Rump Songs

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Rump: or an Exact Collection of the Choycest Poems and Songs Relating to the Late Times. By the Most Eminent Wits, From Anno 1639 to Anno 1661 (1662)
4495163Rump: or an Exact Collection of the Choycest Poems and Songs Relating to the Late Times. By the Most Eminent Wits, From Anno 1639 to Anno 16611662
An Exact Collection of þe Choicest Poems & Songs, Relating to the Late times, & Continued by the most Eminent Witts, from Aº 1639 to 1661. Illustrations: "The Puritan" left; "Covenanter" right; top; bottom.

Rump:
Or an
Exact Collection
Of the Choycest
Poems
And
Songs
Relating to the
Late Times.


By the most Eminent Wits, from Anno 1639 to Anno 1661


London,
Printed for Henry Brome at the Gun in Ivy-lane, and Henry Marsh at the Princes Armes in Chancery-lane. 1662.

To the
Reader.

Thou hast here a Bundle of Rodds; not like those of the Roman Consulls, for these are signes of a No-Government. If thou read these Ballads (and not sing them) the poor Ballads are undone. They came not hither all from one Author; (thou wilt soon perceive the same hand held not the Pen) yet none but shew either Wit or Affection (and that’s better) or Both, which is best of all. The truth is, this Rump, and indeed the whole Carcase was so odious and bloody a Monster, that every man has a stone or rotten Egge to cast at it. Now if you ask who nam’d it Rump, know 'twas so stil’d in an honest Sheet of Paper (call’d The Bloody Rump) written before the Tryal of our late Soveraign of Glorious Memory: but the Word obtain’d not universal notice till it flew from the mouth of Major General Brown at a Publick Assembly in the daies of Richard Cromwell. You have many Songs here, which were never before in Print: We need not tell you whose they are; but we have not subjoyned any Authors Names; heretofore it was unsafe, and now the Gentlemen conceive it not so proper. ’Tis hoped they did His Majesty some Service, ’twas for that end they were scribbled. Now (thanks be to God) we have liv’d to that day, that there is no Cavalier, because there is nothing else, and ’tis wondrous happy to see how many are his Majesties Faithfull Subjects, who were ready to hang the Authors of these Ballads. But he that does not blot out all that’s past, and frankly embrace their New Allegiance, or remembers ought but what shall preserve Universal Peace and Charity, let him be Anathema; For he were a strange man that should now be unsatisfied, when those that writ against the King do now write for Him, and those who wrote for Him, need now write no more. Let Heaven now continue these Blessings on His Majesty, that no one Enemy live unreconciled, nor any false Friend be undiscovered, that so there be no strife, but who shall shew most Duty to so Excellent a King.

Farewell.

The Stationers to the Reader.

Gentlemen,

You are invited here to a Feast, and if Variety cloy you not, we are satisfied. It has been our Care to please you; and it is our Hope you will retribute an Acknowledgement. These are select Things, a work of Time, which for your sake we Publish, assuring you that your Welcome will Crown the Entertainment.

Farewell.

Yours,

H. B. H. M.

Contents (not listed in original)

This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

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