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                <text>English Execution Ballads</text>
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            <text>&lt;a href="https://omeka.cloud.unimelb.edu.au/execution-ballads/items/show/1173"&gt;The Rich Merchant Man&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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        <description>Transcription of ballad lyrics</description>
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            <text>The Arrainement condemnation and execution of the grand [cutpurse]&#13;
John Selman who was executed at White-hall uppon Twesday the seventh of&#13;
Jaunary. 1612  To the tune of a rich Marchant man.&#13;
&#13;
HOw happy is that man.&#13;
that in his b[r]east doth beare:&#13;
A [...]st heart and in his heart,						     a perfect godly feare.&#13;
A man so blest I say,								     can no discomfort have,&#13;
He shall not ta[s]t a shamefull death,&#13;
to fi[l]l a [t]im[e]less[e] grave.&#13;
Could I of this before.								     have well and wisely thought:&#13;
I would not have imbracd the course				     this wamefull death hath brought.&#13;
But all my mind was then,							     on ydle wicked waies.&#13;
To shift to gull, to cog and cheate,					     and so I spent my dayes.&#13;
A multitude of thoughts,							     as black as hell it selfe,&#13;
The Divell put into my heart,						     to compasse worldly pelfe.&#13;
And many waies I used,&#13;
both wicked base and foule,&#13;
[S]till mindfull of my body still,						     unmindfull of my soule.&#13;
In silke and velvets faire,&#13;
I sometime us'd to goe:&#13;
As I had used the Marchants trade,					     forsuch I was in shew.&#13;
And at the worst I went,							     like one of good degree,&#13;
And often used to change my sutes.					     as needfull I should see.&#13;
So still I leap'd untouch't,							     till this presumptuous crime,&#13;
This mounting sinne for that reveng					     up to the Heavens did clime,&#13;
Upon the blessed day,								     we celebrate the birth,&#13;
O'th deere Redeemer of us all.						     with joy and Godlymirth:&#13;
Within the house of God,							     and at the sacred houre,&#13;
O'th blest commanion I was touched,				     with Sathans damning power,&#13;
In presence of the King,							     Whose majesty might make,&#13;
A[w]fil intending wre[t]ch like me,					     to staggar faint and quake.&#13;
This mischiefe vile I did,						     &#13;
I pickt a pocket there,&#13;
Nor sacred person time nor place,					     could make me faintly feare,&#13;
When all were at their prayers,						     and exercise divine,&#13;
I pryed about to get my prey,						     this divelish prey of mine,&#13;
With hands and eyes to heaven,&#13;
all did in reverence stand:&#13;
While I in mischife used mine eye,					     and my accursed hand,&#13;
Now was my mischiefe ripe.						     my villanyes full growne,&#13;
And now the God in secret knew it.					     did make it open knowne.&#13;
I could not shift it heere,							     n[y]r no denyall stond:&#13;
For all hhe purse was newly tooke,					     twas taken in my hand,&#13;
And heere I stand to pay,						    &#13;
the price of that offence,&#13;
God grant no christian after me,					     may such an act commence.&#13;
I pray my fault may s[...]							     [e]xample to you all&#13;
Tha[t] [t]housand soules [...]						     that thus hath mad[e]&#13;
So praying all may pr[...]						     &#13;
for mercy to my God&#13;
I yeeld to death and pa[...]						     indure this heavy t[...]													     &#13;
The names of his [...]							Commision[...]&#13;
William Lord Kno[...]&#13;
mas Vavasor, Sir F[...]&#13;
Sir Arthur Gorge, [...]&#13;
nister, and others o[...]&#13;
Cloth. Sir Edmund [...]&#13;
Robert Leighe &amp; M[...]&#13;
Gerrard.&#13;
The names of the gran[...]&#13;
William Lancaster, E[...]&#13;
John Bull, Gentlema[n]&#13;
William Yates Yeo[man]&#13;
Rebert Powlstone Ye[oman]&#13;
Anthony Barklet, Yeo[man]&#13;
George Cordall, Yeo[man]&#13;
William Carter, Yeo[man]&#13;
John Browne, Yeoma[n]&#13;
John wonnam, Yeom[an]&#13;
Edward Blacgrave, [...]&#13;
Edward Beake, Yeom[an]&#13;
Richard Langley, Yeo[man]&#13;
Thomas Gawen, Yeo[man]&#13;
Richard Gregory, Yeo[man]&#13;
Roger Terry, Yeoman&#13;
Edward Kiffin, Yeoma[n]&#13;
John Whitlocke, Yeo[man]&#13;
Richard Dyar, Yeoma[n]&#13;
FINIS&#13;
Quoth Henry S[mith]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The Captaine Cut-purse.&#13;
A new Ballad shewing the most notorious abuse of life of John Selman,&#13;
who for cutting a purse in the Kings Chapell at White Hall on Christ-&#13;
mas day was executed neere Charing crosse.  To a new tune.&#13;
&#13;
THat men may feare the Acts,						     opugnant are to truth:&#13;
I will anothamize the course,						     of lusty Selmans youth.&#13;
His courses lewd and naught,						     the certaine path of death:&#13;
As in himselfe you well may see,					     who for them lost his breath.&#13;
All labor he cast off,     &#13;
and all religious awe:&#13;
To ireligious actions bent,							     making his will [...] law:&#13;
All company he us'd.							     &#13;
that was prophane and nought,&#13;
And with them all the Arts of sinne,				&#13;
he practized and wrought.&#13;
With drunkerds hee'd carowse,						     the wicked healths they use,&#13;
And so, (his understanding drown'd)					     would friend and foe abuse.&#13;
As drunkerds use to doe,							     the act is too too bad:&#13;
There is smal difference twixt a man				     thats drunke and one thats mad.&#13;
For both's but want of sence,						     which both a like do lacke:&#13;
And Godly unverstanding lost,						     the soule must needs to wracke.&#13;
To this the killing sinne,							     of lust he would annex:&#13;
And with a boyling blood pursue,					     the sinne o'th female sex.&#13;
Counting their hell is heaven,						     dallying with their imbrace:&#13;
Inchanted with his harlots lippe,					     dyed locke and painted face.&#13;
with them hee'd revell rout,						     the houres of day and night:&#13;
Counting their pleasures all his jo[y]				     their sport his best delight,&#13;
And thus will he consume,&#13;
the substance that his friends:&#13;
Had to him given to be imployed,					     to good and thrifty ends.&#13;
His stocke on strumpets vile,						     thus wasted and decaide:&#13;
To keepe the flush of pleasure still:					     he fell tot'h cheaters trade.&#13;
Sometimes with trickes at cards,					     sometime with cogging Dye:&#13;
That he of purpose would prepare,					     to runne too low or hie.&#13;
If all his wifts and trickes,							     would not prevaile to winne:&#13;
Why there to this hee'd adde a worse				     and more presumptuous sinne.&#13;
Hee'd get it out by oathes,							     sweare and forsweare apace:&#13;
Without all feare of heaven or hell,					     or any thought of grace.&#13;
Thus doth one sinne (like waves)					     runne on anothers necke:&#13;
Unlesse (by grace) we can at first,					     our sinfull nature checke.&#13;
And yet he stayed not heere,						     but prog[rest to] his sinnes:&#13;
To fellony [in] [bases]t kind,						     anothers [right to] winne.&#13;
In change of [gallant] suites,						     with all the t[...]s belongs:&#13;
Unto the cunning cutpurse craft,					     hee'd follow crowds and throngs.&#13;
There sometime cut a purse,						     sometime a pocket picke:&#13;
In doing both he was a man,						     knowne very apt and quicke.&#13;
All cheaters cutpurses,								     and pickpurses he knew:&#13;
And was as some report of him,						     the Captaine of that crew:&#13;
But for this sinne on earth,							     he payed the bitter price:&#13;
God grant by his example all,						     may learne to fly his vice.&#13;
FINIS.&#13;
Henry Smith.</text>
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        <description>Language ballad is printed in</description>
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            <text>English</text>
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        <description>Date of ballad</description>
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            <text>1612</text>
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        <name>Notes</name>
        <description>Additional information related to the ballad pamphlet or related events</description>
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            <text>&lt;a href="https://books.google.com.au/books?id=3hJLeLHjh-YC&amp;amp;pg=PA670&amp;amp;lpg=PA670&amp;amp;dq=john+selman+cutpurse&amp;amp;source=bl&amp;amp;ots=_-LTenyPzI&amp;amp;sig=Gk3qXAD0ZKmEqvzw8T3avPuaz34&amp;amp;hl=en&amp;amp;ei=A6l6TqTDIMuYiAfspZk2&amp;amp;sa=X&amp;amp;oi=book_result&amp;amp;ct=result#v=onepage&amp;amp;q&amp;amp;f=false" target="_blank"&gt;Book of Days: A Miscellany of Popular Antiquities in Connection With the Calendar&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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        <name>Printing Location</name>
        <description>Location the ballad pamphlet was printed.</description>
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            <text>London</text>
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        <name>Method of Punishment</name>
        <description>Method of punishment described in the ballad.</description>
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            <text>hanging</text>
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      <element elementId="62">
        <name>Crime(s)</name>
        <description>Crime or crimes for which the person in the ballad is convicted.</description>
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            <text>theft, robbery</text>
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        <name>Gender</name>
        <description>Gender of the person being executed.</description>
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            <text>Male</text>
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        <name>Execution Location</name>
        <description>Location the condemned was executed.</description>
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            <text>Whitehall</text>
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        <name>Composer of Ballad</name>
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            <text>Henry Smith</text>
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        <name>Tune Data</name>
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            <text>&lt;strong&gt;Part 1:&lt;/strong&gt; &lt;em&gt;The Rich Merchant Man&lt;/em&gt; (Simpson 1966, pp. 602-604) &lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Part 2:&lt;/strong&gt; A new tune &lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Date tune first appeared:&lt;/strong&gt; 1594 - ballad called &lt;em&gt;Rich Merchant Man&lt;/em&gt; registered by Thomas Deloney</text>
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            <text>Magdalene College - Pepys Library, Pepys Ballads 1.130-131v; &lt;a href="https://ebba.english.ucsb.edu/ballad/20057/image" target="_blank"&gt;EBBA 20057&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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            <text>who was executed at White-hall vppon Twesday the seuenth of Ianuary. 1612. To the tune of a rich Merchant man.</text>
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              <text>The Arrainement condemnation and execution of the grand [cutpurse] Iohn Selman </text>
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