Page:Works of Thomas Carlyle - Volume 06.djvu/175

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1643]
LETTER VIII. HUNTINGDON
143

Troops of Horse; such, I hope, as will fight. It’s happy to resist such beginnings betimes.

If you can contribute anything to our aid, let us speedily participate thereof: In the mean time, and ever, command your humble servant, OLIVER CROMWELL.[1]

Concerning these Camdeners at Stamford and elsewhere, so soon as Colonel Cromwell has got himself equipt, we shall hear tidings again. Meanwhile, say the old Newspapers,[2] ‘there is a regiment of stout Northfolk blades gone to Wisbeach, Croyland, and so into Holland’ of Lincolnshire, ‘to preserve those parts,’—if they may. Colonel Cromwell will follow; and give good account of that matter by and by.

Lincolnshire in fact ought to be all subdued to the Parliament; added to the Association. We could then coöperate with Fairfax across the Humber, and do good service! So reason the old Committees, as one dimly ascertains.—The Parliament appointed a Lieutenant of Lincolnshire, Lord Willoughby of Parham, a year ago;[3] but he is much infested with Camdeners, with enemies in all quarters, and has yet got no secure footing there. Cromwell’s work, and that of the Association, for the next twelvemonth, as we shall perceive, was that of clearing Lincolnshire from enemies, and accomplishing this problem.


LETTER VIII

Meanwhile enter Robert Barnard, Esquire, again. Barnard, getting ever deeper into trouble, has run up to Town; has been persuading my Lord of Manchester and others, That he is not a disaffected man; that a contribution should not be inflicted on him by the County Committee.

  1. Communicated (from an old Copy) by H. C. Cooper, Esq., Cambridge.
  2. In Cooper’s Annals, iii. 343.
  3. Commons Journals (ii. 497), 25th March 1642. New encouragement and sanction given him (Rushworth, v. 108), of date 9th Jan. 1642-3