Page:Hudibras - Volume 2 (Butler, Nash, Bohn; 1859).djvu/291

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HIS LADY.]
HUDIBRAS.
429
Attacked by despicable foes,
And drubb'd with mean and vulgar blows;
And, after all, to be debarr'd
So much as standing on his guard; 160
When horses, being spurr'd and prick'd,
Have leave to kick for being kick'd?
Or why should you, whose mother-wits[1]
Are furnish'd with all perquisites;
That with your breeding teeth begin, 165
And nursing babies that lie in;
B' allow'd to put all tricks upon
Our cully[2] sex, and we use none?
We, who have nothing but frail vows
Against your stratagems t' oppose; 170
Or oaths, more feeble than your own,
By which we are no less put down?[3]
You wound, like Parthians, while you fly,
And kill with a retreating eye;[4]
Retire the more, the more we press, 175
To draw us into ambushes:
As pirates all false colours wear,
T' intrap th' unwary mariner;
So women, to surprise us, spread
The borrow'd flags of white and red; 180
Display 'em thicker on their cheeks,
Than their old grandmothers, the Picts;
And raise more devils with their looks,
Than conjurers' less subtle books:
Lay trains of amorous intrigues, 185
In tow'rs, and curls, and periwigs,
With greater art and cunning rear'd,
Than Philip Nye's Thanksgiving-beard;[5]

  1. Why should you, who were sharp and witty from your infancy, who bred wit with your teeth, &c.
  2. Foolish, or easily gulled.
  3. That is, we are no less subdued by your oaths than by your stratagems.
  4. The Parthians were excellent horsemen and very dexterous in shooting their arrows behind them, by which means their flight was often as destructive to the enemy as their attack.
  5. Nye was a member of the Assembly of Divines, and as remarkable for his beard as for his fanaticism. He first entered at Brazen-nose college, Oxford, and afterwards removed to Magdalen-hall, where he took his degrees, and then went to Holland. In 1640 he returned home a furious Presbyterian;