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EBBA 32559

Huntington Library - Miscellaneous
Ballad XSLT Template
A SPEECH
Made to His EXCELLENCY
The Lord General MONCK
And the COUNCIL of STATE,
At Fishmongers-Hall in LONDON.
The Thirteenth of April, 1660.
At which time they were Entertained by that Honorable COMPANY.
Written by Tho. Jordan.
After a SONG of difference betwixt the Lawyer, the Soldier, the Citizen and the Countrey-man.
The CHORUS being ended. Enter the Ghost of MASSIANELLO Fisher-man of NAPLES.

IS your Peace just? What Rock stands it upon?
Conscience and Law make the best Union.
If you gain Birthrights here by Bloud and Slaughter,
Though you sing now, youl howle for ever after:
Trust my Experience, one that can unfold
The strangest truest Tale that ere was told,
In my degree, few men shall overtake me,
I was as great as Wickedness could make me;
This heart, this habit, and this tongue to boot
Commanded Forty thousand Horse and Foot,
In three weeks time, My fortune grew so high
I could have matchd my Fishers Family
With the best Bloud in Naples: Right and Wrong,
And Life and Death attended on my Tongue,
Till (by a quick verticitie of Fate)
I find too soon what I repent too late;
And, though a Rebell in a righteous clothing,
My glow-worm glories glimmerd into nothing.

Thus fell that Fisher-man that had no fellow,
I am the Wandring Shade of Massianello;
Who, since I was into Perdition hurld,
Am come to preach this Doctrine to the world.

Rebels though backt with Power, and seeming Reason,
Time and Success, shall feel the fate of Treason.

But stay! what Pictures this hangs in my sight?
Tis valiant Walworth, the King-saving Knight:
That stabd Jack Straw: Had Walworth livd within
These four Months, where had Jack the Cobler been?
It was a bold brave deed, an act in Season,
Whilest he was on the Top-branch of his Treason.

He looketh up
to the Picture
of Sir William
Walworth (who
stabd Jack
Straw) that
hangeth over
the head of
my Lord Ge-
neral.

But from that Shaddow, dropping down My eye,
I see a Substance of like Loyalty.

To the Lord
General.

IF long renowned Walworth had the fate
To save a King, You have to save a State;
And, who knows what by Consequence? The Knight
By that brave Deed, gaind every man his Right:
And you, by this, may gain each Man his due,
Not onely Trusty Hearts, but Traitors too:
He drew bloud, you did not; tis all one sense,
Theres but a Straws breadth in the difference:
He savd the Town from being burnt, and You
Have rescued it from Fire and Plunder too:
He was this Companies good Benefactor,
And You have been their Liberties Protector;
For which, I heard them say, they would engage
Their States, and Blouds, and Lives against all rage
That shall oppose Your just Designes: And that
You are the welcomst Guest, ever came at
This Table; they say, All they can exhibit
Is not so much a Treatment as a Tribute:
They call you the First step to Englands Peace,
The True fore-runner of our Happiness:

A Parallel.

And, joynd with these great Councillors, You are
Our best Preservatives in Peace and War.
You have a Loyal Heart, a Lucky Hand,
Elected for the Cure of this Sick Land,
Who by Protectors and unjust Trustees,
Hath been Enslavd, and brought upon her Knees:

To the Coun-
cil of State.

We humbly pray this may be thought upon
Before the Kingdoms Treasure be quite gon:
And hope you will (though Envy look a squint)
When all is fit, Put a Just Steward int.

Spoken by WALTER YOUKONY.

CHORUS.
Then may your fame out-live all Story,
And prove a Monument of Glory;
Kings and Queens (as Tribute due)
On their knees shall pray for you,
Whilst all True hearts confess with Tongue and Pen,
A Loyal Subject is the best of Men.


LONDON, Printed by W. Godbid over against the Anchor Inn in Little Brittain. 1660.

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