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A20123 A new ballet of the straunge and most cruell whippes which the Spanyards had prepared to whippe and torment English men and women which were found and taken at the ouerthrow of certaine of the Spanish shippes in Iuly last past. 1588. To the tune of the valiant soldiour. Deloney, Thomas, 1543?-1600. 1588 (1588) STC 6558; ESTC S112606 1,612 1

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¶ A new Ballet of the straunge and most cruell Whippes which the Spanyards had prepared to whippe and torment English men and women which were found and taken at the ouerthrow of certaine of the Spanish Shippes in Iuly last past 1588. To the tune of the valiant Soldiour Whippes for the women Whippes for the men AL you that list to looke and see what profite comes from Spayne And what the Pope and Spanyards both prepared for our gayne Then turne your eyes and bend your eares and you shall heare and see What courteous minds what gentle harts they beare to thee and mee They say they seeke for Englands good and wish the people well They say they are such holie men all other they excell They bragge that they are Catholikes and Christes only Spouse And what so ere they take in hand the holie Pope allowes These holie men these sacred Saints and these that thinke no ill See how they fought against all right to murder spoyle and kill Our noble Queene and Countrie first they did prepare to spoyle To ruinate our liues and lands with trouble and turmoyle And not content by fire and sword to take our right away But to torment most cruelly our bodies night and day Although they ment with murdring hands our guiltlesse bloud to spill Before our deathes they did deuise to whip vs first their fill And for that purpose had preparde of whips such wondrouse store So straungely made that sure the like was neuer seene before For neuer was there Horse nor Mule nor dogge of currish kinde That euer had such whips deuisde by any sauadge minde One sorte of whips they had for men so smarting fierce and fell As like could neuer be deuisde by any deuill in hell The strings whereof with wyerie knots like rowels they did frame That euery stroke might teare the flesh they layd on with the same And pluckt the spreading sinewes from the hardned bloudie bone To pricke and pearce each tender veine within the bodie knowne And not to leaue one crooked ribbe on any side vnseene Nor yet to leaue a lumpe of flesh the head and foote betweene And for our seelie women eke their hearts with griefe to clogge They made such whips wherewith no man would seeme to strike a dogge So strengthned eke with brasen tagges and filde so rough and thin That they would force at euery lash the bloud abroad to spinne Although their bodies sweet and fayre their spoyle they ment to make And on them first their filthie lust and pleasure for to take Yet afterward such sower sauce they should be sure to finde That they shoulde curse each springing braunch that cometh of their kinde O Ladies fayre what spite were this your gentle hearts to kill To see these deuilish tyrants thus your childrens bloud to spill What griefe vnto the husband deere his louing wife to see Tormented so before his face with extreame villanie And thinke you not that they which had such dogged mindes to make Such instruments of tyrannie had not like hearts to take The greatest vengeance that they might vpon vs euery one Yes yes be sure for godlie feare and mercie they haue none Euen as in India once they did against those people there With cruell Curres in shamefull sorte the men both rent and teare And set the Ladies great with childe vpright against a tree And shoot thē through with pearcing darts such would their practise bee Did not the Romans in this land sometime like practise vse Against the Brittaines bolde in heart and wonderously abuse The valiant King whom they had caught before his Queene and wife And with most extreame tyrannie dispatcht him of his life The good Queene Voadicia and eke her daughters three Did they not first abuse them all by lust and lecherie And after stript them naked all and whipt them in such sorte That it would grieue each Christian heart to heare that iust reporte And if these ruffling mates of Rome did Princes thus torment Thinke you the Romish Spanyards now would not shewe their desent How did they late in Rome reioyce in Italie and Spayne What ringing and what Bonfires what Masses sung amaine What printed Bookes were sent about as filled their desire How England was by Spanyards wonne and London set on fire Be these the men that are so milde whom some so holie call The Lord defend our noble Queene and Countrie from them all FINIS T. D. Imprinted at London by Thomas Orwin and Thomas Gubbin and are to be solde in Pater-noster-row ouer against the blacke Rauen. 1588.