Page:Hudibras - Volume 1 (Butler, Nash, Bohn; 1859).djvu/115

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CANTO II.]
HUDIBRAS.
51

To get on them a race of champions,
Of which old Homer first made lampoons.
Arctophylax, in northern sphere,[1]
Was his undoubted ancestor; 220
From whom his great forefathers came,
And in all ages bore his name:
Learned he was in med'c'nal lore,
For by his side a pouch he wore,
Replete with strange hermetic powder,[2] 225
That wounds nine miles point-blank would solder;[3]
By skilful chymist, with great cost,
Extracted from a rotten post;[4]
But of a heav'nlier influence
Than that which mountebanks dispense; 230
Tho' by Promethean fire made,[5]
As they do quack that drive that trade.
For as when slovens do amiss
At others' doors, by stool or piss,
The learned write, a red-hot spit 235
Being prudently applied to it,
Will convey mischief from the dung[6]
Unto the breech[7] that did the wrong;
So this did healing, and as sure
As that did mischief, this would cure. 240
Thus virtuous Orsin was endued
With learning, conduct, fortitude
Incomparable; and as the prince
Of poets, Homer, sung long since,

  1. Butler makes the constellation Bootes—which lies in the rear of Ursa Major—the mythological ancestor of the bearward Orsin.
  2. Hermetic, i.e. chemical. The Hermetical philosophy was so called from Hermes Trismegistus.
  3. A banter on the famous sympathetic powder, which was to effect the cure of wounds at a distance, and was much in vogue in the reign of James the First. See Sir Kenelm Digby's "Discourse of the cure of wounds by the powder of sympathy." London, 1644.
  4. Useless powders in medicine are called powders of post.
  5. That is, heat of the sun. The story of Prometheus is very amusingly told by Dean Swift, in No. 14 of his 'Intelligencer'.
  6. Still ridiculing the sympathetic powder. See Sir K. Digby's treatise, where the poet's story of the spit is seriously told.
  7. Thus in the first edition; altered in the later ones to "part."