. The Roxburghe ballads. evious March, 1681. 9 King Charles had conferred the government of Tangier on Colonel Sackvilleat beginning of November. We cannot here spare space to tell the story of mis-used Tangier with its destroyed forts: the Queens dowry. The brave Ossory,the Duke of Ormonds sou, was about to depart thither when he died. Wedisbelieve the story of Mulgrave having been intentionally consigned to a leakyvessel bound for Tangier in 1680 ; and he evidently disbelieved it himself. 10 Monmouth : by December he was at his house in Hedge Lane, back fromGloucestershire, where he had visi


. The Roxburghe ballads. evious March, 1681. 9 King Charles had conferred the government of Tangier on Colonel Sackvilleat beginning of November. We cannot here spare space to tell the story of mis-used Tangier with its destroyed forts: the Queens dowry. The brave Ossory,the Duke of Ormonds sou, was about to depart thither when he died. Wedisbelieve the story of Mulgrave having been intentionally consigned to a leakyvessel bound for Tangier in 1680 ; and he evidently disbelieved it himself. 10 Monmouth : by December he was at his house in Hedge Lane, back fromGloucestershire, where he had visited Sir Ealph Duttons in November. He hadspent the summer at Tunhridge. 11 The Fox, the Elf, and Achitophel, all refer to Shaftesbury. 12 A delicate hint that the operation would be voluntarily performed for him,con amove. May we neer want such a Friend, or a Halter to give him ! %* The woodcut of an early Printing-office, with adjacent type-foundry orstereotype cauldron, appropriately illustrates these abusive 189 mtantcs against ^t. SDmct^ anU ®enctm. Twenty from St. Omera all provd me perjurd, And fifty from Staffordshire made it as plain;Ireland dyd wrongfully to my Souls hazard, And all that I swore against dyed the same ;Besides, my own Evidence came in against me, Calld me Rogue, and Spiller of innocent blood :Yet still Ill deny all, to save those w advancd me, Whose party maintains me with gold, drink, and food. —Oatess Lamentation, and Vision, at the Kings Bench. L HE fraudulent Narratives of the sham Salamanca Doctor Titus Oates had familiarized the ears of the rabble with the nameof St. Omers, as the great Jesuit Seminary in which he had forawhile been allowed to reside, until his own infamous conduct madehis absence be enforced in a manner more summary than their frantic fears of a Popish Plot unsettled the minds ofthose who belonged to a better class of citizens than the debasedpopulace of Wapping, Shaftesburys ten thousand brisk Protes


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookidroxburghebal, bookyear1879