Jack The Giant Killer. Leigh Percival

Jack The Giant Killer - Leigh Percival


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      Jack The Giant Killer

      THE ARGUMENT

                  I sing the deeds of famous Jack,

                      The doughty Giant Killer hight;

                  How he did various monsters "whack,"

                      And so became a gallant knight.

                   In Arthur's days of splendid fun

                      (His Queen was Guenever the Pliant), —

                   Ere Britain's sorrows had begun;

                      When every cave contained its giant;

                   When griffins fierce as bats were rife;

                       And till a knight had slain his dragon,

                    At trifling risk of limbs and life,

                      He did n't think he'd much to brag on;

           When wizards o'er the welkin flew;

           Ere science had devised balloon;

           And 'twas a common thing to view

           A fairy ballet by the moon; —

           Our hero played his valiant pranks;

           Earned loads of kudos, vulgô glory,

           A lady, "tin," and lots of thanks; —

               Relate, oh Muse! his wondrous story.

      OF GIANTS IN GENERAL

           A Giant was, I should premise,

           A hulking lout of monstrous size;

           He mostly stood – I know you 'll laugh —

           About as high as a giraffe.

           His waist was some three yards in girth:

           When he walked he shook the earth.

           His eyes were of the class called "goggle,"

           Fitter for the scowl than ogle.

           His mouth, decidedly carnivorous,

           Like a shark's, – the Saints deliver us!

           He yawned like a huge sarcophagus,

           For he was an Anthropophagus,

           And his tusks were huge and craggy;

           His hair, and his brows, and his beard, were shaggy.

           I ween on the whole he was aught but a Cupid,

           And exceedingly fierce, and remarkably stupid;

                    His brain partaking strongly of lead,

                    How well soe'er he was off for head;

                    Having frequently one or two

                    Crania more than I or you.

                    He was bare of arm and leg,

                    But buskins had, and a philabeg;

                    Also a body-coat of mail

                    That shone with steel or brazen scale,

                    Like to the back of a crocodile's tail;

                              A crown he wore,

                              And a mace he bore

                    That was knobbed and spiked with adamant;

                              It would smash the skull

                              Of the mountain bull,

                    Or scatter the brains of the elephant.

               His voice than the tempest was louder and gruffer —

               Well; so much for the uncouth "buffer."

      JACK'S BIRTH, PARENTAGE, EDUCATION, AND EARLY PURSUITS

                     Of a right noble race was Jack,

                     For kith and kin he did not lack,

                          Whom tuneful bards have puffed;

                     The Seven bold Champions ranked among

                     That highly celebrated throng,

                          And Riquet with the Tuft.

                Jack of the Beanstalk, too, was one;

                And Beauty's Beast; and Valour's son,

                    Sir Amadis de Gaul:

                But if I had a thousand tongues,

                A throat of brass, and iron lungs,

                    I could not sing them all.

           His sire was a farmer hearty and free;

           He dwelt where the Land's End frowns on the sea,

           And the sea at the Land's End roars again,

           Tit for tat, land and main.

           He was a worthy wight, and so

           He brought up his son in the way he should go;

           He sought not – not he! – to make him a "muff;"

           He never taught him a parcel of stuff;

           He bothered him not with trees and plants,

           Nor told him to study the manners of ants.

           He himself had never been

           Bored with the Saturday Magazine;

           The world might be flat, or round, or square,

           He knew not, and he did not care;

           Nor wished that a boy of his should be

           A Cornish "Infant Prodigy."

           But he stored his mind with learning stable,

           The deeds of the Knights of the famed Round Table;

           Legends and stories, chants and lays,

           Of witches and warlocks, goblins and fays;

                   How champions of might

                   Defended the right,

           Freed the captive, and succoured the damsel distrest

                    Till Jack would exclaim —

           "If I don't do the same,

           An' I live to become a man, —I'm blest!"

           Jack lightly recked of sport or play

                    Wherein young gentlemen delight,

           But he would wrestle any day,

           Box, or at backsword fight.

           He was a lad of special "pluck,"

           And strength beyond his years,

               


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