[In A Tract, Called 'Pigges Corantoe, Or Newes From The North,' 4To Lond. 1642, P. 3, This Is Called "Old Tarlton'S Song." It Is Perhaps A Parody On The Popular Epigram Of "Jack And Jill." I Do Not Know The Period Of The Battle To Which It Appears To Allude, But Tarlton Died In The Year 1588, So That The Rhyme Must Be Earlier.] The King Of France Went Up The Hill, With Twenty Thousand Men; The King Of France Came Down The Hill, And Ne'er Went Up Again.