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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 1,
+September 5, 1841, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 1, September 5, 1841
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: February 7, 2005 [EBook #14926]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Syamanta Saikia, Jon Ingram, Barbara Tozier and the PG
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOL. 1.
+
+
+
+FOR THE WEEK ENDING SEPTEMBER 5, 1841.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE GENTLEMAN'S OWN BOOK.
+
+[Illustration: O]Our consideration must now be given to those essentials
+in the construction of a true gentleman--the cut, ornaments, and pathology
+of his dress.
+
+THE CUT
+
+is to the garment what the royal head and arms are to the coin--the
+insignia that give it currency. No matter what the material, gold or
+copper, Saxony or sackcloth, the die imparts a value to the one, and the
+shears to the other.
+
+Ancient Greece still lives in its marble demi-gods; the vivifying chisel
+of Phidias was thought worthy to typify the sublimity of Jupiter; the
+master-hand of Canova wrought the Parian block into the semblance of the
+sea-born goddess, giving to insensate stone the warmth and etheriality of
+the Paphian paragon; and Stultz, with his grace-bestowing shears, has
+fashioned West of England broad-cloths, and fancy goods, into all the
+nobility and gentility of the "Blue Book," the "Court Guide," the "Army,
+Navy, and Law Lists, for 1841."
+
+Wondrous and kindred arts! The sculptor wrests the rugged block from the
+rocky ribs of his mother earth;--the tailor clips the implicated "_long
+hogs_"[1] from the prolific backs of the living mutton;--the toothless
+saw, plied by an unweayring hand, prepares the stubborn mass for the
+chisel's tracery;--the loom, animated by steam (that gigantic child of
+Wallsend and water), twists and twines the unctuous and pliant fleece into
+the silky Saxony.
+
+ [1] The first growth of wool.
+
+The sculptor, seated in his _studio_, throws loose the reins of his
+imagination, and, conjuring up some perfect ideality, seeks to impress the
+beautiful illusion on the rude and undigested mass before him. The tailor
+spreads out, upon his ample board, the happy broadcloth; his eyes scan the
+"measured proportions of his client," and, with mystic power, guides the
+obedient pipe-clay into the graceful diagram of a perfect gentleman. The
+sculptor, with all the patient perseverance of genius, conscious of the
+greatness of its object, chips, and chips, and chips, from day to day; and
+as the stone quickens at each touch, he glows with all the pride of the
+creative Prometheus, mingled with the gentler ecstacies of paternal love.
+The tailor, with fresh-ground shears, and perfect faith in the gentility
+and solvency of his "client," snips, and snips, and snips, until the
+"superfine" grows, with each abscission, into the first style of elegance
+and fashion, and the excited schneider feels himself "every inch a king,"
+his shop a herald's college, and every brown paper pattern garnishing its
+walls, an escutcheon of gentility.
+
+But to dismount from our Pegasus, or, in other words, to cut the poetry,
+and come to the practice of our subject, it is necessary that a perfect
+gentleman should be cut _up_ very high, or cut _down_ very low--_i.e._, up
+to the marquis or down to the jarvey. Any intermediate style is perfectly
+inadmissible; for who above the grade of an attorney would wear a coat
+with pockets inserted in the tails, like salt-boxes; or any but an
+incipient Esculapius indulge in trousers that evinced a morbid ambition to
+become knee-breeches, and were only restrained in their aspirations by a
+pair of most strenuous straps. We will now proceed to details.
+
+_The dressing-gown_ should be cut only--for the arm holes; but be careful
+that the quantity of material be very ample--say four times as much as is
+positively necessary, for nothing is so characteristic of a perfect
+gentleman as his improvidence. This garment must be constructed without
+buttons or button-holes, and confined at the waist with cable-like
+bell-ropes and tassels. This elegant _déshabille_ had its origin (like the
+Corinthian capital from the Acanthus) in accident. A set of massive
+window-curtains having been carelessly thrown over a lay figure, or
+tailor's _torso_, in Nugee's _studio_, in St. James's-street, suggested to
+the luxuriant mind of the Adonisian D'Orsay, this beautiful combination of
+costume and upholstery. The eighteen-shilling chintz great-coats, so
+ostentatiously put forward by nefarious tradesmen as dressing-gowns, and
+which resemble pattern-cards of the vegetable kingdom, are unworthy the
+notice of all gentlemen--of course excepting those who are so by act of
+Parliament. Although it is generally imagined that the coat is the
+principal article of dress, _we_ attach far greater importance to the
+trousers, the cut of which should, in the first place, be regulated by
+nature's cut of the leg. A gentleman who labours under either a convex or
+a concave leg, cannot be too particular in the arrangement of the
+strap-draught. By this we mean that a concave leg must have the pull on
+the convex side, and _vice versa_, the garment being made full, the
+effects of bad nursing are, by these means, effectually "repealed."[2]
+This will be better understood if the reader will describe a
+parallelogram, and draw therein the arc of a circle equal to that
+described by his leg, whether knock-kneed or bandy.
+
+ [2] Baylis.
+
+If the leg be perfectly straight, then the principal peculiarity of cut to
+be attended to, is the external assurance that the trousers cannot be
+removed from the body without the assistance of a valet.
+
+The other considerations should be their applicability to the promenade or
+the equestriade. We are indebted to our friend Beau Reynolds for this
+original idea and it is upon the plan formerly adopted by him that we now
+proceed to advise as to the maintenance of the distinctions.
+
+Let your schneider baste the trousers together, and when you have put them
+on, let them be braced to their natural tension; the schneider should
+then, with a small pair of scissors, _cut out_ all the wrinkles which
+offend the eye. The garment, being removed from your person, is again
+taken to the tailor's laboratory, and the embrasures carefully and
+artistically fine-drawn. The process for walking or riding trousers only
+varies in these particulars--for the one you should stand upright, for the
+other you should straddle the back of a chair. Trousers cut on these
+principles entail only two inconveniences, to which every one with the
+true feelings of a gentleman would willingly submit. You must never
+attempt to sit down in your walking trousers, or venture to assume an
+upright position in your equestrians, for compound fractures in the region
+of the _os sacrum_, or dislocations about the _genu patellć_ are certain
+to be the results of such rashness, and then
+
+[Illustration: "THE PEACE OF THE VALET IS FLED."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SONGS FOR THE SENTIMENTAL. -- NO. 6.
+
+ Thou hast humbled the proud,
+ For my spirit hath bow'd
+ More humbly to thee than it e'er bow'd before;
+ But thy pow'r is past,
+ Thou hast triumph'd thy last,
+ And the heart you enslaved beats in freedom once more!
+ I have treasured the flow'r
+ You wore but an hour,
+ And knelt by the mound where together we've sat;
+ But thy-folly and pride
+ I now only deride--
+ So, fair Isabel, take your change out of that!
+
+ That I loved, and how well,
+ It were madness to tell
+ To one who hath mock'd at my madd'ning despair.
+ Like the white wreath of snow
+ On the Alps' rugged brow,
+ Isabel, I have proved thee as cold as thou'rt fair!
+ 'Twas thy boast that I sued,
+ That you scorn'd as I woo'd--
+ Though thou of my hopes were the Mount Ararat;
+ But to-morrow I wed
+ Araminta instead--
+ So, fair Isabel, take your change out of that!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE LAST HAUL.
+
+The ponds in St. James's Park were on last Monday drawn with nets, and a
+large quantity of the fish preserved there carried away by direction of
+the Chief Commissioner of Woods and Forests. Our talented correspondent,
+Ben D'Israeli, sends us the following squib on the circumstance:--
+
+ "Oh! never more," Duncannon cried,
+ "The spoils of place shall fill our dishes!
+ But though we've lost the _loaves_ we'll take
+ Our last sad haul amongst the _fishes_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+GENERAL SATISFACTION.
+
+Lord Coventry declared emphatically that the sons, the fathers, and the
+grandfathers were all satisfied with the present corn laws. Had his
+lordship thought of the _Herald_, he might have added, "and the
+grandmothers also."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT.
+
+If the enthusiastic individual who distinguished himself on the O.P. side
+of third row in the pit of "the late Theatre Royal English Opera House,"
+but now the refuge for the self-baptised "Council of Dramatic Literature,"
+can be warranted sober, and guaranteed an umbrella, in the use of which he
+is decidedly unrivalled, he is requested to apply to the Committee of
+management, where he will hear of something to his "advantage."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"PUNCH'S" LITERATURE.
+
+ I. "The Hungarian Daughter," a Dramatic Poem, by George Stephens,
+ 8vo., pp. 294. London: 1841.
+
+ II. "Introductory(!) Preface to the above," pp. 25.
+
+III. "Supplement to the above;" consisting of "Opinions of the Press,"
+ on various Works by George Stephens, 8vo., pp. 8.
+
+ IV. "Opinions of the Press upon the 'Dramatic Merits' and 'Actable
+ Qualities' of the Hungarian Daughter," 8vo., _closely printed_,
+ pp. 16.
+
+The blind and vulgar prejudice in favour of Shakspeare, Massinger, and the
+elder dramatic poets--the sickening adulation bestowed upon Sheridan
+Knowles and Talfourd, among the moderns--and the base, malignant, and
+selfish partiality of theatrical managers, who insist upon performing
+those plays only which are adapted to the stage--whose grovelling souls
+have no sympathy with genius--whose ideas are fixed upon gain, have
+hitherto smothered those blazing illuminati, George Stephens and his
+syn--Syncretcis; have hindered their literary effulgence from breaking
+through the mists hung before the eyes of the public, by a weak,
+infatuated adherence to paltry Nature, and a silly infatuation in favour
+of those who copy her.
+
+At length, however, the public blushes (through its representative, the
+provincial press, and the above-named critical puffs,) with shame--the
+managers are fast going mad with bitter vexation, for having, to use the
+words of that elegant pleonasm, the _introductory_ preface, "by a sort of
+_ex officio_ hallucination," rejected this and some twenty other
+exquisite, though unactable dramas! It is a fact, that since the opening
+of the English Opera House, Mr. Webster has been confined to his room;
+Macready has suspended every engagement for Drury-lane; and the managers
+of Covent Garden have gone the atrocious length of engaging sibilants and
+ammunition from the neighbouring market, to pelt the Syncretics off the
+stage! Them we leave to their dirty work and their repentance, while we
+proceed to _our_ "delightful task."
+
+To prove that the "mantle of the Elizabethan poets seems to have fallen
+upon Mr. Stephens" (_Opinions_, p. 11), that the "Hungarian Daughter" is
+quite as good as Knowles's best plays (_Id._ p. 4, _in two places_), that
+"it is equal to Goethe" (_Id._ p. 11), that "in after years the name of
+Mr. S. will be amongst those which have given light and glory to their
+country" (_Id._ p. 10); to prove, in short, the truth of a hundred other
+laudations collected and printed by this modest author, we shall quote a
+few passages from his play, and illustrate his genius by pointing out
+their beauties--an office much needed, particularly by certain dullards,
+the magazine of whose souls are not combustible enough to take fire at the
+electric sparks shot forth _up_ out of the depths of George Stephens's
+unfathomable genius!
+
+The first gem that sparkles in the play, is where _Isabella_, the Queen
+Dowager of Hungary, with a degree of delicacy highly becoming a matron,
+makes desperate love to _Castaldo_, an Austrian ambassador. In the midst
+of her ravings she breaks off, to give such a description of a
+steeple-chase as Nimrod has never equalled.
+
+ ISABELLA (_hotly_). "Love _rides_ upon a thought,
+ And stays not dully to _inquire the way_,
+ But right _o'erleaps the fence_ unto the _goal_."
+
+To appreciate the splendour of this image, the reader must conceive Love
+booted and spurred, mounted upon a _thought_, saddled and bridled. He
+starts. _Yo-hoiks_! what a pace! He stops not to "inquire the
+way"--whether he is to take the first turning to the right, or the second
+to the left--but on, on he rushes, clears the fence cleverly, and wins by
+a dozen lengths!
+
+What soul, what mastery, what poetical skill is here! We triumphantly put
+forth this passage as an instance of the sublime art of sinking in poetry
+not to be matched by Dibdin Pitt or Jacob Jones. Love is sublimed to a
+jockey, Thought promoted to a race-horse!--"Magnificent!"
+
+But splendid as this is, Mr. Stephens can make the force of bathos go a
+little further. The passage continues ("_a pause_" intervening, to allow
+breathing ime, after the splitting pace with which Love has been riding
+upon Thought) thus:--
+
+ "Are your lips free? A smile will make no noise.
+ What ignorance! So! Well! _I'll to breakfast straight_!"
+
+Again:--
+
+ ISABELLA. "Ha! ha! These forms are air--mere counterfeits
+ Of my _imaginous_ heart, _as are the whirling
+ Wainscot and trembling floor_!"
+
+The idea of transferring the seat of imagination from the head to the
+heart, and causing it to exhibit the wainscot in a pirouette, and the
+floor in an ague, is highly _Shakesperesque_, and, as the _Courier_ is
+made to say at page 3 of the _Opinions_, "is worthy of the best days of
+that noble school of dramatic literature in which Mr. Stephens has so
+successfully studied."
+
+This well-deserved praise--the success with which the author has studied,
+in a school, the models of which were human feelings and nature,--we have
+yet to illustrate from other passages. Mr. Stephens evinces his full
+acquaintance with Nature by a familiarity with her convulsions:
+whirlwinds, thunder, lightning, earthquakes, and volcanoes--are this
+gentleman's playthings. When, for instance, _Rupert_ is going to be
+gallant to Queen Isabella, she exclaims:--
+
+ "Dire lightnings! Scoundrel! Help!"
+
+_Martinuzzi_ conveys a wish for his nobles to laugh--an order for a sort
+of court cachinnation--in these pretty terms:--
+
+ "_Blow it about_, ye opposite winds of heaven,
+ Till the loud chorus of derision shake
+ The world with laughter!"
+
+When he feels uncomfortable at something he is told in the first act, the
+Cardinal complains thus:--
+
+ "Ha! earthquakes quiver in my flesh!"
+
+which the _Britannia_ is so good as to tell us is superior to Byron; while
+the _Morning Herald_ kindly remarks, that "a more vigorous and expressive
+line was _never_ penned. In five words it illustrates the fiercest
+passions of humanity by the direst convulsion of nature:" (_Opinions_, p.
+7) a criticism which illustrates the fiercest throes of nonsense, by the
+direst convulsions of ignorance.
+
+_Castaldo_, being anxious to murder the Cardinal with, we suppose, all
+"means and appliances to boot," asks of heaven a trifling favour:--
+
+ "Heaven, that look'st on,
+ Rain thy broad deluge first! All-teeming earth
+ Disgorge thy poisons, till the attainted air
+ Offend the sense! Thou, miscreative hell,
+ Let loose calamity!"
+
+But it is not only in the "sublime and beautiful that Mr. Stephens's
+genius delights" (_vide Opinions_, p. 4); his play exhibits sentiments of
+high morality, quite worthy of the "Editor of the Church of England
+Quarterly Review," the author of "Lay Sermons," and other religious works.
+For example: the lady-killer, _Castaldo_, is "hotly" loved by the
+queen-mother, while he prefers the queen-daughter. The last and _Castaldo_
+are together. The dowager overhears their billing and cooing, and thus,
+with great moderation, sends her supposed daughter to ----. But the author
+shall speak for himself:--
+
+ "Ye viprous twain!
+ Swift whirlwinds snatch ye both to fire as endless
+ And infinite as hell! May it embrace ye!
+ And burn--burn limbs and sinews, souls, until
+ It wither ye both up--both--in its arms!"
+
+Elegant denunciation!--"viprous," "hell," "sinews and souls." Has Goethe
+ever written anything like this? Certainly not. Therefore the "Monthly"
+_is_ right at p. 11 of the _Opinions_. Stephens must be equal, if not
+superior, to the author of "Faust."
+
+One more specimen of delicate sentiment from the lips of a virgin
+concerning the lips of her lover, will fully establish the Syncretic code
+of moral taste:--
+
+ CZERINA (_faintly_). "Do breathe heat into me:
+ Lay thy warm breath unto my bloodless lips:
+ I stagger; I--I must--"
+
+ CASTALDO. "In mercy, what?"
+
+ CZERINA. "Wed!!!"
+
+The lady ends, most maidenly, by fainting in her lover's arms.
+
+A higher flight is elsewhere taken. _Isabella_ urges _Castaldo_ to murder
+_Martinuzzi_, in a sentence that has a powerful effect upon the feelings,
+for it makes us shudder as we copy it--it will cause even _our_ readers to
+tremble when they see it. The idea of using _blasphemy_ as an instrument
+for shocking the minds of an audience, is as original as it is worthy of
+the _sort_ of genius Mr. Stephens possesses. Alluding to a poniard,
+_Isabella_ says:--
+
+ "Sheath it where _God_ and nature prompt your hand!"
+
+That is to say, in the breast of a cardinal!!
+
+The vulgar, who set up the common-place standards of nature, probability,
+moral propriety, and respect for such sacred names as they are careful
+never to utter, except with reverence, will perhaps condemn Mr. Stephens
+(the aforesaid "Editor of the Church of England Quarterly Review," and
+author of other religious works) with unmitigated severity. They must not
+be too hasty. Mr. Stephens is a genius, and cannot, therefore, be held
+accountable for the _meaning_ of his ravings, be they even blasphemous;
+more than that he is a Syncretic genius, and his associates, by the
+designation they have chosen, by the terms of their agreement, are bound
+to cry each other up--to defend one another from the virulent attacks of
+common sense and plain reason. They are sworn to _stick_ together, like
+the bundle of rods in Ćsop's fable.
+
+[Illustration: SYNCRETISM.]
+
+Mr. Stephens, their chief, the god of their idolatry, is, consequently,
+more mad, or, according to their creed, a greater genius, than the rest;
+and evidently writes passages he would shudder to pen, if he knew the
+meaning of them. Upon paper, therefore, the Syncretics are not accountable
+beings; and when condemned to the severest penalties of critical law, must
+be reprieved on the plea of literary insanity.
+
+It may be said that we have descended to mere detail to illustrate Mr.
+Stephens' peculiar genius--that we ought to treat of the grand design, or
+plot of the _Hungarian Daughter_; but we must confess, with the deepest
+humility, that our abilities are unequal to the task. The fable soars far
+beyond the utmost flights of our poor conjectures, of our limited
+comprehension. We know that at the end there are--one case of poisoning,
+one ditto of stabbing with intent, &c., and one ditto of sudden death.
+Hence we conclude that the play is a tragedy; but one which "cannot be
+intended for an acting play" (_preliminary preface_, p.1,)--of course _as_
+a tragedy; yet so universal is the author's genius, that an adaptation of
+the _Hungarian Daughter_, as a broad comedy, has been produced at the
+"Dramatic Authors' Theatre," having been received with roars of laughter!
+
+The books before us have been expensively got up. In the _Hungarian
+Daughter_, "rivers of type flow through meadows of margin," to the length
+of nearly three hundred pages. Mr. Stephens is truly a most spirited
+printer and publisher of his own works.
+
+But the lavish outlay he must have incurred to obtain such a number of
+favourable notices--so many columns of superlative praise--shows him to
+be, in every sense--like the prince of puffers, George Robins--"utterly
+regardless of expense." The works third and fourth upon our list,
+doubtless cost, for the _copyright_ alone, in ready money, a fortune. It
+is astonishing what pecuniary sacrifices genius will make, when it
+purloins the trumpet of Fame to _puff_ itself into temporary notoriety.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+INQUEST EXTRAORDINARY.
+
+ The Whigs, who long
+ Were bold and strong,
+ On Monday night went dead.
+ The jury found
+ This verdict sound--
+ "_Destroy'd by low-priced bread_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+AN EXCLUSIVE APPOINTMENT.
+
+It is with the most rampant delight that we rush to announce, that a
+special warrant has been issued, appointing our friend and _protégé_,
+the gallant and jocular Sibthorp, to the important office of beadle and
+crier to the House of Commons--a situation which has been created from the
+difficulty which has hitherto been found in inducing strangers to withdraw
+during a division of the House. This responsible office could not have
+been conferred upon any one so capable of discharging its onerous duties
+as the Colonel. We will stake our hump, that half-a-dozen words of the
+gallant Demosthenes would, at any time have the effect of
+
+[Illustration: CLEARING THE STRANGER'S GALLERY.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE GREAT CRICKET MATCH AT ST. STEPHEN'S.
+
+FIRST INNINGS.
+
+The return match between the Reform and Carlton Clubs has been the theme
+of general conversation during the past week. Some splendid play was
+exhibited on the occasion, and, although the result has realised the
+anticipations of the best judges, it was not achieved without considerable
+exertion.
+
+It will be remembered that, the last time these celebrated clubs met, the
+Carlton men succeeded in scoring one notch more than their rivals; who,
+however, immediately challenged them to a return match, and have been
+diligently practising for success since that time.
+
+The players assembled in _Lord's_ Cricket Ground on Tuesday last, when the
+betting was decidedly in favour of the Cons, whose appearance and manner
+was more confident than usual; while, on the contrary, the Rads seemed
+desponding and shy. On tossing up, the Whigs succeeded in getting first
+innings, and the Tories dispersed themselves about the field in high glee,
+flattering themselves that they would not be _out_ long.
+
+Wellington, on producing the ball--a genuine _Duke_--excited general
+admiration by his position. Ripon officiated as bowler at the other
+wicket. Sibthorp acted as long-stop, and the rest found appropriate
+situations. Lefevre was chosen umpire by mutual consent.
+
+Spencer and Clanricarde went in first. Spencer, incautiously trying to
+score too many notches for one of his hits, was stumped out by Ripon, and
+Melbourne succeeded him. Great expectations had been formed of this player
+by his own party, but he was utterly unable to withstand Wellington's
+rapid bowling, which soon sent him to the right-about. Clanricarde was
+likewise run out without scoring a notch.
+
+Lansdowne and Brougham were now partners at the wickets; but Lansdowne did
+not appear to like his mate, on whose play it is impossible to calculate.
+Coventry, _the short slip_, excited much merriment, by a futile attempt to
+catch this player out, which terminated in his finding himself horizontal
+and mortified. Wellington, having bowled out Lansdowne, resigned his ball
+to Peel, who took his place at the wicket with a smile of confidence,
+which frightened the bat out of the hands of Phillips, the next Rad.
+
+Dundas and Labouchere were now the batmen. Labouchere is a very
+intemperate player. One of Sandon's slow balls struck his thumb, and put
+him out of temper, whereupon he hit about at random, and knocked down his
+wicket. Wakley took his bat, but apparently not liking his position, he
+hit up and caught himself out.
+
+O'Connell took his place with a lounging swagger, but his first ball was
+caught by the immortal Sibthorp, who uttered more puns on the occasion
+than the oldest man present recollected to have heard perpetrated in any
+given time. Russell--who, by the bye, excavated several quarts of 'heavy'
+during his innings--was the last man the Rads had to put in. He played
+with care, and appeared disposed to keep hold of the bat as long as
+possible. He was, however, quietly disposed of by one of Peel's inexorable
+balls.
+
+Thus far the game has proceeded. The Cons have yet to _go in_. The general
+opinion is, that they will not remain in so long as the Rads, but that
+they will score their notches much quicker. Indeed, it was commonly
+remarked, that no players had ever remained in so long, and had done so
+little good withal, as the Reformites.
+
+Betting is at 100 to 5 in favour of the Carlton men, and anxiety is on
+tip-toe to know the result of the next innings.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+The Tories are exulting in their recent victory over the poor Whigs, whom
+they affirm have been _tried_, and found wanting. A _trial_, indeed, where
+all the jurors were witnesses for the prosecution. One thing is certain,
+that the country, as usual, will have to pay the costs, for a Tory verdict
+will be certain to carry them. The Whigs should prepare a motion for a new
+trial, on the plea that the late decision was that of
+
+[Illustration: A PACKED JURY.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DECIDEDLY UNPLEASANT.
+
+"Kiss the broad moon."--MARTINUZZI.
+
+ Go kiss the moon!--that's more, sirs, than I can dare;
+ 'Tis worse than madness--hasn't she her man there?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CURIOUS COINCIDENCE.
+
+The _Morning Advertiser_ has a paragraph containing a report of an
+extraordinary indisposition under which a private of the Royal Guards is
+now suffering. It appears he lately received a violent kick from a horse,
+on the back of his head: since which time his hair has become so
+sensitive, that he cannot bear any one to approach him or touch it. On
+some portion being cut off by stratagem, he evinced the utmost disgust,
+accompanied with a volley of oaths. This may be wonderful in French hair,
+but it is nothing to the present sufferings of the Whigs in England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE BARTHOLOMEW FAIR SHOW-FOLKS.
+
+Punch having been chosen by the unanimous voice of the public--the
+_arbiter elegantiarum_ in all matters relating to science, literature, and
+the fine arts--and from his long professional experience, being the only
+person in England competent to regulate the public amusements of the
+people, the Lord Mayor of London has confided to him the delicate and
+important duty of deciding upon the claims of the several individuals
+applying for licenses to open show-booths during the approaching
+Bartholomew Fair. Punch, having called to his assistance Sir Peter Laurie
+and Peter Borthwick, proceeded, on last Saturday, to hold his inquisition
+in a highly-respectable court in the neighbourhood of West Smithfield.
+
+The first application was made on behalf of _Richardson's Booth_, by two
+individuals named Melbourne and Russell.
+
+PUNCH.--On what grounds do you claim?
+
+MEL.--On those of long occupancy and respectability, my lord.
+
+RUSS.--We employs none but the werry best of actors, my lud--all "bould
+speakers," as my late wenerated manager, Muster Richardson, used to call
+'em.
+
+MEL.--We have the best scenery and decorations, the most popular
+performances--
+
+RUSS.--Hem! (_aside to_ MEL.)--Best say nothing about our performances,
+Mel.
+
+PUNCH.--Pray what situations do you respectively hold in the booth?
+
+MEL.--_I_ am principal manager, and do the heavy tragedy business. My
+friend, here, is the stage-manager and low comedy buffer, who takes the
+kicks, and blows the trumpet of the establishment.
+
+PUNCH.--What is the nature of the entertainments you have been in the
+habit of producing?
+
+RUSS.--Oh! the real legitimate drammar--"A New Way to Pay Old Debts,"
+"Raising the Wind," "A Gentleman in Difficulties," "Where shall I dine?"
+and "Honest Thieves." We mean to commence the present season with "All in
+the wrong," and "His Last Legs."
+
+PUNCH.--Humph! I am sorry to say I have received several complaints of the
+manner in which you have conducted the business of your establishment for
+several years. It appears you put forth bills promising wonders, while
+your performances have been of the lowest possible description.
+
+RUSS.--S'elp me, Bob! there ain't a word of truth in it. If there's
+anything we takes pride on, 'tis our gentility.
+
+PUNCH.--You have degraded the drama by the introduction of card-shufflers
+and thimble-rig impostors.
+
+RUSS.--We denies the thimble-rigging in totum, my lud; that was brought
+out at Stanley's opposition booth.
+
+PUNCH.--At least you were a promoter of state conjuring and legerdemain
+tricks on the stage.
+
+RUSS.--Only a little hanky-panky, my lud. The people likes it; they loves
+to be cheated before their faces. One, two, three--presto--begone. I'll
+show your ludship as pretty a trick of putting a piece of money in your
+eye and taking it out of your elbow, as you ever beheld. _Has_ your
+ludship got such a thing as a good shilling about you? 'Pon my honour,
+I'll return it.
+
+PUNCH.--Be more respectful, sir, and reply to my questions. It appears
+further, that several respectable persons have lost their honesty in your
+booth.
+
+RUSS.--Very little of that 'ere commodity is ever brought into it, my lud.
+
+PUNCH.--And, in short, that you and your colleagues' hands have been
+frequently found in the pockets of your audience.
+
+RUSS.--Only in a professional way, my lud--strictly professional.
+
+PUNCH.--But the most serious charge of all is that, on a recent occasion,
+when the audience hissed your performances, you put out the lights, let in
+the swell-mob, and raised a cry of "No Corn Laws."
+
+RUSS.--Why, my lud, on that p'int I admit there was a slight row.
+
+PUNCH.--Enough, sir. The court considers you have grossly misconducted
+yourself, and refuses to grant you license to perform.
+
+MEL.--But, my lord, I protest _I did_ nothing.
+
+PUNCH.--So everybody says, sir. You are therefore unfit to have the
+management of (next to my own) the greatest theatre in the world. You may
+retire.
+
+MEL. (_to_ RUSS.)--Oh! Johnny, this is your work--with your confounded
+hanky-panky.
+
+RUSS.--No--'twas you that did it; we have been ruined by your laziness.
+What _is_ to become of us now?
+
+MEL.--Alas! where shall we dine?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The next individual who presented himself, to obtain a license for the
+Carlton Club Equestrian Troop, was a strange-loooking character, who gave
+his name as Sibthorp.
+
+PUNCH.--What are you, sir?
+
+SIB.--Clown to the ring, my lord, and principal performer on the Salt-box.
+I provide my own paint and pipe-clay, make my own jokes, and laugh at them
+too. I do the ground and lofty tumbling, and ride the wonderful
+donkey--all for the small sum of fifteen bob a-week.
+
+PUNCH.--You have been represented as a very noisy and turbulent fellow.
+
+SIB.--Meek as a lamb, my lord, except when I'm on the saw-dust; there I
+acknowledge, I do crow pretty loudly--but that's in the way of
+business,--and your lordship knows that we public jokers must pitch it
+strong sometimes to make our audience laugh, and bring the _browns_ into
+the treasury. After all, my lord, I am not the rogue many people take me
+for,--more the other way, I can assure you, and
+
+ "Though to my share some human errors fall,
+ Look in my face, and you'll forget them all."
+
+PUNCH.--A strong appeal, I must confess. You shall have your license.
+
+The successful claimant having made his best bow to Commissioner Punch,
+withdrew, whistling the national air of
+
+[Illustration: "BRITONS, STRIKE HOME."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A fellow named Peel, who has been for many years in the habit of
+exhibiting as a quack-doctor, next applied for liberty to vend his
+nostrums at the fair. On being questioned as to his qualifications, he
+shook his head gravely, and, without uttering a word, placed the following
+card in the hands of Punch.
+
+
+TO THE GULLIBLE PUBLIC.
+
+SIR RHUBARB PILL, M.D. and L.S.D.
+
+Professor of Political Chemistry and Conservative Medicine to the
+
+CARLTON CLUB;
+
+PHYSICIAN IN ORDINARY TO THE KING OF HANOVER!!!
+
+Inventor of the People's Patent Sliding Stomach-pump;--of the Poor Man's
+anti-Breakfast and Dinner Waist-belt;--and of the new Royal extract of
+Toryism, as prescribed for, and lately swallowed by,
+
+THE MOST ILLUSTRIOUS PERSONAGE IN THESE DOMINIONS.
+
+Sir Rhubarb begs further to state, that he practises national
+tooth-drawing and bleeding to an unlimited extent; and undertakes to cure
+the consumption of bread without the use of
+
+A FIXED PLASTER.
+
+N.B.--No connexion with the corn doctor who recently vacated the concern
+now occupied by Sir R.P.
+
+Hours of attendance, from ten till four each day, at his establishment,
+Downing-street.--A private entrance for M.P.'s round the corner.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ben D'Israeli, the proprietor of the Learned Pig, applied for permission
+to exhibit his animal at the fair. A license was unhesitatingly granted by
+his lordship, who rightly considered that the exhibition of the
+extraordinary talents of the pig and its master, would do much to promote
+a taste for polite literature amongst the Smithneld "pennyboys."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A poor old man, who called himself Sir Francis Burdett, applied for a
+license to exhibit his wonderful Dissolving Views. The most remarkable of
+which were--"The Hustings in Covent-garden--changing to Rous's dinner in
+Drury-lane"--and "The Patriot in the Tower--changing to the Renegade in
+the Carlton." It appeared that the applicant was, at one time, in a
+respectable business, and kept "The Old Glory," a favourite public-house
+in Westminster, but, falling into bad company, he lost his custom and his
+character, and was reduced to his present miserable occupation. Punch, in
+pity for the wretched petitioner, and fully convinced that his childish
+tricks were perfectly harmless, granted him a license to exhibit.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Licenses were also granted to the following persons in the course of the
+day:--
+
+Sir E.L. Bulwer, to exhibit his own portrait, in the character of
+Alcibiades, painted by himself.
+
+Doctor Bowring, to exhibit six Tartarian chiefs, caught in the vicinity of
+the Seven Dials, with songs, translated from the original Irish Calmuc, by
+the Doctor.
+
+Emerson Tennent, to exhibit his wonderful Cosmorama, or views of anywhere
+and everywhere; in which the striking features of Ireland, Greece,
+Belgium, and Whitechapel will be so happily confounded, that the spectator
+may imagine he beholds any or all of these places at a single glance.
+
+Messrs. Stephens, Heraud, and Co., to exhibit, gratis, a Syncretic
+Tragedy, with fireworks and tumbling, according to law, between the acts;
+to be followed by a lecture on the Unactable Drama.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CAPITAL ILLUSTRATION.
+
+At the recent _fracas_ in Pall Mall, between Captain Fitzroy and Mr.
+Shepherd, the latter, like his predecessor of old, the "Gentle Shepherd,"
+performed sundry vague evolutions with a silver-mounted cane, and
+requested Captain Fitzroy to consider himself horsewhipped. Not
+entertaining quite so high an opinion of his adversary's imaginative
+powers, the Captain floored the said descendant of gentleness, thereby
+ably illustrating the precise difference of the "_real and ideal_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE HEIR OF APPLEBITE.
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+SHOWS HOW AGAMEMNON BECAME DISGUSTED WITH NUMBER ONE, AND THE AWFUL
+CONSEQUENCES WHICH SUCCEEDED.
+
+[Illustration: P]Poor old John's alarm was succeeded by astonishment, for
+without speaking a word, Agamemnon bounced into his bed-chamber. He
+thought the room the most miserable-looking room he had ever entered,
+though the floor was covered with a thick Turkey carpet, a bright fire was
+blazing in the grate, and everything about seemed fashioned for comfort.
+He threw himself into an easy chair, and kicking off one of his pumps,
+crossed his legs, and rested his elbow on the table. He looked at his
+bed--it was a French one--a mountain of feathers, covered with a thick,
+white Marseilles quilt, and festooned over with a drapery of rich crimson
+damask.
+
+"I'll have a four-post to-morrow," growled Collumpsion; "French beds are
+mean-looking things, after all. Stuffwell has the fellow-chair to
+this--one chair does look strange! I wonder it has never struck me before;
+but it is surprising--what--strange ide--as a man--has"--and Collumpsion
+fell asleep.
+
+It was broad day when Collumpsion awoke; the fire had gone out, and his
+feet were as cold as ice. He (as he is married there's no necessity for
+concealment)--he swore two or three naughty oaths, and taking off his
+clothes, hurried into bed in the hope of getting warm.
+
+"How confoundedly cold I am--sitting in that chair all night,
+too--ridiculous. If I had had a--I mean, if I hadn't been alone, that
+wouldn't have happened; she would have waked me." _She_--what the deuce
+made him use the feminine pronoun!
+
+At two o'clock he rose and entered his breakfast-room. The table was laid
+as usual--_one_ large cup and saucer, _one_ plate, _one_ egg-cup, _one_
+knife, and _one_ fork! He did not know wherefore, but he felt to want the
+number increased. John brought up a slice of broiled salmon and _one_ egg.
+Collumpsion got into a passion, and ordered a second edition. The morning
+was rainy, so Collumpsion remained at home, and employed himself by
+kicking about the ottoman, and mentally multiplying all the single
+articles in his establishment by two.
+
+The dinner hour arrived, and there was the same singular provision for
+one. He rang the bell, and ordered John to furnish the table for
+_another_. John obeyed, though not without some strong misgiving of his
+master's sanity, as the edibles consisted of a sole, a mutton chop, and a
+partridge. When John left the room at his master's request, Collumpsion
+rose and locked the door. Having placed a chair opposite, he resumed his
+seat, and commenced a series of pantomimic gestures, which were strongly
+confirmatory of John's suspicions. He seemed to be holding an inaudible
+conversation with some invisible being, placing the choicest portion of
+the sole in a plate, and seemingly desiring John to deliver it to the
+unknown. As John was not there, he placed it before himself, and commenced
+daintily and smilingly picking up very minute particles, as though he were
+too much delighted to eat. He then bowed and smiled, and extending his
+arm, appeared to fill the opposite glass, and having _actually_ performed
+the same operation with his own, he bowed and smiled again, and sipped the
+brilliant Xeres. He then rang the bell violently, and unlocking the door,
+rushed rapidly back to his chair, as though he were fearful of committing
+a rudeness by leaving it. The table being replenished, and John again
+dismissed the room, the same pantomime commenced. The one mutton chop
+seemed at first to present an obstacle to the proper conduct of the scene;
+but gracefully uncovering the partridge, and as gracefully smiling towards
+the invisible, he appeared strongly to recommend the bird in preference to
+the beast. Dinner at length concluded, he rose, and apparently led his
+phantom guest from the table, and then returning to his arm-chair, threw
+himself into it, and, crossing his hands upon his breast, commenced a
+careful examination of the cinders and himself. His rumination ended in a
+doze, and his doze in a dream, in which he fancied himself a Brobdignag
+Java sparrow during the moulting season. His cage was surrounded by
+beautiful and blooming girls, who seemed to pity his condition, and vie
+with each other in proposing the means of rendering him more comfortable.
+Some spoke of elastic cotton shirts, linsey-wolsey jackets, and silk
+nightcaps; others of merino hose, silk feet and cotton tops, shirt-buttons
+and warming-pans; whilst Mrs. Greatgirdle and Mrs. Waddledot sang an echo
+duet of "What a pity the bird is alone."
+
+ "A change came o'er the spirit of his dream."
+
+He thought that the moulting season was over, and that he was rejoicing in
+the fulness of a sleeky plumage, and by his side was a Java sparrowess,
+chirping and hopping about, rendering the cage as populous to him as
+though he were the tenant of a bird-fancier's shop. Then--he awoke just as
+Old John was finishing a glass of Madeira, preparatory to arousing
+Collumpsion, for the purpose of delivering to him a scented note, which
+had just been left by the footman of Mrs. Waddledot.
+
+It was lucky for John that A.C.A. had been blessed with pleasant dreams,
+or his attachment to Madeira might have occasioned his discharge from No.
+24, Pleasant-terrace.
+
+The note was an invitation to Mrs. Waddledot's opera-box for that evening.
+The performance was to be Rossini's "La Cenerentola," and as Collumpsion
+recollected the subject of the opera, his heart fluttered in his bosom. A
+prince marrying a cinder-sifter for love! What must the happy state be--or
+rather what must it not be--to provoke such a condescension!
+
+Collumpsion never appeared to such advantage as he did that evening; he
+was dressed to a miracle of perfection--his spirits were so elastic that
+they must have carried him out of the box into "Fop's-alley," had not Mrs.
+Waddledot cleverly surrounded him by the detachment from the corps of
+eighteen daughters, which had (on that night) been placed under her
+command.
+
+Collumpsion's state of mind did not escape the notice of the fair
+campaigners, and the most favourable deductions were drawn from it in
+relation to the charitable combination which they had formed for his
+ultimate good, and all seemed determined to afford him every encouragement
+in their power. Every witticism that he uttered elicited countless
+smiles--every criticism that he delivered was universally applauded--in
+short, Agamemnon Collumpsion Applebite was voted the most delightful beau
+in the universe, and Agamemnon Collumpsion Applebite gave himself a
+plumper to the same opinion.
+
+On the 31st of the following month, a string of carriages surrounded St.
+George's Church, Hanover-square, and precisely at a quarter to twelve,
+A.M., Agamemnon Collumpsion Applebite placed a plain gold ring on the
+finger of Miss Juliana Theresa Waddledot, being a necessary preliminary to
+the introduction of our hero, the "Heir of Applebite."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+EPIGRAM.
+
+ "I wonder if Brougham thinks as much as he talks,"
+ Said a punster perusing a trial:
+ "I vow, since his lordship was made Baron Vaux,
+ He's been _Vaux et prćterea nihil!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE TWO FATAL CHIROPEDISTS.
+
+Our great ancestor, Joe Miller, has recorded, in his "Booke of Jestes," an
+epitaph written upon an amateur corn-cutter, named Roger Horton, who,
+
+ "Trying one day his corn to mow off,
+ The razor slipp'd, and cut his toe off."
+
+The painful similarity of his fate with that of another corn
+experimentalist, has given rise to the following:--
+
+EPITAPH ON LORD JOHN RUSSELL, WHO EXPIRED POLITICALLY, AFTER A LINGERING
+ILLNESS, ON MONDAY EVENING, AUGUST 30, 1841.
+
+ In Minto quies.
+
+ Beneath this stone lies Johnny Russell,
+ Who for his place had many a tussel.
+ Trying one day _the corn_ to cut down,
+ The motion fail'd, and he was _put_ down.
+ The benches which he nearly grew to,
+ The Opposition quickly flew to;
+ The fact it was so mortifying,
+ That little Johnny took to dying.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SHALL GREAT OLYMPUS TO A MOLEHILL STOOP?
+
+Some difficulty has arisen as to the production of Knowles's new play at
+the Haymarket Theatre. Mr. Charles Kean and Miss Helen Faucit having
+objected to hear the play read, "_because their respective parts had not
+been previously submitted to them._"--_Sunday Times_.--[We are of opinion
+that they were decidedly right. One might as well expect a child to spell
+without learning the alphabet, as either of the above persons to
+understand Knowles, unless enlightened by a long course of previous
+instruction.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE LETTER OF INTRODUCTION.
+
+ [From a MS. drama called the "COURT OF VICTORIA."
+
+_Scene in Windsor Castle._
+
+[_Her Majesty discovered sitting thoughtfully at an escrutoire._--
+
+_Enter the_ LORD CHAMBERLAIN.]
+
+LORD CHAMBERLAIN.--May it please your Majesty, a letter from the Duke of
+Wellington.
+
+THE QUEEN (_opens the letter_.)--Oh! a person for the vacant place of
+Premier--show the bearer in, my lord. [_Exit_ LORD CHAMBERLAIN.
+
+THE QUEEN (_muses_).--Sir Robert Peel--I have heard that name before, as
+connected with my family. If I remember rightly, he held the situation of
+adviser to the crown in the reign of Uncle William, and was discharged for
+exacting a large discount on all the state receipts; yet Wellington is
+very much interested in his favour.
+
+_Enter the_ LORD CHAMBERLAIN, _who ushers in_ SIR ROBERT, _and then
+retires. As he is going_--]
+
+LORD CHAMBERLAIN (_aside_).--If you do get the berth, Sir Robert, I hope
+you'll not give me warning. [_Exit_.
+
+SIR ROBERT (_looking demurely_).--Hem!
+
+[_The Queen regards him very attentively._]
+
+THE QUEEN (_aside_).--I don't much like the looks of the fellow--that
+affectation of simplicity is evidently intended to conceal the real
+cunning of his character. (_Aloud_). You are of course aware of the nature
+and the duties of the situation which you solicit?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Oh, yes, your Majesty; I have filled it before, and liked it
+very much.
+
+THE QUEEN.--It's a most responsible post, for upon your conduct much of
+the happiness of my other servants depends.
+
+SIR ROBERT.--I am aware of that, your Majesty; but as no one can hope to
+please everybody, I will only answer that _one half_ shall be perfectly
+satisfied.
+
+THE QUEEN.--You have recently returned from Tamworth?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Yes, your Majesty.
+
+THE QUEEN.--We will dispense with forms. At Tamworth, you have been
+practising as a quack doctor?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Yes, madam; I was brought up to doctoring, and am a professor
+of sleight-of-hand.
+
+THE QUEEN.--What have you done in the latter art to entitle you to such a
+distinction?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--I have performed some very wonderful changes. When I was out
+of place, I had opinions strongly opposed to Catholic emancipation; but
+when I got into service I changed them in the course of a few days.
+
+THE QUEEN.--I have heard that you boast of possessing a nostrum for the
+restoration of the public good. What is it?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Am I to consider myself "as regularly called in?"
+
+THE QUEEN.--That is a question I decline answering at present.
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Then I regret that I must also remain silent.
+
+THE QUEEN (_aside_).--The wily fox! (_aloud_)--Are you aware that great
+distress exists in the country?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Oh, yes! I have heard that there are several families who
+keep no man-servant, and that numerous clerks, weavers, and other
+artisans, occupy second-floors.
+
+THE QUEEN.--I have heard that the people are wanting bread.
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Ha, ha! that was from the late premier, I suppose. He merely
+forgot an adjective--it is _cheap_ bread that the people are clamouring
+for.
+
+THE QUEEN.--And why can they not have it?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--I have consulted with the Duke of Richmond upon the subject,
+and he says it is impossible.
+
+THE QUEEN.--But why?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Wheat must be lower before bread can be cheaper.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Well!
+
+SIR ROBERT.--And rents must be less if that is the case, and--
+
+THE QUEEN.--Well!
+
+SIR ROBERT.--And that the landowners won't agree to.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Well!
+
+SIR ROBERT.--And, then, I can't keep my place a day.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Then the majority of my subjects are to be rendered miserable
+for the advantage of the few?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--That's the principle of all good governments. Besides, cheap
+bread would be no benefit to the masses, for wages would be lower.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Do you really believe such _would_ be the case?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Am I regularly called in?
+
+THE QUEEN.--You evade a direct answer, I see. Granting such to be _your
+belief_, your friends and landowners would suffer no injury, for their
+incomes would procure them as many luxuries.
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Not if they were to live abroad, or patronise foreign
+manufactures: and _should_ wages be higher, what would they say to me
+after all the money they have expended in bri--I mean at the Carlton Club,
+if I allow the value of their "dirty acres" to be reduced.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Pray, what do you call such views?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Patriotism.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Charity would be a better term, as that is said to begin at
+home. How long were you in your last place?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Not half so long as I wished--for the sake of the country.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Why did you leave?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Somebody said I was saucy--and somebody else said I was not
+honest--and somebody else said I had better go.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Who was the latter somebody?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--My master.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Your exposure of my late premier's faults, and your present
+application for his situation, result from disinterestedness, of course?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Of course, madam.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Then salary is not so much an object as a comfortable
+situation.
+
+SIR ROBERT.--I beg pardon; but I've been out of place ten years, and have
+a small family to support. _Wages_ is, therefore, some sort of a
+consideration.
+
+THE QUEEN.--I don't quite like you.
+
+SIR ROBERT (_glancing knowingly at the Queen_).--I don't think there is
+any one that _you can_ have better.
+
+THE QUEEN.--I'm afraid not.
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Then, am I regularly called in?
+
+THE QUEEN.--Yes, you can take your boxes to Downing-street.
+
+[_Exeunt ambo_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PARLIAMENTARY INTENTIONS.
+
+Mr. Muntz, we understand, intends calling the attention of Parliament, at
+the earliest possible period, to the state of the crops.
+
+Lord Palmerston intends proposing, that a looking-glass for the use of
+members should be placed in the ante-room of the House, and that it shall
+be called the New Mirror of Parliament.
+
+Mr. T. Duncombe intends moving that the plans of Sir Robert Peel be
+immediately submitted to the photographic process, in order that some
+light may be thrown upon them as soon as possible.
+
+The Earl of Coventry intends suggesting, that every member of both Houses
+be immediately supplied with a copy of the work called "Ten Minutes'
+Advice on Corns," in order to prepare Parliament for a full description of
+the Corn Laws.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+EXTRA FASHIONABLE NEWS.
+
+Colonel Sibthorp has expressed his intention of becoming the blue-faced
+monkey at the Zoological Gardens with his _countenance_, on next
+Wednesday.
+
+Lord Melbourne has received visits of condolence on his retirement from
+office, from Aldgate pump--Canning's statue in Palace-yard--the Three
+Kings of Brentford--and the Belle Sauvage, Ludgate-hill.
+
+Her Royal Highness the Princess, her two nurses, and a pap-spoon, took an
+airing twice round the great hall of the palace, at one o'clock yesterday.
+
+The Burlington Arcade will be thrown open to visitors to-morrow morning.
+Gentlemen intending to appear there, are requested to come with
+tooth-picks and full-dress walking-canes.
+
+Sir Francis Burdett's top-boots were seen, on last Saturday, walking into
+Sir Robert Peel's house, accompanied by the legs of that venerable turner.
+
+His Grace the Duke of Wellington inspected all the passengers in Pall
+Mall, from the steps of the United Service Club-house, and expressed
+himself highly pleased with the celerity of the 'busses and cabs, and the
+effective state of the pedestrians generally.
+
+His Royal Highness the Duke of Sussex has, in the most unequivocal manner,
+expressed his opinion on the state of the weather--which he pronounces to
+be hot! hot! all hot!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A SINGULAR INADVERTENCE.
+
+A good deal of merriment was caused in the House of Commons, by Mr. Bernal
+and Commodore Napier addressing the members as "gentlemen." This may be
+excusable in young members, but the oldest parliamentary reporter has no
+recollection of the term being used by any one who had sat a session in
+the House. "Too much familiarity," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PUNCH'S PENCILLINGS--No. VIII.
+
+[Illustration: THE LETTER OF INTRODUCTION.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE MINISTRY'S ODE TO THE PASSIONS.
+
+NOT BY COLLINS.
+
+ When the Whig Ministry had run,
+ Nor left behind a mother's son,
+ The Tories, at their leader's call,
+ Came thronging round him, one and all,
+ Exulting, braying, cringing, coaxing,
+ Expert at humbugging and hoaxing;
+ By turns they felt an _honest_ zeal
+ For private good and public weal;
+ Till all at once they raised such yells,
+ As rung in Apsley House the bells:
+ And as they sought snug berths to get
+ In Bobby Peel's new cabinet,
+ Each, for interest ruled the hour,
+ Would prove his taste for place and power.
+
+ First Follett's hand, his skill to try,
+ Upon the _seals_ bewilder'd laid;
+ But back recoil'd--he scarce knew why--
+ Of Lyndhurst's angry scowl afraid.
+
+ Next Stanley rush'd with frenzied air;
+ His eager haste brook'd no delay:
+ He rudely seized the _Foreign_ chair,
+ And bade poor Cupid trudge away.
+
+ With woeful visage Melbourne sate--
+ A pint of double X his grief beguiled;
+ And inly pondering o'er his fate,
+ He bade th' attendant pot-boy "draw it mild."
+
+ But thou, Sir Jamie Graham--prig;
+ What was thy delighted musing?
+ Now accepting, now refusing,
+ Till on the Admiralty pitch'd,
+ Still would that thought his speech prolong;
+ To gain the place for which he long had itch'd,
+ He call'd on Bobby still through all the song;
+ But ever as his sweetest theme he chose,
+ A sovereign's golden chink was heard at every close,
+ And Pollock grimly smiled, and shook his powder'd wig.
+
+ And longer had he droned--but, with a frown
+ Brougham impatient rose;
+ He threw the bench of snoring bishops down,
+ And, with a withering look,
+ The Whig-denouncing trumpet took,
+ And made a speech so fierce and true,
+ Thrashing, with might and main, both friend and foe;
+ And ever and anon he beat,
+ With doubled fist his cushion'd seat;
+ And though sometimes, each breathless pause between,
+ Astonished Melbourne at his side,
+ His moderating voice applied,
+ Yet still he kept his stern, unalter'd mien,
+ While battering the Whigs and Tories black and blue.
+
+ Thy ravings, Goulburn, to no theme were fix'd.
+ Not ev'n thy virtue is without its spots;
+ With piety thy politics were mix'd,
+ And now they courted Peel, now call'd on Doctor Watts.
+
+ With drooping jaw, like one half-screw'd,
+ Lord Johnny sate in doleful mood,
+ And for his Secretarial seat,
+ Sent forth his howlings sad, but sweet
+ Lost Normanby pour'd forth his sad adieu;
+ While Palmerston, with graceful air,
+ Wildly toss'd his scented hair;
+ And pensive Morpeth join'd the sniv'lling crew.
+ Yet still they lingered round with fond delay,
+ Humming, hawing, stopping, musing,
+ Tory rascals all abusing,
+ Till forced to move away.
+
+ But, oh! how alter'd was the whining tone
+ When, loud-tongued Lyndhurst, that unblushing wight,
+ His gown across his shoulders flung,
+ His wig with virgin-powder white,
+ Made an ear-splitting speech that down to Windsor rung,
+ The Tories' call, that Billy Holmes well knew,
+ The turn-coat Downshire and his Orange crew;
+ Wicklow and Howard both were seen
+ Brushing away the wee bit green;
+ Mad Londonderry laugh'd to hear,
+ And Inglis scream'd and shook his ass's ear
+
+ Last Bobby Peel, with hypocritic air,
+ He with modest look came sneaking:
+ First to "_the Home_" his easy vows addrest,--
+ But soon he saw the _Treasury's_ red chair,
+ Whose soft inviting seat he loved the best.
+ They would have thought, who heard his words,
+ They saw in Britain's cause a patriot stand,
+ The proud defender of his land,
+ To aw'd and list'ning senates speaking;--
+
+ But as his fingers touch'd the purse's strings,
+ The chinking metal made a magic sound,
+ While hungry placemen gather'd fast around:
+ And he, as if by chance or play,
+ Or that he would their venal votes repay,
+ The golden treasures round upon them flings.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SIR ROBERT PEEL AND THE QUEEN.
+
+
+Upon the first interview of the Queen with Sir Robert Peel, her Majesty
+was determined to answer only in monosyllables to all he said; and, in
+fact, to make her replies _an echo_, and nothing more, to whatever he said
+to her. The following dialogue, which we have thrown into verse for the
+purpose of smoothing it--the tone of it, as spoken, having been on one
+side, at least, rather rough--ensued between the illustrious persons
+alluded to.
+
+ HE.--Before we into minor details go,
+ Do I possess your confidence or no?
+
+ SHE.--_No._
+
+ HE.--You shall not vex me, though your treatment's rough;
+ No, madam, I am made of sterner stuff.
+
+ SHE.--_Stuff._
+
+ HE.--Really, if thus your minister you flout,
+ A single syllable he can't get out.
+
+ SHE.--_Get out!_
+
+ HE.--But try me, madam; time indeed will show
+ Unto what lengths to serve you I would go.
+
+ SHE.--_Go._
+
+ HE.--We both have power,--'tis doubtful which is greater;
+ These crooked words had better be made straighter.
+
+ SHE.--_Traighter (Traitor.)_
+
+ HE.--Farewell! and never in this friendly strain
+ (My proffer'd aid foregone) I breathe again!
+
+ SHE.--_Gone. I breathe again!_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SONGS OF THE SEEDY.--NO. 2.
+
+ I cannot rove with thee, where zephyrs float--
+ Sweet sylvan scenes devoted to the loves!--
+ For, oh! I have not got one decent coat,
+ Nor can I sport a single pair of gloves.
+
+ Gladly I'd wander o'er the verdant lawn,
+ Where graze contentedly the fleecy flock;
+ But can I show myself in gills so torn,
+ Or brave the public gaze in such a stock?
+
+ I know _thou_'lt answer me that love is blind,
+ And faults in one it worships can't perceive;
+ It must be sightless, truly, not to find
+ The hole that's gaping in my threadbare sleeve.
+
+ Farewell, my love--for, oh! by heaven, we part,
+ And though it cost me all the pangs of hell.
+ The herd shall not on thee inflict a smart,
+ By calling after us--"There goes a swell!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A PRIVATE BOX.
+
+During the clear-out on Wednesday last in Downing-street, a small chest,
+strongly secured, was found among some models of balloting-boxes. It had
+evidently been forgotten for some years, and upon opening it, was found to
+contain the Whig promises of 1832. They were immediately conveyed to Lord
+Melbourne, who appeared much astonished at these resuscitation of the
+
+[Illustration: HOME OFFICE.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE LOST MEDICAL PAPERS OF THE BRITISH ASSOCIATION.
+
+"It is somewhat remarkable," observe the journals of the past week, "that
+the medical division of this scientific meeting has not contributed one
+single paper this year in furtherance of its object, although the
+communications from that section have usually been of a highly important
+character."
+
+The journals may think it somewhat remarkable--we do not at all; for here,
+as in every other event of the day, a great deal depends upon being
+"behind the curtain;" and as the greater portion of our life is passed in
+that locality, we are always to be relied upon for authenticity in our
+statements. The plain truth is, that the papers were inadvertently lost,
+and rather than lead to some unpleasant disclosures, in which the eminent
+professor to whom they were entrusted would have been deeply implicated,
+it was thought best to say nothing about them. By chance they fell into
+the hands of the manager of one of our perambulating theatres, who was
+toiling his way from the west of England to Egham races, and having
+deposited them in his portable green-room, under the especial custody of
+the clown, the doctor, and the overbearing parochial authority, he duly
+remitted them to our office. We have been too happy in giving them a place
+in our columns, feeling an honest pride in thus taking the lead of the
+chief scientific publications of the day. It will be seen that they are
+drawn up as a report, all ready for publication, according to the usual
+custom of such proceedings, where every one knows beforehand what they are
+to dispute or agree with.
+
+Dr. Splitnerve communicated a remarkable case of Animal Magnetism:--Eugene
+Doldrum, aged 21, a young man of bilious and interesting temperament,
+having been mesmerized, was rendered so keenly magnetic, as to give rise
+to a most remarkable train of phenomena. On being seated upon a
+music-stool, he immediately becomes an animated compass, and turns round
+to the north. Knives and forks at dinner invariably fly towards him, and
+he is not able to go through any of the squares, in consequence of being
+attracted firmly to the iron railings. As most of the experiments took
+place at the North London Hospital, Euston-square was his chief point of
+attraction, and when he was removed, it was always found necessary to
+break off the railings and take them away with him. This accounted for the
+decrepit condition of the _fleur de lys_ that surround the inclosure,
+which was not, as generally supposed, the work of the university pupils
+residing in Gower-place. Perfect insensibility to pain supervened at the
+same time, and his friends took advantage of this circumstance to send
+him, by way of delicate compliment, to a lying-in lady, in the style of a
+pedestrian pin-cushion, his cheeks being stuck full of minikin pins, on
+the right side, forming the words "Health to the Babe," and on the left,
+"Happiness to the Mother."
+
+Dr. Mortar read a talented paper on the cure of strabismus, or squinting,
+by dividing the muscles of the eye. The patient, a working man, squinted
+so terribly, that his eyes almost got into one another's sockets; and at
+times he was only able to see by looking down the inside of his nose and
+out at the nostrils. The operation was performed six weeks ago, when, on
+cutting through the muscles, its effects were instantly visible: both the
+eyes immediately diverging to the extreme outer angles of their respective
+orbits.
+
+Dr. Sharpeye inquired if the man did not find the present state of his
+vision still very perplexing.
+
+Dr. Mortar replied, that so far from injuring his sight, it had proved
+highly beneficial, as the patient had procured a very excellent situation
+in the new police, and received a double salary, from the power he
+possessed of keeping an eye upon both sides of the road at the same time.
+
+[Illustration: WILL YOU LOOK THIS WAY, IF YOU PLEASE?]
+
+An elaborate and highly scientific treatise was then read by Dr. Sexton,
+upon a disease which had been very prevalent in town during the spring,
+and had been usually termed the influenza. He defined it as a disease of
+convenience, depending upon various exciting causes acting upon the mind.
+For instance:--
+
+Mrs. A----, a lady residing in Belgrave-square, was on the eve of giving a
+large party, when, upon hearing that Mr. A---- had made an unlucky
+speculation in the funds, the whole family were seized with influenza so
+violently, that they were compelled to postpone the reunion, and live upon
+the provided supper for a fortnight afterwards.
+
+Miss B---- was a singer at one of our large theatres, and had a part
+assigned to her in a new opera. Not liking it, she worried herself into an
+access of influenza, which unluckily seized her the first night the opera
+was to have been played.
+
+But the most marked case was that of Mr. C----, a clerk in a city house of
+business, who was attacked and cured within three days. It appeared that
+he had been dining that afternoon with some friends, who were going to
+Greenwich fair the next day, and on arriving at home, was taken ill with
+influenza, so suddenly that he was obliged to despatch a note to that
+effect to his employer, stating also his fear that he should be unable to
+attend at his office on the morrow. Dr. Sexton said he was indebted for an
+account of the progress of his disease to a young medical gentleman,
+clinical clerk at a leading hospital, who lodged with the patient in
+Bartholomew-close. The report had been drawn up for the _Lancet_, but Dr.
+S. had procured it by great interest.
+
+ MAY 30, 1841, 11 P.M.--Present symptoms:--Complains of his
+ employer, and the bore of being obliged to be at the office next
+ morning. Has just eaten a piece of cold beef and pickles, with a
+ pint of stout. Pulse about 75, and considerable defluxion from the
+ nose, which he thinks produced by getting a piece of Cayenne pepper
+ in his eye. Swallowed a crumb, which brought on a violent fit of
+ coughing. Wishes to go to bed.
+
+ MAY 31, 9 A.M.--Has passed a tolerable night, but appears restless,
+ and unable to settle to anything. Thinks he could eat some broiled
+ ham if he had it; but not possessing any, has taken the following:
+
+ Rx--Infus. coffee lbj
+ Sacchari [symbol: dram]iij
+ Lactis Vaccć [symbol: ounce]j
+ Ft. mistura, poculum mane sumendum.
+
+ A plaster ordered to be applied to the inside of the stomach,
+ consisting of potted bloater spread upon bread and butter.
+
+ Eleven, A.M.--Appears rather hotter since breakfast. Change of air
+ recommended, and Greenwich decided upon.
+
+ Half-past 11.--Complains of the draught and noise of the
+ second-class railway carriages, but is otherwise not worse. Thinks
+ he should like "a drain of half-and-half." Has blown his nose once
+ in the last quarter of an hour.
+
+ Two, P.M.--Since a light dinner of rump steaks and stout, a
+ considerable change has taken place. He appears labouring under
+ cerebral excitement and short pipes, and says he shall have a
+ regular beanish day, and go it similar to bricks. Calls the waiter
+ up to him in one of the booths, and has ordered "a glass of
+ cocktail with the chill off and a cinder in it."
+
+ Three, P.M.--Has sallied out into the fair, still much excited,
+ calling every female he meets "Susan," and pronouncing the s's with
+ a whistling accent. Expresses a desire to ride in the ships that go
+ round and round.
+
+ Half-past 3.--The motion of the ships has tended considerably to
+ relieve his stomach. Pulse slow and countenance pale, with a desire
+ for a glass of ale. Has entered a peepshow, and is now arguing with
+ the exhibitor upon the correctness of his view of the siege of "St.
+ Jane Daker!" which he maintains was a sea-port, and not a field
+ with a burning windmill, as represented in the view.
+
+ Eight, P.M.--After rambling vaguely about the fair all the
+ afternoon, he has decided upon taking a hot-air bath in Algar's
+ Crown and Anchor booth. Evidently delirious. Has put on a false
+ nose, and purchased a tear-coat rattle. Appears labouring under
+ violent spasmodic action of the muscles of his legs, as he dances
+ "Jim along Josey," when he sets to his partner in a country dance
+ of eighty couple.
+
+ Half-past 10, P.M.--Has just intimated that he does not see the use
+ of going home, as you can always go there when you can go nowhere
+ else. Is seated straddling across one of the tables, on which he is
+ beating time to the band with a hooky stick. Will not allow the
+ state of his pulse to be ascertained, but says we may feel his fist
+ if we like.
+
+ Eleven.--Considerable difficulty experienced in getting the patient
+ to the railroad, but we at last succeeded. After telling every one
+ in the carriage "that he wasn't afraid of any of them," he fell
+ into a deep stertorous sleep. On arriving at home, he got into bed
+ with his boots on, and passed a restless night, turning out twice
+ to drink water between one and four.
+
+ JUNE.--10, A.M.--Has just returned from his office, his employer
+ thinking him very unfit for work, and desiring him to lay up for a
+ day or two. Complains of being "jolly seedy," and thinks he shall
+ go to Greenwich again to get all right.
+
+A thrilling paper upon the "Philosophy of death," was then read by
+Professor Wynne Slow. After tracing the origin of that fatal attack, which
+it appears the earliest nations were subject to, the learned author showed
+profound research in bringing forward the various terms applied to the act
+of dying by popular authors. Amongst the principal, he enumerated "turning
+your toes up," "kicking the bucket," "putting up your spoon," "slipping
+your wind," "booking your place," "breaking your bellows," "shutting up
+your shop," and other phrases full of expression.
+
+The last moments of remarkable characters were especially dwelt upon, in
+connexion, more especially, with the drama, which gives us the best
+examples, from its holding a mirror up to nature. It appeared that at
+Astley's late amphitheatre, the dying men generally shuffled about a great
+deal in the sawdust, fighting on their knees, and showing great
+determination to the last, until life gave way; that at the Adelphi the
+expiring character more frequently saw imaginary demons waiting for him,
+and fell down, uttering "Off, fiends! I come to join you in your world of
+flames!" and that clowns and pantaloons always gave up the ghost with
+heart-rending screams and contortions of visage, as their deaths were
+generally violent, from being sawn in half, having holes drilled in them
+with enormous gimlets, or being shot out of cannon; but that, at the same
+time, these deaths were not permanent.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE.
+
+Our foreign expresses have reached us _via_ Billingsgate, and are full of
+interesting matter. Captain Fitz-Flammer is in prison at Boulogne, for
+some trifling misunderstanding with a native butcher, about the settlement
+of an account; but we trust no time will be lost by our government in
+demanding his release at the hands of the authorities. The attempt to make
+it a private question is absurd; and every Englishman's blood will simmer,
+if it does not actually boil, at the intelligence. Fitz-Flammer was only
+engaged in doing that which many of our countrymen visit Boulogne
+expressly to do, and it is hard that he should have been intercepted in
+his retreat, after accomplishing his object. To live at the expense of a
+natural enemy is certainly a bold and patriotic act, which ought to excite
+sympathy at home, and protection abroad. The English packet, the _City of
+Boulogne_, has turned one of its imitation guns directly towards the town,
+which, we trust, will have the effect of bringing the French authorities
+to reason.
+
+It is expected that the treaty will shortly be signed, by which Belgium
+cedes to France a milestone on the north frontier; while the latter
+country returns to the former the whole of the territory lying behind a
+pig-stye, taken possession of in the celebrated 6th _vendemiaire_, by the
+allied armies. This will put an end to the heart-burnings that have long
+existed on either side of the Rhine, and will serve to apply the sponge at
+once to a long score of national animosities.
+
+Our letters from the East are far from encouraging. The Pasha has had a
+severe sore-throat, and the disaffected have taken advantage of the
+circumstance. Ibrahim had spent the two last nights in the mountains, and
+was unfurling his standard, when our express left, in the very bosom of
+the desert. Mehemet Ali was still obstinate, and had dismissed his visier
+for impertinence. The whole of Servia is in a state of revolt, and the
+authorities have planted troops along the entire line, the whole of whom
+have gone over to the enemy. It is said there must be further concessions,
+and a new constitution is being drawn up; but it is not expected that any
+one will abide by it. Mehemet attempted to throw himself upon the rock of
+Nungab, with a tremendous force, but those about him wisely prevented him
+from doing so.
+
+We have received China (tea) papers to the 16th. There is nothing in them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+FANCIED FAIR.
+
+"The Duke of Wellington," says a correspondent of the _Times_, "left his
+umbrella behind him at a fancy fair, held for charitable purposes, between
+Twickenham and Teddington. On discovering it, Lady P. immediately said,
+'Who will give twenty guineas for the Duke's umbrella?' A purchaser was
+soon found; and when the fact was communicated to his Grace, he
+good-naturedly remarked, 'I'll soon supply you with umbrellas, if you can
+sell them with so much advantage to the charity.'" We trust his Grace's
+benevolent disposition will not induce him to carry this offer into
+execution. We should extremely regret to see the Hero of Waterloo in
+Leicester-square, of a rainy night, vending second-hand _parapluies_. The
+same charitable impulse will doubtlessly induce other fashionable hawkers
+at fancy fairs to pick his Grace's pockets. We are somewhat curious to
+know what a Wellington bandana would realise, especially were it the
+produce of some pretty lady P.'s petty larceny. "Charity," it is said,
+"covereth a multitude of sins." What must it do with an umbrella? We fear
+that Lady P. will some day figure in the "fashionable departures."
+
+[Illustration: FOR SYDNEY DIRECT.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PUNCH'S THEATRE.
+
+MARTINUZZI AS THE ACT DIRECTS.
+
+The production upon the stage of a tragedy "not intended for an acting
+play," as a broad travestie, is a novel and dangerous experiment--one,
+however, which the combined genius of the Dramatic Authors' Council has
+made, with the utmost success. The "Hungarian Daughter" was, under the
+title of "Martinuzzi," received, on its first appearance, with bursts of
+applause and convulsions of laughter!
+
+The plot of this piece our literary reviewer has expressed himself unable
+to unravel. We are in the same condition; all we can promise is some
+account of the scenes as they followed each other; of the characters, the
+sentiments, the poetry, and the rest of the fun.
+
+The play opens with an elderly gentleman, in a spangled dressing-gown, who
+commences business by telling us the time of day, poetically clapping a
+wig upon the sun, by saying, he
+
+ "Shakes day about, like perfume from his _hair_,"
+
+which statement bears out the after sentence, that "the wisdom he endures
+is terrible!" An Austrian gentleman--whose dress made us at first mistake
+him for Richard III. on his travels--arrives to inform the gentleman _en
+déshabille_--no other than _Cardinal Martinuzzi_ himself--that he has come
+from King Ferdinand, to ask if he will be so good as to give up some
+regency; which the Cardinal, however, respectfully declines doing. A
+gentleman from Warsaw is next announced, and _Castaldo_ retires, having
+incidentally declared a passion for the reigning queen of Hungary.
+
+Mr. Selby, as _Rupert_ from Warsaw, then appears, in a dress most
+correctly copied from the costume of the knave of clubs. Being a Pole, he
+stirs up the Cardinal vigorously enough to provoke some exceedingly
+intemperate language, chiefly by bringing to his memory a case of
+child-stealing, to which _Martinuzzi_ was, before he had quite sown his
+wild oats, _particeps criminis_. This case having got into the papers
+(which _Rupert_ had preserved), the Cardinal wants to obtain them, but
+offers a price not long enough for the Pole, who, declaring that
+_Martinuzzi_ carries it "too high" to be trusted with them, vanishes. Mr.
+Morley afterwards comes forward to sing a song according to Act of
+Parliament, and the scene changes for Miss Collect to comply, a second
+time, with the 25th of George II.
+
+In the following scene, the Queen Dowager of Hungary, _Isabella_,
+introduces herself to the audience, to inform them that the Austrian
+gentleman, _Castaldo_, is
+
+ "the mild,
+ Pity-fraught object of her fondness."
+
+He appears. She makes several inflammatory speeches, which he seems
+determined not to understand, for he is in love with the virgin queen; and
+maidens before dowagers is evidently his sensible motto.
+
+The second act opens with the queen junior stating her assurance, that if
+she lives much longer she will die, and that when she is quite dead, she
+will hate _Martinuzzi_[3]. As, however, she means to hate when she is
+deceased, she will make the most of her time while alive, by devoting
+herself to courtship and _Castaldo_: for a very tender love-scene ensues,
+at the end of which the lady elopes, to leave the lover a clear stage for
+some half-dozen minutes' ecstatics, appropriately ended by his arrest,
+ordered by _Martinuzzi_. Why, it is not stated, the officer not even
+producing the copy of a writ.
+
+ [3] "_Czerina._ When I am dead--which will be soon--I feel,
+ If I much longer on my throne remain,
+ I shall abhor the name of Martinuzzi."
+
+In the next scene, _Isabella_ is visited by _Rupert_, who disinterestedly
+presents the dowager with the papers for nothing, which he was before
+offered an odd castle and snug estate for, by _Martinuzzi_. This is
+accounted for on no other supposition, than the proverbial gallantry of
+gentlemen from Warsaw.
+
+_Martinuzzi_, possessing a ward whom he is anxious should wed the queen,
+opens the third act by declaring he will "precipitate the match," and so
+the author considerately sends _Czerina_ to him, to talk the matter over.
+But the young lady gets into a passion, and the Cardinal declares he can
+make nothing of her, in the following passage:--
+
+ "Fool! I can make thee nothing but a laugh."
+
+A sentiment to which the audience gave a most vociferous echo. The damsel
+is angry that she may not have the man she has chosen, and threatens to
+faint, but defers that operation till her lover's arms are near enough to
+receive her; which they happen to be just in time, for _Martinuzzi_
+retires and _Castaldo_ comes on. _Czerina_, to be quite sure, exclaims,
+"_Are_ these thy arms?" (_sic_) and finally faints in the lover's embrace,
+so as to exhibit a picturesque cuddle.
+
+_Queen Isabella_ is discovered, in the second scene of this act, perusing
+the much vaunted "papers" with intense interest. Unluckily _Castaldo_
+chooses that moment to complain, that _Martinuzzi_ will not let him marry
+her rival. The queen, being by no means a temperate person, and wondering
+at his impudence in telling _her_ such a tale, raves thus:--
+
+ "My soul's on fire I'm choked, and seem to perish;
+ _But will suppress my scream_"
+
+Probably for fear of compromising _Castaldo_, who is alone with her; and
+she ends the act by requesting the Austrian to murder _Martinuzzi_; to
+which he is so obliging as to consent, the more so, as an order comes from
+the Secretary of State for foreign affairs, of his own government, to "cut
+off" (_sic_) the Regent.
+
+The fourth act is enlivened by a masquerade and a murder. The gentleman
+from Warsaw having abused the hospitality of his host by getting drunk, is
+punished by one of _Martinuzzi's_ attendants with a mortal stab; and
+having, in the agonies of death, made a careful survey of all the sofas in
+the apartment, suits himself with the softest, and dies in great comfort.
+
+After this, the masquerade proceeds with spirit. _Isabella_ mixes in the
+festive scene, disguised in a domino, made of black sticking-plaster.
+_Czerina_ overhears that she is a usurper and a changeling, and expresses
+her surprise in a line most unblushingly stolen from Fitz-Ball and the
+other poetico-melo-dramatists:--
+
+ "Merciful Heavens! do my ears deceive me?"
+
+The festivities conclude with an altercation between _Martinuzzi_ and
+_Isabella_, carried on with much vigour on both sides. The lady accuses
+the gentleman of inebriation, and he owns the soft impeachment, fully
+bearing it out by several incoherent speeches.
+
+This was one of the most successful scenes in the comedy. The death of
+_Rupert_, Mr. Morley's song about "The sea," the quarrel (which was about
+the great pivot of the plot, "the papers," inscribed, says _Martinuzzi_,
+
+ "With ink that's _brew'd_ in the infernal Styx,")
+
+were all received with uproarious bursts of laughter.
+
+In the fifth act, we behold _Martinuzzi_ and the usurping young Queen
+making matters up at a railway pace. She has it all her own way. If she
+choose, she may marry _Castaldo_, retire into private life, be a
+"farm-house thrall," and keep a "dairy;" for which estate she has
+previously expressed a decided predilection[4].
+
+ [4] Acting play, published in the theatre, p. 32.
+
+But it is the next scene that the author seems to have reserved for
+putting forth his strongest powers of burlesque and broad humour.
+_Isabella_ and _Castaldo_ are together; the latter feels a little afraid
+to murder _Martinuzzi_, but is impelled to the deed by a thousand
+imaginary torches, which he fears will hurry his "_moth_-like soul" into
+their "blinding sun-beams," till it (the soul) is scorched "_into_
+cinders."
+
+_Castaldo_ appears, in truth, a very bad barber of murders; for, as he is
+rushing out to
+
+ "Strike the tyrant down--in crimson streams
+ Rend every nerve,"
+
+_Isabella_ has the shrewdness to discover that he is without a weapon.
+Important omission! The incipient assassin exclaims--
+
+ "Oh! that I had my sword!"
+
+but at that moment (clever, dramatic contrivance!)
+
+ [_Enter_ CZERINA, _with a drawn sword_.]
+ "CZERINA. There's one! Thine own!"
+
+Far from being grateful for this opportune supply of ways and means for
+murder. _Castaldo_ calls the bilbo a "fated aspic," upon the edge of which
+his "eye-balls crack to look," and makes a raving exit from the stage, to
+a roaring laugh from the audience.
+
+It is quite clear to _Isabella_, from his extreme carelessness about his
+tools, that _Castaldo_ is not safely to be trusted with a job which
+requires so much tact and business-like exactitude as the capital offence.
+She therefore "_shows a phial_," which she intends, "occasion suiting,"
+for "_Martinuzzi's_ bane;" thereby hinting that, if _Castaldo_ fail with
+his steel medicine, she is ready with a surer potion.
+
+The next scene, being the last, was ushered in with acclamations. The
+stage, as is always in that case made and provided, was full. There is a
+young gentleman on a throne, and _Czerina_ beside it, having been somehow
+ungallantly deposed. _Martinuzzi_ expresses a wish to drink somebody's
+health, and this being the "fitting opportunity" mentioned by the author
+in the scene preceeding, _Isabella_ empties the phial of her wrath into
+the beverage, and the _Cardinal_ quenches his thirst with a most
+intemperate draught. It is now duly announced, that _Castaldo_ is, "with
+naked sword, approaching." That gentleman appears, and makes a speech long
+enough for any man who has had such plain warning of what is to
+happen--even a cardinal encumbered with a spangled dressing-gown--to get a
+mile out of his way. The speech quite ended, he goes to work, and with
+"this from King Ferdinand," thrusts at _Martinuzzi_. _Czerina_, however,
+throws herself, with great skill, on the point of the sword, and dies.
+Another long harangue from _Castaldo_--which, as he is evidently
+broken-winded from exertion, is pronounced in tiny snatches--and he dies
+with a "ha!" for want--like many greater men--of breath.
+
+Meanwhile, the poison makes _Martinuzzi_ exceedingly uncomfortable in the
+stomachic regions. He is quite sure
+
+ "That hath been done to me which sends me _star_-ward!"
+
+but in his progress thither he evidently loses his way; for he ends the
+play by inquiring--
+
+ "WHERE IS THE WORLD?"
+
+The sublimity of which query is manifestly insisted on by the author, by
+his having it printed in capitals.
+
+When the curtain fell, there arose an uproarious shout for the author; but
+instead of "the mantle of the Elizabethan poets," which, it has been said,
+he commonly wears, the most attractive garment that met the view was an
+expansive white waistcoat. This latter exhibition concluded the
+entertainments, strictly so called; for though a farce followed, it turned
+out a terrible bore.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONCERTS D'ETE.
+
+If the advance of musical science is to be effected by indecent _tableaux
+vivans_--by rattling peas against sieves, and putting out the lights
+(appropriately enough) when Beethoven is being murdered--by the most
+contemptible class of compositions that ever was put upon score-paper, and
+noised forth from an ill-disciplined band--if these be the means towards
+improving musical taste, Monsieur Jullien is undoubtedly the harmonic
+regenerator of this country. He is a great man--great in his own
+estimation--great to the ends of his moustachios and the tips of his
+gloves--a great composer, and a great charlatan--_ex. gr._:--
+
+The overture to the promenade concerts usually consists of a pantomime
+entirely new to an English audience. Monsieur Jullien having made his
+appearance in the orchestra, seats himself in a conspicuous situation, to
+indulge the ladies with the most favourable view of his elegant person,
+and the splendid gold-chainery which is spread all over his magnificent
+waistcoat. A servant in livery then appears, and presents him with a pair
+of white kid gloves. The illustrious conductor, having taken some time to
+thrust them upon a very large and red hand, leisurely takes up his baton,
+rises, grins upon the expectant musicians, lifts his arm, and--the first
+chord is struck!
+
+Quadrilles are the staple of the evening--those composed by Monsieur
+Jullien always, of course, claiming precedence and preference. These are
+usually interspersed with solos on the flageolet, to contrast with
+_obligati_ for the ophecleido; the drummers--side, long, and double--are
+seldom inactive; the trombones and trumpets have no sinecure, and there is
+always a great mortality amongst the fiddle-strings. Eight bars of
+impossible variation is sure to be succeeded by sixteen of the deafening
+fanfare of trumpets, combined with smashing cymbalism, and dreadful
+drumming.
+
+The public have a taste for headaches, and Jullien has imported a capital
+recipe for creating them; they applaud--he bows; and musical taste
+goes--in compliment to the ex-waiter's genuine profession of man-cook--to
+_pot_.
+
+But the _ci-devant cuisinier_ is not content with comparatively harmless,
+plain-sailing humbug; he must add some _sauce piquante_ to his musical
+hashes. He cannot rest with merely stunning English ears, but must shock
+our morals, At the _bals masqués_, the French dancers, and the hardly
+mentionable _cancan_, were hooted back to their native stews under the
+Palais Royal; but he provides substitutes for them in the _tableaux
+vivans_ now exhibiting. This, because a more insidious, is a safer
+introduction. The living figures are dressed to imitate plaster-of-Paris,
+and are so arranged as to form groups, called in the bills "classical;"
+but for which it would be difficult to find originals. In short, the whole
+thing is a feeler thrown out to see how far French impudence and French
+epicureanism in vice may carry themselves. It shall not be our fault if
+they do not experience an ignominious downfall, and beat a speedy retreat,
+to the tune of the "Rogue's March," arranged as a quadrille!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MADAME TUSSAUD'S,
+
+THE REAL TEMPLE OF FAME.
+
+ "Some men are born to greatness, some men achieve greatness, and
+ some have greatness thrust upon them."--SHAKSPEARE.
+
+Reader, should you doubt the above assertion, in the true showman
+phraseology, just "Walk up! walk up!" to Madame Tussaud's, the real Temple
+of Fame, and let such doubts vanish for ever; convince yourselves that the
+mighty attribute not more survives from good than evil deeds, though, like
+poverty, it makes its votaries acquainted with the strangest of strange
+bedfellows! The regal ermine and the murderer's fustian alike obtain their
+enviable niche.
+
+The likeness of departed majesty, robed in the matchless splendour of a
+ruler's state, redolent with all the mimic glories of a king's insignia,
+the modelled puppet from the senseless clay, that wore in life the
+imperial purple, and moved a breathing thing, chief actor in its childish
+mummeries, may here be seen shining in tinselled pomp, in glittering
+contrast to the blood-stained shirt through which the dagger of Ravaillac
+reached the bosom of the murdered Henry.
+
+The "Real Robes" of the dead George give value to his waxen image! The
+heart's-blood of the slaughtered Henry immortalises the linen bearing its
+hideous stain. The daring leader of France's countless hosts--the
+wholesale slaughterer of unnumbered thousands--ambition's mightiest
+son--now ruling kingdoms and now ruled by one--once more than king--in
+death the captive of his hated foes--"the great Napoleon!" shares the
+small space with the enshrined Fieschi!
+
+The glorious triumphs of the mighty Wellington are here no better
+passports than the foul murders of the atrocious Burke; the subtle
+Talleyrand, the deep deviser of political schemes, ruler of rulers, and
+master mover of the earth's great puppets, is not one jot superior to the
+Italian mountebank, whose well-skilled hand drew tones from catgut
+rivalling even the ideal trumpet of great Fame herself!
+
+By some strange anomaly, _success_ and _failure_ alike render the
+candidates admissible--no matter the littleness of the source from whence
+they sprung. Lord Melbourne's "premiership" gave shape to the all but
+Promethean wax. The failure of John Frost, his humble follower, secured
+his right to Fame's posthumous honours. All partiality is _here_
+forgotten. The titled premier, in the haunts of men, may boast his
+monarch's palace as his home. The suffering felon, though _iron_ binds his
+limbs, and eats into his heart--though slow approaching, but sure-coming
+death, makes the broad world for him a living grave, _here_ he stands, as
+one among the great ones of the _show_! The amiability of Albert, that
+"excellent Prince," and therefore "_most_ excellent young man," is
+ingeniously contrasted with the vices of a Greenacre, and the villany of a
+_Hare_. The stern endurance and unflinching perseverance of the zealous
+and single-hearted Calvin is deprived of its exclusiveness by the more
+exciting and equally famous Sir William Courtenay (_alias_ Thom).
+
+The thrilling recollection of the "poet peer," and "peerless poet," the
+highly-imaginative and unrivalled Byron, whose flood of song, poured out
+in one continuous stream of varied passion-breathing fancy, is calmed by
+gazing on "dull life's antipodes," the bandaged remnant of a dried-up
+mummy!
+
+Poor Mary Stuart! the beautiful, the murdered Queen of Scots, is only
+parted from the "Maiden Queen," who sealed her doom, by the interposition
+of the blood-stained ruthless wretch (England's Eighth Harry), to whom
+"Bess" owed her birth!
+
+Pitt, Fox, and Canning are matched with Courvoisier, Gould, and Collins.
+
+Liston is _vis ŕ vis_ to Joe Hume, while Louis Philippe but shares
+attention with the rivalling models of the Bastille and Guillotine!
+
+Verily, there is a moral in all this, "an we could but find it out."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol.
+1, September 5, 1841, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 1,
+September 5, 1841, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 1, September 5, 1841
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: February 7, 2005 [EBook #14926]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Syamanta Saikia, Jon Ingram, Barbara Tozier and the PG
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<h1>PUNCH,<br />
+OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.</h1>
+<h2>VOL. 1.</h2>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page85" name="page85"></a>[pg
+85]</span>
+<h2>SEPTEMBER 5, 1841.</h2>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>THE GENTLEMAN&rsquo;S OWN BOOK.</h2>
+<div class="dropcap"><a href="images/008-01.png"><img src=
+"images/008-01.png" alt=
+"A man on a horse charges through a laurel wreath in the shape of an O"
+id="img008-01" name="img008-01" width="100%" /></a></div>
+<p><span class="hide">O</span>ur consideration must now be given to
+those essentials in the construction of a true gentleman&mdash;the
+cut, ornaments, and pathology of his dress.</p>
+<h4>THE CUT</h4>
+<p>is to the garment what the royal head and arms are to the
+coin&mdash;the insignia that give it currency. No matter what the
+material, gold or copper, Saxony or sackcloth, the die imparts a
+value to the one, and the shears to the other.</p>
+<p>Ancient Greece still lives in its marble demi-gods; the
+vivifying chisel of Phidias was thought worthy to typify the
+sublimity of Jupiter; the master-hand of Canova wrought the Parian
+block into the semblance of the sea-born goddess, giving to
+insensate stone the warmth and etheriality of the Paphian paragon;
+and Stultz, with his grace-bestowing shears, has fashioned West of
+England broad-cloths, and fancy goods, into all the nobility and
+gentility of the &ldquo;Blue Book,&rdquo; the &ldquo;Court
+Guide,&rdquo; the &ldquo;Army, Navy, and Law Lists, for
+1841.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Wondrous and kindred arts! The sculptor wrests the rugged block
+from the rocky ribs of his mother earth;&mdash;the tailor clips the
+implicated &ldquo;<em>long hogs</em>&rdquo;<sup>1</sup><span class=
+"sidenote">1. The first growth of wool.</span> from the prolific
+backs of the living mutton;&mdash;the toothless saw, plied by an
+unweayring hand, prepares the stubborn mass for the chisel&rsquo;s
+tracery;&mdash;the loom, animated by steam (that gigantic child of
+Wallsend and water), twists and twines the unctuous and pliant
+fleece into the silky Saxony.</p>
+<p>The sculptor, seated in his <em>studio</em>, throws loose the
+reins of his imagination, and, conjuring up some perfect ideality,
+seeks to impress the beautiful illusion on the rude and undigested
+mass before him. The tailor spreads out, upon his ample board, the
+happy broadcloth; his eyes scan the &ldquo;measured proportions of
+his client,&rdquo; and, with mystic power, guides the obedient
+pipe-clay into the graceful diagram of a perfect gentleman. The
+sculptor, with all the patient perseverance of genius, conscious of
+the greatness of its object, chips, and chips, and chips, from day
+to day; and as the stone quickens at each touch, he glows with all
+the pride of the creative Prometheus, mingled with the gentler
+ecstacies of paternal love. The tailor, with fresh-ground shears,
+and perfect faith in the gentility and solvency of his
+&ldquo;client,&rdquo; snips, and snips, and snips, until the
+&ldquo;superfine&rdquo; grows, with each abscission, into the first
+style of elegance and fashion, and the excited schneider feels
+himself &ldquo;every inch a king,&rdquo; his shop a herald&rsquo;s
+college, and every brown paper pattern garnishing its walls, an
+escutcheon of gentility.</p>
+<p>But to dismount from our Pegasus, or, in other words, to cut the
+poetry, and come to the practice of our subject, it is necessary
+that a perfect gentleman should be cut <em>up</em> very high, or
+cut <em>down</em> very low&mdash;<em>i.e.</em>, up to the marquis
+or down to the jarvey. Any intermediate style is perfectly
+inadmissible; for who above the grade of an attorney would wear a
+coat with pockets inserted in the tails, like salt-boxes; or any
+but an incipient Esculapius indulge in trousers that evinced a
+morbid ambition to become knee-breeches, and were only restrained
+in their aspirations by a pair of most strenuous straps. We will
+now proceed to details.</p>
+<p><em>The dressing-gown</em> should be cut only&mdash;for the arm
+holes; but be careful that the quantity of material be very
+ample&mdash;say four times as much as is positively necessary, for
+nothing is so characteristic of a perfect gentleman as his
+improvidence. This garment must be constructed without buttons or
+button-holes, and confined at the waist with cable-like bell-ropes
+and tassels. This elegant <em>d&eacute;shabille</em> had its origin
+(like the Corinthian capital from the Acanthus) in accident. A set
+of massive window-curtains having been carelessly thrown over a lay
+figure, or tailor&rsquo;s <em>torso</em>, in Nugee&rsquo;s
+<em>studio</em>, in St. James&rsquo;s-street, suggested to the
+luxuriant mind of the Adonisian D&rsquo;Orsay, this beautiful
+combination of costume and upholstery. The eighteen-shilling chintz
+great-coats, so ostentatiously put forward by nefarious tradesmen
+as dressing-gowns, and which resemble pattern-cards of the
+vegetable kingdom, are unworthy the notice of all
+gentlemen&mdash;of course excepting those who are so by act of
+Parliament. Although it is generally imagined that the coat is the
+principal article of dress, <em>we</em> attach far greater
+importance to the trousers, the cut of which should, in the first
+place, be regulated by nature&rsquo;s cut of the leg. A gentleman
+who labours under either a convex or a concave leg, cannot be too
+particular in the arrangement of the strap-draught. By this we mean
+that a concave leg must have the pull on the convex side, and
+<em>vice versa</em>, the garment being made full, the effects of
+bad nursing are, by these means, effectually
+&ldquo;repealed.&rdquo;<sup>2</sup><span class="sidenote">2.
+Baylis.</span> This will be better understood if the reader will
+describe a parallelogram, and draw therein the arc of a circle
+equal to that described by his leg, whether knock-kneed or
+bandy.</p>
+<p>If the leg be perfectly straight, then the principal peculiarity
+of cut to be attended to, is the external assurance that the
+trousers cannot be removed from the body without the assistance of
+a valet.</p>
+<p>The other considerations should be their applicability to the
+promenade or the equestriade. We are indebted to our friend Beau
+Reynolds for this original idea and it is upon the plan formerly
+adopted by him that we now proceed to advise as to the maintenance
+of the distinctions.</p>
+<p>Let your schneider baste the trousers together, and when you
+have put them on, let them be braced to their natural tension; the
+schneider should then, with a small pair of scissors, <em>cut
+out</em> all the wrinkles which offend the eye. The garment, being
+removed from your person, is again taken to the tailor&rsquo;s
+laboratory, and the embrasures carefully and artistically
+fine-drawn. The process for walking or riding trousers only varies
+in these particulars&mdash;for the one you should stand upright,
+for the other you should straddle the back of a chair. Trousers cut
+on these principles entail only two inconveniences, to which every
+one with the true feelings of a gentleman would willingly submit.
+You must never attempt to sit down in your walking trousers, or
+venture to assume an upright position in your equestrians, for
+compound fractures in the region of the <em>os sacrum</em>, or
+dislocations about the <em>genu patell&aelig;</em> are certain to
+be the results of such rashness, and then</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/008-02.png"><img src=
+"images/008-02.png" alt=
+"A valet shakes a brush at a gentlemen cuddling a housemaid." id=
+"img008-02" name="img008-02" width="60%" /></a>
+<p>&ldquo;THE PEACE OF THE VALET IS FLED.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>SONGS FOR THE SENTIMENTAL. &mdash; NO. 6.</h2>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Thou hast humbled the proud,</p>
+<p>For my spirit hath bow&rsquo;d</p>
+<p>More humbly to thee than it e&rsquo;er bow&rsquo;d before;</p>
+<p class="i4">But thy pow&rsquo;r is past,</p>
+<p class="i4">Thou hast triumph&rsquo;d thy last,</p>
+<p>And the heart you enslaved beats in freedom once more!</p>
+<p class="i4">I have treasured the flow&rsquo;r</p>
+<p class="i4">You wore but an hour,</p>
+<p>And knelt by the mound where together we&rsquo;ve sat;</p>
+<p class="i4">But thy-folly and pride</p>
+<p class="i4">I now only deride&mdash;</p>
+<p>So, fair Isabel, take your change out of that!</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>That I loved, and how well,</p>
+<p>It were madness to tell</p>
+<p>To one who hath mock&rsquo;d at my madd&rsquo;ning despair.</p>
+<p class="i4">Like the white wreath of snow</p>
+<p class="i4">On the Alps&rsquo; rugged brow,</p>
+<p>Isabel, I have proved thee as cold as thou&rsquo;rt fair!</p>
+<p class="i4">&rsquo;Twas thy boast that I sued,</p>
+<p class="i4">That you scorn&rsquo;d as I woo&rsquo;d&mdash;</p>
+<p>Though thou of my hopes were the Mount Ararat;</p>
+<p class="i4">But to-morrow I wed</p>
+<p class="i4">Araminta instead&mdash;</p>
+<p>So, fair Isabel, take your change out of that!</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>THE LAST HAUL.</h3>
+<p>The ponds in St. James&rsquo;s Park were on last Monday drawn
+with nets, and a large quantity of the fish preserved there carried
+away by direction of the Chief Commissioner of Woods and Forests.
+Our talented correspondent, Ben D&rsquo;Israeli, sends us the
+following squib on the circumstance:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! never more,&rdquo; Duncannon cried,</p>
+<p class="i2">&ldquo;The spoils of place shall fill our dishes!</p>
+<p>But though we&rsquo;ve lost the <em>loaves</em> we&rsquo;ll
+take</p>
+<p class="i2">Our last sad haul amongst the
+<em>fishes</em>.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>GENERAL SATISFACTION.</h3>
+<p>Lord Coventry declared emphatically that the sons, the fathers,
+and the grandfathers were all satisfied with the present corn laws.
+Had his lordship thought of the <em>Herald</em>, he might have
+added, &ldquo;and the grandmothers also.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>ADVERTISEMENT.</h3>
+<p>If the enthusiastic individual who distinguished himself on the
+O.P. side of third row in the pit of &ldquo;the late Theatre Royal
+English Opera House,&rdquo; but now the refuge for the
+self-baptised &ldquo;Council of Dramatic Literature,&rdquo; can be
+warranted sober, and guaranteed an umbrella, in the use of which he
+is decidedly unrivalled, he is requested to apply to the Committee
+of management, where he will hear of something to his
+&ldquo;advantage.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page86" name="page86"></a>[pg
+86]</span>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/008-03.png"><img src=
+"images/008-03.png" alt="A man looks in a pond and sees Shakspere"
+id="img008-03" name="img008-03" width="100%" /></a></div>
+<h2>&ldquo;PUNCH&rsquo;S&rdquo; LITERATURE.</h2>
+<ol type="I">
+<li>&ldquo;The Hungarian Daughter,&rdquo; a Dramatic Poem, by
+George Stephens, 8vo., pp. 294. London: 1841.</li>
+<li>&ldquo;Introductory(!) Preface to the above,&rdquo; pp.
+25.</li>
+<li>&ldquo;Supplement to the above;&rdquo; consisting of
+&ldquo;Opinions of the Press,&rdquo; on various Works by George
+Stephens, 8vo., pp. 8.</li>
+<li>&ldquo;Opinions of the Press upon the &lsquo;Dramatic
+Merits&rsquo; and &lsquo;Actable Qualities&rsquo; of the Hungarian
+Daughter,&rdquo; 8vo., <em>closely printed</em>, pp. 16.</li>
+</ol>
+<p>The blind and vulgar prejudice in favour of Shakspeare,
+Massinger, and the elder dramatic poets&mdash;the sickening
+adulation bestowed upon Sheridan Knowles and Talfourd, among the
+moderns&mdash;and the base, malignant, and selfish partiality of
+theatrical managers, who insist upon performing those plays only
+which are adapted to the stage&mdash;whose grovelling souls have no
+sympathy with genius&mdash;whose ideas are fixed upon gain, have
+hitherto smothered those blazing illuminati, George Stephens and
+his syn&mdash;Syncretcis; have hindered their literary effulgence
+from breaking through the mists hung before the eyes of the public,
+by a weak, infatuated adherence to paltry Nature, and a silly
+infatuation in favour of those who copy her.</p>
+<p>At length, however, the public blushes (through its
+representative, the provincial press, and the above-named critical
+puffs,) with shame&mdash;the managers are fast going mad with
+bitter vexation, for having, to use the words of that elegant
+pleonasm, the <em>introductory</em> preface, &ldquo;by a sort of
+<em>ex officio</em> hallucination,&rdquo; rejected this and some
+twenty other exquisite, though unactable dramas! It is a fact, that
+since the opening of the English Opera House, Mr. Webster has been
+confined to his room; Macready has suspended every engagement for
+Drury-lane; and the managers of Covent Garden have gone the
+atrocious length of engaging sibilants and ammunition from the
+neighbouring market, to pelt the Syncretics off the stage! Them we
+leave to their dirty work and their repentance, while we proceed to
+<em>our</em> &ldquo;delightful task.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To prove that the &ldquo;mantle of the Elizabethan poets seems
+to have fallen upon Mr. Stephens&rdquo; (<em>Opinions</em>, p. 11),
+that the &ldquo;Hungarian Daughter&rdquo; is quite as good as
+Knowles&rsquo;s best plays (<em>Id.</em> p. 4, <em>in two
+places</em>), that &ldquo;it is equal to Goethe&rdquo;
+(<em>Id.</em> p. 11), that &ldquo;in after years the name of Mr. S.
+will be amongst those which have given light and glory to their
+country&rdquo; (<em>Id.</em> p. 10); to prove, in short, the truth
+of a hundred other laudations collected and printed by this modest
+author, we shall quote a few passages from his play, and illustrate
+his genius by pointing out their beauties&mdash;an office much
+needed, particularly by certain dullards, the magazine of whose
+souls are not combustible enough to take fire at the electric
+sparks shot forth <em>up</em> out of the depths of George
+Stephens&rsquo;s unfathomable genius!</p>
+<p>The first gem that sparkles in the play, is where
+<em>Isabella</em>, the Queen Dowager of Hungary, with a degree of
+delicacy highly becoming a matron, makes desperate love to
+<em>Castaldo</em>, an Austrian ambassador. In the midst of her
+ravings she breaks off, to give such a description of a
+steeple-chase as Nimrod has never equalled.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">ISABELLA (<em>hotly</em>). &ldquo;Love <em>rides</em>
+upon a thought,</p>
+<p>And stays not dully to <em>inquire the way</em>,</p>
+<p>But right <em>o&rsquo;erleaps the fence</em> unto the
+<em>goal</em>.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>To appreciate the splendour of this image, the reader must
+conceive Love booted and spurred, mounted upon a <em>thought</em>,
+saddled and bridled. He starts. <em>Yo-hoiks</em>! what a pace! He
+stops not to &ldquo;inquire the way&rdquo;&mdash;whether he is to
+take the first turning to the right, or the second to the
+left&mdash;but on, on he rushes, clears the fence cleverly, and
+wins by a dozen lengths!</p>
+<p>What soul, what mastery, what poetical skill is here! We
+triumphantly put forth this passage as an instance of the sublime
+art of sinking in poetry not to be matched by Dibdin Pitt or Jacob
+Jones. Love is sublimed to a jockey, Thought promoted to a
+race-horse!&mdash;&ldquo;Magnificent!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But splendid as this is, Mr. Stephens can make the force of
+bathos go a little further. The passage continues (&ldquo;<em>a
+pause</em>&rdquo; intervening, to allow breathing ime, after the
+splitting pace with which Love has been riding upon Thought)
+thus:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;Are your lips free? A smile will make no noise.</p>
+<p>What ignorance! So! Well! <em>I&rsquo;ll to breakfast
+straight</em>!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Again:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">ISABELLA. &ldquo;Ha! ha! These forms are
+air&mdash;mere counterfeits</p>
+<p>Of my <em>imaginous</em> heart, <em>as are the whirling</em></p>
+<p><em>Wainscot and trembling floor</em>!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>The idea of transferring the seat of imagination from the head
+to the heart, and causing it to exhibit the wainscot in a
+pirouette, and the floor in an ague, is highly
+<em>Shakesperesque</em>, and, as the <em>Courier</em> is made to
+say at page 3 of the <em>Opinions</em>, &ldquo;is worthy of the
+best days of that noble school of dramatic literature in which Mr.
+Stephens has so successfully studied.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This well-deserved praise&mdash;the success with which the
+author has studied, in a school, the models of which were human
+feelings and nature,&mdash;we have yet to illustrate from other
+passages. Mr. Stephens evinces his full acquaintance with Nature by
+a familiarity with her convulsions: whirlwinds, thunder, lightning,
+earthquakes, and volcanoes&mdash;are this gentleman&rsquo;s
+playthings. When, for instance, <em>Rupert</em> is going to be
+gallant to Queen Isabella, she exclaims:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;Dire lightnings! Scoundrel! Help!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><em>Martinuzzi</em> conveys a wish for his nobles to
+laugh&mdash;an order for a sort of court cachinnation&mdash;in
+these pretty terms:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;<em>Blow it about</em>, ye opposite winds of heaven,</p>
+<p>Till the loud chorus of derision shake</p>
+<p>The world with laughter!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>When he feels uncomfortable at something he is told in the first
+act, the Cardinal complains thus:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;Ha! earthquakes quiver in my flesh!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>which the <em>Britannia</em> is so good as to tell us is
+superior to Byron; while the <em>Morning Herald</em> kindly
+remarks, that &ldquo;a more vigorous and expressive line was
+<em>never</em> penned. In five words it illustrates the fiercest
+passions of humanity by the direst convulsion of nature:&rdquo;
+(<em>Opinions</em>, p. 7) a criticism which illustrates the
+fiercest throes of nonsense, by the direst convulsions of
+ignorance.</p>
+<p><em>Castaldo</em>, being anxious to murder the Cardinal with, we
+suppose, all &ldquo;means and appliances to boot,&rdquo; asks of
+heaven a trifling favour:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;Heaven, that look&rsquo;st on,</p>
+<p>Rain thy broad deluge first! All-teeming earth</p>
+<p>Disgorge thy poisons, till the attainted air</p>
+<p>Offend the sense! Thou, miscreative hell,</p>
+<p>Let loose calamity!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>But it is not only in the &ldquo;sublime and beautiful that Mr.
+Stephens&rsquo;s genius delights&rdquo; (<em>vide Opinions</em>, p.
+4); his play exhibits sentiments of high morality, quite worthy of
+the &ldquo;Editor of the Church of England Quarterly Review,&rdquo;
+the author of &ldquo;Lay Sermons,&rdquo; and other religious works.
+For example: the lady-killer, <em>Castaldo</em>, is
+&ldquo;hotly&rdquo; loved by the queen-mother, while he prefers the
+queen-daughter. The last and <em>Castaldo</em> are together. The
+dowager overhears their billing and cooing, and thus, with great
+moderation, sends her supposed daughter to &mdash;&mdash;. But the
+author shall speak for himself:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="i10">&ldquo;Ye viprous twain!</p>
+<p>Swift whirlwinds snatch ye both to fire as endless</p>
+<p>And infinite as hell! May it embrace ye!</p>
+<p>And burn&mdash;burn limbs and sinews, souls, until</p>
+<p>It wither ye both up&mdash;both&mdash;in its arms!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Elegant denunciation!&mdash;&ldquo;viprous,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;hell,&rdquo; &ldquo;sinews and souls.&rdquo; Has Goethe ever
+written anything like this? Certainly not. Therefore the
+&ldquo;Monthly&rdquo; <em>is</em> right at p. 11 of the
+<em>Opinions</em>. Stephens must be equal, if not superior, to the
+author of &ldquo;Faust.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>One more specimen of delicate sentiment from the lips of a
+virgin concerning the lips of her lover, will fully establish the
+Syncretic code of moral taste:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">CZERINA (<em>faintly</em>). &ldquo;Do breathe heat
+into me:</p>
+<p>Lay thy warm breath unto my bloodless lips:</p>
+<p>I stagger; I&mdash;I must&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">CASTALDO. &ldquo;In mercy, what?&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">CZERINA. &ldquo;Wed!!!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>The lady ends, most maidenly, by fainting in her lover&rsquo;s
+arms.</p>
+<p>A higher flight is elsewhere taken. <em>Isabella</em> urges
+<em>Castaldo</em> to murder <em>Martinuzzi</em>, in a sentence that
+has a powerful effect upon the feelings, for it makes us shudder as
+we copy it&mdash;it will cause even <em>our</em> readers to tremble
+when they see it. The idea of using <em>blasphemy</em> as an
+instrument for shocking the minds of an audience, is as original as
+it is worthy of the <em>sort</em> of genius Mr. Stephens possesses.
+Alluding to a poniard, <em>Isabella</em> says:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;Sheath it where <em>God</em> and nature prompt your
+hand!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>That is to say, in the breast of a cardinal!!</p>
+<p>The vulgar, who set up the common-place standards of nature,
+probability, moral propriety, and respect for such sacred names as
+they are careful never to utter, except with reverence, will
+perhaps condemn Mr. Stephens (the aforesaid &ldquo;Editor of the
+Church of England Quarterly Review,&rdquo; and author of other
+religious works) with unmitigated severity. They must not be too
+hasty. Mr. Stephens is a genius, and cannot, therefore, be held
+accountable for the <em>meaning</em> <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page87" name="page87"></a>[pg 87]</span>of his ravings, be they
+even blasphemous; more than that he is a Syncretic genius, and his
+associates, by the designation they have chosen, by the terms of
+their agreement, are bound to cry each other up&mdash;to defend one
+another from the virulent attacks of common sense and plain reason.
+They are sworn to <em>stick</em> together, like the bundle of rods
+in &AElig;sop&rsquo;s fable.</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/008-04.png"><img src=
+"images/008-04.png" alt=
+"A bundle of rods tied with a banner marked 'KANT'" id="img008-04"
+name="img008-04" width="20%" /></a>
+<p>SYNCRETISM.</p>
+</div>
+<p>Mr. Stephens, their chief, the god of their idolatry, is,
+consequently, more mad, or, according to their creed, a greater
+genius, than the rest; and evidently writes passages he would
+shudder to pen, if he knew the meaning of them. Upon paper,
+therefore, the Syncretics are not accountable beings; and when
+condemned to the severest penalties of critical law, must be
+reprieved on the plea of literary insanity.</p>
+<p>It may be said that we have descended to mere detail to
+illustrate Mr. Stephens&rsquo; peculiar genius&mdash;that we ought
+to treat of the grand design, or plot of the <em>Hungarian
+Daughter</em>; but we must confess, with the deepest humility, that
+our abilities are unequal to the task. The fable soars far beyond
+the utmost flights of our poor conjectures, of our limited
+comprehension. We know that at the end there are&mdash;one case of
+poisoning, one ditto of stabbing with intent, &amp;c., and one
+ditto of sudden death. Hence we conclude that the play is a
+tragedy; but one which &ldquo;cannot be intended for an acting
+play&rdquo; (<em>preliminary preface</em>, p.1,)&mdash;of course
+<em>as</em> a tragedy; yet so universal is the author&rsquo;s
+genius, that an adaptation of the <em>Hungarian Daughter</em>, as a
+broad comedy, has been produced at the &ldquo;Dramatic
+Authors&rsquo; Theatre,&rdquo; having been received with roars of
+laughter!</p>
+<p>The books before us have been expensively got up. In the
+<em>Hungarian Daughter</em>, &ldquo;rivers of type flow through
+meadows of margin,&rdquo; to the length of nearly three hundred
+pages. Mr. Stephens is truly a most spirited printer and publisher
+of his own works.</p>
+<p>But the lavish outlay he must have incurred to obtain such a
+number of favourable notices&mdash;so many columns of superlative
+praise&mdash;shows him to be, in every sense&mdash;like the prince
+of puffers, George Robins&mdash;&ldquo;utterly regardless of
+expense.&rdquo; The works third and fourth upon our list, doubtless
+cost, for the <em>copyright</em> alone, in ready money, a fortune.
+It is astonishing what pecuniary sacrifices genius will make, when
+it purloins the trumpet of Fame to <em>puff</em> itself into
+temporary notoriety.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>INQUEST EXTRAORDINARY.</h3>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2">The Whigs, who long</p>
+<p class="i2">Were bold and strong,</p>
+<p>On Monday night went dead.</p>
+<p class="i2">The jury found</p>
+<p class="i2">This verdict sound&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<em>Destroy&rsquo;d by low-priced bread</em>.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>AN EXCLUSIVE APPOINTMENT.</h3>
+<p>It is with the most rampant delight that we rush to announce,
+that a special warrant has been issued, appointing our friend and
+<em>prot&eacute;g&eacute;</em>, the gallant and jocular Sibthorp,
+to the important office of beadle and crier to the House of
+Commons&mdash;a situation which has been created from the
+difficulty which has hitherto been found in inducing strangers to
+withdraw during a division of the House. This responsible office
+could not have been conferred upon any one so capable of
+discharging its onerous duties as the Colonel. We will stake our
+hump, that half-a-dozen words of the gallant Demosthenes would, at
+any time have the effect of</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/008-05.png"><img src=
+"images/008-05.png" alt="People are tossed off of their benches."
+id="img008-05" name="img008-05" width="50%" /></a>
+<p>CLEARING THE STRANGER&rsquo;S GALLERY.</p>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>THE GREAT CRICKET MATCH AT ST. STEPHEN&rsquo;S.</h3>
+<h4>FIRST INNINGS.</h4>
+<p>The return match between the Reform and Carlton Clubs has been
+the theme of general conversation during the past week. Some
+splendid play was exhibited on the occasion, and, although the
+result has realised the anticipations of the best judges, it was
+not achieved without considerable exertion.</p>
+<p>It will be remembered that, the last time these celebrated clubs
+met, the Carlton men succeeded in scoring one notch more than their
+rivals; who, however, immediately challenged them to a return
+match, and have been diligently practising for success since that
+time.</p>
+<p>The players assembled in <em>Lord&rsquo;s</em> Cricket Ground on
+Tuesday last, when the betting was decidedly in favour of the Cons,
+whose appearance and manner was more confident than usual; while,
+on the contrary, the Rads seemed desponding and shy. On tossing up,
+the Whigs succeeded in getting first innings, and the Tories
+dispersed themselves about the field in high glee, flattering
+themselves that they would not be <em>out</em> long.</p>
+<p>Wellington, on producing the ball&mdash;a genuine
+<em>Duke</em>&mdash;excited general admiration by his position.
+Ripon officiated as bowler at the other wicket. Sibthorp acted as
+long-stop, and the rest found appropriate situations. Lefevre was
+chosen umpire by mutual consent.</p>
+<p>Spencer and Clanricarde went in first. Spencer, incautiously
+trying to score too many notches for one of his hits, was stumped
+out by Ripon, and Melbourne succeeded him. Great expectations had
+been formed of this player by his own party, but he was utterly
+unable to withstand Wellington&rsquo;s rapid bowling, which soon
+sent him to the right-about. Clanricarde was likewise run out
+without scoring a notch.</p>
+<p>Lansdowne and Brougham were now partners at the wickets; but
+Lansdowne did not appear to like his mate, on whose play it is
+impossible to calculate. Coventry, <em>the short slip</em>, excited
+much merriment, by a futile attempt to catch this player out, which
+terminated in his finding himself horizontal and mortified.
+Wellington, having bowled out Lansdowne, resigned his ball to Peel,
+who took his place at the wicket with a smile of confidence, which
+frightened the bat out of the hands of Phillips, the next Rad.</p>
+<p>Dundas and Labouchere were now the batmen. Labouchere is a very
+intemperate player. One of Sandon&rsquo;s slow balls struck his
+thumb, and put him out of temper, whereupon he hit about at random,
+and knocked down his wicket. Wakley took his bat, but apparently
+not liking his position, he hit up and caught himself out.</p>
+<p>O&rsquo;Connell took his place with a lounging swagger, but his
+first ball was caught by the immortal Sibthorp, who uttered more
+puns on the occasion than the oldest man present recollected to
+have heard perpetrated in any given time. Russell&mdash;who, by the
+bye, excavated several quarts of &lsquo;heavy&rsquo; during his
+innings&mdash;was the last man the Rads had to put in. He played
+with care, and appeared disposed to keep hold of the bat as long as
+possible. He was, however, quietly disposed of by one of
+Peel&rsquo;s inexorable balls.</p>
+<p>Thus far the game has proceeded. The Cons have yet to <em>go
+in</em>. The general opinion is, that they will not remain in so
+long as the Rads, but that they will score their notches much
+quicker. Indeed, it was commonly remarked, that no players had ever
+remained in so long, and had done so little good withal, as the
+Reformites.</p>
+<p>Betting is at 100 to 5 in favour of the Carlton men, and anxiety
+is on tip-toe to know the result of the next innings.</p>
+<hr />
+<p>The Tories are exulting in their recent victory over the poor
+Whigs, whom they affirm have been <em>tried</em>, and found
+wanting. A <em>trial</em>, indeed, where all the jurors were
+witnesses for the prosecution. One thing is certain, that the
+country, as usual, will have to pay the costs, for a Tory verdict
+will be certain to carry them. The Whigs should prepare a motion
+for a new trial, on the plea that the late decision was that of</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/008-06.png"><img src=
+"images/008-06.png" alt="A crowd of people in a jury box." id=
+"img008-06" name="img008-06" width="50%" /></a>
+<p>A PACKED JURY.</p>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>DECIDEDLY UNPLEASANT.</h3>
+<p class="cen">&ldquo;Kiss the broad
+moon.&rdquo;&mdash;MARTINUZZI.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Go kiss the moon!&mdash;that&rsquo;s more, sirs, than I can
+dare;</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Tis worse than madness&mdash;hasn&rsquo;t she her man
+there?</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>CURIOUS COINCIDENCE.</h3>
+<p>The <em>Morning Advertiser</em> has a paragraph containing a
+report of an extraordinary indisposition under which a private of
+the Royal Guards is now suffering. It appears he lately received a
+violent kick from a horse, on the back of his head: since which
+time his hair has become so sensitive, that he cannot bear any one
+to approach him or touch it. On some portion being cut off by
+stratagem, he evinced the utmost disgust, accompanied with a volley
+of oaths. This may be wonderful in French hair, but it is nothing
+to the present sufferings of the Whigs in England.</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page88" name="page88"></a>[pg
+88]</span>
+<h2>THE BARTHOLOMEW FAIR SHOW-FOLKS.</h2>
+<p>Punch having been chosen by the unanimous voice of the
+public&mdash;the <em>arbiter elegantiarum</em> in all matters
+relating to science, literature, and the fine arts&mdash;and from
+his long professional experience, being the only person in England
+competent to regulate the public amusements of the people, the Lord
+Mayor of London has confided to him the delicate and important duty
+of deciding upon the claims of the several individuals applying for
+licenses to open show-booths during the approaching Bartholomew
+Fair. Punch, having called to his assistance Sir Peter Laurie and
+Peter Borthwick, proceeded, on last Saturday, to hold his
+inquisition in a highly-respectable court in the neighbourhood of
+West Smithfield.</p>
+<p>The first application was made on behalf of
+<em>Richardson&rsquo;s Booth</em>, by two individuals named
+Melbourne and Russell.</p>
+<p>PUNCH.&mdash;On what grounds do you claim?</p>
+<p>MEL.&mdash;On those of long occupancy and respectability, my
+lord.</p>
+<p>RUSS.&mdash;We employs none but the werry best of actors, my
+lud&mdash;all &ldquo;bould speakers,&rdquo; as my late wenerated
+manager, Muster Richardson, used to call &lsquo;em.</p>
+<p>MEL.&mdash;We have the best scenery and decorations, the most
+popular performances&mdash;</p>
+<p>RUSS.&mdash;Hem! (<em>aside to</em> MEL.)&mdash;Best say nothing
+about our performances, Mel.</p>
+<p>PUNCH.&mdash;Pray what situations do you respectively hold in
+the booth?</p>
+<p>MEL.&mdash;<em>I</em> am principal manager, and do the heavy
+tragedy business. My friend, here, is the stage-manager and low
+comedy buffer, who takes the kicks, and blows the trumpet of the
+establishment.</p>
+<p>PUNCH.&mdash;What is the nature of the entertainments you have
+been in the habit of producing?</p>
+<p>RUSS.&mdash;Oh! the real legitimate drammar&mdash;&ldquo;A New
+Way to Pay Old Debts,&rdquo; &ldquo;Raising the Wind,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;A Gentleman in Difficulties,&rdquo; &ldquo;Where shall I
+dine?&rdquo; and &ldquo;Honest Thieves.&rdquo; We mean to commence
+the present season with &ldquo;All in the wrong,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;His Last Legs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>PUNCH.&mdash;Humph! I am sorry to say I have received several
+complaints of the manner in which you have conducted the business
+of your establishment for several years. It appears you put forth
+bills promising wonders, while your performances have been of the
+lowest possible description.</p>
+<p>RUSS.&mdash;S&rsquo;elp me, Bob! there ain&rsquo;t a word of
+truth in it. If there&rsquo;s anything we takes pride on,
+&rsquo;tis our gentility.</p>
+<p>PUNCH.&mdash;You have degraded the drama by the introduction of
+card-shufflers and thimble-rig impostors.</p>
+<p>RUSS.&mdash;We denies the thimble-rigging in totum, my lud; that
+was brought out at Stanley&rsquo;s opposition booth.</p>
+<p>PUNCH.&mdash;At least you were a promoter of state conjuring and
+legerdemain tricks on the stage.</p>
+<p>RUSS.&mdash;Only a little hanky-panky, my lud. The people likes
+it; they loves to be cheated before their faces. One, two,
+three&mdash;presto&mdash;begone. I&rsquo;ll show your ludship as
+pretty a trick of putting a piece of money in your eye and taking
+it out of your elbow, as you ever beheld. <em>Has</em> your ludship
+got such a thing as a good shilling about you? &rsquo;Pon my
+honour, I&rsquo;ll return it.</p>
+<p>PUNCH.&mdash;Be more respectful, sir, and reply to my questions.
+It appears further, that several respectable persons have lost
+their honesty in your booth.</p>
+<p>RUSS.&mdash;Very little of that &rsquo;ere commodity is ever
+brought into it, my lud.</p>
+<p>PUNCH.&mdash;And, in short, that you and your colleagues&rsquo;
+hands have been frequently found in the pockets of your
+audience.</p>
+<p>RUSS.&mdash;Only in a professional way, my lud&mdash;strictly
+professional.</p>
+<p>PUNCH.&mdash;But the most serious charge of all is that, on a
+recent occasion, when the audience hissed your performances, you
+put out the lights, let in the swell-mob, and raised a cry of
+&ldquo;No Corn Laws.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>RUSS.&mdash;Why, my lud, on that p&rsquo;int I admit there was a
+slight row.</p>
+<p>PUNCH.&mdash;Enough, sir. The court considers you have grossly
+misconducted yourself, and refuses to grant you license to
+perform.</p>
+<p>MEL.&mdash;But, my lord, I protest <em>I did</em> nothing.</p>
+<p>PUNCH.&mdash;So everybody says, sir. You are therefore unfit to
+have the management of (next to my own) the greatest theatre in the
+world. You may retire.</p>
+<p>MEL. (<em>to</em> RUSS.)&mdash;Oh! Johnny, this is your
+work&mdash;with your confounded hanky-panky.</p>
+<p>RUSS.&mdash;No&mdash;&rsquo;twas you that did it; we have been
+ruined by your laziness. What <em>is</em> to become of us now?</p>
+<p>MEL.&mdash;Alas! where shall we dine?</p>
+<hr class="short" />
+<p>The next individual who presented himself, to obtain a license
+for the Carlton Club Equestrian Troop, was a strange-loooking
+character, who gave his name as Sibthorp.</p>
+<p>PUNCH.&mdash;What are you, sir?</p>
+<p>SIB.&mdash;Clown to the ring, my lord, and principal performer
+on the Salt-box. I provide my own paint and pipe-clay, make my own
+jokes, and laugh at them too. I do the ground and lofty tumbling,
+and ride the wonderful donkey&mdash;all for the small sum of
+fifteen bob a-week.</p>
+<p>PUNCH.&mdash;You have been represented as a very noisy and
+turbulent fellow.</p>
+<p>SIB.&mdash;Meek as a lamb, my lord, except when I&rsquo;m on the
+saw-dust; there I acknowledge, I do crow pretty loudly&mdash;but
+that&rsquo;s in the way of business,&mdash;and your lordship knows
+that we public jokers must pitch it strong sometimes to make our
+audience laugh, and bring the <em>browns</em> into the treasury.
+After all, my lord, I am not the rogue many people take me
+for,&mdash;more the other way, I can assure you, and</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;Though to my share some human errors fall,</p>
+<p>Look in my face, and you&rsquo;ll forget them all.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>PUNCH.&mdash;A strong appeal, I must confess. You shall have
+your license.</p>
+<p>The successful claimant having made his best bow to Commissioner
+Punch, withdrew, whistling the national air of</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/008-07.png"><img src=
+"images/008-07.png" alt="A woman attacks her husband." id=
+"img008-07" name="img008-07" width="60%" /></a>
+<p>&ldquo;BRITONS, STRIKE HOME.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+<hr class="short" />
+<p>A fellow named Peel, who has been for many years in the habit of
+exhibiting as a quack-doctor, next applied for liberty to vend his
+nostrums at the fair. On being questioned as to his qualifications,
+he shook his head gravely, and, without uttering a word, placed the
+following card in the hands of Punch.</p>
+<h6>TO THE GULLIBLE PUBLIC.</h6>
+<h4>SIR RHUBARB PILL, M.D. and L.S.D.</h4>
+<p class="cen">Professor of Political Chemistry and Conservative
+Medicine to the</p>
+<h4>CARLTON CLUB;</h4>
+<h6>PHYSICIAN IN ORDINARY TO THE KING OF HANOVER!!!</h6>
+<p class="cen">Inventor of the People&rsquo;s Patent Sliding
+Stomach-pump;&mdash;of the Poor Man&rsquo;s anti-Breakfast and
+Dinner Waist-belt;&mdash;and of the new Royal extract of Toryism,
+as prescribed for, and lately swallowed by,</p>
+<h4>THE MOST ILLUSTRIOUS PERSONAGE IN THESE DOMINIONS.</h4>
+<p>Sir Rhubarb begs further to state, that he practises national
+tooth-drawing and bleeding to an unlimited extent; and undertakes
+to cure the consumption of bread without the use of</p>
+<h4>A FIXED PLASTER.</h4>
+<p>N.B.&mdash;No connexion with the corn doctor who recently
+vacated the concern now occupied by Sir R.P.</p>
+<p>Hours of attendance, from ten till four each day, at his
+establishment, Downing-street.&mdash;A private entrance for
+M.P.&rsquo;s round the corner.</p>
+<hr class="short" />
+<p>Ben D&rsquo;Israeli, the proprietor of the Learned Pig, applied
+for permission to exhibit his animal at the fair. A license was
+unhesitatingly granted by his lordship, who rightly considered that
+the exhibition of the extraordinary talents of the pig and its
+master, would do much to promote a taste for polite literature
+amongst the Smithneld &ldquo;pennyboys.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class="short" />
+<p>A poor old man, who called himself Sir Francis Burdett, applied
+for a license to exhibit his wonderful Dissolving Views. The most
+remarkable of which were&mdash;&ldquo;The Hustings in
+Covent-garden&mdash;changing to Rous&rsquo;s dinner in
+Drury-lane&rdquo;&mdash;and &ldquo;The Patriot in the
+Tower&mdash;changing to the Renegade in the Carlton.&rdquo; It
+appeared that the applicant was, at one time, in a respectable
+business, and kept &ldquo;The Old Glory,&rdquo; a favourite
+public-house in Westminster, but, falling into bad company, he lost
+his custom and his character, and was reduced to his present
+miserable occupation. Punch, in pity for the wretched petitioner,
+and fully convinced that his childish tricks were perfectly
+harmless, granted him a license to exhibit.</p>
+<hr class="short" />
+<p>Licenses were also granted to the following persons in the
+course of the day:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Sir E.L. Bulwer, to exhibit his own portrait, in the character
+of Alcibiades, painted by himself.</p>
+<p>Doctor Bowring, to exhibit six Tartarian chiefs, caught in the
+vicinity of the Seven Dials, with songs, translated from the
+original Irish Calmuc, by the Doctor.</p>
+<p>Emerson Tennent, to exhibit his wonderful Cosmorama, or views of
+anywhere and everywhere; in which the striking features of Ireland,
+Greece, Belgium, and Whitechapel will be so happily confounded,
+that the spectator may imagine he beholds any or all of these
+places at a single glance.</p>
+<p>Messrs. Stephens, Heraud, and Co., to exhibit, gratis, a
+Syncretic Tragedy, with fireworks and tumbling, according to law,
+between the acts; to be followed by a lecture on the Unactable
+Drama.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>CAPITAL ILLUSTRATION.</h3>
+<p>At the recent <em>fracas</em> in Pall Mall, between Captain
+Fitzroy and Mr. Shepherd, the latter, like his predecessor of old,
+the &ldquo;Gentle Shepherd,&rdquo; performed sundry vague
+evolutions with a silver-mounted cane, and requested Captain
+Fitzroy to consider himself horsewhipped. Not entertaining quite so
+high an opinion of his adversary&rsquo;s imaginative powers, the
+Captain floored the said descendant of gentleness, thereby ably
+illustrating the precise difference of the &ldquo;<em>real and
+ideal</em>.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page89" name="page89"></a>[pg
+89]</span>
+<h2>THE HEIR OF APPLEBITE.</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+<h4>SHOWS HOW AGAMEMNON BECAME DISGUSTED WITH NUMBER ONE, AND THE
+AWFUL CONSEQUENCES WHICH SUCCEEDED.</h4>
+<div class="dropcap"><a href="images/008-08.png"><img src=
+"images/008-08.png" alt=
+"A man holds a bass drum on his back in the shape of a P" id=
+"img008-08" name="img008-08" width="100%" /></a></div>
+<p><span class="hide">P</span>oor old John&rsquo;s alarm was
+succeeded by astonishment, for without speaking a word, Agamemnon
+bounced into his bed-chamber. He thought the room the most
+miserable-looking room he had ever entered, though the floor was
+covered with a thick Turkey carpet, a bright fire was blazing in
+the grate, and everything about seemed fashioned for comfort. He
+threw himself into an easy chair, and kicking off one of his pumps,
+crossed his legs, and rested his elbow on the table. He looked at
+his bed&mdash;it was a French one&mdash;a mountain of feathers,
+covered with a thick, white Marseilles quilt, and festooned over
+with a drapery of rich crimson damask.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have a four-post to-morrow,&rdquo; growled
+Collumpsion; &ldquo;French beds are mean-looking things, after all.
+Stuffwell has the fellow-chair to this&mdash;one chair does look
+strange! I wonder it has never struck me before; but it is
+surprising&mdash;what&mdash;strange ide&mdash;as a
+man&mdash;has&rdquo;&mdash;and Collumpsion fell asleep.</p>
+<p>It was broad day when Collumpsion awoke; the fire had gone out,
+and his feet were as cold as ice. He (as he is married
+there&rsquo;s no necessity for concealment)&mdash;he swore two or
+three naughty oaths, and taking off his clothes, hurried into bed
+in the hope of getting warm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How confoundedly cold I am&mdash;sitting in that chair
+all night, too&mdash;ridiculous. If I had had a&mdash;I mean, if I
+hadn&rsquo;t been alone, that wouldn&rsquo;t have happened; she
+would have waked me.&rdquo; <em>She</em>&mdash;what the deuce made
+him use the feminine pronoun!</p>
+<p>At two o&rsquo;clock he rose and entered his breakfast-room. The
+table was laid as usual&mdash;<em>one</em> large cup and saucer,
+<em>one</em> plate, <em>one</em> egg-cup, <em>one</em> knife, and
+<em>one</em> fork! He did not know wherefore, but he felt to want
+the number increased. John brought up a slice of broiled salmon and
+<em>one</em> egg. Collumpsion got into a passion, and ordered a
+second edition. The morning was rainy, so Collumpsion remained at
+home, and employed himself by kicking about the ottoman, and
+mentally multiplying all the single articles in his establishment
+by two.</p>
+<p>The dinner hour arrived, and there was the same singular
+provision for one. He rang the bell, and ordered John to furnish
+the table for <em>another</em>. John obeyed, though not without
+some strong misgiving of his master&rsquo;s sanity, as the edibles
+consisted of a sole, a mutton chop, and a partridge. When John left
+the room at his master&rsquo;s request, Collumpsion rose and locked
+the door. Having placed a chair opposite, he resumed his seat, and
+commenced a series of pantomimic gestures, which were strongly
+confirmatory of John&rsquo;s suspicions. He seemed to be holding an
+inaudible conversation with some invisible being, placing the
+choicest portion of the sole in a plate, and seemingly desiring
+John to deliver it to the unknown. As John was not there, he placed
+it before himself, and commenced daintily and smilingly picking up
+very minute particles, as though he were too much delighted to eat.
+He then bowed and smiled, and extending his arm, appeared to fill
+the opposite glass, and having <em>actually</em> performed the same
+operation with his own, he bowed and smiled again, and sipped the
+brilliant Xeres. He then rang the bell violently, and unlocking the
+door, rushed rapidly back to his chair, as though he were fearful
+of committing a rudeness by leaving it. The table being
+replenished, and John again dismissed the room, the same pantomime
+commenced. The one mutton chop seemed at first to present an
+obstacle to the proper conduct of the scene; but gracefully
+uncovering the partridge, and as gracefully smiling towards the
+invisible, he appeared strongly to recommend the bird in preference
+to the beast. Dinner at length concluded, he rose, and apparently
+led his phantom guest from the table, and then returning to his
+arm-chair, threw himself into it, and, crossing his hands upon his
+breast, commenced a careful examination of the cinders and himself.
+His rumination ended in a doze, and his doze in a dream, in which
+he fancied himself a Brobdignag Java sparrow during the moulting
+season. His cage was surrounded by beautiful and blooming girls,
+who seemed to pity his condition, and vie with each other in
+proposing the means of rendering him more comfortable. Some spoke
+of elastic cotton shirts, linsey-wolsey jackets, and silk
+nightcaps; others of merino hose, silk feet and cotton tops,
+shirt-buttons and warming-pans; whilst Mrs. Greatgirdle and Mrs.
+Waddledot sang an echo duet of &ldquo;What a pity the bird is
+alone.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;A change came o&rsquo;er the spirit of his
+dream.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>He thought that the moulting season was over, and that he was
+rejoicing in the fulness of a sleeky plumage, and by his side was a
+Java sparrowess, chirping and hopping about, rendering the cage as
+populous to him as though he were the tenant of a
+bird-fancier&rsquo;s shop. Then&mdash;he awoke just as Old John was
+finishing a glass of Madeira, preparatory to arousing Collumpsion,
+for the purpose of delivering to him a scented note, which had just
+been left by the footman of Mrs. Waddledot.</p>
+<p>It was lucky for John that A.C.A. had been blessed with pleasant
+dreams, or his attachment to Madeira might have occasioned his
+discharge from No. 24, Pleasant-terrace.</p>
+<p>The note was an invitation to Mrs. Waddledot&rsquo;s opera-box
+for that evening. The performance was to be Rossini&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;La Cenerentola,&rdquo; and as Collumpsion recollected the
+subject of the opera, his heart fluttered in his bosom. A prince
+marrying a cinder-sifter for love! What must the happy state
+be&mdash;or rather what must it not be&mdash;to provoke such a
+condescension!</p>
+<p>Collumpsion never appeared to such advantage as he did that
+evening; he was dressed to a miracle of perfection&mdash;his
+spirits were so elastic that they must have carried him out of the
+box into &ldquo;Fop&rsquo;s-alley,&rdquo; had not Mrs. Waddledot
+cleverly surrounded him by the detachment from the corps of
+eighteen daughters, which had (on that night) been placed under her
+command.</p>
+<p>Collumpsion&rsquo;s state of mind did not escape the notice of
+the fair campaigners, and the most favourable deductions were drawn
+from it in relation to the charitable combination which they had
+formed for his ultimate good, and all seemed determined to afford
+him every encouragement in their power. Every witticism that he
+uttered elicited countless smiles&mdash;every criticism that he
+delivered was universally applauded&mdash;in short, Agamemnon
+Collumpsion Applebite was voted the most delightful beau in the
+universe, and Agamemnon Collumpsion Applebite gave himself a
+plumper to the same opinion.</p>
+<p>On the 31st of the following month, a string of carriages
+surrounded St. George&rsquo;s Church, Hanover-square, and precisely
+at a quarter to twelve, A.M., Agamemnon Collumpsion Applebite
+placed a plain gold ring on the finger of Miss Juliana Theresa
+Waddledot, being a necessary preliminary to the introduction of our
+hero, the &ldquo;Heir of Applebite.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>EPIGRAM.</h3>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder if Brougham thinks as much as he
+talks,&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Said a punster perusing a trial:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I vow, since his lordship was made Baron Vaux,</p>
+<p>He&rsquo;s been <em>Vaux et pr&aelig;terea
+nihil!</em>&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>THE TWO FATAL CHIROPEDISTS.</h3>
+<p>Our great ancestor, Joe Miller, has recorded, in his
+&ldquo;Booke of Jestes,&rdquo; an epitaph written upon an amateur
+corn-cutter, named Roger Horton, who,</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;Trying one day his corn to mow off,</p>
+<p>The razor slipp&rsquo;d, and cut his toe off.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>The painful similarity of his fate with that of another corn
+experimentalist, has given rise to the following:&mdash;</p>
+<h4>EPITAPH ON LORD JOHN RUSSELL, WHO EXPIRED POLITICALLY, AFTER A
+LINGERING ILLNESS, ON MONDAY EVENING, AUGUST 30, 1841.</h4>
+<p class="cen">In Minto quies.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Beneath this stone lies Johnny Russell,</p>
+<p>Who for his place had many a tussel.</p>
+<p>Trying one day <em>the corn</em> to cut down,</p>
+<p>The motion fail&rsquo;d, and he was <em>put</em> down.</p>
+<p>The benches which he nearly grew to,</p>
+<p>The Opposition quickly flew to;</p>
+<p>The fact it was so mortifying,</p>
+<p>That little Johnny took to dying.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>SHALL GREAT OLYMPUS TO A MOLEHILL STOOP?</h3>
+<p>Some difficulty has arisen as to the production of
+Knowles&rsquo;s new play at the Haymarket Theatre. Mr. Charles Kean
+and Miss Helen Faucit having objected to hear the play read,
+&ldquo;<em>because their respective parts had not been previously
+submitted to them.</em>&rdquo;&mdash;<em>Sunday
+Times</em>.&mdash;[We are of opinion that they were decidedly
+right. One might as well expect a child to spell without learning
+the alphabet, as either of the above persons to understand Knowles,
+unless enlightened by a long course of previous instruction.]</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page90" name="page90"></a>[pg
+90]</span>
+<h2>THE LETTER OF INTRODUCTION.</h2>
+<p class="cen">[From a MS. drama called the &ldquo;COURT OF
+VICTORIA.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="cen"><em>Scene in Windsor Castle.</em></p>
+<p class="cen">[<em>Her Majesty discovered sitting thoughtfully at
+an escrutoire.</em>&mdash;</p>
+<p class="cen"><em>Enter the</em> LORD CHAMBERLAIN.]</p>
+<p>LORD CHAMBERLAIN.&mdash;May it please your Majesty, a letter
+from the Duke of Wellington.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN (<em>opens the letter</em>.)&mdash;Oh! a person for
+the vacant place of Premier&mdash;show the bearer in, my lord.
+[<em>Exit</em> LORD CHAMBERLAIN.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN (<em>muses</em>).&mdash;Sir Robert Peel&mdash;I have
+heard that name before, as connected with my family. If I remember
+rightly, he held the situation of adviser to the crown in the reign
+of Uncle William, and was discharged for exacting a large discount
+on all the state receipts; yet Wellington is very much interested
+in his favour.</p>
+<p class="cen"><em>Enter the</em> LORD CHAMBERLAIN, <em>who ushers
+in</em> SIR ROBERT, <em>and then retires. As he is
+going</em>&mdash;]</p>
+<p>LORD CHAMBERLAIN (<em>aside</em>).&mdash;If you do get the
+berth, Sir Robert, I hope you&rsquo;ll not give me warning.</p>
+<p class="rgt">[<em>Exit</em>.</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT (<em>looking demurely</em>).&mdash;Hem!</p>
+<p class="cen">[<em>The Queen regards him very
+attentively.</em>]</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN (<em>aside</em>).&mdash;I don&rsquo;t much like the
+looks of the fellow&mdash;that affectation of simplicity is
+evidently intended to conceal the real cunning of his character.
+(<em>Aloud</em>). You are of course aware of the nature and the
+duties of the situation which you solicit?</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;Oh, yes, your Majesty; I have filled it
+before, and liked it very much.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;It&rsquo;s a most responsible post, for upon
+your conduct much of the happiness of my other servants
+depends.</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;I am aware of that, your Majesty; but as no
+one can hope to please everybody, I will only answer that <em>one
+half</em> shall be perfectly satisfied.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;You have recently returned from Tamworth?</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;Yes, your Majesty.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;We will dispense with forms. At Tamworth, you
+have been practising as a quack doctor?</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;Yes, madam; I was brought up to doctoring, and
+am a professor of sleight-of-hand.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;What have you done in the latter art to entitle
+you to such a distinction?</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;I have performed some very wonderful changes.
+When I was out of place, I had opinions strongly opposed to
+Catholic emancipation; but when I got into service I changed them
+in the course of a few days.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;I have heard that you boast of possessing a
+nostrum for the restoration of the public good. What is it?</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;Am I to consider myself &ldquo;as regularly
+called in?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;That is a question I decline answering at
+present.</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;Then I regret that I must also remain
+silent.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN (<em>aside</em>).&mdash;The wily fox!
+(<em>aloud</em>)&mdash;Are you aware that great distress exists in
+the country?</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;Oh, yes! I have heard that there are several
+families who keep no man-servant, and that numerous clerks,
+weavers, and other artisans, occupy second-floors.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;I have heard that the people are wanting
+bread.</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;Ha, ha! that was from the late premier, I
+suppose. He merely forgot an adjective&mdash;it is <em>cheap</em>
+bread that the people are clamouring for.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;And why can they not have it?</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;I have consulted with the Duke of Richmond
+upon the subject, and he says it is impossible.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;But why?</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;Wheat must be lower before bread can be
+cheaper.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;Well!</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;And rents must be less if that is the case,
+and&mdash;</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;Well!</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;And that the landowners won&rsquo;t agree
+to.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;Well!</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;And, then, I can&rsquo;t keep my place a
+day.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;Then the majority of my subjects are to be
+rendered miserable for the advantage of the few?</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;That&rsquo;s the principle of all good
+governments. Besides, cheap bread would be no benefit to the
+masses, for wages would be lower.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;Do you really believe such <em>would</em> be
+the case?</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;Am I regularly called in?</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;You evade a direct answer, I see. Granting such
+to be <em>your belief</em>, your friends and landowners would
+suffer no injury, for their incomes would procure them as many
+luxuries.</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;Not if they were to live abroad, or patronise
+foreign manufactures: and <em>should</em> wages be higher, what
+would they say to me after all the money they have expended in
+bri&mdash;I mean at the Carlton Club, if I allow the value of their
+&ldquo;dirty acres&rdquo; to be reduced.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;Pray, what do you call such views?</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;Patriotism.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;Charity would be a better term, as that is said
+to begin at home. How long were you in your last place?</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;Not half so long as I wished&mdash;for the
+sake of the country.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;Why did you leave?</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;Somebody said I was saucy&mdash;and somebody
+else said I was not honest&mdash;and somebody else said I had
+better go.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;Who was the latter somebody?</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;My master.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;Your exposure of my late premier&rsquo;s
+faults, and your present application for his situation, result from
+disinterestedness, of course?</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;Of course, madam.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;Then salary is not so much an object as a
+comfortable situation.</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;I beg pardon; but I&rsquo;ve been out of place
+ten years, and have a small family to support. <em>Wages</em> is,
+therefore, some sort of a consideration.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;I don&rsquo;t quite like you.</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT (<em>glancing knowingly at the Queen</em>).&mdash;I
+don&rsquo;t think there is any one that <em>you can</em> have
+better.</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;I&rsquo;m afraid not.</p>
+<p>SIR ROBERT.&mdash;Then, am I regularly called in?</p>
+<p>THE QUEEN.&mdash;Yes, you can take your boxes to
+Downing-street.</p>
+<p class="rgt">[<em>Exeunt ambo</em>.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>PARLIAMENTARY INTENTIONS.</h3>
+<p>Mr. Muntz, we understand, intends calling the attention of
+Parliament, at the earliest possible period, to the state of the
+crops.</p>
+<p>Lord Palmerston intends proposing, that a looking-glass for the
+use of members should be placed in the ante-room of the House, and
+that it shall be called the New Mirror of Parliament.</p>
+<p>Mr. T. Duncombe intends moving that the plans of Sir Robert Peel
+be immediately submitted to the photographic process, in order that
+some light may be thrown upon them as soon as possible.</p>
+<p>The Earl of Coventry intends suggesting, that every member of
+both Houses be immediately supplied with a copy of the work called
+&ldquo;Ten Minutes&rsquo; Advice on Corns,&rdquo; in order to
+prepare Parliament for a full description of the Corn Laws.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>EXTRA FASHIONABLE NEWS.</h3>
+<p>Colonel Sibthorp has expressed his intention of becoming the
+blue-faced monkey at the Zoological Gardens with his
+<em>countenance</em>, on next Wednesday.</p>
+<p>Lord Melbourne has received visits of condolence on his
+retirement from office, from Aldgate pump&mdash;Canning&rsquo;s
+statue in Palace-yard&mdash;the Three Kings of Brentford&mdash;and
+the Belle Sauvage, Ludgate-hill.</p>
+<p>Her Royal Highness the Princess, her two nurses, and a
+pap-spoon, took an airing twice round the great hall of the palace,
+at one o&rsquo;clock yesterday.</p>
+<p>The Burlington Arcade will be thrown open to visitors to-morrow
+morning. Gentlemen intending to appear there, are requested to come
+with tooth-picks and full-dress walking-canes.</p>
+<p>Sir Francis Burdett&rsquo;s top-boots were seen, on last
+Saturday, walking into Sir Robert Peel&rsquo;s house, accompanied
+by the legs of that venerable turner.</p>
+<p>His Grace the Duke of Wellington inspected all the passengers in
+Pall Mall, from the steps of the United Service Club-house, and
+expressed himself highly pleased with the celerity of the
+&lsquo;busses and cabs, and the effective state of the pedestrians
+generally.</p>
+<p>His Royal Highness the Duke of Sussex has, in the most
+unequivocal manner, expressed his opinion on the state of the
+weather&mdash;which he pronounces to be hot! hot! all hot!</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>A SINGULAR INADVERTENCE.</h3>
+<p>A good deal of merriment was caused in the House of Commons, by
+Mr. Bernal and Commodore Napier addressing the members as
+&ldquo;gentlemen.&rdquo; This may be excusable in young members,
+but the oldest parliamentary reporter has no recollection of the
+term being used by any one who had sat a session in the House.
+&ldquo;Too much familiarity,&rdquo; &amp;c.</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page91" name="page91"></a>[pg
+91]</span>
+<h2>PUNCH&rsquo;S PENCILLINGS&mdash;No. VIII.</h2>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/008-09.png"><img src=
+"images/008-09.png" alt=
+"A woman sits at a desk while a gentleman looks on." id="img008-09"
+name="img008-09" width="100%" /></a>
+<p>THE LETTER OF INTRODUCTION.</p>
+</div>
+<!-- [pg 92] -->
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page93" name="page93"></a>[pg
+93]</span>
+<h2>THE MINISTRY&rsquo;S ODE TO THE PASSIONS.</h2>
+<h4>NOT BY COLLINS.</h4>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>When the Whig Ministry had run,</p>
+<p>Nor left behind a mother&rsquo;s son,</p>
+<p>The Tories, at their leader&rsquo;s call,</p>
+<p>Came thronging round him, one and all,</p>
+<p>Exulting, braying, cringing, coaxing,</p>
+<p>Expert at humbugging and hoaxing;</p>
+<p>By turns they felt an <em>honest</em> zeal</p>
+<p>For private good and public weal;</p>
+<p>Till all at once they raised such yells,</p>
+<p>As rung in Apsley House the bells:</p>
+<p>And as they sought snug berths to get</p>
+<p>In Bobby Peel&rsquo;s new cabinet,</p>
+<p>Each, for interest ruled the hour,</p>
+<p>Would prove his taste for place and power.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>First Follett&rsquo;s hand, his skill to try,</p>
+<p class="i2">Upon the <em>seals</em> bewilder&rsquo;d laid;</p>
+<p>But back recoil&rsquo;d&mdash;he scarce knew why&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">Of Lyndhurst&rsquo;s angry scowl afraid.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Next Stanley rush&rsquo;d with frenzied air;</p>
+<p class="i2">His eager haste brook&rsquo;d no delay:</p>
+<p>He rudely seized the <em>Foreign</em> chair,</p>
+<p class="i2">And bade poor Cupid trudge away.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>With woeful visage Melbourne sate&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">A pint of double X his grief beguiled;</p>
+<p>And inly pondering o&rsquo;er his fate,</p>
+<p class="i2">He bade th&rsquo; attendant pot-boy &ldquo;draw it
+mild.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>But thou, Sir Jamie Graham&mdash;prig;</p>
+<p class="i2">What was thy delighted musing?</p>
+<p>Now accepting, now refusing,</p>
+<p>Till on the Admiralty pitch&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p class="i2">Still would that thought his speech prolong;</p>
+<p>To gain the place for which he long had itch&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p class="i2">He call&rsquo;d on Bobby still through all the
+song;</p>
+<p>But ever as his sweetest theme he chose,</p>
+<p>A sovereign&rsquo;s golden chink was heard at every close,</p>
+<p>And Pollock grimly smiled, and shook his powder&rsquo;d wig.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>And longer had he droned&mdash;but, with a frown</p>
+<p class="i8">Brougham impatient rose;</p>
+<p>He threw the bench of snoring bishops down,</p>
+<p class="i8">And, with a withering look,</p>
+<p class="i8">The Whig-denouncing trumpet took,</p>
+<p>And made a speech so fierce and true,</p>
+<p>Thrashing, with might and main, both friend and foe;</p>
+<p class="i8">And ever and anon he beat,</p>
+<p class="i8">With doubled fist his cushion&rsquo;d seat;</p>
+<p>And though sometimes, each breathless pause between,</p>
+<p class="i8">Astonished Melbourne at his side,</p>
+<p class="i8">His moderating voice applied,</p>
+<p>Yet still he kept his stern, unalter&rsquo;d mien,</p>
+<p>While battering the Whigs and Tories black and blue.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Thy ravings, Goulburn, to no theme were fix&rsquo;d.</p>
+<p class="i2">Not ev&rsquo;n thy virtue is without its spots;</p>
+<p>With piety thy politics were mix&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p class="i2">And now they courted Peel, now call&rsquo;d on Doctor
+Watts.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>With drooping jaw, like one half-screw&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>Lord Johnny sate in doleful mood,</p>
+<p>And for his Secretarial seat,</p>
+<p>Sent forth his howlings sad, but sweet</p>
+<p>Lost Normanby pour&rsquo;d forth his sad adieu;</p>
+<p class="i8">While Palmerston, with graceful air,</p>
+<p class="i8">Wildly toss&rsquo;d his scented hair;</p>
+<p>And pensive Morpeth join&rsquo;d the sniv&rsquo;lling crew.</p>
+<p class="i2">Yet still they lingered round with fond delay,</p>
+<p class="i8">Humming, hawing, stopping, musing,</p>
+<p class="i8">Tory rascals all abusing,</p>
+<p class="i2">Till forced to move away.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>But, oh! how alter&rsquo;d was the whining tone</p>
+<p class="i2">When, loud-tongued Lyndhurst, that unblushing
+wight,</p>
+<p>His gown across his shoulders flung,</p>
+<p class="i2">His wig with virgin-powder white,</p>
+<p>Made an ear-splitting speech that down to Windsor rung,</p>
+<p>The Tories&rsquo; call, that Billy Holmes well knew,</p>
+<p>The turn-coat Downshire and his Orange crew;</p>
+<p>Wicklow and Howard both were seen</p>
+<p>Brushing away the wee bit green;</p>
+<p>Mad Londonderry laugh&rsquo;d to hear,</p>
+<p>And Inglis scream&rsquo;d and shook his ass&rsquo;s ear</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Last Bobby Peel, with hypocritic air,</p>
+<p class="i2">He with modest look came sneaking:</p>
+<p>First to &ldquo;<em>the Home</em>&rdquo; his easy vows
+addrest,&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">But soon he saw the <em>Treasury&rsquo;s</em> red
+chair,</p>
+<p>Whose soft inviting seat he loved the best.</p>
+<p>They would have thought, who heard his words,</p>
+<p>They saw in Britain&rsquo;s cause a patriot stand,</p>
+<p>The proud defender of his land,</p>
+<p>To aw&rsquo;d and list&rsquo;ning senates speaking;&mdash;</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>But as his fingers touch&rsquo;d the purse&rsquo;s strings,</p>
+<p class="i2">The chinking metal made a magic sound,</p>
+<p class="i2">While hungry placemen gather&rsquo;d fast around:</p>
+<p class="i2">And he, as if by chance or play,</p>
+<p class="i2">Or that he would their venal votes repay,</p>
+<p>The golden treasures round upon them flings.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>SIR ROBERT PEEL AND THE QUEEN.</h3>
+<p>Upon the first interview of the Queen with Sir Robert Peel, her
+Majesty was determined to answer only in monosyllables to all he
+said; and, in fact, to make her replies <em>an echo</em>, and
+nothing more, to whatever he said to her. The following dialogue,
+which we have thrown into verse for the purpose of smoothing
+it&mdash;the tone of it, as spoken, having been on one side, at
+least, rather rough&mdash;ensued between the illustrious persons
+alluded to.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>HE.&mdash;Before we into minor details go,</p>
+<p class="i6">Do I possess your confidence or no?</p>
+<p class="rgt">SHE.&mdash;<em>No.</em></p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>HE.&mdash;You shall not vex me, though your treatment&rsquo;s
+rough;</p>
+<p class="i6">No, madam, I am made of sterner stuff.</p>
+<p class="rgt">SHE.&mdash;<em>Stuff.</em></p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>HE.&mdash;Really, if thus your minister you flout,</p>
+<p class="i6">A single syllable he can&rsquo;t get out.</p>
+<p class="rgt">SHE.&mdash;<em>Get out!</em></p>
+<p>HE.&mdash;But try me, madam; time indeed will show</p>
+<p class="i6">Unto what lengths to serve you I would go.</p>
+<p class="rgt">SHE.&mdash;<em>Go.</em></p>
+<p>HE.&mdash;We both have power,&mdash;&rsquo;tis doubtful which is
+greater;</p>
+<p class="i6">These crooked words had better be made
+straighter.</p>
+<p class="rgt">SHE.&mdash;<em>Traighter (Traitor.)</em></p>
+<p>HE.&mdash;Farewell! and never in this friendly strain</p>
+<p class="i6">(My proffer&rsquo;d aid foregone) I breathe
+again!</p>
+<p class="rgt">SHE.&mdash;<em>Gone. I breathe again!</em></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>SONGS OF THE SEEDY.&mdash;NO. 2.</h3>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>I cannot rove with thee, where zephyrs float&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">Sweet sylvan scenes devoted to the loves!&mdash;</p>
+<p>For, oh! I have not got one decent coat,</p>
+<p class="i2">Nor can I sport a single pair of gloves.</p>
+<p>Gladly I&rsquo;d wander o&rsquo;er the verdant lawn,</p>
+<p class="i2">Where graze contentedly the fleecy flock;</p>
+<p>But can I show myself in gills so torn,</p>
+<p class="i2">Or brave the public gaze in such a stock?</p>
+<p>I know <em>thou</em>&rsquo;lt answer me that love is blind,</p>
+<p class="i2">And faults in one it worships can&rsquo;t
+perceive;</p>
+<p>It must be sightless, truly, not to find</p>
+<p class="i2">The hole that&rsquo;s gaping in my threadbare
+sleeve.</p>
+<p>Farewell, my love&mdash;for, oh! by heaven, we part,</p>
+<p class="i2">And though it cost me all the pangs of hell.</p>
+<p>The herd shall not on thee inflict a smart,</p>
+<p class="i2">By calling after us&mdash;&ldquo;There goes a
+swell!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>A PRIVATE BOX.</h3>
+<p>During the clear-out on Wednesday last in Downing-street, a
+small chest, strongly secured, was found among some models of
+balloting-boxes. It had evidently been forgotten for some years,
+and upon opening it, was found to contain the Whig promises of
+1832. They were immediately conveyed to Lord Melbourne, who
+appeared much astonished at these resuscitation of the</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/008-10.png"><img src=
+"images/008-10.png" alt="A man is covered with children." id=
+"img008-10" name="img008-10" width="50%" /></a>
+<p>HOME OFFICE.</p>
+</div>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page94" name="page94"></a>[pg
+94]</span>
+<h2>THE LOST MEDICAL PAPERS OF THE BRITISH ASSOCIATION.</h2>
+<p>&ldquo;It is somewhat remarkable,&rdquo; observe the journals of
+the past week, &ldquo;that the medical division of this scientific
+meeting has not contributed one single paper this year in
+furtherance of its object, although the communications from that
+section have usually been of a highly important
+character.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The journals may think it somewhat remarkable&mdash;we do not at
+all; for here, as in every other event of the day, a great deal
+depends upon being &ldquo;behind the curtain;&rdquo; and as the
+greater portion of our life is passed in that locality, we are
+always to be relied upon for authenticity in our statements. The
+plain truth is, that the papers were inadvertently lost, and rather
+than lead to some unpleasant disclosures, in which the eminent
+professor to whom they were entrusted would have been deeply
+implicated, it was thought best to say nothing about them. By
+chance they fell into the hands of the manager of one of our
+perambulating theatres, who was toiling his way from the west of
+England to Egham races, and having deposited them in his portable
+green-room, under the especial custody of the clown, the doctor,
+and the overbearing parochial authority, he duly remitted them to
+our office. We have been too happy in giving them a place in our
+columns, feeling an honest pride in thus taking the lead of the
+chief scientific publications of the day. It will be seen that they
+are drawn up as a report, all ready for publication, according to
+the usual custom of such proceedings, where every one knows
+beforehand what they are to dispute or agree with.</p>
+<p>Dr. Splitnerve communicated a remarkable case of Animal
+Magnetism:&mdash;Eugene Doldrum, aged 21, a young man of bilious
+and interesting temperament, having been mesmerized, was rendered
+so keenly magnetic, as to give rise to a most remarkable train of
+phenomena. On being seated upon a music-stool, he immediately
+becomes an animated compass, and turns round to the north. Knives
+and forks at dinner invariably fly towards him, and he is not able
+to go through any of the squares, in consequence of being attracted
+firmly to the iron railings. As most of the experiments took place
+at the North London Hospital, Euston-square was his chief point of
+attraction, and when he was removed, it was always found necessary
+to break off the railings and take them away with him. This
+accounted for the decrepit condition of the <em>fleur de lys</em>
+that surround the inclosure, which was not, as generally supposed,
+the work of the university pupils residing in Gower-place. Perfect
+insensibility to pain supervened at the same time, and his friends
+took advantage of this circumstance to send him, by way of delicate
+compliment, to a lying-in lady, in the style of a pedestrian
+pin-cushion, his cheeks being stuck full of minikin pins, on the
+right side, forming the words &ldquo;Health to the Babe,&rdquo; and
+on the left, &ldquo;Happiness to the Mother.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. Mortar read a talented paper on the cure of strabismus, or
+squinting, by dividing the muscles of the eye. The patient, a
+working man, squinted so terribly, that his eyes almost got into
+one another&rsquo;s sockets; and at times he was only able to see
+by looking down the inside of his nose and out at the nostrils. The
+operation was performed six weeks ago, when, on cutting through the
+muscles, its effects were instantly visible: both the eyes
+immediately diverging to the extreme outer angles of their
+respective orbits.</p>
+<p>Dr. Sharpeye inquired if the man did not find the present state
+of his vision still very perplexing.</p>
+<p>Dr. Mortar replied, that so far from injuring his sight, it had
+proved highly beneficial, as the patient had procured a very
+excellent situation in the new police, and received a double
+salary, from the power he possessed of keeping an eye upon both
+sides of the road at the same time.</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/008-11.png"><img src=
+"images/008-11.png" alt="A cross-eyed woman" id="img008-11" name=
+"img008-11" width="50%" /></a>
+<p>WILL YOU LOOK THIS WAY, IF YOU PLEASE?</p>
+</div>
+<p>An elaborate and highly scientific treatise was then read by Dr.
+Sexton, upon a disease which had been very prevalent in town during
+the spring, and had been usually termed the influenza. He defined
+it as a disease of convenience, depending upon various exciting
+causes acting upon the mind. For instance:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Mrs. A&mdash;&mdash;, a lady residing in Belgrave-square, was on
+the eve of giving a large party, when, upon hearing that Mr.
+A&mdash;&mdash; had made an unlucky speculation in the funds, the
+whole family were seized with influenza so violently, that they
+were compelled to postpone the reunion, and live upon the provided
+supper for a fortnight afterwards.</p>
+<p>Miss B&mdash;&mdash; was a singer at one of our large theatres,
+and had a part assigned to her in a new opera. Not liking it, she
+worried herself into an access of influenza, which unluckily seized
+her the first night the opera was to have been played.</p>
+<p>But the most marked case was that of Mr. C&mdash;&mdash;, a
+clerk in a city house of business, who was attacked and cured
+within three days. It appeared that he had been dining that
+afternoon with some friends, who were going to Greenwich fair the
+next day, and on arriving at home, was taken ill with influenza, so
+suddenly that he was obliged to despatch a note to that effect to
+his employer, stating also his fear that he should be unable to
+attend at his office on the morrow. Dr. Sexton said he was indebted
+for an account of the progress of his disease to a young medical
+gentleman, clinical clerk at a leading hospital, who lodged with
+the patient in Bartholomew-close. The report had been drawn up for
+the <em>Lancet</em>, but Dr. S. had procured it by great
+interest.</p>
+<div class="note">
+<p>MAY 30, 1841, 11 P.M.&mdash;Present symptoms:&mdash;Complains of
+his employer, and the bore of being obliged to be at the office
+next morning. Has just eaten a piece of cold beef and pickles, with
+a pint of stout. Pulse about 75, and considerable defluxion from
+the nose, which he thinks produced by getting a piece of Cayenne
+pepper in his eye. Swallowed a crumb, which brought on a violent
+fit of coughing. Wishes to go to bed.</p>
+<p>MAY 31, 9 A.M.&mdash;Has passed a tolerable night, but appears
+restless, and unable to settle to anything. Thinks he could eat
+some broiled ham if he had it; but not possessing any, has taken
+the following:</p>
+<table summary="prescription" style="margin-left:10%;">
+<tr>
+<td style="text-align:right;">&#8478;&mdash;</td>
+<td>Infus. coffee</td>
+<td>lbj</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td>Sacchari</td>
+<td>&#658;iij</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td>Lactis Vacc&aelig;</td>
+<td>&#8485;j</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="3">Ft. mistura, poculum mane sumendum.</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p>A plaster ordered to be applied to the inside of the stomach,
+consisting of potted bloater spread upon bread and butter.</p>
+<p>Eleven, A.M.&mdash;Appears rather hotter since breakfast. Change
+of air recommended, and Greenwich decided upon.</p>
+<p>Half-past 11.&mdash;Complains of the draught and noise of the
+second-class railway carriages, but is otherwise not worse. Thinks
+he should like &ldquo;a drain of half-and-half.&rdquo; Has blown
+his nose once in the last quarter of an hour.</p>
+<p>Two, P.M.&mdash;Since a light dinner of rump steaks and stout, a
+considerable change has taken place. He appears labouring under
+cerebral excitement and short pipes, and says he shall have a
+regular beanish day, and go it similar to bricks. Calls the waiter
+up to him in one of the booths, and has ordered &ldquo;a glass of
+cocktail with the chill off and a cinder in it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Three, P.M.&mdash;Has sallied out into the fair, still much
+excited, calling every female he meets &ldquo;Susan,&rdquo; and
+pronouncing the s&rsquo;s with a whistling accent. Expresses a
+desire to ride in the ships that go round and round.</p>
+<p>Half-past 3.&mdash;The motion of the ships has tended
+considerably to relieve his stomach. Pulse slow and countenance
+pale, with a desire for a glass of ale. Has entered a peepshow, and
+is now arguing with the exhibitor upon the correctness of his view
+of the siege of &ldquo;St. Jane Daker!&rdquo; which he maintains
+was a sea-port, and not a field with a burning windmill, as
+represented in the view.</p>
+<p>Eight, P.M.&mdash;After rambling vaguely about the fair all the
+afternoon, he has decided upon taking a hot-air bath in
+Algar&rsquo;s Crown and Anchor booth. Evidently delirious. Has put
+on a false nose, and purchased a tear-coat rattle. Appears
+labouring under violent spasmodic action of the muscles of his
+legs, as he dances &ldquo;Jim along Josey,&rdquo; when he sets to
+his partner in a country dance of eighty couple.</p>
+<p>Half-past 10, P.M.&mdash;Has just intimated that he does not see
+the use of going home, as you can always go there when you can go
+nowhere else. Is seated straddling across one of the tables, on
+which he is beating time to the band with a hooky stick. Will not
+allow the state of his pulse to be ascertained, but says we may
+feel his fist if we like.</p>
+<p>Eleven.&mdash;Considerable difficulty experienced in getting the
+patient to the railroad, but we at last succeeded. After telling
+every one in the carriage &ldquo;that he wasn&rsquo;t afraid of any
+of them,&rdquo; he fell into a deep stertorous sleep. On arriving
+at home, he got into bed with his boots on, and passed a restless
+night, turning out twice to drink water between one and four.</p>
+<p>JUNE.&mdash;10, A.M.&mdash;Has just returned from his office,
+his employer thinking him very unfit for work, and desiring him to
+lay up for a day or two. Complains of being &ldquo;jolly
+seedy,&rdquo; and thinks he shall go to Greenwich again to get all
+right.</p>
+</div>
+<p>A thrilling paper upon the &ldquo;Philosophy of death,&rdquo;
+was then read by Professor Wynne Slow. After tracing the origin of
+that fatal attack, which it appears the earliest nations were
+subject to, the learned author showed profound research in bringing
+forward the various terms applied to the act of dying by popular
+authors. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page95" name="page95"></a>[pg
+95]</span>Amongst the principal, he enumerated &ldquo;turning your
+toes up,&rdquo; &ldquo;kicking the bucket,&rdquo; &ldquo;putting up
+your spoon,&rdquo; &ldquo;slipping your wind,&rdquo; &ldquo;booking
+your place,&rdquo; &ldquo;breaking your bellows,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;shutting up your shop,&rdquo; and other phrases full of
+expression.</p>
+<p>The last moments of remarkable characters were especially dwelt
+upon, in connexion, more especially, with the drama, which gives us
+the best examples, from its holding a mirror up to nature. It
+appeared that at Astley&rsquo;s late amphitheatre, the dying men
+generally shuffled about a great deal in the sawdust, fighting on
+their knees, and showing great determination to the last, until
+life gave way; that at the Adelphi the expiring character more
+frequently saw imaginary demons waiting for him, and fell down,
+uttering &ldquo;Off, fiends! I come to join you in your world of
+flames!&rdquo; and that clowns and pantaloons always gave up the
+ghost with heart-rending screams and contortions of visage, as
+their deaths were generally violent, from being sawn in half,
+having holes drilled in them with enormous gimlets, or being shot
+out of cannon; but that, at the same time, these deaths were not
+permanent.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE.</h3>
+<p>Our foreign expresses have reached us <em>via</em> Billingsgate,
+and are full of interesting matter. Captain Fitz-Flammer is in
+prison at Boulogne, for some trifling misunderstanding with a
+native butcher, about the settlement of an account; but we trust no
+time will be lost by our government in demanding his release at the
+hands of the authorities. The attempt to make it a private question
+is absurd; and every Englishman&rsquo;s blood will simmer, if it
+does not actually boil, at the intelligence. Fitz-Flammer was only
+engaged in doing that which many of our countrymen visit Boulogne
+expressly to do, and it is hard that he should have been
+intercepted in his retreat, after accomplishing his object. To live
+at the expense of a natural enemy is certainly a bold and patriotic
+act, which ought to excite sympathy at home, and protection abroad.
+The English packet, the <em>City of Boulogne</em>, has turned one
+of its imitation guns directly towards the town, which, we trust,
+will have the effect of bringing the French authorities to
+reason.</p>
+<p>It is expected that the treaty will shortly be signed, by which
+Belgium cedes to France a milestone on the north frontier; while
+the latter country returns to the former the whole of the territory
+lying behind a pig-stye, taken possession of in the celebrated 6th
+<em>vendemiaire</em>, by the allied armies. This will put an end to
+the heart-burnings that have long existed on either side of the
+Rhine, and will serve to apply the sponge at once to a long score
+of national animosities.</p>
+<p>Our letters from the East are far from encouraging. The Pasha
+has had a severe sore-throat, and the disaffected have taken
+advantage of the circumstance. Ibrahim had spent the two last
+nights in the mountains, and was unfurling his standard, when our
+express left, in the very bosom of the desert. Mehemet Ali was
+still obstinate, and had dismissed his visier for impertinence. The
+whole of Servia is in a state of revolt, and the authorities have
+planted troops along the entire line, the whole of whom have gone
+over to the enemy. It is said there must be further concessions,
+and a new constitution is being drawn up; but it is not expected
+that any one will abide by it. Mehemet attempted to throw himself
+upon the rock of Nungab, with a tremendous force, but those about
+him wisely prevented him from doing so.</p>
+<p>We have received China (tea) papers to the 16th. There is
+nothing in them.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>FANCIED FAIR.</h3>
+<p>&ldquo;The Duke of Wellington,&rdquo; says a correspondent of
+the <em>Times</em>, &ldquo;left his umbrella behind him at a fancy
+fair, held for charitable purposes, between Twickenham and
+Teddington. On discovering it, Lady P. immediately said, &lsquo;Who
+will give twenty guineas for the Duke&rsquo;s umbrella?&rsquo; A
+purchaser was soon found; and when the fact was communicated to his
+Grace, he good-naturedly remarked, &lsquo;I&rsquo;ll soon supply
+you with umbrellas, if you can sell them with so much advantage to
+the charity.&rsquo;&rdquo; We trust his Grace&rsquo;s benevolent
+disposition will not induce him to carry this offer into execution.
+We should extremely regret to see the Hero of Waterloo in
+Leicester-square, of a rainy night, vending second-hand
+<em>parapluies</em>. The same charitable impulse will doubtlessly
+induce other fashionable hawkers at fancy fairs to pick his
+Grace&rsquo;s pockets. We are somewhat curious to know what a
+Wellington bandana would realise, especially were it the produce of
+some pretty lady P.&rsquo;s petty larceny. &ldquo;Charity,&rdquo;
+it is said, &ldquo;covereth a multitude of sins.&rdquo; What must
+it do with an umbrella? We fear that Lady P. will some day figure
+in the &ldquo;fashionable departures.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/008-12.png"><img src=
+"images/008-12.png" alt="A man picks another's pocket" id=
+"img008-12" name="img008-12" width="50%" /></a>
+<p>FOR SYDNEY DIRECT.</p>
+</div>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>PUNCH&rsquo;S THEATRE.</h2>
+<h3>MARTINUZZI AS THE ACT DIRECTS.</h3>
+<p>The production upon the stage of a tragedy &ldquo;not intended
+for an acting play,&rdquo; as a broad travestie, is a novel and
+dangerous experiment&mdash;one, however, which the combined genius
+of the Dramatic Authors&rsquo; Council has made, with the utmost
+success. The &ldquo;Hungarian Daughter&rdquo; was, under the title
+of &ldquo;Martinuzzi,&rdquo; received, on its first appearance,
+with bursts of applause and convulsions of laughter!</p>
+<p>The plot of this piece our literary reviewer has expressed
+himself unable to unravel. We are in the same condition; all we can
+promise is some account of the scenes as they followed each other;
+of the characters, the sentiments, the poetry, and the rest of the
+fun.</p>
+<p>The play opens with an elderly gentleman, in a spangled
+dressing-gown, who commences business by telling us the time of
+day, poetically clapping a wig upon the sun, by saying, he</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;Shakes day about, like perfume from his
+<em>hair</em>,&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>which statement bears out the after sentence, that &ldquo;the
+wisdom he endures is terrible!&rdquo; An Austrian
+gentleman&mdash;whose dress made us at first mistake him for
+Richard III. on his travels&mdash;arrives to inform the gentleman
+<em>en d&eacute;shabille</em>&mdash;no other than <em>Cardinal
+Martinuzzi</em> himself&mdash;that he has come from King Ferdinand,
+to ask if he will be so good as to give up some regency; which the
+Cardinal, however, respectfully declines doing. A gentleman from
+Warsaw is next announced, and <em>Castaldo</em> retires, having
+incidentally declared a passion for the reigning queen of
+Hungary.</p>
+<p>Mr. Selby, as <em>Rupert</em> from Warsaw, then appears, in a
+dress most correctly copied from the costume of the knave of clubs.
+Being a Pole, he stirs up the Cardinal vigorously enough to provoke
+some exceedingly intemperate language, chiefly by bringing to his
+memory a case of child-stealing, to which <em>Martinuzzi</em> was,
+before he had quite sown his wild oats, <em>particeps
+criminis</em>. This case having got into the papers (which
+<em>Rupert</em> had preserved), the Cardinal wants to obtain them,
+but offers a price not long enough for the Pole, who, declaring
+that <em>Martinuzzi</em> carries it &ldquo;too high&rdquo; to be
+trusted with them, vanishes. Mr. Morley afterwards comes forward to
+sing a song according to Act of Parliament, and the scene changes
+for Miss Collect to comply, a second time, with the 25th of George
+II.</p>
+<p>In the following scene, the Queen Dowager of Hungary,
+<em>Isabella</em>, introduces herself to the audience, to inform
+them that the Austrian gentleman, <em>Castaldo</em>, is</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="i10">&ldquo;the mild,</p>
+<p>Pity-fraught object of her fondness.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>He appears. She makes several inflammatory speeches, which he
+seems determined not to understand, for he is in love with the
+virgin queen; and maidens before dowagers is evidently his sensible
+motto.</p>
+<p>The second act opens with the queen junior stating her
+assurance, that if she lives much longer she will die, and that
+when she is quite dead, she will hate
+<em>Martinuzzi</em><sup>3</sup><span class="sidenote">3.
+&ldquo;<em>Czerina.</em> When I am dead&mdash;which will be
+soon&mdash;I feel,<br />
+If I much longer on my throne remain,<br />
+I shall abhor the name of Martinuzzi.&rdquo;</span>. As, however,
+she means to hate when she is deceased, she will make the most of
+her time while alive, by devoting herself to courtship and
+<em>Castaldo</em>: for a very tender love-scene ensues, at the end
+of which the lady elopes, to leave the lover a clear stage for some
+half-dozen minutes&rsquo; ecstatics, appropriately ended by his
+arrest, ordered by <em>Martinuzzi</em>. Why, it is not stated, the
+officer not even producing the copy of a writ.</p>
+<p>In the next scene, <em>Isabella</em> is visited by
+<em>Rupert</em>, who disinterestedly presents the dowager with the
+papers for nothing, which he was before offered an odd castle and
+snug estate for, by <em>Martinuzzi</em>. This is accounted for on
+no other supposition, than the proverbial gallantry of gentlemen
+from Warsaw.</p>
+<p><em>Martinuzzi</em>, possessing a ward whom he is anxious should
+wed the queen, opens the third act by declaring he will
+&ldquo;precipitate the match,&rdquo; and so the author
+considerately sends <em>Czerina</em> to him, to talk the matter
+over. But the young lady gets into a passion, and the Cardinal
+declares he can make nothing of her, in the following
+passage:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;Fool! I can make thee nothing but a laugh.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>A sentiment to which the audience gave a most vociferous echo.
+The damsel is angry that she may not have the man she has chosen,
+and threatens to faint, but defers that operation till her
+lover&rsquo;s arms are near enough to receive her; which they
+happen to be just in time, for <em>Martinuzzi</em> retires and
+<em>Castaldo</em> comes on. <em>Czerina</em>, to be quite sure,
+exclaims, &ldquo;<em>Are</em> these thy arms?&rdquo; (<em>sic</em>)
+and finally faints in the lover&rsquo;s embrace, so as to exhibit a
+picturesque cuddle.</p>
+<p><em>Queen Isabella</em> is discovered, in the second scene of
+this act, perusing the much vaunted &ldquo;papers&rdquo; with
+intense interest. Unluckily <em>Castaldo</em> chooses that moment
+to complain, that <em>Martinuzzi</em> will not let him marry her
+rival. The queen, being by no means a temperate person, and
+wondering at his impudence in telling <em>her</em> such a tale,
+raves thus:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;My soul&rsquo;s on fire I&rsquo;m choked, and seem to
+perish;</p>
+<p><em>But will suppress my scream</em>&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Probably for fear of compromising <em>Castaldo</em>, who is
+alone with her; and she ends the act by requesting the Austrian to
+murder <em>Martinuzzi</em>; to which he is so obliging as to
+consent, the more so, as an order comes from the Secretary of State
+for foreign affairs, of his own government, to &ldquo;cut
+off&rdquo; (<em>sic</em>) the Regent.</p>
+<p>The fourth act is enlivened by a masquerade and a murder. The
+gentleman from Warsaw having abused the hospitality of his host by
+getting drunk, is punished by one of <em>Martinuzzi&rsquo;s</em>
+attendants with a mortal stab; and having, in the agonies of death,
+made a careful survey of all the sofas in the apartment, suits
+himself with the softest, and dies in great comfort.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page96" name="page96"></a>[pg
+96]</span>
+<p>After this, the masquerade proceeds with spirit.
+<em>Isabella</em> mixes in the festive scene, disguised in a
+domino, made of black sticking-plaster. <em>Czerina</em> overhears
+that she is a usurper and a changeling, and expresses her surprise
+in a line most unblushingly stolen from Fitz-Ball and the other
+poetico-melo-dramatists:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;Merciful Heavens! do my ears deceive me?&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>The festivities conclude with an altercation between
+<em>Martinuzzi</em> and <em>Isabella</em>, carried on with much
+vigour on both sides. The lady accuses the gentleman of
+inebriation, and he owns the soft impeachment, fully bearing it out
+by several incoherent speeches.</p>
+<p>This was one of the most successful scenes in the comedy. The
+death of <em>Rupert</em>, Mr. Morley&rsquo;s song about &ldquo;The
+sea,&rdquo; the quarrel (which was about the great pivot of the
+plot, &ldquo;the papers,&rdquo; inscribed, says
+<em>Martinuzzi</em>,</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;With ink that&rsquo;s <em>brew&rsquo;d</em> in the
+infernal Styx,&rdquo;)</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>were all received with uproarious bursts of laughter.</p>
+<p>In the fifth act, we behold <em>Martinuzzi</em> and the usurping
+young Queen making matters up at a railway pace. She has it all her
+own way. If she choose, she may marry <em>Castaldo</em>, retire
+into private life, be a &ldquo;farm-house thrall,&rdquo; and keep a
+&ldquo;dairy;&rdquo; for which estate she has previously expressed
+a decided predilection<sup>4</sup><span class="sidenote">4. Acting
+play, published in the theatre, p. 32.</span>.</p>
+<p>But it is the next scene that the author seems to have reserved
+for putting forth his strongest powers of burlesque and broad
+humour. <em>Isabella</em> and <em>Castaldo</em> are together; the
+latter feels a little afraid to murder <em>Martinuzzi</em>, but is
+impelled to the deed by a thousand imaginary torches, which he
+fears will hurry his &ldquo;<em>moth</em>-like soul&rdquo; into
+their &ldquo;blinding sun-beams,&rdquo; till it (the soul) is
+scorched &ldquo;<em>into</em> cinders.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><em>Castaldo</em> appears, in truth, a very bad barber of
+murders; for, as he is rushing out to</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;Strike the tyrant down&mdash;in crimson streams</p>
+<p>Rend every nerve,&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><em>Isabella</em> has the shrewdness to discover that he is
+without a weapon. Important omission! The incipient assassin
+exclaims&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! that I had my sword!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>but at that moment (clever, dramatic contrivance!)</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>[<em>Enter</em> CZERINA, <em>with a drawn sword</em>.]</p>
+<p>&ldquo;CZERINA. There&rsquo;s one! Thine own!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Far from being grateful for this opportune supply of ways and
+means for murder. <em>Castaldo</em> calls the bilbo a &ldquo;fated
+aspic,&rdquo; upon the edge of which his &ldquo;eye-balls crack to
+look,&rdquo; and makes a raving exit from the stage, to a roaring
+laugh from the audience.</p>
+<p>It is quite clear to <em>Isabella</em>, from his extreme
+carelessness about his tools, that <em>Castaldo</em> is not safely
+to be trusted with a job which requires so much tact and
+business-like exactitude as the capital offence. She therefore
+&ldquo;<em>shows a phial</em>,&rdquo; which she intends,
+&ldquo;occasion suiting,&rdquo; for
+&ldquo;<em>Martinuzzi&rsquo;s</em> bane;&rdquo; thereby hinting
+that, if <em>Castaldo</em> fail with his steel medicine, she is
+ready with a surer potion.</p>
+<p>The next scene, being the last, was ushered in with
+acclamations. The stage, as is always in that case made and
+provided, was full. There is a young gentleman on a throne, and
+<em>Czerina</em> beside it, having been somehow ungallantly
+deposed. <em>Martinuzzi</em> expresses a wish to drink
+somebody&rsquo;s health, and this being the &ldquo;fitting
+opportunity&rdquo; mentioned by the author in the scene preceeding,
+<em>Isabella</em> empties the phial of her wrath into the beverage,
+and the <em>Cardinal</em> quenches his thirst with a most
+intemperate draught. It is now duly announced, that
+<em>Castaldo</em> is, &ldquo;with naked sword, approaching.&rdquo;
+That gentleman appears, and makes a speech long enough for any man
+who has had such plain warning of what is to happen&mdash;even a
+cardinal encumbered with a spangled dressing-gown&mdash;to get a
+mile out of his way. The speech quite ended, he goes to work, and
+with &ldquo;this from King Ferdinand,&rdquo; thrusts at
+<em>Martinuzzi</em>. <em>Czerina</em>, however, throws herself,
+with great skill, on the point of the sword, and dies. Another long
+harangue from <em>Castaldo</em>&mdash;which, as he is evidently
+broken-winded from exertion, is pronounced in tiny
+snatches&mdash;and he dies with a &ldquo;ha!&rdquo; for
+want&mdash;like many greater men&mdash;of breath.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, the poison makes <em>Martinuzzi</em> exceedingly
+uncomfortable in the stomachic regions. He is quite sure</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;That hath been done to me which sends me
+<em>star</em>-ward!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>but in his progress thither he evidently loses his way; for he
+ends the play by inquiring&mdash;</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;WHERE IS THE WORLD?&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>The sublimity of which query is manifestly insisted on by the
+author, by his having it printed in capitals.</p>
+<p>When the curtain fell, there arose an uproarious shout for the
+author; but instead of &ldquo;the mantle of the Elizabethan
+poets,&rdquo; which, it has been said, he commonly wears, the most
+attractive garment that met the view was an expansive white
+waistcoat. This latter exhibition concluded the entertainments,
+strictly so called; for though a farce followed, it turned out a
+terrible bore.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>CONCERTS D&rsquo;ETE.</h3>
+<p>If the advance of musical science is to be effected by indecent
+<em>tableaux vivans</em>&mdash;by rattling peas against sieves, and
+putting out the lights (appropriately enough) when Beethoven is
+being murdered&mdash;by the most contemptible class of compositions
+that ever was put upon score-paper, and noised forth from an
+ill-disciplined band&mdash;if these be the means towards improving
+musical taste, Monsieur Jullien is undoubtedly the harmonic
+regenerator of this country. He is a great man&mdash;great in his
+own estimation&mdash;great to the ends of his moustachios and the
+tips of his gloves&mdash;a great composer, and a great
+charlatan&mdash;<em>ex. gr.</em>:&mdash;</p>
+<p>The overture to the promenade concerts usually consists of a
+pantomime entirely new to an English audience. Monsieur Jullien
+having made his appearance in the orchestra, seats himself in a
+conspicuous situation, to indulge the ladies with the most
+favourable view of his elegant person, and the splendid
+gold-chainery which is spread all over his magnificent waistcoat. A
+servant in livery then appears, and presents him with a pair of
+white kid gloves. The illustrious conductor, having taken some time
+to thrust them upon a very large and red hand, leisurely takes up
+his baton, rises, grins upon the expectant musicians, lifts his
+arm, and&mdash;the first chord is struck!</p>
+<p>Quadrilles are the staple of the evening&mdash;those composed by
+Monsieur Jullien always, of course, claiming precedence and
+preference. These are usually interspersed with solos on the
+flageolet, to contrast with <em>obligati</em> for the ophecleido;
+the drummers&mdash;side, long, and double&mdash;are seldom
+inactive; the trombones and trumpets have no sinecure, and there is
+always a great mortality amongst the fiddle-strings. Eight bars of
+impossible variation is sure to be succeeded by sixteen of the
+deafening fanfare of trumpets, combined with smashing cymbalism,
+and dreadful drumming.</p>
+<p>The public have a taste for headaches, and Jullien has imported
+a capital recipe for creating them; they applaud&mdash;he bows; and
+musical taste goes&mdash;in compliment to the ex-waiter&rsquo;s
+genuine profession of man-cook&mdash;to <em>pot</em>.</p>
+<p>But the <em>ci-devant cuisinier</em> is not content with
+comparatively harmless, plain-sailing humbug; he must add some
+<em>sauce piquante</em> to his musical hashes. He cannot rest with
+merely stunning English ears, but must shock our morals, At the
+<em>bals masqu&eacute;s</em>, the French dancers, and the hardly
+mentionable <em>cancan</em>, were hooted back to their native stews
+under the Palais Royal; but he provides substitutes for them in the
+<em>tableaux vivans</em> now exhibiting. This, because a more
+insidious, is a safer introduction. The living figures are dressed
+to imitate plaster-of-Paris, and are so arranged as to form groups,
+called in the bills &ldquo;classical;&rdquo; but for which it would
+be difficult to find originals. In short, the whole thing is a
+feeler thrown out to see how far French impudence and French
+epicureanism in vice may carry themselves. It shall not be our
+fault if they do not experience an ignominious downfall, and beat a
+speedy retreat, to the tune of the &ldquo;Rogue&rsquo;s
+March,&rdquo; arranged as a quadrille!</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>MADAME TUSSAUD&rsquo;S,</h3>
+<h4>THE REAL TEMPLE OF FAME.</h4>
+<div class="note">
+<p>&ldquo;Some men are born to greatness, some men achieve
+greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon
+them.&rdquo;&mdash;SHAKSPEARE.</p>
+</div>
+<p>Reader, should you doubt the above assertion, in the true
+showman phraseology, just &ldquo;Walk up! walk up!&rdquo; to Madame
+Tussaud&rsquo;s, the real Temple of Fame, and let such doubts
+vanish for ever; convince yourselves that the mighty attribute not
+more survives from good than evil deeds, though, like poverty, it
+makes its votaries acquainted with the strangest of strange
+bedfellows! The regal ermine and the murderer&rsquo;s fustian alike
+obtain their enviable niche.</p>
+<p>The likeness of departed majesty, robed in the matchless
+splendour of a ruler&rsquo;s state, redolent with all the mimic
+glories of a king&rsquo;s insignia, the modelled puppet from the
+senseless clay, that wore in life the imperial purple, and moved a
+breathing thing, chief actor in its childish mummeries, may here be
+seen shining in tinselled pomp, in glittering contrast to the
+blood-stained shirt through which the dagger of Ravaillac reached
+the bosom of the murdered Henry.</p>
+<p>The &ldquo;Real Robes&rdquo; of the dead George give value to
+his waxen image! The heart&rsquo;s-blood of the slaughtered Henry
+immortalises the linen bearing its hideous stain. The daring leader
+of France&rsquo;s countless hosts&mdash;the wholesale slaughterer
+of unnumbered thousands&mdash;ambition&rsquo;s mightiest
+son&mdash;now ruling kingdoms and now ruled by one&mdash;once more
+than king&mdash;in death the captive of his hated
+foes&mdash;&ldquo;the great Napoleon!&rdquo; shares the small space
+with the enshrined Fieschi!</p>
+<p>The glorious triumphs of the mighty Wellington are here no
+better passports than the foul murders of the atrocious Burke; the
+subtle Talleyrand, the deep deviser of political schemes, ruler of
+rulers, and master mover of the earth&rsquo;s great puppets, is not
+one jot superior to the Italian mountebank, whose well-skilled hand
+drew tones from catgut rivalling even the ideal trumpet of great
+Fame herself!</p>
+<p>By some strange anomaly, <em>success</em> and <em>failure</em>
+alike render the candidates admissible&mdash;no matter the
+littleness of the source from whence they sprung. Lord
+Melbourne&rsquo;s &ldquo;premiership&rdquo; gave shape to the all
+but Promethean wax. The failure of John Frost, his humble follower,
+secured his right to Fame&rsquo;s posthumous honours. All
+partiality is <em>here</em> forgotten. The titled premier, in the
+haunts of men, may boast his monarch&rsquo;s palace as his home.
+The suffering felon, though <em>iron</em> binds his limbs, and eats
+into his heart&mdash;though slow approaching, but sure-coming
+death, makes the broad world for him a living grave, <em>here</em>
+he stands, as one among the great ones of the <em>show</em>! The
+amiability of Albert, that &ldquo;excellent Prince,&rdquo; and
+therefore &ldquo;<em>most</em> excellent young man,&rdquo; is
+ingeniously contrasted with the vices of a Greenacre, and the
+villany of a <em>Hare</em>. The stern endurance and unflinching
+perseverance of the zealous and single-hearted Calvin is deprived
+of its exclusiveness by the more exciting and equally famous Sir
+William Courtenay (<em>alias</em> Thom).</p>
+<p>The thrilling recollection of the &ldquo;poet peer,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;peerless poet,&rdquo; the highly-imaginative and unrivalled
+Byron, whose flood of song, poured out in one continuous stream of
+varied passion-breathing fancy, is calmed by gazing on &ldquo;dull
+life&rsquo;s antipodes,&rdquo; the bandaged remnant of a dried-up
+mummy!</p>
+<p>Poor Mary Stuart! the beautiful, the murdered Queen of Scots, is
+only parted from the &ldquo;Maiden Queen,&rdquo; who sealed her
+doom, by the interposition of the blood-stained ruthless wretch
+(England&rsquo;s Eighth Harry), to whom &ldquo;Bess&rdquo; owed her
+birth!</p>
+<p>Pitt, Fox, and Canning are matched with Courvoisier, Gould, and
+Collins.</p>
+<p>Liston is <em>vis &agrave; vis</em> to Joe Hume, while Louis
+Philippe but shares attention with the rivalling models of the
+Bastille and Guillotine!</p>
+<p>Verily, there is a moral in all this, &ldquo;an we could but
+find it out.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol.
+1, September 5, 1841, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 1,
+September 5, 1841, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 1, September 5, 1841
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: February 7, 2005 [EBook #14926]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Syamanta Saikia, Jon Ingram, Barbara Tozier and the PG
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOL. 1.
+
+
+
+FOR THE WEEK ENDING SEPTEMBER 5, 1841.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE GENTLEMAN'S OWN BOOK.
+
+[Illustration: O]Our consideration must now be given to those essentials
+in the construction of a true gentleman--the cut, ornaments, and pathology
+of his dress.
+
+THE CUT
+
+is to the garment what the royal head and arms are to the coin--the
+insignia that give it currency. No matter what the material, gold or
+copper, Saxony or sackcloth, the die imparts a value to the one, and the
+shears to the other.
+
+Ancient Greece still lives in its marble demi-gods; the vivifying chisel
+of Phidias was thought worthy to typify the sublimity of Jupiter; the
+master-hand of Canova wrought the Parian block into the semblance of the
+sea-born goddess, giving to insensate stone the warmth and etheriality of
+the Paphian paragon; and Stultz, with his grace-bestowing shears, has
+fashioned West of England broad-cloths, and fancy goods, into all the
+nobility and gentility of the "Blue Book," the "Court Guide," the "Army,
+Navy, and Law Lists, for 1841."
+
+Wondrous and kindred arts! The sculptor wrests the rugged block from the
+rocky ribs of his mother earth;--the tailor clips the implicated "_long
+hogs_"[1] from the prolific backs of the living mutton;--the toothless
+saw, plied by an unweayring hand, prepares the stubborn mass for the
+chisel's tracery;--the loom, animated by steam (that gigantic child of
+Wallsend and water), twists and twines the unctuous and pliant fleece into
+the silky Saxony.
+
+ [1] The first growth of wool.
+
+The sculptor, seated in his _studio_, throws loose the reins of his
+imagination, and, conjuring up some perfect ideality, seeks to impress the
+beautiful illusion on the rude and undigested mass before him. The tailor
+spreads out, upon his ample board, the happy broadcloth; his eyes scan the
+"measured proportions of his client," and, with mystic power, guides the
+obedient pipe-clay into the graceful diagram of a perfect gentleman. The
+sculptor, with all the patient perseverance of genius, conscious of the
+greatness of its object, chips, and chips, and chips, from day to day; and
+as the stone quickens at each touch, he glows with all the pride of the
+creative Prometheus, mingled with the gentler ecstacies of paternal love.
+The tailor, with fresh-ground shears, and perfect faith in the gentility
+and solvency of his "client," snips, and snips, and snips, until the
+"superfine" grows, with each abscission, into the first style of elegance
+and fashion, and the excited schneider feels himself "every inch a king,"
+his shop a herald's college, and every brown paper pattern garnishing its
+walls, an escutcheon of gentility.
+
+But to dismount from our Pegasus, or, in other words, to cut the poetry,
+and come to the practice of our subject, it is necessary that a perfect
+gentleman should be cut _up_ very high, or cut _down_ very low--_i.e._, up
+to the marquis or down to the jarvey. Any intermediate style is perfectly
+inadmissible; for who above the grade of an attorney would wear a coat
+with pockets inserted in the tails, like salt-boxes; or any but an
+incipient Esculapius indulge in trousers that evinced a morbid ambition to
+become knee-breeches, and were only restrained in their aspirations by a
+pair of most strenuous straps. We will now proceed to details.
+
+_The dressing-gown_ should be cut only--for the arm holes; but be careful
+that the quantity of material be very ample--say four times as much as is
+positively necessary, for nothing is so characteristic of a perfect
+gentleman as his improvidence. This garment must be constructed without
+buttons or button-holes, and confined at the waist with cable-like
+bell-ropes and tassels. This elegant _deshabille_ had its origin (like the
+Corinthian capital from the Acanthus) in accident. A set of massive
+window-curtains having been carelessly thrown over a lay figure, or
+tailor's _torso_, in Nugee's _studio_, in St. James's-street, suggested to
+the luxuriant mind of the Adonisian D'Orsay, this beautiful combination of
+costume and upholstery. The eighteen-shilling chintz great-coats, so
+ostentatiously put forward by nefarious tradesmen as dressing-gowns, and
+which resemble pattern-cards of the vegetable kingdom, are unworthy the
+notice of all gentlemen--of course excepting those who are so by act of
+Parliament. Although it is generally imagined that the coat is the
+principal article of dress, _we_ attach far greater importance to the
+trousers, the cut of which should, in the first place, be regulated by
+nature's cut of the leg. A gentleman who labours under either a convex or
+a concave leg, cannot be too particular in the arrangement of the
+strap-draught. By this we mean that a concave leg must have the pull on
+the convex side, and _vice versa_, the garment being made full, the
+effects of bad nursing are, by these means, effectually "repealed."[2]
+This will be better understood if the reader will describe a
+parallelogram, and draw therein the arc of a circle equal to that
+described by his leg, whether knock-kneed or bandy.
+
+ [2] Baylis.
+
+If the leg be perfectly straight, then the principal peculiarity of cut to
+be attended to, is the external assurance that the trousers cannot be
+removed from the body without the assistance of a valet.
+
+The other considerations should be their applicability to the promenade or
+the equestriade. We are indebted to our friend Beau Reynolds for this
+original idea and it is upon the plan formerly adopted by him that we now
+proceed to advise as to the maintenance of the distinctions.
+
+Let your schneider baste the trousers together, and when you have put them
+on, let them be braced to their natural tension; the schneider should
+then, with a small pair of scissors, _cut out_ all the wrinkles which
+offend the eye. The garment, being removed from your person, is again
+taken to the tailor's laboratory, and the embrasures carefully and
+artistically fine-drawn. The process for walking or riding trousers only
+varies in these particulars--for the one you should stand upright, for the
+other you should straddle the back of a chair. Trousers cut on these
+principles entail only two inconveniences, to which every one with the
+true feelings of a gentleman would willingly submit. You must never
+attempt to sit down in your walking trousers, or venture to assume an
+upright position in your equestrians, for compound fractures in the region
+of the _os sacrum_, or dislocations about the _genu patellae_ are certain
+to be the results of such rashness, and then
+
+[Illustration: "THE PEACE OF THE VALET IS FLED."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SONGS FOR THE SENTIMENTAL. -- NO. 6.
+
+ Thou hast humbled the proud,
+ For my spirit hath bow'd
+ More humbly to thee than it e'er bow'd before;
+ But thy pow'r is past,
+ Thou hast triumph'd thy last,
+ And the heart you enslaved beats in freedom once more!
+ I have treasured the flow'r
+ You wore but an hour,
+ And knelt by the mound where together we've sat;
+ But thy-folly and pride
+ I now only deride--
+ So, fair Isabel, take your change out of that!
+
+ That I loved, and how well,
+ It were madness to tell
+ To one who hath mock'd at my madd'ning despair.
+ Like the white wreath of snow
+ On the Alps' rugged brow,
+ Isabel, I have proved thee as cold as thou'rt fair!
+ 'Twas thy boast that I sued,
+ That you scorn'd as I woo'd--
+ Though thou of my hopes were the Mount Ararat;
+ But to-morrow I wed
+ Araminta instead--
+ So, fair Isabel, take your change out of that!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE LAST HAUL.
+
+The ponds in St. James's Park were on last Monday drawn with nets, and a
+large quantity of the fish preserved there carried away by direction of
+the Chief Commissioner of Woods and Forests. Our talented correspondent,
+Ben D'Israeli, sends us the following squib on the circumstance:--
+
+ "Oh! never more," Duncannon cried,
+ "The spoils of place shall fill our dishes!
+ But though we've lost the _loaves_ we'll take
+ Our last sad haul amongst the _fishes_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+GENERAL SATISFACTION.
+
+Lord Coventry declared emphatically that the sons, the fathers, and the
+grandfathers were all satisfied with the present corn laws. Had his
+lordship thought of the _Herald_, he might have added, "and the
+grandmothers also."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT.
+
+If the enthusiastic individual who distinguished himself on the O.P. side
+of third row in the pit of "the late Theatre Royal English Opera House,"
+but now the refuge for the self-baptised "Council of Dramatic Literature,"
+can be warranted sober, and guaranteed an umbrella, in the use of which he
+is decidedly unrivalled, he is requested to apply to the Committee of
+management, where he will hear of something to his "advantage."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"PUNCH'S" LITERATURE.
+
+ I. "The Hungarian Daughter," a Dramatic Poem, by George Stephens,
+ 8vo., pp. 294. London: 1841.
+
+ II. "Introductory(!) Preface to the above," pp. 25.
+
+III. "Supplement to the above;" consisting of "Opinions of the Press,"
+ on various Works by George Stephens, 8vo., pp. 8.
+
+ IV. "Opinions of the Press upon the 'Dramatic Merits' and 'Actable
+ Qualities' of the Hungarian Daughter," 8vo., _closely printed_,
+ pp. 16.
+
+The blind and vulgar prejudice in favour of Shakspeare, Massinger, and the
+elder dramatic poets--the sickening adulation bestowed upon Sheridan
+Knowles and Talfourd, among the moderns--and the base, malignant, and
+selfish partiality of theatrical managers, who insist upon performing
+those plays only which are adapted to the stage--whose grovelling souls
+have no sympathy with genius--whose ideas are fixed upon gain, have
+hitherto smothered those blazing illuminati, George Stephens and his
+syn--Syncretcis; have hindered their literary effulgence from breaking
+through the mists hung before the eyes of the public, by a weak,
+infatuated adherence to paltry Nature, and a silly infatuation in favour
+of those who copy her.
+
+At length, however, the public blushes (through its representative, the
+provincial press, and the above-named critical puffs,) with shame--the
+managers are fast going mad with bitter vexation, for having, to use the
+words of that elegant pleonasm, the _introductory_ preface, "by a sort of
+_ex officio_ hallucination," rejected this and some twenty other
+exquisite, though unactable dramas! It is a fact, that since the opening
+of the English Opera House, Mr. Webster has been confined to his room;
+Macready has suspended every engagement for Drury-lane; and the managers
+of Covent Garden have gone the atrocious length of engaging sibilants and
+ammunition from the neighbouring market, to pelt the Syncretics off the
+stage! Them we leave to their dirty work and their repentance, while we
+proceed to _our_ "delightful task."
+
+To prove that the "mantle of the Elizabethan poets seems to have fallen
+upon Mr. Stephens" (_Opinions_, p. 11), that the "Hungarian Daughter" is
+quite as good as Knowles's best plays (_Id._ p. 4, _in two places_), that
+"it is equal to Goethe" (_Id._ p. 11), that "in after years the name of
+Mr. S. will be amongst those which have given light and glory to their
+country" (_Id._ p. 10); to prove, in short, the truth of a hundred other
+laudations collected and printed by this modest author, we shall quote a
+few passages from his play, and illustrate his genius by pointing out
+their beauties--an office much needed, particularly by certain dullards,
+the magazine of whose souls are not combustible enough to take fire at the
+electric sparks shot forth _up_ out of the depths of George Stephens's
+unfathomable genius!
+
+The first gem that sparkles in the play, is where _Isabella_, the Queen
+Dowager of Hungary, with a degree of delicacy highly becoming a matron,
+makes desperate love to _Castaldo_, an Austrian ambassador. In the midst
+of her ravings she breaks off, to give such a description of a
+steeple-chase as Nimrod has never equalled.
+
+ ISABELLA (_hotly_). "Love _rides_ upon a thought,
+ And stays not dully to _inquire the way_,
+ But right _o'erleaps the fence_ unto the _goal_."
+
+To appreciate the splendour of this image, the reader must conceive Love
+booted and spurred, mounted upon a _thought_, saddled and bridled. He
+starts. _Yo-hoiks_! what a pace! He stops not to "inquire the
+way"--whether he is to take the first turning to the right, or the second
+to the left--but on, on he rushes, clears the fence cleverly, and wins by
+a dozen lengths!
+
+What soul, what mastery, what poetical skill is here! We triumphantly put
+forth this passage as an instance of the sublime art of sinking in poetry
+not to be matched by Dibdin Pitt or Jacob Jones. Love is sublimed to a
+jockey, Thought promoted to a race-horse!--"Magnificent!"
+
+But splendid as this is, Mr. Stephens can make the force of bathos go a
+little further. The passage continues ("_a pause_" intervening, to allow
+breathing ime, after the splitting pace with which Love has been riding
+upon Thought) thus:--
+
+ "Are your lips free? A smile will make no noise.
+ What ignorance! So! Well! _I'll to breakfast straight_!"
+
+Again:--
+
+ ISABELLA. "Ha! ha! These forms are air--mere counterfeits
+ Of my _imaginous_ heart, _as are the whirling
+ Wainscot and trembling floor_!"
+
+The idea of transferring the seat of imagination from the head to the
+heart, and causing it to exhibit the wainscot in a pirouette, and the
+floor in an ague, is highly _Shakesperesque_, and, as the _Courier_ is
+made to say at page 3 of the _Opinions_, "is worthy of the best days of
+that noble school of dramatic literature in which Mr. Stephens has so
+successfully studied."
+
+This well-deserved praise--the success with which the author has studied,
+in a school, the models of which were human feelings and nature,--we have
+yet to illustrate from other passages. Mr. Stephens evinces his full
+acquaintance with Nature by a familiarity with her convulsions:
+whirlwinds, thunder, lightning, earthquakes, and volcanoes--are this
+gentleman's playthings. When, for instance, _Rupert_ is going to be
+gallant to Queen Isabella, she exclaims:--
+
+ "Dire lightnings! Scoundrel! Help!"
+
+_Martinuzzi_ conveys a wish for his nobles to laugh--an order for a sort
+of court cachinnation--in these pretty terms:--
+
+ "_Blow it about_, ye opposite winds of heaven,
+ Till the loud chorus of derision shake
+ The world with laughter!"
+
+When he feels uncomfortable at something he is told in the first act, the
+Cardinal complains thus:--
+
+ "Ha! earthquakes quiver in my flesh!"
+
+which the _Britannia_ is so good as to tell us is superior to Byron; while
+the _Morning Herald_ kindly remarks, that "a more vigorous and expressive
+line was _never_ penned. In five words it illustrates the fiercest
+passions of humanity by the direst convulsion of nature:" (_Opinions_, p.
+7) a criticism which illustrates the fiercest throes of nonsense, by the
+direst convulsions of ignorance.
+
+_Castaldo_, being anxious to murder the Cardinal with, we suppose, all
+"means and appliances to boot," asks of heaven a trifling favour:--
+
+ "Heaven, that look'st on,
+ Rain thy broad deluge first! All-teeming earth
+ Disgorge thy poisons, till the attainted air
+ Offend the sense! Thou, miscreative hell,
+ Let loose calamity!"
+
+But it is not only in the "sublime and beautiful that Mr. Stephens's
+genius delights" (_vide Opinions_, p. 4); his play exhibits sentiments of
+high morality, quite worthy of the "Editor of the Church of England
+Quarterly Review," the author of "Lay Sermons," and other religious works.
+For example: the lady-killer, _Castaldo_, is "hotly" loved by the
+queen-mother, while he prefers the queen-daughter. The last and _Castaldo_
+are together. The dowager overhears their billing and cooing, and thus,
+with great moderation, sends her supposed daughter to ----. But the author
+shall speak for himself:--
+
+ "Ye viprous twain!
+ Swift whirlwinds snatch ye both to fire as endless
+ And infinite as hell! May it embrace ye!
+ And burn--burn limbs and sinews, souls, until
+ It wither ye both up--both--in its arms!"
+
+Elegant denunciation!--"viprous," "hell," "sinews and souls." Has Goethe
+ever written anything like this? Certainly not. Therefore the "Monthly"
+_is_ right at p. 11 of the _Opinions_. Stephens must be equal, if not
+superior, to the author of "Faust."
+
+One more specimen of delicate sentiment from the lips of a virgin
+concerning the lips of her lover, will fully establish the Syncretic code
+of moral taste:--
+
+ CZERINA (_faintly_). "Do breathe heat into me:
+ Lay thy warm breath unto my bloodless lips:
+ I stagger; I--I must--"
+
+ CASTALDO. "In mercy, what?"
+
+ CZERINA. "Wed!!!"
+
+The lady ends, most maidenly, by fainting in her lover's arms.
+
+A higher flight is elsewhere taken. _Isabella_ urges _Castaldo_ to murder
+_Martinuzzi_, in a sentence that has a powerful effect upon the feelings,
+for it makes us shudder as we copy it--it will cause even _our_ readers to
+tremble when they see it. The idea of using _blasphemy_ as an instrument
+for shocking the minds of an audience, is as original as it is worthy of
+the _sort_ of genius Mr. Stephens possesses. Alluding to a poniard,
+_Isabella_ says:--
+
+ "Sheath it where _God_ and nature prompt your hand!"
+
+That is to say, in the breast of a cardinal!!
+
+The vulgar, who set up the common-place standards of nature, probability,
+moral propriety, and respect for such sacred names as they are careful
+never to utter, except with reverence, will perhaps condemn Mr. Stephens
+(the aforesaid "Editor of the Church of England Quarterly Review," and
+author of other religious works) with unmitigated severity. They must not
+be too hasty. Mr. Stephens is a genius, and cannot, therefore, be held
+accountable for the _meaning_ of his ravings, be they even blasphemous;
+more than that he is a Syncretic genius, and his associates, by the
+designation they have chosen, by the terms of their agreement, are bound
+to cry each other up--to defend one another from the virulent attacks of
+common sense and plain reason. They are sworn to _stick_ together, like
+the bundle of rods in AEsop's fable.
+
+[Illustration: SYNCRETISM.]
+
+Mr. Stephens, their chief, the god of their idolatry, is, consequently,
+more mad, or, according to their creed, a greater genius, than the rest;
+and evidently writes passages he would shudder to pen, if he knew the
+meaning of them. Upon paper, therefore, the Syncretics are not accountable
+beings; and when condemned to the severest penalties of critical law, must
+be reprieved on the plea of literary insanity.
+
+It may be said that we have descended to mere detail to illustrate Mr.
+Stephens' peculiar genius--that we ought to treat of the grand design, or
+plot of the _Hungarian Daughter_; but we must confess, with the deepest
+humility, that our abilities are unequal to the task. The fable soars far
+beyond the utmost flights of our poor conjectures, of our limited
+comprehension. We know that at the end there are--one case of poisoning,
+one ditto of stabbing with intent, &c., and one ditto of sudden death.
+Hence we conclude that the play is a tragedy; but one which "cannot be
+intended for an acting play" (_preliminary preface_, p.1,)--of course _as_
+a tragedy; yet so universal is the author's genius, that an adaptation of
+the _Hungarian Daughter_, as a broad comedy, has been produced at the
+"Dramatic Authors' Theatre," having been received with roars of laughter!
+
+The books before us have been expensively got up. In the _Hungarian
+Daughter_, "rivers of type flow through meadows of margin," to the length
+of nearly three hundred pages. Mr. Stephens is truly a most spirited
+printer and publisher of his own works.
+
+But the lavish outlay he must have incurred to obtain such a number of
+favourable notices--so many columns of superlative praise--shows him to
+be, in every sense--like the prince of puffers, George Robins--"utterly
+regardless of expense." The works third and fourth upon our list,
+doubtless cost, for the _copyright_ alone, in ready money, a fortune. It
+is astonishing what pecuniary sacrifices genius will make, when it
+purloins the trumpet of Fame to _puff_ itself into temporary notoriety.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+INQUEST EXTRAORDINARY.
+
+ The Whigs, who long
+ Were bold and strong,
+ On Monday night went dead.
+ The jury found
+ This verdict sound--
+ "_Destroy'd by low-priced bread_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+AN EXCLUSIVE APPOINTMENT.
+
+It is with the most rampant delight that we rush to announce, that a
+special warrant has been issued, appointing our friend and _protege_,
+the gallant and jocular Sibthorp, to the important office of beadle and
+crier to the House of Commons--a situation which has been created from the
+difficulty which has hitherto been found in inducing strangers to withdraw
+during a division of the House. This responsible office could not have
+been conferred upon any one so capable of discharging its onerous duties
+as the Colonel. We will stake our hump, that half-a-dozen words of the
+gallant Demosthenes would, at any time have the effect of
+
+[Illustration: CLEARING THE STRANGER'S GALLERY.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE GREAT CRICKET MATCH AT ST. STEPHEN'S.
+
+FIRST INNINGS.
+
+The return match between the Reform and Carlton Clubs has been the theme
+of general conversation during the past week. Some splendid play was
+exhibited on the occasion, and, although the result has realised the
+anticipations of the best judges, it was not achieved without considerable
+exertion.
+
+It will be remembered that, the last time these celebrated clubs met, the
+Carlton men succeeded in scoring one notch more than their rivals; who,
+however, immediately challenged them to a return match, and have been
+diligently practising for success since that time.
+
+The players assembled in _Lord's_ Cricket Ground on Tuesday last, when the
+betting was decidedly in favour of the Cons, whose appearance and manner
+was more confident than usual; while, on the contrary, the Rads seemed
+desponding and shy. On tossing up, the Whigs succeeded in getting first
+innings, and the Tories dispersed themselves about the field in high glee,
+flattering themselves that they would not be _out_ long.
+
+Wellington, on producing the ball--a genuine _Duke_--excited general
+admiration by his position. Ripon officiated as bowler at the other
+wicket. Sibthorp acted as long-stop, and the rest found appropriate
+situations. Lefevre was chosen umpire by mutual consent.
+
+Spencer and Clanricarde went in first. Spencer, incautiously trying to
+score too many notches for one of his hits, was stumped out by Ripon, and
+Melbourne succeeded him. Great expectations had been formed of this player
+by his own party, but he was utterly unable to withstand Wellington's
+rapid bowling, which soon sent him to the right-about. Clanricarde was
+likewise run out without scoring a notch.
+
+Lansdowne and Brougham were now partners at the wickets; but Lansdowne did
+not appear to like his mate, on whose play it is impossible to calculate.
+Coventry, _the short slip_, excited much merriment, by a futile attempt to
+catch this player out, which terminated in his finding himself horizontal
+and mortified. Wellington, having bowled out Lansdowne, resigned his ball
+to Peel, who took his place at the wicket with a smile of confidence,
+which frightened the bat out of the hands of Phillips, the next Rad.
+
+Dundas and Labouchere were now the batmen. Labouchere is a very
+intemperate player. One of Sandon's slow balls struck his thumb, and put
+him out of temper, whereupon he hit about at random, and knocked down his
+wicket. Wakley took his bat, but apparently not liking his position, he
+hit up and caught himself out.
+
+O'Connell took his place with a lounging swagger, but his first ball was
+caught by the immortal Sibthorp, who uttered more puns on the occasion
+than the oldest man present recollected to have heard perpetrated in any
+given time. Russell--who, by the bye, excavated several quarts of 'heavy'
+during his innings--was the last man the Rads had to put in. He played
+with care, and appeared disposed to keep hold of the bat as long as
+possible. He was, however, quietly disposed of by one of Peel's inexorable
+balls.
+
+Thus far the game has proceeded. The Cons have yet to _go in_. The general
+opinion is, that they will not remain in so long as the Rads, but that
+they will score their notches much quicker. Indeed, it was commonly
+remarked, that no players had ever remained in so long, and had done so
+little good withal, as the Reformites.
+
+Betting is at 100 to 5 in favour of the Carlton men, and anxiety is on
+tip-toe to know the result of the next innings.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+The Tories are exulting in their recent victory over the poor Whigs, whom
+they affirm have been _tried_, and found wanting. A _trial_, indeed, where
+all the jurors were witnesses for the prosecution. One thing is certain,
+that the country, as usual, will have to pay the costs, for a Tory verdict
+will be certain to carry them. The Whigs should prepare a motion for a new
+trial, on the plea that the late decision was that of
+
+[Illustration: A PACKED JURY.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DECIDEDLY UNPLEASANT.
+
+"Kiss the broad moon."--MARTINUZZI.
+
+ Go kiss the moon!--that's more, sirs, than I can dare;
+ 'Tis worse than madness--hasn't she her man there?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CURIOUS COINCIDENCE.
+
+The _Morning Advertiser_ has a paragraph containing a report of an
+extraordinary indisposition under which a private of the Royal Guards is
+now suffering. It appears he lately received a violent kick from a horse,
+on the back of his head: since which time his hair has become so
+sensitive, that he cannot bear any one to approach him or touch it. On
+some portion being cut off by stratagem, he evinced the utmost disgust,
+accompanied with a volley of oaths. This may be wonderful in French hair,
+but it is nothing to the present sufferings of the Whigs in England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE BARTHOLOMEW FAIR SHOW-FOLKS.
+
+Punch having been chosen by the unanimous voice of the public--the
+_arbiter elegantiarum_ in all matters relating to science, literature, and
+the fine arts--and from his long professional experience, being the only
+person in England competent to regulate the public amusements of the
+people, the Lord Mayor of London has confided to him the delicate and
+important duty of deciding upon the claims of the several individuals
+applying for licenses to open show-booths during the approaching
+Bartholomew Fair. Punch, having called to his assistance Sir Peter Laurie
+and Peter Borthwick, proceeded, on last Saturday, to hold his inquisition
+in a highly-respectable court in the neighbourhood of West Smithfield.
+
+The first application was made on behalf of _Richardson's Booth_, by two
+individuals named Melbourne and Russell.
+
+PUNCH.--On what grounds do you claim?
+
+MEL.--On those of long occupancy and respectability, my lord.
+
+RUSS.--We employs none but the werry best of actors, my lud--all "bould
+speakers," as my late wenerated manager, Muster Richardson, used to call
+'em.
+
+MEL.--We have the best scenery and decorations, the most popular
+performances--
+
+RUSS.--Hem! (_aside to_ MEL.)--Best say nothing about our performances,
+Mel.
+
+PUNCH.--Pray what situations do you respectively hold in the booth?
+
+MEL.--_I_ am principal manager, and do the heavy tragedy business. My
+friend, here, is the stage-manager and low comedy buffer, who takes the
+kicks, and blows the trumpet of the establishment.
+
+PUNCH.--What is the nature of the entertainments you have been in the
+habit of producing?
+
+RUSS.--Oh! the real legitimate drammar--"A New Way to Pay Old Debts,"
+"Raising the Wind," "A Gentleman in Difficulties," "Where shall I dine?"
+and "Honest Thieves." We mean to commence the present season with "All in
+the wrong," and "His Last Legs."
+
+PUNCH.--Humph! I am sorry to say I have received several complaints of the
+manner in which you have conducted the business of your establishment for
+several years. It appears you put forth bills promising wonders, while
+your performances have been of the lowest possible description.
+
+RUSS.--S'elp me, Bob! there ain't a word of truth in it. If there's
+anything we takes pride on, 'tis our gentility.
+
+PUNCH.--You have degraded the drama by the introduction of card-shufflers
+and thimble-rig impostors.
+
+RUSS.--We denies the thimble-rigging in totum, my lud; that was brought
+out at Stanley's opposition booth.
+
+PUNCH.--At least you were a promoter of state conjuring and legerdemain
+tricks on the stage.
+
+RUSS.--Only a little hanky-panky, my lud. The people likes it; they loves
+to be cheated before their faces. One, two, three--presto--begone. I'll
+show your ludship as pretty a trick of putting a piece of money in your
+eye and taking it out of your elbow, as you ever beheld. _Has_ your
+ludship got such a thing as a good shilling about you? 'Pon my honour,
+I'll return it.
+
+PUNCH.--Be more respectful, sir, and reply to my questions. It appears
+further, that several respectable persons have lost their honesty in your
+booth.
+
+RUSS.--Very little of that 'ere commodity is ever brought into it, my lud.
+
+PUNCH.--And, in short, that you and your colleagues' hands have been
+frequently found in the pockets of your audience.
+
+RUSS.--Only in a professional way, my lud--strictly professional.
+
+PUNCH.--But the most serious charge of all is that, on a recent occasion,
+when the audience hissed your performances, you put out the lights, let in
+the swell-mob, and raised a cry of "No Corn Laws."
+
+RUSS.--Why, my lud, on that p'int I admit there was a slight row.
+
+PUNCH.--Enough, sir. The court considers you have grossly misconducted
+yourself, and refuses to grant you license to perform.
+
+MEL.--But, my lord, I protest _I did_ nothing.
+
+PUNCH.--So everybody says, sir. You are therefore unfit to have the
+management of (next to my own) the greatest theatre in the world. You may
+retire.
+
+MEL. (_to_ RUSS.)--Oh! Johnny, this is your work--with your confounded
+hanky-panky.
+
+RUSS.--No--'twas you that did it; we have been ruined by your laziness.
+What _is_ to become of us now?
+
+MEL.--Alas! where shall we dine?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The next individual who presented himself, to obtain a license for the
+Carlton Club Equestrian Troop, was a strange-loooking character, who gave
+his name as Sibthorp.
+
+PUNCH.--What are you, sir?
+
+SIB.--Clown to the ring, my lord, and principal performer on the Salt-box.
+I provide my own paint and pipe-clay, make my own jokes, and laugh at them
+too. I do the ground and lofty tumbling, and ride the wonderful
+donkey--all for the small sum of fifteen bob a-week.
+
+PUNCH.--You have been represented as a very noisy and turbulent fellow.
+
+SIB.--Meek as a lamb, my lord, except when I'm on the saw-dust; there I
+acknowledge, I do crow pretty loudly--but that's in the way of
+business,--and your lordship knows that we public jokers must pitch it
+strong sometimes to make our audience laugh, and bring the _browns_ into
+the treasury. After all, my lord, I am not the rogue many people take me
+for,--more the other way, I can assure you, and
+
+ "Though to my share some human errors fall,
+ Look in my face, and you'll forget them all."
+
+PUNCH.--A strong appeal, I must confess. You shall have your license.
+
+The successful claimant having made his best bow to Commissioner Punch,
+withdrew, whistling the national air of
+
+[Illustration: "BRITONS, STRIKE HOME."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A fellow named Peel, who has been for many years in the habit of
+exhibiting as a quack-doctor, next applied for liberty to vend his
+nostrums at the fair. On being questioned as to his qualifications, he
+shook his head gravely, and, without uttering a word, placed the following
+card in the hands of Punch.
+
+
+TO THE GULLIBLE PUBLIC.
+
+SIR RHUBARB PILL, M.D. and L.S.D.
+
+Professor of Political Chemistry and Conservative Medicine to the
+
+CARLTON CLUB;
+
+PHYSICIAN IN ORDINARY TO THE KING OF HANOVER!!!
+
+Inventor of the People's Patent Sliding Stomach-pump;--of the Poor Man's
+anti-Breakfast and Dinner Waist-belt;--and of the new Royal extract of
+Toryism, as prescribed for, and lately swallowed by,
+
+THE MOST ILLUSTRIOUS PERSONAGE IN THESE DOMINIONS.
+
+Sir Rhubarb begs further to state, that he practises national
+tooth-drawing and bleeding to an unlimited extent; and undertakes to cure
+the consumption of bread without the use of
+
+A FIXED PLASTER.
+
+N.B.--No connexion with the corn doctor who recently vacated the concern
+now occupied by Sir R.P.
+
+Hours of attendance, from ten till four each day, at his establishment,
+Downing-street.--A private entrance for M.P.'s round the corner.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ben D'Israeli, the proprietor of the Learned Pig, applied for permission
+to exhibit his animal at the fair. A license was unhesitatingly granted by
+his lordship, who rightly considered that the exhibition of the
+extraordinary talents of the pig and its master, would do much to promote
+a taste for polite literature amongst the Smithneld "pennyboys."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A poor old man, who called himself Sir Francis Burdett, applied for a
+license to exhibit his wonderful Dissolving Views. The most remarkable of
+which were--"The Hustings in Covent-garden--changing to Rous's dinner in
+Drury-lane"--and "The Patriot in the Tower--changing to the Renegade in
+the Carlton." It appeared that the applicant was, at one time, in a
+respectable business, and kept "The Old Glory," a favourite public-house
+in Westminster, but, falling into bad company, he lost his custom and his
+character, and was reduced to his present miserable occupation. Punch, in
+pity for the wretched petitioner, and fully convinced that his childish
+tricks were perfectly harmless, granted him a license to exhibit.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Licenses were also granted to the following persons in the course of the
+day:--
+
+Sir E.L. Bulwer, to exhibit his own portrait, in the character of
+Alcibiades, painted by himself.
+
+Doctor Bowring, to exhibit six Tartarian chiefs, caught in the vicinity of
+the Seven Dials, with songs, translated from the original Irish Calmuc, by
+the Doctor.
+
+Emerson Tennent, to exhibit his wonderful Cosmorama, or views of anywhere
+and everywhere; in which the striking features of Ireland, Greece,
+Belgium, and Whitechapel will be so happily confounded, that the spectator
+may imagine he beholds any or all of these places at a single glance.
+
+Messrs. Stephens, Heraud, and Co., to exhibit, gratis, a Syncretic
+Tragedy, with fireworks and tumbling, according to law, between the acts;
+to be followed by a lecture on the Unactable Drama.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CAPITAL ILLUSTRATION.
+
+At the recent _fracas_ in Pall Mall, between Captain Fitzroy and Mr.
+Shepherd, the latter, like his predecessor of old, the "Gentle Shepherd,"
+performed sundry vague evolutions with a silver-mounted cane, and
+requested Captain Fitzroy to consider himself horsewhipped. Not
+entertaining quite so high an opinion of his adversary's imaginative
+powers, the Captain floored the said descendant of gentleness, thereby
+ably illustrating the precise difference of the "_real and ideal_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE HEIR OF APPLEBITE.
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+SHOWS HOW AGAMEMNON BECAME DISGUSTED WITH NUMBER ONE, AND THE AWFUL
+CONSEQUENCES WHICH SUCCEEDED.
+
+[Illustration: P]Poor old John's alarm was succeeded by astonishment, for
+without speaking a word, Agamemnon bounced into his bed-chamber. He
+thought the room the most miserable-looking room he had ever entered,
+though the floor was covered with a thick Turkey carpet, a bright fire was
+blazing in the grate, and everything about seemed fashioned for comfort.
+He threw himself into an easy chair, and kicking off one of his pumps,
+crossed his legs, and rested his elbow on the table. He looked at his
+bed--it was a French one--a mountain of feathers, covered with a thick,
+white Marseilles quilt, and festooned over with a drapery of rich crimson
+damask.
+
+"I'll have a four-post to-morrow," growled Collumpsion; "French beds are
+mean-looking things, after all. Stuffwell has the fellow-chair to
+this--one chair does look strange! I wonder it has never struck me before;
+but it is surprising--what--strange ide--as a man--has"--and Collumpsion
+fell asleep.
+
+It was broad day when Collumpsion awoke; the fire had gone out, and his
+feet were as cold as ice. He (as he is married there's no necessity for
+concealment)--he swore two or three naughty oaths, and taking off his
+clothes, hurried into bed in the hope of getting warm.
+
+"How confoundedly cold I am--sitting in that chair all night,
+too--ridiculous. If I had had a--I mean, if I hadn't been alone, that
+wouldn't have happened; she would have waked me." _She_--what the deuce
+made him use the feminine pronoun!
+
+At two o'clock he rose and entered his breakfast-room. The table was laid
+as usual--_one_ large cup and saucer, _one_ plate, _one_ egg-cup, _one_
+knife, and _one_ fork! He did not know wherefore, but he felt to want the
+number increased. John brought up a slice of broiled salmon and _one_ egg.
+Collumpsion got into a passion, and ordered a second edition. The morning
+was rainy, so Collumpsion remained at home, and employed himself by
+kicking about the ottoman, and mentally multiplying all the single
+articles in his establishment by two.
+
+The dinner hour arrived, and there was the same singular provision for
+one. He rang the bell, and ordered John to furnish the table for
+_another_. John obeyed, though not without some strong misgiving of his
+master's sanity, as the edibles consisted of a sole, a mutton chop, and a
+partridge. When John left the room at his master's request, Collumpsion
+rose and locked the door. Having placed a chair opposite, he resumed his
+seat, and commenced a series of pantomimic gestures, which were strongly
+confirmatory of John's suspicions. He seemed to be holding an inaudible
+conversation with some invisible being, placing the choicest portion of
+the sole in a plate, and seemingly desiring John to deliver it to the
+unknown. As John was not there, he placed it before himself, and commenced
+daintily and smilingly picking up very minute particles, as though he were
+too much delighted to eat. He then bowed and smiled, and extending his
+arm, appeared to fill the opposite glass, and having _actually_ performed
+the same operation with his own, he bowed and smiled again, and sipped the
+brilliant Xeres. He then rang the bell violently, and unlocking the door,
+rushed rapidly back to his chair, as though he were fearful of committing
+a rudeness by leaving it. The table being replenished, and John again
+dismissed the room, the same pantomime commenced. The one mutton chop
+seemed at first to present an obstacle to the proper conduct of the scene;
+but gracefully uncovering the partridge, and as gracefully smiling towards
+the invisible, he appeared strongly to recommend the bird in preference to
+the beast. Dinner at length concluded, he rose, and apparently led his
+phantom guest from the table, and then returning to his arm-chair, threw
+himself into it, and, crossing his hands upon his breast, commenced a
+careful examination of the cinders and himself. His rumination ended in a
+doze, and his doze in a dream, in which he fancied himself a Brobdignag
+Java sparrow during the moulting season. His cage was surrounded by
+beautiful and blooming girls, who seemed to pity his condition, and vie
+with each other in proposing the means of rendering him more comfortable.
+Some spoke of elastic cotton shirts, linsey-wolsey jackets, and silk
+nightcaps; others of merino hose, silk feet and cotton tops, shirt-buttons
+and warming-pans; whilst Mrs. Greatgirdle and Mrs. Waddledot sang an echo
+duet of "What a pity the bird is alone."
+
+ "A change came o'er the spirit of his dream."
+
+He thought that the moulting season was over, and that he was rejoicing in
+the fulness of a sleeky plumage, and by his side was a Java sparrowess,
+chirping and hopping about, rendering the cage as populous to him as
+though he were the tenant of a bird-fancier's shop. Then--he awoke just as
+Old John was finishing a glass of Madeira, preparatory to arousing
+Collumpsion, for the purpose of delivering to him a scented note, which
+had just been left by the footman of Mrs. Waddledot.
+
+It was lucky for John that A.C.A. had been blessed with pleasant dreams,
+or his attachment to Madeira might have occasioned his discharge from No.
+24, Pleasant-terrace.
+
+The note was an invitation to Mrs. Waddledot's opera-box for that evening.
+The performance was to be Rossini's "La Cenerentola," and as Collumpsion
+recollected the subject of the opera, his heart fluttered in his bosom. A
+prince marrying a cinder-sifter for love! What must the happy state be--or
+rather what must it not be--to provoke such a condescension!
+
+Collumpsion never appeared to such advantage as he did that evening; he
+was dressed to a miracle of perfection--his spirits were so elastic that
+they must have carried him out of the box into "Fop's-alley," had not Mrs.
+Waddledot cleverly surrounded him by the detachment from the corps of
+eighteen daughters, which had (on that night) been placed under her
+command.
+
+Collumpsion's state of mind did not escape the notice of the fair
+campaigners, and the most favourable deductions were drawn from it in
+relation to the charitable combination which they had formed for his
+ultimate good, and all seemed determined to afford him every encouragement
+in their power. Every witticism that he uttered elicited countless
+smiles--every criticism that he delivered was universally applauded--in
+short, Agamemnon Collumpsion Applebite was voted the most delightful beau
+in the universe, and Agamemnon Collumpsion Applebite gave himself a
+plumper to the same opinion.
+
+On the 31st of the following month, a string of carriages surrounded St.
+George's Church, Hanover-square, and precisely at a quarter to twelve,
+A.M., Agamemnon Collumpsion Applebite placed a plain gold ring on the
+finger of Miss Juliana Theresa Waddledot, being a necessary preliminary to
+the introduction of our hero, the "Heir of Applebite."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+EPIGRAM.
+
+ "I wonder if Brougham thinks as much as he talks,"
+ Said a punster perusing a trial:
+ "I vow, since his lordship was made Baron Vaux,
+ He's been _Vaux et praeterea nihil!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE TWO FATAL CHIROPEDISTS.
+
+Our great ancestor, Joe Miller, has recorded, in his "Booke of Jestes," an
+epitaph written upon an amateur corn-cutter, named Roger Horton, who,
+
+ "Trying one day his corn to mow off,
+ The razor slipp'd, and cut his toe off."
+
+The painful similarity of his fate with that of another corn
+experimentalist, has given rise to the following:--
+
+EPITAPH ON LORD JOHN RUSSELL, WHO EXPIRED POLITICALLY, AFTER A LINGERING
+ILLNESS, ON MONDAY EVENING, AUGUST 30, 1841.
+
+ In Minto quies.
+
+ Beneath this stone lies Johnny Russell,
+ Who for his place had many a tussel.
+ Trying one day _the corn_ to cut down,
+ The motion fail'd, and he was _put_ down.
+ The benches which he nearly grew to,
+ The Opposition quickly flew to;
+ The fact it was so mortifying,
+ That little Johnny took to dying.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SHALL GREAT OLYMPUS TO A MOLEHILL STOOP?
+
+Some difficulty has arisen as to the production of Knowles's new play at
+the Haymarket Theatre. Mr. Charles Kean and Miss Helen Faucit having
+objected to hear the play read, "_because their respective parts had not
+been previously submitted to them._"--_Sunday Times_.--[We are of opinion
+that they were decidedly right. One might as well expect a child to spell
+without learning the alphabet, as either of the above persons to
+understand Knowles, unless enlightened by a long course of previous
+instruction.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE LETTER OF INTRODUCTION.
+
+ [From a MS. drama called the "COURT OF VICTORIA."
+
+_Scene in Windsor Castle._
+
+[_Her Majesty discovered sitting thoughtfully at an escrutoire._--
+
+_Enter the_ LORD CHAMBERLAIN.]
+
+LORD CHAMBERLAIN.--May it please your Majesty, a letter from the Duke of
+Wellington.
+
+THE QUEEN (_opens the letter_.)--Oh! a person for the vacant place of
+Premier--show the bearer in, my lord. [_Exit_ LORD CHAMBERLAIN.
+
+THE QUEEN (_muses_).--Sir Robert Peel--I have heard that name before, as
+connected with my family. If I remember rightly, he held the situation of
+adviser to the crown in the reign of Uncle William, and was discharged for
+exacting a large discount on all the state receipts; yet Wellington is
+very much interested in his favour.
+
+_Enter the_ LORD CHAMBERLAIN, _who ushers in_ SIR ROBERT, _and then
+retires. As he is going_--]
+
+LORD CHAMBERLAIN (_aside_).--If you do get the berth, Sir Robert, I hope
+you'll not give me warning. [_Exit_.
+
+SIR ROBERT (_looking demurely_).--Hem!
+
+[_The Queen regards him very attentively._]
+
+THE QUEEN (_aside_).--I don't much like the looks of the fellow--that
+affectation of simplicity is evidently intended to conceal the real
+cunning of his character. (_Aloud_). You are of course aware of the nature
+and the duties of the situation which you solicit?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Oh, yes, your Majesty; I have filled it before, and liked it
+very much.
+
+THE QUEEN.--It's a most responsible post, for upon your conduct much of
+the happiness of my other servants depends.
+
+SIR ROBERT.--I am aware of that, your Majesty; but as no one can hope to
+please everybody, I will only answer that _one half_ shall be perfectly
+satisfied.
+
+THE QUEEN.--You have recently returned from Tamworth?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Yes, your Majesty.
+
+THE QUEEN.--We will dispense with forms. At Tamworth, you have been
+practising as a quack doctor?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Yes, madam; I was brought up to doctoring, and am a professor
+of sleight-of-hand.
+
+THE QUEEN.--What have you done in the latter art to entitle you to such a
+distinction?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--I have performed some very wonderful changes. When I was out
+of place, I had opinions strongly opposed to Catholic emancipation; but
+when I got into service I changed them in the course of a few days.
+
+THE QUEEN.--I have heard that you boast of possessing a nostrum for the
+restoration of the public good. What is it?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Am I to consider myself "as regularly called in?"
+
+THE QUEEN.--That is a question I decline answering at present.
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Then I regret that I must also remain silent.
+
+THE QUEEN (_aside_).--The wily fox! (_aloud_)--Are you aware that great
+distress exists in the country?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Oh, yes! I have heard that there are several families who
+keep no man-servant, and that numerous clerks, weavers, and other
+artisans, occupy second-floors.
+
+THE QUEEN.--I have heard that the people are wanting bread.
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Ha, ha! that was from the late premier, I suppose. He merely
+forgot an adjective--it is _cheap_ bread that the people are clamouring
+for.
+
+THE QUEEN.--And why can they not have it?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--I have consulted with the Duke of Richmond upon the subject,
+and he says it is impossible.
+
+THE QUEEN.--But why?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Wheat must be lower before bread can be cheaper.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Well!
+
+SIR ROBERT.--And rents must be less if that is the case, and--
+
+THE QUEEN.--Well!
+
+SIR ROBERT.--And that the landowners won't agree to.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Well!
+
+SIR ROBERT.--And, then, I can't keep my place a day.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Then the majority of my subjects are to be rendered miserable
+for the advantage of the few?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--That's the principle of all good governments. Besides, cheap
+bread would be no benefit to the masses, for wages would be lower.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Do you really believe such _would_ be the case?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Am I regularly called in?
+
+THE QUEEN.--You evade a direct answer, I see. Granting such to be _your
+belief_, your friends and landowners would suffer no injury, for their
+incomes would procure them as many luxuries.
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Not if they were to live abroad, or patronise foreign
+manufactures: and _should_ wages be higher, what would they say to me
+after all the money they have expended in bri--I mean at the Carlton Club,
+if I allow the value of their "dirty acres" to be reduced.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Pray, what do you call such views?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Patriotism.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Charity would be a better term, as that is said to begin at
+home. How long were you in your last place?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Not half so long as I wished--for the sake of the country.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Why did you leave?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Somebody said I was saucy--and somebody else said I was not
+honest--and somebody else said I had better go.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Who was the latter somebody?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--My master.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Your exposure of my late premier's faults, and your present
+application for his situation, result from disinterestedness, of course?
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Of course, madam.
+
+THE QUEEN.--Then salary is not so much an object as a comfortable
+situation.
+
+SIR ROBERT.--I beg pardon; but I've been out of place ten years, and have
+a small family to support. _Wages_ is, therefore, some sort of a
+consideration.
+
+THE QUEEN.--I don't quite like you.
+
+SIR ROBERT (_glancing knowingly at the Queen_).--I don't think there is
+any one that _you can_ have better.
+
+THE QUEEN.--I'm afraid not.
+
+SIR ROBERT.--Then, am I regularly called in?
+
+THE QUEEN.--Yes, you can take your boxes to Downing-street.
+
+[_Exeunt ambo_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PARLIAMENTARY INTENTIONS.
+
+Mr. Muntz, we understand, intends calling the attention of Parliament, at
+the earliest possible period, to the state of the crops.
+
+Lord Palmerston intends proposing, that a looking-glass for the use of
+members should be placed in the ante-room of the House, and that it shall
+be called the New Mirror of Parliament.
+
+Mr. T. Duncombe intends moving that the plans of Sir Robert Peel be
+immediately submitted to the photographic process, in order that some
+light may be thrown upon them as soon as possible.
+
+The Earl of Coventry intends suggesting, that every member of both Houses
+be immediately supplied with a copy of the work called "Ten Minutes'
+Advice on Corns," in order to prepare Parliament for a full description of
+the Corn Laws.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+EXTRA FASHIONABLE NEWS.
+
+Colonel Sibthorp has expressed his intention of becoming the blue-faced
+monkey at the Zoological Gardens with his _countenance_, on next
+Wednesday.
+
+Lord Melbourne has received visits of condolence on his retirement from
+office, from Aldgate pump--Canning's statue in Palace-yard--the Three
+Kings of Brentford--and the Belle Sauvage, Ludgate-hill.
+
+Her Royal Highness the Princess, her two nurses, and a pap-spoon, took an
+airing twice round the great hall of the palace, at one o'clock yesterday.
+
+The Burlington Arcade will be thrown open to visitors to-morrow morning.
+Gentlemen intending to appear there, are requested to come with
+tooth-picks and full-dress walking-canes.
+
+Sir Francis Burdett's top-boots were seen, on last Saturday, walking into
+Sir Robert Peel's house, accompanied by the legs of that venerable turner.
+
+His Grace the Duke of Wellington inspected all the passengers in Pall
+Mall, from the steps of the United Service Club-house, and expressed
+himself highly pleased with the celerity of the 'busses and cabs, and the
+effective state of the pedestrians generally.
+
+His Royal Highness the Duke of Sussex has, in the most unequivocal manner,
+expressed his opinion on the state of the weather--which he pronounces to
+be hot! hot! all hot!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A SINGULAR INADVERTENCE.
+
+A good deal of merriment was caused in the House of Commons, by Mr. Bernal
+and Commodore Napier addressing the members as "gentlemen." This may be
+excusable in young members, but the oldest parliamentary reporter has no
+recollection of the term being used by any one who had sat a session in
+the House. "Too much familiarity," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PUNCH'S PENCILLINGS--No. VIII.
+
+[Illustration: THE LETTER OF INTRODUCTION.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE MINISTRY'S ODE TO THE PASSIONS.
+
+NOT BY COLLINS.
+
+ When the Whig Ministry had run,
+ Nor left behind a mother's son,
+ The Tories, at their leader's call,
+ Came thronging round him, one and all,
+ Exulting, braying, cringing, coaxing,
+ Expert at humbugging and hoaxing;
+ By turns they felt an _honest_ zeal
+ For private good and public weal;
+ Till all at once they raised such yells,
+ As rung in Apsley House the bells:
+ And as they sought snug berths to get
+ In Bobby Peel's new cabinet,
+ Each, for interest ruled the hour,
+ Would prove his taste for place and power.
+
+ First Follett's hand, his skill to try,
+ Upon the _seals_ bewilder'd laid;
+ But back recoil'd--he scarce knew why--
+ Of Lyndhurst's angry scowl afraid.
+
+ Next Stanley rush'd with frenzied air;
+ His eager haste brook'd no delay:
+ He rudely seized the _Foreign_ chair,
+ And bade poor Cupid trudge away.
+
+ With woeful visage Melbourne sate--
+ A pint of double X his grief beguiled;
+ And inly pondering o'er his fate,
+ He bade th' attendant pot-boy "draw it mild."
+
+ But thou, Sir Jamie Graham--prig;
+ What was thy delighted musing?
+ Now accepting, now refusing,
+ Till on the Admiralty pitch'd,
+ Still would that thought his speech prolong;
+ To gain the place for which he long had itch'd,
+ He call'd on Bobby still through all the song;
+ But ever as his sweetest theme he chose,
+ A sovereign's golden chink was heard at every close,
+ And Pollock grimly smiled, and shook his powder'd wig.
+
+ And longer had he droned--but, with a frown
+ Brougham impatient rose;
+ He threw the bench of snoring bishops down,
+ And, with a withering look,
+ The Whig-denouncing trumpet took,
+ And made a speech so fierce and true,
+ Thrashing, with might and main, both friend and foe;
+ And ever and anon he beat,
+ With doubled fist his cushion'd seat;
+ And though sometimes, each breathless pause between,
+ Astonished Melbourne at his side,
+ His moderating voice applied,
+ Yet still he kept his stern, unalter'd mien,
+ While battering the Whigs and Tories black and blue.
+
+ Thy ravings, Goulburn, to no theme were fix'd.
+ Not ev'n thy virtue is without its spots;
+ With piety thy politics were mix'd,
+ And now they courted Peel, now call'd on Doctor Watts.
+
+ With drooping jaw, like one half-screw'd,
+ Lord Johnny sate in doleful mood,
+ And for his Secretarial seat,
+ Sent forth his howlings sad, but sweet
+ Lost Normanby pour'd forth his sad adieu;
+ While Palmerston, with graceful air,
+ Wildly toss'd his scented hair;
+ And pensive Morpeth join'd the sniv'lling crew.
+ Yet still they lingered round with fond delay,
+ Humming, hawing, stopping, musing,
+ Tory rascals all abusing,
+ Till forced to move away.
+
+ But, oh! how alter'd was the whining tone
+ When, loud-tongued Lyndhurst, that unblushing wight,
+ His gown across his shoulders flung,
+ His wig with virgin-powder white,
+ Made an ear-splitting speech that down to Windsor rung,
+ The Tories' call, that Billy Holmes well knew,
+ The turn-coat Downshire and his Orange crew;
+ Wicklow and Howard both were seen
+ Brushing away the wee bit green;
+ Mad Londonderry laugh'd to hear,
+ And Inglis scream'd and shook his ass's ear
+
+ Last Bobby Peel, with hypocritic air,
+ He with modest look came sneaking:
+ First to "_the Home_" his easy vows addrest,--
+ But soon he saw the _Treasury's_ red chair,
+ Whose soft inviting seat he loved the best.
+ They would have thought, who heard his words,
+ They saw in Britain's cause a patriot stand,
+ The proud defender of his land,
+ To aw'd and list'ning senates speaking;--
+
+ But as his fingers touch'd the purse's strings,
+ The chinking metal made a magic sound,
+ While hungry placemen gather'd fast around:
+ And he, as if by chance or play,
+ Or that he would their venal votes repay,
+ The golden treasures round upon them flings.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SIR ROBERT PEEL AND THE QUEEN.
+
+
+Upon the first interview of the Queen with Sir Robert Peel, her Majesty
+was determined to answer only in monosyllables to all he said; and, in
+fact, to make her replies _an echo_, and nothing more, to whatever he said
+to her. The following dialogue, which we have thrown into verse for the
+purpose of smoothing it--the tone of it, as spoken, having been on one
+side, at least, rather rough--ensued between the illustrious persons
+alluded to.
+
+ HE.--Before we into minor details go,
+ Do I possess your confidence or no?
+
+ SHE.--_No._
+
+ HE.--You shall not vex me, though your treatment's rough;
+ No, madam, I am made of sterner stuff.
+
+ SHE.--_Stuff._
+
+ HE.--Really, if thus your minister you flout,
+ A single syllable he can't get out.
+
+ SHE.--_Get out!_
+
+ HE.--But try me, madam; time indeed will show
+ Unto what lengths to serve you I would go.
+
+ SHE.--_Go._
+
+ HE.--We both have power,--'tis doubtful which is greater;
+ These crooked words had better be made straighter.
+
+ SHE.--_Traighter (Traitor.)_
+
+ HE.--Farewell! and never in this friendly strain
+ (My proffer'd aid foregone) I breathe again!
+
+ SHE.--_Gone. I breathe again!_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SONGS OF THE SEEDY.--NO. 2.
+
+ I cannot rove with thee, where zephyrs float--
+ Sweet sylvan scenes devoted to the loves!--
+ For, oh! I have not got one decent coat,
+ Nor can I sport a single pair of gloves.
+
+ Gladly I'd wander o'er the verdant lawn,
+ Where graze contentedly the fleecy flock;
+ But can I show myself in gills so torn,
+ Or brave the public gaze in such a stock?
+
+ I know _thou_'lt answer me that love is blind,
+ And faults in one it worships can't perceive;
+ It must be sightless, truly, not to find
+ The hole that's gaping in my threadbare sleeve.
+
+ Farewell, my love--for, oh! by heaven, we part,
+ And though it cost me all the pangs of hell.
+ The herd shall not on thee inflict a smart,
+ By calling after us--"There goes a swell!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A PRIVATE BOX.
+
+During the clear-out on Wednesday last in Downing-street, a small chest,
+strongly secured, was found among some models of balloting-boxes. It had
+evidently been forgotten for some years, and upon opening it, was found to
+contain the Whig promises of 1832. They were immediately conveyed to Lord
+Melbourne, who appeared much astonished at these resuscitation of the
+
+[Illustration: HOME OFFICE.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE LOST MEDICAL PAPERS OF THE BRITISH ASSOCIATION.
+
+"It is somewhat remarkable," observe the journals of the past week, "that
+the medical division of this scientific meeting has not contributed one
+single paper this year in furtherance of its object, although the
+communications from that section have usually been of a highly important
+character."
+
+The journals may think it somewhat remarkable--we do not at all; for here,
+as in every other event of the day, a great deal depends upon being
+"behind the curtain;" and as the greater portion of our life is passed in
+that locality, we are always to be relied upon for authenticity in our
+statements. The plain truth is, that the papers were inadvertently lost,
+and rather than lead to some unpleasant disclosures, in which the eminent
+professor to whom they were entrusted would have been deeply implicated,
+it was thought best to say nothing about them. By chance they fell into
+the hands of the manager of one of our perambulating theatres, who was
+toiling his way from the west of England to Egham races, and having
+deposited them in his portable green-room, under the especial custody of
+the clown, the doctor, and the overbearing parochial authority, he duly
+remitted them to our office. We have been too happy in giving them a place
+in our columns, feeling an honest pride in thus taking the lead of the
+chief scientific publications of the day. It will be seen that they are
+drawn up as a report, all ready for publication, according to the usual
+custom of such proceedings, where every one knows beforehand what they are
+to dispute or agree with.
+
+Dr. Splitnerve communicated a remarkable case of Animal Magnetism:--Eugene
+Doldrum, aged 21, a young man of bilious and interesting temperament,
+having been mesmerized, was rendered so keenly magnetic, as to give rise
+to a most remarkable train of phenomena. On being seated upon a
+music-stool, he immediately becomes an animated compass, and turns round
+to the north. Knives and forks at dinner invariably fly towards him, and
+he is not able to go through any of the squares, in consequence of being
+attracted firmly to the iron railings. As most of the experiments took
+place at the North London Hospital, Euston-square was his chief point of
+attraction, and when he was removed, it was always found necessary to
+break off the railings and take them away with him. This accounted for the
+decrepit condition of the _fleur de lys_ that surround the inclosure,
+which was not, as generally supposed, the work of the university pupils
+residing in Gower-place. Perfect insensibility to pain supervened at the
+same time, and his friends took advantage of this circumstance to send
+him, by way of delicate compliment, to a lying-in lady, in the style of a
+pedestrian pin-cushion, his cheeks being stuck full of minikin pins, on
+the right side, forming the words "Health to the Babe," and on the left,
+"Happiness to the Mother."
+
+Dr. Mortar read a talented paper on the cure of strabismus, or squinting,
+by dividing the muscles of the eye. The patient, a working man, squinted
+so terribly, that his eyes almost got into one another's sockets; and at
+times he was only able to see by looking down the inside of his nose and
+out at the nostrils. The operation was performed six weeks ago, when, on
+cutting through the muscles, its effects were instantly visible: both the
+eyes immediately diverging to the extreme outer angles of their respective
+orbits.
+
+Dr. Sharpeye inquired if the man did not find the present state of his
+vision still very perplexing.
+
+Dr. Mortar replied, that so far from injuring his sight, it had proved
+highly beneficial, as the patient had procured a very excellent situation
+in the new police, and received a double salary, from the power he
+possessed of keeping an eye upon both sides of the road at the same time.
+
+[Illustration: WILL YOU LOOK THIS WAY, IF YOU PLEASE?]
+
+An elaborate and highly scientific treatise was then read by Dr. Sexton,
+upon a disease which had been very prevalent in town during the spring,
+and had been usually termed the influenza. He defined it as a disease of
+convenience, depending upon various exciting causes acting upon the mind.
+For instance:--
+
+Mrs. A----, a lady residing in Belgrave-square, was on the eve of giving a
+large party, when, upon hearing that Mr. A---- had made an unlucky
+speculation in the funds, the whole family were seized with influenza so
+violently, that they were compelled to postpone the reunion, and live upon
+the provided supper for a fortnight afterwards.
+
+Miss B---- was a singer at one of our large theatres, and had a part
+assigned to her in a new opera. Not liking it, she worried herself into an
+access of influenza, which unluckily seized her the first night the opera
+was to have been played.
+
+But the most marked case was that of Mr. C----, a clerk in a city house of
+business, who was attacked and cured within three days. It appeared that
+he had been dining that afternoon with some friends, who were going to
+Greenwich fair the next day, and on arriving at home, was taken ill with
+influenza, so suddenly that he was obliged to despatch a note to that
+effect to his employer, stating also his fear that he should be unable to
+attend at his office on the morrow. Dr. Sexton said he was indebted for an
+account of the progress of his disease to a young medical gentleman,
+clinical clerk at a leading hospital, who lodged with the patient in
+Bartholomew-close. The report had been drawn up for the _Lancet_, but Dr.
+S. had procured it by great interest.
+
+ MAY 30, 1841, 11 P.M.--Present symptoms:--Complains of his
+ employer, and the bore of being obliged to be at the office next
+ morning. Has just eaten a piece of cold beef and pickles, with a
+ pint of stout. Pulse about 75, and considerable defluxion from the
+ nose, which he thinks produced by getting a piece of Cayenne pepper
+ in his eye. Swallowed a crumb, which brought on a violent fit of
+ coughing. Wishes to go to bed.
+
+ MAY 31, 9 A.M.--Has passed a tolerable night, but appears restless,
+ and unable to settle to anything. Thinks he could eat some broiled
+ ham if he had it; but not possessing any, has taken the following:
+
+ Rx--Infus. coffee lbj
+ Sacchari [symbol: dram]iij
+ Lactis Vaccae [symbol: ounce]j
+ Ft. mistura, poculum mane sumendum.
+
+ A plaster ordered to be applied to the inside of the stomach,
+ consisting of potted bloater spread upon bread and butter.
+
+ Eleven, A.M.--Appears rather hotter since breakfast. Change of air
+ recommended, and Greenwich decided upon.
+
+ Half-past 11.--Complains of the draught and noise of the
+ second-class railway carriages, but is otherwise not worse. Thinks
+ he should like "a drain of half-and-half." Has blown his nose once
+ in the last quarter of an hour.
+
+ Two, P.M.--Since a light dinner of rump steaks and stout, a
+ considerable change has taken place. He appears labouring under
+ cerebral excitement and short pipes, and says he shall have a
+ regular beanish day, and go it similar to bricks. Calls the waiter
+ up to him in one of the booths, and has ordered "a glass of
+ cocktail with the chill off and a cinder in it."
+
+ Three, P.M.--Has sallied out into the fair, still much excited,
+ calling every female he meets "Susan," and pronouncing the s's with
+ a whistling accent. Expresses a desire to ride in the ships that go
+ round and round.
+
+ Half-past 3.--The motion of the ships has tended considerably to
+ relieve his stomach. Pulse slow and countenance pale, with a desire
+ for a glass of ale. Has entered a peepshow, and is now arguing with
+ the exhibitor upon the correctness of his view of the siege of "St.
+ Jane Daker!" which he maintains was a sea-port, and not a field
+ with a burning windmill, as represented in the view.
+
+ Eight, P.M.--After rambling vaguely about the fair all the
+ afternoon, he has decided upon taking a hot-air bath in Algar's
+ Crown and Anchor booth. Evidently delirious. Has put on a false
+ nose, and purchased a tear-coat rattle. Appears labouring under
+ violent spasmodic action of the muscles of his legs, as he dances
+ "Jim along Josey," when he sets to his partner in a country dance
+ of eighty couple.
+
+ Half-past 10, P.M.--Has just intimated that he does not see the use
+ of going home, as you can always go there when you can go nowhere
+ else. Is seated straddling across one of the tables, on which he is
+ beating time to the band with a hooky stick. Will not allow the
+ state of his pulse to be ascertained, but says we may feel his fist
+ if we like.
+
+ Eleven.--Considerable difficulty experienced in getting the patient
+ to the railroad, but we at last succeeded. After telling every one
+ in the carriage "that he wasn't afraid of any of them," he fell
+ into a deep stertorous sleep. On arriving at home, he got into bed
+ with his boots on, and passed a restless night, turning out twice
+ to drink water between one and four.
+
+ JUNE.--10, A.M.--Has just returned from his office, his employer
+ thinking him very unfit for work, and desiring him to lay up for a
+ day or two. Complains of being "jolly seedy," and thinks he shall
+ go to Greenwich again to get all right.
+
+A thrilling paper upon the "Philosophy of death," was then read by
+Professor Wynne Slow. After tracing the origin of that fatal attack, which
+it appears the earliest nations were subject to, the learned author showed
+profound research in bringing forward the various terms applied to the act
+of dying by popular authors. Amongst the principal, he enumerated "turning
+your toes up," "kicking the bucket," "putting up your spoon," "slipping
+your wind," "booking your place," "breaking your bellows," "shutting up
+your shop," and other phrases full of expression.
+
+The last moments of remarkable characters were especially dwelt upon, in
+connexion, more especially, with the drama, which gives us the best
+examples, from its holding a mirror up to nature. It appeared that at
+Astley's late amphitheatre, the dying men generally shuffled about a great
+deal in the sawdust, fighting on their knees, and showing great
+determination to the last, until life gave way; that at the Adelphi the
+expiring character more frequently saw imaginary demons waiting for him,
+and fell down, uttering "Off, fiends! I come to join you in your world of
+flames!" and that clowns and pantaloons always gave up the ghost with
+heart-rending screams and contortions of visage, as their deaths were
+generally violent, from being sawn in half, having holes drilled in them
+with enormous gimlets, or being shot out of cannon; but that, at the same
+time, these deaths were not permanent.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE.
+
+Our foreign expresses have reached us _via_ Billingsgate, and are full of
+interesting matter. Captain Fitz-Flammer is in prison at Boulogne, for
+some trifling misunderstanding with a native butcher, about the settlement
+of an account; but we trust no time will be lost by our government in
+demanding his release at the hands of the authorities. The attempt to make
+it a private question is absurd; and every Englishman's blood will simmer,
+if it does not actually boil, at the intelligence. Fitz-Flammer was only
+engaged in doing that which many of our countrymen visit Boulogne
+expressly to do, and it is hard that he should have been intercepted in
+his retreat, after accomplishing his object. To live at the expense of a
+natural enemy is certainly a bold and patriotic act, which ought to excite
+sympathy at home, and protection abroad. The English packet, the _City of
+Boulogne_, has turned one of its imitation guns directly towards the town,
+which, we trust, will have the effect of bringing the French authorities
+to reason.
+
+It is expected that the treaty will shortly be signed, by which Belgium
+cedes to France a milestone on the north frontier; while the latter
+country returns to the former the whole of the territory lying behind a
+pig-stye, taken possession of in the celebrated 6th _vendemiaire_, by the
+allied armies. This will put an end to the heart-burnings that have long
+existed on either side of the Rhine, and will serve to apply the sponge at
+once to a long score of national animosities.
+
+Our letters from the East are far from encouraging. The Pasha has had a
+severe sore-throat, and the disaffected have taken advantage of the
+circumstance. Ibrahim had spent the two last nights in the mountains, and
+was unfurling his standard, when our express left, in the very bosom of
+the desert. Mehemet Ali was still obstinate, and had dismissed his visier
+for impertinence. The whole of Servia is in a state of revolt, and the
+authorities have planted troops along the entire line, the whole of whom
+have gone over to the enemy. It is said there must be further concessions,
+and a new constitution is being drawn up; but it is not expected that any
+one will abide by it. Mehemet attempted to throw himself upon the rock of
+Nungab, with a tremendous force, but those about him wisely prevented him
+from doing so.
+
+We have received China (tea) papers to the 16th. There is nothing in them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+FANCIED FAIR.
+
+"The Duke of Wellington," says a correspondent of the _Times_, "left his
+umbrella behind him at a fancy fair, held for charitable purposes, between
+Twickenham and Teddington. On discovering it, Lady P. immediately said,
+'Who will give twenty guineas for the Duke's umbrella?' A purchaser was
+soon found; and when the fact was communicated to his Grace, he
+good-naturedly remarked, 'I'll soon supply you with umbrellas, if you can
+sell them with so much advantage to the charity.'" We trust his Grace's
+benevolent disposition will not induce him to carry this offer into
+execution. We should extremely regret to see the Hero of Waterloo in
+Leicester-square, of a rainy night, vending second-hand _parapluies_. The
+same charitable impulse will doubtlessly induce other fashionable hawkers
+at fancy fairs to pick his Grace's pockets. We are somewhat curious to
+know what a Wellington bandana would realise, especially were it the
+produce of some pretty lady P.'s petty larceny. "Charity," it is said,
+"covereth a multitude of sins." What must it do with an umbrella? We fear
+that Lady P. will some day figure in the "fashionable departures."
+
+[Illustration: FOR SYDNEY DIRECT.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PUNCH'S THEATRE.
+
+MARTINUZZI AS THE ACT DIRECTS.
+
+The production upon the stage of a tragedy "not intended for an acting
+play," as a broad travestie, is a novel and dangerous experiment--one,
+however, which the combined genius of the Dramatic Authors' Council has
+made, with the utmost success. The "Hungarian Daughter" was, under the
+title of "Martinuzzi," received, on its first appearance, with bursts of
+applause and convulsions of laughter!
+
+The plot of this piece our literary reviewer has expressed himself unable
+to unravel. We are in the same condition; all we can promise is some
+account of the scenes as they followed each other; of the characters, the
+sentiments, the poetry, and the rest of the fun.
+
+The play opens with an elderly gentleman, in a spangled dressing-gown, who
+commences business by telling us the time of day, poetically clapping a
+wig upon the sun, by saying, he
+
+ "Shakes day about, like perfume from his _hair_,"
+
+which statement bears out the after sentence, that "the wisdom he endures
+is terrible!" An Austrian gentleman--whose dress made us at first mistake
+him for Richard III. on his travels--arrives to inform the gentleman _en
+deshabille_--no other than _Cardinal Martinuzzi_ himself--that he has come
+from King Ferdinand, to ask if he will be so good as to give up some
+regency; which the Cardinal, however, respectfully declines doing. A
+gentleman from Warsaw is next announced, and _Castaldo_ retires, having
+incidentally declared a passion for the reigning queen of Hungary.
+
+Mr. Selby, as _Rupert_ from Warsaw, then appears, in a dress most
+correctly copied from the costume of the knave of clubs. Being a Pole, he
+stirs up the Cardinal vigorously enough to provoke some exceedingly
+intemperate language, chiefly by bringing to his memory a case of
+child-stealing, to which _Martinuzzi_ was, before he had quite sown his
+wild oats, _particeps criminis_. This case having got into the papers
+(which _Rupert_ had preserved), the Cardinal wants to obtain them, but
+offers a price not long enough for the Pole, who, declaring that
+_Martinuzzi_ carries it "too high" to be trusted with them, vanishes. Mr.
+Morley afterwards comes forward to sing a song according to Act of
+Parliament, and the scene changes for Miss Collect to comply, a second
+time, with the 25th of George II.
+
+In the following scene, the Queen Dowager of Hungary, _Isabella_,
+introduces herself to the audience, to inform them that the Austrian
+gentleman, _Castaldo_, is
+
+ "the mild,
+ Pity-fraught object of her fondness."
+
+He appears. She makes several inflammatory speeches, which he seems
+determined not to understand, for he is in love with the virgin queen; and
+maidens before dowagers is evidently his sensible motto.
+
+The second act opens with the queen junior stating her assurance, that if
+she lives much longer she will die, and that when she is quite dead, she
+will hate _Martinuzzi_[3]. As, however, she means to hate when she is
+deceased, she will make the most of her time while alive, by devoting
+herself to courtship and _Castaldo_: for a very tender love-scene ensues,
+at the end of which the lady elopes, to leave the lover a clear stage for
+some half-dozen minutes' ecstatics, appropriately ended by his arrest,
+ordered by _Martinuzzi_. Why, it is not stated, the officer not even
+producing the copy of a writ.
+
+ [3] "_Czerina._ When I am dead--which will be soon--I feel,
+ If I much longer on my throne remain,
+ I shall abhor the name of Martinuzzi."
+
+In the next scene, _Isabella_ is visited by _Rupert_, who disinterestedly
+presents the dowager with the papers for nothing, which he was before
+offered an odd castle and snug estate for, by _Martinuzzi_. This is
+accounted for on no other supposition, than the proverbial gallantry of
+gentlemen from Warsaw.
+
+_Martinuzzi_, possessing a ward whom he is anxious should wed the queen,
+opens the third act by declaring he will "precipitate the match," and so
+the author considerately sends _Czerina_ to him, to talk the matter over.
+But the young lady gets into a passion, and the Cardinal declares he can
+make nothing of her, in the following passage:--
+
+ "Fool! I can make thee nothing but a laugh."
+
+A sentiment to which the audience gave a most vociferous echo. The damsel
+is angry that she may not have the man she has chosen, and threatens to
+faint, but defers that operation till her lover's arms are near enough to
+receive her; which they happen to be just in time, for _Martinuzzi_
+retires and _Castaldo_ comes on. _Czerina_, to be quite sure, exclaims,
+"_Are_ these thy arms?" (_sic_) and finally faints in the lover's embrace,
+so as to exhibit a picturesque cuddle.
+
+_Queen Isabella_ is discovered, in the second scene of this act, perusing
+the much vaunted "papers" with intense interest. Unluckily _Castaldo_
+chooses that moment to complain, that _Martinuzzi_ will not let him marry
+her rival. The queen, being by no means a temperate person, and wondering
+at his impudence in telling _her_ such a tale, raves thus:--
+
+ "My soul's on fire I'm choked, and seem to perish;
+ _But will suppress my scream_"
+
+Probably for fear of compromising _Castaldo_, who is alone with her; and
+she ends the act by requesting the Austrian to murder _Martinuzzi_; to
+which he is so obliging as to consent, the more so, as an order comes from
+the Secretary of State for foreign affairs, of his own government, to "cut
+off" (_sic_) the Regent.
+
+The fourth act is enlivened by a masquerade and a murder. The gentleman
+from Warsaw having abused the hospitality of his host by getting drunk, is
+punished by one of _Martinuzzi's_ attendants with a mortal stab; and
+having, in the agonies of death, made a careful survey of all the sofas in
+the apartment, suits himself with the softest, and dies in great comfort.
+
+After this, the masquerade proceeds with spirit. _Isabella_ mixes in the
+festive scene, disguised in a domino, made of black sticking-plaster.
+_Czerina_ overhears that she is a usurper and a changeling, and expresses
+her surprise in a line most unblushingly stolen from Fitz-Ball and the
+other poetico-melo-dramatists:--
+
+ "Merciful Heavens! do my ears deceive me?"
+
+The festivities conclude with an altercation between _Martinuzzi_ and
+_Isabella_, carried on with much vigour on both sides. The lady accuses
+the gentleman of inebriation, and he owns the soft impeachment, fully
+bearing it out by several incoherent speeches.
+
+This was one of the most successful scenes in the comedy. The death of
+_Rupert_, Mr. Morley's song about "The sea," the quarrel (which was about
+the great pivot of the plot, "the papers," inscribed, says _Martinuzzi_,
+
+ "With ink that's _brew'd_ in the infernal Styx,")
+
+were all received with uproarious bursts of laughter.
+
+In the fifth act, we behold _Martinuzzi_ and the usurping young Queen
+making matters up at a railway pace. She has it all her own way. If she
+choose, she may marry _Castaldo_, retire into private life, be a
+"farm-house thrall," and keep a "dairy;" for which estate she has
+previously expressed a decided predilection[4].
+
+ [4] Acting play, published in the theatre, p. 32.
+
+But it is the next scene that the author seems to have reserved for
+putting forth his strongest powers of burlesque and broad humour.
+_Isabella_ and _Castaldo_ are together; the latter feels a little afraid
+to murder _Martinuzzi_, but is impelled to the deed by a thousand
+imaginary torches, which he fears will hurry his "_moth_-like soul" into
+their "blinding sun-beams," till it (the soul) is scorched "_into_
+cinders."
+
+_Castaldo_ appears, in truth, a very bad barber of murders; for, as he is
+rushing out to
+
+ "Strike the tyrant down--in crimson streams
+ Rend every nerve,"
+
+_Isabella_ has the shrewdness to discover that he is without a weapon.
+Important omission! The incipient assassin exclaims--
+
+ "Oh! that I had my sword!"
+
+but at that moment (clever, dramatic contrivance!)
+
+ [_Enter_ CZERINA, _with a drawn sword_.]
+ "CZERINA. There's one! Thine own!"
+
+Far from being grateful for this opportune supply of ways and means for
+murder. _Castaldo_ calls the bilbo a "fated aspic," upon the edge of which
+his "eye-balls crack to look," and makes a raving exit from the stage, to
+a roaring laugh from the audience.
+
+It is quite clear to _Isabella_, from his extreme carelessness about his
+tools, that _Castaldo_ is not safely to be trusted with a job which
+requires so much tact and business-like exactitude as the capital offence.
+She therefore "_shows a phial_," which she intends, "occasion suiting,"
+for "_Martinuzzi's_ bane;" thereby hinting that, if _Castaldo_ fail with
+his steel medicine, she is ready with a surer potion.
+
+The next scene, being the last, was ushered in with acclamations. The
+stage, as is always in that case made and provided, was full. There is a
+young gentleman on a throne, and _Czerina_ beside it, having been somehow
+ungallantly deposed. _Martinuzzi_ expresses a wish to drink somebody's
+health, and this being the "fitting opportunity" mentioned by the author
+in the scene preceeding, _Isabella_ empties the phial of her wrath into
+the beverage, and the _Cardinal_ quenches his thirst with a most
+intemperate draught. It is now duly announced, that _Castaldo_ is, "with
+naked sword, approaching." That gentleman appears, and makes a speech long
+enough for any man who has had such plain warning of what is to
+happen--even a cardinal encumbered with a spangled dressing-gown--to get a
+mile out of his way. The speech quite ended, he goes to work, and with
+"this from King Ferdinand," thrusts at _Martinuzzi_. _Czerina_, however,
+throws herself, with great skill, on the point of the sword, and dies.
+Another long harangue from _Castaldo_--which, as he is evidently
+broken-winded from exertion, is pronounced in tiny snatches--and he dies
+with a "ha!" for want--like many greater men--of breath.
+
+Meanwhile, the poison makes _Martinuzzi_ exceedingly uncomfortable in the
+stomachic regions. He is quite sure
+
+ "That hath been done to me which sends me _star_-ward!"
+
+but in his progress thither he evidently loses his way; for he ends the
+play by inquiring--
+
+ "WHERE IS THE WORLD?"
+
+The sublimity of which query is manifestly insisted on by the author, by
+his having it printed in capitals.
+
+When the curtain fell, there arose an uproarious shout for the author; but
+instead of "the mantle of the Elizabethan poets," which, it has been said,
+he commonly wears, the most attractive garment that met the view was an
+expansive white waistcoat. This latter exhibition concluded the
+entertainments, strictly so called; for though a farce followed, it turned
+out a terrible bore.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONCERTS D'ETE.
+
+If the advance of musical science is to be effected by indecent _tableaux
+vivans_--by rattling peas against sieves, and putting out the lights
+(appropriately enough) when Beethoven is being murdered--by the most
+contemptible class of compositions that ever was put upon score-paper, and
+noised forth from an ill-disciplined band--if these be the means towards
+improving musical taste, Monsieur Jullien is undoubtedly the harmonic
+regenerator of this country. He is a great man--great in his own
+estimation--great to the ends of his moustachios and the tips of his
+gloves--a great composer, and a great charlatan--_ex. gr._:--
+
+The overture to the promenade concerts usually consists of a pantomime
+entirely new to an English audience. Monsieur Jullien having made his
+appearance in the orchestra, seats himself in a conspicuous situation, to
+indulge the ladies with the most favourable view of his elegant person,
+and the splendid gold-chainery which is spread all over his magnificent
+waistcoat. A servant in livery then appears, and presents him with a pair
+of white kid gloves. The illustrious conductor, having taken some time to
+thrust them upon a very large and red hand, leisurely takes up his baton,
+rises, grins upon the expectant musicians, lifts his arm, and--the first
+chord is struck!
+
+Quadrilles are the staple of the evening--those composed by Monsieur
+Jullien always, of course, claiming precedence and preference. These are
+usually interspersed with solos on the flageolet, to contrast with
+_obligati_ for the ophecleido; the drummers--side, long, and double--are
+seldom inactive; the trombones and trumpets have no sinecure, and there is
+always a great mortality amongst the fiddle-strings. Eight bars of
+impossible variation is sure to be succeeded by sixteen of the deafening
+fanfare of trumpets, combined with smashing cymbalism, and dreadful
+drumming.
+
+The public have a taste for headaches, and Jullien has imported a capital
+recipe for creating them; they applaud--he bows; and musical taste
+goes--in compliment to the ex-waiter's genuine profession of man-cook--to
+_pot_.
+
+But the _ci-devant cuisinier_ is not content with comparatively harmless,
+plain-sailing humbug; he must add some _sauce piquante_ to his musical
+hashes. He cannot rest with merely stunning English ears, but must shock
+our morals, At the _bals masques_, the French dancers, and the hardly
+mentionable _cancan_, were hooted back to their native stews under the
+Palais Royal; but he provides substitutes for them in the _tableaux
+vivans_ now exhibiting. This, because a more insidious, is a safer
+introduction. The living figures are dressed to imitate plaster-of-Paris,
+and are so arranged as to form groups, called in the bills "classical;"
+but for which it would be difficult to find originals. In short, the whole
+thing is a feeler thrown out to see how far French impudence and French
+epicureanism in vice may carry themselves. It shall not be our fault if
+they do not experience an ignominious downfall, and beat a speedy retreat,
+to the tune of the "Rogue's March," arranged as a quadrille!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MADAME TUSSAUD'S,
+
+THE REAL TEMPLE OF FAME.
+
+ "Some men are born to greatness, some men achieve greatness, and
+ some have greatness thrust upon them."--SHAKSPEARE.
+
+Reader, should you doubt the above assertion, in the true showman
+phraseology, just "Walk up! walk up!" to Madame Tussaud's, the real Temple
+of Fame, and let such doubts vanish for ever; convince yourselves that the
+mighty attribute not more survives from good than evil deeds, though, like
+poverty, it makes its votaries acquainted with the strangest of strange
+bedfellows! The regal ermine and the murderer's fustian alike obtain their
+enviable niche.
+
+The likeness of departed majesty, robed in the matchless splendour of a
+ruler's state, redolent with all the mimic glories of a king's insignia,
+the modelled puppet from the senseless clay, that wore in life the
+imperial purple, and moved a breathing thing, chief actor in its childish
+mummeries, may here be seen shining in tinselled pomp, in glittering
+contrast to the blood-stained shirt through which the dagger of Ravaillac
+reached the bosom of the murdered Henry.
+
+The "Real Robes" of the dead George give value to his waxen image! The
+heart's-blood of the slaughtered Henry immortalises the linen bearing its
+hideous stain. The daring leader of France's countless hosts--the
+wholesale slaughterer of unnumbered thousands--ambition's mightiest
+son--now ruling kingdoms and now ruled by one--once more than king--in
+death the captive of his hated foes--"the great Napoleon!" shares the
+small space with the enshrined Fieschi!
+
+The glorious triumphs of the mighty Wellington are here no better
+passports than the foul murders of the atrocious Burke; the subtle
+Talleyrand, the deep deviser of political schemes, ruler of rulers, and
+master mover of the earth's great puppets, is not one jot superior to the
+Italian mountebank, whose well-skilled hand drew tones from catgut
+rivalling even the ideal trumpet of great Fame herself!
+
+By some strange anomaly, _success_ and _failure_ alike render the
+candidates admissible--no matter the littleness of the source from whence
+they sprung. Lord Melbourne's "premiership" gave shape to the all but
+Promethean wax. The failure of John Frost, his humble follower, secured
+his right to Fame's posthumous honours. All partiality is _here_
+forgotten. The titled premier, in the haunts of men, may boast his
+monarch's palace as his home. The suffering felon, though _iron_ binds his
+limbs, and eats into his heart--though slow approaching, but sure-coming
+death, makes the broad world for him a living grave, _here_ he stands, as
+one among the great ones of the _show_! The amiability of Albert, that
+"excellent Prince," and therefore "_most_ excellent young man," is
+ingeniously contrasted with the vices of a Greenacre, and the villany of a
+_Hare_. The stern endurance and unflinching perseverance of the zealous
+and single-hearted Calvin is deprived of its exclusiveness by the more
+exciting and equally famous Sir William Courtenay (_alias_ Thom).
+
+The thrilling recollection of the "poet peer," and "peerless poet," the
+highly-imaginative and unrivalled Byron, whose flood of song, poured out
+in one continuous stream of varied passion-breathing fancy, is calmed by
+gazing on "dull life's antipodes," the bandaged remnant of a dried-up
+mummy!
+
+Poor Mary Stuart! the beautiful, the murdered Queen of Scots, is only
+parted from the "Maiden Queen," who sealed her doom, by the interposition
+of the blood-stained ruthless wretch (England's Eighth Harry), to whom
+"Bess" owed her birth!
+
+Pitt, Fox, and Canning are matched with Courvoisier, Gould, and Collins.
+
+Liston is _vis a vis_ to Joe Hume, while Louis Philippe but shares
+attention with the rivalling models of the Bastille and Guillotine!
+
+Verily, there is a moral in all this, "an we could but find it out."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol.
+1, September 5, 1841, by Various
+
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