AN ELEGY On the MODERN HEROE, REDMON o HANLAN, Surnamed The TORY.
|
COme Gentle Muse, assist my pen
|
To praise the worthiest of men,
|
With whom, your ancient Heroes put
|
In ballance, weigh not shell of Nut.
|
As for great Hanlans reputation,
|
We shall evince by demonstration.
|
Of them, let Jason first be namd,
|
For clean conveyance so much famd.
|
For whose each lock of Golden wooll,
|
Bold Redmon has a thousand stole.
|
Nor did their owners scape so cheap,
|
He often took both Fleece, and Sheep.
|
Nay Mercury himself, though made
|
A God, for his great skill ith trade;
|
Compard, would look like Picaroon
|
To First-Rate Ship, or Star to Moon.
|
Next Hercules, about whose Club
|
Strange tales you tell, like those of Tub:
|
Would the unequal combat shun,
|
Ore-matchd by his dead doing Gun.
|
For if with Blunderbuss compard,
|
Like all that met it, twoud have feard.
|
The force of this Achilles hide
|
Well tand as twas, woud ner abide.
|
Shoud lusty Blunder once assault him,
|
In spight of Fate it would have mauld him.
|
Hector; that of the Greeks made spoyl,
|
As you and Homer keep a coyl;
|
Nere bolder set upon his foes
|
Than he, who told them to their nose,
|
You must deliver up your Purse,
|
Or by my Shoul youl fare the worse.
|
Which said, if enemy seemd stout,
|
Soon half a dozen balls flew out,
|
And strait one Army fell to rout.
|
Which if our party no worse fard
|
Than losing Prize, and being scard:
|
For th famous Warrior was compleat
|
In all that makes a General great,
|
Knew when to fight, when to retreat.
|
In which no Mountains, Rocks, or Woods,
|
Coud stop his course, nor Bogs, nor Floods;
|
As oft he manifested, when
|
Pursud by Floyd, and his six men.
|
Shewing a pair of heels so light,
|
That some mistook it for plain flight.
|
But they are much mistane, alass!
|
And chiefly in the Millers case:
|
For though his men and he retird
|
With speed, after the Mill was fird;
|
Yet none must think the Count woud run
|
From one old Miller and his Son.
|
Attribute then the haste was made
|
Only to fear of Ambuscade.
|
But death, although he ran so fast,
|
Has got the heels of him at last.
|
For which, the tears are numberless
|
That have been shed, as you may guess.
|
But to his friends one comforts left,
|
Although he be of life bereft,
|
He shant partake the common fate;
|
For neither Redmons limbs nor pate
|
Shall under sordid rubbish lye
|
Forgot, but shall be placd on high,
|
Monuments of his Chivalry.
|
Where, if his shining Beard, and Hair,
|
Should like some new made Star appear,
|
(For Stars, in times past, Heroes were)
|
To all that dare his Rivals be,
|
They will portend black destiny.
|
|
|
|
|
|