Page:Hudibras - Volume 1 (Butler, Nash, Bohn; 1859).djvu/255

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CANTO I.]
HUDIBRAS.
163

And growing down't' a man, was wont
With wolves upon all four to hunt.
As for your reasons drawn from tails,[1]
We cannot say they're true or false,
Till you explain yourself, and show735
B' experiment, 'tis so or no.
Quoth he, If you'll join issue on't,[2]
I'll give you satistact'ry account;
So you will promise, if you lose,
To settle all, and be my spouse.740
That never shall be done, quoth she,
To one that wants a tail, by me:
For tails by nature sure were meant.
As well as beards, for ornament;[3]
And tho' the vulgar count them homely,745
In man or beast they are so comely,
So gentee, alamode, and handsome,[4]
I'll never marry man that wants one:
And till you can demonstrate plain,
You have one equal to your mane,750
I'll be torn piece-meal by a horse,
Ere I'll take you for better or worse.
The Prince of Cambay's daily food
Is asp, and basilisk, and toad,[5]

  1. See Fontaine, Conte de la jument du compere Pierre. Lord Monboddo had a theory about tails; he maintained that naturally they were as proper appendages to man as to beasts; but that the practice of sitting had in process of time completely abraded them.
  2. That is, rest the cause upon this point.
  3. Mr Butler here alludes to Dr Bulwer's Artificial Changeling, p. 410, where, besides the story of the Kentish men near Rochester, who had tails clapped to their breeches by Thomas a Beckett, he gives an account, from an honest young man of Captain Morris's company, in Ireton's regiment, "that at Cashell, in the county of Tipperary, in Carrick Patrick church, seated on a rock, stormed by Lord Inchequin, where near 700 were put to the sword, there were found among the slain of the Irish, when they were stripped, divers that had tails near a quarter of a yard lung: forty soldiers, that were eye-witnesses, testified the same upon their oaths." For an account of the Kentish Long-tails, see Lambarde's Perambulation of Kent, p. 315, and Bohn's Handbook of Proverbs, p. 207.
  4. Gentee is the affected pronunciation of the French Gentil.
  5. See Purchas's Pilgrime, vol. ii. p. 1495, for the story of Macamut, Sultan of Cambay, who is said to have lived upon poison, and so complete-