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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
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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pickle art thou in Alass poor Tarquin whither wilt thou go The State was put to far greater trouble and expences upon the hanging of Montrosse then some were pleased to bestow upon Tarquin's great Grandfather when they truss't him up upon a Pear Tree Young Tarquin intends to mount the Royal Galloway to run a race with the Scotch Hierarchy and out run Montross's and his Father's destiny and this if he do he may do well to call upon his Brother Iames at the I le of Iersey that they may learn to trayle a Pike and Rant away a Pension for the maintenance of the French In every line you will find We and Vs as if he had a Litter of Pigs besides Popes in his belly He confesseth the sins of his Fathers House a foul House indeed if he had reckoned up his Mothers House too The Thing called King The Scots King hath been in the Penitential Chair he hath acknowledged his Fathers sin and his own wickednesse and his Mothers Idolatry The Scots King is wholly passive led up and down by the Nose at their pleasure Charles Tarquin being already a Catholick swore he would turn Turk too but he would be revenged upon the English Iames Tarquin is to be a Cardinal and Rupert Tarquin is as good as the best in the Bunch having been a Thief in two Elements and a Runnagate in divers Countries all which being considered by our Brethren of London and others they have little considence in a Cause that admits of a combination with that wretched Family It is very possible young Tarquin may lick up again the late vomit of the sins of his Family Attempts have been made to make a purse to buy Gunpowder and Milk for the Baby of Scotland The young Proselite Their young King is in a Consumption I believe both of Purse and Reputation they say he spits blood but not so fast I suppose as he and his Father spilt it his Doctors tell him he cannot live three moneths and yet I fear he will out live both his Religion and Reputation We had Leisure to take notice of young Tarquins Declaration He will believe all these Evils to have occasioned through the blood spilt by his Father and himself the Idolatry of his Mother and the sins of his Fathers House that all his own miscarriages are excuseable by reason of his Education Age evil Council and Company Out of a desire to recover the Crown for which I will not give him a halfpenny he is content to passe an Act of Oblivion for all but such who had the courage to do justice upon his Father whom he himself hath acknowledged to be guilty of all the blood in the three Nations The rest concludes with an exhortation to Rebellion Given at our Court at Dumfermlin Aug. 16. 1650. Young Tarquin hath shewn the Kirk a fair pair of Heels Iames Tarquin is gone to Brussells and required of Iermin an account of 600 Pistols lent him by the Duke of Orleance for his Journey but Iermin had played away 60 of them A Crown he may have but not of Gold for some Princes have been Crowned with Brown Paper and some with Ivy. Iames Tarquin whom they call Duke of York the Lad c. His Father was justly put to death for his Acts of Tyranny The King of Scots having received his Crown design'd the Parliament to appoint a fast for his sins I saw the Duke of York accompanied with bad Tutors being part of the Fates of that Family The nominal Duke of York intends speedily for France being constrained thereunto against his will because upon Iermins perswasions to the Princesse his Sister that she would not countenance him in his disobedience to his Mother he is like to receive no farther supplies from her There will not ●ide with the Royall Party any persons of note that have but morall honesty in them The new Tyrant will be as absolute as was William the Conquerour Young Pharaoh's Chariot wheels drive not with that fury as was expected The young Pretender The onely way to be rid of Taxes and make the Nation happy is utterly to desert the common Enemy and cast off the Tyrannick Family with all the Curses that attend it The Scots have an Ishbosheth amongst them Heir of a Family of the very same complexion and condition against whom destruction hath been written in broad Characters by the special hand of Providence that no Party whatsoever that joyns with it doth prosper They have an Achan and an Isbosheth amongst them Tarquin the Second The Abominable Interest Malignants Cavaliers Papists yea and Irish Rebels are upon the Account of their Charles the Second When a Nation hath cast off the yoke of Tyranny or Kingship and newly obtained their Liberty it must look to have all those for Enemies that were Familiars and Retainers to the Tyrant The Scotch King came with his Covenant-Pretences and acted the mockery of Repentance with much Hypocritical Solemnity Though the Presbyterians laid not the Tyrant down upon the block yet they brought him to the Scaffold The Scots deprived him K. Charles the First of his Earthly Crown as he deserved The young Raven hath rookt the Kirk The Scots have taken a Snake into their bosome He was born to the old Corrupt Interest He suckt it in with his milk was nurst up with bloud and malignancy and had a share so far as he was capable in all the sins of his Family The Tyrant being beheaded The young Gentleman by his guardian the Scot is very active They will see what Tarquin can do for himself The cunning sleights and devices of the Scottish King That Heroick and most noble Act of Justice in Judging and Executing the late King The Scots pronounced and printed the late King a man of bloud one that had shed more bloud in his time than had been shed in the ten Christian persecutions Mary Iames his Mother massacred her own Husband by Poyson Gunpowder and Halter for the Love that Shee bare to a Fidler and another of her Adulterers by name Bothwell The wicked wayes of his Father the idolatry of his Mother and the bloud-guiltinesse of his Father's House Woe to that Bloudy House A Bloudy Generation He hath approved himself Heir apparent of that bloud and vengeance which belongs to his Father's house As for the Title of young Tarquin who now would fain be accounted Heir The Treason of the Father hath cut off the Son What a governour he is like to be who took in his Father's Principles with his Mother's Milk Who hath been bred up under the