RUMP-SONGS. The First Part.
The
ZEALOUS PURITAN. 1639.
MY Brethren all attend,
And list to my relation:
This is the day, mark what I say,
Tends to your renovation;
Stay not among the Wicked,
Lest that with them you perish,
But let us to
New-England go,
And the Pagan People cherish;
Then for the truths sake come along, come along,
Leave this place of Superstition:
Were it not for we, that the Brethren be,
You would sink into Perdition.
There you may teach our hymns,
Without the Laws controulment:
We need not fear, the Bishops there,
Nor Spiritual-Courts inroulment;
[Page 2]Nay, the Surplice shall not fright us,
Nor superstitious blindness;
Nor scandal-rise, when
[...]e disguise,
And our Sister-kiss in kindness;
Then for the truths sake, &c.
For Company I fear not,
There goes my Cosin
Hannah,
And
Ruben, so perswades to go
My Cosin
Joyce, Susanna.
With
Abigal and
Faith,
And
Ruth, no doubt, comes after;
And
Sarah kind, will not stay behind,
My Cosin
Constance Daughter;
Then for the truth, &c.
Tom Tyler is prepared,
And th' Smith as black as a coal;
Ralph Cobler too with us will go,
For he regards his soul;
The Weaver, honest
Simon,
With
Prudence, Jacobs Daughter,
And
Sarah, she, and
Barbary
Professeth to come after;
Then for the truth, &c.
When we, that are elected,
Arrive in that fair Country,
Even by our faith, as the Brethren saith,
We will not fear our entry;
The Psalms shall be our Musick,
Our time spent in expounding,
Which in our zeal we will reveal
To the Brethrens joy abounding;
Then for the truths sake, &c.
Pyms
Juncto ▪ 1640.
TRuth I could chide you Friends, why, how so late?
My Watch speaks Eight and not one pin o'th State
This day undone, can such remisnesse sit
Your Active spirits, or my more Hellish wit?
The Sun each step he mounts to Heavens Crown,
Whilst
Pym commands, should see a Kingdome down;
Y'ave spurs enough I'me sure to make you run.
HOPES guilty, FORTUNES crackt, and th' ILLS y'ave done.
Thus Whilome seated was Great
James his Heir,
Just, as you see me now, ith' Kingdoms Chair:
There the Great Seal, there
Richmond, Hertford sate,
There
Marshall, D
[...]rset, Fristol
[...]'s temperate pate,
But there sate
P
[...]mbroke, life of Loyalty,
There
Holland, flower of Fidelity.
We are no lesse then
Charles in power and state,
You are our Junctoes, who were his of late;
Here sits
K — Holy
Say, and
Seal,
With
Whartor, Warwick, Brookes inspired zeal:
Stro
[...]d, Hampden, H — Has
[...]rigge, bold spirits,
Bold
Martin, Ludlow, Vain, unmatched wights,
But their Church-Elder,
Whites Religious beard,
There sits Abomination Statists:
Perd ▪
Charles wear at
York thy Crown that pretty thing
We must most humbly be at
London King▪
But what's the businesse of the House this day,
How speaks my note, Commissioners of Array,
[Page 4]The nineteen Propositions to be scand
A second time,
M— Train-band,
Letters from
Tristram Whitcombe, and from
Hull,
From
Amsterdam, the Admirall; how full
Of high concernments are we Sirs, advise
How we most warily may weigh our prise:
I do conceive it must be our first play,
Be't right or wrong, by Vote to damn th' Array,
If ever that take footing and advance,
Farewell Militia, and our Ordinance,
But what will the appearance be? yet stay,
Who dares our leading Votes and Wills gainsay?
Should any haughty spirit presume so far,
What serves the Tower for then, or the Bar?
But if we fear the businesse will not bend
As may be most conducing to our end:
By some feignd wile it must be our next Plot
To put it off, and a new time alot,
And just Jumpe for our turn: these Letters shall
From
Whitcombe, Hotham, or our Admirall,
(Though forg'd untruths) be interpos'd and read,
To spend the time, and maze the Peoples head;
If the next day we yet suspect to find
Such whose just Conscience cannot be inclin'd
To be made Vassals to our desperate sence,
'Tis easie to procure a Conferrence,
Which shall out-spin the leisure of the morn,
Then we'
[...]e resume the House, and so adjourn
Till five at night, the moderate wearied thus,
Will quit their seats and leave us, none but us;
There's President for this, this was the feat
That pluckt the Bishops from the Barons seat,
This wrought good Orders, manag'd many a Vote,
This Art must my Disciples learn by Rote.
[Page 5]But if the Accommodation chance to spring
Into debate, then your Artillery bring,
And lay that flat, that cold: my Genius starts
With fear to find ith' House two Loyal hearts;
Seem though we must teeth outwards to comply,
And humbly kisse the feet of Majesty,
Yet live we cannot, but obedience dead,
Nor stand elsewhere but on the Kingdoms head;
Calmes proper are for guiltlesse sons of Peace,
Our Vessels bear out best in storming Seas;
Charles must not reign secure whilst reigns a
Pym,
The Sun if it rise with us must set with him;
You have one pleasure which must be exprest
To
Leicester Pembroke, St — and your rest,
Bid
Essex, Percy, and your Quondam Grom
O'th stool, to wait us in the Princes Room:
Some of you subtilly may in
Cottons walk,
Sit and allure Affection by your talk,
'Twill be a work worthy your nimble wit,
To gain the Devil and us a Proselyte.
So, to your businesse, yet ere you be gone
Take my advice, then blessing light upon
Your nimble Votes, and first be sure you shroud
Your dark designs in a Religious Cloud,
Gods Glory, Churches Good, Kings head Supreme,
A Preaching Minister must be your T
[...]eame;
Next structure of your
Babel to be built,
Must speciously be varnisht o're, and gilt
With Liberty, Propriety of lives
And fortunes, 'gainst th' high stretcht Prerogatives.
And then a Speech or two most neatly spent,
For Rights and Privilege of Parliament;
These two well mixt, you're need no other lures
To gain the People, and to make them yours.
[Page 6]If
Charles displeased, with some witty, tart
Message (and justly too) shall make you start,
Saying ye have put him to his Guard, be sure
Ye then be loud enough, and first cry Whore,
War rais'd against the Parliament, a great
Hinderance of the
Irish Ayde, and strong Abet
Unto the Rebels: then if any thing
You have may blast the Honour of the King,
Be it had enough, no matter from what hand,
Wee'l Vote it true, and then to believe command;
But on your memories if I impose no more,
You cannot misse your way when I'me before:
Rise
Synna, Sylla, Marius, Gracchus Ghost,
With the rest of the whole Mechanick Host,
Romes greatest Earth-quakes, and this little trunck
Make with your desperate Spirits deeply drunk,
Up from your drousie urnes, the Ghost of those
My Ancestors that
Richard did depose,
Drop fresh into my breast, my soul inspire,
And strongly actuate me with your fire,
That theirs thus mixt with my Malitious Gall,
Mine may with theirs fully possesse you all.
Go and exceed their Villanies as much more
As theirs did all attempts that was before;
Act past example, that it may be known
You copied no example but your own.
And if in after times, when silently
We sleep, another si
[...]ebrand chance to be,
'Twill be chief Crown and Glory unto him,
To say he playd his Prancks like you and
Pym.
Upon Mr.
Pyms Picture.
REader, behold the Counterfeit of him
Who now controuls the Land;
Almighty Pym ▪
A man whom even the Devil to fear begins,
And dares not trust him with succesless sins;
A man who now is wading through the Floud
Of Reverend
Lauds, and Noble
Straffords Bloud,
To strike so high as to put Bishops down,
And in the
Miter to controul the
Crown;
The Wretch hath mighty thoughts, and entertains
Some Glorious Mischief in his Active Brains,
Where now he's plotting to make
England such
As may out-vye the villany of the
Dutch;
He dares not go to Heaven, 'cause he doth fear
To meet (and not pull down) the Bishops there:
Is it not strange, that in that Shuttle-head
Three Kingdoms ruines should be buried?
Is it not strange there should be hatch't a Plot
Which should out-doe the Treason of the
Scot,
And even the Malice of a
Puritan?
Reader behold, and hate the poysonous man;
The Picture's like him; yet 'tis very fit
He adde one likeness more, that's hang like it.
[...]
[...]
[...]
[...]
A Song.
To the Tune of
Blue Cappe for me.
LEt
Scots now return at
Lesleys demand,
How all the Affairs in the North-part do stand,
And tell him the Parliament is fully agreed
To send him good store of Mony with speed,
To serve their occasions: thus say, they shall find
For to come to passe, when the Devil is blind.
Let all their Brethren be new circumcis'd,
And
Burton and — for Saints canonis'd,
And at the Sacrament sit for their ease,
And pray unto God, even just when they please,
The
Scots in despite shall please their own mind,
And do what they please, when the Devil is blind.
Next they will have in each City and Town
All painted Glasse-windows to be pull'd down;
One Bell in a Church to call them away,
It's enough when the Spirit doth move them to pray,
Without any Surplice or Tippet behind
The Priest shall say Service, when the Devil is blind.
Lastly, the Parliament in any case
Will down with all Organs, for Piping is base;
[Page 9]No cringing below the Altar shall be,
For that is a Trick of Idolatry:
Now tell me good
Scots, are not
English-men kind,
But when this comes to passe, say the Devil is blind.
Mr.
Hampdens Speech against
Peace at the close Committee.
To the Tune of
I went from England.
BUt will you now to Peace incline,
And languish in the Main design,
And leave us in the lurch?
I would not Monarchy destroy,
But only as the way to enjoy
The ruine of the Church.
Is not the Bishops Bill deny'd,
And we still threatned to be try'd?
You see the King embraces
Those Councellours he approv'd before:
Nor doth he promise, which is more,
That we shall have their Places.
Did I for this bring in the
Scot,
(For 'tis no Secret new) the Plot
Was
Sayes and mine together:
Did I for this return again,
And spend a Winter there in vain,
I went more to invite them hither.
Though more our Mony than our Cause
Their Brotherly assistance draws,
My labour was not lost.
At my Return I brought you thence
Necessity, their strong Pretence,
And these shall quit the Cost.
Did I for this my County bring
To help their Knight against their King,
And raise the first Sedition?
Though I the Business did decline,
Yet I contriv'd the whole Design,
And sent them their Petition.
So many nights spent in the City
In that invisible Committee;
The Wheele that governs all;
From thence the Change in Church and State,
And all the Mischiefs bear the date
From
Haberdashers Hall.
Did we force
Ireland to despair,
Upon the King to cast the War,
To make the World abhor him:
Because the Rebells us'd his Name,
Though we our selves can do the same,
While both alike were for him.
Then the same Fire we kindled here
With that, was given to quench it there,
And wisely lost that Nation:
To do as crafty Beggars use,
To maim themselves thereby to abuse
The simple mans compassion.
Have I so often past between
Windsor and
VVestminster unseen,
And did my self divide:
To keep his Excellence in awe,
And give the Parliament the Law,
For they knew none beside.
Did I for these take pains to teach
Our zealous Ignorants to preach,
And did their Lungs inspire,
Read them their Text, shew'd them their Parts,
And taught them all their little Arts,
To fling abroad the Fire.
Sometimes to begg, sometimes to threaten,
And say the Cavaliers are beaten,
And stroke the Peoples ears;
Then streight when Victory grows cheap,
And will no more advance the heap,
To raise the price of Fears.
And now the Book, and now the Bells,
And now the Act the Preachers tells
To edifie the People;
All our Divinity is News,
And we have made of equal use
The Pulpit and the Steeple.
And shall we kindle all this Flame,
Onely to put it out again,
And must we now give o're,
And only end where we begun
In vain this Mischief we have done,
If we can do no more.
If men in Peace can have their right,
Where's the Necessity to fight,
That breaks both Law, the Oath;
They'le say they fight not for the Cause,
Nor to defend the King and Laws,
But as against them both.
Either the Cause at first was ill,
Or being good it was so still;
And thence they will infer,
That either now, or at the first
They were deceiv'd; or which is worse,
That we our selves may erre.
But Plague and Famine will come in,
For they and we are near of kin,
And cannot go asunder:
But while the wicked starve, indeed
The Saints have ready at their need
Gods Providence and Plunder.
Princes we are if we prevail,
And Gallant Villains if we fail,
When to our fame 'tis told;
It will not be our last of prayse,
Sin' a New State we could not raise
To have destroy'd the old.
Then let us stay and fight, and vote
Till
London is not worth a Groat;
Oh 'tis a patient Beast:
When we have gall'd and tyr'd the Mule,
And can no longer have the rule,
We'le have the Spoyle at least.
A Song.
To the Tune of
The Queens old Souldier.
TO make
Charles a great King, and give him no Power,
To Honour him much, and not obey him an Hower;
To provide for his Safety, and take away his Tower,
And to prove all is sweet, be it never so sower.
The new Order of the Land, & the Lands new Order.
To secure men their Lives, Liberties and Estates
By arbitrary Power, as it pleaseth the Fates
To take away Taxes, by imposing great Rates,
And to make us a Playster by breaking our Pates▪
The new Order of the Land, & the Lands new Order.
To sit and consult for ever and a day,
To counterfeit Treason by a Parliamentary way,
To quiet the Land by a tumultuous sway,
New Plots to devise, then them to betray.
The new Order, &c.
To leave all Votes free by using of Force.
That one make Petitions for Countie
[...] by course,
To make
Pym as great as his Mothers great Horse,
Which
William left
Agnus, though his meaning was worse.
The new Order, &c.
To encourage good Souldiers by cashiering the Band,
To hearten brave Spirits by expelling the Land,
[Page 14]To quit
Digby and
Deering, whom they can't understand
To frame not new Laws, but new Words, if well scan'd.
The new Order, &c.
To put by brave Doctors, because th'are not taught,
To set for Preachers men, very well wrought,
Who all the day fish, but nothing ere caught;
This, Bretheren, were good, if not very naught.
The new Order, &c.
To send them their Zealots to Heaven in a string,
Who else to Confusion Religion will bring,
Who say the Lords Prayer is a Popish thing,
Who pray for themselves, but leave out their King.
The new Order of the Land, and the Lands new Order.
A Song.
To the Tune of
Cuckolds all a-row.
KNow this my Brethren Heaven is clear,
And all the clowds are gone,
The righteous men shall flourish now
Good dayes are comming on;
Come then my Brethren and be glad,
And eke rejoyce with me,
Lawn sleeves and Roc
[...]ets shall go down,
And hey then up go we.
Wee'l break the Windows which the Whore
Of
Babylon hath painted,
And when the Popish Saints are down,
Then
Burges shall be Sainted;
There's neither Crosse nor Crucifix
shall stand for men to see,
Romes trash and trumpery shall go down,
And hey then up go we.
What ere the Popish hands have built,
Our Hammers shall undoe,
Wee'l break their Pipes, and burn their Copes,
And pull down
Churches too:
Wee'l exercise within the Groves,
And teach beneath a Tree,
Wee'l make a
Pulpit of a
Cask,
And hey then up go we.
Wee'l down with all the
Versities,
Where Learning is profest,
Because they practice and maintain
The language of the Beast;
Wee'l drive the
Doctors out of doors,
And parts what ere they be;
Wee'l cry all
Arts and
Learning down
And hey then up go we.
Wee'l down with
Deans and
Prebends too,
And I rejoyce to tell ye
How that we will eat
Pigs our fill,
And
Capon by the belly;
Wee'l burn the
Fathers Learned Books,
And make the School-men flee;
Wee'l down with all that smells of wit,
And hey then up go we.
If once the
Antichristian crew
Be crush'd and overthrown,
Wee'l teach the Nobles how to stoop,
And keep the Gentry down:
Good manners have an ill report,
And turns to pride we see,
Wee'l therefore cry good manners down,
And hey then up go we.
The name of
Lords shall be abhorr'd,
for every man's a Brother,
No reason why in
Church and
State
One man should rule another.
But when the Change of Government
Shall set our fingers free.
Wee'l make the wanton
Sisters stoop,
And hey then up go we.
What though the
King and
Parliament
Do not accord together,
We have more cause to be content,
This is our Sun-shine weather;
For if that reason should take place,
And they should once agree,
Who would be in a
Round-heads case?
And hey then up go we.
What should we do then in this case,
Let's put it to a venture,
If that we hold out seven years space,
Wee'l sue out our indenture.
A time may come to make us rue,
And time may set us free,
Except the
Gallows claim his due,
And hey then up go we.
The Humble Petition of the House of Commons.
IF
Charles thou wilt but be so kind
To give us leave to take our mind,
Of all thy store.
When we thy Loyal Subjects, find
Th'ast nothing left to give behind,
Wee'l ask no more:
First, for Religion, it is meet
We make it go upon new feet,
'Twas lame before:
One from
Geneva would be sweet,
Let
Warwick fetch't home with his Fleet,
Wee'll ask no more.
Let us a Consultation call
Of Honest men, but Round-heads all,
God knows wherefore;
Allow them but a place to baul
'Gainst Bishops Courts Canonical,
Wee'll ask no more.
Let him be hang'd a Surplice wears,
And Tippet on his shoulders bears,
Raggs of the Whore;
Secure us from our needlesse fears,
Let — and
Burton have their ears,
Wee'll ask no more.
Reform each University,
And in them let no Learning be,
A great Eye-sore;
From hence make
Romes Arminians flee,
That none may have free-will but wee,
Wee'll ask no more.
Lest the Elect should go astray,
Let Coblers teach you the right way
To Heavens door;
And lest their soles should wear away,
Let them their Sisters underlay,
Wee'll ask no more.
Next from the Bishops Hierarchy,
Oh the word sounds but scurvily,
Let's hear't no more;
It ne're was taught the Apostles by,
Lay-Elders may the place supply,
Wee'll ask no more.
Next, for the State, we think it fit
That Mr.
Pym should govern it,
He's very poor:
The money that's for
Ireland writ,
Faith let them have the Devil a bit,
Wee'll ask no more.
For ordering the Militia,
Let us ordain a new new way,
Ne're heard before;
Let the Great Council bear the sway,
If you will give us leave you may,
Wee'll ask no more.
In this we will not be deny'd,
Because in you wee'll not confide,
We know wherefore
The Citizens their Plate provide,
Do you but send in yours beside,
Wee'll ask no more.
Now if that you'll make
Hull your own,
There's one thing more we must set down
Forgot before;
Sir
John shall then give up the Town,
If you will but resign your Crown,
Wee'll ask no more.
The Answer to the Petition, &c.
I
Charles the King will be so kind,
To give you leave to take your mind,
Of all my store,
When I you Loyal Subjects find,
And you those Members have resign'd,
I askt before.
And when Religion's all your cares,
Or
London have such heed of theirs,
They had before:
When
Warwick from
Geneva dares,
Now Printed, bring the Common-Prayers,
And read them o're.
When all your Consultations tend,
To pay what you have made men lend,
None knows wherefore;
When you no more shall say you'll send,
And bring me fairly to mine end,
You'll ask no more.
When your Smectymnuus Surplice wears,
Or Tippet on his shoulders bears,
Raggs of the Whore;
When
Burton, — and
Bastwick dares,
With your good leaves, but shew their Eares,
They'll ask no more.
When what I borrowed I shall see,
Y'have paid each Universitie,
Of th' City store:
And Doctors, Chaplains, Fellows, be
Free-willers of pluralitie,
They'll ask no more.
When the elect shall make such hast,
By th' Bretheren to be embrac't
In Tubs on floore;
When Coblers they shall preach their last
At Conventicles on a Fast,
They'll ask no more.
When Bishops all the House adorns,
And Round-heads for their absence mourns,
A great Eye-sore;
When ev'ry Citizen lesse scorns
Lord
Wentworth's head, then
Essex horns,
You'll ask no more.
When you no more shall dare hereafter,
A needlesse thing which gains much laughter,
Granted before;
When
Pym is sent to
Ireland slaughter,
And ne're more hopes to marry my Daughter,
You'll ask no more.
When you have found a clearer way
For ordering the Militia,
Then heard before;
When
Atkins on the Training day,
Sha'nt dare his Office to bewray,
Hee'll ask no more.
When naught to me shall be deny'd,
And you shall all in me confide,
Good cause therefore;
When
Denmark shall for me provide,
And now Lord
Digby's on my side,
Ask me no more.
Last, when I shall make
Hull my own,
This one thing more I must set down,
Forgot before,
When I have got into the Town,
I'le make ten more besides that Clown,
Kneele and implore.
To the five Principal Members of the Honourable House of Commons.
The Humble Petition of the
POETS.
AFter so many Concurring Petitions
From all Ages and Sexes, and all conditions,
We come in the Rear to present our Follies
To
Pym, Stroude, Haslerig, Hampden and —
And we hope for our labour we shall not be shent,
For this comes from
Christendom, & not from
Kent;
Though set form of
Prayers be an
Abomination,
Set forms of
Petitions find great Approbation:
Therfore, as others from th' bottom of their souls,
So wee from the depth and bottom of our
Bowles,
According unto the blessed form taught us,
We thank you first for the
Ills you have brought us,
For the
Good we receive we thank him that gave it,
And you for the Confidence only to crave it.
Next in course, we Complain of the great
violation
Of
Privilege (like the rest of our Nation)
But 'tis none of yours of which we have spoken
Which never had being, untill they were broken:
But ours is a
Privilege Antient and Native,
Hangs not on
Ordinance, or power
Legislative.
And first, 'tis to speak whatever we please
Without fear of a
Prison, or
Pursuivants fees.
Next, that we only may
lye by Authority,
But in that also you have got the Priority.
Next, an old Custom, our Fathers did name it
Po
[...]tical license, and alwayes did claim it.
[Page 23]By this we have power to change Age in Youth,
Turn
Non-sence into Sence, and Falshood to Truth;
In brief, to make good whatsoever is faulty,
This art some
Poet, or the
Devil has taught ye;
And this our Property you have invaded,
And a
Privilege of both Houses have made it:
But that trust above all in Poets reposed,
That
Kings by them only are made and Deposed,
This though you cannot do, yet you are willing;
But when we undertake Deposing or Killing,
They're
Tyrants and
Monsters, and yet then the Poet
Takes full Revenge on the Villains that do it,
And when we resume a
Scepter or a
Crown,
We are Modest, and seek not to make it our own.
But is't not presumption to write Verses to you,
Who make the better
Poems of the two,
For all those pretty Knacks you do compose,
Alas, what are they but
Poems in prose,
And between those and ours there's no difference,
But that yours want the rhime, the wit and the sense:
But for lying (the most Noble part of a
Poet)
You have it abundantly, and your selves know it,
And though you are Modest, and seem to abhor it,
'T has done you good service, and thank He'ven for it:
Although the old Maxime remains still in force,
That a Sanctified Cause, must have a Sanctified Course:
If poverty be a part of our Trade,
So far the whole Kingdome
Poets you have made,
Nay even so far as undoing will do it,
You have made
King Charles in manner a Poet,
But provoke not his Muse, for all the world knows,
Already you have had too much of his
Prose.
The Parliaments Pedigree.
NO
Pedigrees nor
Projects
Of after-times I tell,
Nor what strange things the
Parliament
In former times befell,
Nor how an
Emperour got a
King,
Nor how a
King a
Prince,
But you shall hear what Progenies
Have been begotten since.
The
Devil he a
Monster got,
Which was both strong and stout,
This many-headed Monster
Did strait beget a
Rout:
This
Rout begat a
Parliament,
As
Charles he well remembers,
The
Parliament got Monsters too,
The which begot
Five Members.
The
Members Five did then beget
Most of the House of
Peers,
The
Peers mis-understandings got
All
Jealousies and
Fears;
The
Jealousies got Horse and Men,
Lest Warrs should have abounded,
And I dare say this
Horse got
Pym,
And he begot a
Round-head.
The
Round-head got a
Citizen,
That great Tax-bearing
Mule,
The
Mule begot a Parliament
Asse,
And he begot a
Fool:
And
Rich gave him his whole Land,
In zeal Lord
Rich got God knows who,
And God knows who got
H—
This
H— Surplices got down,
And those Church Rites that were,
He hath Petitions enough each day,
No need of the
Lords Prayer:
But it's no wonder that's cry'd down,
And that indeed the rather,
Cause
Pym and he two Bastards are,
And dare not say,
Our Father.
Now since this is the chiefest thing,
Hath got this great division,
Which
London for to reconcile,
Hath got this great Munition:
The City hath now been refin'd,
From all her Drosse and Pelf,
They're now about for to new mold,
And Coyn the
Common-wealth.
To those who desire no Peace.
SHould all those various Gales, whose titles are layn
Enrol'd within the Pilots Register,
Break from their drowsie Dens, where they have
Bound up in slumbers, and invade the Main,
They could not raise a storm like that which they
Raise in the
Common-wealth, who would betray
[Page 26]Our Peace to Civil War, in which the State
Must bleed it self to death, and have the fate,
After its stock of life is spent, to lye
Buried i'th Rubbish of an Anarchy.
Should Ravens, Bats, and the shrill Owl conspire
To twist their Notes into a General Quire,
And chuse the Mandrake for the Chaunter, they
Could not shrill forth such an ill-boding lay,
Or strains so Jarring, as do those whose throats
Warble the clamorous and untunefull Notes
Of Blood and Death, some whirle-wind, Sirs, has ta'en
Its Lodging up in the Fanatick brain
Of these bold sons of tumult, I dare say
They moulded were of some distemper'd Clay,
Which from its Centre was by Earth-quake torn,
A Tempest shook the world when they were born;
Sure from its Sphere the Element of Fire
Is dropt, and does their bosomes now inspire,
The flame lockt up in bold
Ravillacks urne,
Is snatcht from thence, and in their hearts does burn.
Night, open thy black wombe, and let out all
Thy dreadfull furies, yet these furies shall
Not chill my heart with any fear, since day
Has furies shewn, blacker by far then they.
Let
Vaux now sleep untill the day of Doom,
Open his eyes, forgotten in his Tomb,
Let none revile his dust, his Name shall be
Extirpated from every History,
To yield a room for others, for 'tis fit
Their Names in place of his should now be writ,
Who think that no Religion can be good,
Unlesse't be writ in Characters of Blood,
No marvail if the Rubrick then must be
Blotted from out the Sacred Liturgie,
[Page 27]And those red Letters now no more be known,
They'le have no other Rubrick but their own.
But shall they thus impetuously roule on,
And meet not any Malediction?
Yes sure, may sleep, that milde and gentle balme,
Which all unkind distempers does becalme,
Be unto them a torture, may their Dreams
Be all of Murders, Rapes, and such like Theams;
And when they're spent, may Wolves approach and howle,
To break their slumbers; may the Bat and Owle,
Before their Gates, to usher in the dayes
Unwellcome light, stretch out their direfull layes;
'Mongst their disordered humors, may there be
A deadly Feud, and fatal mutiny;
May sudden flames their houses melt away,
And Feavers burn their houses too of Clay;
May all their faculties and sences be
Astonisht by some drousie Lethargie,
That there may be allow'd them only sence
Enough to feel the pangs of Conscience,
Griping their souls, that they who thought it sin
To have peace without, may have no peace within
The French Report.
ME have of late been in
England
Vere me have seen much sport,
De raising of de Parliament,
Have quite pull'd down de Court,
And rule in Ignorance,
Pray judge ye Gentlemen, if dis
Be a la mode de France:
A vise man dere is like a Ship
Dat strikes upon de shelves,
Dey Prison all, Behead and Whip
All viser den demselves,
Dey send out men to fetch deyr King,
Who may come home perchance,
Oh fye, fye, fye, it is be Gar
Not a la mode de France.
Dey raise deyr Valiant Prentices,
To guard deyr Cause with Clubs,
Dey root deyr Bishops out of doors,
And Presh demselves in Tubs,
De Cobler and de Tinker too,
Dey will in time advance,
Pox take dem all, it is (
Mort Dieu)
Not a la mode de France.
Instead of bowing to deyr King,
Dey vex him with Epistles,
Dey furnish all deyr Souldiers out
With Bodkins, Spoons, and Whistles,
Dey bring deyr Gold and Silver in,
De Brownists to advance,
But if dey be cheat of it all,
'Tiz a la mode de France.
But if when all deyr wealth is gone,
Dey turn unto deyr King,
Den merrily we will sing,
VIVE LE ROY, VIVE LE ROY,
Vee'le Sing, Carouse and Dance,
De English men have done fort Bon,
And a la mode de France.
A Loyal Subjects Oath.
THis is my Oath, for ever to despise,
With heart and soul and all my Faculties
The Kings proud foes, and with my life subdue
All that to his Sacred Majesty are not true,
To execute his Precepts with my Blood,
So far as Conscience dictates it is good;
To make my body a Bullwark 'gainst his foes,
And to maintain his red and whitest Rose,
Venture Life and Living, Sword and Muse,
Still to uphold the Glorious Flower-de-luce:
To be the same to Prince, and Duke of
York,
Or for a cursed Jew that eats no Pork,
Let me be Cursed, and receive the Curse
Hangs over
Pym, and
Hotham, and a worse
I cannot wish, he that denyes this Oath,
Let these, and my Curse, light upon them both.
Short and Sweet.
WIse men suffer, good men grieve,
Knaves devise, and Fools believe,
Help, O Lord, send ayd unto us,
Else Knaves and Fools will quite undoe us.
To the City of
London.
TEll me Cittz. what ye lack,
That the Knaves of the Pack
Ye do not see forth comming,
Love ye Treason so well,
That ye neither buy nor sell,
But keep a noise with your Drumming.
What is't that you guard,
With your double watch and ward,
Your own wares, or your wises things,
If down come the Blades,
Then down go the Trades,
They'll not leave a dead or a live thing.
What doth your profit say,
When shall we see the day,
That money shall be paid in,
Great
Strafford he is dead,
Ye have cut off his bead,
And the Bishops all are laid in.
And yet you grow poor,
As any Common whore,
That hath been long a fading;
There's no man will buy,
Ye may leave to swear and lie,
As ye use to do in your trading.
There's something Behind
That lies in the winde
And brings you thus to nothing,
What doth then remain?
O the Parliament must raign,
And you'll have
A King and no King.
But though their power can
From a VVoman turn a Man,
If they please so to declare him;
Yet let them take heed,
The King is King indeed,
And the Souldiers cannot spare him▪
Is't nothing ye think
24. in a
Link
Kings that make his succession:
Besides for our Good,
Three Princes of the
Brood,
And three Kingdoms in Possession.
And all his Vertues too
Should be something to you,
If they could ought amend you;
But 'cause Hee's Chaste and Just,
You'd have Cruelty and Lust,
Another
King Harry God send you.
But if you mean to thrive,
And keep your trades alive,
And bring to your City treasure,
Give the King his full Rate,
As well as to the State,
And let Him have
London measure.
The Players Petition to the Parliament.
HEroick Sirs, you glorious nine or ten,
That can depose the King, and the Kings men,
Who by your Sublime Rhetorick agree,
That prisons are the Subjects libertie:
And though we sent in silver at great rates,
You plunder, to secure us our Estates.
Your serious subtilty is grown so grave,
We dare not tell you how much power you have,
At least you dare not hear us; how you frown
If we but say, King
Pym wears
Charles his Crown,
Such a word's
Treason, and you dare not hear it,
Treason to speak it, and yet not to wear it.
O wise mysterious Synod, what shall we
Do for such men as you e're forty three
Be half expir'd, and an unlucky season
Shall set a period to
Triennial Treason,
When the fields pitcht, and some, for all their skill,
Shall fight a Bloody Battel on
Tower-Hill;
Where Master
Pym, your wise judicious Schollar,
Ascends his Throne, and takes his Crown in Coller;
When
Canterbury coming forth shall wonder
You have so long secur'd him from the Thunder
[Page 17]Of King-hunting Prentices, and the Mayor
Shall jussel zealous
Isaack from his Chair.
Fore-seeing
Brookes, thou drewst a happy lot,
'Twas a wise Bolt, although 'twas quickly shot;
But whilst you live, our loude Petition craves,
That we the true Subjects, and the true Slaves,
May in our Comick mirth and Tragick rage,
Set up the Theatre, and shew the Stage,
The shop of truth and fancy, and we Vow
Not to Act any thing you disallow:
We will not dare at your strange Votes to Jea
[...],
Not personate King
Pym with his State-flear;
Aspiring
Cataline shall be forgot,
Bloody
Se
[...]anus, or who e're would Plot
Confusion to a State; the Warrs betwixt
The Parliament, and just
Henry the sixt,
Shall have no thought or mention, cause their power,
Not only plac'd, but left him in the
Tower;
No
[...] yet the Grave advice of learned
Pym,
Make a Malignant, and then Plunder him.
All these and such like actions as may ma
[...]
Your soaring Plots, and shew you what you are,
We will omit, lest that your mention shake 'um,
Why should the men be wiser then you make 'um.
Methinks there should not such a difference be
'Twixt our profession and your quality,
You meet, plot, talk, consult, with minds immense,
The like with us, but only we speak sense
Inferiour unto you; we can tell how
To depose Kings, there we are more then you,
Although not more then what you would; the
[...] we
Likewise in our vast Privilege agree,
Only yours are the longer; and controules,
Not only Lives and fortunes, but mens Souls;
[Page 34]For you declare by Aenigmatick sense,
A Privilege over mens Conscience,
As if the
Trinity would not consent
To save a Soul without the Parliament.
Wee make the People laugh at some vain shew,
And as they laugh at us, they doe at you;
But then i'th Contrary we disagree,
For you can make them cry faster then wee:
Your
Tragedies more really are exprest,
You murder men in
Earnest, wee in
Jest.
There we come short: But if you follow't thus,
Some wise men fear you will come short of us.
Now humbly, as we did begin, Wee pray,
Dear
School-masters, you'd give us leave to play
Quickly before the King come, for we wou'd
Be glad to say y'ave done a little good
Since you have sate, your Play is almost done,
As well as ours, would it had ne'er begun;
For we shall see e're the last Act be spent,
Enter the King,
Exeunt the Parliament.
And hey then up go we, who by the frown
Of guilty Consciences have been kept down:
So may you still remain, and sit and Vote,
And through your own beam see your brothers mote,
Until a legal trial do shew how
You us'd the King▪ and hey then up goe you:
So pray your humble
Slaves with all their powers,
That they may have their due, and you have yours.
A Madrigall on Justice, alluding to the PARLIAMENT.
JUstice is here made up of Might,
With two left hands, but ne're a right,
And men that are well-sighted, find
This Justice sits with both eyes blind:
Yet though the Matron cannot see,
She holds that edg'd Sword,
Cruelty,
Which that it may not rust, she whets
In cutting off the Islands
Teats,
Who long since did
Anathemize
Englands too too much seeing eyes,
Because they have been found to be
Guilty of
Wit and
Piety:
All this and more they rudely vent,
By Privilege of Parliament.
All former Laws fall head-long down,
And are themselves now lawless grown;
Equity hath been lately try'd,
And Right it self been rectin'd;
The rules that shew a Christian how
To live, must all be ruled now;
The Lesson here to learn, is brought,
And
Ethicks better manners taught;
Religion, and the Churches wealth,
Of late deprived of their health,
Were brought to th' House, that they might be
Cured of their Integrity;
We found a seam for this great rent,
By Privilege of Parliament.
Most men do now the Buttocks lick
Of their great body Politick;
For not the head, but breech, is it
By which the Kingdom now doth sit;
The world is chang'd, and we have Choyces,
Not by most Reasons, but most Voyces,
The Lion's trod on by the Mouse,
The lower is the upper House:
As once from Chaos order came,
So do their orders Chaos frame,
And smoothly work the Lands delusion,
By a Methodical Confusion;
These are the things that lately went
By Privilege of Parliament.
They would not have the kingdom fall
By an Ignoble Funeral;
But piously prefer the Nation
To a renowned Decollation,
The feet, and lower parts, 'tis sed,
Would trample on, and off the head,
What ere they say, this is the thing,
They love the
Charles, but hate the
King;
To make an even Grove, one stroke
Should lift the
Shrubb unto the
Oake;
Anew-found musick they would make,
A
Gamut, but no
Ela take.
This is the pious good intent
Of Privilege of Parliament.
In all humilitie they crave
Their Soveraign, to be their
Slave;
Desiring him, that he would be
Betray'd to them most loyally:
To be a
Vice-Roy unto
Pym;
And if he would a while lay down
His Scepter, Majestie, and Crown,
He should be made for time to come
The greatest Prince in Christendom.
Charles at this time not having need,
Thank'd them as much as if he did.
This is the happy wish'd event
Of Privilege of Parliament.
Pym, that ador'd
Publicola,
Who play'd the base —
Who got a Lust to sacrifice
The
Heroē to the Peoples Eyes,
Whose back-from-Hell-fetch'd-knaverie
By some is nick-nam'd policie,
Would be a
Lyon with a pox,
When at the best hee's but a
Fox;
And just like him that set on fire
The hallowed
Ephesian Spire,
Hath purchas'd to be largely known,
In that he is an Addage grown:
All this to honest
John is lent,
By Privilege of Parliament.
The Valiant House was not afeard,
To pull our
Aaron by the Beard;
To hide dark deeds from
Gazers sights,
Strove to blow out the Churches Lights,
That squares might run round as their head,
They long to have the Rochet sped:
They Vote down Universities,
Lest men from thence become too wise,
Whose works of darknesse hate the day;
Hence they prefer in every Town,
The Petticoat before the Gown;
These blessings to the Land are sent
By Privilege of Parliament.
They put forth Orders, Declarations,
Unacted Laws, and Protestations,
O
[...] which all can be said, is this,
The whole is one Parenthesis,
Because the sence (without all doubt)
Were ne're the lesse, were all left out.
Petitions none must be presented,
But what are by themselves invented,
Else they not heal, but Cicatrize,
And from the cure a Scar doth rise,
Though Holy Cut, the fault commit,
Yet
[...]ong tail must be paid for it;
Unto this wound was laid a Tent,
By Privilege of Parliament.
They paid the
Scottish debt, and thus,
To be more honest, they rob'd us;
They feed the poor, with what think ye,
Why sure with large Calamity,
And once a month they think it fitting
To fast from sin, because from sitting,
They would have winde and storms supprest,
To drive the Hallcyon from her Nest:
Charles is a Picture, they make bold
To use the Scepter he should hold:
They'd pull down one, but give as good
A Golden Crown, made up of Wood,
By Privilege of Parliament.
The Call.
Hoe Yes,
IF there be any Traytor, Viper, or Wigeon,
That will fight against God for the true Religion,
That to maintain the Parliaments Votes,
Of all true Subjects will cut the throats,
That for the King and his Countries good,
Will consume all the Land with Fire and Blood.
I say,
If any such Traytor, Viper, Mutineer, be born,
Let him repair to the Lord with the double gilt Horn.
Englands Woe.
I Mean to speak of
Englands sad fate,
To help in mean time the King, and his Mate,
That's ruled by an Antipodian State,
Which no body can deny.
But had these seditious times been when
We had the life of wise Poet
Ben,
Parsons had never been Parliament men,
Which no body can deny.
Had Statesmen read the Bible throughout,
And not gone by the Bible so round about,
They would have ruled themselves without doubt,
Which no body can deny.
But Puritans now bear all the sway,
They'll have no Bishops as most men say,
But God send them better another day,
Which no body can deny.
Zealous
P — has threatned a great downfall,
To cut off long locks that is bushy and small,
But I hope he will not take ears and all,
Which no body can deny.
P— Burton, sayes women that's lewd and loose,
Shall wear no stallion locks for a bush,
They'll only have private boyes for their use,
Which no body can deny.
They'll not allow what pride it brings,
Nor favours in hats, nor no such things,
They'll convert all ribbands to Bible strings,
Which no body can deny.
God blesse our King and Parliament,
And send he may make such K — repent,
That breed our Land such discontent,
Which no body can deny.
And blesse our Queen and Prince also,
And all true Subjects both high and low,
The Brownings can pray for themselves you know,
Which no body can deny.
Upon Ambition.
Occasioned by the Accusation of the Earl of
STRAFFORD, in the year
1640.
HOw uncertain is the State
Of that greatnesse we adore,
When Ambitiously we sore,
And have ta'en the glorious height,
'Tis but Ruine gilded o're,
To enslave us to our fate,
Whose false Delight is easier got, then kept,
Content ne'er on its gaudy Pillow slept.
Then how fondly do we try,
With such superstitious care,
To build Fabricks in the Ayr?
Or seek safety in that sky,
Where no Stars but Meteors are,
That portend a ruine nigh?
And having reacht the object of our ayme,
We find it but a
Pyramid of flame.
The Argument.
WHen the unfetter'd Subjects of the Seas,
The Rivers, found their silver feet at ease,
No sooner summon'd, but they swi
[...]tly went
To meet the Ocean, at a Parliament:
[Page 42]Did not the petty Fountains say their King,
The
Ocean, was no
Ocean, but a
Spring?
As now some do the Power of Kings dispute,
And think it lesse, 'cause more is added to't.
Pale
Ignorance, can the excesse of store
Make him seem poorer then he was before?
The Stars, the Heavens, inferiour Courtiers, may
Govern Nights Darknesse, but not rule the Day;
Where the Sun Lords it, should they all Combine
With
Lucia in her brightest dresse, to shine,
Their light's but faint: Nor can he be subdu'd,
Although but one, and they a Multitude.
Say Subjects, are you Stars? be it allow'd,
You justly of your numbers may be proud,
But to the Sun inferiour; for know this,
Your
Light is borrow'd, not your
Own, but
His:
And as all streams into the Ocean run▪
You ought to pay your Contribution;
Then do not such Ingratitude oppresse,
To make him low, that could have made you lesse
The Character of a Roundhead.
1641.
WHat Creature's this with his short hairs,
His little band and huge long ears,
That this new faith hath founded,
The Puritans were never such,
The Sanits themselves, had ne'er so much,
Oh, such a knave's a Rounded.
What's he that doth the Bishops hate,
And count their Calling reprobate,
Cause by the Pope propounded,
And saies a zealous Cobler's better,
Then he that studieth every letter,
Oh, such a knave's a Roundhead.
What's he that doth high Treason say,
As often as his yea and nay,
And wish the King confounded,
And dare maintain that Master
Pym,
Is fitter for the Crown then him,
Oh, such a rogue's a Roundhead.
What's he that if he chance to hear,
A piece of
London's Common-Prayer,
Doth think his Conscience wounded.
And goes five miles to preach and pray,
And lyes with's Sister by the way,
Oh, such a rogue's a Roundhead.
What's he that met a holy Sister,
And in an Hay-cock gently kist her,
Oh! then his zeal abounded,
Close underneath a shady willow,
Her Bible serv'd her for her pillow,
And there they got a Roundhead.
A Curtain Lecture.
The Tune, Cannot keep her Lips together.
WILL you please to hear a Song,
Though it want both rime and reason,
It was pend to do no wrong,
But for description at this season,
Of he or she what ere they be,
That wish Church-orders quite confounded,
Yet makes a shew, where e're they go,
Of Fervent zeal: I mean a Roundhead.
First hee'l have a smoothing tongue,
Next hee'l learn for to dissemble,
And when he hears of willfull wrong,
He'll sigh and look as he would tremble,
The next of all then let him fall,
To praise mens hearts in secret bravery,
A speaking still against all ill,
That is the Cloak to hide their Knavery.
Let Charity be used much,
In words at length and not in action,
It is the Common use of such,
Not to do, but give direction,
They'l be loath to swear an Oath,
By yea and nay, you may believe them,
But for their gains, they will take paines,
To cheat and ly, and never grieve them.
The Common-Prayer they like it not,
For they are wise and can make better,
Confutes it all in word and letter;
For he can rayle mens hearts to quaile
With deep damnation for their sinnning,
But to amend they ne're intend,
And to transgress they're now beginning.
But here is a very worthy man,
That undertakes more than he is able,
That in a Tub sometimes will stand,
In Hey-barn, Sheep-house, or a Stable,
That all the Rout that comes about
To hear his Doctrines,
Saints he calls them,
They vow and swear they nere did hear
Such worthy things as he hath told them.
They will not hear of Wedding Rings
For to be used in their Mariage,
But say they are Superstitious things,
And doth Religion much disp
[...]rage,
They are but vain, and things prophane,
Wherefore now no Wit be-speaks them
So to be ty'd unto the Bride,
But do it as the
Spirit moves them.
No
Pater-Noster nor no
Creed
In their Petitions never mention,
And hold there's nothing good indeed
But what is done by their pretention,
Prayers that are old in vain they hold,
And can with God no favour merit,
Therefore they will nothing say,
But as they are moved by the Spirit.
The wisest Schools they count but Fools,
Which do no more than they have taught them
For
Brownists they can preach and pray
With Wits their Fathers never bought them;
Then I perceive that wit they have
They gather it by Inspiration,
No Books they need to learn to read,
If all be true of their relation.
Only the Horn-book I would have
Them practice at their beginning,
That you the better may perceive
The Fruits that comes by fleshly sinning.
Neverthelesse I would express
All other Books that now are used,
Least that the Ghost that lea
[...]s you most
By too m
[...]ch Art to be abufed.
Their Hair close to their Heads they crop
And yet not only for the fashion,
But that the Eare it should not stop
From hearing of some rare Relation;
Therefore his Eares he will prepare
To hearken to an Holy Brother.
That in regard he may be heard
From one side of the Barne to th' other.
They count their Fathers were but Fools,
Which formerly became such Debters,
To spend their Means upon the Schools,
To teach their Sons a few fond Letters,
The Christ Crosse-row's enough to know,
For 'tis the Horn that must exalt 'em,
Their Gen'ral Vows his Antler'd Brows
Shall gore the Proudest dare assault 'em▪
At the last when they must part,
Male and Female go together
Joynd in hand, and joyn'd in heart,
And joyn'd a little for their pleasure.
First for a Kisse they will agree,
And what comes next you may conjecture,
So that the Wicked do not see,
And so break up the
Roundheads Lecture.
A Mad World My Masters.
WE have a King and yet no King,
For he hath lost his Power,
For 'gainst his Will his Subjects are
Imprison'd in the
Tower.
We had some Laws (but now no Laws)
By which he held his Crown,
And we had Estates and Liberties
But now they they're voted down.
We had Religion; but of late
That's beaten down with Clubs,
Whilst that Prophanesse Authoriz'd
Is belched forth in Tubs.
We were free Subjects born, but now
We are by force made Slaves,
By some whom we did count our Friends,
But in the end prov'd Knaves.
And now to such a grievous height
Are our Misfortunes grown,
That our Estates are took away
By tricks before ne're known.
For there are Agents sent abroad
Most humbly for to crave
Our Almes: but if they are deny'd,
And of us nothing have.
Then by a Vote
ex tempore
We are to Prison sent,
Mark'd with the Name of
Enemy
Of
King and
Parliament.
And during our Imprisonment,
Their lawless Bulls do thunder
A Licence to their Souldiers
Our Houses for to plunder.
And if their Hounds do chance to smell
A man whose Fortunes are
Of some Account, whose Purse is full,
Which now is somewhat rare.
A
Monster now
Delinquent term'd,
He is declar'd to be,
And that his Lands as well as Goods
Sequestred ought to be.
And as if our Prisons were too good,
He is to
Yarmouth sent
By vertue of a Warrant from
The
King and
Parliament.
Thus is our Royal Soveraigns name
And eke his Power infus'd,
And by the vertue of the same
He and all His abus'd.
For by this Means his Castles now
Are in the power of those
Who treacherously with Might and Maine
Do strive him to depose.
Arise therefore brave
British men,
Fight for your King and State,
Against those Trayterous men that strive
This Realm to Ruinate.
'Tis
Pym, 'tis
Pym, and his Colleagues,
That did our woe engender,
Nought but their Lives can end our Woes,
And us in safety render.
The Riddle.
S-Hall's have a Game at Put, to pass away the time,
X-pect no foul-play; though I do play the Knave
I- have a King at hand, yea that I have:
C- Cards be ye true, then the Game is mine.
R-ejoyce my Heart, to see thee then repine.
A- that's lost, that's Cuckolds luck.
T-rey comes like Quater, to pull down the Buck.
An Answer to a Love-Elegy (written from
I. P. one of the Five Members, to his Delightfull Friend) in
Latin.
WHat
Latin Sir? why there is no man
That e're thought you an
English-Roman.
Your Father Horse could teach you none,
Nor was it e're your Mother tongue,
Your Education too assures
Me, that your
Poem is not yours:
Besides, I thought you did detest
The Language of the
Latin Beast,
But now your Impudence I see
Did hereby shew its Modesty;
Each syllable would blush you thought,
If it had bin plain
English taught,
And that your foul debauched stuff
Might do its Errand fast enough,
Forsooth your Wisedom thought it meet
That Words might run to give 'em feet,
Pardon me, Sir, I'me none of those
That love
Love-verse, give me your Prose,
I wish each Verse to make delay,
Had turn'd lame
Scazon by the way,
I read a Hell in every line
Of your Polluted
Fescennine;
Your Verses stunk; to keep 'em sweet
You should have put Socks on their Feet.
And that the Answer which I shall
Now write, may be Methodicall,
An
Anacephalaeosis.
And first I look'd for
Nestor; when
Mere
Cupid trickl'd from your Pen,
Who was your Father, you make proof
By your Colt's tooth, though not your hoof,
She that was great with you, you hold
Did not lye in, but was with fole'd.
I wonder one so old, so grave
Should yet such Youth, such Lightnesse have;
Of the Five Members you alone
Shall be esteem'd the Privy One,
Who (like the
Gnosticks) preach your
Text,
Increase and Multiply, and next
Convincing Doctrines you deduce,
Put out the Lights, and make Use.
You say I am a Maid exceeding
Apt to be taught by you good breeding.
But where there's breeding, it is said
There's none, unlesse a broken Maid
Turn Papist, (
Stallion) they'le dispence
With Whoredom, by an Indulgence,
Turn Fryer, that thou mayst be free
At once with a whole Nunnery,
There 'twill be vertue to ride on
The Purple Whore of
Babylon.
Thou mayst as soon turn
Turk, as
King,
And that, O that's the tempting thing
That thou mayst glut thy Appetite
With a
Seraglio of Delight.
I am no
Proserpine, that thus
I should desire an
Incubus:
But you must vote (if Me you'le win)
No Fornication to be Sin,
The
King 'gainst
Rebells should Rebell;
And that's the reason why you stand
To be Dictator of the Land,
Which mov'd me to a mighty toyle
Of getting Vardygrease and Oyle.
'Cause such Itch-Med'cine is a thing
That's fittest to anoint you
King.
You say youl'd undertake and do
Wonders, would I undergo you,
For my sake you would Cobler play,
Your
Trade should be to underlay,
For Me you'd your chiefest blood,
Pray spend it on the Sisterhood,
You wish to dye in those great Fights
Of
Venus, where each Wound delights,
And should I once to Heaven take wing,
Youl'd follow me, though in a string;
Thank you (good Sir) it is our Will
You your last Promise doe fulfill;
There's nothing spoke that pleaseth us
Like your (
In funes Cedulus)
Next come those idle Twittle-twats,
Which calls me many God-knows-whats,
As hallowed, beautifull, and faire,
Supple and kind, and
Debonaire.
You talk of Women that did wooe,
When I am mad I'le do so too;
Then that my Father may not spye
The coupling of you and I,
He shall be guiltlesly detected,
As a true Subject ill-affected,
And so the Protestant shall lye
In Goal for fear of Popery.
Almost is now a Prison grown,
Where Loyalty lies fetter'd, then
You do commit more sins then men.)
But those your words I have thought best,
Should punisht be by being prest;
And that this Body Politick
May then be well, which now lyes sick,
May the Greek Π, that fatal
Tree,
This Spring bear all such fruit as thee.
The Penitent Traytor. The Humble Petition of a
Devonshire Gentleman who was Condemned for
TREASON, and Executed for the same, An.
1641.
To the Tune of
Fortune my Foe, &c.
ATtend good Christian People to my story,
A sadder yet was never brought before ye;
Let each man learn here like a good Disciple,
To shun foul
Treason, and the tree that's
Triple.
Long time I liv'd in the Country next to
Cornwall,
And there my Children were both breed and born all,
Great was my Credit, as my debts did speak,
And now I'le shew you why my neck must break.
There being a Parliament called in
September,
I was for th' Commons an Elected Member,
And though there were besides above four hundred
Yet I at last was for the fifth part numbred.
For first, I joyn'd with some whom Piety
Made Knaves, lest such their Fathers prov'd should be;
Their Ignorance to sin enjoyned many Voyces,
Which made bad Speeches, but Excellent Noyses.
Thus by my faction the whole House was sway'd,
All sorts of people flockt to me for Ayd;
They brought me Gold and Plate in Huggar Muggar,
Besides eight hundred pounds worth in Loaf-sugar.
What e're the Grievance was, I did advise
They should Petitions bring in Humble wise,
Which I did frame my self, & thus did rook them,
They paid me when I gave, and when I took them.
By this I gained, and by the Money-Pole,
Which paid my debts, 10000 pounds i'th whole,
My Childrens Portions too, with much content,
I paid in State, by Acts of Parliament.
Thus though I make all Jesuits fly the Nation,
My self did practise much Equivocation,
For oft I Vow'd the Common-wealth as honey
Was sweet to me, but I, by wealth, meant money.
And lest my Plots should after be unmasked,
And how I got such Wealth, chance to be asked,
I cast about how I might gain such power,
As might from Justice safely me secure.
Then first I labour'd to divest the Crown,
Of all Prerogatives, and bring them down;
First, to both Houses, and then but one should have them,
Five Members next, and last my self would have them
Because I knew the State would not admit
Such Change, unlesse the Church did Usher it,
I left the old Religion for advantage,
Endeavouring to set up one that did want age.
Which when all Learned Levites did withstand,
(Regarding Gods Word more then my command)
I such supprest, and made (for which I woe am)
The basest people Priests, like
Jeroboam.
Then each profession sent out
Teachers, moe
Then both the Universities could doe,
To handle a
Text the Good-wifes fingers itches,
And vows she'll preach with her Husband for the Breeches.
By this new Godly lives but few did gain,
The rest for want of
Trading they complain,
I told them 'twas a wicked Counsellors plot,
And till his head went off, their wares would not:
This Great mans guilt was Loyalty and Wisdom,
Which made me cast about to work his Doom;
The Sword of Justice was too short to do't,
2000. Clubs must therefore jerk it out.
He being knockt down, some others for the like Crime,
Were sent to Prison, some escapt in time;
[Page 56]Thus Law and Equity in awe was kept here,
And Clubs were taught how to controul the Scepter,
We took from th' Upper-house Votes five times five,
And they aym'd all the Kings Voyce Negative,
Which to effect we did an Order make,
That what he would not give, our selves would take.
Then we petition'd that the Forts and Towers,
And all the strength o'th Kingdom might be ours,
And thus to save the King from Soveraign dangers,
As if he had better Fall by Us than Strangers.
Whilst he denyes they Legally are stay'd on
By a
[...]aw call'd,
Resolv'd upon the Question,
But still his Chief strength was above our Arts,
His righteous Cause, and loyal Subjects hearts.
Being Arm'd with these, by Heaven he was so blest,
That he soon honour Got, and all the rest,
Bringing all such to punishment endignant,
As were of my Contrived part, Malignant.
O
Tyburn, Tyburn; O thou sad Tryangle,
A vyler weight on thee nee'r yet did dangle,
See here I am at last with Hemp to mew,
To give thee what was long before thy due.
How could I bless thee, could'st thee take away
My Life and Infamy both in one day;
But this in Ballads will survive I know,
Sung to that preaching tune,
Fortune my Foe.
Then mark good Christian people, and take heed,
Use not Religion for an upper weed,
Serve God sincerely, touch not his
Anointed,
And then your
Necks shall never be disjoynted.
God bless the King, the Queen, and all the Children,
(And pardon me all, that I 'gainst them have ill done)
May one of that brave Race still rule this Nation,
And now I pray you sing the Lamentation.
The Passage of a Coach travelling to Dover.
THe Foundation of the Coach, a
Guilty Conscience.
The Axeltree,
Ambition and
Cruelty.
The Wheels,
Fears and
Jealousies.
The Reins,
too much liberty and licentiousness.
The six Horses,
five Members and
K —
The Postillion,
Captain Venne.
The Coach-man,
Isaac Pennington Lord Maior:
In the two ends of the Coach sate
Essex and
B— In the Boots sate
Say and
Seal, and the
silent Speaker. On the hinder part of the Coach was written this Anagram.
Robert Devereux General. Never duller Oxe greater Rebel.
[Page 58]
After the Coach follows
Straffords Ghost, crying,
Drive on, drive on, Revenge, revenge.
As this Coach was going through the City it was staid by a
Court of Guard, who cry'd,
Where's our Mony? where's our Plate? the Speaker said,
Ye have the Publick Faith for't. Whereupon they passed towards
Gravesend, where they stayed at the Sign of the
Hope, where was the Earl of
Warwick, with a Ship called the
Carry-Knave.
The Five Members Thanks to the Parliament.
NOw tend your ear a while
To a tale that I shall tell,
Of a lusty lively Parliament
That goes on passing well.
Which makes our Gratious King, a King
Of so much worth and glory,
His like is not to be seen or found
In any Humane Story.
Win him who knows how many Crowns,
With losse of two or three,
Within so short a time as this,
As Wonder is to see,
The Country eas'd, the City pleas'd,
O what a World is this!
When upright men did stand at Helme,
How can we fail or miss?
And yet beyond all this, the King
Doth in abundance swim,
Gramercy
K — and
Stroud say I,
Haslerigge, H— Hampden, Pym.
And when as our Church Government
Was fallen into Disorders,
As that upon Grosse Popery
It seemed somewhat to border.
So sweet a Course is taken now,
As no man need to fear,
For Bishops learn'd, and Learned men
Have nothing to do here:
But every one shall teach and preach,
As best beseems his Sense:
And so we'll banish Popery,
And send it packing hence:
Now for that happy Church and State,
Drest up so fine and trym:
Gramercy
K— and
Stroud say I,
Haslerigg, H— Hampden, Pym.
For Arbitrary Government,
Star-Chamber, High Commission,
They will themselves do all that Work,
By their good Kings permission.
If any else presume to do't,
They weigh it not a straw:
They'll club such sawcy Fellows down,
As Beasts debarr'd of Law.
And let no Wights henceforth presume
To hold it Rime or Reason,
That Judges shall determine what
Is Felony or Treason:
But what the Worthies say is so,
Is Treason to award,
Albeit in Councel only spoke,
And at the Councel-board.
I'le shew you yet another thing,
Which you'll rejoyce to see,
The Prince and People know that these
Men cannot Traytors be.
Then let our King, our Church and State
Acknowledge as is due,
The Benefits they do receive
From this right Divine crue.
And for this Sea of Liberty,
Wherein we yet do swim,
Gramercy
K — and
Stroud say I,
Haslerigg, H— Hampden, Pym.
Upon the Parliament Fart.
DOwn came Grave Antient Sir
John Crooke,
And read his Messuage in a Book;
Very well quoth
Will. Norris, it is so,
But Mr.
Pym's Tayle cry'd No.
Fye quoth Alderman
Atkins I like not this passage,
To have a Fart inter voluntary in the midst of a Message.
Then upstarts one fuller of Devotion
Than Eloquence, and said, a very ill Motion.
Not so neither quoth Sir
Henry Jenking,
The Motion was good but for the stinking.
Quoth Sir
Henry Poole 'twas an audacious trick
To fart in the face of the Body Politick.
Sir
Jerome in Folio swore by the Mass
This Fart was enough to have blown a Glass:
Quoth then Sir
Jerome the Lesser, such an Abuse
Was never offer'd in
Poland nor
Pruce.
Quoth Sir
Richard Houghton, a Justice i'th
Quorum
Would tak't in snuff to have a Fart let before him.
If it would bear an Action quoth Sir
Thomas Holecraft
I would make of this Fart a Bolt or a Shaft.
Then qd. Sir
John Moor to his great Commendation
I will speak to this House in my wonted fashion.
Now surely sayes he, For as much as, How be it,
This Fart to the Serjeant we must commit.
No quoth the Serjeant, low bending his Knees,
Farts oft will break Prisons, but never pay Fees.
Besides, this Motion with small reason stands,
To charge me with that I can't keep in my hands.
Quoth Sir
Walter Cope 'twas so readily let,
I would it were sweet enough for my Cabinet.
[Page 62]Why then Sir
Walter (quoth Sir
William Fleetwood)
Speak no more of it, but bury it with Sweetwood;
Grave Senate, quoth
Duncombe, upon my salvation,
This Fart stands in need of some great Reformation;
Quoth Mr.
Cartwright, upon my Conscience
It would be reformed with a little Frankencense;
Quoth Sir
Roger Aston it would much mend the matter,
If this Fart were shaven, and washt in Rosewater;
Per verbum Principis, how dare I tell it,
A Fart by hear-say, and not see it, nor smell it.
I am glad qd.
Sam: Lewknor we have found a thing,
That no Tale-bearer can carry it the King,
Such a Fart as this was never seen
Quoth the learned Council of the Queen,
Yes quoth Sir
Hugh Breston the like hath been
Let in a dance before the Queen,
Then said Mr.
Peak I have a President in store
His Father Farted last Sessions before,
A Bill must be drawn then, quoth Sir
John Bennet,
Or a selected Committee quickly to pen it,
Why quoth Dr.
Crompton no man can draw
This Fart within Compass of the Civil-Law,
Quoth Mr.
Jones by the Law't may be done
Being a Fart intayld from Father to Sonne,
In truth quoth Mr.
Brooke, this Speech was no lye
This Fart was one of your
Post-Nati
Quoth Sir
William Paddy a dare-assuram
Though twere
contra modestum: 'tis not
prater naturam,
Besides by the Aphorismes of my art
Had he not been deliver'd, h'ad been sick of a Fart;
Then quoth the Recorder, the mouth of the City,
To have smother'd that Fart had been great pity,
[Page 63]It is much certain quoth Sir
Humphrey Bentwizle,
That a Round-fart is better then a stinking fiezle:
Have patience Gentlemen, quoth Sir
Francis Bacon
There's none of us all but may be mistaken;
Why right, quoth the great Attorney I confesse,
The Eccho of ones — is remedilesse.
The old Earle of
Bristol's Verses on an Accommodation.
THe
Parliament cryes
Arme, the
King sayes
No,
The New
Lieutenants cry
Come on, let's go;
The
Citizens and
Roundheads cryes
So, so;
The
People all amaz'd cryes
Where's the Foe;
The
Scots that stand behind the Door cryes
Boe,
Peace, Stay awhile and you shall know:
The
King stands still faster than they can go.
If that the
King by force of Armes prevail,
He is invited to a
Tyranny;
If that by power of
Parliament he fail,
We heap continual Warre on our Posterity.
Then he that is not for
Accommodation,
Loves neither
God, nor
Church, nor
King, nor
Nation.
The Rump's Hypocricy
WE fasted first, then pray'd that War might cease,
When Praying would not serve, we paid for Peace;
And glad we had it so, and gave God thanks,
Which made the
Irish play the
Scotish Pranks.
Is there no God? let's put it to a Vote;
Is there no Church? some Fools say so by rote;
Is there no King, but
Pym, for to assent
What shall be done by Act of Parliament?
No God, no Church, no King, then all were well,
If they could but Enact there were no Hell.
The Parliaments Hymnes.
O Lord preserve the Parliament,
And send them long to reign,
From three years end, to three years end,
And so to three again.
Let neither King nor Bishops, Lord,
Whilst they shall be alive,
Have power to rebuke thy Saints,
Nor hurt the Members five.
For they be good and godly men,
No sinfull path they tread;
And setting up Round-head.
From
Holdsworth, Bromrigge, and old
Shute,
Those able learned Scholars,
Good Lord deliver us with speed,
And all our zealous Followers.
From
Fielding and from
Vavasour,
Both ill affected men;
From
Lunsford eke deliver us,
That eateth up Children.
Thy holy
Burton, Bastwick, —
Lord keep them in thy Bosome;
Eke him that hath kept out the King,
Worshipfull Sir
John Hotham.
Put down the King and
Hartford, Lord,
And keep them down for aye;
Thy chosen
Pym set up on high,
And eke the good Lord
Say.
For
Warwick wee beseech thee Lord,
Be thou his strong defence,
Holland, Brooks, and
S — shield,
And eke his Oxcellence.
For
B — and
K — to
That are both wise and stout,
Who have rebuk'd the King of late,
And his ungodly Rout.
Once more we pray for Parliament,
That they may sit secure,
From Age to Age endure.
Let all the Godly say
Amen,
And let them Praises sing
To God and to the Parliament,
And all that hate the King.
The Round-heads Race.
I Will not say for the Worlds store,
The World's now drunk, (for did I)
The Faction which now reigns would roare,
But I will swear 'tis giddy.
And all are prone to this same Fit,
That it their Object make,
For every thing runs Round in it,
And no form else will take.
To the Round-Nose Peculiar is
The Ruby and the Rose;
The Round-lip gets away the Kisse,
And that by Favour goes.
The Round-beard for Talke of State,
Carry it at the Club;
The Round-Robin by a like fate
Is Victor in the Tubb.
Hanworths Round-block speak pollicy,
The Round-hose Riches draw.
The Round Copes for the Law.
Tom his Round Garbe so rules all o're,
The pox take him for mee
That e're lookes for square dealing more,
And hears an health to thee.
On the Queens Departure.
UP, up wrong'd
Charls his friends, what can you be
Thus Mantled In a stupid Lethargie,
When all the world's in Arms? and can there be
Armies of Fears abroad and none with thee?
Breath out your souls in sighs, melt into tears,
And let your griefs be equal to your fears;
The Sphaeres are all a jarring, and their jarres
Seems counter-like to Calculate the Starres;
The Inferior Orbes aspire, and do disdain
To move at all, unlesse they may attain
The highest Room, our Occedentall Sunne
Eclips'd by Starres, forsakes his
Horizon,
Bright
Cinthia too (they say) hath hid her face
As 'twere Impatient of her
Sol's disgrace;
And our fears tell us, that unlesse the Sunne
Lend us his beams again, the World will run
Into another Chaos, where will be
Nought but the cursed Fruits of Anarchie;
Sedition, Murder, Rapine, and what's worse
None to Implore for Aid; Oh, here's the Curse,
But stay ye Starres, what will ye wish to bee?
More Sunns then one will prove a Prodigie:
[Page 68]To afright the Amazed World, will ye be-night
That glorious Lamp, that Fountain of all light,
Will none but
Sol's own Chaire, please your desire?
Take heed bold Stars you'le set the world on fire.
Pyms
Anarchy.
ASk me no more, why there appears
Dayly such troopes of Dragooners?
Since it is requisite, you know;
They rob
cum privilegio.
Ask me no more, why th' Gaole confines
Our Hierarchy of best divines?
Since some in Parliament agree
Tis for the Subjects Liberty.
Ask me no more, why from
Blackwall
Great tumults come into
Whitehall?
Since it's allow'd, by free consent,
The Priviledge of Parliament.
Ask me not, why to
London comes
So many Musquets, Pikes and Drums?
Although you fear they'll never cease;
'Tis to protect the Kingdoms peace.
Ask me no more, why little
Finch
From Parliament began to winch?
Since such as dare to hawk at Kings
Can easie clip a Finches wings.
Ask me no more, why
Strafford's dead,
And why they aim'd so at his head?
Faith, all the reason I can give,
'Tis thought he was too wise to live.
Ask me no more, where's all the Plate,
Brought in at such an easie rate?
They will it back to th' Owners bring
In case it fall not to the King.
Ask me not why the House delights
Not in our two wise Kentish Knights?
There Counsell never was thought good,
Because it was not understood.
Ask me no more, why
Lesley goes
To seize all rich men as his foes?
Whilst Country Farmers sigh and sob,
Yeomen may beg when Kings do rob.
Ask me no more, by what strange sight
Londons Lord Maior was made a Knight?
Since there's a strength, not very far,
Hath as much power to make as mar.
Ask me no more, why in this Age
I fing so sharp without a Cage?
My answer is, I need not fear
Since
England doth the burden bear.
Ask me no more, for I grow dull,
Why
Hotham kept the Town of
Hull?
This answer I in brief do sing,
All things were thus when
Pym was K—
To my Lord B. of
S. he being at
York.
WHen you were last at
London 'twas our fear,
Lest the same
Rout which threatned
Majesty,
Might strike at
you: 'tis but the same Career
To aime at
Crowns, and at the
Miter fly.
For still the
Scepter and the
Crosier staffe
Together
fall, 'cause they're together
safe:
Yet while the sence of Tumults deepest grow,
And presse in
us, no doubts in
you arise;
There still dwelt
calm and
quiet in your
Brow,
As our
Distractions were your
Exercise:
And taught us, all
assaults, all
Il
[...]s to beare,
Is not to fly from Danger, but from Fear.
That
Courage waits you still, some merely rode
From Tumults and the Peoples frantick Rage,
Counting their
safety by their
far abode,
And so grew
safer still at the next Stage:
But 'tis not space that shelters you, the rest
Secure themselves by
Miles, you by your Breast.
And now my Lord, since you have
London left,
Where Merchants wives
dine cheap, & as cheap
sup,
Where Fools themselves have of their Plate bereft,
And sigh and drink in the
course Pewter cup.
Where's not a Silver
Spoon left, not that giv'n than
When the first
Cockney was made
Christian.
No not a
Bodkin, Pincase, all they send
Or carry all, what ever they can happe on,
Ev'n to the pretty
Pick Tooth, whose each end
Oft purg'd the Relicks of
continual Capon.
Nothing must stay behind, nothing must tarry,
No not the
Ring by which dear
Joan took
Harry.
But now no
City-Villain, though he were
Free of a
Trade and
Treason, dares intrude,
No sawcy Prentises assault you there,
Engag'd by their
Indentures to be
rude:
Whom for the
two first years their Masters use
Onely to cry down
Bishops, and cleanse
Shooes.
There as in silent Orbes you may ride on,
And as in
Charles his
Wain move without jarres,
Your
Coach will seem your
Constellation,
Not drawn about by
Horses, but by
Stars.
Till seated near the
Northern Pole, wee thence
Judge your
seat Sphear, you its
Intelligence.
An Elegie on the Most Reverend Father in God
William, Lord Archbishop of CANTERBURY.
Attached
the
18. of
December, 1640. Beheaded the
10. of
January, 1644.
THou, since thy thick Afflictions first begun,
Mak'st
Dioclesian's dayes all
Calme, and
Sun,
[Page 72]And when thy Tragick Annals are compil'd,
Old Persecution shall be
Pity styl'd,
The
Stake and
Faggot shall be Temp'rate names,
And
Mercy wear the Character of
Flames:
Men knew not then
Thrift in the Martyrs breath,
Nor weav'd their Lives into a four years Death,
Few antient
Tyrants do our Stories Taxe,
That flew first by
Delayes, then by the
Axe,
But these (
Tiberius like) alone do cry,
'Tis to be
Reconcil'd to let Thee dy.
Observe we then a while into what
Maze,
Compasse, and
Circle they contrive Delayes,
What
Turnes and wilde
Perplexities they chuse,
Ere they can forge their
Slander, and
Accuse:
The Sun hath now brought his warm Chariot back,
And rode his Progress round the
Zodiack,
When yet no
Crime appears, when none can tell,
Where thy
Guilt sleeps, nor when 'twill break the shell.
Why is His
Shame defer'd? what's in't that brings
Your
Justice back, spoyles
Vengeance of her Wings?
Hath
Mercy seiz'd you? will you rage no more?
Are
Windes grown tame? have
Seas forgot to
roar?
No, a wilde fiercenesse hath your minds possest,
Which
time and
sins must
cherish and
digest:
You durst not now let
His clear Blood be spilt,
You were not yet grown up to such a guilt;
You try if
Age, if
Seaventy years can Kill:
Then y'have your
Ends, and you are
harmlesse still,
But when this fail'd, you do your Paths enlarge,
But would not yet
whole Innocence discharge;
You'll not be
Devil All, you fain would prove
Good at a
Distance, within some
Remove,
[Page 73]"Virtue hath sweets which are good Mens due gaine,
"Which Vice could not Deserve, yet would Retaine.
This was the Cause, why once it was your Care,
That
Storms and
Tempests in your
Sin might share,
You did engage the
Waves, and strongly stood
To make the
Water guilty of his
Blood.
Boats are dispatcht in haste, and 'tis his doome,
Not to his
Charge, but to his
Shipwrack come;
Fond men, your cruel Project cannot doe,
Tempests and
storms must learn to kill from
you;
When this comes short, he must
Walk
[...] Pilgrimage,
No
Coach nor
Mule, that may sustein his Age,
Must trace the
City (now a
Desert rude)
And combate salvage
Beasts the
Multitude.
But when his
Guardian Innocence can fling,
Awe round about, and save him by that
King.
When the
Just cause can fright the
Beasts away,
And make the
Tyger tremble at her
prey.
When nether
Waves dare seize him, nor the
Rout;
The storm with Reason, nor the storm
without:
Lost in their streights when
Plots have vanquisht bin,
And
Sin perplext hath no
Relief, but
Sin.
Agents and
Instruments now on you fall,
You must be
Judges, People, Waves, and
All.
Yet 'cause the
Rout will have't perform'd by
you,
And long to see
done what they dare not
Doe.
You put the
Crime to
use, it swells your
Heap;
Your
Sin's your
own, nor are you
Guilty cheap,
You
Husband All; there's no
Appearance lost,
Nor comes he once to th'
Bar but at your
cost;
A
constant Rate well
Taxt, and
Levyed right,
And a
Just value set upon each
sight.
[Page 74]At last they find the
Dayes by their own
Purse,
Lesse known from
him than what they do
disburse:
But when it now strikes high for him t'
appear,
And
Chapmen see the
Bargain is grown
dear;
They
Muster hands, and their hot suits enlarge,
Not to persue the
Man, but save the
Charge;
Then least you loose their
Custome, (a just fear)
Selling your
Sinnes and others
Blood too dear.
You grant their Suits, the Manner, and the Time,
And he must Dye for what no
Law calls
Crime.
Th'
Afflicted Martyrs, when their pains began.
Their
Trajan had, or
Dioclesian.
Their
Tortures were some
Colours, and proceed;
Though from no
Guilt, yet 'cause they
disagreed:
What
league, what
friendship's there? They could not joyn,
And fix the
Ark and
Dagon in one
Shrine.
Faith, combats
Faith; and how agree can they,
That still go on, but still a several way?
Zeal,
Martyrs Zeal, and
Heat 'gainst
Heat conspires.
As
Theban Brothers fight though in their
Fires.
Yet as two diff'rent
Stars unite their
Beams,
And
Rivers mingles
Waves and mix their
Streams;
And though they challenge each a several
Name,
Conspire because their
moysture is the
same.
So
Parties knit, though they be
diverse known,
The
Men are
many but the
Christian, one.
Trajan, no
Trajan was to his own
Heard,
And
Tygers are not by the
Tygers fear'd.
What strange excesse then? what's that
menstruous Power,
When
Flames do
Flames, and
Streams do
Streams devour?
Where the
same Faith 'gainst the same
Faith doth knock,
And
Sheep are
Wolves to
Sheep of the same
Flock?
[Page 75]Where
Protestant the
Protestant defies,
Where
both Assent, yet one for
Dissent dyes?
Let these that doubt this, through his Actions
Wade,
Where some must needs
Convince, All may
perswade.
Was he
Apostate, who your
Champion stood,
Bath'd in his
Inke before, as now in
Blood?
He that unwinds the
subtle Jesuite,
That Feels the
Serpents Teeth, and is not
bit?
Unites the
Snake finds each
Mysterious knot,
And turns the
Poyson into
Antidot.
Doth
Nicety with
Nicety undoe?
And makes the
Labyrinth the
Labyrinth's clew?
That
sleight by
sleight subdues, and clearly proves,
Truth hath her
Serpents too, as well as
Doves.
Now, you that blast his
Innocence, Survey,
And view the
Triumph of this
Glorious day;
Could you (if that might be) if you should come
To seal God's cause with your own
Martyrdom,
(Could all the blood whose Tydes move in their veins,
Which then perhaps were
Blood, but now in stains)
(Yield it that
Force and
strength, which it hath took
Should we except his
Bloud) from
this his
Book,
Your
Flame or
Axe would lesse evince to Men,
Your
Block and
Stake would prop lesse than his
Pea;
Is he
Apostate, whom the
Baites of
Rome
Cannot seduce, though all her
Glories come?
Whom all her specious
Honours cannot hold,
Who hates the snare although the
Hook be
Gold?
Who
Prostituted Titles can despise,
And from
despised Titles, greater Rise?
[Page 76]Whom
Names cannot
Amuse, but seats withall
The
Protestant above the
Cardinall?
Who
sure to his own Soul, doth scorn to find
A Crimson cap the
Purchase of his
Minde?
"Who
is not Great, may blame his Fate's Offence,
"Who would not be, is Great in's Conscience.
Next these His
Sweat and
Care how to advance
The
Church but to Her
Just Inheritance,
How to gain back her
Own, yet
none Beguile,
And make her
Wealth her
Purchase, nor her
spoyle:
Then, shape Gods worship to a
joynt consent;
'Till when the seamlesse Coat must still be
Rent:
Then, to repair the
Shrines, as
Breaches sprung,
Which we should
hear, could we lend
Pauls a
Tongue,
Speak, Speak great Monument! while thou yet art
such,
And Rear him 'bove their
Scandals and their
Touch;
Had he surviv'd thou mighst in Time Declare,
Vast things may
comely be, and
Greatest Fair.
And though thy
Limbs spread high, and
Bulk exceed,
Thou'dst prov'd that
Gyants are no
monstrous breed:
Then 'bove
Extent thy
Lustre would prevaile,
And 'gainst
Dimension Feature turn the Scale;
But now, like
Pyrrah's half adopted birth.
Where th'issue part was
Woman, Part was
Earth,
Where
Female some, and some to
stone was Bent,
And the
one half was t'others
Monument,
Thou must imperfect lye, and learn to Groan,
Now for his
Ruine, straightway for
thine own:
But
this and
Thousand such
Abortives are;
By
Bloody Rebels Ravisht from his care;
But yet though some miscarried in their
Wombe,
And
Deeds Still-born have hastned to the
Tombe,
[Page 77]God (that Rewards him now) forbad his store,
Should all lye hid, and he but give ith'
Ore.
Many are
Stampt, and
shapt, and do still shine,
Approv'd at
Mint, a firm, and
Perfect Coyne.
Witness that
Mart of
Books that yonder stands.
Bestow'd by him, though by
anothers Hands:
Those
Attick Manuscripts, so
rare a Piece,
They tell the
Turk, he hath not conquer'd
Greece,
Next these, a second
beautuous Heap is thrown,
Of
Eastern Authors, who were
all his own.
Who in so
Various Languages appear,
Babel, would scarce be their
Interpreter.
To
These, we may that
Fair-built Colledge bring,
Which proves that Learning's no such
Rustick thing;
Whose
structure well contriv'd doth not relate
To
Antick fineness, but
strong lasting state:
Beauty well mixt with
strength, that it complyes
Most with the
Gazer's use, much with his
Eyes,
On
Marble Columns thus the
Arts have stood,
As wise
Seth's Pillars sa
[...]'d 'em in the
Flood.
But did he leave here
Walls, and only Own
A Glorious
Heap, and make us rich in
Stone?
Then had our
Chanc'lour seem'd to fail, and here
Much honour due to the
Artificer:
But
this our
Prudent Patron long fore-saw,
When he Refin'd
rude Statutes into
Law;
Our
Arts and
Manners to his
Building falls,
And he erects the
Men, as well as
Walls:
"Thus
Solons Laws his
Athens did Renown,
"And turn'd that
throng of Building to a
Town.
Yet neither
Law nor
Statute can be known
So
strickt, as to
Himself he made his
own,
[Page 78]Which in his Actions
Inventory lyes,
Which
Hell or — can never scandalize:
Where every Act his rigid eye surveyes,
And
Night is
Barre and
Judge to all his Dayes;
Where all his secret Thoughts he doth comprize,
And every
Dream summon'd to an
Assize;
VVhere he
Arraigns each
Circumstance of care,
VVhich never parts dismiss'd without a
Prayer;
See! how he
sifts and
searches every part,
And ransacks all the Closets of his heart;
He puts the hours upon the
Rack and
Wheel,
And all his
minutes must
confess or
feel:
If they reveal one Act which forth did come.
VVhen
Humane frailty crept into the
Loome,
If one Thread stain, or sully, break, or faint,
So that the
Man does Inteerrupt the
Saint,
He hunts it to its
Death, nor quits his feares,
Till't be
Embalm'd in
Prayers, or
drown'd in
Teares.
The
Sun in all his journeys ne're did see
One more
devout, nor one more
strict than He.
Since his
Religion then's
Ʋnmixt and
Fine,
And
Works do
warrant Faith, as Ore the Mine:
VVhat can his
Crime be then? Now you must lay
The
Kingdoms Laws subverted in his way:
See! no such
Crime doth o're his
Conscience grow,
(VVithout which
Witness ne're can make it so;)
A clear Transparent
White, bedecks his mind,
VVhere nought but
Innocence can shelter find,
Witnesse that
Breath which did your
stain and
blot
Wipe freely out, (though
Heaven I fear will
not)
Witnesse that
Calme and
Quiet in His
Breast,
Prologue and
Preface to his
Place of
Rest;
When with the
VVorld He could undaunted part,
And see in
Death nor
meagre Looks; nor
Dart:
[Page 79]When to the
Fatal Block His
Gray Age goes
With the same
Ease, as when he took
Repose.
"He like old
Enoch to His Blisse is gone,
"Tis not his Death, but his Translation.
A Mock Remonstrance referring to the Porters Petition.
To
Pym King of the Parliamented,
The Grievances are here presented
Of Porters, Butchers, Broom-men, Tanners,
That fain would fight under your Banners;
Weavers, Dyers, Tinkers, Coblers,
And many other such like Joblers,
As Water-men, and those call'd Dray-men,
That have a long time sung
Solamen, &c.
WHereas,
Imprimis, first, that is, the Porters,
The heavy burthens laid on their four Quarters
Is not complain'd of here; nor of Us, any,
Although We have good Causes, and full many,
As yet unknown; but there's a day will come
Shall pay for all, We say no more but Mum.
It is well said by some, You are about
To give the Church and Government a Rout,
Let it be so cry VVe, for it is known,
To do't, you will want more hands than your own.
And since you are
Their Declaration.
necessitated to
Raise war, 'ifaith (Sirrevence) do, do, do;
'Tis fit that Old things should grow out of date,
Like
Hampden's Sister, or that Beldame
Kate.
[Page 80]Old things in course do commonly decay,
When New perhaps may last full many a day;
Old Frocks, old Shirts, old Brooms, old Boots, old Skins
Are much addicted to the Venial sins
Of wearing out; and why not then the Church,
That has left many a simple man ith' lurch.
Beside, the Porters so the Surplice hate,
Their very Frocks they have casheer'd of late;
And rather than endure 'em, you may see,
They wear the Rope, the Hang-mans Livery.
The Butchers too, inspired are at least,
And know the very Intrails of the Beast
That wears those
Surplices.
Smocks, and though they love a Whore,
A
Babilonish one they do abhor.
In fine, in this great work of Reformation,
Which you intend shall stigmatize the Nation,
We pray to be Fellow-labourers, and
That you our Vertues right may understand,
Know that the Porters shall for Eighteen-pence
Carry the Dreggs of
Rome in Bottles hence
To any Foreign part you'l think upon,
And bring the Juyce of the
Turks Alcaron
In lieu of it; the Butcher kill'd in Slaughter
Shall send Gods, and the Laws Disciples after:
There shall not a Religious Relique be
Left in the Church, or in the Library,
But shall be swept away by the Nice hand
Oth' Broom-mens Art, who nothing understand
More than
Kent-street; If any them deride,
The Tanners come, and then beware their Hide;
And for the Weavers, they can preach, or pray,
As is well known to the Lords,
Brooks and
Say.
The Dyers they delight you know in Scarlet,
And care no more for Blood, than any Varlet;
[Page 81]Like Archers good they will come on so powring,
That who escapes them will escape a scowring.
The Tinkers they can both make Holes, and mend 'em
In Church or State; if you will but befriend 'em
With Mettle; They care not for God or Divell;
A Pack of sturdy Rogues inur'd to Evill.
The Cobler vows, and that you'l say is News,
To venture All, what over Boots, o're Shooes?
And likewise undertakes at a Cheap rate
The Government, though Crabbed, to Translate.
The Water-men more flye than any Otters,
Knowing 'tis good fishing in troubl'd Waters,
If any do Oppose them, though their Betters,
They will betake themselves unto their Stretchers,
And so belabour 'em in Church and Cloysters,
Their Bones shall rattle, like a Sacke of Oysters,
In their thin Skins. The Dray-men likewise shall
With Crusted Fists, fling 'um and fling 'um all.
Thus in Our several Functions We can serve ye,
Men fit for your Employment, pray observe ye;
And therefore list Us, where your best defence is,
In th' Yealow Regiment of's
Oxcellencies:
So taking leave, resting at your Commands,
We do subscribe either Our Horns, or Hands,
The Caution. A SONG.
To the Tune of
Oh Women, Monstrous Women.
YOu Sep'ratists that Sequister
Your selves from Laws are good,
Your Courses so irregular
Shall now be understood;
Your fond Expounding corrupts the Bibble,
Yet you'l maintain it with your Twibble.
Oh Roundheads, Roundheads, damnable Roundheads,
What do you mean to do?
He that does swear, though to a Truth,
You count him far worse than a Lyer,
Yet you will firk your Sister
Ruth,
So it may edifie her;
You, like the Devil, abhor a Crosse,
But I'le have as good Reason from
Pyms Stonehorse.
Oh Roundheads, Roundheads, damnable Roundheads,
What do you mean to do?
Our Churches Hierarchy you hold
Within a foul Suspition;
And say the Prelates Sleeves are old
Reliques of Superstition;
The very Ragges of
Rome they are
Such as the Whores of
Babilon wear.
Oh Roundheads, Roundheads, damnable Roundheads,
What do you mean to do?
Therefore in Zeal and Piety,
You'l dy their Lawn in blood,
And root out their Society,
A work you think is good;
The Malice is, some of your Eares
Were cropt far shorter than your hairs.
Oh Roundheads, Roundheads, damnable Roundheads,
What do you mean to do?
When you the Miter have pull'd down,
You'l be hang'd before contented,
Your next Pluck must be at the Crown,
A Plot long since invented:
But
Grigge swears
Tyburn shall have her due,
Hee'l be hang'd himself, if he hang not you.
Oh Roundheads, Roundheads, damnable Roundheads,
What do you mean to do?
The Coblers were astonished,
The Porters eke, also;
To hear the Noyse that ecchoed
From your vast
Tubb below:
But let him be hang'd will never mend,
The Cobler thinks upon his end.
But you to whom my Lines do tend
Have a care of what you do.
Lilly contemn'd. A SONG.
WHy art thou sad? Our Glasses flow
Like little Rivers to the Mayne;
What need'st thou then complain?
Then Boys mind your Glass,
And let all News pass
That treats not of this our Canary,
Let Lawyers fear their Fate,
In the turn of the State,
We suffer if this do miscarry,
Chor.
'Tis this will preserve us 'gainst Lillies
predictions,
And make us contemn our Fate and his Fictions.
'Tis this that setts the City Ruff;
And lyne
[...] the Aldermen with Fur;
It makes the Watchmen stiff and tuff
To call,
where go you Sir?
'Tis this doth advance
The Cap of Maintenance,
And keeps the Sword sleeping or waking;
It Courage doth raise
In such Men now adaies,
That hereto
[...]ore cry'd at Head-aching,
Chor.
'Tis this doth infuse in a Miser some pity,
And is the Genius, and Soul of the City.
Then why should we dispair, or think
The Enemy approacheth near?
Let such as never us'd to drink
Sack, be enslav'd to Fear.
Then to get Honor,
And that waits on her,
Strange Titles,
Illustrious and
Mighty.
Wee'l have a smart Bout
Shall speak us Men and stout,
And I'le be the first that shall fight ye.
[Page 85]Chor.
He that stifly can stand to't, and hath the best Braine;
Shall be styl'd Son of Mars,
and God of the Mayne.
A Monster to be seen at
VVestminster. 1642.
WIthin this House is to be seen
Such a Monster as hath not been
At any time in
England, nay
In
Europe, Africk, Asia.
'Tis a Round body, without a Head
Almost three years, yet not dead.
'Tis like that Beast I once did see,
Whose Tayle stood where his Head should be;
And, which was never seen before,
Though't want a Head, 'thas Horns good store,
It has very little hair, and yet
You'l say it has more hair than wit,
'Thas many Eyes and many Eares,
'Thas many Jealousies and
[...]ears,
'Thas many Mouths, and many Hands,
'Tis full of Questions and Commands.
'Tis arm'd with Muskets, Pikes, it fears
Naught in the World but Cavaliers;
'Twas born in
England, but begot
Betwixt the
English and the
Scot.
Though some are of Opinion Father
That the Devil was its Father,
And the City, which is worse,
Was its Mother, and its Nurse.
That it was a
Cretan born,
And not unlike, for't has the fashion
Just as may be of that Nation;
For 'tis a Lyer, none oth' least;
A slow Belly, an Evil beast;
Of what Religion none can tell,
It much resembles that in Hell.
Some say it is a Jew disguis'd,
And why, because 'tis circumcis'd;
For 'twas deprived long ago
Of many a Member wee well know.
In some points 'tis a Jesuited Priest,
In some it is a Calvinist:
For 'tis not Justify'd, it saith
By Good works, but by Publick Faith.
Some call't an Anabaptist: Some
Think now that Antichrist is come.
A Creature of an uncouth kind,
Both for its Body, and its mind:
Make hast and see't, else 'twill be gon,
For now 'tis sick, and drawing on.
London sad
London. AN ECCHO.
WHat wants thee, that thou art in this sad taking?
A King
What made him first remove hence his residing?
syding.
Faction.
Tell me whereon this strength of Faction lyes?
On lyes.
What didst thou do when the King left Parliament?
Lament.
What terms would'st give to gain his Company?
Any.
But how wouldst serve him, with thy best endeavour?
Ever.
What wouldst thou do if here thou couldst behold him?
Hold him.
But if he comes not what becomes of
London?
Ʋndone.
Upon bringing in the Plate.
ALL you that would no longer
To a
Monarch be subjected,
Come away to
Guildhall, and be there liberall,
Your Wish shall be there effected.
Come come away, bring your Gold, bring your Jewells,
Your silver Shap't, or Molten,
If the King
you'l have down, and advance to the Crown
Five Members
and K—
Regard no Proclamations,
They're Subjects fit to Jest on,
Henry Elsing's far better than
C. R.
Resolv'd upon the Question.
Come come away, &c.
You
Aldermen first send in
Your
Chaines upon these Summons,
To buy Ropes ends, for all the Kings Friends,
They're
Traytors to the Commons▪
Come, come away, &c.
Your
Basons large, and
Ewers,
Unto this use alot them,
If ere you mean your hands to clean
From th'Sins by which you got them.
Come, come away, &c.
Bring in your
Cannes and
Gobletts,
You Citizens confiding,
And think it no scorn, to drink in a
Horn
Of your own Wives providing.
Come, come away, &c.
Ye Bretheren strong and lusty,
The Sisters
Exercise yee,
Get
Babes of Grace, and
Spoons apace,
Both Houses do advise yee.
Come, come away, &c.
Let the Religious
Sempstress
Her silver
Thimble bring here,
'Twill be a fine thing in deposing a King,
To say you had a Finger.
Come, come away, &c.
Your Childe's redeemed
Whistle
May here obtain Admittance,
Nor shall that Cost, be utterly lost,
They'le give you an Acquittance.
Come, come away, &c.
The Gold and Silver
Bodkin,
The Parliament woo'd ha both,
Which oft doth make, the House to take
A Journey on the Sabboth.
Come, come away, &c.
You that have store of Mony
Bring't hither, and be thrifty,
If th'
Parliament thrive, they'le so contrive
You shall have back
Four for
Fifty.
Come, come away, &c.
If when the Councell's ended,
Your Plate you will recover,
Be sure you may the chief Head that day
On the
Bridge or
Tower discover.
Come, come away, &c.
The Prentices Petition to the Close Committee.
TO you close Members, wee the Young men come
(If Justice in this house has any Room?)
With a Petition, but it is for peace;
If you are vext, pray let all Quarrells cease;
First, for Religion.) If't be no offence,
Nor hinder things of greater Consequence)
We hope you do suppose there's some such thing,
'Cause 'thas bin often mention'd by the King.
Wee'ld hav't establisht, and do hold it fit
That no Lay-Levites ought to meddle with't.
[Page 90]Next, that in spight of Treason, we may have
A happy peace, but that we need not crave,
For when our bodkins cease 'twil be your pleasure
That arms may cease, not wanting wil, but treasure;
Else you'le but put the King to farther trouble,
To beat you to't, and make you Subjects double.
We know y'are powerfull, and can wonders do
Both by your Votes and Ordinances too;
In case all those Murther'd Innocent men
May by your Votes be made alive again,
Then your admiring Spirits shall perswade us
That neither War nor Famine can invade us:
Till then you'le give us leave to trust our Eyes,
And from our sad Experience, now grow wise:
Let not the Collonell's gaping son o'th' City
Be made the Mouth unto this close Committe;
Whose gaudy Troope, because they're boyes, he boasts
They are the Children of the Lord of Hosts;
And knows no reason, (for indeed tis' scant)
Why States are not like Churches Militant.
Next, that Truth, Wisedome, Justice, Loyalty,
And Law, five Members of our Faculty
(Who not by the King; but you, have been so long
By Votes Expell'd from your Rebellious throng)
May be restored; and in spight of
Pym
Be heard to speak their mind as well as him.
Which if not granted, we do tell you this,
Your Lord (whose head's in a Parenthesis)
Shall not secure you, but we shall unty
That twisted Rabble of the Hierachy,
Clubs are good payments, and'mongst other things
Know we are as many Thousands as you Kings.
In the Interim pray tell your fore-horse
Pym,
Just as he loves the King, so we love him.
Londons Farewell to the Parliament.
FArewell to the Parliament, with hey, with hey,
Farewell to the Parliament, with hoe,
Your dear delight the City,
Our wants have made us witty,
And a — for the Close Committee,
With a hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell the Lord of
Essex, with hey, with hey,
Farewell the Lord of
Essex, with hoe,
He sleeps till eleven,
And leaves the Cause at six and seven,
But 'tis no matter, their hope's in Heaven,
With hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell the Lord
Wharton, with hey, with hey,
Farewell the Lord
Wharton, with hoe,
The Saw-pit did hide him,
Whilst
Hastings did out-ride him,
Then came
Brooks and he out-ly'd him,
With hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell
Billy Stroud, with hey, with hey,
Farewell
Billy Stroud, with hoe,
He swore all
Whartons lyes were true,
And it concern'd him so to do,
For he was in the Saw-pit too,
With hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell the Lord
Brooks, with hey, with hey,
Farewell the Lord
Brooks, with hoe,
[Page 92]He said (but first he had got a Rattle)
That but one hundred fell in the Battle,
Besides Dogs, Whores, and such Parliament Cattle,
With hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell
Say and
Seale, with hey, with hey,
Farewell
Say and
Seale, with hoe,
May these Valiant Sons of
Ammon,
All be Hang'd as high as
Haman,
With the old Anabaptist they came on,
With hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell
K — with hey, with hey,
Farewell
K — with hoe,
Thy Father writ a Godly Book,
Yet all was fish that came to the hook,
Sure he is damn'd though but for his look.
With hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell
K — with hey, with hey,
Farewell
K — with hoe,
Thy House had been confounded,
In vain he had compounded,
If he had not got a Round-head,
With hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell
D— H— with hey, with hey,
Farewell
D— H — with hoe
Twas his Ambition, or his need,
Not his Religion did the deed,
But his Widow hath tam'd him of the speed.
With hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell
John Hampden, with hey, with hey,
Farewell
John Hampden with hoe,
Hee's a sly and subtile Fox,
Well read in
Buchanan and
Knox,
And hees gone down to goad the Oxe,
With hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell
John Pym, with hey, with hey,
Farewell
John Pym with hoe,
He would have had a place in Court,
And he ventur'd all his partie for't,
But bribing proves his best support.
VVith hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell
John Pym with hey, with hey,
Farewell
John Pym with hoe,
For all the feign'd disaster
Of the
Taylor and the Plaster,
Thou shalt not be our Master,
VVith hey trolly, lolly, loe,
Farewell Major
Skippon, with hey, with hey
Farewell Major
Skippon with hoe,
Ye have ordered him to kill and slay,
To rescue him and run away,
Provide you vote fair weather, and pay,
VVith hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell our VVorthies all, with hey, with hey,
Farewell our VVorthies all with hoe,
For they instead of dying,
Maintain the truth by lying,
And get victories by flying,
VVith hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell our
Scotch Brethren, with hey, with hey,
Farewell our
Scotch Brethren, with hoe.
They March but to the border,
But will be brought no farther,
For neither Ordinance nor Order,
With hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell my little Levites, with hey, with hey,
Farewell my little Levites, with hoe,
Though you seem to fear him,
Yet you can scarce forbear him,
And when you thank him, you but jeer him,
With hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell fears and jealousies, with hey, with hey,
Farewell fears and jealousies, with hoe,
Which, with lying Declarations,
Tumults, traytors, and protestations,
Have been the ruine of two Nations,
With hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell little
Isaack, with hey, with hey,
Farewell little
Isaack, with hoe,
Thou hast made us all, like Asses,
Part with our Plate, and drink in Glasses,
Whilst thou growst rich with 2 s. Passes,
With hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell Plate and Money, with hey, with hey,
Farewell Plate and Money, with hoe,
'Tis going down by water,
Or something near the matter,
And a Publique Faith's going after,
With hey trolly, lolly, loe.
Farewell Members five, with hey, with hey,
Farewell Members five, with hoe,
Next Petition we deliver,
Sends you packing down the River,
And the Devil be your driver,
With hey trolly, lolly, loe.
A SONG.
NEw-
England is preparing a-pace,
To entertain King
Pym, with his Grace,
And
Isaack before shall carry the Mace,
For Round-heads Old Nick stand up now.
No Surplisse nor no Organs there,
Shall ever offend the Eye, or the Ear,
But a Spiritual Preach, with a 3. hours Prayer,
For Round-heads, &c.
All things in Zeal shall there be carried,
Without any Porredge read over the buried,
No Crossing of Infants, nor Rings for the Married,
For Round-heads, &c.
The Swearer there shall punisht be still,
But Drunkennesse private be counted no ill,
Yet both kind of lying as much as you will,
For Round-heads, &c.
Blow winds, Hoyse sailes, and let us be gone,
But be sure we take all our Plunder a long,
That
Charles may find little when as he doth come,
For Round-heads Old Nick stand up now.
Sir
John Hotham's Alarm.
COme Traytors, March on, to the Leader Sir
John,
Though King
Charles his Friends disaffect you,
Do not obey him, but obey Devil
Pym,
And the Parliament will protect you.
Let us plead that we Fight, for the King and his Right,
But if he desire for to enter,
Let us Armed appear, and let us all sweare
Our lives for his sake we will venter.
But if he give Command, to disarm out of hand,
As we our
Allegiance do tender,
Let us presently Sweare, that Commanded we are
By the Parliament not to surrender.
If he desire for to see, what Command that may be,
We then will resolve him no further,
But intreat him to stay, while we send Post away,
He shall have a Copy of the Order.
But if he Proclaime, me a Traytor by Name,
And all you that adhere to my Faction,
What an Honour it will be, when my Country see me,
Second
Pym in a Trayterous Action.
But when the King sends, to require an amends
Of the Parliament for such denyal;
Whether Treason or no, the Law shall ne're know,
I must be put to your Vote for a Tryal.
And to put it to the Voice, or the Parliaments choice,
The House being now so empty;
If there be such a thing, as God or a King,
We'll carry it by five in the twenty.
If so please the Fates, as to change our Estates,
That the King his own Rights doth recover,
We will turn to their way, and the Town will betray,
Though a Ladder for our pains we turn over.
The Publique Faith.
SOme tell of
Africk Monsters, which of old,
Vain Superstition did for God-heads hold,
How the
Aegyptians, who first knowledge spread,
Ador'd their
Apis with the white Bulls head;
Apis still fed with Serpents that do hiss,
Hamon, Osiris, Monster
Anubis.
But Sun-burnt
Africk never had, nor hath
A Monster like our
English Publique Faith;
Those fed on Snakes, and satisfi'd, did rest,
This, like the Curtain Gulf, will have the best
Thing in the City, to appease its still
Encreasing hunger, Glutting its lewd will
With Families, whose substance it devours,
Perverting Justice and the Higher Powers;
Contemning without fear of any Law,
Preying on all to fill its ravenous Maw;
Whose
Estrich stomack, which no steele can sate,
Has swallowed down Indies of Gold and Plate:
[Page 98]This is the
Publique Faith, which being led
By th' Cities wealth, has in this Kingdom bred
Such various mischiefs with its viperous breath,
Blasting its peace and happinesse to death;
And yet this Idoll which our world adores,
Has made men prostitute their truth like Whores,
To its soul Lust, which surely may as well
And soon be satisfi'd, as th' Grave, or Hell;
This preys on Horses, yet that will not do,
Unlesse it may devour the Riders too:
This takes up all the Riches of the Land,
Not by intreaty, but unjust Command,
Borrowing extortively without any day
But the
Greek Calends, then it means to pay;
This 'gainst the Law of Nations does surprise
The Goods of Strangers, Kings, & in its wise
Discretion, thinks (though its not worth their note)
They're bound to take the
Publique Faiths trim Vote
For their security, when this
Publique Faith
Has broke more Merchants then e're Riot hath,
And yet, good men o'th City, you are proud
To have this Bankrupt
Publique Faith allow'd
More credit then your King, to this you'll lend
More willingly then ever you did spend
Money to buy your Wives and Children bread,
By such a strange Inchantment being misled
To your undoings; you who upon Bond,
Nay scarcely upon Mortgage of that Land,
Treble your Moneys value, would not p
[...]rt
With your lov'd Coine, vanquish'd by th' powerfull art
Of this
Magician Publique Faith, justly install
Him Master of your Bags, the Devil and all
That taught you get them by deceitfull wares,
And sucking in (like Mornings draughts) young Heirs:
[Page 99]Well, certainly if this fine humour hold,
Your Aldermen will have no other Gold
But what's in Thumb-rings, for their ponderous Chains,
They'le be the
Publique Faiths just lawfull gains,
And have the Honour afterwards to be
Hang'd in them for its Publique
Treachery.
What will become of you then, Grave and Witty
Inhabitants of this Inchanted City?
Who is't shall those vast Sums to you re-pay,
When Master
Publique Faith is run away?
O
[...] who shall those prodigious heaps renew,
Which were prodigally decreas'd by you?
Whom the whole world imagin'd men of thrift,
What will your Orphans do? How will they shift,
Whose whole Estates in th' City Chamber, hath
Been given a spoyle to ruin'd
Publique Faith?
Perhaps you'le pawn your Charter to supply
The worthy wants of your Necessity.
Who is 't will take't, when all (but men misled
Like you) know 'tis already forfeited?
Who is't will then into New Coine translate
Such monstrous Cupboards of huge antick Plate?
To
Publique Faiths vast
Treasury bring in,
From the Gilt Goblet, to the Silver Pin,
All that was Coinable, and what to do?
Even to create you
Knaves, and
Traytors too.
Faith if you chance to come off with your
Lives,
Your way will be to live upon your
Wives,
Their
Trading will be good, when
Fortune wears
Your Colours in the Caps of th' Cavaliers,
Whose Cuckolds you'll be then, & on your brow,
Wear their Horns, as you
Publique Faith's do now;
Then, then you'll howle, when you shall clearly see
That
Publique Faith, was
Publique Treachery:
[Page 100]Then you'll confess your selves to 've been undone
By
Publique Faith's man,
Isaack Pennington;
Then you'll repent that ever you did fling
Such monstrous Sums away against your King;
When he in
Triumph, with his
War-like Train,
Shall to your terrour view your
Town again;
Unlesse his Mercy mittigate his wrath,
Justly conceiv'd 'gainst you and
Publique Faith;
That Reverent Alderman which did defile
His Breeches at the Mustering ere while.
Shall then again those Velvet Slops bewray,
Cause
Publique Faith did make him go astray:
Pauls shall be opened then, and you conspire
No more against the Organs in the Quire,
Nor threat the Saints ith' Windows, nor repair
In Troops to kill the Book of Common-Prayer;
Nor drunk with Zeal, endeavour to engrosse
To your own use, the stones of
Cheap-side Crosse:
Then, then you'll bow your heads, your horns and all,
That so exalted were to save from thrall
Your ruin'd Liberties, and humbly pray
For Mercy, more then upon each
Fast-day;
When your Seditious Preachers to the throng,
Make Prayers
Ex Tempore of five hours long;
Lest you by early penitence prevent
Your certain danger, if not punishment,
Which you by no means may so safely do,
As quitting
Publique Faith, and
Treason too:
Then, then, though late, you to your grief will find,
That you have walkt (as Moles ith' Earth do.)
Of your fair reason, and obedient light,
Involv'd in Mists of black Rebellious Night: blind
If these Instructions will not make you see
Your Errour, may you perish in't for me,
[Page 101]And to your Ruine walk in deathfull path,
That leads to'th Gallows with the
Publique Faith.
The Sence of the House, or the Reason why those Members who are the Remnant of the two Families of Parliament cannot consent to Peace, or an Acccommodation.
To the Tune of
The New-England Psalm, Huggle Duggle, ho ho ho the Devil he laught aloud.
COme come beloved
Londoners, fy fy you shame us all,
Your rising up for Peace, will make the close Committe fall;
I wonder you dare ask for that, which they must needs deny,
There's 30. swears they'l have no Peace, and bid me tell you why.
First I'le no Peace quoth
Essex, my Chaplain sayes 'tis Sin
To loose 100
l. a day, just when my Wife lyes in;
They cry God blesse your Excellence, but if I loose my Place
They'l call me Rebel, Popular Asse, and Cuckold to my face.
You Citizen Fools, quoth
W— d' ye talk to to me of Peace,
Who not only stole his Majesties Ships, but rob'd him of his Seas,
No no I'le keep the Water still, and have my Ships well man'd,
For I have lost and stole so much, I know not where to land.
Do Brother do, sayes
H— for Peace breeds us no quiet,
Besides my Places to have lost, with sixteen Dishes dyet,
I play'd the
Judas with the King, which makes the World detest me,
Nay should his Majesty pardon me, 500. would arest me.
K — said, these
Londoners deserve to loose their Eares.
For now they'l all obey the King, like Citizen Cavaliers;
Let's vote this Peace a desperate Plot, and send them a denyal,
For if they save the Kingdom, they'le give us a Legal tryal.
The
Welsh-men rage quoth
S — and call me villanous Goat
For plundering
Hereford's Aldermens Gownes to make my
Besse a Coat,
'Tis true the Town did feed me well, for which I took good Fleeces,
But if Peace come they'le tear me and all my Whores in piece.
Fight fight quoth
Say, now now hold up these Jealousies and Fears,
The work will shew I laid the Plot above these 17. years;
'Tis I that am your Engineer', but if for Peace you vote,
Oh then they'le make me go to Church, or else they'le cut my Throate.
My Father
Goodwin quoth
W— calls me a silly Lad,
And wonders theyl'e ask Peace of me who have been lately mad;
You chuse me
Irish General, and I chuse to stay here,
For should we fight among the Boggs, there's never a Sawpit near.
Those Heathen Prentices quoth
Brooks, that made my Coach-man stay,
Bid me be bare, although I spoke but 13. Bulls that day,
But if Peace lop off my learned Skull, then all my House you'le see
The Sword of
Guy, the Dun-cows rib, the Asses tooth, and me.
I made a
Speech quoth
R — when his Excellence first began,
For which he swore by a
Pottle of Sack to make me a Gentleman:
But if the King get to
Whitehall then all my hopes are past,
My Father was first Lord of the House, and I shall be the last.
Keep Silence, quoth Mr.
Speaker, but do not hold your peace,
Let's sit, and vote, and hold them too't, for I'le do what you please;
I have had but poor 6000
l. besides some Spoons and Bowles,
Nay, grant a Peace, and how shall I be Master of the Rolles?
Then spake 5. Members all at once; who for an Army cry'd,
Last year, quoth they, you rescu'd us else we had all been try'd:
What though you be almost undone, you must contribute still,
Or wee'le convey, our Trunks away, and then do what you will.
My Venome swells, quoth
H— that his Majesty full well knows,
And I, quoth
Hampden, fetcht the
Scots, from whence this Mischief flows.
I am an Asse quoth
Haslerigg, but yet I'me deep ith' Plott,
And I, quoth
Stroud, can lye as fast, as Mr.
Pym can trott.
But I, quoth
Pym, your Hackney am, and all your drudgery do,
Have made good Speeches for my self, and Priviledges for you:
I can sit down and look on men, whilst others bleed and fight,
I eat their Lordships meat by day, and giv't their Wives by night.
Then
Vane grew black ith' face, and swore there's none so deep as I,
The Staff and Signet slipt my hand, my Son can tell you why,
The name of Peace they say 'tis sweet, but oh it makes me shrink,
Straffords Ghost doth haunt me so, I cannot sleep a wink.
Were
Strafford living,
Mildmay said, he would do me no ill,
I hid my selfith' Privy, when the House did pass his Bill:
But all my Gold and Silver thread
Gregory calls his own,
Though in a Ship I made my will, I was not born to drown.
You found me, quoth Sir
R— P— I had been long a Knave;
You promis'd I should be so still, if you my Vote might have.
And I, quoth
Laurence Whittaker, agreed to doe so too,
But if you serve old Courtiers thus, they'le do as much for you.
This Peace, quoth
Michael Oldsworth, will bring me never a Fee,
Although my Lord have sworn for Peace, and will not follow me.
Down, down with Bishops,
Wheeler said, for I have rob'd the Church▪
Oh base, will you conclude a Peace, and leave me in the lurch.
Who speaks of Peace quoth
Ludlow, hath neither Sence nor Reason,
For I ne're spoke ith' House but once, and then I spoke High Treason,
Your meaning was as bad as mine, you must defend my Speech,
Or else you make my mouth as foul as was my Fathers breech.
I'le plunder Him, quoth
Baynton, that mentions Peace to Me,
The Bishop would not grant my Lease, but now I'le have his Fee.
A Gunpowder Monopoly quoth
Evelyn rais'd my Father,
But if you let this War go down, they'le call me
Powder Traytor.
Oh
Jove, quoth Sir
John Hotham, is this a time to treat?
When
Newcastle and
Cumberland me to the Walls have beat?
You base-obedient Citizens d' ye think to save your Lives?
My Sonne and I will serve you all as I have serv'd Five Wives.
Indeed, quoth Sir
Hugh Cholmley, Sir
John you speak most true,
For I have sold, and morgaged, most of my Land to you;
My Brother would have serv'd the King, but was forbid to stay;
The King fore saw at
Keynton-field, Sir
Harry would run away.
I went down, quoth Sir
Ralph Stapleton, with Musquet, Pike and Drum,
To fetch Sir
Francis Wortley up, but truly hee'd not come.
Oh Lord, Sir
Robert Harlow said, how do our Foes increase?
I wonder who the Devil it was that first invented Peace.
Treason, Treason, Treason, Sir
Walter Earle cryes out,
Worse than blowing up the
Thames, the Dagger, or the Clout.
Hang me, quoth
Miles Corbet then, for we are all confounded,
And
Cavaliers will Cuckold me, as well as did the
Roundhead.
Quoth Sir
John Wray, Mr.
Speaker? I'le end this matter streit,
For this which is my Ninth Speech, I'me sure is none of my Eight;
I try'd it at my Tables end, my Neighbours know 'tis right,
But Peace will make me speak lesse wit, and then farewell your
Knight.
A-vengeance, quoth
Harry Martin then, I'le ha no Accommodation,
For it was I, that bravely tore his Majesties Proclamation;
Ith' House I spoke High Treason, I have sold both Land and Lease;
I shall not then keep but 3. Whores, Apox upon your Peace.
You see beloved Londoners,
your Peace is out of season,
For which you have the sence of the House, and every Members reason:
Oh doe not stand for Peace then, for trust me if you doe,
Each County in the Kingdome will rise and doe soe too.
Essex Petition to the Best of Princes.
THat
All-Majesty (from whom you take
Your Heaven-Anointed Scepter) for whose sake
You drink the Dregs of Bitternesse, which turns
Your Crown of Glory, to a Crown of Thornes;
View'd sinfull
Sodom, Sodom that offended
Even him, as we do you, that vilely blended
His gracious Promises, did wrest his Powers,
And violate his Laws, as we do yours;
Yet urg'd by him whose Zeal brookt no denyal,
Would have sav'd all, if ten were found but loyal.
Great Prince, to whom the Breath of Heaven hath read
The Principles of Mercy, in whose stead
You sit as God to punish, or to spare,
Whose equal Hand can ruine, or repair
Our staggering Fortunes▪ Pity, and behold
Rebellious
Essex! People now grown old
In Dis-obedience, who deserv'dly stand
Like Calves, expecting Death from your Just hand.
[Page 109]'Twas we that bleated first Rebellion out,
Who being Pulpit-led, not apt to doubt
Our Lecturing Zealots, and but green in reason,
Were made too wise, and frighted into
Treason:
We are a Cock-brain'd Multitude, a Rabble
Of all Religions, and we daily squabble
About vain shades, and let the substance passe,
Hating good Manners as we hate the Masse;
Our new discretions every day convince,
Our old Rebellions, 'gainst so mild a Prince
Were scarcely fixt, but a fresh Ordinance comes,
And damns our Conscience into deeper Sums;
Breaks ope our Houses, Rifles all our Stuff,
Nay more, as if we had not yet enough,
Plunders our very wits; nay if we do
Shew but a sorry shrug, Malignants too;
That in so much our people now obeys
As many
Tyrants as the Year hath dayes:
But we have ten, ten, ten times multiply'd,
And thousands more to that, which have deny'd
To bend their knees to
Baal, whereof some lye
Cloystered in Grates, where they unpittied, cry
For Superannuated Crusts, and there remain,
Even taking Gods and
Charles his Name in vain:
Some scorning to be aw'd by Subjects, fled
From their dear
Wives and
Children; led
Like
Theeves to
Gaols, saluted with the Curse
Of every Dunghill scurfe, with durt and worse,
Where they are sadly, but yet dearly fed,
Some ag'd, some weak, some dying, and some dead:
For their dear sake (great
Charles) they undertake
Deaths willing Martyrdome, for
Charles his sake;
Be gracious to their County, let her know
That she, a miserable Land, doth owe
[Page 110]Her sweet Redemption to their Congruous merit,
And least they'le abjure what now they scarce inherit,
Let that accustom'd Sun-shine of your Eye
Enrich her soyle, that she may still out-vye
Her Neighbouring Shires, & let that brand which now
She wears, be set on th' Epidemick brow;
And let the Loyal Gentry still be known
By this firm Mark from the perfidious Clown;
Let them, like treacherous slaves, be alwaies bound
To pay Rack-rents, and only Till the ground;
Let neither them nor their base off-spring dare
To be so rich as buy a Purchase there.
Dread Soveraign,
Forgive, Forget, Remember, and Relent,
Resemble him you so much represent,
And when pleas'd Heavens shall set thy Scepter free,
Triumph in
him, and wee'll triumph in
thee.
The Cryer.
O Yes, if any Man or Woman,
Of what degree soever,
Lord, Knight, Esquire, Gentleman, or
Yeoman,
Felt-maker, Button-Maker, or
Weaver,
Coach-man, Cobler, or
Brick-layer,
Sheriff, Alderman, or
Mayor,
In
City, Town, or
Country, hath
Lost his
Religion, or his
Faith,
Let him forth with repair to th' Cryer
Of
Westminster, where let him bring
And he shall hear on't, if
God blesse the King.
O Yes, if any Man or Woman,
Of what degree soever,
From the
Marquis, to the
Yeoman,
From the
Straw-hat to the
Beaver,
From the
Land-lord, to the
Dray-man,
Whether the
Clergy, or the
Layman,
Hath l
[...]st a
War-Horse-Armes, or
Dragoones,
That were the
Treasure of
Buffoones;
Jewells▪ Money, Pearle, or Plate,
Cups for
Service, or for
State;
Come to the Cryer, and you then
Shall find them he knows where, but God knows when.
The Cavaliers Prayer.
GOd blesse the
King and
Queen, the
Prince also,
And all his
Loyal Subjects both high and low,
For
Roundheads can pray for themselves we know;
Which no body can deny.
The Devil take
Pym and all his Peers,
God blesse Prince
Rupert and his Cavaliers,
For if they come hither
Pym will stink with fears;
Which no body can deny.
God blesse
Rupert and
Maurice withall,
That gave the Roundheads a great downfall,
And knockt their Noddles 'gainst
Worcester wall;
Which no body can deny.
Lawn sleeves and Surplices must go down,
For why, King
Pym doth sway the Crown;
But all are Bishops that wears a Black Gown;
Which no body can deny.
Let the Canons roar, and the Bullets flye,
King
Pym doth swear he'll not come nigh,
He sayes, its a pittyfull thing to dye;
Which no body can deny.
The
Horners they are brave Blades,
I do not know, but it is said
The stout Earl of
Essex is free of that trade;
Which no body can deny.
The Baker over
Burton cannot domineer,
For it is most firmly reported here,
He's as free of the Pillory as ever they were;
Which no body can deny.
There is
Isaack Pennington both wise and old,
I do not know, but 'tis for truth told
That he is turned poor Sexton of
Pauls.
Which no body can deny.
There is a
Lord W— both wise and round,
He will meet
Prince Rupert upon any ground,
And if that his hands behind him be bound;
Which few people will deny.
To whom it concerns.
COme, come, ye Cock-brain'd Crew, that can suppose
No truth, but that which travells through the Nose;
That looks on Gods Anointed with those Eyes,
You view your Prentices; ye that can prize
A Stable with a Church; that can Impeach
A Grave Devine, and hear an Hostler preach:
Are ye all mad? has your Fanatick zeal
Stifl'd your stock of Sences at a Meal?
Have ye none left to look upon these Times?
With Grief, which you and the unpunisht Crimes
Have brought upon this miserable Land?
Are ye all Bruits? not apt to understand
The neighbouring stroke of Ruine, till't be past?
And you become the Sacrifice at last?
What would you have? can Reformation border
On Sacriledge? or Truth upon Disorder?
Can Rifleing, and Religion dwell together?
Can the way hence be said the next way thither?
Go, ply your Trades,
Mechanicks, and begin
To deal uprightly, and Reform within;
Correct your prick-ear'd Servants; and perswade
Your long lov'd Arm-fulls; if you can thus trade
In Pigges and Poultry: let them cease to smooth
Your Rumpled Follies, and forbear to sooth
Your pious Treasons, thus to kick and fling,
Against the
Lords Anointed, and your
King.
By the Author.
That neither loves for
Fashion nor for
Fear,
As far from
Roundhead, as from
Cavalier.
To the City.
DRaw near you factious Citizens; prepare
To hear from me what hideous Fools you are;
What lumps of sordid Earth; in which we find
Not any least Resemblance of a Mind;
Unlesse to Baseness and Rebellion bent
Against the King, to ayde the Paliament;
That Parliament, whose Insolence will undoe
Your Cities Wealth, your Lives, and Safety too:
Are you so stupid, dull, you cannot see
How your best Vertues now are Treachery?
Apparent Treason, Murder, and the like:
How with unhallowed hands your strive to strike
Him, whom you should your Loyalty afford,
(
Great Charles) the
blest Anointed of the Lord?
How you do daily contribute, and pay
Mony, your Truths and Honours to betray?
Bigg with Phanatique thoughts, and wilde desire:
'Tis you, that blew up the increasing Fire
Of foul Rebellion, you that only bring
Armies into the
Field against your
King;
For were't not for supportment from your Baggs,
That
Great and
Highest Court that only braggs
[Page 115]Of your vain folly, long ere this had bin
Punish'd for their bold Sacrilegious sin,
Of
Actual Treason, there had never come
Upon this Kingdom such a
Martyrdom.
Armes hang'd up as uselesse, and the State
Retain'd his freedom; had you kept your Plate,
No
Keinton-Battails had with Mothers curse,
Made Childless there the Treason of your Purse;
The
Publick Purse o'th
City; which must be
Esteem'd the Cause of
Publick Misery;
No
Drums had frighted
silken Peace from out
The
Neighbouring Countries, nor need you about
Your
City with your
guilded Musquets goe
Trayning, not for good Service, but for Shew;
That the whole Town may see your
Feathers spread
Over your
Hatts, as th'
Hornes doe o're your
Head;
The
Humble Parliament had never dar'd
To have prescrib'd
Laws to their
King, but spar'd
Their Zeal in bringing
Innovations, and
Distractions o're the beautious face oth
Land,
They would not then have so Supreamly brought
Their Votes, to bring the Kingdomes
Peace to nought;
Nor with so sleight a value lookt on Him,
King Charles, and only doted on
King Pym;
Nor for Authentick doctrine, have allow'd
As Law, the Precepts of Ingenuous
Stroud;
Hampden nor
Martyn had not then lookt bigge
Upon their
King, nor
Arthur Haslerigge;
Nor yet
K — on whom we now confer
The style of
Trayterous Earle of
M—
Secur'd by you, the
Patrons of the Cause,
Condemn'd his
Loyalty, and the
Kingdoms Laws;
[Page 116]Nor mis-led
Essex ▪ had not you been, nere
had acted on this
Kingdoms Theater
So many
Tragedie
[...]; nor
Warwick sought
T'ingrosse the Naval Honours, no nor thought
On any Action so unjust, unmeet,
As keeping from his Majesty his
Fleet;
Tis you have done all this, y'ave been the Head.
The very Spring from whence this River spread
The streams of foul
Rebellion; which we know
At last will drown'd you with its over-flow;
You the
Arch-Traytors are, you, those that slew
The Kingdoms happinesse, and th' Allegiance due
Unto his
Sacred Majesty; you, you that have
Betray'd this Nations Honour to the Grave
of lasting Obloquy; you that have destroy'd
The smiling wealth of th'
City, and made void
The good Opinion, which the
King before
Had of your Loyalties, and th' Faith you bore
To th'
Royal Stem; which still has to your great
Advantage made this
City their
Chief Seat.
Fond and seditious Fools, d'ye think, yee
Are wiser than Times
numerous Progeny?
That have Ador'd your
City, when did
They
Your harmlesse
Ancestors, strive to give away
Their Wealth, and Duty from their
Sovereigne Lord,
To make themselves
Traytors upon
Record?
When did they their
Plate and
Coine bring in?
To be the Cause of their own
Ruyning?
They never us'd to fright their
King, nor draw
Tumults together, to affront the
Law.
No, nor good
Houses, their
Corslets slept, and all
The Armes they us'd hung up in each mans Hall.
[Page 117]They did not then
enamel'd Musquets carry
To
Train in
Moor-fields, and in
Finsbury:
But did in
Comely Archery excell,
Like honest grave Children of
Adam Bell,
And
Climme oth' Clough, now each of you will be
More than a furious
Wi
[...]liam Cloudeslee;
And trace the Streets with terror, as if
Ven,
With
Fulk and
Mannwaring, were the only Men
Whom you did owe
Allegiance to; as if
They
Could give you priviledge to disobey
The
Royal Mandate, which does them proclaim
Guilty of
Treason, and you of the
same;
As deeply stand Impeacht, and will at last
Pay dearly for't, when your
vain hopes are past.
All
succours, which you
credit for your
Merit,
Will be afforded you, by the
help oth'
Spirit,
That is the
Devil; sure the
Heavenly Powers,
Will never
Patronize such
Acts as
yours.
Poor baffl'd
City! baffled by a
Crue
Of Men, which are as arrant Fools as you;
Surely your
Brains can never be so
dull
As not
conceive this, which each
empty Skull
Must needs
resent; how that
their only Ayme
Is,
to create your City all one Flame,
And as the
Smoak and
Sparks do
up aspire,
They'le
sit and
laugh (like
Nero) at the
Fire
Themselves have made; unlesse your
Heads be all
Horns and no
Flesh, you needs must see the
Fall
That threatens
you, like
Lightning: To
eschew
Which
Ruine, 'twould be Wisedome to
renue
Your lost Allegiance, and
Repentance bring,
As a
fresh Victim, to
appease your King;
For be assur'd,
Who to the King's untrue,
Must in their Nature needs be false to you.
The MONSTER.
PEace,
Vipers peace, let
Crying blood nere cease
To haunt your
bloody Souls, that love not
Peace.
And curst be that
Religion, that shall cry,
A
Reformation with
Phlebotomye;
Your
Impious Firebrands, whom the very
Tears
Of
Growning England, buried in their
Fears,
Cannot extinguish; whom the
bleeding Veins
Of
desperate Ireland, which even now remains
A very
Golgotha, cannot asswage
Those
Stripes, the earnest of
Another Age
Taste of your
salvage Piety, and ly
The
Lamb-less Martyrs of your
Cruelty;
Whilst you lye softly emb'red, to encrease
The
flames of
Christendome, and cry
no Peace,
Let
Sampsons coupled
Messengers convey
Those
Firebrands hence, and let them make their way
To their own
Houses, consume and
devaste,
Burn down their Barnes, and lay their
Graynards waste,
Demolish all within
doors, and
without,
Make havock there,
destroy both Branch and Root.
Let all their
Servants flee
amaz'd; and cry,
Fire, Fire, and let no helping hand be nigh;
Let their
Wiv
[...]s live, but only live t' appear
Thornes in their
Sides, and
Thunder in their
Ears;
May all their
Sons run mad into the Street,
And seeking
Refuge there, there may they meet
Th'
encountering Sword, and whom it spares to
kill,
May they be
Slaves, and labour at the
Mill:
Let all their
Daughters beg, and
beg in
vain;
Let them be
ravisht first, and then be
slain;
[Page 119]Let all their
Kindred wander up and down,
Like
Vagabond ▪ be lasht, from
Town, to
Town:
Let
basenesse be Entituled on their
Names,
Too firm for all recoveries: O let
Shames,
Reproach, and
Lasting Infamy, remain
In
deeper Characters than that of
Cain;
Let
Caitiff P— and that
Bloody Plot,
Be
Sanctified now, or at least forgot;
And let those
Vipers vindicate their
Crimes
In every
Almanack to after times;
Where may there
Treason live among their sences,
More firm then Reigns of either
Kings or
Princes.
Thus may these
Firebands thrive, and if this
Curse
Succeed not, let it yield unto a worse.
For them, let them burn still, till Heaven thinks good,
To
Quench them in their
Generations Blood;
So that the
World may hear them hisse and cry,
Who lov'd not
Peace, in
Peace shall never dye.
The Earl of
Essex his Speech to the Parliament after
Keinton Battle.
HAil to my
Brother Round-heads, you that sit
At home, and study
Treason, 'bove my
Wit
Or
Valour to maintain; it's you whose hearts
And brains are stufft with all Devillish darts
Of
Rapine, and
Rebellion; you whose dark
Religious Villanies, hates the least spark
Of Justice or Obedience to the King;
To you, and none but you, true News I bring,
[Page 120]With all my
Fellow Rebells that survive,
'Mongst whom in faith my self scapt scarce alive:
For when the Cavaliers, and Popish Schollers
Charg'd us so hot, my Coach full of
Rex-dollers
I could have given to have been ten miles off;
And though the Zealots of our Party scoff,
And taunt the King's well-wishers, take't from me,
Happy were all the Round-heads that did flee;
They scapt a scowering, which through very fear
Took me and all my Regiment in th' Rear,
At the first Charge; for that when we should fight,
We sneakt away▪ and had more mind to —
For had I dard, to venture my dear life,
I should have rought once for the
Whore my Wife;
Yet I dare swear that we had won the day,
Had not so many fallen and run away:
And yet for all this Blood that hath been spilt,
My Sword is guiltlesse, for fast by the hilt
I held it in my Scabbard, and still cry'd,
Well done, Fight on, unto the Fools that dy'd;
Whilst I stole towards
Warwick, to avoyd
The Field, with the sad Spectacle quite cloyd:
I lost my Coach, and (which doth make me fret)
I lost
[...]lake's Letter in my Cabinet,
That reveal'd all our
Treason, he good man
Suffer'd at
Oxford, and unlesse I can
Repent, 'tis said, that I must dye like him,
Be Hang'd and Quarter'd, and you Mr.
Pym:
We must be cautious, for the Cavaliers
Have desperate souls, concerning those base fears
That brought mee back again; besides, the King
Has a Just Cause you know, and though we bring
Our own hearts tell us we are like to loose
Our heads, if
Charles prevail; which we must do
If he proceeds thus, to kill ten for two,
You must provide new Armour, and more Armes,
And a new Generall, that dares hear
Alarms
Of
Drums and
Trumpets; one that may have sence
And valour to excell my Excellence.
The
Peev
[...]sh Women as I pass'd the
Strand,
Blesse me knee deep, and would have kiss'd my hand,
As King, whilst I most curteously vayl'd
My Hat, and Feather to them, others rayl'd;
And them as wisht, or knew I had the worst,
For one that pray'd for me, dovoutly curst.
The truest News of all I hope to tell ye,
Is that I have more mind to fill my belly,
Then fight again, for that same
Dutchland Devil,
Rupert, the Prince of mischief, and all evil,
My Victuals took away, and burst my
Waggons,
Whilst the
Kings Forces fought with fiery
Dragoons,
And beat me out o'th'
Field; although we blind
The Multitude, and say w' had sea and wind,
Yet I protest the Elements themselves
Conspir'd to ruine us,
Rebellious Elves:
And to conclude, some
Jeering Cavalier,
Has put upon us, in a
Song, this Jeer,
Rather than they should have the better a,
That you and I were drawn and hang'd,
&c.
A Dialogue between two
ZEALOTS upon the
&c. in the
Oath.
SIr
Roger from a zealous piece of Freeze,
Rais'd to a Vicar of the Children threes;
Whose yearly Audit may, by strict account,
To twenty Nobles, and his vails Amount;
Fed on the common of the female charity,
Untill the
Scots can bring about their parity,
So shotten, that his Soul like to himself,
Walks but in
Querpo: this same Clergy Elf,
Encountring with a Brother of the Cloth,
Fell presently to Cudgels with the O th:
The Quarel was, a strange mis-shapen Monster
&c. (God blesse us!) which they conster
The brand upon the buttock of the Beast,
The Dragons tayle ty'd on a knot, a neast
Of young
Apocraphas, the fashion
Of a new mental Reservation.
While
Roger thus divides the text, the other
Winks and expounds, saying, My pious Brother,
Hearken with reverence; for the point is nice,
I never read on't, but I fasted twice;
And so by revelation know it better,
Than all the Idolaters o' the Letter.
With that he swell'd, and fell upon the Theam,
Like great
Goliah with his Weavers beam:
I say to thee,
&c. thou ly'st,
Thou art the curled lock of Antichrist:
Rubbish of
Babel, for who will not say,
[...]ongues were confounded in
&c?
[Page 123]Who swears
&c. swears more Oaths at once
Than
Cerberus out of his triple Sconce:
Who views it well, with the same eye beholds
The old half Serpent in his numerous folds.
Accurst
&c. thou, for now I scent,
What lately the prodigious Oysters meant.
Oh
Booker, Booker, how cam'st thou to lack
this Sign in thy prophetick Almanack?
It's the dark Vault wherein th' infernal plot
Of Powder 'gainst the State was first begot.
Peruse the Oath, and you shall soon descry it,
By all the Father
Garnets that stand by it;
'Gainst whom the Church, whereof I am a Member,
Shall keep another fifth day of
November:
Yet here's not all, I cannot halfe untrusse
&c. it's so abominous.
The
Trojan Nag was not so fully lin'd!
Unrip
&c. and you shall find
Og the great Commissary, and which is worse,
Th' Apparatour upon his skew-ball'd horse.
Then (finally my Babe of Grace) forbear,
&c. will be too far to swear;
For 'tis (to speak in a familiar style)
A
York-shire wea-bit, longer, than a mile.
Then
Roger was inspir'd, and by Gods-diggers,
Hee'l swear in words at large, and not in Figures.
Now by this drink, which he takes off as loath
To leave
&c. in his liquid Oath.
His Brother pledg'd him, and that bloody wine,
He swears shall seal the Synods
Cataline.
So they drunk on, not offering to part
Till they had quite sworn out th' eleventh quart:
[Page 124]While all that saw and heard them, joyntly pray,
They and their tribe were all,
&c.
The Publique Faith.
STand off my Masters: 'Tis your pence a peece,
Jason, Medea, and the Golden Fleece;
What side the line good Sir?
Tigris, or
Po?
Lybia? Japan? Whisk? or
Tradinktido?
St. Kits? St. Omer? or
St. Margaret's Bay?
Presto begon? or come aloft? what way?
Doublets? or Knap? the Cog? low Dice? or high?
By all the hard names in the Letany,
Bell, Book and Candle, and the
Pope's great toe
I conjure thy account: Devil say no.
Nay, since I must untruss, Gallants look to't,
Keep your prodigious distance forty foot,
This is that
Beast of eyes in th'
Revelations,
The
Basilisk has twisted up three Nations.
Ponteus Hixius doxius, full of tricks,
The
Lottery of the vulgar lunaticks.
The
Knapsack of the State, the thing you wish,
Magog and
Gog stew'd in a Chaffendish.
A bag of Spoons and Whistles, wherein men
May whistle when they see their Plate agen.
Thus far his Infancy: his riper age
Requires a more mysterious Folio page.
Now that time speaks him perfect, and 'tis pity
To dandle him longer in a close Committee,
The Elf dares peep abroad, the pretty Fool
Can wag without a truckling standing-stool;
Hee's the fair Off-spring of one half-score year;
The Heir of the House and hopes, the cry
And wonder of the Peoples misery.
'Tis true, while as a Puppy it could play
For Thimbles, any thing to passe the day;
But now the Cub can count, arithmetize,
[...]link
Masenello with the
Duke of
Guise;
Sign for an
Irish purchase, and traduce
The
Synod from their Doctrine to their Use;
Give its Dam suck, and a hidden way
Drink up arrears
a tergo mantica.
An everlasting Bale, Hell in Trunk-hose,
Uncased, the Divel's
Don Quixot in prose.
The Beast and the false Prophet twin'd together,
The squint-eyed emblem of all sorts of weather.
The refuse of that Chaos of the earth,
Able to give the World a second birth.
Affrick avaunt! Thy trifling Monsters glance
But Sheeps-eyed to this Penal Ignorance.
That all the Prodigies brought
[...]orth before
Are but Dame Natures blush left on the score.
This strings the Baker's dozen, christens all
The cross-leg'd hours of time since
Adam's fall.
The Publick Faith? why 'tis a word of kin,
A Nephew that dare
[...]
Cozen any fin.
A Term of Art, great
Bohemoth's younger Brother,
Old
Machiavel, and half a thousand other.
Which when subscrib'd writes
Legion, names on truss,
Abaddon, Belzebub, and
Incu
[...]us,
All the
Vice-Royes of darkness, every spell
And Fiend wrap'd in a short Tri
[...]illable.
But I fore-stall the Show. Enter and see,
Salute the Door, your
Exit shall be free.
[Page 126]In brief 'tis call'd Religions ease, or loss;
For no one's suffer'd here to bear his crosse.
A Committee.
CAst
Knaves my
Masters, fortune guide the chance,
No packing I beseech you, no by-glance
To mingle pairs, but fairly shake the bag,
Cheats in their spheres like subtile spirits wag.
Or if you please the Cards run as they will,
There is no choyce in sin and doing ill.
Then happy man by's dole, luck makes the ods,
He acts most high that best out-dares the gods.
These are that
Raw-bon'd Herd of
Pharaoh's Kine,
Which eat up all your Fatlings, yet look lean.
These are the after-claps of bloudy showres,
Which, like the
Scots, come for your guide and yours.
The Gleaners of the Fielde, where, if a man
Escape the sword, that milder frying-pan;
He leaps into the fire, cramping the claws
of such can speak no English but the Cause.
Under that foggy term, that Inquisition,
Y' are wrackt at all adventures
On suspition:
No matter what's the crime, a good estate's
Delinquency enough to ground their hate.
Nor shall calm innocence so scape, as not
To be made guilty, or at least so thought.
And if the spirit once inform, beware,
The flesh and world but renegadoes are.
[Page 127]Thus once concluded, out the
Teazers run,
And in full cry and speed till
Wat's undone.
So that a poor
Delinquent fleec'd and torn
Seems like a man that's creeping through a horn,
Finds a smooth entrance, wide, and fit, but when
Hee's squeez'd and forc'd up through the smaller end,
He looks as gaunt and pin'd, as he that spent
A tedious twelve years in an eager Lent;
Or bodies at the
Resurrection are
On wing, just rarifying into aire.
The
Emblem of a man, the pitied
Case
And shape of some sad being once that was.
The
Type of flesh and blood, the Skeleton
And superfices of a thing that's gone.
The winter quarter of a life, the tinder
And body of a corps squeez'd to a cinder;
When no more tortures can be thought upon,
Mercy shall flow into oblivion.
Mercifull Hell! thy Judges are but three,
Ours multiform, and in plurality!
Thy calmer censures flow without recall,
And in one doom souls see their finall All.
We travel with expectance: Suffrings here
Are but the earnests of a second fear.
Thy plagues and pains are infinite; 'tis true;
Ours are not only infinite, but new.
So that the dread of what's to come, exceeds
The anguish of that part already bleeds.
This only difference swells 'twixt us, and you,
Hell has the kinder
Devils of the two.
The Model of the New Religion.
WHoop!
Mr. Vicar in your flying frock?
What news at
Babel now? how stands the
Cock!
When wags the floud? no
Ephimerides?
Nought but confounding of the languages?
No more of th' Saints arival? or the chance
Of three pipes two pence and an ordinance?
How many Queer-religions? clear your throat,
May a man have a peny-worth? four a groat?
Or do the
Junsto leap at truss-a-fayle?
Three Tenents clap while five hang on the tayle?
No
Querpo model? never a knack or wile?
To preach for Spoons and Whistles? cross or pile?
No hints of truth on foot? no sparks of grace?
No late sprung light? to dance the wilde-goose chase?
No
Spiritual Dragoones that take their flames
From th' inspiration of the City Dames?
No crums of comfort to relieve your cry?
No new dealt mince-meat of Divinity?
Come lets's project: by the great late
Eclipse
We justly fear a famine of the lips.
for Sprats are rose an
Omer for a sowse,
Which gripes the conclave of the lower House.
Let's therefore vote a close humiliation
For opening the seal'd eyes of this blind Nation,
That they may see confessingly, and swear
They have not seen at all this fourteen year.
And for the splints and s
[...]avins too, tis said
All the joynts have the
Riffcage, since the head
[Page 129]Swell'd so prodigious, and exciz'd the parts
From all
Allegiance, but in tears and hearts.
But zealous
Sir, what say to a touch at Prayer?
How
Quops the spirit? In what garb or ayre?
With
Souse erect, or pendent, winks, or haws?
Sniveling? or the extention of the jaws?
Devotion has its mode:
Dear Sir, hold forth,
Learning's a venture of the second worth.
For since the peoples rise and its sad fall,
We are inspir'd from much, to none at all.
Brother adieu! I see y'are closely girt,
A costive
Dover gives the
Saints the squirt.
Hence (Reader) all our flying news contracts
Like the
States Fleet, from the
Seas into
Acts:
But where's the Model all this while, you'll say
'Tis like the Reformation, run away.
To a Fair Lady weeping for her Husband Committed to Prison by the Parliament.
1643.
TUsh, let them keep him if they can,
He's not in hold while you are free,
Come, sigh no more, but pledge the man,
What though in Fetters, yet can he
Be Prisoner unto none but thee;
Then dry your Eyes, for every tear
Makes them like drowned worlds appear.
Post through the Aire, my fancy went,
With wings disguis'd, and there stood by
When he was brought to th' Parliament,
And streight
to th' Bar, to th' Bar, they cry,
The smiling Captain asked,
Why?
With that they soon drew up his Charge,
Which Lady you shall hear at large.
Imprimis, he was married late
With a Gold Ring, unto a Dame,
Would make the best of us a Mate;
Witty, Pretty, Young, and Quaint,
And fairer then our selves can Paint:
Her lips do set mens teeth on edge,
Sure 'tis a Breach of Priviledge.
And her Malignant beauty, can
Provoke our Members up to rise,
Nay make our General prove a man;
And the Star-Chamber of her Eyes,
Robs Subjects of their Liberties:
And then her voice keeps Eares in awe,
Even like the High-Commission Law.
Nay more, the fair Delinquent hath
A pair of Organs in her throat,
Which when she doth inspire with breath,
She can command in every noat,
More then both our Houses Vote
Her very Hair, put in Array,
Can fetter our Militia.
Her Cheeks still Natures Pattent have,
Not yet call'd in, for only
[...]
And other Ladies Hucksters be,
Her Beauty's the Monopolie;
When theirs is spent, to her they come,
And chaffer with her face for some.
She keeps an Alter on her brow,
Her Eyes two Tapers on each side,
There Superstitious Lovers bow;
Her Name is
Mary too beside,
Who owns a Faith that's sanctifi'd;
Let's clap up him till further leisure,
And send for her to wait our pleasure.
Then go fair Lady, follow him,
Fear no
Trumpet, fear no
Drum,
Fair Women may prevail with
Pym,
And one sweet smile when there you come,
Will quickly strike the
Speaker dumb:
If not, then let one tear be spent,
And 'twill dissolve the Parliament.
Mr.
Fullers Complaint.
ENgland once
Europes joy,
Now her scorn;
Ambitious to be forlorn,
Self, by self torn;
Stand amaz'd?
Thy woes are blaz'd,
By silence best,
And wanting words, even wonder out the rest.
Help Gracious King,
The source and spring
Of all our bliss,
Alas the fault's not his;
Good Prince how is he griev'd,
That he's mistook?
Or what's a Curse,
Far worse, he is not believ'd.
Help long-wisht for Parliament,
If so good by your intent;
And will,
And skill,
Why ill is your successe?
Alas Malignant humors lurk,
And cause the Physick not to work,
To give our woes redresse.
Help in the Law, ye Learned Sages,
Studied well in former ages:
But our Rents
Are above all Presidents;
In fight, what's might,
That's right:
For Statutes are by Lawyers awed,
And Common-law by Canon-law out-lawed.
Help ye Divines our souls to plaister,
Settle the Legacy which your Master
Bequeath'd to his own at his decease,
Even Peace:
Alas alas in
Gilead,
Where is no balm for to be had;
They that should holy water bring, bring fiery fuell.
No help, no help,
Why then 'tis vain
For to complain;
And why men sin with all their heart,
Sorrow only but in part;
And still they cry
That all is ill,
And love to make't and keep't so still.
Since then our wounds
Are grown so wide,
And all means try'd,
And all deny'd;
Good God help us at last,
Before all help be past,
For this is sure,
Men made the wounds, but God alone can help the cure.
Upon wearing the Kings Colours.
ALas, what take ye pepper in the Nose
To see King
Charles his Colours worne in Pose?
'Twas but an Ornament to grace the Hat,
And must we have an Ordinance for that?
O serious worthies! how can you dispence
With so much time to draw a Grievance thence?
But you do very well to make it known,
When others Liberties surmounts your own;
[Page 134]You can and will suppresse it, well, you may
Do even what you please, we must obey;
I hope you'll take in hand the
Taylors Trade,
And teach us how our
Apparell must be made,
That women in a Vote shall plainly see
How wide their Smocks and Petticoats shall be:
If this continue, faith turn
Barbars too,
And cut our hair of the same length you do;
And let it be no less a Crime then
Treason,
To wear, do, or speak any thing that's reason:
As for the King, you'll say he's King, 'tis true,
But he can rule himself, and order you:
What, can he so? he's mightily too blame,
And faln into displeasure for the same;
He will not grant that you're his Friends, 'tis true,
Should you rule two Kingdoms as a third does you,
Lest from a Ribbin then, should spring a Faction,
'Twas wisely done to stop its growth i'th' Action;
Yet in despight of you, that this controule,
I'le wear my Soveraigns Colours in my
Soul.
A Western Wonder.
DO you not know, not a fortnight agoe,
How they brag'd of a Western wonder?
When a hundred and ten, slew five thousand men,
With the help of Lightning and Thunder.
There
Hopton was slain, again and again,
Or else my Author did lye;
With a new
Thanksgiving, for who are living,
To God, and his Servant
Ch
[...]dleigh.
But now on which side, was this Miracle try'd,
I hope we at last are even;
For Sir
Ralph and his Knaves, are risen from their Graves,
And Cudgel'd the Clowns of
Devon.
And now
St— came, for his Honour was lame
Of the Gout three months together;
But it prov'd when they fought, but a running Gout,
For his heels were lighter then ever.
For now he out-runs, his Armes and his Guns,
And leaves all his money behind him;
But they follow after, unlesse he take water
At
Plymouth again, they will find him.
What
Reading hath cost and
St— hath lost,
Goes deep in the Sequestration;
These wounds will not heal, with your new Great Seal,
Nor
Jepsons Declarations.
Now
Peters, and
Case, in their Prayer and Grace,
Remember their new
Thanksgiving;
Isaack and his
Wife, now dig for their life,
And shortly must do't for their living.
A SONG.
THe world is now turn'd upside-down,
'Tis thought K.
Charles will keep his Crown,
The
Roundheads now shall all be put down,
And alas poor Parliament now, now, now.
Prince
Rupert made fair work t'other day,
He kild all the Troopers that durst to stay,
The rest he kild, their Horses running away:
And alas poor Parliament now, now, now.
And
Essex his hornes hung so in his light,
Alas poor Cuckold, he could not see to fight,
And both Houses they were all ready to —
And alas poor Parliament now, now, now.
Then send for
W— and give him good pay,
He'le hoise up his Sayles and carry you away,
In hopes you'le stand his Friend another day:
And alas poor Parliament now, now, now.
Upon Alderman
Atkins bewraying his Slops on the great Training day.
I Sing the strange adventures and sad Fate,
That did befall a Collonel of late,
A portly Squire; a Warlike hardy wight,
And pity 'tis, we cannot call him Knight,
A stout man at Custard, and Son of
Mars,
But oh the soul disaster of his.—
Before the
Worthies, and the rest beside.
Who saw how he his Courser did bestride,
Weilding his
Truncheon, like a
Weavers beam,
And yet — his hose in every seam;
I cannot tell how fair he was i'th' Cradle,
But sure I am he was foul enough i'th' Saddle:
[Page 137]For feats of
Armes none could come near him then,
He smelt so strong, and when eight thousand men
Discharg'd their Musquets, he discharged too,
But what? his Office and his Guts? what though
He made a House of Office of his Hose?
Stand further off, if it offend your Nose:
Belike he meant to hansell his New Satten,
Or, like fat Oxen, in his dung to batten;
But when in triumph he from
Finsbury
Came home to
Leaden-hall, he call'd to see
His
Hellena, his Sultanesse, when she
At's first approach smelt out his Knavery;
And lest by the hot skirmish of the day,
Her
Paris might miscarry in the way,
Or mett with some wounds, sends for in all haste
Shambrook the skilfull Chirurgion, who begins at th' waste
T'untruss, and as he fumbling downwards tends,
He had the businesse at his fingers ends;
Foh, quoth the Chirurgion, call the Kitchin Quean
With clout in hand to make his Worship clean;
Then about the Master all the Servants shuffl'd,
He, like old
Lockwood in the Counter, scuffl'd,
Shew'd two broad mighty Hanches all bew ray'd,
Nay then, quoth
Shambrook, how shall I be paid;
The Devil a wound I see, is this the prime
Of six City Colonels in good time?
They say that shitten luck is good, and I
Will put it to the Vote of Chivalry,
Whether all be not likely well to jump
In th' New Militia, when a — is trump.
The Downfall of
Cheapside-Crosse,
May 2, 3, 4. 1643.
WHat hast thou done poor
Crosse, that this hard doome
Is laid upon thee? what is now become
Of all thy gilded Images? for behold,
That now is Stone and Brick, which once seem'd Gold,
The City-Rulers, in their Graver wit,
And late got Power, have now thought it fit,
That thou shouldst be demolisht, and pluckt down
By th' warrant of Lord
Isaack Pennington;
London's chief (
ut vis) who thinks store of good
He doth, in prisoning, hanging, shedding blood,
In robbing, plundering each that's good to's King,
Because no Plate , nor Mony, they will bring
Into
Guildhall: nay then it is no wonder,
If by his Order thou art pluckt asunder,
When first the top of thee with many a knock
They did beat down, (Lord) how the silly flock
Of Round-heads shouted, looking up to th' Skies,
Giving God thanks for the great Victories
They had got 'gainst thee, whilst the Drums did beat,
And Trumpets sounding; truly it was meet:
They threw their Hatts up, and their Muskets shot,
They shook their Heads, and clapt their Hands, what not?
[Page 139]And thus when any Picture, Legge, or Arme
Was thrown to th' Ground, the Roundheads all did swarme,
And sundry heaps tumbling one on another,
Striving who first should see it, then a Brother
A long Prayer made for thanks, that now they might,
Doe what they list, be it nor Just, nor Right;
For now they keep the whole City in awe,
With wrong-expounded, and misconstrued Law,
Doing what they think fit, what's good i'th eyes
Of them, being led even as their Spirits rise.
But for their Misdemeanours let this Curse
Light upon them, or a ten-times far worse:
May they no Silver have, nor yet no Gold,
Because there's Crosses in't: and, to be bold,
May they lead Lives so crost with grief and care,
That, at the last, may bring them to despair,
May they no good thing quietly enjoy,
May they even perish as they walk, and dye,
And may they still crost be, and crost again,
May Crosses mixt with Losses be their pain,
Nay, because
Crosses they desire none,
May they have ever Crosses two for one,
May all their Noses rot, that we may know
Them, may their Eares as long as Asses grow,
May their Hair nere be long, and may their hands
Even pine away, may they stink as they stand:
And to conclude, may they all lead crosse Lives,
Nay, which is worse, be troubled with crosse Wives.
A Vindication of
Cheapside-Crosse against the Roundheads.
MUst I then down? is an eternal doome
Past out against me? must I needs to
Rome?
And why? it is contrary to the Laws,
To judge th' offendor e're they hear the Cause.
Why come you arm'd against me? what may be
The cause of difference 'twixt you and me?
Have I transgrest the Law? or did I ever
Our gracious Soveraign from his People sever?
Did I to a factious Covenant subscribe,
Or turn a
Jack-on-both-sides for a bribe?
Rebells have long our wisht for blisse defer'd,
All rose in armes, but yet I never stir'd.
When such a
Prick-ear troop upou me gaz'd,
Crying (no
Crosse) good faith I stood amaz'd:
I was struck dumb with wonder, and which worse,
Because I'de gold about me, fear'd my Purse.
This zealous rabble came not to adore me,
Yet (thanks to th' Butchers) some fell down before me,
Others ran quite away, the rest disputed,
Mis-using Scripture phrases, but confuted.
Wisedome they call'd Apocriphal, threw di
[...]t on
All Fathers faces, but Saint
P— and
Burton.
Was God ith' middle of this Congregation?
Or were they led by instinct, or revelation?
Kings do
[...]t their Crowns, and Cardinals their Copes,
All must be bare unto a crew of Crops.
To hate the very picture of a King?
Brethren what would you have? or what d'ye fear?
I draw no sword, nor do I wear long hair.
I'le do no wrong (though arm'd with Pikes about)
Would you know why? 'twas to keep Roundheads out,
Who have not sworn, but tane a Protestation
To leave no golden Crosse to blesse our Nation.
They will divide my Coat, my Flesh, my Bones,
Theyl'e share the Gold, and give their Wives the Stones.
They say they'le pluck the Tower of
Babel down,
All things go right when there's no Crosse it'h Town.
But who can live without them? Crosses are
The good mans blessings, and his certain share.
He that would win an everlasting Crown,
Must elevate his Crosse, not throw it down.
They'le have no Common Prayer, but do abhor
All that is common, but a common W—
Will you
[...]ear reason? that's not common to ye,
Will Prayers prevail? He pray
ex tempore.
You think 'tis justice that your factious crew
Are crosse to me 'cause I am Crosse to you:
You will have flesh for flesh, It's very dear
That
Peters nose should pay for
Malchas ear.
If he should snuffle now, that were a jest,
That very thing would make him full blest:
You'l run to hear him, and cry's doctrine strong,
Though non-sense, in regard he stands so long.
Put out his eyes next time, and you may may find
A second like the first, and doctrine blind.
[Page 142]Some call me Popish, and report they see
Divers adore me, what's all that to me?
Because they worship me shall I fall down
Unto such Calves, Mechanicks of the Town.
'Tis Popery, let them kneel that list, Ile stand?
Before Ile bow, Ile fly to some new Land.
Be sorry Brethren, I am pleas'd to think
'Twas from too little wit, or too much drink.
Ile be a Roundhead spiritually sent
To pardon your affronts, if youl repent.
I am a foe to
Rome, for you shall find
When I am gone, there's the more room behind.
A Song in defence of
Christmass.
NOw Christmass is come, let us beat up the Drum,
And call our good Neighbours together,
And when they appear, let us make them good chear,
That will keep out the wind and the weather,
To feast at this season, I think 'tis no treason,
I could give you a reason why,
Though some are so pure, that they cannot endure to see a Nativity Pye.
I cannot but wonder, that the Souldiers should plunder,
For keeping our Saviours birth,
For all Christians then, or I cannot tell when,
Should shew forth their joy and their mirth.
[Page 143]But our Saints now adayes, despise good old wayes,
'Gainst which they both preach and pray,
But to give them their dues, they're no better than Jewes,
That speak against Christmass day.
These like the good chear, all times oth' year,
'Tis the birth day that doth them annoy,
Plumb-porrage and brawn, and the Doe and the Fawne,
With the Creature, they love to enjoy,
They often have meetings, and then there's such greetings,
Such traceing of Sisters about,
They preach and they pray, but I must not now say
What they do when their Candles are out.
Yet I cannot forbear, to tell in your ear
What befell at a breaking of bread,
How a Virgin full neat, went thither to eat,
But it cost her, her Maiden-head;
These men of high merit, though much for the spirit,
Are yet for the Flesh now and than,
For a new Babe of Grace, was got near the Place,
By a Congregational man.
The Dippers and Ranters, and our Scotch Covenanters,
That bragge of their Faith and their Zeale,
These abound in their fainings, but I'le make no complainings,
Nor will I their Secrets reveale,
[...]
[...]
[Page 144]The poor Cavaliers, that still lives in fears
Of Prisons, and Sequestration,
Though they keep Christmasse day, are more honest than they,
But Honesty's quite out of fashion.
If you view our great Cities, and our Countrie Committees,
You will not find overmuch there,
Our Divines, though they preach it, themselves do scarce reach it;
And our Lawyers have little to spare.
I could tell of some more, that have no great store,
Of our Gentry, both Old and New,
But I think it is best, with edge tooles not to jest,
Nor to speak all we know to be true.
But the poor Cavalier, as to mirthe and good cheere,
But now bid Christmass adieu,
If the Taxes hold on, their Money will be gone,
They will want both to bake and to brew,
Their Healths are put down, who adher'd to the Crown,
'Tis they that must fast and pray,
For to any mans thinking, both their eating and drinking,
Is like to be taken away.
The Bishop of
Ossery on the Rebells.
LEt proud
Babilon cease to boast
Of her
Pyramid's stately spires,
This Rebellion is more strange,
Surmounting all Infernal fires.
No Age the like hath ever bread,
Nor shall when these Rebells be dead.
A Bill on St.
Paul's Church Door.
THis House is to be let,
It is both wide, and fair;
If you would know the price of it,
Pray ask of Mr. Maior.
A SONG.
WHat though the Zealots, pull down the Prelates,
Push at the Pulpit, and kick at the Crown,
Shall we not ever, strive to endeavour
Once more to purchase our Royal Renown?
Shall not the Roundhead first be confounded?
Sa, sa, sa, sa boyes, ha, ha, ha, ha boyes,
[Page 146]Then wee'le return home, with Triumph and Joy,
Then weel'e be merry, drink Sack and Sherry,
And we will sing Boys,
God blesse the King Boys,
Cast up our Caps, and cry,
Vive le Roy.
What though the wise, make Alderman
Isaack,
Put us into Prison, and steal our Estates;
Though we are forced, to be un-horsed,
And walk on foot, as it pleaseth the Fates,
In the Kings Army, no man will harm ye;
Then come along Boyes, valiant and strong Boys,
Fight for your Goods, which the Roundheads enjoyes;
And when you venter,
London to enter,
And when you come Boys, with Phife and Drum Boyes,
Isaack himself shall cry,
Vive le Roy.
If not then, chuse him, 'twill not excuse him,
Since honest Parliaments never made them Theeves;
Charles ne're did furder, Theeves dipt in Murder,
Never by Pardon, long Lease, or Reprieves;
For such Conditions, and Propositions
Will not be granted, then be not daunted,
We will our honest old Customes enjoy:
Pauls now rejected, shall be respected,
And in the Quire, Voyces sing hire,
Thanks to
Jehovah, then
Vive le Roy.
On two Parliaments dissolved.
TWo Parliaments dissolv'd! then let my heart;
As they in Faction, it in fraction part,
And, like the Levite sad with rage, ascribe
My piece-meal Portion to each broken Tribe,
And say, that
Bethlehem, Judahs love, hath been
Wrong'd by the Fag-end crue of
Benjamin.
O Let such High presumption be accurst,
When the last Tribe shall wrong the best, and first;
While, like the Levite, our best
Charles may say,
The Ravenous Wolf hath seiz'd the Lions prey.
Thus oft Inferiour Subjects are not shye,
A love to mock at Sacred Majesty.
What Faculty should not be injured,
If that the Feet had Power to spurn the Head?
And Kings Prerogative may soon fall down,
When Subjects make a Footstool of a Crown:
The Starrs, the Heavens Inferiour Courtiers, might
Command the Darknesse, but not rule the Light,
Nor him that made it; should they all combine
With
Luna at the fu
[...]l, our Sun should shine
Brighter than they, nor can he be subdu'd,
Though he but one, and they a Multitude.
Say, Subjects ye were Starrs, and 'twere allow'd,
You justly of the Number might be proud;
Yet to your Sun be humble, and know this,
Your Light is borrowed, not your own, but His.
When the unfettered Subjects of the Seas,
The Fountains, felt their feet, and ease,
[Page 148]No sooner summon'd, but they nimbly went
To meet the Ocean at a Parliament.
Did then these petty Fountains say their King,
The Ocean, was no Ocean, but a Spring?
Let me alone, if fresh excess of store
Can make me poorer than I was before.
And shall we then the power of Kings dispute?
And count it lesse, when more is added to't?
No, let the Common body, i
[...] it can,
Be not a River, but an Ocean,
And swell into a Deluge, till it hide
The top of Mountains in its teeming pride.
Kings, like
Noahs Ark, are nearer to the Skies,
The more the Billows underneath them rise.
You then, who if your hearts were first in love,
Might sit in Counsell with the Gods Above:
You, that do question your Kings Power Below,
If you come there, will you use Heavens King so?
Do not aspire, you must take up you rest
More safe Below, than in the Eagles nest.
Hath Clemency offended? will you harm,
And pluck the Sun from Heaven that makes you warm?
No King nor Bishops please? what, have we got
An Outside
English, and an Inside
Scot?
If Faction thus our Countries Peace distracts,
You may have want of Parliaments, not Acts.
Ill-ended Sessions, and yet well begun,
Too much being spoke hath made too little done.
So Faction thrives, Puritanism bears sway,
None must do any thing but only
Say.
Stoop, stoop, you baren-headed Hills, confess
You might be fruitfuller, if ye were lesse.
[Page 149]Tremble ye thred-bare Commons: are you vext
That Lambs feed on ye? Lions will come next.
Collonel
Vennes Encouragement to his Souldiers. A SONG.
Fight on brave Souldiers for the Cause,
Fear not the Cavaliers,
Their threatnings are, as sencelesse as
Our jealousies and fears.
'Tis you must perfect this great Work,
And all Malignants slay,
You must bring back the King again
The clean contrary way.
'Tis for Religion that you fight,
And for the Kingdoms good,
By robbing Churches, plundering them,
And shedding Guiltlesse blood.
Down with the Orthodoxal train,
All Loyal Subjects slay,
When these are gone, we shall be blest
The clean contrary way.
When
Charles we have made Banckrupt,
Of Power and Crown bereft him,
And all his Loyal Subjects slain,
And none but Rebells left him.
And sent our Trunks away,
Wee'le make him then a Glorious Prince
The clean contrary way.
'Tis to preserve his Majesty,
That we against him fight,
Nor ever are we beaten back,
Because our Cause is right.
If any make a scruple at
Our Declarations, say
Who fight for us, fight for the King
The clean contrary way.
At
Keinton, Brainsford, Plymouth, York,
And divers Places more,
What Victories we Saints obtain,
The like nere seen before.
How often we Prince
Rupert kill'd,
And bravely wonne the day,
The wicked Cavaliers did run
The clean contrary way.
The true Religion we maintain,
The Kingdoms Peace and Plenty,
The Priviledge of Parliament,
Not known to One of twenty.
The antient Fundamental Laws,
And teach men to obey
Their lawfull Soveraign; and all these
The clean contrary way.
Wee, Subjects Liberties preserve
By Imprisonment and Plunder,
By keeping th' Wicked under.
Wee must preserve Mechanicks now
To Lectorize and pray,
By them the Gospel is advanc't
The clean contrary way.
And though the King be much misled
By that Malignant Crew,
Hee'le find us honest at the last,
Give all of us our due.
For we do wisely plot, and plot
Rebellion to allay,
He sees wee stand for Peace and Truth
The clean contrary way.
The Publique-Faith shall save our Souls,
And our good Works together,
And Ships shall save our Lives that stay
Only for Winde and Weather.
But when our Faith and Workes fall down,
And all our Hopes decay,
Our Acts will bear us up to Heaven
The clean contrary way.
A Second Western Wonder.
YOu heard of that wonder, of the
Lightening and
Thunder,
Which made the lye so much the louder;
Now li
[...]t to another, that Miracles Brother,
Which was done with a
Firkin of Powder.
Oh what a damp, struck through the Camp,
But as for Honest Sir
Ralph,
It blew him to the
Vies, without beard, or eyes,
But at least three heads and a half.
When out came the book, which the
New-monger took
From the
preaching Ladies Letter,
Where in the first place, stood the
Conquerors face,
VVhich made it shew so much the better.
But now without lying, you may paint him flying,
At
Bristoll they say you may finde
Great
William the
Con, so fast he did run,
That he left half his name behind.
And now came the Post, saves all that was lost.
But alas, we are past deceiving,
By a trick so stale, or else such a tayl
Might mount for a new
Thanks-giving.
This made Mr.
Case, with a pittifull face,
In the Pulpit to fall a weeping,
Though his mouth utter'd
lyes, truth fell from his eyes,
VVhich kept our
Lord Maior from sleeping.
Now shut up shops, and spend your last drops,
For the Laws of your Cause, you that loath 'um,
Lest
Essex should start, and play the
Second part,
Of
Worshipfull Sir
John Hotham.
The Battel of Worcester.
ALl you that be true to the King & the State,
Come listen, and Ile tell you what happen'd of late,
In a large field near
Worcesters gate.
Which no body can deny.
Brave
Sir John Byron, true to the Crown,
VVith forces too few, tis very well known,
VVent thither, 'tis said, to keep the
Town,
Which no body can deny.
But whether 'twas true, ye have learn'd to guess,
As for my own part I think no lesse,
To give you a taste of our Future successe,
Which mo body can deny.
Thither came
Fines with armes Complete,
The
Town to take, and
Byron defeat,
Provisions were made, but he staid not to eat,
Which no body can deny.
But as soon as he heard our great Guns play,
VVith a Flea in's ear, he ran quite away,
Like the lawfull begotten
Son of Lord
Say,
Which no body &c.
Nay had the old Crop-ear'd his Father dar'd
To approach the walls, his design had bin marr'd,
For
Byron would not have proved a VVard.
Which no body can deny.
Pox on him he keeps his Patent yet,
But I hope next Term he shall not fit,
'Twas but
quam diu se bene Gesserit,
Which no body, &c.
But now behold, increased in force,
Hee comes again with ten Troups of Horse,
Oh bloudy-Man he had no remorse,
Which no body, &c.
They marched up boldly, without any fear,
Little thinking Prince
Rupert was come so near,
But alas poor souls it cost them dear,
Which no body, &c.
The Prince like a Gallant man of his trade,
Marcht out of the
Town till this quarter was made,
Sir, the Enemies are near at hand it is said:
Which no body, &c.
Where, where are they? Prince
Rupert cryes,
And looking about with fiery eyes,
Some thirty behind a hedge he spyes.
Which no body, &c.
This Forlorn-hope he no sooner saw,
But 4. or 5. more did towards them draw;
He asked, who's there? one answer'd him, haw,
Which no body, &c.
The man you'll say was rudely bred;
The Prince shot a Bullet into his head,
His haw had been better spared then said,
Which no body, &c.
Prince
Maurice then, to second his Brother,
Discharg'd his Pistol, and down fell another,
'Twere pitty but news were sent to his Mother,
Which no body, &c.
Lord
Digby slew one to his great fame,
So did Monsieur de
Lisl
[...], and Sir
Rich. Crane,
And another
French man, with a harder name,
Which no body, &c.
Prince
Rupert to his own Force retired,
And bad them not shoot till their Doublets were fired,
His Courage and Conduct were both admired,
Which no body, &c.
He Charged but twice, yet made them shrink,
'Twere hard to get off now one would think,
Yet both can do it as easie as drink.
Which no body, &c.
Then have amongst ye, quoth Sir
Lewes Dives,
For a good Cause you know alwayes thrives,
His heart in his shoulders cost many mens lives,
Which no body, &c.
John Byron did as bravely fight;
To the
Prince of Wales his great delight,
He came home in safety and was made a Knight.
Which no body, &c.
My Friend
David Walter in Doublet white,
Without any Armes either rusty or bright,
Charg'd through them twice like a little spright,
Which no body, &c.
But oh Prince
Maurice, where was he?
Where one of us would be loath to be,
Surrounded with Butchers three times three,
Which no body, &c.
These men of
East-cheap little said,
But all their blows at his head they made,
As if they had been at work at their Trade,
Which no body, &c.
Then came a
French-man fiery and keen,
He broke the Ring and came in between,
Ere a man let a — not a Butcher was seen.
Which no body, &c.
Brave Lord
Wilmot, by whose hands did fall
Many a Rebell stout and tall,
Came to him without any Armes at all,
Which no body, &c.
Their Horses then close up they spur'd,
The wounds they gave were all with the Sword,
Their Pistols proved not worth a —
Which no body, &c.
But the Parliament having quite forgot
To Vote that
Sandys should not be shot
By the hand of a
Mounsier he went to the pot.
Which no body, &c.
Douglas a
Scotch-man of great fame
Was slain that day for want of the same;
The Houses in this were much to blame,
Which no body, &c.
Of all their chief Commanders that day,
I hold it fit I should something say,
His name was
Brown, and he ran away,
Which no body, &c.
If a few more o'em should shew such a freak,
Both Houses surely would quickly break,
And honester men would have leave to speak,
Which no body, &c.
They fly, they fly, Prince
Rupert cry'd,
No sooner said, but away they hy'd;
The force of his Armes they durst not abide,
Which no body can deny.
Smectymnuus, or the Club-Divines.
SMectymnuus! the Goblin makes me start!
I'th' Name of Rabbi
Abraham, what art?
Syriack? or
Arabick? or
Welch? what skilt?
Ap all the Brick-layers that
Babel built!
Some Conjurer translate, and let me know it,
Till then 'tis fit for a
West-Saxon Poet.
But do the Brother-hood then play their Prizes
Like Mummers in Religion with disguises?
Out-brave us with a name in Rank and File,
A name▪ which if 'twere train'd, would spread a Mile;
[Page 158]The Saints monopolie, the zealous cluster,
Which, like the Porcupine, presents a muster,
And shoots his quills at Bishops and their Sees,
A Devont litter of young
Maccabees.
Thus Jack of all trades hath devoutly shown
The twelve Apostles on a cherry-stone,
Thus fashion's Al-a-Mode in Treasons fashion;
Now we have heresie by Complication.
Like to
Don Quixots Rosary of slaves
Strung on a chain; a Murnival of Knaves
Packt in a trick, like Gypsies when they ride,
Or like Colleagues, which fit all on a side:
So the vain
Satyrists stand all a row,
As hollow teeth upon a Lute-string show:
Th'
Italian Monster, pregnant with his Brother,
Natures
Diaeresis, half one another,
He, with his little sides-man
Lazarus,
Must both give way unto
Smectymnuus.
Next
Sturbridge Fair is
Smecks, for lo his side
Into a five-fold
Lezar's multipli'd.
Under each arm there's tuckt a double gyssard,
Five faces lurk under one single vizard:
The
Whore of Babylon left these brats behind,
Heirs of confusion by
Gavelkind.
I think
Pythagoras's foul is rambl'd hither,
With all the change of Rayment on together:
Smec is her general Ward-robe, shee'l not dare
To think of him as of a thorough fare;
He stops the Gossiping Dame; alone he is
The purlew of a
Metempsichosis.
Like a
Scotch Mark, where the more modest sense
Checks the loud phrase, and shrinks to 13. pence▪
Like to an
Ignis fatuus, whose flame,
Though sometimes tripartite, joynes in the same:
[Page 159]Like to nine
Taylors, who if rightly spell'd,
Into one man are Monosyllabel'd:
Short-handed zeal in one hath cramped many,
Like to the Decalogue in a single penny.
See, see! how close the curs hunt under sheet,
As if they spent in Quire, and scann'd their feet;
One Cure, and five Incumbents leap a truss:
The title sure must be litigious!
The
Sadduces would raise a question,
Who must be
Smec at th' Resurrection.
Who coop'd them up together were to blame,
Had they but wire-drawn, & spun out their name,
'Twould make another Prentices Petition
Against the Bishops and their Superstition.
Robson and
French (that count from five to five,
As far as nature fingers did contrive,
She saw they would be sessors, that's the cause
She cleft her hoof into so many claws,)
May tire their Carret-bunch, yet ne're agree
To rate
Smectymnuus for Pole-money.
Caligula, whose pride was mankinds bail,
(As who disdain'd to murther by retail)
Wishing the world had but one general neck,
His glutton blade might have found game in
Smec.
No eccho can improve the Author more,
Whose lungs pay use on use, to half a score:
No Felon is more letter'd, though the brand
Both superscribes his shoulder and his hand.
Some
Welsh-man was his Godfather, for he
Wears in his name his Genealogy.
The Banes are ask'd, would but the time give way,
Beewixt
Smectymnuus and
Et caetera;
The Guests invited by a friendly Summons,
Should be the Convocation and the Commons;
[Page 160]The Priest to tye the Foxes tayles together,
Mosely, or
Sancta Clara, chuse you whether.
See, what off-spring every one expects!
What strange pluralities of men and sects?
One sayes hee'l get a Vestery, another
Is for a Synod: But upon the Mother:
Faith! cry St.
George, let them go to't, and stickle,
Whether a Conclave or a Conventicle:
Thus might Religions catterwaul, and spight,
Which uses to divorce, might once unite.
But their crosse Fortunes interdict their trade,
The Groom is Rampant, but the Bride displaid.
My task is done, all my Hee-Goats are milkt,
So many Cards i'th' stock, and yet be bilkt?
I could by Letters now untwist the Rabble,
Whip
Smec from Constable to Constable.
But there I leave you to another dressing,
Only kneel down and take your Fathers blessing,
May the
Queen Mother justifie your fears,
And stretch her Patent to your leather ears.
A Lenten Letany. Composed for a confiding Brother, for the benefit and edification of the Faithfull Ones.
FRom Villany drest in the Doublet of Zeal,
From three Kingdomes bak'd in one Common weal,
From a gleek of
Lord Keepers of one poor Seal,
Libera nos, &c.
From a Chancery-writ, and a whip and a bell,
From a Justice of Peace that never could spell,
From
Collonel P. and the
Vicar of Hell.
Libera nos, &c.
From Neat's feet without socks, and three-peny Pyes.
From a new sprung Light that will put out ones eyes,
From Goldsmiths-hall, the Devil, and Excise,
Libera nos, &c.
From two hours talk without one word of sense,
From Liberty still in the future tense,
From a Parliament long-wasted Conscience,
Libera nos, &c.
From a Coppid Crown-tenent prick'd up by a Brother,
From damnable Members, and fits of the Mother.
From Ears like Oysters that grin at each other,
Libera nos, &c.
From a Preacher in buff, and a Quarter-staff-steeple▪
From th' unlimited Soveraigne Power of the People,
From a Kingdom that crawles on its knees like a Creeple,
Libera nos, &c.
From a vinegar Priest on a Crab-tree stock,
From a foddering of Prayer four hours by the Clock.
[Page 162]From a holy Sister with a pittifull Smock,
Libera nos, &c.
From a hunger-starv'd Sequestrators maw,
From Revelations and Visions that never man saw,
From Religion without either Gospel or Law,
Libera nos, &c.
From the Nick and Froth of a Peny Pot-house,
From the Fiddle and Crosse, and a great
Scotch Louse,
From Committees that chop up a Man like a Mouse,
Libera nos, &c.
From broken shins, and the blood of a Martyr,
From the Titles of Lords, and Knights of the Garter,
From the teeth of mad-dogs, and a Country mans quarter,
Libera nos, &c.
From the Publique Faith, and an Egg & Butter,
From the
Irish Purchasers, and all their clutter,
From
Omega's nose, when he fettles to sputter,
Libera nos, &c:
From the zeal of Old
Harry lock'd up with a Whore,
From waiting with Plaints at the Parliament dore,
From the death of a King without why or wherefore,
Libera nos, &c.
From the French disease; and the Puritan fry,
From such as nere swear, but devoutly can lye,
From cutting of capers full three story high,
Libera nos, &c.
From Painted glass, and Idolatrous cringes,
From a
Presbyter's Oath that turns upon hinges,
From
Westminster Jews with Levitical fringes,
Libera nos, &c.
From all that is said, and a thousand times more,
From a Saint, and his Charity to the Poor,
From the Plagues that are kept for a Rebel in store.
Libera nos, &c.
The Second Part.
THat if it please thee to assist
Our
Agitators, and their List,
And
Hemp them with a gentle twist,
Quaesumus te, &c.
That it may please thee to suppose
Our actions are as good as those
That gull the People through the Nose,
Quaesumus te, &c.
That it may please thee here to enter,
And fix the rumbling of our center,
For we live all at peradventure,
Quaesumus te, &c.
That it may please thee to unite
The flesh and bones unto the sprite,
Else Faith and literature good night,
Quaesumus te, &c.
That it may please thee O that wee
May each man know his Pedigree,
And save that plague of Heraldry,
Quaesumus te, &c.
That it may please thee in each Shire
Cities of refuge Lord to rear,
That failing Brethren may know where,
Quaesumus te, &c.
That it may please thee to abhor us,
Of any such dear favour for us,
That thus have wrought thy peoples sorrows,
Quaesumus te, &c.
That it may please thee to embrace
Our dayes of thanks and fasting face,
For robbing of thy holy place,
Quaesumus te, &c.
That it may please thee to adjourn
The day of judgement, least we burn,
For lo it is not for our turn,
Quaesumus te, &c.
That it may please thee to admit
A
close Committee there to sit,
No Devil to a Humane wit!
Quaesumus te, &c.
That it may please to dispence
A little for convenience,
Or let us play upon the sense,
Quaesumus te, &c.
That it may please thee to embalm
The Saints in
Robin Wisdom's Psalm,
And make them musical and calm,
Quaesumus te, &c.
That it may please thee, since 'tis doubt,
Satan cannot throw Satan out,
Unite us and the Highland rout.
Quaesumus te, &c▪
AN ELEGIE On the Death of Sir
B
[...]vile Grenvile.
TO build upon the merit of thy
Death,
And raise thy Fame from thy
expiring Breath,
Were to s
[...]eal Glories from thy
Life, and tell
The World, that
Grenvil only did
dye well.
But all thy Dayes were fair, the same Sun rose,
The Lustre of thy
Dawning, and thy
Close.
Thus to her Urn th'
Arabian wonder flyes,
She lives in
Perfumes, and in
Perfumes dyes:
E're stormes, and tumults (Names undreaded here)
Could in their Bloome and In
[...]ancy appeare;
[Page 166]He in the stock and treasure of his mind
Had heaps of Courage, and just heat combin'd.
Where, like the thrifty Ant, he kept in store
Enough for
Spring, but for a
Winter more.
In Peace he did direct his thoughts on Warrs,
And learn't in
silence how to combat
Jarres.
And though the Times look't smooth and would allow
No track of Frown or Wrincle in their Brow:
Yet his quick sight perceiv'd the Age would low'r,
And, while the
Day was
faire, fore-saw the
Show'r.
At this the prudent Augur did provide
Where to
endure the
storme, not where to
hide,
And sought to shun the Danger now drawn nigh,
Not by
Concealment but by
Victory.
As valiant
Seamen, if the Vessel knock,
Rather
sayle o're it, than avoid the Rock.
And thus Resolv'd, he saw on either hand,
The
Causes, and their bold
Abettors stand.
The
Kingdoms Law is the pretence of each,
Which these
by Law preserve, these by its
breach,
The
Subjects Liberty each side maintains,
These say it consists in
freedom, these in
Chaines,
These love the
decent Church, but these not pass
To dresse our
Matron by the
Geneva Glass?
These still
enshrine their God; but these adore
Him most at some
Ara
[...]nah's Threshing-floor.
Each part defends their King a several way,
By true
Subjection these, by
Treasons they.
But our Spectatour soon unmask't the sin,
And saw all
Serpent through that
specious skin.
And midst their best Pretext did still despair,
In any dresse to see their
Moor look fair.
[Page 167]And though the
Number weigh'd ith'
popular scale
As light things float still with the
tyde and
gale,
He with the
solid mixt, and did conclude,
Justice makes Parties
great, not
Multitude.
And with this constant Principle possest,
He did alone expose his single Breast,
Against an
Armies force, and bleeding lay,
The
great Restorer o'th' Declining Day.
Thus slain thy
Valiant Ancestor did lye,
When his one
Bark a
Navy durst defie,
When now encompass'd rounds he Victor stood,
And bath'd his
Pinnace in his conquering Blood.
Till all his Purple current dry'd and spent,
He fell, and left the
Waves his
Monument,
Where shall next
famous Grenvills Ashes stand?
Thy Grandsire fills the
Seas, and Thou the
Land.
To my Lord Bishop of S. on
New-years day.
THough with the course and motion of the year,
Not only
Starres and
Sun
Move where they first begun;
But
Things and
Actions do
Keep the same
Circle too,
Return'd to the same point in the same
Sphear.
Griefs and their
Causes still are where they stood,
'Tis the same
Cloud and
Night
Shuts up our
Joyes and
Light:
Warres as remote from
Peace,
And
Bondage from
Release,
As when the
Sun his last years Circuite rode.
Though
Sword and
Slaughter are not Parted hence,
But we like
years and
times,
Meet in
unequal chimes,
Now a
Cloud and then a
Sun,
Ʋndoe and are
undone,
Let loose and stopt by th' Orbes intelligence.
Though
Combates have so thick and frequent stood,
That we at length may raise
A
Calendar of dayes,
And style them foul or fair,
By their
success, not
Aire:
And sign our Festivals by
Rebels blood.
Though the sad years are cloath'd in such a dress,
That
times to
times give place,
And
seasons shift their
grace,
Not by our
Cold or
Heat,
But
Conquest or
Defeat:
And Losse makes
Winter, Summer, happiness.
Nay though a greater Ruine yet await;
Such as the
Active curse,
The new disease.
Sent to make
worst times
worse,
Deaths
keen and
secret dart,
The shame of Hearbs and Art
Which proves at once our
Wonder and our
Fate.
Though these conspire to fully our request,
And labour to destroy,
And kill your
New-years joy.
Yet still your wonted Art
Will keep our wish in
heart.
Proportion'd not toth' times but to your breast
Thus in the Storm you
Calme and
Silence find,
Nor
Sword nor
Sickness can approach your mind.
A SATYR, Occasioned by the Author's Survey of a Scandalous Pamphlet, intituled
The Kings Cabinet opened.
WHen
Lawes and
Princes are despis'd and cheap,
When
High patcht Mischiefs all are in the heap;
Returns must still be had;
Guilt must strive more
Though not to'
Enoble, yet to
Enlarge her store.
Poor
cheap Design! the
Rebell now must flie
To
Packet Warre, to
Paper-Treacherie.
The
Basiliskes are turn'd to
Closet-Spies,
And to their
Poys'nous adde
Enquiring eyes:
As
Snakes and
Serpents should they cast their sting,
Still the same
Hate, though not same
Poyson fling;
And their
Vain teeth to the same point addresse,
With the like
Rancor, though unlike
Successe:
Have thrown their
Venom-deep, and their dark stains,
By
frail Advantages, still find it good,
To keep th' Infection high ith' Peoples Blood.
"For
Active Treason must be
doing still:
"Lest she
unlearn her
Art of
doing ill.
Who now have waded through all
Publick aw,
Will break through
Secrets and prophane their Law.
Know you, that would their
Act and
Statute see,
Nature kept
Court, and made it her
Decree.
When
Angells talke, all their
Conceipts are brought
From
Minde to
Minde, and they discourse by
Thought.
A
Close Idea moves, and
Silence flies
To
post the
Message, and
dispatch Replies,
And though
Ten Legions, in the Round are bent,
They only
hear to whom the
Talk was meant.
Now, though in
Men a different Law controules,
And
Soules are not
Embassadours to
Soules:
Nature gave Reason power to find a way,
Which none but these could venture to betray.
"Two close safe Pathes she did bequeath to men,
"In
Presence, Whisper; and at
Distance, Penne.
Publick
Decrees and
Thoughts were else the same,
Nor went it to
Converse, but to
Proclaim.
Conceipts were else but
Records, but by this care
Our
Thoughts no
Commons, but
Inclosures are:
What bold
Intruders then are, who assail
To cut their Prince's
Hedge, and break his
Pale?
That so
Ʋmanly gaze, and dare be seen
Ev'n then, when He converses with his
Queen?
[Page 171]Yet, as who breaks the tall Bank's rising Side,
And all the Shore doth levy with the Tyde,
Doth not confine the Waves to any Bound,
But the whole Streame may gain upon the Ground;
So these,
streight Prospect scorn, and
Private View,
"The Crime is small that doth engage a Few.
These print their Shame, they must compleat their Sinne:
Not take some
Waves, and shut the
Sluce agen
But, to the
Raging of their Sea, they do
Let in the
Madnesse of the People too.
But, 'cause their
Crime must wear a
Mask and
Vail,
And fain the Serpent would conceal his
Tail.
No sooner comes the
Libell to our view,
But see a
stay'd demure, grave Preface too:
Which seems to shew they would not thus intrude,
Nor presse so far, but for the
Publick good:
But as some
London Beggers use to stand,
In
Grecians Coats with Papers in their hand,
Who are (as them indifferent Parts we meet)
English at Home, but solemn
Greeks ith' street.
Of whom
uncloath'd, and when the truth is heard,
Constantinople only knows the
Beard.
So this
sly Masker, lay its
Tinsell by,
Is only
Painted Zeal, and
Pageantry,
We need not let our
Satyr here compute,
How it prophanes God in his
Attribute.
See the Preface
But for it
[...]s
Light it need no
B
[...]shell call,
A
Sempstresse Thimble will
Eclypse it all.
O! in what meeknesse it pretends to creep!
How well the
Tyger personates the
Sheep!
It not Returns ill Language to the King,
Though the next Lines the
Psalms against Him bring.
[Page 172]Then it to th'
Business comes, and lets us know,
Who reads it either is its
Friend, or
Foe.
If
Friend, the Scandals all must true appear:
If
Foe (alack the man is ne're the near.)
Foe no Light moves, no
Miracles like these,
Hee'le say they're not the
Kings too, if he please.
And tell us pray? what, may'nt your last words stand?
You counterfeit his
Seal, why not his
Hand?
But to admit, We now deduce and bring,
What
after-notes clearly imply oth' King.
First, They His Comfort from His
Secrets wrest.
They doe allow the
King, but not the
Breast,
The Sacred Knot must have a Tye, and Force,
To joyne their Hands, but yet their Thoughts Divorce:
And, as the Ivye weddes her Consort-Tree,
Though joyn'd, and close their chast Embraces be,
Yet in those
Twinnes and
Circuits we can find
No Traffique, no Commerce of mind with mind:
So must the Sacred Laws of Marriage pierce;
Here she may
Sprout and
Grow, but not
Converse.
And, like a Plant remov'd by Grafters toyle,
She finds not Nuptials, but a change of Soyle.
England to th' Queen transplanted thus must prove,
No
Forraigne Kingdom
[...], but a
Forraigne Grove.
But, least this groundlesse seem, they reasons vex,
And tell the World Shee's of the Weaker Sex.
In what wilde Braines this Madnesse first began!
They're wondrous angry, 'cause the Queen's no Man.
[Page 173]Fond Sirs forbear, do not the world perplex:
Reason and
Judgement are not things of
Sex.
Souls and their Faculties were never heard
To be confin'd to th'
Doublet, and the
Beard.
Consult one Age from this, and you shall find
A Queen the Glory of your Annals shin'd.
But who to farre and distant Objects flies,
Must say the
Sun wants
Lustre, or he
Eyes.
Our
Present injur'd Queen returns that store,
And doth again, what could be done before:
By the
King's Judgement, shews Her
own is Right,
And still she meets His Ray with her own Light.
Thus the
wise King to
Shebah's Queen was known,
Who knew
Him wise by
Wisedom of
her own.
But as all
Publick Knowledge barr'd must be,
So
Houshold-Acts must have their
Mysterie:
No Circumstance can passe, no Servant made,
But must be wrapt in
silence and close
shade.
One
Place in Court a Riddle must afford,
Worthy a secret
Sybi
[...]s dark Record.
As the
Kings Acts must all their limits prove,
So their
Restraint and
Reins must check his
Love.
Esteems of's Consort by their
pitch must fly,
Nor must He
rate his Dear Queens Health
too high.
He must affect thus
far, and then no
more,
His
Tydes must be proportion'd to their
shore;
His
Tenderness their
Weights and
Ballanc
[...] weare,
By
Graines and
Scruples they Confine His Care,
But (Savage) know, there can no ransome be
Poys'd with the Health of such a Queen as
She.
She that at once such
weighty Acts can do,
That can be
Queen and yet
negotiate too:
Send and be
sent, and without more demurre,
Be both the
Queen and her
Embassadour.
[Page 174]That gives dispatch for Ships, and when she please,
Divides the Empire with the Queen o'th Seas:
Who dares the threats of any danger stand,
The stubborn Rock, or the Devouring Sand.
And though the Sea swell like Her
fate, and
Grave,
Look at Her Consort, and despise the
Wave.
The Captive Queen did (thus) the
Tyrant tell,
I am no Captive so my
King be well.
Q. Curtius, lib.
3.
By these her worth and rate is faintly known,
Past stories
blush when she erects Her
own.
Search
old gray Annals, you may find at length,
Some Queen in
Vigour, and her
mid-day strength;
Who in her injured Consorts cause, referres
To Copies glancing at these Acts of
Hers.
But if
Infirm and
Sickly Queens we
scanne,
No story patterns her, None ever can
Shew us a Queen fraught with such wide Affairs,
Here private
Weaknesse, there a
Kingdom's cares,
Perplext and tortur'd from her rest and ease,
By a
Rebellion here, there a
Disease:
Advice, and
Medcines at one time we view,
A Counsel-board, Board of Physicians too.
Yet her Capacious Soul both these defeats,
While this hand holds
Instructions, that
Receipts.
These are our fam'd Queens Crimes, but yet one more
Must be the main
Ingredient of the store.
Which seems to presse so
deep, there's nought so bright,
But this may sully all its lustre quite:
'Tis her
Religions Care: She tryes Her Pow'rs
To keep that still, do not we so for
Ours?
Why to one
Face so diff'rent
shapes have bin,
What
Virtue is in
Ʋs, in
Her is
Sin.
Our diff'rent Faiths did long together grow,
And neither suffer'd, neither losse did know:
[Page 175]And like a stream, which 'twixt two fields doth flow,
Which as it
Moistens, so
Divides them too:
So did the Kingdoms Law throw
Dew and
growth,
In
Weight and just
proportion unto both,
And like a parting Current, slide along
To keep them
wide, that neither neither
Wrong.
Our Faiths were then but
Two, but since a sp'rit
So many
Mushrome Sects rais'd in a Night:
The
Protestant (as she could Parties gain
Who unconcern'd were in the
Dregs and
staine)
Did recommend her
Votaries, and bring
Her Faith to
its Defender, our
Just King.
Who with such
Zeal hath kept her Rites entire,
As well from
Languishing, as from
strange Fire:
That still the Censer savours its true scent,
Without
Accession, yet no
Perfume spent;
The happy
Martyrs find their Faith had stood
In
Him, as when they bath'd it in their blood.
They joy to see, that
He his God adores,
Not at
High-places, nor at
Threshing-floores,
But spight of
Scandals, pays his Homage still
In the
Just Beauty of the
Sion-Hill.
The
Other Sects, though as in Common-fields,
Which
Swine, and
Horses, Mules and
Oxen yields,
Who though at
Distance fed, Approaching clash,
And disproportion'd shapes together dash▪
So they, though one
Rebellion them sustain,
Themselves
Accuse, and are
Accus'd again.
Could they comply, then possibly might dwell
Some
faint Agreement, though no
Peace in Hell:
Now, these nice tasts no
Forraign aids indure,
(Their
Rebell Scots are
English Rebells sure,)
No, nor the
Papists: much it with them sticks,
Lest these Mens
Punniards should be
Hereticks:
[Page 176]Their souls would be
prophan'd, and clean
undun,
Should they be slain by an
Idolatrous Gun.
Go lay your
Vizar by, your Masking stuff,
The Devil is
tyr'd, and Hell hath
laugh'd enough:
The world descryes the
Cheat, 'tis quickly known
They no Faith
hate, who have
Resolv'd on None.
These may not fight: that is, the King you'd have
Tamely forsake his
Crown, and be your
Slave.
His Easier
Subjects long agoe you gat,
All who approv'd your
Baite, and swallow'd
that.
Indeed,
Discerning souls the snare forsook,
And through the
Wave did still descry the
Hook:
But yet so
close designs were cast about,
Your Race was
half runne e're the King
set out,
Yet you
complain, and guilty fears do
gnaw,
Lest you should
scanted be for
Space and
Law:
Conscious, though you your cause did forward meet,
Its
Guilt and
Sin hangs
Plummets at its feet.
Are not the
Jews, Walloones, the
Turks, and all meet,
Whom from as
Diff'rent Gods as
Lands you call,
An
Army strong to keep the cause in heart,
But that the
King must with His
Subjects part?
Can no Accession so much safety send,
But you will
Dread Him still before you end?
Sometimes at Ebbes his God doth let Him stand,
That so the Rescue may declare His hand.
But, what (you hope) may make the King's side pause,
Is what he writes about the
Penall Laws.
Poor shallow souls, I deem it one from hence
To forfeit
Loyalty, and forfeit
Sence.
Shall such as wast their
Blood be quite debarr'd,
And kept without the
Pale from all
Reward?
Shall fame report, shall after Ages tell,
So just a King regards not who do dwell?
[Page 177]But you pretend, this was a
State-Decree,
Nor without Pow'r which
made may cancel'd be
The King
nev'r sayes it shall: but cannot doubt
That when his God hath brought his work about,
And shifted
Jarres and
Tumults into
Ease,
And set him 'midst his Counsell in High peace:
Their
joynt united suffrage will think fit
To give
this Act, or something Great as it.
But see, His
Pardon then to
Ireland came,
(Wild
Rebells) offers he not you the
same?
He holds still out the
same fresh chearfull Ray,
You shut your
Windows and
exclude the Day:
Embrace the
shine, or else expect the stroak,
The Flint the Sun ne're
melts, at last is
broke.
But now the Flood-gates op
[...], and a free
[...]luce,
[...]ets in all sencelesse Doctrines, and wild use;
And by
Comparing what's said
long agoe,
Finds
Disproportion in the
King's Acts now.
His
past Resolves it up to
Present brings,
His
Vowes to
Vowes, and
Things to combate
Things.
A
Different face throughout, and a
fresh Scene
Succeed: and all his Acts
seem shifted clean.
Weak men! who are depriv'd by
Guilt or chance,
Of all the
lights of Common Circumstance;
That have unlearn't that
Actions shift their
Face,
And da
[...]e their worth from
Persons, Time, and
Place.
And
sundry such, from
whose Negl
[...]cts appear
Acts as
Sinnes there, which are
Try'd Virtues here.
For instance then, o
[...]t as the King reflects
His
Oath's enjoyn, His
People he protects.
Which
Oathes extent, and Circuit we may view
Spread ore th'
Five Execrable Members too.
Yet (far
as't them concerns) that
Chain is
broke,
That
Oath left
Him, because they le
[...]t
His Yoake ▪
[Page 178]Now of this
Pitch, and
Size, do still appear
All
Aiery Scruples which are started there.
The King
Declared, He thought you meant no ill,
Say, would you have the King
Declare so still?
Allow but
Different Circumstance, and we
Find all your
Scandalls will his
Glories be.
Now, as the
worst things have
some things of
stead,
And some
T
[...]ades treasure
Jewells in their Head.
So doth this
Libels womb Girt, and
contain.
What though it
compasse Round? it cann
[...]t
stain
Lines of so
cleare, yet
[...]o
Majestick straine;
A most
Transparent, yet a
close-wove Veine;
Which when we reach its
Sense, we may descry,
We see more by
its Light, then
our own Eye.
So
Phoebus (when the
Cloud and
Night is done)
Lends us his Light, to know he is the
Sunne.
Yet this expressive clearnesse is but
barke,
An
Out-side Sunne which guards us from the dark.
Here the
Bright Language shuts in
Brighter sense,
Rich Diamonds sleep within a
Crystall Fence.
Gemmes of that rate, to
Tully they'd appear
Fit purchase
for his Critick Senates Ear:
And their whole
Shine in a full Lustre tends
To
God, His
Conscience, Consort, and his
Friends.
THE CLOSE.
No
winding Characters, no
secret Maze,
Could so
perplex, but they have found their wayes.
They
thred the Labyrinth, and what to do?
Whe'r
tends the Guide? what
purchase in this Clew?
Rash
Alexander forc't King
Gordius Knot,
Q. Curtius lib.
2.
And so in hand found he a
Rope had got.
Exactly drawn up then heretofore.
Printed and Published, 'tis order'd to be,
By Henry Elsing
the Clerk of the P.
1
June 1643.
Since many Diurnals (for which we are griev'd)
Are come from both Houses, and are not believ'd;
The better to help them for running and flying,
We have put them in Verse to Authorize their lying.
For it has been debated, and found to be true,
That lying's a Parliament Priviledge too:
And that they may the sooner our Conquests rehearse,
We are minded to put them in Galloping Verse;
But so many Maim'd Souldiers from
Reading there came,
That in spight of the Surgeons, make our Verses go lame.
We have ever us'd Fictions, and now it is known,
Our Poverty has made us Poetical grown.
Munday.
On
Munday both Houses fell into debate,
And were likely to fall by the ears as they sate;
[Page 180]Yet would they not have the businesse decided,
That they (as the Kingdom is) might be divided.
They had an intention to Prayers to go,
But
Ex tempore Prayers are now Common too.
To Voting they fall, and the key of the work,
Was the raising of Money for the State and the Kirk▪
'Tis only Free-loan, yet this Order they make,
That what Men would not lend they should Plunder and take;
Upon this, the word
Plunder came into their minds,
And all of them did labour a new one to find;
They call'd it distraining: yet thought it no shame,
To persist in the Act, which they blusht for to name.
They Voted all Persons from
Oxford that came,
Should be apprehended: and after the same,
With an Humble Petition, the King they request,
He'd be pleas'd to return, and be serv'd like the rest.
A Message from
Oxford conducing to Peace,
Came next to their hands, that Armes might cease:
They Voted and Voted, and still they did vary,
Till at last the whole sence of the House was contrary
To reason; they knew by their Armes they might gain▪
What neither true reason, nor Law can maintain.
Cessation was Voted a dangerous Plot,
Because the King would have it, both Houses would not.
[Page 181]But when they resolv'd it, abroad must be blowne,
(To baffle the World) that the King would have none.
And carefully muzled the mouth of the Press,
Least the truth should peep through their jugling dress.
For they knew a Cessation would work them more harmes,
Than
Essex could do the Cavaliers with his Arms.
While they keep the Ships and the Forts in their hand,
They may be Traytors by Sea, as well as by Land.
The Forts will preserve them as long as they stay,
And the Ships carry them and their Plunder away.
They have therefore good reason to account War the better,
For the Law will prove to them but a killing Letter.
Tuesday.
A Post from his Excellence came blowing his Horn,
For Money to advance, and this spun out the Morn;
And strait to the City some went for relief,
The rest made an Ordinance to carry Powder-Beef.
Thus up go the Roundheads, and
Essex advances,
But only to lead his Souldiers new dances.
[Page 182]To
Reading he goes, for at
Oxford (they say)
His Wife has made him Bull-works to keep him away.
Prince
Rupert, for fear that the Name be confounded,
Will saw off his Horns, and make him a Roundhead.
The news was returned with General fame,
That
Reading was taken ere ever he came.
Then away Rode our Captains, and Souldiers did run,
To shew themselves valiant, when the Battail was done,
Preparing to plunder; but as soon as they came,
They quickly perceived it was but a flam:
An Ordinance of Parliament
Essex brought down,
But that would not serve him to batter the Town.
More Mony was rais'd, more Men and Ammunition,
Carts loaded with Turnips, and other Provision.
His Excellence had Chines, and Rams-heads for a Present,
And his Councel of Warre had Woodcock and Pheasant.
But
Ven had 5000. Calves-heads all in Carts,
To nourish his Men, and to chear up their Hearts.
This made them so valiant that that very day,
They had taken the Town but for running away.
'Twas ordered this day, that thanksgiving be made,
To the Roundheads in Sermons, for their Beef and their Bread.
Wednesday.
Two Members this day at a Conference sate,
And one gives the other a knock on the Pate.
This set them a voting, and the Upper House swore,
'Twas a breach of Priviledge he gave him no more.
The lower the breaking their Members head voted
A breach of their Priviledge; for it is to be noted,
That Reason and Priviledge in it did grow,
'Twas a breach of his Crown and Dignity too.
Then came in the Women with a long long Petition.
To settle Militia, and damn the Commission.
For if fighting continue, they say they did
[...]ear.
That Men would be scarce, and Husbands be dear.
So plainly the Speaker the Businesse unties,
That presently all the Members did rise
They had hardly the leisure all things to lay ope,
But some felt in their Bellies if they had not a Pope.
Some strictly stood to them, and others did fear,
Each carried about them a fierce Cavalier.
This Businesse was handled by the close Committee,
That privately met at a Place in the City.
So closely to voting the Members did fall,
That the humble Sisters were overthrown all.
But they and their Helpers came short at the last,
Till at length the whole Work on Prince
Griffith was cast.
[...]
[...]
[Page 184]And he with his troup did handle the matter
He pleased every Woman, as soon as he came at her.
The Businesse had like to have gone on her side,
Had not
Pym perswaded them not to confide.
For rather than Peace, to fill the Common-Wealth,
He said hee'd do them every night himself.
Thursday.
This Day a great Fart in the House they did hear,
Which made all the Members make Buttons for fear;
And One makes nine Speeches while the Businesse was hot,
And spake through the Nose that he smelt out the Plot.
He takes it to task, and the Articles drawes,
As a breach of their own Fundamental-laws.
Now Letters were read, which did fully relate
A Victory against
Newcastle of late;
That hundreds were slain, and hundreds did run,
And all this was got ere the Battel begun.
This they resolv'd to make the best on;
And next they resolv'd upon the Question,
That Bonfires and Prayse
[...], the Pulpit and Steeple,
Must all be suborned to couzen the People.
But the policy was more Mony to get,
For the Conquest's dear bought, and far enough set;
Such Victories in
Ireland, although it be known
They strive to make that Land as bad as our Own.
[Page 185]No sooner the Mony for this was brought hither,
But a croud of true Letters came flocking together,
How
Hotham and's Army, and others were beaten,
This made the blew Members to startle and threaten.
And these by all means must be kept from the City,
And only referred to the Privy Committee.
And they presently with an
Ex tempore Vote,
Which they have used so long, that they learned by rote,
They styl'd them Malignant, and to Lyes they did turn them,
Then
Corbet, in stead of the Hangman, must burn them.
And he after that an Ordinance draws,
That none should tell truth that disparag'd the Cause.
Then
Pym like a
Pegasus trots up and down,
And takes up an Angel to throw down a Crown.
He stand like a Creature, and makes a long Speech,
That came from his mouth, and part from his breech.
He moves for more Horse, that the Army might be
Part Mans flesh and Horse flesh, as well as he;
And heel'l be a Colonel as well as another,
But durst not ride a Horse, 'cause a Horse rid his Mother.
Friday.
Sir
Hugh Cholmley for being no longer a Traytor,
Was ac
[...]us'd of
Treason in the highest Nature;
'Cause he (as they bad him) his Souldiers did bring,
To turn from Rebellion, and fight for the King.
They voted him out, but, nor they nor their men
Could vote him into the House agen.
Sir
Davids Remonstrance next to them was read,
From the Cities Round-body, and
Isaac's the Head.
'Twas approv'd; but one Cause produc'd a denyal,
That all Traytors be brought to a Legal tryal.
For 'tis against Reason to vote, or to do
Against Traytors, when
They are no other but so.
Because about nothing so long they sit still,
They hold it convenient Diurnalls to fill.
And therefore they gave their Chronographer charge
To stuff it with Orders and Letters at large.
The King by's Prerogative, nor by the Law,
Can speak nor print nothing his People to draw,
Yet
Pennyles Pamphletters they do maintain,
Whose only Religion is Stipendary gain.
Yet
Cum Privilegio, against King and the State.
The Treason that's taught them (like Parrats) they prate.
These Hackneys are licens't what ever they do,
As if they had Parliament priviledge too.
[Page 187]Thus then they consult: so zealous they are,
To settle the peace of the Kingdom by War.
But against Civil-war their hatred is such,
To prevent it they'le bring in the
Scotch and the
Dutch.
They had rather the Land be destroy'd in a minute,
Than abide any thing that has Loyalty in it;
And yet their Rebellion so neatly they trim,
They fight for the King, but they mean for King
Pym
These all to fight for, and maintain are sent
The Laws of
England; but
New-England is meant.
And though such disorders are broke in of late,
They keep it the
Anagram still of a State.
For still they are plotting such riches to bring,
To make
Charles a rich and glorious King.
And by this Rebellion this good they will doe him,
They'l forfeit all their Estates unto him.
No Clergy must meddle in Spiritual affairs,
But
Layton nere heard of it, losing his ears,
For that he might be deaf to the Prisoners cries,
To a spiritual Goalers place he must rise.
The rest have good reason for what they shall do,
For they are both Clergy and Laity too.
Or else at the best when the Question is stated,
They are but
Mechanicks newly translated.
They may be Committees to practice their bawling,
For stealing of Horse is Spiritual Calling.
The reason why People our Martyrs ador'd,
'Cause their Ears being cut off their Fame sounds the more.
[Page 188]'Twas ordered the Goods of Malignants, and Lands,
Shall be shar'd among them, and took into their hands.
They have Spirits of more Malignants to come,
That every one in the House may have some
Then down to
Guild-Hall they return their thanks,
To the Fools whom the Lottery has cheated with Blanks.
Saturday.
This day there came news of the taking a Ship,
(To see what strange wonders are wrought in the deep)
That a troop of their Horse ran into the Sea,
And pull'd out a Ship alive to the Key.
And after much prating and fighting they say
The Ropes serv'd for Traces to draw her away.
Sure these were Sea-horses, or else by their lying
They'le make them as famous for swimming as flying.
The rest of the day they spent to bemoan
Their Brother, the Roundhead that to
Tyburn was gone.
And could not but think it a barbarous thing,
To hang him for killing a friend to the King.
He was newly baptized, and held it was good
To be washed, yet not in water, but blood.
They ordered for his honour to cut off his ears,
And make him a Martyr: but a Zealot appears,
[Page 189]And affirms him a Martyr, for although 'twas his fate
To be hang'd, yet he dy'd for the good of the State
Then all fell to plotting of m
[...]t
[...]ers so deep,
That the silent Speaker fell down fast asleep.
He recovers himself and rub
[...] up his eyes,
Then motions his House that 'twas time to rise.
So home they went all, and their businesse refer'd
To the Close Committee by them to be heard;
They took it upon them, but what they did do,
Take notice that none but themselves must know.
Postscript.
Thus far we have gone in Rythme to disclose,
What never was utter'd by any in Prose.
If any be wanting, 'twas by a mishap,
Because we forgot to weigh't by the map.
For over the Kingdom their Orders were spread,
They have made the whole Body as bad as the Head.
And now made such work that they all do,
Is but to read Letters and answers them too.
We thought to make
Finis the end of the story,
But that we shall have more business for you.
For (as their proceedings do) so shall our
Pen,
Run roundly from
Munday to
Munday agen.
And since we have begun, our Muse doth intend,
To have (like their Votes) no beginning nor end.
The holy Pedler.
FRom a Forraign shore
I am come to store,
Your
Shops with rare devices:
No
drugs do I bring
From the
Indian King,
No
Peacocks, Apes, nor
Spices.
Such Wares I do show
As in
England do grow,
And are for the good of the Nation,
Let no body fear
To deal in my Ware,
For
Sacriledge now's in fashion.
I the
Pedlar am,
That came from
Amsterdam
With a pack of
new Religions,
I did every one fit,
According to's wit,
From the
Tub to
Mahomets pigeons.
Great Trading I found,
For my spiritual ground,
Wherein every man was a Medler;
I made People decline,
The learned
Divine,
And then they bought
Heaven of the
Pedler.
First
Surplices I took,
Next the
Common-Prayer-book,
And made all those Papists that us'd 'um;
Then the
Bishops and
Deans,
I stript of their means,
And gave it to those that abus'd 'um.
I withdrew from their
Text,
And set up the gifted
Brother;
Thus
Religion I made,
But a matter of trade,
And I car'd nor for one or t'other.
Then
Tythes I fell upon,
And those I quickly won,
'Twas prophane in the
Clergy to take 'um.
But they serv'd for the Lay,
Till I sold them away,
And so did Religious make 'um;
But now come away,
To the
Pedler, I pray,
I scorn to rob or cozen;
If Churches you lack,
Come away to my Pack,
Here's thirteen to the dozen.
Church
Militants they be,
For now we do see,
They have fought so long with each other;
The Rump's-Churches threw down,
Those that stood for the Crown,
And sold them to one another.
Then come you factious Crue,
Here's a Bargain now for you,
With the spoyles of the Church you may revel;
Now pull down the Bells,
And then hang up your selves,
And so
give his due to the Devil.
The Hue and Cry after Sir
John Presbyter.
WIth hair in Characters, and Lugs in text;
With a splay mouth and a nose circumflext;
With a set Ruffe of Musket-bore, that wears
Like Cartrages, or linnen Bandileers,
Exhausted of their sulphurous contents,
In Pulpit fire-works, which that Bomball vents;
The
Negative and
Covenanting Oath,
Like two Mustachoes, issuing from his mouth;
The bush upon his chin (like a carv'd story,
In a box-knot) cut by the
Directory;
Madams Confession hanging at his ear,
Wire-drawn through all the questions,
How and
Where
Each circumstance so in the hearing felt,
That when his ears are cropt he'll count them gelt;
The weeping Cassock scar'd into a Jump,
A sign the
Presbyter's worn to the stump:
The
Presbyter though charm'd against mischance,
With the
Divine Right of an
Ordinance.
If you meet any that do thus attire 'em,
Stop them, they are the tribe of Adoniram.
What zealous frenzie did the
Senate seize,
To tare the
Rochet to such rags as these?
Episcopacy minc'd, reforming
Tweed
Hath sent us
Runts, even of her Churches breed;
Lay-interlining
Clergy, a device
That's nick-name to the stuff call'd
Lops and
Lice.
[Page 193]The Beast at wrong-end branded, you may trace
The Devils foot-steps in his cloven face.
A face of severall parishes and sorts,
Like to a Sergeant shav'd at Innes of Courts.
What mean these Elders else, those Kirk Dragoons
Made up of
Ears and
Ruffs like
Ducatoons?
That
Hierarchy of
Handicrafts begun,
Those new
Exchange-men of
Religion?
Sure they'r the
Antick
[...]eads, which plac'd without
The Church, do gape and disembogue a sprout:
Like them above the
Commons house have been
So long without, now both are gotten in;
Then, what imperious in the Bishop sounds,
The same the
Scotch Executor rebounds.
This stating
Prelacy, the
Classick rout,
That spake it often, e're it spake it out;
So by an Abbies Sceleton of late,
I heard an Eccho supererogate
Through imperfection, and the voice restore,
As if she had the hiccop o're and o're.
Since they our mixt Diocesans combine
Thus to ride double in their Discipline,
That Pauls
shall to the Consistory
call
A Dean
and Chapter
out of Weavers-Hall?
Each at the Ordinance for to assist,
With the five thumbs
of his groat-changing
fist.
Down Dagon Synod
with thy motley ware,
Whilst we do swagger for the Common-Prayer;
That Dove-like Embassie, that wings our sence
To Heavens gate in shape of innocence.
Pray for the Miter'd Authors, and defie
These Demicasters
of Divinity.
For where Sir John
with Jack-
of-all-trades joyns,
His Finger's thicker than the Prelates
Loyns.
The way to wooe a Zealous Lady.
I Came unto a
Puritan to wooe,
And
[...]oughly did salute her with a Kiss;
She shov'd me from her when I came unto;
Brother, by yea and nay I like not this:
And as I her with amorous talk saluted,
My Articles with Scripture she confuted.
She told me, that I was too much prophane,
And not devout neither in speech nor gesture;
And I could not one word answer again,
Nor had not so much Grace to call her Sister;
For ever something did offend her there,
Either my broad beard, hat, or my long hair.
My Band was broad, my 'Parrel was not plain,
My Points and Girdle made the greatest show;
My Sword was odious, and my Belt was vain,
My
Spanish shooes was cut too broad at toe;
My Stockings light, my Garters ty'd too long,
My Gloves perfum'd, and had a scent too strong.
I left my pure Mistris for a space,
And to a snip-snap Barber streight went I;
I cut my Hair, and did my Corps uncase
Of 'Parrels pride that did offend the eye;
My high-crown'd Hat, my little Beard also,
My pecked Band, my Shooes were sharp at toe.
Gone was my Sword, my Belt was laid aside,
And I transformed both in looks and speech;
[Page 195]My 'Parrel plain, my Cloak was void of Pride,
My little Skirts, my metamorphis'd Breech,
My Stockings black, my Garters were ty'd shorter,
My Gloves no scent; thus marcht I to her Porte
[...].
The Porter spide me, and did lead me in,
Where his sweet Mistris reading was a Chapter:
Peace to this house, and all that are therein,
Which holy words with admiration wrapt her,
And ever, as I came her something nigh,
She, being divine, turn'd up the white o'th' eye.
Quoth I, dear Sister, and that lik'd her well,
I kist her, and did passe to some delight,
She, blushing, said, that long-tail'd men would tell,
Quoth I, I'll be as silent as the night;
And least the wicked now should have a sight
Of what we do, faith, I'll put out the light.
O do not swear, quoth she, but put it out,
Because that I would have you save your Oath,
In truth, you shall but kisse me, without doubt;
In troth, quoth I, here will we rest us both;
Swear you, quoth she, in troth? had you not sworn
I'd not have don't, but took it in foul scorn.
A Hue and Cry after the Reformation.
WHen Temples lye like batter'd Quarrs,
Rich in their ruin'd Sepulchers,
When Saints forsake their painted Glasse
To meet their worship as they passe,
Of humane bloud,
Is this the floud
Of Christianity?
When Kings are cup-boarded like cheese,
Sights to be seen for pence a piece,
When Dyadems, like Brokers tire,
Are custom'd reliques set to hire,
When Soveraignty & Scepters loose their names,
Stream'd into words,
Carv'd out by swords
Are these refining flames?
When Subjects and Religion stir
Like Meteors in the Metaphor,
When zealous hinting and the yawn
Excize our
M
[...]niver and
Lawn;
When blue digressions fill the troubled ayr,
And th' Pulpit's let
To every Set
That will usurp the Chair?
Call ye me this the night's farewell,
When our noon day's as dark as Hell?
How can we lesse than term such lights
Ecclesiastick Heteroclites?
Bold sons of
Adam when in fire you crawl,
Thus high to be,
Perch'd on the tree,
Remember but the fall.
Was it the glory of a King
To make him great by suffering?
But rendring of it infamous?
If this be then the merry ghostly trade?
To work in gall?
Pray take it all
Good brother of the blade.
Call it no more the Reformation,
According to the new translation:
Why will you wrack the common brain
With words of an unwonted strain?
As Plunder? or a phrase in senses cleft?
When things more nigh
May well supply
And call it down-right theft.
Here all the
School-men and
Divines
Consent, and swear the naked lines
Want no expounding or contest,
Or
Bellarmine to break a jest.
Since then the Heroes of the pen with me
Nere scrue the sense
With difference,
We all agreee agree.
The Times.
TO speak in wet-shod eyes, and drowned looks,
Sad broken accents, and a vein that brooks
No spirit, life, or vigour, were to own
The crush and triumph of affliction;
The pale-fac'd Pensioners of our enemy.
No 'tis the glory of the Soul to rise
By falls, and at rebound to pierce the skies.
Like a brave
Courser standing on the sand
Of some high-working
Fretum, views a land
Smiling with sweets upon the distant side,
Garnish'd in all her gay embroydered pride,
Larded with Springs, and fring'd with curled Woods,
Impatient, bounces in the cap'ring flouds,
Big with a nobler fury than that stream
Of shallow violence he meets in them;
Thence arm'd with scorn and courage ploughs a way
Through the impostum'd billows of the Sea;
And makes the grumbling Surges slaves to oar
And waft him safely to the further shoar:
Where landed, in a soveraign disdain
He turns back, and surveys the foaming main,
While the subjected waters flowing reel,
Ambitious yet to wash the Victor's heel.
In such a noble Equipage should we
Embrace th' encounter of our misery.
Not like a field o
[...] corn, that hangs the head
For every tempest, every petty dread.
Crosses were the best
Christians arms: and we
That hope a wished
Canaan once to see,
Must not expect a carpet-way alone
Without a red-sea of affliction.
Then cast the dice: Let's foord old
Rubicon,
Caesar 'tis thine, man is but once undone.
Tread softly though, least
Scyllah's ghost awake,
And us i'th' roll of his
Proscriptions take.
In the black
Island are once more a State;
The City trembles: there's no third to shield,
If once
Augustus to
Antonius yield,
Law shall not shelter
Cicero, the Robe
The
Senate: Proud successe admits no Probe
Of Justice to correct, or quare the fate
That bears down all as illegitimate;
For whatsoere it lists to overthrow,
It either finds it, or else makes it so.
Thus
Tyranny's a stately
Palace, where
Ambition sweats to climbe and nustle there;
But when 'tis enter'd, what hopes then remain?
The
[...]e is no Salliport to come out again.
For Mischief must rowle on, and gliding grow,
Like little Rivulets that gently flow
From their first bubbling springs, but still increase
And swell their Chanel as they mend their pace;
Till in a glorious tyde of villany
They over-run the banks, and posting fly
Like th' bellowing Wave
[...] in tumults, till they can
Di
[...]play themselves in a full Ocean.
And if
[...]lind rage shall chance to miss its way,
Bring stock enough alone to make a Sea.
Thus trebble treason▪ are secur'd and drown'd
By lowder cryes of deeper mouth and
[...]ound.
And high attempts swallow a puny p
[...]ot,
A
[...] Cannons overwhelm the smaller
[...]hor
Whiles the deaf senceless World inur'd a while
(Like the
Catadupi
[...]t the fall of
Nile)
To the fierce tumbling wonder, think it none,
Thus Custom hallow
[...]
[...]rreligion!
And stroaks the patient beast till he admit
The now-grown-light and necessary Bit.
Cannot endure a smart hand ore their crimes
Distracted age? What Dialect or fashion
Shall I assume? to passe the approbation
Of thy censorious
Synod; which now sit
High
Areopagites to destroy all wit?
I cannot say, I say, that I am one
Of th'
Church of
Ely-hous
[...], or
Abington,
Nor of those precious Spirits that can deal
The Pomegranates of grace at every meal.
No zealous
Hemp-dresser yet dipp'd me in
The Laver of adoption from my sin.
Put yet if inspiration or a tale
Of a long-wasted six hours length prevail
A smooth Certificate from the sister-hood,
Or to be termed holy before good,
Religious malice, or a faith 'thout works
Other than may proclaim us
Jews or
Turks:
If these, these hint at any thing? Then, then
Whoop! my dispairing
Hope come back agen:
For since the inundation of grace,
All honesty's under water, or in chase.
But 'tis the old worlds dotage, thereupon
We feed on dreams, imagination,
Humours, and cross-grain'd passions which now reign
In the decaying elements of the brain.
'Tis hard to coin new fancies, when there be
So few that lanch out in discovery.
Nay Arts are so far from being cherished,
There's scarce a
Colledge but has lost its
Head,
And almost all its
Members: O sad wound!
Where never an Artery could be judged sound!
To what a height is
Vice now towred? When we
Dare not miscall it an
Obliquitie?
That it subscribes it self no lesse then
Law?
If this be Reformation then? The great
Account pursued with so much bloud and sweat?
In what black lines shall our sad story be
Deliver'd over to posterity?
With what a dash and scar shall we be read?
How has Dame
Nature in us suffered?
Who of all Centuries the first age are
That sunk the world for want of due repair?
When first we issued out in cryes and tears,
(Those salt presages of our future years)
Head-long we dropt into a quiet calm;
Times crown'd with rosie Garlands, spice and balm,
Where first a glorious
Church and mother came,
Embrac'd us in her armes, gave us a name
By which we live, and an indulgent brest,
Flowing with stream to an eternal rest.
Thus ravish'd, the poor
Soul could not guess even,
Which was more kind to her yet, earth or heaven.
Or rather wrapped in a pious doubt
Of heaven, whether she were in or out.
Next the
Great Father of our
Country brings
His blessing too, (even the
Best of
Kings)
Safe and well-grounded Laws to guard our peace,
And nurse our virtues in their just increase;
Like a pure
Spring from whom all graces come,
Whose boun
[...]y made it double
Christendome:
Such and so sweet were those
Halcyon dayes,
That rose upon us in our Infant rayes;
Such a composed
State we breathed under,
We only heard of
Jove, nere felt his thunder.
Terrors were then as strange, as love now grown,
Wrong and Revenge liv'd quietly at home.
Was a rare strife and war in doing good.
Now let's reflect upon our gratefulness,
How we have added, or (O:) made it less,
What are th' improvements? what our progress, where
Those handsom acts that say that some men were?
He that to antient wreaths can bring no more
From his own worth, dies banq'rupt on the score.
For Father's Crests are crowned in the Son,
And glory spreads by propogation.
Now virtue shield me! where shall I begin?
To what a labyrinth am I now slipp'd in?
What shall we answer them? or what deny?
What prove? or rather whither shall we fly?
When the poor widdow'd
Church shall ask us where
Are all her honours? and that filial care
We owed so sweet a Parent as the Spouse
Of
Christ, which here vouchsafed to own a house?
Where are her
B
[...]anerges? and those rare
Brave sons of consolation? which did bear
The
Ark before our
Israel, and dispence
The heavenly
Manna with such diligence?
In them the prim'tive Motto's come to passe,
Aut mortui sunt, aut docent literas.
Bless'd
Virgin, we can only say we have
Thy Prophets Tombes among us, and their grave.
And here and there a man in colours paint,
That by thy
[...]uines grew a mighty
Saint.
Next
Caesar some accounts are due to thee,
But those in Bloud already written be;
So loud and lasting, in such monstrous shapes,
So wide the never to be clos'd wound gapes;
[Page 203]All ages yet to come with shivering, shall
Recite the fearfull pres'dent of thy fall.
Hence we confute thy tenent
Solomon,
Ʋnder the Sun a new thing hath been done▪
A thing before all pattern, all pretence
Of rule or copy: Such a strange offence
Of such original extract, that it bears
Date only from the
Eden of our years.
Laconian Agis! we have read thy fate,
The violence of the
Spartan love and hate.
How
Pagans trembled at the thought of thee,
And fled the horror of thy tragedie;
Thyestes cruel feast, and how the Sun
Shrunk in his golden beams that fight to shun▪
The bosoms of all Kingdoms open lye,
Plain and emergent to th' inquiring eye.
But when we glance upon our native home▪
As the black
Center to whom all points come,
We rest amazed, and silently admire
How far beyond all spleen ours did aspire.
All that we dare assert, is but a cry
Of an exchanged peace for
Liberty ▪
A secret term by inspiration known,
A mist that brooks no demonstration,
Unlesse we dive into our purses, where
We quickly find
Our Freedom purely dear.
But why exclaim you thus? may some men say,
Against the times? when equal night and day
Keep their just course? the seasons still the same?
As sweet as when from the first hand they came?
The influence of the
Stars benigne and free,
As at first
Peep up in their infancie?
'Tis not those standing motions that divide
The space of years, nor the swift hours that glide
[Page 204]Those little particles of age, that come
In thronging
Items that make up the
Sum,
That's here intended: But our crying crimes,
Our Monsters that abominate the times.
'Tis we that make the
Metonimie good
By being bad, which like a troubled floud
Nothing produce but slimy mire and dirt,
And impudence that makes shame malepert.
To travel further in these wounds that lye
Rankling, though seeming closed, were to deny
Rest to an ore-watch'd world, and force fresh tears
From stench'd eyes, new alarum'd by old fears.
Which if they thus shall heal and stop, they be
The first that ere were cur'd by
Lethargie.
This only
Axiom from ill
Times increase
I gather,
There's a time to hold ones peace.
The Commoners.
1
COme your wayes
Bonny Boyes,
Of the
Town,
For now is the time or never,
Shall your fears,
Or your cares
Cast you down?
Hang your wealth,
And your health,
Get renown,
We all are undone for ever.
Now the
King and the
Crown
Are tumbling down,
[Page 205]And the
Realm doth groan with
disasters,
And the scum of the land,
Are the men that command,
And our
Slaves are become our
Masters.
2
Now our lives
Children, wives
And Estate,
Are a prey to the lust and plunder,
To the rage
Of our age;
And the fate
Of our land
Is at hand,
'Tis too late
To tread these
Ʋsurpers under.
First down goes the
Crown,
Then follows the
Gown,
Thus levell'd are we by the
Roundhead,
While
Church and
State must
Feed their
Pride and their
Lust,
And the
Kingdom and
King confounded.
3
Shall we still
Suffer ill
And be dumb?
And let every
Varlet undo us?
Shall we doubt
Of each Lowt,
That doth come,
With a voice
Like the noise
Of a Drum,
And a
Sword or a
Buff-coat to us?
By
plunder and
rates
To bedeck those proud upstarts that
swagger,
Rather fight for your meat,
Which these
Locusts do eat,
Now every man's a beggar.
The Scots Curanto.
1.
COme, come away to the
English wars,
A fig for our Hills and Valleys,
'Twas we did begin and will lengthen their jarrs,
We'l gain by their loss and folleys;
Let the
Nations
By invasions,
Break through our barrs,
They can get little good by their
salleys.
2.
Though
Irish and
English entred be,
The State is becom
[...] our Debtor.
Let them have our Land, if their own may be free
And the
Scot will at length be a getter.
If they crave it
Let them have it,
What care we:
We would fain change our Land for a better.
3.
Long have we longed for the
English Land,
But we are hindred still by disasters,
But now is their time, when they can't withstand,
But are their own Countries wasters.
If we venter,
We may enter
By command,
And at last we shall grow to be Masters.
4.
When at first we began to rebell,
Though they did not before regard us,
How the name of a
Scot did the
English quell▪
Which formerly have out-dar'd us.
For our comming
And returning,
They paid us well,
And royally did reward us.
5.
The better to bring our ends about,
We must plead for a
Reformation;
And tickle the minds of the giddy-brain'd rout▪
With the hopes of an innovation.
They will love us
And approve us,
Without doubt,
If we bring in an alteration.
6.
Down with the
Bishops and their train,
The
Surplice and
Common Prayers,
But we'l be the
Realms surveyers.
So by little
And a little
We shall gain
All the Kingdom without gain-sayers.
7.
And when at the last we have conquer'd the
King,
And beaten away the
Cavaleers,
The Parliament next must the same ditty sing,
And thus we will set the State by the ears.
By their jarring
And their warring
We will bring,
Their Estates to be
ours, which they think to be
theirs.
8.
And thus when among us the Kingdom is shar'd,
And the People are all made Beggars like we;
A
Scot will be as good as an English
Leard,
O! what a unity this will be.
As we gain it
We'l retain it
By the sweard;
And the English shall say,
bonny blew-cap for me.
An Answer to a Letter from Sir
John Mennis, wherein he jeers him for falling so quickly to the use of the Directory.
FRiend thou doest lash me with a story,
A long one too of Directory;
When thou alone deserves the Birch,
That brought'st the bondage on the Church.
Didst thou not treat for
Bristol City,
And yield it up? the more's the pity.
And saw'st thou not, how right or wrong
The Common-prayer-book went along?
Did'st thou not scourse, as if enchanted
For Articles Sir
Thomas granted?
And barte
[...], as an Author saith,
The Articles oth' Christian Faith?
And now the Directory jostles
Christ out oth' Church and his Apostles;
And tears down the Communion rayles,
That men may take it on their tayles.
Imagine, Friend,
Bochus the King
Engraven on
Sylla's Signet ring,
Delivering up into his hands
Fugurth, and with him, all his Lands;
Whom
Sylla took and sent to
Rome,
There to abide the Senates doom.
In the same posture I suppose,
John standing in's Doublet and Hose,
The Common-prayer and Wisedoms song
To hands of
Fairfax, to be sent
A Sacrifice to the Parliament.
Thou little thought'st what Jear began,
Wrapt in that Treaty?
Busie John▪
There lurk'd, the Fire that turn'd to Cinder,
The Church her Ornaments to Tinder.
There bound up in that Treaty lyes
The fate of all our Christmass-pyes;
Our Holydaies there went to wrack,
Our Wakes were laid upon their back,
Our Gossips spoons away were lurcht,
Our Feasts and Fees for Women churcht;
All this, and more ascribe we might
To Thee at
Bristol, wretched Knight.
Yet thou upbraid'st and rayld'st in rime,
On me, for that which was thy Crime.
So froward Children in the Sun,
Amidst their sports some shrew'd turn done,
The faulty Youth begins to prate,
And layes it on his harmlesse Mate.
Dated,
From
Nympton where the Cider smiles,
And
James has horse as lame as
Giles,
The fourth of
May, and dost thou hear?
'Tis as I take the 8th. year
Since
Portugal by Duke
Braganza
Was cut from
Spain without a Hand-saw.
The Kings Disguise.
ANd why a Tenant to this vile disguise,
Which who but sees, blasphemes thee with his eyes?
My twins of light within their penthouse shrink,
And hold it their Allegiance now to wink.
Oh! for a state-distinction to arraign
Charles of High Treason 'gainst my Soveraign.
What an usurper to his Prince is wont,
Cloyster and shave him, he himself hath don't.
His muffled feature speaks him a recluse,
His ruines prove him a religious house.
The Sun hath mew'd his beams from off his lamp,
And Majesty defac'd the Royal stamp.
It's not enough thy Dignitie's in thrall,
But thou'lt transmute it in thy shape and all?
As if thy blacks were of too faint a dye,
Without the tincture of Tautology.
Flay an Aegyptian for his Cassocks skin,
Spun of his Countries darknesse, line't within
With Presbyterian budge, that drowsie t
[...]ance,
The Synod-sable, foggy ignorance:
Nor bodily, nor ghostly
Negro could
Rough-cast thy figure in a sadder mould:
This Privy-Chamber of thy shape would be
But the close-mourner of thy Royalty:
Twill break the circle of thy Jaylors spell,
A Pearle within a rugged Oyster shell.
Heaven, which the Minster of thy Person owns,
Will fine thee for Dilapidations:
[Page 212]Like to the martyr'd Abbeys courser doom,
Devoutly alter'd to a Pidgeon-room:
Or like the colledge by the changeling rabble,
M— Elves, transform'd into a s
[...]able.
Or if there be a prop
[...]anation higher,
Such is the Sacriledge of thine attire,
By which th' art half depos'd: thou lookst like one
Whose looks are under sequestration.
Whose Regenado form, at the first glance,
Shews like the self-denying Ordinance,
Angel of light, and darkness too, I doubt,
Inspir'd within, and yet possess'd without:
Majestick twi-light in the state of grace,
Yet with an excommunicated face.
Charles and his Mask are of a different Mint,
A Psalm of mercy in a miscreant print
The Sun wears mid-night, Day is beetle-brow'd,
And lightning is in Keldar of a cloud.
Oh the accurst Stenography of fate!
The Princely Eagle shrunk into a Bat.
What charm, what Magick vapour can it be,
That shrinks his
[...]ayes to this Apostasie?
It is but subtile
[...]ilm of tiffany air,
No Cob-web vizard, such as Ladies wear,
When they are veil'd on purpose to be seen,
Doubling their lustre by their vanquish'd skreen,
Nor the false scabbard of a Princes tough
Metal, and three pild darkness, like the slough
Of an imprison'd flame: 'tis
Faux in grain,
Dark-Lanthorn to our high Meridian.
Hell belcht the damp, the
Warwick-castle Vote
Rang
Britains Corfeu, so our light went out.
Thy visage is not legible, the letters,
Like a Lords name writ in phantastick fetters:
[Page 213]Cloaths where a Switzer might be buried quick:
Sure they would fit the Body politick.
False beard enough to fit a stages plot,
For that's the ambush of their wit, God wot.
Nay all his Properties so strange appear,
Y'are not i'th' presence, though the King be there.
A Libel is his dress, a garb uncouth,
Such as the
Hue and
Cry once purg'd at mouth.
Scribling assassinate, thy lines attest
An ear-mark due, Cub of the Blatant beast,
Whose wrath before 'tis syllabled for worse,
Is Blasphemy unfledg'd, a callow curse.
The Laplanders, when they would sell a wind
Wafting to Hell, bag up thy phrase, and bind
It to the Barque, which at the Voyage-end
Shi
[...]ts Poop, and breeds the Collicke in the Fiend.
But I'le not dubbe thee with a glorious scar,
Nor sink thy Skullar with a man of War.
The black mouth'd
Si-quis, and this slandering suit,
Both do alike in picture execute
But since we're all call'd Papists, why not date
Devotion to the rags thus consecrate?
As Temples use to have their Porches wrought
With Sphynxes,
[...]reatures of an antick draught,
And puzling Pourtraictures, to shew that there
Riddles inhabited, the like is here.
But pardon Sir, since I presume to be
Clerk of this Closet to your Majesty;
Me thinks in this your dark mysterious dresse
I see the Gospel coucht in Parables.
At my next view my pur-blind fancy ripes,
And shews Religion in its dusky types.
Was
Solomon in proverbs all array'd.
Come all the brats of this expounding age,
To whom the spirit is in pupillage;
You that damn more than ever
Sampson slew,
And with his engine the same jaw-bone too:
How is't he scapes your Inquisition free,
Since bound up in the Bibles livery?
Hence Cabinet-intruders, Pick-locks hence,
You that dim Jewels with your
Bristol-sence:
And Characters, like Witches so torment,
Till they confesse a guilt, though innocent.
Keys for this Coffer you can never get,
None but St▪
Peter ope's this Cabinet.
This Cabinet, whose aspect would benight
Critick spectators with redundant light.
A Prince most seen, is least: What Scriptures call
The Revelation, is most mystical.
Mount then thou Shadow-royal, and with hast
Advance thy morning-star,
Charles overcast.
May thy strange journey contradictions twist,
And force fair weather from a Scotish mist;
Heavens Confessors are pos'd, those star-ey'd sages
To interpret Eclipse, thus riding stages.
Thus
Israel-like, he travels with a cloud,
Both as a conduct to him and a shroud.
But oh! he goes to
Gibeon, and renews
A league with mouldy bread, and clouted shooes.
The Rebell SCOT.
HOw! Providence! and yet a
Scottish crew!
Then Madam nature wears black patches too?
What? shall our Nation be in bondage thus
Unto a Land that truckles under us?
Ring the Bells backward, I am all on fire,
Not all the Buckets in a Country Quire
Shall quench my rage. A Poet should be fear'd,
When angry, like a Comets flaming beard.
And where's the Stoick? can his wrath appease
To see his Country sick of
Pym's disease,
By
Scotch Invasion to be made a prey
To such
Pig-wiggin Myrmidons as they?
But that there's charm in verse, I would not quote
The name of
Scot without an Antidote,
Unlesse my head were red, that I might brew
Invention there that might be poyson too.
Were I a drowsie Judge, whose dismal note
Disgorgeth halters, as a Juglers throat
Doth ribbands: could I (in Sir Emp'rick's tone)
Speak Pills in phrase, and quack destruction:
Or roar like
Marshall, that
Geneva Bull,
Hell and Damnation a Pulpit full:
Yet to expresse a
Scot, to play that prize,
Not all those mouth-Granadoes can suffice.
Before a
Scot can properly be curst,
I must (like
Hocas) swallow daggers first.
Come keen
Iambicks with your Badgers feet,
And Badger-like, bite till your teeth do meet.
Help ye tart
Satyrists to imp my rage,
With all the
Scorpions that should whip this age:
[Page 216]
Scots are like Witches, do but whet your pen,
Scratch till the bloud come, they'l not hurt you then.
Now as the Martyrs were inforc'd to take
The shapes of Beasts, like Hypocrites at stake,
I'le bait my
Scot so, yet not cheat your eyes;
A
Scot within a Beast is no disguise.
No more let
Ireland brag, her harmless Nation
Fosters no Venom, since the
Scots plantation:
Nor can ours feign'd antiquity maintain,
Since they came in,
England hath Wolves again.
The
Scot that kept the Tower, might have shown
(Within the grate of his own breast alone)
The Leopard and the Panther, and ingrost
What all those wild Collegiates had cost
The honest high-shoes in their termly fees,
First to the salvage Lawyer, next to these.
Nature her self doth
Scotch-men Beasts confesse,
Making their Country such a wildernesse:
A Land that brings in question and suspence
Gods omni-presence, but that
Charles came thence,
But that
Montross and
Crawfords loyal band
Atton'd their sins and christ'ned half the Land.
Nor is it all the Nation hath these spots;
There is a Church, as well as
Kirk of
Scots:
As in a picture, where the squinting paint
Shews
[...]iend on this side, and on that side Saint.
He that saw Hell in's melancholly dream,
And in the twi-light of his fancy's theam
Sca
[...]'d from his sins, repented in a fright,
Had he view'd
Scotland, had turn'd Proselyte.
A Land where one may pray with curst intent,
O may they never suffer banishment!
Had
[...]ain been
Scot, God would have chang'd his
doom,
Not forc't him wander, but confin'd him home:
[Page 217]Like
Jews they spread, and as infection fly,
As if the Devil had Ubiquity.
Hence 'tis they live at Rovers, and defie
This or that place, Rags of Geography.
They'r Citizens o'th' world; they'r all in all,
Scotland's a Nation Epidemicall.
And yet they ramble not, to learn the mode
How to be drest, or how to lisp abroad;
To return knowing in the
Spanish shrug,
Or which of the
Dutch States a double Jug
Resembles most, in belly, or in beard;
(The Card by which the Marriners are steer'd.)
No, the
Scots-Errant fight, and fight to eat,
Their
Ostrich-stomachs make their
Swords their
meat:
Nature with
Scots, as Tooth-drawers hath dealt,
Who use to hang their teeth upon their Belt.
Yet wonder not at this their happy choise,
The
Serpent's fatall still to
Paradise.
Sure
England hath the Hemeroids, and these
On the North posture of the patient seize,
Like Leeches: thus thy Physically thirst
After our bloud, but in the cure shall burst.
Let them not think to make us run o'th' score,
To purchase villanage as once before,
When an Act pass'd to stroak them on the head,
Call them good Subjects, buy them Gingerbread;
Nor Gold, nor Acts of grace, 'tis Steel must tame
The stubborn
Scot: a Prince that would reclaim
Rebells by yielding, doth like him, (or worse)
Who sadled his own back, to shame his horse.
Was it for this you left your leaner soil,
Thus to lard
Israel with
Aegypts spoyle?
They are the Gospels Life guard: but for them
The Garrison of new
Jerusalem!
[Page 218]What would the Brethren do? the Cause! the Cause!
Sack possets, and the Fundamental Laws!
Lord! what a goodly thing is want of shirts!
How a
Scotch-stomach, and no meat, converts!
They wanted food and raiment, so they took
Religion for their Seamstresse and their Cook.
Unmask them well, their honours and estate,
As well as conscience are sophisticate.
Shrive but their titles, and their money poize,
A Laird & twenty pounds pronounc'd with noise,
When constru'd, but for a plain Yeoman go,
And a good sober two-pence, and well so.
Hence then you proud Impostors, get you gone,
You Picts in Gentry and Devotion;
You scandal to the stock of Verse, a race
Able to bring the Gibbet in disgrace.
Hyperbolus by suffering did traduce
The Ostracism, and sham'd it out of use.
The
Indian, that Heaven did forsware,
Because he heard the
Spaniards were there,
Had he but known what
Scots in Hell had been,
He would,
Erasmus like, have hung between:
My Muse hath done. A voider for the nonce;
I wrong the Devil should I pick their bones.
That dish is his, for when the
Scots decease,
Hell, like their Nation, feeds on Barnacles.
A
Scot, when from the Gallow-tree got loose,
Drops into
Styx, and turns a
Soland-Goose.
The Scots Apostasie.
IS't come to this? what shall the cheeks of fame,
Stretcht with the breath of learned
Londons name,
Be flag'd again? and that great piece of sence,
As rich in Loyalty and Eloquence▪
Brought to the Test, be found a trick of State?
Like Chymists tinctures, prov'd adulterate?
The Devil sure such language did atchieve,
To cheat our un-forwarned Grandam
Eve,
As this impostour found out, to besot
Th' experienc'd
English to believe a
Scot.
Who reconcil'd the Covenants doubtfull sence?
The Commons argument, or the Cities pence?
Or did you doubt persistance in one good
Would spoyle the fabrick of your Brotherhood,
Projected first in such a forge of sin,
Wa
[...] fit for the grand Devils hammering?
Or was't ambition that this damned fact
Should tell the world you know the sins you act?
The infamy this super-treason brings,
Blasts more than Murders of your
sixty Kings;
A crime so black, as being advis'dly done,
Those hold with these no competition.
Kings only suffer'd then, in this doth lye
Th' Assassination of
Monarchy.
Beyond this sin no one step can be trod,
If not t'attempt deposing of your God:
Oh were you so ingag'd, that we might see
Heavens angry lightning 'bout your ears to flee
[Page 220]Till you were shrivel'd to dust, and your cold Land,
Parcht to a drought beyond the
Lybian sand▪
But 'tis reserv'd, till Heaven plague you worse:
Be Objects of an Epidemick curse.
First, may your Brethren, to whose viler ends
Your power hath bawded, cease to be your friends;
And prompted by the dictate of their reason,
Reproach the
Traytors though they hug the
Treason.
And may their jealousies increase and breed,
Till they confine your steps beyond the
Tweed.
In forrain Nations may your loath'd name be
A stigmatizing brand of infamy;
Till forc'd by general hate, you cease to rome
The world, and for a plague to live at home:
Till you resume your poverty, and be
Reduc'd to beg where none can be so free
To grant; and may your scabby Land be all
Translated to a general Hospitall,
Let not the Sun afford one gentle ray,
To give you comfort of a Summers day;
But, as a guerdon for your Trayterous War,
Live cherish'd only by the Northern star.
No stranger deign to visit your rude coast,
And be to all but banisht men, as lost.
And such in heightning of the infliction due,
Let provok'd Princes send them all to you.
Your State a Chaos be, where not the Law,
But power, your lives and liberties may aw.
No Subject 'mongst you keep a quiet brest,
But each man strive through bloud to be the best;
Till, for those miseries on us you've brought,
By your own Sword our just revenge be wrought.
As your
Allegiance, mask'd hypocrisie:
Untill, when
Charles shall be compos'd in dust,
Perfum'd with Epithetes of
good and
just;
HE sav'd, incensed Heaven may have forgot
T' afford one act of mercy to a
Scot,
Unlesse that
Scot deny himself, and do
(What's easier far) renounce his
Nation too.
The Scots Arrears.
FOur hundred thousand pounds!
A lusty Bag indeed:
Was't ever known so vast a Sum
Ere past the River
Tweede?
Great pity it is, I swear,
Whole Carts was thither sent,
Where hardly two in fifty knew,
What
Forty shillings meant:
But 'twas to some perceiv'd,
Three Kingdoms were undone.
And those that sit here thought it fit,
To settle them one by one,
Now
Ireland hath no haste,
So there they'le not begin;
The
Scotish ayde must first be paid,
For ye came freely in,
And
William Lilly writes —
Who writes the truth you know;
In frosty weather they marched hither.
Up to the chins in snow.
They do not weigh a feather,
Those Crowns for coals, brought in by shoals;
Scarce kept their men together,
Of Plunder they esteem
As trifles of no worth,
Of force ye dote, because recruit
Issued no faster forth.
If once this Cash is paid,
I hope the
Scot be spedd,
He need not steal, but fairly deal,
Both to be cloth'd and fedd.
Our sheep and Oxen may
Safe in their pastures stand,
What need they filch the cow
That's milch to sojourn in their land.
I wonder much the
Scot
With this defiles his hand,
Because the summ's a price of
Rome,
Rais'd out of the Bishops lands;
But too too well ye know
To what intent they in come;
'Twas not their pains produc'd this gains,
'Twas sent to pack them home:
Methinks I hear them laugh
To see how matters proved,
And give a shout, it so fell out,
Ye were more fear'd than loved.
If
Jockey after this
Reneaginge hath forgot,
From antient fires, he much retires,
And shows himself no
Scot.
A SONG On the Schismatick
ROTUNDOS.
ONce I a curious Eye did fix,
To observe the tricks
Of the
Schismaticks of the Times,
To find out which of them
Was the merriest Theme,
And best would befit my Rimes;
Arminius I found solid,
Socinians were not stolid,
Much Learning for Papists did stickle.
But ah, ah, ha ha ha ha Rotundos
rot,
ah, ha ha ha ha ha Rotundos
rot,
'Tis you that my spleen doth tickle.
And first to tell must not be forgot,
How I once did trot
With a great
Zealot to a Lecture,
Where I a Tub did view,
Hung with apron blew;
'Twas the Preachers as I conjecture,
His Use and his Doctrine too
Were of no other hue,
Though he spake in a tone most mickle:
But ah, ha ha ha, &c.
He taught amongst other prety things
That the Book of
Kings
Small benefit brings to the godly,
At the Book of
Judges,
And talkt of
Leviticus odly,
Wisedome most of all
He declares
Apocryphal,
Beat
Bell and the
Dragon, like
Michael:
But ah, ah, ha ha ha ha, &c.
'Gainst Humane Learning next he envyes,
And almost boldly say's,
'Tis that which destroyes Inspiration,
Let superstitious sence
And wit be banished hence,
With Popish Predomination
Cut
Bishops down in hast,
And
Cathedrals as fast
As Corn that's fit for the sickle:
But ah, ah, ha ha ha ha Rotundos
rot,
ah, ha ha ha ha ha Rotundos
rot,
'Tis you that my spleen doth tickle.
Cromwell's Panegyrick.
SShall Presbyterian Bells ring
Cromwels praise,
While we stand still and do no Trophyes raise
Unto his lasting name? Then may we be
Hung like the Bells for our dependencie.
Well may his Nose, that is Dominicall,
Take pepper in't, to see no Pen at all
Stir to applaud his merits, who hath lent
Such valour, to erect a Monument
[Page 225]Of lasting praise; whose name shall never dye,
While
England has a Church, or Monarchy.
He whom the laurell'd Army home did bring
Riding triumphant o're his conquer'd King,
He is the Generals Cypher now; and when
Hee's joyn'd to him▪ he makes that One a Ten.
The Kingdoms Saint;
England no more shall stir
To cry St.
George, but now St
Oliver.
Hee's the Realm Ensign; and who goes to wring
His Nose, is forc'd to cry,
God save the King.
He that can rout an Army with his name,
And take a City, ere he views the same:
His Souldiers may want bread, but n'ere shall fear
(While hee's their General,) the want of Beer;
No Wonder they wore Bayes, his Brewing-fat
(
Helicon-like) make Poets Laureat.
When Brains in those Castalian liquors swim,
We sing no Heathenish
Pean, but a Hymne;
And that by th' Spirit too, for who can chuse
But sing
Hosanna to this King of Jewes?
Tremble you
Scotish Zealots, you that han't
Freed any Conscience from your Covenant:
That for those bal'd Appellatives of
Cause,
Religion, and the
Fundamental Laws,
Have pull'd the old Episcopacy down,
And as the Miter, so you'le serve the Crown.
You that have made the Cap to th' Bonnet vaile,
And made the Head a Servant to the Taile.
And you curst spawne of Publicans, that sit
In every County, as a plague to it;
That with your Yeomen Sequestrating Knaves,
Have made whole Counties beggerly, and Slaves.
You Synod, that have sate so long to know
Whether we must believe in God, or no;
[Page 226]You that have torn the Church, and sate t' impaire
The Ten Commandements, the Creed, the Prayer;
And made your honors pull down Heavens glory,
While you set up that Calfe, your
Directory:
We shall no wicked Jews-ear'd Elders want,
This Army's built of Churches Militant:
These are new Tribes of
Levi; for they be
Clergy, yet of no Universitie.
Pull down your Crests, for every bird shall gather,
From your usurping back, a stollen feather.
Your great Lay Levite, whose great Margent tires
The patient Reader, while he blots whole quires,
Nay reams with Treason; and with Nonsence too,
To justifie what e're you say or do:
Whose circumcised ears are hardly grown
Ripe for another Persecution:
He must to
Scotland for another paire;
For he will lose these, if he tarry here.
[...]urges that Reverend Presbydean of
Pauls,
Must (with his Poundage) leave his Cure of Souls,
And into
Scotland trot, that he may pick
Out of that Kirk, a nick-nam'd Bishoprick.
The Protean Hypocrites, that will ne're burn,
Must here, or else at
Tyburn take a turn.
And
Will. the Conqueror in a
Scotish dance
Must lead his running Army into
France.
Or he and's Juncto among those Crews
In
Holland build a Synagogue of Jewes,
And spread Rebellion; Great
Alexander
Fears not a Pillory, like this Commander.
And
Bedlam John, that at his Clerks so raves,
Using them not like servants, but like slaves.
[Page 227]He that so freely rail'd against his Prince,
Call'd him
dissembling s
[...]btile Knave, and since
Has stil'd the whole Army
Bankrupts; said, that none
Of their Estates were equal to his own:
He that was by a strong Ambition led
To set himself upon the Cities head:
But when he has restor'd his both-side fees,
Hee'l be as poor, or they as rich as hee's.
And that still-gaping Tophet Goldsmiths Hall,
With all his Furies, shall to ruine fall.
Wee'l be no more gull'd by that Popish story,
But shall reach Heav'n without that Purgatory:
What Honour does he merit? what Renown?
By whom all these Oppression are pull'd down.
And such a Government is like to be
In Church and State, as eye did never see:
Magicians hold, hee'l set up Common-prayer;
Looking in's face they find the Rubrick there.
His Name shall never dye by fire nor floud,
But in Church-windows stand, where Pictures stood▪
And if his Soul lothing that house of clay,
Shall to another Kingdom march away,
Under some Barnes floor his bones shall lye,
Who Churches did, and Monuments defie:
Where the rude Thrasher with much knocking on,
Shall wake him at the Resurrection.
And on his Grave since there must be no Stone,
Shall stand this Epitaph;
That he has none.
The Scotch War.
WHen first the
Scottish War began
The
English man, we did trapan, with Pellit and Pike,
The bonny blythe and cunning
Scot
Had then a Plot, which they did not, well smell, it's like;
Although he could neither write, nor read,
Yet our General
Lashly cross'd the
Tweed
With his gay gangh of Blew-caps all,
And we marcht with our Generall;
We took
New-castle in a trice,
But we thought it had been Paradice,
They did look all so bonny and gay,
Till we took all their Pillage away.
Then did we streight to plundering fall
Of great and small, for were all most valiant that day;
And
Jinny in her Satten Gown the best in Town,
From Heel to Crown was gallant and gay;
Our silks and sweets made such a smother,
Next day we knew not one another:
For
Jockie did never so shine,
And
Jinny was never so fine;
A geud faith a gat a ged Beaver then,
But it's beat into a Blew-cap agen
By a Redcoat, that did still cry, Rag,
And a red snowt, a the Deel aw the Crag.
The
English raised an Army streight
With mickle state, and we did wate to face them as well;
[Page 229]Then every valiant Musquet man put fire in pan,
And we began to lace them as well;
But before the Sparks were made a Cole,
They did every man pay for his Pole;
Then their bought Land we lent them agen,
Into
Scotland we went with our men;
We were paid by all, both Peasant and Prince,
But I think we have soundly paid for it since,
For our Silver is wasted, Sir, all,
And our Silks hang in
Westminster Hall.
The Godly Presbyterian, that holy man,
The War began with Bishop and King,
Where we like Waiters at a Feast
But not the least of all the guest, must dish up the thing,
We did take a Covenant to pull down
The Cross, the Crofier, and the Crown,
VVith the Rochet the Bishop did bear.
And the Smock that his Chaplain did wear:
But now the Covenant's gone to wrack,
They say, it looks like an old Almanack,
For
Jockie is grown out of date,
And
Jinny is thrown out of late.
I must confesse the holy firk did only work
Upon our Kirk for silver and meat,
VVhich made us come with aw our broods,
Venter our bloods for aw your goods, to pilfer & cheat;
But we see what covetousness doth bring,
For we lost our selves when we sold our King;
And alack now and welly we cry,
Our backs mow and bellies must dye;
VVe fought for food, and not vain-glory,
And so there's an end of a
Scotish mans Story;
Aw the worst tale that ever was told.
The Power of Money.
TIs not the silver nor gold for it self
That makes men adore it, but 'tis for its power:
For no man does doat upon pelf because pelf,
But all Court the Lady in hope of her dower:
The wonders that now in our dayes we behold,
Done by the irresistable power of gold,
Our Zeal, and our Love, and Allegiance do hold.
This purchaseth Kingdoms, Kings, Scepters, and Crowns;
Wins Battels, and conquers the Conquerors bold;
Takes Bulwarks, and Castles, and Cities, and Towns,
And our prime Laws are writ in letters of gold;
'Tis this that our Parliament calls and creates,
Turns Kings into Keepers, and Kingdomes to States,
And peopledomes these into highdomes translates.
This made our black Synod to sit still so long,
To make themselves rich, by making us poor;
This made our bold Army so daring and strong,
And made them turn them, like Geese, out of door;
[Page 231]'Twas this made our Covenant-makers to make it,
And this made our Priests for to make us to take it,
And this made both Makers and Takers forsake it.
'Twas this spawn'd the dunghill Crew of Committees and 'strators,
Who live by picking the Crockadile Parliaments gums;
This first made, and then prospered the Rebells and Traytors,
And made Gentry of those that were the Nations scums:
This Herald gives Armes not for merit, but store,
And gives Coats to those that did sell Coats before,
If their pockets be but lin'd well with argent and ore.
This, plots can devise, and discover what they are;
This, makes the great Fellons the lesser condemn;
This, sets those on the Bench, that should stand at the Bar,
Who Judge such as by right ought to Execute them;
Gives the boysterous Clown his unsufferable pride,
Makes Beggars, and Fools, and Usurpers to ride,
Whiles ruin'd Propriators run by their side.
[Page 232]Stamp either the Armes of the State or the King,
St.
George or the Breeches,
C. R. or
O. P.
The Cross or the Fiddle, 'tis all the same thing;
This, still is the Queen whosoe'er the King be;
This, lines our Religion, builds Doctrine & Truth,
With Zeal and the Spirit the factious endueth,
To club with St.
Katharine, or sweet Sister
Ruth.
'Tis money makes Lawyers give Judgement, or plead
On this side, or that side, on both sides, or neither;
This makes young men Clerks that can scarce write or read,
And spawns arbitrary Orders as various as the weather;
This makes your blew Lecturers pray, preach, and prate
Without reason or sence against Church, King, or State,
To shew the thin lining of his twice-covered pate.
'Tis money makes Earls, Lords, Knights, and Esquires
Without breeding, descent, wit, learning, or merit;
This makes Ropers, and Ale-drapers, Sheriffs of Shires,
Whose trade is not so low, nor so base as their spirit:
This Justices makes, and wise ones we know,
Furr'd Aldermen too, and Mayors also;
This makes the old Wise trot, and makes the Mare to go.
[Page 233]This makes your blew aprons Right Worshipfull;
And for this we stand bare, and before them do fall;
They leave their young heirs well fleeced with wooll,
Whom we must call Squires, and then they pay all:
Who with beggarly souls, though their bodies be gawdy,
Court the pale Chamber-maid, and nick-name her a Lady,
And for want of good wit, they do swear and talk bawdy.
This Mariages makes, 'tis a Center of love,
It draws on the man, & it pricks up the woman
Birth, virtue, and parts no affection can move,
Whilst this makes a Lord stoop to the Brat of a Broom-man;
This gives virtue and beauty to the Lasses that you wooe,
Makes women of all sorts and ages to do;
'Tis the soul of the world, and the worldling too.
This procures us whores, hawks, hounds & hares;
'Tis this keeps your Groom, and your Groom keeps your Gelding;
This built Citizens Wives, as well as wares;
And this makes your coy Lady so coming and yielding;
This buys us good Sack, which revives like the spring,
'Tis this your Poetical fancies do bring;
And this makes you as merry as we that do sing.
Contentment.
WHat though the ill times do run crosse to our will,
And Fortune still frown upon us,
Our hearts are our own, and shall be so still,
A fig for the plagues they lay on us;
Let us take t'other cup, to chear our hearts up,
And let it be purest Canary;
We'll ne'er shrink nor care, at the Crosses we bear,
Let them plague us untill they be weary.
What though we are made both Beggars and Slaves?
Let's endure it, and stoutly drink on't,
'Tis our comfort we suffer 'cause we wont be Knaves,
Redemption will come e're we think on't;
We must flatter and fear, those that over us are,
And make them believe that we love them,
When their Tyranny is past, we can serve them at last
As they have serv'd those have been above them.
Let the Levites go preach for the Goose or the Pig,
To drink Wine at
Christmas or
Easter:
The Doctor may labour our lives to new trig,
And make Nature fast while we feast her;
The Lawyer may bawl, out his Lungs and his Gall
For Plaintiff, and for Defendant,
At his Book the Scholar lye, while with
Plato he dye
With an ugly hard word at the end on't.
Then here's to the man that delights in
solfa,
For Sack is his only Rozin.
A load of hey ho, is not worth a ha ha,
He's a man for my money that draws in;
Then a pin for the muck, and a pin for ill luck,
'Tis better be blithe and frolick,
Than sigh out our breath, and invite our own death
By the Gout, or the Stone, or the Collick.
On the Goldsmiths Committee.
COm Drawer, some wine,
Or wee'll pull down the Sign,
For we are all joviall Compounders:
We'll make the house ring,
With healths to our KING,
And confusion light on his Confounders.
Since Goldsmiths Committee
Affords us no pitty,
Our sorrows in Wine we will steep 'um,
They force us to take
Two Oaths, but wee'll make
A third, that we ne'er meant to keep 'um.
And next, who e're sees,
We drink on our knees,
To the King, may he thirst that repines:
A fig for those Traytors
That look to our waters,
They have nothing to do with our Wines.
And next, here's a Cup
To the Queen, fill it up,
Were it poyson we would make an end on't;
May
Charles and she meet.
And tread under feet
Both Presbyter and Independent.
To the Prince, and all others,
His Sisters and Brothers,
As low in condition as high born,
We'll drink this, and pray
That shortly they may
See all them that wrongs them at
Tyburn.
And next, here's three bouls
To all gallant souls,
That for the King did, and will venter;
May they flourish when those
That are his, and their foes,
Are hang'd and ram'd down to the Center.
And next, let a Glasse
To our undoers passe,
Attended with two or three Curses:
May plagues sent from Hell
Stuff their bodies as well
As the Cavaliers coyn doth their purses.
May the Cannibals of
Pym
Eat them up limb by limb,
Or a hot Feaver scorch 'um to embers;
Pox keep 'um in bed
Untill they are dead,
And repent for the losse of their Members.
And may they be found
In all to abound,
Both with Heaven and the Countries anger,
May they never want Fractions,
Doubts, Fears, and Distractions,
Till the Gallow-tree choaks them from danger.
The mad Zealot.
AM I mad, O noble
Festus,
When Zeal and godly knowledge
Have put me in hope
To deal with the Pope,
As well as the best in the Colledge?
Boldly I preach, hate a Crosse, hate a Surplice,
Miters, Copes, and Rochets:
Come hear me pray nine times a day,
And fill your heads with Crochets.
In the house of pure
Emanuel
I had my Education,
Where my friends surmise
I dazell'd mine eyes
With the light of Revelation.
Boldly I preach, &c.
They bound me like a Bedlam,
They lasht my four poor quarters;
Whilst thus I endure,
Faith makes me sure
To be one of
Foxes Martyrs.
Boldly I preach, &c.
These injuries I suffer
Through Antichrists perswasions;
Take off this Chain,
Neither
Rome nor
Spain
Can resist my strong invasions.
Boldly I preach, &c.
Of the beasts ten horns (God blesse us!)
I have knock'd off three already:
If they let them alone,
I'le leave him none:
But they say I am too heady.
Boldly I preach, &c.
When I sack'd the seven-hill'd City,
I met the great red Dragon;
I kept him aloof
With the armour of proof,
Though here I have never a rag on.
Boldly I preach, &c.
With a fiery Sword and Target
There fought I with this Monster:
But the sons of Pride
My Zeal deride,
And all my deeds misconster.
Boldly I preach, &c.
I unhors'd the Whore of
Babel
With the Lance of Inspirations:
I made her stink,
And spill her drink
In the cup of Abominations,
Boldly I preach, &c.
I have seen two in a Vision,
With a flying Book between them:
I have been in despair
Five times a year,
And cur'd by reading
Greenham,
Boldly I preach, &c.
I observ'd in
Perkins Tables
The black Lines of Damnation,
Those crooked veins
So stuck in my Brains,
That I fear'd my Reprobation,
Boldly I preach, &c.
In the holy tongue of
Canaan
I plac'd my chiefest pleasure,
Till I prickt my foot,
With an
Hebrew root,
That I bled beyond all measure.
Boldly I preach, &c.
I appear'd before th' Archbishop,
And all the High Commission:
I gave him no Grace,
But told him to his face
That he favour'd Superstition.
Boldly I preach, hate a Crosse, hate a Surplice,
Miters, Copes, and Rochets:
Come hear me pray nine times a day,
And fill your heads with Crotchets.
Of banishing the Ladies out of Town.
1.
A Story strange I will unfold,
Then which a sadder ne're was told,
How the Ladies were from
London sent,
With mickle woe and discontent.
2
A heart of Marble would have bled,
To see this rout of white and red,
Both
York and
Lancaster must fly,
With all their painted Monarchy.
3.
Those faces which men so much prize,
In Mrs.
Gibbes her Liveries,
Must leave their false and borrowed hue,
And put on grief that's only true.
4.
Those pretty patches long and round,
Which covered all that was not sound;
Must be forgotten at the Farmes,
As useless and suspicious charmes.
5.
Now we must leave all our Designes,
That were contriv'd within the Lines;
Communication is deny'd,
If to our Husbands we be try'd.
6.
And here's the misery alone,
We must have nothing but our own,
Oh give us Liberty, and we
Will never aske propriety.
7.
Alas how can a Kisse be sent,
From Rocky
Cornwall into
Kent?
Or how can
Sussex stretch an arm
To keep a Northern servant warm,
8.
Oh
London! Centre of all Mirth,
Th' Epitome of English Earth;
All Provinces are in the streets,
And
Warwick-shire with
Essex meets.
9.
Then farewell
Queen-street, and the Fields,
And Garden that such pleasure yields,
Oh who would such fair Lodgings change,
To nestle in a plunder'd Grange!
10.
Farewell good places old and new,
And
Oxford Kates once more adieu;
But it goes unto our very hearts,
To leave the Cheese-cakes and the Tarts.
11.
Farewell
Bridge-foot and
Bear thereby,
And those bald-pates that stand so high,
That other Heads were on those powles.
12.
But whether hands of Parliament,
Or of Husbands, we're content,
Since all alike such Traytors be,
Both against us and Monarchy.
Loyalty confin'd.
BEat on proud Billowes,
Boreas Blow,
Swell curled Waves, high as
Jove's roof,
Your incivility doth shew,
That innocence is tempest proof.
Though surely
Nereus frown, my thoughts are calm,
Then strike affliction, for thy wounds are balm.
That which the world miscalls a Goale,
A private Closet is to me,
Whilst a good Conscience is my Baile,
And Innocence my Liberty:
Locks Barres and Solitude together met,
Make me no Prisoner but an Anchorit.
I whil'st I wish'd to be retir'd
Into this private room was turn'd,
As if their wisedomes had conspir'd,
The Salamander should be burn'd.
The Cynick hugs his poverty,
The Pelican her wilderness,
And 'tis the
Indians pride to be
Naked on frozen
Caucasus.
Contentment cannot smart, Stoicks we see
Make torments easie to their Apathy.
These Menacles upon my Arm,
I as my Mistris's favours wear;
And for to keep my Ankles warm,
I have some Iron Shackles there.
These walls are but my Garrison; this Cell
Which men call Goal, doth prove my Cittadel.
So he that strook at
Jasons life,
Thinking he had his purpose sure:
By a malicious friendly Knife,
Did only wound him to a cure.
Malice I see wants wit, for what is meant,
Mischief oft-times, proves favour by th' event▪
I'me in this Cabinet lockt up,
Like some high-prized
Margaret,
Or like some great Mogul or Pope,
Are cloystered up from publick sight.
Retirement is a piece of Majesty,
And thus proud
Sultan, I'me as great as thee.
Here sin for want of food must starve,
Where tempting Objects are not seen;
And these strong Walls do only serve,
To keep Vice out, and keep me in.
Malice of late's grown charitable sure,
I'me not committed, but I'me kept secure.
Whence once my Prince affliction hath,
Prosperity doth Treason seem;
And for to smooth so tough a Path,
I can learn Patience from him.
Now not to suffer, shews no Loyal heart,
When Kings wants ease, Subjects must bear a part.
Have you not seen the Nightingale,
A Pilgrim koopt into a Cage,
How doth she chant her wonted tale,
In that her narrow hermitage.
Even then her charming melody doth prove,
That all her Boughs are Trees, her Cage a Grove.
My soul is free as the ambient aire,
Although my baser part's immur'd,
Whilest Loyal thoughts do still repair,
T' accompany my Solitude.
And though immur'd, yet I can chirp and sing,
Disgrace to Rebels, glory to my King.
VVhat though I cannot see my King,
Neither in his Person or his Coyne,
Yet contemplation is a thing,
That renders what I have not mine.
My King from me, what Adamant can part,
VVhom I do wear engraven on my heart.
I am that Bird whom they combine,
Thus to deprive of Liberty;
But though they do my Corps confine,
Yet maugre hate, my Soul is free.
Although Rebellion do my Body bind,
My King can only captivate my mind.
On the demolishing the Forts.
IS this the end of all the toil,
And labour of the Town?
And did our Bulwarks rise so high
Thus low to tumble down?
All things go by contraries now,
We fight to still the Nation,
Who build Forts to pull down Popery,
Pull down for Edification.
The Indepedents tenets, and
The wayes so pleasing be.
Our City won't be bound about,
But stands for Liberty.
The Popish doctrine shall no more
Prevail within our Nation;
For now we see that by our works,
There is no Justification.
What an Almighty army's this,
How worthy of our praysing,
That with one Vote can blow down that
All we so long were raising!
Yet let's not wonder at this Change,
For thus 'twill be with all.
These works did lift themselves too high,
And Pride must have a fall.
And when both Houses vote agen,
The Cavies to be gone,
Nor dare to come within the lines
Of Communication.
They must reserve the sense or else,
Referr't to the Divines,
And they had need fit seven years more
Ere they can read those lines.
They went to make a
Gotham on't,
For now they did begin
To build these mighty banks about,
To keep the Cuckoes in.
Alas what need they take such pains!
For why a Cucko here
Might find so many of his Mates,
Hee'l sing here all the year.
Has
Isaac our L.
Maior, L.
Maior,
With Tradesmen and his Wenches,
Spent so much time, and Cakes and Beer,
To edifie these Trenches!
All trades did shew their skill in this,
Each Wife an Engineer;
The Mairess took the tool in hand,
The maids the stones did bear.
These Bulwarks stood for Popery,
And yet we never fear'd um,
And now they worship and fall down,
Before those Calves that rear'd 'um.
But though for Superstition,
The Crosses have been down'd,
Who'ld think these works would Popish turn,
That ever have been round?
This spoyles our Palmistry; for when
Wee'l read the Cities fate,
We find nor Lines nor Crosses now,
As it hath had of late.
No wonder that the Aldermen,
Will no more mony lend,
When they that in this seven years,
Such learned works have pen'd.
Now to debase their lofty lines,
In which the wits delighted▪
'Tis thought they'l nere turn Poets more,
Because their works are slighted.
These to a dolefull tune are set,
For they that in the town.
Did every where cry Up go we,
Now they must sing down down.
But if that
Tyburn do remain,
When tother slighted be,
The Cits will thither flock and sing,
Hay, hay, then up go we.
Upon Routing the
Scots Army. A SONG.
To the Tune of
Through the Wood Lady.
1.
CAm lend, lend y'are lugs Joes, an Ise speak a Song,
Sing heome agen Jocky,
sing heome agen Jocky,
O hes velient Acts an hes Prowes emong,
Sing heome agen heome agen O valent Jocky.
2.
Sirs,
Jockie's a Man held a mickle Note,
Sing heome agen Jocky,
&c.
Tha Breech o tha Covenant stuck in hes Throte,
Sing heome agen, heome agen, &c.
3.
For
Jockie was riteous, whilk ye wad admire,
Sing heome agen Jocky,
&c.
A fooght for tha Kirk, bet a plunder'd tha Quire
Sing heome agen Jocky,
&c.
4.
An
Jockie waxt roth, and toll
Angland a cam,
Sing heome agen Jocky,
&c.
Fro whence hee'd return, but alack a is lame,
Sing heome agen Jocky,
&c.
5.
An
Jockie was armed fro topp toll to toe,
Sing heome agen Jocky,
&c.
Wi a po're o Men and th'are geod D— I tro,
Sing heome agen Jocky,
&c.
6.
So valent I wis they were, an sa prat,
Sing heome agen Jocky,
&c.
Ne Cock nor Hen durst stand in thare gat,
Sing heome agen Jocky,
&c.
7
In every strete thay ded sa flutter,
Sing heome agen Jocky,
&c.
Ne Child durst shaw his Bred and Butter,
Sing heome agen, Jocky,
&c.
8.
Whan th'
Anglish Forces they her'd on o're night,
Sing heome again Jocky,
&c.
Next Morne thay harnest themsels for a fight,
Sing heome agen, heome agen, &c.
9.
Thare D— wes tha Mon that wad be sen
[...]oot,
Sing heome agen, Jocky,
&c.
He feas't tham awhile, then turn'd Ars's about,
Sing heome agen, heome agen, &c.
10.
Tha Men that ater this valent
Scot went,
Sing heome agen Jocky,
&c.
[Page 250]Had ner foond him oout, bet by a strong sent,
Sing heome agen, heome agen O val
[...]nt Jocky.
11.
Bet se tha reward ò that Cowardly Crue,
Sing heome agen Jocky,
&c.
Thare Countremon
Ballatine sent 'em to
Corfew,
Not home agen, home agen, O slavish Jocky.
The disloyal Timist.
1.
NOw our holy Wars are don,
Betwixt the Father and the Son;
And since we have by righteous fate,
Distrest a Monarch and his Mate.
And first their heirs fly into
France
To weep out their Inheritance;
Let's set open all our Packs,
Which contain ten thousand wracks;
Cast on the shore of the red Sea
Of
Naseby, and of
Newbery.
If then you will come provided with Gold,
We dwell
Close by Hell,
Where wee'l sell
What you will,
That is ill;
For Charity waxeth cold.
2.
Hast thou done murther, or bloud spilt,
We can soon giv't another name,
That will keep thee from all blame:
But be it still provided thus,
That thou hast once been one of us;
Gold is the God that shall pardon the Guilt,
For we have
What shall save
Thee from th' Grave,
Since the Law
We can awe;
Although a famous Prince's bloud were spilt.
3.
If a Church thou hast bereft
Of its Plate, 'tis holy-theft;
Or for Zeal-sake, if thou beest
Prompted on to take a Priest;
Gold is a sure prevailing Advocate:
Then come
Bring a summe,
Law is dumb:
And submits,
To our wits;
For it's Policy guides a State.
A Medley.
1.
ROom for a Gamester that plays at all he sees,
Whose fickle faith is fram'd, Sir, to fit such times as these;
One that cryes
Amen, to ev'ry factious Prayer,
From
Hugh Peters Pulpit, to St.
Peters Chair:
One that can comply with Crosier and with Crown;
And yet can bouze
A full carouze,
While bottles tumble down,
Dery down.
2.
This is the way to trample without trembling.
Since Sycophants only secure;
Covenants and Oaths are badges of dissembling,
'Tis the Politique pulls down the pure:
To plunder and pray,
To protest and betray
Are the only ready wayes to be great,
Flattering will do the feat:
Ne're go, ne're stir
Have ventred farther,
Then the greatest o' th' Damme's in the Town,
From a Copper to a Crown.
3.
I am in an excellent homor now to think well,
And I'me in another humor now to drink well;
That we may drink it merrily;
And let none other see,
Nor cause to understand,
For if we do, 'tis ten to one we are Trepand.
4.
Come fill us up a brace of Quarts,
Whose Anagram is call'd true hearts;
If all were true as I would hav't,
And
Britain were cur'd of its humor,
Then I should very well like my fate,
And drink off my Wine at a freer rate,
Without any noise or tumor;
And then I should fix my humor.
5.
But since 'tis no such matter, change your hue,
I may cog and flatter, so may you;
Religion
Is a wigeon,
And reason
Is Treason;
And he that hath a Noble heart may bid the world adieu.
6.
We must be like the
Scotish man,
Who with intent to beat down schism,
Brought forth a Presbyterian,
A Canon and a Catechism.
If Beuk wont do't, then
Jockie shoot,
The Kirk of
Scotland doth command;
And what hath been, since he come in,
I am sure we ha' cause to understand.
A Medley of the Nations.
The Scot.
1.
I Am the bonny
Scot Sir,
My name is
Mickle John;
'Tis I was in the Plot Sir
When first the Wars began:
I left the Court one thousand
Six hundred forty one;
But since the flight
At
Worster fight
We are aw undone.
I serv'd my Lord and Master
When as he liv'd at home,
Untill by sad disaster
He receiv'd his doom;
But now we sink,
Uds bred I think
The Deel's gat in his room.
He ne man spares,
But stamps and stares
At all Christendom.
2.
I have travel'd mickle grounds,
Since I came from
Worster bounds,
I have gang'd the jolly rounds
Of the neighbouring Nations;
Of the
Scotch and
English war,
In geed faith I sal declare,
And their approbations.
Jockie swears
He has his load,
Bears the rod,
Comes from God,
And complaints go very odd
Since the siege at
Worster;
We were wounded
Tag and rag,
Foot and leg,
Wemb and crag;
Hark I hear the
Dutchman brag,
And begin to bluster.
The Dutch.
3.
Uds Sacrament, sal
Hoghen Moghen States
Strike down der top sails unto puny Powers;
Ten twosand tun of Tivel Dammy Fates,
If dat der Ships and Goods prove not all ours:
Since dat bloot and wounds do delight dem,
Tararara Trumpet sounds,
Let
Van Tromp go fort and fight dem;
All de States shall first be crown'd,
English
Skellam fight not on goat side;
Out at last the
Flemins bear,
Dey ha' giv'n us sush a broad side;
Dat ick sal be forc't to retreat,
See de
French man he comes in compleat.
The French.
4.
By Gat Mounsieur 'tis much in vain
For
Dushland, France, or
Spain,
To crosse de
English main;
De Nation now is grown so strong,
De Divla er't be long
Must learna de same tongue.
'Tis bettra den far to combine,
To sel dem Wine,
And teasha dem to make der Laty fine;
We'll teash dem for to trip and minsh,
To kick and winsh,
For by de Sword we never sal convince,
Since every Brewer dere can beat a Prince.
The Spaniard.
5.
What are the
English to quarrel so prone,
Dat dey cannot now adayes let deir neighbour alone,
And sal de Grave and the Catholick King,
Before ever dus control'd wid a sword and a sling;
Sal bode de
Indias be left unto de sway,
And purity a dose dat do plunder and pray;
E're dat we will suffer such affronts for to be,
We'll tumble dem down, as you sal sennon see:
The Welsh.
6.
[...]affy was once a Cottamighty of
Wales,
Put her Cosin
O. P. was a
[...]reater,
Was come in her Country Cats
[...]pluttery nailes,
Was take her welch hook and was peat her;
Was eat up her Shee
[...]e,
Her Tuck and her Geese,
Her Pick, her Capon was ty for't;
Ap Richard, ap Owen▪ ap Morgon, ap S
[...]ef
[...]n,
Ap Shenkin, ap Powel was fly for't.
The Irish.
7.
O hone, O hone, poor Teg and shone,
O hone may howl and cry,
St.
Patrick help dy Country men,
Or fait and trot we dye;
De
[...]nglish steal our h
[...]art of
Ʋsquebagh,
Dey put us to de sword all in
Dewguedagh ▪
Help us St.
Patrick we ha no Saint at all but dee▪
O let us cry no more,
O hone, a cram, a cree!
The English.
8.
A Crown, a Crown, make room,
The
English man is come,
Is taller
Than all Christendome:
The
Spanish, French, and
Dutch,
Scotch, Welch, and
Irish Grutch,
We fear not,
We care not,
For we can deal with such.
You thought when we began in a Civil war to waste,
Our Tillage
Your Pillage
Should come home at last:
For when we
Could not agree,
You thought to share in our fall;
But nere stir Sir,
For first Sir
We shall noose you all.
A Medley.
3.
The English. LEt the Trumpets sound,
And the Rocks rebound,
Our English Natives comming;
Let the Nations swarm,
And the Princes storm;
We value not their drumming.
'Tis not
France that looks so smug
Old fashions still renewing,
It is not the
Spanish shrug,
Nor the
Dutch-mans double jug
Can help what is ensuing,
Pray my Masters look about,
For something is a Brewing.
2.
He that is a Favorite consulting with Fortune,
If he grow not wiser, then he's quite undone▪
In a rising Creature we daily see certainly,
He is a Retreater that fails to go on:
He that in a Builder's trade
Stops e're the Roof be made,
By the Aire he may be betray'd
And overthrown:
He that hath a Race begun,
And let's the Goale be won;
He had better never run,
But let 't alone.
3.
Then plot rightly,
March fightly,
Shew your glittering Arms brightly:
Charge hightly,
Fight sprightly:
Fortune gives renown.
A right riser
Will prize her,
She makes all the World wiser;
Still try her,
Wee'l gain by her
A Coffin or a Crown.
4.
If the
Dutchman or the
Spaniard
Come but to oppose us,
We will thrust them out of the Main-yard,
If they do but nose us:
Hans, Hans, think upon thy sins,
And then submit to
Spain thy Master;
For though now you look like Friends,
Yet he will never trust you after;
Drink, drink, give the
Dutchman drink,
And let the tap and kan run faster;
For faith, at the last I think
A Brewer will become your Master.
5.
Let not poor Teg and Shone
Vender from der Houses,
Lest dey be quite undone
In der very trowzes:
And all her Orphans bestow'd under hatches,
And made in
London free der to cry matches;
St.
Patrick wid his Harp do tun'd wid tru string
Is not fit to unty St.
Hewson's shooes-strings.
6.
Methinks I hear
The Welch draw near,
And from each lock a louse trops;
Ap Shon, ap LLoyd,
Will spen'd her ploot.
For to defend her mouse-traps:
Mounted on her
K
[...]fflebagh
With coot store of
Koradagh,
With a hook her was over come her
Pluck her to her, thrust her from her,
By cot her was preak her shins.
Let Taffy fret,
And Welch-hook whet,
And troop up Pettigrees;
We only tout,
Tey will stink us out,
Wit Leeks and toasted Sheeze.
7.
But
Jockie now and
Jinny comes,
Our Brethren must approve on't;
For pret a Cot dey beat der drums
Onely to break de Couvenant.
Dey bore St.
Andrew's Crosse,
Till our Army quite did rout dem,
[...]ut when we put um to de Losse
De deal a Crosse about dem:
The King and Couvenant they crave,
Their Cause must needs be further'd;
Although so many Kings they have
Most barbarously, basely murther'd.
8.
The French. The French-man he will give consent,
Though he trickle in our veins;
That willingly
We may agree,
To a marriage with Grapes and Graines:
He conquers us with kindnesse,
And doth so far entrench,
[Page 262]That fair, and wise, and young, and rich
Are finified by the
French:
He prettifies us with Feathers and Fans,
With Petticoats, Doublets, and Hose;
And faith they shall
Be welcome all
If they forbear the nose.
For love or for fear,
Let Nations forbear;
If fortune exhibit a Crown,
A Coward he
Must surely be,
That will not put it on.
The Levellers Rant.
TO the
Hall, to the
hall,
For justice we call,
On the
King and his pow'rful
adherents &
friends
Who still have endeavour'd, but we work their ends.
'Tis we will pull
down what e're is above us,
And make them to
fear us, that never did
love us,
Wee'l
level the
proud, and make every degree,
To our
Royalty bow the
Knee,
'Tis no lesse then treason,
'Gainst freedom and Reason
For our brethren to be higher then we.
2.
First the thing, call'd a King,
To judgement we bring,
And the
spawn of the
court, that were prouder then he,
And next the two Houses united shall be,
[Page 263]It does to the
Romish religion enveagle,
For the State to be two-headed like the
spredeagle
Wee'l purge the superfluous Members away,
They are too many Kings to sway,
And as we all teach,
'Tis our Liberties breach,
For the Freeborn
Saints to obey.
3
Not a claw, in the
Law,
Shall keep us in aw;
Wee'l have no
cushon-cuffers to tell us of hell,
For we are all
gifted to do it as well,
'Tis freedom that we do hold forth to the
Nations
To enjoy our
fellow-creatures as at the creation,
The
Carnal mens wives are for men of the
spirit
Their wealth is our own by merit,
For we that have right,
By the
Law called
Might,
Are the
Saints that must
judge and
inherit ▪
The Safety.
SInce it has been lately enacted
high Treason,
For a man to speak
truth of the
heads of the
state
Let every wise man make use of his reason,
See and hear what he can, but take heed what he prate.
For the proverbs do learn us,
He that stays from the battail sleeps in a whole skin,
And our words are our own, if we can keep 'um in.
What fools are we then, that to
prattle begin
Of things that do not concern us?
2
Let the three kingdoms fall to one of the
prime ones
My mind is a Kingdom, and shall be to me,
I could make it appear, if I had but the time once,
I'm as happy with one, as he can be with three.
If I could but enjoy it
He thats mounted on high, is a mark for the
hate,
And the
envy of every
pragmatical pate,
While he that
creeps low, lives safe in his state,
And
greatness do scorn to annoy it.
3
I am never the better which side gets the battel,
The
Tubs or the
Crosses, what is it to me?
They'l never increase my goods or my cattel,
But a
beggar's a
beggar and so he shall be,
Unless he turn
Traytor,
Let
M
[...]sers take courses to hep up their treasure,
Whose
lust has no
limits, whose
mind has no
measur
[...]
Let me be but quiet and take a little pleasure,
A little contents my nature.
4.
My Petition shall be that Canary be cheaper,
Without Patent or Custom, or cursed Excise;
That the
Wits may have leave to drink deeper and deeper,
And not be undone, while their heads they
baptise,
And in liquor do drench 'um;
If this were but granted, who would not desire,
To
dub himself one of
Apollo's own Quire?
We'll ring out the Bells, when our noses are on fire,
And the quarts shall be the buckets to drench 'um,
5.
I account him no wit, that is gifted at railing,
And
flirting at those that above him do sit,
While they do out-wit him, with
whipping and
goaling,
Then his
purse and his
person both pay for his wit,
'Tis better to be drinking;
If sack were reform'd into twelve-pence a quart,
I'ld study for money to Marchandize for't,
And a friend that is true, we together will sport.
Not a word, but we'l pay them with thinking.
The Leveller.
NAy prethee don't fly me,
But
[...]it thee down by me,
I cannot endure
A man that's demure,
Go hang up your
Worships and
Sirs;
Your
Congies and
Trips,
With your legs and your lips,
Your
Madams and
Lords,
And such finikin words,
With the Complements you bring,
That do spell
NO-THING,
You may keep for the
Chains and the
Furs:
For at the beginning was no Peasant or Prince,
And 'twas policy made the distinction since.
2.
Those Titles of Honours
Do remain in the
Donours,
To which they do cling,
If his soul be too narrow to wear 'um,
No delight can I see
In that word call'd degree,
Honest
Dick sounds as well
As a name of an
ell,
That with Titles doth swell,
And sounds like a
spell,
To affright mortal ears that hear 'um,
He that wears a brave soul, and dares gallantly do,
May be his own Herald and Godfather too,
3.
Why should we then doat on,
One with a Fools coat on?
Whose
Coffers are cram'd,
But yet he'l be damn'd
Ere he'l do a good act or a wise one?
What
Reason has he
To be ruler o're me?
That's a Lord in his chest,
But in's
head and his
breast,
Is empty and bare,
Or but puff'd up with air,
And can neither
assist nor
advise one.
Honour's but
air, and
proud flesh but
dust is,
'Tis we
Commons make
Lords, and the
Clerk makes the
Justice.
4.
But since men must be
Of a different degree,
Because most do aspire,
To be greater and higher,
Then the rest of their Fellows and Brothers.
Let him gain it by's merit,
Spend his
brains, wealth, or
blood
For his
Countries good,
And make himself fit
By his
valour or
wit,
For
things above the
reach of
all others.
For
Honour's a
Prize, and who wins it may wear it,
If not 'tis a
Badge and a
burthen to bear it.
5.
For my part let me
Be but quiet and free,
I'le drink Sack and obey,
And let great ones sway,
And spend their whole time in thinking,
I'le ne're busie my Pate
With secrets of State,
The
News books I'le burn all,
And with the
Diurnall
Light
Tobacco, and admit
That they're so far fit,
As they serve
good company and
drinking.
All the
name I desire is an honest
Good-Fellow,
And that
man has no worth that won't sometimes be
mellow.
The Royalists Answer.
I Have reason to fly thee,
And not sit down by thee;
For I hate to behold,
One so sawcy and bold,
Our
Madams and
Lords,
And such mannerly words,
With the
gestures that be
Fit for every degree,
Are things that we and you
Both claim as our due
From all those that are our Inferiours.
For from the beginning there were
Princes we know,
'Twas you
Levellers hate 'um, 'cause you can't be so.
2.
All Titles of Honours
Were at first in the
Donours.
But being granted away
With the Grantees stay,
Where he wear a small soul or a bigger.
There's a necessity
That there should be degree.
Where 'tis due we'l afford
A
Sir John, and my
Lord,
Though
Dick, Tom and
Jack,
Will serve you and your Pack,
Honest
Dick's name enough for a Digger.
He that has a strong
Purse can all things be or do,
He is
valiant and
wise and
religious too.
3.
We have cause to adore,
That man that has store,
Though a
Bore or a sot,
There's something to be got;
Though he be neither
honest nor
witty;
Make him high, let him rule,
Hee'l be playing the fool,
Him for
fines and for
fees.
And so we shall gain,
By the wants of his brain,
'Tis the
Fools-cap that maintains the
City.
If honour be
air, 'tis in common, and as fit,
For the
fool & the
clown, as for the
champion or the
wit.
4.
Then why mayn't we be
Of different degree?
And each man aspire
To be greater and higher
Then his
wiser or
honester brother,
Since
Fortune and
Nature
Their
favours do scatter;
This hath
valour, that
wit,
T'other
wealth, nor is't fit
That one should have all,
For then what would befall
Him, that's
born nor to
one nor to'ther?
Though
honour were a
prize at first, now 'tis a
chattle,
And as
merchantable grown as your wares or your cattle.
5.
Yet in this we agree,
To live quiet and free,
To drink
sack and
submit,
And not shew our wit
By our
prating, but
silence, and
thinking,
Let the politick
Jewes
Read
Diurnals and
Newes,
And lard their discourse,
With a Comment that's worse,
Is a Song or a Jest,
And my obedience I'le shew by my
drinking.
He that drinks well, does sleep well, he that sleeps well, doth think well,
He that thinks well, does do well, he that does well must drink well.
The Independents resolve.
COme Drawer and fill us about some Wine
Let's merrily tipple the day's our own,
VVee'l have our delights, let the Country go pine,
Let the King and his Kingdom groan.
The Crown is our own, and so shall continue,
VVee'l Monarchy baffle quite,
VVee'l drink off the Kingdomes revenue,
And sacrifice all to delight.
'Tis Power that brings
Us all to be Kings,
And wee'l be all crown'd by our might.
2.
A fig for divinity lectures and law,
And all that to Loyalty do pretend,
While we by the sword keep the Kingdom in aw,
Our Power shall never have end.
The
Church and the
State wee'l turn into liquor,
And spend a whole Town in a day,
We'l melt all their
bodkins the quicker
Into Sack, and drink them away.
And turn
Bishops and
Deans,
And over the Presbyters sway.
3.
The nimble St.
Patrick is sunk in his boggs,
And his Country men sadly cry
O hone! O hone!
St.
Andrew and's
Kirk-men are lost in the foggs,
Now we are the
Saints alone.
Then on our
Superiours and
Equalls we trample,
And
Jockie our stirrup shall hold,
The
City's our
Mule for example,
That we may in plenty be roul'd.
Each delicate dish,
Shall but
Eccho our wish
And our
drink shall be cordial gold.
The Lamentation.
MOurn,
London, mourn,
Bathe thy polluted
soul in tears;
Return, return,
Thou hast more cause of grief, then th'hadst for fears,
For the whole
Kingdom now begins
To feel thy sorrow as they saw thy sins,
And now do no
Compassion show
Unto thy misery and woe,
But slight thy
sufferings as thou didst theirs.
2.
Pride towring Pride,
And boyling lust, those fatal twins,
Sit side by side,
And are become
Plantations of sins.
Both to the King above, and him below.
And sordid sloth
The Nurse of both,
Have rais'd thy crimes to such a growth,
That sorrow must conclude as sin begins.
3.
Fire raging fire,
Shall burn thy
stately towers down,
Yet not expire,
Tygres and
Wolves, or men more savage grown,
Thy Childrens brains, and thine shall dash,
And in your
blood their guilty tallons wash,
Thy
Daughters must
Allay their lust,
Mischiefs will be on mischief thrust,
Till thy
Cap tumble as thou mad'st the Crown.
4.
Cry
London cry!
Now now petition for redresse,
Where canst thou fly?
Thy emptyed
Chests augment thy heavinesse,
The
Gentry and the
Commons loath,
Th' adored
Houses slight thee worse than both,
The King poor Saint,
Would help, but can't;
To heav'n alone unfold thy
want,
Thence came thy Plagues, thence onely Pity flow'th.
The Reformation.
TEll not me of Lords or Laws,
Rules or
Reformation,
All that's done's not worth two straws,
To the welfare of the Nation.
Men in power do ra
[...]t it still,
And give no
reason but their will,
For all their domination.
Or if they do an act that's just,
'Tis not because they would▪ but must,
To
Gratifie some parties lust,
Or merely for a fashion.
2.
Our expence of blood and purse
Has produc'd no profit.
Men are still as bad or worse,
And will be what e're comes of it.
We've shuffled out, and shuffled in,
The persons, but retain the sin,
To make our game the surer,
Yet spite of all our pains and skill,
The Knaves all in the pack are still,
And ever were and ever will,
Though something now demurer.
3.
And it cannot but be so,
Since those toys in
fashion,
And of Souls so base and low,
And mere
Bigots of the
Na
[...]ion,
Whose designs are power and wealth▪
At which, by
rapines, fraud, and
stealth,
They lay their Consciences aside,
And turn with every
winde and
tide,
Puff'd on by
Ignorance and
Pride,
And all to look like
Gentry.
4.
Crimes are not punish'd 'cause their
Crimes,
But 'cause they're low and little,
Mean men for
mean faults in these times
Make satisfaction to a tittle;
While those in
office and in
power,
Boldly the
underlings devour
Our Cobweb laws can't hold 'um.
They sell for many a
Thousand crown,
Things which were never yet their own,
And this is
law and
custom grown.
'Cause those do
judge that
sold 'um.
5.
Brothers still with
Brothers brawl,
And for trifles sue 'um,
For two
Pronouns that spoyl all,
Those contentious
Meum, Tuum,
The wary
Lawyer buyes and builds,
While the
Client sells his fields,
To sacrifice to's fury;
And when he thinks to obtain his right
He's baffled off, or beaten quite,
By th' Judges will, or Lawyers slight,
Or ignorance of the Jury.
6.
See the
Trades-man how he thrives
With perpetual trouble,
How he
[...]heats, and how he
strives
His Estate t'enlarge and double,
To be a
Squire, and keep a
Coach,
And to be one o'th'
Quorum,
Who may with's
Brother worships
[...]it,
And judge without
law, fear or
wit,
Poor petty
Thieves that nothing get,
And yet are brought before 'um.
7.
And his way to get all this
Is mere
dissimulation,
No factious Lecture does he miss,
And
scapes no schism that's in fashion.
But with short hair and shining shooes,
He with two Pens and's Note-book goes,
And winks and writes at randome;
Thence with
short meal and
tedious Grace,
In a loud tone and Publick place,
Sings
Wisedoms hymnes, that
trot and pace,
As if
Goliah scan'd um.
8.
But when death begins his threats,
And his
Conscience struggles,
To call to mind his former
cheats
Then at heav'n he turns his juggles.
And out of all's ill-gotten store,
He gives a dribling to the poor,
In a
Hospital or
School-house,
And the suborned
Priest for's hire
Quite frees him from th'
infernal fire,
And places him ith'
Angels quire,
Thus these
Jack-puddings fool us.
9.
All he gets by's pains ith' close,
Is that he dyed worth so much,
That neither care nor know much,
Then
Fortunes favourite his heir,
Bred base, and ignorant and bare,
Is blown up like a bubble,
Who
wondring at's own suddain rise,
By Pride, Simplicity and Vice,
Falls to's sports,
drink, drab and
dice
And makes all fly like stubble.
10.
And the
Church the other twin,
Whose mad zeal enrag'd us,
Is not purify'd a pin,
By all those broyles in which she engag'd us,
We, our Wives turn'd out of doors,
And took in
Concubines and
Whores,
To make an alteration
Our
Pulpitteers are proud and bold,
They their own
Wills and
factions hold,
And sell
salvation still for
Gold,
And here's our
Reformation.
11.
'Tis a madnesse then to make,
Thriving our employment,
And
lucre love, for
Lucres sake,
Since we've possession, not enjoyment.
Let the times run on their course,
For opposition makes them worse,
We ne're shall better find 'um,
Let
Grand
[...]es wealth and power ingrosse,
And honour too, while we sit close,
And laugh and take our plenteous dose,
Of
sack and never mind 'um.
CHRONOSTICON Decollationis
CAROLI Regis tricesimo die
Januari
[...] ▪ secunda hora Pomeridiana,
Anno Dom. MDCXLVIII.
‘Ter Deno Ianl Labens ReX SoLe CaDente CaroLVs eXVtVs SoLIo SCeptroq Ve SeCVto.’
CHARLES — ah forbear, forbear! lest Mortals prize
His Name too dearly, and Idolatrize.
His Name! Our Losse! Thrice cursed and forlorn
Be that Black Night which usher'd in this Morn.
CHARLES our Dread Soveraign! — hold! lest Outlaw'd Sense
Bribe, and seduce tame Reason to dispense
With those Celestial powers; and distrust
Heav'n can behold such Treason, and prove Just.
CHARLES our Dread Soveraign's murther'd! tremble! and
View what Convulsions shoulder-shake this Land,
Court, City, Country, nay three Kingdoms run
To their last stage, and Set with him their Sun.
CHARLES our Dread Soveraign's murther'd at His Gate!
Fell fiends! dire Hydra's of a stiff-neck'd-State!
[Page 278]Strange Body-politick! whose Members spread,
And Monster-like, swell bigger than their HEAD.
CHARLES of Great Britain! He! who was the known
King of three Realms, lyes murther'd in his own;
He! He! who liv'd, and Faith's Defender stood,
Dy'd here to re-Baptize it in his bloud.
No more, no more, Fame's Trump shall Eccho all
The rest in dreadfull Thunder. Such a Fall
Great Christendom nere pattern'd; and 'twas strange
Earth's Center reel'd not at this dismal Change.
The Blow struck Britain blinde, each well-set Limb
By dislocation was lopt off in HIM.
And though she yet lives, she lives but to condole
Three Bleeding Bodies left without a Soul.
Religion puts on Black, sad
Loyalty
Blushes and mourns so see bright Majesty
Butcher'd by such Assassinates; nay both
'Gainst
God, 'gainst
Law, Allegiance, and their
Oath.
Farewell sad Isle! Farewell! thy fatal Glory
Is Sum'd, Cast up, and Cancell'd in this Story.
AN ELEGIE. Upon King
CHARLES the first, murthered publickly by his Subjects.
WEre not my
Faith buoy'd up by sacred bloud,
It might be
drown'd in this prodigious flood;
Which reasons highest ground doth so exceed,
It leaves my
soul no Anch'rage, but my
Creed;
Where my
Faith resting on th'
Original;
Supports it self in this the
Copies fall;
So while my Faith floats on that
Bloudy wood,
My reason's cast away in this
Red flood,
Which ne're o'reflows us all: Those showers past
Made but Land-floods, which did some vallies wast;
This stroak hath cut the only neck of land
Which between us, and this
Red Sea did stand,
That covers now our world, which cursed lies
At once with two of
Aegypts prodigies;
O're-cast with darkness, and with bloud o're-run,
And justly, since our hearts have theirs outdone;
Th' Inchanter led them to a lesse known ill,
To act his sin, then 'twas their
King to kill:
Which crime hath widdowed our whole Nation,
Voided all Forms, left but Privation
In
Church and
State; inverting ev'ry right;
Brought in Hells State of fire without light;
No wonder then, if all good eyes look red,
Washing their Loyal hearts from bloud so shed;
The which deserves each pore should turn an eye,
To weep out, even a bloudy
Agony.
[Page 280]Let nought then passe for
Musick, but sad cryes,
For
Beauty, bloudless cheeks, and bloud-shot eyes.
All colours soil but black, all odours have
Ill scent but
Myrrh, incens'd upon this
Grave:
It notes a
Jew, not to believe as much,
The cleaner made by a Religious touch
Of their
Dead Body, whom to judge to dye,
Seems the Judaical Impiety.
To kill the
King, the
Spirit Legion paints
His rage with Law, the Temple and the Saints:
But the truth is, He fear'd and did repine,
To be cast out, and back into the Swine:
And the case holds, in that the Spirit bends
His malice in this Act against his ends:
For it is like, the sooner hee'll be sent
Out of that body, He would still torment;
Let
Christians then use otherwise this bloud,
Detest the Act, yet turn it to their good;
Thinking how like a
King of Death He dies;
We easily may the world and death despise:
Death had no sting for him, and its sharp arm,
Only of all the troop, meant him no harm.
And so he look'd upon the
Axe, as one
Weapon yet left, to guard Him to his
Throne;
In His great Name then may His Subjects cry,
Death thou art swallowed up in Victory.
If this our losse a comfort can admit,
'Tis that his narrowed
Crown is grown unfit
For his enlarged Head, since his distresse
Had greatned this, as it made that the lesse;
His
Crown was faln unto too low a thing
For him, who was become so great a
King;
So the same hands enthron'd him in that
Crown,
They had exalted from Him, not pull'd down;
[Page 281]And thus Gods truth by them hath rendred more
Than e're mens falshood promis'd to restore;
Which, since by Death, alone he could attain,
Was yet exempt from weaknesse, and from pain;
Death was enjoyn'd by God, to touch a part,
Might make his passage quick, ne'r move his heart;
Which ev'n expiring was so far from death,
It seem'd but to command away his breath.
And thus his
Soul, of this her triumph proud,
Broke, like a flash of lightning, through the cloud
Of flesh and bloud; and from the highest line
Of humane vertue, pass'd to be divine:
Nor is't much lesse his vertues to relate,
Than the high glories of his present state;
Since both then passe all Acts but of belief,
Silence may praise the one, the other grief.
And since, upon the Diamond, no lesse
Than Diamonds, will serve us to impresse,
I'le only wish that for his Elegie,
This our
Josias had a
Jeremie.
AN ELEGIE On • The best of Men, , • The meekest of Martyrs, ,
and •
CHARLES the First, &c.
DOe
[...] not the Sun call in his light, and day
Like a thin exhalation melt away?
Both wrapping up their Beams in Clouds, to be
Themselves Close Mourners at the Obsequie
[Page 282]Of this great Monarch? does his Royal Bloud,
Which th'Earth late drunk in so profuse a floud,
Not shoot through her affrightned womb, and make
All her convulsed Arteries to shake
So long, till all those hinges that sustain,
Like Nerves, the frame of nature shrink again
Into a shuffled Chaos? Does the Sun
Not suck it from its liquid Mansion,
And Still it in
[...]o vap'rous Clouds, which may
Themselves in bearded Meteors display,
Whose s
[...]aggy and dishevel'd Beams may be
The
Tapers at this black Solemnitie?
You seed of Marble in the Womb accurst,
Rock'd by some storm, or by some Tigress nurst,
Fed by some Plague, which in blind mists was hurld,
To strew infection on the tainted World;
What fury charm'd your hands to Act a deed,
Tyrants to think on would not weep, but bleed?
And Rocks by instinct so resent this Fact,
They'ld into Springs of easie tears be slack'd.
Say sons of tumult since you think it good,
Still to keep up the trade, and Bath in Blood
Your guilty hands, why did you then not state
Your Slaughters at some cheap and common rate?
Your gluttonous and lavish Blades might have
Devoted Myriads to one publick Grave;
And lop'd off thousands of some base allay,
Whilst the same Sexton that inter'd their clay,
In the same Urne their Names too might entomb,
But when on him you fixt your fatall Doom,
You gave a blow to Nature, since even all▪
The
[...]ock of man now bleeds too in his fall.
Could not Religion, which you oft have made
A specious glosse your black designs to shade,
[Page 283]Teach you, that we come nearest Heaven when we
Are suppled into acts of Clemency?
And copy out the Deity agen,
When we distill our mercies upon men?
But why do I deplore this ruine? He
Only shook off his fraile Humanity,
And with such calmnesse fell, he seem'd to be,
Even lesse unmov'd and unconcern'd than we;
And forc'd us from our Throes of Grief to say,
We only died, he only liv'd that Day:
So that his
Tomb is now his
Throne become,
T'invest him with the Crown of Martyrdome;
And death the shade of nature did not shroud
His Soul in Mists, but its clear Beams uncloud,
That who a Star in our Meridian shone,
In Heaven might shine a Constellation.
On the Death of his Royal Majestie,
CHARLES late King of
ENGLAND, &c.
WHat went you out to see? a dying King?
Nay more, I fear an Angel suffering.
But what went you to see? a Prophet slain?
Nay that and more, a Martyr'd Soveraign.
Peace to that sacred dust!
Great Sir, our fears
Have left us nothing but obedient tears
To court your hearse, and in those pious flouds
We live, the poor remainder of our goods.
Accept us in these latter Obsequies,
The unplundred riches of our hearts and eyes;
[Page 284]For in these faithfull streams, and emanations,
W'are Subjects still beyond all
Sequestrations.
Here we cry more than Conquerors: malice may
Murder Estates, but hearts will still obey;
These as your glory's yet above the reach
Of such whose purple lines confusion preach.
And now, (
Dear Sir) vouchsafe us to admire
With envy your arrival, and that
Quire
Of
Cherubims and
Angels that supply'd
Our duties at your triumphs: where you ride
With full caelestial
Joyes, and
Ovations,
Rich as the Conquest of three ruin'd
Nations.
But 'twas the heavenly plot that snatch'd you hence,
To crown your Soul with that magnificence,
And bounden rites of honour, that poor earth
Could only wish and stangle in the birth.
Such pitied emulation stop'd the blush
Of our ambitious shame, non-suited us.
For where souls act beyond mortality,
Heaven only can perform that
Jubilee.
We wrastle then no more, but blesse your day,
And mourn the anguish of our sad delay:
That since we cannot adde we yet stay here
Fette
[...]ed in clay: Yet longing to appear
Spectators of your blisse, that being shown
Once more, you may embrace us as your own;
Where never envy shall divide us more,
Nor City tumults, nor the worlds uproar;
But an eternal hush, a quiet peace
As without end, so still in the increase,
Shall lull humanity asleep, and bring
Us equal Subjects to the Heavenly King.
[Page 285]Till then I'le turn
Recusant, and forswear
All
Calvin, for there's
Purgatory here.
AN EPITAPH.
STay Passenger: Behold and see
The widowed Grave of
Majestie.
Why tremblest thou? Here's that will make
All but our stupid souls to shake.
Here lies entomb'd the sacred dust
Of
Peace and
Piety, Right and Just.
The bloud (O start'st not thou to hear?)
Of a
King, 'twixt hope and fear
Shed and hurried hence to be
The miracle of misery.
Adde the ills that
Rome can boast,
Shrift the world in every coast,
Mix the fire of Earth and Seas
With humane spleen and practices,
To puny the records of time,
By one grand
Gygantick crime,
Then swell it bigger till it squeeze
The Globe to crooked hams and knees,
Here's that shall make it seem to be
But modest
Christianitie.
The
Law-giver, amongst his own,
Sentenc'd by a Law unknown.
Voted
Monarchy to death
By the course
Plebeian breath.
The
Soveraign of all command,
Suff'ring by a
Common hand.
Offer'd at his very door.
The
Head cut off, O death to see't!
In obedience to the feet.
And that by
Justice you must know,
If you have Faith to think it so.
We'll stir no further then this Sacred Clay,
But let it slumber till the
Judgement day:
Of all the
Kings on Earth, 'tis not denyed,
Here lies the first that for
Religion dyed.
The Engagement stated.
BEgon
Expositor: the
Text is plain,
No
Church, no
Lord, no
Law, no
Soveraign.
Away with mental reservations, and
Senses of Oaths in files out-vy the
Strand:
Here's Hell truss'd in a thimble, in a breath,
Dares face the hazard of the second death.
The
Saints are grown
Laconians, and can twist
Perjury up in Pills, like
Leyden grist:
But hold precize
Doponents: though the heat
Of
Zeal in
Cataracts digest
[...] such meat,
My cold concoction shrinks, and my advance
Drives slowly to approach your
Ordinance.
The sign's in
Cancer, and the
Zodiack turns
Leonick, roul'd in curls, while
Terra burns.
What though your fancies are sublim'd to reach
Those fatal reins? Successe and will can teach
But rash Divinity: a sad renown,
Where one man fell to see a million drown.
[Page 287]When neither Arts nor Armes can serve to fight
And wrest a
Title from its Law and Right,
Must Malice piece the
Trangum, and make clear
The scruple? Else we will resolve to swear?
Nay out-swear all that we have sworn before,
And make good lesser crimes by acting more
And more sublime? This, this extends the Line▪
And shames the puny soul of
Cataline.
On this account all those whose Fortune's crost,
And want estates, may turn
Knights of the
Post.
Vaulx we out-vy'd thee, since thy plot fell lame,
We found a closer
Celler for the same,
Piling the fatal Powder in our mouths,
Which in an Oath discharg'd blew up the
House.
Maugre
Mounteagle, Aspes not throughly slain,
Their poyson in an age may live again.
Good
Demas cuff your Bear, then let us see
The mystery of your iniquity.
May a Man course a Cur? and freely box
The Question? or the formal Paradox?
But as in Physick, so in this device
This que
[...]k of policy the point is nice.
For he that in this model means to thrive,
Must first subscribe to the Preparative;
Like Witches compact counter-march his faith
And soak up all what ere the
Spirit saith;
Then seale and signe.
Scylla threw three Barres short,
He a had Sword indeed, but no
Text for't.
Old
Rome lam
[...]nt thy infancy in sin,
We perfect what thou trembledst to begin,
Blush then to see thy self out-done. But all
The world may grieve, 'tis epidemical.
[Page 288]Heaven frowns indeed. But what makes Hell enraged?
Sweet
Pluto be at Peace, we have Engaged.
On the happy Memory of Alderman
Hoyle that hang'd himself.
ALL hail fair fruit! may every Crab-tree bear
Such blossomes, and so lovely every year!
Call ye me this the slip? marry 'tis well,
Zacheus slip'd to Heaven, the Thief to Hell:
But if the Saints thus give's the slip, 'tis need
To look about us to preserve the breed.
Th'are of the Running game, and thus to post
In nooses, blanks the reckning with their
Host.
Here's more than
Trussum cordum I suppose
That knit this knot: guilt seldome singly goes!
A wounded soul close coupled with the sense
Of sin, payes home its proper recompence.
But hark you Sir, if hast can grant the time?
See you the danger yet what 'tis to climbe
In Kings Prerogatives? things beyond just,
When Law seemes brib'd to doom them, must be truss'd.
But O I smell your Plot strong through your Hose,
'Twas but to cheat the Hang-man of your Cloaths▪
Else your more active hands had fairly stay'd
The leasure of a Psalm:
Judas has pray'd.
[Page 289]But later crimes cannot admit the pause,
They run upon effects more than the cause.
Yet let me ask one question, why alone?
One Member of a Corporation?
'Tis clear amongst Divines, Bodies and Souls
As joyntly active, so their judgement rowles
Concordant in the Sentence; why not so
In earthly Suffrings?
States attended go.
But I perceive the Knack: Old women say
And bee't approv'd, each Dogge should have his day.
Hence sweep the Almanack:
Lilly make room,
And blanks enough for the new Saints to come,
All in
Red letters: as their faults have bin
Scarlet, so limbe their
Anniverse of sin.
And to their Childrens credits and their Wives
Be it still said, they leap fair for their lives.
The States New Coyne.
1.
SAw you the States mony new come from the Mint?
Some People do say it is wonderous fine;
And that you may read a great mystery in't,
Of mighty King
Nol, the Lord of the Coyn.
2.
They have quite omitted his Politick head,
His worshipfull face, and his excellent Nose;
But the better to tempt the sisters to bed,
They have fixed upon it the print of his Hose.
3.
For, if they had set up his Picture there,
They needs must ha' crown'd him in
Charles his stead;
But 'twas cunningly done, that they did forbear,
And rather would set up his Ar— than his head.
4
'Tis monstrous strange, and yet it is true,
In this Reformation we should ha' such luck,
That Crosses were alwaies disdained by you,
Who before pull'd them down, should now set them up.
5.
On this side they have circumscrib'd
God with us,
And in this stamp and Coyn they confide;
Common-wealth on the other, by which we may guess
That
God and the
States were not both of a side.
6.
On this side they have Crosse and Harp,
And only a Crosse on the other set forth;
By which we may learn it falls to our part
Two Crosses to have for one fit of Mirth.
7.
A Country-man hearing this, straight way did think,
That he would procure such a piece of his own;
And knowing it like his Wifes Butter-print,
She should ha't for a Token when as he came home.
8.
Then since that this is the Parliament coyn,
Now
Lilly by thy mysterious charms,
Or Heralds, pray tell us if these ha' not been
Carmen or Fidlers before by their Arms.
The Rebellion.
NOw, thanks to the Powers below,
We have even done our do,
The Myter is down, and so is the Crown,
And with them the Corronet too:
All is now the Peoples, and then
What is theirs is ours we know;
There is no such thing as a Bishop or K—
Or Peer, but in name or show;
Come Clowns, and come Boys, come Hoberdehoys,
Come Females of each degree,
Stretch out your throats, bring in your Votes,
And make good the Anarchy;
Then thus it shall be, sayes
Alse,
Nay, thus it shall be, sayes
Amie,
Nay, thus it shall go, sayes
Taffie,! trow,
Nay, thus it shall go, sayes
Jemmy.
Oh but the truth, good People all, the truth is is such a thing.
For it will undo both Church and State too,
And pull out the throat of our King;
No, nor the Spirit, nor the new Light
Can make the Point so clear,
But we must bring out the defil'd Coat,
What thing the truth is, and where,
Speak
Abraham, speak
Hester,
Speak
Judith, speak
K
[...]ster,
Speak tag and rag, short coat and long:
Truth is the spell that made us rebell,
And murder and plunder ding dong;
Nay, I have the truth, sayes
Clem,
Nay, I have the truth, sayes reverend
Ruth,
Nay, I have the truth, sayes
Nem.
Well, let the truth be whose it will,
There is something else in ours,
Yet this devotion in our Religions
May chance to abate our Powers:
Then let's agree on some new way,
It skills not much how true,
Take
P — and his club, or
Smec and his tub
Or any Sect, old or new;
The Devil is in the pack, if choyce you can lack▪
We are fourscore Religions strong,
Then take your choice, the Major voice
Shall carry't right or wrong;
Then let's have King
Charles, sayes
George,
Nay, wee'l have his Son, sayes
Hugh;
Nay, then let's have none, sayes gabbering
Jone,
Nay, wee'l be all Kings, sayes
Prue.
Nay, but neighbours and friends, one word more,
There's something else behind,
And wise though you be, you do not well see
In which door fits the winde;
And for Religion, to speak truth,
And in both Houses sence,
The matter is all one, if any or none,
If it were not for the pretence;
Now here doth lurk the key of the work,
And how to dispose of the Crown
Dexteriously, and as it may be
For your behalf and our own;
Nay, wee'l be of this, sayes
Tib,
Come, we'll be of all, sayes pittifull
Paul,
Nay, wee'l be of none, sayes
Gib.
Oh we shall have, if we go on
In Plunder, Excise, and Blood,
But few folks, and poor, to domineer o're,
And that will not be good;
Then let's agree on some new way,
Some new and happy course,
The Country is grown sad, the City is Horn mad,
And both the Houses are worse;
The Synod hath writ, the General hath shit,
And both to like purpose, for
Religion, Laws, the Truth, and the Cause
We talk on, but nothing we do;
Come, then let's have peace, sayes
Nel,
No, no, but we won't sayes
Meg,
But I say we will, sayes fiery-face
Phil,
We will, and we won't, sayes
Hodge.
Thus from the Rout who can expect
Ought but confusion,
Since the Unity with good Monarchy
Begin and end in one?
If then when all is thought their own,
And lyes at their belief,
These popular pates, reap nought but debates
From these many round-headed beast;
Come Royalists then, do you play the men,
And Cavaliers give the word,
And now let's see what you will be,
And whether you can accord;
Up with it, sayes
Ralph, like a man,
God blesse him, sayes
Doll, and raise him, sayes
Moll,
And send him his own, sayes
Nan.
But now for these prudent Wights,
That sit without end, and to none,
And their Committees in Towns and Cities
Fill with confusion;
For the bold Troops of Sectaries,
The
Scots, and their Partakers,
Our new British States, Col.
Burges and his Mates,
The Covenant and its Makers:
For all these wee'l pray, and in such a way,
That if it might granted be,
Both
Jack and
Gill, and
Moll and
Will,
And all the world will agree:
El
[...]e Pox take them all, sayes
Bess,
And a Plague too sayes
Mary,
The Devil, sayes
Dick, and his Dam too, sayes
Nick,
Amen and amen say we.
On
Britannicus his leap three Story high, and his escape from
London.
PAul from
Damascus in a basket slides,
Cran'd by the faithfull
Brethren down the sides
O
[...] their embattel'd walls;
Britannicus
As loath to trust the
Brethrens God with us,
[Page 295]Slides too, but yet more desp'rate, and yet thrives
In his descent; needs must! the Devil drives.
Their Cause was both the same, and herein meet,
Only their fall was not with equal feet,
Which makes the Case
Iambick: thus we see
How much News falls short of
Divinity.
Truth was their crying crime: One takes the night,
Th' other th' advantage of the
New-sprung Light
To mantle his escape: how different be
The Pristin and the
Modern Policy?
Have
Ages their
Antipodes? Yet still
Close in the Propagation of ill?
Hence flowes this use and doctrine from the thump
I last sustain'd (beloved)
Good wits may Jump.
An Epigram on the People of
England.
SWeating and chafing hot
Ardelio cryes
A Boat a Boat, else farewell all the prize.
But having once set foot upon the deep
Hot-spur
Ardelio fell fast asleep.
So we, on fire with zealous discontent,
Call'd out a
Parliament, a
Parliament;
Which being obtain'd at last, what did they do?
Even squeez the Wool-packs, and lye snorting too.
Another.
BRitain a lovely Orchard seem'd to be
Furnish'd with natures choise variety,
Temptations golden fruit of every sort,
Th'
Hesperian Garden fann'd from fein'd report;
Great boyes and small together in we brake,
No matter what disdain'd
Priapus spake:
Up, up, we lift the great boyes in the trees,
Hoping a common share to sympathize:
But they no sooner there, neglected streight
The shoulders that so rais'd them to this height;
And fell to stuffing of their own bags first,
And as their treasure grew, so did their thirst.
Whiles we in lean expectance gaping stand,
For one shake from their charitable hand.
But all in vain, the dropsie of desire
So scortch'd them, three Realms could not quench the fire.
Be wise then in your
Ale, bold youths, for fear
The
Gardner catch us as
Mosse caught his
Mare.
Upon report there should be no more Terms kept at
Westminster.
IS't possible? will no
Terms then prevail?
And must the
Gown and
Bag jog on to sale?
The
Bills and
Answers in our
Courts become
Converted to the taring use of
Drum?
'Twixt
Midsomer and dying
Michaelmas?
Though they deprive us of Old
An Attorney.
Hillary,
'Tis fit they should allow the
Trinity;
But that's denyed too: this
Alteration
Contracts our whole time to a long
Vacation.
Now farewell the
(1.)
Brown bowl, and
Bonny Ale,
The
Sanguine Herring, and its merry tayle;
(2.)
Higgenian Quibbles, and the
Harpean Lyre,
Fentonian Sweetness, and the
Tow'ring Fire;
Our
(3.)
Host and
Hostess too, they're both
Ʋxorums,
As
Hermophraditus is, in
Sex Duorums:
Weep
(4.)
Heaven, lament thy loss, and thou
Hell rore,
Thy Furnace scarce will ere be heated more;
Of
Pleasure, Paradise, thou must be barren,
And
Purgatory furnisht but with Carrion:
Th'Abomination of the
(5.)
Hole i'th' Wall,
Now
June is past, cry Pamphlets in the
Hall;
And she that's left but th' remnant of a Nose,
Who to a Chirurgion (as men do suppose)
Did pawn the other part for cure of this,
Turn
Zealot, and be
Martyr'd when she p—
All
Trades, and all
Societies lament
Your wants in us, you'le find cause to repent
The setting up your Idol Parliament:
For though on these
Terms they'le no profit give
To Us, we'll try on other
Terms to live.
Upon the Cavaliers departing out of London.
NOw fare thee well
London,
Thou next must be undone,
'Cause thou hast undone us before;
This
Cause and this
Tyrant,
Had ne're play'd this high rant,
Were't not for thy
argent and
Or.
2.
Now we must desert thee,
With the lines that begirt thee,
And the Red-coated
Saints domineer;
Who with liberty fool thee,
While a Monster doth rule thee,
And thou feel'st what before thou didst fear.
3.
Now
Justice and
Freedom,
With the
Laws that did breed 'um,
Are sent to
Jamaica for gold;
And those that upheld 'um,
Have power but seldom,
For Justice is barter'd and sold.
4.
Now the Christian Religion
Must seek a new Region,
And the old
Saints give way to the new;
And we that are Loyal,
Vail to those that destroy all,
When the Christian gives place to the Jew.
5.
But this is our glory
In this wretched story,
Calamities fall on the best;
And those that destroy us
Do better imploy us,
To sing till they are supprest.
On Col.
Pride.
OF
Gyants and
Knights, and their wonderfull
fights
We have stories enough in
Romances,
But Ile tell you one new, that is
strange and yet
true,
Though t'other are nothing but fancies.
2.
A
Knight lately made, of the
Governing trade,
Whose name he'l not have to be known;
Has been trucking with fame, to purchase a name,
For 'tis said he had none of his own.
3.
He by Fortunes design, should have been a Divine,
And a Pillar no doubt of the Church;
Whom a
Sexton (God wot) in the
Bellfry begot,
And his Mother did pig in the Porch.
4.
And next for his breeding, 'twas learned
Hog-feeding,
With which he so long did converse,
That his
manners &
feature, was so like their
nature,
You'ld scarce know his
sweetnesse from theirs.
5.
But observe the device, of this
Noblemans rise,
How he hurried from trade to trade,
From the
grains he'd aspire, to the
yest, and then
higher,
Till at length he a
Drayman was made.
6.
Then his
dray-horse and
he, in the streets we did see,
With his
hanger, his
sling, and his
jacket;
Long time he did
watch, to meet with his
match,
For he'd ever a mind to the Placket.
7.
At length he did find, out a
Trull to his mind,
And
Ʋrsula was her name;
Oh Ʋrsl
[...] quoth he, and oh Tom then quoth she,
And so they began their game.
8.
But as soon as they met, O such Babes they did get,
And Blood-royal in 'um did place,
From a
swineheard they came, a
she-bear was their
Dam,
They were suckled as
Romulus was.
9.
At last when the Rout, with their head did fall out,
And the Wars thereupon did fall in,
He went to the field, with a sword, but no shield,
Strong drink was his buckler within.
10
But when he did spy, how they dropt down and dye,
And did hear the bullets to sing;
His armes he flung down, and run fairly to town,
And exchang'd his sword for his sling.
11.
Yet he claimed his share, in such honours as were
Belonging to nobler spirits;
[Page 301]That ventur'd their
lives, while this
Buffon survives
To receive the reward of their merits.
12.
When the Wars were all done, he his fighting begun,
And would needs shew his valour in peace,
Then his fury he flings, at poor conquer'd things,
And frets like a
hog in his grease.
13.
For his first feat of all, on a
Wit he did fall,
A
Wit as some say, and some not,
Because he'd an art, to rhime on the quart,
But never did care for the pot.
14.
And next on the
Cocks, he fell like an
Ox,
Took them and their
Masters together;
But the
combs and the
spurs, kept himself and his
Sirs,
Who are to have both or neither.
15.
The cause of his spight, was because they would
fight,
And because he durst not, he did take on;
And said they were fit, for the pot, not the spit,
And would serve to be eaten with
Bacon.
16.
But flesh'd with these
spoyles, the next of his
toyles,
Was to fall with wild-beasts by the ears,
To the
Bearward he goeth, and then opened his
mouth,
And said,
Oh! are you there with your bears.
17.
Our stories are dull, of a
Cock and a
Bull,
But such was his valour and care;
Since he bears the Bell, the tales that we tell,
Must be of a
Cock and a
Bear.
18.
The crime of the
Bears, was, they were
Cavaliers,
And had formerly fought for the
King;
And pull'd by the
Burrs, the Round-headed
Cur
[...],
That they made their ears to ring.
19.
Our successor of Kings, like blind fortune flings
Upon him both honour and store;
Who has as much right, to make
Tom a Knight,
As
Tom has
desert, and no more.
20.
But
Fortune that Whore, still attended this
Brewer,
And did all his
Atchievements reward;
And blindly did
fling, on this lubberly
thing,
More
Honour, and made him a
Lord.
21.
Now he walks with his spurs, and a couple of curs
At his heels, which he calls
Squires;
So when
Honour is
thrown, on the head of a
Clown,
'Tis by
Parasites held up, and
Lyars.
22.
The rest of his
pranks, will merit new
thanks,
With his death, if we did but know it;
But we'l leave him and it, to a time and place fit,
And
Greg. shall be
funeral Poet.
Upon the General Pardon past by the
RUMP, 1653.
REjoyce, rejoyce, ye
Cavaliers,
For here comes that expells your fears;
What was long look'd for, comes at last.
It Pardons all that are undone;
The Pope ne're granted such a one:
So long, so large, so full, so free;
O what a gratious State have we!
Yet do not joy too much (my friends)
First see how well this pardon ends,
For though it hath a Glorious face,
I fear there's in't but little grace.
'Tis said the Mountains once brought forth,
And what brought they? a Mouse introth;
Our States have done the like, I doubt,
In this their Pardon now set out.
We'll look it o're then if you please,
And see wherein it brings us ease;
And first, it Pardons words I find
Against our State, words are but wind.
Hath any pray'd for th'King of late?
And wish'd confusion to our State?
And call'd them Rebells? he come in
And plead this Pardon for that sin.
Hath any call'd King
Charles that's dead
A Martyr? He that lost his Head?
And Villains those that did the Fact?
That man is pardoned by this Act.
Hath any said our Parliament
Is such a one as God ne're sent?
Or hath he writ, or put in Print
That he believes the Devil's in't?
Or hath he said there never were
Such
Tyrants any where as here?
Though this offence of his be high,
He's pardon'd for his Blasphemy.
You see how large this Pardon is,
It Pardons all our
Mercuries,
And
Poets too, for you know they
Are poor, and have not ought to pay.
For where there's money to be got,
I find this Pardon pardons not;
Malignants that were rich before,
Shall not be pardon'd till they'r poor.
Hath any one been true to th' Crown.
And for that paid his money down;
By this new Act he shall be free,
And pardon'd for his Loyalty.
Who have their Lands confiscate quite,
For not Compounding when they might;
If that they know not how to digg,
This Pardon gives them leave to beg.
Before this Act came out in print,
We thought there had been comfort in't;
We drank some Healths to th' Higher Powers,
But now we've seen't they'd need drink ours.
For by this Act it is thought fit
That no man shall have benefit,
Unlesse he first engage to be
A Rebel to eternity.
Thus in this Pardon it is clear,
That nothing's here, and nothing's there,
I think our States do mean to choke us
With this new Act of
Hocus Pocus.
Well, since this Act's not worth a pin,
We'll pray our States to call it in,
For most men think it ought to be
Burnt by the hand of
Gregory.
Then to conclude, here's little joy
For those that pray
Vive le Roy:
But since they'l not forget our Crimes,
Wee'l keep our mirth till better times.
Upon
Olivers dissolving the Parliament in
1653.
1.
WIll you hear a strange thing scarce heard of before,
A ballad of News without any lyes,
The Parliament men are turn'd out of doors,
And so are the Council of State likewise.
2.
Brave
Oliver came to the House like a Spright,
His fiery looks strook the Speaker dumb;
[Page 306]You must be gone hence, quoth he, by this light,
Do you mean to sit here till Dooms-day come?
3.
With that the Speaker lookt pale for fear,
As though he had been with the night-mare rid,
Insomuch that some did think that were there,
That he had even done as the Alderman did.
4.
But
Oliver though he be Doctor of Law,
Yet he seem'd to play the Physician there;
His Physick so wrought on the Speakers maw,
That he gave him a stool instead of a Chair.
5.
Harry Martyn wondred to see such a thing,
Done by a Saint of such high degree;
'Twas an act he did not expect from a King,
Much lesse from such a dry bone as he.
6.
But
Oliver laid his hand on his sword,
And upbraided him with his Adultery;
To which
Harry answer'd never a word,
Saving, humbly thanking his Majesty.
7.
Allen the Coppersmith was in great fear,
He did as much harm since the Wars began;
A broken Citizen many a year,
And now he is a broken Parliament-man.
8.
Bradshaw that President proud as the Pope,
That loves upon Kings and Princes to trample;
Now the house is dissolv'd I cannot but hope,
To see such a President made an example.
9.
And were I one of the Council of War,
I'le tell you what my Vote should be,
Upon his own Turret at
Westminster,
To be hanged up for all comers to see.
10.
My Masters I wonder you could not agree,
You that have been so long Brethren in evil;
A dissolution you might think there would be,
When the Devil's divided against the Devil.
11.
Then room for the Speaker without his Mace,
And room for the rest of the Rabble-rout;
My Masters methinks 'tis a pitifull case,
Like the snuff of a Candle thus to go out.
12.
Now some like this change, and some like it not,
Some think it was not done in due season;
Some think it was but a Jesuits plot,
To blow up the House like a Gun-powder-treason,
13.
Some think that
Oliver and
Charles are agreed,
And sure it were good policy if it were so;
Lest the
Hollander, French, the
Dane, and the
Swede,
Should bring him in whether he would or no.
14.
And now I would gladly conclude my Song,
With a Prayer as Ballads are used to do,
But yet I'le forbear, for I think er't be long,
We shall have a King and a Parliament too.
Admiral
Deans Funeral.
1.
NIck Culpepper, and
William Lilly,
Though you were pleas'd to say they were silly,
Yet something these prophesi'd true, I tell ye,
Which no body can deny.
2.
In the month of
May, I tell you truly,
Which neither was in
June nor
July,
The
Dutch began to be unruly,
Which no body can deny.
3.
Betwixt our
England and their
Holland,
Which neither was in
France nor
Poland,
But on the Sea, where there was no Land,
Which no body can deny.
4.
There joyn'd the
Dutch, and the
English Fleet,
Our Authors opinion then they did meet,
Some saw't that never more shall see't,
Which no body can deny.
5.
There were many mens hearts as heavy as lead,
Yet would not believe
Dick Dean to be dead,
Till they saw his Body take leave of his head,
Which no body can deny.
6.
Then after the sad departure of him,
There was many a man lost a Leg or a Lim,
And many were drow'd 'cause they could not swim,
Which no body can deny.
7.
One cryes, lend me thy hand good friend,
Although he knew it was to no end,
I think, quoth he, I am going to the Fiend,
Which no body can deny.
8.
Some, 'twas reported, were kill'd with a Gun,
And some stood that knew not whether to run,
There was old taking leave of Father and Son,
Which no body can deny.
9
There's a rumour also, if we may believe,
We have many gay Widows now given to grieve,
'Cause unmannerly Husbands nere came to take leave.
Which no body can deny.
10.
The
[...]itty is sad of our
Dean to sing;
To say truth, it was a pittifull thing
To take off his head and not leave him a ring,
Which no body can deny.
11.
From
Greenwich toward the Bear at Bridgefoot
He was wafted with wind that had water to't,
But I think they brought the Devil to boot,
Which no body can deny.
12.
The heads on
London Bridge upon Poles,
That once had bodies, and honester souls
Than hath the Master of the Roules,
Which no body can deny.
13.
They grieved for this great man of command,
Yet would not his head amongst theirs should stand;
[Page 310]He dy'd on the Water, and they on the Land,
Which no body can deny.
14▪
I cannot say, they look'd wisely upon him,
Because People cursed that parcel was on him;
He has fed fish and worms, if they do not wrong him,
Which no body can deny.
15.
The Old Swan as he passed by,
Said, she would sing him a dirge, and lye down and di
[...];
Wilt thou sing to a bit of a body, quoth I?
Which no body can deny.
16.
The Globe on the Bank, I mean, on the Ferry,
Where Gentle and Simple might come and be merry,
Admired at the change from a Ship to a Wherry,
Which no body can deny.
17.
Tom Godfreys Bears began for to roare,
Hearing such moans one side of the shore,
They knew they should never see
Dean any more,
Which no body can deny.
18.
Queen-hithe, Pauls-Wharf, and the
Fryers also,
Where now the Players have little to do,
Let him passe without any tokens of woe,
Which no body can deny.
19.
Quoth th' Students o'th' Temple, I know not their names,
Looking out of their Chambers into the
Thames,
The Barge fits him better than did the great
James,
Which no body can deny.
20.
Essex House, late called Cuckolds Hall,
The folk in the Garden staring over the wall,
Said, they knew that once
Pride would have a fall.
Which no body can deny.
21.
At
Strand Gate, a little farther then,
Where mighty Guns numbred to sixty and ten,
Which neither hurt Children▪ Women nor Men,
Which no body can deny.
22.
They were shot over times one, two, three, or four,
'Tis thought one might 'heard the bounce to th' Tower,
Folk report, the din made the Buttermilk sower,
Which no body can deny.
23.
Had old Goodman
Lenthal or
All
[...]n but heard 'um,
The noise worse than
Olivers voice would have fear'd 'um,
And out of their small wits would have scar'd um
Which no body can deny.
24.
Sommerset House, where once did the Queen lye,
And afterwards
Ireton in black, and not green, by,
The Canon clattered the Windows really
Which no body can deny.
25.
The
Savoys mortified spitled Crew,
If I lye, as
Falstaffe sayes, I am a Jew,
Gave the Hearse such a look it would make a man spew,
Which no body can deny.
26.
The House of
S — that Fool and Knave,
[Page 312]Had so much wit left lamentation to save
From accompanying a traytorly Rogue to his grave,
Which no body can deny.
27.
The
Exchange, and the ruines of
Durham house eke
Wish'd such sights might be seen each day i'th' week,
A General's Carkasse without a Cheek,
Which no body can deny.
28.
The House that lately Great
Buckinghams was,
Which now Sir
Thomas Fairfax has,
Wish'd it might be Sir
Thomas's fate so to passe,
Which no body can deny.
29.
Howards House,
Suffolks great Duke of Yore,
Sent him one single sad wish, and no more,
He might flote by
Whitehall in purple gore,
Which no body can deny.
30.
Some
[...]hing I should of
VVhitehall say,
[...]ut the Story is so sad, and so bad, by my fay,
That it turns my wits another way,
Which no body can deny.
31.
To
VV
[...]stminster, to the Bridge of the Kings.
The water the Barge, and the Barge-men brings
The small remain of the worst of things,
Which no body can deny.
32.
They inter'd him in triumph, like
Lewis the eleven,
In the famous Chappel of
Henry the seven,
But his soul is scarce gone the right way to heaven,
Which no body can deny.
The merry Goodfellow.
WHy should we not laugh and be jolly,
Since all the World now is grown mad?
And lull'd in a dull melancholly;
He that wallows in store
Is still gaping for more,
And that makes him as poor,
As the Wretch that never any thing had.
How mad is that damn'd Money-monger?
That to purchase to him and his heirs,
Grows shriviled with thirst and hunger;
While we that are bonny,
Buy Sack with ready-mony,
And ne'r trouble the Scriveners, nor Lawyers.
Those guts that by scraping and toyling,
Do swell their Revenues so fast,
Get nothing by all their turmoiling,
But are marks of each tax,
While they load their own backs
With the heavier packs,
And lye down gall'd and weary at last.
While we that do traffick in tipple,
Can baffle the Gown and the Sword,
Whose jaws are so hungry and gripple;
We ne'r trouble our heads
With Indentures or Deeds,
And our Wills are compos'd in a word.
Our mony shall never indite us,
Nor drag us to Goldsmiths Hall,
No Pyrats nor wracks can affright us;
We, that have no Estates,
Fear no plunder nor rates,
We can sleep with open gates,
He that lyes on the ground cannot fall.
We laugh at those Fools whose endeavours
Do but fit them for Prisons and Fines,
When we that spend all are the savers;
For if Thieves do break in,
They go out empty agin,
Nay, the Plunderers lose their designs.
Then let us not think on to morrow,
But tipple and laugh while we may,
To wash from our hearts all sorrow;
Those Cormorants which
Are troubled with an itch,
To be mighty and rich,
Do but toyl for the wealth which they borrow.
The Maior of the Town with his Ruff on,
What a pox is he better than we?
He must vail to the man with the Buff on;
Though he Custard may eat,
And such lubbardly meat,
Yet our Sack makes us merrier than he.
The Rebells Reign.
NOw we are met in a knot, let's take t'other pot,
And chirp o're a cup of Nectar;
Let's think on a charm, to keep us from harm,
From the Fiend, and the new Protector.
Heretofore at a brunt, a Cross would have don't,
But now they have taken courses,
With their Laws and their theft, there's not a Cross left
In the Church, nor the Farmers Purses.
They're with you to bring, for stuffing at a King,
For now you must make no dainty,
To have your Nose ground, on a stone turned round
By
Noll, and one and twenty.
But our Rights are kept for us, in
Oliver's storehouse,
'Twere as good they were set in the Stocks:
They are just in the pickle, in the thirtieth Article,
Like
Jack in a Juglers box.
We are loath for to look, for the Saints in a book,
But would not a man be vext,
To see them so rough with their blades and their buff,
But not a word on't in the Text.
We have been twelve years together by the ears
To prepare for a spiritual raign:
Men were never so spic'd, with the Scepter of Christ
In the hands of a Saint in grain.
'Twas brewed in their Hives by Citizens wives,
Who ventured their husbands far,
With
Robin the fool, there was ne're such a tool
To lead in the womens War.
He was ill at Command, but worse at a stand,
So they sought out another more able:
Then
Fair ▪ undertakes, but
Nol keeps the stakes,
And sends away
Fax with a bauble.
Will, Conqueror the second, without his host reckon'd,
And so did
B— billet his Mate;
They made a great noise, 'mongst women and boys,
But now they are both out of date.
Cowardly
W— had but a foul Fortune,
And wanted a knife to scrape it,
When his Oriphice ran, there was no mortal man,
But
omnibus horis sapit.
Bradshaw, the Knave, sent the King to his grave,
And on the Bloud Royal did trample,
For which the next
Lent, he was made President,
And ere long may be made an example.
Dorislaus did steer, to
Hans mine heer,
And
Askew to
Don at
Madril,
Ere a man could have scratcht, they were both dispatcht,
Yet there they lye Leger still.
Martin and
St. Johns, and more with a Vengeance,
Had each a finger i'th' pye:
Some for the Money, and some for the Conny,
And some for they knew not why.
The Parliament sate as snug as a Cat,
And were playing for mine and yours:
Sweep-stakes was their Game, till
Oliver came,
And turn'd it to Knave out of doors.
Then a new one was cast, and made up in hast,
But alas they could do no more
Than empty our purse, and empty us worse
Than e're we were married before.
But in a good hour, they gave up their power
To one that was wiser than they;
By common consent, 'twas the first Parliament
That ever was
felo de se.
After all this Jeer, we are never the near,
There sits one at the Helm commanding;
One that doth us nick, with a trick for our trick,
And the stone in our foot notwithstanding
He'll not relax, one groat of the Tax,
Though it come to more then he need,
He may keep it in store, till his need be more;
Tis an Article of our new Creed.
So well he hath wrought, that now he hath brought
The Realm to the manner he it meant;
The fishes, and the foul, and the Devil and all,
And the monthly pay his high rent.
All this we must bear, but 'twould make a man swear
When they call us a Reformed Nation:
It can never sink into my head for to think
That this is a Reformation.
'Tis the man in the Moon, or the Devil as soon,
Our Laws are asleep upon shelves:
Our Charter & Freedom, we may bid God speed um,
'Tis well we can beg for our selves.
Since
Nol hath bereft us, and nothing hath left us,
Not a Horse or an Oxe to plough land,
Let
Oliver passe, come fill up my Glasse,
And here's a good health to
Rowland.
The Resolve.
1.
THere's no Man so worthy of Envy as he,
Drinks Sack, and is free,
Can draw down his mind to his present Condition,
And at that ebbe, can
Shew himself a better man,
Then his Enemy at his full tide of Ambition;
Has a breast so well Man'd, he fears not the thunder
Of those Bastards of fame,
That have got a Name
By Rapine and Plunder;
But bravely despiseth,
The
Mock-Sun that riseth:
He that's quiet within, what need he to care,
Though not worth a groat, h'as the whole world to spare.
2.
He's arm'd 'gainst the Chances and Changes of State,
And still meets his Fate,
[Page 319]With a Conquering Cup of the stoutest Canary,
Drinks healths to the best,
And he Wrastles with the rest,
Yet never is foyl'd, 'less his liquor miscarry;
His thoughts are more soft then the bed that he lies on;
Who puts his cares to flight,
A Prince is o're Night,
And next Morn doth rise one;
Let th'Fates do what they will,
He's the self-same Man still:
Scepters have Palfies, and Crowns too are shaking,
Who soundly doth sleep, need not keep others waking.
3.
Then give us the
Sack, let the
Hen-hearted Cit,
Drink
Whey, and submit,
His
Cucumber Courage does ne're well till beaten;
He,
Camel-like, kneels,
And his Burthen ne're feels,
Till his back become gall'd, and his carcasse near eaten;
Has a spirit so poor, that ev'ry Fool rides him;
He's soul-lesse, alone;
At best, but a Drone,
And no Man abides him;
He's a compact of Clay,
That will yield any way:
'Tis Sack and good Company sets the Soul free,
Like the Musick of that there's no Harmonie.
Upon
Cromwell's pulling out the Long Parliament.
1653.
The Alligory.
1.
AS
Plutarch doth write, (a Man of known Credit)
A
Serpent there was had a Mutinous
Tayle,
Rebell'd 'gainst the
Head, that so oft had fed it,
And would not permit it to lead, or prevaile:
Is't not fit that by turns we Leaders should be
Quoth the
Tayle? follow me, as I've follow'd thee.
2.
Now, the
Body being grown too strong for the
Head,
Quoth the
Head, if it must be, then let it be so;
For quietnesse sake I yield to be lead,
But fear that from hence some mischief will grow;
A thing so un-naturall never was read,
As the
Head to turn
Tayle, and the
Tayle to turn
Head.
3.
A Monster like this, but of stranger Conditions,
Engender'd there was in the year
thirty nine;
Rebell'd 'gainst the
Head, but with fawning
Petitions,
To have him his Pow'r and his Right to resign;
This Monster (the truth on't to speak) was begot
By a Mongrell
Parson, and that Hagg the
Scot.
4.
So large and so mighty this
Tayle grew in length,
That where ere it came, it swept all before it;
There was no resisting so pow'rfull a strength,
The
Head at the last was forc't to implore it:
All our Castles and Towns this
Tayle did subdue,
A sad tale to tell, but believe me 'tis true.
5.
Above seven years Conflict this
Head did endure,
With that Monsterous
Tayle, and the Spawn it begot:
During which time no Man's life was secure,
Our Goods and our Cattle all went to the Pot:
At last came a Champion with an Iron stayle,
And ended the strife 'twixt the
Head, and the
Tayle ▪
6.
The
Head being departed the
Body began
To consult with the
Tayle what wa
[...] best to do;
St.
George (quoth the
Body) 'tis said was a Man,
But what can this thing be is called St.
O.
Why he (quoth the
Tayle) was one of our Rout,
And 'tis wonderous strange he should turn
Tayle about.
7.
While thus they did argue in rusht our St.
O.
With Courage more keen then the Sword that he wore;
Quoth he, ye are vile things, not fit here to grow,
Such Fiends ne're was known in this place heretofore,
The wealth and the fat of the Country doth feed you,
And now I do guesse it is high time to bleed you.
8.
Some say that this
Tayle wore the mark of a
P,
O, is a Letter in rank known before it;
How e're 't makes no matter, 'tis all one to me,
Save this, that I'm sure the
O had the more wit;
There's no Man so blind, but may easily see
He hath added unto his small
O, a tall
P.
9.
My Story now ended come
viva St.
George,
That old true blew Lad, and Hospitable-Saint,
Bring a Butt of good Sack to fill up my Gorge,
At this tale of
Head and
Tayle I almost faint;
Howe're let it pass; if you studdy upon't,
I hope you will neither make
Head or
Tayle on't.
The Advice.
1.
NE're trouble thy self at the Times nor their turnings,
Afflictions run circular, and wheele about,
Away with these Murmurings, and, these Heart-burnings,
With the Juyce of the Grape wee'l quench the Fire out,
Ne're chain, nor imprison thy Soul up in sorrow,
What fails us to day, may befriend us to morrow,
Wee'l scorn our Content from others to borrow.
2.
Though Fortune hath left us wee'le strive to regain her,
And court her with Cupps till her Favourite come,
Then with a Courage untam'd wee'le maintain her,
And silence the noyse of the Enemies Drum,
Wee'le link her unto the Man most deserving,
Shall keep her at work, as well as from starving,
She shall not hereafter be at her own Carving.
3.
I hold him a Novice in Humane affairs,
Thinks whirlings in State a wonderous thing,
To daub up old Ruines with dirty repairs,
And instead of a Scepter to set up a Sling.
Such Atomes of Greatnesse are but Fortune's laughter,
She fattens them up 'till they're fitted for slaughter,
Then leaves them at
Tiburn to Tittar and Tauter.
Sharers in the Government. A MEDLEY. To 8. several Tunes.
SOme say the World is but a Cheat,
Troth we see't
For the feet
When Antipodian Rulers sway,
Who'le obey?
Thus some say,
Shall we not his own steps tread?
Pray were we not in the late Quarrel,
All pickl'd up in the same Barrel?
Then why that? or why this?
Our hearts are as great as his.
Harrison.
Here is One that claims a share
In the Scepter, and the Chaire,
Though he cryes Religion down,
Hee's Ambitious for a Crown;
Fain hee'd have his Head to shine
Where his Father
[...]ngs his Signe,
So he should, had I the Power
In the twinkling of an how're
I, of his disease would cure him.
Blake
What think you of the Man of War,
Whose Muzle is the Sea-mans Star?
Hee's Arm'd within, and Wall'd without
To give the Rout, if that we dare;
But faith the
Dutch will hem him in,
And make him either sink or swim;
This is the News brought Mr.
P —
To which he lent scarce half an Eare.
There is one, and a sly one,
In
Scotland, lurks to quarter with the Lyon,
He is your comeing Man sir,
Will lead the Van sir,
Pick out the meaning if you can.
Upon the least Commotion;
[Page 325]He wears a Coat with double-colours faced,
On one side whereof the States is gravely placed,
But on the other the Cavies rudely raced;
Hold Ambodexter whither wilt thou go?
Lambert.
Then comes a stout Heart,
A Man very pert,
Reaking with Revenge, for Disgrace;
He swore he was true
To give the Devil his due,
And as firm as the Nose on his Face.
To be a States Pin,
Good reason it should be so,
He can Circumvent
A Parliament;
Then why not Our
Oliver O?
Some talk this, and some talk that,
Some talk of New wars, and some they know not what,
But well fare the Cavalier, for at a bare word,
Hee's scarce left either Tongue or Sword.
John Lilborn.
Then Turbulent-spirited
Jack bring up the Reere,
For thou hast a Spleene farr keener than any one here;
Thou spurn'st at Authoritie, art Ambition's Minion,
And boy
[...]'
[...]t like thy Soap to advance a New-fangled Opinion;
[Page 326]Promotion's thy drift, to rule doth make thy Wits roame,
But a Gibbet 'tis thought will stand betwixt thee and home.
Upon
Cromwell's refusing the Kingly Power.
1.
HOw poor is his Spirit? how lost is his Name,
Deceiveth Opinion, and Curtailes his Fame?
When a
[...] his Designs come near to their height,
'Twixt
shall I and
shall I, suspect their own weight,
He has traffiqu'd for Honour, but lost the whole Freight:
He that's stout in the Front, not so in the Rear,
Doth forfeit his Fame, and is Cow'd out by Fear.
2.
A small part of Honor to him doth belong,
Consults not the Glory, but faints in the throng;
That dares not embrace what his own Soul doth Vote,
But yields up Our Liberties to a Red-coat;
Sure Midsommer's near, and some Men doth dote:
I like the bold Romanes, (whose Fame ever rings)
That kept in Subjection such pittifull things.
3.
He that will be Bug-bea
[...]'d, is turn'd again Child,
A Reed than a Scepteris fitter to weild;
Saving the Story,
that Kat will to kind,
The World is deluded, the Common-wealth blind;
These false stamps of Honour prove but Copper-Mettle,
And Fame sounds as loud from a Tinkers old Kettle.
4.
He that past has the Pikes, and found Canon-free,
Which shews that noe Curse from his Parents could be,
Had a Soul so devout, it made Killing a Trade;
And now to retreat at the sent of a Blade
Doth show of what Mold our
Knight-Errant was made▪
He that flagges in his Flight, when's Ambition sores high,
Doth stabb his own Merit, & gives Fame the lye.
5.
Then
Cicero-like, yea Gown-men drench Cares,
O
[...]re-whelm'd with your Own, and your Countries Affairs;
And Pulpit-men too be as Airy as Wee;
Do you but preach Sack up, we'l ne'r disagree,
That Common-wealth's best that is the most free:
Then fret not, nor care not, when the Sack's in our Crown,
We can fancy a King up, or fancy Him down.
The Encounter. A SONG.
1.
HAng the Presbyters Gill,
Bring a Pinte of Sack
Will,
More O
[...]thodox of the two;
Though a slender dispute
Will strike the Elfe mute,
Hees one of the honester Crue.
2.
In a Pinte there's small heart,
Sir
[...]ah, bring us a Quart,
There's substance and vigor met,
'Twill hold us in Play,
Some part of the day,
But we'll suck him before Sun-set.
3.
The dareing old Pottle
Does now bid us Battle;
Let's try what his strength can do;
Keep your Ranks and your Files:
And for all his Wiles,
Wee'l tumble him down Staires too.
4
The Stout-breasted Lumberd,
His Brains ne'r encumber'd
With drinking of Gallous three;
Tricongius was named,
And by
Caesar
[...]amed,
Who dubbed him Knight Cap-a-pe.
5.
If then Honour be in't,
Why a pox should we stint
Our selves of the fullness it bears?
H' has lesse wit than an Ape
In the blood of the Grape,
Will not plunge himself o're head and ears.
6.
Then summon the Gallon,
A stout Foe, and a tall One,
And likely to hold us to't;
Keep Coyn in your Purse,
The Word is disburse,
I'le warrant he falls at your foot.
7.
See, the bold Foe appears,
May he falls that him fears;
Keep you but close Order, and then
We will give him the Rout,
Be he never so stout,
And prepare for his Rallying agen.
8.
Wee'l dreyn the whole Cellar,
Pipes, Butts, and the Dweller,
If the Wine does flow no faster;
Will, when thou dost slack us,
By Warrant from
Bacchus,
Wee'l Cane thy Tun-belly'd Master.
The Good Old Cause.
NOw
Lambert's sunk, and valiant
M —
Does ape his General
Cromwell,
And
Arthur's Court, 'cause time is short,
Does rage like Devils from Hell;
Let's mark the fate and course of State,
Who rises when t'other is sinking,
And beleive when this is past
'Twill be our turn at last
To bring the Good Old Cause by drinking.
First, red nos'd
Nol he swallowed all,
His colour shew'd he lov'd it:
But
Dick his Son, as he were none,
Gav't off, and hath reprov'd it;
But that his foes made bridge of's nose,
And cry'd him down for a Protector,
Proving him to be a fool, that would undertake to rule,
And not drink and fight like
Hector.
The Grecian Lad, he drank like mad,
Minding no work above it;
And
Sans question kill'd
Ephestion,
Because he'd not approve it;
He got command, where God had land,
And like a
Maudlin Yonker,
When he tippled all and wept, he laid him down to sleep,
Having no more Worlds to conquer.
Rump-Parliament would needs invent
An Oath of Abjuration,
But Obedience and Allegiance are now come into fashion:
Then heres a boul, with a heart and soul
To
Charles, and let all men say Amen to't,
Though they brought the Father down
From a triple Kingdom Crown,
Wee'l drink the Son up agen to't.
The Protecting Brewer.
A Brewer may be a Burgess grave,
And carry the matter so fine and so brave,
That he the better may play the Knave,
Which no body can deny.
A Brewer may be a Parliament-man,
For there the Knavery first began,
And brew most cunning Plots he can,
Which no body, &c.
A Brewer may put on a
Nabal face,
And march to the Wars with such a grace,
That he may get a Captains place,
Which no body, &c.
A Brewer may speak so wonderous well,
That he may raise strange things to tell,
And so to be made a Collonel,
Which no body, &c.
A Brewer may make his foes to flee,
And raise his Fortunes, so that he
Lieutenant-General may be,
Which no body, &c.
A Brewer he may be all in all,
And raise his Powers both great and small,
That he may be a Lord General,
Which no body, &c.
A Brewer may be like a Fox in a Cub,
And teach a Lecture out of a Tub,
And give the wicked world a rub,
Which no body, &c.
A Brewer by's Excize and Rate,
Will promise his Army he knows what,
And set it upon the Colledge-gate,
Which no body, &c.
Methinks I hear one say to me,
Pray why may not a Brewer be,
Lord-Chancellor o'th' University,
Which no body, &c.
A Brewer may be as bold as
Hector,
When as he has drunk off his cup of
Nectar,
And a Brewer may be a Lord Protector.
Which no body, &c.
Now here remans the strangest thing,
How this Brewer about his Liquor did bring,
To be an Emperour, or a King,
Which no body, &c.
A Brewer may do what he will,
And rob the Church and State, to sell
His soul unto the devil of hell,
Which no body can deny.
The Power of the Sword.
LAY by your Pleading, Law lyes a bleeding,
Burn all your Studies down, and throw away your Reading;
Small power the Word has, and can afford us
Not half so many Priviledges as the Sword has:
It fosters your Masters, it plasters Disasters,
And makes your Servants, quickly greater than their Masters;
It venters, it enters, it circles, it centers,
And makes a Prentice free in spight of his Indentures.
This takes off tall things, and sets up small things,
This masters Money, though Money masters all things;
'Tis not in season, to talk of Reason,
Or call it Legal, when the Sword will have it Treason;
It conquers the Crown too, the Furres and the Gown too,
This set up a Presbyter, and this pull'd him down too;
This subtil Deceiver, turn'd Bonnet to Beaver,
Down drops a Bishop, and up starts a Weaver.
This fits a Lay-man to preach and pray man,
'Tis this can make a Lord of him that was a Drayman;
Forth from the dull pit, of Follies full pit,
This brought an Hebrew Iron-monger to the Pulpit;
Such pittifull things be, more happier than Kings be,
This got the Herauldry of
Thimblebee and
Slingsbee;
No Gospel can guide it, no Law can decide it,
In Church or State, untill the Sword hath sanctify'd it.
Down goes the Law-tricks, for from that Matrix
Sprung holy
Hewson's power, and tumbled down St.
Patricks;
The Sword prevails so highly in
Wales too,
Shinkin ap Powel cryes, and swears Cuts-plutteranails too;
In
Scotland this Waster, did make such disaster,
They sent their Money back for which they sold their Master;
It batter'd so their
Dunkirke, and did so the
Don firke,
That he is fled, and swears, the Devil is in
Dunkirke.
He that can tower o'er him that is lower,
Would be but thought a Fool to put away his Power;
Take Books and rent 'um, who would invent 'um,
When as the Sword replyes,
Negatur argumentum?
[Page 335]Your grand Colledge Butlers, must stoop to your Sutlers,
There's not a Library living like the Cutlers;
The bloud that is spilt, Sir, hath gain'd all the gilt, Sir,
Thus have you seen me run the Sword up to the hilt, Sir.
Cromwell's Coronation.
OLiver, Oliver, take up thy Crown,
For now thou hast made three Kingdoms thine own;
Call thee a Conclave of thy own creation,
To ride us to ruine, who dare thee oppose:
Whilst we thy good people are at thy Devotion,
To fall down and worship thy terrible Nose.
To thee and thy Mermydons,
Oliver, we,
Do tender our homage as fits thy degree,
We'll pay the Excise and Taxes, God blesse us,
With fear and contrition, as penitents should,
Whilst you, great Sir, vouchsafe to oppresse us,
Not daring so much as in private to soold.
We bow down, as cow'd down, to thee and thy Sword,
For now thou hast made thy self
Englands sole Lord,
By Mandate of Scripture, and Heavenly warrant,
The Oath of Allegiance, and Covenant too;
[Page 336]To
Charles and his Kingdoms thou art Heir apparent,
And born to rule over the
Turk and the
Jew.
Then
Oliver, Oliver, get up and ride,
Whilst Lords, Knights, and Gentry do run by thy side;
The Maulsters and Brewers account it their glory,
Great God of the Grain-tub's compared to thee:
All Rebells of old are lost in their story,
Till thou plod'st along to the
Padington-tree.
The BREWER.
To the Tune of the
Black-smith.
THere many a Clinching Verse is made
In honour of the
Black-smiths trade,
But more of the
Brewer may be said,
Which no body can deny.
I need not much of this repeat,
The
Black-smith cannot be compleat,
Unlesse the
Brewer do give him a heat,
Which no body can deny.
When
Smug unto the forge doth come,
Unlesse the
Brew
[...]r doth liquor him home,
He'll never strike thy pot and my pot
Tom.
Which no body can deny.
Of all professions in the town
The
Brewers trade hath gain'd renown,
His liquor reacheth up to the Crown,
Which no body can deny.
Many new Lords from him there did spring,
Of all the trades he still was their King,
For the
Brewer had the world in a sling,
Which no body can deny.
He scorneth all Laws and Martial stops,
But whips an Army as round as tops,
And cuts off his foes as thick as hops,
Which no body can deny.
He dives for Riches down to the bottom,
And cryes, my Masters, when he had got um,
Let every tub stand upon his own bottom,
Which no body can deny.
In War-like acts he scorns to stoop,
For when his Army begins to droop,
He draws them up us round as a hoop,
Which no body can deny.
The Jewish
Scots that scorns to eat
The flesh of Swine, and
Brewers beat,
'Twas the sight of this hogs-head made 'um retreat,
Which no body can deny.
Poor
Jockie and his basket hilt
Was beaten, and much blood was spilt,
And their bodies like barrels did run a tilt,
Which no body can deny.
Though
Jemy gave the first assault,
The
Brewer at last made them to halt,
And left them what the Cat left in the Mault.
Which no body can deny.
They cry'd that Antichrist came to settle
Religion in a Cooler and a Kettle,
For his Nose and Copper were both of one mettle,
Which no body can deny.
Some Christian King began to quake,
And said, with the
Brewer no quarrels we'll make,
We'll let him alone, as he Brews let him Bake,
Which no body can deny.
He hath a strong and very stout heart,
And thought to be made an Emperor for't,
But the Devil put a spoke in his Cart,
Which no body can deny.
If any intended to do him disgrace,
His fury would take off his head in the place,
He alway did carry his Furnesse in his face,
Which no body can deny.
But yet by the way you must understand,
He kept his foes so under command,
That
Pride could never get the upper hand,
Which no body can deny.
He was a stout
Brewer, of whom we may brag,
But now he is hurried away with a hag;
He brew'd in a bottle, and bak'd in a bag,
Which no body can deny.
And now may all stout Souldiers say,
Farewell the glory of the day,
For the
Brewer himself is turn'd to clay,
Which no body can deny.
Thus fell the brave
Brewer, the bold son of slaughter,
We need not to fear what shall follow after,
For he dealt all his life time in fire and water,
Which no body can deny.
And if his Successor had had but his might,
We had not been in a pittifull plight,
But he was found many grains too light,
Which no body can deny.
Let's leave off singing, and drink off our Bub,
Wee'll call for a Reckoning, and every man Club,
For I think I have told you a
Tale of a Tub.
Which no body can deny.
In imitation of
Come my Daphne, a Dialogue between
Pluto and
Oliver.
Pluto.
COme Imp Royal, come away,
Into black night we will turn bright day.
Oliver.
'Tis
Pluto calls, what would my Syre?
Pluto.
Come, follow to the Stygian fire,
Where
Ireton doth wait
To welcome thee in state.
Oliver.
Were I in bed with
Lamberts wife,
I'de quit those joyes for such a life.
Pluto.
[Page 340]
My Princely
Nol make hast,
For thee we keep a Fast.
Oliver.
In these dismal shades will I
Unto thee unfold my Villany.
Pluto.
In my bosome I'll thee lay,
For thy sake wee'l all keep holyday.
Chorus.
Wee'l rage and roar, and fry in flames,
And
Charles himself shall see
How damn'dly we agree,
Yet scorn to change our Chains
For his eternal diety.
A Quarrel betwixt
Tower-hill and Tyburn.
I'LE tell you a Story that never was told,
A tale that hath both head and heel,
And though by no Recorder inroll'd,
I know you will find it as true as steel.
When General
Monck was come to the Town,
A little time after the Rump had the rout,
When Loyalty rose, and Rebellion fell down,
They say, that
Tower-hill and
Tyburne fell out.
Q
[...]oth terrible
Tyburne to lofty
Tower-hill,
Thy longed-for daies are come at last,
And now thou wilt dayly thy belly fulfill
With King-killers bloud whilst I must fast.
The High Court of Justice will come to the Bar,
There to be cooked and dressed for thee,
Whilst I, that live out of Town so far,
Must only be fed by Fellony.
If
Treason be counted the foulest fact,
And dying be a
Traytor's due,
Then why should you all the glory exact?
You know, they are sitter for me than you.
To speak the plain truth, I have groan'd for them long,
For when they had routed the Royal Root,
And done the Kingdom so much wrong,
I knew at the last they would come to't▪
When
Titchburne sate upon the Ben
[...]h,
Twirling his Chain in high degree,
With a Beardless Chin, like a withered Wench,
Thought I, the Bar is fitter for thee.
But then, with stately composed face,
Tower-hill to
Tyburne made reply,
Do not complain, in such a Case
Thou shalt have thy share as well as I.
There are a sort of Mongrils, which
My Lordly Scaffold will disgrace:
I know
Hugh Peters his fingers itch
To make a Pulpit of the place.
But t
[...]ke him
Tyburn, he is thine own,
Divide his quarter
[...] with thy
[...]ife,
Who did pollute with f
[...]sh and
[...]e
The quarters of the Butchers wife.
The next among these Petticoat-Peers
Is
Harry Martin, take him thither,
But he hath been addle so many years,
That I fear he will hardly hang together.
There's
Hacker, zealous
Tom Harrison too,
That boldly defends the bloudy deed,
He practizeth what the Jesuites do,
To murder his King, as a part of his Creed.
There's single-eyed
Hewson the Cobler of Fate,
Translated into Buff and Feather,
But bootless are all his seams of State
When the soul is unript from the upper-leather.
Is this prophane mechanical Brood
For me, that have been dignfy'd
With loyal
Land and
Straffords blood,
And holy
Hewet, who lately dy'd?
Do thou contrive with deadly
Dun
To send them to the River of
Stix,
'Tis pitty, since those Saints are gone,
That Martyrs and Murtherers bloud should mix.
Then do not fear me that I will
Deprive thee of that fatal Day:
'Tis fit those that their King did kill
Sould hang up in the Kings high-way.
My Priviledge, though I know it is large,
Into thy hand I'le freely give it,
For there is
Cook that read the Kings Charge,
Is only fit for the Devils tribute.
Then taunting
Tyburn, in great scorn,
Did make
Tower-hill this rude reply:
So much rank bloud my stomack will turn,
And thou shalt be sick as well as I.
These Traytors made those Martyrs bleed
Upon the Block, that thou dost bear,
And there it is fit they should dye for the deed;
But
Tower-hill cryed, they shall not come there.
With that grim
Tyburn began to fret,
And
Tower-hill did look very grim:
And sure as a Club they both would have met,
But that the City did step between.
The Bloody Bed-roll, or
Treason displayed in its Colours.
Triumphing News for Cavaliers,
The Rump smells strong, cast out by th' Peers.
OLd OLIVER's gone to the Dogs,
Oh! No I do mistake,
Hee's gone in a Wherry
Over the Ferry,
Is call'd the
Stygian Lake.
But
Cerberus that Great Porter
Did read him such a Lecture,
That made him to roar
When he came a-shoar
For being
Lord Protector.
News, news, news,
Brave Cavaliers
be merry,
Chear up your sad souls
With Bacchus
Bowls,
Of Claret, White, and Sherry.
Where is that Cursed Crew
Were of the last King
[...] Jury,
By thy damned soul
Go fetch them
Nol
Quoth
[...]luto in his fury.
Where is old
Joan thy wife?
Her Highness I would see,
Come let her in
She shall be my Queen,
For a Cuckold thou shalt be.
News, news, &c.
Make room for a
Ramping Lady,
One of the Devils race,
This ugly Witch,
And nasty Bitch
Spat in the King's sweet face.
I
[...]le make her a Lady of Honour,
Q
[...]oth
Pluto let her in,
And open the door;
For this old Whore
Shall wait upon my Queen.
News, n
[...]ws, &c.
Here comes Sir HENRY MARTYN
As good as ever pist,
Had Whores at least
A thousand on his lift:
This made the Devils laugh,
So good a friend to see,
At
Pluto's Court
There's better sport,
Come thou shalt dwell with me.
News, news, &c.
Bid
Caron bring his Boat,
Here comes a man of fame,
Who hath waited here
Above a year,
JACK BRADSHAW is his name,
O ho quoth
Pluto then,
As loud as he could yawl,
By
Oliver's Nose
I did suppose
Thou hadst been at
White-hall.
News, news, &c.
Thou'rt welcome to my Court,
Here on my Scroul I find,
I have in store
A thousand more
As Arrant Rogues behind.
Why art thou sad quoth
Pluto?
My Servants must appear,
Then do not grudge
I'le made thee Judge
Of all my Subjects here.
News, news, &c.
Here comes a friend of mine,
Make room for the Lord LISLE,
His guests at last
Did come so fast
That made old
Pluto smile.
Thou must along with me,
Now 'tis too late to rue it,
Thy damned Soul
Is on my Scroul,
Remember Doctor
Hewet.
News, news, &c.
What is the Cause Sir ARTHUR
Your Pulses go so quick?
'Tis Bishops Lands
That's in your hands
VVhich makes them beat so thick.
Thy Oath of Abjuration
Was far a worser thing,
For the Devil and thou
Did study how
VVe should abjure our KING.
News, news, &c.
Next comes Sir HENRY MILDMAY
As good as ever twang'd,
VVhat Laws had we
VVhen he scap'd free
And honest men were hang'd?
Perhaps the KING's good grace
May pardon what is past,
But that's all one
At
Pluto's Throne
Thou must appear at last,
News, news, &c,
Shall
Traytors be conceal'd?
Oh! no Sir HENRY VANE,
'Tis a pittifull thing
For our good KING
When Traytors are in grain.
If thou wilt take the pains,
Then pray thee go and look,
For I am told
Thou art enrol'd
In
Pluto's bloody Book.
News, news, &c.
Here comes the
Learned SPEAKER,
Whose baggs of Gold do rust,
Who would not hear
A
Cavalier
Though his Cause were nere so just.
Corruption bears the sway
Where Justice is deny'd,
The Devil take him,
And Mr. PYM,
And likewise Collonel PRIDE.
News, news, &c.
Make room for one-ey'd HEWSON,
A
Lord of such account,
'Twas a pretty Jest
That such a Beast
Should to such honour mount.
When
Coblers were in fashion,
And
Nigherds in such grace;
'Twas sport to see
How PRIDE and he
News, news, &c.
What dreadfull shew is this?
'Tis PRIDEAUX or his Ghost,
He makes such hast,
And comes so fast,
I think He's riding Post.
A
Lawyer if thou art,
Amongst the damned souls,
At
Pluto's Barre,
'Tis better farre
Then pleading at the Roles.
News, news, &c.
Oh welcome Dr. PETERS,
And Co
[...]ne
[...]
[...]OYCE also,
One of these twain
Was worse than
Cain
That gave the deadly blow:
One of these
Cursed Rogues
Was he that did the feat,
But some men say
'Twas that Lord GRAY
That made the work compleat.
News, news, &c.
A Boat for this Old
Doctor
To cross the River
Styx,
For
Pluto he
Desired to see
Some of his Antick tricks;
My
Chaplain thou shalt be,
What more can be desired?
That cannot be,
My Lease is not expir'd.
News, news, &c.
Oh! my
Rump, my
Rump, my
Rump,
My
Rump smells wonderous strong,
The blisters rise
About my Thighs
With voting here so long,
My
Rump is grown so sore,
I can no longer sit,
Hold up thy Bum,
The Devil is come
With a Plaister to cure it.
News, news, &c.
VVhen
Pluto keeps his feast,
The Rogues must all appear,
And Mr. SCOT
I had forgot,
Must tast of this good Chear.
Find out the Man, quoth
Pluto,
That is the greatest sinner,
If COOK be he
Then COOK shall be
The
Cook to
Cook my dinner,
News, news, &c.
God blesse the
KINGS good grace,
And keep him from his foes,
I wish the rather
Because his
Father,
Had too too many of those.
His Sister, and Another,
Accurst be those
That do oppose
The sending for their Mother.
News, news, news,
Brave Cavaliers
be merry,
Chear up your sad souls
With Bacchus
Bowls,
Of Claret, White, and Sherry.
The four Legg'd Elder; or a Relation of a Horrible Dog and an Elders Maid.
To the Tune of
The Ladies fall; Or
Gather your Rose Buds, and 50 other Tunes.
1.
ALL
Christians, and
Lay-Elders too,
For shame amend your Lives,
I'll tell you of a Dog-trick now,
Which much concerns your wives.
An
Elder's Maid near
Temple-bar
(Ah what a Quean was she!)
Did take an ugly Mastiff Cur
Where Christians use to be.
Help House of Commons, House of Peers!
Oh now or never help!
Th' Assembly having sate four years
Have now brought forth a whelp!
2.
One Evening late she stept aside,
Pretending to fetch Eggs,
And there she made her self a Bride
To one that had four leggs:
Her Master heard a Rumblement,
And wonder'd she did tarry,
Not dreaming (without his consent)
His Dog would ever marry.
Help House of Commons, &c.
3.
He went to peep, but was afraid,
And hastily did run
To fetch a Staff to help his Maid,
Not knowing what was done;
He took his
Ruling Elder's Cane,
And cry'd out,
Help, help here!
For
Swash our Mastiff and poor
Jane
Are now,
fight Dog, fight Bear.
Oh House of Commons, &c.
4.
But when he came he was full sorry,
For he perceiv'd their strife,
That according to the
Directory
These two were Dog and Wife:
Ah (then he said) thou cruel Quean,
Why hast thou me beguil'd?
I wonder'd
Swash was grown so lean,
Poor Dog he's almost spoyl'd.
Oh House of Commons, &c.
5.
I thought thou hadst no carnal sense
But what's in other Lasses,
According to the
Classis;
But all the Parish see it plain,
Since thou art in this pickle,
Thou art an
Independent Quean,
And lov'st a
Conventicle.
Oh House of Commons, &c.
6.
Alas now each
Malignant Rogue
Will all the world perswade
That she that's Spouse unto a Dog,
May be an
Elder's Maid;
They'll jeer us if abroad we stir,
Good Master
Elder stay,
Sir, of what
Classis is your Cur;
And then what can we say?
Oh House of Commons, &c.
7.
They'll many graceless Ballads sing
Of a
Presbyterian,
That a
Lay-Elder is a thing
Made up half-Dog half-Man:
Out, out, (said he, and smote her down)
Was Mankind grown so scant?
There's scarce another Dog in town
Had took the
Covenant.
Oh House of Commons, &c.
8.
Then
Swash began to look full grim,
And
Jane did thus reply,
Sir, you thought nought too good for him,
You fed your Dog too high:
Tis true, he took me in the lurch,
And leapt into my arm,
I did your Dog no harm.
Oh House of Commons, &c.
9.
Then she was brought to
Newgate Gaol,
And there was naked stript,
They whipt her till the Cord did fail,
As Dogs use to be whipt:
Poor City Maids shed many a tear
When she was lash'd and bang'd,
And had she been a
Cavalier,
Surely she had been hang'd.
Oh House of Commons, &c.
10.
Her's was but
Fornication found,
For which she felt the lash,
But his was
Buggery presum'd,
Therefore they hanged
Swash.
What will become of
Bishops then,
Or
Independency,
For now we find both Dogs and Men
Stand for
Presbytery.
Oh House of Commons, &c.
11.
She might have took a
Sow-gelder,
With
Synod-men good store,
But she would have a
Lay-Elder
With two legs, and two more.
Go tell the
Assembly of
Divines,
Tell
Adoniram Blew,
Tell
Burges, Marshall, Case, and
Vines,
Tell
Now-and-Anon-too.
Oh House of Commons, &c.
12.
Some said she was a
Scotish Girl,
Or else (at least) a Witch;
But she was born in
Colchester,
Was ever such a Bitch!
Take heed all Christian Virgins now,
The
Dog-star now prevails;
Ladies beware your Monkeys too,
For Monkeys have long tails.
Oh House of Commons, &c.
13.
Blesse
King and
Queen, and send us peace,
As we had seven years since,
For we remember no
Dog-dayes
While we enjoy'd our Prince:
Bless sweet Prince
Charles, two Dukes, three Girls,
O save His
Majesty!
Grant that his
Commons, Lords, and
Earls,
May lead such lives as He
Oh House of Commons, House of Peers!
Oh now or never help!
Th' Assembly having sate four years,
Have now brought forth a whelp!
News from
Colchester.
Or, A Proper new Ballad of certain Carnal passages betwixt a
Quaker and a
Colt, at
Horsley near
Colchester in
Essex. To the Tune of
Tom of Bedlam.
1.
ALL in the Land of
Essex,
Near
Colchester the Zealous,
Was play'd such a Prank,
As would make a Stone-horse jealous.
2.
Help
Woodcock Fox, and
Nailor,
For Brother
Green's a Stallion,
Now alas what hope
Of converting the Pope,
When a Quaker turns
Italian!
3.
Even to our whole profession
A scandall 'twill be counted,
When 'tis talkt with disdain
Amongst the Profane,
How Brother
Green was mounted.
4.
And in the Good time of Christmas,
Which though our Saints have damn'd all,
Yet when did they hear
That a damn'd Cavalier
Ere play'd such a Christmas gamball?
5.
Had thy flesh, O
Green, been pamper'd
With any Cates unhallow'd,
Hadst thou sweetned thy Gums
With Pottage of Plums,
Or prophane minc'd Pie hadst swallow'd.
6.
Roll'd up in wanton Swine's-flesh,
The Fiend might have crept into thee,
Then fullnesse of gut
Might have made thee rut,
And the Devil have so rid through thee.
7.
But alas, he had been feasted
With a Spiritual Collation,
By our frugal Mayor,
Who can dine on a Prayer,
And sup on an Exhortation.
8.
'Twas meer impulse of Spirit,
Though he us'd the weapon carnal,
Filly Foal, quoth he,
My Bride thou shalt be:
And how this is lawfull, learn all.
9.
For if no respect of Persons
Be due 'mongst the sons of
Adam,
In a large extent,
Thereby may be meant
That a
Mare's as good as a
Madam.
10.
Then without more Ceremony,
Not Bonnet vail'd, nor Kist her,
But took her by force,
For better for worse,
And us'd her like a Sister.
11.
Now when in such a Saddle
A Saint will needs be riding,
Though we dare not say
'Tis a falling away,
May there not be some back-sliding?
12.
No surely, quoth
James Nailor,
'Twas but an insurrection
For a Quaker in heart
Can never lose perfection.
13.
For (as our Masters teach us)
The intent being well directed,
Though the Devil trapan
The Adamical man,
The Saint stands un-infected.
14.
But alas a Pagan Jury
Ne're judges what's intended,
Then say what we can,
Brother
Green's out-ward man
I fear will be suspended.
15.
And our Adopted Sister
Will find no better quarter,
But when him we inroul
For a Saint, Filly Foal
Shall passe her self for a Martyr.
16.
Rome that Spiritual
Sodome,
No longer is thy debter,
O
Colchester, now
Who's
Sodome but thou,
Even according to the Letter?
The Four-legg'd Quaker.
To the Tune of
The Four-legg'd Elder.
1.
ALL that have two or but one ear,
(I dare not tell ye half)
You of an
Essex Colt shall hear
Will shame their very
Calf.
In
Horsley Fields near
Colchester
A
Quaker would turn Trooper;
He caught a Foal and mounted her
(O base!) below the Crupper.
Help Lords, and Commons, once more help,
O send us Knives and Daggers!
For if the Quakers be not gelt
Your Troops will have the Staggers.
2.
Ralph Green (it was this Varlet's name)
Of
Colchester you'll swear,
For thence the
Four-legg'd Elder came,
Was ever such a Pair!
But though 'twas foul 'tween
Swash and
Jane,
Yet this is ten times worse;
For then a Dog did play the Man,
But Man now play'd the Horse.
Help, &c.
3.
The Owner of the Colt was nigh,
(Observing their Embrace)
And drawing nearer did espy
The
Quaker's sorrel Face:
And fiercely at him ran)
Thou Rogue, I'll have thee haltered twice,
As Horse and eke as Man!
Help, &c.
4.
Ah Devil, do'st thou tremble? now
'Tis sore against thy will;
For Mares and preaching Ladies know
Thou hast a Colts tooth still:
But mine's not guilty of this Fact,
She was by thee compelled;
Poor thing, whom no man ever backt
Thou wickedly hast Bellied.
Help, &c.
5.
O Friend (said
Green, with sighs and groans)
Let this thy wrath appease!
(And gave him then eight new Half-crowns
To make him hold his peace)
The man reply'd, though I for this
Conceal thy Hugger Mugger,
Do'st think it lawfull for a Piece
A silly Foal to Bugger?
Help, &c.
6.
The Master saw his Colt defil'd,
Which vext his Soul with doubt;
For if his Filly prov'd with Childe
He knew All would come out:
Then he afresh began to rave,
(For all his Money taking)
Neighbours, said he, I took this Knave
'Ith' very act of
Quaking.
Help, &c.
7.
Then to the Pinfold (Gaol I mean)
They dragg'd him by the Mane,
They call'd him Beast, and call'd her Quean,
As if she had been
Jane.
O stone him (all the Women cry'd)
Nay geld him (which is worse)
Who scorn'd us all, and took a Bride
That's Daughter to a Horse!
Help, &c.
8.
The Colt was silent all this while,
And therefore 'twas no Rape,
The Virgin foal he did beguile,
And so intends to scape:
For though he caught her in a Ditch
Where she could not revolt,
Yet he had no
Scott'sh spurr nor Switch
To ride the willing Colt
Help, &c.
9.
O
Essex, Essex, England's pride,
Go burn this long-tail'd Quean,
For though the
Thames runs by thy side,
It cannot wash thee clean!
'Tis not thy Bleating Sonn's complaints,
Hold forth such wanton courses,
Thy Oysters hint the very Saint
To horn the very Horses.
Help, &c.
10.
Though they salute not in the Street
(Because they are our Masters)
'Tis now reveal'd why
Quakers meet
In Meadows, Woods, and Pastures.
Who Man and Beast perplex,
Not only from
East-Horsley come,
But from
West-Middle-Sex.
Help, &c.
11.
This was not GREEN the
Feltmaker,
Nor Willow GREEN the
Baker,
Nor GEORGE the Sea-GREEN
Mariner,
But RALPH the Grasse-GREEN
Quaker,
Had GREEN the Sow-gelder but known,
And done his Office duly,
Though RALPH was GREEN when he came on,
He had come off most blewly.
Help, &c.
12.
Alas you know by Man's flesh came
The
Foul-disease to
Naples,
And now we fear the very same
Is broke into our Stable
[...];
For Death hath stoln so many Steeds
From Prince and Peer, and Carrier,
That this new Murrain rather needs
a
Physician to the Earl of
Pembrook, who is no Quaker nor Quacker.
FARRAR than a Farrier
Help, &c.
13.
Nay if this GREEN within the walls
Of
Colchester left forces,
Those Cavaliers were Caniballs,
Eating his Humane Horses!
But some make Man their
second course,
(In cool Blood will not spare)
Who butcher Men and favour Horse
Will couple with a Mare.
Help, &c.
14.
This
Centaur, unquoth
Other thing,
Will make a dreadfull Breach:
Yet though an Ass may
speak or
A new Sect of young Men and Women, who pray, eat and sing
ex tempore.
sing,
O let not Horses
preach!
But
bridle such wilde Colts who can
When they'll obey no Summons,
For things begot 'tween Mare & Man
Are neither Lords nor Commons.
Help, &c.
15.
O
Elders, Independants too,
Though all your Power's combin'd▪
Quakers will grow too strong for you
Now Horse and Man are joyn'd:
While
Cavaliers, poor foolish Rogues,
Know only Maids Affairs,
She-Presbyters can deal with Dogs,
And
Quaking-men with Mares.
Help, &c.
16.
Now as when
Milan Town was rear'd,
A Monstrous Sow untam'd,
With Back
half Hair half Wool appear'd,
'Twas
Mediolanum nam'd:
So
Colchester must have recourse
To some such four-legg'd Sister,
For sure as
Horsley came from Horse,
From Colt 'twas call'd
Col-chester.
Help, Lords and Commons, &c.
A
JOLT on Michaelmas day
1654.
To the Tune of
To himself that hath fool'd
More than
Mahomet could, &c.
1.
IT fell on a day,
When good People say
St.
Michael beat the Dragon,
My Lord the
Protector
Did drive (like a
Hector)
A Coach instead of a
Londinium petere solebat gestatorio, se
[...] vehiculo communi.
Wagon.
2.
Because he did hear
The Chareteer
Did antiently wear a Crown,
Up went the Horse-heels,
Round round went the Wheeles,
'Till his
Highnesse came head-long down.
3.
He reign'd them so hard,
They look'd back and were scar'd
To see him so red and so grim
Away then they fled,
And though he us'd to lead,
This
new-modell'd Horse would lead him.
4.
But O how they snuff
When his Pistol flew off,
For which all the Saints suspect him,
Doth Providence attend him,
Thirty thousand defend him,
Yet a poor Pocket-pistol protect him;
5.
How many a Hurl
—
Lo! He in the Coach did prank it:
He thought he had sate
Chief Secretary of State,
But was toss'd like a Dog in a Blanket.
6.
Nay had they run faster
Hee'd follow his Master
Through all the Sceans of this Mad-show:
A Brewer, a Collonel,
A Preacher a General,
A Protector, a King—then comes
Bradshaw.
7.
They slander my
Lord
With a bug-bear Word,
That he did like
Phaeton drive;
But his
Highness try'd
Six Horses to guide,
And
Phaeton had now
five.
8.
Mad
Phaeton hurl'd
Fire all o're the World,
Then dead in a River was found:
But my Lord had no ayme
To set all in a flame,
And never was born to be drown'd.
9.
'Twas
Nero did strive
Such Charets to drive,
And publickly shew'd his Work;
But when my Lord sticks
Up his Bills to shew tricks,
Hee'l undo th'other
dauncing Turk.
10.
But if you look high,
There's some reason why
These Jades did so fling and skip,
For though we afford
Him the
power of the Sword,
He had no command of the
Whip.
11.
Enthron'd in his Chair
(What a pox did He there?)
He took such Protectorly courses,
He seem'd Horse and Mule,
But 'tis easier to rule
Three Kingdoms, than six Horses.
12.
Not a day nor an hour
But we felt his Power,
And now he would shew us his Art:
Is a fall from a Coach,
And his last will be from a Cart.
The House out of Doors.
April 20. 1653.
To the Tune of
Cook Laurell.
1.
YOu saw
Eleven Members turn'd out of Doors,
And 200. more were driven from home,
And then their own
Lords were voted down stairs,
(When some of them crept into the
Lower room:)
We purg'd and we purg'd, but all would not do't,
The Body had got such a damnable Paunch)
'Till
OLIVER fell upon
Branch and Root,
Then down with it, down with it, down
Root and Branch.
With a hey down, down a down down,
Sing ho down down to make up the Ditty,
With a hey down down a down down,
The Parliament's broke as well as the City.
2.
These Remnant
Members began to say
Their
General was fit to be had in suspition;
And offer'd to Vote his Commission away,
As if (forsooth) they had given him his Commission:
He did (yet did not) make use of his Sword,
On Men that could vote, and vote, but no more;
[Page 367]He shew'd them his Hilt, and spake but a word,
And that word blew the whole House out of door.
With a hey down, &c.
The Parliament's broke as well as the City.
3.
This day was
Strafford all-to-be-Traytor'd,
Because (they say)
He had an Intent
(As this day
Nol the
Members scatter'd)
April 20. 1641
April 20. 1653
By an Army to force the Parliament.
At which old
VANE now rants and raves,
For
Strafford's bloud is not yet grown cold)
And yet we must say while we speak of Knaves,
The
Old is the
Young, and the
Young is the
Old.
With a hey down, &c.
The Parliament's broke as well as the City.
4.
Sir
MILDMAY then with his hand on his groin,
(As fit for a
Knave of the Diamonds) stood:
He eat the Kings Bread, & drank the Kings Wine,
So long till at last he drank of his Bloud.
So did
CORNELIƲS HOLLAND too,
Whose share i'th'
Revenue doth fill three Pages,
But now when the
House is broke up (you know)
'Tis fit
Houshold Servants be paid their Wages.
With a hey down, &c.
The Parliament's broke as well as the City.
5.
The Judge of
Morocco (Treason HILL)
Devour'd at a Morsell all
Taunton Dean,
He keeps five Chambers i'th'
Temple, but will
(Now th'
House is pull'd down) be a
Hillock again.
And the Devil too for his
BOND doth call,
[Page 368]Though
Dennis from Chamber to Chamber did hop,
He sate
Lord President at
Whitehall,
But now must go home to fit in his shop.
With a hey, &c.
The Parliament's broke as well a
[...] the City.
6.
Now Alderman
Fustian cocks not his Beaver,
Who chang'd his Name from
Perry to
PƲRY,
A Dean and a Bishop made out of a Weaver,
That had been refus'd to be of a Jury:
He vow'd to
leave not a Gentleman,
Though every House were as big as Rome:
In all bloody Votes he highest ran;
But now may run down to his
Bottom and
Loom.
With a hey, &c,
The Parliament's broke as well as the City.
7.
Now look to your Wives, for I am inform'd
That carnal
SCOT is again broke loose;
But the
House that shelter'd his Lust is Reform'd
As he did the Hall of
Lambeth-house;
(For he knew the
High Commission sate there)
Both
King and
Cromwell he openly curs'd,
But
Oliver now will pay his Arrear,
For of all kind of
Scots the
English is worst.
With a hey down, down a down down,
Sing ho down down to make up the Ditty,
With a hey down down a down down,
The Parliament's broke as well as the City.
The
RUMP.
December 26. 1659.
To the Tune of
The Blacksmith.
NOw Master & Prentice for Rimes must pump
On
Hab,
St. John's.
Noll, Arthur, and
Lawson Vantrump,
A
Long Parliament of a
Short Rump.
Which no body can deny.
For Wits and No-Wits now have an Itch
To prepare some damnable tearing Switch
For them whose very Face is a Breech.
Which, &c.
Twelve years they sate above
Kings and
Queens,
Full twelve, and then had enter'd their
teens
When
Oliver came to out-sin their Sins.
Which, &c.
And yet after all his signal
Septembers,
Both he and his Babe, and his
Other-House Members
Saw
Rump was but asleep in its Embers.
Which, &c.
For up it rose, then out 'twas blown,
For
Lambert and
Rump like my Lady and
Joan,
Blew in and out till
Rump blew out
John.
Which, &c▪
And then it swell'd with such monstrous growth
[Page 370]That by and by it broke out in the South,
From whence it was called PORTS-MOUTH.
Which, &c.
From thence to
London it rode tan-tivy,
(Though
London then wore
Holly and
Ivy)
And sate at
Whitehall in a
Council-Privy.
Which, &c.
Then suddenly
Fleetwood fell from Grace,
And now cryes
Heaven hath spit in his face,
Though he
smelt it came from
another place.
Which, &c.
Janizary
Desbrow then look'd pale,
For, said he, if this
Rump prevail,
'Twill blow me back to my old Plough-tayl,
Which, &c.
But when he felt his own Regiment kick,
Oh, quoth he, this was my own Trick
'Gainst my Brother
Nol and my Nephew
Dick.
Which, &c.
Now whom the Devil doth
Rump represent?
'Twas This that Sir
Thomas Jermyn meant
When he call'd it a
Whipping Parliament.
Which, &c.
We're stript of all shelter from the
long Robe,
As rich and warm as the Devil left
Job,
For Satan
Rump sits Lord of the Globe.
Which, &c.
And yet when all is examin'd and ponder'd,
You'll find three Kingdoms enslav'd & plunder'd,
For saying
Fourty is lesse than
Four hundred.
Which, &c.
And now behold the Sign is
in Clune,
But if
Monck be honest or wise, then soon he
Makes
Rump but the
Italian's Domo Communi.
Which, &c.
Heaven bless the
King, with his two brave
Brothers,
From
Rumps and
Lords of the
House call'd
Others,
And hang these
Rumping Sons of their Mothers.
Which, &c.
And that He may blesse both Us and our Heirs,
Let all the Members of Commons and Peers,
Turn honest as He that wants his Ears.
Which no body can deny.
Sir
Eglamor and the Dragon: Or a Relation how Generall
George Monck slew a most Cruell Dragon
Febr. 11. 1659.
To the Tune of Sir
Eglamor.
1.
GEnerall
George that Valiant wight,
He took his Sword and he would go fight,
And as he rode through
London Town,
Men, Women, Posts, and Gates, fell down.
2.
But turning about towards
Westminster,
He saw it must come to
Fight Dog, Fight Bear,
For there an old Dragon sate in its Den,
Had devour'd (God knows how many) brave Men.
3.
This Dragon it was and a monstrous Beast,
With fourty or fifty heads at least,
And still as this Dragon drank down Blood,
Those heads would wag and cry
good—good—good!
4.
No
Hidra nor
Leviathan,
For every Head look'd like a Man,
And yet they all grew
Hidra-wise,
For cut off one and another would rise
5.
Besides it had most Devilish claws,
Call'd
Committees of the
Good Old Cause;
But Devil and his Dam had no such Paunch
As this which swallow'd
Root and Branch.
6.
It swallow'd Churches, Pallaces,
Forrests, Islands, Lands, and Seas,
Cathedrall Choires it made but a Sallad,
And left not a man to sing a Ballad.
7.
But that which made this Dragon prevaile,
Was a damnable Sting stuck in its
Tayle,
This
Tayle 'gainst Christendom made Wars,
And swept down all St.
Georges
Stars.
8.
Then
Aegypts Plagues we understood,
Darknesse, Rivers turn'd to
Blood,
And
Frogs and
Locusts Pulpits full.
9.
Yet that which most did Plague these Isles,
Three Kingdoms lay so sick of th' Piles,
For every man in dolefull dump
Was tortur'd with a
Bloody Rump.
10.
But as in its Den this Dragon did sit,
George gave it many a gay good hit,
Though then he had no Sword nor Sythe on,
But fought as
Phoebus slew old
Python.
11.
For
George shot at him a flaming Letter,
(Which some then thought might have been better
He wipe'd the
Rump away with a Paper,
And out it flew like a stinking Vapour.
12.
Now
London had her own desire,
For every Street was pav'd with fire,
All Men and Bells with many a thump,
Cry'd
Rump-Rump-Rump-Rump-Rump-Rump-R.
13.
Six thousand fifty Bone-fires then,
(By twenty more thenth' Army had Men)
O monstrous
Rump, that thus requires
(Though but half broyl'd) six thousand Fires▪
14.
This very day that
Rump was burn'd,
Old
Magna Charta was confirm'd;
This day they Voted that monstrous thing,
Febr. 11. 1647.
That no Addresses be made to the King.
15.
Now God bless
Charles, &
York, &
Gloucester,
From many or from one Impostor,
May
Kings, and
Peers, and
Commons joyn
To save us both from
Rump and
Loyn.
The Cities Feast to the Lord Protector.
To the Tune of
Cook Laurell.
SIR Mayor invites his Highnesse his guest,
And bids him to
Grocers-Hall to dinner,
There never was Saint at so great a Feast
Provided him at the Charge of a Sinner.
With a ran tan the Devil is dead.
And what was the day do you think, without jesting,
Of all the year it was
Ash-wednesday,
This pious Reformer set apart for his Feasting,
When all good Christians should Fast and Pray.
With a ran tan the Devil is dead.
The Souldiers in clusters throng'd for place,
To see this Monster of their own making,
And said it was a Protectors grace,
But that it wanted not much of
A King.
With a ran tan the Devil is dead.
The
Bucks of the City in herds were met,
And were paled in with a very good fence,
But what their
Does did, I cannot tell yet,
Of that ye may hear three quarters hence.
With a ran tan the Devil is dead.
With that the Recorder marcht up to the Hall
With a dish of Divinity drest for his pallate,
And laid before him a shoulder of
Saul,
With a savory
simily by for a salate.
With a ran tan the Devil is dead.
His Highnesse commanded to lay it by,
'Twas fit for his people he'd make it known,
And they should have it, good reason why,
For they wanted more shoulders than their own.
With a ran tan the Devil is dead.
A dish of Delinquents heads in a Charger
Was sent as a present from
Goldsmiths Hall,
He wisht his stomack ten times larger,
Yet made a long neck and poach'd them all.
With a ran tan the Divil is dead.
A Prelate was next, and to him he buckles,
With a Bishoprick truss'd before and behinde,
His Highness was in with him up to the knuckles,
And to his own kitchin the skuers assign'd.
With a ran tan the Divel is dead.
His Highness then calld' for a boule of Canary,
And drank so deep that it made him reel,
He toss'd it to
Lambert, and
Lambert to
Harry,
And
Harry to the
Mayor, and the
Mayor to
Steel.
With a ran tan the Devil is dead.
When Dinner was ended, away to the banquet,
Where snatching of Sugar-plums one from another,
H
[...]l fill'd up his pockets, and said God be thanked,
[Page 376]And carried them home to his Lady Mother.
With a ran tan the Devil is dead.
Then his
Highness commanded the
Mayor to kneel,
The
Beast of the
City was soon on his knees,
He made him a Knight with iron and steel,
And bid him rise up, and pay him his fees.
With a ran tan the Devil is dead.
Up rose my
Lords worship and made him a leg,
With that the
Knight-maker did give him the Sword;
His
Highnesse did spice him without a nutmeg,
When he made a bad
Knight of a pittifull
Lord.
With a ran tan the Devil is dead.
When he left the City he broke a jest,
His words were pithy, and I'le repeat them,
Farewell (quoth his Highness)
thou spur-gall'd Beast,
Fools make the Feasts, and wise men eat them.
With a ran tan the Devil is dead.
FINIS.