, is inferior only to theirs who choose
+them."[29:2] However, to make both King and Church responsible to
+Parliament was, in truth, the one common aim of the whole Parliamentary
+party; and, as Gardiner well points out,[29:3] "every year which passed
+after the Restoration made it more evident that, for the time at least,
+the most substantial gains of the long conflict had fallen to those who
+had concentrated their efforts on this object."
+
+Keeping in view the reforms secured during the first session of the Long
+Parliament, it may fairly be urged that everything necessary to this end
+had been gained prior to the outbreak of the Civil War, everything, of
+course, save the control of the sword; and this, if the King could have
+been trusted, was not immediately urgent, and would necessarily have
+followed the control of the purse. "If the King could have been
+trusted!" In these words the key to the whole situation is to be found.
+The Parliamentary leaders could not, did not, dared not, trust the
+King: hence the power of the sword had to be wrested from his grasp. It
+was this that made the Civil War inevitable. It was this that rendered
+constitutional government, government by discussion, government by
+compromise, impossible. It was this well-grounded and repeatedly
+confirmed distrust of the King that, after years of war and repeated and
+sincere negotiations, negotiations which only served still further to
+reveal his duplicity, made the execution of the King unavoidable. As the
+judicial Gardiner well says,[30:1] in summing up the causes which led to
+this most solemn, impressive, and instructive event in the whole history
+of England--"The situation, complicated enough already, had been still
+further complicated by Charles' duplicity. Men who would have been
+willing to come to terms with him, despaired of any constitutional
+arrangement in which he was to be a factor; and men who had long been
+alienated from him were irritated into active hostility. By these he was
+regarded with increasing intensity as the one disturbing force with
+which no understanding was possible and no settled order consistent. To
+remove him out of the way appeared, even to those who had no thought of
+punishing him for past offences, to be the only possible road to peace
+for the troubled nation."
+
+The religious issues of the great struggle, however, were by no means so
+simple. Episcopacy, as it had existed, had few supporters in England
+outside the ranks of the bishops. The Laudian coercion had not only
+reawakened slumbering animosities and given renewed vigour to the
+Puritan dislike of the forms and ceremonies of the Anglican Church, but
+had served to fill men's minds with a healthy, vigorous, and deep-rooted
+distrust of ecclesiastical government in any form. To any claims,
+whether of kings or of bishops or of presbyters, to rule by Divine
+right, the ear of the nation was temporarily closed. If Protestants of
+all shades of opinions had learned to distrust Episcopacy, intellectual
+men of all shades of religious beliefs, and of none, equally distrusted
+Presbyterianism, and feared that the free play of intellectual life
+would be as much endangered by the rule of the presbyters as by the
+rule of the bishops. We should, however, do well to remember that at the
+outbreak of the war most of the great Parliamentary leaders, including
+Pym, Hampden, and even Cromwell, had no deep-rooted objection to
+Episcopacy as a form of Church government, provided only that it was
+controlled by Parliament, and allowed the fullest possible liberty of
+conscience. They all shared Pym's expressed conviction that "the
+greatest liberty of the kingdom is religion," and seemed to have
+inclined toward the ideal of Chillingworth, a full liberty of thought
+maintained within the unity of the Church. It was their necessity, not
+their will, the necessity to gain the cordial co-operation of the
+Scotch, that later compelled them to commit themselves to
+Presbyterianism, of their profound distrust of which they gave repeated
+proof. And it is worthy of special note that even in the time of their
+greatest need the English Parliament, to use Gardiner's words,[31:1]
+"was as disinclined as the Tudor kings had ever been to allow the
+establishment in England of a Church system claiming to exist by Divine
+right, or by any right whatever independent of the State."
+
+That religious conformity was a necessary condition of national unity,
+aye, even of national existence, was, however, still accepted as an
+axiomatic truth by those whose mental visions were limited by inherited
+conceptions. To such as these the only question at issue seems to have
+been whether an Episcopalian or a Presbyterian system of Church
+government should prevail. Of the claims of those who would bow the head
+neither to Rome, to Geneva, nor to Canterbury, who refused to entrust
+their conscience to pope, to bishop, or to presbyter, the extreme
+adherents of both these systems were probably equally insensible. And
+yet it was precisely such men who were to come to the front during the
+coming struggle, and who, under the guidance of their great leader, were
+to become the champions of that great democratic principle of
+toleration, of liberty of conscience, which was the one leading
+principle of his life.[31:2] It was precisely such men who were to
+proclaim to the rulers of the nation--"That matters of religion and the
+ways of God's worship are not at all entrusted by us to any human
+power, because therein we cannot remit or exceed a tittle of what our
+consciences dictate to be the mind of God without wilful sin." But who
+themselves were tolerant enough to be willing that "nevertheless the
+public way of instructing the nation (_so it be not compulsive_) is
+referred to their discretion."[32:1]
+
+"So it be not compulsive!" in these words we have the key to the
+position of the great body of sectarians known under the name of
+Independents. They recognised, to use the words of their immortal
+leader, that "it's one thing to love a brother, to bear with and love a
+person of different judgement in matters of religion; and another thing
+to have anybody so far set in the saddle on that account, as to have all
+the rest of his brethren at mercy." So it be not compulsive! in these
+words, too, we have the secret of their subsequent attitude toward the
+Long Parliament and its successors. As Gardiner forcibly expresses
+it--"Men who longed for religious toleration with a stern conviction
+were impatient of parliamentary majorities working for uniformity." To
+their opponents, more especially to those of the strict Presbyterian
+school, toleration may have seemed of the devil, incompatible with
+individual salvation, and injurious alike to Church and to State; to the
+Independents, on the other hand, it was a necessary condition of
+continued existence. They had no desire to establish a State Church of
+their own; they were not prepared to deny that at least "a public way of
+instructing the nation" might be necessary; but they were determined
+that any such Church should be tolerant of the claims of men like
+themselves, who could not conform their conscience to its requirements.
+To create a home of liberty out of the England of the Tudors and the
+Stuarts, of Laud and of Prynne, was a task beyond even their powers. But
+whatever they may have failed to accomplish, they saved England from the
+ecclesiastical tyranny Presbyterianism at that time involved, and raised
+the standard of liberty and toleration, which during the great struggle
+obtained a hold of the mind of the nation such as it never had before,
+but never entirely lost again.
+
+At the very outbreak of the Civil War, Cromwell's aim had been to find
+"men who know what they fight for, and love what they know,--men as had
+the fear of God before them, as made some conscience of what they
+did."[33:1] Such men soon gathered round the great Independent, and he
+moulded them into the famous Ironsides, by whose aid he turned the tide
+of defeat at Marston Moor, and gained the glorious victories of Naseby,
+Preston, Dunbar, and Worcester. Such men stood by his side at the
+momentous Army Council at Windsor, May 1st, 1648, when it was solemnly
+resolved, "not any dissenting," "that it was our duty, if ever the Lord
+brought us back again in peace, to call Charles Stuart, that man of
+blood, to account for the blood he had shed, and mischief he had done to
+his utmost, against the Lord's cause and people in these poor
+nations."[33:2] It was such men who, on December 6th, 1648, to save the
+kingdom from a new war or from a peace destructive of everything they
+had fought for,[33:3] purged the House of Commons of its "malignant"
+members; and who cut the Gordian knot of the difficulties that beset the
+nation by bringing the King, who seemed to them to stand in the way of
+any and every satisfactory settlement, to trial and execution (January
+30th, 1649). Moreover, it was such men who most heartily concurred with
+the resolution of the House of Commons (February 7th, 1649), "That it
+has been found by experience ... that the office of a king in this
+nation, and to have the power thereof in any single person, is
+unnecessary, burdensome, and dangerous to the liberty, safety, and
+public interests of the people of this nation, and therefore ought to be
+abolished." And, finally, it was such men who were the main supporters
+of the Council of State to whom, on February 13th, 1649, under the
+control of the House of Commons, was entrusted full executive authority
+over the home and foreign affairs of the nation.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[23:1] Macaulay's _Essays_, "John Hampden."
+
+[24:1] In 1624, Charles had voluntarily sworn to the House of Commons
+that if he married a Roman Catholic "it should be of no advantage to the
+recusants at home." In the autumn of the same year, on his betrothal to
+Henrietta Maria, sister to the King of France, he solemnly swore to
+grant the very condition he had previously solemnly sworn never to
+concede. He came to the throne early in the following year, 1625.
+
+[24:2] _Loc. cit._
+
+[24:3] _Constitutional History_, vol. ii. p. 81.
+
+[25:1] The Apology of the Commons, 1604. See Gardiner's _History of
+England_, 1603-1642, vol. i. pp. 180-185.
+
+[25:2] _Ibid._ vol. vii. pp. 72-76.
+
+[28:1] _Loc. cit._
+
+[29:1] This was the point of view taken at the time by the Levellers,
+the most active and progressive politicians of the period. In a "Humble
+Petition of thousands of well affected people inhabiting the City of
+London," presented September 11th, 1648, the petitioners address the
+House of Commons as "the supreme authority of England," and desire it so
+to consider itself. They complain that the Commons have declared their
+intention not to alter the ancient government of King, Lords and
+Commons, "not once mentioning, in case of difference, which of them is
+supreme, but leaving that point, which was the chiefest cause of all our
+public differences, disturbances, wars, and miseries, as uncertain as
+ever." See _Clarke Papers_, vol. ii. p. 76.
+
+[29:2] See "The Agreement of the People for a firm and present peace,"
+as presented to the Council of the Army, October 28th, 1647. Reprinted
+at the end of the third volume of Gardiner's _History of the Civil War_.
+
+[29:3] _History of the Civil War_, vol. ii. p. 67.
+
+[30:1] _History of the Civil War_, vol. iv. pp. 327-328.
+
+[31:1] _History of the Civil War_, vol. iii. p. 95.
+
+[31:2] See Appendix B.
+
+[32:1] "The Agreement of the People for a firm and present peace."
+(Italics are ours.)
+
+[33:1] See Carlyle's _Cromwell's Letters and Speeches_, part ii. p. 135,
+and part x. p. 255.
+
+[33:2] See Gardiner's _History of the Civil War_, vol. iv. pp. 120-121.
+
+[33:3] Cromwell seems early to have foreseen and guarded against such a
+contingency. See Gardiner, _ibid._ vol. ii. p. 25.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE DIGGERS
+
+ "The way to cast out Kingly Power is not to cast it out by the
+ Sword; for this doth but set him in more power, and removes him
+ from a weaker to a stronger hand. The only way to cast him out is
+ for the people to leave him to himself, to forsake fighting and all
+ oppression, and to live in love one towards another. The Power of
+ Love is the True Saviour."--WINSTANLEY, _A New Year's Gift for the
+ Parliament and Army_.
+
+
+The Council of State which, on February 13th, 1649, within a month of
+the execution of the King, had been appointed to administer the public
+affairs of England, had scarcely settled down to their work when they
+received the following information of the mysterious doings of "a
+disorderly and tumultuous sort of people" very near to their
+doors:[34:1]
+
+ "INFORMATION OF HENRY SANDERS OF WALTON UPON THAMES.
+
+ "Informeth, that on Sunday was sennight last,[34:2] there was one
+ Everard, once of the army but was cashiered, who termeth himself a
+ prophet, one Stewer and Colten, and two more, all living at Cobham,
+ came to St. George's Hill in Surrey, and began to dig on that side
+ the hill next to Campe Close, and sowed the ground with parsnips,
+ carrots, and beans. On Monday following they were there again,
+ being increased in their number, and on the next day, being
+ Tuesday, they fired the heath, and burned at least forty rood of
+ heath, which is a very great prejudice to the town. On Friday last
+ they came again, between twenty and thirty, and wrought all day at
+ digging. They did then intend to have two or three ploughs at work,
+ but they had not furnished themselves with seed-corn, which they
+ did on Saturday at Kingston. They invite all to come in and help
+ them, and promise them meat, drink, and clothes. They do threaten
+ to pull down and level all park pales, and lay open, and intend to
+ plant there very shortly. They give out they will be four or five
+ thousand within ten days, and threaten the neighbouring people
+ there, that they will make them all come up to the hills and work:
+ and forewarn them suffering their cattle to come near the
+ plantation; if they do, they will cut their legs off. It is feared
+ they have some design in hand.
+
+ "HENRY SANDERS.
+
+ "_16 April 1649._"
+
+The Council of State were sufficiently impressed by this letter to
+forward it the same day to Lord Fairfax, the Lord General of the armed
+forces of the Commonwealth, with the following despatch:
+
+ "THE COUNCIL OF STATE TO LORD FAIRFAX.[35:1]
+
+ "MY LORD,--By the narrative enclosed your Lordship will be informed
+ of what relation hath been made to this Council of a disorderly and
+ tumultuous sort of people assembling themselves together not far
+ from Oatlands, at a place called St. George's Hill; and although
+ the pretence of their being there by them avowed may seem very
+ ridiculous, yet that conflux of people may be a beginning whence
+ things of a greater and more dangerous consequence may grow, to the
+ disturbance of the peace and quiet of the Commonwealth. We
+ therefore recommend it to your Lordship's care that some force of
+ horse may be sent to Cobham in Surrey and thereabouts, with orders
+ to disperse the people so met, and to prevent the like for the
+ future, that a malignant and disaffected party may not under colour
+ of such ridiculous people have any opportunity to rendezvous
+ themselves in order to do a greater mischief.
+
+ "Signed in the name and by order of the Council of State
+ appointed by authority of Parliament,
+
+ "JOHN BRADSHAW, _President_.
+
+ "DERBY HOUSE, _16th April 1649_.
+
+ "For the Right Honourable
+ THOMAS LORD FAIRFAX, Lord General."
+
+
+Acting on his instructions, within a few days Lord Fairfax was in
+possession of the following soldier-like letter from the active
+republican officer to whom he had entrusted the business, and who
+evidently was not so easily frightened as the Council of State:
+
+ "CAPTAIN JOHN GLADMAN TO LORD FAIRFAX.[36:1]
+ (Slightly Abridged.)
+
+ "SIR,--According to your order I marched towards St. Georges Hill
+ and sent four men before to bring certain intelligence to me; as
+ they went they met with Mr. Winstanlie and Mr. Everard (which are
+ the chief men that have persuaded these people to do what they have
+ done). And when I had enquired of them and of the officers that lie
+ at Kingston, I saw there was no need to march any further. I cannot
+ hear that there have been above twenty of them together since they
+ first undertook the business. Mr. Winstanlie and Mr. Everard have
+ engaged both to be with you this day: I believe you will be glad to
+ be rid of them again, especially Everard, who is no other than a
+ mad man. Sir, I intend to go with two or three men to St. Georges
+ Hill this day, and persuade these people to leave this employment
+ if I can, and if then I see no more danger than now I do I shall
+ march back again to London tomorrow.... Indeed the business is not
+ worth the writing nor yet taking notice of: I wonder the Council of
+ State should be so abused with informations....
+
+ "JO. GLADMAN.
+
+ "KINGSTON, _April 19th, 1649_."
+
+As they had undertaken, Winstanley and Everard duly appeared before
+Lord Fairfax at Whitehall, and under date April 20th the following
+account of their interview appears in the ponderous pages of Bulstrode
+Whitelocke's _Memorial of English Affairs_:[37:1]
+
+ "Everard and Winstanley, the chief of those that digged at St.
+ George's Hill in Surrey, came to the General and made a large
+ declaration to justify their proceedings.
+
+ "Everard said he was of the race of the Jews, that all the
+ liberties of the people were lost by the coming in of William the
+ Conqueror, and that ever since the people of God had lived under
+ tyranny and oppression worse than that of our forefathers under the
+ Egyptians.
+
+ "But now the time of deliverance was at hand, and God would bring
+ his people out of this slavery, and restore them to their freedom
+ in enjoying the fruits and benefits of the Earth.
+
+ "And that there had lately appeared to him a vision, which bad him
+ arise and dig and plough the earth, and receive the fruits thereof.
+
+ "That their intent is to restore the Creation to its former
+ condition. That as God had promised to make the barren land
+ fruitful, so now what they did was to restore the ancient community
+ of enjoying the fruits of the Earth, and to distribute the benefits
+ thereof to the poor and needy, and to feed the hungry and to clothe
+ the naked.
+
+ "That they intend not to meddle with any man's property nor to
+ break down any pales or enclosures, but only to meddle with what
+ was common and untilled, and to make it fruitful for the use of
+ man. That the time will suddenly be, when all men shall willingly
+ come in and give up their lands and estates, and submit to this
+ community.
+
+ "And for all those that will come in and work they should have
+ meat, drink, and clothes, which is all that is necessary to the
+ life of man; and that for money, there was not any need of it, nor
+ of clothes more than to cover nakedness.
+
+ "That they will not defend themselves by arms, but will submit unto
+ authority, and wait till the promised opportunity be offered, which
+ they conceive to be at hand. And that as their forefathers lived in
+ tents, so it would be suitable to their condition now to live in
+ the same: and more to the like effect.
+
+ "While they were before the General, they stood with their hats
+ on; and being demanded the reason thereof, they said, 'Because he
+ was but their fellow-creature.' Being asked the meaning of that
+ place, 'Give honour to whom honour is due'; they said that their
+ mouths should be stopped that gave them that offence."
+
+ Whitelocke continues, "I have set down this the more largely
+ because it was the beginning of the appearance of this opinion; and
+ that we might the better understand and avoid these weak
+ persuasions."
+
+"The germ of Quakerism and much else is curiously visible here," is
+Carlyle's shrewd comment on the above incident. But as to how far this
+account of the views of the Diggers is correct, we shall leave to the
+judgement of those who read the pages that are to follow. Though we may
+now believe that, save that he placed Norman in the place of the Saxon
+Lords, William the Conqueror introduced but few innovations into the
+laws and institutions of the country, the very opposite was the accepted
+opinion in the days of Winstanley and his associates.[38:1] It may also
+be well to mention here that, though Everard's name appears, and first
+in order, amongst those who signed the pamphlet, _The True Levellers
+Standard Advanced: or, The State of Community opened and presented to
+the Sons of Men_, which bears date April 26th, 1649, and to which we
+shall presently refer, it does not appear in any of the later
+publications of the Diggers. Whether he died about this time or merely
+dropped out of the movement, we have not been able to ascertain.
+
+However this may be, Lord Fairfax appears to have been somewhat
+impressed by his interview, to which the Diggers themselves always
+referred in most cordial terms; for on his way from Guildford to London
+the following month, he visited them at their work, of which visit we
+take the following account from the pages of a contemporary and
+evidently friendly news-sheet, dated May 31st, 1649:[39:1]
+
+ "The SPEECHES of Lord General FAIRFAX and the Officers of the Army
+ to the Diggers at St. George's Hill in Surrey, and the Diggers'
+ several answers and replies thereunto.
+
+ "As his Excellency the Lord General came from Gilford to London, he
+ went to view the Diggers at St. George's Hill in Surrey, with his
+ Officers and Attendants. They found about twelve of them hard at
+ work, and amongst them one Winstanley was the chief speaker.
+ Several questions were propounded by the Officers, and the Lord
+ General made a short speech by way of admonition to them, and this
+ Winstanley returned sober answers, though they gave little
+ satisfaction (if any at all) in regard of the strangeness of their
+ action. It was urged that the Commons were as justly due to the
+ Lords as any other lands. They answered that these were Crown Lands
+ where they digged, and the King who possessed them by the Norman
+ Conquest being dead, they were returned again to the Common People
+ of England, who might improve them if they would take the pains;
+ that for those who would come dig with them, they should have the
+ benefit equal with them, and eat of their bread; but they would not
+ force any, applying to all the golden rule, to do to others as we
+ would be done unto. Some Officers wished they had no further plot
+ in what they did, and that no more was intended than what they did
+ pretend.
+
+ "As to the barrenness of the ground, which was objected as a
+ discouragement, the Diggers answered they would use their
+ endeavours, and leave the success to God, who had promised to make
+ the barren ground fruitful. They carry themselves civilly and
+ fairly in the country, and have the report of sober, honest men.
+ Some barley is already come up, and other fruits formerly; but was
+ pulled up by some of the envious inhabitants thereabouts, who are
+ not so far convinced as to promise not to injure them for the
+ future. The ground will probably in a short time yield them some
+ fruit of their labour, how contemptible soever they do yet appear
+ to be."
+
+Before following the further adventures of the Diggers, as revealed in
+the numerous pamphlets they left us, from which alone they can now be
+gathered, we deem it best to lay before our readers what we have been
+able to ascertain of Gerrard Winstanley's previous life's history and
+writings. Behind every movement that has ever influenced the thoughts of
+mankind, there is always some master-mind, a Lautze, a Gautama, a Jesus
+of Nazareth, a Wiclif, a John Wesley, a Darwin, a Tolstoy, or a Henry
+George; and it is in the comparatively unknown Gerrard Winstanley that
+we shall find the master-mind, the inspirer and director, of the Digger
+Movement. As Gardiner well says, "It is not only by the immediate
+accomplishment of its aim that the value of honest endeavour is to be
+tested." And the reader's interest in our work may be quickened if we so
+far forestall the pages that are to follow as to indicate that not only
+were Winstanley's earlier theological writings the source whence the
+early Quakers, or the Children of Light, as they at first called
+themselves, drew many of their most characteristic tenets and doctrines,
+but that the fundamental principles which inspired and animated his
+political writings were in all respects identical with those that during
+the past quarter of a century have been so honourably associated with
+the name of Henry George. We are not here called upon to pronounce
+judgement on these principles; but in passing we shall endeavour to
+point out how far the demands and doctrines of the Land Reformers of the
+Seventeenth Century, as revealed in Winstanley's writings, coincide with
+those of their successors in the Twentieth Century. In all cases we
+shall, as far as possible, let Gerrard Winstanley speak for himself.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[34:1] _Clarke Papers_, vol. ii. p. 209. Bulstrode Whitelocke, then
+already a member of the Council of State, in his _Memorial of English
+Affairs_ (p. 396), under date April 17th, 1649, has an entry referring
+to and summarising this letter.
+
+[34:2] That is to say, a week last Sunday, or last Sunday week.
+
+[35:1] _Loc. cit._ vol. ii. p. 210.
+
+[36:1] _Loc. cit._ vol. ii. pp. 211-212.
+
+[37:1] P. 397.
+
+[38:1] A glance at the titles of John Hare's well-known pamphlets, the
+work of a learned, prosaic, diffuse, moderate, and loyal writer,
+suffices to show how widespread this jealousy and impatience of what he
+terms Normanism was. One runs as follows:--"_St. Edwards Ghost or Anti
+Normanism_: Being a pathetical Complaint and Motion, in the behalf of
+our English Nation, against the grand yet neglected grievance
+Normanism." Another, {3}"_Englands Proper and Only Way to an
+Establishment in Honor, Freedom, Peace and Happiness_: Or the Norman
+Yoke once more uncased, and the Necessity, Justice, and Present
+Seasonableness of breaking it in pieces demonstrated, in Eight most
+plain and true Propositions, with their proofs." The pamphlets are
+interesting only as showing the prevalence of the idea that the
+dishonour of the English Nation, and the slavery and impoverishment of
+the masses of the English people, were due to Norman Laws and
+institutions introduced by William the Conqueror.
+
+[39:1] British Museum, Press Mark, E. 530.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+GERRARD WINSTANLEY
+
+ "Your word-divinity darkens knowledge. You talk of a body of
+ Divinity, and of Anatomysing Divinity. O fine language! But when it
+ comes to trial, it is but a husk without the kernel, words without
+ life. The Spirit is in the hearts of the people whom you despise
+ and tread under foot."--WINSTANLEY, _The New Law of Righteousness
+ (1649)_.
+
+
+Gerrard Winstanley, whose strange entry on the stately stage of English
+History we have recorded in the previous chapter, was born at Wigan in
+the County of Lancashire, on October 10th, 1609.[41:1] He was,
+therefore, some ten years younger than his great contemporary Oliver
+Cromwell (born 1599), one year the junior of the immortal Milton (born
+1608), and some fifteen years older than George Fox (born 1624). Of his
+earlier years we know nothing; but, to judge from many passages in his
+writings, he appears to have received a good middle-class education, and
+to have been brought up a dutiful follower of the Church as by law
+established. When arrived at man's estate, he settled as a small trader
+in London, of which City he probably became a freeman; for in a pamphlet
+addressed to the City of London,[41:2] he claims to be "one of thy sons
+by freedom." He then goes on to relate how, "by thy cheating sons in
+the thieving art of buying and selling, and by the burdens of and for
+the soldiery in the beginning of the war," he "had been beaten out of
+both estate and trade," and had been forced "to accept of the good-will
+of friends, crediting of me, to live a country life."
+
+Those who have passed through a similar experience, who have been driven
+from the comparatively comfortable middle-class life to the precarious
+and comfortless existence of the vast majority of the toiling masses,
+will readily realise that under such circumstances Winstanley's mind
+would naturally be full of questionings such as might not have forced
+themselves on his attention under more prosperous conditions. What was
+the aim and object of that incessant struggle out of which he had just
+emerged "beaten out of both estate and trade"? What made it necessary?
+who really benefited by it? For whose benefit was the war being waged,
+the burden of which had fallen so heavily upon him? How was it going to
+advantage the masses of the people? Was it ever intended that it should
+benefit them? was it possible that it should do so? Could any such
+struggle be a means of delivering the great masses of the people, "the
+younger brothers," out of the straits of poverty, with its attendant
+train of ignorance, misery, vice, and crime, to which they had hitherto
+been ruthlessly and hopelessly condemned? Was it, in truth, inevitable,
+was it inherent in the very nature of things, was it God's intention
+that a privileged few, "the elder brothers," should be lords and
+masters, and that the great majority of mankind should for ever remain
+the mere hewers of wood and drawers of water, the slaves and servants of
+an insignificant minority of their fellow-creatures? Were these things
+due to natural causes, to the inscrutable workings of a Divine
+Providence; or were they but the necessary though unforeseen fruits of
+mere man-made laws and institutions the existing generation had
+inherited from a by-gone and ignorant past? Such were the questions
+which vaguely and indistinctly may have passed, and, as we shall see,
+did pass, through the active, original, philosophic and deeply religious
+mind of Winstanley in the quiet solitude of his country life.
+
+His life had drifted from its accustomed moorings; his troubles were
+greater than he could bear; and when he turned to Religion for guidance
+and consolation, alas! he found that the teachings he had imbibed in his
+childhood, and never questioned in his manhood, now failed him in his
+hour of need. Foiled, though not beaten, he turned to the pages of the
+Holy Scriptures themselves for guidance and information, for consolation
+and revelation. In these inspired writings, if anywhere, there surely
+must be found some expression, some revelation, of God's intentions
+towards His children, some indication of His holy will, which, if men
+would wholly follow, would lead them down the path of righteousness to
+happiness and peace. And it was from these pages that Winstanley derived
+those religious and political convictions that find such eloquent and
+forcible expression in his writings, and which he made such heroic
+efforts to proclaim by word and deed to his fellow-men.
+
+What seems to us to give a special charm to the study of Winstanley's
+writings is that they reveal the gradual development of his acute and
+powerful mind. His earlier pamphlets betray the influence of the
+mysticism so prevalent in his days; his last utterance on theological
+questions, as we shall see, might have been penned by an advanced
+thinker of the present day, imbued with modern scientific views, and
+recognising the necessary relation and co-ordination of all the physical
+and psychical phenomena of the universe, "of the several bodies of the
+stars and planets in the heavens above, and the several bodies of the
+earth below, as plants, grass, fishes, beasts, birds, and mankind."
+
+As to how far Winstanley owes the views that find expression in his
+earlier pamphlets--which deal exclusively with cosmological or
+theological speculations--to others, or to the writings of earlier
+mystics, we have no means of knowing.[43:1] From them we gather,
+however, that he had learned or had come to regard the whole Biblical
+narrative as an allegory, of which he gives a most poetical
+interpretation. The Creation is mankind. The Garden of Eden is the mind
+of man, which he describes as originally filled with herbs and pleasant
+plants, "as love, joy, peace, humility, delight, and purity of life."
+The serpent he holds to be self-love, the forbidden fruit to be
+"selfishness," following the promptings of which "the whole garden
+becomes a stinking dunghill of weeds, and brings forth nothing but
+pride, envy, discontent, disobedience, and the whole actings of the
+spirit and power of darkness." And he argues that--"If the creature
+should be honored in this condition, then God would be dishonored,
+because his command would be broken.... And if the creature were utterly
+lost ... then likewise God would suffer dishonor, because his work would
+be spoiled." Hence he maintains that "the curse that was declared to
+Adam was temporary," and that eventually the whole creation, the whole
+of mankind, shall be saved, and "the work of God shall be restored from
+this lost, dead, weedy and enslaved condition."[44:1]
+
+Winstanley, however, regarded the word "God" as too vague satisfactorily
+to denote the supreme spiritual power which pervades, upholds and
+governs the whole universe. He had, he tells us, "been held in darkness
+by that word, as I see many people are."[44:2] And so that neither he
+nor others should "rest longer upon words without knowledge, but
+hereafter may look upon that spiritual power, and know what it is that
+rules them, which doth rule in and over all," he felt himself impelled
+to conceive of and to refer to this spiritual power, which is God, as
+"Reason." He contends that "though men may esteem the word Reason to be
+too mean a name to set forth the Father by, yet it is the highest name
+that can be given to Him. For it is Reason that made all things; and it
+is Reason that governs the whole Creation. If flesh were but subject
+thereunto, that is, to the Spirit of Reason within itself, it would
+never act unrighteously.... For this Spirit of Reason is not without a
+man, but within every man; hence he need not run after others to tell
+him or to teach him; for this Spirit is his maker, he dwells in him, and
+if the flesh were subject thereunto, he would daily find teaching
+therefrom, though he dwelt alone and saw the face of no other
+man."[45:1] "This is the Spirit, or Father, which as he made the Globe
+and every creature, so he dwells in every creature, but supremely in
+man. He it is by whom everyone lives, and moves, and hath his being.
+Perfect man is the eye and face that sees and declares the Father: and
+he is perfect when he is taken up in the Spirit and lives in the light
+of Reason."[45:1] "Reason is that living Power of Light that is in all
+things. It is the salt that savours all things. It is the fire that
+burns up dross, and so restores what is corrupted, and preserves what is
+pure. He is the Lord our Righteousness. It lies in the bottom of love,
+of justice, of wisdom: for if the Spirit Reason did not uphold and
+moderate these, they would be madness; nay, they could not be called by
+their names, for Reason guides them in order and leads them to their
+right end, which is not to preserve a part, but the whole
+Creation."[45:2]
+
+The reason of man, Winstanley regarded but as an emanation of the Divine
+Spirit Reason, as the one true Inward Light, which if men would only and
+wholly follow would lead them to live in peace and harmony, and in
+accordance with the Divine Spirit. "Man's reasoning," he says,[45:2] "is
+a creature which flows from that Spirit to this end, to draw up man into
+himself. It is but a candle lighted by that soul, and this light,
+shining through flesh, is darkened by the imagination of the flesh. So
+that many times men act contrary to reason, though they think they act
+according to Reason.... The Spirit Reason, which I call God, the Maker
+and Ruler of all things, is that spiritual power that guides all men's
+reasoning in right order, and to a right end ... and knite every
+creature together into a oneness, making every creature to be an
+upholder of his fellows; and so everyone is an assistant to preserve the
+whole. And the nearer man's reasoning comes to this, the more spiritual
+they are; the further off they be, the more selfish and fleshy they be."
+
+Winstanley took care to point out,[46:1] however, that "this word Reason
+is not the alone name of this spiritual power; but everyone may give him
+a name according to that spiritual power that they feel and see rules in
+them, carrying them forth in actions to preserve their fellow-creatures
+as well as themselves. Therefore some may call him King of
+Righteousness, or Prince of Peace; some may call him Love, and the like.
+But I can and I do call him Reason, because I see him to be that living,
+powerful light that is in righteousness, making righteousness to be
+righteousness, or justice to be justice, or love to be love. For without
+this moderator and ruler they would be madness; nay, the self-willedness
+of the flesh, and not what we call them."[46:1]
+
+But, he warns his readers,[46:2] "truly let me tell you, that you cannot
+say the Spirit, Reason, is your God, till you see and feel by experience
+that the Spirit doth govern your flesh. For if Envy be the Lord that
+rules your flesh, if Pride and Covetousness rule your flesh, then is
+Envy, Covetousness, or Pride your God. If you fear man so greatly that
+you dare not do righteously for fear of angering men, then slavish fear
+is your God. If rash anger govern your flesh, then is anger your God.
+Therefore deceive not yourselves, but let Reason work within you; and
+examine and see what your flesh is subject to. For whatever doth govern
+in you, that is your God."
+
+Winstanley's characteristic theological doctrines were, then, the
+realisation of the function and importance of the Inward Light, of
+Reason, which he regarded as the necessary and all-sufficient guide for
+human conduct; his keen appreciation of silence as the necessary
+precursor of all real prayer, if not as in itself a form of worship;
+and his intense conviction of the ultimate salvation of the whole of
+mankind. To Winstanley, Reason is the Ruling Spirit of the whole
+Creation, is God, the Spirit of Righteousness, who is ever seated within
+the hearts of men combating the lusts of the flesh, the promptings of
+the brute animal nature of mankind. Disobedient man may know him not,
+because covetous flesh, the promptings of self-love, hath deceived him,
+and "so he looks abroad for a God, and so doth imagine or fancy a God in
+some particular place of glory beyond the skies; or else, if men do look
+for a God within them, yet are they led by the notions of King Flesh,
+and not of King Spirit."[47:1] Reason, in short, is the spark of the
+Divine in man, the Spirit of Light that dwells within and may rule the
+mind and actions of every man. Conscience is but the promptings of
+Reason, inspiring men to right action, to deal justly and brotherly and
+to live in peaceful and harmonious association with their fellows.
+Self-love, covetousness, the desire of the flesh, is ever the enemy of
+Reason. And life is but a continuous struggle between these two powers
+for dominion in the Creation, over the hearts and actions of mankind.
+Self-love ruling the hearts of man, is the Adam that causes him to sin,
+not the crime of the man Adam who lived so many thousand years ago. And
+similarly it is the ruling of the spirit of Jesus Christ, the Inward
+Light, within the hearts of man, not the sufferings of a man Christ
+Jesus, which is the essential condition of individual and social
+salvation. "This is the lightning that shall spread from East to West.
+This is the Kingdom of Heaven within you, dwelling and ruling in your
+flesh. Therefore learn to know Jesus Christ as the Father knows him;
+that is, not after the flesh; but know that the Spirit within the flesh
+is that mighty man Christ Jesus. He within governs the flesh; he within
+laid down the flesh, when he was said to die; he within is to arise, not
+at a distance from man, but he will rise up in men, and manifest himself
+to be the light and life of every man and woman that is saved by
+him."[47:2] By following the desires of the flesh, the promptings of
+selfish covetousness, we can never gain true happiness, which is Heaven,
+for the voice of Reason within us, of our conscience, or the Inward
+Light illumining the inner darkness, will upbraid{4} us and cast us into
+Hell within us. True happiness, complete satisfaction, which is Heaven,
+can only be gained by following the dictates of Reason, by following the
+promptings of the Inward Light. Thus to Winstanley, as to Tolstoy, the
+Kingdom of Heaven, as well as the kingdom of hell, is within men's
+minds, and "there is no other."[48:1] Everything that happens, however,
+is ordained, or rather permitted, by God the Father, "the Ruling Spirit
+of the Whole Creation," for His own ends. He controls the Spirits or
+Powers we call evil, as well as those we call good: all work in
+accordance with His commands, to further His ends. In Winstanley's
+philosophy, unlike that of Luther, there was no room for an independent
+Devil. Though in our blindness we may attribute our sufferings to such a
+personage, yet whatever happens to a man is somehow or other for his own
+good, though in an unregenerate state we may not realise this. All
+suffering, in truth, does but tend to purify the soul from the lust of
+the flesh, to enable the Inward Light to overcome the inward darkness,
+to enable Reason to overcome Self-Love, good to overcome evil: and thus
+to lead men to God. In the end, in the day of Judgement, the good will
+triumph, Reason will cast out Covetousness, Universal Love will cast out
+Self Love, meekness will cast out pride, righteousness will cast out
+unrighteousness: and all men made perfect by the Inward Light, the
+Spirit of Christ within them, will rejoice in the knowledge and glory of
+God.
+
+It is almost impossible to read Winstanley's earlier theological
+pamphlets without being struck by the similarity in thought and doctrine
+with those to-day still held by the Society of Friends, or Quakers,
+whose original name amongst themselves, be it remembered, was the
+Children of Light. And it is interesting to note that during the
+seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the opponents of the Quakers
+repeatedly taunted them with being disciples of Winstanley the
+Leveller.[49:1] Thus the Right Reverend Thomas Coomber, Dean of Durham,
+in a pamphlet significantly entitled _Christianity no Enthusiasm: Or the
+several kinds of inspiration and Revelation pretended to by the Quakers
+tried and found destructive to Holy Scripture and True Religion_,
+published in 1678, wrote as follows:
+
+ "First for their original, it may seem more difficult to discover,
+ where Sects are not called after their Founder, but after some
+ property, etc., it may be harder to trace them to their head. In
+ 1652 their beginning is supposed, and then abouts they were so
+ called and known. John Whitehead fixes it in the year 1648;[49:2]
+ and Hubberthorne in 1660 told the King that they were then twelve
+ years standing.[49:3] In that black year to these kingdoms (1648)
+ their pretended light appeared.[50:1] ... But the very draughts and
+ even body of Quakerism are to be found in the several works of
+ Gerrard Winstanley, a zealous Leveller, wherein he tells us of the
+ arising of new times and dispensations, and challengeth Revelation
+ very much for what he writ."
+
+Coomber proceeds to quote from every one of Winstanley's theological
+pamphlets, and then continues:
+
+ "That these are the Quaker principles is well enough known,
+ allowing for some little alterations, as few Sect-Masters but have
+ their doctrines varied by their Proselytes.... Now, considering
+ these opinions, the year, the country[50:2] (as _The Mystery of
+ God_ is dedicated to his "beloved countrymen of the County of
+ Lancaster"), the printer Giles Calvert, and that several Levellers
+ settled into Quakers, we incline to take them for Winstanley's
+ Disciples and a branch of the Levellers. And what this man writes
+ of--levelling men's estates, of taking in of Commons, that none
+ should have more ground than he was able to till and husband by
+ his labour--proving unpracticable by reason of so many tough old
+ laws which had fixed propriety; yet it is pursued by the Quakers as
+ much as they well can, in thouing everybody, in denying Titles,
+ Civil Respects, and terms of distinction among men, and at first
+ they were for Community."
+
+If Winstanley's writings be really the source whence the early Quakers,
+the Children of Light, drew their most characteristic tenets and
+doctrines, as we ourselves do not doubt, then surely his noble ambition
+has been satisfied: for through them he has, indeed, influenced the
+thought of his country, the thought of the whole world, which owes more
+than we even yet realise to their pure and altruistic teachings.
+However, leaving this most interesting question to be decided by our
+readers, each for himself, we shall now place the chief contents of
+these writings before them, using as far as possible Winstanley's own
+words.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[41:1] Both Gerrard and Winstanley are common names in that part of
+Lancashire which lies between Wigan and Liverpool. In the Wigan Parish
+Register there is an entry under the above date--"Gerrard Winstanlie,
+son of Edward Winstanlie." The first pamphlet he wrote, _The Mystery of
+God concerning the whole Creation_, is dedicated "To my beloved
+countrymen of the County of Lancaster." In his time the term
+"countrymen" had a more contracted meaning than now, and implied a
+common nativity of a Shire or Parish: indeed it still has this meaning
+in some parts of Cheshire.
+
+[41:2] _A Watchword to the City of London._
+
+[43:1] Between the years 1644-1662 the works of the German mystic Jakob
+Boehme were translated into English. All Winstanley's theological
+pamphlets were published in the year 1648-1649, to which year the origin
+of the Quaker doctrines is generally attributed.
+
+[44:1] See _The Mystery of God concerning the whole Creation, Mankind_.
+British Museum, Press Mark, 4377, a. 1. The whole pamphlet consists of
+some 69 closely printed pages.
+
+[44:2] _Truth lifting up its Head above Scandals._ British Museum, Press
+Mark, 4372, a.a. 17.
+
+[45:1] _The Saint's Paradise._ British Museum, Press Mark, E. 2137.
+
+[45:2] _Truth lifting up its Head above Scandals._
+
+[46:1] _Truth lifting up its Head above Scandals._
+
+[46:2] _The Saint's Paradise._
+
+[47:1] _The Saint's Paradise._
+
+[47:2] "That which the people called Quakers lay down as a main
+fundamental in religion, is this, that God, through Christ, hath placed
+a principle in every man, to inform him of his duty, and to enable him
+to do it; and that those who live up to this principle, are the people
+of God; and that those who live in disobedience to it, are not God's
+people, whatever name they bear, or profession they may make of
+religion.... By this principle they understand something that is Divine,
+and though in man, not of man, but of God; it came from Him and leads to
+Him all those who will be led by it ... it is the spirit given to every
+man to profit withal."--William Penn, _Primitive Christianity Revived_
+(1696). Quoted from J. S. Rowntree's _The Society of Friends; its Faith
+and Practice_.
+
+[48:1] Speaking of the early Quakers, Cotton Mather, after attributing
+the origin of this sect "to some fanatics here in our town of Salem,"
+describes the principles of "the old Foxian Quakerism" as follows:
+"There is in every man a certain excusing and condemning _principle_,
+which indeed is nothing but some _remainder_ of the Divine Image left by
+the compassion of God upon the conscience of man after his fall.... They
+scoffed at our imagined God beyond the stars." He also contends that
+"the new turn such ingenuous men as Mr. Penn" had given to Quakerism,
+had made of it "quite a new thing." See his _History of New England_,
+book vii. chap. iv.
+
+[49:1] The Rev. Thos. Bennet, on p. 4 of _An Answer to the Dissenters'
+Pleas for Separation_, published in 1711, referring to the origin of the
+various sorts of dissenters, speaks of the time "when Winstanley
+published the principles of Quakerism, and enthusiasm broke out." In a
+footnote he mentions _The Saint's Paradise_.
+
+[49:2] Gerard Croese in _The General History of the Quakers_, published
+1696, says, "The Quakers themselves date their first rise from the
+forty-ninth year of the present century."
+
+[49:3] See _An account of what passed between the King and Richard
+Hubberthorne, after the delivery of George Fox his letter to the King_,
+which is to be found amongst Thomasson's Pamphlets, British Museum.
+
+[50:1] As our readers will notice, all Winstanley's theological writings
+were written and published in 1648-1649. The Preface to _Truth Lifting
+up its Head above Scandals_ is dated October 16th, 1648; _The Saint's
+Paradise_ bears no date, but was certainly written before _The New Law
+of Righteousness_, the Preface to which is dated January 26th, 1648
+(1649). (At that time the New Year commenced on March 26th.)
+
+[50:2] Coomber had already pointed out that Quakerism arose in the North
+of England, and mainly in Winstanley's native county of Lancashire. His
+reference to Giles Calvert, the printer, is also most suggestive; for
+Calvert published almost all Winstanley's pamphlets, and later was one
+of the first authorised publishers of the official publications of the
+Society of Friends. Calvert's establishment seems to have been the
+source, as well as the depository, of much of the advanced literature of
+his times. In his _Protest against Toleration of Printing Pamphlets
+against Non-Conformists_, Baxter refers to it as follows: "Let all the
+Apothecaries of London have liberty to keep open shop. But O do not
+under that pretence let a man keep an open shop of poisons for all that
+will destroy themselves freely, as Giles Calvert doth for Soul-poisons."
+Calvert was suspected of having provided the funds for one of the later
+risings of the Fifth Monarchy Men. He subsequently joined the Quakers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+WINSTANLEY'S EXPOSITION OF THE QUAKER DOCTRINES (1648-1649)
+
+ "There is nothing more sweet and satisfactory to a man than this,
+ to know and feel that spiritual power of righteousness to rule in
+ him which he calls God.... Wait upon the Lord for teaching. You
+ will never have rest in your soul till He speaks in you. Run after
+ men for teaching, follow your forms with strictness, you will still
+ be at a loss, and be more and more wrapped up in confusion and
+ sorrow of heart. But when once your heart is made subject to
+ Christ, the Law of Righteousness, looking up to Him for
+ instruction, waiting with a meek and quiet spirit till He appear in
+ you: then you shall have peace; then you shall know the truth, and
+ the truth shall make you free."--_The New Law of Righteousness_.
+
+
+_The Mystery of God concerning the whole Creation, Mankind_, is the
+title of Winstanley's first published pamphlet, to which we have already
+referred, and which was written early in the year 1648, probably in
+April or May. As already mentioned, it opens with a Dedicatory Epistle
+to "My beloved countrymen of the County of Lancaster," in which he first
+apologises for venturing into print in the following suggestive words:
+"Dear countrymen, when some of you see my name subscribed to this
+ensuing discourse, you may wonder at it, and it may be despise me in
+your hearts ... but know that God's works are not like men's; He does
+not always take the wise, the learned, the rich of the world to manifest
+Himself in, and through them to others, but He chooses the despised, the
+unlearned, the poor, the nothings of the world, and fills them with the
+good tidings of Himself, whereas He sends the others empty away." He
+further apprehends that his view, that "the curse that was declared to
+Adam was temporary," and that ultimately the curse shall be removed off
+the whole Creation, and the whole of mankind shall be saved, will not
+be favourably received by those whom he is specially addressing. But he
+avows it a necessary truth, and concludes his appeal by saying that
+since the pamphlet was written he had met with "more Scripture to
+confirm it, so that it is not a spirit of private fancy, but it is
+agreeable to the Written Word."
+
+The pamphlet opens with Winstanley's interpretation of the story of the
+fall of Adam, the outline of which we have already given. Subsequently
+he describes his own experiences: how he lay under bondage to the
+serpent self-love, and saw not his bondage; how God had manifested His
+love to him by causing him to see that the things in which he did take
+pleasure were, in truth, his death and his shame. He again repeats his
+contention that in due time God will not lose any of His work, but
+redeem "His own whole Creation to Himself." Though this, he holds, will
+not be done all at once, but in several dispensations, "some whereof are
+passed, some in being, and some yet to come." He quotes largely from the
+Scriptures, more especially from Revelation, in support of this view;
+and argues most vehemently against the objection that if this were true,
+if eventually all will be saved, then men need not trouble about their
+own individual salvation. He also protests against the doctrine of an
+everlasting Hell, as unconfirmed by the Holy Scriptures, as destructive
+of God's work, and as incompatible with His great goodness.
+
+The prevalence of the belief in dispensations, past, present, and
+future, may be gathered from the following extract from one of
+Cromwell's speeches to the Army Council, November 1st, 1647: "Truly, as
+Lieut. Col. Goffe said, God hath in several ages used several
+dispensations, and yet some dispensations more eminently in one age than
+another. I am one of those whose heart God hath drawn out to wait for
+some extraordinary dispensations, according to those promises He hath
+set forth of things to be accomplished in the latter time, and I cannot
+but think that God is beginning of them."[53:1]
+
+The same idea reappears, in fact influences the whole of Winstanley's
+second pamphlet, of some 127 closely printed duodecimo pages, as might
+almost be inferred from its title, _The Breaking of the Day of
+God_,[54:1] which is in itself a revelation of its main contents. The
+Dedicatory Epistle, which is dated May 20th, 1648, some twelve months
+prior to the outbreak of the Digger Movement, already recorded, is the
+most interesting and suggestive portion of this long, wearisome, and
+almost unreadable volume. It is addressed to--"The Despised Sons and
+Daughters of Zion, scattered up and down the Kingdom of England." He
+first reminds them that "they are the object of the world's hatred and
+reproach," "branded as wicked ones," "threatened with ruin and death,"
+"the object of every one's laughter and reproach," "sentenced to be put
+to death under the name of round-heads," and so on. That they "are
+counted the troublers of Kingdoms and Parishes where they dwell, though
+the truth is that they are the only peaceable men in the Kingdom, who
+love the People's peace, the Magistrate's peace, and the Kingdom's
+peace." He continues--"But what's the reason the world doth so storm at
+you, but because you are not of this world, nor cannot walk in the dark
+ways of the world. They hated your Lord Jesus Christ, and they hate you.
+They knew not Him, and they know not you. For if they had known Him,
+they would not have crucified Him; and if they did truly know the power
+of the God that dwells in you, they would not so despise you." "But,
+well," he goes on to say, "these things must be. It is your Father's
+will that it shall be so; the world must lie under darkness for a time;
+that is God's dispensation to them. And you that are the Children of
+Light must lie under the reproach and oppression of the world;[54:2]
+that is God's dispensation to you. But it shall be but for a little
+time. What I have here to say is to bring you glad tidings that your
+redemption draws near."
+
+In the pamphlet itself Winstanley attempts to prove that the coming
+reign of Righteousness, and the overthrow of the Covetous, Self-Seeking
+Power, are entirely in accordance with the prophesies of the Scriptures,
+more especially with Revelation and John. In its final pages he
+vehemently protests against the continued union of Church and State, or
+rather against the continued upholding of the persecuting power of the
+Church by the secular authorities. "The misery of the age" he attributes
+to the fact that men are still striving "to uphold the usurped
+Ecclesiastical Power, which God never made," and that in upholding this
+they are "so mad and ignorant" as "to count Magistracie no government
+unless the Beast reign cheek by chaw with it, as formerly in the days of
+ignorance." This, however, he contends, should not be so, "for
+Magistracie in the Commonwealth must stand, it's God's ordinance. But
+this Ecclesiastical power in and over the Saints must fall." "This
+Ecclesiastical power," he contends, "hath been a great troubler of
+Magistracie ever since the deceived Magistracie set it up." The function
+of Magistracie, "which is God's Ordinance," is "to be a terror to the
+wicked, and to protect them that do well; whereas by this Ecclesiastical
+power, established by deceived Magistracie, the sincere in heart that
+worship God in spirit and truth, according as God hath taught them and
+they understand, these are and have been troubled in Sessions, in
+Courts, and punished by fine and prisons. But the loose-hearted that
+will be of any religion that the most is of, these have their liberty
+without restraint. And so Magistracie hath acted quite backward, in
+punishing them that do well, and protecting in a hypocritical liberty
+them that do evil. O that our Magistrates would let Church-work alone to
+Christ, upon whose shoulders they shall find the government lies, and
+not upon theirs. And then, in the wisdom and strength of Christ, they
+would govern Commonwealths in justice, love, and righteousness more
+peaceably."[55:1]
+
+This pamphlet concludes with the following wise and beautiful thought:
+
+ "All that I shall say in conclusion is this: Wait patiently upon
+ the Lord; let every man that loves God endeavour by the spirit of
+ wisdom, meekness, and love to dry up Euphrates, even this spirit of
+ bitterness, that like a great river hath overflowed the earth of
+ mankind. For it is not revenge, prisons, fines, fightings, that
+ will subdue a tumultuous spirit; but a soft answer, love and
+ meekness, tenderness and justice, to do as we would be done unto:
+ this will appease wrath. When this Sun of Righteousness and Love
+ arises in Magistrates and people, one to another, then these
+ tumultuous national storms will cease, and not till then. This Sun
+ is risen in some; this Sun will rise higher, and must rise higher;
+ and the bright shining of it will be England's liberty."
+
+The next fruit of Winstanley's prolific pen is a volume of some 134
+closely printed pages, entitled _The Saint's Paradise: Or the Father's
+Teaching the only Satisfaction to Waiting Souls_,[56:1] from which in
+the previous chapter we have already quoted somewhat freely. The words
+on its title-page, "The inward testimony is the Soul's strength,"
+indicate the characteristic teachings of this remarkable book, which are
+also admirably suggested by the two biblical quotations that also appear
+thereon. "And they shall teach no more every man his neighbour, and
+every man his brother, saying, Know the Lord: for they shall all know
+me, from the least of them to the greatest of them, saith the Lord"
+(Jer. xxxi. 34). "But the annointing which ye have received of him
+abideth in you; and ye need not that any man teach you: but as the same
+annointing teacheth you all things, and is truth" (1 John ii. 27).
+
+As was his usual custom, Winstanley opens with a Dedicatory letter,
+addressed this time "To my Beloved Friends whose Souls hunger after
+sincere milk," in which he relates his experience of the insufficiency
+of mere traditional, or book, or imparted knowledge, in the following
+words:
+
+ "I myself have known nothing but what I received in tradition from
+ the mouths and pen of others. I worshipped a God, but I neither
+ knew who he was nor where he was, so that I lived in the dark,
+ being blinded by the imagination of my flesh.... I spoke of the
+ name of God, and Lord, and Christ, but I knew not this Lord, God,
+ and Christ. I prayed to a God, but I knew not where he was nor what
+ he was, and so walking by imagination I worshipped the devil, and
+ called him God. By reason whereof my comforts were often shaken to
+ pieces, and at last it was shown to me, that while I builded upon
+ any words or writings of other men, or while I looked after a God
+ without me, I did but build upon the sand, and as yet I knew not
+ the Rock."
+
+He then admonishes his friends that, though they may not as yet be aware
+of it, and though they will probably be offended with him for saying so,
+yet that, in reality, "this ignorant, unsettled condition is yours at
+this time." However, he protests that nevertheless:
+
+ "I do not write anything as to be a teacher of you, for I know you
+ have a teacher within yourselves (which is the Spirit) and when
+ your flesh is made subject to him, he will teach you all things,
+ and bring all things to your remembrance, so that you shall not
+ need to run after men for instruction, for, your eyes being opened,
+ you shall see the King of Righteousness sit upon the throne within
+ yourselves, judging and condemning the unrighteousness of the
+ flesh, filling your face with shame, and your soul with horror,
+ though no man see or be acquainted with your actions or thoughts
+ but yourselves, and justifying your righteous thoughts and actions,
+ and leading you into all ways of truth."
+
+Winstanley then further explains that the Father, the Spirit of
+Righteousness, of Reason, pervades the whole Universe, and "dwells in
+every creature, but supremely in man," and then continues:
+
+ "Truly, Friends, the King of Righteousness within you is a meek,
+ patient, and quiet spirit, and full of love and sincerity.... And
+ when you come to know, feel, and see that the Spirit of
+ Righteousness governs your flesh, then you begin to know your God,
+ to fear your God, to love your God, and to walk humbly before your
+ God, and so to rejoice in Him. Therefore if you would have the
+ peace of God, as you call it, you must know what God it is you
+ serve, which is not a God without you, visible among bodies, but
+ the Spirit within you, invisible in every body to the eye of flesh,
+ yet discernible to the eye of the spirit. And when souls shall have
+ communion with that spirit, then they have peace, and not till
+ then."
+
+In the first chapter Winstanley emphasises the essential difference
+between the teachings of men and the teachings of God in the following
+words:
+
+ "The teachings of men and the teachings of God are much different.
+ The former being but the light of the moon, which shines not of
+ itself, but by the means and through the help of the sun. The
+ latter is the light of the sun, which gives light to all, not by
+ means and helps from others, but immediately from himself.
+
+ "Men's teachings are twofold. First, when men speak to others what
+ they have heard or read of the Scriptures, or books of other men's
+ writings, and have seen nothing from God Himself.... Secondly,
+ others speak from their own experience, of what they have heard and
+ seen from God, and of what great things God hath done for their
+ souls.... It is very possible that a man may attain to a literal
+ knowledge of the Scriptures, of the Prophets and Apostles, and may
+ speak largely of the history thereof, and yet both they that speak
+ and they that hear may be not only unacquainted with, but enemies
+ to that Spirit of truth by which the Prophets and Apostles
+ writ.[58:1] "For it is not the Apostles' writings, but the spirit
+ that dwelt in them, that did inspire their hearts, which gives life
+ and peace to all."
+
+In the second chapter Winstanley consoles those whom he is specially
+addressing by expressing his conviction that though their enemies may
+think to kill all the Saints, and though God may suffer them to kill
+some, yet others of them will necessarily be preserved to keep alive
+their beliefs and to spread abroad their teachings, of the ultimate
+triumph of which he never seemed to doubt. However, in view of the
+perplexity of the times and of the dangers by which they were
+surrounded, he gave them the following somewhat worldly-wise
+advice--"For the appearance of God now is in the Saints that they
+worship the Father in spirit and truth in such a secret manner as the
+eye of the world cannot and does not always see": a practice of which,
+as we have already noticed, the adherents of the Family of Love were
+accused in the reign of Queen Elizabeth.
+
+It is, however, in the fourth and fifth chapters that Winstanley
+concisely and eloquently summarises the fundamental articles of his
+religious faith. In them he again emphatically warns his fellows against
+looking to others for knowledge of Divine revelations, and strongly
+advises them to look into their own hearts. In support of this view he
+quotes the Scripture text--"Light is come into the world, and men love
+darkness rather than light, because their deeds are evil" (John iii.
+19), which he then proceeds to explain as follows:
+
+ "The world is mankind; and every particular man and woman is a
+ perfect creation of himself, a perfect created world. If a
+ particular branch of mankind desire to know what the nature of
+ other men and women are, let him not look abroad, but into his own
+ heart, and he shall see. So that I say, man is the world, a perfect
+ creation, from whose poisoned flesh proceeds the lust of the eye,
+ the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life: these are not of the
+ Father. Now _light is come into the world_; that is, the Spirit of
+ Right Understanding hath taken up his dwelling in this flesh. Hence
+ man is called a reasonable creature, which is a name given to no
+ other creature but man, because the Spirit of Reason appears acting
+ in him, which if men did submit themselves unto, they would act
+ righteously continually: and so man would become lord of all other
+ creatures in righteousness.... But the masculine powers of the
+ poisoned flesh stand it out against the King of Glory till He cast
+ them into the lake of fire, into His own spirit, by which they are
+ tried, and, being found but chaff and not able to endure, are
+ burned and consumed to nothing in the flame."
+
+"No man or woman, however, need be troubled at this," Winstanley
+contends, "for let every man cleanse himself of these wicked powers that
+rule in him, and there speedily will be a harmony of love in the great
+creation, even among all creatures. Therefore let no man look without
+himself, and say, other men will not obey this light that is come into
+mankind; but let him look into his own heart, and he shall find that the
+powers in his heart are those very men of the world that will not submit
+to that Light of Reason that is come into it."[60:1]
+
+Winstanley then proceeds to explain his conception of the resurrection
+of Christ, as follows:
+
+ "Friends, do not mistake the resurrection of Christ. You expect
+ that he shall come in one single person, as he did when he came to
+ suffer and die, and thereby to answer the types of Moses' Law. Let
+ me tell you that if you look for him under the notion of one single
+ man after the flesh, to be your Saviour, you shall never, never
+ taste salvation by him.... If you expect or look for the
+ resurrection of Jesus Christ, you must know that the Spirit within
+ the flesh is the Jesus Christ, and you must see, feel, and know
+ from himself his own resurrection within you, if you expect life
+ and peace by him. For he is the Life of the World, that is, of
+ every particular son and daughter of the Father ... for everyone
+ hath the Light of the Father within himself, which is the mighty
+ man Christ Jesus. And he is now rising and spreading himself in
+ these his sons and daughters, and so rising from one to many
+ persons till he enlighten the whole creation (mankind) in every
+ branch of it, and cover this earth with knowledge as the waters
+ cover the sea.... And this is to be saved by Jesus Christ; for that
+ mighty man of spirit hath taken up his habitation within your
+ body; and your body is his body, and now his spirit is your spirit,
+ and so you are become one with him and with the Father. This is the
+ faith of Christ, when your flesh is subject to the Spirit of
+ Righteousness, as the flesh of Christ was subject. And this is to
+ believe in Christ, when the actings and breathings of your soul are
+ within the centre of the same spirit in which the man Jesus Christ
+ lived, acted, and breathed."
+
+In accordance with this profound, philosophic, and truly spiritual view,
+Winstanley found it incumbent upon him to warn his fellows against
+another generally held belief, as follows:
+
+ "So that you do not look for a God now, as formerly you did, to be
+ a place of glory beyond the sun, moon, and stars, nor imagine a
+ Divine Being you know not where; but you see Him ruling within you;
+ and not only in you, but you see and know Him to be the Spirit or
+ Power that dwells in every man and woman, yea, in every creature,
+ according to his orb, within the globe of the Creation. So that now
+ you see and feel and taste the sweetness of the Spirit ruling in
+ your flesh, who is the Lord and King of Glory in the whole
+ Creation, and you have community with Him who is the Father of all
+ things. Now you are enlightened; now you are saved, and rise higher
+ and higher into life and peace, as this manifestation of the Father
+ increases and spreads within you."[61:1]
+
+As was only to be expected, the publication of the above pamphlets
+brought Winstanley into disrepute with the orthodox Ministers of the
+Church, who accused him of denying God, Christ, Scripture, and the
+Ordinances of God. This accusation gave rise to Winstanley's next
+pamphlet, of some 77 well-printed duodecimo pages, the preface to which
+is dated October 16th, 1648, and which bears the significant
+title--_Truth lifting its Head above Scandals_.[62:1] In this volume
+Winstanley indignantly denies such a charge, and makes use of the
+opportunity to restate his views even more clearly than he had
+previously done. The book opens with a dedicatory letter addressed "To
+the Scholars of Oxford and Cambridge, and to all that call themselves
+Ministers of the Gospel in City or Country," in which he carries the war
+into his enemy's camp in a forcible and masterly manner. He reminds them
+that they are not the only ones who have the right to judge of the
+meaning of the Scriptures, "For the people, having the Scriptures, may
+judge by them as well as you." He then continues:
+
+ "If you say, 'No, the people cannot judge, because they know not
+ the original:' I answer, Neither do you know the original. Though
+ by your learning you may be able to translate a writing out of
+ Hebrew or Greek into our mother-tongue, English, but to say this is
+ the original Scripture you cannot: for those very copies which the
+ Prophets and Apostles writ are not to be seen in your
+ Universities."
+
+He forces home his argument in the following words:
+
+ "You say you have the just copies of their writings. You do not
+ know that but as your Fathers have told you, which may be as well
+ false as true, if you have no other better ground than tradition.
+ You say that the interpretation of Scripture into our mother tongue
+ is according to the mind of the _spirit_. You cannot tell that
+ neither, unless you are able to say that those who did interpret
+ those writings have had the same testimony of spirit as the pen-men
+ of Scripture had. For it is the spirit within that must prove these
+ copies to be true."
+
+He then turns the tables by accusing them of being "the very men that do
+deny God, Scriptures, and the Ordinances of God; and that turn the
+truths of the Spirit into a lie, by leaving the letter, and walking in
+their own inferences"; and also "by holding forth spiritual things by
+the imagination of the flesh, and not by the law and testimony of the
+Spirit within." And he contends that, in truth, he and his fellows are
+"those men that do advance God, Christ, Scriptures, and Ordinances in
+the spirituality of them."
+
+In the opening chapter of the book itself, Winstanley, with more than
+his usual directness, plunges into the heart of his subject in the
+following suggestive words:
+
+ "I have said that whosoever worships God by hearsay, as others tell
+ him, and knows not what God is from light within himself; or that
+ thinks God is in the heavens above the skies, and so prays to that
+ God which he imagines to be there and everywhere, but from any
+ testimony within, he knows not how nor where: this man worships his
+ own imagination, which is the Devil. But he who is a true
+ worshipper must know who God is and how He is to be worshipped,
+ from the Power of Light shining within him, if ever he have true
+ peace."
+
+ "Hence," he continues, "a report is raised, and is frequent in the
+ mouth of the teachers, that I deny God. Therefore, first, I shall
+ give account of what I see and know Him to be; and let the
+ understanding in heart judge me."
+
+Winstanley then endeavours to formulate his theistic views and beliefs
+in a series of questions and answers, from which we feel compelled to
+quote the following:
+
+ "_Q._ What is God?
+
+ "_A._ I answer, He is the incomprehensible Spirit Reason;[63:1]
+ who as He willed the Creation should flow out of Him, so He
+ governs the whole Creation in righteousness, peace, and moderation.
+ And He is called the Father, because as the whole Creation comes
+ out of Him, so He is the life of the whole Creation, by whom every
+ creature doth subsist.
+
+ "_Q._ When can a man call the Father his God?
+
+ "_A._ When he feels and sees, by experience, that the Spirit which
+ made the flesh doth govern and rule king in his flesh. And so can
+ say, I rejoice to feel and see my flesh made subject to the Spirit
+ of Righteousness.
+
+ "_Q._ But may not a man call Him God till he have this experience?
+
+ "_A._ No: for if he do, he lies, and there is no truth in him. For
+ whatsoever rules as king in his flesh, that is his God....
+
+ "_Q._ But I hope that the Father is my Governor, and therefore may
+ I not call Him God?
+
+ "_A._ Hope without ground is the hope of the hypocrite. Thou canst
+ not call Him God till thou be able in pure experience to say thy
+ flesh is subject to Him. For if thy knowledge be no more but
+ imagination or thoughts, it is of the Devil, and not of the Father.
+ Or if thy knowledge be merely from what thou hast read or heard
+ from others, it is of the flesh, not of the spirit.
+
+ "_Q._ When then may I call him God, or the Mighty Governor, and not
+ deceive myself?
+
+ "_A._ When thou art by that Spirit made to see Him rule and govern,
+ not only in thee but in the whole creation.... Wait upon Him till
+ He teach thee. All that read do not understand; the Spirit only
+ sees truth, and lives in it."
+
+Winstanley subsequently explains his views at considerable length. True
+knowledge, he contends, comes from within, not from without. "The whole
+Scriptures," he maintains, "are but a report of spiritual mysteries held
+forth to the eye of the flesh in words." The Gospel he explains to be
+"the Father Himself, that is, the Word and glad tidings that speak peace
+inwardly to pure souls." The writings of the Apostles and the Prophets
+he regards as "the report or declaration of the Gospel, which are to
+cease when the Lord Himself, who is the everlasting Gospel, doth
+manifest Himself to rule in the flesh of sons and daughters." Concerning
+Baptism he says: "I have gone through the ordinance of dipping, which
+the letter of the Scripture doth warrant, yet I do not press anyone
+thereunto, but bid everyone to wait upon the Father, till He teach and
+persuade, and then their submitting will be sound. For I see now that it
+is not the material water, but the water of life; that is, the Spirit in
+which souls are to be dipped, and so drawn forth into the one Spirit;
+and all these outward customs and forms are to cease and pass
+away."[65:1] As regards prayer, he contends that no one should pray
+"until the Power within thee gives words to thy mouth to utter, then
+speak, and thou canst not but speak."[65:2]
+
+It is, however, in a subsequent pamphlet, _The New Law of
+Righteousness_, that Winstanley more fully expounds this characteristic
+Quaker doctrine, and summarises his deeply philosophic views concerning
+silence as the necessary precursor of all true prayer, as follows:
+
+ "All these declare the half-hour's silence that is to be in Heaven
+ (Rev. viii. 1). For all mouths are to be stopped by the power of
+ Reason's law shining within the heart. And this abundance of talk
+ that is amongst people by arguments, by disputes, by declaring
+ expositions upon others' word and writing, by long discourse,
+ called preaching, shall all cease (Jer. xxxi. 34).
+
+ "Some shall not be able to speak, they shall be struck silent with
+ shame by seeing themselves in a loss and in confusion. Neither
+ shall they care to speak till they know by experience within
+ themselves what to speak; but wait with a quiet silence upon the
+ Lord, till He break forth within their hearts, and give them words
+ and power to speak.... Men must leave off teaching one another,
+ and the eyes of all shall look upward to the Father, to be taught
+ of Him. And at this time silence shall be a man's rest and liberty;
+ it is the gathering time, the soul's receiving time: it is the
+ forerunner of pure language.... He that speaks from the original
+ light within can truly say, I know what I say, and I know whom I
+ worship."
+
+Somewhat later he continues:
+
+ "None shall need to turn over books and writings (for indeed all
+ these shall cease too) to get knowledge. But everyone shall be
+ taken off from seeking knowledge from without, and with an humble
+ quiet heart shall wait upon the Lord, till He manifest Himself: for
+ He is a great king, and worthy to be waited upon. His testimony
+ within fills the heart with joy and singing. He first gives
+ experiences; and then power to set forth these experiences. Hence
+ you shall speak to the rejoicing one of another, and to the praise
+ of Him who declares His power in you. But he that speaks his
+ thoughts, studies, and imagination, and stands up to be a teacher
+ of others, shall be judged for his unrighteousness, because he
+ seeks to honor flesh, and does not honor the Lord."
+
+He then somewhat mystically continues:
+
+ "Behold the Annointing, that is to reach all things, is coming to
+ create a new Heaven and a new Earth wherein Righteousness shall
+ dwell, and there shall not be a vessel of humane earth but it shall
+ be filled with Christ. If it were possible to have so many buckets
+ as to contain the whole ocean, every one could be filled with the
+ ocean, and being put all together it would make up the perfect
+ ocean which filled them all. Even so Christ, which is the spreading
+ power, is now beginning to fill every man and woman with Himself.
+ He will dwell and rule in everyone; and the Law of Reason and
+ Equity shall be Christ in them. Every single body is a star shining
+ forth of Him, or rather a body in and out of whom He shines; and He
+ is the ocean of power that fills all. And so the words are true,
+ the Creation, mankind, shall be the fulness of Him that fills all
+ in all. This is the Church, the great Congregation, that, when the
+ mystery is completed, shall be the mystical body of Christ, all set
+ at liberty from inward and outward straits and bondage. And this
+ is called the holy breathing that made all new by Himself and for
+ Himself."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We think we have now dealt sufficiently with Winstanley's exposition of
+the theistical doctrines subsequently adopted, and almost in their
+entirety, by the Society of Friends. In a later chapter (Chap. XVI.) we
+shall show how far he himself modified his earlier views. And in the
+succeeding chapter we shall briefly lay before our readers the practical
+and fundamental social changes Winstanley deemed demanded by the
+dictates of Reason, as forming the necessary first steps towards laying
+the foundations of "a new Earth and a new Heaven wherein Righteousness,
+or Justice, shall dwell."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[53:1] _Clarke Papers_, vol. i. p. 379.
+
+[54:1] British Museum, Press Mark, 4377, a. 2.
+
+[54:2] In 1655, Giles Calvert published "A _Declaration from the
+Children of Light_ (who are by the world scornfully called Quakers)."
+British Museum, Press Mark, E. 838.
+
+[55:1] The full truth of these words comes home to us when we bear in
+mind that the law (_De Comburendo Heretico_) sanctioning the burning of
+heretics was only repealed in the reign of Charles the Second (in 1677),
+the Bishops of the day opposing its repeal almost to a man.
+
+[56:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 2137.
+
+[58:1] "The early Friends were men of prayer, and diligent searchers of
+the Holy Scriptures. Unable to find true rest in the various opinions
+and systems which in that day divided the Christian world, they believed
+that they found the Truth in a more full reception of Christ, not only
+as the living and ever-present Head of the Church in its aggregate
+capacity, but also as the life and light, the spiritual ruler, teacher
+and friend of every individual member."--_Book of Discipline of the
+Society of Friends_. Quoted by J. S. Rowntree, _Society of Friends: its
+Faith and Practice_, p. 24. See also Barclay's _Apology for the true
+Christian Divinity_, p. 1: Second Proposition.
+
+[60:1] "It is the inward master (saith Augustine) that teacheth, it is
+Christ that teacheth, it is inspiration that teacheth: where this
+inspiration and unction is wanting, it is vain that words from without
+are beaten in." And thereafter: "For he that created us, and redeemed
+us, and called us by faith, and dwelleth in us by his Spirit, unless he
+speaketh unto you inwardly, it is needless for us to cry out."--From
+Barclay's _Apology_, p. 13.
+
+[61:1] "If instead of assuming the being of an awful deity, which men,
+though they cannot and dare not deny, are always unwilling, sometimes
+unable, to conceive, we were to show them a near, visible, inevitable,
+but all-beneficent deity, whose presence makes the earth itself a
+heaven, I think there would be fewer deaf children sitting in the
+market-place."--John Ruskin, _Modern Painters_.
+
+[62:1] British Museum, Press Mark, 4372, a.a. 17. Below the title
+appears the following words: "Professors of all forms, behold the
+Bridegroom is coming, your profession will be tried to purpose, your
+hypocricy shall be hid no longer. You shall feed no longer upon the Oil
+that was in other men's Lamps (the Scriptures), for now it is required
+that everyone have Oil in his own Lamp, even the pure testimony of truth
+within himself. For he that wants this, though he have the report of it
+in his book, he shall not enter with the Bridegroom into the chamber of
+peace."
+
+[63:1] "The incomprehensible Spirit Reason!" It is interesting to note
+here that the "Tau" of the great Chinese philosopher, Lau-tsze,--the
+word he uses to denote the Absolute, which, consequently, he wisely
+leaves vague and undefined, and which apparently has no English word
+exactly equivalent to it,--suggests to his translator three English
+words--"the Way, Reason, and the Word." The latter's one objection to
+the word Reason as an equivalent is that to him it "seems to be more
+like a quality or attribute of some conscious being than Tau is." See
+_The Speculations of the old Philosopher Lau-tsze_, by John Chalmers,
+M.A. Introduction.
+
+[65:1] See Barclay's _Apology_ (Concerning Baptism), p. 7.
+
+[65:2] "All true and acceptable worship to God is offered in the
+_inward_ and _immediate_ moving and drawing of his own Spirit, which is
+limited neither to places, times, nor persons. For though we be to
+worship him always, in that we are to fear before him; yet as to the
+outward signification thereof in prayers, praises, or preachings, we
+ought not to do it where and when we will, but where and when we are
+moved by the secret inspiration of his Spirit in our hearts, which God
+heareth and accepteth of, and is never wanting to move us thereunto when
+need is, of which he himself is the alone proper judge."--Barclay's
+_Apology_ (Concerning Worship), p. 6.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE NEW LAW OF RIGHTEOUSNESS
+
+ "The great Lawgiver in Commonwealth's Government is the Spirit of
+ Universal Righteousness dwelling in mankind, now rising up to teach
+ everyone to do to another as he would have another do to him.... If
+ any goes about to build up Commonwealth's Government upon Kingly
+ principles, they will both shame and loose themselves: for there is
+ a plain difference between the two Governments."--WINSTANLEY, _The
+ Law of Freedom_.
+
+
+On January 26th, 1648 (1649), four days prior to the execution of
+Charles the First, the very day the King's death-warrant lay at the
+Painted Chamber, Westminster, awaiting the signatures of some of the
+less resolute among his judges, Winstanley sat down to write the opening
+epistle of the pamphlet we have now to make known to our readers.[68:1]
+They were stirring and momentous times, of which, as it seems to us,
+this pamphlet is in every way worthy. It reveals a most momentous step
+in the development of Winstanley's mind; for in it we see him move from
+the misty regions of cosmological, metaphysical, and theistical
+speculations to the somewhat firmer ground of social thought. From the
+time of its publication, Winstanley leaves the former almost untouched,
+concentrates his mind almost exclusively on the latter, pleads
+eloquently for the recognition of natural law in the social, or
+political world, and steps boldly forward to a life of action, animated
+and inspired by the conclusions concerning the necessary foundations of
+a social state based upon righteousness that his previous reflections
+and meditations, or the Inward Light to which he unhesitatingly
+submitted himself, had revealed unto him.
+
+The only indication that Winstanley was in any way influenced by the
+exciting discussions which under the circumstances must have raged
+everywhere around him, is to be found in his condemnation of Capital
+Punishment, which may here find a fitting place. In accordance with his
+favourite method, he summarises his views in answer to a hypothetical
+question, as follows:
+
+ "But is not this the old rule, He that sheds man's blood by man
+ shall his blood be shed?
+
+ "I answer, It is true, but not as usually it is observed. If any
+ man can say, he can give life, then he hath the power to take away
+ life. But if the power of life and death be only in the hand of the
+ Lord, then surely he is a murderer of the Creation that taketh away
+ the life of his fellow-creature, man, by any law whatsoever.... For
+ if I kill you, I am a murderer; if a third come to kill me for
+ murdering you, he is a murderer of me; and so murder hath been
+ called Justice, when it is but the curse.... Therefore, O thou
+ proud flesh that dares hang or kill thy fellow-creatures that are
+ equal to thee in the Creation, know this, that none hath the power
+ of life and death but the Spirit, and that all punishments that are
+ to be inflicted amongst creatures called men are only such as to
+ make the offender to know his Maker, and to live in the community
+ of the Righteous Law of Love one with the other."
+
+The opening epistle is addressed--"To the Twelve Tribes of Israel that
+are circumcised in heart, and scattered through all the Nations of the
+Earth." In it he admonishes them to be patient, for "this New Law of
+Righteousness and Peace which is raising up is David your King, which
+you have been seeking a long time"; that "He is now coming to reign,
+and the isles and nations of the Earth shall all come in unto Him"; that
+"He will rest everywhere, for this blessing will fill all places." But
+he reminds them that "the swords and counsels of the flesh shall not be
+seen in this work; the arm of the Lord only shall bring these mighty
+things to pass in the day of His power." "Therefore," he continues, "all
+that I can say is this--Though the world, even the seed of the flesh,
+despise you, and call you by reproachful names at their pleasure, yet
+wait patiently upon your King; He is coming; He is rising; the Son is
+up, and His glory will fill the Earth."
+
+In the opening chapter of this pamphlet Winstanley still further
+elucidates his interpretation of the allegorical stories of the Creation
+and the Fall. How in the beginning man was created perfect, and "the
+whole Creation lived in man, and man lived in his Maker." And how man
+fell from this high estate by following the promptings of self-love,
+covetousness, or the desires of the flesh, to which he attributes all
+the misery and suffering men bring upon themselves, and which he
+personifies as the First Adam. "All that this Adam doth," he says, "is
+to advance himself to be the one power. He gets riches and government in
+his hands so that he may lift up himself and suppress the universal
+liberty, which is Christ."
+
+He then continues:
+
+ "And this is the beginning of particular interest, buying and
+ selling the Earth from one particular hand to another, saying 'This
+ is mine,' upholding this particular propriety by a law of
+ government of his own making, and thereby restraining other
+ fellow-creatures from seeking nourishment from their Mother Earth.
+ So that though a man was bred up in a Land, yet he must not work
+ for himself where he would, but for him who had bought part of the
+ Land, or had come to it by inheritance of his deceased parents, and
+ called it his own Land. So that he who had no Land was to work for
+ small wages for those who called the Land theirs. Thereby some are
+ lifted up in the chair of tyranny, and others trod under the
+ footstool of misery, as if the Earth were made for a few, and not
+ for all men."
+
+"As if the Earth were made for a few, and not for all men!" In these
+few pertinent and indignant words Winstanley strikes the keynote of all
+his subsequent writings, as that of those of many other later students
+of social problems, from John Locke,[71:1] who may be regarded as his
+immediate successor, to Thomas Spence, Patrick Edward Dove,[71:2] Thomas
+Paine,[71:3] and Henry George.
+
+He then further emphasises his contention, in words similar to those
+that are to-day resounding throughout the advanced political centres of
+the world, as follows:
+
+ "And let all men say what they will, so long as such are Rulers as
+ call the land theirs, upholding this particular propriety of Mine
+ and Thine, the common people shall never have their liberty, nor
+ the Land be ever freed from troubles, oppressions, and
+ complainings, by reason whereof the Creator of all things is
+ continually provoked. O thou proud, selfish, governing Adam, in
+ this Land called England! know that the cries of the poor, whom
+ thou layeth heavy oppressions upon, are heard."
+
+And in the closing passage of the chapter he formulates his social
+ideals in the following words:
+
+ "This is the unrighteous Adam, that dammed up the water springs of
+ universal liberty, and brought the Creation under the curse of
+ bondage, sorrow, and tears. But when the Earth becomes a Common
+ Treasury, as it was in the beginning, and the King of Righteousness
+ comes to rule in every one's hearts, then He kills the first
+ Adam--for Covetousness thereby is killed.
+
+ "A man shall have meat and drink and clothes by his labour in
+ freedom, and what can he desire more in Earth? Pride and Envy
+ likewise are killed thereby; for everyone shall look upon each
+ other as equal in the Creation, every man, indeed, being a perfect
+ Creation of himself. And so this second Adam, Christ the Restorer,
+ stops or dams up the running of those stinking waters of
+ self-interest, and causes the waters of life and liberty to run
+ plentifully in and through the Creation, making the Earth one Store
+ House, and every man and woman to live in the Law of Righteousness
+ and Peace, members of one household."
+
+In a subsequent chapter (chap. vi.) he returns to this subject, and
+emphasises the differences of the views of the ethical-minded man and
+the ordinary conventional materialist, in the following suggestive
+passage:
+
+ "The man of the flesh judges it a righteous thing that some men who
+ are cloathed with the objects of the Earth, and so called rich men,
+ whether it be got by right or wrong, should be Magistrates to rule
+ over the poor; and that the poor should be servants, nay, rather
+ slaves, to the rich. But the spiritual man, which is Christ, doth
+ judge according to the light of equity and reason, that all mankind
+ ought to have a quiet subsistence and freedom to live upon Earth;
+ and that there should be no bondman nor beggar in all his holy
+ mountain."
+
+For, he contends:
+
+ "Mankind was made to live in the freedom of the spirit, not under
+ the bondage of the flesh. For everyone was made to be a Lord over
+ the creation of the Earth, cattle, fish, fowl, grass, trees, not
+ anyone to be a bond-slave and a beggar under the Creation of his
+ own kind. That so everyone, living in freedom and love in the
+ strength of the Law of Righteousness in him, not under straits of
+ poverty, nor bondage of tyranny one to another, might all rejoice
+ together in righteousness, and so glorify their Maker. For surely
+ this must dishonor the Maker of all men, that some men should be
+ oppressing tyrants, imprisoning, whipping, hanging their
+ fellow-creatures, men, for those very things which those very men
+ themselves are guilty of. Let men's eyes be opened, and it appears
+ clear enough, that the punishers have and do break the Law of
+ Equity and Reason more or as much as those who are punished by
+ them."
+
+But, he adds rejoicingly, just
+
+ "As the powers and wisdom of the flesh hath filled the Earth with
+ injustice, oppression, and complainings, by mowing the Earth into
+ the hands of a few covetous unrighteous men, who assume a lordship
+ over others, declaring themselves thereby to be men of the basest
+ spirits. Even so, when the spreading of wisdom and truth fill the
+ Earth, mankind, he will take off that bondage, and give a universal
+ liberty, and there shall be no more complainings against
+ oppression, poverty, or injustice."
+
+Winstanley, however, warns his readers that "this is not to be done by
+the hands of a few, or by unrighteous men that would pull down the
+tyrannical government out of other men's hands and keep it in their own
+heart, as we feel this to be a burden of our age. But it is to be done
+by the universal spreading of the Divine Power, which is Christ in
+mankind, making them all to act in one spirit, and in and after one law
+of reason and equity."
+
+In the next chapter (chap. viii.) Winstanley describes his peculiar
+state of mind at the time he first arrived at his fundamental
+conclusions, which he evidently regarded as directly revealed to him, in
+the following mystic words:
+
+ "As I was in a trance not long since, divers matters were present
+ to my sight, which here must not be related. Likewise I heard these
+ words--_Work together: Eat bread together: Declare this all
+ abroad_. Likewise I heard these words--_Whosoever it is that labors
+ in the earth--for any person or persons that lift up themselves as
+ Lords and Rulers over others, and that doth not look upon
+ themselves as equal to others in the Creation, the hand of the Lord
+ shall be upon that laborer. I the Lord have spoke it and I will do
+ it. Declare this all abroad._"
+
+He then continues:
+
+ "After I was raised up I was made to remember very fresh what I had
+ seen and heard, and did declare all things to them that were with
+ me, and I was filled with abundance of quiet peace and secret joy.
+ And since that time those words have been like very fruitful seed,
+ that have brought forth increase in my heart, which I am much
+ pressed in spirit to declare all abroad."
+
+He further explains the meaning of this revelation in the following
+words:
+
+ "The poor men by their labors in this time of the first Adam's
+ government, have made the buyers and sellers of land, or rich men,
+ to become tyrants and oppressors over them. But in the time of
+ Israel's restoration, now beginning, when the King of Righteousness
+ himself shall be Governor in every man, none then shall work for
+ hire, neither shall any give hire, but everyone shall work in love,
+ one with and for another, and eat bread together, as being members
+ of one household, the Creation, in whom Reason rules king in
+ perfect glory."
+
+Under these circumstances, he contends:
+
+ "No man shall have any more land than he can labor himself,[74:1]
+ or have others to labor with him in love, working together, and
+ eating bread together, as one of the tribes or families of Israel,
+ neither giving hire nor taking hire."
+
+After having given forcible expression to his profound contempt for all
+mere lip-professions of brotherhood, sympathy, and love, with which
+those whose actions are least in accord with the dictates of
+righteousness, equity, and reason are so often the most profuse, and
+reminding these that--"The talking of love is no love; it is the acting
+of love in righteousness which the Spirit Reason, our Father, delights
+in"; he addressed the following stirring warning to his fellow-workers:
+
+ "Therefore you dust of the earth that are trod under foot, you poor
+ people that make both scholars and rich men your oppressors by your
+ labors, take notice of your privilege, the Law of Righteousness is
+ now declared. If you labor the earth and work for others that live
+ at ease and follow the ways of the flesh, eating the bread which
+ you get by the sweat of your brow, not of their own, know this,
+ that the hand of the Lord shall break out upon every such hireling
+ laborer, and you shall perish with that covetous rich man that hath
+ held and yet doth hold the Creation under the bondage of the
+ curse."
+
+Winstanley then declares his intentions as to the future, which, as we
+shall see, he faithfully carried out, as follows:
+
+ "I have now obeyed the command of the Spirit that bid me declare
+ all this abroad. I have declared it and I will declare it by word
+ of mouth, I have now declared it with my pen. And when the Lord
+ doth show unto me the place and manner, how He will have us that
+ are called common people manure and work upon the common lands, I
+ will then go forth and declare it by my action, to eat my bread by
+ the sweat of my brow, without either giving or taking hire, looking
+ upon the land as freely mine as another's. I have now peace in the
+ Spirit, and I have an inward persuasion that the spirit of the poor
+ shall be drawn forth ere long to act materially this Law of
+ Righteousness."
+
+Winstanley then proceeds to formulate the practical proposals, whereby
+he deemed the disinherited many might reclaim their inheritance, and
+that without infringing on the established rights or the property of the
+rich: proposals, be it remembered, which, if acted on, would have
+altered the whole future economic history of Great Britain. Before
+judging of their efficacy, we should bear in mind that at the time he
+was writing, before the era of Enclosure Acts, over a third of England
+was still common land. However, whatever opinion may be held on this
+point, there can be no denying the lucidity and incisiveness of his
+words: he says:
+
+ "But be it so that some will say, This is my land, and call such
+ and such a parcel of land his own interest.... Therefore, if the
+ rich still hold fast to this propriety of Mine and Thine, let them
+ labor their own lands with their own hands. And let the common
+ people, that say the earth is _ours_, not _mine_, let them labor
+ together, and eat bread together upon the commons, mountains, and
+ hills."
+
+Such, then, was the proposal by which Winstanley deemed the relative
+merits of Individualism and Communism, as a system of social union,
+might best be tested, and which he immediately proceeded to defend in
+the following words:
+
+ "For as the enclosures are called such a man's land, and such a
+ man's land, so the Commons and Heath are called the common
+ people's. And let the world see who labor the Earth in
+ righteousness, and those to whom the Lord gives the blessing, let
+ them be the people that shall inherit the Earth. Whether they that
+ hold a civil propriety, saying, This is mine, which is selfish,
+ devilish, and destructive to the Creation; or those that hold a
+ common right, saying, The Earth is ours, which lifts up the
+ Creation from bondage."
+
+Further, he contends that if his proposals were acted on--
+
+ "None can say their right is taken from them. For let the rich work
+ alone by themselves; and let the poor work together by themselves.
+ The rich in their enclosures, saying, _This is mine_; and the poor
+ upon the Commons, saying, _This is ours, the Earth and its fruits
+ are common_. And who can be offended at the poor for doing this?
+ None but covetous, proud, idle, pampered flesh, that would have the
+ poor work still for this devil (particular interest) to maintain
+ his greatness that he may live at ease."
+
+And after expressing his intense conviction that "Surely the Lord hath
+not revealed this in vain," he summarises the whole train of reasoning
+that had led him to his final conclusion, as follows:
+
+ "Was the Earth made for to preserve a few covetous, proud men to
+ live at ease, and for them to bag and barn up the treasures of the
+ Earth from others, that these may beg or starve in a fruitful land;
+ or was it made to preserve all her children? Let Reason and the
+ Prophets' and Apostles' writings be judge, the Earth is the Lord's,
+ it is not to be confined to particular interests.... Did the light
+ of Reason make the Earth for some men to engross up into bags and
+ barns, that others might be oppressed with poverty? Surely Reason
+ did not make that law. For the Earth is the Lord's; that is, the
+ spreading Power of Righteousness, not the inheritance of covetous,
+ proud flesh that dies. If any man can say that he makes corn or
+ cattle, he may say, _That is mine_. But if the Lord made these for
+ the use of his Creation, surely then the Earth was made by the Lord
+ to be a Common Treasury for all, not a particular treasury for
+ some."
+
+Winstanley then summarises the results of the prevailing system in the
+following terse but telling passage:
+
+ "Divide England into three parts, scarce one part is manured. So
+ that here is land enough to maintain all her children, yet many die
+ of want, or live under a heavy burden of poverty all their days.
+ And this misery the poor people have brought upon themselves by
+ lifting up particular interest by their labors."
+
+This long but most interesting chapter concludes with indicating the
+three steps Winstanley deemed essential for both individual and social
+salvation, with which our notice of this pamphlet may fittingly close:
+
+ "There are yet three doors of hope for England to escape destroying
+ plagues.
+
+ "First, Let everyone leave off running after others for knowledge
+ and comfort, and wait upon the Spirit, Reason, till he break forth
+ out of the clouds of your heart and manifest himself within you.
+ This is to cast off the shadow of learning, to reject covetous,
+ subtile, proud flesh that deceives all by the hearsay and
+ traditional preaching of words, letters, and syllables without the
+ Spirit, and to make choice of the Lord, the true teacher of
+ everyone in their own inward experience.
+
+ "Secondly, Let everyone open his bags and barns, that all may feed
+ upon the crops of the Earth, that the burden of poverty may be
+ removed. Leave off this buying and selling of land, or of the
+ fruits of the Earth, and, as it was in the light of Reason first
+ made, so let it be in action amongst all, a Common Treasury, none
+ enclosing or hedging in any part of the Earth, saying, _This is
+ mine_, which is rebellion and high treason against the King of
+ Righteousness. And let this word of the Lord be acted amongst all:
+ _Work together; Eat bread together._{5}
+
+ "Thirdly, Leave off dominion and lordship one over another; for the
+ whole bulk of mankind are but one living Earth. Leave off
+ imprisoning, whipping, and killing, which are but the actings of
+ the curse. Let those that have hitherto had no land, and have been
+ forced to rob and steal through poverty; henceforth let them
+ quietly enjoy land to work upon, that everyone may enjoy the
+ benefit of his Creation, and eat his own bread with the sweat of
+ his own brows. For surely this particular propriety of mine and
+ thine hath brought in all misery upon people. First, it hath
+ occasioned people to steal one from another. Secondly, it hath made
+ laws to hang those that did steal. It tempts people to do an evil
+ action, and then kills them for doing of it. Let all judge whether
+ this be not a great evil.
+
+ "Well, if everyone would speedily set about the doing of these
+ three particulars I have mentioned, the Creation would thereby be
+ lift up out of bondage, and our Maker should have the glory of the
+ works of His hands."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Before Winstanley found opportunity to declare in action the truths that
+had been revealed unto him, he found time to write yet another pamphlet,
+entitled _Fire in the Bush_.[78:1] In it he still further elucidates his
+interpretation of the story of the Creation, and his conception of the
+Tree of Knowledge and the Tree of Life, and reaffirms his basic
+contention that "All the strivings that are in mankind are for the
+Earth: Who shall have it? Whether some particular persons shall have it,
+and the rest have none; or whether the Earth shall be made a Common
+Treasury to all, without respect of persons?" As it traverses much the
+same ground as the pamphlet from which we have just quoted at such
+length, it really calls for no further notice from us. The following
+verse on its title-page, however, seems to us worth quoting:
+
+ "The Righteous Law a government will give to whole mankind
+ How he should govern all the Earth, and therein true peace find;
+ This government is Reason pure, who will fill man with Love,
+ And wording justice, without deeds, is judged by this Dove."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[68:1] The full title reads--"_The New Law of Righteousness_: Budding
+forth to restore the whole Creation from the Bondage or the Curse. Or a
+glympse of the new Heaven and the new Earth, wherein dwells
+Righteousness. Giving an Alarm to silence all that preach or speak from
+hearsay or imagination." This pamphlet is very scarce. There is no copy
+in the British Museum or in any other of the London Public Libraries,
+nor in the Bodleian. The Jesus College Library, Oxford, however, is
+fortunate enough to possess a copy, which, to judge from its marginal
+notes, was once in the possession of one of Winstanley's followers or
+admirers, and which was courteously placed at our disposal by the
+librarian, Mr. Hazell, to whom we here desire to convey our grateful
+acknowledgement.
+
+[71:1] See his chapter "Of Property" in his classical work on _Civil
+Government_, a chapter which, as the conservative Hallam observes,
+"would be sufficient, if all Locke's other writings had perished, to
+leave him a high name in philosophy."
+
+[71:2] For a short account of the writings of Thomas Spence and Patrick
+Edward Dove, see J. Morrison Davidson's _Four Precursors of Henry
+George_. (Publisher, F. Henderson, London.)
+
+[71:3] See his _Agrarian Justice_.
+
+[74:1] "As much land as a man tills, plants, improves, cultivates, and
+can use the product of, so much is his property."--JOHN LOCKE, _Civil
+Government_. (Of Property.)
+
+[78:1] "_Fire in the Bush_: The Spirit burning, not consuming, but
+purging mankind." Published by Giles Calvert. This pamphlet, too, is
+very scarce. There is no copy in the British Museum, but a copy is to be
+found in the Bodleian Library.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+LIGHT SHINING IN BUCKINGHAMSHIRE
+
+ "O England, England! wouldst thou have thy government sound and
+ healthful? Then cast about and see and search diligently to find
+ out all those burthens that came in by Kings, and remove them; and
+ then will thy Commonwealth's Government arise from under the clods
+ under which as yet it is buried and covered with
+ deformity."--WINSTANLEY, _The Law of Freedom_.
+
+
+The place in the country to which our hero had retired was, we believe,
+the little town of Colnbrook, in the extreme southern end of the county
+of Buckinghamshire, on the borders of Middlesex, and within seven miles
+of St. George's Hill in Surrey. On December 5th, 1648, about a month
+prior to the date attached to the opening epistle of _The New Law of
+Righteousness_, there issued from the press a short pamphlet,[79:1]
+which, seeing that a second edition was printed the following March,
+appears to have had a considerable sale, and the title-page of which ran
+as follows:
+
+ "LIGHT SHINING IN BUCKINGHAMSHIRE:
+
+ OR
+
+ A Discovery of the Main Ground, Original Cause of all the Slavery
+ in the World, but chiefly in England. Presented by way of a
+ Declaration of many of the Well-Affected in that County, to all
+ their poor oppressed Countrymen of England. And also to the
+ consideration of the present Army under the conduct of the Lord
+ Fairfax.
+
+ Arise, O God, judge thou the Earth.
+
+ Printed in the year 1648."
+
+It opens as follows:
+
+ "Jehovah Ellohim created man after his own likeness and image,
+ which image is his son Jesus (Heb. 1. v. 3), who is the image of
+ the invisible God. Now man being made after God's image or
+ likeness, and created by the word of God, which word was made flesh
+ and dwelt amongst us, which word was life, and that life the light
+ of man (John 1. v. 1-4). This light I take to be that pure Spirit
+ in man we call Reason, which we call Conscience. From all which
+ there issued out that Golden Rule or Law, which we call Equity: the
+ sum of which is, saith Jesus, _Whatsoever ye would that men should
+ do to you, do to them: this is the Law and the Prophets._ James
+ calls it the Royal Law; and to live from this principle is called a
+ good conscience."
+
+It then points out the cause why men are disinclined to follow this
+sound principle of harmonious social union, and the consequences
+thereof, as manifested in the prevailing conditions, in the following
+words:
+
+ "But man following his own sensuality became a devourer of the
+ creatures and an encloser, not content that another should enjoy
+ the same privilege as himself, but encloseth all from his brother;
+ so that all the land, trees, beasts, fish, fowl, etc., are enclosed
+ into a few mercenary hands, and all the rest deprived and made
+ their slaves. So if they cut a tree for fire, they are to be
+ punished, or hunt a fowl, it is imprisonment, because it is
+ gentlemen's game, as they say. Neither must they keep cattle, or
+ set up a house, all ground being enclosed, without hiring leave for
+ the one or buying room for the other of the chief encloser, called
+ the Lord of the Manor, or some other wretch as cruel as he.... Now
+ all this slavery of the one and tyranny of the other was at first
+ by murder and cruelty one against the other. And that they might
+ strengthen themselves in their villany against God's Ordinances and
+ their Brother's Freedom and Rights, they had always a
+ Commander-in-Chief, and he became their King."
+
+After emphasising at some length that all special privileges of the few
+and disabilities of the many came in and are maintained by kings, it
+continues:
+
+ "So that observe the king is made by you your god on Earth, as God
+ is the God of Heaven, saith the Lawyers.... Now, Friends, what have
+ we to do with any of these unfruitful works of darkness? Let us
+ take Peter's advice (1 Pet. iv. 3)--_The time past of our lives may
+ suffice that we have wrought the will of the Gentiles, when we
+ walked in lascivious lusts, excess of wine, revellings,
+ banquetting, and abominable idolatry._ And let us not receive the
+ Beast's mark lest that the doom in Revelation (xiv. 9-10) befall
+ us: but let us oppose the Beast's power, and follow the Lamb
+ withersoever he goeth."
+
+The pamphlet then dwells on the chief causes impelling "wicked men," the
+privileged classes and their parasites, to stand up for a king:
+
+ "Rich men cry for a king, so that the Poor should not claim his
+ right, which is his by God's gift.
+
+ "The horseleech Lawyer cries for a king, because else the supreme
+ power will come into the People's representatives lawfully
+ elected....
+
+ "The things, Lords, Barons, etc., cry for a king, else their
+ tyrannical House of Peers falls down, and all their rotten honour,
+ and all Patents and Corporations: their power being derived from
+ him; if he go down, all their tyranny falls too."
+
+But now, it continues:
+
+ "The honest man that would have liberty cries down all interests
+ [or special privileges, as they would be termed to-day] whatsoever;
+ and to this end he desires Common Rights and Equity: which consist
+ of these particulars following:
+
+ "1. A just portion for each man to live, that so none need to beg
+ or steal for want, but everyone may live comfortably.
+
+ "2. A just Rule for each man to go by, which Rule is to be found in
+ Scripture.
+
+ "3. All men alike under the said Rule, which Rule is, to do to one
+ another as another should do to him....
+
+ "4. The government to be by Judges, called Elders, men fearing God
+ and hating Covetousness, to be chosen by the people, and to end all
+ controversies in every town or hamlet, without any other or further
+ trouble or charge."
+
+These, then, were the four points of the People's Charter of 1648; the
+four fundamental reforms which Winstanley, if Winstanley be the author
+of this pamphlet, as we believe, deemed necessary to secure the peace
+and well-being of the masses of the people. The pamphlet then indicates
+where the people are to look for their model, in the following words:
+
+ "And in the Scriptures the Israelite's Common-wealth is an
+ excellent pattern.... Now in Israel if a man were poor, then a
+ public maintenance and stock were to be provided to raise him
+ again. So would all Bishops Lands, Forest Lands, and Crown Lands do
+ in your Land, which the apostate Parliament men give one to
+ another, and to maintain the needless thing called a king. And
+ every seven years the whole Land was for the poor, the fatherless,
+ widows, and strangers, and at every crop a portion allowed them.
+
+ "Mark this, poor people, what the Levellers would do for you. Oh
+ why are you so mad as to cry up a king? It is he and his Court and
+ Patentee-men, as Majors Aldermen, and such creatures, that like
+ cormorants devour what you should enjoy, and set up Whipping-posts
+ and Correcting-houses to enslave you. 'Tis rich men that oppress
+ you, saith James.
+
+ "Now in this right Common-wealth he that had least had no want.
+ Therefore the Scriptures call them a Family or Household of Israel.
+ And amongst those who received the Gospel, they were gathered into
+ a Family, and had all things common (Acts 2. 44); yet so that each
+ one was to labor and get his own bread. And this is Equity as
+ aforesaid. For it is not lawful nor fit for some to work and the
+ others to play; for it's God's command that all work, let all eat.
+ And if all work alike, is it not fit for all to eat alike, have
+ alike, and enjoy alike privileges and freedoms? And he that doth
+ not like this, is not fit to live in a Common-wealth. Therefore
+ weep and howl, ye rich men, by what vain name or title soever, God
+ will visit you for all your oppressions. You live upon other men's
+ labors, giving them bran to eat, extorting extreme rents and taxes
+ from your fellow-creatures. But now what will you do? for the
+ people will no longer be enslaved by you, for the knowledge of the
+ Lord shall enlighten them."
+
+The pamphlet then details the doings of William the Conqueror, contends
+that the Nobility and Gentry owe all their special privileges to his
+innovations, that "their rise was the Country's ruin, and the putting
+them down will be the restitution of our rights again." The very
+existence of Parliaments is attributed to the uprisings of their
+forefathers; and after emphasising the manner in which all power was
+still secured to the King and the House of Peers, it concludes with the
+following exhortation: "So when all Israel saw that the King hearkened
+not unto them, the people answered the King, saying, What portion have
+we in David; neither have we inheritance in the Son of Jesse. To your
+tents, O Israel."
+
+Within a few days of the publication of the second edition of the above
+pamphlet, its author was ready with the second part, which appeared on
+March 30th (1649), and was entitled:
+
+ "MORE LIGHT SHINING IN BUCKINGHAMSHIRE:[83:1]
+
+ Being a Declaration of the State and Condition that all Men are in
+ by Right. Likewise the Slavery all the World are in by their
+ own kind, and this Nation in particular, and by whom. Likewise
+ the Remedies, as Take away the Cause and the Effect will cease.
+
+ Being a Representation unto all the People of England, and to the
+ soldiery under the Lord General Fairfax.
+
+ THE SECOND PART.
+
+ 'Whatsoever doth manifest, is Light.'--EPH. v. 13."
+
+As this pamphlet covers much the same ground as the former, our notice
+of it will be but brief. After emphasising the importance of the
+observance of the Golden Rule, it declares that "All men by God's
+donation are alike free by birth, and have alike privileges by virtue of
+His grant." "So that for any to enclose the creation wholly from his
+kind, to his own use, to the impoverishment of his fellow-creatures,
+whereby they are made his slaves, is altogether unlawful. And it is the
+cause of all oppressions, whereby many thousands are deprived of their
+rights which God hath invested them withal, whereby they are forced to
+beg or steal for want." It then details the various means taken to this
+end, and declares them, as well as the kingly power which its author
+holds, to be their source and origin, to be opposed to the direct
+command of God as expressed in the Holy Scriptures. Hence it denounces
+the oppressing privileged classes as "rebels against God's commands,"
+and as "traitors against God's Annointed, Jesus Christ, who alone is
+Lord and King over men, and all men are equal." The writer contends that
+with the fall of the King, all the special privileges, grants, patents,
+monopolies, etc., created by him, should have fallen also. But since "it
+is apparent that the Grandees of the Parliament intend still to uphold
+them, and to take a large share thereof unto themselves," he finds
+himself forced to appeal "to all our dear Brethren in England and to the
+Soldiers in the Army to stand everyone in his place to oppose all
+Tyranny whatsoever and by whomsoever intended against us."
+
+At the foot of this pamphlet we find the following notice: "Reader, You
+may expect in the Third Part to have an Anatomising of all Powers that
+now are, etc. And in the Fourth Part, the Grounds and Rules that all men
+are to go by. Farewell." Whether these notices refer to some of
+Winstanley's pamphlets, the second seems to point to _The New Law of
+Righteousness_, or not, we have no means of knowing. Nor, indeed,
+whether the above pamphlets were from his pen, though we strongly
+believe them to have been so. In any case they seem to us to have
+sufficient bearing on the Digger Movement to justify our noticing them
+here.
+
+Some six weeks later, on May 10th, yet another pamphlet appeared from
+the same part of the country, entitled:
+
+ "A DECLARATION OF THE WELL-AFFECTED IN THE COUNTY OF
+ BUCKINGHAMSHIRE:[84:1]
+
+ Being a Representation of the Middle Sort of Men within the three
+ Chilterne Hundreds of Disborough, Burnum and Stoke, and part of
+ Ailsbury Hundred, whereby they declare their Resolution and
+ Intentions, with a Removal of their Grievances."
+
+This is a very short pamphlet, of some seven pages, in which these
+"Middle Sort of Men" state that they had waited for eight years for
+redress of their grievances, but finding them still continue, and
+expecting little good from the Parliament and the Grandees of the Army,
+"finding the Grandees of the Army to be the men that hinder both the
+honest soldiery that stand for absolute freedom, and doth imprison and
+put them to death that are for Just Principles of Common Right and
+Equity, so that those honest men are by those proud Commanders
+persecuted by the name of Levellers...."[85:1]
+
+ "Therefore we declare our intentions that the World may take notice
+ of our principles, which are for Common Right and Freedom. And
+ therefore--
+
+ "1. We do protest against all Arbitrary Courts, Terms, Lawyers,
+ Impropriators, Lords of Manors, Patents, Privileges, Customs,
+ Tolls, Monopolisers, Incroachers, Enhancers, etc., or any other
+ interest-parties, whose powers are arbitrary, etc., as not to allow
+ or suffer ourselves to be inslaved by any of those parties, but
+ shall resist, as far as lawfully we can, all their Arbitrary
+ Proceedings.
+
+ "2. We protest against the whole Norman Power, as being too
+ intolerable a burden any longer to bear.
+
+ "3. We protest against paying Tythes, Tolls, Customs, etc.
+
+ "4 We protest against any coming to Westminster Terms, or to give
+ any money to the Lawyers, but will endeavour to have all our
+ Controversies ended by 2, 3 or 12 men of our own neighborhood, as
+ before the Norman Conquest.
+
+ "5. We protest against any trial by a Martial Court as arbitrary,
+ tyrannical and wicked, and not for a Free People to suffer in times
+ of peace.
+
+ "6. We shall help to aid and assist the Poor to the regaining all
+ their Rights, dues, etc., that do belong unto them, and are
+ detained from them by any Tyrant whatsoever.
+
+ "7. And likewise will further and help the said Poor to manure,
+ dig, etc., the said Commons, and to sell those woods growing
+ thereon to help them to a stock, etc.
+
+ "8. All well affected persons that joyn in Community in God's way,
+ as those Acts 2. v. 44, and desire to manure, dig and plant in the
+ waste grounds and commons, shall not be troubled or molested by any
+ of us, but rather furthered therein.
+
+ "We desire to go by the Golden Rule of Equity, viz., To do to all
+ men as we would they should do to us, and no otherwise: and as we
+ would tyrannise over none, so we shall not suffer ourselves to be
+ slaves to any whosoever."
+
+That such views were not restricted to "the Levellers" may be inferred
+from the very similar demands made in "A Petition of the Officers
+engaged for Ireland," and presented to the House of Commons in July of
+the same year (see Whitelocke, p. 413), from which we take the
+following: "That proceedings in law may be in English, cheap, certain,
+etc., and all suits and differences first to be arbitrated by three
+neighbours, and if they cannot determine it, then to certify the Court."
+They also "humbly pray"--"That Tithes may be taken away, and Two
+Shillings in the Pound paid for all lands, out of which the Ministers to
+be maintained and the Poor." This, we should think, was the first
+petition to the House of Commons in favour of the Taxation of Land
+Values.
+
+In fact, religious and political speculation, as well as dissatisfaction
+and discontent, were rife amongst the active and thoughtful of the
+people, as well as in the Army. On the 17th of the previous month, some
+of the soldiers, who, according to Gardiner,[87:1] "had resolved not to
+leave England till the demands of the Levellers [the political
+Levellers] had been granted--300 in Hewson's regiment alone," had
+refused to go to Ireland, and had been promptly cashiered. On April 24th
+a dispute about pay in one of the troops of Whalley's regiment had
+resulted "in some thirty of the soldiers seizing the colours and
+refusing to leave their quarters." It was not till Cromwell and Fairfax
+appeared on the scene that they submitted. Fifteen of their number were
+carried to Whitehall, where, on the 26th, a Court-martial condemned six
+of them to death. "Cromwell, however, pleaded for mercy, and in the end
+all were pardoned with the exception of Robert Lockyer, who was believed
+to have been their leader." Lockyer, Gardiner continues, "though young
+in years, had fought gallantly through the whole of the war. He was a
+thoughtful, religious man, beloved by his comrades, who craved for the
+immediate establishment of liberty and democratic order. As such he had
+stood up for _The Agreement of the People_ on Corkbush Field," when
+another trooper of a similar character, named Arnold, had been shot to
+death, "and he now entertained against his commanding officers a
+prejudice arising from other sources than the mere dispute about pay,
+which influenced natures less noble than his own.... On the 27th,
+Lockyer, firmly believing himself to be a martyr to the cause of right
+and justice, was led up Ludgate Hill to the open space in front of St.
+Paul's, and there, after expostulating with the firing party for their
+obedience to their officers in a deed of murder, he was shot to death."
+
+Lockyer's funeral took place on the 29th, and was the occasion of a
+remarkable demonstration, of which we take the following account from
+the pages of Whitelocke's _Memorial of English Affairs_ (p. 399):
+
+ "Mr. Lockier a Trooper who was shot to death by Sentence of the
+ Court Martial was buried in this manner. About one thousand went
+ before the Corps, and five or six in a file, the Corps was then
+ brought with six Trumpets sounding a Soldier's Knell, then the
+ Trooper's Horse came clothed all over in mourning and led by a
+ Footman. The Corps was adorned with bundles of Rosemary, one half
+ stained with blood, and the Sword of the deceased with them. Some
+ thousands followed in Ranks and Files, all had Sea-green and black
+ Ribbon tied on their Hats and to their Breasts, and the Women
+ brought up the Rear. At the new Church Yard in Westminster some
+ thousands more of the better sort met them, who thought not fit to
+ march through the City. Many looked on this Funeral as an Affront
+ to the Parliament and Army; others called them Levellers, but they
+ took no notice of any of them."
+
+In view of such a manifestation of the state of public opinion, we
+cannot be surprised that Winstanley's eloquent and impressive appeals
+awoke a responsive echo in the minds of many who would have shrunk from
+following his example, or even from publicly avowing his creed.
+Moreover, the miserable condition of the masses of the agricultural
+population, of which we shall give some startling evidence later on,
+must have prepared a soil favourable to his self-imposed mission, to
+awaken them to a knowledge both of their rights and of their duties.
+Especially welcome must have been doctrines in accordance with their
+simple religious beliefs, as well as with their ancient and well-founded
+traditions of certain inalienable rights to the use of the land: rights
+that, as they well knew, had been filched from them under cover of laws
+they had no voice in making, which they did not understand, and which
+were enforced upon them by the power of the sword and gallows. We must
+remember, however, that though the landholders had succeeded in
+impoverishing, they had not yet succeeded in degrading the people; some
+remnant of the old English spirit was still left, and the Civil War had
+re-awakened the old English craving for freedom, liberty, and equity.
+The landholders, in their attempt to emancipate themselves from the
+control of the Crown, had kindled a fire amongst the people before which
+they quailed; small wonder, then, that about this time they began to
+wish, to intrigue and to struggle for the re-establishment of the
+Monarchy. From the time of Henry the Eighth the condition of the English
+labourers had steadily worsened; it was left to the landholders after
+the Restoration to complete their enslavement and degradation. When
+considering Winstanley's or any other similar doctrines, the student
+would do well to bear in mind Professor Thorold Rogers'
+conclusions,[89:1]--conclusions arrived at after a lifelong study of the
+question,--that--"I contend that from 1563 to 1824, a conspiracy,
+concocted by the law and carried out by parties interested in its
+success, was entered into, to cheat the English workmen of his wages, to
+tie him to the soil, to deprive him of hope, and to degrade him into
+irremediable poverty." Or, as he elsewhere expresses it[89:2]--"For more
+than two centuries and a half the English law, and those who
+administered the law, were engaged in grinding down the English workman
+to the lowest pittance, in stamping out every expression or act which
+indicated any organised discontent, and in multiplying penalties upon
+him when he thought of his natural rights."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[79:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark E 475 (11).
+
+[83:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 548 (33).
+
+[84:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 555.
+
+[85:1] About this time, or a little later, there appeared in London an
+interesting manifesto from some of the disbanded soldiers, the copy of
+which in the British Museum (Press Mark, 4152. b.b. 109) bears no date,
+but is addressed as follows: "To the Generals and Captains, Officers and
+Soldiers of this present Army. The Just and Equal Appeal, and the state
+of the Innocent Cause of us, who have been turned out of your Army for
+the exercise of our pure Consciences, who are now persecuted amongst our
+Brethren under the name of Quakers." Wherein they declare that "The
+first cause and ground of our engagement in the late wars against the
+Bishops and Prelates, and against Kings and Lords, and the whole body of
+oppressors: our first engagement, we say, against these was justly and
+truly upon that account of purchasing and obtaining Liberties in Civil
+Rights, and also in matters of Conscience in the exercise of the worship
+of God.... And we can safely say that the Liberty of Conscience and the
+True Freedom of the Nations from all their oppressions was the mark at
+which we aimed, and the harbour for which we hoped and the rest proposed
+in our minds as the absolute end of our long and weary travel."
+
+[87:1] _History of the Protectorate_, vol. i. pp. 50, 51.
+
+[89:1] _Six Centuries of Work and Wages_, p. 398.
+
+[89:2] _Socialism and Land._ Essay in a Quarterly Review, _Subjects of
+the Day_, part ii. p. 52.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE DIGGERS' MANIFESTOES
+
+ "Take notice, That England is not a Free People till the Poor that
+ have no land have a free allowance to dig and labor the Commons,
+ and so live as comfortably as the Land Lords that live in their
+ Inclosures. For the people have not laid out their monies and shed
+ their blood that their Land Lords, the Norman Power, should still
+ have its liberty and freedom to rule in tyranny, but that the
+ Oppressed might be set free, prison doors opened, and the Poor
+ People's heart comforted by an universal consent of making the
+ Earth a Common Treasury, that they may live together united by
+ brotherly love into one spirit, and having a comfortable livelihood
+ in the Community of one Earth their Mother."--WINSTANLEY, _The True
+ Levellers Standard Advanced_.
+
+
+By the publication of his earlier pamphlets, Winstanley seems to have
+attracted a small band of earnest disciples, eager by their actions to
+declare their adherence to the principles he had so fearlessly and
+eloquently proclaimed. However, before taking the steps they had decided
+on, they deemed it necessary openly and frankly to declare their
+intentions to the world, more especially to those whose individual or
+class interests would be likely to be affected thereby. Hence early in
+1649, probably in the last days of March or the beginning of April, they
+issued a pamphlet, signed by some 46 of them, which seems mainly from
+Winstanley's pen, entitled:
+
+ "A DECLARATION FROM THE POOR OPPRESSED PEOPLE OF ENGLAND:[90:1]
+
+ Directed to all that call themselves or are called Lords of Manors
+ through this Nation, that have begun to cut, or that through
+ fear of Covetousness do intend to cut down the woods and trees
+ that grow upon the Commons and Waste Land."
+
+The pamphlet opens with the following vigorous and pertinent words:
+
+ "We whose names are subscribed, do in the name of all the poor
+ oppressed people of England, declare unto you that call yourselves
+ Lords of Manors and Lords of the Land, that, in regard the King of
+ Righteousness, our Maker, hath enlightened our hearts so far as to
+ see that the Earth was not made purposely for you to be Lords of
+ it, and we to be your Slaves, Servants and Beggars, but it was made
+ to be a common livelihood to all.... And further, in regard the
+ King of Righteousness hath made us sensible of our burthens, and
+ the cries and groanings of our hearts are come before Him, we take
+ it as a testimony of love from Him, that our hearts begin to be
+ freed from slavish fear of men such as you are, and that we find
+ Resolutions in us, grounded upon the Inward Law of Love one towards
+ another, to dig and plough up the Commons and Waste Land through
+ England; and that our conversations shall be so unblamable that
+ your Laws shall not reach to oppress us any longer, unless you by
+ your Laws will shed the innocent blood that runs in our veins."
+
+Subsequently they protest against the Lords of Manors controlling the
+use and taking the profit of the Commons, hindering the people from
+supplying their wants as regards "Woods, Heath, Turf or Turfeys in
+places about the Commons," and continue defiantly:
+
+ "Therefore we are resolved to be cheated no longer, nor to be held
+ under the slavish fear of you no longer, seeing the Earth was made
+ for us as well as for you. And if the Common Land belong to us who
+ are the poor oppressed, surely the woods that grow upon the Commons
+ belong to us likewise. Therefore we are resolved to try the
+ uttermost in the light of Reason to know whether we shall be
+ Free-men or Slaves. If we lie still and let you steal away our
+ birthrights, we perish; and if we petition, we perish also, though
+ we have paid taxes, given free-quarter, and have ventured our lives
+ to preserve the Nation's freedom as much as you, and therefore, by
+ the Law of Contract with you, freedom in the land is our portion
+ as well as yours, equal with you. And if we strive for Freedom, and
+ your murdering, governing Laws destroy us, we can but perish."
+
+ "Therefore we require and we resolve to take both Common Land and
+ Common Woods to be a livelihood for us, and look upon you as equal
+ with us, not above us, knowing very well that England, the Land of
+ our Nativity, is to be a Common Treasury of Livelihood to all,
+ without respect of persons.
+
+ "So then, we declare unto you that do intend to cut our Common
+ Woods and Trees, that you shall not do it, unless it be for a stock
+ for us, and we to know of it by a public declaration abroad, that
+ the poor oppressed, who live thereabouts, may take it and employ it
+ for their public use: Therefore take notice, we have demanded it in
+ the name of the Commons of England, and of all the Nations of the
+ world, it being the righteous freedom of the Creation."
+
+They then warn all wood-buyers against purchasing from those who would
+dispose of such wood for their own private advantage, again emphasising
+their contention that they would take it only to provide a common stock
+for all. Then they appeal to the Great Council of England for protection
+and encouragement, urging that august body to fulfil the promises so
+freely made, at the outbreak of the Civil War, to induce them and others
+to espouse the Parliament's cause. Apparently they did not expect much
+from them, as their appeal commences in the following somewhat
+hesitating manner:
+
+ "And we hope we may not doubt (at least we expect) that they that
+ are called the Great Council and Powers of England, who so often
+ have declared themselves by promises and by covenants, and have
+ confirmed them by multitude of fasting days, and devout
+ protestations to make England a free people, upon condition they
+ would pay moneys and adventure their lives against the successor of
+ the Norman Conqueror, under whose oppressing power England was
+ enslaved. And we look upon that freedom promised to be the
+ inheritance of all, without respect of persons. And this cannot be
+ unless the Land of England be freely set at liberty from
+ proprietors and becomes a Common Treasury to all her children, as
+ every portion of the Land of Canaan was the common livelihood of
+ such and such a Tribe, and of every member of that Tribe, without
+ exception, neither hedging in any, nor hedging out.
+
+ "We say we hope we need not doubt of their sincerity to us herein,
+ and that they will not gainsay our determinate course. Howsoever,
+ their actions will prove to the view of all either their sincerity
+ or their hypocrisy. We know what we speak is our privilege and that
+ our cause is righteous; and if they doubt of it, let them but send
+ a child for us to come before them, and we will make it manifest
+ some ways."
+
+They then advance the grounds for their demands in the following
+incisive words:
+
+ "_First_, By the National Covenant, which yet stands in force to
+ bind Parliament and People to be faithful and sincere before the
+ Lord God Almighty, wherein every one in his several place hath
+ covenanted to preserve and seek the liberty each of other without
+ respect of persons.
+
+ "_Secondly_, By the late victory over King Charles we do claim this
+ our privilege to be quietly given us out of the hands of Tyrant
+ Government, as our bargain and contract with them. For the
+ Parliament promised if we would pay taxes, and give free-quarter,
+ and adventure our lives against Charles and his party, whom they
+ called the common enemy, they would make us a free people.[93:1]
+ These three being all done by us, as well as by themselves, we
+ claim this our bargain by the Law of Contract from them, to be a
+ free people with them, they being chosen by us, but for a peculiar
+ work, and for an appointed time, from among us, not to be our
+ oppressing Lords, but servants to succour us. But these two are our
+ weakest proofs. And yet by them, in the light of Reason and Equity
+ that dwells in men's hearts, we shall with ease cast down all those
+ former enslaving, Norman, reiterated Laws, in every King's reign
+ since the Conquest, which are as thorns in our eyes and pricks in
+ our sides, and which are called the Ancient Government of England.
+
+ "_Thirdly_, We shall prove we have a free right to the land of
+ England, being born therein, as well as elder brothers, and that it
+ is our right equal with them and they with us, to have a
+ comfortable livelihood in the Earth, without owning any of our own
+ kind to be either Lords or Land-Lords over us. And this we shall
+ prove by plain text of Scripture, without exposition upon them,
+ which the Scholars and Great Ones generally say is their rule to
+ walk by.
+
+ "_Fourthly_, We shall prove it by the Righteous Law of our
+ Creation, that mankind in all its branches is the Lord of the
+ Earth, and ought not to be in subjection to any of his own kind
+ without him, but to live in the light of the Law of Righteousness
+ and Peace established in his heart."
+
+The pamphlet concludes as follows:
+
+ "Thus in love we have declared the purpose of our hearts plainly,
+ without flattery, expecting love and the same sincerity from you,
+ without grumbling or quarrelling, being Creatures of your own image
+ and mould, intending no other matter herein, but to observe the Law
+ of Righteous Action, endeavouring to shut out of the Creation the
+ accursed thing called Particular Propriety, which is the cause of
+ all wars, bloodshed, theft, and enslaving Laws, that hold the
+ people under misery.
+
+ "Signed for and in the behalf of all the poor oppressed people of
+ England and the whole world--
+
+ "GERARD WINSTANLEY, }
+ JOHN COULTON, }
+ JOHN PALMER, }
+ THOMAS STAR, }
+ SAMUEL WEBB, } and others, forty-six in all.
+ JOHN HAYMAN, }
+ THOMAS EDCER, }
+ WILLIAM HOGRILL," }
+
+A few days after the publication of this declaration, viz., on Sunday,
+April 1st, 1649, the Diggers commenced their labours on the Commons
+around George's Hill, in Surrey, the first results of which we have
+already recorded. Within a few days of Winstanley and Everard's visit to
+Lord Fairfax and his Council of War, they and their followers drafted
+yet another pamphlet, which bears date April 26th, 1649, the very day
+Lockyer, "The Army's Martyr," was condemned to death, and the title-page
+of which reads as follows:
+
+ "THE TRUE LEVELLERS STANDARD ADVANCED:[95:1]
+
+ OR
+
+ THE STATE OF COMMUNITY OPENED AND PRESENTED TO THE SONS OF MEN.
+
+ BY
+
+ WILLIAM EVERARD.
+ JOHN PALMER.
+ JOHN SOUTH.
+ JOHN COURTON.
+ WILLIAM TAYLOR.
+ CHRISTOPHER CLIFFORD.
+ JOHN BARKER.
+ GERRARD WINSTANLEY.
+ RICHARD GOODGROOME.
+ THOMAS STARRE.
+ WILLIAM HOGGRILL.
+ ROBERT SAWYER.
+ THOMAS EDER.
+ HENRY BICKERSTAFFE.
+ JOHN TAYLOR, etc.
+
+ Beginning to plant and manure the Waste Land upon Georges Hill, in
+ the Parish of Walton, in the County of Surrey."
+
+The pamphlet opens with a Preface by a certain John Taylor, whose name
+appears last on the list of signatures attached thereto, and who was
+probably one of Winstanley's more recent converts. In it he states that
+he has had "some conversation with the author of this ensuing
+declaration, and the persons subscribing, and by experience find them
+sweetly acted and guided by the everlasting Spirit, the Prince of Peace,
+to walk in the paths of Righteousness." "Such as these," he declares,
+"shall be partakers of the promise--_Blessed are the meek, for they
+shall inherit the Earth._"
+
+The body of the pamphlet itself is headed:
+
+ "A DECLARATION TO THE POWERS OF ENGLAND, AND TO ALL THE POWERS OF
+ THE WORLD, shewing the cause why the Common People of England
+ have begun and give consent to dig up, manure, and sow corn
+ upon George Hill in Surrey, by those that have subscribed, and
+ thousands more that give consent."
+
+It commences as follows:
+
+ "In the beginning of time the great Creator, Reason, made the Earth
+ to be a Common Treasury to preserve beasts, birds, fishes and man,
+ the Lord who was to govern this Creation. For man had dominion
+ given him over the beasts, birds and fishes; but not one word was
+ spoken in the beginning that one branch of mankind should rule over
+ another.... But since human flesh began to delight himself in the
+ objects of the Creation more than in the Spirit of Reason and
+ Righteousness ... and selfish imagination ruling as King in the
+ room of Reason therein, and working with Covetousness, did set up
+ one man to teach and rule over another; and thereby the Spirit was
+ killed, and Man was brought into bondage and became a greater slave
+ to some of his own kind than the beasts of the field were to him.
+ Hereupon the Earth (which was made to be a Common Treasury of
+ Relief for all, both beasts and men) was hedged into enclosures by
+ the Teachers and Rulers, and the others were made Servants and
+ Slaves. And the Earth, which was made to be a Common Storehouse for
+ all, is bought and sold and kept within the hands of a few, whereby
+ the Great Creator is mightily dishonoured, as if He were a
+ respecter of persons, delighting in the comfortable livelihood of
+ some, and rejoicing in the miserable poverty and straits of
+ others."
+
+Winstanley then makes his appeal to those who had been entrusted with
+the government of the Nation, in the following touching and yet
+suggestive words:
+
+ "O thou Powers of England! though thou hast promised to make this
+ people a Free People, yet thou hast so handled the matter, through
+ thy self-seeking humour, that thou hast wrapped us up more in
+ bondage, and oppression lies heavy upon us.... If some of you will
+ not dare to shed your blood to maintain tyranny and oppression
+ upon the Creation, know this, That our blood and life shall not be
+ unwilling to be delivered up in meekness to maintain Universal
+ Liberty, that so the Curse, on our part, may be taken off the
+ Creation. We shall not do this by force of arms; we abhor it, for
+ it is the work of the Midianites to kill one another, but by
+ obeying the Lord of Hosts, by laboring the Earth in Righteousness
+ together, to earn our bread by the sweat of our brows, neither
+ giving hire nor taking hire, but working together and eating
+ together as one man, or as one house in Israel restored from
+ Bondage. And so by the power of Reason, the Law of Righteousness in
+ us, we endeavour to lift up the Creation from that bondage of Civil
+ Propriety which it groans under."
+
+He again explains the work they are entered upon, and their reasons for
+attempting it, as follows:
+
+ "The work we are going about is this, To dig up Georges Hill and
+ the waste grounds thereabouts, and to sow corn, and to eat our
+ bread together by the sweat of our brows.
+
+ "And the First Reason is this, THAT WE MAY WORK IN RIGHTEOUSNESS,
+ AND LAY THE FOUNDATION OF MAKING THE EARTH A COMMON TREASURY FOR
+ ALL, BOTH RICH AND POOR, THAT EVERYONE THAT IS BORN IN THE LAND MAY
+ BE FED BY THE EARTH HIS MOTHER THAT BROUGHT HIM FORTH, ACCORDING TO
+ THE REASON THAT RULES IN THE CREATION."
+
+Then follows this impressive declaration of the motives inspiring their
+actions:
+
+ "For it is showed us, That so long as we, or any other, do own the
+ Earth to be the peculiar Interest of Lords and Land Lords, and not
+ common to others as well as to them, we own the Curse, and hold the
+ Creation under Bondage. And so long as we or any other do own Land
+ Lords and Tenants, for one to call the land his, or another to hire
+ it of him, or for one to give hire and for another to work for
+ hire: This is to dishonour the work of Creation, as if the
+ righteous Creator should have respect to persons, and therefore
+ made the Earth for some and not for all. So long as we, or any
+ other, maintain this Civil Propriety, we consent still to hold the
+ Creation in that bondage it groans under; and so we should hinder
+ the Work of Restoration, and sin against the Light that is given
+ into us, and so, through fear of the flesh man, lose our peace."
+
+And the pamphlet concludes with the following somewhat mystic words:
+
+ "Thus you Powers of England, and of the whole World, we have
+ declared our Reasons why we have begun to dig upon George Hill in
+ Surrey. One thing I must tell you more, which I received in voice
+ likewise at another time; and when I received it my eye was set
+ towards you. The words were these--_Let Israel go free._
+
+ "Surely as Israel lay four hundred and thirty years under Pharaoh's
+ bondage, before Moses was sent to fetch them out, even so Israel
+ (the Elect Spirit spread in Sons and Daughters) hath lain three
+ times so long already.... But now the time of Deliverance hath
+ come.... For now the King of Righteousness is arising to rule in
+ and over the Earth.... Therefore once more, _Let Israel go free_,
+ that the Poor may labour the waste land, and suck the Breasts of
+ their Mother Earth, that they starve not. In so doing thou wilt
+ keep the Sabbath Day, which is a Day of Rest, sweetly enjoying the
+ Peace of the Spirit of Righteousness, and find Peace by living
+ among a people that live in Peace: This will be a Day of Rest which
+ thou never knew yet.
+
+ "But I do not entreat thee, for thou art not to be entreated. But
+ in the Name of the Lord, that hath drawn me forth to speak to thee,
+ I, yea I say, I command thee, _To let Israel go free, and quietly
+ to gather together into the place where I shall appoint; and hold
+ them, no longer in bondage_.... But if you will not, but
+ Pharaoh-like cry, _Who is the Lord that we should obey him?_ and
+ endeavour to oppose, then know, that He that delivered Israel from
+ Pharaoh of old is the same Power still, in whom we trust, and whom
+ we serve. For this, Conquest over thee shall be got, _not by Sword
+ or Weapon, but by my Spirit, saith the Lord of Hosts._"
+
+Such, then, were the first "official pronouncements" of the body of men
+known in the History of England as the Diggers, whose proud privilege it
+was to be the first in our native land, as against the rights of
+property, boldly to proclaim the rights of man. Poor in worldly goods
+they may have been, but they were rich in hope and in love, in broad
+thoughts and elevating ideals, in a firm belief in the power and
+ultimate triumph of the Inward Light of Equity and Reason, and in
+unflinching resolution, not only to proclaim the steps necessary to
+social salvation, but to adventure their lives and persons to lay the
+foundations of a better, of a more equitable and beneficial, social
+state than ever they knew. Certain it is that they were inspired by the
+highest motives that impel men to action; hence even those who may deem
+their views erroneous should not withhold from the men themselves their
+meed of respect, admiration, and sympathy. To those who deem their views
+true, we need make no appeal. Monuments are erected in stone, in marble,
+or in gold, to those whose actions in peace or in war commend themselves
+to their own generation; the monuments to those in advance of their
+times and of our times, are to be found only in the hearts of thinkers.
+It was but yesterday, after some two hundred and fifty years, that
+public sentiment tolerated the erection of a public monument to the
+memory of the man who delivered his country from under the tyranny of
+Kings. Before another similar period has passed away, a similar tribute
+may be paid to the memory of those who, during the same tumultuous but
+inspiring times, would have saved all future generations of their
+countrymen from under the tyranny of Land-Lords.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[90:1] British Museum, Press Mark, 1027, i. 16 (3). We say "mainly from
+Winstanley's pen," for though the arguments are his, the style of the
+pamphlet, with its long, involved, never-ending sentences, so unlike
+Winstanley's crisp, epigrammatic, vigorous style, suggests to us that
+the writing was probably left to some other member of his company, or
+probably to a Committee appointed for the purpose.
+
+[93:1] This fairly represents the general spirit and feeling prevailing
+in the Model Army, who repeatedly contended, to quote the words of the
+Declaration of the Army of June 14th, 1647, that--"We are not a mere
+mercenary army hired to serve any arbitrary power of a State, but called
+forth and conjured by the several Declarations of Parliament to the
+defence of our own and the people's just Rights and Liberties; and so we
+took up arms in judgment and conscience to those ends, and have so
+continued in them, and are resolved according to your first just desires
+in your Declarations, and such principles as we have received from your
+frequent informations, and our own common sense concerning those our
+fundamental rights and liberties, to assert and vindicate the just power
+and rights of this Kingdom in Parliament for those common ends promised
+against all arbitrary power, violence and oppression, and against all
+particular parties or interests whatsoever."
+
+[95:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 552. In the
+British Museum Catalogue the Preface is attributed to John Taylor the
+Water Poet; but, to judge from his other writings, this is probably an
+error.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+A LETTER TO LORD FAIRFAX AND HIS COUNCIL OF WAR; AND AN APPEAL TO THE
+HOUSE OF COMMONS
+
+ "For you must either establish Commonwealth's Freedom in power,
+ making provision for everyone's peace, which is Righteousness, or
+ else you must set up Monarchy again. Monarchy is twofold, either
+ for one king to reign, or for many to rule by kingly principles.
+ For the king's power lies in his laws, not in his name. And if
+ either one king rule, or many rule by kingly principles, much
+ murmuring, grudges, troubles, and quarrels may and will arise among
+ the oppressed people upon every gained opportunity."--WINSTANLEY,
+ _The Law of Freedom_.
+
+
+Within a few days of Lord Fairfax's visit to the Diggers, already
+recorded, and about two months after the publication of _The True
+Levellers Standard Advanced_, Winstanley, on June 9th, 1649, again made
+his appearance at the headquarters of the Army, the bearer of a letter,
+which, as he tells us, he himself delivered to the Lord General, "who
+very mildly promised to read it and consider of it":
+
+ "A LETTER TO LORD FAIRFAX AND HIS COUNCIL OF WAR:[100:1]
+
+ With divers questions to the Lawyers and Ministers: Proving it an
+ undeniable equity that the Common People ought to dig, plow,
+ plant and dwell upon the Commons without hiring them or paying
+ Rent to any.
+
+ Delivered to the General and his Chief Officers, June 9th, 1649, by
+ Gerrard Winstanley in the behalf of those who have begun to dig
+ upon George Hill in Surrey."
+
+The letter opens as follows:
+
+ "Our digging and ploughing upon George Hill in Surrey is not
+ unknown to you, since you have seen some of our persons, and heard
+ us speak in defence thereof; and we did receive kindness and
+ moderation from you and your Council of War, both when some of us
+ were at Whitehall before you, and when you came in person to George
+ Hill to view our works. We endeavour to lay open the bottom and
+ intent of our business as much as can be, that none may be troubled
+ with doubtful imaginations about us, but may be satisfied in the
+ sincerity and universal righteousness of the work."
+
+It then continues:
+
+ "We understand that our digging upon that Common is the talk of the
+ whole Land, some approving, some disowning; some are friends filled
+ with love, and see that the work intends good to the Nation, the
+ peace whereof is that which we seek after; others are enemies
+ filled with fury, who falsely report of us that we have intent to
+ fortify ourselves, and afterwards to fight against others and take
+ away their goods from them, which is a thing we abhor. And many
+ other slanders we rejoice over, because we know ourselves clear,
+ our endeavour being no otherwise but to improve the Commons, and to
+ call off that oppression and outward bondage which the Creation
+ groans under, as much as in us lies, and to lift up and preserve
+ the purity thereof."
+
+Winstanley then declares that their opponents were but "one or two
+covetous freeholders that would have all the Commons to themselves, and
+that would uphold the Norman tyranny," and still further explains his
+position, as follows:
+
+ "We told you, upon a question you put to us, that we were not
+ against any that would have Magistrates and Laws to govern, as the
+ Nations of the World are governed, but that, for our own parts, we
+ shall need neither the one nor the other in that nature of
+ government. For as our land is common, so our cattle is to be
+ common, and our corn and fruits of the earth common, and are not to
+ be bought and sold among us, but to remain a standing portion of
+ livelihood to us and our children, without that cheating
+ entanglement of buying and selling; and we shall not arrest one
+ another. And then what need have we of imprisoning, whipping or
+ hanging laws to bring one another into bondage? And we know that
+ none of those that are subject to this righteous law dares arrest
+ or enslave his brother for or about the objects of the Earth,
+ because the Earth is made by our Creator to be a Common Treasury of
+ Livelihood to one equal with another, without respect of
+ persons.... What need have we of any outward, selfish, confused
+ laws, made to uphold the Power of Covetousness, when we have the
+ Righteous Law written in our hearts, teaching us to walk purely in
+ the Creation."
+
+Winstanley then complains of the action of some of the soldiers, but
+expresses the desire that they should not be punished, only cautioned
+not to offend again; and states the readiness of himself and companions
+to come to headquarters "upon a bare letter." He reiterates his
+contention that their demand is only to enjoy freedom "according to the
+law of contract between you and us"; freedom to till the common land,
+not to trespass upon any enclosures. He continues:
+
+ "We desire that your Lawyers may consider these questions, which we
+ affirm to be truths, and which give good assurance, by the law of
+ the land, that we that are the younger brothers, or common people,
+ have a true right to dig, plow up and dwell upon the Commons, as we
+ have declared."
+
+ QUESTIONS TO THE LAWYERS.
+
+ "1. Did not William the Conqueror dispossess the English, and thus
+ cause them to be servants to him?
+
+ "2. Was not King Charles the direct successor of William the First?
+
+ "3. Whether Lords of the Manor were not the successors of the chief
+ officers of William the First, holding their rights to the Commons
+ by the power of the sword?
+
+ "4. Whether Lords of the Manor have not lost their royalty to the
+ common land by the recent victories?
+
+ "5. Whether any laws since the coming in of kings have been made in
+ the light of the righteous law of our Creation, _respecting all
+ alike_, or have not been grounded upon selfish principles in fear
+ or flattery of their king, to uphold freedom in the gentry and
+ clergy, and to hold the common people under bondage still, and so
+ respecting persons?
+
+ "6. Whether all laws that are not grounded upon equity and reason,
+ not giving an universal freedom to all, but respecting persons,
+ ought not to be cut off with the king's head? We affirm they ought.
+ If all laws be grounded upon equity and reason, then the whole land
+ of England is to be a Common Treasury to everyone born in the Land.
+
+ "7. Whether everyone without exception, by the Law of Contract,
+ ought not to have liberty to enjoy the earth for his livelihood,
+ and to settle his dwelling in any part of the Commons of England,
+ without buying or renting land of any, seeing that everyone by
+ agreement and covenant among themselves have paid taxes, given
+ free-quarter, and adventured their lives to recover England out of
+ bondage? We affirm they ought.[103:1]
+
+ "8. Whether the laws that were made in the days of the king do give
+ freedom to any but the gentry and clergy?"
+
+Winstanley then puts a string of similar questions to Public Preachers,
+"that say they preach the Righteous Law," from which, however, we need
+only quote the following:
+
+ "QUESTIONS TO PUBLIC PREACHERS.
+
+ "First we demand, Yea or No, Whether the Earth, with her fruits,
+ was made to be bought and sold from one to another; And whether one
+ part of mankind was made to be a Lord of the Land, and another part
+ a servant, by the Law of Creation before the Fall?
+
+ "I affirm (and I challenge you to disprove) that the Earth was made
+ to be a Common Treasury of Livelihood for all, without respect of
+ persons, and was not made to be bought and sold.... And this being
+ a truth, as it is, then none ought to be Lords and Land Lords over
+ another, but the Earth is free to every son and daughter of mankind
+ to live upon."
+
+And the letter concludes with the following eloquent and heart-stirring
+words:
+
+ "Thus I have declared to you and to all the world what that Power
+ of Life is that is in me; and knowing that the Spirit of
+ Righteousness doth appear to many in this Land, I desire all of you
+ seriously, in love and humility, to consider of this business of
+ Public Community, which I am carried forth in the Power of Love and
+ clear light of Universal Righteousness to advance as much as I can;
+ and I can do no other, the Law of Love in my heart does so
+ constrain me; by reason whereof I am called fool and madman, and
+ have many slanderous reports cast upon me, and meet with much fury
+ from some covetous people; under all of which my spirit is made
+ patient and is guarded with joy and peace. I hate none, I love all,
+ I delight to see everyone live comfortably, I would have none live
+ in poverty, straits and sorrows; therefore if you find any
+ selfishness in this work, or discover anything that is destructive
+ of the whole Creation [Mankind], that you would open your hearts as
+ freely to me, in declaring my weakness to me, as I have been
+ open-hearted in declaring that which I find and feel much life and
+ strength in. But if you see Righteousness in it, and that it holds
+ forth the strength of Universal Love to all, without respect to
+ persons, so that our Creator is honored in the work of His hand,
+ then own it and justify it, and let the Power of Love have his
+ freedom and glory."
+
+In his interview with the Diggers, Lord Fairfax had expressed his
+intention to leave them to "the Gentlemen of the County and the Law of
+the Land." The former soon put the latter in motion, and on July 11th,
+1649, the day before Cromwell set out with much pomp and ceremony for
+his notorious expedition to Ireland, Winstanley, under circumstances
+that will presently be revealed, found himself compelled to address an
+eloquent appeal for protection to the House of Commons, long extracts
+from which we feel impelled to place before our readers. It appeared in
+pamphlet form with the following title-page:
+
+ "AN APPEAL TO THE HOUSE OF COMMONS:[105:1]
+
+ Desiring their answer whether the Common People shall have the
+ quiet enjoyment of the Commons and Waste Land; or whether they
+ shall be under the will of Lords of Manors still. Occasioned by
+ an Arrest made by Thomas Lord Wenman, Ralph Verney Knight, and
+ Richard Winwood Esq. upon the Author hereof, for a Trespass in
+ Digging upon the Common Land at Georges Hill in Surrey.
+
+ BY GERRARD WINSTANLEY, JOHN BARKER AND THOMAS STAR.
+
+ In the name of all the poor oppressed in the Land of England.
+
+ Unrighteous oppression kindles a flame, but love, righteousness and
+ tenderness of heart quenches it again."
+
+With more than his usual directness, Winstanley at once states the
+subject of his appeal in the following manner:
+
+ "SIRS,--The cause of this our presentment before you is, an Appeal
+ to you desiring you to demonstrate to us, and the whole Land, the
+ equity or non-equity of our cause. And that you would either cast
+ us by just reason under the feet of those we call Task Masters, or
+ Lords of Manors, or else to deliver us out of their tyrannical
+ hands: In whose hands by way of Arrest we are for the present, for
+ a Trespass to them, as they say, in digging upon the Common Land.
+ The settling whereof according to Equity and Reason will quiet the
+ minds of the oppressed people; it will be a keeping of our
+ National Covenant; it will be a peace to yourselves, and make
+ England the most flourishing and strongest Land in the world, and
+ the first of Nations that shall begin to give up their Crown and
+ Scepter, their dominion and government, into the hands of Jesus
+ Christ.[106:1]
+
+ "The cause is this, we amongst others of the common people, that
+ have ever been friends to the Parliament, as we are assured our
+ enemies will witness to it, have ploughed and digged upon Georges
+ Hill in Surrey, to sow corn for the succour of man, offering no
+ offence to any, but do carry ourselves in love and peace towards
+ all, having no intent to meddle with any man's enclosures or
+ property till it be freely given to us by themselves, but only to
+ improve the Commons and waste lands to our best advantage, for the
+ relief of ourselves and others, being moved thereunto by the reason
+ hereafter following, not expecting any to be much offended, in
+ regard the cause is so just and upright.
+
+ "Yet notwithstanding, there be three men (called by the people
+ Lords of Manors), viz., Thomas Lord Wenman, Ralph Verney Knight,
+ and Richard Winwood Esq., have arrested us for a trespass in
+ digging upon the Commons, and upon the arrest we made our
+ appearance in Kingstone Court, where we understood we were arrested
+ for meddling with other men's rights; and, secondly, they were
+ encouraged to arrest us upon your Act of Parliament (as they tell
+ us) to maintain the old laws. We desired to plead our own cause,
+ the Court denied us, and to fee a lawyer we cannot, for divers
+ reasons, as we may show hereafter.
+
+ "Now, Sirs, our case is this, for we appeal to you, for you are the
+ only men that we are to deal withal in this business: Whether the
+ common people, after all their taxes, free-quarter and loss of
+ blood to recover England from under the Norman yoke, shall have the
+ freedom to improve the Commons and Waste Lands free to themselves,
+ as freely their own as the Enclosures are the propriety of the
+ elder brothers? Or whether the Lords of Manors shall have them,
+ according to their old custom, from the King's will and grant, and
+ so remain Task Masters still over us, which was the people's
+ slavery under conquest?
+
+ "We have made our appeal to you to settle this matter in the Equity
+ and Reason of it, and to pass the sentence of freedom to us, you
+ being the men with whom we have to do in this business, in whose
+ hands there is power to settle it, for no Court can end this
+ controversy but your Court of Parliament, as the case of this
+ Nation now stands."
+
+After emphasising his fundamental contention that in Equity and by the
+Law of Righteousness all should have the freedom of the Earth granted
+unto them, he summarises the causes that have conspired to place the
+Members of the House of Commons in power, as follows:
+
+ "You of the Gentry, as well as we of the Commonalty, all groaned
+ under the burden of the bad government and burdening laws of the
+ late King Charles, who was the last successor of William the
+ Conqueror. You and we cried for a Parliament, and a Parliament was
+ called, and wars, you know, presently began between the king that
+ represented William the Conqueror and the body of the English
+ people that were enslaved. We looked upon you to be our Chief
+ Council to agitate business for us, though you were summonsed by
+ the king's writ, and choosen by the Freeholders, who are the
+ successors of William the Conqueror's soldiers. You saw the danger
+ so great that without a war England was likely to be more enslaved,
+ therefore you called upon us to assist you with plate, taxes,
+ free-quarter and our persons: and you promised us, in the name of
+ the Almighty, to make us a Free People. Thereupon you and we took
+ the National Covenant with joint consent, to endeavour the freedom,
+ peace, and safety of the people of England. And you and we joined
+ person and purse together in the common cause, and Will. the
+ Conqueror's successor, which was Charles, was cast out; thereby we
+ have recovered ourselves from under that Norman yoke. And now
+ unless you and we be merely besotted with covetousness, pride and
+ slavish fear of men, it is and will be our wisdom to cast out all
+ those enslaving laws which was the tyrannical power the king
+ pressed us down by.[108:1] O shut not your eyes against the light;
+ darken not knowledge by dispute about particular men's privileges,
+ when Universal Freedom is brought to be tried before you; dispute
+ no further when truth appears, but be silent and practice it. Stop
+ not your ears against the secret moanings of the oppressed, under
+ these expressions, lest the Lord see it and be offended, and shut
+ His eyes against your cries, and work a deliverance for His waiting
+ people some other way than by you."
+
+He then summarises the prevailing ills, and indicates their manifest and
+immediate duty, as follows:
+
+ "The main thing that you should look upon is the Land, which calls
+ upon her children to be free from the entanglements of the Norman
+ Taskmasters. For one third part lies waste and barren, and her
+ children starve for want, in regard the Lords of Manors will not
+ suffer the poor to manure it.... The power is in your hands, the
+ Nations Representative, O let the first thing you do be this, to
+ set the land free. Let the Gentry have their enclosures free from
+ all enslaving entanglements whatsoever, and let the Common People
+ have the Commons and Waste Lands set free to them from all Norman
+ enslaving Lords of Manors. That so both Elder and Younger Brother,
+ as we spring successively one from another, may live free and quiet
+ one by and with another in this Land of our Nativity." "This
+ thing," he then boldly declares, "you are bound to see done, or at
+ least to endeavour it, before another Representative force you;
+ otherwise you cannot discharge your trust to God and man." And the
+ Appeal concludes with the following words: "Set the Land free from
+ oppression, and righteousness will be the Laws, Government, and
+ Strength of that People."
+
+The Long Parliament, however, were too busy carrying English
+civilisation into Ireland to heed his words. And yet surely there was
+work enough for them to do in their own country, in which, as we have
+already pointed out, since the reign of Henry the Seventh the condition
+of the masses of the people had steadily worsened, and, as a natural
+consequence, the number of beggars, "rogues and vagrants," despite
+barbarous laws, involving their wholesale hanging, had steadily
+increased. During the reign of James the First, in a pamphlet entitled
+_Grievous Groans of the Poor_, published 1622, we hear the complaint
+that "the number of the poor do daily increase." The only remedy the
+then wise men of England could devise was to make the laws against them
+still more severe. Consequently it was ordered that the first time such
+people were apprehended they should be branded with the letter R, and if
+subsequently again found begging or wandering they were "to suffer death
+without benefit of Clergy." Yet such was their obstinacy that they still
+increased in numbers; and that for the simple reason that the economic
+or social causes of which they were but the inevitable outcome were not
+removed.
+
+During all this period, however, the country was developing, its
+industry and commerce expanding, and its wealth increasing by leaps and
+bounds; but in all this the "meaner sort," the Younger Brothers, the
+disinherited masses, had neither lot nor share. Though Clarendon may
+speak of the growing economical prosperity of the country during the
+time of which we are writing, yet there be no doubt of the truth of
+Thorold Rogers' contention, that[109:1]--"I am convinced from the
+comparison I have been able to make between wages, rents and prices,
+that it was a period of excessive misery among the mass of the people
+and the tenants, a time in which a few might have become rich, while the
+many were crushed down into hopeless and almost permanent indigence."
+And yet the facts are such as to compel him, when speaking of the
+Restoration, to point out that[110:1]--"the labourers, as far as the
+will went, were better off under the rule of the Saints than under that
+of the sinners."
+
+The English land-system, as we know it to-day, really began with the
+Restoration, when the very memory of Winstanley and his doctrines was
+swept away, when the men of the Model Army found themselves powerless,
+while "the great and wise men" of the nation "set up Monarchy again,"
+humbly prostrating themselves at the feet of a licentious, cynical
+debauchee, and the Landocracy, new and old, found themselves in the
+saddle with far greater political power than they had ever before
+enjoyed. They soon found means of fastening their yoke more firmly than
+ever on the necks of the people, and of making short work of any claims
+of an independent yeomanry to any right to the soil of their native
+country apart from their good-will and pleasure. After some effort, they
+passed a Statute under which the estates of such of the free-holders as
+had no documentary evidence by which to support their titles, were
+confiscated and turned into tenancies at will. By means of Enclosure
+Acts they still further plundered and impoverished the peasantry, by
+appropriating to themselves millions of acres of land over which these
+still had some right, some enjoyment. By means of the Law of Parochial
+Settlement, as Thorold Rogers repeatedly points out,[110:2] they
+"consummated the degradation of the labourer"; and made him, as it has
+left him, what the same impartial authority well terms "the most
+portentous phenomenon in agriculture, a serf without land." By means of
+their Financial Policy they rid themselves of the duties which
+originally accompanied the privilege of land-holding, viz. to provide
+the necessary public revenues for all defence purposes, and converted
+themselves from Land Holders into Land Owners, by shifting the burden
+of taxation to the food, industry, and handicraft of those they had
+despoiled and disinherited. And, finally, for the first time in the
+history of England, they passed a Corn Law artificially to increase
+their rents, at the cost and to the detriment, often to the starvation,
+of the masses of the people. From the effect of these laws the people of
+Great Britain have not yet been able entirely to recover themselves,
+though since 1824 they have made heroic steps to do so. With this
+portion of the history, we had almost written of the martyrdom, of the
+English people we are not here directly concerned. Manifestly it would
+have been very different had the Long Parliament listened to
+Winstanley's appeal, or had his self-sacrificing efforts been crowned
+with the success they so well deserved.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[100:1] Thomasson's Tracts. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 560 (1).
+Reprinted in the _Harleian Miscellany_, vol. ii. p. 485.
+
+[103:1] Others, in far more influential positions than Winstanley and
+his comrades, gave forcible expression to much the same views. In the
+debates of the Army Council on the Agreement of the People, on November
+1647, Edward Sexby, the Agitator or Representative of the private
+soldiers, an able, daring, and energetic man, replying to Ireton, on the
+question of the right to vote, said: "We have engaged in this kingdom
+and ventured our lives, and it was all for this: to recover our
+birthrights and privileges as Englishmen; and by the arguments urged,
+there are none. There are many thousands of us soldiers that have
+ventured our lives, we have had little propriety in the kingdom as to
+our estates, yet we have had a birthright. But it seems now that except
+a man hath a fixed estate in this kingdom, he hath no right in this
+kingdom. I wonder we were so deceived. If we had not a right to the
+kingdom, we were mere mercenary soldiers. There are men in my position,
+it may be little estate they have at present, and yet they have as much
+a birthright as those two who are their law-givers, or as any in this
+place." During the same debate Colonel Rainborrow said: "I think that
+the poorest he that is in England hath a life to live as the greatest
+he." And, also in reply to Ireton, he subsequently declared: "Sir, I see
+that it is impossible to have liberty but all property must be taken
+away.... If you will say it, it must be so. But I would fain know what
+the soldier hath fought for all this while? He hath fought to enslave
+himself, to give power to men of riches, to men of estate, and to make
+himself a perpetual slave."--See _Clarke Papers_, vol. i. pp. 322-323,
+325.
+
+[105:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 564. Also at
+the Guildhall Library. The Ralph Verney mentioned is the hero of _The
+Verney Memoirs_: there is, however, no mention of this incident therein.
+
+[106:1] This argument would scarcely have appealed to Ireton, who during
+the debate of the Army Council frankly declared that in his opinion--"It
+was not the business of Jesus Christ, when he came into the world, to
+create Kingdoms of the World, and Magistracies and Monarchies, or to
+give the rule of them, positive or negative."--See _Clarke Papers_, vol.
+ii. p. 101.
+
+[108:1] Colonel Rainborrow, who with Sexby and Wildman represented on
+the Army Council the private soldiers of the Model Army, during the
+debate on the right of voting, gave expression to the view that some
+fundamental changes in the laws of the Land were both necessary and
+justifiable, in the following words: "I hear it said, 'It's a huge
+alteration it's a bringing in of new laws.' ... If writings be true,
+there hath been many scuttlings between the honest men of England and
+those that have tyrannised over them. And if what I have read be true,
+there is none of those just and equitable laws that the people of
+England are born to, but were once intrenchments [but were once
+innovations]. But if they [the existing laws] were those which the
+people have been always under, if the people find that they are not
+suitable to freeman, I know no reason that should deter me, either in
+what I must answer before God or the world, from endeavouring by all
+means to gain anything that might be of more advantage to them than the
+government under which they live."--_Clarke Papers_, vol. i. p. 247.
+
+[109:1] _Economic Interpretation of History_, p. 138.
+
+[110:1] _Economic Interpretation of History_, p. 241.
+
+[110:2] _Six Centuries of Work and Wages_, pp. 432-433.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+A WATCHWORD TO THE CITY OF LONDON, ETC.
+
+ "All men have stood for Freedom; thou hast kept fasting-days and
+ prayed in the morning exercises for Freedom; thou hast given thanks
+ for victories because hopes of Freedom; plenty of Petitions and
+ Promises thereupon have been made for Freedom. But now the common
+ enemy is gone, you are all like men in a mist seeking for Freedom,
+ but know not where nor what it is.... Assure yourselves, if you
+ pitch not now upon the right point of Freedom in action, as your
+ Covenant hath it in words, you will wrap up your children in
+ greater slavery than ever you were in."--WINSTANLEY, _A Watchword
+ to the City of London_.
+
+
+The House of Commons, as we have seen, took no notice of Winstanley's
+dignified appeal, hence, within a week of its publication in pamphlet
+form, Winstanley, on August 26th, 1649, addressed himself to the City of
+London, at that time the stronghold of advanced political and religious
+thought. The pamphlet, which is one of the most interesting he ever
+wrote, appeared the following month: the title-page reads as follows:
+
+ "A WATCHWORD TO THE CITY OF LONDON AND THE ARMY:[112:1]
+
+ Wherein you may see that England's Freedom, which should be the
+ result of all our Victories, is sinking deeper under the Norman
+ Power, as appears by this Relation of the unrighteous
+ proceedings of Kingston Court against some of the Diggers at
+ George Hill, under colour of law; but yet thereby the cause of
+ the Diggers is more brightened and strengthened, so that every
+ one singly may truly say what his Freedom is and where it lies.
+
+ BY JERRARD WINSTANLEY.
+
+ When these clay bodies are in grave, and children stand in place,
+ This shows we stood for truth and peace and freedom in our days;
+ And true-born sons we shall appear of England that's our Mother,
+ No Priests nor Lawyers wiles t'embrace, their slavery we'll discover."
+
+This pamphlet, too, commences with a Dedicatory Letter, which opens as
+follows:
+
+ "TO THE CITY OF LONDON,--Freedom and Peace desired,--{6}Thou City
+ of London, I am one of thy sons by freedom, and I do truly love thy
+ peace. While I had an estate in thee, I was free to offer my Mite
+ into thy Public Treasury, Guildhall, for a preservation to thee and
+ to the whole Land. But by thy cheating sons in the thieving art of
+ buying and selling, and by the burdens of and for the soldiery in
+ the beginning of the War, I was beaten out of both estate and
+ trade, and forced to accept of the good-will of friends, crediting
+ of me, to live a Country life. There likewise by the burthen of
+ Taxes and much Free Quarter my weak back found the burthen heavier
+ than I could bear. Yet in all the passages of these eight years
+ troubles, I have been willing to lay out what my talent was, to
+ procure England's peace inward and outward; and yet all along I
+ have found such as in words have professed the same cause to be
+ enemies to me."
+
+It then briefly summarises Winstanley's past actions, as well as the
+causes that inspired them, and the position in which he finds himself in
+consequence thereof, as follows:
+
+ "Not a full year since, being quiet at my work, my heart was filled
+ with sweet thoughts, and many things were revealed to me which I
+ never read in books, nor heard from the mouth of any flesh. When I
+ began to speak of them some people could not bear my words. Amongst
+ these revelations this was one, _That the Earth shall be made a
+ Common Treasury of Livelihood to whole mankind without respect of
+ persons._
+
+ "And I had a voice within me that bade me declare it by word all
+ abroad, which I did obey, for I declared it by word of mouth
+ wheresoever I came. Then I was made to write a little book called
+ the New Law of Righteousness, and therein I declared it. Yet my
+ mind was not at rest, because nothing was acted; and thoughts ran
+ in me that words and writings were all nothing and must die; for
+ action is the life of all, and if thou dost not act, thou dost
+ nothing.
+
+ "Within a little time I was made obedient to the word in that
+ particular likewise. For I took my spade and went and broke the
+ ground upon George Hill in Surrey, thereby declaring Freedom to the
+ Creation, and that the Earth must be set free from entanglement of
+ Lords and Land Lords, and that it shall become a Common Treasury to
+ all, as it was first made and given to the sons of men.
+
+ "For which doing ... the old Norman Prerogative Lord of that Manor
+ caused me to be arrested for a trespass against him in digging upon
+ that barren Heath. And the unrighteous proceedings of Kingston
+ Court I have declared to thee and to the whole Land that you may
+ consider the case England is in."
+
+The Dedicatory Letter concludes as follows:
+
+ "I have declared this truth to the Army and Parliament, and now I
+ have declared it to thee likewise, that none of you that are the
+ fleshy strength of this Land may be left without excuse: for now
+ you have been all spoken to. And because I have obeyed the voice of
+ the Lord in this thing, therefore do the Freeholders and Lords of
+ Manors seek to oppress me in the outward livelihood of the world,
+ but I am in peace. And London, nay England, look to thy Freedom. I
+ assure you thou art very near to be cheated of it, and if thou lose
+ it now after all thy boasting, truly thy posterity will curse thee
+ for thy unfaithfulness to them. Everyone talks of Freedom, but
+ there are but few that act for Freedom, and the actors for Freedom
+ are oppressed by the talkers and verbal professors of Freedom. If
+ thou wouldst know what true Freedom is, read over this and other of
+ my writings, and thou shalt see it lies in the Community in Spirit
+ and Community in the Earthly Treasury; and this is Christ, the true
+ manchild, spread abroad in the Creation, restoring all things unto
+ himself. And so I leave thee, Being a free Denizon of thee, and a
+ true lover of thy peace.
+
+ JERRARD WINSTANLEY.
+ "_August 26th, 1649._"
+
+The pamphlet commences with a short and business-like account of the
+proceedings at Kingston Court, as follows:
+
+ "Whereas we, Henry Bickerstaffe, Thomas Star and Jerrard
+ Winstanley, were arrested into Kingston Court by Thomas Wenman,
+ Ralph Verney, and Richard Winwood, for a trespass in digging upon
+ George Hill in Surrey, being the right of Mr. Drake, Lord of that
+ Manor, as they say, we all three did appear the first Court-day of
+ our arrest, and demanded of the Court, What was laid to our
+ charge? and to give answer thereunto ourselves. But the answer of
+ your Court was this, that you would not tell us what the trespass
+ was, unless we would fee an Attorney to speak for us. We told them
+ we were to plead our own cause, for we knew no Lawyer that we could
+ trust with this business. We desired a copy of the Declaration, and
+ profered to pay for it, but still you denied us unless we would fee
+ an Attorney. But in conclusion the Recorder of your Court told us
+ that the cause was not entered. We appeared two Court-days after
+ this, and desired to see the Declaration, and still you denied us
+ unless we would fee an Attorney, so greedy are these Attornies
+ after money, more than to justify a righteous cause. We told them
+ that we could not fee any unless we would wilfully break our
+ National Covenant, which both Parliament and People have taken
+ jointly together to effect a Reformation. And unless we would be
+ professed Traitors to the Nation and Common-wealth of England, by
+ upholding the old Norman tyrannical and destructive Laws, when they
+ are to be cast out of equity, and reason to be the Moderator.
+
+ "Then seeing that you would not suffer us to speak, one of us
+ brought the following writing into Court, that you might read our
+ answer. Because we would acknowledge all righteous proceedings in
+ Law, though some slander us and say we deny all Law, because we
+ deny the corruption of Law, and endeavour a Reformation in our
+ place and calling, according to that National Covenant. And we know
+ if your Laws were built upon equity and reason, you ought both to
+ have heard us speak, and to have read our answer. For that is no
+ righteous Law, whereby to keep a Common-wealth in peace, when one
+ sort shall be suffered to speak and not another, as you deal with
+ us, to pass sentence and execution upon us, before both sides be
+ heard to speak. This principle in the forehead of your Laws
+ foretells destruction to this Common-wealth. For it declares that
+ the Laws that follow such refusal are selfish and thievish and full
+ of murder, protecting all that get money by their Laws, and
+ crushing all others.
+
+ "The writer hereof does require Mr. Drake, and he is a Parliament
+ man, therefore a man counted able to speak rationally, to plead
+ this cause of digging with me.[115:1] And if he show a just and
+ rational title that Lords of Manors have to the Commons, and that
+ they have a just power from God to call it their right, shutting
+ out others, then I will write as much against it as ever I wrote
+ for this cause. [A heavy forfeit, truly!] But if I show by the Law
+ of Righteousness that the poorest man hath as good a title and just
+ right to the Land as the richest man, and that undeniably the Earth
+ ought to be a Common Treasury of Livelihood for all without
+ respecting persons; then I shall require no more of Mr. Drake but
+ that he would justify our cause of digging, and declare abroad that
+ the Commons ought to be free to all sorts, and that it is a great
+ trespass before the Lord God Almighty for one to hinder another of
+ his liberty to dig the earth, that he might feed and clothe himself
+ with the fruits of his labor thereupon freely, without owning any
+ Land Lord or paying any Rent to any person of his own kind."
+
+After this perfectly safe challenge, he continues:
+
+ "I sent this following answer to the Arrest in writing into
+ Kingston Court:
+
+ "In four passages your Court hath gone contrary to the
+ righteousness of your own Statute Laws. For, _First_, it is
+ mentioned in 36 Edward III. 15 that no Process, Warrant or Arrest
+ should be served till after the cause was recorded and entered. But
+ your Bailiff either could not or would not tell us the cause when
+ he arrested us, and Mr. Rogers, your Recorder, told us the first
+ Court-day we appeared that our cause was not entered.
+
+ "_Secondly_, We appeared two other Court-days, and desired a copy
+ of the Declaration, and profered to pay for it, and you denied us.
+ This is contrary to equity and reason, which is the foundation your
+ Laws are or should be built upon, if you would have England to be a
+ Common-wealth, and stand in peace.
+
+ "_Thirdly_, We desired to plead our own cause, and you denied us,
+ but told us we must fee an Attorney to speak for us, or else you
+ would mark us in default for not appearance. This is contrary to
+ your own Laws likewise, for in 28 Edward I. chapter ii. there is
+ freedom given to a man to speak for himself, or else he may choose
+ his father, friend or neighbour to speak for him, without the help
+ of any other Lawyer.
+
+ "_Fourthly_, You have granted a judgement against us, and are
+ proceeding to an execution, and this is contrary likewise to your
+ own laws, which say that no plaint ought to be received or
+ judgement passed, till the cause be heard, and witnesses present,
+ to testify the plaint to be true, as Sir Edward Coke, 2nd part of
+ Institutes upon the 29 chap. of Magna Charta, fol. 51-53. The
+ Mirror of Justice."
+
+Then, as if ashamed of appealing to mere conventional man-made Laws, he
+at once acknowledges what he and his comrades have done, and justifies
+their action in the following dignified words:
+
+ "But that all men may see that we are neither ashamed nor afraid to
+ justify that cause we are arrested for, neither to refuse to answer
+ to it in a righteous way, therefore we have here delivered this up
+ in writing, and we leave it in your hands, disavowing the
+ proceedings of your Court, because you uphold prerogative
+ oppression, though the kingly office be taken away, and the
+ Parliament hath declared England a Common-wealth, so that
+ prerogative cannot be in force, unless you be besotted by your
+ covetousness and envy.
+
+ "We deny that we have trespassed against those three men, or Mr.
+ Drake either, or that we should trespass against any, if we should
+ dig up and plough for a livelihood upon any of the waste land in
+ England. For thereby we break no particular Law made by any Act of
+ Parliament, but only an ancient custom bred in the strength of
+ kingly prerogative, which is that old Law or Custom by which Lords
+ of Manors lay claim to the Commons, which is of no force now to
+ bind the people of England, since the kingly power and office was
+ cast out. And the Common People who have cast out the oppressor, by
+ their purse and person, have not authorised any as yet to give away
+ from them their purchased freedom; and if any assume a power to
+ give away or withhold this purchased freedom, they are Traitors to
+ this Common-wealth of England; and if they imprison, oppress, or
+ put to death any for standing to maintain this purchased freedom,
+ they are murderers and thieves, and no just rulers.
+
+ "Therefore in the light of Reason and Equity, and in the light of
+ the National Covenant which Parliament and People have taken with
+ joint consent, all such prerogative customs, which by experience we
+ have found to burden the Nation, ought to be cast out with the
+ kingly office, and the Land of England now ought to be a Free Land
+ and a Common Treasury to all her children, otherwise it cannot
+ properly be called a Common-wealth."
+
+He then continues:
+
+ "Therefore we justify our act of digging upon that Hill to make the
+ Earth a Common Treasury. First, because the Earth was made by
+ Almighty God to be a Common Treasury of Livelihood to the whole of
+ mankind in all its branches, without respect of persons....
+ Secondly, because all sorts of people have lent assistance of purse
+ and person to cast out the kingly order as being a burden that
+ England groaned under. Therefore those from whom money and blood
+ were received, ought to obtain freedom in the Land to themselves
+ and posterity, by the Law of Contract between Parliament and
+ People. But all sorts, poor as well as rich, Tenant as well as Land
+ Lord, have paid taxes, free-quarter, excise, or adventured their
+ lives to cast out the kingly office. Therefore all sorts of people
+ ought to have freedom in this the Land of their Nativity, without
+ respecting persons, now that kingly power is cast out by their
+ joint assistance.... Therefore, in that we do dig upon that Hill,
+ we do not thereby take away other men's rights, nor demand of this
+ Court, nor from the Parliament, what is theirs and not ours. But we
+ demand our own to be set free to us, and to them, out of the
+ tyrannical oppression of ancient customs of kingly prerogative; and
+ let us have no more gods to rule over us, but the King of
+ Righteousness only.
+
+ "Therefore, as the Freeholders claim a quietness and freedom in
+ their enclosures, as it is fit they should have, so we that are
+ younger brothers, or the poor oppressed, we claim our freedom in
+ the Commons; that so elder and younger brother may live quietly and
+ in peace, together freed from the straits of poverty and oppression
+ in this Land of our Nativity."
+
+His written address to the Court at Kingston concludes as follows:
+
+ "Thus we have in writing declared in effect what we should say, if
+ we had liberty to speak before you, declaring withal that your
+ Court cannot end this controversy in that equity and reason of it
+ which we stand to maintain. Therefore we have appealed to the
+ Parliament, who have received our Appeal and promised an answer,
+ and we wait for it. And we leave this with you, and let Reason and
+ Righteousness be our Judge. Therefore we hope you will do nothing
+ rashly, but seriously consider of this cause before you proceed to
+ execution upon us."
+
+Of course, the Court paid no heed to his pleadings, and he details the
+subsequent proceedings in the following business-like manner:
+
+ "Well, this same writing was delivered into their Court, but they
+ cast it out again, and would not read it, and all because I would
+ not fee an Attorney. And then the Court-day following, before there
+ was any trial of our cause, for there was none suffered to speak
+ but the Plaintiff, they passed a judgement, and after that an
+ execution. Now their Jury was made of rich Freeholders, and such as
+ stand strongly for the Norman power. And though our digging upon
+ that barren Common hath done the Common good, yet this Jury brings
+ in damages of L10 a man, and the charges of the Plaintiff in their
+ Court, twenty-nine shillings and a penny: and this was their
+ sentence and the passing of the execution upon us."
+
+Winstanley then mentions one instance descriptive of the way he and his
+comrades were "boycotted" by his neighbours, and of the men responsible
+therefor. He says:
+
+ "Before the report of our digging was much known, I bought three
+ acres of grass from a Lord of the Manor, whom I will not here name
+ because I know the counsel of others made him prove false to me.
+ For when the time came to mow, I brought money to pay him
+ beforehand, but he answered me that I should not have it, and sold
+ it to another before my face. This was because his Parish Priest
+ and the Surrey Ministers have bid the people neither to buy nor to
+ sell us, but to beat us, imprison us, or to banish us."
+
+He then relates that two days later "they sent to execute the execution,
+and they put Harry Bickerstaffe in prison, but after three days Mr.
+Drake released him again, Bickerstaffe not knowing of it till the
+release came. They seek after Thomas Star to imprison his body, who is
+a poor man, not worth ten pounds." He continues:
+
+ "Then they came privately by day to Gerrard Winstanley's house and
+ drove away four cows, I not knowing of it. They took away the cows
+ which were my livelihood, and beat them with their clubs that the
+ cows' heads and sides did swell, which grieved tender hearts to
+ see. And yet," he pathetically but somewhat humourously adds,
+ "these cows never were upon George Hill, nor never digged upon that
+ ground, and yet the poor beasts must suffer because they gave milk
+ to feed me. But strangers made rescue of those cows, and drove them
+ astray out of the Bailiffs' hands, so that the Bailiffs lost them.
+ But before the Bailiffs had lost the cows, I, hearing of it, went
+ to them and said--'Here is my body, take me, that I may speak to
+ those Normans that have stolen our land from us; and let the cows
+ go, for they are none of mine.' After some time, they telling me
+ they had nothing against my body, it was my goods they were to
+ have. Then said I, 'Take my goods, for the cows are not mine.'"
+
+Here follows one of the most touching passages to which Winstanley ever
+set pen:
+
+ "And so I went away and left them, being quiet in my heart, and
+ filled with comfort within myself, that the King of Righteousness
+ would cause this to work for the advancing of His own cause, which
+ I prefer above estate and livelihood. Saying within my heart as I
+ went along, that if I could not get meat to eat, I would feed upon
+ bread, milk and cheese. And if they take the cows, and I cannot
+ feed on this, or hereby make a breach between me and him that owns
+ the cows, then I'll feed upon bread and beer, till the King of
+ Righteousness clears up my innocency and the justice of His own
+ cause. And if this be taken from me for maintaining His cause, then
+ I'll stand still and see what He will do with me; for as yet I know
+ not.
+
+ "Saying likewise within my heart as I was walking along--O thou
+ King of Righteousness, show thy power and do thy work thyself, and
+ free thy people now from under this heavy bondage of misery. And
+ the answer in my heart was satisfactory, and full of sweet joy and
+ peace: and so I said, Father, do what thou wilt, for this cause is
+ thine, and thou knowest that the love to righteousness makes me do
+ what I do."
+
+He then continues:
+
+ "I was made to appeal to the Father of Life in the speakings of my
+ heart likewise thus--Father, thou knowst that what I have writ or
+ spoken concerning this light, that the Earth should be restored and
+ become a Common Treasury for all mankind, without respect of
+ persons, was thy free revelation to me, I never read it in any
+ book, I heard it from no mouth of flesh, till I understood it from
+ thy teaching first within me. I did not study nor imagine the
+ conceit of it; self-love to my own particular body does not carry
+ me along in the managing of this business; but the power of love
+ flowing forth to the liberty and peace of thy whole Creation, to
+ enemies as well as to friends: nay, towards those who oppress me,
+ endeavouring to make me a beggar to them. And since I did obey thy
+ voice, to speak and act this truth, I am hated, reproached and
+ oppressed on every side. Such as make professions of thee, yet
+ revile me. And though they see I cannot fight with fleshy weapons,
+ yet they will strive with me by that power. And so I see, Father,
+ that England yet doth choose rather to fight with the Sword of Iron
+ and Covetousness than with the Sword of the Spirit, which is Love.
+ And what thy purpose is with this Land or with my body, I know not,
+ but establish thy power in me, and then do what pleases thee.
+
+ "These and such like sweet thoughts dwelt in my heart as I went
+ along; and I feel myself now like a man in a storm, standing under
+ shelter upon a hill in peace, waiting till the storm be over to see
+ the end of it, and of many other things that my eye is fixed upon."
+
+The pamphlet concludes as follows:
+
+ "You have arrested us for digging upon the common land, you have
+ executed your unrighteous power, in destraining cattle, imprisoning
+ our bodies, and yet our cause was never publicly heard, neither can
+ it be proved that we broke any Law that is built upon equity and
+ reason. Therefore we wonder whence you had your power to rule over
+ us by will, more than we to rule over you by our will.... We
+ request that you would let us have a fair open trial.... let your
+ Ministers plead with us in the Scriptures, and let your Lawyers
+ plead with us as to the equity and reason of your own Law. And if
+ you prove us transgressors, then we shall lay down our work and
+ acknowledge that we have trespassed against you in digging upon the
+ Commons, and then punish us. But if we prove by Scripture and
+ Reason that undeniably the Land belongs to one as well as another,
+ then you shall own our work, justify our cause, and declare that
+ you have done wrong to Christ, who you say is your Lord and Master,
+ in abusing us His servants and your fellow-creatures, while we are
+ doing His work. Therefore, knowing you to be men of moderation in
+ outward show, I desire that your actions towards your
+ fellow-creatures may not be like one beast to another, but carry
+ yourselves like man to man, for your proceeding in your pretence of
+ Law hitherto against us is both unrighteous, beastly, and devilish,
+ and nothing of the spirit of man seen in it. You Attornies and
+ Lawyers, you say you are Ministers of Justice, and we know that
+ equity and reason is or ought to be the foundation of Law. If so,
+ then plead not for money altogether, but stand for Universal
+ Justice and Equity: then you will have peace; otherwise both you
+ and the corrupt Clergy will be cast out as unsavoury salt."
+
+As will have been seen from the above, and as we shall show more fully
+later on, the little company of Diggers were having a rather troublesome
+time. Within two days of the delivery of their first letter to Lord
+Fairfax, on June 11th, some of them were grievously assaulted by two of
+the local freeholders, accompanied by men in women's garments; but,
+according to their own account, they made no attempt to defend
+themselves.[122:1] In November of the same year the agitation against
+their doings was revived, or became more acute, and early in December
+they found themselves compelled again to appeal to Lord Fairfax for
+protection.[122:2] After having recapitulated their main arguments, this
+letter continues:
+
+ "Now, Sirs, divers repulses we have had from some of the Lords of
+ Manors and their servants, with whom we are patient and loving, not
+ doubting but at last they will grant liberty quietly to live by
+ them. And though your tenderness hath moved us to be requesting
+ your protection against them, yet we have forborne, and rather
+ waited upon God with patience till he quell their unruly
+ spirits.... In regard likewise the soldiers did not molest us, for
+ that you told us when some of us were before you, that you had
+ given command to your soldiers not to meddle with us, but resolved
+ to leave us to the Gentlemen of the County and to the Law of the
+ Land to deal with us, which we were satisfied with, and for this
+ half-year past your soldiers have not meddled with us.
+
+ "But now, Sirs, this last week, upon the 28th of November, there
+ came a party of soldiers commanded by a Cornet, and some of them of
+ your own regiment, and by their threatening words forced three
+ labouring men to help them to pull down our two houses, and carried
+ away the wood in a cart to a Gentleman's house, who hath been a
+ Cavalier all our time of war, and cast two or three old people out
+ who lived in those houses to lie in the open fields this cold
+ weather (an act more becoming Turks to deal with Christians than
+ for one Christian to deal with another). But if you inquire into
+ the business you will find that the Gentlemen who set the soldiers
+ on are enemies to you, for some of the chief had hands in the
+ Kentish rising against the Parliament, and we know, and you will
+ find it true if you trust them so far, that they love you but from
+ the teeth outward.
+
+ "Therefore our request to you is this, that you would call your
+ soldiers to account for attempting to abuse us without your
+ commission, that the Country may know that you had no hand in such
+ an unrighteous and cruel act. Likewise we desire that you would
+ continue your former kindness and promise to give commission to
+ your soldiers not to meddle with us without your order."
+
+As we shall presently see, nothing more discouraged the little company
+of Diggers than the assistance given to their enemies by the soldiery.
+Lord Fairfax, however, had no free hand in this matter; the Council of
+State had again received information of what was termed "a tumultuous
+meeting at Cobham," which the ordinary power at the disposal of the
+local Justices of the Peace "was not sufficient to disperse," and had
+consequently sent Lord Fairfax definite instructions to send "such horse
+as you may think fit to march to that place."[124:1] This information
+had evidently come to Winstanley's knowledge. He had not signed the
+foregoing letter, so felt himself at liberty to supplement it by another
+and more forcible one, which opens as follows:
+
+ "WINSTANLEY'S SECOND LETTER TO LORD FAIRFAX.[124:2]
+
+ "TO MY LORD GENERAL AND HIS COUNCIL OF WAR.
+
+ "SIR,--I understand that Mr. Parson Platt with some other gentlemen
+ have made report to you and the Council of State that we that are
+ called Diggers are a riotous people, and that we will not be ruled
+ by the Justices, and that we hold a man's house by violence from
+ him, and that we have four guns in it to secure ourselves, and that
+ we are drunkards, and Cavaliers waiting an opportunity to bring in
+ the Prince, and such like. Truly, Sir, these are all untrue
+ reports, and as false as those which Hamaan of old brought against
+ sincere-hearted Mordecai to incense king Ahasuerus against him. The
+ conversation of the Diggers is not such as they report; we are
+ peaceable men and walk in the light of righteousness to the utmost
+ of our power."
+
+He then expounds their aims, and justifies their action in the manner
+with which our readers will by now be familiar, and continues:
+
+ "We know that England cannot be a free Common-wealth, unless all
+ the poor Commoners have a free use and benefit of the land. For if
+ this freedom be not granted, we that are the poor commoners are in
+ a worse case than we were in the King's days; for then we had some
+ estate about us, though we were under oppression, but now our
+ estates are spent to purchase freedom, and we are under oppression
+ still of Lords of Manors tyranny. Therefore unless we that are poor
+ commoners have some part of the land to live upon freely, as well
+ as the Gentry, it cannot be a Common-wealth, neither can the kingly
+ power be removed so long as this kingly power in the hands of Lords
+ of Manors rules over us.
+
+ "Now, Sir, if you and the Council will quietly grant us this
+ freedom, which is our own right, and set us free from the kingly
+ power of Lords of Manors, that violently now as in the king's days
+ hold the commons from us (as if we had obtained no conquest at all
+ over the kingly power), then the poor that lie under the great
+ burden of poverty, and are always complaining for want, and their
+ miseries increase because they see no means of relief found out,
+ and therefore cry out continually to you and the Parliament for
+ relief, and to make good your promises, will be quieted.
+
+ "We desire no more of you than freedom to work, and to enjoy the
+ benefit of our labors--for here is waste land enough and to spare
+ to supply all our wants. But if you deny this freedom, then in
+ righteousness we must raise collections for the poor out of the
+ estates, and a mass of money will not supply their wants. Many are
+ in want that are ashamed to take collection money, and therefore
+ they are desperate, and would rather rob and steal and disturb the
+ land, and others that are ashamed to beg would do any work for to
+ live, as it is the case of many of our Diggers, who have been good
+ housekeepers. But if this freedom were granted to improve the
+ common lands, then there would be a supply to answer everyone's
+ inquire, and the murmurings of the people against you and the
+ Parliament would cease, and within a few years we should have no
+ beggars nor idle persons in the land.
+
+ "_Secondly_, Hereby England would be enriched with all commodities
+ within itself which they each would afford. And truly this is a
+ stain to Christian religion in England [a stain not yet removed]
+ that we have so much land lie waste and so many starve for want.
+ Further, if this freedom be granted, the whole Land will be united
+ in love and strength, that if a foreign enemy, like an army of rats
+ and mice, come to take our inheritance from us, we shall all rise
+ as one man to defend it.
+
+ "Then, lastly, if you will grant the poor commoners this quiet
+ freedom to improve the common land for our livelihood, we shall
+ rejoice in you and the Army in protecting our work, and we and our
+ work will be ready to secure that, and we hope that there will not
+ be any kingly power over us, to rule at will and we to be slaves,
+ as the power has been, but that you will rule in love as Moses and
+ Joshua did the children of Israel before any kingly power came in,
+ and that the Parliament will be as the elders of Israel, chosen
+ freely by the people to advise for and to assist both you and us.
+
+ "And thus in the name of the rest of those called Diggers and
+ Commoners through the land, I have in short declared our mind and
+ cause to you in the light of righteousness, which will prove all
+ these reports made against us to be false and destructive to the
+ uniting of England into peace.
+
+ "Per me Gerrard Winstanley, for myself and in the behalf of my
+ fellow commoners.
+
+ "_December the 8th, 1649._"
+
+Amongst Winstanley's disciples was one Robert Coster, who appears to
+have been the poet of the Digger Movement, and the next pamphlet which
+issued from their camp, on December 18th, some ten days after the date
+affixed to the above vigorous letter, was from his pen. It is entitled:
+
+ "_A Mite cast into the Common Treasury_:[126:1] Or Queries
+ propounded (for all Men to consider of) by him who desireth to
+ advance the work of Public Community. By Robert Coster."
+
+In it Coster first recapitulates Winstanley's main arguments and
+contentions, and then shows that he for one fully realised their
+far-reaching scope, by indicating their probable effects in the
+following words:
+
+ "As, 1. If men would do as aforesaid rather than to go with cap in
+ hand and bended knee to Gentlemen and Farmers, begging and
+ entreating to work with them for 8d. or 10d. a day, which doth give
+ them an occasion to tyrannise over poor people, who are their
+ fellow-creatures; if poor men would not go in such a slavish
+ posture, but do as aforesaid, the rich Farmers would be weary of
+ renting so much land of the Lords of Manors.
+
+ "2. If the Lords of Manors and other Gentlemen who covet after so
+ much land, could not let it out by parcels, but must be constrained
+ to keep it in their own hands, then would they want those great
+ bags of money (which do maintain pride, idleness and fullness of
+ bread) which are carried in to them by the Tenants, who go in as
+ slavish a posture as well may be, namely, with cap in hand and
+ bended knee, crouching and creeping from corner to corner, while
+ his Lord (rather Tyrant) walks up and down the room with his proud
+ looks, and with great swelling words questions him about his
+ holding.
+
+ "3. If the Lords of Manors and other Gentlemen had not those great
+ bags of money brought to them, then down would fall the lordliness
+ of their spirits, and then poor men might speak to them, and there
+ might be an acknowledging of one another to be Fellow-Creatures.
+
+ "For what is the reason that great gentlemen covet after so much
+ land? Is it not because Farmers and others creep to them in a
+ slavish manner, profering them so much money for such and such
+ parcels of it, which doth give them occasion to tyrannise over
+ their Fellow-Creatures, which they call their Inferiors?
+
+ "And what is the reason that Farmers and others are so greedy to
+ rent land of the Lords of Manors? Is it not because they expect
+ great gains, and because poor men are so foolish and slavish as to
+ creep to them for employment, although they will not give them
+ money enough to maintain themselves and their families comfortably?
+ All which do give them an occasion to tyrannise over their
+ Fellow-Creatures, which they call their Inferiors.
+
+ "All which considered, if poor men which want employment and others
+ which work for little wages would go to dress and improve the
+ Commons and Waste Lands, whether it would not bring down the price
+ of Land, which doth principally cause all things to be dear?"
+
+The pamphlet concludes with the following lines:
+
+ "The Nation is in such a state as this,
+ to honor rich men because they are rich;
+ And poor men, because poor, most do them hate.
+ O, but this is a very cursed state;
+ But those who act from love which is sincere,
+ will honor truth wherever it doth appear.
+ And no respecting of persons will be with such,
+ but tyranny they will abhor in poor and rich.
+ And in this state is he whose name is here,
+ your very loving friend, Robert Costeer."
+
+By way of appendix the author adds a long poem, of nine verses, entitled
+"A Digger's Ballad," of which the following verse, the last one, will
+give our readers a sufficient idea:
+
+ "The glorious state
+ which I do relate
+ Unspeakable comfort shall bring,
+ The corn will be green
+ and the flowers seen,
+ Our Storehouses they will be filled.
+ The birds will rejoice
+ with a merry voice,
+ All things shall yield sweet increase.
+ Then let us all sing
+ and joy in our King,
+ Who causeth all sorrows to cease."
+
+As will be seen in the following chapter, the time the above pamphlet
+was published was one of great anxiety in the brave little community
+which had ventured so much to lay the foundations of a better society
+than ever they knew, of a Social State based upon Justice, in which all
+should equally enjoy the benefits of their Creation. They had thrown
+their little possessions into a Common Treasury; they had taken
+possession of their birthright, the Commons of England; they had
+patiently endured all possible wrongs, injuries and insults, and had
+still remained steadfast to the Law of Reason and Love, to the express
+command of their acknowledged Master and King--Resist not evil. However,
+though their courage and endurance remained unabated, their little stock
+of provisions was becoming exhausted, and the end of their high
+endeavour was in sight. However this may be, it was about this time,
+during the bleak winter months, that they composed two Christmas Carols
+to sing round their camp-fires, which were given to the world the
+following April in a little book bearing the following title:
+
+ "THE DIGGERS MIRTH:[129:1]
+
+ OR
+
+ Certain Verses composed and fitted to tunes, for the delight and
+ recreation of all those that dig, or own that work, in the
+ Commonwealth of England.
+
+ Wherein is shewed how the Kingly Power doth still reign in several
+ sorts of men.
+
+ With a hint of that Freedom which shall come,
+ When the Father shall reign alone in His Son.
+
+ Set forth by those who were the original of that so righteous a
+ work, and continue still successful therein at Cobham in Surrey.
+
+ LONDON.
+
+ Printed in the year 1650."
+
+It contains but two long pieces, both of which merit more than a passing
+notice. The first, probably from the pen of Robert Coster, entitled "The
+Diggers Christmasse Caroll," contains some twenty-eight verses of six
+lines each. The view and hopes of the Diggers, as well as references to
+recent public events, are amusingly related, and in conclusion the
+reader is reminded that--"Freedom is not won, neither by sword nor gun,"
+and therefore entreated to discard his faith in the efficacy of force,
+of Money and the Sword, and to share their belief in the power of Love,
+Righteousness, and Co-operative Labour, for the satisfaction of the
+needs and desires of all.
+
+The second piece, which we suspect to be from Winstanley's pen, is
+headed:
+
+ "A hint of that Freedom which shall come,
+ When the Father shall reign alone in His Son,"
+
+and the first two verses seem to us worthy of being given in full. They
+run as follows:
+
+ "The Father He is God alone,
+ nothing besides Him is;
+ All things are folded in that one,
+ by Him all things subsist.
+
+ He is our Light, our Life, our Peace,
+ whereby we our being have;
+ From Him all things have their increase,
+ the Tyrant and the Slave."
+
+It was probably also about this time that Winstanley composed the
+following much more lively piece, which is to be found in the _Clarke
+Papers_,[130:1] and which may here find a fitting place:
+
+ "THE DIGGERS SONG.
+
+ "You noble Diggers all, stand up now, stand up now,
+ You noble Diggers all, stand up now,
+ The waste land to maintain, seeing Cavaliers by name
+ Your digging do disdain and persons all defame.
+ Stand up now, stand up now.
+
+ Your houses they pull down, stand up now, stand up now,
+ Your houses they pull down, stand up now;
+ Your houses they pull down to fright poor men in town,
+ But the Gentry must come down, and the poor shall wear the crown.
+ Stand up now, Diggers all!
+
+ With spades and hoes and plowes, stand up now, stand up now,
+ With spades and hoes and plowes, stand up now;
+ Your freedom to uphold, seeing Cavaliers are bold
+ To kill you if they could, and rights from you withhold.
+ Stand up now, Diggers all!
+
+ Their self-will is their law, stand up now, stand up now,
+ Their self-will is their law, stand up now;
+ Since tyranny came in, they count it now no sin
+ To make a goal a gin, to starve poor men therein.
+ Stand up now, stand up now.
+
+ The Gentry are all round, stand up now, stand up now,
+ The Gentry are all round, stand up now;
+ The Gentry are all round, on each side they are found,
+ Their wisdom's so profound to cheat us of our ground.
+ Stand up now, stand up now.
+
+ The Lawyers they conjoin, stand up now, stand up now,
+ The Lawyers they conjoin, stand up now;
+ To arrest you they advise, such fury they devise,
+ The devil in them lies, and hath blinded both their eyes.
+ Stand up now, stand up now.
+
+ The Clergy they come in, stand up now, stand up now,
+ The Clergy they come in, stand up now;
+ The Clergy they come in, and say it is a sin
+ That we should now begin our freedom for to win.
+ Stand up now, Diggers all!
+
+ The tithes they yet will have, stand up now, stand up now,
+ The tithes they yet will have, stand up now;
+ The tithes they yet will have, and Lawyers their fees crave,
+ And this they say is brave, to make the poor their slave.
+ Stand up now, Diggers all!
+
+ 'Gainst Lawyers and 'gainst Priests, stand up now, stand up now,
+ 'Gainst Lawyers and 'gainst Priests, stand up now;
+ For tyrants they are both, even flat against their oath,
+ To grant us they are loath, free meat and drink and cloth.
+ Stand up now, Diggers all!
+
+ The club is all their law, stand up now, stand up now,
+ The club is all their law, stand up now;
+ The club is all their law, to keep poor men in awe;
+ But they no vision saw to maintain such a law.
+ Stand up now, Diggers all!
+
+ The Cavaliers are foes, stand up now, stand up now,
+ The Cavaliers are foes, stand up now;
+ The Cavaliers are foes, themselves they do disclose
+ By verses, not in prose, to please the singing boys.
+ Stand up now, Diggers all!
+
+ To conquer them by love, come in now, come in now,
+ To conquer them by love, come in now;
+ To conquer them by love, as it does you behove,
+ For He is King above, no Power is like to Love.
+ Glory here, Diggers all!"
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[112:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 573. Also at
+the Guildhall Library.
+
+[115:1] Mr. Drake was the Lord of the Manor, and the patron of Parson
+Platt. He was made an Ejector for the County of Surrey by Cromwell, and
+Platt made Lay Ejector.
+
+[122:1] See _A Declaration of the Bloody and Unchristian Acting of
+William Star and John Taylor of Walton, with divers men in women's
+apparell, in opposition to those that dig upon St. Georges Hill_. King's
+Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 561.
+
+[122:2] _Clarke Papers_, vol. ii. pp. 215-217. No date is attached; but
+Winstanley's second letter, which immediately follows it, is dated
+December 8th, 1649.
+
+[124:1] See _Calendar of State Papers_, Domestic, 1649-1650, p. 335.
+
+[124:2] _Clarke Papers_, vol. ii. pp. 217-220.
+
+[126:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 585.
+
+[129:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 1365.
+
+[130:1] Vol. ii. p. 221.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+A NEW YEAR'S GIFT FOR THE PARLIAMENT AND ARMY
+
+ "Hear, O thou Righteous Spirit of the Whole Creation, and judge,
+ who is the thief, he who takes away the Freedom of the Common Earth
+ from me, which is my Creation Right; Or I, who take the Common
+ Earth to plant upon for my free livelihood, endeavouring to live as
+ a Free Commoner, in a Free Common-wealth, in Righteousness and
+ Peace."--WINSTANLEY, _The Law of Freedom_.
+
+
+It was probably during the anxious times that beset the little community
+of Diggers during the winter of 1649-1650, that Winstanley wrote the
+long and bitter pamphlet, to which is attached a detailed list of the
+injuries inflicted upon them, and which early in 1650 appeared in book
+form under the following title:
+
+ "A NEW YEAR'S GIFT FOR THE PARLIAMENT AND ARMY:[132:1]
+
+ Showing what the Kingly Power is; and that the Cause of those they
+ call Diggers is the Life and Marrow of that Cause the
+ Parliament hath declared for and the Army fought for. The
+ perfecting of which work will prove England to be the First of
+ Nations, or the Tenth Part of the City Babylon, that falls off
+ from the Beast first, and that sets the Crown upon Christ's
+ head, to govern the World in Righteousness.
+
+ By JERRARD WINSTANLEY,
+ A Lover of England's Freedom and Peace.
+
+ Die Pride and Envy; Flesh take the Poor's advice.
+ Covetousness begone: Come Truth and Love arise.
+ Patience take the Crown; throw Anger out of doors:
+ Cast out Hypocrisy, and Lust, and mere invented Laws.[133:1]
+ Then England sit in rest; Thy Sorrows will have end;
+ Thy Sons will live in Peace, and each will be a friend.
+
+ LONDON.
+ Printed for Giles Calvert, 1650."
+
+Winstanley first gives a rapid sketch of recent events, as follows:
+
+ "Gentlemen of the Parliament and Army; You and the Common People
+ have assisted each other to cast out the head of oppression, which
+ was Kingly Power seated in one man's hand, and that work is now
+ done, and till that work was done you called upon the people to
+ assist you to deliver this distressed, bleeding, dying Nation out
+ of bondage. And the people came and failed you not, counting
+ neither purse nor blood too dear to part with to effect this work.
+
+ "The Parliament after this have made an Act to cast out Kingly
+ Power and to make England a free Common-wealth. These Acts the
+ people are much rejoiced with, as being words forerunning their
+ freedom, and they wait for their accomplishment that their joy may
+ be full. For as words without actions are a cheat, and kill the
+ comfort of a righteous spirit, so words performed in action do
+ comfort and nourish the life thereof.
+
+ "Now, Sirs, wheresoever we spy out Kingly Power, no man I hope
+ shall be troubled to declare it, nor afraid to cast it out, having
+ both Act of Parliament, the Soldier's Oath, and the Common People's
+ Consent on his side. For Kingly Power is like a great spread tree;
+ if you lop the head or top bough and let the other branches and
+ root stand, it will grow again and recover fresher strength.
+
+ "If any ask me, what Kingly Power is? I answer, there is a twofold
+ Kingly Power. The one is the Kingly Power of Righteousness, and
+ this is the power of the Almighty God, ruling the whole Creation in
+ Peace, and keeping it together. And this is the Power of Universal
+ Love, leading people unto all truth, teaching everyone to do as he
+ would be done unto.... But the other Kingly Power is the power of
+ Unrighteousness.... This Kingly Power is the Power of Self Love,
+ ruling in one or in many men over others, and enslaving those who
+ in the Creation are their equals; nay, who are in the strictness of
+ equity rather their masters. And this Kingly Power is usually set
+ in the Chair of Government, under the name of Prerogative, when he
+ rules in one over another; and in the name of State Privilege of
+ Parliament, when he rules in many over others.... While this Kingly
+ Power ruled in a man called Charles, all sorts of people complained
+ of oppression, both Gentry and Common People, because their lands,
+ enclosures and copyholds were entangled, and because their Trade
+ was destroyed by Monopolising Patentees, and your troubles were
+ that you could not live free from oppression in the earth.
+ Thereupon you that were the Gentry, when you were assembled in
+ Parliament, you called upon the Common People to come and help you
+ to cast out oppression: and you that complained are helped and
+ freed, and that top-bough is lopped off the Tree of Tyranny, and
+ Kingly Power in that one particular is cast out. But, alas!
+ oppression is a great tree still, and keeps off the Sun of Freedom
+ from the poor Commons still. He hath many branches and great roots
+ which must be grubbed up, before everyone can sing Zion's song in
+ peace."
+
+After again praising the two Acts of Parliament--"the one to cast out
+Kingly Power; the other to make England a free Common-wealth"--and
+detailing his grievances against the Tything Priests and Lords of
+Manors, he continues:
+
+ "Search all your Laws, and I'll adventure my life, for I have
+ little else to lose, that all Lords of Manors hold Title to the
+ Commons by no stronger hold than the King's Will, whose head is cut
+ off; and the King held title as he was a Conqueror. Now if you cast
+ off the King who was the head of that power, surely the power of
+ Lords of Manors is the same. Therefore perform your own Act of
+ Parliament, and cast out that part of the Kingly Power likewise,
+ that the People may see that you understand what you say and do,
+ and that you are faithful. For truly the Kingly Power reigns
+ strongly in the Lords of Manors over the Poor. For my own
+ particular, I have in other writings, as well as in this, declared
+ my reasons why the Common Land is the Poor People's propriety; and
+ I have digged upon the Commons; and I hope in time to obtain the
+ freedom to get food and raiment therefrom by righteous labour:
+ which is all I desire. And for so doing the supposed Lord of that
+ Manor hath arrested me twice. First in an Action of L20 trespass
+ for plowing upon the Commons, which I never did.... And now they
+ have arrested me again in an Action of L4 trespass for digging upon
+ the Commons, which I did, and own the work to be righteous and no
+ trespass to any. This was the Attorney at Kingstone's advice,
+ either to get money from both sides ... or else that I should not
+ remove the action to a Higher Court, but that the cause might be
+ tried there. For they know how to please Lords of Manors, that have
+ resolved to spend hundreds of pounds but they will hinder the Poor
+ from enjoying the Commons."
+
+Then he gives utterance to the sense of indignation which filled his
+heart in the following bitter and contemptuous words:
+
+ "Do these men obey the Parliament's Acts, to throw down Kingly
+ Power? O no! The same unrighteous doing that was complained of in
+ King Charles' days, the same doing is among them still. Money will
+ buy and sell Justice still. And is our eight years' war come round
+ about to lay us down again in the Kennel of Injustice as much or
+ more than before? Are we no farther learned yet? O ye Rulers of
+ England, when must we turn over a new leaf? Will you always hold us
+ in one lesson? Surely you will make Dunces of us; then all the Boys
+ in other Lands will laugh at us! Come, I pray, let us take forth
+ and go forward in our learning!"
+
+Winstanley's zeal for the cause he had espoused was, however, too real
+to allow him to continue long in this strain, so he immediately adopts a
+more persuasive tone, as follows:
+
+ "You blame us who are the Common People as though we would have no
+ government. Truly, Gentlemen, we desire a righteous government with
+ all our hearts. But the Government we have gives freedom and
+ livelihood to the Gentry, to have abundance, and to lock up
+ Treasures of the Earth from the Poor; so that rich men may have
+ chests full of gold and silver, and houses full of corn and goods
+ to look upon, while the Poor who work to get it can hardly live;
+ and if they cannot work like slaves, then they must starve. Thus
+ the Law gives all the Land to some part of mankind, whose
+ predecessors got it by conquest, and denies it to others, who by
+ the Righteous Law of Creation may claim an equal portion. And yet
+ you say this is a Righteous Government, but surely it is no other
+ than selfishness."
+
+His indignation again gets the mastery of him, and he continues
+bitterly:
+
+ "England is a prison; the varieties of subtilties in the Laws
+ preserved by the Sword are the bolts, bars and doors of the prison;
+ the Lawyers are the Jailers; and Poor Men are the prisoners. For
+ let a man fall into the hands of any, from the Bailiff to the
+ Judge, and he is either undone or weary of his life. Surely this
+ power, the Law, which is the great Idol that people dote upon, is
+ the burden of the Creation, a nursery of idleness, luxury and
+ cheating, the only enemy of Christ, the King of Righteousness! For
+ though it pretends Justice, yet the Judges and Law Officers buy and
+ sell Justice for money, and say it is my calling, and never are
+ troubled at it."
+
+He then makes the following manly appeal to his persecutors:
+
+ "You Gentlemen of Surrey, and Lords of Manors, and you Mr. Parson
+ Platt especially ... my advice to you is this, hereafter to lie
+ still and cherish the Diggers, for they love you and would not have
+ your finger ache if they could help it, then why should you be so
+ bitter against them? O let them live beside you. Some of them have
+ been Soldiers, and some Countrymen that were always friends to the
+ Parliament's cause, by whose hardships and means you enjoy the
+ creatures about you in peace. And will you now destroy part of them
+ that have preserved your lives? O do not do so; be not so besotted
+ with the Kingly Power.... Bid them go and plant the Commons. This
+ will be your honor and your comfort; for assure yourselves that you
+ can never have true comfort till you be friends with the Poor.
+ Therefore, come, come, love the Diggers, make restitution of their
+ land you hold from them; for what would you do if you had not such
+ laboring men to work for you?"
+
+A pertinent question, truly, and one which those whom he addressed, as
+well as those who are to-day in their places, would find it somewhat
+inconvenient to answer.
+
+He then appeals to the Officers of the Army in the following bold and
+manly words:
+
+ "And you, great Officers of the Army and Parliament, love your
+ common Soldiers (I plead for Equity and Reason) and do not force
+ them, by long delay of payment, to sell you their dearly bought
+ Debentures for a thing of nought, and then to go and buy our Common
+ Land, and Crown Land, and other Land that is the spoil, one of
+ another therewith. Remember you are Servants to the Commons of
+ England, and you were volunteers in the Wars, and the Common People
+ have paid you for your pains largely.... As soon as you have freed
+ the Earth from one entanglement of Kingly Power, will you entangle
+ it more? I pray you consider what you do, and do righteously. We
+ that are the Poor Commons, that paid our money and gave you
+ free-quarter, have as much right in those Crown Lands and Lands of
+ the spoil as you. Therefore we give no consent that you should buy
+ and sell our Crown Lands and Waste Lands; for it is our purchased
+ inheritance from under oppression! it is our own, even the poor
+ Common People's of England.... We paid you your wages to help us
+ recover it, but not to take it yourselves and turn us out, and to
+ buy and sell it among yourselves.... If you do so, you uphold the
+ Kingly Power, and so disobey both Acts of Parliament, and break
+ your Oath; and you will live in the breach of these two
+ commandments, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, by denying
+ us the Earth which is our livelihood, and thereby killing us by a
+ lingering death."
+
+Winstanley then summarises his contentions, as follows:
+
+ "Well, the end of all my speech is to point out the Kingly Power
+ where I spy it out. And you see it remains strongly in the hands of
+ Lords of Manors, who have dealt so discourteously with some who are
+ sincere in heart, though there have some come among the Diggers
+ that have caused scandal, but we disown their ways.[137:1]
+
+ "The Lords of Manors have sent to beat us, to pull down our houses,
+ spoil our labours; yet we are patient, and never offered any
+ violence to them again these forty weeks past, but wait upon God
+ with love till their hearts thereby be softened. All that we
+ desire is but to live quietly in the Land of our Nativity by our
+ righteous labour upon the Common Land, which is our own; but as yet
+ the Lords of the Manors, so formerly called, will not suffer us,
+ but abuse us. Is not that part of the Kingly Power? In that which
+ follows I shall clearly prove it is; for it appears so clear that
+ the understanding of a child does say, 'It is tyranny; it is the
+ Kingly Power of Darkness.' Therefore we expect that you will grant
+ us the benefit of your Act of Parliament, so that we may say--Truly
+ England is a Common-wealth, and a Free People indeed."
+
+Winstanley then declares that despite all their trouble and anxiety the
+Diggers were still "mightily cheerful," and resolved "to wait upon God
+to see what He will do ... taking it a great happiness to be persecuted
+for righteousness' sake by the Priests and Professors that are the
+successors of Judas and the bitter spirited Pharisees that put the man
+Christ to death." He then again advances the reasons on which he bases
+the equal claims of all to the use of the earth, denounces the sources
+whence the exclusive claims of the few have sprung, more especially the
+tyrannical claims of Lords of Manors, boldly claiming that from this
+tyranny of man to man England should have been freed by the recent
+casting out of kingly power--and continues:
+
+ "Therefore I say, the Common Land is my own Land, equal with my
+ Fellow Commoners; and our true propriety by the Law of Creation.
+ _It is every ones, but not one single ones._ Yea, the Commons are
+ as truly ours by the last excellent two Acts of Parliament, the
+ foundation of England's new Righteous Government aimed at, as the
+ Elder Brothers can say the Enclosures are theirs. For they ventured
+ their lives and covenanted with us to help them preserve their
+ Freedom; and we adventured our lives and they covenanted with us to
+ purchase and to give us our Freedom, that hath been hundreds of
+ years kept from us."
+
+The first part of this pamphlet concludes as follows:
+
+ "_Damona non Armis sed Morte subegit Jesus._
+
+ "By patient sufferings, not by Death,
+ Christ did the devil kill:
+ And by the same still to this day,
+ His foes he conquers still.
+
+ "True Religion and undefiled is this: To make Restitution of the
+ Earth, which hath been taken and held from the Common People by the
+ power of Conquests formerly, and to set the oppressed free. Do not
+ all strive to enjoy the land? The Gentry strive for land; the
+ Clergy strive for land; the Common People strive for land; and
+ Buying and Selling is an Art whereby People endeavour to cheat one
+ another of the land. Now, if any can prove from the Law of
+ Righteousness that the land was made peculiar to him and his
+ successively, shutting others out, he shall enjoy it freely for my
+ part. But I affirm, it was made for all; and true Religion is to
+ let everyone enjoy it. Therefore you Rulers of England, make
+ restitution of the Land which the Kingly Power holds from us. Set
+ the Oppressed free; and come in and honor Christ, who is the
+ Restoring Power, and you shall find rest."
+
+In the opening of the second part of this pamphlet Winstanley reverts
+somewhat to his earlier mystical style, and still further expounds the
+eternal struggle between the Spirit of Self Love and the Spirit of
+Universal Love, denouncing the former as the source of all social ills,
+extolling the latter as the source and inspirer of peaceful and
+equitable social life. "In our present experience," he contends,
+"Darkness or Self Love goes before, and Light or Universal Love follows
+after"; and hence "Darkness and Bondage doth oppress Liberty and Light."
+He illustrates this contention, as well as the essential difference of
+the spirits animating the Diggers and their opponents, by relating how
+one of the Colonels of the Army told him--"That the Diggers did work
+upon Georges Hill for no other end than to draw a company of people into
+arms; and that our knavery was found out, because it takes not that
+effect": on which Winstanley comments as follows:
+
+ "Truly thou Colonel, I tell thee, thy knavish imagination is
+ thereby discovered, which hinders the effecting of that Freedom
+ which by Oath and Covenant thou hast engaged to maintain. For my
+ part and the rest, we had no such thought. We abhor fighting for
+ Freedom; it is acting of the Curse, and lifting him up higher. Do
+ thou uphold it by the Sword; we will not. We will conquer by Love
+ and Patience, or else we count it no Freedom. Freedom gotten by the
+ Sword is an established Bondage to some part or other of the
+ Creation. This we have declared publicly enough. Therefore thy
+ imagination told thee a lie, and will deceive thee in a greater
+ matter, if Love doth not kill him. VICTORY THAT IS GOTTEN BY THE
+ SWORD IS A VICTORY SLAVES GET ONE OVER ANOTHER; BUT VICTORY
+ OBTAINED BY LOVE IS A VICTORY FOR A KING!"
+
+Surely, surely, if all other writings of Winstanley had perished, this
+one passage would have given us sufficient insight into his philosophy,
+into the noble principles animating his life, to entitle him to our
+admiration and respect.
+
+He then continues:
+
+ "This is your very inward principle, O ye present Powers of
+ England, you do not study how to advance Universal Love. If you did
+ it would appear in action. But Imagination and Self Love mightily
+ disquiet your mind, and makes you to call up all the Powers of
+ Darkness to come forth and help you to set the Crown upon the head
+ of Self, which is that Kingly Power you have oathed and vowed
+ against, but yet uphold it in your hands.... All this falling out
+ and quarrelling among mankind is about the Earth, and who shall,
+ and who shall not enjoy it, when indeed it is the portion of
+ everyone, and ought not to be striven for, nor bought, nor sold,
+ whereby some are hedged in and others are hedged out. Far better
+ not to have had a body than to be debarred the fruit of the Earth
+ to feed and clothe it. And if every one did but quietly enjoy the
+ Earth for food and raiment, there would be no wars, prisons, nor
+ gallows, and this action which men call theft would be no sin. For
+ Universal Love never made it a sin, but the Power of Covetousness
+ made it a sin, and made Laws to punish it, though he himself lives
+ in that sin in a higher manner than those he hangs and punishes....
+ Well, He that made the Earth for us as well as for you will set us
+ free, though you will not. When will the Veil of Darkness be drawn
+ off your faces? Will you not be wise, O ye Rulers?"
+
+After further expatiating on the blessings inherent in Righteousness and
+Universal Love, and on the inevitable evil consequences of Self Love or
+Covetousness, he indicates the practical steps by which these evils
+might be removed, as follows:
+
+ "If ever the Creation is to be restored, this is the way, which
+ lies in this two-fold power:
+
+ "First, Community of Mankind, which is comprised in the Unity of
+ the Spirit of Love, which is called Christ within you, or the Law
+ written in the Heart, leading Mankind unto all Truth, and to be of
+ one heart and one mind.
+
+ "The Second is Community of the Earth, for the quiet livelihood in
+ food and raiment, without using force or restraining one another.
+
+ "These Two Communities, or rather one in two branches, is that true
+ Levelling which Christ shall work at His more glorious appearance.
+ FOR JESUS CHRIST, THE SAVIOUR OF ALL MEN, IS THE GREATEST, FIRST
+ AND TRUEST LEVELLER THAT EVER WAS SPOKEN OF IN THE WORLD."
+
+ "Therefore you Rulers of England, be not afraid nor ashamed of
+ Levellers, hate them not; Christ comes to you riding upon these
+ clouds. Look not upon other Lands to be your pattern. All Lands in
+ the World lie under Darkness, so doth England yet, though the
+ nearest to Light and Freedom than any other. Therefore let no other
+ Land take your Crown....
+
+ "At this very day poor people are forced to work, in some places
+ for 4, 5, and 6 pence a day, in other places for 8, 10, and 12
+ pence a day, for such small prices that now, corn being dear, their
+ earnings cannot find them bread for their families. Yet if they
+ steal for maintenance, the murdering Law will hang them.... Well
+ this shows that if this be Law, it is not the Law of Righteousness.
+ It is a murderer; it is the Law of Covetousness and Self Love. And
+ this Law that frights people and forces people to obey it by
+ prisons, whips and gallows, is the very Kingdom of the Devil and
+ Darkness, which the Creation groans under at this day."
+
+After this characteristic outburst, he gives them the following equally
+characteristic advice:
+
+ "Come, make peace with the Cavaliers, your enemies, and let the
+ oppressed go free, and let them have a livelihood. Love your
+ enemies, and do to them as you would have had them do to you, if
+ they had conquered you. Well, let them go in peace, and let Love
+ wear the Crown. For I tell you and your Preachers, that Scripture
+ which saith 'The Poor shall inherit the Earth,' is really and
+ materially to be fulfilled. For the Earth is to be restored from
+ the bondage of Sword-propriety, and is to become a Common Treasury
+ in reality to the whole of mankind. For this is the work for the
+ true Saviour to do, who is the true and faithful Leveller, even the
+ Spirit and Power of Universal Love, that is now rising to spread
+ itself in the whole Creation, who is the Blessing, who will spread
+ as far as the Curse has spread, to take it off and cast it out, and
+ who will set the Creation in peace."
+
+The pamphlet then concludes with the following words:
+
+ "The time is very near when the people generally shall loathe and
+ be ashamed of your Kingly Power, in your preaching, in your Laws,
+ in your Councils, as now you are ashamed of the Levellers. I tell
+ you Jesus Christ, who is that powerful Spirit of Love, is the Head
+ Leveller: and as He is lifted up, He will draw all men after Him,
+ and leave you naked and bare.... This Great Leveller, Christ our
+ King of Righteousness in us, shall cause men to beat their swords
+ into plough-shares, their spears into pruning-hooks, and Nations
+ shall learn war no more. Everyone shall delight to let each other
+ enjoy the pleasures of the Earth, and shall hold each other no more
+ in bondage. Then what will become of your power? Truly he must be
+ cast out as a murderer. I pity you for the torment your spirit must
+ go through, if you be not fore-armed as you are abundantly
+ fore-warned from all places. But I look on you as part of the
+ Creation that must be restored; and the Spirit may give you wisdom
+ to fore-see a danger, as he hath admonished divers of your rank
+ already to leave those high places and to lie quiet and wait for
+ the breaking forth of the powerful day of the Lord. Farewell, once
+ more, Let Israel go free."
+
+As a sort of appendix to this pamphlet there appears the following
+interesting document:
+
+ "A BILL OF ACCOUNT OF THE MOST REMARKABLE SUFFERINGS THAT THE
+ DIGGERS HAVE MET WITH SINCE APRIL 1ST, 1649, which was the
+ first day they began to dig and to take possession of the
+ Commons for the Poor on George Hill in Surrey.
+
+ "1. The first time divers of the Diggers were carried prisoners
+ into Walton Church, where some of them were struck in the Church
+ by the bitter Professors and rude multitude; but after some time
+ they were freed by a Justice.
+
+ "2. They were fetched by above a hundred rude people, whereof John
+ Taylor was the leader, who took away their spades, and some of them
+ they never had again: and carried them first to prison in Walton,
+ and then to a Justice in Kingston, who presently dismissed them.
+
+ "3. The enemy pulled down a house which the Diggers had built upon
+ George Hill, and cut their spades and hoes to pieces.
+
+ "4. Two Troops of Horse were sent from the General to fetch us
+ before the Council of War, to give account of our Digging.
+
+ "5. We had another House pulled down, and our Spades cut to pieces.
+
+ "6. One of the Diggers had his head sore wounded, and a Boy beaten,
+ and his clothes taken from him: divers being by.
+
+ "7. We had a Cart and Wheels cut in pieces, and a Mare cut over the
+ back with a Bill when we went to fetch a load of wood from Stoak
+ Common, to build a house upon George Hill.
+
+ "8. Divers of the Diggers were beaten upon the Hill, by William
+ Star and John Taylor, and by men in women's apparel, and so sore
+ wounded that some of them were fetched home in a Cart.
+
+ "9. We had another House pulled down, and the Wood they carried to
+ Walton in a Cart.
+
+ "10. They arrested some of us, and some they cast into Prison, and
+ from others they went about to take away their Goods, but that the
+ Goods proved another man's, which one of the Diggers was servant
+ to.
+
+ "11. And indeed at divers times besides, we had all our corn
+ spoiled. For the enemy were so mad that they tumbled the earth up
+ and down, and would suffer no Corn to grow.
+
+ "12. Another Cart and Wheels were cut to pieces, and some of our
+ Tools taken by force from us, which we never had again.
+
+ "13. Some of the Diggers were beaten by the Gentlemen, the Sheriff
+ looking on, and afterwards five of them were carried to White Lion
+ Prison, and kept there about five weeks, and then let out.
+
+ "14. The Sheriff, with the Lords of Manors and Soldiers standing
+ by, caused two or three poor men to pull down another House: and
+ divers things were stolen from them.
+
+ "15. The next day two Soldiers and two or three Countrymen, sent
+ by Parson Platt, pulled down another House, and turned a poor old
+ man and his wife out of doors to lie in the fields in a cold
+ night."
+
+ "And this is the last hitherto. And so you Priests, as you were the
+ last that had a hand in our persecution, so it may be that our
+ misery may rest in your hand. For assure yourselves God in Christ
+ will not be mocked by such Hypocrites that pretend to be His
+ nearest and dearest Servants, as you do, and yet will not suffer
+ His hungry and naked and houseless members to live quiet by you in
+ the Earth, by whose Blood and Monies in the Wars you are in peace.
+
+ "And now those Diggers that remain have made little Hutches to lie
+ in, like Calf-cribs, and are cheerful, taking the spoiling of their
+ Goods patiently, and rejoicing that they are counted worthy to
+ suffer persecution for Righteousness' sake. And they follow their
+ work close, and have planted divers acres of Wheat and Rye, which
+ is come up and promises a very plentiful crop, and have resolved to
+ preserve it by all the diligence they can. And nothing shall make
+ them slack but want of food, which is not much now, they being all
+ poor people, and having suffered so much in one expense or other
+ since they began. For Poverty is their greatest burthen; and if
+ anything do break them from the Work, it will be that."
+
+After this confession of their weakness, and of the probable end of
+their work, Winstanley again bursts out into verse as follows:
+
+ "You Lordly Foes, you will rejoice
+ this news to hear and see.
+ Do so, go on; but we'll rejoice
+ much more the Truth to see.
+ For by our hands Truth is declared,
+ and nothing is kept back;
+ Our faithfulness much joy doth bring,
+ though victuals we may lack,
+ This trial may our God see good,
+ to try, not us, but you;
+ That your profession of the Truth
+ may prove either false or true."
+
+And after another and much worse specimen of his poetry, which we will
+spare our readers, he concludes as follows:
+
+ "And here I end, having put my Arm as far as my strength will go
+ to advance Righteousness. I have writ; I have acted; I have Peace.
+ And now I must wait to see the Spirit do His own work in the hearts
+ of others; and whether England shall be the first Land, or some
+ other, wherein Truth shall sit down in triumph.
+
+ "But, O England, England, would God thou didst know the things that
+ belong to thy peace before they be hid from thine eyes. The Spirit
+ of Righteousness hath striven with thee, and doth yet strive with
+ thee, and yet there is hope. Come in thou England, submit to
+ righteousness before the voice go out, my Spirit shall strive no
+ longer with flesh, and let not Covetousness make thee oppress the
+ poor....
+
+ "Gentlemen of the Army, we have spoken to you; we have appealed to
+ the Parliament; we have declared our Cause with all humility to you
+ all; and we are Englishmen, your friends that stuck to you in your
+ miseries, when those Lords of Manors that oppose us were wavering
+ on both sides. Yet you have heard them, and answered their request
+ to beat us off; and yet you would not afford us an answer.
+
+ "Yet Love and Patience shall lie down and suffer; let Pride and
+ Covetousness stretch themselves upon their beds of ease, and forget
+ the afflictions of Joseph, and persecute us for Righteousness'
+ sake, yet we will wait to see the issue. The Power of Righteousness
+ is our God; the Globe runs round; the longest sunshine day ends in
+ a dark night. Therefore to Thee, O Thou King of Righteousness, we
+ do commit our cause. Judge Thou between us and them that strive
+ against us, and those that deal treacherously with Thee and us; and
+ do Thine own work, and help weak flesh in whom the Spirit is
+ willing."
+
+"To thee, O thou King of Righteousness, we do commit our cause. Judge
+Thou, and help weak flesh in whom the Spirit is willing." At this very
+hour the same prayer, the same cry for Justice, is still ascending to
+the throne of the King of Righteousness from the disinherited masses, on
+whose shoulders the weight of our civilisation rests, and whom it
+presses down to helpless poverty, misery, and wretchedness, and who are
+still suffering from the same fundamental injustice against which, as we
+have seen, Gerrard Winstanley protested so eloquently over two hundred
+and fifty years ago.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[132:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 587.
+
+[133:1] In deference to prevailing conventionalities, we have ventured
+to alter this line.
+
+[137:1] In the next chapter we shall learn something of those "Diggers
+that have caused scandal," and whose actions and views Winstanley found
+it necessary to disown.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+A VINDICATION; A DECLARATION; AND AN APPEAL
+
+ "There is but one way to remove an evil--and that is to remove its
+ cause. Poverty deepens as wealth increases, and wages are forced
+ down while productive power grows, because land, which is the
+ source of all wealth and the field of all labour, is monopolised.
+ To extirpate poverty, to make wages what justice demands they
+ should be, the full earnings of the labourer, we must therefore
+ substitute for the individual ownership of land a common ownership.
+ Nothing else will go to the cause of the evil--in nothing else is
+ there the slightest hope."--HENRY GEORGE, 1877-1878.
+
+
+In the pamphlet we have considered in the previous chapter we heard that
+"there have some come among the Diggers that have caused scandal," and
+whose ways were disowned by Winstanley and his associates. A few weeks
+subsequent to its publication, Winstanley judged it necessary publicly
+and formally to dissociate himself and his companions from them, which
+he did, in a manner quite in accordance with his own principles, in a
+small pamphlet of some eight pages, which was published under the title:
+
+ "A VINDICATION OF THOSE WHOSE ENDEAVOURS IS ONLY TO MAKE THE EARTH
+ A COMMON TREASURY, CALLED DIGGERS: Or Some Reasons given by
+ them against the immoderate use of creatures, or the excessive
+ community of women, called Ranting or rather Renting,"[146:1]
+
+which, after a long condemnation of "the Ranting Practice," runs as
+follows:
+
+ "There are only two things I must speak as an advice in Love.
+
+ "First, Let everyone that intends to live in peace set themselves
+ with diligent labour to till, dig and plow the common and barren
+ land, to get them bread with righteous, moderate working, among a
+ moderate-minded people; this prevents the evil of idleness, and the
+ danger of the Ranting power.
+
+ "Secondly, Let none go about to suppress that Ranting power by the
+ punishing hand; for it is the work of the Righteous and Rational
+ Spirit within, not thy hand without, that must suppress it. But if
+ thou wilt need be punishing, then see thou be without sin thyself,
+ and then cast the first stone at the Ranter. Let not sinners punish
+ others for sin, but let the power of thy reason and righteous
+ action shame and so beat down their unrational actings. Wouldst
+ thou live in peace, then look to thy own ways, mind thy own Kingdom
+ within.... Let everyone alone to stand or fall their own Master;
+ for thou being a sinner and striving to suppress sinners by force,
+ thou wilt thereby but increase their rage and thine own trouble.
+ But do thou keep close to the Law of Righteous Reason, and thou
+ shalt presently see a return of the Ranters: for that Spirit within
+ must shame them and turn them and pull them out of darkness."
+
+After emphasising the fact that such evil actions must necessarily bring
+evil on those who indulge in them, the pamphlet concludes with the
+following words:
+
+ "This I was made to write as a Vindication of the Diggers, who are
+ slandered with the Ranting action. My end is only to advance the
+ Kingdom of Peace in and among mankind, which is and will be torn in
+ pieces by the Ranting power, if Reason do not kill this
+ fine-hearted or sensitive Beast. All you that are merely civil and
+ that are of a loving and flexible disposition, wanting the strength
+ of Reason, and the Life of Universal Love, leading you forth to
+ seek the peace and preservation of every single body as of one's
+ self, you are the people that are likely to be tempted, and set
+ upon and torn into pieces by this devouring Beast, the Ranting
+ Power.
+ "GERRARD WINSTANLEY.
+ "_Feb. this 20, 1649 (1650)._"
+
+On March 4th he adds the following interesting postscript:
+
+ "I am told there are some people going up and down the country
+ among such as are friends to the Diggers, gathering monies in
+ their name. And they have a note wherein my name and divers others
+ are subscribed. This is to certify that I never subscribed my name
+ to any such note. Neither have we that are called Diggers received
+ any money by any such collections. Therefore to prevent this cheat,
+ we desire, if any are willing to cast a gift in to further our work
+ of digging upon the Commons, that they would send it to our own
+ hands by some trusty friends of their own."
+
+If others could get monies in their name, the Diggers evidently thought
+that they might themselves take advantage of the same means to maintain
+the public work on which they were engaged. For we gather the following
+from a contemporary news-sheet,[148:1] _A Perfect Diurnal_, April 1-8:
+
+ "_April 4 (Thursday)._--THE TRUE COPY OF A LETTER taken at
+ Wellingborough, Northamptonshire, with some men that were there
+ apprehended for going about to incite people to Digging, and
+ under such pretence gathered money of the well-affected for
+ their assistance.
+
+ "These are to certify all that are Friends to Universal Freedom,
+ and that look upon the Digging and Planting of the Commons to be
+ the first springing up of Freedom: To make the Earth a Common
+ Treasury that everyone may enjoy food and raiment freely by his
+ labour upon the Earth, without paying Rents or Homage to any
+ Fellow-creature of his own kind; that everyone may be delivered
+ from the Tyranny of the Conquering Power, and to rise up out of
+ that Bondage to enjoy the benefit of his Creation: This, I say, is
+ to certify all such that those Men that have begun to lay the First
+ Stone in the Foundation of this Freedom (by digging upon Georges
+ Hill on the Common called Little Heath in Cobham) in regard of the
+ great opposition hitherto from the Enemy, by reason whereof they
+ lost the last Summer's work, yet, through inward faithfulness to
+ advance Freedom, they keep the field still, ... but in regard to
+ poverty their work is like to flag and drop: Therefore if the
+ hearts of any be stirred up to drop anything into this Treasury, to
+ buy victuals to keep the men alive, and to buy Corn to cast into
+ the ground, it will keep alive the Spirit of Public Freedom to the
+ whole Land, which otherwise is ready to die again for want of help.
+ And if you hear hereafter that there was a people appeared to stand
+ up to advance Public Freedom, and struggled with the Opposing Power
+ of the Land, for that they begin to let them alone, and yet these
+ men and their public work were crushed, because they wanted
+ assistance of food and corn to keep them alive: I say, if you hear
+ this, it will be trouble to you when it is too late, that you had
+ monies in your hand, and would not part with any of it to purchase
+ Freedom, therefore you deservedly groan under Tyranny, and no
+ Saviour appears. But let your Reason weigh the excellency of this
+ work, and I am sure you will cast in something.
+
+ "And because there were some treacherous persons drew up a note and
+ subscribed our names to it, and by that moved some friends to give
+ money to this work of ours, when as we know of no such note, nor
+ subscribed our names to any, nor ever received any money from such
+ collection. Therefore to prevent such a cheat, I have mentioned a
+ word or two in the end of a printed book against that treachery,
+ that neither we nor our friends may be cheated. And I desire if any
+ be willing to communicate of their substance unto our work, that
+ they would make a collection among themselves, and send that money
+ to Cobham to the Diggers' own hands, by some trusty friend of your
+ own, and so neither you nor we shall be cheated.
+
+ "The Bearers hereof, Thomas Haydon and Adam Knight, can relate by
+ word of mouth more largely the condition of the Diggers and their
+ work, and so we leave this to you to do as you are moved.
+
+ "Jacob Heard, Jo. South junior, Henry Barton, Tho. Barnard, Tho.
+ Adams, Will Hitchcocke, Anthony Wren, Robert Draper, William Smith,
+ Robert Coster, Gerrard Winstanley, Jo. South, Tho. Heydon, Jo.
+ Palmer, Tho. South, Henry Handcocke, Jo. Batt, Dan Ireland, Jo.
+ Hayman, Robert Sawyer, Tho. Starre, Tho. Edcer, besides their wives
+ and families, and many more if there were food for them."
+
+Then follows this detailed account of their travels:
+
+ "A COPY OF THEIR TRAVELS, that was taken with the four men at
+ Wellingborow.
+
+ "Out of Buckinghamshire into Surrey; from Surrey to Middlesex, from
+ thence to Hartfordshire, to Bedfordshire, again to Buckinghamshire,
+ so to Berkshire, and then to Surrey, thence to Middlesex, and so to
+ Hartfordshire, and to Bedfordshire, thence into Huntingdonshire,
+ from thence to Bedfordshire, and so into Northamptonshire, and
+ there they were apprehended.
+
+ "They visited these towns to promote the business: Colebrook,
+ Hanworth, Hounslow, Harrowhill, Watford, Redburn, Dunstable,
+ Barton, Amersley, Bedford, Kempson, North Crawley, Cranfield,
+ Newport, Stony Stratford, Winslow, Wendover, Wickham, Windsor,
+ Cobham, London, Whetston, Mine, Wellin, Dunton, Putney, Royston,
+ St. Needs, Godmanchester, Wetne, Stanton, Warbays, Kimolton, from
+ Kimolton to Wellingborrow."
+
+Before this date, however, some of the inhabitants of Wellingborrow had
+followed the example of their brothers in Surrey. From a beautifully
+printed broadsheet,[150:1] bearing date March 12th, 1649 (1650), and
+issued by Giles Calvert, we find the following account of their doings,
+which incidentally reveals the terrible state of the rural working
+population at the time it was written:
+
+ "A DECLARATION OF THE GROUNDS AND REASONS why we the poor
+ inhabitants of the Town of Wellinborrow, in the County of
+ Northampton, have begun and give consent to dig up, manure and
+ sow corn upon the Commons and Waste Ground called Bareshanke,
+ belonging to the inhabitants of Wellinborrow, by those that
+ have subscribed and hundreds more that give consent.
+
+ "1. We find in the word of God that God made the Earth for the use
+ and comfort of all mankind, and sat him in it to till and dress it,
+ and said, That in the sweat of his brow he should eat his bread.
+ And also we find that God never gave it to any sort of people that
+ they should have it all to themselves, and shut out all the rest,
+ but He saith, The Earth hath He given to the children of men, which
+ is every man.
+
+ "2. We find that no creature that ever God made was ever deprived
+ of the benefit of the Earth, but Mankind; and that it is nothing
+ but covetousness, pride and hardness of heart that hath caused man
+ so far to degenerate.
+
+ "3. We find in the Scriptures, that the Prophets and Apostles have
+ left it upon record, That in the last day the oppressor and proud
+ man shall cease, and God will restore the waste places of the Earth
+ to the use and comfort of man, and that none shall hurt nor destroy
+ in all His Holy Mountain.
+
+ "4. We have great encouragement from these two righteous Acts,
+ which the Parliament of England have set forth, the one against
+ Kingly Power and the other to make England a Free Common-wealth.
+
+ "5. We are necessitated from our present necessity to do this, and
+ we hope that our actions will justify us in the gate, when all men
+ shall know the truth of our necessity:
+
+ "We are in Wellinborrow in one parish 1169 persons that receive
+ alms, as the Officers have made it appear at the Quarter Sessions
+ last. We have made our case known to the Justices; the Justices
+ have given order that the Town should raise a stock to set us on
+ work, and that the Hundred should be enjoyned to assist them. But
+ as yet we see nothing is done, nor any man that goeth about it. We
+ have spent all we have; our trading is decayed; our wives and
+ children cry for bread; our lives are a burden to us, divers of us
+ having 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 in family, and we cannot get bread for one of
+ them by our labor. Rich men's hearts are hardened; they will not
+ give us if we beg at their doors. If we steal, the Law will end our
+ lives. Divers of the poor are starved to death already; and it were
+ better for us that are living to die by the Sword than by the
+ Famine. And now we consider that the Earth is our Mother; and that
+ God hath given it to the children of men; and that the Common and
+ Waste Grounds belong to the poor; and that we have a right to the
+ common ground both from the Law of the Land, Reason and Scriptures.
+ Therefore we have begun to bestow our righteous labor upon it, and
+ we shall trust the Spirit for a blessing upon our labor, resolving
+ not to dig up any man's propriety until they freely give us it. And
+ truly we have great comfort already through the goodness of our
+ God, that some of those rich men amongst us that have had the
+ greatest profit upon the Common have freely given us their share
+ in it ... and the country farmers have profered, divers of them, to
+ give us seed to sow it; and so we find that God is persuading
+ Japhet to dwell in the tents of Shem. And truly those that we find
+ most against us are such as have been constant enemies to the
+ Parliament Cause from first to last.
+
+ "Now at last our desire is, That some that approve of this work of
+ Righteousness would but spread this our Declaration before the
+ great Council of the Land; that so they may be pleased to give us
+ more encouragement to go on; that so they may be found amongst the
+ small number of those that consider the poor and needy; that so the
+ Lord may deliver them in the time of their troubles ... and our
+ lives shall bless them, so shall good men stand by them, and evil
+ men shall be afraid of them, and they shall be counted the
+ Repairers of our Breaches, and the Restorers of our Paths to dwell
+ in. And thus we have declared the truth of our necessity, and
+ whosoever will come in to labor with us, shall have part with us,
+ and we with them, and we shall all of us endeavour to walk
+ righteously and peaceably in the Land of our Nativity.
+
+ "Richard Smith, John Avery, Thomas Fardin,
+ Richard Pendred, James Pitman, Roger Tuis,
+ Joseph Hitchcock, John Pye, Edward Turner.
+
+ _March 12th, 1649 (1650)._"
+
+By some means or other this Declaration seems to have reached the
+Council of State; for we find the following reference to it in
+Whitelocke, p. 448, under date April:
+
+ "A Letter sent from the Diggers and Planters of Commons for
+ Universal Freedom, to make the Earth a Common Treasury, that
+ everyone may enjoy food and raiment freely by his labor upon the
+ Earth, without paying Rents or Homage to any Fellow Creature of his
+ own kind, that everyone may be delivered from the Tyranny of the
+ Conquering Power, and so rise up out of that Bondage to enjoy the
+ Benefit of his Creation.
+
+ "The Letters were to get money to buy food for them, and corn to
+ sow the land which they had digged."
+
+Presently we shall lay some evidence before our readers of the view the
+Council of State, influenced as it was by men who had recently enriched
+themselves by land-grabbing, took of such proceedings, the trend of
+which they fully recognised. However, whatever view the Council of State
+were likely to take of this touching Declaration, there can be little
+doubt but that it appealed most strongly to Winstanley, who within a
+fortnight of its issue, on March 26th, replied to it in the following
+high-spirited, almost triumphal, address, which also appeared in the
+form of a broadsheet:[153:1]
+
+ "AN APPEAL TO ALL ENGLISHMEN TO JUDGE BETWEEN BONDAGE AND FREEDOM:
+ Sent from those that began to dig upon George Hill in Surrey,
+ but now are carrying on that public work upon the little heath
+ in the Parish of Cobham, near unto George Hill, wherein it
+ appears that the work of Digging upon the Commons is not only
+ warranted by Scripture, but by the Law of the Common-wealth of
+ England likewise.
+
+ "Behold, behold all Englishmen, The Land of England now is your
+ free inheritance: all Kingly and Lordly entanglements are declared
+ against by our Army and Parliament. The Norman Power is beaten in
+ the field, and his head is cut off. And that oppressing Conquest,
+ that hath reigned over you by King and House of Lords, for about
+ 600 years past, is now cast out by the Armies' Swords, the
+ Parliament's Acts and Laws, and the Common-wealth's Engagement.
+
+ "Therefore let not sottish covetousness in the Gentry deny the poor
+ or younger bretheren their just Freedom to build and plant corn
+ upon the common waste land; nor let slavish fear possess the heart
+ of the poor to stand in fear of the Norman yoke any longer, seeing
+ that it is broke. Come, those that are free within, turn your
+ Swords into Ploughshares, and Spears into Pruning Hooks, and take
+ Plow and Spade, and break up the Common Land, build your houses,
+ sow corn and take possession of your own Land, which you have
+ recovered out of the hands of the Norman oppressor.
+
+ "The common Land hath laid unmanured all the days of his Kingly and
+ Lordly power over you, by reason whereof both you and your fathers
+ (many of you) have been burthened with poverty. And that land which
+ would have been fruitful with corn, hath brought forth nothing but
+ heath, moss, turfeys, and the curse, according to the words of the
+ Scriptures: A fruitful land is made barren because of the
+ unrighteousness of the people that ruled therein, and would not
+ suffer it to be planted, because they would keep the poor under
+ bondage, to maintain their own Lordly Power and conquering
+ covetousness.
+
+ "But what hinders you now? Will you be Slaves and Beggars still
+ when you may be Freemen? Will you live in straits and die in
+ poverty when you may live comfortably? Will you always make a
+ profession of the words of Christ and Scripture, the sum whereof is
+ this--Do as you would be done unto, and live in love? And now it is
+ come to the point of fulfilling that Righteous Law, will you not
+ rise up and act? I do not mean act by the Sword, for that must be
+ left. But come, take plow and spade, build and plant, and make the
+ waste land fruitful, that there may be no beggar or idle person
+ among you. For if the waste land of England were manured by her
+ children, it would become in a few years the richest, the
+ strongest, and the most flourishing Land in the world, and all
+ Englishmen would live in peace and comfort. And this Freedom is
+ hindered by such as yet are full of the Norman base blood, who
+ would be Free-men themselves, but would have all others bond-men
+ and servants, nay Slaves to them....
+
+ "Well Englishmen, the Law of the Scriptures gives you a free and
+ full warrant to plant the Earth, and to live comfortably and in
+ love, doing as you would be done by, and condemns that covetous
+ kingly and lordly power of darkness in men, that makes some men
+ seek their freedom in the Earth and deny others that freedom. And
+ the Scriptures do establish this Law, to cast out kingly and lordly
+ self-willed and oppressing power, and to make every Nation in the
+ World a Free Common-wealth. So that you have the Scriptures to
+ protect you in making the Earth a Common Treasury for the
+ comfortable livelihood of your bodies, while you live upon Earth.
+
+ "Secondly, you have both what the Army and the Parliament have done
+ to protect you.... Our Common-wealth's Army have fought against the
+ Norman Conquest, and have cast him out, and keeps the field.... And
+ by this victory England is made a Free Common-wealth; and the
+ common land belongs to the younger brother, as the enclosures to
+ the elder brother, without restraint.... The Parliament since this
+ victory have made an Act or Law to make England a Free
+ Common-wealth. And by this Act they have set the people free from
+ King and House of Lords that ruled as conquerors over them, and
+ have abolished their self-will and murdering Laws with them that
+ made them. Likewise they have made another Act or Law, to cast out
+ Kingly Power, wherein they free the people from yielding obedience
+ to the King, or to any that holds claiming under the King. Now all
+ Lords of Manors, Tything Priests and Impropriators hold claiming or
+ title under the King, but by this Act of Parliament we are freed
+ from their power.
+
+ "Then, lastly, the Parliament have made an engagement to maintain
+ this present Common-wealth's government comprised within those Acts
+ or Laws against King and House of Lords. And called upon all
+ officers, tenants, and all sort of people to subscribe to it,
+ declaring that those that refuse to subscribe shall have no
+ privilege in the Common-wealth of England, nor protection from the
+ Law.
+
+ "Now behold all Englishmen, that by virtue of these two Laws and
+ the Engagement, the Tenants of Copyhold are free from obedience to
+ their Lords of Manors, and all poor people may build upon and plant
+ the Commons, and Lords of Manors break the Laws of the Land, and
+ still uphold the Kingly and Lordly Norman Power, if they hinder
+ them, or seek to beat them off from planting the Commons. Nor can
+ the Lords of Manors compel their Tenants of Copyholds to come to
+ their Court Barons, nor to be of their Juries, nor to take an oath
+ to be true to them, nor to pay fines, heriots, quit-rents, nor any
+ homage as formerly while the Kings and Lords were in their power.
+ And if the Tenants stand up to maintain their freedom against their
+ Lords' oppressing power, the Tenants forfeit nothing, but are
+ protected by the Laws and Engagement of the Land.
+
+ "And if so be that any poor men build them houses and sow corn upon
+ the Commons, the Lords of Manors cannot compel their Tenants to
+ beat them off: and if the Tenants refuse to beat them off, they
+ forfeit nothing, but are protected by the Laws and Engagement of
+ the Land. But if so be that any fearful or covetous Tenant do obey
+ their Court Barons, and will be of their Jury, and will still pay
+ fines, heriots, quit-rents, or any homage as formerly, or take new
+ oaths to be true to their Lords, or at the command of their Lords
+ do beat the poor men off from planting the Commons, then they have
+ broke the Engagement and Law of the Land, and both Lords and
+ Tenants are conspiring to uphold or bring in the Kingly or Lordly
+ Power again, and declare themselves to the Army, and to the
+ Parliament, and are Traitors to the Commonwealth of England. And if
+ so be that they are to have no protection of the Law that refused
+ to take the Engagement, surely they have lost their protection by
+ breaking their Engagement, and stand liable to answer for this
+ their offence to their great charge and trouble if any will
+ prosecute against them.
+
+ "Therefore you Englishmen, whether Tenants or Labouring-men, do not
+ enter into a new bond of slavery, now you are come to the point
+ that you may be free, if you will but stand up for freedom. For the
+ Army hath purchased your freedom. The Parliament hath declared for
+ your freedom. And all the Laws of the Commonwealth are your
+ protection. So that nothing is wanting on your part but courage and
+ faithfulness to put those Laws in execution, and so take possession
+ of your own Land, which the Norman power took from you and hath
+ kept from you about 600 years, and which you have now recovered out
+ of his hand.
+
+ "And if any say that the old Laws and Customs of the Land are
+ against the Tenant and the poor, and entitle the land only to Lords
+ of Manors still, I answer, all the old Laws are of no force, for
+ they were abolished when the King and House of Lords were cast out.
+ And if any say, I, but the Parliament made an Act to establish the
+ old Laws, I answer, this was to prevent a sudden rising upon the
+ cutting off the King's head; but afterwards they made these two
+ Laws, to cast out the Kingly Power, and to make England a
+ Common-wealth. And they have confirmed these two by the Engagement,
+ which the people now generally do own and subscribe: Therefore by
+ these Acts of Freedom they have abolished that Act that held up
+ bondage.
+
+ "Well, by these you may see your freedom; and we hope the Gentry
+ hereafter will cheat the poor no longer of their Land; and we hope
+ the Ministers hereafter will not tell the poor they have no right
+ to the Land. For now the Land of England is and ought to be a
+ Common Treasury to all Englishmen, as the several portions of the
+ Land of Canaan were the common livelihood to such and such a Tribe,
+ both to elder and younger Brother, without respect of persons. If
+ you do deny this, you deny the Scriptures. And now we shall give
+ you some few encouragements out of many to move you to stand up for
+ your freedom in the Land by acting with plow and spade upon the
+ Commons:
+
+ "(1) By this means, within a short time, there will be no beggar
+ or idle person in England, which will be the glory of England, and
+ the glory of that Gospel which England seems to profess in words.
+
+ "(2) The waste and common land being improved will bring in plenty
+ of all commodities, and prevent famine, and pull down the price of
+ corn, to 12d. a bushel, or less.
+
+ "(3) It will prove England to be the first of Nations which falls
+ off from the covetous beastly government first; and that sets the
+ Crown of Freedom on Christ's head, to rule over the Nations of the
+ World, and to declare him to be the joy and blessing of all
+ Nations. This should move all Governors to strive who shall be the
+ first that shall cast down their Crowns, Sceptres and Government at
+ Christ's feet: and they that will not give Christ his own glory
+ shall be shamed.
+
+ "(4) This Commonwealth's Freedom will unite the hearts of
+ Englishmen together in love; so that if a foreign enemy endeavour
+ to come in, we shall all with joint consent rise up together to
+ defend our inheritance, and shall be true one to another. Whereas
+ now the poor see if they fight and should conquer the enemy, yet
+ either they or their children are like to be slaves still, for the
+ Gentry will have all. And this is the cause why many run away and
+ fail our Armies in the time of need. And so through the Gentry's
+ hardness of heart against the Poor, the Land may be left to a
+ foreign enemy for want of the Poor's love sticking to them. For say
+ they, we can as well live under a foreign enemy, working for day
+ wages, as under our own bretheren, with whom we ought to have equal
+ freedom by the Law of Righteousness.
+
+ "(5) This freedom in planting the common land will prevent robbing,
+ stealing and murdering, and prisons will not so mightily be filled
+ with prisoners; and thereby we shall prevent that heart-breaking
+ spectacle of seeing so many hanged every Session as there are. And
+ surely this imprisoning and hanging of men is the Norman Power
+ still, and cannot stand with the freedom of the Commonwealth, nor
+ warranted by the Engagement. For by the Laws and Engagement of the
+ Commonwealth, none ought to be hanged nor put to death, for other
+ punishment may be found out. And those that do hang or put to death
+ their fellow Englishmen, under colour of Laws, do break the Laws
+ and Engagements by so doing, and cast themselves from under the
+ protection of the Commonwealth, and are Traitors to England's
+ Freedom, and upholders of the kingly, murdering power.
+
+ "(6) This Freedom in the Common Earth is the Poor's Right by the
+ Law of Creation and Equity of the Scriptures. For the Earth was not
+ made for a few, but for whole mankind; for God is no respecter of
+ persons."
+
+Winstanley then concludes as follows:
+
+ "Now these few considerations we offer to all England, and we
+ appeal to the judgement of all rational and righteous men whether
+ this we speak be not that substantial truth brought forth into
+ action, which Ministers have preached up, and all Religious Men
+ have made profession of. For certainly God, who is the King of
+ Righteousness, is not a God of words only, but of deeds; for it is
+ the badge of hypocrisy for man to say and not to do. Therefore we
+ leave this with you all, having peace in our hearts by declaring
+ faithfully to you this Light that is in us, and which we do not
+ only speak and write, but which we do easily act and practice.
+
+ "Likewise we write it as a letter of congratulation and
+ encouragement to our dear Fellow Englishmen that have begun to dig
+ upon the Commons, thereby taking possession of their Freedom, in
+ Wellinborow in Northamptonshire, and at Cox Hall in Kent, waiting
+ to see the chains of slavish fear to break and fall off from the
+ hearts of others in other countries till at last the whole Land is
+ filled with the knowledge and righteousness of the Restoring Power,
+ which is Christ Himself, Abraham's seed, who will spread Himself
+ till He become the joy of all Nations.
+
+ "Jerrard Winstanley, Richard Maidley, Thomas James, John Dickins,
+ John Palmer, John South, _Elder_, Nathaniel Halcomb, Thomas Edcer,
+ Henry Barton, John Smith, Jacob Heard, Thomas Barnet, Anthony Wren,
+ John Hayman, William Hitchcock, Henry Hancocke, John Batty, Thomas
+ Starre, Thomas Adams, John Coulton, Thomas South, Robert Sawyer,
+ Daniel Ireland, Robert Draper, Robert Coster, and divers others
+ that were not present when this went to the Presse.
+
+ "_March 26th, 1650._"
+
+We are afraid that the enterprise at Wellinborrow did not have a very
+long life; for in the _Calendar of State Papers_, Domestic, Green, p.
+106, under date April 15th, 1650, we note the following letter, which
+seems to us to show that the Rulers of England were fully alive to "the
+mischief these designs tend to," and to prove that it was the theories
+of the Diggers, not their actions, that filled the breasts of the
+privileged classes with the determination to nip their enterprise in the
+bud, before it had time to influence the life and thought of the Nation:
+
+ "COUNCIL OF STATE to Mr. PENTLOW, Justice of Peace for County
+ Northampton.
+
+ "We approve your proceedings with the Levellers in those parts, and
+ doubt not you are sensible of the mischief those designs tend to,
+ and of the necessity to proceed effectually against them. If the
+ laws in force against those who intrude upon other men's
+ properties, and that forbid and direct the punishing of all riotous
+ assemblies and seditious and tumultuous meetings, be put in
+ execution, there will not want means to preserve the public peace
+ against the attempts of this sort of people. Let those men be
+ effectually proceeded against at the next Sessions, _and if any
+ that ought to be instrumental to bring them to punishment fail in
+ their duty, signify the same to us_, that we may require of them an
+ account of their neglect; but till we find the ordinary means
+ unable to preserve the peace, we would not have recourse to any
+ other."
+
+The sentence we have italicised seems to show that even amongst the
+Justices of the Peace and Officers of the Land the doctrines of the
+Diggers had found sympathisers, who were unwilling that they should be
+proceeded against. Nor can we be surprised at this when we bear in mind
+the terrible state of the rural population of the "meaner sort" at the
+time. Some idea of same may be gathered in the Declaration from
+Wellinborrow, which is more than fully confirmed in the pages of
+Whitelocke, from which we take the following brief entries:
+
+ (P. 398.) Under date April 30th, 1649:
+
+ "Letters from Lancashire of their want of bread, so that many
+ families were starved."
+
+ (P. 399.) Under date May 1649:
+
+ "Letters from Newcastle that many in Cumberland and Westmoreland
+ died in the Highways for want of bread, and divers left their
+ habitations, travelling with their wives and children to other
+ parts to get Relief, but could have none. That the Committees and
+ Justices of the Peace of Cumberland signed a certificate, that
+ there were Thirty Thousand Families that had neither seed nor bread
+ corn, nor money to buy either, and they desired a collection for
+ them, which was made, but much too little to relieve so great a
+ multitude."
+
+ (P. 404.) Under date May 1649:
+
+ "Letters from Lancashire of great scarcity of corn, and that the
+ famine was sore among them, after which the plague overspread
+ itself in many parts of the country, taking away whole families
+ together, and few escaped where any house was visited, and that the
+ Levellers got into arms, but were suppressed speedily by the
+ Governor."
+
+ (P. 421.) Under date August 1649:
+
+ "Letters of great complaints of the taxes in Lancashire: and that
+ the meaner sort threaten to leave their habitations, and their
+ wives and children to be maintained by the Gentry; that they can no
+ longer bear the oppression, to have the bread taken out of the
+ mouths of their wives and children by taxes; and that if an army of
+ the Turks came to relieve them, they will join them."
+
+Under such circumstances we cannot be surprised that Winstanley's
+revolutionary, though to our mind eternally true, doctrines, upholding
+the equal claim of all to the use of the land, proclaimed as they were
+with all the eloquence, zeal and fire of his noble spirit, should have
+awakened an echo in the hearts of the more thoughtful, as well as of the
+more necessitous, of his fellow-citizens. But all in vain. In his time,
+as in our time, the Inward Light could not overcome the Outward
+Darkness, nor Universal Love, which is Justice and Righteousness,
+overcome Self Love, which is Covetousness. Then, as now, the Spirit of
+Equity, of Reason and of Love was impotent when opposed by the power of
+the Sword, of Force. And yet, and yet--more especially in view of the
+thought to-day stirring advanced political circles in every
+constitutionally governed country in the world--who dare maintain that
+Winstanley lived in vain!
+
+About a fortnight after the publication of his _Appeal to all
+Englishmen_, Winstanley issued yet another pamphlet, of which, as it
+contains nothing save what he had already better expressed in his other
+writings, we need only quote the suggestive title-page, with which this
+chapter may fittingly close: it reads as follows:
+
+ "AN HUMBLE REQUEST TO THE MINISTERS OF BOTH UNIVERSITIES, AND TO
+ ALL LAWYERS OF EVERY INNS-A-COURT:[161:1] to consider of the
+ Scriptures and Points of Law herein mentioned, and to give a
+ rational and Christian answer, whereby the difference may be
+ composed in peace, between the Poor Men in England who have
+ begun to dig, plow and build upon the Common Land, claiming it
+ their own by right of Creation,
+
+ AND
+
+ The Lords of Manors that trouble them, who have no other claimings
+ to Commons than from the King's will, or from the Power of the
+ Conquest,
+
+ AND
+
+ If neither Minister nor Lawyer will undertake a Reconciliation in
+ this case. Then we appeal to the Stone, Timber and Dust of the
+ Earth you tread upon, to hold forth the light of this business,
+ questioning not but that Power that dwells everywhere will
+ cause Light to spring out of Darkness, and Freedom out of
+ Bondage."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[146:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 1365.
+
+[148:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 534. We have to
+thank the late Rev. Thomas Hancock, of Harrow on the Hill, for this
+reference. Mr. Hancock's profound knowledge of the Commonwealth times
+was well known to every student of the period, at whose disposal he
+gladly placed the wonderful store of information he had collected. We
+would here acknowledge our indebtedness to him for this and other
+information.
+
+[150:1] British Museum, under Wellingborrow, Press Mark, S. Sh. fol. 669
+f., 15 (21).
+
+[153:1] British Museum, Press Mark, S. Sh. fol. 669 f., 15 (23).
+
+[161:1] There is no copy of this pamphlet at the British Museum, nor in
+the Bodleian; but a copy is to be found in the Dyce and Forster Library,
+South Kensington Museum, London, W.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+GERRARD WINSTANLEY'S UTOPIA: THE LAW OF FREEDOM
+
+ "And when reason's voice,
+ Loud as the voice of nature, shall have waked
+ The nations; and mankind perceives that vice
+ Is discord, war and misery; that virtue
+ Is peace, and happiness and harmony;
+ When man's maturer nature shall disdain
+ The playthings of its childhood;--kingly glare
+ Will lose its power to dazzle; its authority
+ Will silently pass by; the gorgeous{7} throne
+ Shall stand unnoticed in the regal hall,
+ Fast falling to decay; whilst falsehood's trade
+ Shall be as hateful and unprofitable
+ As that of truth is now."--SHELLEY.
+
+
+The above words of Shelley might have been written purposely to serve as
+a preface to Winstanley's final work, the main contents of which we now
+propose to lay before our readers. It happened to be the first of
+Winstanley's works that fell into our hands, when, many years since, in
+consequence of Carlyle's somewhat patronising reference to them, we
+first determined to ascertain what the views and aims of the Diggers
+really were. Its perusal{8} convinced us, and our subsequent
+investigations have only served to strengthen the belief, that
+Winstanley was, in truth, one of the most courageous, far-seeing and
+philosophic preachers of social righteousness that England has given to
+the world. And yet how unequally Fame bestows her rewards. More's
+_Utopia_ has secured its author a world-wide renown; it is spoken of,
+even if not read, in every civilised country in the world. Gerrard
+Winstanley's Utopia is unknown even to his own countrymen. Yet let any
+impartial student compare the ideal society conceived by Sir Thomas
+More--a society based upon slavery, and extended by wars carried on by
+hireling, mercenary soldiers--with the simple, peaceful, rational and
+practical social ideal pictured by Gerrard Winstanley, and it is to the
+latter that he will be forced to assign the laurel crown.
+
+From internal evidence we gather that the book was written some time
+before it was published. Winstanley had come to realise that the real
+power of the Country was in the hands of the Army, of its trusted
+officers and leaders. Hence it is, probably, that the opening epistle is
+addressed to Oliver Cromwell, who at the time was Commander in Chief of
+the Army, and the man to whom all England was looking with wonder and
+admiration, not unmixed with anxious forebodings. The years that had
+elapsed between the conception and the publication of Winstanley's book
+had been momentous ones in this great man's career. Owing to Lord
+Fairfax's reluctance to invade Scotland, the command of the
+Commonwealth's Army had devolved on him: and right good use had the hero
+of Naseby made of his opportunities. In September 1651 he won the
+decisive battle of Dunbar; and in the same month of the following year
+he won the even more decisive battle of Worcester, which, to use
+Gardiner's words, manifested to the world that England refused "to be
+ruled by a king who came in as an invader."[163:1] In the following
+November, when Winstanley was sitting down to write his Dedicatory
+Epistle, Cromwell was already back in his seat in Parliament,
+endeavouring "to use the patriotic fervour called out by the invasion to
+settle the Commonwealth on a broader basis," and agitating for "a time
+to be fixed for the dissolution of the existing Parliament and for the
+calling of a new one."[163:2] And in February 1652, when the book was
+published, political and religious excitement in England was probably at
+the greatest height to which it ever attained even in the stirring days
+of the Commonwealth, and Cromwell may be regarded as standing at the
+dividing line of his wonderful career.
+
+The title-page of the book reads as follows:
+
+ "THE LAW OF FREEDOM IN A PLATFORM:[164:1]
+
+ OR
+
+ TRUE MAGISTRACY RESTORED.
+
+ Humbly presented to Oliver Cromwel, General of the Commonwealth's
+ Army in England, Scotland and Ireland. And to all English-men
+ my Bretheren, whether in Church Fellowship or not in Church
+ Fellowship,[164:2] both sorts walking as they conceive
+ according to the order of the Gospel: and from them to all the
+ Nations of the World.
+
+ Wherein is declared, What is Kingly Government, and What is
+ Commonwealth's Government.
+
+ BY GERRARD WINSTANLEY.
+
+ In thee, O England, is the Law arising up to shine,
+ If thou receive and practice it, the Crown it will be thine.
+ If thou reject, and still remain a froward Son to be,
+ Another Land will it receive, and take the Crown from thee.
+
+ REV. 11-15. DAN. 7. 27.
+
+ LONDON.
+
+ Printed for the Author, and are to be sold by Giles Calvert at the
+ Black Spred-Eagle at the West end of Pauls."
+
+As already mentioned, it opens with a Dedicatory Letter--
+
+ "To His Excellency OLIVER CROMWEL, General of the Commonwealth's
+ Army in England, Scotland and Ireland"--
+
+which commences as follows:
+
+ "SIR,--God hath honored you with the highest honor of any man since
+ Moses' time, to be the head of a People who have cast out an
+ oppressing Pharaoh. For when the Norman Power had conquered our
+ forefathers, he took the free use of our English Ground from them,
+ and made them his servants. And God hath made you a successful
+ instrument to cast out that Conqueror, and to recover our Land and
+ Liberties again, by your Victories, out of that Norman hand."
+
+Winstanley then indicates Cromwell's duty, as well as the alternative
+ways open to him, in the following words:
+
+ "That which is wanting on your part to be done is this, To see the
+ Oppressor's Power be cast out with his person; and to see that the
+ free possession of the Land and Liberties be put into the hands of
+ the Oppressed Commoners of England. For the Crown of Honor cannot
+ be yours, neither can these Victories be called victories on your
+ part, till the Land and Freedom won be possessed by them that
+ adventured person and purse for them.
+
+ "Now you know, Sir, that the Kingly Conqueror was not beaten by you
+ only, as you are a single man, nor by the Officers of the Army
+ joined to you; but by the hand and assistance of the Commoners,
+ whereof some came in person and adventured their lives with you,
+ others stayed at home and planted the Earth, and paid Taxes and
+ gave Free Quarter to maintain you that went to war.... And now you
+ have the Power of the Land in your hand, you must do one of these
+ two things: First, either set the Land free to the Oppressed
+ Commoners who assisted you ... and so take possession of your
+ deserved honor. Or, secondly, you must only remove the Conqueror's
+ power out of the King's hand into other men's, maintaining the old
+ laws still; and then your wisdom and honor will be blasted for
+ ever, and you will either lose yourself, or lay the foundation of
+ greater slavery to posterity than you ever knew."
+
+A marvellous prophecy, truly! Cromwell could see nothing in Winstanley's
+demands save that they tended "to make the Tenant as liberal a fortune
+as the Land-lord,"[165:1] which did not conform to his sense of the
+eternal fitness of things. Winstanley then continues:
+
+ "You know that while the King was in the height of his oppressing
+ power, the People only whispered in private chambers against him;
+ but afterwards it was preached upon the house-tops, that he was a
+ Tyrant, a Traitor to England's Peace: and he had his overturn.
+
+ "The Righteous Power in the Creation is the same still. If you and
+ those in power with you should be found walking in the King's
+ steps, can you secure yourselves or posterities from an overturn?
+ Surely No.
+
+ "The Spirit of the whole Creation (who is God) is about the
+ Reformation of the World, and he will go forward in his
+ work.[166:1] For if he would not spare Kings, who have sat so long
+ at his right hand, governing the world, neither will he regard you,
+ unless your ways be found more righteous than the King's.... Lose
+ not your Crown; take it up and wear it. But know that it is no
+ Crown of Honor till promises and engagements made by you be
+ performed to your friends. _He that continues to the end, shall
+ receive the Crown._ Now you do not see the end of your work unless
+ the Kingly Law and Power be removed as well as his person."
+
+
+THE COMPLAINTS OF THE PEOPLE.
+
+He subsequently returns to his original subject, as follows:
+
+ "It may be you will say to me, _What shall I do?_ I answer, You are
+ in place and power to see all Burthens taken off from your friends
+ the Commoners of England. You will say, _What are those burthens?_
+
+ "I will instance in some, both which I know in my own experience,
+ and which I hear the people daily complaining of and groaning
+ under, looking upon you and waiting for deliverance.
+
+ "Most people cry, We have paid taxes, given free-quarter, wasted
+ our estates, and lost our friends in the wars, and the Task-masters
+ multiply over us more than formerly. I have asked divers this
+ question, _Why do you say so?_
+
+ "Some have answered me that promises, oaths and engagements have
+ been made, as a motive to draw us to assist in the wars, that
+ Privileges of Parliament and Liberties of Subjects should be
+ preserved, and that all Popery and Episcopacy and Tyranny should be
+ rooted out. And these promises are not performed. Now there is an
+ opportunity to perform them.
+
+ "For first, say they, the current of succeeding Parliaments is
+ stopped, which is one of the greatest privileges (and people's
+ liberties) for safety and peace. And if that continue stopped, we
+ shall be more offended by an hereditary Parliament than we were
+ oppressed by an hereditary King.
+
+ "And for the Commoners, who were called Subjects while the Kingly
+ Conqueror was in power, they have not as yet their Liberties
+ granted them. I will instance them in order, according as the
+ common whisperings are among the people."
+
+
+THE POWER OF THE CLERGY.
+
+ "For say they, The Burthens of the Clergy remain still upon us, in
+ a threefold nature.
+
+ "_First_, If any man declare his judgement in the things of God
+ contrary to the Clergy's report, or the minds of some high
+ Officers, they are cashiered, imprisoned, crushed and undone, and
+ made sinners for a word, as they were in the Popes and Bishops
+ days; so that though their names be cast out, yet their High
+ Commission Court Power remains still, persecuting men for
+ conscience sake, when their actions are unblamable.
+
+ "_Secondly_,{9} In many Parishes there are old, formal, ignorant
+ Episcopal Priests established; and some Ministers, who are bitter
+ enemies to Commonwealth's Freedom, and friends to Monarchy, are
+ established preachers, and are continually buzzing their subtle
+ principles into the minds of the people, to undermine the peace of
+ our declared Commonwealth, causing a disaffection of spirit among
+ neighbours, who otherwise would live in peace.
+
+ "_Thirdly_, The burthen of Tythes remains still upon our estates,
+ which was taken from us by the Kings and given to the Clergy to
+ maintain them by our labors. So that though their preaching fill
+ the minds of many with madness, contention and unsatisfied
+ doubting, because their imaginary and ungrounded doctrines cannot
+ be understood by them, yet we must pay them large Tythes for so
+ doing: this is Oppression."
+
+
+THE POWER OF THE LAWYERS.
+
+ "_Fourthly_, If we go to the Lawyer, we find him to sit in the
+ Conqueror's Chair, though the King be removed, maintaining the
+ King's power to the height....
+
+ "_Fifthly_, Say they, if we look upon the Customs of the Law
+ itself, it is the same it was in the King's days, only the name is
+ altered; as if the Commoners of England had paid their taxes, given
+ free-quarter, and shed their blood, not to reform, but to baptize
+ the Law with a new name, from Kingly Law to State Law....[168:1]
+ And so as the Sword pulls down Kingly Power with one hand, the
+ King's Old Law builds up Monarchy again with the other."
+
+
+THE MAIN WORK OF REFORMATION.
+
+ "AND INDEED THE MAIN WORK OF REFORMATION LIES IN THIS, TO REFORM
+ THE CLERGY, LAWYERS AND LAW; FOR ALL THE COMPLAINTS OF THE LAND ARE
+ WRAPPED UP WITHIN THEM THREE, NOT IN THE PERSON OF A KING."
+
+ "_Sixthly_, If we look into Parishes, the burthens there are many."
+
+
+AND OF LORDS OF MANORS.
+
+ "_First_, For the Power of Lords of Manors remains still over their
+ Bretheren, requiring Fines and Heriots, beating them off the free
+ use of the Common Land, unless their Bretheren will pay them Rent,
+ exacting obedience as much as they did, and more, when the King was
+ in power.
+
+ "Now saith the People, By what Power do these maintain their Title
+ over us? Formerly they held Title from the King, as he was the
+ Conqueror's successor. But have not the Commoners cast out the
+ King, and broken the band of that Conquest? Therefore in equity
+ they are free from the slavery of that Lordly Power.
+
+ "_Secondly_, In Parishes where Commons lie, the rich Norman
+ Free-holders, or the new (more covetous) Gentry, overstock the
+ Commons with sheep and cattle, so that the inferior Tenants and
+ poor Labourers can hardly keep a cow, but half starve her. So that
+ the poor are kept poor still, and the Common Freedom of the Earth
+ is kept from them, and the poor have no more relief than they had
+ when the King (or Conqueror) was in power....
+
+ "Now saith the whisperings of the People, the inferior Tenants and
+ Laborers bear all the burthens, in laboring the Earth, in paying
+ Taxes and Free-quarter above their strength, and in furnishing the
+ Armies with soldiers, who bear the greatest burden of the War; and
+ yet the Gentry, who oppress them and live idle upon their labors,
+ carry away all the comfortable livelihood of the Earth.
+
+ "For is not this a common speech among the People, We have parted
+ with our estates, we have lost our friends in the wars, which we
+ willingly gave up because Freedom was promised us; and now in the
+ end we have new Task-masters, and our old burthens are increased.
+ And though all sorts of people have taken an engagement to cast out
+ Kingly Power, yet Kingly Power remains in power still in the hands
+ of those who have no more right to the Earth than ourselves.
+
+ "For say the people, If the Lords of Manors and our Task-masters
+ hold Title to the Earth over us from the old Kingly Power, behold
+ that power is broken and cast out. And two Acts of Parliament have
+ been made. The one to cast out Kingly Power, backed by the
+ Engagement against King and the House of Lords. The other to make
+ England a Free Commonwealth."
+
+He then still further supports his fundamental contention in the
+following unanswerable manner:
+
+ "If Lords of Manors lay claim to the Earth over us from the Army's
+ Victories over the King; then we have as much right to the Land as
+ they, because our labors and blood and death of friends, were the
+ purchasers of the Earth's Freedom as well as theirs. And is not
+ this a slavery, say the people, that though there be land enough in
+ England to maintain ten times as many people as are in it, yet some
+ must beg of their bretheren, or work in hard drudgery for day wages
+ for them, or starve, or steal, and so be hanged out of the way, as
+ men not fit to live on the Earth? Before they are suffered to plant
+ the waste land for a livelihood, they must pay rent to their
+ bretheren for it. Well, this is a burthen the Creation groans
+ under; and the subjects (so-called) have not their birth-right
+ freedom granted them from their bretheren, who hold it from them by
+ Club-Law, but not by Righteousness."
+
+
+WHAT IS TO RULE?
+
+ "And who now must we be subject to, seeing the Conqueror is gone? I
+ answer, We must either be subject to a law or to men's wills. If to
+ a law, then _all_ men in England are subject, or ought to be,
+ thereunto.... You will say, We must be subject to the Rulers. This
+ is true, but not to suffer the Rulers to call the Earth theirs and
+ not ours; for by so doing they betray their trust and run into the
+ line of tyranny, and we lose our freedom, and from thence enmity
+ and wars arise. A Ruler is worthy double honor when he rules well;
+ that is, when he himself is subject to the Law, and requires all
+ others to be subject thereunto, and makes it his work to see the
+ Law obeyed, and not his own will; and such Rulers are faithful, and
+ they are to be subjected unto us therein: For all Commonwealth's
+ Rulers are Servants to, not Lords and Kings over the
+ people."[170:1]
+
+
+THE LAND QUESTION.
+
+ "But you will say, Is not the land your brother's? and you cannot
+ take away another man's right by claiming a share therein with him.
+ I answer, It is his either by Creation Right or by Right of
+ Conquest. If by Creation Right he calls the Earth his and not mine,
+ then it is mine as well as his; for the Spirit of the whole
+ Creation, who made us both, is no respecter of persons. And if by
+ Conquest he calls the Earth his and not mine, it must be either by
+ the conquest of the King over the Commoners or by the conquest of
+ the Commoners over the King. If he claim the Earth to be his from
+ the King's Conquest, the Kings are beaten and cast out, and that
+ title is undone. If he claim title to the Earth to be his from the
+ conquest of the Commoners over the Kings, then I have right to the
+ land as well as my brother; for my brother without me, nor I
+ without my brother, did not cast out the Kings; but both together
+ assisting, with purse and person, we prevailed, so that I have by
+ this victory as equal a share in the Earth which is now redeemed as
+ my brother, by the Law of Righteousness.
+
+ "If my brother still say he will be Land Lord (through his covetous
+ ambition) and I must pay him rent, or else I shall not live in the
+ Land, then does he take my right from me, which I have purchased by
+ my money in taxes, free-quarter and blood. And O thou Spirit of the
+ Whole Creation, who hath this title to be called King of
+ Righteousness and King of Peace, judge thou between my brother and
+ me, Whether this be Righteous, etc.
+
+ "And now say the people, Is not this a grievous thing, that our
+ bretheren that will be Land Lords, right or wrong, will make Laws,
+ and call for a Law to be made to imprison, crush, nay put to death
+ any that denies God, Christ and Scripture; and yet they will not
+ practice that Golden Rule, _Do to another as thou wouldst have
+ another do to thee_, which God, Christ and Scripture have enacted
+ for a Law? Are not these men guilty of death by their own Law,
+ which is the word of their own mouth? Is it not a flat denial of
+ God and Scripture?"
+
+Winstanley then gives some interesting details of the history of this
+pamphlet, as follows:
+
+ "Thus, Sir, I have reckoned up some of those burdens which the
+ people groan under. And I being sensible hereof was moved in myself
+ to present this Platform of Commonwealth's Government unto you,
+ wherein I have declared a full Commonwealth's Freedom, according to
+ the Rule of Righteousness, which is God's Word. It was intended for
+ your view about two years ago, but the disorder of the times caused
+ me to lay it aside, with a thought never to bring it to light.
+ Likewise I hearing that Mr. Peters and some others propounded this
+ request--That the Word of God might be consulted with to find out a
+ healing Government, which I liked well, and waited to see such a
+ Rule come forth, for there are good Rules in the Scripture if they
+ were obeyed and practised.
+
+ "I laid aside this in silence, and said I would not make it public;
+ but this word was like fire in my bones ever and anon--_Thou shalt
+ not bury thy talent in the earth_. Thereupon I was stirred to give
+ it a resurrection, and to pick together as many of my scattered
+ papers as I could find, and to compile them into this method, which
+ I do here present to you, and do quiet my own spirit. And now I
+ have set the candle at your door; for you have power in your hand
+ to act for Common Freedom if you will: I have no power."
+
+He then continues to indicate his own views, as also the outlines of the
+scheme the details of which are unfolded in the body of his work, and
+warns Cromwell that--
+
+ "It may be here are some things inserted which you may not like,
+ yet other things you may like; therefore I pray you read it, and be
+ as the industrious bee, suck out the honey and cast away the weeds.
+ Though this Platform be like a piece of timber rough-hewed, yet the
+ discreet workman may take it and frame a handsome building out of
+ it."
+
+
+OF COMPENSATION.
+
+ "It may be you will say, If Tythe be taken from the Priests and
+ Impropriators, and Copyhold Services from Lords of Manors, how
+ shall they be provided for again; for is it not unrighteous to take
+ their estates from them?
+
+ "I answer, When Tythes were first enacted, and Lordly Power drawn
+ over the backs of the oppressed, the Kings and Conquerors made no
+ scruple of conscience to take it, though the people lived in sore
+ bondage of poverty for want of it; and can there be scruple of
+ conscience to make restitution of this which hath been so long
+ stolen goods? It is no scruple arising from the Righteous Law, but
+ from Covetousness, who goes away sorrowful to hear he must part
+ with all to follow Righteousness and Peace."
+
+He then explains that under his scheme even the privileged classes would
+not be injured, since they would share with the rest of the community.
+
+
+OF RICHES.
+
+ "But shall not one man be richer than another?
+
+ "There is no need for that; for riches make men vainglorious,
+ proud, and to oppress their bretheren, and are the occasion of
+ wars. No man can be rich but he must be rich either by his own
+ labors, or by the labors of other men helping him. If a man have no
+ help from his neighbors, he shall never gather an estate of
+ hundreds and thousands a year. If other men help him to work, then
+ are those riches his neighbors' as well as his; for they be the
+ fruits of other men's labors as well as his own. But all rich men
+ live at ease, feeding and clothing themselves by the labors of
+ other men, not by their own, which is their shame and not their
+ nobility; for it is a more blessed thing to give than to receive.
+ But rich men receive all they have from the laborer's hand, and
+ what they give, they give away other men's labors, not their own.
+ Therefore they are not righteous actors in the Earth."
+
+
+TITLES OF HONOUR.
+
+ "But shall not one man have more Titles of Honor than another?
+
+ "Yes: As a man goes through offices, he rises to Titles of Honor,
+ till he comes to the highest nobility, to be a faithful
+ Commonwealth's Man in a Parliament House. Likewise he who finds out
+ any secret in Nature shall have a Title of Honor given him, though
+ he be a young man. But no man shall have any Title of Honor till he
+ win it by industry, or come to it by age or Office-bearing. Every
+ man that is fifty years of age shall have respect as a man of honor
+ from all others that are younger, as is shown hereafter."
+
+
+OF FAMILY LIFE.
+
+ "Shall every man count his neighbour's house as his own, and live
+ together as one family?
+
+ "No; though the Earth and Storehouses be common to every Family,
+ yet every Family shall live apart as they do; and every man's
+ house, wife, children and furniture for ornament of his house, or
+ anything he hath fetched in from the Storehouses, or provided for
+ the necessary use of his family, is all a propriety unto that
+ Family, for the peace thereof. And if any man offer to take away a
+ man's wife, children, or furniture of his house, without his
+ consent, or disturb the peace of his dwelling, he shall suffer
+ punishment as an enemy to the Commonwealth's Government, as is
+ mentioned in the Platform following."
+
+
+OF LAW AND LAWYERS.
+
+ "Shall we have no Lawyers?
+
+ "There shall be no need of them, for there is to be no buying and
+ selling, neither any need to expound Laws; for the bare letter of
+ the Law shall be both Judge and Lawyer, trying every man's actions.
+ And seeing we shall have successive Parliaments every year, there
+ will be rules made for every action that a man can do.
+
+ "But there are to be Officers chosen yearly in every Parish, to see
+ the Laws executed according to the letter of the Laws; so that
+ there will be no long work in trying of offences, as it is under
+ Kingly Government, to get the Lawyers money, and to enslave the
+ Commoners to the Conqueror's Prerogative Law or Will. The sons of
+ contention, Simeon and Levi, must not bear rule in a Free
+ Commonwealth."
+
+
+PLEA FOR CONSIDERATION.
+
+ "At the first view you may say, 'This is a strange government.' But
+ I pray you judge nothing before trial. Lay this Platform of
+ Commonwealth's Government in one scale, and lay Monarchy, or Kingly
+ Government, in the other scale, and see which gives true weight to
+ Righteous Freedom and Peace. _There is no middle path between
+ these two; for a man must either be a free and true Commonwealth
+ man, or a Monarchial Tyrannical Royalist._"
+
+
+ANSWERS TO FURTHER OBJECTIONS.
+
+ "If any say this will bring poverty, surely they mistake: for there
+ will be plenty of all Earthly Commodities, with less labor and
+ trouble then now it is under Monarchy. There will be no want; for
+ every man may keep as plentiful a house as he will, and never run
+ into debt, for common stock pays for all.
+
+ "If you say, Some will live idle; I answer, No. It will make idle
+ persons to become workers, as is declared in the Platform: There
+ shall be neither Beggar nor Idle Person.
+
+ "If you say, This will make men quarrel and fight; I answer, No. It
+ will turn Swords into Ploughshares, and settle such a peace in the
+ Earth as Nations shall learn war no more. Indeed, the Government of
+ Kings is a breeder of wars, because men being put into the straits
+ of poverty, are moved to fight for Liberty, and to take one
+ another's estates from them, and to obtain Mastery. Look into all
+ Armies and see what they do more, but make some poor, some rich,
+ put some into freedom others into bondage: and is not this a plague
+ among mankind?
+
+ "Well I question not but what Objections can be raised against this
+ Commonwealth's Government, they shall find an answer in this
+ Platform following. I have been something large, because I could
+ not contract myself into a lesser volume, having so many things to
+ speak of."
+
+
+THE ONE THING NECESSARY.
+
+ "I do not say nor desire that everyone shall be compelled to
+ practice this Commonwealth's Government; for the spirits of some
+ will be enemies at first, though afterwards they will prove the
+ most cordial and true friends thereunto. Yet I desire that the
+ Commonwealth's Land ... may be set free to all that have lent
+ assistance{10} either of person or purse to obtain it, and to all
+ that are willing to come in to the practice of this Government, and
+ be obedient to the Laws thereof. And for others who are not
+ willing, let them stay in the way of buying and selling, which is
+ the Law of the Conqueror, till they be willing."
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+ "And so I leave this in your hand, humbly prostrating myself and it
+ before you, and remain, A true lover of Commonwealth's Government,
+ Peace and Freedom.
+ "GERRARD WINSTANLEY.
+ "_November 5th, 1651._"
+
+
+
+
+TO THE FRIENDLY AND UNBIASSED READER.
+
+The somewhat long, though comprehensive, letter to Cromwell is followed
+by one addressed "To the Friendly and Unbiassed Reader," in which a very
+different tone is adopted, and which runs as follows:
+
+ "READER,--It was the Apostle's advice formerly to try all things,
+ and to hold fast that which is best. This Platform of Government
+ which I offer is the original Righteousness and Peace in the Earth,
+ though he hath been buried under the clod of Kingly Covetousness,
+ Pride and Oppression a long time. Now he begins to have his
+ Resurrection, despise it not while it is small; though thou
+ understand it not at the first sight, yet open the door and look
+ into the house; for thou mayst see that which will satisfy thy
+ heart in quiet rest."
+
+
+SUMMARY OF THE RESULTS OF HIS PLAN.
+
+ "To prevent thy hasty rashness, I have given thee a short
+ compendium of the whole.
+
+ "_First_, Thou knowst that the Earth in all Nations is governed by
+ buying and selling, for all the Laws of Kings hath relation
+ thereunto. Now this Platform following declares to thee the
+ Government of the Earth without buying and selling, and the Laws
+ are the Laws of a free and peaceable Commonwealth....
+
+ "Every family shall live apart, as now they do; every man shall
+ enjoy his own wife, and every woman her own husband, as now they
+ do: every Trade shall be improved to more excellency than now it
+ is; all children shall be educated and trained up in subjection to
+ parents and elder persons more than now they are: The Earth shall
+ be planted and the fruits reaped and carried into Storehouses by
+ common assistance of every family: The Riches of the Storehouses
+ shall be the common stock to every Family: There shall be no idle
+ person nor beggar in the Land."
+
+
+COMMONWEALTH GOVERNMENT AND KINGLY GOVERNMENT.
+
+ "The Commonwealth's Government unites all people in a Land into one
+ heart and mind. And it was this Government which made Moses to call
+ Abraham's seed one House of Israel, though there were many Tribes
+ and many Families. And it may be said, Blessed is the People whose
+ Earthly Government is the Law of Common Righteousness....
+
+ "The Government of Kings is the Government of the Scribes and
+ Pharisees, who count it no freedom unless they be the Lords of the
+ Earth and of their Bretheren. But Commonwealth's Government is the
+ Government of Righteousness and Peace, who is no respecter of
+ persons."
+
+
+FINAL APPEAL TO THE READER.
+
+ "Therefore, Reader, here is a trial for thy sincerity. Thou shalt
+ have no want of food, raiment or freedom among bretheren in this
+ way propounded. See now if thou canst be content, as the Scriptures
+ say, Having food and raiment therewith be content, and grudge not
+ to let thy brother have the same with thee.
+
+ "Dost thou pray and fast for Freedom, and give God thanks again for
+ it? Why, know that God is not partial. For if thou pray, it must be
+ for Freedom to all; and if thou give thanks, it must be because
+ Freedom covers all people: for this will prove a lasting peace.
+
+ "Everyone is ready to say, They fight for their Country, and what
+ they do, they do it is for the good of their Country. Well, let it
+ appear now that thou hast fought and acted for thy Country's
+ Freedom. But if when thou hast power to settle Freedom in thy
+ Country, thou takest the possession of the Earth into thy own
+ particular hands, and makest thy Brother work for thee, as the
+ Kings did, thou hast fought and acted for thyself, not for thy
+ Country, and here thy inside hypocrisy is discovered.
+
+ "But here take notice, That Common Freedom, which is the Rule I
+ would have practiced and not talked on, was thy pretence, but
+ particular Freedom to thyself was thy intent. Amend, or else thou
+ wilt be shamed, when Knowledge doth spread to cover the Earth, even
+ as the waters cover the Seas. And so Farewell.
+ J. W."
+
+To-day knowledge is commencing "to spread to cover the Earth even as the
+waters cover the Seas"; and the thinkers of our times are rapidly coming
+to realise, to use Shelley's words, that--"The most fatal error that
+ever happened in the world was the separation of political and ethical
+science": a separation against which, as we have seen, Winstanley in his
+time protested so vigorously. Hence it is, probably, that the teachings
+of our modern seers and prophets, of the leaders and inspirers of the
+advanced thought of to-day, of Ruskin, Tolstoy, and even of Henry
+George, almost seem to us but as the echoes of those of their great
+forerunner in the stirring days of the Commonwealth.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[163:1] _History of the Commonwealth_, vol. i. p. 446.
+
+[163:2] _Ibid._ p. 471.
+
+[164:1] King's Pamphlets. British Museum, Press Mark, E. 655. Also at
+the Guildhall Library and the Bodleian.
+
+[164:2] At the very time this book was being written, some of the new
+settlements in America were making Church Fellowship a necessary
+condition of civil rights.
+
+[165:1] See Carlyle's _Letters and Speeches_, Speech II., Sept. 4th,
+1654, part viii. p. 20.
+
+[166:1] This argument would have appealed strongly to Cromwell, who, in
+one of his Speeches to his First Parliament, said: "If I had not a hope
+fixed in me that this cause and this business was of God, I would many
+years ago have run from it. If it be of God, He will bear it up. If it
+be of man, it will tumble; as everything that hath been of man since the
+world began hath done. And what are all our Histories and other
+Traditions of Actions in former times but God manifesting Himself, that
+He hath shaken and tumbled down, and trampled upon everything that He
+had not planted."--Carlyle, _Letters and Speeches_, part viii. p. 89.
+
+[168:1] With this contention, too, Cromwell would have found himself in
+complete sympathy. For "the truth of it is, There are wicked and
+abominable laws which will be in your power to alter," he said to one of
+his Parliaments on Sept. 17th, 1656. "To hang a man for
+Six-and-eight-pence, and I know not what; to hang for a trifle and
+acquit murder,--is in the ministration of the Law, through the ill
+framing of it. I have known in my experience abominable murders
+acquitted. And to see men lose their lives for petty matters: this is a
+thing God will reckon for. And I wish it may not lie upon this Nation a
+day longer than you have an opportunity to give a remedy; and I hope I
+shall cheerfully join with you in it. This hath been a great grief to
+many honest hearts and conscientious people; and I hope it is in all
+your hearts to rectify it."
+
+[170:1] "And truly this is matter of praise to God:--and it hath some
+instruction in it, To own men who are religious and godly. And so many
+of them as are peaceable and honestly and quietly disposed to live
+within Government, and will be subject to those Gospel rules of obeying
+Magistrates and living under Authority. I reckon no Godliness without
+that circle! Without that spirit, let it pretend what it will, it is
+diabolical, it is devilish," and so on. See Cromwell's Speech to his
+Second Parliament, April 13th, 1657 (Carlyle, part x. p. 250). It would
+almost seem as if Winstanley had written the above paragraph to answer
+this explosive utterance of Cromwell, some six years before it took
+place. As a matter of fact, of course, he was only answering an
+objection which every little conventional upholder of existing abuses,
+in his time as in our time, would be sure to make in one form or other.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+GERRARD WINSTANLEY'S UTOPIA
+
+THE LAW OF FREEDOM (_continued_)
+
+ "Look on yonder earth:
+ The golden harvests spring; the unfailing sun
+ Sheds light and life; the fruits, the flowers, the trees,
+ Arise in due succession; all things speak
+ Peace, harmony and love.... Is Mother Earth
+ A step-dame to her numerous sons, who earn
+ Her unshared gifts with unremitting toil;
+ A mother only to those puling babes
+ Who, nursed in ease and luxury, make men
+ The playthings of their babyhood, and mar,
+ In self-important childishness, that peace
+ Which men alone appreciate?"--SHELLEY.
+
+
+"The end of law," says Locke, "is not to abolish or restrain, but to
+preserve and enlarge freedom." Winstanley evidently held the same view;
+for he commences this, his last and greatest book, as follows:
+
+ "WHERE TRUE FREEDOM LIES.
+
+ "The great searching of heart in these days is to find out where
+ true Freedom lies, that the Commonwealth of England might be
+ established in peace. Some say, It lies in the free use of Trading,
+ and to have all Patents, Licenses and Restraints removed: But this
+ is a Freedom under the Will of a Conqueror. Others say, It is true
+ Freedom to have Ministers to preach, and for people to hear whom
+ they will, without being restrained or compelled from or to any
+ form of worship: But this is an unsettled Freedom.... Others say,
+ It is true Freedom that the Elder Brother shall be Land Lord of the
+ Earth, and the Younger Brother a Servant: And this is but a half
+ Freedom, and begets murmurings, wars and quarrels.
+
+ "All these, and such like, are Freedoms; but they lead to Bondage,
+ and are not the true Foundation-Freedom which settles a
+ Commonwealth in Peace.
+
+
+ "TRUE COMMONWEALTH'S FREEDOM LIES IN THE FREE ENJOYMENT OF THE
+ EARTH.
+
+ "True Freedom lies where a man receives his nourishment and
+ preservation, and that is in the use of the Earth.... All that a
+ man labors for, saith Solomon, is this, That he may enjoy the free
+ use of the Earth with the fruits thereof (Eccles. 2. 24). Do not
+ the Ministers preach for maintenance in the Earth? The Lawyers
+ plead causes to get the possessions of the Earth? Doth not the
+ Soldier fight for the Earth? And doth not the Land Lord require
+ Rent that he may live in the fullness of the Earth by the labor of
+ his Tenants? And so from the Thief upon the Highway to the King who
+ sits upon the Throne, does not everyone strive, either by force of
+ Arms or secret Cheats, to get the possessions of the Earth one from
+ another, because they see their Freedom lies in plenty, and their
+ Bondage lies in Poverty?"
+
+Then occurs this eternally true passage:
+
+ "Surely, then, oppressing Lords of Manors, exacting Land-lords and
+ Tythe-takers, may as well say their Bretheren shall not breathe in
+ the air, nor enjoy warmth in their bodies, nor have the moist
+ waters to fall upon them in showers, unless they will pay them rent
+ for it, as to say their Bretheren shall not work upon Earth, nor
+ eat the fruits thereof, unless they will hire that liberty of them.
+ For he that takes upon him to restrain his Brother from the liberty
+ of the one, may upon the same ground restrain him from the liberty
+ of all four, viz., Fire, Water, Earth and Air.
+
+ "A man had better to have had no body than to have no food for it.
+ Therefore this restraining of the Earth from Bretheren by Bretheren
+ is oppression and bondage; but the free enjoyment thereof is true
+ Freedom."
+
+
+INWARD AND OUTWARD BONDAGE.
+
+ "I speak now in relation between the Oppressor and the Oppressed,
+ the Inward Bondages I meddle not with in this place, though I am
+ assured that if it be rightly searched into, the inward bondages of
+ the mind, as covetousness, pride, hypocrisy, envy, sorrow, fears,
+ desperation and madness, are all occasioned by the outward bondage
+ that one sort of people lay upon another. And thus far natural
+ experience makes it good, THAT TRUE FREEDOM LIES IN THE FREE
+ ENJOYMENT OF THE EARTH."
+
+
+ "WHAT IS GOVERNMENT IN GENERAL?
+
+ "Government is a wise and free ordering of the Earth and of the
+ Manners of Mankind by observation of particular Laws or Rules, so
+ that all the inhabitants may live peaceably in plenty and freedom
+ in the Land where they are born and bred."
+
+With this most suggestive, philosophic and beautiful definition of
+Government, Winstanley opens his second chapter, and immediately
+elucidates his views on this all-important subject by drawing what we
+regard as a true and just comparison between what he well terms Kingly
+Government and Commonwealth's Government, or, what would now be termed,
+Aristocracy and Democracy, as follows:
+
+
+ "WHAT IS KINGLY GOVERNMENT?
+
+ "There is a twofold Government: a Kingly Government and a
+ Commonwealth's Government.
+
+ "Kingly Government governs the Earth by that cheating art of buying
+ and selling, and thereby becomes a man of contention, his hand is
+ against every man, and every man's hand against him ... and if it
+ had not a Club Law to support it, there would be no order in it,
+ because it is but the covetous and proud will of a Conqueror
+ enslaving a conquered people.... Indeed, this Government may well
+ be called the Government of Highwaymen, who hath stolen the Earth
+ from the Younger Bretheren by force and holds it from them by
+ force.... The great Lawgiver of this Kingly Government is
+ Covetousness, ruling in the hearts of mankind, making one Brother
+ to covet a full possession of the Earth, and a Lordly Rule over
+ another Brother.... The Rise of Kingly Government is attributable
+ to a politic wit in drawing the people out of Common Freedom into
+ a way of Common Bondage: FOR SO LONG AS THE EARTH IS A COMMON
+ TREASURY TO ALL MEN, KINGLY COVETOUSNESS CAN NEVER REIGN AS KING.
+
+
+ "WHAT IS COMMONWEALTH'S GOVERNMENT?
+
+ "Commonwealth's Government governs the Earth without buying and
+ selling, and thereby becomes a man of peace, and the Restorer of
+ Ancient Peace and Freedom. He makes provision for the oppressed,
+ the weak and the simple, as well as for the rich, the wise and the
+ strong.... All slavery and Oppressions ... are cast out by this
+ Government, _if it be right in power as well as in name_ ... IF
+ ONCE COMMONWEALTH'S GOVERNMENT BE SET UPON THE THRONE, THEN NO
+ TYRANNY OR OPPRESSION CAN LOOK HIM IN THE FACE AND LIVE.{11}
+
+ "If true Commonwealth's Freedom lies in the free enjoyment of the
+ Earth, as it doth, then whatsoever Law or Custom doth deprive
+ Bretheren of their Freedom in the Earth is to be cast out as
+ unsavoury salt."
+
+And after reminding his readers that "the great Lawgiver in
+Commonwealth's Government is the Spirit of Universal Righteousness," and
+warning them of the evils that would necessarily attend their posterity
+if they heeded not His dictates, he continues:
+
+ "If you do not run in the right channel of Freedom, you must, nay,
+ you will as you do, face about and turn back again to Egyptian
+ Monarchy; and so your names in the days of posterity shall be
+ blasted with abhorred infamy for your unfaithfulness to Common
+ Freedom; and the evil effects will be sharp upon the backs of
+ posterity.
+
+ "Therefore, seeing England is declared to be a Free Commonwealth,
+ and the name thereof established by a Law; surely then the greatest
+ work is now to be done; and that is, to escape all Kingly cheats in
+ setting up a Commonwealth's Government, so that the power and the
+ name may agree together; so that all the inhabitants may live in
+ peace, plenty and freedom.... For oppression was always the
+ occasion why the spirit of freedom in the people desired change of
+ government.... And the oppressions of the Kingly Government have
+ made this age of the world to desire a Commonwealth's Government
+ and the removal of the Kings: for the Spirit of Light in man loves
+ Freedom and hates Bondage."
+
+
+ "WHERE BEGAN THE FIRST ORIGINAL OF GOVERNMENT IN THE EARTH AMONG
+ MANKIND?"
+
+In the third chapter, under the above heading, Winstanley first points
+out that--"The original root of Magistracy is Common Preservation; and
+it rose up first in a private family," and then continues:
+
+
+COMMON PRESERVATION.
+
+ "There are two roots whence Laws do spring. The first root is
+ Common Preservation, when there is a principle in every one to seek
+ the good of others as himself, without respecting persons: and this
+ is the root of the tree Magistracy, and the Law of Righteousness
+ and Peace: and all particular Laws found out by experience
+ necessary to be practiced for common preservation, are the boughs
+ and branches of that tree."
+
+
+THE INWARD LIGHT.
+
+ "And because among the variety of mankind ignorance may grow up,
+ therefore this Original Law is written in the hearts of every man,
+ to be his guide and leader; so that if an Officer be blinded by
+ covetousness and pride, and ignorance rule in him, yet an inferior
+ man may tell him when he goes astray. For COMMON PRESERVATION AND
+ PEACE IS THE FOUNDATION-RULE OF ALL GOVERNMENT: therefore if any
+ will preach or practice Fundamental Truths, or Doctrine, here you
+ may see where the foundation thereof lies."
+
+
+SELF-PRESERVATION.
+
+ "The second root is Self-Preservation: when particular Officers
+ seek their own preservation, ease, honor, riches, and freedom in
+ the Earth, and do respect persons that are in power and riches with
+ them, and regard not the peace, freedom, and preservation of the
+ weak and foolish among Bretheren."
+
+
+THE ROOT OF THE TREE TYRANNY.
+
+ "This is the root of the tree Tyranny, and the Law of
+ Unrighteousness; and all particular Kingly Laws found out by
+ Covetous Policy to enslave one Brother to another, whereby bondage,
+ tears, sorrows and poverty are brought upon many men, are all but
+ the boughs and branches of that tree Tyranny.... Indeed, this
+ Tyranny is the cause of all wars and troubles, of the removal of
+ the Government of the Earth out of one hand into another so often
+ as it is in all Nations. For if Magistrates had a care to cherish
+ the peace and liberties of the common people, and to see them set
+ free from oppression, they might sit in the Chair of Government and
+ never be disturbed. But when their sitting is altogether to advance
+ their own interest, and to forget the afflictions of their
+ Bretheren who are under bondage: this is the forerunner of their
+ own downfall, and oftentimes proves the plague of the whole Land.
+
+ "Therefore the work of all true Magistrates is to maintain the
+ Common Law, which is the root of right government, and preservation
+ and peace to everyone; and to cast out all self-ended principles
+ and interests, which is Tyranny and Oppression, and which breaks
+ common peace. For surely the disorderly actings of Officers break
+ the peace of the Commonwealth more than any men whatsoever."
+
+
+ "ALL OFFICERS IN A TRUE MAGISTRACY OF A COMMONWEALTH ARE TO BE
+ CHOSEN OFFICERS.
+
+ "He who is a true Commonwealth's officer is not to step into the
+ place of Magistracy by policy or violent force, as all Kings and
+ Conquerors do, and so become oppressing Tyrants, by promoting their
+ self-ended Interests, or Machiavilian Cheats, that they may live in
+ plenty and rule as Lords over their Bretheren. But a true
+ Commonwealth's Officer is to be a chosen one by them who are in
+ necessity and who judge him fit for that work....
+
+ "When the people have chosen all Officers, to preserve a right
+ order in government of earth among them, then doth the same
+ necessity of common peace move the people to say to their Overseers
+ and Officers--'_Do you see our Laws observed for our preservation
+ and peace, and we will assist and protect you._' And these words
+ _assist_ and _protect_ imply the rising up of the people by force
+ of arms to defend their Laws and Officers against any Invasion,
+ Rebellion or Resistance: yea, to beat down the turbulency of any
+ foolish or self-ended spirit that endeavours to break their common
+ peace."
+
+
+FAITHFUL OFFICERS AND FAITHLESS OFFICERS.
+
+ "So that all true Officers are chosen Officers, and when they act
+ to satisfy the necessities of them who chose them, then they are
+ faithful and righteous servants to that Commonwealth, and then
+ there is a rejoicing in the City. But when Officers do take the
+ possessions of the Earth into their own hands, lifting themselves
+ up thereby to be Lords over their Masters, the people who choose
+ them, and will not suffer the people to plant the Earth and reap
+ the fruits for their livelihood unless they will hire the land of
+ them, or work for day wages for them, that they may live in ease
+ and plenty and not work: These Officers are fallen from true
+ Magistracy of a Commonwealth, and they do not act righteously, and
+ because of this sorrow and tears, poverty and bondages are known
+ among mankind, and now that City mourns."
+
+
+ "ALL OFFICERS IN A COMMONWEALTH ARE TO BE CHOSEN NEW ONES EVERY
+ YEAR."
+
+Winstanley believed that power of any sort, more especially if long
+enjoyed, tends to corrupt and to deteriorate. He therefore advocates,
+and shows surprisingly good reasons for his advocacy, that new Officers
+should be appointed every year. He says:
+
+ "When public Officers remain long in places of Judicature, they
+ will degenerate from the bounds of humility, honesty and tender
+ care of bretheren, in regard the heart of man is so subject to be
+ overspread with the clouds of covetousness, pride and vain-glory.
+ For though at the first entrance into places of Rule they be of
+ public spirits, seeking the Freedom of others as their own; yet
+ continuing long in such a place, where honors and greatness come
+ in, they become selfish, seeking themselves, and not Common
+ Freedom; as experience proves it true in these days, according to
+ this common proverb--'_Great offices in a Land and Army have
+ changed the disposition of many sweet spirited men._'
+
+ "And Nature tells us, that if water stand long, it corrupts;
+ whereas running water keeps sweet and is fit for common use.
+
+ "Therefore, as the necessity of Common Preservation moves the
+ people to frame a Law and to choose Officers to see the Law
+ obeyed, that they may live in peace: So doth the same necessity bid
+ the people, and cries aloud in the ears and eyes of England, to
+ choose new Officers, and to remove the old ones, and to choose
+ State Officers every year: and that for these reasons:
+
+ "_First_, To prevent their own evils: for when pride and fulness
+ take hold of an Officer, his eyes are so blinded therewith that he
+ forgets he is a servant to the Commonwealth, and strives to lift up
+ himself high above his Bretheren, and oftentimes his fall prove
+ very great: witness the fall of oppressing Kings, Bishops and other
+ State Officers.
+
+ "_Secondly_,{12} To prevent the creeping of oppression into the
+ Commonwealth again. For when Officers grow proud and full, they
+ will maintain their greatness, though it be in the poverty, ruin
+ and hardship of their Bretheren: Witness the practice of Kings and
+ their Laws, that have crushed the Commoners of England a long time.
+ And have we not experience in these days that some Officers of the
+ Commonwealth have grown so mossy for want of removing that they
+ will hardly speak to an old acquaintance, if he be an inferior man,
+ though they were very familiar before these wars began? And what
+ hath occasioned this distance among friends and bretheren, but long
+ continuance in places of honor, greatness and riches?"
+
+ "_Thirdly_, Let Officers be chosen new every year in love to our
+ posterity. For if burdens and oppressions should grow up in our
+ Laws and in our Officers for want of removing, as moss and weeds
+ grow in some land for want of stirring, surely it will be a
+ foundation of misery not easily to be removed by our posterity, and
+ then will they curse the time when we their forefathers had
+ opportunities to set things to rights for their ease, and would not
+ do it.
+
+ "_Fourthly_, To remove Officers of State every year will make them
+ truly faithful, knowing that others are coming after who will look
+ into their ways, and if they do not do things justly, they must be
+ ashamed when the next Officers succeed. And when Officers deal
+ faithfully with the Government of the Commonwealth, they will not
+ be unwilling to remove: the peace of London is much preserved by
+ removing their Officers yearly.
+
+ "_Fifthly_, It is good to remove Officers every year, that whereas
+ many have their portions to obey, so many may have their turn to
+ rule. And this will encourage all men to advance righteousness and
+ good manners in hopes of honor; but when money and riches bear all
+ the sway in the Rulers' hearts, there is nothing but tyranny in
+ such ways.
+
+ "_Sixthly_, The Commonwealth hereby will be furnished with able and
+ experienced men, fit to govern, which will mightily advance the
+ honor and peace of our Land, occasion the more watchful care in the
+ education of children, and in time will make our Commonwealth of
+ England the Lily among the Nations of the Earth.
+
+
+ "WHO ARE FIT TO CHOOSE, AND FIT TO BE CHOSEN OFFICERS IN A
+ COMMONWEALTH.
+
+ "All uncivil livers, as drunkards, quarrellers, fearful ignorant
+ men, who dare not speak truth less they anger other men; likewise
+ all who are wholly given to pleasure and sports, or men who are
+ full of talk: all these are empty of substance and cannot be
+ experienced men, therefore not fit to be chosen Officers in a
+ Commonwealth--yet they may have a voice in the choosing.
+
+ "_Secondly_, All those who are interested in the Monarchial Power
+ and Government, ought neither to choose nor to be chosen Officers
+ to manage Commonwealth's affairs; for these cannot be friends to
+ Common Freedom.... But seeing that few of the Parliament's friends
+ understand their Common Freedom, though they own the name
+ Commonwealth, therefore the Parliament's Party ought to bear with
+ the ignorance of the King's Party, because they are Bretheren, and
+ not make them servants, though for the present they be suffered
+ neither to choose nor be chosen Officers, lest that ignorant spirit
+ of revenge break out in them to interrupt our common peace.
+
+ "Moreover, All those who have been so hasty to buy and sell the
+ Commonwealth's Land, and so to entangle it upon a new accompt,
+ ought neither to choose nor be chosen Officers. For hereby they
+ declare themselves either to be for kingly interest, or else are
+ ignorant of Commonwealth's Freedom, or both, therefore unfit to
+ make Laws to govern a Free Commonwealth, or to be Overseers to see
+ those laws executed. What greater injury could be done to the
+ Commoners of England than to sell away their Land so hastily,
+ before the people knew where they were, or what Freedom they had
+ got by such cost and bloodshed as they were at? And what greater
+ ignorance could be declared by Officers than to sell away the
+ purchased Land from the purchasers, or from part of them, into the
+ hands of particular men to uphold Monarchial Principles?
+
+ "But though this be a fault, let it be borne withal, it was
+ ignorance of Bretheren; for England hath lain so long under kingly
+ slavery that few knew what Common Freedom was; and let a
+ restoration of this redeemed land be speedily made by those who
+ have possession of it. For there is neither Reason nor Equity that
+ a few men should go away with that Land and Freedom which the whole
+ Commoners have paid taxes, free-quarter, and wasted their estates,
+ healths and blood, to purchase out of bondage, and many of them are
+ in want of a comfortable livelihood.
+
+ "Well, these are the men that take away other men's rights from
+ them, and they are members of the covetous generation of
+ self-seekers, therefore unfit to be chosen Officers or to choose.
+
+
+ "WHO THEN ARE FIT TO BE CHOSEN OFFICERS?
+
+ "Why truly choose such as have a long time given testimony by their
+ actions to be promoters of Common Freedom, whether they be Members
+ in Church Fellowship, or not in Church Fellowship, for all are one
+ in Christ.
+
+ "Choose such as are men of peaceable spirits, and of a peaceable
+ conversation.
+
+ "Choose such as have suffered under Kingly Oppression, for they
+ will be fellow-feelers of others' bondages.
+
+ "Choose such as have adventured the loss of their estates and lives
+ to redeem the Land from bondage, and who have remained constant.
+
+ "Choose men of courage, who are not afraid to speak the truth; for
+ this is the shame of many in England at this day, they are drowned
+ in the dung-hill mud of slavish fear of men.
+
+ "Choose Officers out of the number of those men that are above
+ forty years of age, for these are most likely to be experienced
+ men, and to be men of courage, dealing truly and hating
+ covetousness."
+
+
+PAYMENT OF REPRESENTATIVES.
+
+ "And if you choose men thus principled who are poor men, as times
+ go, for the Conqueror's Power hath made many a righteous man a
+ poor man, then allow them a yearly maintenance from the Common
+ Stock, until such time as a Commonwealth's Freedom is established,
+ for then there will be no need of such allowances."
+
+
+THE MAIN SOURCE OF IGNORANCE.
+
+ "What is the reason that most men are so ignorant of their
+ Freedoms, and so few fit to be chosen Commonwealth's Officers?
+
+ "Because the old Kingly Clergy, that are seated in Parishes for
+ lucre of Tythes, are continually distilling their blind principles
+ into the people, and do thereby nurse up ignorance to them. For
+ they observe the bent of the people's minds, and make sermons to
+ please the sickly minds of ignorant people, to preserve their own
+ riches and esteem among a charmed, befooled and besotted people."
+
+After this passing shot at his old adversaries, Winstanley proceeds to
+consider the Offices and Institutions suitable for his ideal community,
+for a Free Commonwealth. He first summarises their function as a whole,
+and of the special duty incumbent on all public officials, as follows:
+
+ "All the Offices in a Commonwealth are like links of a chain; they
+ arise from one and the same root, which is necessity of Common
+ Peace; therefore they are to assist each other, and all others are
+ to assist them, as need requires, upon pain of punishment by the
+ breach of the Laws. The Rule of Right Government being thus
+ observed, may make a whole Land, nay the whole Fabric of the Earth,
+ to become one Family of Mankind, and one well-governed
+ Commonwealth."
+
+
+THE WORK OF A FATHER OR MASTER OF A FAMILY.
+
+ "A Father is to cherish his children till they grow wise and
+ strong; and then as a Master he is to instruct them in reading, in
+ learning languages, Arts and Sciences, or to bring them up to
+ labor, or employ them in some Trade or other, or cause them to be
+ instructed therein, according as is shown hereafter in the
+ Education of Mankind. A Father is to have a care that all his
+ children do assist to plant the Earth, or by other Trades provide
+ necessaries; so he shall see that every one have a comfortable
+ livelihood, not respecting one before another. He is to command
+ them their work, and see they do it, and not suffer them to live
+ idle; he is either to reprove by words, or whip those that offend;
+ for the Rod is prepared to bring the unreasonable ones to
+ experience and moderation. That so children may not quarrel like
+ beasts, but live in Peace, like rational men, experienced in
+ yielding obedience to the Law and Officers of the Commonwealth:
+ every one doing to another as he would have another do to him."
+
+
+THE WORK OF A PEACEMAKER.
+
+ "In a Parish or Town may be chosen three, four or six Peacemakers,
+ according to the bigness of the place: and their work is twofold.
+ _First_, In general to sit in Council to order the affairs of the
+ Parish, to prevent troubles, and to preserve common peace.
+ _Secondly_, If there arise any matters of offence between man and
+ man, the offending parties shall be brought by the Soldiers
+ [Policemen] before any one or more of these Peacemakers, who shall
+ hear the matter, and endeavour to reconcile the parties and make
+ peace, and so put a stop to the rigour of the Law, and go no
+ further. But if the Peacemaker cannot persuade or reconcile the
+ parties, then he shall command them to appear at the Judges' Court
+ at the time appointed to receive the Judgement of the Law.
+
+ "If any matter of public concernment fall out wherein the Peace of
+ the City, Town or Country is concerned, then the Peacemakers in
+ every town thereabouts shall meet and consult about it; and from
+ them, or any six of them, if need require, shall issue forth any
+ orders to inferior Officers. But if the matter concern only the
+ limits of a Town or City, then the Peacemakers of that Town shall
+ from their Court send forth orders to inferior Officers for the
+ performing of any public service within their limits.
+
+ "_Thirdly_, If any proof be given that any Officer neglects his
+ duty, a Peacemaker is to tell that Officer, between them two, of
+ his neglect. If the Officer continue negligent after this reproof,
+ the Peacemaker shall acquaint either the County Senate, or the
+ National Parliament therewith, that from them the offender may
+ receive condign punishment.
+
+ "AND IT IS ALL TO THIS END THAT THE LAWS BE OBEYED; FOR A CAREFUL
+ EXECUTION OF LAWS IS THE LIFE OF GOVERNMENT."
+
+
+THE WORK OF AN OVERSEER.
+
+Winstanley then details at some length the functions of Overseers, of
+which the following will, we think, give our readers sufficient insight:
+
+ "In a Parish or Town there is to be a four-fold degree of
+ Overseers, which are to be chosen yearly. The first is an Overseer
+ to preserve peace, in case of any quarrels that may fall out
+ between man and man.... The second office of Overseer is for
+ Trades. This Overseer is to see that young people be put to
+ Masters, to be instructed in some labour, trade, service, or to be
+ waiters in Storehouses, that none may be idly brought up in any
+ family within his circuit.... Truly the Government of the Halls and
+ Companies in London is a very rational and well-ordered government;
+ and the Overseers for Trades may well be called Masters, Wardens,
+ and Assistants of such and such a Company, for such and such a
+ particular Trade.... Likewise this Overseer for Trades shall see
+ that no man shall be a Housekeeper and have servants under him till
+ he hath served under a Master seven years, and hath learned his
+ Trade: and the reason is, that every Family may be governed by
+ staid and experienced Masters, and not by wanton youth. And this
+ Office of Overseer keeps all people within a peaceful harmony of
+ Trades, Sciences, or Works, that there be neither Beggar nor Idle
+ Person in the Commonwealth.
+
+ "The third Office of Overseership is to see particular Tradesmen
+ bring in their work to the Storehouses and Shops, and to see that
+ the waiters in Storehouses do their duty.... And if any Keeper of a
+ Shop or Storehouse neglect the duty of his place ... the Overseer
+ shall admonish him and reprove him. If he amend, all is well; if he
+ doth not, the Overseer shall give orders to the Soldiers to carry
+ him before the Peacemaker's Court, and if he reform upon the
+ reproof of that Court, all is well. But if he doth not reform, he
+ shall be sent by the Officers to appear before the Judge's Court,
+ and the Judge shall pass sentence--That he shall be put out of that
+ House and Employment, and sent among the Husbandmen to work in the
+ Earth: and some other shall have his place and house till he be
+ reformed."
+
+ "Fourthly, all ancient men, above sixty years of age, are General
+ Overseers. And wheresoever they go and see things amiss in any
+ Officer or Tradesmen, they shall call any Officer or others to
+ account for their neglect of duty to the Commonwealth's Peace; and
+ they are called Elders."
+
+
+THE OFFICE OF A SOLDIER.
+
+ "A Soldier is a Magistrate as well as any other Officer; and indeed
+ all State Officers are Soldiers, for they represent power; and if
+ there were not power in the hands of Officers, the spirit of
+ rudeness would not be obedient to any Law or Government, but their
+ own wills. Therefore every year shall be chosen a Soldier, like
+ unto a Marshall of a City, and, being the Chief, he shall have
+ divers soldiers under him at his command to assist in case of need.
+ The work of a Soldier in times of peace is to fetch in Offenders,
+ and to bring them before either Officer or Court, and to be a
+ protector to the Officers against all disturbances."
+
+
+THE WORK OF A TASK-MASTER.
+
+ "The Work or Office of a Task-master is to take those into his
+ oversight as are sentenced by the Judge to loose their Freedom, to
+ appoint them their work, and to see they do it."
+
+
+THE WORK OF A JUDGE.
+
+ "THE LAW ITSELF IS THE JUDGE OF ALL MEN'S ACTIONS; yet he who is
+ chosen to pronounce the Law is called Judge, because he is the
+ mouth of the Law: for no single man ought to judge or to interpret
+ the Law. Because the Law itself, as it is left us in the letter, is
+ the mind and determination of the Parliament and of the people of
+ the Land, to be their Rule to walk by and to be the touch-stone of
+ all actions. And the man who takes upon him to interpret the Law,
+ doth either darken the sense of the Law, and so make it confused
+ and hard to be understood, or else puts another meaning upon it,
+ and so lifts up himself above the Parliament, above the Law, and
+ above all people in the Land.
+
+ "Therefore the work of that man who is called Judge is to hear any
+ matter that is brought before him; and in all cases of difference
+ between man and man, he shall see the parties on both sides before
+ him, and shall hear each man speak for himself, without a fee'd
+ Lawyer; likewise he is to examine any witness who is to prove a
+ matter on trial before him. And then he is to pronounce the bare
+ letter of the Law concerning such a thing: for he hath his name
+ Judge, not because his will or mind is to judge the actions of
+ offenders before him, but because he is the mouth to pronounce the
+ Law, who, indeed, is the true Judge: Therefore to this Law and to
+ this Testimony let everyone have regard who intends to live in
+ Peace in the Commonwealth."
+
+Then occurs a passage that shows how carefully Winstanley had watched
+the public affairs of his own times, more especially the prolonged
+attempt of the late King to govern England under cover of ancient
+obsolete Laws interpreted by Judges removable at his will. He continues:
+
+ "For hence hath arisen much misery in the Nations under Kingly
+ Government, in that the man called the Judge hath been suffered to
+ interpret the Law. And when the mind of the Law, the Judgement of
+ the Parliament and the Government of the Land, is resolved into the
+ breasts of the Judges, this hath occasioned much complaining of
+ Injustice in Judges, in Courts of Justice, in Lawyers, and in the
+ course of the Law itself, as if it were an evil Rule. Because the
+ Law which was a certain Rule was varied, according to the will of a
+ covetous, envious or proud Judge. Therefore no marvel though the
+ Kingly Laws be so intricate, and though few know which way the
+ course of the Law goes, because the sentence lies many times in the
+ breast of a Judge, and not in the letter of the Law. And so the
+ good Laws made by an industrious Parliament are like good eggs laid
+ by a silly goose, and as soon as she hath laid them, she goes her
+ way and lets others take them, and never looks after them more, so
+ that if you lay a stone in her nest, she will sit upon it as if it
+ were an egg. And so, though the Laws be good, yet if they be left
+ to the will of a Judge to interpret, the execution hath many times
+ proved bad."
+
+
+ "WHAT IS THE JUDGE'S COURT?
+
+ "In a County or Shire there are to be chosen--A Judge, the
+ Peacemakers of every Town within that Circuit, the Overseers, and a
+ band of Soldiers attending thereupon: and this is called the
+ Judge's Court or the County Senate. The Court shall sit four times
+ in the year, or oftener if need be.... If any disorder break in
+ among the people, this Court shall set things to right. If any be
+ bound over to appear at this Court, the Judge shall hear the
+ matter, and pronounce the letter of the Law, according to the
+ nature of the offence. So that the alone work of the Judge is to
+ pronounce the Sentence and mind of the Law: and all this is but to
+ see the Law executed and the Peace of the Commonwealth preserved."
+
+
+ "WHAT IS THE WORK OF A COMMONWEALTH'S PARLIAMENT IN GENERAL?"
+
+Winstanley then sketches, first in broad outline and then in detail,
+what he deemed the work of a Commonwealth's Parliament should be; and
+for our own part we know not where to find a higher ideal of the duties
+incumbent upon the chosen Representatives of the People: an ideal that
+no Parliament to this day has ever attained, and which probably is only
+attainable when there shall be a strong body of educated public opinion,
+loving Justice and deserving Justice, inspiring and supporting their
+endeavours. He commences as follows:
+
+ "A Parliament is the highest Court of Equity in a Land; and it is
+ to be chosen every year.... This Court is to oversee all other
+ Courts, Officers, persons, and actions, and to have a full power,
+ being the Representative of the whole Land, to remove all
+ grievances, and to ease the people that are oppressed."
+
+
+A PARLIAMENT IS THE FATHER OF THE COMMONWEALTH.
+
+ "A Parliament hath its rise from the lowest Office in a
+ Commonwealth, viz., from the Father in a Family. For as a Father's
+ tender care is to remove all grievances from the oppressed
+ children, not respecting one before another; so a Parliament are to
+ remove all burdens from the people of the Land, and are not to
+ respect persons who are great before those who are weak; but their
+ eye and care must be principally to relieve the oppressed ones, who
+ groan under the Tyrant's Laws and Powers: the strong, or such as
+ have the Tyrant's Power to support them, need no help.
+
+ "But though a Parliament be the Father of a Land, yet by the
+ Covetousness and Cheats of Kingly Government the heart of this
+ Father hath been alienated from the children of the Land, or else
+ so overawed by the frowns of a Kingly Tyrant, that they could not
+ or durst not act for the weaker children's ease. For hath not
+ Parliament sat and rose again, and made Laws to strengthen the
+ Tyrant in his Throne, and to strengthen the rich and the strong by
+ those Laws, and left Oppression upon the backs of the oppressed
+ still?"
+
+
+HIS HOPES FOR THE FUTURE.
+
+Here Winstanley checks himself, and continues:
+
+ "But I'll not reap up former weaknesses, but rather rejoice in hope
+ of amendment, seeing our present Parliament hath declared England
+ to be a Free Commonwealth, and to cast out Kingly Power: and upon
+ this ground I rejoice in hope that succeeding Parliaments will be
+ tender-hearted Fathers to the oppressed children of the Land. And
+ not only dandle us upon the knee with good words and promises till
+ particular men's turn be served, but will feed our bellies and
+ clothe our backs with good actions of Freedom, and give to the
+ oppressed children's children their birthright portion, which is
+ Freedom in the Commonwealth's Land, which the Kingly Law and Power,
+ our cruel step-fathers and step-mothers, have kept from us and our
+ fathers for many years past.
+
+
+ "THE PARTICULAR WORK OF A PARLIAMENT IS FOUR-FOLD--FIRSTLY,
+
+ "As a tender Father, a Parliament is to empower Officers and give
+ orders for the free planting and reaping of the Commonwealth's
+ Land, that all who have been oppressed, and kept back from the free
+ use thereof by Conquerors, Kings, and their Tyrant Laws, may now be
+ set at liberty to plant in Freedom for food and raiment, and are to
+ be a protection to them who labor the Earth, and a punisher of them
+ who are idle.
+
+ "But some may say, What is that I call Commonwealth's Land? I
+ answer, All that land which hath been withheld from the inhabitants
+ by the Conqueror, or Tyrant Kings, and is now recovered out of the
+ hands of that oppression by the joint assistance of the persons and
+ purses of the Commoners of the Land. For this Land is the price of
+ their blood. It is their birthright to them and to their posterity,
+ and ought not to be converted into particular hands again by the
+ Laws of a Free Commonwealth. In particular, this Land is all Abbey
+ Lands, formerly recovered out of the Pope's Power by the blood of
+ the Commoners of England, though the Kings withheld their rights
+ therein from them. So likewise all Crown Lands, Bishops' Lands,
+ with all Parks, Forests, Chases, now of late recovered out of the
+ hand of the Kingly Tyrants, who have set Lords of Manors and
+ Taskmasters over the Commoners, to withhold the free use of the
+ land from them. So likewise all the Commons and Waste Lands, which
+ are called Commons because the Poor was to have part therein. But
+ this is withheld from the Commoners, either by Lords of Manors
+ requiring quit-rents, and overseeing the poor so narrowly that none
+ dares build him a house upon this Common Land, or plant thereupon,
+ without his leave, but must pay him rents, fines, and heriots, and
+ homage as unto a Conqueror. Or else the benefit of this Common Land
+ is taken away from the Younger Bretheren by the rich Land Lords and
+ Freeholders, who overstock the Commons with sheep and cattle, so
+ that the Poor in many places are not able to keep a Cow unless they
+ steal grass for her.
+
+ "And this is the bondage the Poor complain of, that they are kept
+ poor in a Land where there is so much plenty for everyone, if
+ Covetousness and Pride did not rule as King in one Brother over
+ another: and Kingly Government occasions all this. Now it is the
+ work of a Parliament to break the Tyrant's bands, to abolish all
+ their oppressing Laws, and to give orders, encouragements and
+ directions unto the poor oppressed people of the Land, that they
+ forthwith plant and manure this their own Land, for the free and
+ comfortable livelihood of themselves and posterities. And to
+ declare to them, it is their own Creation-Rights, faithfully and
+ courageously recovered by their diligence, purses and blood from
+ under the Kingly Tyrant's and Oppressor's Power.
+
+
+ "THE WORK OF A PARLIAMENT--SECONDLY,
+
+ "Is to abolish all old Laws and Customs which have been the
+ strength of the Oppressor, and to prepare and then to enact new
+ Laws for the ease and freedom of the people, but yet not without
+ the people's knowledge.[197:1]
+
+ "For the work of a Parliament herein is three-fold:
+
+ "_First_, When old Laws and Customs of the Kings do burden the
+ people, and the people desire the remove of them, and the
+ establishment of more easy Laws: it is now the work of a Parliament
+ to search into Reason and Equity, how relief may be found for the
+ people in such a case, and to preserve a Common Peace. And when
+ they have found a way by debate of counsel among themselves,
+ whereby the people may be relieved, they are not presently to
+ establish their conclusions for a Law. But in the next place they
+ are to make a public declaration thereof to the people of the Land,
+ who choose them, for their approbation. And if no objection come in
+ from the people within one month, they may then take the people's
+ silence as a consent thereto. And then, in the third place, they
+ are to enact it for a Law, to be a binding rule to the whole Land.
+ For as the remove of the old Laws and Customs is by the people's
+ consent, which is proved by their frequent petitionings and
+ requests; so the enacting of new Laws must be by the people's
+ consent and knowledge likewise. And here they are to require the
+ consent, not of men interested in the old oppressing Laws and
+ Customs,[197:2] as Kings used to do, but of them who have been
+ oppressed. And the reason is this: Because the people must be all
+ subject to the Law, under pain of punishment, therefore it is all
+ reason that they should know it before it be enacted, so that if
+ there be anything of the Counsel of Oppression in it, it may be
+ discovered and amended."
+
+
+ANSWERS TO TWO OBJECTIONS.
+
+ "But you will say, If it must be so, then will men so differ in
+ their judgements that we shall never agree.
+
+ "I answer: There is but Bondage and Freedom, _particular_ Interest
+ or _common_ Interest; and he who pleads to bring in particular
+ interest into a Free Commonwealth, will presently be seen and cast
+ out, as one bringing in Kingly Slavery again.
+
+ "Moreover, men in place and office, where greatness and honor is
+ coming in, may sooner be corrupted to bring in particular interest
+ than a whole Land can be, who must either suffer sorrow under a
+ burdensome Law, or rejoice under a Law of Freedom. And surely those
+ men who are not willing to enslave the people will be unwilling to
+ consent hereunto.
+
+
+ "THE WORK OF A PARLIAMENT--THIRDLY,
+
+ "Is to see all those burdens removed actually, which have hindered
+ or do hinder the oppressed People from the enjoyment of their
+ Birth-Rights.
+
+ "If their Common Lands be under the oppression of Lords of Manors,
+ they are to see the Land freed from that slavery.
+
+ "If the Commonwealth Land be sold by the hasty counsel of subtle,
+ covetous and ignorant Officers, who act for their own particular
+ interest, and so hath entangled the Commoners' Land again, under
+ colour of being bought and sold: then a Parliament is to examine
+ what authority any had to sell or buy the Commonwealth's Land
+ without a general consent of the People: FOR IT IS NOT ANY ONE'S,
+ BUT EVERY ONE'S BIRTH-RIGHT. And if some through covetousness and
+ self-interest gave consent privately, yet a Parliament, who is the
+ Father of the Land, ought not to give consent to buy and sell that
+ Land which is all the children's birth-right, and the price of
+ their labors, moneys and blood.
+
+ "They are to declare likewise that the Bargain is unrighteous; and
+ that the Buyers and Sellers are Enemies to the Peace and Freedom of
+ the Commonwealth. For indeed the necessity of the People chose a
+ Parliament to help them in their weakness. Hence when they see a
+ danger like to impoverish or enslave one part of the people to
+ another, they are to give warning and so prevent that danger. For
+ they are the Eyes of the Land: and surely those are blind eyes that
+ lead the People into Bogs to be entangled in Mud again, after they
+ are once pulled out. =And when the Land is once freed from the
+ Oppressor's Power and Laws, the Parliament is to keep it so, and
+ not suffer it by their consent to have it bought or sold, and so
+ entangled in Bondage upon a new account.=
+
+ "For their faithfulness herein to the People, the People are
+ engaged in love and faithfulness to cleave close to them in defence
+ and protection. But when a Parliament have no care herein, the
+ hearts of the People run away from them like sheep who have no
+ Shepherd."
+
+
+THE CAUSE OF ALL GRIEVANCES.
+
+ "All grievances are occasioned either by the covetous wills of
+ State Officers, who neglect their obedience to the good Laws, and
+ then prefer their own ease, honor, and riches before the ease and
+ freedom of the oppressed people. A Parliament is to cashier and
+ punish those Officers, and place others who are men of public
+ spirit in their rooms.
+
+ "Or else the People's grievances arise from the practice and power
+ that the King's Laws have given to Lords of Manors, covetous
+ Landlords, Tythe Takers, or unbounded Lawyers, being all
+ strengthened in their oppressions over the people by that Kingly
+ Law. And when the People are burthened herewith, and groan waiting
+ for deliverance, as the oppressed People of England do at this day,
+ it is then the work of a Parliament to see the People delivered,
+ and that they enjoy their Creation's Freedom in the Earth. They are
+ not to dally with them, but as a father is ready to help his
+ children out of misery when they either see them in misery, or when
+ the children cry for help, so should they do for the oppressed
+ people.
+
+ "And surely for this end, and no other, is the Parliament chosen.
+ =For the necessity for Common Preservation and Peace is the
+ Fundamental Law both to Officers and People.=
+
+
+ "THE WORK OF A PARLIAMENT--FOURTHLY,
+
+ "Is this: If there be occasion to raise an Army to wage war, either
+ against an Invasion of a Foreign Enemy, or against an Insurrection
+ at home, it is the work of a Parliament to manage that business for
+ to preserve Common Peace.
+
+ "And here their work is three-fold:
+
+ "_First_, To acquaint the People plainly with the cause of the
+ War, and to show them the danger of such an Invasion or
+ Insurrection. And so from that cause require their assistance in
+ person, for the preservation of the Laws, Liberties and Peace of
+ the Commonwealth, according to their engagement when they were
+ chosen, which was this: _Do you protect our Laws and Liberties, and
+ we will protect and assist you._
+
+ "_Secondly_, A Parliament is to make choice of understanding, able
+ and public-spirited men to be Leaders of an Army in this case, and
+ to give them Commissions and Power, in the name of the
+ Commonwealth, to manage the work of an Army.
+
+ "_Thirdly_, A Parliament's work in this case is either to send
+ Ambassadors to another Nation which has invaded our Land, or that
+ intends to invade, to agree upon terms of peace, or to proclaim
+ war; or else to receive and hear Ambassadors from other Lands for
+ the same business, or about any other business concerning the peace
+ and honor of the Land.
+
+ "For a Parliament is the Head of a Commonwealth's Power; or, as it
+ may be said, it is the great Council of an Army, from whom
+ originally all Orders do issue forth to any Officer or Soldier. For
+ if so be a Parliament had not an Army to protect them, the rudeness
+ of the people would not obey their proceedings; and if a Parliament
+ were not the representative of the People, who indeed is the body
+ of all power, the Army would not obey their orders.
+
+ "So then a Parliament is the Head of Power in a Commonwealth. It is
+ their work to manage public affairs in times of War and in times of
+ Peace; not to promote the interests of particular men, but for the
+ Peace and Freedom of the whole Body of the Land, viz., of every
+ particular man, that none be deprived of his Creation Eights,
+ unless he hath lost his Freedom by transgression, as by the Laws is
+ expressed."[200:1]
+
+With this admirable summary of the functions of a Parliament, our
+author brings his consideration of their work to a conclusion, and
+somewhat later proceeds to consider the source and function of a true
+Commonwealth's Army, which he evidently regards as a necessary evil,
+capable of much harm as well as of some good. He says:
+
+
+THE RISE OF A COMMONWEALTH'S ARMY.
+
+ "After that the necessity of a People in a Parish, in a County and
+ in a Land, hath moved the People to choose Officers to preserve
+ common peace, the same necessity causeth the People to say to their
+ Officers--_Do you see our Laws observed for our common
+ preservation, and we will assist and protect you._
+
+ "These words, _assist_ and _protect_, implies the rising of the
+ People by force of arms to defend their Laws and Officers, who rule
+ well, against any invasion, insurrection or rebellion of selfish
+ Officers or rude people: yea, to beat down the turbulency of any
+ foolish spirit that shall arise to break our common peace. So that
+ the same Law of Necessity of Common Peace, which moved the People
+ to choose Officers, and to compose a Law to be a Rule of
+ Government: the same Law of Necessity of Protection doth raise an
+ Army. So that an Army, as well as other Officers in a Commonwealth,
+ spring from one and the same root, viz., from the necessity of
+ Common Preservation."
+
+
+AN ARMY IS TWO-FOLD: VIZ., A RULING ARMY, OR A FIGHTING ARMY.
+
+ "A Ruling Army is called Magistracy in times of Peace, keeping that
+ Land and Government in Peace by Execution of the Laws, which the
+ Fighting Army did purchase in the field by their blood out of the
+ hands of Oppression. All Officers, from the Father in a Family to
+ the Parliament in a Land, are but the heads and leaders of an Army;
+ and all people arising to protect and assist their Officers, in
+ defence of a right-ordered Government, are but the body of an Army.
+ And this Magistracy is called the Rejoicing of all Nations, when
+ the foundations thereof are Laws of Common Equity, whereby every
+ single man may enjoy the fruits of his labor, in the free use of
+ the Earth, without being restrained or oppressed by the hands of
+ others.
+
+ "Secondly, A Fighting Army, called Soldiers in the Field, when the
+ necessity of preservation, by reason of a foreign invasion, or
+ inbred Oppression, doth move the people to arise in an Army to cut
+ and tear to pieces either degenerate Officers, or rude people, who
+ seek their own interests, and not Common Freedom, and through
+ treachery do endeavour to destroy the Laws of Common Freedom, and
+ to enslave both the Land and the People of the Commonwealth to
+ their particular wills and lusts.... The use or work of a Fighting
+ Army in a Commonwealth is to beat down all who arise to endeavour
+ to destroy the Liberties of the Commonwealth. For as in the days of
+ the Monarchy an Army was used to subdue all who rebelled against
+ Kingly Propriety, so in the days of a Free Commonwealth, an Army is
+ to be made use of to resist or destroy all who endeavour to keep up
+ or bring in Kingly Bondage again.... Therefore, you Army of
+ England's Commonwealth, look to it. The Enemy could not beat you in
+ the field, but they may be too hard for you by Policy in Counsel,
+ if you do not stick close to see Common Freedom established. For if
+ so be that Kingly Authority is set up in your Laws again, King
+ Charles has conquered you and your posterity by policy, though you
+ seemingly have cut off his head. For the Strength of a King lies
+ not in the visible Appearance of his Body, but in his Will, Laws,
+ and Authority, which is called Monarchial Government. But if you
+ remove Kingly Government, and set up true and free Commonwealth's
+ Government, then you gain your Crown and keep it, and leave peace
+ to your posterity: otherwise not. And thus doing makes a War either
+ lawful or unlawful."
+
+Then follows this bold, manly challenge of the conduct of the Grandees
+of the Army:
+
+
+ "AN ARMY MAY BE MURTHERERS AND UNLAWFUL.
+
+ "If an Army be raised to cast out Kingly Oppression, and if the
+ Heads of that Army promise a Commonwealth's Freedom to the
+ oppressed people, in case they will assist in person and purse, and
+ if the people do assist and prevail over the Tyrant, those Officers
+ are bound by the Law of Justice (who is God) to make good their
+ engagements. And if they do not set the Land free from the
+ branches of the Kingly Oppression, but reserve some part of the
+ Kingly Power to advance their own particular interest, whereby some
+ of their friends are left under as great slavery to them as they
+ were under the Kings, those Officers are not faithful
+ Commonwealth's Soldiers, they are worse Thieves and Tyrants than
+ the Kings they cast out, and that Honor they seemed to get by their
+ Victories over the Commonwealth's Oppressor, they lose again by
+ breaking Promise and Engagement to their oppressed friends who did
+ assist them.
+
+ "For what difference is there between a professed Tyrant, who
+ declares himself a Tyrant in words, laws and deeds, as all
+ Conquerors do, and him who promises to free me from the power of
+ the Tyrant if I'll assist him; and when I have spent my estate and
+ blood, and the health of my body, and expect my bargain by his
+ engagements to me, he sits himself down in the Tyrant's Chair, and
+ takes the possession of the Land to himself, and calls it his and
+ none of mine, and tells me he cannot in conscience let me enjoy the
+ Freedom of the Earth with him, because it is another man's right."
+
+
+HIS ACCOUNT OF HIS OWN CIRCUMSTANCES.
+
+ "And now my health and estate is decayed and I grow in age, I must
+ either beg or work for day-wages, which I was never brought up to,
+ for another; when the Earth is as freely my Inheritance and
+ Birth-Right as his whom I must work for. And if I cannot live by my
+ weak labors, but take where I need, as Christ sent and took the
+ Asses Colt in his need, there is no dispute, but by the Kings and
+ Laws, he will hang me for a thief."
+
+
+THE TRUE FUNCTION OF A COMMONWEALTH ARMY.
+
+ "A Monarchial Army lifts up mountains and makes valleys, viz.,
+ advances Tyrants and treads the oppressed in the barren lanes of
+ poverty. But a Commonwealth's Army is like John the Baptist, who
+ levels the Mountains to the Valleys, pulls down the Tyrant, and
+ lifts up the Oppressed: and so makes way for the Spirit of Peace
+ and Freedom to come in to rule and inherit the Earth.
+
+ "By this which has been spoken an Army may see wherein they may do
+ well and wherein they may do hurt."
+
+
+THE OFFICE OF THE POST-MASTER.
+
+Under this heading Winstanley describes an office by which he evidently
+thought the social bonds uniting the whole Nation might be strengthened
+and all parts thereof be brought into closer and more intimate relations
+one with the other. He describes its functions as follows:
+
+ "In every Parish throughout the Commonwealth shall be chosen two
+ men (at the time when the other Officers are chosen), and these
+ shall be called Post-Masters. And whereas there are four parts of
+ the Land, East, West, North, South, there shall be chosen in the
+ chief City two men to receive what the Post-Master of the East
+ Country brings in"; and so on. "Now the work of a Country
+ Post-master shall be this: They shall every month bring up or send
+ by tidings from their respective Parishes to the chief City, of
+ what accidents or passages fall out, which is either to the honor
+ or dishonor, hurt or profit, of the Commonwealth. And if nothing
+ have fallen out in that month worth observation, then they shall
+ write down peace or good order in such a Parish.
+
+ "When these respective Post-masters have brought up their Bills or
+ Certificates from all parts of the Land, the Receiver of these
+ Bills shall write down everything in order from Parish to Parish in
+ the nature of a Weekly Bill of Observation. And those eight
+ Receivers shall cause the Affairs of the Four Quarters of the Land
+ to be printed in one Book with what speed may be, and deliver to
+ every Post-master a Book, that as they bring up the affairs of one
+ Parish in writing, they may carry down in print the Affairs of the
+ Whole Land."
+
+
+ITS BENEFITS.
+
+ "The benefit lies here, that if any part of the Land be visited
+ with Plague, Famine, Invasion or Insurrection, or any casualties,
+ the other parts of the Land may have speedy knowledge, and send
+ relief. And if any accident fall out through unreasonable action,
+ or careless neglect, other parts of the Land may thereby be made
+ watchful to prevent like dangers. Or if any through industry or
+ through ripeness of understanding have found out any secret in
+ Nature, or new invention in any Art or Trade, or in the tillage of
+ the Earth, or such like, whereby the Commonwealth may more
+ flourish in peace and plenty, for which virtues those persons
+ received honor in the places where they dwelt; then, when other
+ parts of the Land hear of it, many thereby will be encouraged to
+ employ their Reason and Industry to do the like; that so in time
+ there will not be any Secret in Nature, which now lies hid (by
+ reason of the iron age of Kingly Oppressing Government) but by some
+ or other will be brought to light, to the beauty of our
+ Commonwealth."
+
+With this suggestive passage this chapter may fittingly close. Like his
+great successor in the Nineteenth Century, Winstanley evidently realised
+that "Liberty means Justice, and Justice is the Natural Law--the law of
+health and symmetry and strength, of fraternity and co-operation."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[197:1] Law Reform was at that time very popular, and undoubtedly much
+needed. The month previous to the publication of the book we are now
+considering, in January 1652, a Law Reform Commission consisting of
+twenty-one members had been appointed. It evidently went to work in a
+very thorough manner. For, according to a modern Lawyer, Mr. Inderwick
+(see his book _The Interregnum_, referred to by Gardiner), it appears
+that of eight draft Acts proposed on March 23rd, 1652, one became Law in
+1833, one in 1846, and a third in 1885.
+
+[197:2] "Things of this world," says Locke (_Of Civil Government_, part
+ii. chap. xiii. sec. 157), "are in so constant a flux, that nothing
+remains long in the same state.... But ... private interest often keeps
+up customs and privileges when the reasons of them are ceased."
+
+[200:1] In his great work _Of Civil Government_, John Locke takes
+practically the same view as Winstanley of the duties of Parliaments and
+of the function of Law. In chapter ix. (part ii.) he says: "The
+legislative or supreme power of any Commonwealth, is bound to govern by
+established _standing laws_, promulgated and known to the people, and
+not by extemporary decrees; by indifferent [impartial] and upright
+judges, who are to decide controversies by those laws; and to employ the
+force of the community at home, _only in the execution of such laws_, or
+abroad, to prevent or redress foreign injuries, and secure the community
+from inroads and invasion. _And all this to be directed to no other end,
+but the peace, safety, and public good of the people._" Italics are
+ours.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+GERRARD WINSTANLEY'S UTOPIA
+
+THE LAW OF FREEDOM (_concluded_)
+
+ "Day unto day utters speech--
+ Be wise, O ye Nations! and hear
+ What yesterday telleth to-day,
+ What to-day to the morrow will preach.
+ A change cometh over our sphere,
+ And the old goeth down to decay.
+ A new light hath dawned on the darkness of yore,
+ And men shall be slaves and oppressors no more."
+ CHARLES MACKAY.
+
+
+It is in the chapter we have just been considering, the fourth chapter
+of "The Law of Freedom," that we find Winstanley's last recorded
+utterances on cosmological and theological problems. Nothing seems to us
+more strikingly to show the broadening and development of his powerful
+mind than a comparison of the views here expressed with those contained
+in his earlier writings on the subject. True, the underlying ideas are
+practically the same: he still realises the existence of a Divine
+Spirit, the Spirit of Reason and of Love, of Righteousness and of Peace,
+animating, inspiring, pervading and governing the whole Creation; he
+still holds to his doctrine of the Inward Light, the spark of the Divine
+Spirit of Reason, within man, prompting each and all to act righteously
+and equitably one toward the other. Yet he is decidedly less mystical.
+He lays emphasis on the necessity to study the works of God rather than
+the Word of God; and has evidently become less anthropomorphic and more
+spiritual, less mystical and more rational, less religious and more
+ethical, less theological and more philosophic, less scholastic and more
+scientific. However, we had better let him speak for himself.
+Immediately after his reflections on the duties and functions of a
+Commonwealth's Parliament, he proceeds to consider the work of a
+Commonwealth's Ministry, as follows:
+
+
+ "THE WORK OF A COMMONWEALTH'S MINISTRY, AND WHY ONE DAY IN SEVEN
+ MAY BE A DAY OF REST FROM LABOR.
+
+ "If there were good Laws and the People be ignorant of them, it
+ would be as bad for the Commonwealth as if there were no Laws at
+ all. Therefore it is very rational and good that one day in seven
+ be still set apart, for three reasons:
+
+ "_First_, That the People in such a Parish may generally meet
+ together to see one another's faces, and beget or preserve
+ fellowship in friendly love.
+
+ "_Secondly_, To be a day of rest, or cessation from labor; so that
+ they may have some bodily rest for themselves and cattle.
+
+ "_Thirdly_, That he who is chosen Minister (for that year) in that
+ Parish may read to the People three things. First, the affairs of
+ the whole Land, as it is brought in by the Post-Master. Secondly,
+ to read the Law of the Common-wealth, not only to strengthen the
+ memory of the ancients, but that the young people also, who are not
+ grown up to ripeness of experience, may be instructed to know when
+ they do well and when they do ill. For the Law of a Land hath the
+ power of Freedom and Bondage, life and death, in its hand,
+ therefore the necessary knowledge to be known; and he is the best
+ Prophet that acquaints men therewith, that as men grow up in years
+ they may be able to defend the Laws and Government of the Land. But
+ these Laws shall not be expounded by the Reader; for to expound a
+ plain Law, as if a man would put a better meaning than the letter
+ itself, produces two evils: First, the pure Law and the minds of
+ the people will be thereby confounded, for multitude of words
+ darken knowledge. Secondly, the reader will be puffed up in pride
+ to contemn the Law-makers, and in time that will prove the father
+ and nurse of tyranny, as at this day is manifested by our
+ Ministry."
+
+
+WHAT SHALL BE SPOKEN OF.
+
+ "But because the minds of people generally love discourses,
+ therefore, that the wits of men, both old and young, may be
+ exercised, there may be speeches made in a threefold nature:
+
+ "_First_, To declare the acts and passages of former ages and
+ governments, setting forth the benefit of freedom by well-ordered
+ Governments, as in Israel's Commonwealth, and the troubles and
+ bondage which hath always attended oppression and oppressors, as
+ the State of Pharaoh and other tyrant kings, who said the Earth and
+ People were theirs, and only at their disposal.
+
+ "_Secondly_, Speeches may be made of all Arts and Sciences, some
+ one day some another, as in Physics, Chyrurgery, Astrology,
+ Astronomy, Navigation, Husbandry, and such like. And in these
+ speeches may be unfolded the nature of all herbs and plants, from
+ the Hysop to the Cedar, as Solomon writ of. Likewise men may come
+ to see into the nature of the fixed and wandering Stars, those
+ great powers of God in the heavens above. And hereby men will come
+ to know the secrets of Nature and Creation, within which all true
+ knowledge is wrapped up, and the light in man must arise to search
+ it out.
+
+ "_Thirdly_, Speeches may be made sometimes of the nature of
+ mankind, of his darkness and of his light, of his weakness and of
+ his strength, of his love and of his envy, of his inward and
+ outward bondages, of his inward and outward freedoms, etc. And this
+ is that at which the ministry of Churches generally aim; but only
+ that they confound their knowledge by imaginary study.... And thus
+ to speak, or thus to read the Law of Nature (or God) as He hath
+ written His name in every body, is to speak a pure language, and
+ this is to speak the truth as Jesus Christ spake it, giving to
+ everything its own weight and measure. By this means in time men
+ shall attain to the practical knowledge of God truly, that they may
+ serve Him in spirit and in truth: and this knowledge will not
+ deceive a man."
+
+
+HIS ANSWER TO OBJECTIONS.
+
+Then follows a passage which even to-day would bring down the wrath of
+"zealous but ignorant professors" upon the head of any author
+acknowledging it, if within their sphere of influence. He continues:
+
+ "'I,' but saith the zealous but ignorant Professor, 'this is a low
+ and carnal Ministry indeed; this leads men to know nothing but the
+ knowledge of the earth and the secrets of nature; but we are to
+ look after spiritual and heavenly things.'
+
+ "I answer: 'To know the secrets of nature is to know the works of
+ God; and to know the works of God within the Creation, is to know
+ God himself; for God dwells in every visible work or body. Indeed,
+ if you would know spiritual things, it is to know how the Spirit or
+ Power of Wisdom and Life, causing motion or growth, dwells within
+ and governs both the several bodies of the stars and planets in the
+ heavens above, and the several bodies of the earth below, as grass,
+ plants, fishes, beasts, birds and mankind. For to reach God beyond
+ the Creation, or to know what he will be to a man after the man is
+ dead, if any otherwise than to scatter him into his essences of
+ fire, water, earth and air, of which he is composed, is a knowledge
+ beyond the line or capacity of man to attain to while he lives in
+ his compounded body. And if a man should go to imagine what God is
+ beyond the Creation, or what he will be in a spiritual
+ demonstration after a man is dead, he doth, as the proverb saith,
+ but build castles in the air, or tells us of a world beyond the
+ Moon or beyond the Sun, merely to blind the reason of man.
+
+ "'I'll appeal to yourself in this question, What other knowledge
+ have you of God but what you have within the circle of the
+ Creation? For if the Creation in all its dimensions be the fullness
+ of Him that fills all with Himself; and if you yourself be part of
+ this Creation: where can you find God but in that line or station
+ wherein you stand? God manifests Himself in actual Knowledge, not
+ in Imagination. He is still in motion, either in bodies upon earth
+ or in the bodies in the heavens, or in both; in the night and in
+ the day, in Winter, in Summer, in cold, in heat, in growth or not
+ in growth.'"
+
+
+THE CAUSE OF IGNORANCE, EVIL AND SORROWS.
+
+ "But when a studying imagination comes into man, which is the
+ devil, for it is the cause of all evil and sorrows in the world;
+ that is he who puts out the eyes of man's knowledge, and tells him
+ he must believe what others have writ or spoke, and must not trust
+ to his own experience. And when this bewitching fancy sits in the
+ Chair of Government, there is nothing but saying and unsaying,
+ frowardness, covetousness, fears, confused thoughts, and
+ unsatisfied doubtings, all the days of that man's reign in the
+ heart."
+
+
+EXAMINE THE WAYS OF MEN, NOT ONLY THEIR PRECEPTS.
+
+ "Or, secondly, examine yourself and look likewise into the ways of
+ all Professors, and you shall find that the enjoyment of the earth
+ below, which you call a low and a carnal knowledge, is that which
+ you and all Professors (as well as the men of the world, as you
+ call them) strive and seek after. Wherefore are you so covetous
+ after the world, in buying and selling, counting yourself a happy
+ man if you be rich, and a miserable man if you be poor? And though
+ you say, _Heaven after death is a place of glory where you shall
+ enjoy God face to face_, yet you are loth to leave the earth and go
+ thither.
+
+ "Do not your Ministers preach for to enjoy the earth? Do not
+ professing Lawyers, as well as others, buy and sell the Conquerer's
+ justice that they may enjoy the earth? Do not professing Soldiers
+ fight for the earth, and seat themselves in that Land which is the
+ birth-right of others, as well as theirs, shutting others out? Do
+ not all Professors strive to get earth, that they may live in
+ plenty by other men's labors? Do you not make the earth your very
+ rest? Doth not the enjoying of the earth please the spirit in you?
+ and then you say God is pleased with your ways and blesseth you. If
+ you want earth, and become poor, do you not say, God is angry with
+ you? Why do you heap up riches? why do you eat and drink, and wear
+ clothes? Are not all these carnal and low things of the earth? and
+ do you not live in them and covet them as much as any, nay more
+ than many which you call men of the world?
+
+ "It being thus with you, what other spiritual and heavenly things
+ do you seek after more than others? What is in you more than in
+ others? If you say there is, then surely you should leave these
+ earthly things alone to the men of the world, as you call them,
+ whose portions these are, and keep you within the compass of your
+ own sphere, that others seeing you live a life above the world in
+ peace and freedom, neither working yourselves, nor deceiving, nor
+ compelling others to work for you, they may be drawn to embrace the
+ same spiritual life by your single hearted conversation. Well I
+ have done here."
+
+
+ "LET US NOW EXAMINE YOUR DIVINITY."
+
+Winstanley then carries the war into the camp of his clerical opponents,
+and that in so forcible a manner that we cannot refrain from quoting at
+length. He says:
+
+ "Let us now examine your Divinity, which you call heavenly and
+ spiritual things; for herein speeches are made, not to advance
+ knowledge, but to destroy the true knowledge of God. For Divinity
+ does not speak the truth, as it is hid in everybody, but it leaves
+ the motional knowledge of a thing as it is, and imagines, studies
+ or thinks what may be, and so runs the hazard of true or false.
+ This Divinity is always speaking words to deceive the simple, that
+ he may make them work for him and maintain him, but he never comes
+ to action himself, to do as he would be done by; for he is a
+ monster who is all tongue and no hand.
+
+ "This Divining Doctrine, which you call spiritual and heavenly
+ things, is the thief and the robber, he comes to spoil the Vineyard
+ of a man's peace, and does not enter in at the door, but he climbs
+ up another way. And this Doctrine is two-fold: First, it takes upon
+ him to tell you the meaning of other men's words and writings, by
+ his studying or imagining what another man's knowledge might be,
+ and by thus doing darkens knowledge, and wrongs the spirit of the
+ Authors who did write and speak those things which he takes upon
+ him to interpret. Secondly, he takes upon him to foretell what
+ shall befall a man after he is dead, and what that world is beyond
+ the Sun and beyond the Moon, etc. And if any man tell him there is
+ no reason for what you say, he answers, you must not judge of
+ heavenly and spiritual things by reason, but you must believe what
+ is told you, whether it be reason or no."
+
+
+WHEREIN IT IS WANTING.
+
+ "There is a three-fold discovery of falsehood in this Doctrine.
+ First, it is a Doctrine of a sickly and weak spirit, who hath lost
+ his understanding in the knowledge of the Creation, and of the
+ temper of his own heart and nature, and so runs into fancies,
+ either of joy or sorrow. If the passion of joy predominate, then he
+ fancies to himself a personal God, personal Angels, and a local
+ place of glory, which he saith, he, and all who believe what he
+ hath, shall go to after they are dead. If sorrow predominate, then
+ he fancies to himself a personal Devil, and a local place of
+ torment that he shall go to after he is dead: and this he speaks
+ with great confidence.
+
+ "_Secondly_, This is the doctrine of a subtle running spirit, to
+ make an ungrounded wise man mad.... For many times when a wise
+ understanding heart is assaulted with this Doctrine of a God, a
+ Devil, a Heaven and a Hell, Salvation and Damnation after a man is
+ dead, his spirit being not strongly grounded in the knowledge of
+ the Creation nor in the temper of his own heart, he strives and
+ stretches his brain to find out the depth of that doctrine and
+ cannot attain to it. For, indeed, it is not knowledge, but
+ imagination. And so by poring and puzzling himself in it, he loses
+ that wisdom he had, and becomes distracted and mad. If the passion
+ of joy predominate, then he is merry, and sings, and laughs, and is
+ ripe in the expression of his words and will speak strange things:
+ but all by imagination. But if the passion of sorrow predominate,
+ then he is heavy and sad, crying out, _He is damned; God hath
+ forsaken him, and he must go to Hell when he dies; he cannot make
+ his calling and election sure._ And in that distemper many times a
+ man doth hang, kill or drown himself. So this Divining Doctrine,
+ which you call spiritual and heavenly things, torments people
+ always when they are weak, sickly or under any distemper. Therefore
+ it cannot be the Doctrine of Christ the Saviour.
+
+ "Or, _thirdly_, This Doctrine is made a cloak of policy by the
+ subtle Elder Brother, to cheat his simpler Younger Brother of the
+ Freedoms of the Earth. For, saith the Elder Brother, 'The Earth is
+ mine, and not yours, Brother; and you must not work upon it, unless
+ you will hire it of me; and you must not take the fruits of it,
+ unless you will buy them of me, by that which I pay you for your
+ labor. For if you should do otherwise, God will not love you, and
+ you shall not go to Heaven when you die, but the Devil will have
+ you, and you must be damned in Hell.'
+
+ "If the Younger reply, and say--'The Earth is my Birth-Right as
+ well as yours, and God who made us both is no Respecter of persons.
+ Therefore there is no reason but I should enjoy the Freedoms of the
+ Earth for my comfortable livelihood, as well as you, Brother.'
+
+ "'I,' but saith the Elder Brother, 'You must not trust to your own
+ Reason and Understanding, but you must believe what is written and
+ what is told you; and if you will not believe, your Damnation will
+ be the greater.'
+
+ "'I cannot believe,' saith the Younger Brother, 'that our Righteous
+ Creator should be so partial in his Dispensations of the Earth,
+ seeing our bodies cannot live upon Earth without the use of the
+ Earth.'
+
+ "The Elder Brother replies, 'What, will you be an Atheist, and a
+ factious man, will you not believe God?'
+
+ "'Yes,' saith the Younger Brother, 'if I knew God said so, I should
+ believe, for I desire to serve Him.'
+
+ "'Why,' saith the Elder Brother, 'this is His Word, and if you will
+ not believe it, you must be damned; but if you will believe it, you
+ will go to Heaven.'
+
+ "Well, the Younger Brother, being weak in spirit, and not having a
+ grounded knowledge of the Creation, nor of himself, is terrified,
+ and lets go his hold in the Earth, and submits himself to be a
+ Slave to his Brother, for fear of damnation in Hell after death,
+ and in hopes to get Heaven thereby after he is dead. And so his
+ eyes are put out, and his Reason is blinded. So that this divining
+ spiritual doctrine is a cheat. For while men are gazing up to
+ Heaven, imagining after a happiness, or fearing a Hell after they
+ are dead, their eyes are put out, that they see not what are their
+ Birth-Rights, nor what is to be done by them here on Earth while
+ they are living. This is the filthy Dreamer and the Cloud without
+ rain. And indeed the subtle Clergy do know that if they can but
+ charm the people by this their divining doctrine, to look after
+ riches, Heaven and Glory when they are dead, that then they shall
+ easily be the inheritors of the Earth, and have the deceived people
+ to be their Servants.
+
+ "For my own part," he continues, "my spirit hath waded deep to find
+ the bottom of this divining spiritual Doctrine; and the more I
+ searched, the more I was at a loss. I never came to quiet rest and
+ to know God in my spirit, till I came to the knowledge of the
+ things in this Book. And let me tell you, They who preach this
+ divining doctrine are the murderers of many a poor heart, who is
+ bashful and simple, and who cannot speak for himself, but who keeps
+ his thoughts to himself."
+
+Such, then, was Winstanley's final attack on the body of teachings he,
+rightly or wrongly, hated and despised as the main supporter of the
+prevailing social injustice. Correct thought he realised to be the
+necessary precursor of right action; and he knew that correct thought is
+impossible so long as old, inherited false ideas are unquestioningly
+accepted and hold undisputed dominion over the human mind. Winstanley
+seems to us to have realised that it was the ignorance of the many that,
+in truth, maintained the privileges of the few; that the masses
+themselves forge the fetters for their own enslavement, which, though
+apparently as strong as iron bands, are, in truth, but things of
+gossamer, easily to be broken by those who themselves have forged and
+who themselves still maintain them.
+
+In the next chapter (chap. v.) Winstanley briefly summarises his views
+on education, and outlines the means by which he deemed both the
+production and the distribution of wealth could be carried on without
+having recourse to "the thieving art of buying and selling." It
+commences as follows:
+
+
+OF EDUCATION.
+
+ "Mankind in the days of his youth is like a young colt, wanton and
+ foolish, till he be broken in by education and correction; the
+ neglect of this care, or the want of wisdom in the performance of
+ it, hath been and is the cause of much division and trouble in the
+ world. Therefore the Law of a Common-wealth doth require that not
+ only a Father, but that all Overseers and Officers should make it
+ their work to educate children in good manners, and to see them
+ brought up in some trade or other, and to suffer no children in any
+ Parish to live in idleness and youthful pleasures all their days,
+ as many have been; but that they may be brought up like men and not
+ like beasts. That so the Commonwealth may be planted with laborious
+ and wise experienced men, and not with idle fools."
+
+He continues his reflections as follows:
+
+ "Mankind may be considered in a four-fold degree, his childhood,
+ youth, manhood, and old age. His childhood and his youth may be
+ considered from his birth till forty years of age. Within this
+ compass of time, after he is weaned from his mother, his parents
+ shall teach him a civil and humble behaviour towards all men. Then
+ send him to school, to learn to read the Laws of the Common-wealth,
+ to ripen his wits from his childhood, and so to proceed with his
+ learning till he be acquainted with all Arts and Languages.... But
+ one sort of children shall not be trained up only to book-learning,
+ and to no other employment, called Scholars, as they are in the
+ Government of Monarchy. For then through idleness they spend their
+ time to find out policies to advance themselves to be Lords and
+ Masters over their laboring bretheren, which occasions all the
+ trouble in the world."
+
+After again indicating the source of all real knowledge, he continues:
+
+ "Therefore, to prevent idleness and the danger of Machivilian
+ cheats, it is profitable for the Commonwealth that children be
+ trained up in trades and some bodily employment, as well as in
+ learning languages or the histories of former ages. And as boys are
+ trained up in learning and in trades, so all maids shall be trained
+ up in reading, sewing, kniting, spinning of linnen and woollen,
+ music, and all other easy neat works, either for to furnish
+ Storehouses with linnen and wooll cloth, or for the ornament of
+ particular houses with needlework. If this course were taken, there
+ would be no idle person or beggar in the Land, and much work would
+ be done by that now lazy generation for the enlarging of the Common
+ Treasury."
+
+
+INVENTION TO BE ENCOURAGED.
+
+ "In the managing of any trade let no young wit be crushed in his
+ invention. If any man desire to make a new trial of his skill in
+ any trade or science, the Overseer shall not injure him but
+ encourage him therein; that so the Spirit of Knowledge may have his
+ full growth in man, to find out the secrets in every art. And let
+ everyone who finds out a new invention have a deserved honor given
+ him; and certainly when men are sure of food and raiment, their
+ reason will be ripe and ready to dive into the secrets of the
+ Creation, that they may learn to see and know God (the Spirit of
+ the whole Creation) in all his works. For fear of want and care to
+ pay Rent to Task-Masters hath hindered many rare inventions. So
+ that Kingly Power hath crushed the Spirit of Knowledge, and would
+ not suffer it to rise up in its beauty and fullness, but by his
+ Club Law hath preferred the Spirit of Imagination, which is a
+ deceiver, before it.
+
+
+ "THERE SHALL BE NO BUYING AND SELLING OF THE EARTH, NOR OF THE
+ FRUITS THEREOF.
+
+ "For by the Government under Kings the cheaters hereby have cozened
+ the plain-hearted of their Creation Birth-rights, and have
+ possessed themselves in the Earth, and call it theirs, and not the
+ others, and so have brought in that poverty and misery which lies
+ upon many men. And whereas the wise should help the foolish, and
+ the strong help the weak, the wise and strong destroy the weak and
+ simple ... and so the Proverb is made true--_Plain dealing is a
+ jewel, but he who uses it shall die a beggar._ And why? Because
+ this buying and selling is the nursery of cheats; it is the Law of
+ the Conqueror, the Righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees....
+ And these cunning cheaters commonly become the Rulers of the
+ Earth.... For not the wise poor man, but the cunning rich man was
+ always made an Officer and a Ruler; such a one as by his stolen
+ interests in the Earth would be sure to hold others in bondage of
+ poverty and servitude to him and his party. Therefore there shall
+ be no buying and selling in a free Common-wealth, neither shall
+ anyone hire his Brother to work for him."
+
+From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs:
+such, then, was Winstanley's ideal; such was the Communistic
+Commonwealth he evidently imagined would naturally evolve if only the
+equal claims of all to the use of the Earth were once recognised and
+respected. He was, however, much too shrewd to think for a moment that
+any such State could be ushered in all at once, or created by Act of
+Parliament. For he continues:
+
+ "If the Common-wealth might be governed without buying and selling,
+ here is a Platform of Government for it, which is the ancientest
+ Law of Righteousness to Mankind in the use of the Earth, and which
+ is the very height of Earthly Freedom. But if the minds of the
+ people, through covetousness and proud ignorance, will have the
+ Earth governed by buying and selling still, this same Platform,
+ with some few things subtracted, declares an easy way of Government
+ of the Earth for the quiet of people's minds, and the preserving of
+ peace in the Land.
+
+
+ "HOW MUST THE EARTH BE PLANTED?
+
+ "The Earth is to be planted and the fruits reaped and carried into
+ Barns and Storehouses by the assistance of every family. If any man
+ or family want corn or other provisions, they may go to the
+ Storehouses and fetch without money. If they want a horse to ride,
+ go into the fields in Summer, or to the Common Stables in Winter,
+ and receive one from the Keepers, and when your journey is
+ performed, bring him where you had him, without money. If any want
+ food or victuals, they may either go to the butchers' shops and
+ receive what they want without money, or else go to the flocks of
+ sheep or herds of cattle, and take and kill what meat is needful
+ for their families, without buying and selling. The reason why all
+ the riches of the Earth are a Common Stock is this: Because the
+ Earth and the labors thereupon are managed by common assistance of
+ every family, without buying and selling, as is shown more largely
+ in the Office of Overseers for Trades and the Law for Storehouses.
+ The Laws for the right ordering thereof, and the Officers to see
+ the Laws executed, to preserve the peace of every family, and to
+ improve and promote every trade, is shown in the work of Officers
+ and the Laws following."
+
+
+WHO ALONE WILL OBJECT.
+
+ "None will be an enemy to this Freedom, which, indeed, is to do to
+ another as a man would have another do to him, but Covetousness and
+ Pride, the spirit of the old grudging, snapping Pharisees, who give
+ God abundant of good words in their sermons, in their prayers, in
+ their fasts, and in their thanksgivings, as though none should be
+ more faithful servants to Him than they. Nay, they will shun the
+ company, imprison, and kill every one that will not worship God,
+ they are so zealous. Well now, God and Christ hath enacted an
+ everlasting Law, which is Love, not only one another of your own
+ mind, but love your enemies too, such as are not of your mind: and
+ having food and raiment therewith be content. Now here is a trial
+ for you, whether you will be faithful to God and Christ in obeying
+ His Laws; or whether you will destroy the man-child of true
+ Freedom, Righteousness and Peace, in his resurrection. And now thou
+ wilt either give us the tricks of a Soldier, face about, and return
+ to Egypt, and so declare thyself to be part of the Serpent's seed
+ that must bruise the heel of Christ. Or else to be one of the
+ plain-hearted Sons of Promise, or Members of Christ, who shall help
+ to bruise the Serpent's head, which is Kingly Oppression, and so
+ bring in everlasting Righteousness and Peace into the Earth. Well,
+ the eye is now open."
+
+
+ "STOREHOUSES SHALL BE BUILT AND APPOINTED IN ALL PLACES AND BE THE
+ COMMON STOCK.
+
+ "There shall be Storehouses in all places, both in the Country and
+ in Cities, to which all the fruits of the Earth, and other works
+ made by Tradesmen, shall be brought, and thence delivered out again
+ to particular Families, and to every one as they want for their
+ use; or else to be transplanted by ships to other Lands to exchange
+ for those things which our Land will not or does not afford. For
+ all the labors of Husbandmen and Tradesmen within the Land, or by
+ Navigation to or from other Lands, shall be upon the Common Stock.
+ And as everyone works to advance the Common Stock, so everyone
+ shall have a free use of any commodity in the Storehouse for his
+ pleasure and comfortable livelihood, without buying or selling or
+ restraint from any. Having food and raiment, lodging, and the
+ comfortable societies of his own kind, what can a man desire more
+ in these days of his travel? Indeed, covetous, proud, and beastly
+ minded men desire more, either to lay by them to look upon, or else
+ to waste and spoil it upon their lusts, while other Bretheren live
+ in straits for the want of the use thereof. But the Laws and
+ Faithful Officers of a Free Commonwealth do regulate the irrational
+ conduct of such men.
+
+
+ "THERE ARE TWO SORTS OF STOREHOUSES, GENERAL AND PARTICULAR.
+
+ "The general Storehouses are such houses as receive in all
+ commodities in the gross.... And these general Storehouses shall be
+ filled and preserved by the common labor and assistance of every
+ Family, as is mentioned in the Office for Overseer for Trades. And
+ from these Public Houses, which are the general stock of the Land,
+ all particular Tradesmen may fetch materials for their particular
+ work as they need, or to furnish their particular dwellings with
+ any commodities.
+
+ "_Secondly_, There are particular Storehouses, or Shops, to which
+ the Tradesmen shall bring their particular works; as all
+ instruments of iron to the Iron-shops, hats to the shops appointed
+ for them, and so on.... They shall receive in, as into a
+ Storehouse, and deliver out again freely, as out of a Common
+ Storehouse, when particular persons or families come for everything
+ they need, as now they do by buying and selling under Kingly
+ Government. For as particular Families and Tradesmen do make
+ several works more than they can make use of ... and do carry their
+ particular works to Storehouses; so it is all Reason and Equity
+ that they should go to other Storehouses to fetch any other
+ commodity which they want and cannot make. For as other men partake
+ of their labors, so it is reason they should partake of other
+ men's."
+
+It should be scarcely necessary to pause to point out that what
+Winstanley here describes is exactly what is taking place, in his time
+as in our times, all the world over. Commodities of every description
+are continuously being produced, and being brought to the Storehouses,
+wholesale and retail, thence to be redistributed to those who require
+them. The Social Problem, of Winstanley's time and of our time, is how
+to secure to each co-operating worker his fair share of the returns to
+the labours of all. And manifestly this is impossible so long as some
+can command any share thereof without having in any way shared in the
+toil or rendered any equivalent counter-service. In 1905, as in 1652, an
+ever increasing portion and proportion of the wealth thus harvested and
+garnered constantly gravitates towards those who, under the prevailing
+"kingly laws," claim to control the use of the land, whence alone it can
+be derived. This was the basic social injustice, the parent source of
+innumerable other social ills and injustices, which Winstanley was one
+of the first clearly to apprehend, and to combat which he devoted his
+life.
+
+Winstanley, moreover, fully and clearly realised that:
+
+ "THE KING'S OLD LAWS CANNOT SERVE A FREE COMMONWEALTH."
+
+And this formed the heading of his next chapter, in which in a specially
+lively manner he first points out that the Laws of a Monarchy--which,
+being based upon inequality, necessarily tend to produce inequality, and
+whose main function is to legalise and to maintain privileges--are
+necessarily essentially different from those suitable to a Free
+Commonwealth--which, being based upon the recognition of the equality of
+rights, would necessarily tend to produce an equality of social
+conditions; and whose main function would be to establish and to
+legalise Justice, equal rights and equal duties, to maintain and to
+enforce the equal claims of all to the use of the earth, to life, to
+liberty, and to the pursuit of happiness. It commences as follows:
+
+
+OF KINGLY LAWS.
+
+ "The King's Old Laws cannot govern in times of Bondage and in times
+ of Freedom too. They have indeed served many masters, Papish and
+ Protestant. They are like old Soldiers, who will but change their
+ name, and turn about, and as they were. The Reason is because they
+ are the prerogative will of those, under any Religion, who count it
+ no Freedom to them unless they be Lords over the minds, persons and
+ labors of their bretheren.
+
+ "They are called the King's Laws, because they are made by the
+ King. If any say they were made by the Commoners, it is answered,
+ They were not made by the Commoners as the Commoners of a Free
+ Commonwealth are to make Laws. For in the days of the King none
+ were to choose or be chosen Parliament Men, or Law Makers, but
+ Lords of Manors, and Freeholders, such as held title to their
+ Enclosures of Land, or Charters for their Liberties in Trades,
+ under the King, who called the Land his, as he was the Conqueror or
+ his successor. All inferior people were neither to choose nor be
+ chosen. And the reason was because all Freeholders of Land and such
+ as held their Liberties by Charter, were all of the King's
+ interest; and the inferior people were successively of the rank of
+ the conquered ones, and servants and slaves from the time of the
+ Conquest.
+
+ "Further, when a Parliament was chosen in that manner, yet if any
+ Parliament Man, in the uprightness of his heart, did endeavour to
+ promote any freedom contrary to the King's will or former customs
+ from the Conquest, he was either committed to prison by the King or
+ by the House of Lords, who were his ancient Norman successive
+ Council of War; or else the Parliament was dissolved and broke up
+ by the King. So that the old Laws were made in times under Kingly
+ Slavery, not under the liberty of Commonwealth's Freedom, because
+ Parliament Men had to have regard to the King's prerogative
+ interest to uphold his conquest, or else endanger themselves. As
+ sometimes it is in these days, some Officers dare not speak against
+ the minds of those men who are the chief in power, nor a Private
+ Soldier against the mind of his Officer, lest they be cashiered
+ their places and livelihood. And so long as the promoting of the
+ King's will and prerogative was to be in the eye of the Law Makers,
+ the oppressed Commoners could never enjoy Commonwealth's Freedom
+ thereby. Yet by the wisdom, courage, faithfulness and industry of
+ some Parliament Men, the Commoners have received here a line and
+ there a line of freedom inserted into their Laws: as those good
+ lines of freedom in Magna Charta were obtained by much hardship and
+ industry.
+
+ "_Secondly_, They were the King's Laws, because the King's own
+ creatures made the Laws: Lords of Manors, Freeholders, etc., were
+ successors of the Norman soldiers from the Conquest, therefore they
+ could do no other but maintain their own and the King's interest.
+ Do we not see that all Laws were made in the days of the King to
+ ease the rich Landlord? The poor laborers were left under bondage
+ still; they were to have no freedom in the earth by those
+ pharisaical Laws. For when Laws were made and Parliaments broke up,
+ the poor oppressed Commoners had no relief; the power of Lords of
+ Manors, withholding the free use of the Common-land from them,
+ remained still. For none durst make any use of any Common-land but
+ at the Lord's leave, according to the will and law of the
+ Conqueror. Therefore the old Laws were called King's Laws."
+
+
+OF COMMONWEALTH'S LAWS.
+
+ "These old Laws cannot govern a Free Commonwealth; because the Land
+ is now to be set free from the slavery of the Norman Conquest, and
+ the power of Lords of Manors and Norman Freeholders is to be taken
+ away. Or else the Commoners are but where they were, if not fallen
+ lower into straits than they were. The Old Laws cannot look with
+ any other face than they did; though they be washed with
+ Commonwealth's water, their countenance is still withered.
+ Therefore it was not for nothing that the Kings would have all
+ their Laws written in French and Latin, and not in English; partly
+ in honor to the Norman Race, and partly to keep the Common People
+ ignorant of their Creation Freedom lest they should rise to redeem
+ themselves. And if those Laws should be writ in English, yet if the
+ same Kingly Principles remain in them, the English language would
+ not advantage us anything, but rather increase our sorrow by our
+ knowledge of our bondage."
+
+
+ "WHAT IS LAW IN GENERAL?"
+
+Winstanley then proceeds to consider the question, What is Law? and to
+emphasise the essential difference between customary, conventional or
+written Law and that unwritten Law, proceeding from the Inward Light of
+Reason, that inspires men, in action as in words, to do as they would be
+done unto. He first gives the following clear, rational and sufficient
+definition of Law:
+
+ "Law is a Rule, whereby men and other creatures are governed in
+ their actions for the preservation of Common Peace."
+
+Then follows a most philosophic consideration of the whole question,
+which seems to us to reveal that Winstanley was groping, and by no means
+so blindly as many who succeeded him, after some Natural Law, some
+unalterable and immutable principle, which should serve as a basis, as
+well as the test and touchstone, of all man-made customs, laws and
+institutions. He continues:
+
+
+THE TWO-FOLD NATURE OF LAW.
+
+ "This Law is two-fold: First, it is the power of Life (called the
+ Law of Nature within the Creatures) which doth move both man and
+ beast in their actions, or that causes grass, trees, corn and all
+ plants to grow in their several seasons. And whatsoever anybody
+ does, he does it as he is moved by this inward Law. And this Law of
+ Nature moves two-fold, viz., irrationally or rationally."
+
+
+THE LAW OF THE FLESH.
+
+ "A man by this inward Law is guided to actions of present content,
+ rashly, through a greedy self-love, without any consideration, like
+ foolish children, or like the brute beasts. By reason whereof much
+ hurt many times follows the body. And this may be called the Law of
+ the Members warring against the Law of the Mind."
+
+
+THE LAW OF THE MIND.
+
+ "Or where there is an inward watchful oversight of all motions to
+ action, considering the end and effect of those actions, so that
+ there be no excess in diet, in speech, or in action break forth, to
+ the prejudice of a man's self or others: and this may be called the
+ Light in Man, the Reasonable Power, or the Law of the Mind. And
+ this rises up in the heart by an experimental observation of that
+ peace or trouble which such and such words, thoughts and actions
+ bring the man into. And this is called the Record on High; for it
+ is a record in a man's heart above the former unreasonable power:
+ and it may be called the witness or testimony of a man's own
+ conscience: and this moderate watchfulness is still the Law of
+ Nature, but in a higher resurrection than the former. It hath many
+ terms, which for brevity sake I let pass."
+
+
+THEIR STRUGGLE FOR SUPREMACY.
+
+ "This two-fold work of the Law within man strive to bring forth
+ themselves in writing to beget numbers of bodies on their sides.
+ That power which begets the bigger number always rules as King or
+ Lord in the creature and in the Creation, till the other side
+ overtop him: even as light and darkness strive in day and night to
+ succeed each other. Or as it is said--"The strong man armed keeps
+ the heart of man till a stronger than he came and cast him out."
+
+
+THE WRITTEN LAW.
+
+ "This written Law, proceeding either from reason or
+ unreasonableness, is called the Letter, whereby the creation of
+ mankind, beasts and earth are governed, according to the will of
+ that power which rules.... As for example, if the experienced, wise
+ and strong man bears rule, then he writes down his mind to curb the
+ unreasonable Law of Covetousness and Pride in inexperienced man, to
+ preserve Peace in the Commonwealth. This is called the Historical
+ or Traditional Law, because it is conveyed from one generation to
+ another by writing: as the Laws of Israel's Commonwealth were writ
+ in a book by Moses, and so conveyed to posterity. And this outward
+ Law is a bridle to unreasonableness; or as Solomon writ, It is a
+ whip for the fool's back, for whom only it was added."
+
+
+ITS CORRUPTION.
+
+ "_Secondly_, Since Moses' time the power of unreasonable
+ covetousness and pride hath sometimes risen up and corrupted that
+ Traditional Law. For since the power of the sword rises up in
+ Nations to conquer, the Written Law hath not been to advance Common
+ Freedom and to beat down the unreasonable self-will in mankind, but
+ it hath been framed to uphold the self-will of the Conqueror, right
+ or wrong, not respecting the Freedom of the Commonwealth, but the
+ Freedom of the Conqueror and his friends only. By reason whereof
+ much slavery hath been laid on the backs of the plain-dealing men;
+ and men of public spirit, as Moses was, have been crushed, and
+ their spirits damped thereby: which hath bred first discontents,
+ and then more wars in the Nations.... But hereby the true nature of
+ a well-governed Commonwealth hath been ruined; the will of Kings
+ set up for a Law; and the Law of Righteousness, the Law of Liberty,
+ trod under foot and killed. This Traditional Law of Kings is that
+ Letter at this day which kills true freedom and is the fomenter of
+ wars and persecutions.
+
+ "This is the soldier who cut Christ's garments into pieces, which
+ was to remain uncut and without seam. This law moves the people to
+ fight one against the other for those pieces; viz., for the several
+ enclosures of the Earth, who shall possess the Earth, and who shall
+ be Rulers over others."
+
+
+THE EVERLASTING LAW.
+
+ "But the true ancient Law of God is a Covenant of Peace to the
+ whole of mankind. This sets the Earth free to all. This unites both
+ Jew and Gentile into one Brotherhood, and rejects none. This makes
+ Christ's garment whole again; and makes the Kingdoms of the World
+ to become Commonwealths again. It is the Inward Power of Right
+ Understanding, which is the True Law that teaches people in action,
+ as well as in words, to do as they would be done unto."
+
+Winstanley then contends that, as far as written laws are concerned--
+
+ "SHORT AND PITHY LAWS ARE BEST TO GOVERN A COMMONWEALTH,"
+
+and defends this conclusion as follows:
+
+ "The Laws of Israel's Commonwealth were few, short and pithy; and
+ the Government thereof was established in peace so long as Officers
+ and People were obedient thereunto. But those many Laws in the days
+ of the Kings of England, which were made some in times of Popery
+ and some in times of Protestantism, and the proceedings of the Laws
+ being in French and Latin, hath produced two great evils in
+ England. First, it hath occasioned much ignorance among the people,
+ and much contention. And the people have mightily erred through
+ want of knowledge, and thereby they have run into great expense of
+ money by suits of Law; or else many have been imprisoned, whipped,
+ banished, lost their estates and lives by that Law which they were
+ ignorant of till the scourge thereof was on their backs. This is a
+ sore evil among the people.
+
+ "_Secondly_, The people's ignorance of the laws hath bred many sons
+ of contention. For when any difference falls out between man and
+ man, they neither of them know which offends the other; therefore,
+ both of them thinking their cause is good, they delight to make use
+ of the Law; and then they go and give a Lawyer money to tell them
+ which of them was the offender. The Lawyer, being glad to maintain
+ his own trade, sets them together by the ears till all their money
+ be near spent; and then bids them refer the business to their
+ neighbors to make them friends, which might have been done at the
+ first. So that the course of the Law and Lawyers hath been a mere
+ snare to entrap the people and to pull their estates from them by
+ craft. For the Lawyers do uphold the Conqueror's Interest and the
+ People's Slavery; so that the King, seeing this, did put all the
+ affairs of Judicature into their hands: and all this must be called
+ Justice, but it is a sore evil.
+
+ "But now if the Laws were few and short, and often read, it would
+ prevent those evils. Everyone, knowing when they did well and when
+ ill, would be very cautious of their words and actions, and thus
+ would escape the Lawyer's craft. As Moses' Law in Israel's
+ Commonwealth: '_The People did talk of them when they lay down and
+ when they rose up, and as they walked by the way, and bound them as
+ bracelets upon their hands_:' so that they were an understanding
+ people in the Laws wherein their peace did depend. But it is a sign
+ that England is a blinded and snared generation; their Leaders,
+ through pride and covetousness, have caused them to err, yea and
+ perish too, for want of the knowledge of the Laws, which hath the
+ Power of Life and Death, Freedom and Bondage in its hand. But I
+ hope better things hereafter."
+
+Winstanley, then, we regret to say, was ambitious enough to attempt to
+formulate a whole series of rigid artificial laws, which he evidently
+deemed adapted to promote the prosperity and preserve the happiness of
+his ideal Commonwealth: laws for the planting of the Earth, for
+Navigation, Trade, Marriage, etc. etc. The curious reader will find them
+almost in full in Appendix C. Many of them may seem to us unnecessary,
+but then we should remember that we have at our command a greater store
+of economic knowledge, and more accurate economic reasoning, than were
+available to Winstanley. Many of his laws will appear to us
+unnecessarily severe; but if we compare them with those prevailing for
+many, many years after his time, they will appear, by comparison, both
+mild and humane. As it seems to us, Winstanley intended to formulate
+suggestions rather than Laws in the accepted sense of the term:
+suggestions by following which the Earth could be planted and harvested,
+and all handicraft, trade, commerce and industries carried on, and the
+fruits of the united labours of all equitably distributed amongst all
+according to their needs, without having recourse to "the thieving art
+of buying and selling" either the Earth or the fruits thereof.
+
+The pamphlet concludes with the following quaint and yet philosophic
+lines, with which our notice of it may also fittingly close:
+
+ "Here is the Righteous Law, Man wilt thou it maintain?
+ It may be, as hath still, in the World been slain.
+ Truth appears in Light, Falsehood rules in Power;
+ To see these things to be, is cause of grief each hour.
+ Knowledge, Why didst thou come, to wound and not to cure?
+ I sent not for thee, thou didst me inlure.
+ Where knowledge does increase, there sorrows multiply,
+ To see the great deceit which in the World doth lie.
+ Man saying one thing now, unsaying it anon,
+ Breaking all Engagements, when deeds for him are done.
+ O Power where art thou? thou must mend things amiss;
+ Come, change the heart of Man, and make him Truth to kiss:
+ O Death, where art thou? wilt thou not tidings send?
+ I fear thee not, thou art my loving friend.
+ Come take this body, and scatter it in the Four,
+ That I may dwell in One, and rest in peace once more."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+CONCLUDING REMARKS
+
+ "While God gave to man a capacity to labour, He also gave him a
+ right to the object (the earth) on which that labour must be
+ employed to produce the necessaries of life. This gift of God is to
+ all men alike. No compact or consent or legislation on the part of
+ one portion of the community, can ever justly deprive another
+ portion of the community of their right of their share of the
+ earth, and of its natural productions. No arrangement or agreement
+ or legislation of men now dead, can justly deprive the present
+ inhabitants of the earth, or any portion of those inhabitants, of
+ their right to labour, and to labour for their own profit, on some
+ portion of the earth which God has given to man."--PATRICK EDWARD
+ DOVE, _Elements of Political Science_. 1854.
+
+ "Our postulates are the primary perceptions of human reason, the
+ fundamental teachings of the Christian faith. We hold: That--This
+ world is the creation of God. The men brought into it for the brief
+ period of their earthly lives are the equal creatures of His
+ bounty, the equal subjects of His provident care.... Being the
+ equal creatures of the Creator, equally entitled under His
+ providence to live their lives and satisfy their needs, men are
+ equally entitled to the use of land, and any adjustment that denies
+ this equal use of land is morally wrong."--HENRY GEORGE, _An Open
+ Letter to Pope Leo XIII_. 1891.[228:1]
+
+
+Here, then, we must bid farewell to Gerrard Winstanley. We are uncertain
+as to the place and year of his birth; we know not where he lived, nor
+where or when he died; yet his words still appeal to us, prompting us to
+cast off the blinding and distorting spectacles of convention and
+custom, to look the facts of social life fairly and squarely in the
+face, and boldly to proclaim whatever social truths reflection and study
+may reveal to us. Such are the lessons which his life and teachings seem
+to us to inculcate.
+
+What Winstanley regarded, and what a steadily increasing number of
+earnest students to-day regard, as a fundamental social truth was
+revealed to him; and right well he gave expression, by words and deeds,
+to his strong and well-grounded conviction of the equal claim of all to
+the use of Mother Earth, to the use of the nation's natural home,
+workhouse and storehouse, whence, by labour, everything necessary to
+life and comfort can alone be derived. Winstanley realised, as they
+to-day realise, that to admit in the abstract the Fatherhood of God and
+the Brotherhood of Man, to admit the equal claim of all to life, and yet
+to deny the equal claim of all to the use of God's Earth, to share in
+those blessings which the great Father of all men has lavished upon His
+children, and which form the only means by which life can be maintained,
+is but hypocrisy and cant. The "rights of property," the financial
+interests of the privileged classes, the Elder Brothers, the so-called
+"power of the capitalists," may be based on and involved in the
+recognition of the claim of the few to control the use of the Earth. But
+the rights of man, the material, moral and spiritual interests of the
+masses of mankind, their emancipation from the unjust economic
+conditions to-day enthralling and impoverishing them, narrowing and
+degrading their lives, depriving them of all real enjoyment of the
+present, as of all hope for the future, hindering the advance of the
+race to a nobler civilisation, to a higher plane of individual and
+social life, depend upon our recognising and enforcing the claim of all
+to the use of the Earth, and to share in the bounties of Nature, upon
+equitable terms. What Winstanley discovered and proclaimed in the
+Seventeenth Century, Henry George rediscovered and again proclaimed in
+the Nineteenth Century, and that in tones which are still reverberating
+and producing their effects on social thought throughout the length and
+breadth of the civilised world, promising ultimately to produce a change
+in social conditions compared with which the abolition of slavery sinks
+into comparative insignificance. It is no longer a question of the
+emancipation of a few chattel slaves, but of the whole human race.
+
+Fundamental social laws and institutions, based upon inequality of
+rights, must necessarily produce inequality of conditions. And all who
+impartially consider the question will be forced to admit that both
+Winstanley and Henry George trace the prevailing social inequality, the
+debauching wealth of the few and the degrading poverty of the many, to
+its true cause. Nor can there be any doubt but that if Winstanley's
+practical and efficacious remedy had been adopted, if the use of the
+Common Land had been secured to the Common People on equitable terms,
+the economic condition of the masses of the generations which succeeded
+him, the whole subsequent economic, social and political history of the
+English People, would have been very different; and they would not now,
+in the Twentieth Century, be fighting for, or more often whispering with
+bated breath concerning, those very reforms he so strenuously advocated
+over two hundred and fifty years ago.
+
+Winstanley's writings met with the fate that awaits all thought much in
+advance of the times in which it is given to the world. They have been
+ignored and forgotten; and till very recently even his memory had
+vanished from the minds of his fellow-countrymen, to whose emancipation
+he unstintedly devoted his life. Nor can we be surprised at this, when
+we consider the circumstances. There can be little doubt but that his
+earlier writings were the quiver whence the early Quakers derived many
+of their arrows, their most pointed and consequently by their opponents
+most hated doctrines. And yet the highly philosophic and rational
+attitude toward cosmological and theological speculations Winstanley
+attained to in his last pamphlet, placed before our readers in Chapter
+XVI., seems to us sufficiently to account for his having been ignored
+even by those who may have availed themselves of his earlier works, and
+hence that these, too, should have been gradually forgotten.
+
+That the same fate should have befallen his political writings, his
+noble and yet simple and practical political ideals and aspirations, is
+also not surprising. After the Restoration, when, as we have already
+shown, Winstanley's bitter opponents, the old and new landholders, were
+in the saddle, and made unsparing, we had almost written unscrupulous,
+use of their opportunities, such doctrines as his were little likely to
+commend themselves to the privileged, cultured and educated classes.
+Prior to the Reformation, education, at least the knowledge of reading,
+writing and arithmetic, was undoubtedly more widely diffused amongst the
+masses of the people than it was subsequently--at all events, till very
+recent times. From the Restoration to within our own times, education,
+even the knowledge of reading, was as a very general rule only within
+the reach of the few, of the privileged classes and those more or less
+dependent on their favour, with whom such ideals as those voiced by
+Winstanley would naturally meet with but scant consideration. Moreover,
+though we may be accused of pessimism or cynicism for saying so, it
+seems to us that the main reason why teachings such as Winstanley's must
+necessarily remain specially unpalatable and unwelcome so long as social
+and political privileges are allowed to continue, is that they are too
+simple and direct, and the path toward their realisation too clearly
+indicated, to be acceptable or welcome to those who benefit, or think
+they benefit, by the continuance of social injustice. Winstanley's
+proposals, as the proposals of his great modern representative, Henry
+George, are, indeed, a test of sincerity. It is easy to express approval
+of Freedom, Justice, Honesty, Equality of Opportunities, Brotherhood, of
+the Equal Right of All to Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness,
+and so on, _in the abstract_, and to talk about the necessity for men,
+_other men_, dealing honestly, equitably and righteously one toward the
+other. It is difficult, though but a test of our own honesty and
+sincerity, to give practical support to unpopular doctrines and
+proposals which would tend to make these noble and elevating conceptions
+into real, living realities, and to enforce us to act honestly,
+equitably and righteously ourselves. Hence it is that even to-day those
+who advocate any such doctrines, any such social change, are either
+dismissed as impossible, utopian dreamers, or denounced as revolutionary
+demagogues, as "prophets of iniquity," "preachers of immorality,"
+"advocates of villany," as enemies of society, and so on; and if this
+fails of its desired effects, other means are found by which their
+influence is undermined and their teachings discredited in the minds of
+those who more or less blindly follow in the wake of the "superior
+classes," the privileged few and their more or less direct dependents.
+Thus Society continues its troubled slumbers until--until the necessary
+changes denied to peaceful reformers, to the thinkers of the race, may
+be demanded, by revolutionary methods, by force, by those who know
+themselves injured and oppressed, though they may be ignorant of the
+means by which they are wronged.
+
+It was, however, as a sincere and unswerving advocate of peaceful,
+practical reforms, as a courageous and unflinching opponent of the use
+of force, of the sword, even for righteous ends, that Winstanley
+appealed to his own generation, as Henry George, Ruskin and Tolstoy
+appeal to the present. Nor can there be any doubt but that his teachings
+found far more general acceptance than is to be gathered from modern
+histories of the troubled times in which his lot was cast. For not only
+was there sufficient demand to warrant the publication of at least two
+editions of _The Law of Freedom_, as of several of his other pamphlets,
+but additional testimony is to be gathered from the fact that his
+writings were immediately pirated and issued under new titles by other
+publishers:[232:1] than which no better evidence can be had of the
+popularity of any writer.
+
+However this may be, new and less earnest and less strenuous generations
+arose which knew not Winstanley, and heeded not his teachings; and till
+very recent years both he and his teachings have remained utterly
+forgotten. And yet we write the closing lines of our work with the same
+conviction with which we commenced it some five years ago, that not only
+was Gerrard Winstanley a man worthy to be recalled to the memory of his
+fellow-countrymen, as one who deserved well of his day, of his
+generation and of his country, but that the intrinsic merits of his
+writings and teachings make them worthy of our most careful study, of
+our highest admiration, and of our most profound respect.
+
+True, they have hitherto received but scant consideration; but this need
+neither surprise nor disturb us. The man in whose heart a new truth is
+born may be a benefactor of his species; but, as all history teaches us,
+if he have courage to proclaim it to the world, he must be prepared to
+meet the hatred, scoffing and abuse of the ignorant, the sneering
+contempt, if not bitter persecution, of the learned and highly placed
+upholders of already accepted beliefs and superstitions. More especially
+is this true of a social truth, of a truth which threatens the
+continuance of society in its accustomed paths, which threatens the
+continuance of some vested social wrong, of some deep-rooted and
+time-honoured social injustice, which, though it may be poisoning the
+springs of social life, necessarily finds favour in the eyes of those
+who are advantaged, or think they are advantaged, thereby. It was such a
+truth that meditation and reflection revealed to Gerrard Winstanley;
+and, as we have seen, he too met with the fate awaiting those who find
+themselves in advance of their times. As already pointed out, his memory
+has passed away, his teachings have remained unheeded. The seed he
+planted fell upon barren soil; but though so hardened by the withering
+frosts of ignorance, of that ignorance which is indeed "the curse of
+God," as to seem but as a dead stone, the vivifying sun of knowledge may
+yet stir its dormant potency, recalling it to life, to spring up and to
+develop into a stately tree, yielding its life-giving fruits, offering
+the welcome protection of its branches to all seeking rest and shelter
+beneath its shade. To-day the thought that inspired Winstanley has again
+been proclaimed by one greater than Winstanley, and is slowly but surely
+remoulding the social thought of the world. Thanks to the genius of
+Henry George, the more thoughtful and ethical-minded of our race are
+gradually coming to realise that, to use Winstanley's words--"True
+Commonwealth's Freedom lies in the free enjoyment of the Earth"; and
+that if they would remove those remediable social ills which harass,
+haunt and warp our advancing civilisation, the use of the Earth and a
+share in the bounties and blessings of Nature must be secured to each
+and all upon equitable terms and conditions. Hence it is that we feel
+impelled to close our notice of the great Apostle of Social Justice and
+Economic Freedom of the Seventeenth Century with the following eloquent
+and soul-stirring words of his still greater successor of the Nineteenth
+Century, words which almost seem but as an echo of his own, even though
+many of us even to-day may have yet to learn to appreciate their full
+force, meaning and truth:
+
+ "In our time, as in times before, creep on the insidious forces
+ that, producing inequality, destroy Liberty. On the horizon the
+ clouds begin to lower. Liberty calls to us again. We must follow
+ her further; we must trust her fully. Either we must wholly accept
+ her or she will not stay. It is not enough that men should vote; it
+ is not enough that they should be theoretically equal before the
+ law. They must have liberty to avail themselves of the
+ opportunities and means of life; they must stand on equal terms
+ with reference to the bounties of nature. Either this, or Liberty
+ withdraws her light! Either this, or darkness comes on, and the
+ very forces that progress has evolved turn to powers that work
+ destruction. This is the universal law. This is the lesson of the
+ centuries. Unless its foundations be laid in justice the social
+ structure cannot stand."
+
+
+END.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[228:1] Published under the title, _The Condition of Labour_ (Swan,
+Sonnenschein & Co., London).
+
+[232:1] The following are some of such pirated publications: _Articles
+of High Treason._ British Museum, Press Mark, E. 521. _A Declaration for
+Freedom._ E. 321. _The Levellers Remonstrance._ E. 652. 12.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX A
+
+THE FUNDAMENTAL AND JUST CHIEF ARTICLES OF ALL THE PEASANTRY AND
+VILLEINS BY WHICH THEY DEEM THEMSELVES OPPRESSED
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+To the Christian Reader, Peace and the Grace of God through
+Christ,--There are many Anti-Christians who now take occasion to libel
+the Gospel on account of the assembled peasantry, saying these be the
+fruits of the New Gospel, to obey none, to raise rebellion in all
+places, to rush to arms to reform, to root out, and perhaps to destroy
+all spiritual and temporal authority. All such godless and wicked
+judgements the Articles here written do answer; in the first place, so
+that the shame may be lifted off the word of God; in the second, to
+excuse in a Christian manner this uprising of the peasants.
+
+In the first place, the Gospel is no cause of any uprising, seeing that
+it is the word of Christ, the promised Messiah, whose word and life
+teach naught save love, peace, patience and unity; so all who believe in
+this Christ should be loving, peaceful, patient and united. The object
+of all the Articles of the Peasants, when once clearly apprehended, is
+that they may hear the Gospel and live according to the Gospel. How then
+can Anti-Christians denounce the Gospel as a cause of rebellion and
+disobedience? But that Anti-Christians and Enemies of the Gospel should
+rise up against such requirements, of this the Gospel is not the cause,
+but the Devil, the most hurtful enemy of the Gospel, who arouses
+infidelity in his followers, so that the word of God, which teaches
+peace and unity, may be trodden down and taken away.
+
+In the second place, the following show clearly that the peasants in
+their Articles demand the Gospel for teaching and for life; therefore
+they cannot be called disobedient or rebellious. But should God hear the
+peasants, who sincerely desire to live according to His word: Who will
+oppose the will of God? (Rom. xi.). Who will impeach His judgment? (Isa.
+xi.). Who dare resist His majesty? (Rom. viii.). Did He not hear the
+Children of Israel when they called on Him, and delivered them out of
+the hand of Pharaoh (II Moses 3. 7), and can He not to-day also save His
+own? Aye, He will save them, and that speedily (Luke xviii. 8).
+Therefore, Christian Reader, read the following Articles sedulously, and
+then judge.
+
+
+FIRST ARTICLE.
+
+It is our humble request and desire, as also our will and intention,
+that henceforth the community itself shall have power to choose their
+Pastor, as also to dismiss him should he be found unsuitable. The Pastor
+so chosen shall preach to us the Gospel clearly and purely, free from
+all man-made additions, teachings and ordinances. For whoever preaches
+to us the true Faith giveth us reason to pray to God for His mercy, and
+to call up within us and confirm us in the true Faith. For if we do not
+enjoy His grace, we remain mere flesh and blood, which profiteth not. It
+is clearly written in the Scriptures that it is only through the true
+Faith that we can come to God, and only through His mercy that we can be
+saved. Therefore it is that we require such a Pastor and Minister.
+
+
+SECOND ARTICLE.
+
+_Secondly_, As the just tithe was established in the Old Testament, and
+in the New covered all dues, so we will gladly furnish the just tithe of
+corn, but only in a seemly manner, according to which it should be given
+to God, and divided among His servants. It is the due of a Pastor, as
+the Word of God clearly proclaims. Therefore it is our will that the
+Church Overseers, such as are appointed by the Community, shall collect
+and receive this tithe, and therefrom shall give to the Pastor, who
+shall be chosen by the Community, suitable and sufficient subsistence
+for him and his, as the whole Community may deem just. The surplus shall
+be devoted to the use of the poor and needy, as we are instructed in the
+Holy Scriptures. And so that no general tax shall be levied on the poor,
+their share of such taxation shall be defrayed out of such surplus.
+
+In villages where the right to the tithe has been sold, out of sheer
+necessity, the buyers shall lose nothing, but their rights shall be
+redeemed in a seemly manner. But those who have not bought the right to
+the tithe from the village, but who or whose fathers have simply usurped
+it to themselves, we will not and we should not give them anything. We
+owe such men nothing; but we are willing out of the proceeds of such
+tithe to support our chosen Pastor, and to relieve the needy as we are
+commanded in the Holy Scriptures.
+
+The small tithe we will not give. For God the Lord hath created the
+beasts free to mankind (Gen. i.). It is only a mere human invention that
+we should pay tithe on them. Therefore we shall not pay such tithe for
+the future.
+
+
+THIRD ARTICLE.
+
+_Thirdly_, It has hitherto been the custom that we should be held as
+serfs, which is deplorable, since Christ redeemed us all with His
+precious blood, the shepherd as well as the noble, the lowest as well as
+the highest, none being excepted. Therefore it accords with Scripture
+that we should be free; and we will be free. Not that we are absolutely
+free, or desire to be free from all authority: this God does not teach
+us. We are to live according to His commandments, not according to the
+promptings of the flesh; but shall love God as our Master, and recognise
+Him as the one nearest to us. And everything He has commanded we shall
+do; and His commands do not instruct us to disobey the orders of the
+Authorities. On the contrary, not only before the Authorities, but
+before all men we are to be humble; so that in all matters fitting and
+Christian we shall gladly obey the orders of those who have been chosen
+or have been set up over us. And doubtless, as true and honest
+Christians, you will gladly abolish serfdom, or prove it to be in
+accordance with the Gospel.
+
+
+FOURTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Fourthly_, It has hitherto been the custom that no poor man should have
+any right to the game, the birds, or to the fish in the running waters.
+This seems to us unseemly and unbrotherly, and not to be in accordance
+with the Word of God. Moreover, in some places the authorities let the
+game increase to our injury and mighty undoing, since we have to permit
+that which God has caused to grow for the use of man to be unavailingly
+devoured by the beasts; and we have to hold our peace concerning this,
+which is against God and our neighbours. When our Lord God created
+mankind, He gave him power over all creatures, over the birds in the air
+and the fish in the waters. Therefore as regards those who control the
+running waters, and who can show us documents to prove that they
+purchased it with money, we do not desire to take it away from such men
+by force, but to come to some Christian agreement with them in brotherly
+love. Those who have no such documents shall share with the community in
+a seemly manner.
+
+
+FIFTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Fifthly_, We find ourselves oppressed as regards the woods. For our
+Lords have taken to themselves all the woods; and when poor men require
+any wood, they have to buy it with money. Our view is that such woods,
+whether claimed by spiritual or by temporal Lords, as have not been
+purchased, should return to the community, and be free to all in a
+seemly manner. So that those who require wood for firing shall be free
+to take same without payment, as also if they require any for
+carpentering: but, of course, always with the knowledge of the chosen
+Authorities of the community. But where there are no woods save those as
+have been honestly purchased, with such we will arrange the matter in a
+brotherly and Christian spirit. And in cases where the land was first
+appropriated and afterwards sold, we will also come to an agreement with
+the buyers according to the circumstances of the case, and with regard
+to brotherly love and the Holy Writings.
+
+
+SIXTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Sixthly_, The burden of service presses heavily upon us, and is daily
+increased. We desire that this matter shall be looked into, and that we
+be not so heavily burdened, but shall be mercifully dealt with herein;
+that we should serve but as our fathers have served, but only according
+to the Word of God.
+
+
+SEVENTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Seventhly_, Henceforth we will no longer allow ourselves to be
+oppressed by the Lords, but according as a Lord hath granted the land,
+so shall it be held, according to the agreement between the Lord and the
+peasant. The Lord shall not force him to render more service for naught;
+so that the peasant shall enjoy his holding in peace and unoppressed.
+But if the Lord hath need of service, the peasant shall be willing and
+obedient to him before others; but it shall be at the hour and the time
+when it shall not injure the peasant, and at a proper remuneration.
+
+
+EIGHTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Eighthly_, Many of us are oppressed in that we hold lands that will not
+bear the price placed on them, so that the peasant thereby is ruined and
+undone. Our desire is that the Lord shall allow such land to be seen by
+honourable men, so that the price shall be fixed in such a manner that
+the peasant shall not have his labour in vain: for every labourer is
+worthy of his hire (Matt. x.).
+
+
+NINTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Ninthly_, We suffer greatly because of the new punishments that are
+continually laid upon us. Not that they punish us according to the
+circumstances of the case, but at times spitefully and at other times
+favourably. We would be punished according to the old written
+punishments, and not arbitrarily.
+
+
+TENTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Tenthly_, We suffer in that some have taken to themselves meadows and
+arable land that belong to the community. Such land we would take once
+more into the hands of our communities wheresoever they have not been
+honestly purchased. But where they have been purchased, then shall the
+case be agreed upon in peace and brotherly love, according to the
+circumstances of the case.
+
+
+ELEVENTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Eleventhly_, We would have the custom called the death-due entirely
+abolished. We will never suffer nor permit that widows and orphans shall
+be disgraced and robbed of their own, contrary to God and honour, as has
+happened in many cases and in many ways. Those who would protect and
+shelter them, they have abused and injured, and when these have had
+some little property, even this they have taken. Such things God will no
+longer suffer, they shall be abolished. For such things no man shall
+henceforth be compelled to give aught, be it little or much.
+
+
+TWELFTH ARTICLE.
+
+_Twelfthly_, It is our resolve and final decision that if any of the
+Articles here set forth be not according to the Word of God, we will,
+whenever they are shown to be against the Word of God, at once withdraw
+therefrom. Yea, even though certain articles were now granted and it
+should hereafter be found that they are unjust, from that hour they
+shall be null and void and of no effect. The same shall happen if there
+should with truth be found in the Scriptures yet more Articles which
+were held to be against God and a stumbling-block to our neighbours,
+even though we should have determined to preserve such for ourselves.
+For we have determined and resolved to practice ourselves in all
+Christian doctrines. Therefore we pray God the Lord who can grant us the
+same, and none other. The Peace of Christ be with you all. Amen.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX B
+
+TOLERATION
+
+
+The statement that toleration was the one leading principle of
+Cromwell's life, may seem somewhat exaggerated to those who have not
+carefully studied his career. By his own words let him be judged.
+Writing to Major Crawford as early as March 1643 (1644) he plainly tells
+him--"Sir, the State, in choosing men to serve it, takes no notice of
+their opinions; if they be willing faithfully to serve it, that
+satisfies." After Naseby, under date June 14th, 1645, in his dispatch to
+the Speaker, he tells the Presbyterian House of Commons--"Honest men
+served you faithfully in this action. Sir, they are trusty; I beseech
+you in the name of God not to discourage them.... _He that ventures his
+life for the liberty of the country, I wish he trust God for the liberty
+of his conscience, and you for the liberty he fights for._" The meaning
+of these words was not lost to the House, so when sending his dispatch
+to the press, they carefully omitted this paragraph.
+
+After the siege of Bristol, Cromwell is still more outspoken. Under date
+September 14th, 1645, he writes to the Speaker as follows--"Presbyterians,
+Independents, all have here the same spirit of faith and prayer; the same
+presence and answer; they agree here, have no names of difference; pity
+it should be otherwise anywhere--_for, bretheren, in things of the mind
+we look for no compulsion but that of light and reason_." This dispatch,
+too, the House of Commons took care to mutilate before sending it to the
+press.
+
+As he advanced in his career, Cromwell became still more outspoken. In
+his opening speech to his first Parliament, after having given
+expression to his view that the Lord had given them the victory for the
+common good of all, "for the good of the whole flock," he
+continues--"Therefore I beseech you--but I think I need not--have a care
+of the whole flock! Love the sheep, love the lambs; love all, tender
+all, cherish and countenance all, in all things that are good. _And if
+the poorest Christian, the most mistaken Christian, shall desire to live
+peaceably and quietly under you--I say, if any shall desire but to lead
+a life of godliness and honesty, let him be protected._"
+
+Again, when dissolving his first Parliament (Speech IV.), he expresses
+the same thought in the following words--"Is there not yet upon the
+spirits of men a strange itch? Nothing will satisfy them unless they can
+press their finger upon their bretheren's consciences, to pinch them
+there. To do this was no part of the contest we had with the common
+adversary. For religion was not the thing at first contended for, but
+God brought it to that issue at last; and gave it unto us by way of
+redundancy; and at last it proved to be that which was most dear to us.
+And wherein consisted this more than in obtaining that liberty from the
+tyranny of the Bishops to all species of Protestants to worship God
+according to their own light and consciences? ... And was it fit for them
+to sit heavy upon others? Is it ingenuous to ask liberty and not to give
+it? What greater hypocrisy than for those who were oppressed by the
+Bishops to become the greatest oppressors themselves, so soon as their
+yoke was removed? I could wish that they who call for liberty now also
+had not too much of that spirit, if the power were in their hands."
+
+Cromwell, in short, had no deep-rooted objection either to a moderate
+Episcopacy or to a tolerant Presbyterianism, though, as he somewhere
+says, "both are a hard choice," provided only there was sufficient
+consideration for those who could not reconcile their consciences to the
+demands of the established State Church. His great desire was "for union
+and right understanding" between Protestants of all shades, in fact
+between "godley" (religious or moral) people of all races, countries and
+denominations, "Scots, English, Jews, Gentiles, Presbyterians,
+Independents, Anabaptists, and all." (See his letter to Hammond, _Clarke
+Papers_, vol. ii. p. 49.) His aim was to reconcile, or rather to stand
+as mediator between all the opposing sects. "Fain," he writes to one of
+his most devoted adherent (see _Cromwell's Letters and Speeches_,
+Carlyle, part vii. p. 363), "would I have my service accepted of the
+Saints, if the Lord will;--but it is not so. Being of different
+judgements, and those of each sort seeking most to propagate their own,
+that spirit of kindness that is to them all is hardly accepted of any. I
+hope I can say it, My life has been a willing sacrifice,--and I
+hope--for them all. Yet it much falls out as when the two Hebrews were
+rebuked: you know upon whom they turned their displeasure."
+
+In short, Cromwell's attitude toward all honest, sincere, "godley" men
+was the same as his attitude toward George Fox. "Come again to my
+house," he said, when dismissing the sturdy Quaker, "for if thou and I
+were but an hour a day together we should be nearer one to the other. I
+wish you no more ill than I do to my own soul."
+
+On November 17th, 1645, "the Dissenting Bretheren," the representatives
+of the Independents in the Westminster Assembly, declared for a full
+liberty of conscience. "They expressed themselves," as Baillie, the
+Scotch Presbyterian commissioner, wrote sadly, "for toleration, not only
+to themselves, but to all sects." In February of the same year, the
+Oxford Clergy, who had been consulted by the King as to the limits of
+possible concession, gave strong evidence that the pressure of events
+were forcing them to move, even though slowly, in the same direction.
+(See Gardiner, _History of the Civil War_, vol. ii. pp. 125-126.)
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX C
+
+WHAT MAY BE THOSE PARTICULAR LAWS, OR SUCH A METHOD OF LAWS, WHEREBY A
+COMMONWEALTH MAY BE GOVERNED?
+
+
+1. The bare letter of the Law established by Act of Parliament shall be
+the Rule for Officers and People, and the chief Judge of all actions.
+
+2. He or they who add or diminish from the Law, excepting in the Court
+of Parliament, shall be cashiered his Office, and never bear Office
+more.
+
+3. No man shall administer the Law for Money or Reward. He that doth
+shall die as a Traitor to the Commonwealth. For when Money must buy and
+sell Justice, and bear all the sway, there is nothing but Oppression to
+be expected.
+
+ [Here, as also in other Laws yet to follow, Winstanley, and as it
+ seems to us without sufficient grounds, gives up the position taken
+ up in The New Law of Righteousness, that capital punishment was
+ absolutely unjustifiable.]
+
+4. The Laws shall be read by the Minister to the People four times in
+the year, viz., every quarter; that everyone may know whereunto they are
+to yield obedience, that none may die for want of knowledge.
+
+5. No accusation shall be taken against any man unless it be proved by
+two or three witnesses, or his own confession.
+
+6. No man shall suffer any punishment but for matter of fact or reviling
+words. But no man shall be troubled for his judgement or practice in the
+things of his God, so he live quiet in the Land.
+
+7. The accuser and the accused shall always appear face to face before
+any Officer; that both sides may be heard, and no wrong to either party.
+
+8. If any Judge execute his own will contrary to the Law, or where there
+is no Law to warrant him in, he shall be cashiered, and never bear
+Office more.
+
+9. He who raises an accusation against any man, and cannot prove it,
+shall suffer the same punishment as the other should, if proved. An
+accusation is, when one man complains of another to an Officer, all
+other accusations the Law takes no notice of.
+
+10. He who strikes his neighbor shall be struck himself by the
+executioner, blow for blow, and shall lose eye for eye, tooth for tooth,
+limb for limb, life for life. And the reason is that men should be
+tender of one another's bodies, doing as they would be done by.
+
+11. If any man strike an Officer, he shall be made a servant under the
+Task-master for a whole year.
+
+12. He who endeavours to stir up contention among neighbors, by
+tale-bearing or false reports, shall the first time be reproved openly
+by the Overseers among the people. The second time he shall be whipped.
+The third time he shall be a servant under the Task-master for three
+months. And if he continue, he shall be a servant for ever, and lose his
+Freedom in the Commonwealth.
+
+13. If any give reviling or provoking words, whereby his neighbor's
+spirit is burdened, if complaint be made to the Overseers, they shall
+admonish the offender privately to forbear. If he continue to offend his
+neighbor, the next time he shall be openly reproved and admonished
+before the Congregation when met together. If he continue, the third
+time he shall be whipped; the fourth time, if proof be made by
+witnesses, he shall be a servant under the Task-master for twelve
+months.
+
+14. He who will rule as a Lord over his Brother, unless he be an Officer
+commanding obedience to the Law, he shall be admonished as aforesaid,
+and receive like punishment, if he continue.
+
+
+LAWS FOR THE PLANTING OF THE EARTH.
+
+15. Every household shall keep all instruments and tools fit for the
+tillage of the Earth, either for planting, reaping or threshing. Some
+households, which have many men in them, shall keep ploughs, carts,
+harrows, and such like. Other households shall keep spades, pick-axes,
+pruning hooks, and such like, according as every family is furnished
+with men to work therewith. And if any Master or Father of a Family be
+negligent herein, the Overseer for that Circuit shall admonish him
+between them two. If he continue negligent, the Overseer shall reprove
+him before all the people. And if he utterly refuse, then the ordering
+of that Family shall be given to another, and he shall be Servant under
+the Task-master till he reform.
+
+16. Every Family shall come into the field with sufficient assistance at
+seed time, to plough, dig and plant, and at harvest time to reap the
+fruits of the Earth, and to carry them into the Storehouses, as the
+Overseers order the work and the number of workmen. If any refuse to
+assist in the work, the Overseer shall ask the reason; and if it be
+sickness or any distemper that hinders them, they are freed from such
+service; if mere idleness keep them back, they are to suffer punishment
+according to the Laws against Idleness.
+
+
+LAWS AGAINST IDLENESS.
+
+17. If any refuse to learn a trade, or refuse to work in seed-time, or
+refuse to be a waiter in storehouses, and yet will feed and clothe
+himself with other men's labors, the Overseer shall first admonish him
+privately. If he continue idle, he shall be reproved openly before all
+the people by the Overseer, and shall be forbore with a month after this
+reproof. If he still continue idle, he shall be whipped, and let go at
+liberty for a month longer. If still he continue idle, he shall be
+delivered into the Task-master's hand, who shall set him to work for
+twelve months, or till he submit to right order. The reason why every
+young man shall be trained up in some work or other, is to prevent pride
+and contention; it is for the health of their bodies; it is a pleasure
+to the mind to be free in labors one with another; and it provides
+plenty of food and all necessaries for the Commonwealth.
+
+
+LAWS FOR STOREHOUSES.
+
+18. In every Town and City shall be appointed Storehouses for flax,
+wood, leather, cloth, and for all such commodities as come from beyond
+seas. These shall be called General Storehouses, whence every particular
+Family may fetch such commodities as they want, either for their own use
+in their house, or for to work in their trades, or to carry into the
+Country Storehouses.
+
+19. Every particular house and shop in a town or city shall be a
+particular Storehouse or Shop, as now they be. And these shops shall
+either be furnished by the particular labor of that family according to
+the trade that family is of, or by the labor of other lesser families of
+the same trade, as all shops in every town are now furnished.
+
+20. The waiters in Storehouses shall deliver the goods in their charge
+without receiving any money, as they shall receive in their goods
+without paying any money.
+
+21. If any waiter in a Storehouse neglect his Office, upon a just
+complaint, the Overseers shall acquaint the Judge's Court therewith; and
+from thence he shall receive his sentence, to be discharged that house
+and office, to be appointed some other work under the Task-master; and
+another shall have his place. For he who may live in Freedom and will
+not, is to taste of servitude.
+
+
+LAWS FOR OVERSEERS.
+
+22. The only work of every Overseer is to see the Laws executed. For the
+Law is the True Magistracy of the land.
+
+23. If any Overseer favour any in their idleness and neglect the
+execution of the Laws, he shall be reproved, the first time by the
+Judge's Court; the second time cashiered his Office, and shall never
+bear Office more, but fall back into the ranks of young people and
+servants to be a worker.
+
+24. New Overseers, at their first entrance into their office, shall look
+back upon the actions of the Old Overseers of the last year, to see if
+they have been faithful in their places, and consented to no breach of
+Law, whereby Kingly Bondage should in any way be brought in.
+
+25. The Overseers for Trades shall see every Family to lend assistance
+to plant and reap the fruits of the Earth, to work in their Trades, and
+to furnish the Storehouses. And to see that the Waiters in Storehouses
+be diligent to receive in and deliver out any goods, without buying and
+selling, to any man whatsoever.
+
+26. While any Overseer is in performance of his place, every one shall
+assist him, upon pain of open reproof (or cashiered if he be another
+Officer) or forfeiture of freedom, according to the nature of the
+business in hand, in which he refused his assistance.
+
+
+LAWS AGAINST BUYING AND SELLING.
+
+27. If any man entice another to buy and sell, and he who is enticed
+does not yield, but makes it known to the Overseer, the enticer shall
+lose his freedom for twelve months, and the Overseer shall give words of
+commendation of him that refused the enticement before all the
+Congregation, for his faithfulness to the Commonwealth's Peace.
+
+
+THE UNPARDONABLE SIN!
+
+28. If any do buy and sell the Earth, or the fruits thereof, unless it
+be to or with strangers of another Nation, according to the Law of
+Navigation, they shall be both put to death as Traitors to the Peace of
+the Commonwealth. Because it brings in Kingly Bondage again, and is the
+occasion of all quarrels and oppressions.
+
+29. He, or she, who calls the Earth his, and not his brother's, shall be
+set upon a stool, with those words written in his forehead, before all
+the Congregation, and afterwards be made a Servant for twelve months
+under the Task-master. If he quarrel, or seek by secret persuasion or
+open rising in arms to set up such a Kingly Propriety, he shall be put
+to death.
+
+30. The Storehouses shall be every man's subsistence, and not any ones.
+
+31. No man shall either give hire or take hire for his work; for this
+brings in Kingly Bondage. If any Freeman want help, there are young
+people, or such as are common servants, to do it by the Overseer's
+appointment. He that gives and he that hires for work, shall both lose
+their freedom and become Servants for twelve months under the
+Task-master.
+
+
+LAWS FOR NAVIGATION.
+
+32. Because other Nations as yet own Monarchy, and will buy and sell,
+therefore it is convenient for the peace of our Commonwealth, that our
+ships do transport our English goods and exchange for theirs, and
+conform to the customs of other Nations in buying and selling: Always
+provided that what goods our ships carry out, they shall be the
+Commonwealth's goods; and all their trading with other Nations shall be
+upon the Common Stock, to enrich the Storehouses.
+
+
+LAWS FOR SILVER AND GOLD.
+
+33. As Silver and Gold is either found out in mines in our own Land, or
+brought by shipping from beyond Sea, it shall not be coined with a
+Conqueror's stamp upon it, to set up buying and selling under his name,
+or by his leave. For there shall be no other use for it in the
+Commonwealth than to make dishes and other necessaries for the ornament
+of houses, as now there is use made of brass, pewter and iron, or any
+other metal in their use. But in case other Nations whose commodities we
+want, will not exchange with us unless we give them money, then pieces
+of silver and gold may be stamped with the Commonwealth's Arms upon
+them, for the same use and no otherwise.
+
+For where money bears all the sway, there is no regard of that Golden
+Rule, "_Do as you would be done by_." Justice is bought and sold; nay,
+Injustice is sometimes bought for money; and it is the cause of all wars
+and oppressions. Certainly the Righteous Spirit of the Whole Creation
+did never enact a Law that his weak and simple men should go from
+England to the East Indies and fetch silver and gold to bring in their
+hands to their bretheren, and give it them for their good-will to let
+them plant the Earth, and live and enjoy their livelihood therein.
+
+
+LAWS TO CHOOSE OFFICERS.
+
+34. All Overseers and State Officers shall be chosen new every year, to
+prevent the rise of Ambition and Covetousness. For the Nations have
+smarted sufficiently by suffering Officers to continue long in an
+Office, or to remain in an Office by hereditary succession.
+
+35. A man who is of a turbulent spirit, given to quarrelling and
+provoking words to his neighbor, shall not be chosen any Officer while
+he so continues.
+
+36. All men of twenty years of age upwards shall have freedom of voice
+to choose Officers, unless they be such as lie under sentence of the
+Law.
+
+37. Such shall be chosen Officers as are rational men of moderate
+conversation, and who have experience in the Laws of the Commonwealth.
+
+38. All men from forty years of age upwards shall be capable to be
+chosen State Officers, and none younger, unless any one by his industry
+and moderate conversation doth move the people to choose him.
+
+39. If any man make suit to move the people to choose him an Officer,
+that man shall not be chosen at all that time. If another man shall
+persuade the people to choose him that made suit for himself, they shall
+both loose their freedom at that time, viz., they shall neither have a
+voice to choose another, nor be chosen themselves.
+
+
+LAWS AGAINST TREACHERY.
+
+40. He who professes the service of a righteous God by preaching and
+prayer, and makes a trade to get the possessions of the Earth, shall be
+put to death for a Witch and a Cheater.
+
+41. He who pretends one thing in words, and his actions declare his
+intent was another thing, shall never bear Office in the Commonwealth.
+
+
+WHAT IS FREEDOM?
+
+Every Freeman shall have a Freedom in the Earth, to plant or build, to
+fetch from the Storehouses anything he wants, and shall enjoy the fruits
+of his labor without restraint from any. He shall not pay Rent to any
+Landlord. He shall be capable of being chosen Officer, so he be above
+forty years of age, and he shall have a voice to choose Officers though
+he be under forty years of age. If he want any young men to be
+assistants to him in his trade or household employment, the Overseers
+shall appoint him young men or maids to be his servants in his family.
+
+
+LAWS FOR SUCH AS HAVE LOST THEIR FREEDOM.
+
+42. All those who have lost their freedom shall be clothed in white
+woollen cloth, that they may be distinguished from others.
+
+43. They shall be under the government of a Task-master, who shall
+appoint them to be porters or laborers, to do any work that any Freeman
+wants to be done.
+
+44. They shall do all kinds of labor without exception, but their
+constant work shall be carriers or carters, to carry corn or other
+provision from Storehouse to Storehouse, from Country to Cities, and
+thence to Countries.
+
+45. If any of these refuse to do such work, the Task-master shall see
+them whipped, and shall feed them with coarse diet. And what hardship is
+this? For Freemen work the easiest work, and these shall work the
+hardest work. And to what end is this but to kill their Pride and
+Unreasonableness, that they may become useful men in the Commonwealth?
+
+46. The wife or children of such as have lost their Freedom shall not be
+as slaves till they have lost their Freedom as their parents and
+husbands have done.
+
+47. He who breaks any laws shall be the first time reproved in words in
+private or in public, as is shown before; the next time whipped; the
+third time lose his Freedom, either for a short time or for ever, and
+not to be any Officer.
+
+48. He who hath lost his Freedom shall be a common servant to any
+Freeman who comes to the Task-master and requires one to do any work for
+him. Always provided, that after one Freeman hath by the consent of the
+Task-master appointed him his work, another Freeman shall not call him
+thence till that work be done.
+
+49. If any of these offenders revile the Laws by words, they shall be
+soundly whipped and fed with coarse diet. If they raise weapons against
+the Laws, they shall die as Traitors.
+
+
+LAWS TO RESTORE SLAVES TO FREEDOM.
+
+50. When any Slaves [_i.e._ those who have lost their Freedom] give open
+testimony of their humility and diligence, and of their care to observe
+the Laws of the Commonwealth, they are then capable to be restored to
+their Freedom, when the time of servitude has expired, according to the
+Judge's sentence. But if they continue opposite to the Laws, they shall
+continue slaves for another term of time.
+
+51. None shall be restored to Freedom till they have been a twelve month
+laboring servants to the Commonwealth; for they shall winter and summer
+in that condition.
+
+52. When any is restored to Freedom, the Judge at the Senator's Court
+shall pronounce his Freedom, and give liberty to him to be clothed in
+what other coloured garments he will.
+
+53. If any person be sick or wounded, the Chyrurgeons, who are trained
+up in the knowledge of Herbs and Minerals, and know how to apply
+plasters or physick, shall go when they are sent for to any who need
+their help, but require no reward, because the Common Stock is the
+public pay for every man's labor.
+
+54. When a dead person is to be buried, the Officers of the Parish and
+neighbors shall go along with the corpse to the grave, and see it laid
+therein in a civil manner; but the public Minister nor any other shall
+have any hand in reading or exhortation.
+
+ [Whatever we may think of this latter proviso, certain it is that
+ it would put an end to many unseemly squabblings at a time when
+ they are specially to be avoided.]
+
+55. When a man hath learned his Trade, and the time of his seven years
+Apprenticeship has expired, he shall have his Freedom to become Master
+of a Family, and the Overseers shall appoint him such young people to be
+his servants as they think fit, whether he marry or live a single life.
+
+
+LAWS FOR MARRIAGE.
+
+56. Every man and woman shall have the free liberty to marry whom they
+love, if they can obtain the love and liking of that party whom they
+would marry, and neither birth nor portion shall hinder the match. For
+we are all of one blood, mankind, and for portion, the Common
+Storehouses are every man and maid's portion, as free to one as to
+another.
+
+57. If any man lie with a maid and beget a child, he shall marry her.
+
+58. If a man lie with a woman forcibly, and she cry out and give no
+consent; if this be proved by two witnesses, or the man's confession, he
+shall be put to death, and the woman let go free: it is robbery of a
+woman's bodily freedom.
+
+59. If any man by violence endeavour to take another man's wife, the
+first time of such violent offer he shall be reproved before the
+Congregation by the Peacemaker; the second time he shall be made a
+Servant under the Task-master for twelve months; and if he forcibly lie
+with another man's wife, and she cry out, as is the case when, a maid is
+forced, the man shall be put to death.
+
+60. When any man or woman have consented to live together in marriage,
+they shall acquaint all the Overseers in the Circuit therewith, and some
+other neighbors. And being all met together, the man shall declare with
+his own mouth before them all that he takes that woman to be his wife,
+and the woman shall say the same, and desire the Overseers to be
+witnesses.
+
+
+LAWS TO SECURE ECONOMY.
+
+61. No Master of a Family shall suffer more meat to be dressed at a
+dinner or supper than will be spent and eaten by his household or
+company present, or within such a time after before it be spoilt. If
+there be any spoil constantly made in a family of the food of man, the
+Overseer shall reprove the Master for it privately; if that abuse be
+continued in his family, through his neglect of family government, he
+shall be openly reproved by the Peacemaker before all the people, and
+ashamed for his folly; the third time he shall be made a servant for
+twelve months under the Task-master, so that he may know what it is to
+get food, and another shall have the oversight of his house for the
+time.
+
+62. No man shall be suffered to keep house and have servants under him
+till he hath served seven years under command to a Master himself. The
+reason is that a man may be of age and of rational carriage before he be
+made a Governor of a Family, that the peace of the Commonwealth may be
+preserved.
+
+
+
+
+BIBLIOGRAPHY
+
+COMPLETE LIST OF "DIGGER" PUBLICATIONS.
+
+
+WINSTANLEY, The Mystery of God concerning the Whole Creation,
+ Mankind.--April 1648. (British Museum, Press Mark, 4377, a. 1.)
+
+ " The Breaking of the Day of God.--May 1648. (British Museum, P. M.,
+ 4377, a. 2.)
+
+ " The Saints' Paradise: Or the Father's Teaching the Only Satisfaction
+ to Waiting Souls.--August or September 1648. (British Museum, P. M.,
+ E. 2137.)
+
+ " Truth Lifting up its Head above Scandals.--October 1648. (British
+ Museum, P. M., 4372, a.a. 17.)
+
+ " (?) Light Shining in Buckinghamshire.--December 1648. (British
+ Museum, P. M., E. 475 (11).)
+
+ " (?) More Light Shining in Buckinghamshire.--March 1649. (British
+ Museum, P. M., E. 548 (33).)
+
+ " (?) A Declaration from the Well Affected in the County of
+ Buckinghamshire.--May 1649. (British Museum, P. M., E. 555.)
+
+ " The New Law of Righteousness.--January 1649. (Jesus College Library,
+ Oxford.)
+
+ " Fire in the Bush: The Spirit burning, not consuming but purging,
+ Mankind.--March 1649. (Bodleian Library.)
+
+ " A Declaration from the Poor Oppressed People of England.--March
+ 1649. (British Museum, Press Mark, 1027, i. 16 (3).)
+
+ " The True Levellers' Standard Advanced: Or the State of Community
+ opened and presented to the Sons of Men.--April 1649. (British
+ Museum, P. M., E. 552.)
+
+ " A Declaration of the Bloody and Unchristian Acting of William Star
+ and John Taylor of Walton, with diverse men in women's apparel, in
+ opposition to those that dig upon St. Georges Hill.--June 1649.
+ (British Museum, Press Mark, E. 561.)
+
+ " A Letter to Lord Fairfax and his Council of War.--June 1649.
+ (British Museum, P. M., E. 560 (1).)
+
+ " An Appeal to the House of Commons.--July 1649. (British Museum,
+ P. M., E. 564. Also at the Guildhall Library.)
+
+ " A Watchword to the City of London.--August 1649. (British Museum,
+ P. M., E. 573. Also at the Guildhall Library.)
+
+ " A Second Letter to Lord Fairfax.--December 1649. (Clarke Papers,
+ vol. ii. pp. 217-220.)
+
+
+COSTER, ROBERT, A Mite cast into the Common Treasury.--December 1649.
+ (British Museum, P. M., E. 585.)
+
+ " The Diggers' Mirth. (British Museum, P. M., E. 1365.)
+
+ " The Diggers' Song. (Clarke Papers, vol. ii. p. 218.)
+
+
+WINSTANLEY, A New Year's Gift for the Parliament and Army.--January
+ 1650. (British Museum, P. M., E. 587.)
+
+ " A Vindication of Those whose Endeavour it is only to make the Earth
+ a Common Treasury, called Diggers.--February 1650. (British Museum,
+ P. M., E. 1365.)
+
+ " An Appeal for Money.--April 1650. (See "A Perfect Diurnal," British
+ Museum, P. M., E. 534.)
+
+ " A Declaration from Wellingborrow, in the County of Northampton.--
+ March 1650. (British Museum, under Wellinborrow, P. M., S. Sh.
+ fol. 669 f., 15. 21.)
+
+ " An Appeal to all Englishmen to Judge between Bondage and
+ Freedom.--March 1650. (British Museum, P. M., S. Sh. fol. 669 f.,
+ 15. 23.)
+
+ " An Humble Request to the Ministers of Both Universities and to all
+ Lawyers of every Inns-a-Court.--April 1650. (Dyce and Forster's
+ Library, South Kensington Museum.)
+
+ " The Law of Freedom in a Platform: Or True Magistracie
+ Restored.--February 1652. (British Museum, P. M., E. 655. Also at
+ the Guildhall and Bodleian Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+Agreement of the People, 29, 32, 87, 103.
+
+Anabaptists, 15, 18.
+
+Army, the Model, Views of, 29;
+ Declaration of (1647), 93 (note).
+
+Army Council, Resolution of, 33;
+ Debate of, 103, 108.
+
+
+Baptism, Winstanley on, 64.
+
+Barclay (Apology), quoted, 58, 60, 65.
+
+Baxter (Thos.), quoted, 50 (note).
+
+Beard (Hibbert Lectures, 1883), quoted, 4, 10, 15, 18.
+
+Buckle, quoted, 1, 21, 22.
+
+
+Capital Punishment, Winstanley on, 69.
+
+Carlyle, quoted, 38, 165, 166, 168, 170.
+
+Cartwright, Thos., quoted, 20.
+
+Chalmers, John, quoted, 63.
+
+Chillingworth, quoted, 21.
+
+Clarke Papers, quoted, 29, 34, 35, 36, 53, 103, 106, 108, 122, 124, 130.
+
+Clergy, Winstanley on, 62, 167, 189.
+
+Coomber, Thos., quoted, 49.
+
+Coster, Robert, 126.
+
+Council of State, Letter to Fairfax, 35;
+ to Mr. Pentlow, 159.
+
+Croese, Gerrard, quoted, 49 (note).
+
+Cromwell, Oliver, quoted, 32, 33, 53, 165, 166, 168, 170;
+ Open Letter to, 164.
+
+
+Diggers, Information against, 34;
+ Fairfax's visit to, 39;
+ Mirth, 129;
+ Declaration of, 91;
+ Sufferings of, 143;
+ Travels, 150.
+
+Dispensations, Winstanley on, 53;
+ Cromwell on, 53.
+
+Doctrines, Family of Love, 16, 18;
+ Presbyterian, 20, 32;
+ Model Army, 29;
+ Independent, 31, 32;
+ Children of Light, 52, 65;
+ Anabaptists, 15, 18.
+
+Dove, Patrick Edward, quoted, 228.
+
+
+Earth, Right to use of, Winstanley on, 70, 74, 76, 80, 83, 90, 96, 104,
+118, 132, 170, 180, 213.
+
+England, Reformation in, 12;
+ Church of, 13.
+
+Erasmus, quoted, 15, 18.
+
+Everard, 36, 38.
+
+
+Fairfax, Lord, Council of State to, 35;
+ Gladman to, 39;
+ Visit to Diggers, 39;
+ Winstanley's letters to, 100, 124.
+
+Fall, the, Winstanley on, 44, 53, 70.
+
+Family of Love, History of, 15;
+ Doctrines of, 16, 18.
+
+Freedom, Winstanley on, 100, 112, 114, 179.
+
+Fuller on Family of Love, 16.
+
+
+Gardiner, quoted, 25, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 87, 163.
+
+George, Henry, quoted, 146, 205, 228, 234.
+
+Golden Rule, Winstanley on the, 39, 56, 80, 81, 86, 141, 154, 171, 190,
+217, 225.
+
+Government, Winstanley on, 68, 101, 177;
+ Definition of, 181.
+
+
+Hallam, quoted, 24.
+
+Hare's pamphlets, 38.
+
+Hooker, quoted, 21, 23.
+
+House of Commons, Apology of, 25;
+ Remonstrance of, 27;
+ Officers' Petition to, 86;
+ Appeal to, 105.
+
+
+Independents, Origin of, 14;
+ Growth of, 33;
+ Doctrines of, 31.
+
+Ireton, quoted, 106 (note).
+
+Israel's Commonwealth, Winstanley on, 82, 93, 225.
+
+
+Kingly Power, Winstanley on, 34, 100, 130, 168, 177, 202, 220.
+
+
+Land Question, Winstanley on the, 70, 71, 124, 138, 156, 171, 175, 180.
+
+Law, Winstanley on, 102, 136, 141, 168, 171, 183, 192, 197, 220;
+ Definition of, 222.
+
+Lawyers, Questions to, 102;
+ Power of, 168, 225.
+
+Light, The Inward, 45, 46, 52, 57, 59, 60, 63, 66, 77, 141, 183, 225;
+ Children of, 17, 49, 54.
+
+Locke, John, quoted, 74, 179, 197 (note), 200 (note).
+
+Lockyer, Execution and burial of, 87.
+
+Love, The Everlasting Law of, 217;
+ Family of, 15, 16, 18.
+
+Luther, quoted, 4, 10.
+
+
+Macaulay, quoted, 23, 24, 28.
+
+Mackay, Charles, quoted, 207.
+
+Mather, Cotton, on origin of Quakers, 48.
+
+Melanchthon, quoted, 9.
+
+Ministry, Winstanley on the work of, 207.
+
+
+Officers, Petition of, 86;
+ Winstanley on functions of, 184.
+
+
+Parliament, The Short and Long, 26;
+ Winstanley on work of, 194, 197.
+
+Peasantry, Demands of German, 8;
+ Condition of English, 126, 141, 151, 159.
+
+Penn, William, on Quaker Doctrines, 48 (note).
+
+People, Agreement of, 29, 32, 87, 103;
+ Condition of, 126, 141, 151, 159.
+
+Politics, Influence of religion on, 8.
+
+Prayer, Winstanley on, 63, 65.
+
+Presbyterianism, Doctrines of, 20, 32.
+
+
+Quakers, Doctrines of, 47 (note);
+ Coomber on origin of, 49;
+ Cotton Mather on, 48 (note);
+ Thos. Bennet on, 49 (note);
+ a Declaration from, 54 (note);
+ Appeal of Army, 85 (note).
+
+
+Rainborrow, Colonel, Views of, 103, 108.
+
+Ranters, Winstanley on the, 147.
+
+Reason, Luther on, 4;
+ Hooker on, 21;
+ Winstanley on, 44, 48, 59, 76.
+
+Reformation, influence of the, 3, 10, 12.
+
+Religion, Dual nature of, 6;
+ Winstanley, Definition of, 139.
+
+Restoration, the, Legislation of, 110.
+
+Resurrection, the, Winstanley on, 47, 60, 66.
+
+Revolt, The Peasants', 6, Appendix A.
+
+Riches, Winstanley on, 173.
+
+Rogers, Thorold, quoted, 7, 89, 109, 110.
+
+Rowntree, J. S., quoted, 48, 58.
+
+Ruskin, John, quoted, 61 (note).
+
+
+Sexby, Edward, Views of, 103.
+
+Shelley, quoted, 162, 178, 179.
+
+Silence, the Law of, Winstanley on, 65.
+
+
+Teachings, Human and divine, 52, 57, 59, 209, 211.
+
+Tithes, 85, 167, 173.
+
+Toleration, 13, 19, 31, 32, Appendix B.
+
+
+Vagrants, Laws against, 109.
+
+
+Wellingborrow, declaration from, 150.
+
+Whitelocke, quoted, 37, 86, 87, 152, 159.
+
+Wyclif, teachings of, 6, 13.
+
+Winstanley, on Baptism, 64;
+ Capital Punishment, 69;
+ Clergy, 62, 167, 189;
+ Dispensations, 53;
+ Earth, rights to use of, 70, 74, 76, 80, 83, 90, 96, 104, 118, 132,
+ 170, 180, 213;
+ Ecclesiastical Power, 55;
+ Education, 214;
+ Fall, the, 44, 53, 70;
+ Freedom, 100, 112, 114, 179;
+ Golden Rule, the, 39, 56, 80, 81, 86, 141, 154, 171, 190, 217, 225;
+ Government, 68, 101, 177, 181;
+ Israel's Commonwealth, 82, 93, 225;
+ Kingdom of Heaven, 47, 48, 61, 66, 211;
+ Kingly Power, 34, 100, 133, 168, 177, 202, 220;
+ Land Question, 70, 71, 124, 138, 156, 171, 175, 180;
+ Law, 102, 136, 141, 168, 171, 183, 192, 197, 220, 222;
+ Lawyers, questions to, 102;
+ power of, 168, 225;
+ Light, the Inward, 45, 46, 52, 57, 60, 63, 66, 77, 141, 183, 225;
+ Love, the Law of, 217;
+ Ministry, work of a, 207;
+ Officers, work of, 184;
+ Parliament, work of, 194, 197;
+ Prayer, 63, 65;
+ Reason, 44, 48, 59, 76;
+ Religion, 137;
+ Resurrection, the, 47, 60, 66;
+ Riches, 173;
+ Silence, the Law of, 65;
+ Teachings, human and divine, 52, 57, 59, 209, 211;
+ Tithes, 167, 173;
+ Titles of Honour, 173.
+
+
+
+
+_Printed by_
+MORRISON & GIBB LIMITED
+_Edinburgh_
+
+
+
+
+BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
+
+LATEST ADDITION TO
+THE SOCIAL SCIENCE SERIES.
+
+
+=TOWARD THE LIGHT:=
+_ELEMENTARY STUDIES IN ETHICS AND ECONOMICS._
+
+BY
+
+=LEWIS H. BERENS=,
+Co-Author "The Story of My Dictatorship," "Government by the People,"
+etc.
+
+_=Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 2s. 6d.=_
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ I. Preliminary Remarks.
+ II. Why do men work?
+ III. Co-operation and Division of Labour.
+ IV. Productive and Unproductive Labour.
+ V. The Same continued.
+ VI. Elements of Production.
+ VII. The Auxiliaries of Production.
+ VIII. Barter, Trade, and Commerce.
+ IX. Conflicting Tendencies.
+ X. Ethics and Economics.
+ XI. Social Ethics.
+ XII. The Institution of Property.
+ XIII. Of Wages.
+ XIV. Of Rent.
+ XV. Principles of Taxation.
+ XVI. Of Interest.
+ XVII. The Same continued.
+XVIII. Of Money.
+ XIX. Of Government.
+ XX. The Way Out.
+ XXI. Social Evolution.
+ XXII. Democracy.
+
+
+=PRESS NOTICES.=
+
+"This is an admirable book that may be read by everybody with
+advantage."--_Sunday Special._
+
+"It is clearly the thinking of a man who has personally grappled with
+the grave questions of his time, and who sees the light beyond, to which
+he would lead all men."--_Echo_ (London).
+
+"The book forms an appropriate addition to the Social Science Series, in
+which it appears."--_Scotsman._
+
+"A work of ripe thought, full of interest to all to whom the question of
+the people of England is vital."--_New Age_ (London).
+
+"Earnest and instructive."--_Literary Guide._
+
+"Mr. Berens treats of ethics and economics from the standpoint of one
+who wishes to see the evolution of a social system on the basis of the
+golden rule of righteousness, the law of equal freedom."--_Nottingham
+Guardian._
+
+"'Toward the Light' is a volume for all students of present day politics
+and economics."--_Co-operative News._
+
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+life."--_Young Oxford._
+
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+
+"Mr. Berens' book is one which, by reason of its sincerity and its
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+work in support of the Taxation of Land Values that has appeared since
+the death of Henry George."--_Public_ (Chicago, U.S.A.).
+
+"Those who are uncertain about various knotty points in Political
+Economy will find their perplexities stated and explained, in simple and
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+
+
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+ * * * * *
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+="SIX CENTURIES OF WORK AND WAGES."=
+ The History of English Labour. By JAMES E. THOROLD ROGERS. Sixth
+ Edition. (Published, 10s. 6d.) 5s. per copy, post free.
+
+="THE LAND AND THE COMMUNITY."=
+ By the Rev. S. W. THACKERAY, M.A., LL.D. With Preface by HENRY GEORGE.
+ Cloth, 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+="PROGRESS AND POVERTY."=
+ By HENRY GEORGE. An Enquiry into the Cause of Industrial Depressions,
+ and of Increase of Want with Increase of Wealth. The Remedy.
+ 8vo, cloth, 1s. 6d.; paper covers, 1s.
+
+="SOCIAL PROBLEMS."=
+ By the Same. Cloth, 1s. 6d.; paper covers, 1s.
+
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+ An Examination of the Tariff Question, with special regard to the
+ Interests of Labour. By the Same. Cloth, 1s. 6d. The League's Special
+ Edition, paper covers, 6d.; post free, 9d.
+
+="THE CONDITION OF LABOUR."=
+ Reply to the Pope's Encyclical on Labour. By the Same. New Edition.
+ Cloth, 1s.; paper covers, 6d.
+
+="A PERPLEXED PHILOSOPHER."=
+ Being an Examination of Mr. HERBERT SPENCER'S various utterances on the
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+[=The Five above Books=, by HENRY GEORGE. In red cloth, post free, 5s.
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+ * * * * *
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+ By HENRY GEORGE. Library Edition, 6s.
+
+="LIFE OF HENRY GEORGE."=
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+
+=THE MENACE OF PRIVILEGE.=
+ By HENRY GEORGE, Jun. 6s.
+
+="THE LAND QUESTION: What it is, and how only it can be settled."=
+ By HENRY GEORGE. Post free, 4d.
+
+
+="THE PEER AND THE PROPHET."=
+ Articles by the DUKE OF ARGYLL and HENRY GEORGE. 6d.; post free, 7d.
+
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+ Elementary Studies in Ethics and Economics. By LEWIS H. BERENS.
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+376 AND 377 STRAND, LONDON, W.C.
+
+ * * * * *
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+subscribing 2s. 6d. or more to the League Funds.)=
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+Transcriber's notes:
+
+ 1. Original reads 'bleibt den Nachwelt'; changed to
+ 'bleibt der Nachwelt'.
+
+ 2. Footnote marker missing in original. Footnote appears on
+ page 21, but refers to a quotation on page 22.
+
+ 3. Original has no opening double quotation mark before
+ '_Englands Proper and Only Way_'.
+
+ 4. Original reads 'will upraid us'; changed to 'will upbraid us'.
+
+ 5. Original has closing double quotation mark after '_Work
+ together; Eat bread together._'
+
+ 6. Original has an opening double quotation mark before 'Thou
+ City of London'.
+
+ 7. Original reads 'georgeous throne'; changed to 'gorgeous throne'.
+
+ 8. Original reads 'Its perusual convinced us'; changed to 'Its
+ perusal convinced us'.
+
+ 9. Original has no opening double quotation mark before '_Secondly_'.
+
+ 10. Original has 'all that have lent asssistance'; changed to
+ 'all that have lent assistance'.
+
+ 11. Original has closing double quotation mark at the end of this
+ paragraph.
+
+ 12. Original has no opening double quotation mark before
+ '_Secondly_'.
+
+
+
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