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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
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