Cases - Mylward V. Weldon Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis

Rhyme Scheme: A BBCCD EFGGD DDGGD HHDDD IIGGD

The plaintiff was committed to the Fleet Prison on Feb by order of the Lord Keeper for drawing a replication of sixscore sheets containing much impertinent matter which might well have been contained in sixteen On Feb the Lord Keeper ordered that on the following Saturday the Warden of the Fleet should cut a hole through the replication and put the plaintiff's head through the hole and let it hang about his shoulders with the written side outwards and lead the plaintiff bareheaded and barefaced round about Westminster Hall and show him at the bar of all the courts and so back to the Fleet Abridged from Spence's Equitable Jurisdiction vol i pA
-
'Gainst Weldon Mylward files a billB
But doth his replication fillB
With scandalous and idle matterC
That would disgrace the maddest hatterC
Woe is me for MylwardD
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'Twas sixscore sheets it might have beenE
Contained and amply in sixteenF
So after that the court hath risenG
Must Mylward Fleetward go to prisonG
Woe is me for MylwardD
-
And two days afterwards 'tis meetD
That by the Warden of the FleetD
He be led on in slow progressionG
Through every court that sits in sessionG
Woe is me for MylwardD
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The pleading writ with words so fairH
Must Mylward like a tabard wearH
A hole therein the Warden cuts itD
A head put through it Mylward puts itD
Woe is me for MylwardD
-
The bar makes merry at his shameI
What careth he He winneth fameI
Three hundred years his reputationG
Hath rested on that replicationG
Woe is me for MylwardD

James Williams



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