In medieval and Renaissance siege warfare, a common tactic was to dig a shallow trench close to the enemy gate, and then erect a small hoisting engine that would lift the lit petard out of the trench, swing it up, out, and over to the gate, where it would detonate and hopefully breach the gate. It was not impossible, however, that this procedure would go awry, and the engineer lighting the bomb could be snagged in the ropes and lifted out with the petard and consequently blown up. Alternately, and perhaps a more likely scenario, if the petard were to detonate prematurely due to a faulty or short slow match, the engineer would be lifted or 'hoist' by the explosion.
Oh good Christ.
ReplyDeleteyou want me to take it off.? I'll do it. Say the word. 14 people have seen it already. Zorros Hot Mask stays though.
ReplyDeletefunny. always pulling crap, aren't ya. It has 58 views so far but no comments. The other one now has 8,970 views and 57+ comments. Funny.
ReplyDeleteDammit. I'm at 9800 + a few and Scott's is up to 118. It's sapping my count, keeping me from 10K. Hoisted on my own petard.
ReplyDeleteIn medieval and Renaissance siege warfare, a common tactic was to dig a shallow trench close to the enemy gate, and then erect a small hoisting engine that would lift the lit petard out of the trench, swing it up, out, and over to the gate, where it would detonate and hopefully breach the gate. It was not impossible, however, that this procedure would go awry, and the engineer lighting the bomb could be snagged in the ropes and lifted out with the petard and consequently blown up. Alternately, and perhaps a more likely scenario, if the petard were to detonate prematurely due to a faulty or short slow match, the engineer would be lifted or 'hoist' by the explosion.
ReplyDeleteOk then.
ReplyDelete