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-A chauntry fair, And of Monks a pair,
To pray for his soul for ever and aye,
Thou must duly endow, Sir Ingoldsby Bray,
And fourteen marks by the year must thou pay

For plenty of lights To burn there o' nights-
None of your rascally 'dips'-but sound,
Round, ten-penny moulds of four to the pound ;-
And a shirt of the roughest and coarsest hair
For a year and a day, Sir Ingoldsby, wear!
So may your qualms of conscience cease,
And the soul of the Soldier shall rest in peace!"

"Now nay, Holy Father, now nay, now nay !
Less penance may serve!" quoth Sir Ingoldsby Bray,
"No champion free of the Cross was he;
No belted Baron of high degree;

No Knight nor Squire Did there expire;
He was, I trow, but a bare-footed Friar!
And the Abbot of Abingdon long may wait
With his monks around him, and early and late
May look from loop-hole, and turret and gate,
He hath lost his Prior-his Prior his pate!"

"Now Thunder and turf!" Pope Gregory said,
And his hair rais'd his triple crown right off his

head

"Now Thunder and turf! and out and alas! A horrible thing has come to pass!

What!-cut off the head of a reverend Prior,

And say he was 'only (!!!) a bare-footed Friar!'

'What Baron or Squire, Or Knight of the shire Is half so good as a holy Friar?'

O, turpissime! Vir nequissime! Sceleratissime!-quissime!-issime! Never, I trow, have the Servi servorum

Had before 'em Such a breach of decorum,

Such a gross violation of morum bonorum,
And won't have again sæcula-sæculorum!-
Come hither to me, My Cardinals three,
My Bishops in partibus, Masters in Artibus,
Hither to me, A.B. and D.D.,

Doctors and Proctors of every degree,

Go fetch me a book!-go fetch me a bell

As big as a dustman's!-and a candle as well

I'll send him - where good manners won't let me

tell!"

-" Pardon and grace!-now pardon and grace!"
-Sir Ingoldsby Bray fell flat on his face-

“Meâ culpâ !-in sooth I'm in pitiful case.
Peccavi! peccavi !-I've done very wrong!
But my heart it is stout, and my arm it is strong,
And I'll fight for Holy Church all the day long;
And the Ingoldsby lands are broad and fair,

And they're here, and they're there, and I can't tell you

where,

And Holy Church shall come in for her share!"

Pope Gregory paused, and he sat himself down,
And he somewhat relaxed his terrible frown,
And his Cardinals three they pick'd up his crown.

"Now, if it be so that you own you've been wrong,
And your heart is so stout, and your arm is so strong,
And you really will fight like a trump all day long;
If the Ingoldsby lands do lie here and there,

And Holy Church shall come in for her share,

Why, my Cardinals three,

You'll agree With me

That it gives a new turn to the whole affair,
And I think that the Penitent need not despair!
-If it be so, as you seem to say,
Rise up, rise up, Sir Ingoldsby Bray!

"An Abbey so fair Sir Bray shall found,
Whose innermost wall's encircling bound
Shall take in a couple of acres of ground;
And there in that Abbey all the year around,
A full choir of monks, and a full choir of nuns,
Shall live upon cabbage and hot-cross buns.

And Sir Ingoldsby Bray, Without delay,
Shall hie him again To Ascalon plain,

And gather the bones of the foully slain :
And shall place said bones, with all possible care,
In an elegant shrine in his Abbey so fair;

And plenty of lights Shall be there o' nights;

None of your rascally 'dips,' but sound,
Best superfine wax-wicks, four to the pound;

And Monk and Nun Shall pray, each one,
For the soul of the Prior of Abingdon !
And Sir Ingoldsby Bray, so bold and so brave,
Never shall wash himself, comb, or shave,

Nor adorn his body, Nor drink gin-toddy,

Nor indulge in a pipe, - But shall dine upon tripe,

And blackberries gathered before they are ripe,
And for ever abhor, renounce, and abjure

Rum, hollands, and brandy, wine, punch, and liqueur:"

(Sir Ingoldsby Bray Here gave away
To a feeling which prompted a word profane,
But he swallow'd it down, by an effort, again,
And his Holiness luckily fancied his gulp a
Mere repetition of O, meâ culpâ!)

"Thrice three times upon Candlemas day
Between Vespers and Compline, Sir Ingoldsby Bray
Shall run round the Abbey, as best he may,

Subjecting his back To thump and to thwack,
Well and truly laid on by a bare-footed Friar,
With a stout cat-o'-nine-tails of whipcord and wire,

And nor he, nor his heir* Shall take, use, or bear
Any more, from this day, The surname of Bray,

* His brother Reginald, it would seem by the pedigree, disregarded this prohibition.

As being dishonour'd; but all issue male he has
Shall, with himself, go henceforth by an alias!
So his qualms of conscience at length may cease,
And Page, Dame, and Prior shall rest in peace!"

Sir Ingoldsby (now no longer Bray)
Is off like a shot away and away,

Over the brine To far Palestine,
To rummage and hunt over Ascalon plain
For the unburied bones of his victim slain,

"Look out, my Squire, Look higher and nigher,

Look out for the corpse of a bare-footed Friar!
And pick up the arms, and the legs, of the dead,
And pick up his body, and pick up his head!"

FYTTE III.

Ingoldsby Abbey is fair to see,

It hath manors a dozen, and royalties three,
With right of free warren (whatever that be);

Rich pastures in front, and green woods in the rear,

All in full leaf at the right time of year;

About Christmas, or so, they fall into the sear,

And the prospe of course, becomes rather more

drear:

But it's really delightful in spring-time, and near

The great gate Father Thames rolls sun-bright and

clear;

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