Tis A Plaine Case Gentlemen is an English broadside ballad housed in the Huntington Library.
/ Have not wile-men (who are starke mad with rage, / Brought this faire Land to such a combustion, / That through their means we may feare confusion.".
The speaker asserts that London's current woes are brought on by both religious division and the peoples' lack of faith in their king and parliament.
Though the protestant reformation was nearing its end, it was still a considerable driving force in political and religious thought.
The ballad claims that the common folk, as opposed to the king and parliament, are responsible for their own troubles because each private individual is taking on the mantle of king for themselves, which is blasphemous in the eyes of God and ignores the Great Chain of Being that many royalist supporters believed in.