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heart_n blood_n body_n vital_a 2,040 5 10.4566 5 false
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A72345 Batrachomyomachia: or: The wonderfull and bloudy battell betweene frogs and mice The occasion of their falling out: their preparation, munition, and resolution for the warres: the severall combats of every person of worth, with many other memorable accidents. Interlaced with divers pithy and morall sentences, no lesse pleasant to be read, then profitable to be observed. Paraphrastically done into English heroycall verse, by William Fowldes, late one of the cursitors of his Majesties high Court of Chancery.; Battle of the frogs and mice. English. Fowldes, William.; Homer, attributed name. 1634 (1634) STC 13627; ESTC S122590 23,510 67

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Meane while both armies mustred on the plaine And place their wings and squadrons in aray From either part a Herald doth againe Give signe for battell and the bloudy day The buzzing Flies because they were of skill To blow alowd their hornes and trumpets shrill A harsh tantarra sound unto the fight Which lends more courage to their wonted might Heaven and earth doth thunder with the cry When front to front these noble armies meet Loose waving in the winde their ensignes flie With wounds and fatall blowes each other greet The Mice assaile the Frogs the fight accept In combat close each host to other stept For now the wings had skirmish hot begun And with their battels forth like Lyons run But who was first amid this bloudy fight That gave the onset first first wanne renowne Croaking Hypsiboas first like a knight Lick-taile Lichenor bravely tumbled downe Into his paunch so strong he thrust his speare That forth his backe behinde it did appeare Groveling the Mouce fell on the sandy plaine By this audacious Frog with valour slaine Next him Troglodytes which not afraid Each secret hole and corner creepeth in Gave Pelion the Frog with durt berayd A deadly foile with his small brazen pin Within the wound the javeling sticketh sore And frō the veines forth streams the purple gore Thus to his end pale death this Frog did bring * Tendimus huc omnes Which kils the caitife with the crowned king Pot-creeping Embasichytros of late Whose valiant sonne did all the Frogs defie Now quite confounded by disastrous fate Devoid of life thy headles truncke doth lie At hardy Seutlëus his crooked feet A Frog which feeds on nothing but the beete And clam'rous Polyphon there lyes thou dead Slayne by Artophagus which eateth bread But when Limnocharis their deaths beheld Which in the marish hath his whole delight The angry Frog by love and ire compeld To sad revenge his pow'r and forces dight * Mors morte pianda est Life must be paid with life the Frog did cry Their deaths I will revenge or with them dye Thus when true love valour guide the heart A cowards hand will play a souldiers part And from the ground a milstone in great hast He raught strange wonders courage doth enact And with great violence the same he cast At proud Troglodites as one distract In middle of his necke the stone did light Whereby he sleepeth in eternall night Thus bruised with the fall this Mouce did lye Suffring the torments of deaths tyranny Yong Lichenor his sonne that first was slaine A gallant Mouce which did no colours feare Desirous though with death renowne to gaine That his exploits ensuing times might heare Fierce butcher-like Limnocharis espide Whose weapons were with bloud in scarlet dide To whom he said Fight coward or else flie Thou or Lichenor here shall surely dye And with those words ayming his heart to hit Strongly his javeling at the Frog he threw It pierc't his side his brest and bowels split His vitall spirits from his body flew Dead lay Limnocharis upon the playne The bravest souldier in the watry trayne For death impartiall doth with one selfe hand Cut off the strong weake at heavens command Crambophagus Eat-Colewort which of late Basely his armes and weapons cast away Thinking by flight to flie the stroke of fate Ran to the water from the mortall fray Whom Lichenor more swift then he pursude And in his hearts warm bloud his speare imbru'd Vpon the shore the dastard Frog was slaine Ere he could leape into the running maine Heroicall Limnesus Fennie Lord Incensed by mad rage blacke furies brand The bold Ty●oglyphus slew with the sword A great commander in the Mouces band Deepe holes and hollow caves he usde to delve Among the Cheeses lying on the shelve His head the Frog doth from his necke advance And in great triumph beares it on his lance Faint-hearted * So called of the herbe Calamint Calaminthiu in great feare Little in stature and of courage small Beholding vast Pternoglyphus appeare A Mouce exceeding great strong bourly tall And which in bacon flitches holes doth make He doth his weapons with the field forsake And craven-like fled to the durty bogs Even as the fearefull Hare pursude with dogs But bold Hydrocharis that loves the flood Famous for deeds of armes would never flie The furious Mouce this peerelesse Frog withstood Nor would he shun a foot though he should die Lately Pternophagon this gallant killed Which oft with Bacon hath his belly filled Now with a stone Pternoglyphus he slew Whose cloddred brains the crimson field imbrew Lichopinax which first told to the king The balefull newes of his sonnes tragedy At Borborocaetes did his darts still fling A valiant Frog though in the durt he lye Prostrate he fell upon the sandy ground The Mouces dart had made a mortall wound Whereat pale death sent forth his fainting sprite To sleepe in darkenesse and eternall night When this the Frog Prassophagus beheld Eat-Leeke Prassophagus swift as the Hynde He ranne with mighty stowre along the field And taking Cuissodioctes neat behind From off his feet the little Mouce he flung Into the streaming current all along Nor there he left him till with raging mood He had his foe estrangled in the flood Eat-crumme Psicharpax which was neere allide Vnto the kings yong sonne that erst was drown'd In succour of his friends the Frogs defide And to the battell made him ready bound Durty Pelusus in the panch he thrust Faintly the Frog sunke downe into the dust Whose fluttring spirit did her passage make Downe to * It is taken for the entry into hell Avernus that unpleasant lake Pelobates which loves to tread the myre Saw when his friend and fellow souldier fell And adding fuell to the smoking fire His furie into burning flames gan swell For filling both his hands with durt apace He cast it fiercely in Psicharpax face Which much besmeard his visage with disguise And almost blinded and put out his eyes But he the strong Psicharpax mov'd with spleene And justly angry at this beastly wrong Tooke up a mighty stone which there had beene A bound or landmarke tweene two neigbours long And hurling it with vigour and great power He burst his knee asunder in that stower The right leg fell dismembred from his thigh And not once moving on the ground doth lye Ne there he thought to leave him in sad plight But with a javelin would have rest his life Had not Craugasides that croaking wight Whose chiefest pleasure is in brawling strife Kept off the blow and with a sudden push Thrust through the Mouce his belly with a rush Vpon the ground his bowels gushed forth Thus di'de this martial hart Mouce of worth Which when Eat-corne Sitophagus espide That erst was maymed of two legs in fight Washing his wounds along the water side And sore amazed at this rufull sight He dared not adventure forth againe Into