Close ×

Search EBBA

EBBA 32155

Huntington Library - Bridgewater
Ballad XSLT Template
THE
Salamanca Doctors Farewel.
OR,
TITUSS
Exaltation to the Pillory, upon his Conviction of PERJURY.
A BALLAD.
To the Tune of, Packingtons Pound.

I.
COme listen, ye Whigs, to my pitiful Moan,
All you that have Ears, when the Doctor has none;
In Sackcloth and Ashes lets sadly be jogging,
To behold our dear Saviour oth Nation a flogging.
The Tories to spight us,
As a Goblin to fright us,
With a damnd wooden Ruff will bedeck our Friend Titus:
Then mourn all to see this ungrateful Behaviour,
From these lewd Popish Tories to the dear Nation-Saviour.

II.
From three prostrate Kingdoms at once to adore me,
And no less than three Parliaments kneeling before me;
From hanging of Lords with a Word and a Frown,
And no more than an Oath to the shaking a Crown:
For all these brave Pranks,
Now to have no more thanks,
Than to look thro a Hole, thro two damnd oaken Planks.
Oh! mourn ye poor Whigs with sad Lamentation,
To see the hard Fate of the Saviour oth Nation.

III.
For ever farewel the true Protestant Famous
Old days of th Illustrious great Ignoramus;
Had the great Heads-man Bethel, that honest Ketch Royal,
But sate at the Helm still, the Rogues Ide defy all;
The kind Teckelite Crew,
To the Alcoran true,
Spight of Law, Oaths or Gospel, would save poor true Blue:
But the Tories are up, and no Quarter nor Favour,
To trusty old Titus, the great Nation-Saviour.

IV.
There once was a Time, Boys, when to the Worlds wonder,
I could kill with a Breath more than Jove with his Thunder;
But, oh! my great Narratives made but a Fable,
My Pilgrims and Armies confounded like Babel:
Oh theyve struck me quite dumb,
And to tickle my Bum,
Have my Oracles turnd all to a Tale of Tom Thumb.
Oh! weep all to see this ungrateful Behaviour,
In thus ridiculing the great Nation-Saviour.

V.
From Honour and Favour, and Joys, my full swing;
From 12 pound a week, and the World in a string;
Ah poor falling Titus! tis a cursed Debasement,
To be pelted with Eggs thro a lewd wooden Casement!
And oh muckle Tony,
To see thy old Crony,
With a Face all benointed with wild Locust Honey:
Twould make thy old TAPP weep with sad Lamentation,
For trusty old Titus, thy Saviour oth Nation.

VI.
See the Rabble all round me in Battel array,
Against my wood Castle their Batteries play;
With Turnep-Granadoes the Storm is begun,
All weapons more mortal than Pickerings screwd Gun:
Oh! my Torture begins
To punish my Sins,
For peeping thro Key-holes, to spy Dukes and Queens!
Which makes me to roar out with sad Lamentation,
For this tragical Blow to the Saviour oth Nation.

VII.
A curse on the day, when the Papists to run down,
I left buggering at Omers, to swear Plots at London;
And oh my dear Friends! tis a damnable hard case,
To think how theyll pepper my sanctifyd Carcass;
Were my Skin but as tough,
As my Conscience of Buff,
Let em pelt their Heart-bloods, Id hold out well enough[;]
But oh these sad Buffets of Mortification,
To maul the poor Hide of the Saviour oth Nation.

VIII.
Had the Parliament sate till theyd once more but put
Three Kingdoms into the Geneva old Cut,
With what Homage and Duty to Titus in Glory,
Had the worshipping Saints turnd their Bums up before me:
But oh the poor Stallion,
Alamode de Italian,
To be futred at last like an English Rascallion.
Oh mourn all ye Brethren of th Association,
To see this sad Fate of the Saviour oth Nation.

IX.
Coud I once but get loose from these troublesom Tackles,
A pocky stone Doublet, and plaguy steel Shackles,
Id leave the damnd Tories, and to do myself justice,
Id en go a mumping with my honest Friend Eustace.
Little Commyns and Oats,
In two Pilgrim Coats,
Wed truss our black Bills up, and all our old Plots;
Wed leave the base World all for their damnd rude Behavi-ours
To two such heroick true Protestant Saviours.

X.
But alack and a day! the worst is behind still,
Which makes me fetch Groans that woud en turn a Wind-mill
Were the Pillory all, I should never be vext,
But oh to my sorrow the Gallows comes next;
To my doleful sad Fate,
I find tho too late,
To this Collar of Wood comes a hempen Crevat;
Which makes me thus roar out with sad Lamentation,
To think how theyll truss up the Saviour oth Nation.


Printed for G.C. and sold by Randal Taylor near Stationers-Hall, 1685.

View Raw XML