The Roxburghe ballads . these upstart Gallants fall headlong down,I could wish they would view their own state, and Repent before tis too late,For fear lest a Gibbet will be their last fate, (fa la,) Or whipping about the Town. Clear White-Hallol Lobster and Goose, castRUMPS aud kidneys out of the House,Fetch in Charles from over the main, make wars with Dutch-men, peace with Spain,Then we shall have money and Trading again (fa la), And then we care not a Louse 662 The Traitors Downfall Citizens, look to your hits, I say : Let no Cobler preach nor pray! Tom Cablets gone the Lord knows whither,


The Roxburghe ballads . these upstart Gallants fall headlong down,I could wish they would view their own state, and Repent before tis too late,For fear lest a Gibbet will be their last fate, (fa la,) Or whipping about the Town. Clear White-Hallol Lobster and Goose, castRUMPS aud kidneys out of the House,Fetch in Charles from over the main, make wars with Dutch-men, peace with Spain,Then we shall have money and Trading again (fa la), And then we care not a Louse 662 The Traitors Downfall Citizens, look to your hits, I say : Let no Cobler preach nor pray! Tom Cablets gone the Lord knows whither, Lambert and he, I hope, are together ; Now fetch in the King, we shall have fair weather: fa la. Whip Coblers run away. Blind Hewson was not over kind, fa la, . . to run and leave his men behind,1 wish we could find him by the scent, theres neither Law nor Rump ParliamentShould save him from death to give us content. Good People pity the Blind / London, Printed for Francis Coles, in the Old Bailey. [Euings Colophon.]. Left-hand figure is the Cobler-Colonel, Would Hewson had both bis eyes !The wooden-legged cripple is Conscience : Seethe Plain-Dealing ballad on p. 810. A &n 3Extt ta the ISxtt example of mutability, How the Whirligig of Time brings about its Exit Tyrannus? revenges, is furnished by this popular reversal of *#* Guizots daughter, Madame de Witt, when editing her fathers Histoirede VAngleterre, translated by Moy Thomas, 1882, wrote thus on the ExitTyrannus; the subject of the ballad on p. 663:— It was on the eve of theday when the Parliament was at length to pronounce its own dissolution [lothMarch, 1G59]. In spite of all the agitations and manoeuvres of the Republicans,both civil and military, the House now expiring had erased from its registersthe oath of abjuration of Charles Stuart and the Monarchy. A working painter,accompanied by some soldiers, and carrying a ladder in his hand, approached awall in the city near the Royal Exchange, where eleven


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Keywords: ., bookauthorchappell, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookyear1879