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A57626 A rope for Pol, or, A hue and cry after Marchemont Nedham, the late surrulous news-writer being a collection of his horrid blasphemies and revilings against the king's majesty, his person, his cause, and his friends, published in his weekly Politicus. Nedham, Marchamont, 1620-1678. 1660 (1660) Wing R1928; ESTC R19527 33,291 50

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warrant he will teach his Brother more Wit then to venture his neck in two such cold Climates as England and Scotland Young Tarquin slunk away in a Fly-boat and Imbarqued like Poore-Iohn ships being sent to scour the Road of King-Fishers if the young Trout had been worth taking When the Kirk stroak's up the Boy's forehead and gives him her blessing which passeth all understanding He wept at Montross's death by the Water side like a young Crocodile upon the ba●ks of Nilus as all Kings use to do when they have worn out their Favourites Baby Charles of Scotland The Kirk longs much and is like to miscarry for a tri'd bit of young Tarquin They say young Tarquin is Landed among his gude people and must once more be Proclaimed King by the sound of Bagpipes that he may be sent after his beloved Cousin Montrosse There is not a Cavalier in England but sweares this it will come to and therefore they are mad if they stir from the Pipe and the Piss-Pot in hope of a Knighthood nor have they a mind to be led by the Nose or tied by the Tayles with those Foxes and Firebrands which frighted the Pope and the Prelates quite out of the Parish into the King's own Belly so that now she languisheth for a Cordial of new Insurrections in hope of a safe deliverance if the old Cavalry and Bumkins will be made Midwives or Monkies in the behalf of her Holinesse Cranford and Ienkins two principal Rabbies of the Leviticat Order brought a company of starcht'd faces along with them The Kirk is a Monster of a Scotch stomach whose keen appetite will know no difference between Presbyterian and Independant morsells The Thing of Scotland Landed among his beloved Beasts the Redshanks and the Highlanders Upon the Landing of Tarquin c. The young Gentleman came a shore without his Cousin Hamilton or Lauderdail and not so much as a frippery of the old Priesthood and Leiturgy Rather then Tarquin should be no King 't is but rubbing up an old Kettle or Warming-Pan and either may serve for a Scotch Coronation How Sweet the Air of a Commonwealth is beyond that of Monarchy Young Tarquin is a coming with a world of Majesty and Vermin and ther 's not a Royalist in England but dreams of an Office Sir Reverence to be at least Groom of the Stool Rabbi Ienkins what a Platter face full of impudence he presented before the Committee attended with his old gang of Luggs and Ruffs Young Tarquin creeps on still Farewell William Pryn too and farewell all ye wild Wittals of the nasty Faction An ill fate attends all that take part with the Baby of Scotland The young Lad. Young Tarquin One Rout make's Tarquin not worth a Pamphlet The Pride and Covetousnesse of a Pulpit Incendiary the Spleen and Melancholy of a Secluded Member the Purse of a City Elder and the Wit and Valour of a Presbyterian Lordling Iockie Charles His Baby Majesty The young man is full of hope and at Dundee he and the bonny Iockies are fellows at Football His pretty Majesty of Scotland the Lad behaves himself like an obedient Son of the Kirk he never moves but like a Puppet upon the Wire of the Covenant and ambles altogether after their interpretation they feed him just as the Priests did Bell and the Dragon they set meat before him but give him a Sermon of Temperance and eat up all themselves and then Catechise him with a Scotch Primmer for digestion His very Authority is all Apocrypha and the Kirk onely Canonical so that he dares not question a Tittle for fear of a whipping Iure Divine A fine Baby King for a Company of Scots to play withall The old projects that were left in Legacy by his Father There is no thriving for any whatsoever upon the same account of the Tarquins The poor Pill of Orange if things do not mend he will never be able to set an Excise upon the Provinces to buy Petticoats for his Wenches Upon the young Lad 's arrival at Dundee Ringing of Bells Shooting of Pottles and Quarts Those Canon and Demicanon of Royalty were freely discharged upon their Knees to the health of his Medlcy Majesty yet all will not avail to the health of the Baby If Iockie please to search his Pockets 't is ten to one but he will find Madam Kirk to be a Bull by an Vrchin with the Pope's Broad Seal and a dispensation for the Covenant Young Tarquin is grown sick upon his new Soveraignty This old Doctor Bishop Hall in my opinion next to William Prynne and the Mercurial Pamphleteer is one of the greatest Paper-wormes that ever crept into a Closet or Library His Clipt Majesty of Scotland The Thing called his Majesty Young Tarquin may have the luck to wipe the Nose of the Kirk's Holinesse The Idoll of Majesty The Thing called King That Puppet of their own making I dare promise will in the end if they do not look to him be their utter confusion Their great God Tarquin The young Lad begins to grow confident and hath thrown away the Kirk's Horn-Book The Kingly Kickshaw The great Lords and their Idol have a design of their own Sr. Iohn Culpepper Ambassadour Extraordinary from the Thing of Scotland that calleth it self King of great Britain The Earl of Derby intends to convert his Leaden Crown into Bullets as Queen Mall did her Jewels The young Lad of Scotland That Trifle called Charles the second and avowed the Roy Charles to be King of England and Scotland The Scotch Baby King of England Alass poor Thing he hath plaid his part long enough in this Tragedy so that now it is high time to quit the Stage since it is resolved above and below too that none of the Tarquins shall have any inheritance in England The two Birds here of the same nest shall be sent away beyond Sea The Broad Seal of young Tarquin The Diet Dwelling and Designs of young Tarquin the Plots of his great Lords c. His Baby Majesty Strip Tarquin out of all his Titles and pretty Trinkets of Majesty Iames Tarquin is not yet come from Iersey to Paris The Thing of Scotland Incheqnin the dapper Giant of the Iockies Interest The Drummes have been long beaten up in the Pulpit for young Tarquin Young Tarquins Majesty They promised the Baby a Bell a Bib and a Rattle What would you have a Royal Puppet to play withall Mother Mall made a Muster of the forlorn Fobs and Pockets of her Family The Plague Landed out of Ireland in the Western parts much about the same time with young Tarquin in England Alass poor Tarquin what a
for ore worn and disconsolate sinners They say in France a Monck is every jot as good as a Gentleman Vsher and she hath many of them As for Newcastle he is to Act a Comedy in hope of supplies from his Majesty of Denmark his Lordship is a good Poet and a few begging Rythms may doe much when the Dane is in his Cups of which he may chance to send a dozen or two to his Cousin Stewart The King of Scotland was alive at Hounslaer-Dike where after he had given his Chaplain a few pence and a Passe for their Episcopacy they were discharged for ever coming within the Borders of the more Holy Presbytery I am confident not one Elder of an hundred but had rather dye the death of a Wittol then of a Traytor The Presbytery cry out that Politicus is an Atheist because he tosses the Kirk like a Foot-ball and jerks their Hypocrisy O ye Publican Sectaries and Harlots come ye not neer them for these are the Congregation of Dathan and Abiram who stood upon Holy ground and are more holy then you if you list to believe them these are the little Levites that cannot abide you because your sacrilegious Troopers have carried away all the Provender of Reformation and tyed them up to the Manger Wo and alass for the glory of the Priesthood who since they have lost their Command must not look hereafter to go so merrily a wiving because they cannot promise their pretty Mistrisses to make them Queens of the Parish no more must they march like George-a-horseback upon their steeds to Westminster with their Hearts full of Pluralities and Tythes Their Souls swoln with pride their Heads with Faction beyond the Pomp of a Diocess and other appurtinances of their Iure Divino no longer shall they sit Cheek by Joule with the supreme Authority in the state of an Assembly to Catechise the Parliament and con over their most elaborate Confession with the more wondrous Directory which being once past the Press were worn out in Chappels of Ease though they cost us many thousands with their four shillings a day wages and more then three years patience ere the works were brought to perfection His Kingship of Scotland took his Journey from Breda to the Hague his Brother Orange providing him ships for a Convoy Because he durst not trust himself with the Schippers for fear he might have been put off with other small fish and sent in pickle to England therefore in regard these ships were but borrowed the young man went aboard and bad them strike sail for three Kingdomes when he can catch them Thrice they put to Sea and as oft were driven back so that the wind had like to have blown away the Shuttle cock of Monarchy Certainly the Chicken of this family are none of the Halcyon brood because never without a storm old Mary Queen of Scots never crossed the sea but in a storm her son King Iames scap't it because he never was so valiant as to venture or else he had raised a storm in his Breeches His son Charles went a wooing to Spain in a storm and so Returned c. and since the storm ever follows by land as well as by water I suppose it was wisely done of the Parliament to throw them all over board to save themselves and the Vessel But I hear he is blown back again by that pretended blast of Honour and Conscience that blasted his Father The Kirk are very Righteous even as Righteous as their elder Brethren the Pharisees ten of whose Righteousnesses would have hardly saved a Louse out of Gommorrha Judge you then whether the Kirk be not bravely inthroned in Scotland where she destines whom she pleaseth to death and causeth them to kiss the Scaffold and those whom she pleases to let live she makes to kiss her Breech or serve without Ceremony for a Foot-stool The bold Whore bolder then her sister Babylon would faine come hither a madding and set up her trade here in England The King is at a pause because he perceives without the help of Astrology that his head may be made the price of their peace and security he remembers who they were that hunted his great Grandmother like a Polcat and were suspected for hanging her Husband who they were likewise that Baited his Grandsire Jemmy and whipt him out of his Royalty also how they handled his Father and therefore he will look before he leaps having Cause to fear that the same Rods are laid in piss now by the Kirk and her Assembly When they send young Tarquin for a Token to his Friends in England This is like to be the last King that ever they shall be Masters of And if they be wise they will have their pennyworths out of him for all his Projects He hath play'd fast and loose with Them and Montrosse at the same time I mean the same Montrosse that was the Gallant Royalist whom they buried under the Gallows in pure love to his Majesty if he please to believe them This is Dad's own Son two faces under one hood being an Hereditary Posture Montrosse acted nothing but by his instigation and commission for which they hanged him in a most Presbyterian manner and yet at the same time the Kirk opens her bosome most lovingly to receive His Master as her son into her protection The Crime is the same in both but the guilt greater in him being the Author than in Montrosse the Actor wherefore I must here proclaim to all the world the partiality and hypocrisie of the Presbyterians that they should anathematize one Delinquent even to Hell and the Death and Burial of a Dog yet spare another more guilty then he and not only so but give him sugar-sops c. Ormond according to the common fate of all Lords is a thing that lives but by Courtesie As for the rest of the Runnagates the Curse of Cain pursues them beyond hopes of a Pardon All that begins with the name of Charles is unlucky and must down I cannot blame them more then their Brother Curres here in England The Duke of York is a good Boy to be doing abroad I say and not a Rambling after Charles now upon his Voyage to Whitehall for if he be catcht here he will be soundly whipt for running away from St. Iames's The young Lad of Scotland hath left Holland No Letters come yet upon what Coast young Tarquin is a Fishing Madam Kirk and a Baby King A Dainty Covenant with other rare knacks The Ministers or Scotch Trumpeters It is not known yet in what part of the World young Tarquin is landed The late Duke of York is turned Serving-man to his Cousin the King of France who hath bestowed a Cast office upon him being made Commander of his Scottish Ianizaries a warm place believe me and if it will hold I
wings of Popery and Prelacy one who hath been bedabbled in all the bloud of England Scotland and Ireland We have cause to cut off this accursed Line of Tyranny bloud and usurpation in this young Pretender That Tyrannical Line Charles the Father is gon to his own place and so is Charles the Son likewise he being in his own proper Nation Scotland The execution of Iustice is then most proper when an Offender appears incorrigible and by a setled obstinacy puts himself out of the capacity of mercy surely then now or never is the time that men may expect an administration of Iustice without respect of persons this being an Age that is able to take a full Prospect of such Delinquents through all the sacred Colours of Title and Function The time was when this Nation was wedded to the vanity of admiring Kings placing them in a lofty seat of impunity like Gods that were not bound to give men an Account of their Actions but had a Liberty to thunder at Pleasure and put the world into combustion so that there was no Love but Lust no Rule but the Princes will which so vassalized the Spirits of this great and mighty people that they were content to establish the highest piece of Injustice by such Maxims of Law as said The King can do no wrong as if whatsoever he did could not make him a Delinquent or Traytor nor was it Law onely but those antiquated Cheats of the Clergy too made it pass for Divinity so that the Common-wealth of England for almost 600. yeares hath been pinion'd like a Captive with that twofold Cord of the Law and the Gospel which the corrupt Professors have made use of after their own Inventions Yet notwithstanding that this glorious Idol of Royalty was elevated to such a Height over the Liberties of the Parliament and set upon the very Pinnacle of the Temple we have lived to see a noble generation of English hearts that have fetcht it down with a vengeance and cured the Land of that Idolatry by one of the most Heroick and exemplary Acts of Iustice that ever was done under the Sun Nothing farther speaking of transactions in Parliament and news a little before save that the Lord Chancellour Lowdon hath been found in bed with a Scotch Officers wife getting Privy-Counsellours so that without the mercy of the Kirk he must once more to the Stool of Repentance So great was the stupidity of Elder Times being ridden by the Clergy that in all our Chronicles we can hardly meet with a piece of Iustice done upon any of that Tribe till the time of Harry the VIII when Bishop Fisher was brought to the block as a Martyr for the Popes Supremacy and yet from Sodomy and private murder to publick Treason and Rebellion there is not any crime whereof they were not guilty and from the penalty whereof they were not guarded by impunity and exemption from secular power This having been so in time past may prompt us upon the consideration of the present Actions of many of our Ministers to believe that we may be still at the same passe that our forefathers were and that our new Clergy are still the same Idol onely a little disguised with a new dresse of Mummery they have taken a new Form but labour to hold up the old Grandeur and Punctilio's of Veneration onely here is the difference heretofore they got an outward power to controul the temporal Jurisdiction from which Plea being now non-suited in all civil Courts they now renew their sanctimonious pretences by tampering every where in the Court of Conscience but a Conscience well inform'd knows that with God there is no respect of persons and methinks in those dayes it ought to be so too among men yea it must be so since he that sate in the Royal Throne in the midst of his iniquity could not rest secure but being disrobed of all his sacred Titles laid him down upon the Block to shew all inferior Orders of men how vain it is to hope for impunity and that they must all expect to submit and bow before the Throne ofe Justice It is the old Cavaliers Interest speaking of his Majesties leaving Scotland and now coming into England that comes in new clad with a new Cloak of the Covenant after the Scottish fashion and it comes attended by the Scot the apostatizing Scot that will cide any way for a thriving voyage into England Let the Presbytery remember that though they laid not the old Tyrant down upon the Block yet the young one knows they were the men that brought him to the Scaffold and they are the old enemies of his Family in which respect he ever bore a mortal hatred to their whole faction and a little after and we will allow both Cavalier and Presbyter so much sense were their spleen never so high as not to embarque their heads and Estates in the bottom of a beaten rabble for the sake of a Toy call'd King who as he first sail'd into Scotland so now he is driven out again by pure necessity yet for fashion sake he pretends great matters and playing the second part of Perkin Warbeck who once invaded the North after the same manner with a crew of Scots at his heels and had every jot as good a Title as himself or as his Predecessour Henry the 7th and play'd the King with as good a Grace issuing out Proclamations and Declarations calling folks Rebels with as brazen à considence and tossing pardons about to no purpose till at length poor Perkin and his Scots were pack't out again with a vengeance as that Lowsy Nation ever hath been upon every offer of Invasion as may be seen in the Chronicles of both Countreys Let not the Presbyters flatter themselves upon a change that they shall scape any better than others because they never opposed this man's Person viz. his Majesty it would be ground sufficient for his hatred and the spleen of his Prelatick Clergy that they first bandied against his Father the Prerogative and Prelacy And let them consider before they feel it that revenge is reckoned inter Arcana Imperii a prime mystery in the Cabinet counsel of Royalty even the best of Kings could not refrain it as may be seen in the practise of David and Solomon Let them consider too how he hath rook't all their Party in Scotland Let the Cavalier and Compounders consider they will get nothing by this change they can be but Masters of what they have already the high Ranters and Fugitives are they that will be lookt on at Court those Belweathers of Tyranny will bear away the Bell of preferment while the poor Countrey Royalists both Gentry and Yeomen shall be glad to drudge and plow to pay those yet unknown Taxations which must needs be collected to satisfie the forlorn Brethren of the sword the Plunderers and hungry Scots that