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Various

"Cavalier Songs and Ballads of England from 1642 to 1684"


But if not extremely poetical, they are extremely national, and
racy of the soil; and some of them are certain to live as long as
the language which produced them. For the convenience of reference
and consultation they have been arranged chronologically; beginning
with the discontents that inaugurated the reign of Charles I., and
following regularly to the final, though short-lived, triumph of
the Cavalier cause, in the accession of James II. After his ill-
omened advent to the throne, the Cavalier became the Jacobite. In
this collection no Jacobite songs, properly so called, are
included, it being the intention of the publishers to issue a
companion volume, of the Jacobite Ballads of England, from the
accession of James II. to the battle of Culloden, should the public
receive the present volume with sufficient favour to justify the
venture.
The Editor cannot, in justice to previous fellow-labourers, omit to
record his obligation to the interesting volume, with its learned
annotations, contributed by Mr Thomas Wright to the Percy Society;
or to another and equally valuable collection, edited by Mr J. O.
Halliwell.
December, 1862.

Ballad: When The King Enjoys His Own Again

This is perhaps the most popular of all the Cavalier songs - a
favour which it partly owes to the excellent melody with which it
is associated. The song, says Mr Chappell, is ascertained to be by
Martin Parker, by the following extract from the GOSSIPS' FEAST, or
Moral Tales, 1647.


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