Page:The Poetical Works of Thomas Parnell (1833).djvu/190

62 Then drags him o'er the lake depriv'd of breath, And downward plunging, sinks his soul to death. But now the great Psycarpax shines afar, (Scarce he so great whose loss provok'd the war,) Swift to revenge his fatal javelin fled, And through the liver struck Pelusius dead; His freckled corpse before the victor fell, His soul indignant sought the shades of hell.

This saw Pelobates, and from the flood Heav'd with both hands a monstrous mass of mud: The cloud obscene o'er all the hero flies, Dishonours his brown face, and blots his eyes. Enrag'd, and wildly spluttering, from the shore A stone immense of size the warrior bore, A load for labouring earth, whose bulk to raise, Asks ten degenerate mice of modern days: Full on the leg arrives the crushing wound; The frog supportless writhes upon the ground.

Thus flush'd, the victor wars with matchless force, Till loud Craugasides arrests his course: Hoarse-croaking threats precede; with fatal speed Deep through the belly ran the pointed reed, Then strongly tugg'd, return'd imbru'd with gore; And on the pile his reeking entrails bore.

The lame Sitophagus, oppress'd with pain, Creeps from the desperate dangers of the plain; And where the ditches rising weeds supply