Analysis of A Woeful New Ballad Of The Protestant Conspiracy To Take The Pope’s Life



Come all ye Christian people, unto my tale give ear,
'Tis about a base consperracy, as quickly shall appear;
'Twill make your hair to bristle up, and your eyes to start and glow,
When of this dread consperracy you honest folks shall know.

The news of this consperracy and villianous attempt,
I read it in a newspaper, from Italy it was sent:
It was sent from lovely Italy, where the olives they do grow,
And our holy father lives, yes, yes, while his name it is No NO.

And 'tis there our English noblemen goes that is Puseyites no
longer,
Because they finds the ancient faith both better is and stronger,
And 'tis there I knelt beside my lord when he kiss'd the POPE his
toe,
And hung his neck with chains at St. Peter's Vinculo.

And 'tis there the splendid churches is, and the fountains playing
grand,
And the palace of PRINCE TORLONIA, likewise the Vatican;
And there's the stairs where the bagpipe-men and the piffararys
blow.
And it's there I drove my lady and lord in the Park of Pincio.

And 'tis there our splendid churches is in all their pride and
glory,
Saint Peter's famous Basilisk and Saint Mary's Maggiory;
And them benighted Prodestants, on Sunday they must go
Outside the town to the preaching-shop by the gate of Popolo.

Now in this town of famous Room, as I dessay you have heard,
There is scarcely any gentleman as hasn't got a beard.
And ever since the world began it was ordained so,
That there should always barbers he wheresumever beards do grow.

And as it always has been so since the world it did begin,
The POPE, our Holy Potentate, has a beard upon his chin;
And every morning regular when cocks begin to crow,
There comes a certing party to wait on POPE PIO.

There comes a certing gintlemen with razier, soap, and lather,
A shaving most respectfully the POPE, our Holy Father.
And now the dread consperracy I'll quickly to you show,
Which them sanguinary Prodestants did form against NONO.

Them sanguinary Prodestants, which I abore and hate,
Assembled in the preaching-shop by the Flaminian gate;
And they took counsel with their selves to deal a deadly blow
Against our gentle Father, the Holy POPE PIO.

Exhibiting a wickedness which I never heard or read of;
What do you think them Prodestants wished? to cut the good Pope's
head off!
And to the kind POPE'S Air-dresser the Prodestant Clark did go,
And proposed him to decapitate the innocent PIO.

'What hever can be easier,' said this Clerk—this Man of Sin,
'When you are called to hoperate on His Holiness's chin,
Than just to give the razier a little slip—just so?—
And there's an end, dear barber, of innocent PIO!'

The wicked conversation it chanced was overerd
By an Italian lady; she heard it every word:
Which by birth she was a Marchioness, in service forced to go
With the parson of the preaching-shop at the gate of Popolo.

When the lady heard the news, as duty did obleege,
As fast as her legs could carry her she ran to the Poleege.
'O Polegia,' says she (for they pronounts it so),
'They're going for to massyker our Holy POPE PIO.

'The ebomminable Englishmen, the Parsing and his Clark,
His Holiness's Air-dresser devised it in the dark!
And I would recommend you in prison for to throw
These villians would esassinate the Holy POPE PIO?

'And for saving of His Holiness and his trebble crownd
I humbly hope your Worships will give me a few pound;
Because I was a Marchioness many years ago,
Before I came to service at the gate of Popolo.'

That sackreligious Air-dresser, the Parson and his man
Wouldn't, though ask'd continyally, own their wicked plan—
And so the kind Authoraties let those villians go
That was plotting of the murder of the good PIO NONO.

Now isn't this safishnt proof, ye gentlemen at home,
How wicked is them Prodestants, and how good our Pope at Rome?
So let us drink confusion to LORD JOHN and LORD MINTO,
And a health unto His Eminence, and good PIO NONO.


Scheme AXBB CXBB BDDEBB XXFEBE XXABB GXBB HHBB DDBF IIBB XXXBB HHBB CGBB JJBB KKBB CXBB LLBF MMBF
Poetic Form
Metre 1111010101111 101011110101 111111010111101 11111110111 011110101 11100101100111 1111101001010111 01010101111111111 0111010111111 10 011101011101010 011110111111011 1 01111111101 011010101001010 1 001011110100 01011011001 1 011111100100111 011101010101110 10 11010101101 01010111111 11011010110111 10111101111111 111010100110101 0101010111011 11111011111 01111111011101 011010101010111 010010100110111 110110111110 11011111010 0101010001101010 01011110111 111111011 11111101 010001011001001 01110111110101 01101010010110 0100010011101111 111111111011 11 0101111001111 00111010010010 11111001111111 1111111111 111101010111 0111110110010 0100101111 11010101111001 111110100010111 10101010110111 101010111011 11101110011101 111111111 1101111010110 0110010011 11110011001 011011010111 1111010110 0110111000111 1101110111011 0111010010101 011111010111 11110010011 1011111101 010111111 11101010101101 110111110011 11011101110111 11110101110110 00110110001101
Closest metre Iambic heptameter
Characters 3,818
Words 703
Sentences 28
Stanzas 17
Stanza Lengths 4, 4, 6, 6, 5, 4, 4, 4, 4, 5, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4
Lines Amount 74
Letters per line (avg) 41
Words per line (avg) 9
Letters per stanza (avg) 179
Words per stanza (avg) 41
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:35 min read
43

William Makepeace Thackeray

William Makepeace Thackeray was an English novelist of the 19th century. more…

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    "A Woeful New Ballad Of The Protestant Conspiracy To Take The Pope’s Life" Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 7 May 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem-analysis/40995/a-woeful-new-ballad-of-the-protestant-conspiracy-to-take-the-pope%E2%80%99s-life>.

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