Gyant, quoth Guy, y'are quarrelsome I see, Choller and you seem very neere of kin : Most dangerous at the clubb belike you bee; I have bin better armd, though nowe goe thin ; But shew thy utmost hate, enlarge thy spight, Keene is my weapon, and shall doe me right. 35 Soe draws his sword, salutes him with the same About the head, the shoulders, and the side : Standinge with huge Colossus' spacious stride, 40 a 45 But on the ground he spent his strokes in vaine, For Guy was nimble to avoyde them still, Did brush his plated coat against his will : 50 Att last through thirst the gyant feeble grewe, And sayd to Guy, As thou'rt of humane race, Shew itt in this, give natures wants their dewe, Let me but goe, and drinke in yonder place: Thou canst not yeeld to me' a smaller thing, Than to graunt life, thats given by the spring. I graunt I graunt thee leave, quoth Guye, goe drink thy last, 55 Go pledge the dragon, and the salvage bore*: Succeed the tragedyes that they have past, But never thinke to taste cold water more:. Drinke deepe to Death and unto him carouse : Bid him receive thee in his earthen house. 60 Soe to the spring he goes, and slakes his thirst; Takeing the water in extremely like Whose forced hulke against the stones does stryke ; Scooping it in soe fast with both his hands, 65 That Guy admiring to behold it stands, Come on, quoth Guy, let us to worke againe, Thou stayest about thy liquor overlong; The fish, which in the river doe remaine, Will want thereby; thy drinking doth them wrong: But I will see their satisfaction made, 71 With gyants blood they must, and shall be payd. : Villaine, quoth Amarant, lle crush thee streight; Thy life shall pay thy daring toungs offence : Is deathes commission to dispatch thee hence : * Which Guy had slain before. Ver. 64. bulke, MS. and PCC. Incensed Incensed much by these bold pagan bostes, Which worthye Guy cold ill endure to heare, He hewes upon those bigg supporting postes, Which like two pillars did his body beare: Amarant for those wounds in choller growes And desperatelye att Guy his clubb he throwes : Which did directly on his body light, 85 Soe violent, and weighty there-withall, That downe to ground on sudden came the knight; And, ere he cold recover from the fall, The gyant gott his clubb againe in fist, And aimd a stroke that wonderfullye mist. 90 Traytor, quoth Guy, thy falshood Ile repay, This coward act to intercept my bloode. Sayes Amarant, Ile murther any way, With enemyes all vantages are good : O could I poyson in thy nostrills blowe, Besure of it I wold dispatch thee soe. 95 Its well, said Guy, thy honest thoughts appeare, Within that beastlye bulke where devills dwell ; Which are thy tenants while thou livest heare, But will be landlords when thou comest in hell: 100 Vile miscreant, prepare thee for their den, Inhumane monster, hatefull unto men. But breathe thy selfe a time, while I goe drinke, Torments 105 Torments me soe with burning heat, I thinke My thirst wold serve to drinke an ocean drye : а Noe, sillye wretch, my father taught more witt, 110 By all my gods I doe rejoice at itt, To understand that thirst constraines thee now; а 115 Releeve my foe! why, 'twere a madmans part: Noe, fellow, I have known the world too long 120 And with these words heaving aloft his clubb Into the ayre, he swings the same about : And, like the Cyclops, in his pride doth strout : 125 Now you are come unto your latest shift. Perish forever: with this stroke I send thee A medicine, that will doe thy thirst much good; Take noe more care for drinke before I end thee, And then wee'll have carouses of thy blood :... 130 Here's a Here's at thee with a butcher's downright blow, 135 Infernall, false, obdurate feend, said Guy, That seemst a lumpe of crueltye from hell ; The thing to mee wherin I used thee well: ز Thy gyants longitude shall shorter shrinke, Except thy sun-scorcht skin be weapon proof: 140 Farewell my thirst ; I doe disdaine to drinke; Streames keepe your waters to your owne behoof; Or let wild beasts be welcome thereunto; With those pearle drops I will not have to do. Here, tyrant, take a taste of my good-will, 145 For thus I doe begin my bloodye bout : You cannot chuse but like the greeting ill ; It is not that same clubb will beare you out ; And take this payment on thy shaggye crowne A blowe that brought him with a vengeance downe. 150 Then Guy sett foot upon the monsters brest, And from his shoulders did his head divide; Which with a yawninge mouth did gape, unblest ; Noe dragons jawes were ever seene soe wide Το open and to shut, till life was spent. 155 Then Guy tooke keyes, and to the castle went. Where |