CONTENTS OF PART XIII. "How come you here, you Interloper, say! The Present State of a Lost Ballad Addenda, for the present Part XIII. The Struggle for the Succession between the Duke of York The Oxford Parliament and the Monarchy The Ghost of the Old House of Commons to the New One Dialogue between the Ghosts of the Two Last Parliaments Westminster Ghost's Reply to Oxford's Parliament A Song by Matt. Taubman, "Now, now, the work's done " A Catch: "Oh! the Presbyterian Whigs Parliament removed from London to Oxford: a New Song Oxford in Mourning for the Loss of the Parliament. PAGE Fitz-Harris his Farewell to the World; or, A Traytor's Just Monmouth and the Perplexed Prince (i.e. Charles II.) On the Right of Succession: A Poem, 1679. A New Presbyterian Ballad. The Saints' Encouragement, 1643 An Excellent New Hymn, exciting the Mobile, etc., 1681 The Whig Intelligencer; or, Sir Samuel in the Pound Thrice Three Merry Boys are we Milk-M Year's Gift (lacking lost Second Part: compare p. xiv.) The Merry Boys of Europe. The Merry Boys of the Times (The Courtier's Health) Monmouth's Associates Lady Ogle's History (from Trowbesh MS.) Epitaph on Tom Thynne of Longleat Hall The Windsor Prophecy (by Jonathan Swift, 1711) PAGE 41 45 47 50 52 58 59 60 64 68 72 75 78 80 81 82 81 88 89 93 96 102 103 104 108 A Satyr to Julian, 1682 (from MS., first six, of twelve verses). 129 130 Health to the Duke: A Catch The Unfortunate Whigs: An Excellent New Song . The New-Market Song: by Tom D'Urfey. The Whigs' Disloyal Feast Prohibited, April, 1682. The [Dis-]Loyal Feast of 1682 Well-Wishes on the Duke of York's Return from Scotland. J. D.'s Iter Boreale; Tyburn in Mourning for Loss of a Saint. A Health to the Duke, and the King Postscript, fraudulently assigned to J. D. (Dryden) 137 143 144 145 146 148 151 153 154 Ibid. 159 The Norwich Loyal Litany. Content's a Treasure; or, The Jovial Loyalist Matt. Taubman's Song: On the Duke's Return from Shipwreck The Destruction of Care; or, Commendation of the Mug Libellous Satyrs and Coffee-House Politicians New Song: "Would you have at your Devotion." Litanies against St. Omer's and from Geneva 161 165 168 170 171 172 173 177 Ibid. 184 185 189 A Litany for St. Omer's, 1682 190 A Litany from Geneva: In Answer to that from St. Omer's 196 Shaftesbury's Farewell; or, The New Association Monmouth's Chances after Shaftesbury's Death London's Loyalty: By Tom D'Urfey London's Loss of Charter 220 221 222 224 225 231 237 241 243 244 247 248 Ibid. 66 A work which all admire, and well they may : For what insipid Sot can e'er write ill, When Waller, Lee, and Dryden guide the quill? Falkland and Elland, Henningham and Wharton, I wonder who the Devil dub'd 'em Wits: Strangers to Good, but bosom-friends to Ill: -Rochester's Ghost to Julian. THE Struggle for the Succession BETWEEN Dork and Monmouth. A THIRD GROUP OF ROXBURGHE BALLADS ON James, Duke of Monmouth. INCORPORATING, IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER, The Rye-House Plot, with its consequent Trials and Executions; The Overthrow of the Turks at Wienna, 1683; The Great Frost-Fair on the Thames, 1683-4; and the Death of Charles the Second, 1684-5. གིས་ན། FOLLOWED BY FINAL GROUP, ON The Western Ensurrection of 1685, with the Fight at Sedgemoor, and Death of Monmouth. Now first Collected, Annotated, and Reprinted for the Ballad Society, VOL. V. S |