Page:Hudibras - Volume 1 (Butler, Nash, Bohn; 1859).djvu/181

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As that which Diomed did maul
Æneas on the bum withal;[1]
Yet big enough, if rightly hurl'd,495
T' have sent him to another world,
Wliether above ground, or below,
Which saints, twice dipt, are destin'd to.[2]
The danger startled the bold Squire,
And made him some few steps retire; 500
But lludibras advanc'd to's aid,
And rous'd his spirits half dismay'd.
He n'isely doubting lest the shot
O' th' enemy, now growing hot,
Might at a distance gall, press'd close505
To come, pell-mell, to handy-blows,
And that he might their aim decline,
Advanc'd still in an oblique line;
But prudently forbore to fire,
Till breast to breast he had got nigher;[3] 510
As expert warriors use to do,
When hand to hand they charge their foe.
This order the advent'rous Knight,
Most soldier-like, observ'd in fight,
When Fortune, as she's wont, turn'd fickle,515
And for the foe began to stickle.
The more shame for her Goodyship
To give so near a friend the slip.
For Colon, choosing out a stone,
Levell'd so right, it thump'd upon520
His manly paunch, with such a force,
As almost beat him oft' his horse,
He loos'd his whinyard,[4] and the rein.
But laying fast hold on the mane,
Preserv'd his seat: and, as a goose 525
In death contracts his taloua close,

  1. See Iliad v. 304. Virgil. Æn. I. 101. Juvenal. Sat. xv. 65.
  2. Meaning the Anabaptists, who thought they obtained a higher degree sanctification by being re-baptized.
  3. Alluding to Cromwell's prudent conduct in this respect, who seldom suffered his soldiers to fire till they were near enough to the enemy to be sure of doing execution.
  4. Var. He lost his whinyard.