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censure, and control,
As if you were the sole Sir Poll;
And saucily pretend to know
More than your dividend comes to.
Youā€™ll find the thing will not be done
With ignorance and face alone;
No, though yā€™ have purchasā€™d to your name,
In history, so great a fame;
That now your talents, so well known,
For having all belief out-grown,
That evā€™ry strange prodigious tale
Is measurā€™d by your German scale;
By which the virtuosi try
The magnitude of evā€™ry lie,
Cast up to what it does amount,
And place the biggā€™st to your account;
That all those stories that are laid
Too truly to you, and those made,
Are now still chargā€™d upon your score,
And lesser authors namā€™d no more.
Alas! that faculty betrays
Those soonest it designs to raise;
And all your vain renown will spoil,
As guns oā€™erchargā€™d the more recoil.
Though he that has but impudence,
To all things has a fair pretence;
And put among his wants but shame
To all the world may lay his claim;
Though you have tryā€™d that nothingā€™s borne
With greater ease than public scorn,
That all affronts do still give place
To your impenetrable face,
That makes your way through all affairs,
As pigs through hedges creep with theirs;
Yet as ā€™tis counterfeit and brass,
You must not think ā€™twill always pass;
For all impostors, when theyā€™re known,
Are past their labour, and undone:
And all the best that can befal
An artificial natural,
Is that which madmen find, as soon
As once theyā€™re broke loose from the moon,
And, proof against her influence,
Relapse to eā€™er so little sense,
To turn stark fools, and subjects fit
For sport of boys, and rabble wit. Part III Canto I

The Knight and Squire resolve at once
The one the other to renounce.
They both approach the Ladyā€™s bower,
The Squire tā€™inform, the Knight to woo her.
She treats them with a masquerade,
By furies and hobgoblins made:
From which the Squire conveys the Knight,
And steals him from himself by night.

ā€™Tis true, no lover has that powā€™r
Tā€™ enforce a desperate amour,
As he that has two strings tā€™ his bow,
And burns for love and money too;
For then heā€™s brave and resolute,
Disdains to render in his suit,
Has all his flames and raptures double,
And hangs or drowns with half the trouble,
While those who sillily pursue
The simple, downright way, and true,
Make as unlucky applications,
And steer against the stream their passions.
Some forge their mistresses of stars,
And when the ladies prove averse,
And more untoward to be won
Than by Caligula the moon,136
Cry out upon the stars, for doing
Ill offices to cross their wooing;
When only by themselves theyā€™re hindā€™red,
For trusting those they made her kindred;
And still, the harsher and hide-bounder
The damsels prove, become the fonder.
For what mad lover ever dyā€™d
To gain a soft and gentle bride?
Or for a lady tender-hearted,
In purling streams or hemp departed?
Leapā€™d headlong intā€™ Elysium,
Through thā€™ windows of a dazzling room?
But for some cross, ill-naturā€™d dame,
The amā€™rous fly burnt in his flame.
This to the Knight could be no news,
With all mankind so much in use;
Who therefore took the wiser course,
To make the most of his amours,
Resolvā€™d to try all sorts of ways,
As follows in due time and place.

No sooner was the bloody fight,
Between the Wizard and the Knight,
With all thā€™ appurtenances, over,
But he relapsā€™d again tā€™ a lover;
As he was always wont to do,
When hā€™ had discomfited a foe;
And usā€™d the only antique philters,137
Derivā€™d from old heroic tilters.
But now triumphant, and victorious,
He held thā€™ achievement was too glorious
For such a conqueror to meddle
With petty constable or beadle;
Or fly for refuge to the hostess
Of thā€™ inns of court and chancery, Justice;
Who might, perhaps, reduce his cause
To thā€™ ordeal trial of the laws;138
Where none escape, but such as branded
With red-hot irons have past bare-handed;
And, if they cannot read one verse
Iā€™ thā€™ Psalms, must sing it, and thatā€™s worse.
He therefore judging it below him
To tempt a shame the devil might owe him,
Resolvā€™d to leave the Squire for bail
And mainprize for him to the gaol,
To answer, with his vessel, all
That might disastrously befall;
And thought it now the fittest juncture
To give the Lady a rencounter;
Tā€™ acquaint her with his expedition,
And conquest oā€™er the fierce magician;
Describe the manner of the fray,
And show the spoils he brought away;
His bloody scourging aggravate,
The number of his blows, and weight;
All which might probably succeed,
And gain belief hā€™ had done the deed;
Which he resolvā€™d tā€™ enforce, and spare
No pawning of his soul to swear;
But, rather than produce his back,
To set his conscience on the rack;
And in pursuance of his urging
Of articles performā€™d and scourging,
And all things else, upon his part,
Demand delivā€™ry of her heart,
Her goods and chattels, and good graces,
And person, up to his embraces.
Thought he, the ancient errant knights
Won all their ladiesā€™ hearts in fights;
And cut whole giants into fritters,
To put them into amorous twitters;
Whose stubborn bowels scornā€™d to yield
Until their gallants were half killā€™d;
But when their bones were drubā€™d so sore
They durst not woo one combat more,
The ladiesā€™ hearts began to melt,
Subduā€™d by blows their lovers felt.
So Spanish heroes, with their lances,139
At once wound bulls and ladiesā€™ fancies,
And he acquires the noblest spouse
That widows greatest herds of cows:
Then what may I expect to do,
Whā€™ have quellā€™d so vast a buffalo?

Meanwhile, the Squire was on his way
The Knightā€™s late orders to obey;
Who sent him for a strong detachment
Of beadles, constables, and watchmen,
Tā€™ attack the cunning-man, for plunder
Committed falsely on his lumber;
When he, who had so lately sackā€™d
The enemy, had done the fact;
Had rifled all his pokes and fobs
Of gimcracks, whims, and jiggumbobs,
When he, by hook or crook, had gatherā€™d,
And for his own inventions fatherā€™d:
And when they should, at gaol-delivery,
Unriddle one anotherā€™s thievery,
Both might have evidence enough,
To render neither halter-proof.
He thought it desperate to tarry,
And venture to be accessary;
But rather wisely slip his fetters,
And leave them for the Knight, his betters.
He callā€™d to mind thā€™ unjust, foul play
He would have offerā€™d him that day,
To make him curry his own hide,
Which no beast ever did beside,
Without all possible evasion,
But of the riding dispensation;
And therefore much about the hour
The Knight (for reasons told before)
Resolvā€™d to leave them to the fury
Of justice, and an unpackā€™d jury.
The Squire concurrā€™d tā€™ abandon him,
And serve him in the self-same trim;
Tā€™

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