Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Preface
- Introduction
- Bibliographical Note
- A List of Gerrard Winstanley's Writings
- Other Digger or Near-Digger Writings
- The True Levellers' Standard Advanced
- A Declaration from the Poor oppressed People of England
- An Appeal To the House of Commons
- A Watch-Word to The City of London, and the Army
- Preface to Several Pieces gathered into one volume
- A New-year's Gift for the Parliament and Army
- Fire in the Bush
- The Law of Freedom in a Platform
- Poems from other pamphlets
- The Diggers' Song
Preface to Several Pieces gathered into one volume
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 February 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Preface
- Introduction
- Bibliographical Note
- A List of Gerrard Winstanley's Writings
- Other Digger or Near-Digger Writings
- The True Levellers' Standard Advanced
- A Declaration from the Poor oppressed People of England
- An Appeal To the House of Commons
- A Watch-Word to The City of London, and the Army
- Preface to Several Pieces gathered into one volume
- A New-year's Gift for the Parliament and Army
- Fire in the Bush
- The Law of Freedom in a Platform
- Poems from other pamphlets
- The Diggers' Song
Summary
To all rational and meek-spirited readers, who are men most fit to judge.
Friends, I do not write this epistle to set up myself, as if there were something more in me than other men; I tell you plain, I have nothing but what I do receive from a free discovery within, therefore I write it to set forth the spirit's honour, and to cast a word of comfort into a broken and empty heart. Sometimes my heart hath been full of deadness and uncomfortableness, wading like a man in the dark and slabby* weather; and within a little time I have been filled with such peace, light, life and fulness, that if I had had two pair of hands, I had matter enough revealed to have kept them writing a long time; and such matter as hath been my own experience in by-past or present time, which hath filled my heart with abundance of sweet joy and rest.
Then I took the opportunity of the spirit and writ, and the power of self at such over-flowing times was so prevalent in me, that I forsook my ordinary food whole days together; and if my household-friends would persuade me to come to meat, I have been forced with that inward fulness of the power of life to rise up from the table and leave them to God, to write.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Winstanley 'The Law of Freedom' and other Writings , pp. 153 - 158Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1983