This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
A26200 | For what else does thy rayling against the Bishops( as well as us) hold forth? |
A30741 | And what''s th''Enthusiastick breed, Or men of Knipperdoling''s Creed, But Cov''nanters run up to seed? |
A30741 | The starry Rule of Heaven is fixt, There''s no Dissension in the Sky: And can there be a Mean betwixt Confusion and Conformity? |
A30777 | ],[ London?] |
A58298 | s.n.,[ London: 1670?] |
A58298 | written?] |
A78069 | an Axiome that I no ways deny to be true; but I would desire to be instructed who are to be Judges, of what is expedient for the good of the people? |
B01875 | And what''s th''Enthusiastick breed, Or men of Knipperdoling''s Creed, But Cov''nanters run up to seed? |
B01875 | The starry Rule of Heaven is fixt, There''s no Dissension in the Sky: And can there be a Mean betwixt Confusion and Conformity? |
A30775 | And( I beseech you) whither by your own Doctrine does this bring the People that submit to it? |
A30775 | But did they not say they had his Commission, and call themselves the King and Queens Armies? |
A30775 | Can any Man in his Wits deny but the King is to be believed before either of these? |
A29226 | But being at last stake what shall he do? |
A29226 | But was this done, my Gracious Liege, for You? |
A29226 | But whence comes this Complaint? |
A29226 | For what''s this guilded State but painted Clay If Spotlesse Reputation fall away? |
A29226 | Is this a Parallel, line, or Solon''s Law? |
A29226 | Now was not this Design persued well, To take the Kernell and leave You the Shell? |
A29226 | Now what Supplies accommodate the youth Of these profusive Sparks, whose Fruitlesse growth Has spent it self to atoms? |
A29226 | The Sun has many Moats, yet who''l assay To take those radiant blemishes away? |
A29226 | — This Enterview Must Catechise us — Sir, what Chimneys you; What Hearths, Stoves, Ovens? |
A34836 | And what''s the diff''rence,''pray, whether he fall By the Popes Bull, or your Oxe General? |
A34836 | By what vast hopes is your Ambition fed? |
A34836 | Is not this the Assembler? |
A34836 | The King Delinquents to protect did strive; What Clubs, Pikes, Halberts, Lighters, sav''d the Five? |
A34836 | They would be a New Septuagint; the Old translated Scripture out of Heberw into Greek, these turn in to four shillings a day? |
A34836 | What Mist''ries of Iniquity doe we see? |
A34836 | What mighty summs have ye squeez''d out o''th''City? |
A34836 | Where''s all the Goods distrain''d, and Plunders past? |
A34836 | Where''s all the Twentieth part now which hath been Paid you by some, to forfeit the Nineteen? |
A34836 | Ye boundless Tyrants, how do you outvy, Th''Athenians Thirty, Romes Decemviry? |
A34836 | what is the High- Committy? |
A34836 | which hurts most these Nations, Cavaliers Swearing, or your Protestations? |
A30774 | But you may aske, Is there any evill in the Countrey, and the City hath not done it? |
A30774 | and the Hierarchy, Root and branch, if Doctor Burges did but hold up his finger to his Mermidons? |
A30774 | call for innocent blood? |
A30774 | how plyable did the Faction in Parliament find them, to raise Tumults? |
A30774 | how violently did the People of London rush into Rebellion? |
A30774 | make outcries for justice? |
A30774 | or Captain Ven send his summons by his Wife, to assemble the Zelots of the City? |
A30774 | subscribe and preferre Petitions against the holy Lyturgy? |
A30774 | — En quo discordia Cives? |
A30776 | And after turn''d out the whole Houseful, Of Peers as dangerous and unuseful? |
A30776 | Did not our Worthies of the House, Before they broke the Peace, break Vows? |
A30776 | Did they not Swear at first to Fight For the Kings Safety and his Right? |
A30776 | Did they not Swear in express words, To prop and back the House of Lords? |
A30776 | Did they not Swear to Live and Die With Essex, and straight laid him by? |
A30776 | Did they not Swear to maintain Law, In which that Swearing made a Flaw? |
A30776 | Do not your Juries give their Verdict As if they felt the Cause not heard it? |
A30776 | For Priviledge of Parliament, In which that Swearing made a Rent? |
A30776 | For Protestant Religion Vow, Which did that vowing disallow? |
A30776 | For having freed us first from both Th''Allegiance and Supremacy Oath, Did they not next compel the Nation To take and break the Protestation? |
A30776 | Have equal power to Adjourn, Appoint Appearance and Return? |
A30776 | Is''t not ridiculous and non- sense A Saint should be a slave to Conscience? |
A30776 | To take th''Engagement and disclaim it, Enforc''d by those who first did frame it? |
A30776 | Was not the Cause at first begun With Perjury, and carried on? |
A30776 | Was there an Oath the Godly took, But in due time and place they broke? |
A30776 | Why should not Conscience have Vacation, As well as other Courts o''th''Nation? |
A30743 | ''T was a strange Riddle of a Lady; Not love, if any lov''d her? |
A30743 | ( thou: Thou saidst th''woud''st kill me, marry woud''it Why dost thou not, thou Jack- a- Nods thou? |
A30743 | Am not I here to take thy part? |
A30743 | And Hudibras, or me provoke, Though all thy limbs were heart of Oke, And th''other half of thee as good 〈 ◊ 〉 our blows as that of wood? |
A30743 | And shall all now be thrown away In petulant intestine fray? |
A30743 | And then what Genus ● … ightly doth Compr''hend them inclusivè both? |
A30743 | And 〈 ◊ 〉 all we turn our fangs and claws Upon our own selves, without cause? |
A30743 | But cowardly flie from thy word? |
A30743 | But what a- vengeance makes thee slie From me too, as thine enemy? |
A30743 | But what could single valour doe Against so numerous a foe? |
A30743 | Could thin ● … Impertinence find out No work ● … employ it self about, Where thou secure from wooden blow Thy busie vanity might''st show? |
A30743 | Did they coyn Piss- pots, Bowls, and Flaggons, Int''Officers of Horse and Dragoons; And into Pikes and Musketiers Stamp Beakers, Cups, and Porringers? |
A30743 | Did they for this draw down the Rabble, With zeal, and noises formidable; And make all Cries about the Town Joyn throats to cry the Bishops down? |
A30743 | For what can Synods have at all With Bears that''s analogicall? |
A30743 | For what design, what interest Can Beast have to encounter Beast? |
A30743 | Have all these courses, these efforts, Been try''d by people of all sorts, Velis& Remis, omnibus Nervis, And all t''advance the Cause''s service? |
A30743 | Have these bones rattled, and this head So often in thy quarrel bled? |
A30743 | Have they told Prov''dence what it must do, Whom to avoid, and whom to trust to? |
A30743 | Have we not enemies plus satis, That Cane& angue pejus hate us? |
A30743 | How will dissenting Brethren relish it? |
A30743 | How 〈 ◊ 〉 th'', I say, oppose thy Curship''Gainst Arms, Authority and Worship? |
A30743 | If nothing can oppugne love, And vertue envious ways can prove, What may not he confide to do, That brings both love and vertue too? |
A30743 | No Ale unlicen''d, broken hedge, For which thou Statute might''st alledge, To keep thee busie from foul evil, And shame due to thee from the Devil? |
A30743 | No Stollen Pig, nor Plunder''d Goose, To tye thee up from breaking loose? |
A30743 | No subtle Question rais''d among Those out- o- their- wits, and those i''ch''wrong? |
A30743 | Not done? |
A30743 | Or what relation has debating Of Church- Affairs with Bear- baiting? |
A30743 | Quoth Trulla, Whether thou or they Let one another run away, Concerns not me: but was''t not thou That gave Crowdero quarter too? |
A30743 | Quoth he unto himself, Who knows But this brave Conquest o''re my soes May reach her heart, and make that stoop, As I but now have forc''d the Troop? |
A30743 | Quoth he, O whether, wicked Bruin, A ● … t thou fled to my — Echo, ruine? |
A30743 | Shall I have quarrer now? |
A30743 | Shall Saints in Civil bloodshed wallow Of Saints, and let the Cause lie fallow? |
A30743 | Shall we that in the Cov''nant swore, Each man of us to run before Another still in Reformation, Give Dogs and Bears a Dispensation? |
A30743 | So say the Wicked — and will you Make that Sarcasmous Scandal true, By running after Dogs and Bears, Beasts more unclean then Calves or Steers? |
A30743 | The Cause, for which we fought, and swore So boldly, shall we now give o''re? |
A30743 | Then what has quail''d thy stubborn heart? |
A30743 | Then, Hudibras, why shouldst thou fear To be, that art a Conquerer? |
A30743 | Think''st thou''t will not be laid i''th''dish, Thou turn''dst thy back? |
A30743 | To run from those th''hadst overcome Thus cowardly? |
A30743 | Was I for this entitled Sir, And girt with trusty Sword and Spur, For fame and honour to wage Battel, Thus to be brav''d by foe to Cattel? |
A30743 | Was no dispute afoot between The Catterwauling Brethren? |
A30743 | Was there no Felony, no Bawd, Cut- purse, nor Burglary abroad? |
A30743 | What Towns, what Garrisons might you With hazard of this blood subdue, Which now y''are bent to throw away In vain, untriumphable fray? |
A30743 | What will Malignants say? |
A30743 | Why dost not put me to the sword? |
A30743 | Will you employ your Conqu''ring Sword, To break a Fiddle and your word? |
A30743 | Will you, Great Sir, that glory blot In cold blood which you gain''d in hot? |
A30743 | you Ruffin; Or wilt thou be worse than thy huffing? |
A30756 | ( Quoth he) you be Shack- nape, pishaw — Me no care dis — begar me be A Gentlehome in mine Countrey, Me tell you dat, better den you, Vat den? |
A30756 | ? |
A30756 | A Mittimus, quoth Justice then, For what, wherefore, for whom, and when? |
A30756 | After strict search th''Squires fell to weeping, Must we then pay so dear for sleeping? |
A30756 | And ta''ne the Smock from off the Whore, Yet will you aggravate us more? |
A30756 | And these thy Chitterlings so neer? |
A30756 | And what are you, there, Mistris Minks? |
A30756 | And what then? |
A30756 | And who shall serve it? |
A30756 | Are you Whore- ripe( too) for the Gallows? |
A30756 | Be me Shack- daw? |
A30756 | Begar me vill do no sush ting, Quoth Quack, me say, Viva de King, Of mine Countrey; vat me to do To make sush Preachament pour you? |
A30756 | But I digresse; of this no more, To what I should have said before My puupose is; the promise Root To all their hopes laid under foot; By whom? |
A30756 | But what was this? |
A30756 | Can Nature Monsters such afford, That will not hear from Man a word? |
A30756 | Can you send Begger to the Stocks, And have no Punishment for Knocks? |
A30756 | Clad in Coat of Plush? |
A30756 | Did Paracelsus ever make Plaisters of Chips for Valours sake? |
A30756 | Dis be( Quoth Quack) may foy very pretty; Vat do me need hands from fush tings, Ven me have got de hands of Kings? |
A30756 | Do you wear Beard, and want a Face To add a Credit to your Place? |
A30756 | Does Courage so adapt my blade, That Multitudes do Ambuscade? |
A30756 | Good Mr. Blus- Ter, must not th''mercy come from us? |
A30756 | He wipes, and then he hulminates, Words that through Ear late penetrates, Shall we, quoth he, sit down with loss, And faintly go by weeping Cross? |
A30756 | How''s that? |
A30756 | How, how( in rage) quoth Hudibras, Durst they depart without my Pass? |
A30756 | I wonder you should Cackel thus: Has the Hen trod you? |
A30756 | Is Justice lame as well as blind, Crippl''d in Power as well as Mind? |
A30756 | Is your Comb Cut, and no Cock at dunghil- home? |
A30756 | Knocks in a most Malign sence, That will admit of no Pretence? |
A30756 | Now that we fear you not, you know, And love you ca n''t, what Snake in Bo ▪ Some? |
A30756 | Or are employ''d by those that do, To draw the main end up, the Crew? |
A30756 | Or if then bow, had rather break, Defie''em, and not poorly sneak? |
A30756 | Or will( by simpathy) the blows And hacks on Pole be felt by Foes? |
A30756 | Quoth Hudibras, is there no way To put a period to this day By Conquest ours? |
A30756 | Quoth Hudibras, more deaf then Adder To common Sense, to make me madder? |
A30756 | Quoth Hudibras, must we passe by So grand an open Injury? |
A30756 | Quoth Hudibras, thou sawcy Wight, Compare how dar''st thou with Sir Knight? |
A30756 | Quoth Hudibras, what made you to About you call so base a Crew Of Tag and Rag, lew''d hair- brain''d fellows, Many of them deserving Gallows? |
A30756 | Quoth Hudibras, what''s best to do? |
A30756 | Quoth Hudibras, where wert thou bred? |
A30756 | Quoth Justice good, how comes it thus you hem us in, may''nt we untruss? |
A30756 | Quoth Lanio, hence thou Weasel, Rat, That scarce durst look in face a Cat, Who sent for thee? |
A30756 | Render''d the scorn and sport of Clown, And Table- talk for all the Town? |
A30756 | Shall Triumph revel in their smiles, Our Courage pinion''d all the whiles? |
A30756 | Shall we besotted be with beating, And bury Honour by retreating? |
A30756 | Shall we with Patience take their frumps, And Heads revengeless go for bumps? |
A30756 | Shall we with smooth Caresses go And soften flinty hearted foe? |
A30756 | Th''Offence done here? |
A30756 | That ake with blows, and our bones more, Will that be Salve for every Sore? |
A30756 | The Constable, nor Tything- man Will do''t, if they avoid it can: Besides, did Justice er''e obtrude A Mittimus on Multitude? |
A30756 | The Red- coats come, and simply see A goodly Field, and long Pole- tree: Perhaps they''l reak Revenge on Wood, But what will that do out Heads good? |
A30756 | Then Hudibras disturbs the Rout: Quoth he, what do you come to see, A Pandor shew his Harlotry? |
A30756 | There''s neither Bull got loose, nor Bear, And will you seem to make escape From fencing fools, and Jack- a- nape On horse- back? |
A30756 | This''t is to be so merciful, Quoth Hudibras, can none discry Where, and how strong''s the Enemy? |
A30756 | To which o th''Nounes do you incline? |
A30756 | Were you Commissionated Harry, Or are you Supernumerary, To wit, one that may be imploy''d When others are with service cloy''d? |
A30756 | What mean you then, quoth Hudibras? |
A30756 | What serves lids for, who( like Watch- cases) Should close eyes up safe in their places? |
A30756 | What strange Coherence doth bewitch Your Worships Nose to Plow- mans breech? |
A30756 | What trade do you drive''mong these fellows? |
A30756 | What''s that, quoth he, you mutter''d last? |
A30756 | Whence com''st thou, from what nasty Sinck Didst thou creep forth, to prate and stink? |
A30756 | Where are your Scences, pray look to''t, Have we not struck at Branch and Root? |
A30756 | Whoop, quoth the Squire, where are you ho? |
A30756 | Will you in spight of Ordinance, A whorish Stallion thus advance? |
A30756 | Wilt thou not stand us now in sted? |
A30756 | With Cheeks that look like drooping Pinks? |
A30756 | Your words( quoth Hudibras) condemn Your self; but e''re we sentence pass, Come hither fellow with your Lass: What Trade art thou? |
A30756 | must we not pass? |
A30756 | quoth Justice, Sir, What will their coming here infer? |
A30756 | quoth he, And pick a Pocket if need be? |
A30756 | quoth wrathful Hudibras, That word sha n''t unrevenged pass: A Purse( too) can you cut? |
A30756 | so tamely take This Cudgel- Combat, and not make The very Basis of the Town To tremble at your awful frown? |
A30756 | vat be dat? |
A30756 | what mak''st thou here? |
A30756 | where art thou Pate? |
A30759 | ( Quoth he) you be Shack- nape, pishaw — Me no care dis — begar me be A Gentlehome in mine Country, Me tell you dat, better den you, Vat den? |
A30759 | ? |
A30759 | A Mittimus, quoth Justice then, For what, wherefore, for whom, and when? |
A30759 | After it serv''d had dish and pot, And came from dresser reaking hot, Oh fie( quoth she) are you without A cloth? |
A30759 | After strict search th''Squires fell to weeping, Must we then pay so dear for sleeping? |
A30759 | And ta''ne the Smock from off the Whore, Yet will you aggravate us more? |
A30759 | And these thy Chitterlings so neer? |
A30759 | And what are you, there, Mistriss Minks? |
A30759 | And who shall serve it? |
A30759 | Are you VVhore- ripe( too) for the Gallows? |
A30759 | Art thou a Man, of art thou VVoman? |
A30759 | Begar me vill do no sush ting, Quoth Quack, me say, Viva de King, Of mine Countrey; vat me to do To make sush Preachament pour you? |
A30759 | But I digress; of this no more, To what I should have said before My purpose is; the promise, Root To all their hopes laid under foot; By whom? |
A30759 | But what was this? |
A30759 | Clad in Coat of Plush? |
A30759 | Did Paracelsus ever make Plaisters of chips for Valours sake? |
A30759 | Dis be( Quoth Quack) may foy very pretty; Vat do me need hands from sush tings, Ven me have got de hands of Kings? |
A30759 | Do you wear Beard, and want a Face To add a Credit to your Place? |
A30759 | Does Courage so adapt my blade, That Multitudes do Ambuscade? |
A30759 | Given by the hand of reaking Foe, VVhat er''e you think, I think not so, Shall Triumph revel in their smiles, Our Courage pinion''d all the whiles? |
A30759 | How''s that? |
A30759 | How, how( in rage) quoth Hudibras, Durst they depart without my Pass? |
A30759 | I wonder you should Cackel thus: Has the Hen trod you? |
A30759 | Is Justice lame as well as blind, Crippl''d in power as well at Mind ▪ Can you send Begger to the Stocks, And have no punishment for knocks? |
A30759 | Is your Comb Cut, and no Cock at dunghil- home? |
A30759 | Knocks in a most Malign sence, That will admit of no Pretence? |
A30759 | Now that we fear you not, you know, And love you ca n''t, what Snake in Bo- Some? |
A30759 | Oh have you so, youth Hudibras? |
A30759 | Or are employ''d by those that do, To draw the main end up, the Crew? |
A30759 | Or if then bow, h''ad rather break, Defie''em, and not poorly sneak? |
A30759 | Or will( by simpathy) the blows And hacks on Pole be felt by Foes? |
A30759 | Quoth Hudibras, draw neerer you, And you Jack- daw get to your Crew, Speaking Quack, Be me Shack- daw? |
A30759 | Quoth Hudibras, is there no way To put a period to this day By Conquest ours? |
A30759 | Quoth Hudibras, more deaf then Adder To common Sense, to make me madder? |
A30759 | Quoth Hudibras, must we passe by So grand ad open Injury? |
A30759 | Quoth Hudibras, thou sawcy Wight, Compare how dar''st thou with Sir Knight? |
A30759 | Quoth Hudibras, what made you to About you call so base a Crew Of Tag and Rag, lew''d hair- brain''d fellows, Many of them deserving Gallows? |
A30759 | Quoth Hudibras, what''s best to do? |
A30759 | Quoth Hudibras, where wert thou bred? |
A30759 | Quoth Justice good, how comes it thus you hem us in, may''nt we untruss? |
A30759 | Quoth Lanio, hence thou Weasel, Rat, That scarce dar''st look in face a Cat; Who sent for thee? |
A30759 | Render''d the scorn and sport of Clown; And Table- talk for all the Town? |
A30759 | Shall we besotted be with beating, And bury Honour by retreating? |
A30759 | Shall we with Patience take their frumps, And Heads revengeless go for bumps? |
A30759 | Shall we with smooth Caresses go And soften flinty hearted foe? |
A30759 | Th''Offence done here; Good Mr. Slus Ter, must not the mercy come from us? |
A30759 | That ake with blows, and our bones more, Will that be salve for every Sore? |
A30759 | The Red- coats come, and simply see A goodly Field, and long Pole- tree: Perhaps they''l reak revenge on Wood, But what will that do our Heads good? |
A30759 | There''s neither Bull got loose, nor Bear, And will you seem to make escape From fencing fools, and Jack- a- nape On horse- back? |
A30759 | This''t is to be so merciful, Quoth Hudibras, can none discry Where, and how strong''s the Enemy? |
A30759 | To which o th''Nounes do you incline? |
A30759 | VVhat mean you then, quoth Hudibras? |
A30759 | Were you Commissionated Harry, Or are you Supernumerary, To wit, one that may be employ''d When others are with service cloy''d? |
A30759 | What serves lids for, who( like Watch- cases) Should close eyes up safe in their places? |
A30759 | What strange Coherence doth bewitch Your Worships Nose to Plow- mans breech? |
A30759 | What trade do you drive''mong these fellows? |
A30759 | What''s that, quoth he, you mutter''d last? |
A30759 | Whence com''st thou, from what nasty Sinck Didst thou creep forth, to prate and stink? |
A30759 | Where are you Scences, pray look to''t; Have we not struck at Branch and Root? |
A30759 | Whoop, quoth the Squire, where are you ho? |
A30759 | Will you in spight of Ordinance, A whorish Stallion thus advance? |
A30759 | Wilt thou not stand us now in sted? |
A30759 | With Cheeks that look like drooping Pinks? |
A30759 | You say to Morrow, And what then? |
A30759 | Your words( quoth Hudibras) condemn Your self; but e''re we sentence pass, Come hither fellow with your Lass: What Trade art thou? |
A30759 | must we not pass? |
A30759 | quoth Justice, Sir, What will their coming here infer? |
A30759 | quoth he, And pick a Pocket if need be? |
A30759 | quoth wrathfull Hudibras, That word sha n''t unrevenged pass: A Purse( too) can you cut? |
A30759 | so tamely take This Cudgel- Combat, and not make The very Basis of the Town To tremble at your awful frown? |
A30759 | vat be dat? |
A30759 | what mak''st thou here? |
A30759 | where art thou Pate? |
A30759 | who did it violate? |
A30770 | ( As Averrhois play''d but mean trick, To damn our whole Art for Excentrick) For who knows all that knowledge contains? |
A30770 | ( For if a Trumpet sound or Drum beat, Who has not a months mind to combat?) |
A30770 | ( Quoth she) Mum budget, Think''st thou''t will not be laid i''th''dish, Thou turn''dst thy back? |
A30770 | A Comet, and without a Beard? |
A30770 | A Rape, that is the more inhumane, For being acted by a VVoman: Why are you fair, but to entice us To love you, that you may despise us? |
A30770 | A Total O''erthrow giv''n the King In Cornwal, Horse, and Foot, next Spring? |
A30770 | Address, and complement by Vision, Make Love, and Court by intuition? |
A30770 | Alarm''d with many a horrid Fright, And claw''d, by Goblins, in the Night? |
A30770 | Am not I here to take thy part? |
A30770 | An Answer to a Declaration? |
A30770 | And Hudibras, or me provoke, Though all thy Limbs were heart of Oke, And th''other half of thee as good To bear out blows as that of Wood? |
A30770 | And Polish''d, looks a Diamond? |
A30770 | And Precious, Powerful, Preaching- Masters? |
A30770 | And Saints, whose Necks are pawn''d at stake, No notice of the Danger take? |
A30770 | And after letting Blood and Purging, Condemn''d to voluntary Scourging? |
A30770 | And after march''d to find him out, And charg''d him home with Horse and Foot? |
A30770 | And after turn''d out the whole House- ful Of Peers, as dang''rous, and unuseful? |
A30770 | And as they please make Matter of Fact Run all on one side, as th''are packt? |
A30770 | And burn in amorous Flames as fierce, As those Celestial Ministers? |
A30770 | And do they not as Triers sit, To judge what Officers are fit? |
A30770 | And eat the Flesh of Brethren, In stead of Kings and Mighty men? |
A30770 | And has not he point- blank foretold Whats''er the close Committee would? |
A30770 | And have no pow''r at all, nor shift, To help it self at a dead lift? |
A30770 | And if an Owl have so much pow''r, Why should not Planets have much more? |
A30770 | And if she should, which Heaven forbid, O''rethrow me, as the Fidler did, What after- course have I to take,''Gainst losing all I have at Stake? |
A30770 | And if they use their Persons so, What will they to their Fortunes doe? |
A30770 | And is it like they have not still In their old Practises some skill? |
A30770 | And is this all? |
A30770 | And like your whimsey''d Chariots draw The Boys to course you without Law? |
A30770 | And now would prove, the Words and Oath Ingage us to renounce them both? |
A30770 | And shall we turn our fangs and claws Upon our own selves, without cause? |
A30770 | And song, as out of tune, against, As Turk and Pope are by the Saints? |
A30770 | And speak i''th''Nun at Londons Belly? |
A30770 | And that it is in Being yet, To us alone, you are in Debt, Then where''s your liberty of Choice, And our unnatural No- voice? |
A30770 | And that which was prov''d true before, Prove false again? |
A30770 | And then what Genus rightly doth Include, and comprehend them both? |
A30770 | And therefore probably must know What is, and hath been done below? |
A30770 | And vex''em into any form, That fits their purpose to do harm? |
A30770 | And what security maintains Their Right and Title, but the Banes? |
A30770 | And what would serve, if those were gone, To make it Orthodox? |
A30770 | And whatso''ere''s atchiev''d in Fight, Determines which is wrong or right? |
A30770 | And when I shall appear in Court, To plead my Cause, and answer for''t Unless the Judge do partial prove, What will become of Me and Love? |
A30770 | And when the Work was carrying on, Who crost it, but your selves alone? |
A30770 | And when your Sex was foully scandal''d, As foully by the Rabble handled? |
A30770 | And who could those be but the Saints, Those Reformation- Termegants? |
A30770 | And with Bulls Pizle, for her love, Was taw''d as gentle as a Glove? |
A30770 | And yet still had the confidence, To swear it was in his defence? |
A30770 | Appear in divers shapes to Kelly? |
A30770 | Are sweating Lanthorns, or Screen- Fans Made better there, than th''are in France? |
A30770 | Are there not myriads of this sort, Which Stories of all times report? |
A30770 | Are things of Superstitious function, Fit to be us''d in Gospel Sunshine? |
A30770 | As I just now have done to you, Foretelling what you came to know, Were the Stars only made to light Robbers and Burglaries by night? |
A30770 | As Withers in immortal Rime Has register''d to after- time? |
A30770 | As if th''had routed us in battel? |
A30770 | As no man can draw in his breath At once, and force out Air beneath? |
A30770 | At Antwerp their Cathedral Church? |
A30770 | At Sarum take a Cavalier I''th''Cause''s service, Prisoner? |
A30770 | At least, until th''had a clear Stage, And equal Freedom to engage, Without the danger of Surprise By both our common Enemies? |
A30770 | Attack''d by despicable Foes, And drub''d with mean and vulgar blows; And after all, to be debarr''d So much as standing on his Gaurd? |
A30770 | B''allow''d to put all tricks upon Our Cully- Sex, and we use none? |
A30770 | Be under Vows to hang and die Loves Sacrifice, and all a lie? |
A30770 | But Rubies, Pearls and Diamonds; With which a Philter Love commands? |
A30770 | But didst thou scourge thy Vessel thus, As thou hast damn''d thy self to us? |
A30770 | But granting now we should agree, What is it you expect from me? |
A30770 | But if a beating seem so brave, What Glories must a whipping have? |
A30770 | But if w''out- do him here at home, What good of your design can come? |
A30770 | But what a- vengeance makes thee fly From me too, as thine Enemy? |
A30770 | But what could single Valour do Against so numerous a foe? |
A30770 | But what malignant Star, alas, Has brought you both to this sad pass? |
A30770 | But when the Feat''s design''d and meant, What Miracle can bar th''event? |
A30770 | But( like a Reprobate) what course S''ever''s us''d, grow worse and worse? |
A30770 | But, didst thou see no Devils then? |
A30770 | By Santring still on some Adventure, And growing to thy Horse a Centaur, To stuff thy Skin with swelling Knobs Of cruel and hard- wooded Drubs? |
A30770 | By running after Dogs and Bears, Beasts more unclean than Calves or Steers? |
A30770 | Can no Transfusion of the Blood, That makes Fools Cattle, do you good? |
A30770 | Can not the Learned Councel there, Make Laws in any shape appear? |
A30770 | Can they make Plays there, that shall fit The Publick Humor with less Wit? |
A30770 | Can they not juggle, and, with slight Conveyance, play with wrong and right; And sell their blasts of wind as dear, As Lapland Witches botl''d Air? |
A30770 | Canst thou refuse to bear thy part, I''th''publick VVork, base as thou art? |
A30770 | Commit the censure of its Cause To any, but it''s own Great Laws? |
A30770 | Could not the whipping- post prevail With all its Rhet''rick, nor the Gaol, To keep from flaying scourge thy skin, And ankle free from Iron Gin? |
A30770 | Could they not tell you so, as well As what I came to know, foretel? |
A30770 | Could thine Impertinence find out No work t''employ it self about, Where thou secure from Wooden blow Thy busy vanity might''st show? |
A30770 | Did Saints for this bring in the Plate, And crowd as if they came too late? |
A30770 | Did he not help the Dutch to purge, At Antwerp, their Cathedral Church? |
A30770 | Did not a certain Lady whip, Of late her, Husband''s own Lordship? |
A30770 | Did not our Worthies of the House, Before they broke the Peace, break Vows? |
A30770 | Did not th''Illustrious Bassa make Himself a Slave for Misse''s sake? |
A30770 | Did not we here, the Argo rigg Make Berenice''s Periwig? |
A30770 | Did they coyn Piss pots, Bouls, and Flaggons, Int''Officers of Horse and Dragoons; And into Pikes and Musqueteers Stamp Beakers, Cups, and Porringers? |
A30770 | Did they for this draw down the Rabble, With zeal and noises formidable; And make all Cries about the Town Joyn throats to cry the Bishops down? |
A30770 | Did they not swear at first, to fight For the KING''s Safety, and his Right? |
A30770 | Did they not swear to live and die With Essex, and streight laid him by? |
A30770 | Did they not swear to maintain Law, In which that swearing made a Flaw? |
A30770 | Did they not swear, in express words, To prop and back the House of Lords? |
A30770 | Did we not bring our Oaths in first, Before our plate, to have them burst, And cast in fitter Models, for The present use of Church and VVar? |
A30770 | Didst thou not love her then? |
A30770 | Discover''d Sea and Land, Columbus And Magell ● n could never compass? |
A30770 | Do not our great Reformers use This Sidrophel to foreboad News? |
A30770 | Do not your Juries give their Verdict As if they felt the Cause, not heard it? |
A30770 | Do''s not in Chanc''ry ev''ry man swear, What makes best for him in his Answer? |
A30770 | Does not the Whore of Babylon ride Upon her Horned Beast astride, Like this proud Dame, who either is A Type of her, or she of this? |
A30770 | Dost not remember how this day Thou to my Beard wast bold to say, That thou couldst prove Bear- bai ● ing equal With Synods, Orthodox and Lega? |
A30770 | Each other, like a Prize, away? |
A30770 | Else why should Tumults fright us now, We have so many times gone through, And understand as well to tame, As, when they serve our turns, t''inflame? |
A30770 | For Priviledge of Parliament, In which that swearing made a Rent? |
A30770 | For Protestant Religion Vow, That did that Vowing disallow? |
A30770 | For if Bear- baiting we allow, What good can Reformation do? |
A30770 | For if we catch thee failing once, T will fall the heavier on thy Bones, What made thee venture to betray, And filch the Ladie''s Heart away? |
A30770 | For in what stupid Age, or Nation, Was Marriage ever out of Fashion? |
A30770 | For raising of a Common- Purse, Out of their Wages, to raise Horse? |
A30770 | For what Romance can shew a Lover, That had a Lady to recover, And did not steer a nearer Course, To fall aboard in his Amours? |
A30770 | For what can Earth produce, but Love To represent the Joys above? |
A30770 | For what can we pretend t''inherit, Vnless the Marriage- deed will bear it? |
A30770 | For what design, what interest Can Beast have to encounter Beast? |
A30770 | For what did ever Heiress yet By being born to Lordships get? |
A30770 | For what is VVorth in any thing, But so much Money as''t will bring? |
A30770 | For what mad Lover ever dy''d, To gain a soft and gentle Bride? |
A30770 | For what secures the Civil Life But pawns of Children and a Wife; That lie, like Hostages, at stake, To pay for all Men undertake? |
A30770 | For when upon their ungot Heirs Th''intail themselves, and all that''s theirs, What blinder Bargain e''re was driven, Or Wager laid at six and seven? |
A30770 | For where are all your Forfeitures Intrusted in safe hands, but ours? |
A30770 | For who first bred them up to pray, And teach, the House of Commons way? |
A30770 | For who without a Cap and Bauble, Having subdu''d a Bear and Rabble, And might with Honor have come off, Would put it to a second proof? |
A30770 | For, when w''are taken into Trust, How easie are the Wisest choust? |
A30770 | For, when y''have try''d all sorts of ways, What Fools d''we make of you in Plays? |
A30770 | For, without Art, the Noblest Seeds Of Flow''rs degenerate to Weeds: How dull and rugged e''er''t is Ground? |
A30770 | Has Saturn nothing to do in''t? |
A30770 | Has not this present Parliament, A Ledger to the Devil sent? |
A30770 | Have equal power to adjourn Appoint Appearance and Retorn? |
A30770 | Have freer Pow''r, than he, in Grace, And Nature, o''er the Creature has? |
A30770 | Have it''s proceedings disallow''d, or Allow''d, at fancy of Py- powder? |
A30770 | Have not the Handmaids of the City, Chosen o''their Members a Committee? |
A30770 | Have these Bones ratled, and this Head So often in thy quarrel bled? |
A30770 | Have they invented Tones, to win The Women, and make them draw in The Men, as Indians with a Female Tame Elephant enveigle the Male? |
A30770 | Have they told Prov''dence what it must do, Whom to avoid, and whom to trust to? |
A30770 | Have they —? |
A30770 | Have we not enemies plus satis, That Cane& angue pejus hate us? |
A30770 | Have you not power to entertain, And render Love for Love again? |
A30770 | He gave him first the time o''th''day, And welcom''d him, as he might say: He ask''d them whence they came, and whither Their business lay? |
A30770 | He that imposes an Oath, makes it, Not he, that for convenience takes it: Then how can any man be said To break an Oath he never made? |
A30770 | He who was us''d so unlike a Soldier, Blown up with Philters of Love- Powder? |
A30770 | How durst th'', I say, oppose thy Curship Gainst Arms, Authority and Worship? |
A30770 | How fair and sweet the planted Rose, Beyond the Wild in Hedges grows? |
A30770 | How shall I answer Hue and Cry, For a Roan- Gelding, twelve hands high: All spur''d and switch''d, a Lock on''s hoof, A sorrel- mane? |
A30770 | How will dissenting Brethren relish it? |
A30770 | How wouldst th''have us''d her, and her Money? |
A30770 | I grant, all Courses are in vain, Vnless we can get in again; The only way that''s left us now, But all the difficulty''s, How? |
A30770 | I understand, Or bring my Action of Conversion And Trover for my Goods? |
A30770 | If Matrimony and Hanging go By Dest''ny, why not VVhipping too? |
A30770 | If Women had not interven''d, How soon had Mankind had an end? |
A30770 | If nothing can oppugne love, And Vertue invious ways can prove, What may not he confide to do That brings both love and vertue too? |
A30770 | If th''Ancients Crown''d their bravest men That only sav''d a Citizen, What Victory could e''er be won, If ev''ry one would save but one? |
A30770 | In Virgo? |
A30770 | Insulted on, Revil''d and Jeer''d, With rude Invasion of his Beard? |
A30770 | Is it not ominous in all Countreys, When Crows and Ravens croak upon Trees? |
A30770 | Is not the High- Court of Justice sworn To judge that Law that serves their turn? |
A30770 | Is not the winding up Witnesses, And nicking more than half the bus''ness? |
A30770 | Is there a Constellation there, That was not born and bred up here? |
A30770 | Is there a Planet that by Birth Does not derive its House from Earth? |
A30770 | Is there an Officer of State, Vntimely rais''d; or Magistrate, That''s Haughty, and Imperious? |
A30770 | Is''t not Ridiculous, and Nonsence, A Saint should be a slave to Conscience? |
A30770 | Is''t not enough to make one strange, That some mens fancies should ne''er change? |
A30770 | It is a kind of Rape to Marry One, that neglects, or cares not for ye: For, what does make it Ravishment, But b''ing against the the Mind''s Consent? |
A30770 | Leap''d headlong in t''Elizium, Through th''Windows of a dazling Room? |
A30770 | Love, that''s the Worlds preservative, That keeps all Souls of things alive? |
A30770 | Made Mars and Saturn for the Cause, The Moon for Fundamental Laws? |
A30770 | Made Mountains with our Tubes appear, And Cattle gazing on''em there? |
A30770 | Make their own Jealousies High- Treason, And fix''em whomsoe''er they please on? |
A30770 | Make wicked Verses, Treats, and Faces, And spell Names over, with Beer- glasses? |
A30770 | Marriage, at best, is but a Vow; Which all Men either break, or bow: Then what will those forbear to do, Who perjure, when they do but woo? |
A30770 | Meet with the Parliament''s Committee At Woodstock, on a Pars''nal Treaty? |
A30770 | Morality, which both the Saints And Wicked too cry out against?'' |
A30770 | Mould''em as VVitches do their Clay, When they make Pictures to destroy? |
A30770 | My Squire, or that bold Sprite, That took his Place and Shape to Night? |
A30770 | Nature has made Mans breast no Windores, To publish what he does within doors? |
A30770 | No Ale unlicenc''d, broken hedge, For which thou Statute might''st alledge, To keep thee busie from foul evil, And shame due to thee from the Devil? |
A30770 | No Stolen Pig, nor Plunder''d Goose, To tye thee up from breaking loose? |
A30770 | No subtle Question rais''d among Those out- o''-their wits and those i''th''wrong? |
A30770 | Not done? |
A30770 | Not true? |
A30770 | Of Mrtrimony under Hedges? |
A30770 | Only to stand by and look on, But not know what is said or done? |
A30770 | Or Fight endanger''d to be lost, Where all resolve to save the most? |
A30770 | Or Heav''n it self a Sin resent, That for its own supply was ment? |
A30770 | Or Oaths, more feeble than your own, By which, we are no less put down? |
A30770 | Or Witches Simpling, and on Gibbets Cutting from Malefactors snippets? |
A30770 | Or all thy Tricks in this New Trade, The Holy Brotherhood o''th''Blade? |
A30770 | Or do they teach to sing and play O''th''Gittar there a newer way? |
A30770 | Or do you love your self so much, To bear all Rivals else a Grutch? |
A30770 | Or does the Man i''th''Moon look big, And wear a huger Periwig, Shew in his Gate, or Face, more tricks Than our own Native Lunaticks? |
A30770 | Or for a Lady tender- hearted, In purling Streams or Hemp departed? |
A30770 | Or from the Pillory tips of Ears Of Rebel- Saints, and Perjurers? |
A30770 | Or giving one another Pledges? |
A30770 | Or if it did not, but the Cause Were left to th''injury of Laws, What tyranny can disapprove There should be Equity in Love? |
A30770 | Or if''t is better to indite, And bring him to his Trial? |
A30770 | Or vent''ring to be brisk and wanton, Do Penance in a Paper Lanthorn? |
A30770 | Or what but Riches is there known, Which man can solely call his own; In which, no Creatures goes his half, Unless it be to squint and laugh? |
A30770 | Or what relation has debating Of Church- Affairs with Bear- baiting? |
A30770 | Or which way came I Through so immense a space so soon? |
A30770 | Or who made Cassiopoea''s Chair? |
A30770 | Or who, but Lovers, can converse, Like Angels: by the Eye Discourse? |
A30770 | Possess''d with Absolute Dominions, O''re Brethren''s Purses and Opinions? |
A30770 | Quoth Hudibras, I''m before hand In that already, with your command: For where does Beauty, and high VVit, But in your Constellation, meet? |
A30770 | Quoth Trulla, Whether thou or they Let one another run away, Concerns not me; but was''t not thou That gave Crowdero quarter too? |
A30770 | Quoth he, O whether, wicked Bruin, Art thou fled to my — Eccho, ruine? |
A30770 | Quoth he, That Honor''s very squemish That takes a basting for a blemish: For what''s more honourable then scars, Or skin to tatters rent in Wars? |
A30770 | Quoth she, I grant the Case is true, And proper''twixt your Horse and you; But whether I may take, as well As you may give away or sell? |
A30770 | Quoth she, What does a match imply, But likeness and equality? |
A30770 | Quoth she, What is it you would swear? |
A30770 | Quoth she, if Love have these effects, Why is it not forbid our Sex? |
A30770 | Rack''em until they do confess, Impeach of Treason, whom they please, And most perfidiously condemn, Those that engag''d their Lives for them? |
A30770 | Say, will the Law of Arms allow I may have Grace, and Quarter now? |
A30770 | Shall Love, that to no Crown gives place Become the subject of a Case? |
A30770 | Shall Mastiffs by the Collars pull''d, Engag''d with Bulls, let go their hold? |
A30770 | Shall Precious Saints and Secret ones Break one another''s outward Bones? |
A30770 | Shall Saints in Civil bloudshed wallow Of Saints, and let the Cause lie fallow? |
A30770 | Shall we that in the Cov''nant swore, Each man of us to run before Another still in Reformation, Give Dogs and Bears a Dispensation? |
A30770 | Sing catches to the Saints at Mascon, And tell them all they came to ask him? |
A30770 | Some busie Independent Pug, Retainer to his Synagogue? |
A30770 | T''ingage, and after understand? |
A30770 | Tell all it does, or does not know, For swearing ex Officio? |
A30770 | That after several rude Ejections, And as prodigious Resurrections; With new Reversions of nine Lives, Starts up, and like a Cat, revives? |
A30770 | That with your Breeding Teeth begin, And Nursing Babies, that Lie in? |
A30770 | That''s stranger( quoth the Knight) and stranger: Who gave thee notice of my danger? |
A30770 | The Cause for which we fought and swore So boldly, shall we now give o''re? |
A30770 | The Publick Faith, which ev''ry one Is bound t''observe, yet kept by none; And if that go for nothing, why Should Private Faith have such a tye? |
A30770 | The Ram, and Bull, and Goat declare Against the Book of Common Pray''r? |
A30770 | The Scorpion take the Protestation, And Bear engage for Reformation? |
A30770 | Then how can any thing offend In order, to so great an end? |
A30770 | Then what can better represent, Than this Rump- bone, the Parliament? |
A30770 | Then what has quail''d thy stubborn heart? |
A30770 | Then what may I expect to do, Wh''have quell''d so vast a Buffalo? |
A30770 | Then when he is compell''d by her T''Adventures, he would else forbear, Who, with his Honour, can withstand, Since Force is greater than Command? |
A30770 | Then wherefore shall they not b''allow''d In love a greater- Latitude? |
A30770 | Then why should more bewitching Clamour Some Lovers not as much enamour? |
A30770 | Then, Hudibras, why shouldst thou fear To be, that art a Conquerer? |
A30770 | This Sidrophel by chance espy''d, And with Amazement staring wide, Bless us, quoth he, What dreadful wonder Is that, appears in Heaven yonder? |
A30770 | Thou canst at best but overstrain A Paradox, and th''own hot brain For what can Synods have at all With Bears that''s analogical? |
A30770 | Thought he, How does the Devil know What''t was that I design''d to do? |
A30770 | To Spirit her to Matrimony —? |
A30770 | To change the property of selves, As sucking Children are by Elves? |
A30770 | To keep the Good Old Cause on Foot, And present Power from taking Root? |
A30770 | To make the bringing in the King, And keeping of him out, one thing? |
A30770 | To pass themselves away, and turn Their Children''s Tenants e''re th''are born? |
A30770 | To run from those th''hadst overcome Thus cowardly? |
A30770 | To swear, and after to recant, The Solemn League and Covenant? |
A30770 | To take th''Engagement, and disclaim it, Enforc''d by those, who first did frame it? |
A30770 | To wait on Drunkards, Thieves, Gold- finders, And Lovers solacing behind Doors? |
A30770 | To what a height did Infant Rome, By Ravishing of Women come? |
A30770 | To write of Victories next Year, And Castles taken yet i''th''Air; Of Battels fought at Sea, and Ships Sunk, two Years hence, the last Eclips? |
A30770 | VVhy should not Conscience have Vacation, As well as other Courts o''th''Nation? |
A30770 | WHo would believe what strange Bugbears Mankind creates it self, of Fears? |
A30770 | Was I for this entit''led Sir, And girt with trusty Sword and Spur, For Fame and Honor to wage Battel, Thus to be brav''d by Foe to Cattel? |
A30770 | Was no dispute afoot between The Catterwauling Brethren? |
A30770 | Was not young Florio sent( to cool His flame from Biancasiore) to School, Where Pedant made his Pathick Bum For her sake suffer Martyrdom? |
A30770 | Was there an Oath the Godly took, But, in due time and place, they broke? |
A30770 | Was there no Felony, no Bawd, Cut- purse, nor Burglary abroad? |
A30770 | We, who have nothing but frail Vows, Against your Statagems t''oppose? |
A30770 | Were they not, during all their lives, Most of''m Pirats, Whores, and Thieves? |
A30770 | What Churches have such able Pastors? |
A30770 | What Crowns could be Hereditary, If greatest Monarchs did not marry, And with their Consorts consummate Their weightiest Interest of State? |
A30770 | What Honours, or Estates of Peers Could be preserv''d but by their Heirs? |
A30770 | What Laws and Freedom, Persecution? |
A30770 | What Med''cine else can cure the fits Of Lovers when they lose their VVits? |
A30770 | What Oestrum, what phrenetick mood Makes you thus lavish of your bloud, While the proud Vies your Trophies boast, And unreveng''d walks — ghost? |
A30770 | What Politicks, or strange Opinions, That are not in our own Dominions? |
A30770 | What Rage, O Citizens, what fury Doth you to these dire actions hurry? |
A30770 | What Revelations, or Religions, That are not in our Native Regions? |
A30770 | What Science can be brought from thence, In which we do not here Commence? |
A30770 | What Towns, what Garrisons might you With hazard of this bloud subdue, Which now y''are bent to throw away In vain, untriumphable fray? |
A30770 | What Trade from thence can you advance But what we nearer have from France? |
A30770 | What art? |
A30770 | What can our Travellers bring home, That is not to be learnt at Rome? |
A30770 | What hast thou gotten by this Fetch? |
A30770 | What have they done, or what left undone, That might advance the Cause at London? |
A30770 | What made thee break thy Plighted Vows? |
A30770 | What made thee pick and chuse her out, T''imploy their Sorceries about? |
A30770 | What made thee, when they all were gone, And none but thou and I alone; To act the Devil, and forbear To rid me of my Hellish Fear? |
A30770 | What makes Morality a Crime, The most notorious of the Time? |
A30770 | What makes Rebelling against Kings A Good Old Cause? |
A30770 | What makes a Church a Den of Thieves? |
A30770 | What makes a Knave a Child of God, And one of us? |
A30770 | What makes all Doctrines plain and clear? |
A30770 | What makes the Breaking of all Oaths A holy Duty? |
A30770 | What makes y''encroach upon our Trade, And damn all others? |
A30770 | What renders Beating out of Brains And Murther Godliness? |
A30770 | What then( quoth Hudibras) was he That plai''d the Dev''l, to examine me? |
A30770 | What was the Publick Faith found out for, But to slur men of what they fought for? |
A30770 | What will Malignants say? |
A30770 | What''s Liberty of Conscience, I''th''Natural and Genuine Sense? |
A30770 | What''s Orthodox and true Believing Against a Conscience? |
A30770 | What''s tender Conscience? |
A30770 | When Caesar in the Senate fell, Did not the Sun eclips''d foretel, And in resentment of his slaughter, Look''d pale for almost a year after? |
A30770 | When Fiends agree among themselves, Shall they be found the greater Elves? |
A30770 | Where had they all their Gifted Phrases, But from our Calamies and Cases? |
A30770 | Which he prevented thus: What was''t, Quoth he, that I was saying last, Before these Gentlemen arriv''d? |
A30770 | Which, how we have perform''d, all Ages Can speak th''Events of our presages, Have we not lately in the Moon Found a new World to th''Old unknown? |
A30770 | Who have a freer Latitude Then Sinners give themselves allow''d? |
A30770 | Who made the Ballance, or whence came The Bull, the Lion, and the Ram? |
A30770 | Who would not rather suffer VVhipping, Than swallow Toasts of bits of Ribbin? |
A30770 | Whose Liv''ry does the Coachman wear? |
A30770 | Why didst thou chuse that cursed Sin, Hypocrisie, to set up in? |
A30770 | Why didst thou forge those shameful Lies, Of Bears and Witches in Disguise? |
A30770 | Why dost not put me to the Sword, But cowardly fly from thy word? |
A30770 | Why is''t not damn''d, and interdicted, For Diabolical and wicked? |
A30770 | Will you employ your Conqu''ring Sword, To break a Fiddle and your Word? |
A30770 | Will you, Great Sir, that Glory blot In cold bloud, which you gain''d in hot? |
A30770 | With China- Oranges and Tarts, And whining Plays, lay baits for Hearts? |
A30770 | With that he rouz''d his drooping Heart, And hastily cry''d out, What art? |
A30770 | Without whose Sprinkling and Sowing, Who e''r had heard of Nye or Owen? |
A30770 | Write wittier Dances, quainter Shows, Or fight with more ingenious Blows? |
A30770 | by those made after? |
A30770 | can I bring proof, Where, when, by whom, and what y''are sold for, And in the open Market toll''d for? |
A30770 | is this the end To which these carr''ings on did tend? |
A30770 | quoth she, can that be true? |
A30770 | was too too Politick? |
A30770 | — Right, Prevent what he designs to do, And swear for th''State against him? |
A30770 | ● nd vended here among the Rable, ● or staple Goods, and warrantable? |