A cri A o o ^^^^i^a =ss=s X 3) 33 ^^^^^ O O 5 z ^^^^s J> 7 3D 9 > 3D -< 3 ^^^= J> 2 O 5 6 -i THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES I 'V , ^Y.'. /: /M^ jf-+-'V^^ A-^. RUMP: OR AN EXACT COLLECTION Of the Choycest POEMS AND SONGS RELATING TO THE Late Times. By the most Eminent Wits, from Anno 1639. to Anno i 6 6 i LONDON, Printed for Henry Brome at the Gun in Ivy- lane, and Henry Marsh at the Princes Armes in Chancery-lane. 1662. .0 -i> f> s^ \7 7. \ TO THE READER. THoii hast here a Bundle of Rodds ; not like those of the Roman Consulls, for these are signes of a No- Government If thou read these Ballads (and not sing them) the poor Ballads are undone. They came not hither all from one Author ; (thou wilt soon perceive the same hand held not the Pen) yet none but shew either IVit or Affection (and thafs better) or Both, which is best of all. The truth is, this Rump, and indeed the whole Carcase was so odious and To the Reader. bloody a Monster^ that every man has a stone or rotten Egge to cast at it. Now if you ask who nam'd it Rump, know 'twas so stiVd in an honest Sheet of Paper (caird The Bloody Rump) written before the Tryal of our tate Soveraign of Glorious Mejnory : but the Word obtain'd not universal notice till it flew from the mouth of Major General Brown at a Pub lick Assembly in the dales ^Richard Cromwell. You have many Songs here, which were never before in Print : We need not tell you whose they are ; but we have not subjoyned any Authors Names ; here- tofore it was unsafe, and now the Gentlemen conceive it not so proper. ' Tis hoped they did His Majesty so7ne Service, 'twas for that end they were scribbled. Now (thanks be to God) we have liv'd to that day, that there is no Cavalier, because there is' nothing else, and 'tis wondrous happy to see how many are his Majesties Faithfull Sub- To the Reader. jects, who were ready to hang the Authors of these Ballads. But he that does not blot out all thafs past, and frankly embrace their New Allegiance, or remembers ought but what shall pre- serve Universal Peace and Charity, let him be Anathema ; For he were a strange man that should now be un- satisfied, when those that writ against the King do now write for Him, and those who wrote for Him, need now write no more. Let Heaven now con- tinue these Blessings on His Majesty, that no one Enemy live unreconciled, nor any false Friend be undiscovered, that so there be no strife, but who shall shew most Duty to so Excellent a KING, Farewell. The Stationers to the Reader, Gentlemen, YOu are invited here to a Feast, and if Variety cloy you not, we are satisfied. It has been our Care to please you ; and it is our Hope you luill retribute an Ackm)wledgeme?it. These are select Things, a work of Time, which for your sake we Publish, assuring you that your Welcome will Crown the Entertainment. Farewell. Yours, H. B. H. M. V RUMP-SONGS. The First Part. K T/ie 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^ cotne along, Leave this place of Superstition : Were it not for we, that the Brethren be. You ruould sink into Perdition. There you may teach our hymns. Without the Laws controulment : We need not fear, the Bishops there, Nor Spiritual-Courts inroulment j Rump Songs. Part I. Nay, the Surplice shall not fright us, Nor superstitious blindness ; Nor scandals rise, when we disguise. And our Sisters 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 Qo%vci. 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. Part I. Rump Songs. 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 fit 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 QiXtdX James his Heir, Just, as you see me now, ith' Kingdoms Chair : There the Great Seal, there Richmond, Hertford sate. There MarsJuxll, Dorset, BristoWs temperate pate, But there sate Pembroke, 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 Wharton, Warwick, Brookes inspired zeal : Stroud, Hampden, H Haslerigge, 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, I 2 4 Rtimp Songs. Part I. 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 ? Biit if we fear the businesse will not bend As may be most conducing to our end : By some feigned 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 Conferrenc^, Which shall out-spin the leisure of the mom, Then we'le 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. Part I. Rump Songs. 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 our best in storming Seas ; Charles must not reign secure whilst reigns a Pytriy 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 your subtilly may in Cottons walk, Sit and allure Affections 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 Theame ; 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'le need no other lures To gain the People, and to make them yours. 6 Rump Songs. Part I. 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 bad 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, Roines greatest Earth-quakes, and this little trunck Make with your desperate Spirits deeply drunk, Up from your drousie umes, 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 firebrand chance to be, 'Twill be chief Crown and Glory unto him. To say he playd his Prancks like you and Pym. Part I. Rump So?igs. 7 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 mines 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 To adde one likeness more, that's hang like it. 8 Rump Songs. Part I. A Song. To the Tune of Blue Cappefor 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 stores of Money 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 ; Part I. Rump Songs. 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 / 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 a way t' enjoy, The mine 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. ro Rump Songs, Part I. 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. Part I. Rump Songs. 1 1 Have I so often past between Windsor and Westminster 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. J( 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 ? 12 Rump Songs. Part I. 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 deceived, 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. Part I. Rump Songs. 13 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^ (5^' 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, dr* 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, &>. To leave all Votes free by using of Force. That one make Petitions for Counties by course. To make Pym as great as his Mothers great Horse, Which William left Agnus, though his meaning was worse. The new Order, &>. To encourage good Souldiers by cashiering the Band, To hearten brave Spirits by expelling the Land, 14 Rump Songs. Part I. 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, &=. To send men 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 Rochets shall go down, And hey then up go we. Part I. Rump Songs. 15 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 bum their Copes, And pull down Churches too j 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. 1 6 Rump Songs. Part I. 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. Part I. Rump Songs. 17 Tfie 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'U 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. 2 i8 Rump Songs. Part I. Reform each University, And in them let no Learning be, A great Eye-sore ; From hence make Homes 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. Part I. Rump Songs. 19 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 ; SHx 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. 2 2 ao Rump Songs. Part I. 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 show 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 ; Wlien 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. Part I. Rump Songs. 21 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'U ask no more. When naught to me shall be deny'd, And you shall all in me confide, Good cause therefore I 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. 2 2 Rump Songs. Part I. To the five Principal Members of the Honour- able 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 Pyni, Stroude, Haslerig^ Hampden, and And we hope for our labour we shall not be shent, For this comes from Christendom, & not from Kmt; Though set form of Prayers be an Abomination, Set forms of Petitions find great Approbation : Therefore, 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 our 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 Poetical license, and alwayes did claim it. Part I. Rump Songs. 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 carmot 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 sfeek 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. 24 Rump Songs. Part I. 7^>^ 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 ^/^, 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 77'z/(f Members. The Members Five did then beget Most of the House of Peers, The /(? J?.A f-..'>f,_'>^f^A.f;-,A /;-.A iT./ft A,-^ ^^ A.^ ift ^ A O.rfiA A,-,J( wi>><:>: <0>.<3; Oi . <0>v<3'; '0;<3>- : ' ta>. G>.<2 On the Queens Departure. UP, up wronged Charls his friends, what can you be Thus Mantled In a stupid Lethargic, When all the world's in Arms ? and can there be Armies of P^ears abroad and none with thee ? Breath out your souls in sighs, melt into tears, And let your griefs be equal to your fears ; The Sphseres are all a jarring, and their jarres Seems counter-like to Calculate the Starres ; The Inferior Orbes aspire, and do disdaine ; 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 Sots 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 Anarchic ; Sedition, Murder, Rapine, and what's worse None to Implore for Aid ; Oh, hears the Curse, But stay ye Starres, what will ye wish to bee ? More Sunns then one will prove a Prodigie : 5-2 68 Rump Songs. Part I. To afright the Amazed World, will ye be-night That glorious Lamp, that Fountain of all light, AVill none but SoVs 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 Blachvall 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. Part I. Rtimp Songs. 69 Ask me no more, why Sti-a^ord'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 1 sing 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 Jin 117 This answer 1 in brief do sing. All things were thus whom Fjni was A' 70 Rump Songs. Part I. To my Lord B. of S. he being at York. My Lord, 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 Crorcms, and at the Miter fly. For still the Scepter and the Crosier staffe Together /a//, '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 cahn and quiet in your Brow, As our Distractioiu were your Exercise : And taught us, all assaults, all Llls 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 /(2r 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 Cochiey was made Christian. Part I. Rump Songs. 71 No not a Bodkin^ Pimase, 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 Ao-ds Joan took Harry. But now no City- Villain, though he were Free of a Ti-ade 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. ^December, 1640. Beheaded tlie 10. ^January, 1644. Most Rez'erend Martyr, Hou, since thy thick Afflictions first begun, Mak'st Diodesiatis dayes all Calmc, and Sun, T 72 Rump Songs. Part I. 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 weaVd their Lives into a four years Death, Few antient Tyratits do our Stories Taxe, That slew first by Delayes, then by the Axe, But these {Tiberius like) alone do cry, ^Tis to be Recoruird 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 Sha?fie 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 T>evil All, you fain would prove Good at a Distance, within some Remove, Part I. Rump Songs. 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 Siti 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 Waike Pilgrimage, No Coach nor Mtile, 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, and the storm without : Lost in their streights when Plots have vanquish! bin, And Sin perplext hath no Relief, but Sin. Agents and Instruments now on you fall. You must h^ 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 Heape ; Your Sins 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 Leiyed right, And d.Just value set upon each sight. 74 Rump Songs. Part I. At last they find the Dayes by their own Purse, Lesse known from him than what they doe disburse : But when it now strikes high for him \!appear, And Chapmen see the Bargain is gro\vn 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 Shines 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, vih^X. friendships 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 Me7i are i7iany, but the Christian, one. Trajan no Trajaii 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 ? Part I. Rump Songs. 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 xm.y perswade. Was he Apostate, who your CJmtnpion stood, Bath'd in his Inke before, as now in Blood? He that unwinds the subtle Jesuite, That Feels the Serpetits Teeth, and is not bit ? Unites the Snake finds each Mysterious knot. And turns the Poyson into A?itidot. Doth Nicety with Nicety undoe ? And makes the Labyri?ith 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 Innocaice, 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 Blond) from this his Book, Your Flame or Axe would lesse evince to Men, Your Block and Stake would prop lesse than his Pen ; Is he Apostate, whom the Baitcs 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 ? 76 Rump Songs. Part I. 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 Yiex 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 Pe?it; 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 mightst 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 mo7istrous breed : Then 'bove Pxtent thy Lustre would prevaile, And 'gainst Dimension Feature turn the Scale ; But now, like Pyrralis half adopted Birth. Where th' issue part was Woman, Part was Eat^h, Where Female some, and some to stone was Bent, And the otie half was t'others Monument, Thou must imperfect lye, and learn to Groan, Now for his Ruiiu, 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, Part I. Rump Songs. Jf 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 contrived 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 ATis have stood. As wise SetJCs Pillars sav'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 Chanclour seem'd to fail, and here Much honour due to the Artificer : But this our Prudent Patroti long fore-saw, When he Refin'd riide Statutes into Lata ; 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 Tozun. Yet neither Law nor Statute can be known So strickt, as to Himself he made his oivn. 78 Rump Songs. Part I. Which in his Actions Inventory lyes, Which Hell or can never scandalize : Where every Act his rigid eye surveyes, And Night is Barre ?ix\(\ Judge to all his Dayes; Where all his secret Thoughts he doth comprize, And every Dream summon'd to an Assize ; Where he Arraigns each Circumstance of care, Which 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 ox feel; If they reveal one Act which forth did come. When Humajie 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 Embabnd in Prayers, or droivn'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 Vnmixt and Fine, And Works do warrant Faith, as Ore the Mine : What 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, (Without which Witness ne're can make it so ;) A clear Transparent White, bedecks his mind. Where nought but Innocence can shelter find, Witnesse that Bi'cath which did your stain and blot Wipe freely out, (though HeavcJi I fear will not) Witnesse that Calnte and Quiet in His Breast, Prologue and Preface to his Place of Rest ; When with the World He could undaunted part, And see in Death not meagre Looks ; nor Dart : Part I. Rump Songs. 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 Jiere presented Of Porters, Butchers, Broojn-men, Tanmrs, Tfiatfain would fight under your Banners ; Weavers, Dyers, Tinkers, Coblers, And many other such like Joblers, As Water-men, and those calFd 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 We, for it is known, To do't, you will want more hands than your own. And since you are * necessitated to Raise war, 'ifaith (Sirrevence) do, do, do ; 'Tis fit that Old things should grow out of date, Like Hampden's Sister, or the Beldame Kate. * Their Declaration . 8o Ru7np So7igs. Part I. 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. Besides, 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 * 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 0th' Broom-mens Art, who nothing understand More than Keiit-stred ; 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. * Surplices. Part I. Rump Songs. 81 The Dyers they delight you know in Scarlet, And care no more for Blood, than any Varlet ; 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 slye 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 Oxcellendes : So taking leave, resting at your Commands, We do subscribe either Our Horns, or Hands. 82 Rump Songs. Part I. The Catttion. 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 edify her ; You, like the Devil, abhor a Crosse, But I'le have as good Reason from Pyms Stone-horse. Oh Roundheads, Roundheads, damnable Roundheads, What do you mean to do 1 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 ? Part I. Rtitnp Songs. 83 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 puU'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 behang'd himself, if he hang not you. Oh Roundheads, RoundJieads, 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. w Lilly contemn d. A SONG. Ply art thou sad ? Our Glasses flow Like little Rivers to the Mayne ; 62 84 Rump Songs. Part I. And ne're a man here has a Shrew, 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 Against \J^\t% predictions . And make us cotitemn our Fate and his Fictions. 'Tis this that setts the City Ruff; And lynes 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 heretofore 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 used 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 rie be the first that shall fight ye. Part I. Rump Songs. 85 Chor. He that stifly can stami tdt, and hath the best Braim ; Shall be sty I'd Son of Mars and God of the Mayne. A Monster to be seen at Westminster. 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 Uke 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 Fears, '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 bom in England, but begot Betwixt the English and the Scot. Though some are of Opinion rather That the Devil was its Father, And the City, which is worse, Was its Mother, and its Nurse. 86 Rump Songs. Part I. Some say (though perhaps in scorn) That it was a Cretan bom, 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. Part I. Rump Songs. 87 Did any here deny him satisfaction ? Faction. Tell me whereon this strength of Faction lyes ? On lyes. ^Vhat 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 ? Undone. 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 Shaft, or Molten, If the King you' I have down, and advance to the Crown Five Members and K - Regard no Proclamations, They're Subjects fit to Jest on, Henry Rising i, far better than C. R. Eesolv'd upon the Question. Come, come away, drc. 88 Rump Songs. Part I. 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, d^e. - 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. Part I. Rump Songs. 89 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^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, a^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, (S^c. TAe Prentices Petition to the Close Com- mittee. 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'l hav't establisht, and do hold it fit That no Lay-Levites ought to meddle with't. 90 Rump Songs. Part I. 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. Part I. Rump Songs. 91 Londons Farewell to the Parliament. F Are well 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 concem'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. 92 Rump Songs. Part I. He said (but first he had got a Rattle) That but one hundred fell in the Battle, Besides Dogs, Whores, and such Parliament With hey trolly, lolly, loe. (Cattle, Farewell Say and Scale, with hey, with hey, Farewell Say and Scale, with hoe. May these Valiant Sons of Anuncfi, 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. Part I. Rump Songs. 93 Farewell y^/;;? 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 Fym, with hey, with hey. Farewell John Fym 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. With hey trolly, lolly, loe. Farewell yb^ Pym with hey, with hey. Farewell y^-^w Pym with hoe, For all the feign'd disaster Of the Taylor and the Plaster, Thou shalt not be our Master, With 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. With hey trolly, lolly, loe. Farewell our Worthies all, with hey, with hey, Farewell our Worthies all with hoe. For they instead of dying. Maintain the truth by lying. And get victories by flying, With hey trolly, lolly, loe. 94 Rump Songs. Part I. 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 mine 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 2s. Passes, With hey trolly, lolly, loe. Farewell to Plate and Money, with hey, with hey, Farewell Plate and Money, \vith hoe, 'Tis going down by water. Or something near the matter. And a Publique Faith's going after. With hey trolly, lolly, loe. Part I. Rump Songs. 95 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 Routid-Iieads Old Nick stand up tuna. 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, 6^^. 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, 6^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, 6^r. Blow winds, Hoyse sailes, and let us be gone, But be sure we take all our Plunder along. That Charles may find little when as he doth come, For Round-heads Old Nick stand up now. 96 Rump Songs. Part I. Sir John Hotham's Alarm. COme Traytors, March on, to the Leader Sax John, Though King Charles his friends disafiect you, Do not obey him, but obey Devil Fym, And the ParUament 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 Fym in a Trayterous Action. But when the King sends, to require 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. Part I. Rump Songs. 97 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. M2>i>J)<^<3')<3' ><2> J<2i>.ifC>:5' /i<0 <>.*> ^^M^'M^ The Publique Faith. SOme tell of A/rick Monsters, which of old, Vain Superstition did for God-heads hold. How the yE^ptianSy who first knowledge spread, Ador'd their Apis with the white Bulls head \ Apis still fed with Serpents that do hiss, Hcunon, 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 : 7 98 Rump Songs. Part I. This is the Pub/itjuc 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 IdoU which our world adores, Has made men prostitute their truth like Whores, To its foul 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 Caletids, 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 hatii, 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 whet upon Bond, Nay scarcely upon ISIortgage of that Land, Treble your Moneys value, would not part With your lov'd Coinc, vanquish'd by th' powerful! nrt Of this Magician Publique Faith, justly install Him Master of your Bags, the Devil and all That taught you get them by dercitfull wares. And sucking in (like Mornings draughts) young Heirs ; Part I. Rump Songs. 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 ? Or 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 Faitlis do now ; Then, then you'll howle, when you shall clearly see That Publique Faith, was Publique IVeachcry : lOO Rump Songs. Part I. Then youHl confess your selves to 've been undone By Publique FaitJis man, Isaack Pennington ; Then you'll repent that ever you did fling Such monstrous Suras 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, Wbich 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) blind Of your fair reason, and obedient light, Involv'd in Mists of black Rebellious Niglit : If these Instructions will not make you see Your Errour, may you perish in't for me, Part I. Rump Songs. loi And to your Ruine walk in deathfuU path, That leads to'th Gallows with the Publique Faith. TJie Sertce of the House, or the Reason why- those Members who are tlie Remnant of the two Families of Parliament can7iot consent to Peace^ or an Accommodation. To the Tune of The New-England Psalm, \Huggle Duggle, ho ho Iio the Devil he latight aloud. COme come beloved Londoners^ fy fy you shame us- all, Ycmr rising up for Peace, will make the close Committee 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 /. a day, just when my Wife lyes in; They cry God blessc your Excellence, but if I loose my Place They'l call me Rebel, Popular Assc, and Cuckold to my face. I02 Rump Songs. Part I. You Citizen Fools, quoth W d' ye talk 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, says 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 Lofidoncrs deserve to loose their Fares, For now they'l all obey the King, like Citizen Cava- liers ; 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 Bcssc a Coat, 'Tis true the Town did feed me well, for which I took good Fleeces, But if Peace come thcy'lc tear mc and all my AVhorcs in pieces. Part I. Rump Songs. 103 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 E when his Excellence first began, For which he swore by a Potile of Sack to make me a Gentleman : But if the King get to Whitehall then all my hopes arc past, My Father was first Lord of the House, and I shall be the last, I04 Rump Songs. Part I. 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 /. besides some Spoons and Bowles, Nay, grant a Peace, and how shall I be Master of the RoUes ? Then spake 5. Members all at once 3 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 weele convey, our Trunks away, and then do what you will. My Venome swells, quoth H- that his Majesty full well knows, And I, quoth Havipdm, fetcht the Scots, from whence this Mischief flows. I am an Asse quoth Haskrigg, 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 tlieir Wives by night. Part I. Rump Songs. 105 Then Varie grew black ith' face, and swore there's none so deep as I, The Stafif 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 self ith' 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 Lmirence Whittaker, agreed to doe so too. But if you serve old Courtiers thus, they'lc do as much for you. This Peace, quoth Michael Oldsworih, 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. io6 Rump Songs. Part I. Who speaks of Peace quoth Ludlow, hath neither Sence nor Reason, For I ne'rc spoke ith' House but once, and then I spoke High Treason, Your meaning was as bad as mine, you must defend ray 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 Foiuder Tray tor. Oh Jove, quoth Sir John Hot/iam, is this a time to treat ? \Vhen 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 Cholmlcy, Sir John you speak most true, For I have sold, and morgagcd, most of my Land to you; My Brother would have serv'd the King, but was forbid to stay ; The King fore saw at Kcyntonjicld, Sir Harry would run awa)-. Part I. RiLMp Songs. 107 I went down, quoth Sir Ralph Staplelon, with Musquet, Pike and Drum, To fetch Sir Francis IVortky 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 con- founded, And Cavaliers will Cuckold me, as well as did the Roundhead. Quoth Svc John Wray, Mr. Speaker! I'le end this matter streit. For this which is my Ninth Speech, I'm 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 fare- well your Kniglit. A-vengeance, quoth Harry Martin then, I'le ha no Accommodation, For it was I, that bravely tore his Majesties Proclama- tion ; 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. io8 Riwtp Songs. Part I. You see beioi'ed Londoners, your Peace is out of season^ For which you have the seme of tJie House, and every Mem- bers reason : Oh do not stand for Peace then, for tritst me if you doe, Ecuh Coutity in the Kingdome will rise and doe soe too. Essex Petition to the Best of Princes. Sir, 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 Pri/ue, 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 E^ex ! Peo})le now grown old In Dis-obedience, who descrv'dly stand Like Calves, expecting Death from your Just hand. Part I. Rump Songs. 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 ijito 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 Thea'es 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 diaries his sake ; Be gracious to their County, let her know That she, a miserable Land, doth owe 1 1 o Rump Songs. Part I. Her sweet Redemption to their Congruous merit, And least thcy'lc 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 //////, and wee'll triumph in thee. The Cryer. OYes, if any Man or Woman, Of what degree soever, Lord, Kriight, Esquire, Gentleman, or Yeoman, Felt-maker, Buttori-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 forthwith repair to th' Cryer Of Westminster, where let Inm brinc^ Part I. Rump Songs. 1 1 1 The Mark of what he doth require, And he shall hear on't, if God hlessc the King. O Yes, if any Man or Woman, Of what degree soever, From the Marquis^ to the Yeoman, From the Strmcf-hat, to the Beaver, From the Land-lord, to the Dray-man, Whether the Clergy, or the Layman, Hath lost a IVar-horse-Annes, or Dragooncs, That were the Treasure of Buffooncs ; 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 Lj)yal Subjects both high and low, For RoiindJicads can pray for themselves we know ; ]Vhich 710 body can deny. The Devil take Pytn and all his Peers, (iod blesse Prince Rupert and his Cavaliers, For if they come hither Pym will stink with fears ; Which 110 body can deny. God blesse Rupert and Maurice withall, Tliat gave the Roundheads a great downfall. And knockt their Noddles 'gainst Worcester wall ; Which no body can deny. 112 Rump Sotigs, Part I. T^wn sleeves and Surplices must go down, For why, King Pym doth sway the Crown ; But all are Bishops that wears a Black Gown j lV7iich 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 Ilorners 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. Part I . Rump Songs. 1 1 3 To whom tt 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 Rifleihg, 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 lA}rds Anointed, and your King. 114 Rump Songs. Part I. By t)ie Author. That neither loves for Fashiofi nor for Fear, As far from Soundhead, 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 Parliament ; 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 you strive to strike Him, whom you should your Loyalty aiford, {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 Part I. Rump Songs. 1 1 5 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. Arraes 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 Halts, as th' Homes 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 ; Nor mis-led Essex, had not you been, nere 8 2 ii6 Rump Songs. Part I. Had acted on this Kwgdoms Theater So many Tragedies ; nor Warunck 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 1 That have Ador'd your City, when did They Your harmlesse Ancestors, strive to give away Their Wealth, and Duty from their Sovcreigne Lord, To make themselves Traytors upon Record ? ^Vhen 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. They did not then enamel' d Musquets carry To Train in Moor-fields, and in Finsbury : Part I. Rump Songs. 1 1 7 But did in Comely Archery exceli, Like honest grave Children of Adam Bell, And Climjne oth' Clough, now each of you will be More than a furious William Cloudeslee ; And trace the Streets with terror, as if Ven, With Fiilk 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 Heavmly 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 /// aspire, They'le sit and laugh (like Nero) at the Fire Themselves have inade ; unlesse your Heads be all Horns and no Flesh, you needs must see the Fall That threatens you, like Lightning : To eschew Which Ridne, 'twould be Wisedome to renue Your lost Allegiance, and Repentance bring, As z. fresh Victim, to appease your King ; For be assur'd, Who to the King's untrue. Must in their Nature needs he false to you. ii8 Rump Songs. Part I, 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 Refortnaiion with Phlebotomye ; Your Impious Firebrands, whom the very Tears Of Crowning 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 Afiother Age Taste of your salvage Piety, and ly The La7nb-less Martyrs of your Cruelty ; Whilst you lye softly emb'red, to encrease T\it flames of Christen dotfie, and cry jw Peace, Let Sampsons coupled Messengers convey Those Firebrands hence, and let them make their way To their own Houses, consume and devaste. Burn down tJieir Barnes] and lay their Graynards wastes Demolish all -svithin doors, and without, Make havock there, destroy both Branch and Hoot. Let all their Seri'ants flee ainazd; and cry, Fire, Fire, and let no helping hand be nigh ; Let their Wives live, but only live t' appear Tlwriies 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 ; Parti. Rump Songs. 119 Let all their Kindred wander up and down, Like Vagabonds be lasht, from Town, to Town : Let basenesse be Entituled on their Names, Too firm for all recoveries : O let S/iames, 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 Generatiofis 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 Parlia- ment 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 ; yet whose dark Religious Villanies, hates the least spark Of Justice or Obedience to the King ; I20 Rump Songs. Part I. To you, and none but you, true News I bring, 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 tliat 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 fought 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 Blake'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. Pyni : 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 Part I. Rump Songs. 121 The silly Multitude into the Noose, 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 Oi Drums and Trumpets ; one that may have sence And valour to excell my Excellence. The Peevish 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, devoutly 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 ovXd'Cci 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, from Jeering Cavalier, Has put upon us, in a Song, this Jeer, Rather than they should have the betters, That you and I were drawn and hang'd, 6- A * A--^* *^ - ^-^ A A,o- A /> AAA-O A- *-= A <> 4 o<2> c> <[> : <2>< <:>;<2> ' "O: <:>:<<:>" "O-O"! * -> tf'^tt^o'it v'lf vlf vif <,tf . 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 &>. 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