Page:Songs compleat, pleasant and divertive (Wit and mirth or, Pills to purge melancholy).djvu/216

 And therefore my Song None o'th' Senate shall wrong, Nor I'll ruffle no Collars of Esses, But with Royal Anne, A renown'd happy Reign, And a hundred Year more than Queen Besses.

No Peers grown too great, Nor no Commons Wit Shall swell up my Lines to the Margent, Since the first at their Nod Have a swinging black Rod, And the last, a rough thing call'd a Serjeant.

No Statesman that rise By Publick Employs With Offence, here shall trouble the Reader, No takers of Bribes, Nor potent State Scribes Low as Shrubs, or as tall as a Cedar.

I'll not search into Ills Of Occasional Bills, Nor the Gain, or the Loss of the Nation, Nor scan the moot Case Of the Snake in the Grass, Late imagin'd in point of Succession.

Great Ladies at Court That make Profit their Sport, When lucky at Ombre or Bassett, Who in Benefits swim, So well I can trim, To wish much Good do her that has it.

Old Dames boasting youth Without e'er a tooth, And Beaus, that have Breaths that can Purge ye     In short, a meer Ape That's a Layman shall 'scape, But I wont part so fair with the Clergy.