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405—From Evenings Coffee, lac'd with long Argument, |
Of the Kings Power and Rights of Parliament, |
The I Deh'quium: | Or, | TheGrievancesof the Nation | Discovered |
In A Dream. |
[No tune.]
Finis. I
[No imprint. 1679-80.]
2 pp., 2 cols. each. Roman Letter.
A bitter satire against Shaftesbury and his following.
406^From Infallible Rome, once more I am come, |
With a budget of Catholick ware, |
Room for a Ballad, | Or, | A Ballad for Rome. | Being | A Continua¬
tion of the Catholick Ballad inviting to Popery ; | Upon the best
Grounds and Reasons, that could ever yet be produced. |
To an Excellent Tune, called, The Powder-plot. |
Finis. I
Printed for Benjamin Harris, at the Stationers Armes in Swithins-Alley near
the Royal Exchange. ) [1674.]
1 woodcut, 4 cols. R.L.
The author was Dr. Walter Pope, who wrote the " Catholic Ballad = Since Popery
of late is so much in Debate ".
B.S.^. Br. Mus. I^^li^^ Wood 11^
105 17,9 127
407—From sawing the Crown 'twixt Phanaticks and Fryars, |
From Whitehall Scaffolds and Smithfield Fires, |
. . . Libera nos Domine. |
The 1 Loyal Subjects | Littany. |
[No tune.]
London, Printed in the Year 1680. |
(nth Mky. Note in MS. on Luttrell copy.)
12 stanzas, 2 cols. R.L.
This and the following are sometimes found printed on one sheet, by B. Tooke, with
the 2nd title of " The Protestants Petition against Popery ".
B.S.-i-. Luttrell -i-. Luttrell -L.
206 214-5 132

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