Hudibras Samuel Butler (free novels to read TXT) đ
- Author: Samuel Butler
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Or else our aid will come too late.
Quarter he scorns, he is so stout,
And therefore cannot long hold out.
This said, they wavâd their weapons round
About their heads, to clear the ground;
And joining forces, laid about
So fiercely, that thâ amazed rout
Turnâd tail again, and straight begun,
As if the Devil drove, to run.
Meanwhile thâ approachâd thâ place where Bruin
Was now engagâd to mortal ruin.
The conquâring foe they soon assailâd;
First Trulla stavâd, and Cerdon tailâd,74
Until their mastiffs loosâd their hold:
And yet, alas! do what they could,
The worsted Bear came off with store
Of bloody wounds, but all before:
For as Achilles, dipt in pond,
Was anabaptizâd free from wound,
Made proof against dead-doing steel
All over, but the Pagan heel;
So did our championâs arms defend
All of him, but the other end,
His head and ears, which, in the martial
Encounter, lost a leathern parcel:
For as an Austrian archduke once
Had one ear (which in ducatoons
Is half the coin) in battle parâd
Close to his head, so Bruin farâd;
But tuggâd and pullâd on thâ other side,
Like scrivâner newly crucifyâd;
Or like the late corrected leathern
Ears of the circumcised brethren.75
But gentle Trulla into thâ ring
He wore inâs nose, conveyâd a string,
With which she marchâd before, and led
The warrior to a grassy bed.
As authors write, in a cool shade,
Which eglantine and roses made;
Close by a softly murmâring stream,
Where lovers usâd to loll and dream.
There leaving him to his repose,
Secured from pursuit of foes,
And wanting nothing but a song,
And a well-tunâd theorbo hung
Upon a bough, to ease the pain
His tuggâd ears sufferâd, with a strain,
They both drew up, to march in quest
Of his great leader and the rest.
For Orsin (who was more renownâd
For stout maintaining of his ground
In standing fight, than for pursuit,
As being not so quick of foot)
Was not long able to keep pace
With others that pursuâd the chase;
But found himself left far behind,
Both out of heart and out of wind:
Grievâd to behold his bear pursuâd
So basely by a multitude;
And like to fall, not by the prowess,
But numbers of his coward foes.
He ragâd and kept as heavy a coil as
Stout Hercules for loss of Hylas;
Forcing the valleys to repeat
The accents of his sad regret.
He beat his breast, and tore his hair,
For loss of his dear crony bear;
That Echo, from the hollow ground,
His doleful wailings did resound
More wistfully, by many times,
Than in small poets splay-foot rhymes
That make her, in their rueful stories,
To answer to intârogatories,
And most unconscionably depose
To things of which she nothing knows;
And when she has said all she can say,
âTis wrested to the loverâs fancy.
Quoth he, O whither, wicked Bruin
Art thou fled? to myâ âEcho, Ruin?
I thought thâ hadst scornâd to budge a step
For fear. Quoth Echo, Marry guep.
Am not I here to take thy part?
Then what has quelled thy stubborn heart?
Have these bones rattled, and this head
So often in thy quarrel bled?
Nor did I ever winch or grudge it,
For thy dear sake. Quoth she, Mum budget.
Thinkâst thou âtwill not be laid iâ thâ dish
Thou turnâdst thy back? Quoth Echo, Pish.
To run from those thâ hast overcome
Thus cowardly? Quoth Echo, Mum.
But what a vengeance makes thee fly
From me, too, as thine enemy?
Or if thou hast no thought of me,
Nor what I have endurâd for thee,
Yet shame and honour might prevail
To keep thee thus from turning tail:
For who would grudge to spend his blood in
His honourâs cause? Quoth she, A puddin.
This said, his grief to anger turnâd,
Which in his manly stomach burnâd;
Thirst of revenge, and wrath, in place
Of sorrow, now began to blaze.
He vowâd the authors of his woe
Should equal vengeance undergo;
And with their bones and flesh pay dear
For what he sufferâd, and his bear.
This bâing resolvâd, with equal speed
And rage he hasted to proceed
To action straight; and giving oâer
To search for Bruin any more,
He went in quest of Hudibras,
To find him out whereâer he was;
And, if he were above ground, vowâd
Heâd ferret him, lurk where he would.
But scarce had he a furlong on
This resolute adventure gone,
When he encounterâd with that crew
Whom Hudibras did late subdue.
Honour, revenge, contempt, and shame,
Did equally their breasts inflame.
âMong these the fierce Magnano was,
And Talgol, foe to Hudibras;
Cerdon and Colon, warriors stout,
As resolute, as ever fought;
Whom furious Orsin thus bespoke:
Shall we (quoth he) thus basely brook
The vile affront that paltry ass,
And feeble scoundrel Hudibras,
With that more paltry ragamuffin,
Ralpho, with vapouring and huffing,
Have put upon us like tame cattle,
As if thâ had routed us in battle!
For my part, it shall neâer be said,
I for the washing gave my head:
Nor did I turn my back for fear
Oâ thâ rascals, but loss of my bear,
Which now Iâm like to undergo;
For whether those fell wounds, or no,
He has receivâd in fight, are mortal,
Is more than all my skill can foretell
Nor do I know what is become
Of him, more than the pope of Rome.
But if I can but find them out
That causâd it (as I shall, no doubt,
Whereâer thâ in hugger-mugger lurk)
Iâll make them rue their handy-work;
And wish that they had rather darâd
To pull the devil by the beard.
Quoth Cerdon, Noble Orsin, thâ hast
Great reason to do as thou sayâst,
And so has evâry body here,
As well as thou hast or thy bear.
Others may do as they see good;
But if this twig be made of wood
That will hold tack, Iâll make the fur
Fly âbout the ears of that old cur;
And thâ other mongrel vermin, Ralph,
That bravâd us all in his behalf.
Thy bear is safe, and out of peril,
Though luggâd indeed, and wounded very ill;
Myself and Trulla made a shift
To help him out at a dead lift;
And having brought him bravely off,
Have left him where heâs safe enough:
There let him rest; for if we stay,
The slaves may hap to get away.
This said, they all engagâd to join
Their forces in the same design;
And forthwith put themselves in search
Of Hudibras upon their march.
Where leave we awhile, to tell
What the victorious knight befel:
For such, Crowdero being fast
In dungeon shut, we left him last.
Triumphant laurels seemâd to grow
No where so green as on his brow;
Laden with which, as well as tirâd
With conquering toil he now retirâd
Unto a neighbâring castle by,
To rest his body,
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