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EBBA 30897

British Library - Roxburghe
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The Soldiers Fortune:
OR
The Taking of MARDIKE.

WHen first Mardike was made a Prey,
Twas Courage that carryd the Fort away;
Then do not lose your Valors Prize,
By gazing on your Mistress Eyes;
But put off your Petticoat-Parley;
Potting and sotting, & laughing and quaffing Canary,
Will make a good Soldier miscarry,
And never Travel for true Renown:
Then turn to your Martial Mistress,
Fair Minerva the Soldiers Sister is;
Rallying & sallying, with gashing & slashing of Wounds,
With turning and burning of Towns, Sir,
Is a high step to a great Mans Throne.

Let bold Bellonas Brewer frown,
And his Tun shall overflow the Town;
And give the Cobler Sword and Fate,
And a Tinker may trappan the State:
Such fortunate Foes as these be,
Turnd the Crown to a Cross at Naseby:
Father and Mother, and Sister & Brother confounded,
And many a good Family wounded
By a terrible turn of Fate.
He that can kill a Man, thunder and plunder the town, sir,
And pull his Enemies down, Sir,
In time may be an Officer great.

It is the Sword dos order all,
Makes Peasants rise, and Princes fall;
All Syllogisms in vain are spilt,
No Logick like a Basket-Hilt;
It handles em joynt by joynt Sir;
Quilling & drilling, and spilling and killing profoundly,
Untill the Disputers on Ground lye,
And have never a word to say:
Unless it be quarter, quarter, truth is confuted by a Carter,
By stripping & nipping, & ripping and quipping Evasions,
Doth Conquer a power of Perswasions,
Aristotle hath lost the Day.

The Musket bears so great a Force,
To Learning it has no remorse;
The Priest, the Lay-man, and the Lord,
Find no distinction from the Sword;
Tan-tarra, Tan-tarra, the Trumpet,
Has blown away Babylons Strumpet:
Now the Walls begin to crack,
The Counsellors are struck dumb too,
By the Parchment upon the Drum too;
Dub-a-dub, dub-a-dub, dub-a-dub, dub-a-dub, an Alarum,
Each Corporal now can outdare um,
Learned Littleton goes to rack.

Then since the Sword so bright doth shine,
Well leave our Wenches and our Wine,
And follow Mars where ere he runs,
And turn our Pots and Pipes to Guns:
The Bottles shall be Granadoes,
Well bounce about the Bravadoes,
By huffing and puffing, and snuffing and cuffing the French Boys,
Whose Brows has been dyd in a Trench Boys;
Well got Fame is a Warriers Wife,
The Drawer shall be the Drummer,
Well be Collonels all next Summer;
By hilting and tilting, and pointing and joynting like brave Boys,
We shall have Gold, or a Grave Boys,
And theres an end of a Soldiers Life.


FINIS.
Printed for P. Brooksby, at the Golden Ball in
Pye-Corner.

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