n Love's Crosses, 1
e treated in the manner of Hudibras. There was one of 1612 in which a crown was half covered by a broad-brimmed hat, with verses reflecting upon "the aspiring, factious Puritan," who presumed to "overlooke his king." There
of Scripture cited he turnes over the leaves of his Booke, more pleased with the motion of the leaves than the matter of the Text; For he folds downe the leaves though he finds not the p
rant preachers of the day were held up to opprobrium. Each of these "erronious, hereticall, and Mechannick spirits" was
mbridge make p
fordeth bett
ed Refor
figures in many later prints as "Barebones." There are also "Bulcher, a Chicken man;" "Henshaw, a
velvet bed, clad in royal robes, to Westminster Abbey, where a magnificent tomb rose over his remains-was still fresh in the recollection of the people of London when they saw the same body torn from its resting-place, and hung on Tyburn Hill from nine in the morning until six in the evening, and then cast into a deep pit. Thousands who saw his royal fu
s roague is also haunted with a Devill, and consumes away." There was the confession, too, of the hangman, who, being about to depart this life, declared that he had solemnly vowed not to perform his office upon the king, but had nevertheless dealt the fatal blow, trembling from head to foot. Thirty pounds had been his reward, which was paid him in half-crown pieces with
Arms against
mallet at a cask, from which a number of owls escape, most of which, as they take their flight, cry out, "King!" Richard protests that he knows nothing of this trade of cooper, for the more he hammers, the more the barrel breaks
at Shrove-tid
iod that produced them. Shrove-tide, in the calendar of Rome, is the Tuesday before Lent, a day on which many people gave themselves up to revelry and feasting, in anticipation of the forty days' fast. Shrove-tide accordingly is mounted on a fat ox, and his sword is sheathed in a pig and piece of meat, with capons and bottles of wine about his body. His flag, as w
me to mundif
es of this la
d monster (Shrove
ain'd the lat
weekes' glut
n weekes come to
I will turn to
l have some leas
s, playes, and all
o sorrow, and
es valiantly to t
, thou leane-j
r I no flesh u
ce of ayre and sm
llowship and fr
easts to fasts! w
pight, we are
ease the cookes!-th
royl'd with all
nner takes more
h, bak'd, roast, o
rs of 1660 were capable of achieving with pencil and pen. Nor can
James II. and
that makes the wolf h
ct credulity by such events as these, the scoundrel Titus Oates appeared, declaring that the dread calamities which had afflicted England, and others then imminent, were only parts of an awful Popish Plot, which aimed at the destruction of the king and the restoration of the Catholic religion. A short time after, 1678, Sir Edmundsbury Godfrey, the magistrate before whom Titus Oates made his deposition, was found dead in a field near London, the victim probably of some fanatic assassin of the Catholic party. The kingdom was thrown into an ecstasy of terror, from which, as before observe
der of Godfrey was seized by the Protestants of London to arrange a procession which was itself a striking caricature. A pictorial representation of the procession is manifestly impossible here, but we can copy the list of objects as given on a broadsheet issued a few days after the event. This device of a procession, borrowed from Catholic times, was continually employed to promulgate and emphasize Protestant ideas down to
e Silver Cross. VI. Four Carmelite Friers in White and Black Habits. VII. Four Grey Friars in their proper Habits. VIII. Six Jesuits with Bloody Daggers. IX. A Consort of Wind-musick, call'd the Waits. X. Four Popish Bishops in Purple and Lawn Sleeves, with Golden Crosses on their Breasts. XI. Four other Popish Bishops in their Pontificalibus, with Surplices, Rich Embroydered Copes, and Golden Miters on their Heads. XII. Six Cardinals in Scarlet Robes and Red Caps. XIII. The Popes Chief Physitian with Jesuites Powder in one hand, and a -- in the other. XIV. Two Priests in Surplices, with two Golden Crosses. Lastly, the Pope in a Lofty Glorious Pageant, representing a Chair of State, covered with Scarlet, the Chair richly embroydered, fringed, and bedeckt with Golden Balls and Crosses; at his feet a Cushion of State, two Boys in Surplices, with white Silk Banners and Red Crosses, and Bloody Daggers for Murdering Heritical Kings and Princes, painted on them,
, while a dialogue in verse was sung in parts by "one who represented the English Cardinal Howard, and
erve Great Ch
all ho
s all to ju
Amen!
eur into the impartial flames," while the people gave so prodigious a shout that it was heard "f
ith Ghosts." Coleman, Whitebread, and Harcourt, who figure among the ghosts, had been recently executed as "popish plotters." The picture shows the Pope in bed, to whom the devil conducts Coleman, and an angel leads the sp
OPE I
! am not I
t before my t
IN THE FORM
! Ned Coleman
ll, therefore I
AN'S
ause of my Co
t, for your Am
HOST, INTRO
Sr and be fo
me that happy
N A "ROM
who mercy cra
ds that ware hi
ST, WITH A SWORD
ed with perpe
apeares this d
, WITH A SWORD T
Ghost I wish a
ve our Pope of
ISH
and Shun thei
nt before it
DIN
lie with all t
will take u
ure are the ve
NC
ath! what disma
mbers, who in B
Apparitions
Angels; Damn'd
es Conclave mu
laining, thus a
ne to please
mnation for Th
urse Him all, b
s Sacrifice by
Bloody Vengeanc
, who Business
O
Balls Roul, and
t this sight my
now fall on me
, and prove m
rkness, from t
nd in Everla
; you Shades,
your Downfalls
my Ambition
on to this Im
rrors, Ah! my Po
nd? from whence?
rightful Form,
ainted, to my
EN
King's Command,
our Saint his
black Tartari
Absence as t
and the Horrid
him to Rob hi
O
rs, I'll no suc
LE
know your own D
ng be Plung'd i
ugh to see, tho,
ceiver of the
my Wretched F
push me on to
e for it on
end the Clouds,
t Heav'n cou'd y
t, got Torment
Earth I stand,
nscience, pale
rtals Pardon,
Everlastin
Saint I bear
ames, and much
O
Dismal, I can
ies, how I have
. GOD
rimson Stain, t
me, with Joys
Darkest Deed o
e Kingdoms, and
e the Skyes to
erse with Eve
ave to View thy
th thy Hell-bor
the Almighty
Glory from it
s my Swift-Wing'
ither by my
ow thy Sands w
read of Life is
n, Wash off th
Doom'd to Eve
GE
of Seraphic
nverse, and O
r'd the Great
od, to Snatch th
iour's Great Ex
ce, and leave H
eance shall the
O
seizes me, I
et more Appar
TEB
through the Gloo
Traytor, that m
unctions, Dire
hat were never
ues, Chains, Racks
es that Burn a
ons, Uglier
We Endure, no
ve Earth's Empir
O
osts, or I shall
COU
first You mus
hus Delude your
aven, and Vs to
You for't; ere
long into va
l, whilst We som
lter in an en
tty, justly th
O
and Bishops, ha
Candle fetch,
ate, by Fear I
SH
an? with speed from
DIN
got Him, doubtl
astly place no
SH
seize me, Fly,
engeance over-
broadsheets in the same style which appeared in London during the reign of Charles II. This specimen, however, suffices for any reader who is not making a special study of the period. To students and historians the colle
ent General Galas, who defe
rked, and gave rise to much discussion; High Church and Low Church renewed their endless contest; the Baptists became an important denomination; deism began to be the whispered, and became soon the vaunted faith of men of the world; even the voice of the Jew was occasionally heard, timidly asking for a small share o
s pomps and his vanities, his misfortunes and his mistresses, furnished subjects for hundreds of caricatures both in England and Holland. It was on a Dutch caricature of 1695 that the famous retort occurs of the Duc de Luxembourg to an exclamation of the Prince of Orange. The prince impatiently said, after a defeat, "Shall I, then, never be able to beat that hunchback?" Luxembourg replied to the person reporting this, "How does he know that my back is hunched? He has never seen it." Interspersed with political satires, we observe an increasi
minidel exhorting Friend
luntary guards that numbered from one thousand to four thousand mounted men, wearing the Tory badges of white knots edged with gold, and in their hats three leaves of gilt laurel. The picture of the Quaker meeting reflects upon the alliance alleged to have existed between the high Tories and the Quakers, both having an interest in the removal of disabilities, and hence making common cause. A curious relic
ictorial library," is a series of burlesque portraits, produced in Holland in 1686, of the twenty-four persons most guilty of procuring the revocation of the wise edict of Henry IV., which secured to French Protestants the right to practice their religion. The work was entitled "La Procession Monacale conduite par Louis XIV. pour la Conversion des Protestans de son Royaume." The king, accordingly, leads the way, his face a sun in a monk's cowl, in allusion to
t four in his stockings, but his shoe-maker put four inches of leather under his heels, and his wig-maker six inches of other people's hair upon his head, which gave him an imposing altitude. The beginning of his reign was prosperous enough to give some slight excuse for the most richly developed arrogance seen in the world since Xerxes lashed the Hellespont, but the last third of his reign was a col
d to Ladies than to the Pope. (Hol
ss. (Holland, 1686. After the
st in the battle of La Hogue, and offering rewards for their recovery. He figures as the Gallic cock flying before that wise victorious fox of England, William III., and as a pompous drummer leading his army, and attended by his ladies and courtiers. He is an old French Apollo driving the sun, in wig and spectacles. He is a tiger on trial before the other beasts for his cruel depredations. He is shorn and fooled by Maintenon; he is bridled by Queen Anne. He is shown drinking a goblet
Louis XIV.,
ter wit and blasting truth. The same hand wielded both the pen and the pencil, and it was the wonderful hand of Thackeray. "You see at once," he says, in explanation of the