Citt And Bumpkin (1680) Part 6

You’re reading novel Citt And Bumpkin (1680) Part 6 online at LightNovelFree.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit LightNovelFree.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy!

_Citt._ Why then let me tell thee _b.u.mpkin_, the _Mistery_ that I am about to disclose to thee, was _worth_ to our Predecessours not long since, no less then _Three Kingdoms_, and _a better penny_. But I'le seal your Lips up, before I stir one step further.

b.u.m. _Why look ye_ Citt, may this Drink never go thorough me, if ever blab one Syllable of any thing thou tell'st me as a Secret.

_Citt._ Hold, hold, _b.u.mkin_, and _may it never come up again if thou do'st_; for we'l have no s.h.i.+fting.

b.u.m. And may it never come up again neither if I do.

The strange agreement of Dissenters.



_Citt._ Well, I'm satisfy'd, and now give attention; thou seest how unanimously fierce all the several Parties of the _Protestant Dissenters_ are against the _Papists_. Whence comes this _Conjunction_, I prethee, of so many _separate Congregations_, that are many of them worse then _Papists, One_ to _Another_? There must be in it, either _Conscience_, or _Interest_: If it were _Conscience_, we should fall foul _One_ upon _Another_, and for matter of _Interest_; when the _Papists_ are _destroy'd_, we are but still where we were.

b.u.m. _This is a crotchet_, Citt, _that did not fall under my Night-Cap._

The scope of that Agreement.

_Citt._ Be enlighten'd then. It is not the Destruction of those that are _Really Papists_, that will do our Work; for there's nothing to be got by't. But it must be our business to make _those people_ pa.s.s for _Papists_, that are _not_ so, but only have _Places_ to Lose: such as we our selves, by the removal of them, may be the better for; and _This, b.u.mpkin_ must be _our Master-piece_.

b.u.m. _I had this very phansy my self_, Citt; _but it stuck betwixt my Teeth, and would not out._

_Citt._ You hear now in General, what is to be done; You must be next instructed in the Acts of _Raising_, _Cheris.h.i.+ng_, and _Fomenting_ such _Opinions_; in what Cases to _Improve_ them, and where to _apply_ them.

Who are Popishly affected in the first place.

b.u.m. _I'm perswaded my Masters Brother had this very thing in his Head, though he never made any words on't to me, He had got a List of all the considerable Offices and Employments in the Kingdom: And I remember he was us'd to say, that most of the respective_ Officers _were either_ Corrupt, _or_ Popishly affected. _If they were_ Publick Ministers; _either the_ Kings Councells _were_ betray'd, _or they put him upon Governing in an_ Arbitrary way, _and without_ Parliaments: _As for the_ Judges _there was either_ Bribery, Absolute Power, _or_ Oppression _laid to their Charge; and so all the rest were branded for_ Frauds, Imbezilments, _and the like, according to the Quality of their businesse: All the_ Governours _of_ Towns, Castles, _and_ Forts, _were_ Popishly Inclin'd; _and not to be Trusted. And then all_ Ecclesiasticall Officers, _whatsoever, within four or five, were half way at_ Rome _already._

_Citt._ This is well remembred, _b.u.mpkin_; Now 'tis worth a bodies while to make _these Blades_ pa.s.se for _Papists_, and _Traitors_, that leave _Good Offices_ behinde 'um. Nay, we must not suffer so much as any man, either of _Brains_, or _Fortune_ (that does not joyn with _Us_) to pa.s.se untainted.

b.u.m. _Thou say'st Right_, Citt; _for whosoever is not_ With _us, is_ Against _us._

_Citt._ Thou hast spoken patt to This point, _b.u.mpkin_, but yet thou begin'st at the wrong End; For you must first get the skill of _Raising_, and _Improving a Report_, before ye come to the _Fixing_ of it: For that's a Nicety not to be medled with, till we come to the taking out of the very Pins, and the Unhinging of the Government; So that the _First Clamour_ must be Level'd point-blank at some _Known_, and _Eminent Papists_.

b.u.m. _Well, but what shall we_ Charge 'um with?

_Citt._ Why, if we were Once at the bottom of _This Plot_ (which, upon my soul, _b.u.mpkin_, is a most hideous one) and wanted _matter_ for _Another_, I would charge them with a designe of betraying us to a _Foreign Enemy_.

b.u.m. _As how a_ Foreign Enemy _pre'thee?_

A Heavy Charge.

_Citt._ As Thus: I would charge 'um with holding an Intelligence with the Emperor of _Morocco_, for the Landing of _five and thirty thousand Light-horse men_ upon _Salisbury Plain_.

b.u.m. _Pre'thee_, Citt, _don't_ Romance.

Nothing Incredible.

_Citt._ Pre'thee do not _Balderno_, ye should say; Speak _Statutable English_, ye Fool you. Thou think'st perhaps that the people will not believe it: Observe but what I say to thee; let it but be put into the _Protestant Domestique_, that his _Imperiall Majesty_ is to hold up his hand at the _Kings Bench-barr_ for't, and let me be Dogs-meat if they do not swallow That too. Why pre'thee, _b.u.mkin_, we must make 'um believe stranger Things than This, or we shall never do our businesse. They must be made to believe that the _King_ intends to play the _Tyrant_; that all his _Counsellors_ are _Pensioners_ to the _French King_; that all his _Enemies_ are turn'd his _Friends_, o'th sodain, and all his _Friends_, his _Enemies_; That _Prelacy_ is _Anti-Christian_; all our _Clergy-men_, _Papists_, the _Liturgy_ the _Ma.s.se-Book_, and that the _Ten Commandments_ are to be read _backward_.

b.u.m. _Blesse me_, Citt, _what do I hear?_

Popish Ministers may have Orthodox Offices.

_Citt._ Come, come, Sirrah; y'are under an Oath; and This is the plain Truth on'. What is it to Thee and Me, I pre'thee, whether the _Great Ministers_ be _True_, or _False_; Or what _Religion_, the _Clergy_ are of, so long as their _Livings_ ye Rogue, are _Orthodox_, and their _Offices well-Affected_.

b.u.m. _This does Qualifie, I must confess. But you were saying, that the First Clamour should be levell'd at some_ Known _and_ Eminent Papists: _Now what comes after That, I beseech you?_

_Citt_. You may safely Mark all Their Friends then for _Popishly-Affected_; and so consequently on to all that _Love them_, and all that _They Love_. When this Opinion is once started, 'tis an Easy matter, by the help of _Invention_, and _Story_, to improve it; and by this means we shall come, in a short time to secure all the _Councils_ of the Nation to _our Party_, that are chosen by _Suffrage_. If you were read in History you would finde, that still _as the_ Papists _set the House on fire, the_ Non-conformists _took the Opportunity of rosting their own Eggs_.

Who are Popishly affected.

b.u.m. _Yes, yes, I understand ye. As for Example now,_ One _goes to the_ Lords _in the_ Tower, another (_as you were saying_) _drinks the_ Dukes Health, _a_ Third _prays for the_ Queen: _a_ Fourth _Phansies_ Two Plots; _a_ Fifth _refuses the_ Pet.i.tion, _a_ Sixth _speaks well of my_ Lord Chief Justice, _or calls the_ Protestant Domestick _a_ Libel. _All these now are_ Popishly-Affected.

_Citt._ Save your breath _b.u.mpkin_, and take all in one word: whosoever will not do as we would have him shall be _made_ so.

But now to the matter of _Invention_, and _Story_; I hate the over-hearing of Discourses, in Blinde Allyes, and such ordinary _Shams_: I'm rather for coming downright to the _Man_, and to the _Poynt_; after the way of the Protestant Domestique.

Matters of Moment.

b.u.m. _Ay, ay: There's your_ free Speaker. _Well_ Citt, the King wants such men about him. _But pre'thee hear me; Is it certain his Majesty has Lent the King of_ France Three Millions?

_Citt._ No, no; some Two and a half; or thereabouts.

b.u.m. _Why, if the King would but make a League now with the_ Swiss _to keep the_ Turk _off_, That way; _and another with the_ Protestants _in_ Hungary, _to keep off the_ French, _the whole world could never hurt us._

_Citt._ Nay that's true enough, but then the _Pole_ lies so d.a.m.nably betwixt _Us_ and the _Baltique_.

b.u.m. _I'de not value that a Half-penny, so long as we have the_ Waldenses _to Friend._

_Citt._ And then _New-England_ lies so conveniently for _Provisions_.

But what do you think of drawing _Nova Scotia_, and _Geneva_ into the _Alliance_?

b.u.m. _Ay, but there's no hope of that: so long at the King follows these Counsells._

_Citt._ Thou art a great Read man I perceive in the _Interests of States_.

b.u.m. _I have always had a phansy to_ Stows Survey _of_ London, _and those kinde of Books._

_Citt._ But Good _b.u.mpkin_, what's thy Opinion of the _Bishops Votes_, in Case of _Life and Death_?

b.u.m. _Ay, or in Cases of_ Heaven and h.e.l.l _either. Why as true as thou art a man_ Citt, _we have but_ three Protestant Bishops _in the Nation; and I am told they are warping too._

_Citt._ Prethee why should we look for any _Protestant Bishops_ in the _Kingdom_, when there's no _Protestant Episcopacy_ in the _World_? but for all this, we may yet live to see the _Rufling_ of their _Lawn sleeves_.

b.u.m. _Oh, now I think on't; dist thou ever reade the Story of_ Moses _and the_ Ten Tables?

_Citt._ The _Two Tables_ in the _Mount_ thou mean'st.

b.u.m. Gad _I think 'tis the_ Two Tables. _I read it in Print t'other day, in a very good Book, that as sure as thou art alive now,_ the Bishops in _Henry the 8th._ made the _Ten Commandments._

Citt And Bumpkin (1680) Part 6

You're reading novel Citt And Bumpkin (1680) Part 6 online at LightNovelFree.com. You can use the follow function to bookmark your favorite novel ( Only for registered users ). If you find any errors ( broken links, can't load photos, etc.. ), Please let us know so we can fix it as soon as possible. And when you start a conversation or debate about a certain topic with other people, please do not offend them just because you don't like their opinions.


Citt And Bumpkin (1680) Part 6 summary

You're reading Citt And Bumpkin (1680) Part 6. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: Roger L'Estrange and B. J. Rahn already has 567 views.

It's great if you read and follow any novel on our website. We promise you that we'll bring you the latest, hottest novel everyday and FREE.

LightNovelFree.com is a most smartest website for reading novel online, it can automatic resize images to fit your pc screen, even on your mobile. Experience now by using your smartphone and access to LightNovelFree.com