IN A
Ballad on the New PLOT.
To the Tune of, Hey Boys up go We.
|  Ow, 
        now the Plot is all come out, That caus'd our Doubts and Fears, And all the Tribe that made the Rout, Both Commoners and Peers; The mighty Patrons of the Cauテ, 'Gain・ Pagan Popery, Who rais'd a Gibbet for our Foes, And hey Boys up go we. II. 
        With San「ify'd Religious Zeal 
         III. 
        A Holy Covenant we took, 
         IV. 
        Our Zealous Covenanting Saints, 
         V. 
        No longer may the Papiフs boaフ 
         VI. 
        How well did we contrive the Plot, 
         VII 
        Rumテy's Gold, and Rumbold 
        bold,  VIII. 
        Our City Ryots, Countrey 
        Routs,  | 
Printed by N. T. at the entrance into the Old-Spring-Garden, near charing-croピ,1683
  
|   
 
          The tune "Hey Boys up go We" (Simpson 
          B190) starts automatically if   
           
 
          Press play to start "Cuckolds all 
          a row" (Simpson B095). This was also a popular   | 
| To display these correctly, see the instructions on the main page, Restoration Print Culture.   | 
| This ballad, attributed to John Murcot, is a Tory satire on the foiled plans of a popular insurrection, known somewhat misleadingly as the 'Rye House Plot.' The plans were revealed in late June of 1683 and led to a vigorous prosecution -- and worse -- of the Whig conspirators (cf. "A True Narrative of the Bloody Murther of the Earl of Essex," new window). 
          The ballad was printed in London 
          during the second half of 1683. The original is at the Huntington Library; 
          a reproduction is available on microfilm in Early English Books, 
          1641-1700, 818: 7. Indexed as Wing M3085 and ESTC R16149.  
           
          In Edinburgh that same year was made 
          a second impression, now kept at the Bodleian Library.  
           | 
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