A SPEECH MADE TO THE Lord General MONCK, AT Clotheworkers Hall in London The 13. of March, 1659. at which time he was there entertained by that VVorthie Companie.
NAy, then let me come too with my
Addresse,
Why mayn't a
Rustick promise, or professe
His good Affection t' you? Why not declare
His Wants? How many, and how great they are?
And how you may supply them? Since you may
See our Hearts mourn, although our Clothes be
gray.
Great
Hero of three Nations! Whose Bloud springs
From
pious and from
pow'rfull Grandsire Kings;
With whose
Bloud-Royal you've
enrich'd your
veyns,
And by continu'd
Policy and
Pains
Have equall'd all their
Glory; So that now
Three
Kingless Scepters to your Feet do bow,
And court
Protection, and
Allyance too;
And what Great men still
reach'd at
stoups to you.
But you're too truly
Noble to aspire
By
Fraud or
Force to
Greatness; or t' acquire
Scepters and
Crowns by Robbery, or base
And wilfull breach of
Trusts, and
Oaths, nor place
Your
Happinesse in
avished Dominion,
Whose
Glory's only founded in
opinion;
Attended still with danger, fear, and doubt,
And fears
within, worse than all those
without.
You must still
watch and
fear, and
think, and must
Lose all
Content to gratifie one
Lust,
Should you invade the
Throne, or aym at
Pelf,
Throw
down three Nations to
set up your self;
Kings are but
royal Slaves, and Prisoners too,
They alwaies
toyl, and alwaies
guarded go.
You are for making
Princes, and can find
No work proportion'd to your
Pow'r, and
mind,
But
Atlas-like to bear the
World, and be
The great
Restorer of the Liberty
Of three long captiv'd
Kingdoms who were thrown
By others strong
Delusions, and their own
Misguided zeal, to
do and
suffer what
Their very Souls now
grieve and
tremble at,
Debauch'd by those they thought would
teach &
rule 'um,
Who now, they find did
ruine and
befool 'um.
Our
meanings still were
honest, for
alas!
We never
dream't of what's since come to pass;
'Twas never our
intent to
violate
The setled
Orders of the
Church or
State,
To throw down
Rulers from their lawfull Seat,
Merely to make ambitious
small things great,
Or to
subvert the
Laws; but we thought then
The
Laws were
good if manag'd by
good men;
And so we do think still, and find it true,
Old Laws did more good, and less harm than
New;
And 'twas the
Plague of Countries and of Cities,
When that
great-belly'd House did spawn
Committees.
We fought not for
Religion, for 'tis known,
Poor men have
little, and some great Ones
none;
Those few that
love it truly, do well know,
None can take't from us, where we
will or no.
Nor did we fight for
Laws, nor had we need,
For if we had but
Gold enough to feed
Our taking
Lawyers, we had
Laws enough,
Without addressing to the
Sword, or
Buff.
Nor yet for
Liberties; for those are things
Have cost us more in
Keepers, than in
Kings.
Nor yet for
Peace; for if we had done so,
The
Souldiers would have beat us long ago;
Yet we did
fight, and now we see for what,
To
shufle mens
Estates; those
Owners that
Before these wars, could call
Estates their own,
Are beaten out by others, that had
none.
Both
Law and
Gospel overthrown together,
By those who ne're
believ'd in, or
lov'd either.
Our
truth, our
trade, our
peace, our
wealth, our
freedom,
And our full
Parliaments, that did
get, and
breed 'um,
Are all
devour'd, and by a
Monster fell,
Whom none, but you, could
satisfie, or
quell.
You're
great, you're
good, you're
valiant, & you're
wise,
You have
Briarius hands, and
Argus eyes;
You are our
English Champion, you're the true
St. George for England, and for
Scotland too.
And though his
Storie's question'd much by some.
Where true, or false, this
Age, and those to come,
Shall for the future find it so far true,
That all was but a
Prophecy of you;
And all his great and high
Atchievements be
Explain'd by you in this
Mythologie.
Herein you've far out done him, he did fight
But with one single
Dragon: but by your might
A Legion have been tam'd, and made to serve
The People, whom they meant t'
undo and
starve.
In this you may do higher, and make fame,
Immortalize your
celebrated name,
This Ages
glory, wonder of all after,
If you would free the
Son, as he the
Daughter.
FINIS.