The king and kingdoms joyful day of triumph. Or, The kings most excellent majesties royal and triumphant coming to London, accompanied by the ever renowned, his excellenct the Lord General Monck ... To the tune of, The Scottish lady, or, Ill tide that cruel peace that gain'd a war on me. Wade, John, fl. 1660-1680. 1660 Approx. 5 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 1 1-bit group-IV TIFF page image. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2009-10 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). B06558 Wing W168A ESTC R186131 47012704 ocm 47012704 174671

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Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. B06558) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 174671) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English Books, 1641-1700 ; 2694:11) The king and kingdoms joyful day of triumph. Or, The kings most excellent majesties royal and triumphant coming to London, accompanied by the ever renowned, his excellenct the Lord General Monck ... To the tune of, The Scottish lady, or, Ill tide that cruel peace that gain'd a war on me. Wade, John, fl. 1660-1680. 1 sheet ([1] p.) : ill. Printed for John Andrews ..., London, : [1660] Contains 3 illustrations. Right half-sheet contains: The second part, to the same tune. Date of publication taken from Wing (2nd ed.) Reproduction of original in: University of Glasgow. Library.

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eng Charles -- II, -- King of England, 1630-1685 -- Poetry. Ballads, English -- 17th century. Broadsides -- England -- 17th century. 2008-02 Assigned for keying and markup 2008-07 Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2008-09 Sampled and proofread 2008-09 Text and markup reviewed and edited 2009-02 Batch review (QC) and XML conversion
The King and Kingdoms joyful Day of Triumph.

OR, The Kings moſt Excellent Majeſties Royal and Triumphant coming to London, accompanied by the ever Renowned, his Excellency the Lord General Monck, and an numerous company of his Royal Peers, Lords, Knights, Citizens, and Gentry, who conducted his Royal Majeſty in Honour and Triumph from Dover to London.

To the Tune of, The Scottiſh Lady, or, Ill tide that cruel peace that gain'd a War on one.

KIng Charles he now in Landed, to eaſe his Subjects moan; Thoſe that are faithful handed he takes them for his own: Oh he is our Royal Sovereign King, And is of the Royalleſt Off ſpring, Peace and plenty with him he'l bring, And will ſet us frée from all vexations, and great taxations, woe and miſery, And govern all theſe Nations with great tranquility. Lord General of fair England marcht forth to méet the King, To entertain him when he did Land, and to London him did bring; He is the worthy Man of Might That doth both King and Countrey right, In whom God and man taketh delight: For ſurely he well doth underſtand what he doth take in hand; and moſt diſcreetly He doth his warlike Troops commmand, renown'd to Poſterity. The Trumpets bravely ſounded, the Kings Return again. With joy their hearts abounded the King to entertain: Aloud they ſounded forth his praiſe, Englands Glory for to raiſe; For God is juſt in his wayes Aſſuredly: moſt hearts then were glad, no man ſeeming ſad, the braveſt day that ever came, We happy by our King are made, to his eternal fame, The Citizens of London with a moſt pompous Train, For evermore hath praiſe wone, his favour for to gain, Gallantly marched out of the Town To King Charles's Royal Renown, In peace to bring him to the Crown Richly attired: by the Lords perſwaſion after the richeſt faſhion greatly admired; The chiefeſt in this Nation, whoſe hearts with joy are fired.
The ſecond Part, to the ſame Tune.

THen many brave Noblemen All moſt gallant and brave, Marched out of the Town then; both valiant, wiſe, and grave, Counting it a moſt delightful thing For to honour Charles our Royal King, And to the Crown him in peace to bring: deſiring he now might be Crowned, and ſtill Renowned to poſterity, On whom fortune had frowned for his ſincerity. Many thouſands of Horſemen, then marched o're the Plain, For to defend King Charles then, and him to entertain: Their Horſes went prancing along, When they were the reſt among, And ſeem'd to dance amidſt the Throng So merrily; ſeeming to be glad, they that journey had: they ma cht on moſt, They were neither heavy nor ſad, but went delightfully. Their Riders richly tired in coſtly Cloth of Gold, Their journey ſo required, moſt rich for to behold: Oh it was the moſt glorious ſight, And did my heart ſo much delight, That I could not forbear but write. They were ſuch gallant Blades, and ſo richly dreſt, as cannot be expreſt, they were moſt bonny Lads, All malice they did d teſt, they were ſuch brave Comrades. Each Regiment from other known by their ſev'ral notes, As plainly it did appear, and was all in Buff-Coats: And in ſilken Scarfs all of gréen, With Hats and Feathers to be ſéen, Moſt rich as well I ween, Were theſe brave men: England did never ſée the like ever but may again They marched moſt courageous, the King to entertain And this doth theſe Lands rejoyce, and all that in them live, Even both with hearts and voice, and thanks to God do give, Which reſtored unto us our King, And Vſurpers down did fling: Freedom unto us to bring; We ſhall be frée from all Exilements and ill Revilements, we and our poſterity Shall have our full enjoyments, and happy dayes ſhall ſée. J. W.
FINIS.

London, Printed for John Andrews, at the White Lion near Pye-Corner.