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A88225 A new bull-bayting: or, A match play'd at the Town-Bull of Ely: by twelve mungrills. Viz. [brace] 4 English 4 Irish 4 Scotch [brace] doggs, Iohn Lilburn, Richard Overton, Thomas Prince, and William Walwyn, to stave and nose. ; With his last will and testament, and several legacies bequeathed to the Iuncto, the Councel of State, and army. Lilburne, John, 1614?-1657. 1649 (1649) Wing L2146; ESTC R34538 10,500 19

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his Sonne to be more honest no sooner was he in the House of Commons but he was like Belzebubb amongst the inferior Devils and sent out his Agents and spies to work mischief he first got the Earl of Essex to be poysoned and wone Fairfax to be Head of his Faction till he had brought his Plots to perfection he hath taken the Oath of his Allegiance Supremacy the Solemn League and Covenant look'd up to Heaven call'd God to behold his Hypocrisie and the Angels to witness his perjury he hath broken all Oaths himself and caused others to do the like he caused the King to be seized on at Holmby where he made Protestations That what he did was for the good of the King and Country and that he would bring him to Westminster and Establish him in his Throne in Peace At Hampton-Court by his Jesuitical policy he juggled his Majesty into the Isle of Wight where he hired Rolf to Murder him which being discovered and finding his Plot like to faile and a Treaty to take effect with his Majesty at London and so his Majesty like to come into other mens power made him set all his Enginers of mischief a working took Counsel of Iack Bradshaw as arrant a Villain as himself one that when he was a boy run from his Father and followed a Pedlar to sell Laces and Points where he learnt to Can't creep in at windows and rob Hen-roosts returning home full fraught with Villany his father kept him at School and with a little Scholar ship and roguery together thought him a fit instrument to make a knavish Lawyer and sent him up to Grayes-Inne where he frequented on Sundayes Hollands Leaguer and in the week dayes Bloomsbury would Drum with his fists till he Carrowsed healths on his knees to him he afterwards murdered biting in too every Glass and slinging it to the Wals would familiarly let out his Blood to write Love Letters to his Whores his great Grand-Father lay with his own Daughter committed Incest got her with Child and then with advice of his Wife poysened her and was himself hang'd in Chains on a Heath in Cheshire and his Wife executed for consenting to the murder this precious Counsellor was hired and bribed by the Bull of Ely and brought in to assist them in the Confederacy Dorrislaw Aske and Cook who were all sworn to secrecy A Letter is directed from Cromwel to the General and another to the Iuncto for Iustice on some Capital Offenders whereof the King must be one a party sent to seize on him frustrate the Treaty and commit his Majesty close Prisoner to Hurst Castle the Army must advance to London seized on thirty Members of Parliament at one time and Secluded a hundred more set a Guard upon the Juncto put in and thrust out whom he list forced them to sit vote make Laws and give Judgement on whom he list called a Court of Mock-justice by his own Authority against the peoples will or advice and hired knaves to cry Iustice justice directly against the Law of God and his own former Oathes and Protestations took off the Kings head abolished Monarchy erected a Popular Government of himself his hired Servants and combined Creatures besides the infringment of the Fundamental Law of the Kingdom the just Rights of the Crown and Liberty and Propriety of the Subjects broken several Orders Ordinances Protestations Covenants and Oathes which he first thrust upon the people and forced them to take yet afterwards as his Designes ripened not only brook them himself but compelld hired and corrupted other knaves and Traytors to do the like and this he hath done in dispight of Gospel or Law first commanding or causing that to be done directly forbidden and not to do that was injoyned and commanded therein and so having usurped Gods Authority as well as the Kings hath establisht a Monstrous Government without head or tayle rule or President law or Reason and commanded all People under pain of high treason to acknowledge just and be subject unto it abolish the Kingly Office and proclaimed the undoubted Heir to the Crown with the Duke of York his Brother Traytors Prince This you have said Mr. Overton is true but your self at first held with his Wayes and stiled him Faithful Cromwel Overton I profess I did but he has by swerving from his first principles deceived me and thousands more and therefore I le have one course more at him hit or miss A Dogge a Dogge a Dogge a Kingdome for a good Dogge Hy day Whose Crop-ear'd Curr is this O he was bred up at Lincolns-Inne I know him of old they say his teeth be poyson by reason of an Asp that lies under his tongue Lilburn No matter so much the better let him slip Ha looe Crap A pox take him for a Curre he has him by the Genitals they 'l burn his mouth pull him off by the tayle and set him on fair Ha looe Crap for a second Course for thy Master Iack Presbyters credit Alas poor Crap he has him on his borns Save him for pitty Foh how he stinks Oh he has beshitt my fingers give me some of his Wasle Paper to wipe them the Popish Royal Favourite will do the deed Hang him this is a Cur and looks like one of Envies whelps t is pitty to save him pull off his Coller and set him going Overton Let him gore his gutts out hang him for a Cur he is not worth the saving Prince O save him for Mercies sake Pray Col. Lilburn stave him off for old acquaintance sake he hath had punishment enough by loosing his Eares and being marked for a Cur. Lilburn For your sake I le take him off Walwyn Try another this Crap is a Dogge that will bite the hand that feeds him give him two or three kicks and send him going Overton Here 's another grizly Cur of the same breed Set him on This Dogge was ty'de up in the Pulpit in Pauls when the Army came in he looks as if he were got between a Dog-Fox and a Spannel Bitch a Laodicean whelp neither hote nor cold he looks as if he were going rather to hanging then to a Match sure he hath lost his 400 l. per annum draw him forward Come along Good-Cole how he fawns as if he would suck Eggs this Tyke when he perceives you going will run at you as fierce as if he would eate you but stand but still and he Retires back run from him and he will follow you barking bawrling and snarling and perchance give you a bite behinde Lilburn On with him let him be what he will he bawles as if he were wondrous eager Overton Hang him hee 'l snarle against the Moon yet keep his bone they say he will run at Sheep le ts preserve him from hanging because he will give warning he first bawld at the Bishops to set us on Prince I that was because they had him up in the bawdy-Court and put him to
his Compurgators Walwyn He dares not so much as touch the Bulls-tayle hee 's good for nothing give him a crust and let him seek a Master you know not but a mangy Curre may in the end prove a good Dogge Lilburn Le ts set on another this is a lovely Dogge with a thin pair of Chaps another of Sir Iohn Presbyters breed better to hang then to keep how he drivels out Nonscence and Tautoligies sure he has wasted his Lungs in consuting a May-pole and entered into a dispute with the Maid-marrian in a Morrice-dance about the unlawfulness of that innocent pastime till the Hobby-horse confuted him with his tayle and retorted his rebuke with his heels Walwyn Stroke him and LOVE him methinks 't would make a pretty foysting-hound for an Aldenmans daughter he can turn after his tayle take a Tythe-pigge by the eare fawn on any body and bark when his Masters bids him stand up on his hind-leggs or do any thing Sir Iohn Presbyter will have him he was once in request with the Iuncto though now he be out of service Overton Do they not feed him he must do tricks or something for it do ye think they 'l keep a Dogge and bark themselves or maintain a Dogge that will bark against themselves that were the way to make the People mistrust them for Thieves he was counted a good house-Dogge when he came from Vxbridge but now he fawns not so much as formerly that makes him out of request and miss of their LOVE Lilburn Try another if they all prove such Curs no matter if they were all hangd they are fitter for a Wood-yard then a Bear-Garden Set on Poynze and see what he will do Prince He has slipt his Coller and run away we know not whether Overton Bring a Northren Trundle-tayle Are they of the same mettle Lilburn All Curs all Curs try them on and if a Dogge fastens I le eate him whole they 'l bark and bawle as the other but will b● hang'd before they 'l fasten Prince I have heard that your English Mastiffs have been the best mettle in the World and would beat all Countries Overton They are so good mettle that if it were possible they would pull God out of heaven and murder him as they have worried and killed their King and most of the true hearted Nobility of the Land they make no more to pull out the throats of their own Dammes or worry their own Litter then the Man in the Moon 's Dogge does to snap a Rebel by the shins or to lap Milk when he is a hungry they can find none else to fight with that can master them and that makes them to kill and devour one another Lilburn These Curs are not of the right breed then Overton No hang them these are but Mungerills that bawle to set on the rest to fight and that 's all they can do bark for the Cause the blessed work of Reformation the godly Army the self-denying Army the holy Army and pronounce Damnation on them that did not come out and fight for the Cause of the Lawrd though it was but to kill and rob one another and this was all the Cause and blessed reformation that the Cornelian Cathedral-Keeper prayed might be carried on in their Iunctoes hands so long as the Sun and Moon endured Lilburn A good Prayer I le promise you and deserves a 500 pounds per annum and some three or four hundred Acres of Deanes and Chapters Lands besides But did they not reward him Overton Yes with 400 pounds per annum and the Dean of Pauls his house besides the stones that he plundered out of the Walks enough to build himself a Pallace Prince No marvel that the people be so foolish as to bite one another when such bawling Curs set them on but I hope now they will learn the wisdom to agree together fear God and love their Prince and for these Changelings hang them up that England may no more be called The Kingdom of Blind men because they cannot discern a Head from a Nose but now I talk of Noses our Bull expects another Dogge Lilburn Put on another let loose all the Scotch-breed on him at once Overton He has so toss'd them lately that they dare not come neer him yet wee 'l try them Ha loo Trundle-tayles I tould you so not a Dogge will fasten only Archy has him by the Tayle Has kick'd out his teeth how he howles as if he mourn'd for the breach of their Covenant or to call in his dear Brethren for the rest of our Guds sure they have nere another King to sell have they Lilburn No he is too wise for them and will keep out of their Market-place trust a Scot and trust the Devil they were perfidious from the beginning it would not ask much labour to prove Noll a right Scot that the like Camelian can change his hew to what colour and shape he list in the Parliament-House he is a fawning Spannel in the Church the picture of a Saint In Counsel a deep dissembling Hypocrite in the Field a Caine in the Court a Iudas as barren of all charity as hell is of honesty as malitious as mischeif can make him his eares bigger then Midas a double face like Ianus one looking to the people the other after his own gain and profit picking the peoples purses whilst he stares them in the faces What is become think you of all the Contributions Subsidies Twentieth-Parts Loans Meale-money Excise Bishops-Lands Deans and Chapters-Lands Composition-Monies Sequestrations and now the Kings Navy Customs and Revenues Honors Manners Castles Houses Messuages Parks Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Royalties Priviledges Franchises and Immunities belonging to the late King the Dutchy of Lancaster all the Goods and Lands belonging to the Queen the Prince and Duke of York the Dukedom of Cornwal or Earldom of Chester besides what they have retained to themselves and yet not half enough a hundred thousand pound sent for more in his late Letter from Bristol and the Continuation of the Assessement of 90000 pounds per mensem notwithstanding Excise and all this before mentioned sure this Bull has a better stomack then Bell and the Dragon to devour all this and yet be hungry Set on all the Irish Pack on him at once if they will not do it wee 'l knock him down with our Clubbs Pronge and Staves Overton Sir William and Brown have fairly lost Jockey is Bull'd with an Urchin the Irish will be the death of them Ormond and Inchiquin have Dundalk and Dublin already which makes him paw with his Cloven hoffe as if he intended to fill the Boggs up with Gravil 40000 Irish are in a readiness to wait his landing he flyes to the Welch mountaines and wishes them to fall on him to bury his Infamy Prince This is the last Course shall speed him Ha looe Towzer he Noses again they have him with his heels upwards his Puddings come forth send for a Scrivener