Cavalier Songs and Ballads of England from 1642 to 1684 | Page 3

Charles Mackay (editor)
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The Cavalier Songs and Ballads of England from 1642 to 1684 Edited
by Charles Mackay

The Cavalier Songs and Ballads of England from 1642 to 1684

Contents:
When The King Enjoys His Own Again When The King Comes Home
In Peace Again I Love My King And Country Well The Commoners
The Royalist The New Courtier Upon The Cavaliers Departing Out Of
London A Mad World, My Masters The Man O' The Moon The
Tub-Preacher The New Litany The Old Protestant's Litany Vive Le
Roy The Cavalier A Caveat To The Roundheads Hey, Then, Up Go We
The Clean Contrary Way, Or, Colonel Venne's Encouragement To His
Soldiers The Cameronian Cat The Royal Feast Upon His Majesty's
Coming To Holmby I Thank You Twice The Cities Loyaltie To The
King The Lawyers' Lamentation For The Loss Of Charing-Cross The
Downfal Of Charing-Cross The Long Parliament The Puritan The
Roundhead Prattle Your Pleasure Under The Rose The Dominion Of
The Sword The State's New Coin The Anarchie, Or The Blest

Reformation Since 1640 A Coffin For King Charles, A Crown For
Cromwell, And A Pit For The People A Short Litany For The Year
1649 The Sale Of Rebellion's House-Hold Stuff The Cavalier's
Farewell To His Mistress, Being Called To The Warrs The Last News
From France Song To The Figure Two The Reformation Upon The
General Pardon Passed By The Rump An Old Song On Oliver's Court
The Parliament Routed, Or Here's A House To Be Let A Christmas
Song When The Rump Was First Dissolved A Free Parliament Litany
The Mock Song As Close As A Goose The Prisoners The Protecting
Brewer The Arraignment Of The Devil For Stealing Away President
Bradshaw A New Ballad To An Old Tune, - Tom Of Bedlam Saint
George And The Dragon, Anglice Mercurius Poeticus The Second Part
Of St George For England A New-Year's Gift For The Rump A Proper
New Ballad On The Old Parliament; Or, The Second Part Of Knave
Out Of Doors The Tale Of The Cobbler And The Vicar Of Bray The
Geneva Ballad The Devil's Progress On Earth, Or Huggle Duggle A
Bottle Definition Of That Fallen Angel, Called A Whig The
Desponding Whig Phanatick Zeal, Or A Looking-glass For The Whigs
A New Game At Cards: Or, Win At First And Lose At Last The
Cavaleers Litany The Cavalier's Complaint An Echo To The Cavalier's
Complaint A Relation The Glory Of These Nations The Noble Progress
On The King's Return The Brave Barbary A Catch The Turn-Coat The
Claret Drinker's Song The Loyal Subjects' Hearty Wishes To King
Charles II. King Charles The Second's Restoration, 29th May. The
Jubilee, Or The Coronation Day The King Enjoys His Own Again A
Country Song, Intituled The Restoration Here's A Health Unto His
Majesty The Whigs Drowned In An Honest Tory Health The Cavalier
The Lamentation Of A Bad Market, Or The Disbanded Souldier The
Courtier's Health; Or, The Merry Boys Of The Times The Loyal Tories'
Delight; Or A Pill For Fanaticks The Royal Admiral The Unfortunate
Whigs The Downfall Of The Good Old Cause Old Jemmy The Cloak's
Knavery The Time-Server, Or A Medley The Soldier's Delight The
Loyal Soldier The Polititian A New Droll The Royalist The Royalist's
Resolve Loyalty Turned Up Trump, Or The Danger Over The
Loyalist's Encouragement The Trouper On The Times, Or The Good
Subject's Wish The Jovialists' Coronation The Loyal Prisoner Canary's
Coronation The Mournful Subjects "Memento Mori" Accession Of

James II On The Most High And Mighty Monarch King James In A
Summer's Day

INTRODUCTION.

The Cavalier Ballads of England, like the Jacobite Ballads of England
and Scotland at a later period, are mines of wealth for the student of the
history and social manners of our ancestors. The rude but often
beautiful political lyrics of the early days of the Stuarts were far more
interesting and important to the people who heard or repeated them,
than any similar compositions can be in our time. When the
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