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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 1,
+November 20, 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, November 20, 1841
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: February 7, 2005 [EBook #14937]
+
+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 NOVEMBER 20, 1841.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MYSELF, PUNCH, AND THE KEELEYS.
+
+I dined with my old friend and schoolfellow, Jack Withers, one day last
+September. On the previous morning, on my way to the India House, I had
+run up against a stout individual on Cornhill, and on looking in his face
+as I stopped for a moment to apologise, an abrupt "This is surely Jack
+Withers," burst from my lips, followed by--"God bless me! Will Bayfield!"
+from his. After a hurried question or two, we shook hands warmly and
+parted, with the understanding that I was to cut my mutton with him next
+day.
+
+Seventeen years had elapsed since Withers and I had seen or heard of each
+other. Having a good mercantile connexion, he had pitched upon commerce as
+his calling, and entered a counting-house in Idollane in the same year
+that I, a raw young surgeon, embarked for India to seek my fortune in the
+medical service of the East India Company.
+
+Things had gone well with honest Jack; from a long, thin, weazel of a
+youngster, he had become a burly ruddy-faced gentleman, with an aldermanic
+rotundity of paunch, which gave the world assurance that his ordinary fare
+by no means consisted of deaf nuts; he had already, as he told me,
+accumulated a very pretty independence, which was yearly increasing, and
+was, moreover, a snug bachelor, with a well-arranged residence in
+Finsbury-square; in short, it was evident that Jack was "a fellow with two
+coats and everything handsome about him."
+
+As for me, I was a verification of the adage about the rolling stone;
+having gathered a very small quantity of "moss," in the shape of worldly
+goods. I had spent sixteen years in marching and countermarching over the
+thirsty plains of the Carnatic, in medical charge of a native
+regiment--salivating Sepoys and blowing out with blue pills the
+officers--until the effects of a stiff jungle-fever, that nearly made me
+proprietor of a landed property measuring six feet by two, sent me back to
+England almost as poor as I had left it, and with an atrabilarious visage
+which took a two-months' course of Cheltenham water to scour into anything
+like a decent colour.
+
+Withers' dinner was in the best taste: viands excellent--wine superb;
+never did I sip racier Madeira, and the Champagne trickled down one's
+throat with the same facility that man is inclined to sin.
+
+The cloth drawn, we fell to discoursing about old times, things, persons,
+and places. Jack then told me how from junior clerk he had risen to become
+second partner in the firm to which he belonged; and I, in my turn,
+enlightened his mind with respect to Asiatic Cholera, Runjeet Sing,
+Ghuzni, tiger-shooting, and Shah Soojah.
+
+In this manner the evening slid pleasantly on. An array of six bottles,
+that before dinner had contained the juice of Oporto, stood empty on the
+sideboard. Jack wanted to draw another cork, which, however, I positively
+forbad, as I have through life made it a rule to avoid the slightest
+approach towards excess in tippling; so, after a modest brace of glasses
+of brandy-and-water, I shook hands with and left my friend about half-past
+nine, for I am an old-fashioned fellow, and love early hours, my usual
+time for turning in being ten.
+
+When I got into the street an unaccustomed spirit of gaiety at once took
+possession of me; my general feelings of benevolence and goodwill towards
+all mankind appeared to have received a sudden and marvellous increase. I
+seemed to tread on eider-down, and, cigar in mouth, strolled along
+Fleet-street and the Strand, towards my domicile in Half-Moon
+street--"nescio quid meditans nugarum"--sometimes humming the fag end of
+an Irish melody; anon stopping to stare in a print-shop window; and then I
+would trudge on, chewing the cud of sweet and bitter fancy as I conned
+over the various ups and downs that had chequered my life since Jack
+Withers and I were thoughtless lads together "a long time ago."
+
+In this mood I found myself standing before the New Strand Theatre, my
+attention having been arrested by the word PUNCH blazoned in large letters
+on a play-bill.
+
+"What can this mean?" quoth I to myself. "I know a publication called
+Punch very well, but I never heard of a performance so named. I'll go in
+and see it. Who knows but it may be an avatar[1] of the Editor of that
+illustrious periodical, who condescends to discard his dread incognito for
+the nonce, in order to exhibit himself, for one night only, to the eyes
+and understandings of admiring London."
+
+ [1] The Avatar we do not allow--the illustrious periodical we
+ do.--ED. OF PUNCH.
+
+In another minute I was seated in the boxes, and found a crowded audience
+in full enjoyment of the quiet waggery of Keeley, who was fooling them to
+the top of their bent, accoutred from top to toe as Mynheer Punch the
+Great, while his clever little wife--who, by the way, possesses, I think,
+more of the "vis comica" than any actress of the day--caused sides to
+shake and eyes to water by her naïve and humorous delineation of Mrs.
+Snozzle.
+
+The curtain had hardly fallen more than a couple of minutes, when a door
+behind me opened hastily, and a box-keeper thrusting in his head, called
+out--"Is there a medical man here?" "I am one," said I, getting up;
+"anything the matter?" "Come with me then, sir, if you please," said he;
+"a severe accident has just happened to Mrs. Keeley; a falling scene has
+struck her head, sir, and hurt her dreadfully."
+
+"Good heavens!" said I, much shocked; "I will come immediately."
+
+I followed the man to the stage door, and was ushered into a dressing-room
+with several people in it, where, extended on a sofa, lay the unfortunate
+lady, whom I had but a few minutes before seen full of life and spirits,
+delighting hundreds with her unrivalled humour and _espièglerie_,--there
+she lay, in the same fantastic dress she had worn on the stage, pale as
+death--a quantity of blood flowing from a fearful wound on her head, and
+uttering those low quick moans which are indicative of extreme suffering.
+
+Poor little Keeley stood beside the couch, holding her hand; he was still
+in full fig as _Polichinel_; and the grotesqueness of his attire
+contrasted strangely with the anguish depicted on his countenance. As I
+came forward, he slowly made way for me--looked in my face imploringly, as
+if to gather from its expression some gleam of hope, and then stood aside,
+in an attitude of profound dejection.
+
+Having felt the sufferer's pulse, I was about to turn her head gently, in
+order to examine the nature of the wound, when a hustling noise behind me
+causing me to turn round, to my infinite dismay, I perceived Mr. Keeley,
+having pushed the bystanders on one side, in the act of performing a kind
+of Punchean dance upon the floor, accompanying himself with the vigorous
+chuckling and crowing peculiar to the hero whose habiliments he wore. I
+was horror-stricken--conceiving that grief had suddenly turned his brain.
+
+All at once, he made a spring towards me, and, seizing my arm, thrust me
+into a corner of the room, where he held me fast, exclaiming--
+
+"Wretch! villain! restore me my wife--that talented woman your infernal
+arts have destroyed! You did for her!"
+
+"Mr. Keeley," said I, struggling to release myself from his grasp--"my
+dear sir, pray compose yourself."
+
+"Unhappy traitor!" he shouted, giving me an unmerciful tweak by the nose;
+"Look at her silver skin laced with her golden blood!--see, see! Oh, see!"
+
+This was rather too much, even from a man whose wits were astray. I began
+to lose patience, and was preparing to rid myself somewhat roughly of the
+madman's grasp, when a new phenomenon occurred.
+
+The patient on the sofa, whom I had judged well nigh moribund, and
+consequently incapable of any effort whatever, all at once sat up with a
+sudden jerk, and gave vent to a series of the most ear-piercing shrieks
+that ever assailed human tympanum.
+
+_"Oh! oh! Mon Dieu! je suis étouffée! levez-vous donc,
+monsieur--n'avez-vous pas honte!"_
+
+I started up--O misery!--I had fallen asleep, and my head, resting against
+a pillar, had slipped down, depositing itself upon the expansive bosom of
+a portly French dame in the next box, who seemed, by her vehement
+exclamations, to be quite shaken from the balance of her propriety by the
+unlooked-for burthen I had imposed upon her; whilst a _petit monsieur_
+poured forth a string of _sacres_ and _sapristies_ upon my devoted head
+with a volubility of utterance truly astonishing.
+
+I gazed about me with troubled and lack-lustre eye. Every lorgnette in the
+boxes was levelled at my miserable countenance; a sea of upturned and
+derisive faces grinned at me from the pit, and the gods in Olympus
+thundered from on high--"Turn him out; he's drunk!"
+
+This was the unkindest cut of all--thus publicly to be accused of
+intoxication, a vice of all others I have ever detested and eschewed.
+
+I cast one indignant glance around me, and left the theatre, lamenting the
+depravity of our nature, which is, alas! always ready to put the worst
+construction upon actions in themselves most innocent; for if I had gone
+to sleep in my own arm-chair, pray who would have accused me of inebriety?
+
+How I got home I know not. As I hurried through the streets, a legion of
+voices, in every variety of intonation, yelled in my ears--"Turn him
+out--he's drunk!" and when I woke in the middle of the night, tormented by
+a raging thirst (produced, I suppose, by the flurry of spirits I had
+undergone), I seemed to hear screams, groans, and hisses, above all which
+predominated loud and clear the malignant denunciation--"Turn him
+out--he's drunk!"
+
+Upon my subsequently mentioning the above adventure to Jack Withers, it
+will hardly be credited that this villain without shame at once roundly
+asserted that, when I left him on the afore-mentioned night, I was at
+least three sheets and three quarters in the wind; adding with
+praiseworthy candour, that he himself was so far gone as to be obliged, to
+the infinite scandal of his staid old housekeeper, to creep up stairs _à
+quatre pieds_, in order to gain his bedroom.
+
+Now this latter may be true enough, for it is probable that friend Jack
+freshened his nip a trifle after my departure, seeing that he was always
+something of a drunken knave. As for his calumnious and scandalous
+declaration, that _I_ was in the least degree tipsy, it is too ridiculous
+to be noticed. I scorn it with my heels--I was sober--sober, cool, and
+steady as the north star; and he that is inclined to question this solemn
+asseveration, let him send me his card; and if I don't drill a hole in his
+doublet before he's forty-eight hours older, then, as honest Slender has
+it, "I would I might never come in mine own great chamber again else."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"ARE YE SURE THE NEWS IS TRUE?"
+
+We learn from good authority that Lord TAMBOFF STANLEY, in answer to a
+deputation from Scotland, assured the gentlemen who waited upon him that
+"the subject of _emigration_ was under the serious consideration of Her
+Majesty's Ministers." We hope that those respectable gentlemen may soon
+resolve upon their departure--we care not "what clime they wander to, so
+not again to _this_;" or, as Shakspeare says, let them "stand not upon the
+order of their going, but GO." The country, we take it upon ourselves to
+say, will remember them when they are gone; they have left the nation too
+many weighty proofs of their regard to be forgotten in a
+hurry--Corruption, Starvation, and Taxation, and the National Debt by way
+of
+
+[Illustration: A HANDSOME LEG--I SEE (LEGACY).]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A DOSE OF CASTOR.
+
+Peter Borthwick, late of the Royal Surrey Nautical, having had the honour
+of "deep damnation" conferred upon his "taking off" the character of
+Prince Henry, upon that occasion, to appear in unison with the text of the
+Immortal Bard, "dressed" the part in a most elaborate "neck-or-nothing
+tile." Upon being expostulated with by the manager, he triumphantly
+referred to the description of the chivalrous Prince in which the narrator
+particularly states--
+
+[Illustration: I SAW YOUNG HARRY WITH HIS BEAVER ON.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CUTTING AT THE ROOT OF THE EVIL.
+
+"Good heavens, Sir Peter," said Hobler, confidentially, to our dearly
+beloved Alderman, "How could you have passed such a ridiculous sentence
+upon Jones, as to direct his hair to be cut off?" "All right, my dear
+Hobby," replied the sapient justice; "the fellow was found fighting in the
+streets, and I wanted to hinder him, at least for some time, from again
+
+[Illustration: COMING TO THE SCRATCH."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+TO PUNCH.
+
+We have received the following choice bit of poetic pathology from our old
+friend and jolly dog Toby, who, it seems, has taken to medicine. The dog,
+however, always had a great propensity to _bark_, owing doubtlessly to the
+strong _tincture_ of _canine_ there was in his constitution:--
+
+
+MY DEAR PUNCH,
+
+Nothing convinces me more of my treacherous memory than my not
+recollecting you at the memorable "New-boot Supper;" for I certainly must
+have been as long in that society as yourself. Be that as it may, you have
+induced me to scrape together a few reminiscences in an imperfect way,
+leaving to you, from your better recollection, to correct and flavour the
+specimen to the palate of your readers, who have, most deservedly, every
+reliance upon your good taste and moral tendency. I have in vain tried to
+meet with the music of "the good old days of Adam and Eve," consequently
+have lost the enjoyment of the chorus--"Sing hey, sing ho!" It would be
+too much to ask you to sing it, but perhaps you may too-te-too it in your
+next. May your good intentions to the would-be Æsculapius be attended with
+success.--I remain, dear Punch, your old friend,
+
+TOBY.
+
+
+ASCITES.
+
+ Abdomen swell'd, which fluctuates when struck upon the side, sirs;
+ Face pale and puff'd, and worse than that, with thirst and cough
+ beside, sirs;
+ Skin dry, and breathing difficult, and pains in epigastrium,
+ And watchfulness or partial sleep, with dreams would strike the
+ bravest dumb.
+ To cure--restore the balance of exhalants and absorbents,
+ With squill, blue-pill, and other means to soothe the patient's
+ torments.
+
+ GRINDER.
+
+ Sure this is not your climax, sir, to save from Davy's locker!
+
+ STUDENT.
+
+ Way, no,--I'd then with caution tap--when first I'd tied the knocker.
+ Sing hey! sing ho! if you cannot find a new plan,
+ In Puseyistic days like these, you'd better try a New-man.
+
+
+TYMPANITIS.
+
+ The swelling here is different--sonorous, tense, elastic;
+ On it you might a tattoo beat, with fingers or with a stick.
+ There's costiveness and atrophy, with features Hippocratic;
+ When these appear, there's much to fear, all safety is erratic.
+ Although a cordial laxative, mix'd up with some carminative,
+ Might be prescribed, with morphia, or hops, to keep the man alive;
+ Take care his diet's nutritive, avoiding food that's flatulent,
+ And each week let him have a dose of Punch from Mr. Bryant sent.
+ Sing hey! sing ho! &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ALARMING PROSPECTS FOR THE COUNTRY.
+
+It appears that no less than _one hundred and sixty-four_ Attorneys have
+given notice of their intention to practise in the Court of Queen's Bench;
+and _eleven_ of the fraternity have applied to be re-admitted Attorneys of
+the Court. We had no idea that such an alarming extension was about taking
+place in
+
+[Illustration: THE RIFLE CORPS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"ONE GOOD TURN DESERVES ANOTHER."
+
+ A poor man went to hang himself,
+ But treasure chanced to find;
+ He pocketed the miser's pelf
+ And left the rope behind.
+
+ His money gone, the miser hung
+ Himself in sheer despair:
+ Thus each the other's wants supplied,
+ And that was surely fair.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+We understand that Mr. Webster has solicited Sir Peter Laurie to make an
+early début at the Haymarket Theatre in the _Heir_ (hair) _at Law_.
+
+Madame Vestris has also endeavoured to prevail upon the civic mercy.
+Andrew to appear in the afterpiece of the _Rape of the Lock_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE HEIR OF APPLEBITE.
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+WHEREIN THE READER WILL FIND GREAT CAUSE FOR REJOICING.
+
+
+[Illustration: C]Conducive as Uncle Peter's suggestion might have been to
+the restoration of peace in the family of our hero, it was decided to be
+impracticable by several medical gentlemen, who were consulted upon the
+matter. After sundry scenes of maternal and grandmaternal distress,
+Agamemnon succeeded in obtaining the victory, and the heir was vaccinated
+accordingly with the most favourable result. The pustule rose, budded,
+blossomed, and disappeared, exactly as it ought to have done, and a few
+days saw the health of the infant Applebite insured in the office of Dr.
+Jenner.
+
+Scarcely had the anxious parents been relieved by this auspicious
+termination, when that painful disorder which renders pork unwholesome and
+children fractious, made its appearance. Had we the plague-pen of the
+romancist of Rookwood, we would revel in the detail of this domesticated
+pestilence--we would picture the little sufferer in the hour of its
+agony--and be as minute as Mr. Hume in our calculations of its feverish
+pulsations; but our quill was moulted by the dove, not plucked from the
+wing of the carrion raven.
+
+And now, gentle reader, we come to a point of this history which we are
+assured has been anxiously looked forward to by you--a point at which the
+reader, already breathless with expectation, has fondly anticipated being
+suffocated with excitement. We may, without vanity, lay claim to
+originality, for we have introduced a new hero into the world of
+fiction--a baby three months old--we have traced his happy parents from
+the ball-room to St. George's church; from St. George's church to the
+ball-room; thence to the doctor's; and from thence to
+
+THE END.
+
+Reproach us not, mamas?--Discard us not, ye blushing divinities who have,
+with your sex's softness, dandled the heir of Applebite in your
+imaginations!--Wait!--Wait till we have explained! We have a motive; but
+as we are novices in this style of literature, we will avail ourselves, at
+our leave-taking, of the valedictory address of one who is more "up to the
+swindle."
+
+
+_To the Readers of the Heir of Applebite._
+
+DEAR FRIENDS,--Having finished the infanto-biography upon which we have
+been engaged, it is our design to cut off our heir, and bring our tale to
+a close. You may want to know why--or if you don't, we will tell you.
+
+We should not regard the anxiety, the close confinement, or the constant
+attention inseparable from a nursery, did we feel that the result was
+agreeable to you. But we have not done so. We have been strongly tempted
+to think, that after waiting from week to week, you have never arrived at
+anything interesting. We could not bear this jerking of our conscience,
+which was no sooner ended than begun again.
+
+Most "passages in a tale of _any length_ depend materially for the
+interest on the intimate relation they bear to what has gone before, or
+what is to follow." We sometimes found it difficult to accomplish this.
+
+Considerations of immediate profit ought, in such cases, to be of
+secondary importance; but, for the reasons we have just mentioned, we have
+(after some pains to resist the temptation) determined to abandon this
+_scheme_ of publication.
+
+Taking advantage of the respite which the close of this work will afford
+us, we have decided in January next to rent a second floor at Kentish
+Town.
+
+The pleasure we anticipate from the realisation of a wish we have long
+entertained and long hoped to gratify, is subdued by the reflection that
+we shall find it somewhat difficult to emancipate our moveables from the
+thraldom of Mrs. Gibbons, our respected but over-particular landlady.
+
+To console the numerous readers of PUNCH, we have it in command to
+announce, that on Saturday, Nov. 27th, the first chapter of a series under
+the title of the "Puff Papers," appropriately illustrated, will be
+commenced, with a desire to supply the hiatus in periodical fiction,
+occasioned by the temporary seclusion of one of the most popular novelists
+of the day.
+
+Dear friends, farewell! Should we again desire to resume the pen, we trust
+at your hands we shall not have to encounter a
+
+[Illustration: DISPUTED RETURN.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE LAMBETH DEMOSTHENES.
+
+We are happy to find that Dr. Tully Cicero Burke Sheridan Grattan Charles
+Phillips Hobler Bedford has not been deterred by the late unsatisfactory
+termination to the "public meeting" called by him to address the Queen,
+from prosecuting his patriotic views for his own personal advantage. Dr.
+&c. Bedford has kindly furnished us with the report of a meeting called by
+himself, which consisted of himself, for the purpose of considering the
+propriety of petitioning the Throne to appoint himself to be
+medical-adviser-in-general to her Majesty, and vaccinator-in-particular to
+his little Highness the Prince of Wales.
+
+At 10 o'clock precisely Dr. &c. Bedford entered the little back parlour of
+his surgery, and advancing to the looking-glass over the mantel-piece,
+made a polite bow to the reflection of himself. After a few complimentary
+gestures had passed between them, Dr &c. Bedford hemmed twice, and in a
+very elegant speech proposed that "Doctor &c. Bedford _shoold_ take the
+_cheer_."
+
+Dr. &c. Bedford rose to second the proposition. Dr. &c. Bedford said, "Dr.
+&c. Bedford is a gentleman what I have had the honour of knowing on for
+many long ears. His medikel requirement are sich as ris a Narvey and a
+Nunter to the summut of the temples of Fame. His political requisitions
+are summarily extinguished. It is, therefore, with no common pride that I
+second this abomination."
+
+Dr. &c. Bedford then bowed to his reflection in the glass, and proceeded
+to take his seat in his easy chair, thumping the table with one hand, and
+placing the other gracefully upon his breast, as though in token of
+gratitude for the honour conferred upon him.
+
+Order being restored, Dr. &c. Bedford rose and said,--
+
+"I never kotched myself in sich a sitchuation in my life--I mean not that
+I hasn't taken a cheer afore, perhaps carried one--but it never has been
+my proud extinction to preside over such a meeting--so numerous in its
+numbers and suspectable in its appearance. My friend, Dr. &c. Bedford,
+(_Hear, hear! from. Dr. &c. Bedford_,) his the hornament of natur in this
+19th cemetary. His prodigious outlays"--
+
+_Voice without_.--"Here they are, only a penny!"
+
+Dr. &c. Bedford.--"Order, order! His--his--you know what I mean that
+shoold distinguish the fisishun and the orator. I may say the Solus of
+orators,--renders him the most fittest and the most properest person to
+take care of the Royal health, and the Royal Infant Babby of these
+regions," (_Hear, hear! from Dr. &c. Bedford_.)
+
+The Doctor then proceeded to embody the foregoing observations into a
+resolution, which was proposed by Dr. &c. Bedford, and seconded by Dr. &c.
+Bedford, who having held up both his hands, declared it to be carried
+_nem. con._
+
+Dr. &c. Bedford then proposed a vote of thanks to Dr, &c. Bedford for his
+conduct in the chair. The meeting then dispersed, after Dr. &c. Bedford
+had returned thanks, and bowed to his own reflection in the looking-glass.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A LEGEND OF THE TOWER (NOT LONDON).
+
+In the immediate vicinity of the pretty little town of Kells stands one of
+those peculiar high round towers, the origin of which has so long puzzled
+the brains of antiquaries. It is invariably pointed out to the curious, as
+a fit subject for their contemplation, and may, in fact, be looked upon as
+the great local lion of the place. It appears almost inaccessible. But
+there is a story extant, and told in very choice Irish, how two small
+dare-devil urchins did succeed in reaching its lofty summit; and this is
+the way the legend was done into English by one Barney Riley, the
+narrator, to whom I am indebted for its knowledge:--
+
+"You see Masther Robert, sir,--though its murduring high, and almost
+entirely quite aqual in stapeness to the ould ancient Tower of Babel, yet,
+sir, there is them living now as have been at the top of that same; be the
+same token I knew both o' the spalpeens myself. It's grown up they are
+now; but whin they wint daws'-nesting to the top there, the little
+blackguards weren't above knee-high, if so much."
+
+"But how did they arrive at the summit?"
+
+"That's the wonder of it! but sure nobody knows but themselves; but the
+scamps managed somehow or other to insart themselves in through one of
+them small loopholes--whin little Danny Carroll gave Tom Sheeney a leg up
+and a back, and Tom Sheeney hauled little Danny up after him by the scruff
+o' the neck; and so they wint squeedging and scrummaging on till, by dad,
+they was up at the tip-top in something less than no time; and the trouble
+was all they had a chance o' gettin for their pains; for, by the hokey,
+the daws' nest they had been bruising their shins, breaking their necks,
+and tearing their frieze breeches to tatters to reach, was on the outside
+o' the building, and about as hard to get at as truth, or marcy from a
+thafe of a tythe proctor.
+
+"'Hubbabboo,' says little Danny; 'we are on the wrong side now, as Pat
+Murphy's carroty wig was whin it came through his hat; what will we do, at
+all, at all?'
+
+"'Divil a know I know. It would make a parson swear after takin' tythe. Do
+you hear the vagabones? Oh, then musha, bad luck to your cawings; its
+impedence, and nothing but it, to be shouting out in defiance of us, you
+dirty bastes. Danny, lad, you're but a little thrifle of a gossoon;
+couldn't you squeedge yourself through one o' them holes?'
+
+"'What will I stand--or, for the matter o' that, as I'm by no manes
+particular,--sit upon, whin I git out--that is, if I can?'
+
+"'Look here, lad, hear a dacent word--it will be just the dandy thing for
+yes entirely; go to it with a will, and make yourself as small as a little
+cock elven, and thin we'll have our revenge upon them aggravation thaves.'
+How the puck he done it nobody knows; but by dad there was his little,
+ragged, red poll, followed by the whole of his small body, seen coming out
+o' that trap-loop there, that doesn't look much bigger than a
+button-hole--and thin sitting astride the ould bit of rotten timbers, and
+laffing like mad, was the tiny Masther Danny, robbing the nests, and
+shouting with joy as he pulled bird after bird from their nate little
+feather-beds. 'This is elegant,' says he; 'here's lashins of 'em.'
+
+"'How many have you,' says Tom Sheeney.
+
+"'Seven big uns--full fledged, wid feathers as black as the priest's
+breeches on a Good Friday's fast.'
+
+"'Seven is it?'
+
+"'It is.'
+
+"'Well, then, hand them in.'
+
+"'By no manes.'
+
+"'Why not?'
+
+"'Seein they're as well wid me as you.
+
+"'Give me my half then--that's your'--
+
+"'Aisy wid you; who's had the trouble and the chance of breaking his
+good-looking neck but me, Mr. Tim Sheeney.'
+
+"'Devil a care I care; I'll have four, or I'll know why.'
+
+"'That you'll soon do: I won't give 'em you.'
+
+"'Aint I holding the wood?'
+
+"'By coorse you are; but aint I sitting outside upon it, and by the same
+token unseating my best breeches.'
+
+"'I bid you take care; give me four.'
+
+"'Ha, ha! what a buck your granny was, Mistet Tim Sheeney; it's three
+you'll have, or none.'
+
+"'Then by the puck I'll let you go.'
+
+"'I defy you to do it, you murdering robber.'
+
+"'Do you! by dad; once more, give me four.'
+
+"'To blazes wid you; three or none.'
+
+"'Then there you go!'
+
+"And, worse luck, sure enough he did, and that at the devil's own pace.
+
+"At this moment I turned my eyes in horror to the Tower, and the height
+was awful."
+
+"Poor child,--of course he was killed upon the spot?"
+
+"There's the wonder; not a ha'porth o' harm did the vagabone take at all
+at all. He held on by the birds' legs like a little nagur; he was but a
+shimpeen of a chap, and what with the flapping of their wings and the soft
+place he fell upon, barring a little thrifle of stunning, and it may be a
+small matter of fright, he was as comfortable as any one could expect
+under the circumstances; but it would have done your heart good to see the
+little gossoon jump up, shake his feathers, and shout out at the top of
+his small voice, 'Tim Sheeney, you thief, you'd better have taken the
+three,--for d--n the daw do you get now!'" And so ends the Legend of the
+Round Tower.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+IRISH INTELLIGENCE.
+
+AWFUL STATE OF THE COUNTRY!
+
+(_From our own Correspondent._)
+
+We are at length enabled to inform the Public that we have, at a vast
+expense, completed our arrangements for the transmission of the earliest
+news from Ireland. We have just received the _Over-bog Mail_, which
+contains facts of a most interesting nature. We hasten to lay our
+sagacious correspondent's remarks before our readers:--
+
+
+_Bally-ha-ghadera, Tuesday Night_.
+
+PUNCH will appreciate my unwillingness to furnish him with intelligence
+which might in any way disturb the commercial relations between this and
+the sister island, more particularly at the _present crisis_, when the
+interests of that prosperous class, the London Baked Potatoe vendors, are
+so intimately connected, with the preservation of good feeling among the
+Tipperary growers. However, my duty to PUNCH and the public compel me to
+speak.--I do feel that we are on the eve of a great popular commotion.
+Every day's occurrences strengthen my conviction. Bally-ha-ghadera was
+this morning at sunrise disturbed by noises of the most appalling kind,
+forming a wild chorus, in which screams and bellowings seemed to vie for
+supremacy; indeed words cannot adequately describe this terrific
+disturbance. As I expected, the depraved Whig Journalist, with
+characteristic mental tortuosity, has asserted that the sounds proceeded
+from a rookery in the adjoining wood, aided by the braying of the
+turf-man's donkey. But an enlightened public will see through this paltry
+subterfuge. Rooks and donkeys! Pooh! There cannot be a doubt but that the
+noises were the preparatory war-whoops of this ferocious and sanguinary
+people. We believe the Whig editor to be the only _donkey_ in the case;
+that he may have been a ravin(g) at the time is also very probable.
+
+No later than yesterday the _Cloonakilty Express_ was stopped by a _band
+of young men_, who savagely ill-treated our courier, a youth of tender
+age, having attempted to stone him to death. Our courier is ready to swear
+that at the time of the attack the young men were busily engaged counting
+a _vast store of ammunition_, consisting of _round white clay balls_ baked
+to the hardness of bullets, and _evidently_ intended for _shooting with_.
+
+I have to call particular attention to the fact that a countryman was this
+day observed to buy a threepenny loaf, and on leaving the baker's to _tear
+it asunder and distribute the fragments with three confederates_!!! an act
+which I need not say was evidently symbolical of their desire to rend
+asunder the _Corn Laws_, and to divide the landed property amongst
+themselves. The action also appears analogous to the custom of breaking
+bread and swearing alliance on it, a practice still observed by the
+inhabitants of some remote regions of the Caucasus. I must again solemnly
+express my conviction that we are standing on a _slumbering_ VOLCANO; the
+thoughtless and unobservant may suppose not; probably because in the
+present tee-total state of society they see nothing of the CRATER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+TAKING A SIGHT AT THE FIRE.
+
+A man bearing the very inapplicable name of _Virtue_ was brought up at
+Lambeth-street last week, on the charge of having stolen a telescope from
+the Ordnance-office in the Tower on the morning of the fire. The prisoner
+pleaded that, being short-sighted, he took the glass to have a sight of
+the fire. The magistrate, however, _saw through_ this excuse very clearly;
+and as it was apparent that _Virtue_ had taken a _glass_ too much on the
+occasion, he was fully committed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+JOE HUME'S FORTHCOMING WORK.
+
+We have received the following note from an old and esteemed
+correspondent, who, we are rejoiced to find, has returned from a tour in
+Switzerland, where he has been engaged in a prodigious work connected with
+the statistics of that country.
+
+
+_Reform Club-house_.
+
+DEAR PUNCH,
+
+Knowing the interest you take in anything relating to the advancement of
+science, I beg to apprise you that I am about publishing a statistical
+work, in which I have made it perfectly clear that an immense saving in
+the article of ice alone might be made in England by importing that which
+lies waste upon Mont Blanc. I have also calculated to a fraction the
+number of pints of milk produced in the canton of Berne, distinguishing
+the quantity used in the making of cheese from that which has been
+consumed in the manufacture of butter--and specifying in every instance
+whether the milk has been yielded by cows or goats. There will be also a
+valuable appendix to the work, containing a correct list of all the inns
+on the road between Frankfort and Geneva, with a copy of the bill of fare
+at each, and the prices charged; together with the colour of the
+postilion's jacket, the age of the landlord and the weight of his wife,
+and the height in inches of the cook and chambermaid. To which will be
+added, "Ten Minutes' Advice" upon making one shilling go as far as two. If
+you can give me a three-halfpenny puff in your admired publication, you
+will confer a favour on
+
+Your sincere friend,
+
+JOE HUME.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE ROMANCE OF A TEACUP.
+
+
+SIP THE FIRST.
+
+ In England one man's mated to one woman,
+ To spend their days in holy matrimony--
+ In fact, I _have_ heard from one or two men,
+ That one wife in a house is one too many--
+ But, be this as it may, in China no man
+ Who can afford it shuts himself to any
+ Fix'd number, but is variously encumber'd
+ With better halves, from twenty to a hundred.
+
+ These to provide for in a pleasant way,
+ And, maybe, to avoid their chat and worry,
+ He shuts up in a harem night and day--
+ With them contriving all his cares to bury--
+ A point of policy which, I should say,
+ Sweetens the dose to men about to marry;
+ For, though a wife's a charming thing enough,
+ Yet, like all other blessings, _quantum suff_.
+
+ So to my tale: Te-pott the Multifarious
+ Was, once upon a time, a mandarin--
+ In personal appearance but precarious,
+ Being incorrigibly bald and thin--
+ But then so rich, through jobs and pensions various,
+ Obtain'd by voting with the party "in,"
+ That he maintain'd, in grace and honour too,
+ Sixty-five years, and spouses fifty-two.
+
+ Fifty-two wives! and still he went about
+ Peering below the maiden ladies' veils--
+ Indeed, it _was_ said (but there hangs a doubt
+ Of scandal on such gossip-whisper'd tales),
+ He had a good one still to single out--
+ For all his wives had tongues, and _some_ had nails--
+ And still he hoped, though fifty-twice deferr'd,
+ To find an angel in his fifty-third.
+
+ In China, mind, and such outlandish places,
+ A gentleman who wishes to be wed
+ Looks round about among the pretty faces,
+ Nor for a moment doubts they may be had
+ For asking; and if any of them "nay" says,
+ He has his remedy as soon as said--
+ For, when the bridegrooms disapprove what they do,
+ They teach them manners with the bastinado.
+
+ Near Te-pott's palace lived an old Chinese--
+ About as poor a man as could be known
+ In lands where guardians leave them to their ease,
+ Nor pen the poor up in bastilles of stone:
+ He got a livelihood by picking teas;
+ And of possessions worldly had but one--
+ But one--the which, the reader must be told,
+ Was a fair daughter seventeen years old.
+
+ She was a lovely little girl, and one
+ To charm the wits of both the high and _the_ low;
+ And Te-pott's ancient heart was lost and won
+ In less time than 'twould take my pen to tell how:
+ So, as he was quite an experienced son-
+ In-law, and, too, a very wily fellow,
+ To make Hy-son his friend was no hard matter, I
+ Ween, with that specific for parents--flattery.
+
+ But, when they two had settled all between
+ Themselves, and Te-pott thought that he had caught her,
+ He found how premature his hopes had been
+ Without the approbation of the daughter--
+ Who talk'd with voice so loud and wit so keen,
+ That he thought all his Mrs. T's had taught her;
+ And, finding he was in the way there rather,
+ He left her to be lectured by her father.
+
+ "Pray, what were women made for" (so she said,
+ Though Heaven forbid I join such tender saying),
+ "If they to be accounted are as dead,
+ And strangled if they ever are caught straying?
+ Tis well to give us diamonds for the head,
+ And silken gauds for festival arraying;
+ But where of dress or diamonds is the use
+ If we mayn't go and show them? that's the deuce!"
+
+ The father answer'd, much as fathers do
+ In cases of like nature here in Britain,
+ Where fathers seldom let fortunes slip through
+ Their fingers, when they think that they can get one;
+ He said a many things extremely true--
+ Proving that girls are fine things to be quit on,
+ And that, could she accommodate her views to it,
+ She would find marriage very nice when used to it.
+
+ Now, 'tis no task to talk a woman into
+ Love, or a dance, or into dressing fine--
+ No task, I've heard, to talk her into sin too;
+ But, somehow, reason don't seem in her line.
+ And so Miss Hy-son, spite of kith and kin too,
+ Persisting such a husband to decline--
+ The eager mandarin issued a warrant,
+ And got her apprehended by her parent.
+
+ Thus the poor girl was caught, for there was no
+ Appeal against so wealthy lover's fiat:
+ She must e'en be a wife of his, and so
+ She yielded him her hand demure and quiet;
+ For ladies seldom cry unless they know
+ There's somebody convenient to cry _at_--
+ And; though it is consoling, on reflection
+ Such fierce emotions ruin the complexion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE.
+
+Yesterday Paddy Green honoured that great artist William Hogarth Teniers
+Raphael Bunks, Esq., with a sitting for a likeness. The portrait, which
+will doubtless be an admirable one, is stated to be destined to adorn one
+of Mr. Catnach's ballads, namely, "The Monks of Old!" which Mr. P. Green,
+in most obliging manner, has allowed to appear.
+
+William Paul took a walk yesterday as far as Houndsditch, in company with
+Jeremiah Donovan. A pair of left-off unmentionables is confidently
+reported to be the cause of their visit in the "far East."
+
+The lady of Paddy Green, Esquire, on Wednesday last, with that kindness
+which has always distinguished her, caused to be distributed a platterful
+of trotter bones amongst the starving dogs of the neighbourhood.
+
+From information exclusively our own, and for whose correctness we would
+stake our hump, we learn that James Burke, the honoured member of the
+P.R., was seen to walk home on the night of Tuesday last with three fresh
+herrings on a twig. After supper, he consoled himself with a pint of
+fourpenny ale.
+
+Charles Mears yesterday took a ride in a Whitechapel omnibus. He alighted
+at Aldgate Pump, at which he took a draught of water from the ladle. He
+afterwards regaled on a couple of polonies and a penny loaf.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE UNKINDEST CUT OF ALL.
+
+Jones, the journeyman tailor who was charged before Sir Peter Laurie with
+being drunk and disorderly in Fleet-street, escaped the penalty of his
+frolic by an extraordinary whim of justice. The young schneider, it
+appears, sported a luxuriant crop of hair, the fashion of which not
+pleasing the fancy of the city Rhadamanthus, he remitted the fine on
+condition that the delinquent should instantly cut off the offending
+hairs. A barber being sent for, the operation was instantly performed; and
+Sir Peter, with a spirit of generosity only to be equalled by his
+_cutting_ humour, actually put his hand in his breeches-pocket and handed
+over to the official Figaro his fee of one shilling. The shorn tailor left
+the office protesting that Sir Peter had not treated him handsomely, as he
+had only consented to sacrifice his flowing locks, but that the Alderman
+had cabbaged his whiskers as well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A CELESTIAL CON.
+
+Why is wit like a Chinese lady's foot?--Because brevity is the _sole_ of
+it!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE PRINCE OF WALES.--HIS FUTURE TIMES.
+
+A private letter from Hanover states that, precisely at twelve minutes to
+eleven in the morning on the ninth of the present November, his Majesty
+King ERNEST was suddenly attacked by a violent fit of blue devils. All the
+court doctors were immediately summoned, and as immediately dismissed, by
+his Majesty, who sent for the Wizard of the North (recently appointed
+royal astrologer), to divine the mysterious cause of this so sudden
+melancholy. In a trice the mystery was solved--Queen Victoria "was happily
+delivered of a Prince!" His Majesty was immediately assisted to his
+chamber--put to bed--the curtains drawn--all the royal household ordered
+to wear list slippers--the one knocker to the palace was carefully tied
+up--and (on the departure of our courier) half a load of straw was already
+deposited beneath the window of the royal chamber. The sentinels on duty
+were prohibited from even sneezing, under pain of death, and all things in
+and about the palace, to use a bran new simile, were silent as the grave!
+
+"Whilst there was only the Princess Royal there were many hopes. There was
+hope from severe teething--hope from measles--hope from hooping-cough--but
+with the addition of a Prince of Wales, the hopes of Hanover are below
+par." But we pause. We will no further invade the sanctity of the sorrows
+of a king; merely observing, that what makes his Majesty very savage,
+makes hundreds of thousands of Englishmen mighty glad. There are now two
+cradles between the Crown of England and the White Horse of Hanover.
+
+We have a Prince of Wales! Whilst, however, England is throwing up its
+million caps in rapture at the advent, let it not be forgotten to whom we
+owe the royal baby. In the clamourousness of our joy the fact would have
+escaped us, had we not received a letter from Colonel SIBTHORP, who
+assures us that we owe a Prince of Wales entirely to the present cabinet;
+had the Whigs remained in office, the infant would inevitably have been a
+girl.
+
+For our own part--but we confess we are sometimes apt to look too soberly
+at things--we think her Majesty (may all good angels make her caudle!) is,
+inadvertently no doubt, treated in a questionable spirit of compliment by
+these uproarious rejoicings at the sex of the illustrious little boy, who
+has cast, if possible, a new dignity upon Lord Mayor's day, and made the
+very giants of Guildhall shoot up an inch taller at the compliment he has
+paid them of visiting the world on the ninth of November. In our playful
+enthusiasm, we have--that is, the public _We_--declared we must have a
+Prince of Wales--we should be dreadfully in the dumps if the child were
+not a Prince--the Queen must have a Prince--a bouncing Prince--and nothing
+but a Prince. Now might not an ill-natured Philosopher (but all
+philosophers are ill-natured) interpret these yearnings for masculine
+royalty as something like pensive regrets that the throne should ever be
+filled by the feminine sex? For own part we are perfectly satisfied that
+the Queen (may she live to see the Prince of Wales wrinkled and
+white-headed!) is a Queen, and think VICTORIA THE FIRST sounds quite as
+musically--has in it as full a note of promise--as if the regal name had
+run--GEORGE THE FIFTH! We think there is a positive want of gallantry at
+this unequivocally shouted preference of a Prince of Wales. Nevertheless,
+we are happy to say, the pretty, good-tempered Princess Royal (she is
+_not_ blind, as the Tories once averred; but then the Whigs were _in_)
+still laughs and chirrups as if nothing had happened. Nay, as a proof of
+the happy nature of the infant (we beg to say that the fact is copyright,
+as we purchased it of the reporter of _The Observer_), whilst, on the
+ninth instant, the chimes of St. Martin's were sounding merrily for the
+birth of the Prince, the Princess magnanimously shook her coral-bells in
+welcome of her dispossessing brother!
+
+Independently of the sensation made in the City by the new glory that has
+fallen upon the ninth of November (it is said that Sir PETER LAURIE has
+been so rapt by the auspicious coincidence, that he has done nothing since
+but talk and think of "the Prince of Wales"--that on Wednesday last he
+rebuked an infant beggar with, "I've nothing for you, _Prince of
+Wales_")--independently of the lustre flung upon the new Lord Mayor and
+the Lord Mayor just out--who will, it is said, both be caudle-cup
+baronets, the occasion has given birth to much deep philosophy on the part
+of our contemporaries--so deep, that there is no getting to the end of it,
+and has also revived much black-letter learning connected with the birth
+of every Prince of Wales, from the first to the last--and, therefore,
+certainly not least--new-comer.
+
+An hour or so after George the Fourth was born, we are told that the
+waggons containing the treasure of the _Hermione_, a Spanish galleon,
+captured off St. Vincent by three English frigates, entered St. James's
+street, escorted by cavalry and infantry, with trumpets sounding, the
+enemy's flags waving over the waggons, and the whole surrounded by an
+immense multitude of spectators. Now here, to the vulgar mind, was a happy
+augury of the future golden reign of the Royal baby. He comes upon the
+earth amid a shower of gold! The melodious chink of doubloons and pieces
+of eight echo his first infant wailings! What a theme for the gipsies of
+the press--the fortune-tellers of the time! At the present hour that baby
+sleeps the last sleep in St. George's chapel; and we have his public and
+his social history before us. What does experience--the experience bought
+and paid for by hard, hard cash--_now_ read in the "waggons of treasure,"
+groaning musically to the rocking-cradle of the callow infant? Simply, the
+babe of Queen Charlotte would be a very expensive babe indeed; and that
+the wealth of a Spanish galleon was all insufficient for the youngling's
+future wants.
+
+We have been favoured, among a series of pictures, with the following of
+George the Fourth, exhibited in his babyhood. We are told that "all
+persons _of fashion_ were admitted to see the Prince, under the following
+restrictions, viz.--that in passing through the apartment _they stepped
+with the greatest caution_, and did not offer to touch his Royal Highness.
+For the greater security in this respect, a part of the apartment was
+latticed off _in the Chinese manner_, to prevent curious persons from
+approaching too nearly."
+
+That lattice "in the Chinese manner" was a small yet fatal fore-shadowing
+of the Chinese Pavilion at Brighton--of that temple, worthy of Pekin,
+wherein the Royal infant of threescore was wont to enshrine himself, not
+from the desecrating touch of the world, but even from the eyes of a
+curious people, who, having paid some millions toward manufacturing the
+most finished gentleman in Europe, had now and then a wish--an unregarded
+wish--to look at their expensive handiwork.
+
+What different prognostics have we in the natal day of our present Prince
+of Wales! What rational hopes from many circumstances that beset him. The
+Royal infant, we are told, is suckled by a person "named Brough, formerly
+a _housemaid_ at Esher." From this very fact, will not the Royal child
+grow up with the consciousness that he owes his nourishment even to the
+very humblest of the people? Will he not suck in the humanising truth with
+his very milk?
+
+And then for the Spanish treasure--"hard food for Midas"--that threw its
+jaundiced glory about the cradle of George the Fourth; what is that to the
+promise of plenty, augured by the natal day of our present Prince? Comes
+he not on the ninth of November? Is not his advent glorified by the
+aromatic clouds of the Lord Mayor's kitchen?--Let every man, woman, and
+child possess themselves of a _Times_ newspaper of the 10th ult.; for
+there, in genial companionship with the chronicle of the birth of the
+Prince, is the luscious history of the Lord Mayor's dinner. We quit
+Buckingham Palace, our mind full of our dear little Queen, the Royal baby,
+Prince Albert--(who, as _The Standard_ informs us subsequently, bows
+"bare-headed" to the populace,)--the Archbishop of Canterbury, Doctor
+Locock, the Duke of Wellington, and the monthly nurse, and immediately
+fall upon the civic "general bill of fare,"--the real turtle at the City
+board.
+
+Oh, men of Paisley--good folks of Bolton--what promise for ye is here!
+Turkeys, capons, sirloins, asparagus, pheasants, pine-apples, Savoy cakes,
+Chantilly baskets, mince pies, preserved ginger, brandy cherries, a
+thousand luscious cakes that "the sense aches at!" What are all these
+gifts of plenty, but a glad promise that in the time of the "sweetest
+young Prince," that on the birth-day of that Prince just vouchsafed to us,
+all England will be a large Lord Mayor's table! Will it be possible for
+Englishmen to dissassociate in their minds the Prince of Wales and the
+Prince of good Fellows? And whereas the reigns of other potentates are
+signalised by bloodshed and war, the time of the Prince will be glorified
+by cooking and good cheer. His drum-sticks will be the drum-sticks of
+turkeys--his cannon, the popping of corks. In his day, even weavers shall
+know the taste of geese, and factory-children smack their lips at the
+gravy of the great sirloin. Join your glasses! brandish your
+carving-knives! cry welcome to the Prince of Wales! for he comes garnished
+with all the world's good things. He shall live in the hearts, and (what
+is more) in the stomachs of his people!
+
+Q.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PROPER PRECAUTION.
+
+Everybody is talking of the great impropriety that has been practised in
+keeping gunpowder within the Tower; and the papers are _blowing up_ the
+authorities with astounding violence for their alleged laxity.
+"Gunpowder," say the angry journalists, "ought only to be kept where there
+is no possibility of a spark getting to it."--We suggest the bottom of the
+Thames, as the only place where, in future, this precious preparation can
+be securely deposited.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: OLIVIA'S RETURN TO HER FRIENDS.
+
+"I ENTREAT, WOMAN, THAT MY WORDS MAY BE NOW MARKED, ONCE FOR ALL; I HAVE
+HERE BROUGHT YOU BACK A POOR DELUDED WANDERER; HER RETURN TO DUTY DEMANDS
+THE REVIVAL OF OUR TENDERNESS. THE KINDNESS OF HEAVEN IS PROMISED TO THE
+PENITENT, AND LET OURS BE DIRECTED BY THE EXAMPLE."
+
+_Vicar of Wakefield_, Chap. XXII.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE LONDON MEDICAL STUDENT.
+
+8.--OF THE EXAMINATION AT APOTHECARIES' HALL.
+
+
+[Illustration: T]The last task that devolves upon our student before he
+goes up to the Hall is to hunt up his testimonials of attendance to
+lectures and good moral conduct in his apprenticeship, together with his
+parochial certificate of age and baptism. The first of these is the chief
+point to obtain; the two last he generally writes himself, in the style
+best consonant with his own feelings and the date of his indenture. His
+"morality ticket" is as follows:--
+
+
+(Copy.)
+
+"I hereby certify, that during the period Mr. Joseph Muff served his time
+with me he especially recommended himself to my notice by his studious and
+attentive habits, highly moral and gentlemanly conduct, and excellent
+disposition. He always availed himself of every opportunity to improve his
+professional knowledge."
+
+(Signed)
+
+According to the name on the indenture.
+
+
+The certificate of attendance upon lectures is only obtained in its most
+approved state by much clever manoeuvring. It is important to bear in mind
+that a lecturer should never be asked whilst he is loitering about the
+school for his signature of the student's diligence. He may then have time
+to recollect his ignorance of his pupil's face at his discourses. He
+should always be caught flying--either immediately before or after his
+lecture--in order that the whole business may be too hurried to admit of
+investigation. In the space left for the degree of attention which the
+student has shown, it is better that he subscribes nothing at all than an
+indifferent report; because, in the former case, the student can fill it
+up to his own satisfaction. He usually prefers the phrase--"with
+unremitting diligence."
+
+And having arrived at this important section of our Physiology, it behoves
+us to publish, for the benefit of medical students in general, and those
+about to go up in particular, the following
+
+
+CODE OF INSTRUCTIONS
+
+TO BE OBSERVED BY THOSE PREPARING FOR EXAMINATION AT THE HALL.
+
+1. Previously to going up, take some pills and get your hair cut. This not
+only clears your faculties, but improves your appearance. The Court of
+Examiners dislike long hair.
+
+2. Do not drink too much stout before you go in, with the idea that it
+will give you pluck. It renders you very valiant for half an hour and then
+muddles your notions with indescribable confusion.
+
+3. Having arrived at the Hall, put your rings and chains in your pocket,
+and, if practicable, publish a pair of spectacles. This will endow you
+with a grave look.
+
+4. On taking your place at the table, if you wish to gain time, feign to
+be intensely frightened. One of the examiners will then rise to give you a
+tumbler of water, which you may, with good effect, rattle tremulously
+against your teeth when drinking. This may possibly lead them to excuse
+bad answers on the score of extreme nervous trepidation.
+
+5. Should things appear to be going against you, get up a hectic cough,
+which is easily imitated, and look acutely miserable, which you will
+probably do without trying.
+
+6. Endeavour to assume an off-hand manner of answering; and when you have
+stated any pathological fact--right or wrong--_stick to it_; if they
+want a case for example, invent one, "that happened when you were an
+apprentice in the country." This assumed confidence will sometimes bother
+them. We knew a student who once swore at the Hall, that he gave opium in
+a case of concussion of the brain, and that the patient never required
+anything else. It was true--he never did.
+
+7. Should you be fortunate enough to pass, go to your hospital next day
+and report your examination, describing it as the most extraordinary
+ordeal of deep-searching questions ever undergone. This will make the
+professors think well of you, and the new men deem yon little less than a
+mental Colossus. Say, also, "you were complimented by the Court." This
+advice is, however, scarcely necessary, as we never know a student pass
+who was not thus honoured--according to his own account.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All things being arranged to his satisfaction, he deposits his papers
+under the care of Mr. Sayer, and passes the interval before the fatal day
+much in the same state of mind as a condemned criminal. At last Thursday
+arrives, and at a quarter to four, any person who takes the trouble to
+station himself at the corner of Union-street will see various groups of
+three and four young men wending their way towards the portals of
+Apothecaries' Hall, consisting of students about to be examined,
+accompanied by friends who come down with them to keep up their spirits.
+They approach the door, and shake hands as they give and receive wishes of
+success. The wicket closes on the candidates, and their friends adjourn to
+the "Retail Establishment" opposite, to _go the odd man_ and pledge their
+anxious companions in dissector's diet-drink--_vulgo_, half-and-half.
+
+Leaving them to their libations, we follow our old friend Mr. Joseph Muff.
+He crosses the paved court-yard with the air of a man who had lost
+half-a-crown and found a halfpenny; and through the windows sees the
+assistants dispensing plums, pepper, and prescriptions, with provoking
+indifference. Turning to the left, he ascends a solemn-looking staircase,
+adorned with severe black figures in niches, who support lamps. On the top
+of the staircase he enters a room, wherein the partners of his misery are
+collected. It is a long narrow apartment, commonly known as "the
+funking-room," ornamented with a savage-looking fireplace at one end, and
+a huge surly chest at the other; with gloomy presses against the walls,
+containing dry mouldy books in harsh, repulsive bindings. The windows look
+into the court; and the glass is scored by diamond rings, and the shutters
+pencilled with names and sentences, which Mr. Muff regards with feelings
+similar to those he would experience in contemplating the inscriptions on
+the walls of a condemned cell. The very chairs in the room look
+overbearing and unpleasant; and the whole locality is invested with an
+overallishness of unanswerable questions and intricate botheration. Some
+of the students are marching up and down the room in feverish
+restlessness; others, arm in arm, are worrying each other to death with
+questions; and the rest are grinding away to the last minute at a manual,
+or trying to write minute atomic numbers on their thumb-nail.
+
+The clock strikes five, and Mr. Sayer enters the room, exclaiming--"Mr.
+Manhug, Mr. Jones, Mr. Saxby, and Mr. Collins." The four depart to the
+chamber of examination, where the medical inquisition awaits them, with
+every species of mental torture to screw their brains instead of their
+thumbs, and rack their intellects instead of their limbs,--the chair on
+which the unfortunate student is placed being far more uneasy than the
+tightest fitting "Scavenger's daughter" in the Tower of London. After an
+anxious hour, Mr. Jones returns, with a light bounding step to a joyous
+extempore air of his own composing: he has passed. In another twenty
+minutes Mr. Saxby walks fiercely in, calls for his hat, condemns the
+examiners _ad inferos_, swears he shall cut the profession, and marches
+away. He has been plucked; and Mr. Muff, who stands sixth on the list, is
+called on to make his appearance before the awful tribunal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+REGULARLY CALLED IN--AND BOWLED OUT.
+
+Dr. Demosthenes &c. &c. &c. &c. Bedford, who has lately broken out in a
+new place, has been accused by the lieges of the Borough of having acted
+in a most unprofessional manner; in short, with having lost his
+_patience_. He, Dr. Demosthenes &c. begs to state, the only surgical
+operation he ever attempted was most successful, notwithstanding it was
+the difficult one of amputating his "mahogany;" and he further adds, the
+only case he ever had is still in his hand, it being a most obstinate
+
+[Illustration: CARD CASE.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE PRINCE OF WALES.
+
+(_By the Observer's Own Correspondent._)
+
+Knowing the anxiety that will be felt on this subject, though we doubt if
+the future King can be called _a subject_ at all, we have collected the
+following exclusive particulars:--
+
+THE PRINCE'S TITLE.
+
+His Royal Highness will for the present go by the title of "Poppet,"
+affectionately conferred upon him by Mrs. Lilly at the moment of his
+birth. Poppet is a title of very great antiquity, and has from time
+immemorial been used as a mark of endearment towards a newly-born child in
+all genteel families. Lovey-Dovey has been spoken of; but it is not likely
+that His Royal Highness will assume the style and dignity of Lovey-Dovey
+for a considerable period.
+
+THE PRINCE'S INCOME.
+
+Considerable mistakes have been fallen into by some of our contemporaries
+on this important subject. What may be the present wishes of His Royal
+Highness it is impossible for any one to ascertain, for he is able to
+articulate nothing on this point with his little pipe; but the piper, we
+know, must be eventually paid. He becomes immediately entitled to all the
+loose halfpence in his mother's reticule, and sixpence a-week will be at
+once payable out of his father's estates at Saxe Gotha. The whole of the
+revenues attached to the Duchy of Cornwall are also his by the mere fact
+of his birth: but there is a difficulty as to his giving a receipt for the
+money, if it should be paid to him. It is believed, that on the meeting of
+Parliament a Bill will pass for granting peg-top money to His Royal
+Highness, and a lollipop allowance will be among the earliest estimates.
+
+THE PRINCE'S MILITARY RANK.
+
+The Prince of Wales is by birth at the head of all the _Infantry_ in the
+kingdom, and is Colonel in his own right of a regiment of tin soldiers.
+
+THE PRINCE'S WARDROBE.
+
+The Prince falls at once into all the long frocks that are required, and
+has an estate tail in six dozen napkins.
+
+THE PRINCE'S EDUCATION.
+
+This important matter will be confined at present to teaching His Royal
+Highness how to take his pap without spilling it. A professor from the
+pap-al states will, it is expected, be entrusted with this branch of the
+royal economy.
+
+THE PRINCE'S WET-NURSE.
+
+Our contemporaries are wrong in stating that the individual to whom the
+post of wet-nurse has been assigned is nothing but a housemaid. We have
+full authority to state that she is no maid at all, but a respectable
+married woman.
+
+THE PRINCE'S HONOURS.
+
+His Royal Highness has not yet been created a Knight of the Garter, though
+Sir James Clark insisted on his being admitted to the Bath, against which
+ceremony the infant Prince entered a vociferous protest.
+
+The whole of the above particulars may be relied on as having been
+furnished from the very highest authority.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A BARROWKNIGHT.
+
+SIR WILLOUGHBY COTTON, during his visit to the Mansion-House Feast, in a
+moment of forgetfulness after the song of "Hurrah for the Road," being
+asked to take wine with the new Lord Mayor, declined the honour in the
+genuine long-stage phraseology, declaring he had already whacked his fare,
+and was quite
+
+[Illustration: FULL INSIDE.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MAGISTERIAL AXIOMS.
+
+VIDE POLICE REPORTS.
+
+An Irishman will _swear anything_.--_Mr. Grove_.
+
+A man who wears long hair is _capable of anything_.--_Sir Peter Laurie_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE ROYAL BULLETINS.
+
+The documents lately shown at Buckingham Palace are spurious, and the real
+ones have been suppressed from party motives, which we shall not allude
+to. The following are genuine; they relate only to the Prince, the
+convalescence of Her Majesty being, we are glad to say, so rapid as to
+require no official notice.
+
+_Half-past Twelve_.
+
+The Prince has sneezed, and it is believed has smiled, though the nurses
+are unable to pronounce whether the expression of pleasure arose from
+satisfaction or cholic.
+
+_Quarter past One_.
+
+The Prince has passed a comfortable minute, and is much easier.
+
+_Two O'Clock_.
+
+The Prince is fast asleep, and is more quiet.
+
+_Half-past Two_.
+
+The Prince has been shown to Sir Robert Peel, and was very fretful.
+
+_Three O'Clock_.
+
+Sir Robert Peel has left the Palace, and the Prince is again perfectly
+composed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DEVILLED DRUMSTICKS.
+
+Our own Sir Peter Laurie, upon witnessing the extraordinary performance of
+little Wieland in _Die Hexen am Rhein_, at the Adelphi Theatre, was so
+transported with his diabolic agility, that he determined upon
+endeavouring to arrive at the same perfection of pliability. As a guide
+for his undertaking, he instantly despatched old Hobler for a folio
+edition of
+
+[Illustration: IMPEY'S PRACTICE.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BRANDY AND WATERFORD. (A GO!)
+
+The Marquis of Waterford, upon his recent visit to Devonshire, was much
+struck with the peculiar notice upon the County Stretchers. Being
+overtaken by some of their extra-bottled apple-juice, he tested the truth
+of the statement, and found them literally "licensed to carry _one in
+cyder_" (_one insider_).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE WHEELS OF FORTUNE.
+
+SIR WYNDHAM ANSTRUTHER, whose "Young Rapid" connexion with the _Stage_ is
+pretty generally known, boasts that his stud was unrivalled for speed, as
+he managed with his four to "run through" his whole estates in six months,
+which he thinks a pretty decent proof that his might well be considered
+
+[Illustration: A FAST COACH.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SEEING NOTHING
+
+COMMISSIONER HARVEY and his old crony, Joe Hume, were talking lately of
+the wonders which the latter had seen in his travels--"You have been on
+Mont Blanc," said Whittle. "Certainly," replied the other. "And what did
+you see there?" "Why really," said Joe, "it is always so wrapped up in a
+double-milled fog, that there is nothing to be seen from it." "Nothing!"
+echoed he of the Blues; "I never knew till now why it was called Mount
+_Blank_." As this was the Commissioner's first attempt at a witticism, we
+forgive him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MORE FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE.
+
+(FROM OUR OWN ONE.)
+
+A marriage is on the _tapis_ between Mr. John Smith, the distinguished
+toll-collector at the Marsh Gate, and Miss Julia Belinda Snooks, the
+lovely and accomplished daughter of the gallant out-pensioner of Greenwich
+Hospital. Should the wedding take place, the bridegroom will be given away
+by Mr. Levy, the great toll-contractor; while the blushing bride will be
+attended to the altar by her mother-in-law, the well-known laundress of
+Tash-street. The _trousseau_, consisting of a selection from a bankrupt's
+stock of damaged _de laines_, has been purchased at Lambeth House; and a
+parasol carefully chosen from a lot of 500, all at one-and-ninepence, will
+be presented by the happy bridegroom on the morning of the marriage. A
+cabman has already been spoken to, and a shilling fare has been sketched
+out for the eventful morning, which is so arranged as to terminate at the
+toll-house, from which Mr. Smith can only be absent for about an hour,
+during which time the toll will be taken by an amateur of celebrity.
+
+Among the fashionables at the Bower Saloon, we observed Messrs. Jones and
+Brown, Mr. J. Jones, Mr. H. Jones, Mr. M. Brown, Mr. K. Brown, and several
+other distinguished leaders of the _ton_ in Stangate.
+
+There is no truth in the report that Tom Timkins intends resigning his
+seat at the apple-stall in the New Cut; and the rumours of a successor are
+therefore premature and indelicate.
+
+The vacant crossing opposite the Victoria has not been offered to Bill
+Swivel, nor is it intended that any one shall be appointed to the post in
+the Circus.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONS. WORTH CONNING.
+
+Why is the making a _mem._ of the number of a person's residence like a
+general election?--Because it's done to re-member _the house_.
+
+Why is Count D'Orsay a capital piece of furniture for a kitchen?--Because
+he's a _good dresser_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MORBID SYMPATHY FOR CRIMINALS.
+
+Our contemporary, the _Times_, for the last few days has been very justly
+deprecating the existing morbid sympathy for criminals. The moment that a
+man sins against the conventionalities of society he ought certainly to be
+excluded from all claims upon the sympathy of his fellows. It is very true
+that even the felon has kindred, parents, wife, children--for whom, and in
+whom, God has implanted an instinctive love. It is true that the criminal
+may have been led by the example of aristocratic sinners to disregard the
+injunctions of revealed religion against the adulterer, the gamester, and
+the drunkard; and having imitated the "pleasant follies" of the great
+without possessing the requisite means for such enjoyments, the man of
+pleasure has degenerated into the man of crime. It is true that the poor
+and ignorant may have claims upon the wealth and the intelligence of the
+rich and learned; but are we to pause to inquire whether want may have
+driven the destitute to theft, or the absence of early instruction have
+left the physical desires of the offender's nature superior to its moral
+restrictions.--Certainly not, whilst we have a gallows. There is, however,
+one difficulty which seems to interfere with a liberal exercise of the
+rope and the beam. Where are we to find executioners? for if "whoso
+sheddeth man's blood" be amenable to man, surely Jack Ketch is not to be
+exempted.
+
+The _Times_ condemns the late Lord Chamberlain for allowing the
+representation of "Jack Sheppard" and "Madame Laffarge" at the Adelphi; so
+do we. The _Times_ intimates, that "the newspapers teem with details about
+everything which such criminals 'as Dick Turpin and Jack Sheppard' say or
+do; that complete biographies of them are presented to the public; that
+report after report expatiates upon every refinement and peculiarity in
+their wickedness," for "the good purpose" of warning the embryo
+highwayman. We are something more than _duberous_ of this. We can see no
+difference between the exhibition of the stage and the gloating of the
+broadsheet; they are both "the agents by which the exploits of the gay
+highwayman are realised before his eyes, amid a brilliant and evidently
+sympathising" public. We deprecate both, as tending to excite the
+weak-minded to gratify "the ambition of this kind of notoriety;"--and yet
+we say, with the _Times_, there should be "no sympathy for criminals."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE MALE DALILAH.
+
+Sir Peter Laurie's aversion to long locks is accounted for by his change
+of political opinions, he having some time since _cut the W(h)igs_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A "PUNCH" TESTIMONIAL.
+
+We are virtuously happy to announce that a meeting has been held at the
+_Hum_-mums Hotel, Colonel Sibthorp in the chair, for the purpose of
+presenting to PUNCH some testimonial of public esteem for his exertions in
+the detection and exposure of fraudulent wits and would-be distinguished
+characters.
+
+COLONEL SIBTHORP thanked the meeting for the honour they had conferred
+upon him in electing him their chairman upon this occasion. None knew
+better than himself the service that PUNCH had rendered to the public. But
+for that fun fed individual his (Col. Sibthorp's) own brilliant effusions
+would have been left to have smouldered in his brain, or have hung like
+cobwebs about the House of Commons. (_Hear, hear_!) But PUNCH had stepped
+in to the rescue; he had not only preserved some of the brilliant things
+that he (Col. Sibthorp) had said, but had also reported many of the
+extremely original witticisms that he had intended to have uttered.
+(_Hear_!) There were many honourable gentlemen--(he begged
+pardon--gentlemen, he meant, without the honourable; but he had been so
+long a member of parliament that he had acquired a habit of calling men
+and things out of their proper names). Apologising for so lengthy a
+parenthesis, he would say that there were many gentlemen who were equally
+indebted (_hear! from Sir Peter Laurie, Peter Borthwick, and Pre-Adam
+Roebuck_) to this jocular benefactor. "It was PUNCH," said the gallant
+gentleman, with much feeling, "who first convinced me that the popular
+opinion of my asinine capabilities was erroneous. It was PUNCH who
+discovered that there was as much in my head as on it(_loud cheers,
+produced doubtlessly by the aptness of the simile, the gallant Colonel
+being perfectly bald_). I should, therefore, be the most ungrateful of
+Members for Lincoln, did I not entreat of this meeting to mark their high
+sense of Mr. PUNCH'S exertions by a liberal subscription" (_cheers_).
+
+SIR PETER LAURIE acknowledged himself equally in debt with their gallant
+Chairman to the object of the present meeting. He (Sir Peter) had tried
+all schemes to obtain popularity--he had made speeches without number or
+meaning--he had done double duty at the Mansion-house, and had made Mr.
+Hobler laugh more heartily than any Lord Mayor or Alderman since the days
+of Whittington (during whose mayoralty the venerable Chief Clerk first
+took office)--he (Sir P. Laurie) had, after much difficulty and four
+years' practice, received the Queen on horseback (_much cheering_); but
+(_continued cheering_)--but it was left for PUNCH to achieve his
+immortality (_immense cheering--several squares of glass in the
+conservatory opposite broken by the explosion_). He (Sir P. Laurie) had
+done all in his power to deserve the notice of that illustrious wooden
+individual. He had endeavoured to be much more ass--(_loud
+cheers_)--iduous than ever. PUNCH had rewarded him; and he therefore felt
+it his bounden duty to reward PUNCH. (_Hear! hear!_)
+
+MR. ROEBUCK fully concurred in the preceding eulogies. What had not PUNCH
+done for him? Had not PUNCH extinguished the _Times_ by the honest way in
+which he had advocated his (Roebuck's) injured genealogy? Had PUNCH not
+proved that he (Mr. Roebuck) had a father, which the "mendacious journal"
+had asserted was impossible? Had not PUNCH traced the Roebuck family as
+far back as 1801?--that was something! But he (Mr. Roebuck) believed that
+he had been injured by an error of the press, and that PUNCH had written
+the numerals 1081. Be that as it might, he (Mr. Roebuck) was anxious to
+discharge the overwhelming debt of gratitude which he owed to MR. PUNCH,
+and intended to subscribe very largely (_cheers_).
+
+MR. PETER BORTHWICK had been in former years a Shaksperian actor. He had
+for many seasons, at the "Royal Rugby Barn," had the honour of bearing the
+principal banners in all the imposing processions, "got up at an immense
+expense" in that unique establishment. (_Hear_!) He was, therefore, better
+qualified than any gentleman present to form an opinion of the services
+which Punch had rendered to the British Drama (_loud and continued cheers,
+during which Mr. Yates rushed on to the platform, and bowed several times
+to the assembled multitude_). Therefore, as a devoted admirer of that art
+which he (Peter) trusted HE and Shakspere had adorned (_cheers_), he
+fondly hoped that the meeting would at once take tickets, when he
+announced that the performance was for the benefit of Mr. PUNCH.
+
+LORD MORPETH next presented himself; but our reporter, having promised to
+take tea with his grandmother, left before the Noble Lord opened his
+mouth.
+
+We hope next week to furnish the remainder of the speeches, and a very
+long list of subscriptions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE RAPE OF THE LOCK-UP;
+
+OR, SIR PETER LAURIE ON CRIME AND THE CROPS.
+
+
+We believe no longing was ever more firmly planted in the human heart,
+than that of discovering some short cut to the high road of mental
+acquirement. The toilsome learner's "Progress" through the barren outset
+of the alphabet; the slough of despond of seven syllables, endangered as
+they both are by the frequent appearance of the compulsive birch of the
+Mr. Worldly-wisemen who teach the young idea how to shoot, must ever be
+looked upon as a probation, the power of avoiding which is "a consummation
+devoutly to be wished." Imbued with this feeling, the more speculative of
+past ages have frequently attempted to arrive, by external means, at the
+immediate possession of results otherwise requiring a long course of
+intense study and anxious inquiry. From these defunct illuminati
+originated the suppositionary virtues of the magically-endowed divining
+wand. The simple bending of a forked hazel twig, being the received sign
+of the deep-buried well, suited admirably with their notions of immediate
+information, and precluded the unpleasant and toilsome necessity for
+delving on speculation for the discovery of their desired object. But,
+alas, divining rods, like dogs, have had their day. The want of faith in
+the operators, or the growth of a new and obstinate assortment of hazel
+twigs, threw discredit on the mummery and the mummers. Still the passion
+existed; and in no case was it more observable than in that of the
+celebrated witch-finder. An actual presence at the demoniacal rites of the
+broom-riding sisterhood would have been attended with much danger and
+considerable difficulty; indeed, it has been asserted that the visitors,
+like those at Almack's, were expected to be balloted for, ticketed, and
+dressed in a manner suiting the occasion. Any infringement of these rules
+must have been at the proper peril of the contumacious infringer; and as
+it is more than probable some of the brooms carried double, there was a
+very decent chance of the intruder's discovering himself across one of the
+heavy-tailed and strong-backed breed, taking a trip to some distant
+bourne, from whence that compulsory aerial traveller would doubtless never
+have returned. Still witches were evils; and proof of evil is what the law
+seeks to enable evil's suppression. Now and again one of these short-cut
+gentry, by some railroad system of mental calculation, discovered certain
+external marks or moles that at a glance betrayed "the secret, dark, and
+midnight hags;" and the witch-finding process was instantaneously
+established. The outward and visible sign of their misdeeds authorised the
+further proceeding necessary for the clear proof of their delinquencies:
+thus the pinchings, beatings, starvings, trials, hangings, and burnings
+were made the goal of the shortest of all imaginable short cuts; and old
+women who had established pin manufactories in the stomachs of thousands,
+instead of receiving patents for their inventions, divided the honour of
+illuminating the land with the blazing tar-barrels provided for their
+peculiar use and benefit. Whether it was that aerial gambols on unsaddled
+and rough-backed broomsticks grew tiresome, or the small profit attending
+the vocation became smaller, or that all the elderly ladies with moles,
+and without anything else, were burnt up, we can't pretend to say; but
+certain it is, the art of witchcraft fell into disrepute. Corking,
+minikin, and all description of pins, were obliged to be made in the
+regular way; and cows even departed this world without the honour of the
+human immolations formerly considered the necessary sacrifice for the loss
+of their inestimable lives. Since the abovetimes Animal Magnetism and
+Mesmerism have followed in the wake of what has been; and now, just as
+despair, already poised upon its outstretched sable wings, was hovering
+for a brief moment previous to making its final swoop upon the External
+Doctrine, Peter--our Peter--Peter Laurie--the great, the glorious, the
+aldermanic Laurie--makes despair, like the Indian Juggler who swallowed
+himself, become the victim of its own insatiate maw.
+
+Our quill trembles as we proceed; it is unequal to the task. Oh, that we
+could write with the whole goose upon the wondrous merits of the wondrous
+Peter!
+
+We are better. That bumper has restored our nerve.
+
+Reader, fancy the gifted Peter seated in the dull dignity of civic
+magistracy: the court is thronged--a young delinquent blinks like an owl
+in sunshine 'neath the mighty flashing of his bench-lit eye. His crime,
+ay, what's his crime? it can't be much--so pale, so thin, so woe-begone!
+look, too, so tremulous of knee, and redolent of hair! what has he done?
+
+Here Roe interprets--"Please your worship, this young man, or tailor, has
+been assaulting several females with a blue bag and a pair of breeches."
+
+_Sir Peter_.--"I don't wonder at it; that man would do anything, I see it
+in his face, or rather in the back of his head, that's where the
+expression lies--look at his hair!"
+
+The whole court becomes a Cyclops--it has but one eye, and that is fixed
+upon the tailor's locks.
+
+"I say," resumes our Peter, "a man with that head of hair would do
+anything--pray, sir, do you wish to be taken for a German sausage, or a
+German student?--they're all the same, sir--speak at once."
+
+The faltering fraction denies the student, and repudiates the sausage.
+
+_Sir Peter_, still looking at the hair, from which external sign he
+evidently derived all his information--"You were drunk, sir."
+
+"I was," faltered the Samsonian schneider.
+
+"I know it, sir--you are fined five shillings, sir--but if you choose to
+submit to the deprivation of that iniquitous hair, which has brought you
+here, and which, I repeat, will make you do anything, I will remit the
+fine."
+
+A sigh, fine-drawn as the accidental rent in an unfinished skirt, escaped
+the hirsute stitcher: a melancholy reflection upon the infinite deal of
+nothing in his various pockets, and the slow revolving of the Brixton
+wheel in stern perspective, wrung from the quodded wretch a slow assent:
+Sir Peter sent a City officer with his warrant to secure the nearest
+barber: a few sharp clickings of the envious shears--and all was over!
+Crime fell from the shoulders of the quondam culprit, and the tonsorial
+innocent stood forth confessed!
+
+Sir Peter was entranced. That was his doing! He gazed with pride upon the
+new absolved from sin. He asked, "Are you not more comfortable?"
+
+All vice had gone, save one--the young man answered "Yes," and _lied_.
+
+"Then, sir, go home."
+
+"The barber," muttered "soft Roe" in as soft a voice.
+
+"What of him?"
+
+"Wants a shillin'."
+
+"There it is," exclaimed the Augustine Peter, "there, from my own pocket,
+paid with pleasure to preserve that youth from the evil influence of too
+much hair--I'll pay for all the City if they like--and banished suicide,
+and I'll pretty soon see if I can't settle all the City crops. Prisoner,
+you are discharged."
+
+The young man lost his hair, the Queen five shillings, and Sir Peter one;
+but then he gained his end,--and docking must henceforth be looked upon as
+the treadmill's antidote, and young man's fines' best friend. We therefore
+say, should the iniquity of your long locks, gentle reader, take you to
+the station (for, remember, Sir Peter says, _Long hair will do anything_),
+if you can't find bail, secure a barber, and command your liberation. We
+have been speculating of these externally-illustrated grades of crime; we
+think the following nearly correct:--
+
+The long and lank indicates larceny (petty and otherwise).
+
+The bushy and bountiful--burglary.
+
+The full and flowing--felony.
+
+The magnificent and mysterious--murder.
+
+And, for aught we know, pigtails--polygamy.
+
+For the future, a thinking man's motto will be, not to mind "his own eye,"
+but everybody else's hair.
+
+P.S. We have just received the following horrifying communication which
+establishes Sir Peter's opinion, "that a man with such hair would do
+anything," but unfortunately disproves the remedy, as those atrocities
+have been committed when he was without.
+
+Indignant at the loss of his head's glory, the evil-minded tailor,
+immediately upon leaving the court, sent for counsel's opinion as to
+whether he couldn't proceed against Sir Peter, under the act for "cutting
+and maiming, with intent to do him some grievous bodily harm." This, it
+appears he cannot do, inasmuch as these very learned gentlemen at the bar
+have decided, "the head" from which the hair was cut, and which, if any,
+is consequently the injured part, is not included in the meaning of the
+word _bodily_, as &c. &c. Foiled in this attempt, the monster, for the
+brutal gratification of his burning revenge, hit upon a scheme the most
+diabolical that human hair could conceive. He actually applied to the
+Society for the Suppression of _Cruelty to Animals_; and they, upon
+inspecting a portion of the dissevered locks, immediately took up the
+case, and are about to indict Sir Peter, Roe, and the barber, under one of
+the clauses of that tremendous act. If they proceed for penalties in
+individual cases, they must be immense, as the killed and wounded are
+beyond calculation,--not to mention all that the process has left
+homeless, foodless, and destitute.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BARBER-OUS ANNOUNCEMENT.
+
+We beg to inform our readers that Mr. Tanner, of Temple-bar and
+Shire-lane, whose salon extends from the city of London to the liberties
+of Westminster, has this day been appointed Hair-cutter Extraordinary to
+Sir Peter Laurie.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A NEW MILKY WAY.
+
+KIRCHOFF, a Prussian chemist, is reported to have discovered a process by
+which milk may be preserved for an indefinite period. Fresh milk is
+evaporated by a very gentle heat till it is reduced to a dry powder, which
+is to be kept perfectly dry in a bottle. When required for use it need
+only be diluted with a sufficient quantity of water. Mr. James Jones, who
+keeps a red cow--over his door--claims the original idea of making milk
+from a white powder, which, he states, may be done without the tedious
+process of evaporation, by using an article entirely known to London
+milk-vendors--namely _chalk_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+OH GEMINI!
+
+At the close of the Civic Festival last week, Sir William Follett inquired
+of the Recorder if he had seen his _Castor_. "No," replied Law (holding up
+the Attorney-General's fifty-seven penn'orth), "but here is your brother
+Pollock's" (_Pollux_.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"Well," said Sir Peter Hobler the other morning, "I should think you will
+be denied the _entrée_ to the Palace after your decision of Saturday."
+"Why so?" inquired the knight of leather. "For fear you should cut off the
+heir to the Throne!" screamed Hobler, and vanished.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol.
+1, November 20, 1841, by Various
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 1,
+November 20, 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, November 20, 1841
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: February 7, 2005 [EBook #14937]
+
+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" />
+<h2>NOVEMBER 20, 1841.</h2>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page217" name="page217"></a>[pg
+217]</span>
+<h2>MYSELF, PUNCH, AND THE KEELEYS.</h2>
+<p>I dined with my old friend and schoolfellow, Jack Withers, one
+day last September. On the previous morning, on my way to the India
+House, I had run up against a stout individual on Cornhill, and on
+looking in his face as I stopped for a moment to apologise, an
+abrupt &ldquo;This is surely Jack Withers,&rdquo; burst from my
+lips, followed by&mdash;&ldquo;God bless me! Will Bayfield!&rdquo;
+from his. After a hurried question or two, we shook hands warmly
+and parted, with the understanding that I was to cut my mutton with
+him next day.</p>
+<p>Seventeen years had elapsed since Withers and I had seen or
+heard of each other. Having a good mercantile connexion, he had
+pitched upon commerce as his calling, and entered a counting-house
+in Idollane in the same year that I, a raw young surgeon, embarked
+for India to seek my fortune in the medical service of the East
+India Company.</p>
+<p>Things had gone well with honest Jack; from a long, thin, weazel
+of a youngster, he had become a burly ruddy-faced gentleman, with
+an aldermanic rotundity of paunch, which gave the world assurance
+that his ordinary fare by no means consisted of deaf nuts; he had
+already, as he told me, accumulated a very pretty independence,
+which was yearly increasing, and was, moreover, a snug bachelor,
+with a well-arranged residence in Finsbury-square; in short, it was
+evident that Jack was &ldquo;a fellow with two coats and everything
+handsome about him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As for me, I was a verification of the adage about the rolling
+stone; having gathered a very small quantity of &ldquo;moss,&rdquo;
+in the shape of worldly goods. I had spent sixteen years in
+marching and countermarching over the thirsty plains of the
+Carnatic, in medical charge of a native regiment&mdash;salivating
+Sepoys and blowing out with blue pills the officers&mdash;until the
+effects of a stiff jungle-fever, that nearly made me proprietor of
+a landed property measuring six feet by two, sent me back to
+England almost as poor as I had left it, and with an atrabilarious
+visage which took a two-months&rsquo; course of Cheltenham water to
+scour into anything like a decent colour.</p>
+<p>Withers&rsquo; dinner was in the best taste: viands
+excellent&mdash;wine superb; never did I sip racier Madeira, and
+the Champagne trickled down one&rsquo;s throat with the same
+facility that man is inclined to sin.</p>
+<p>The cloth drawn, we fell to discoursing about old times, things,
+persons, and places. Jack then told me how from junior clerk he had
+risen to become second partner in the firm to which he belonged;
+and I, in my turn, enlightened his mind with respect to Asiatic
+Cholera, Runjeet Sing, Ghuzni, tiger-shooting, and Shah Soojah.</p>
+<p>In this manner the evening slid pleasantly on. An array of six
+bottles, that before dinner had contained the juice of Oporto,
+stood empty on the sideboard. Jack wanted to draw another cork,
+which, however, I positively forbad, as I have through life made it
+a rule to avoid the slightest approach towards excess in tippling;
+so, after a modest brace of glasses of brandy-and-water, I shook
+hands with and left my friend about half-past nine, for I am an
+old-fashioned fellow, and love early hours, my usual time for
+turning in being ten.</p>
+<p>When I got into the street an unaccustomed spirit of gaiety at
+once took possession of me; my general feelings of benevolence and
+goodwill towards all mankind appeared to have received a sudden and
+marvellous increase. I seemed to tread on eider-down, and, cigar in
+mouth, strolled along Fleet-street and the Strand, towards my
+domicile in Half-Moon street&mdash;&ldquo;nescio quid meditans
+nugarum&rdquo;&mdash;sometimes humming the fag end of an Irish
+melody; anon stopping to stare in a print-shop window; and then I
+would trudge on, chewing the cud of sweet and bitter fancy as I
+conned over the various ups and downs that had chequered my life
+since Jack Withers and I were thoughtless lads together &ldquo;a
+long time ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In this mood I found myself standing before the New Strand
+Theatre, my attention having been arrested by the word PUNCH
+blazoned in large letters on a play-bill.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What can this mean?&rdquo; quoth I to myself. &ldquo;I
+know a publication called Punch very well, but I never heard of a
+performance so named. I&rsquo;ll go in and see it. Who knows but it
+may be an avatar<sup>1</sup><span class="sidenote">1. The Avatar we
+do not allow&mdash;the illustrious periodical we do.&mdash;ED. OF
+PUNCH.</span> of the Editor of that illustrious periodical, who
+condescends to discard his dread incognito for the nonce, in order
+to exhibit himself, for one night only, to the eyes and
+understandings of admiring London.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In another minute I was seated in the boxes, and found a crowded
+audience in full enjoyment of the quiet waggery of Keeley, who was
+fooling them to the top of their bent, accoutred from top to toe as
+Mynheer Punch the Great, while his clever little wife&mdash;who, by
+the way, possesses, I think, more of the &ldquo;vis comica&rdquo;
+than any actress of the day&mdash;caused sides to shake and eyes to
+water by her na&iuml;ve and humorous delineation of Mrs.
+Snozzle.</p>
+<p>The curtain had hardly fallen more than a couple of minutes,
+when a door behind me opened hastily, and a box-keeper thrusting in
+his head, called out&mdash;&ldquo;Is there a medical man
+here?&rdquo; &ldquo;I am one,&rdquo; said I, getting up;
+&ldquo;anything the matter?&rdquo; &ldquo;Come with me then, sir,
+if you please,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;a severe accident has just
+happened to Mrs. Keeley; a falling scene has struck her head, sir,
+and hurt her dreadfully.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good heavens!&rdquo; said I, much shocked; &ldquo;I will
+come immediately.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I followed the man to the stage door, and was ushered into a
+dressing-room with several people in it, where, extended on a sofa,
+lay the unfortunate lady, whom I had but a few minutes before seen
+full of life and spirits, delighting hundreds with her unrivalled
+humour and <em>espi&egrave;glerie</em>,&mdash;there she lay, in the
+same fantastic dress she had worn on the stage, pale as
+death&mdash;a quantity of blood flowing from a fearful wound on her
+head, and uttering those low quick moans which are indicative of
+extreme suffering.</p>
+<p>Poor little Keeley stood beside the couch, holding her hand; he
+was still in full fig as <em>Polichinel</em>; and the grotesqueness
+of his attire contrasted strangely with the anguish depicted on his
+countenance. As I came forward, he slowly made way for
+me&mdash;looked in my face imploringly, as if to gather from its
+expression some gleam of hope, and then stood aside, in an attitude
+of profound dejection.</p>
+<p>Having felt the sufferer&rsquo;s pulse, I was about to turn her
+head gently, in order to examine the nature of the wound, when a
+hustling noise behind me causing me to turn round, to my infinite
+dismay, I perceived Mr. Keeley, having pushed the bystanders on one
+side, in the act of performing a kind of Punchean dance upon the
+floor, accompanying himself with the vigorous chuckling and crowing
+peculiar to the hero whose habiliments he wore. I was
+horror-stricken&mdash;conceiving that grief had suddenly turned his
+brain.</p>
+<p>All at once, he made a spring towards me, and, seizing my arm,
+thrust me into a corner of the room, where he held me fast,
+exclaiming&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wretch! villain! restore me my wife&mdash;that talented
+woman your infernal arts have destroyed! You did for
+her!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Keeley,&rdquo; said I, struggling to release myself
+from his grasp&mdash;&ldquo;my dear sir, pray compose
+yourself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Unhappy traitor!&rdquo; he shouted, giving me an
+unmerciful tweak by the nose; &ldquo;Look at her silver skin laced
+with her golden blood!&mdash;see, see! Oh, see!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was rather too much, even from a man whose wits were
+astray. I began to lose patience, and was preparing to rid myself
+somewhat roughly of the madman&rsquo;s grasp, when a new phenomenon
+occurred.</p>
+<p>The patient on the sofa, whom I had judged well nigh moribund,
+and consequently incapable of any effort whatever, all at once sat
+up with a sudden jerk, and gave vent to a series of the most
+ear-piercing shrieks that ever assailed human tympanum.</p>
+<p><em>&ldquo;Oh! oh! Mon Dieu! je suis &eacute;touff&eacute;e!
+levez-vous donc, monsieur&mdash;n&rsquo;avez-vous pas
+honte!&rdquo;</em></p>
+<p>I started up&mdash;O misery!&mdash;I had fallen asleep, and my
+head, resting against a pillar, had slipped down, depositing itself
+upon the expansive bosom of a portly French dame in the next box,
+who seemed, by her vehement exclamations, to be quite shaken from
+the balance of her propriety by the unlooked-for burthen I had
+imposed upon her; whilst a <em>petit monsieur</em> poured forth a
+string of <em>sacres</em> and <em>sapristies</em> upon my devoted
+head with a volubility of utterance truly astonishing.</p>
+<p>I gazed about me with troubled and lack-lustre eye. Every
+lorgnette in the boxes was levelled at my miserable countenance; a
+sea of upturned and derisive faces grinned at me from the pit, and
+the gods in Olympus thundered from on high&mdash;&ldquo;Turn him
+out; he&rsquo;s drunk!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was the unkindest cut of all&mdash;thus publicly to be
+accused of intoxication, a vice of all others I have ever detested
+and eschewed.</p>
+<p>I cast one indignant glance around me, and left the theatre,
+lamenting the depravity of our nature, which is, alas! always ready
+to put the worst construction upon actions in themselves most
+innocent; for if I had gone to sleep in my own arm-chair, pray who
+would have accused me of inebriety?</p>
+<p>How I got home I know not. As I hurried through the streets, a
+legion of voices, in every variety of intonation, yelled in my
+ears&mdash;&ldquo;Turn him out&mdash;he&rsquo;s drunk!&rdquo; and
+when I woke in the middle of the night, tormented by a raging
+thirst (produced, I suppose, by the flurry of spirits I had
+undergone), I seemed to hear screams, groans, and hisses, above all
+which predominated loud and clear the malignant
+denunciation&mdash;&ldquo;Turn him out&mdash;he&rsquo;s
+drunk!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Upon my subsequently mentioning the above adventure to Jack
+Withers, it will hardly be credited that this villain without shame
+at once roundly asserted that, when I left him on the
+afore-mentioned night, I was at least three sheets and three
+quarters in the wind; adding with praiseworthy candour, that he
+himself was so far gone as to be obliged, to the infinite scandal
+of his staid old housekeeper, to creep up stairs <em>&agrave;
+quatre pieds</em>, in order to gain his bedroom.</p>
+<p>Now this latter may be true enough, for it is probable that
+friend Jack <span class="pagenum"><a id="page218" name=
+"page218"></a>[pg 218]</span>freshened his nip a trifle after my
+departure, seeing that he was always something of a drunken knave.
+As for his calumnious and scandalous declaration, that <em>I</em>
+was in the least degree tipsy, it is too ridiculous to be noticed.
+I scorn it with my heels&mdash;I was sober&mdash;sober, cool, and
+steady as the north star; and he that is inclined to question this
+solemn asseveration, let him send me his card; and if I don&rsquo;t
+drill a hole in his doublet before he&rsquo;s forty-eight hours
+older, then, as honest Slender has it, &ldquo;I would I might never
+come in mine own great chamber again else.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>&ldquo;ARE YE SURE THE NEWS IS TRUE?&rdquo;</h3>
+<p>We learn from good authority that Lord TAMBOFF STANLEY, in
+answer to a deputation from Scotland, assured the gentlemen who
+waited upon him that &ldquo;the subject of <em>emigration</em> was
+under the serious consideration of Her Majesty&rsquo;s
+Ministers.&rdquo; We hope that those respectable gentlemen may soon
+resolve upon their departure&mdash;we care not &ldquo;what clime
+they wander to, so not again to <em>this</em>;&rdquo; or, as
+Shakspeare says, let them &ldquo;stand not upon the order of their
+going, but GO.&rdquo; The country, we take it upon ourselves to
+say, will remember them when they are gone; they have left the
+nation too many weighty proofs of their regard to be forgotten in a
+hurry&mdash;Corruption, Starvation, and Taxation, and the National
+Debt by way of</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/019-01.png"><img src=
+"images/019-01.png" alt="A dancer shows her shapely calves." id=
+"img019-01" name="img019-01" width="50%" /></a>
+<p>A HANDSOME LEG&mdash;I SEE (LEGACY).</p>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>A DOSE OF CASTOR.</h3>
+<p>Peter Borthwick, late of the Royal Surrey Nautical, having had
+the honour of &ldquo;deep damnation&rdquo; conferred upon his
+&ldquo;taking off&rdquo; the character of Prince Henry, upon that
+occasion, to appear in unison with the text of the Immortal Bard,
+&ldquo;dressed&rdquo; the part in a most elaborate
+&ldquo;neck-or-nothing tile.&rdquo; Upon being expostulated with by
+the manager, he triumphantly referred to the description of the
+chivalrous Prince in which the narrator particularly
+states&mdash;</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/019-02.png"><img src=
+"images/019-02.png" alt="A little fellow wears a big hat." id=
+"img019-02" name="img019-02" width="30%" /></a>
+<p>I SAW YOUNG HARRY WITH HIS BEAVER ON.</p>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>CUTTING AT THE ROOT OF THE EVIL.</h3>
+<p>&ldquo;Good heavens, Sir Peter,&rdquo; said Hobler,
+confidentially, to our dearly beloved Alderman, &ldquo;How could
+you have passed such a ridiculous sentence upon Jones, as to direct
+his hair to be cut off?&rdquo; &ldquo;All right, my dear
+Hobby,&rdquo; replied the sapient justice; &ldquo;the fellow was
+found fighting in the streets, and I wanted to hinder him, at least
+for some time, from again</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/019-03.png"><img src=
+"images/019-03.png" alt="Two cats fight." id="img019-03" name=
+"img019-03" width="70%" /></a>
+<p>COMING TO THE SCRATCH.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>TO PUNCH.</h3>
+<p>We have received the following choice bit of poetic pathology
+from our old friend and jolly dog Toby, who, it seems, has taken to
+medicine. The dog, however, always had a great propensity to
+<em>bark</em>, owing doubtlessly to the strong <em>tincture</em> of
+<em>canine</em> there was in his constitution:&mdash;</p>
+<p>MY DEAR PUNCH,</p>
+<p>Nothing convinces me more of my treacherous memory than my not
+recollecting you at the memorable &ldquo;New-boot Supper;&rdquo;
+for I certainly must have been as long in that society as yourself.
+Be that as it may, you have induced me to scrape together a few
+reminiscences in an imperfect way, leaving to you, from your better
+recollection, to correct and flavour the specimen to the palate of
+your readers, who have, most deservedly, every reliance upon your
+good taste and moral tendency. I have in vain tried to meet with
+the music of &ldquo;the good old days of Adam and Eve,&rdquo;
+consequently have lost the enjoyment of the
+chorus&mdash;&ldquo;Sing hey, sing ho!&rdquo; It would be too much
+to ask you to sing it, but perhaps you may too-te-too it in your
+next. May your good intentions to the would-be &AElig;sculapius be
+attended with success.&mdash;I remain, dear Punch, your old
+friend,</p>
+<p class="rgt">TOBY.</p>
+<h4>ASCITES.</h4>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Abdomen swell&rsquo;d, which fluctuates when struck upon the
+side, sirs;</p>
+<p>Face pale and puff&rsquo;d, and worse than that, with thirst and
+cough beside, sirs;</p>
+<p>Skin dry, and breathing difficult, and pains in epigastrium,</p>
+<p>And watchfulness or partial sleep, with dreams would strike the
+bravest dumb.</p>
+<p>To cure&mdash;restore the balance of exhalants and
+absorbents,</p>
+<p>With squill, blue-pill, and other means to soothe the
+patient&rsquo;s torments.</p>
+</div>
+<h5>GRINDER.</h5>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Sure this is not your climax, sir, to save from Davy&rsquo;s
+locker!</p>
+</div>
+<h5>STUDENT.</h5>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Way, no,&mdash;I&rsquo;d then with caution tap&mdash;when first
+I&rsquo;d tied the knocker.</p>
+<p class="i2">Sing hey! sing ho! if you cannot find a new plan,</p>
+<p class="i2">In Puseyistic days like these, you&rsquo;d better try
+a New-man.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<h4>TYMPANITIS.</h4>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>The swelling here is different&mdash;sonorous, tense,
+elastic;</p>
+<p>On it you might a tattoo beat, with fingers or with a stick.</p>
+<p>There&rsquo;s costiveness and atrophy, with features
+Hippocratic;</p>
+<p>When these appear, there&rsquo;s much to fear, all safety is
+erratic.</p>
+<p>Although a cordial laxative, mix&rsquo;d up with some
+carminative,</p>
+<p>Might be prescribed, with morphia, or hops, to keep the man
+alive;</p>
+<p>Take care his diet&rsquo;s nutritive, avoiding food that&rsquo;s
+flatulent,</p>
+<p>And each week let him have a dose of Punch from Mr. Bryant
+sent.</p>
+<p class="i2">Sing hey! sing ho! &amp;c.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>ALARMING PROSPECTS FOR THE COUNTRY.</h3>
+<p>It appears that no less than <em>one hundred and sixty-four</em>
+Attorneys have given notice of their intention to practise in the
+Court of Queen&rsquo;s Bench; and <em>eleven</em> of the fraternity
+have applied to be re-admitted Attorneys of the Court. We had no
+idea that such an alarming extension was about taking place in</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/019-04.png"><img src=
+"images/019-04.png" alt=
+"Three men force another to turn out his pockets." id="img019-04"
+name="img019-04" width="60%" /></a>
+<p>THE RIFLE CORPS.</p>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>&ldquo;ONE GOOD TURN DESERVES ANOTHER.&rdquo;</h3>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>A poor man went to hang himself,</p>
+<p class="i2">But treasure chanced to find;</p>
+<p>He pocketed the miser&rsquo;s pelf</p>
+<p class="i2">And left the rope behind.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>His money gone, the miser hung</p>
+<p class="i2">Himself in sheer despair:</p>
+<p>Thus each the other&rsquo;s wants supplied,</p>
+<p class="i2">And that was surely fair.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<p>We understand that Mr. Webster has solicited Sir Peter Laurie to
+make an early d&eacute;but at the Haymarket Theatre in the
+<em>Heir</em> (hair) <em>at Law</em>.</p>
+<p>Madame Vestris has also endeavoured to prevail upon the civic
+mercy. Andrew to appear in the afterpiece of the <em>Rape of the
+Lock</em>.</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page219" name="page219"></a>[pg
+219]</span>
+<h2>THE HEIR OF APPLEBITE.</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER X.</h3>
+<h4>WHEREIN THE READER WILL FIND GREAT CAUSE FOR REJOICING.</h4>
+<div class="dropcap"><a href="images/019-05.png"><img src=
+"images/019-05.png" alt=
+"A letter C with flowers trailing from it and an heron in its bowl."
+id="img019-05" name="img019-05" width="100%" /></a></div>
+<p><span class="hide">C</span>onducive as Uncle Peter&rsquo;s
+suggestion might have been to the restoration of peace in the
+family of our hero, it was decided to be impracticable by several
+medical gentlemen, who were consulted upon the matter. After sundry
+scenes of maternal and grandmaternal distress, Agamemnon succeeded
+in obtaining the victory, and the heir was vaccinated accordingly
+with the most favourable result. The pustule rose, budded,
+blossomed, and disappeared, exactly as it ought to have done, and a
+few days saw the health of the infant Applebite insured in the
+office of Dr. Jenner.</p>
+<p>Scarcely had the anxious parents been relieved by this
+auspicious termination, when that painful disorder which renders
+pork unwholesome and children fractious, made its appearance. Had
+we the plague-pen of the romancist of Rookwood, we would revel in
+the detail of this domesticated pestilence&mdash;we would picture
+the little sufferer in the hour of its agony&mdash;and be as minute
+as Mr. Hume in our calculations of its feverish pulsations; but our
+quill was moulted by the dove, not plucked from the wing of the
+carrion raven.</p>
+<p>And now, gentle reader, we come to a point of this history which
+we are assured has been anxiously looked forward to by you&mdash;a
+point at which the reader, already breathless with expectation, has
+fondly anticipated being suffocated with excitement. We may,
+without vanity, lay claim to originality, for we have introduced a
+new hero into the world of fiction&mdash;a baby three months
+old&mdash;we have traced his happy parents from the ball-room to
+St. George&rsquo;s church; from St. George&rsquo;s church to the
+ball-room; thence to the doctor&rsquo;s; and from thence to</p>
+<h3>THE END.</h3>
+<p>Reproach us not, mamas?&mdash;Discard us not, ye blushing
+divinities who have, with your sex&rsquo;s softness, dandled the
+heir of Applebite in your imaginations!&mdash;Wait!&mdash;Wait till
+we have explained! We have a motive; but as we are novices in this
+style of literature, we will avail ourselves, at our leave-taking,
+of the valedictory address of one who is more &ldquo;up to the
+swindle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="cen"><em>To the Readers of the Heir of
+Applebite</em>.</p>
+<p>DEAR FRIENDS,&mdash;Having finished the infanto-biography upon
+which we have been engaged, it is our design to cut off our heir,
+and bring our tale to a close. You may want to know why&mdash;or if
+you don&rsquo;t, we will tell you.</p>
+<p>We should not regard the anxiety, the close confinement, or the
+constant attention inseparable from a nursery, did we feel that the
+result was agreeable to you. But we have not done so. We have been
+strongly tempted to think, that after waiting from week to week,
+you have never arrived at anything interesting. We could not bear
+this jerking of our conscience, which was no sooner ended than
+begun again.</p>
+<p>Most &ldquo;passages in a tale of <em>any length</em> depend
+materially for the interest on the intimate relation they bear to
+what has gone before, or what is to follow.&rdquo; We sometimes
+found it difficult to accomplish this.</p>
+<p>Considerations of immediate profit ought, in such cases, to be
+of secondary importance; but, for the reasons we have just
+mentioned, we have (after some pains to resist the temptation)
+determined to abandon this <em>scheme</em> of publication.</p>
+<p>Taking advantage of the respite which the close of this work
+will afford us, we have decided in January next to rent a second
+floor at Kentish Town.</p>
+<p>The pleasure we anticipate from the realisation of a wish we
+have long entertained and long hoped to gratify, is subdued by the
+reflection that we shall find it somewhat difficult to emancipate
+our moveables from the thraldom of Mrs. Gibbons, our respected but
+over-particular landlady.</p>
+<p>To console the numerous readers of PUNCH, we have it in command
+to announce, that on Saturday, Nov. 27th, the first chapter of a
+series under the title of the &ldquo;Puff Papers,&rdquo;
+appropriately illustrated, will be commenced, with a desire to
+supply the hiatus in periodical fiction, occasioned by the
+temporary seclusion of one of the most popular novelists of the
+day.</p>
+<p>Dear friends, farewell! Should we again desire to resume the
+pen, we trust at your hands we shall not have to encounter a</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/019-06.png"><img src=
+"images/019-06.png" alt=
+"A child tries to force his way through a fence." id="img019-06"
+name="img019-06" width="50%" /></a>
+<p>DISPUTED RETURN.</p>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>THE LAMBETH DEMOSTHENES.</h3>
+<p>We are happy to find that Dr. Tully Cicero Burke Sheridan
+Grattan Charles Phillips Hobler Bedford has not been deterred by
+the late unsatisfactory termination to the &ldquo;public
+meeting&rdquo; called by him to address the Queen, from prosecuting
+his patriotic views for his own personal advantage. Dr. &amp;c.
+Bedford has kindly furnished us with the report of a meeting called
+by himself, which consisted of himself, for the purpose of
+considering the propriety of petitioning the Throne to appoint
+himself to be medical-adviser-in-general to her Majesty, and
+vaccinator-in-particular to his little Highness the Prince of
+Wales.</p>
+<p>At 10 o&rsquo;clock precisely Dr. &amp;c. Bedford entered the
+little back parlour of his surgery, and advancing to the
+looking-glass over the mantel-piece, made a polite bow to the
+reflection of himself. After a few complimentary gestures had
+passed between them, Dr &amp;c. Bedford hemmed twice, and in a very
+elegant speech proposed that &ldquo;Doctor &amp;c. Bedford
+<em>shoold</em> take the <em>cheer</em>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. &amp;c. Bedford rose to second the proposition. Dr. &amp;c.
+Bedford said, &ldquo;Dr. &amp;c. Bedford is a gentleman what I have
+had the honour of knowing on for many long ears. His medikel
+requirement are sich as ris a Narvey and a Nunter to the summut of
+the temples of Fame. His political requisitions are summarily
+extinguished. It is, therefore, with no common pride that I second
+this abomination.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. &amp;c. Bedford then bowed to his reflection in the glass,
+and proceeded to take his seat in his easy chair, thumping the
+table with one hand, and placing the other gracefully upon his
+breast, as though in token of gratitude for the honour conferred
+upon him.</p>
+<p>Order being restored, Dr. &amp;c. Bedford rose and
+said,&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never kotched myself in sich a sitchuation in my
+life&mdash;I mean not that I hasn&rsquo;t taken a cheer afore,
+perhaps carried one&mdash;but it never has been my proud extinction
+to preside over such a meeting&mdash;so numerous in its numbers and
+suspectable in its appearance. My friend, Dr. &amp;c. Bedford,
+(<em>Hear, hear! from. Dr. &amp;c. Bedford</em>,) his the hornament
+of natur in this 19th cemetary. His prodigious
+outlays&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+<p><em>Voice without</em>.&mdash;&ldquo;Here they are, only a
+penny!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. &amp;c. Bedford.&mdash;&ldquo;Order, order!
+His&mdash;his&mdash;you know what I mean that shoold distinguish
+the fisishun and the orator. I may say the Solus of
+orators,&mdash;renders him the most fittest and the most properest
+person to take care of the Royal health, and the Royal Infant Babby
+of these regions,&rdquo; (<em>Hear, hear! from Dr. &amp;c.
+Bedford</em>.)</p>
+<p>The Doctor then proceeded to embody the foregoing observations
+into a resolution, which was proposed by Dr. &amp;c. Bedford, and
+seconded by Dr. &amp;c. Bedford, who having held up both his hands,
+declared it to be carried <em>nem. con.</em></p>
+<p>Dr. &amp;c. Bedford then proposed a vote of thanks to Dr,
+&amp;c. Bedford for his conduct in the chair. The meeting then
+dispersed, after Dr. &amp;c. Bedford had returned thanks, and bowed
+to his own reflection in the looking-glass.</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page220" name="page220"></a>[pg
+220]</span>
+<h2>A LEGEND OF THE TOWER (NOT LONDON).</h2>
+<p>In the immediate vicinity of the pretty little town of Kells
+stands one of those peculiar high round towers, the origin of which
+has so long puzzled the brains of antiquaries. It is invariably
+pointed out to the curious, as a fit subject for their
+contemplation, and may, in fact, be looked upon as the great local
+lion of the place. It appears almost inaccessible. But there is a
+story extant, and told in very choice Irish, how two small
+dare-devil urchins did succeed in reaching its lofty summit; and
+this is the way the legend was done into English by one Barney
+Riley, the narrator, to whom I am indebted for its
+knowledge:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You see Masther Robert, sir,&mdash;though its murduring
+high, and almost entirely quite aqual in stapeness to the ould
+ancient Tower of Babel, yet, sir, there is them living now as have
+been at the top of that same; be the same token I knew both
+o&rsquo; the spalpeens myself. It&rsquo;s grown up they are now;
+but whin they wint daws&rsquo;-nesting to the top there, the little
+blackguards weren&rsquo;t above knee-high, if so much.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But how did they arrive at the summit?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the wonder of it! but sure nobody knows but
+themselves; but the scamps managed somehow or other to insart
+themselves in through one of them small loopholes&mdash;whin little
+Danny Carroll gave Tom Sheeney a leg up and a back, and Tom Sheeney
+hauled little Danny up after him by the scruff o&rsquo; the neck;
+and so they wint squeedging and scrummaging on till, by dad, they
+was up at the tip-top in something less than no time; and the
+trouble was all they had a chance o&rsquo; gettin for their pains;
+for, by the hokey, the daws&rsquo; nest they had been bruising
+their shins, breaking their necks, and tearing their frieze
+breeches to tatters to reach, was on the outside o&rsquo; the
+building, and about as hard to get at as truth, or marcy from a
+thafe of a tythe proctor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Hubbabboo,&rsquo; says little Danny; &lsquo;we are
+on the wrong side now, as Pat Murphy&rsquo;s carroty wig was whin
+it came through his hat; what will we do, at all, at
+all?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Divil a know I know. It would make a parson swear
+after takin&rsquo; tythe. Do you hear the vagabones? Oh, then
+musha, bad luck to your cawings; its impedence, and nothing but it,
+to be shouting out in defiance of us, you dirty bastes. Danny, lad,
+you&rsquo;re but a little thrifle of a gossoon; couldn&rsquo;t you
+squeedge yourself through one o&rsquo; them holes?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;What will I stand&mdash;or, for the matter
+o&rsquo; that, as I&rsquo;m by no manes particular,&mdash;sit upon,
+whin I git out&mdash;that is, if I can?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Look here, lad, hear a dacent word&mdash;it will
+be just the dandy thing for yes entirely; go to it with a will, and
+make yourself as small as a little cock elven, and thin we&rsquo;ll
+have our revenge upon them aggravation thaves.&rsquo; How the puck
+he done it nobody knows; but by dad there was his little, ragged,
+red poll, followed by the whole of his small body, seen coming out
+o&rsquo; that trap-loop there, that doesn&rsquo;t look much bigger
+than a button-hole&mdash;and thin sitting astride the ould bit of
+rotten timbers, and laffing like mad, was the tiny Masther Danny,
+robbing the nests, and shouting with joy as he pulled bird after
+bird from their nate little feather-beds. &lsquo;This is
+elegant,&rsquo; says he; &lsquo;here&rsquo;s lashins of
+&rsquo;em.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;How many have you,&rsquo; says Tom Sheeney.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Seven big uns&mdash;full fledged, wid feathers as
+black as the priest&rsquo;s breeches on a Good Friday&rsquo;s
+fast.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Seven is it?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;It is.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Well, then, hand them in.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;By no manes.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Why not?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Seein they&rsquo;re as well wid me as you.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Give me my half then&mdash;that&rsquo;s
+your&rsquo;&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Aisy wid you; who&rsquo;s had the trouble and the
+chance of breaking his good-looking neck but me, Mr. Tim
+Sheeney.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Devil a care I care; I&rsquo;ll have four, or
+I&rsquo;ll know why.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;That you&rsquo;ll soon do: I won&rsquo;t give
+&rsquo;em you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Aint I holding the wood?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;By coorse you are; but aint I sitting outside upon
+it, and by the same token unseating my best breeches.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I bid you take care; give me four.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Ha, ha! what a buck your granny was, Mistet Tim
+Sheeney; it&rsquo;s three you&rsquo;ll have, or none.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Then by the puck I&rsquo;ll let you go.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I defy you to do it, you murdering
+robber.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Do you! by dad; once more, give me
+four.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;To blazes wid you; three or none.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Then there you go!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And, worse luck, sure enough he did, and that at the
+devil&rsquo;s own pace.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At this moment I turned my eyes in horror to the Tower,
+and the height was awful.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor child,&mdash;of course he was killed upon the
+spot?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s the wonder; not a ha&rsquo;porth o&rsquo;
+harm did the vagabone take at all at all. He held on by the
+birds&rsquo; legs like a little nagur; he was but a shimpeen of a
+chap, and what with the flapping of their wings and the soft place
+he fell upon, barring a little thrifle of stunning, and it may be a
+small matter of fright, he was as comfortable as any one could
+expect under the circumstances; but it would have done your heart
+good to see the little gossoon jump up, shake his feathers, and
+shout out at the top of his small voice, &lsquo;Tim Sheeney, you
+thief, you&rsquo;d better have taken the three,&mdash;for d&mdash;n
+the daw do you get now!&rsquo;&rdquo; And so ends the Legend of the
+Round Tower.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>IRISH INTELLIGENCE.</h3>
+<h4>AWFUL STATE OF THE COUNTRY!</h4>
+<p class="cen">(<em>From our own Correspondent.</em>)</p>
+<p>We are at length enabled to inform the Public that we have, at a
+vast expense, completed our arrangements for the transmission of
+the earliest news from Ireland. We have just received the
+<em>Over-bog Mail</em>, which contains facts of a most interesting
+nature. We hasten to lay our sagacious correspondent&rsquo;s
+remarks before our readers:&mdash;</p>
+<p class="rgt"><em>Bally-ha-ghadera, Tuesday Night</em>.</p>
+<p>PUNCH will appreciate my unwillingness to furnish him with
+intelligence which might in any way disturb the commercial
+relations between this and the sister island, more particularly at
+the <em>present crisis</em>, when the interests of that prosperous
+class, the London Baked Potatoe vendors, are so intimately
+connected, with the preservation of good feeling among the
+Tipperary growers. However, my duty to PUNCH and the public compel
+me to speak.&mdash;I do feel that we are on the eve of a great
+popular commotion. Every day&rsquo;s occurrences strengthen my
+conviction. Bally-ha-ghadera was this morning at sunrise disturbed
+by noises of the most appalling kind, forming a wild chorus, in
+which screams and bellowings seemed to vie for supremacy; indeed
+words cannot adequately describe this terrific disturbance. As I
+expected, the depraved Whig Journalist, with characteristic mental
+tortuosity, has asserted that the sounds proceeded from a rookery
+in the adjoining wood, aided by the braying of the turf-man&rsquo;s
+donkey. But an enlightened public will see through this paltry
+subterfuge. Rooks and donkeys! Pooh! There cannot be a doubt but
+that the noises were the preparatory war-whoops of this ferocious
+and sanguinary people. We believe the Whig editor to be the only
+<em>donkey</em> in the case; that he may have been a ravin(g) at
+the time is also very probable.</p>
+<p>No later than yesterday the <em>Cloonakilty Express</em> was
+stopped by a <em>band of young men</em>, who savagely ill-treated
+our courier, a youth of tender age, having attempted to stone him
+to death. Our courier is ready to swear that at the time of the
+attack the young men were busily engaged counting a <em>vast store
+of ammunition</em>, consisting of <em>round white clay balls</em>
+baked to the hardness of bullets, and <em>evidently</em> intended
+for <em>shooting with</em>.</p>
+<p>I have to call particular attention to the fact that a
+countryman was this day observed to buy a threepenny loaf, and on
+leaving the baker&rsquo;s to <em>tear it asunder and distribute the
+fragments with three confederates</em>!!! an act which I need not
+say was evidently symbolical of their desire to rend asunder the
+<em>Corn Laws</em>, and to divide the landed property amongst
+themselves. The action also appears analogous to the custom of
+breaking bread and swearing alliance on it, a practice still
+observed by the inhabitants of some remote regions of the Caucasus.
+I must again solemnly express my conviction that we are standing on
+a <em>slumbering</em> VOLCANO; the thoughtless and unobservant may
+suppose not; probably because in the present tee-total state of
+society they see nothing of the CRATER.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>TAKING A SIGHT AT THE FIRE.</h3>
+<p>A man bearing the very inapplicable name of <em>Virtue</em> was
+brought up at Lambeth-street last week, on the charge of having
+stolen a telescope from the Ordnance-office in the Tower on the
+morning of the fire. The prisoner pleaded that, being
+short-sighted, he took the glass to have a sight of the fire. The
+magistrate, however, <em>saw through</em> this excuse very clearly;
+and as it was apparent that <em>Virtue</em> had taken a
+<em>glass</em> too much on the occasion, he was fully
+committed.</p>
+<hr />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page221" name="page221"></a>[pg
+221]</span>
+<h3>JOE HUME&rsquo;S FORTHCOMING WORK.</h3>
+<p>We have received the following note from an old and esteemed
+correspondent, who, we are rejoiced to find, has returned from a
+tour in Switzerland, where he has been engaged in a prodigious work
+connected with the statistics of that country.</p>
+<p class="rgt"><em>Reform Club-house</em>.</p>
+<p>DEAR PUNCH,</p>
+<p>Knowing the interest you take in anything relating to the
+advancement of science, I beg to apprise you that I am about
+publishing a statistical work, in which I have made it perfectly
+clear that an immense saving in the article of ice alone might be
+made in England by importing that which lies waste upon Mont Blanc.
+I have also calculated to a fraction the number of pints of milk
+produced in the canton of Berne, distinguishing the quantity used
+in the making of cheese from that which has been consumed in the
+manufacture of butter&mdash;and specifying in every instance
+whether the milk has been yielded by cows or goats. There will be
+also a valuable appendix to the work, containing a correct list of
+all the inns on the road between Frankfort and Geneva, with a copy
+of the bill of fare at each, and the prices charged; together with
+the colour of the postilion&rsquo;s jacket, the age of the landlord
+and the weight of his wife, and the height in inches of the cook
+and chambermaid. To which will be added, &ldquo;Ten Minutes&rsquo;
+Advice&rdquo; upon making one shilling go as far as two. If you can
+give me a three-halfpenny puff in your admired publication, you
+will confer a favour on</p>
+<p class="rgt">Your sincere friend,<br />
+JOE HUME.</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>THE ROMANCE OF A TEACUP.</h2>
+<h3>SIP THE FIRST.</h3>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>In England one man&rsquo;s mated to one woman,</p>
+<p class="i2">To spend their days in holy matrimony&mdash;</p>
+<p>In fact, I <em>have</em> heard from one or two men,</p>
+<p class="i2">That one wife in a house is one too many&mdash;</p>
+<p>But, be this as it may, in China no man</p>
+<p class="i2">Who can afford it shuts himself to any</p>
+<p>Fix&rsquo;d number, but is variously encumber&rsquo;d</p>
+<p>With better halves, from twenty to a hundred.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>These to provide for in a pleasant way,</p>
+<p class="i2">And, maybe, to avoid their chat and worry,</p>
+<p>He shuts up in a harem night and day&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">With them contriving all his cares to bury&mdash;</p>
+<p>A point of policy which, I should say,</p>
+<p class="i2">Sweetens the dose to men about to marry;</p>
+<p>For, though a wife&rsquo;s a charming thing enough,</p>
+<p>Yet, like all other blessings, <em>quantum suff</em>.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>So to my tale: Te-pott the Multifarious</p>
+<p class="i2">Was, once upon a time, a mandarin&mdash;</p>
+<p>In personal appearance but precarious,</p>
+<p class="i2">Being incorrigibly bald and thin&mdash;</p>
+<p>But then so rich, through jobs and pensions various,</p>
+<p class="i2">Obtain&rsquo;d by voting with the party
+&ldquo;in,&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That he maintain&rsquo;d, in grace and honour too,</p>
+<p>Sixty-five years, and spouses fifty-two.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Fifty-two wives! and still he went about</p>
+<p class="i2">Peering below the maiden ladies&rsquo;
+veils&mdash;</p>
+<p>Indeed, it <em>was</em> said (but there hangs a doubt</p>
+<p class="i2">Of scandal on such gossip-whisper&rsquo;d tales),</p>
+<p>He had a good one still to single out&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">For all his wives had tongues, and <em>some</em> had
+nails&mdash;</p>
+<p>And still he hoped, though fifty-twice deferr&rsquo;d,</p>
+<p>To find an angel in his fifty-third.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>In China, mind, and such outlandish places,</p>
+<p class="i2">A gentleman who wishes to be wed</p>
+<p>Looks round about among the pretty faces,</p>
+<p class="i2">Nor for a moment doubts they may be had</p>
+<p>For asking; and if any of them &ldquo;nay&rdquo; says,</p>
+<p class="i2">He has his remedy as soon as said&mdash;</p>
+<p>For, when the bridegrooms disapprove what they do,</p>
+<p>They teach them manners with the bastinado.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Near Te-pott&rsquo;s palace lived an old Chinese&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">About as poor a man as could be known</p>
+<p>In lands where guardians leave them to their ease,</p>
+<p class="i2">Nor pen the poor up in bastilles of stone:</p>
+<p>He got a livelihood by picking teas;</p>
+<p class="i2">And of possessions worldly had but one&mdash;</p>
+<p>But one&mdash;the which, the reader must be told,</p>
+<p>Was a fair daughter seventeen years old.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>She was a lovely little girl, and one</p>
+<p class="i2">To charm the wits of both the high and <em>the</em>
+low;</p>
+<p>And Te-pott&rsquo;s ancient heart was lost and won</p>
+<p class="i2">In less time than &rsquo;twould take my pen to tell
+how:</p>
+<p>So, as he was quite an experienced son-</p>
+<p class="i2">In-law, and, too, a very wily fellow,</p>
+<p>To make Hy-son his friend was no hard matter, I</p>
+<p>Ween, with that specific for parents&mdash;flattery.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>But, when they two had settled all between</p>
+<p class="i2">Themselves, and Te-pott thought that he had caught
+her,</p>
+<p>He found how premature his hopes had been</p>
+<p class="i2">Without the approbation of the daughter&mdash;</p>
+<p>Who talk&rsquo;d with voice so loud and wit so keen,</p>
+<p class="i2">That he thought all his Mrs. T&rsquo;s had taught
+her;</p>
+<p>And, finding he was in the way there rather,</p>
+<p>He left her to be lectured by her father.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&ldquo;Pray, what were women made for&rdquo; (so she said,</p>
+<p class="i2">Though Heaven forbid I join such tender saying),</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If they to be accounted are as dead,</p>
+<p class="i2">And strangled if they ever are caught straying?</p>
+<p>Tis well to give us diamonds for the head,</p>
+<p class="i2">And silken gauds for festival arraying;</p>
+<p>But where of dress or diamonds is the use</p>
+<p>If we mayn&rsquo;t go and show them? that&rsquo;s the
+deuce!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>The father answer&rsquo;d, much as fathers do</p>
+<p class="i2">In cases of like nature here in Britain,</p>
+<p>Where fathers seldom let fortunes slip through</p>
+<p class="i2">Their fingers, when they think that they can get
+one;</p>
+<p>He said a many things extremely true&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">Proving that girls are fine things to be quit on,</p>
+<p>And that, could she accommodate her views to it,</p>
+<p>She would find marriage very nice when used to it.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Now, &rsquo;tis no task to talk a woman into</p>
+<p class="i2">Love, or a dance, or into dressing fine&mdash;</p>
+<p>No task, I&rsquo;ve heard, to talk her into sin too;</p>
+<p class="i2">But, somehow, reason don&rsquo;t seem in her
+line.</p>
+<p>And so Miss Hy-son, spite of kith and kin too,</p>
+<p class="i2">Persisting such a husband to decline&mdash;</p>
+<p>The eager mandarin issued a warrant,</p>
+<p>And got her apprehended by her parent.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Thus the poor girl was caught, for there was no</p>
+<p class="i2">Appeal against so wealthy lover&rsquo;s fiat:</p>
+<p>She must e&rsquo;en be a wife of his, and so</p>
+<p class="i2">She yielded him her hand demure and quiet;</p>
+<p>For ladies seldom cry unless they know</p>
+<p class="i2">There&rsquo;s somebody convenient to cry
+<em>at</em>&mdash;</p>
+<p>And; though it is consoling, on reflection</p>
+<p>Such fierce emotions ruin the complexion.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE.</h3>
+<p>Yesterday Paddy Green honoured that great artist William Hogarth
+Teniers Raphael Bunks, Esq., with a sitting for a likeness. The
+portrait, which will doubtless be an admirable one, is stated to be
+destined to adorn one of Mr. Catnach&rsquo;s ballads, namely,
+&ldquo;The Monks of Old!&rdquo; which Mr. P. Green, in most
+obliging manner, has allowed to appear.</p>
+<p>William Paul took a walk yesterday as far as Houndsditch, in
+company with Jeremiah Donovan. A pair of left-off unmentionables is
+confidently reported to be the cause of their visit in the
+&ldquo;far East.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lady of Paddy Green, Esquire, on Wednesday last, with that
+kindness which has always distinguished her, caused to be
+distributed a platterful of trotter bones amongst the starving dogs
+of the neighbourhood.</p>
+<p>From information exclusively our own, and for whose correctness
+we would stake our hump, we learn that James Burke, the honoured
+member of the P.R., was seen to walk home on the night of Tuesday
+last with three fresh herrings on a twig. After supper, he consoled
+himself with a pint of fourpenny ale.</p>
+<p>Charles Mears yesterday took a ride in a Whitechapel omnibus. He
+alighted at Aldgate Pump, at which he took a draught of water from
+the ladle. He afterwards regaled on a couple of polonies and a
+penny loaf.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>THE UNKINDEST CUT OF ALL.</h3>
+<p>Jones, the journeyman tailor who was charged before Sir Peter
+Laurie with being drunk and disorderly in Fleet-street, escaped the
+penalty of his frolic by an extraordinary whim of justice. The
+young schneider, it appears, sported a luxuriant crop of hair, the
+fashion of which not pleasing the fancy of the city Rhadamanthus,
+he remitted the fine on condition that the delinquent should
+instantly cut off the offending hairs. A barber being sent for, the
+operation was instantly performed; and Sir Peter, with a spirit of
+generosity only to be equalled by his <em>cutting</em> humour,
+actually put his hand in his breeches-pocket and handed over to the
+official Figaro his fee of one shilling. The shorn tailor left the
+office protesting that Sir Peter had not treated him handsomely, as
+he had only consented to sacrifice his flowing locks, but that the
+Alderman had cabbaged his whiskers as well.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>A CELESTIAL CON.</h3>
+<p>Why is wit like a Chinese lady&rsquo;s foot?&mdash;Because
+brevity is the <em>sole</em> of it!</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page222" name="page222"></a>[pg
+222]</span>
+<h2>THE PRINCE OF WALES.&mdash;HIS FUTURE TIMES.</h2>
+<p>A private letter from Hanover states that, precisely at twelve
+minutes to eleven in the morning on the ninth of the present
+November, his Majesty King ERNEST was suddenly attacked by a
+violent fit of blue devils. All the court doctors were immediately
+summoned, and as immediately dismissed, by his Majesty, who sent
+for the Wizard of the North (recently appointed royal astrologer),
+to divine the mysterious cause of this so sudden melancholy. In a
+trice the mystery was solved&mdash;Queen Victoria &ldquo;was
+happily delivered of a Prince!&rdquo; His Majesty was immediately
+assisted to his chamber&mdash;put to bed&mdash;the curtains
+drawn&mdash;all the royal household ordered to wear list
+slippers&mdash;the one knocker to the palace was carefully tied
+up&mdash;and (on the departure of our courier) half a load of straw
+was already deposited beneath the window of the royal chamber. The
+sentinels on duty were prohibited from even sneezing, under pain of
+death, and all things in and about the palace, to use a bran new
+simile, were silent as the grave!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whilst there was only the Princess Royal there were many
+hopes. There was hope from severe teething&mdash;hope from
+measles&mdash;hope from hooping-cough&mdash;but with the addition
+of a Prince of Wales, the hopes of Hanover are below par.&rdquo;
+But we pause. We will no further invade the sanctity of the sorrows
+of a king; merely observing, that what makes his Majesty very
+savage, makes hundreds of thousands of Englishmen mighty glad.
+There are now two cradles between the Crown of England and the
+White Horse of Hanover.</p>
+<p>We have a Prince of Wales! Whilst, however, England is throwing
+up its million caps in rapture at the advent, let it not be
+forgotten to whom we owe the royal baby. In the clamourousness of
+our joy the fact would have escaped us, had we not received a
+letter from Colonel SIBTHORP, who assures us that we owe a Prince
+of Wales entirely to the present cabinet; had the Whigs remained in
+office, the infant would inevitably have been a girl.</p>
+<p>For our own part&mdash;but we confess we are sometimes apt to
+look too soberly at things&mdash;we think her Majesty (may all good
+angels make her caudle!) is, inadvertently no doubt, treated in a
+questionable spirit of compliment by these uproarious rejoicings at
+the sex of the illustrious little boy, who has cast, if possible, a
+new dignity upon Lord Mayor&rsquo;s day, and made the very giants
+of Guildhall shoot up an inch taller at the compliment he has paid
+them of visiting the world on the ninth of November. In our playful
+enthusiasm, we have&mdash;that is, the public
+<em>We</em>&mdash;declared we must have a Prince of Wales&mdash;we
+should be dreadfully in the dumps if the child were not a
+Prince&mdash;the Queen must have a Prince&mdash;a bouncing
+Prince&mdash;and nothing but a Prince. Now might not an ill-natured
+Philosopher (but all philosophers are ill-natured) interpret these
+yearnings for masculine royalty as something like pensive regrets
+that the throne should ever be filled by the feminine sex? For own
+part we are perfectly satisfied that the Queen (may she live to see
+the Prince of Wales wrinkled and white-headed!) is a Queen, and
+think VICTORIA THE FIRST sounds quite as musically&mdash;has in it
+as full a note of promise&mdash;as if the regal name had
+run&mdash;GEORGE THE FIFTH! We think there is a positive want of
+gallantry at this unequivocally shouted preference of a Prince of
+Wales. Nevertheless, we are happy to say, the pretty, good-tempered
+Princess Royal (she is <em>not</em> blind, as the Tories once
+averred; but then the Whigs were <em>in</em>) still laughs and
+chirrups as if nothing had happened. Nay, as a proof of the happy
+nature of the infant (we beg to say that the fact is copyright, as
+we purchased it of the reporter of <em>The Observer</em>), whilst,
+on the ninth instant, the chimes of St. Martin&rsquo;s were
+sounding merrily for the birth of the Prince, the Princess
+magnanimously shook her coral-bells in welcome of her dispossessing
+brother!</p>
+<p>Independently of the sensation made in the City by the new glory
+that has fallen upon the ninth of November (it is said that Sir
+PETER LAURIE has been so rapt by the auspicious coincidence, that
+he has done nothing since but talk and think of &ldquo;the Prince
+of Wales&rdquo;&mdash;that on Wednesday last he rebuked an infant
+beggar with, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve nothing for you, <em>Prince of
+Wales</em>&rdquo;)&mdash;independently of the lustre flung upon the
+new Lord Mayor and the Lord Mayor just out&mdash;who will, it is
+said, both be caudle-cup baronets, the occasion has given birth to
+much deep philosophy on the part of our contemporaries&mdash;so
+deep, that there is no getting to the end of it, and has also
+revived much black-letter learning connected with the birth of
+every Prince of Wales, from the first to the last&mdash;and,
+therefore, certainly not least&mdash;new-comer.</p>
+<p>An hour or so after George the Fourth was born, we are told that
+the waggons containing the treasure of the <em>Hermione</em>, a
+Spanish galleon, captured off St. Vincent by three English
+frigates, entered St. James&rsquo;s street, escorted by cavalry and
+infantry, with trumpets sounding, the enemy&rsquo;s flags waving
+over the waggons, and the whole surrounded by an immense multitude
+of spectators. Now here, to the vulgar mind, was a happy augury of
+the future golden reign of the Royal baby. He comes upon the earth
+amid a shower of gold! The melodious chink of doubloons and pieces
+of eight echo his first infant wailings! What a theme for the
+gipsies of the press&mdash;the fortune-tellers of the time! At the
+present hour that baby sleeps the last sleep in St. George&rsquo;s
+chapel; and we have his public and his social history before us.
+What does experience&mdash;the experience bought and paid for by
+hard, hard cash&mdash;<em>now</em> read in the &ldquo;waggons of
+treasure,&rdquo; groaning musically to the rocking-cradle of the
+callow infant? Simply, the babe of Queen Charlotte would be a very
+expensive babe indeed; and that the wealth of a Spanish galleon was
+all insufficient for the youngling&rsquo;s future wants.</p>
+<p>We have been favoured, among a series of pictures, with the
+following of George the Fourth, exhibited in his babyhood. We are
+told that &ldquo;all persons <em>of fashion</em> were admitted to
+see the Prince, under the following restrictions, viz.&mdash;that
+in passing through the apartment <em>they stepped with the greatest
+caution</em>, and did not offer to touch his Royal Highness. For
+the greater security in this respect, a part of the apartment was
+latticed off <em>in the Chinese manner</em>, to prevent curious
+persons from approaching too nearly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That lattice &ldquo;in the Chinese manner&rdquo; was a small yet
+fatal fore-shadowing of the Chinese Pavilion at Brighton&mdash;of
+that temple, worthy of Pekin, wherein the Royal infant of
+threescore was wont to enshrine himself, not from the desecrating
+touch of the world, but even from the eyes of a curious people,
+who, having paid some millions toward manufacturing the most
+finished gentleman in Europe, had now and then a wish&mdash;an
+unregarded wish&mdash;to look at their expensive handiwork.</p>
+<p>What different prognostics have we in the natal day of our
+present Prince of Wales! What rational hopes from many
+circumstances that beset him. The Royal infant, we are told, is
+suckled by a person &ldquo;named Brough, formerly a
+<em>housemaid</em> at Esher.&rdquo; From this very fact, will not
+the Royal child grow up with the consciousness that he owes his
+nourishment even to the very humblest of the people? Will he not
+suck in the humanising truth with his very milk?</p>
+<p>And then for the Spanish treasure&mdash;&ldquo;hard food for
+Midas&rdquo;&mdash;that threw its jaundiced glory about the cradle
+of George the Fourth; what is that to the promise of plenty,
+augured by the natal day of our present Prince? Comes he not on the
+ninth of November? Is not his advent glorified by the aromatic
+clouds of the Lord Mayor&rsquo;s kitchen?&mdash;Let every man,
+woman, and child possess themselves of a <em>Times</em> newspaper
+of the 10th ult.; for there, in genial companionship with the
+chronicle of the birth of the Prince, is the luscious history of
+the Lord Mayor&rsquo;s dinner. We quit Buckingham Palace, our mind
+full of our dear little Queen, the Royal baby, Prince
+Albert&mdash;(who, as <em>The Standard</em> informs us
+subsequently, bows &ldquo;bare-headed&rdquo; to the
+populace,)&mdash;the Archbishop of Canterbury, Doctor Locock, the
+Duke of Wellington, and the monthly nurse, and immediately fall
+upon the civic &ldquo;general bill of fare,&rdquo;&mdash;the real
+turtle at the City board.</p>
+<p>Oh, men of Paisley&mdash;good folks of Bolton&mdash;what promise
+for ye is here! Turkeys, capons, sirloins, asparagus, pheasants,
+pine-apples, Savoy cakes, Chantilly baskets, mince pies, preserved
+ginger, brandy cherries, a thousand luscious cakes that &ldquo;the
+sense aches at!&rdquo; What are all these gifts of plenty, but a
+glad promise that in the time of the &ldquo;sweetest young
+Prince,&rdquo; that on the birth-day of that Prince just vouchsafed
+to us, all England will be a large Lord Mayor&rsquo;s table! Will
+it be possible for Englishmen to dissassociate in their minds the
+Prince of Wales and the Prince of good Fellows? And whereas the
+reigns of other potentates are signalised by bloodshed and war, the
+time of the Prince will be glorified by cooking and good cheer. His
+drum-sticks will be the drum-sticks of turkeys&mdash;his cannon,
+the popping of corks. In his day, even weavers shall know the taste
+of geese, and factory-children smack their lips at the gravy of the
+great sirloin. Join your glasses! brandish your carving-knives! cry
+welcome to the Prince of Wales! for he comes garnished with all the
+world&rsquo;s good things. He shall live in the hearts, and (what
+is more) in the stomachs of his people!</p>
+<p class="rgt">Q.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>PROPER PRECAUTION.</h3>
+<p>Everybody is talking of the great impropriety that has been
+practised in keeping gunpowder within the Tower; and the papers are
+<em>blowing up</em> the authorities with astounding violence for
+their alleged laxity. &ldquo;Gunpowder,&rdquo; say the angry
+journalists, &ldquo;ought only to be kept where there is no
+possibility of a spark getting to it.&rdquo;&mdash;We suggest the
+bottom of the Thames, as the only place where, in future, this
+precious preparation can be securely deposited.</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page223" name="page223"></a>[pg
+223]</span>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/019-07.png"><img src=
+"images/019-07.png" alt=
+"Polictians reenact a scene from 'The Vicar of Wakefield'." id=
+"img019-07" name="img019-07" width="100%" /></a>
+<p>OLIVIA&rsquo;S RETURN TO HER FRIENDS.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I ENTREAT, WOMAN, THAT MY WORDS MAY BE NOW MARKED, ONCE
+FOR ALL; I HAVE HERE BROUGHT YOU BACK A POOR DELUDED WANDERER; HER
+RETURN TO DUTY DEMANDS THE REVIVAL OF OUR TENDERNESS. THE KINDNESS
+OF HEAVEN IS PROMISED TO THE PENITENT, AND LET OURS BE DIRECTED BY
+THE EXAMPLE.&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align:right;"><em>Vicar of Wakefield</em>, Chap.
+XXII.</p>
+</div>
+<!-- [pg 224] -->
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page225" name="page225"></a>[pg
+225]</span>
+<h2>THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE LONDON MEDICAL STUDENT.</h2>
+<h3>8.&mdash;OF THE EXAMINATION AT APOTHECARIES&rsquo; HALL.</h3>
+<div class="dropcap"><a href="images/019-08.png"><img src=
+"images/019-08.png" alt=
+"Two Chinese men face each other with their queues standing out to form a letter T."
+id="img019-08" name="img019-08" width="100%" /></a></div>
+<p><span class="hidden">T</span>he last task that devolves upon our
+student before he goes up to the Hall is to hunt up his
+testimonials of attendance to lectures and good moral conduct in
+his apprenticeship, together with his parochial certificate of age
+and baptism. The first of these is the chief point to obtain; the
+two last he generally writes himself, in the style best consonant
+with his own feelings and the date of his indenture. His
+&ldquo;morality ticket&rdquo; is as follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p class="cen">(Copy.)</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hereby certify, that during the period Mr. Joseph Muff
+served his time with me he especially recommended himself to my
+notice by his studious and attentive habits, highly moral and
+gentlemanly conduct, and excellent disposition. He always availed
+himself of every opportunity to improve his professional
+knowledge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="cen">(Signed)</p>
+<p class="rgt">According to the name on the indenture.</p>
+<p>The certificate of attendance upon lectures is only obtained in
+its most approved state by much clever manoeuvring. It is important
+to bear in mind that a lecturer should never be asked whilst he is
+loitering about the school for his signature of the student&rsquo;s
+diligence. He may then have time to recollect his ignorance of his
+pupil&rsquo;s face at his discourses. He should always be caught
+flying&mdash;either immediately before or after his
+lecture&mdash;in order that the whole business may be too hurried
+to admit of investigation. In the space left for the degree of
+attention which the student has shown, it is better that he
+subscribes nothing at all than an indifferent report; because, in
+the former case, the student can fill it up to his own
+satisfaction. He usually prefers the phrase&mdash;&ldquo;with
+unremitting diligence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And having arrived at this important section of our Physiology,
+it behoves us to publish, for the benefit of medical students in
+general, and those about to go up in particular, the following</p>
+<h4>CODE OF INSTRUCTIONS</h4>
+<h5>TO BE OBSERVED BY THOSE PREPARING FOR EXAMINATION AT THE
+HALL.</h5>
+<ol>
+<li>
+<p>Previously to going up, take some pills and get your hair cut.
+This not only clears your faculties, but improves your appearance.
+The Court of Examiners dislike long hair.</p>
+</li>
+<li>
+<p>Do not drink too much stout before you go in, with the idea that
+it will give you pluck. It renders you very valiant for half an
+hour and then muddles your notions with indescribable
+confusion.</p>
+</li>
+<li>
+<p>Having arrived at the Hall, put your rings and chains in your
+pocket, and, if practicable, publish a pair of spectacles. This
+will endow you with a grave look.</p>
+</li>
+<li>
+<p>On taking your place at the table, if you wish to gain time,
+feign to be intensely frightened. One of the examiners will then
+rise to give you a tumbler of water, which you may, with good
+effect, rattle tremulously against your teeth when drinking. This
+may possibly lead them to excuse bad answers on the score of
+extreme nervous trepidation.</p>
+</li>
+<li>
+<p>Should things appear to be going against you, get up a hectic
+cough, which is easily imitated, and look acutely miserable, which
+you will probably do without trying.</p>
+</li>
+<li>
+<p>Endeavour to assume an off-hand manner of answering; and when
+you have stated any pathological fact&mdash;right or
+wrong&mdash;<em>stick to it</em>; if they want a case for example,
+invent one, &ldquo;that happened when you were an apprentice in the
+country.&rdquo; This assumed confidence will sometimes bother them.
+We knew a student who once swore at the Hall, that he gave opium in
+a case of concussion of the brain, and that the patient never
+required anything else. It was true&mdash;he never did.</p>
+</li>
+<li>
+<p>Should you be fortunate enough to pass, go to your hospital next
+day and report your examination, describing it as the most
+extraordinary ordeal of deep-searching questions ever undergone.
+This will make the professors think well of you, and the new men
+deem yon little less than a mental Colossus. Say, also, &ldquo;you
+were complimented by the Court.&rdquo; This advice is, however,
+scarcely necessary, as we never know a student pass who was not
+thus honoured&mdash;according to his own account.</p>
+</li>
+</ol>
+<hr class="short" />
+<p>All things being arranged to his satisfaction, he deposits his
+papers under the care of Mr. Sayer, and passes the interval before
+the fatal day much in the same state of mind as a condemned
+criminal. At last Thursday arrives, and at a quarter to four, any
+person who takes the trouble to station himself at the corner of
+Union-street will see various groups of three and four young men
+wending their way towards the portals of Apothecaries&rsquo; Hall,
+consisting of students about to be examined, accompanied by friends
+who come down with them to keep up their spirits. They approach the
+door, and shake hands as they give and receive wishes of success.
+The wicket closes on the candidates, and their friends adjourn to
+the &ldquo;Retail Establishment&rdquo; opposite, to <em>go the odd
+man</em> and pledge their anxious companions in dissector&rsquo;s
+diet-drink&mdash;<em>vulgo</em>, half-and-half.</p>
+<p>Leaving them to their libations, we follow our old friend Mr.
+Joseph Muff. He crosses the paved court-yard with the air of a man
+who had lost half-a-crown and found a halfpenny; and through the
+windows sees the assistants dispensing plums, pepper, and
+prescriptions, with provoking indifference. Turning to the left, he
+ascends a solemn-looking staircase, adorned with severe black
+figures in niches, who support lamps. On the top of the staircase
+he enters a room, wherein the partners of his misery are collected.
+It is a long narrow apartment, commonly known as &ldquo;the
+funking-room,&rdquo; ornamented with a savage-looking fireplace at
+one end, and a huge surly chest at the other; with gloomy presses
+against the walls, containing dry mouldy books in harsh, repulsive
+bindings. The windows look into the court; and the glass is scored
+by diamond rings, and the shutters pencilled with names and
+sentences, which Mr. Muff regards with feelings similar to those he
+would experience in contemplating the inscriptions on the walls of
+a condemned cell. The very chairs in the room look overbearing and
+unpleasant; and the whole locality is invested with an
+overallishness of unanswerable questions and intricate botheration.
+Some of the students are marching up and down the room in feverish
+restlessness; others, arm in arm, are worrying each other to death
+with questions; and the rest are grinding away to the last minute
+at a manual, or trying to write minute atomic numbers on their
+thumb-nail.</p>
+<p>The clock strikes five, and Mr. Sayer enters the room,
+exclaiming&mdash;&ldquo;Mr. Manhug, Mr. Jones, Mr. Saxby, and Mr.
+Collins.&rdquo; The four depart to the chamber of examination,
+where the medical inquisition awaits them, with every species of
+mental torture to screw their brains instead of their thumbs, and
+rack their intellects instead of their limbs,&mdash;the chair on
+which the unfortunate student is placed being far more uneasy than
+the tightest fitting &ldquo;Scavenger&rsquo;s daughter&rdquo; in
+the Tower of London. After an anxious hour, Mr. Jones returns, with
+a light bounding step to a joyous extempore air of his own
+composing: he has passed. In another twenty minutes Mr. Saxby walks
+fiercely in, calls for his hat, condemns the examiners <em>ad
+inferos</em>, swears he shall cut the profession, and marches away.
+He has been plucked; and Mr. Muff, who stands sixth on the list, is
+called on to make his appearance before the awful tribunal.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>REGULARLY CALLED IN&mdash;AND BOWLED OUT.</h3>
+<p>Dr. Demosthenes &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c. Bedford, who has
+lately broken out in a new place, has been accused by the lieges of
+the Borough of having acted in a most unprofessional manner; in
+short, with having lost his <em>patience</em>. He, Dr. Demosthenes
+&amp;c. begs to state, the only surgical operation he ever
+attempted was most successful, notwithstanding it was the difficult
+one of amputating his &ldquo;mahogany;&rdquo; and he further adds,
+the only case he ever had is still in his hand, it being a most
+obstinate</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/019-09.png"><img src=
+"images/019-09.png" alt=
+"Two men appear angry with each other -- and there are cards strewn about."
+id="img019-09" name="img019-09" width="70%" /></a>
+<p>CARD CASE.</p>
+</div>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page226" name="page226"></a>[pg
+226]</span>
+<h2>THE PRINCE OF WALES.</h2>
+<p class="cen">(<em>By the Observer&rsquo;s Own
+Correspondent.</em>)</p>
+<p>Knowing the anxiety that will be felt on this subject, though we
+doubt if the future King can be called <em>a subject</em> at all,
+we have collected the following exclusive particulars:&mdash;</p>
+<h3>THE PRINCE&rsquo;S TITLE.</h3>
+<p>His Royal Highness will for the present go by the title of
+&ldquo;Poppet,&rdquo; affectionately conferred upon him by Mrs.
+Lilly at the moment of his birth. Poppet is a title of very great
+antiquity, and has from time immemorial been used as a mark of
+endearment towards a newly-born child in all genteel families.
+Lovey-Dovey has been spoken of; but it is not likely that His Royal
+Highness will assume the style and dignity of Lovey-Dovey for a
+considerable period.</p>
+<h3>THE PRINCE&rsquo;S INCOME.</h3>
+<p>Considerable mistakes have been fallen into by some of our
+contemporaries on this important subject. What may be the present
+wishes of His Royal Highness it is impossible for any one to
+ascertain, for he is able to articulate nothing on this point with
+his little pipe; but the piper, we know, must be eventually paid.
+He becomes immediately entitled to all the loose halfpence in his
+mother&rsquo;s reticule, and sixpence a-week will be at once
+payable out of his father&rsquo;s estates at Saxe Gotha. The whole
+of the revenues attached to the Duchy of Cornwall are also his by
+the mere fact of his birth: but there is a difficulty as to his
+giving a receipt for the money, if it should be paid to him. It is
+believed, that on the meeting of Parliament a Bill will pass for
+granting peg-top money to His Royal Highness, and a lollipop
+allowance will be among the earliest estimates.</p>
+<h3>THE PRINCE&rsquo;S MILITARY RANK.</h3>
+<p>The Prince of Wales is by birth at the head of all the
+<em>Infantry</em> in the kingdom, and is Colonel in his own right
+of a regiment of tin soldiers.</p>
+<h3>THE PRINCE&rsquo;S WARDROBE.</h3>
+<p>The Prince falls at once into all the long frocks that are
+required, and has an estate tail in six dozen napkins.</p>
+<h3>THE PRINCE&rsquo;S EDUCATION.</h3>
+<p>This important matter will be confined at present to teaching
+His Royal Highness how to take his pap without spilling it. A
+professor from the pap-al states will, it is expected, be entrusted
+with this branch of the royal economy.</p>
+<h3>THE PRINCE&rsquo;S WET-NURSE.</h3>
+<p>Our contemporaries are wrong in stating that the individual to
+whom the post of wet-nurse has been assigned is nothing but a
+housemaid. We have full authority to state that she is no maid at
+all, but a respectable married woman.</p>
+<h3>THE PRINCE&rsquo;S HONOURS.</h3>
+<p>His Royal Highness has not yet been created a Knight of the
+Garter, though Sir James Clark insisted on his being admitted to
+the Bath, against which ceremony the infant Prince entered a
+vociferous protest.</p>
+<p>The whole of the above particulars may be relied on as having
+been furnished from the very highest authority.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>A BARROWKNIGHT.</h3>
+<p>SIR WILLOUGHBY COTTON, during his visit to the Mansion-House
+Feast, in a moment of forgetfulness after the song of &ldquo;Hurrah
+for the Road,&rdquo; being asked to take wine with the new Lord
+Mayor, declined the honour in the genuine long-stage phraseology,
+declaring he had already whacked his fare, and was quite</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/019-10.png"><img src=
+"images/019-10.png" alt="One man pushes another in a wheelbarrow."
+id="img019-10" name="img019-10" width="50%" /></a>
+<p>FULL INSIDE.</p>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>MAGISTERIAL AXIOMS.</h3>
+<h4>VIDE POLICE REPORTS.</h4>
+<p>An Irishman will <em>swear anything</em>.&mdash;<em>Mr.
+Grove</em>.</p>
+<p>A man who wears long hair is <em>capable of
+anything</em>.&mdash;<em>Sir Peter Laurie</em>.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>THE ROYAL BULLETINS.</h3>
+<p>The documents lately shown at Buckingham Palace are spurious,
+and the real ones have been suppressed from party motives, which we
+shall not allude to. The following are genuine; they relate only to
+the Prince, the convalescence of Her Majesty being, we are glad to
+say, so rapid as to require no official notice.</p>
+<p class="rgt"><em>Half-past Twelve</em>.</p>
+<p>The Prince has sneezed, and it is believed has smiled, though
+the nurses are unable to pronounce whether the expression of
+pleasure arose from satisfaction or cholic.</p>
+<p class="rgt"><em>Quarter past One</em>.</p>
+<p>The Prince has passed a comfortable minute, and is much
+easier.</p>
+<p class="rgt"><em>Two O&rsquo;Clock</em>.</p>
+<p>The Prince is fast asleep, and is more quiet.</p>
+<p class="rgt"><em>Half-past Two</em>.</p>
+<p>The Prince has been shown to Sir Robert Peel, and was very
+fretful.</p>
+<p class="rgt"><em>Three O&rsquo;Clock</em>.</p>
+<p>Sir Robert Peel has left the Palace, and the Prince is again
+perfectly composed.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>DEVILLED DRUMSTICKS.</h3>
+<p>Our own Sir Peter Laurie, upon witnessing the extraordinary
+performance of little Wieland in <em>Die Hexen am Rhein</em>, at
+the Adelphi Theatre, was so transported with his diabolic agility,
+that he determined upon endeavouring to arrive at the same
+perfection of pliability. As a guide for his undertaking, he
+instantly despatched old Hobler for a folio edition of</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/019-11.png"><img src=
+"images/019-11.png" alt=
+"A devilish-looking chimera stands on its hands." id="img019-11"
+name="img019-11" width="30%" /></a>
+<p>IMPEY&rsquo;S PRACTICE.</p>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>BRANDY AND WATERFORD. (A GO!)</h3>
+<p>The Marquis of Waterford, upon his recent visit to Devonshire,
+was much struck with the peculiar notice upon the County
+Stretchers. Being overtaken by some of their extra-bottled
+apple-juice, he tested the truth of the statement, and found them
+literally &ldquo;licensed to carry <em>one in cyder</em>&rdquo;
+(<em>one insider</em>).</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>THE WHEELS OF FORTUNE.</h3>
+<p>SIR WYNDHAM ANSTRUTHER, whose &ldquo;Young Rapid&rdquo;
+connexion with the <em>Stage</em> is pretty generally known, boasts
+that his stud was unrivalled for speed, as he managed with his four
+to &ldquo;run through&rdquo; his whole estates in six months, which
+he thinks a pretty decent proof that his might well be
+considered</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/019-12.png"><img src=
+"images/019-12.png" alt=
+"A carriage marked 'Bath' crosses through a river since the bridge is broken."
+id="img019-12" name="img019-12" width="90%" /></a>
+<p>A FAST COACH.</p>
+</div>
+<hr />
+<h3>SEEING NOTHING</h3>
+<p>COMMISSIONER HARVEY and his old crony, Joe Hume, were talking
+lately of the wonders which the latter had seen in his
+travels&mdash;&ldquo;You have been on Mont Blanc,&rdquo; said
+Whittle. &ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; replied the other. &ldquo;And
+what did you see there?&rdquo; &ldquo;Why really,&rdquo; said Joe,
+&ldquo;it is always so wrapped up in a double-milled fog, that
+there is nothing to be seen from it.&rdquo; &ldquo;Nothing!&rdquo;
+echoed he of the Blues; &ldquo;I never knew till now why it was
+called Mount <em>Blank</em>.&rdquo; As this was the
+Commissioner&rsquo;s first attempt at a witticism, we forgive
+him.</p>
+<hr />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page227" name="page227"></a>[pg
+227]</span>
+<h3>MORE FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE.</h3>
+<p class="cen">(FROM OUR OWN ONE.)</p>
+<p>A marriage is on the <em>tapis</em> between Mr. John Smith, the
+distinguished toll-collector at the Marsh Gate, and Miss Julia
+Belinda Snooks, the lovely and accomplished daughter of the gallant
+out-pensioner of Greenwich Hospital. Should the wedding take place,
+the bridegroom will be given away by Mr. Levy, the great
+toll-contractor; while the blushing bride will be attended to the
+altar by her mother-in-law, the well-known laundress of
+Tash-street. The <em>trousseau</em>, consisting of a selection from
+a bankrupt&rsquo;s stock of damaged <em>de laines</em>, has been
+purchased at Lambeth House; and a parasol carefully chosen from a
+lot of 500, all at one-and-ninepence, will be presented by the
+happy bridegroom on the morning of the marriage. A cabman has
+already been spoken to, and a shilling fare has been sketched out
+for the eventful morning, which is so arranged as to terminate at
+the toll-house, from which Mr. Smith can only be absent for about
+an hour, during which time the toll will be taken by an amateur of
+celebrity.</p>
+<p>Among the fashionables at the Bower Saloon, we observed Messrs.
+Jones and Brown, Mr. J. Jones, Mr. H. Jones, Mr. M. Brown, Mr. K.
+Brown, and several other distinguished leaders of the <em>ton</em>
+in Stangate.</p>
+<p>There is no truth in the report that Tom Timkins intends
+resigning his seat at the apple-stall in the New Cut; and the
+rumours of a successor are therefore premature and indelicate.</p>
+<p>The vacant crossing opposite the Victoria has not been offered
+to Bill Swivel, nor is it intended that any one shall be appointed
+to the post in the Circus.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>CONS. WORTH CONNING.</h3>
+<p>Why is the making a <em>mem.</em> of the number of a
+person&rsquo;s residence like a general election?&mdash;Because
+it&rsquo;s done to re-member <em>the house</em>.</p>
+<p>Why is Count D&rsquo;Orsay a capital piece of furniture for a
+kitchen?&mdash;Because he&rsquo;s a <em>good dresser</em>.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>MORBID SYMPATHY FOR CRIMINALS.</h3>
+<p>Our contemporary, the <em>Times</em>, for the last few days has
+been very justly deprecating the existing morbid sympathy for
+criminals. The moment that a man sins against the conventionalities
+of society he ought certainly to be excluded from all claims upon
+the sympathy of his fellows. It is very true that even the felon
+has kindred, parents, wife, children&mdash;for whom, and in whom,
+God has implanted an instinctive love. It is true that the criminal
+may have been led by the example of aristocratic sinners to
+disregard the injunctions of revealed religion against the
+adulterer, the gamester, and the drunkard; and having imitated the
+&ldquo;pleasant follies&rdquo; of the great without possessing the
+requisite means for such enjoyments, the man of pleasure has
+degenerated into the man of crime. It is true that the poor and
+ignorant may have claims upon the wealth and the intelligence of
+the rich and learned; but are we to pause to inquire whether want
+may have driven the destitute to theft, or the absence of early
+instruction have left the physical desires of the offender&rsquo;s
+nature superior to its moral restrictions.&mdash;Certainly not,
+whilst we have a gallows. There is, however, one difficulty which
+seems to interfere with a liberal exercise of the rope and the
+beam. Where are we to find executioners? for if &ldquo;whoso
+sheddeth man&rsquo;s blood&rdquo; be amenable to man, surely Jack
+Ketch is not to be exempted.</p>
+<p>The <em>Times</em> condemns the late Lord Chamberlain for
+allowing the representation of &ldquo;Jack Sheppard&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Madame Laffarge&rdquo; at the Adelphi; so do we. The
+<em>Times</em> intimates, that &ldquo;the newspapers teem with
+details about everything which such criminals &lsquo;as Dick Turpin
+and Jack Sheppard&rsquo; say or do; that complete biographies of
+them are presented to the public; that report after report
+expatiates upon every refinement and peculiarity in their
+wickedness,&rdquo; for &ldquo;the good purpose&rdquo; of warning
+the embryo highwayman. We are something more than <em>duberous</em>
+of this. We can see no difference between the exhibition of the
+stage and the gloating of the broadsheet; they are both &ldquo;the
+agents by which the exploits of the gay highwayman are realised
+before his eyes, amid a brilliant and evidently sympathising&rdquo;
+public. We deprecate both, as tending to excite the weak-minded to
+gratify &ldquo;the ambition of this kind of
+notoriety;&rdquo;&mdash;and yet we say, with the <em>Times</em>,
+there should be &ldquo;no sympathy for criminals.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>THE MALE DALILAH.</h3>
+<p>Sir Peter Laurie&rsquo;s aversion to long locks is accounted for
+by his change of political opinions, he having some time since
+<em>cut the W(h)igs</em>.</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>A &ldquo;PUNCH&rdquo; TESTIMONIAL.</h2>
+<p>We are virtuously happy to announce that a meeting has been held
+at the <em>Hum</em>-mums Hotel, Colonel Sibthorp in the chair, for
+the purpose of presenting to PUNCH some testimonial of public
+esteem for his exertions in the detection and exposure of
+fraudulent wits and would-be distinguished characters.</p>
+<p>COLONEL SIBTHORP thanked the meeting for the honour they had
+conferred upon him in electing him their chairman upon this
+occasion. None knew better than himself the service that PUNCH had
+rendered to the public. But for that fun fed individual his (Col.
+Sibthorp&rsquo;s) own brilliant effusions would have been left to
+have smouldered in his brain, or have hung like cobwebs about the
+House of Commons. (<em>Hear, hear</em>!) But PUNCH had stepped in
+to the rescue; he had not only preserved some of the brilliant
+things that he (Col. Sibthorp) had said, but had also reported many
+of the extremely original witticisms that he had intended to have
+uttered. (<em>Hear</em>!) There were many honourable
+gentlemen&mdash;(he begged pardon&mdash;gentlemen, he meant,
+without the honourable; but he had been so long a member of
+parliament that he had acquired a habit of calling men and things
+out of their proper names). Apologising for so lengthy a
+parenthesis, he would say that there were many gentlemen who were
+equally indebted (<em>hear! from Sir Peter Laurie, Peter Borthwick,
+and Pre-Adam Roebuck</em>) to this jocular benefactor. &ldquo;It
+was PUNCH,&rdquo; said the gallant gentleman, with much feeling,
+&ldquo;who first convinced me that the popular opinion of my
+asinine capabilities was erroneous. It was PUNCH who discovered
+that there was as much in my head as on it(<em>loud cheers,
+produced doubtlessly by the aptness of the simile, the gallant
+Colonel being perfectly bald</em>). I should, therefore, be the
+most ungrateful of Members for Lincoln, did I not entreat of this
+meeting to mark their high sense of Mr. PUNCH&rsquo;S exertions by
+a liberal subscription&rdquo; (<em>cheers</em>).</p>
+<p>SIR PETER LAURIE acknowledged himself equally in debt with their
+gallant Chairman to the object of the present meeting. He (Sir
+Peter) had tried all schemes to obtain popularity&mdash;he had made
+speeches without number or meaning&mdash;he had done double duty at
+the Mansion-house, and had made Mr. Hobler laugh more heartily than
+any Lord Mayor or Alderman since the days of Whittington (during
+whose mayoralty the venerable Chief Clerk first took
+office)&mdash;he (Sir P. Laurie) had, after much difficulty and
+four years&rsquo; practice, received the Queen on horseback
+(<em>much cheering</em>); but (<em>continued
+cheering</em>)&mdash;but it was left for PUNCH to achieve his
+immortality (<em>immense cheering&mdash;several squares of glass in
+the conservatory opposite broken by the explosion</em>). He (Sir P.
+Laurie) had done all in his power to deserve the notice of that
+illustrious wooden individual. He had endeavoured to be much more
+ass&mdash;(<em>loud cheers</em>)&mdash;iduous than ever. PUNCH had
+rewarded him; and he therefore felt it his bounden duty to reward
+PUNCH. (<em>Hear! hear!</em>)</p>
+<p>MR. ROEBUCK fully concurred in the preceding eulogies. What had
+not PUNCH done for him? Had not PUNCH extinguished the
+<em>Times</em> by the honest way in which he had advocated his
+(Roebuck&rsquo;s) injured genealogy? Had PUNCH not proved that he
+(Mr. Roebuck) had a father, which the &ldquo;mendacious
+journal&rdquo; had asserted was impossible? Had not PUNCH traced
+the Roebuck family as far back as 1801?&mdash;that was something!
+But he (Mr. Roebuck) believed that he had been injured by an error
+of the press, and that PUNCH had written the numerals 1081. Be that
+as it might, he (Mr. Roebuck) was anxious to discharge the
+overwhelming debt of gratitude which he owed to MR. PUNCH, and
+intended to subscribe very largely (<em>cheers</em>).</p>
+<p>MR. PETER BORTHWICK had been in former years a Shaksperian
+actor. He had for many seasons, at the &ldquo;Royal Rugby
+Barn,&rdquo; had the honour of bearing the principal banners in all
+the imposing processions, &ldquo;got up at an immense
+expense&rdquo; in that unique establishment. (<em>Hear</em>!) He
+was, therefore, better qualified than any gentleman present to form
+an opinion of the services which Punch had rendered to the British
+Drama (<em>loud and continued cheers, during which Mr. Yates rushed
+on to the platform, and bowed several times to the assembled
+multitude</em>). Therefore, as a devoted admirer of that art which
+he (Peter) trusted HE and Shakspere had adorned (<em>cheers</em>),
+he fondly hoped that the meeting would at once take tickets, when
+he announced that the performance was for the benefit of Mr.
+PUNCH.</p>
+<p>LORD MORPETH next presented himself; but our reporter, having
+promised to take tea with his grandmother, left before the Noble
+Lord opened his mouth.</p>
+<p>We hope next week to furnish the remainder of the speeches, and
+a very long list of subscriptions.</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page228" name="page228"></a>[pg
+228]</span>
+<h2>THE RAPE OF THE LOCK-UP;</h2>
+<h3>OR, SIR PETER LAURIE ON CRIME AND THE CROPS.</h3>
+<p>We believe no longing was ever more firmly planted in the human
+heart, than that of discovering some short cut to the high road of
+mental acquirement. The toilsome learner&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Progress&rdquo; through the barren outset of the alphabet;
+the slough of despond of seven syllables, endangered as they both
+are by the frequent appearance of the compulsive birch of the Mr.
+Worldly-wisemen who teach the young idea how to shoot, must ever be
+looked upon as a probation, the power of avoiding which is &ldquo;a
+consummation devoutly to be wished.&rdquo; Imbued with this
+feeling, the more speculative of past ages have frequently
+attempted to arrive, by external means, at the immediate possession
+of results otherwise requiring a long course of intense study and
+anxious inquiry. From these defunct illuminati originated the
+suppositionary virtues of the magically-endowed divining wand. The
+simple bending of a forked hazel twig, being the received sign of
+the deep-buried well, suited admirably with their notions of
+immediate information, and precluded the unpleasant and toilsome
+necessity for delving on speculation for the discovery of their
+desired object. But, alas, divining rods, like dogs, have had their
+day. The want of faith in the operators, or the growth of a new and
+obstinate assortment of hazel twigs, threw discredit on the mummery
+and the mummers. Still the passion existed; and in no case was it
+more observable than in that of the celebrated witch-finder. An
+actual presence at the demoniacal rites of the broom-riding
+sisterhood would have been attended with much danger and
+considerable difficulty; indeed, it has been asserted that the
+visitors, like those at Almack&rsquo;s, were expected to be
+balloted for, ticketed, and dressed in a manner suiting the
+occasion. Any infringement of these rules must have been at the
+proper peril of the contumacious infringer; and as it is more than
+probable some of the brooms carried double, there was a very decent
+chance of the intruder&rsquo;s discovering himself across one of
+the heavy-tailed and strong-backed breed, taking a trip to some
+distant bourne, from whence that compulsory aerial traveller would
+doubtless never have returned. Still witches were evils; and proof
+of evil is what the law seeks to enable evil&rsquo;s suppression.
+Now and again one of these short-cut gentry, by some railroad
+system of mental calculation, discovered certain external marks or
+moles that at a glance betrayed &ldquo;the secret, dark, and
+midnight hags;&rdquo; and the witch-finding process was
+instantaneously established. The outward and visible sign of their
+misdeeds authorised the further proceeding necessary for the clear
+proof of their delinquencies: thus the pinchings, beatings,
+starvings, trials, hangings, and burnings were made the goal of the
+shortest of all imaginable short cuts; and old women who had
+established pin manufactories in the stomachs of thousands, instead
+of receiving patents for their inventions, divided the honour of
+illuminating the land with the blazing tar-barrels provided for
+their peculiar use and benefit. Whether it was that aerial gambols
+on unsaddled and rough-backed broomsticks grew tiresome, or the
+small profit attending the vocation became smaller, or that all the
+elderly ladies with moles, and without anything else, were burnt
+up, we can&rsquo;t pretend to say; but certain it is, the art of
+witchcraft fell into disrepute. Corking, minikin, and all
+description of pins, were obliged to be made in the regular way;
+and cows even departed this world without the honour of the human
+immolations formerly considered the necessary sacrifice for the
+loss of their inestimable lives. Since the abovetimes Animal
+Magnetism and Mesmerism have followed in the wake of what has been;
+and now, just as despair, already poised upon its outstretched
+sable wings, was hovering for a brief moment previous to making its
+final swoop upon the External Doctrine, Peter&mdash;our
+Peter&mdash;Peter Laurie&mdash;the great, the glorious, the
+aldermanic Laurie&mdash;makes despair, like the Indian Juggler who
+swallowed himself, become the victim of its own insatiate maw.</p>
+<p>Our quill trembles as we proceed; it is unequal to the task. Oh,
+that we could write with the whole goose upon the wondrous merits
+of the wondrous Peter!</p>
+<p>We are better. That bumper has restored our nerve.</p>
+<p>Reader, fancy the gifted Peter seated in the dull dignity of
+civic magistracy: the court is thronged&mdash;a young delinquent
+blinks like an owl in sunshine &rsquo;neath the mighty flashing of
+his bench-lit eye. His crime, ay, what&rsquo;s his crime? it
+can&rsquo;t be much&mdash;so pale, so thin, so woe-begone! look,
+too, so tremulous of knee, and redolent of hair! what has he
+done?</p>
+<p>Here Roe interprets&mdash;&ldquo;Please your worship, this young
+man, or tailor, has been assaulting several females with a blue bag
+and a pair of breeches.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><em>Sir Peter</em>.&mdash;&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t wonder at it;
+that man would do anything, I see it in his face, or rather in the
+back of his head, that&rsquo;s where the expression lies&mdash;look
+at his hair!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The whole court becomes a Cyclops&mdash;it has but one eye, and
+that is fixed upon the tailor&rsquo;s locks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I say,&rdquo; resumes our Peter, &ldquo;a man with that
+head of hair would do anything&mdash;pray, sir, do you wish to be
+taken for a German sausage, or a German
+student?&mdash;they&rsquo;re all the same, sir&mdash;speak at
+once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The faltering fraction denies the student, and repudiates the
+sausage.</p>
+<p><em>Sir Peter</em>, still looking at the hair, from which
+external sign he evidently derived all his
+information&mdash;&ldquo;You were drunk, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was,&rdquo; faltered the Samsonian schneider.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know it, sir&mdash;you are fined five shillings,
+sir&mdash;but if you choose to submit to the deprivation of that
+iniquitous hair, which has brought you here, and which, I repeat,
+will make you do anything, I will remit the fine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A sigh, fine-drawn as the accidental rent in an unfinished
+skirt, escaped the hirsute stitcher: a melancholy reflection upon
+the infinite deal of nothing in his various pockets, and the slow
+revolving of the Brixton wheel in stern perspective, wrung from the
+quodded wretch a slow assent: Sir Peter sent a City officer with
+his warrant to secure the nearest barber: a few sharp clickings of
+the envious shears&mdash;and all was over! Crime fell from the
+shoulders of the quondam culprit, and the tonsorial innocent stood
+forth confessed!</p>
+<p>Sir Peter was entranced. That was his doing! He gazed with pride
+upon the new absolved from sin. He asked, &ldquo;Are you not more
+comfortable?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>All vice had gone, save one&mdash;the young man answered
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; and <em>lied</em>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then, sir, go home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The barber,&rdquo; muttered &ldquo;soft Roe&rdquo; in as
+soft a voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What of him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wants a shillin&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There it is,&rdquo; exclaimed the Augustine Peter,
+&ldquo;there, from my own pocket, paid with pleasure to preserve
+that youth from the evil influence of too much
+hair&mdash;I&rsquo;ll pay for all the City if they like&mdash;and
+banished suicide, and I&rsquo;ll pretty soon see if I can&rsquo;t
+settle all the City crops. Prisoner, you are discharged.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The young man lost his hair, the Queen five shillings, and Sir
+Peter one; but then he gained his end,&mdash;and docking must
+henceforth be looked upon as the treadmill&rsquo;s antidote, and
+young man&rsquo;s fines&rsquo; best friend. We therefore say,
+should the iniquity of your long locks, gentle reader, take you to
+the station (for, remember, Sir Peter says, <em>Long hair will do
+anything</em>), if you can&rsquo;t find bail, secure a barber, and
+command your liberation. We have been speculating of these
+externally-illustrated grades of crime; we think the following
+nearly correct:&mdash;</p>
+<p>The long and lank indicates larceny (petty and otherwise).</p>
+<p>The bushy and bountiful&mdash;burglary.</p>
+<p>The full and flowing&mdash;felony.</p>
+<p>The magnificent and mysterious&mdash;murder.</p>
+<p>And, for aught we know, pigtails&mdash;polygamy.</p>
+<p>For the future, a thinking man&rsquo;s motto will be, not to
+mind &ldquo;his own eye,&rdquo; but everybody else&rsquo;s
+hair.</p>
+<p>P.S. We have just received the following horrifying
+communication which establishes Sir Peter&rsquo;s opinion,
+&ldquo;that a man with such hair would do anything,&rdquo; but
+unfortunately disproves the remedy, as those atrocities have been
+committed when he was without.</p>
+<p>Indignant at the loss of his head&rsquo;s glory, the evil-minded
+tailor, immediately upon leaving the court, sent for
+counsel&rsquo;s opinion as to whether he couldn&rsquo;t proceed
+against Sir Peter, under the act for &ldquo;cutting and maiming,
+with intent to do him some grievous bodily harm.&rdquo; This, it
+appears he cannot do, inasmuch as these very learned gentlemen at
+the bar have decided, &ldquo;the head&rdquo; from which the hair
+was cut, and which, if any, is consequently the injured part, is
+not included in the meaning of the word <em>bodily</em>, as &amp;c.
+&amp;c. Foiled in this attempt, the monster, for the brutal
+gratification of his burning revenge, hit upon a scheme the most
+diabolical that human hair could conceive. He actually applied to
+the Society for the Suppression of <em>Cruelty to Animals</em>; and
+they, upon inspecting a portion of the dissevered locks,
+immediately took up the case, and are about to indict Sir Peter,
+Roe, and the barber, under one of the clauses of that tremendous
+act. If they proceed for penalties in individual cases, they must
+be immense, as the killed and wounded are beyond
+calculation,&mdash;not to mention all that the process has left
+homeless, foodless, and destitute.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>BARBER-OUS ANNOUNCEMENT.</h3>
+<p>We beg to inform our readers that Mr. Tanner, of Temple-bar and
+Shire-lane, whose salon extends from the city of London to the
+liberties of Westminster, has this day been appointed Hair-cutter
+Extraordinary to Sir Peter Laurie.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>A NEW MILKY WAY.</h3>
+<p>KIRCHOFF, a Prussian chemist, is reported to have discovered a
+process by which milk may be preserved for an indefinite period.
+Fresh milk is evaporated by a very gentle heat till it is reduced
+to a dry powder, which is to be kept perfectly dry in a bottle.
+When required for use it need only be diluted with a sufficient
+quantity of water. Mr. James Jones, who keeps a red cow&mdash;over
+his door&mdash;claims the original idea of making milk from a white
+powder, which, he states, may be done without the tedious process
+of evaporation, by using an article entirely known to London
+milk-vendors&mdash;namely <em>chalk</em>.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>OH GEMINI!</h3>
+<p>At the close of the Civic Festival last week, Sir William
+Follett inquired of the Recorder if he had seen his
+<em>Castor</em>. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied Law (holding up the
+Attorney-General&rsquo;s fifty-seven penn&rsquo;orth), &ldquo;but
+here is your brother Pollock&rsquo;s&rdquo; (<em>Pollux</em>.)</p>
+<hr />
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Sir Peter Hobler the other morning,
+&ldquo;I should think you will be denied the <em>entr&eacute;e</em>
+to the Palace after your decision of Saturday.&rdquo; &ldquo;Why
+so?&rdquo; inquired the knight of leather. &ldquo;For fear you
+should cut off the heir to the Throne!&rdquo; screamed Hobler, and
+vanished.</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol.
+1, November 20, 1841, by Various
+
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 1,
+November 20, 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, November 20, 1841
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: February 7, 2005 [EBook #14937]
+
+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 NOVEMBER 20, 1841.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MYSELF, PUNCH, AND THE KEELEYS.
+
+I dined with my old friend and schoolfellow, Jack Withers, one day last
+September. On the previous morning, on my way to the India House, I had
+run up against a stout individual on Cornhill, and on looking in his face
+as I stopped for a moment to apologise, an abrupt "This is surely Jack
+Withers," burst from my lips, followed by--"God bless me! Will Bayfield!"
+from his. After a hurried question or two, we shook hands warmly and
+parted, with the understanding that I was to cut my mutton with him next
+day.
+
+Seventeen years had elapsed since Withers and I had seen or heard of each
+other. Having a good mercantile connexion, he had pitched upon commerce as
+his calling, and entered a counting-house in Idollane in the same year
+that I, a raw young surgeon, embarked for India to seek my fortune in the
+medical service of the East India Company.
+
+Things had gone well with honest Jack; from a long, thin, weazel of a
+youngster, he had become a burly ruddy-faced gentleman, with an aldermanic
+rotundity of paunch, which gave the world assurance that his ordinary fare
+by no means consisted of deaf nuts; he had already, as he told me,
+accumulated a very pretty independence, which was yearly increasing, and
+was, moreover, a snug bachelor, with a well-arranged residence in
+Finsbury-square; in short, it was evident that Jack was "a fellow with two
+coats and everything handsome about him."
+
+As for me, I was a verification of the adage about the rolling stone;
+having gathered a very small quantity of "moss," in the shape of worldly
+goods. I had spent sixteen years in marching and countermarching over the
+thirsty plains of the Carnatic, in medical charge of a native
+regiment--salivating Sepoys and blowing out with blue pills the
+officers--until the effects of a stiff jungle-fever, that nearly made me
+proprietor of a landed property measuring six feet by two, sent me back to
+England almost as poor as I had left it, and with an atrabilarious visage
+which took a two-months' course of Cheltenham water to scour into anything
+like a decent colour.
+
+Withers' dinner was in the best taste: viands excellent--wine superb;
+never did I sip racier Madeira, and the Champagne trickled down one's
+throat with the same facility that man is inclined to sin.
+
+The cloth drawn, we fell to discoursing about old times, things, persons,
+and places. Jack then told me how from junior clerk he had risen to become
+second partner in the firm to which he belonged; and I, in my turn,
+enlightened his mind with respect to Asiatic Cholera, Runjeet Sing,
+Ghuzni, tiger-shooting, and Shah Soojah.
+
+In this manner the evening slid pleasantly on. An array of six bottles,
+that before dinner had contained the juice of Oporto, stood empty on the
+sideboard. Jack wanted to draw another cork, which, however, I positively
+forbad, as I have through life made it a rule to avoid the slightest
+approach towards excess in tippling; so, after a modest brace of glasses
+of brandy-and-water, I shook hands with and left my friend about half-past
+nine, for I am an old-fashioned fellow, and love early hours, my usual
+time for turning in being ten.
+
+When I got into the street an unaccustomed spirit of gaiety at once took
+possession of me; my general feelings of benevolence and goodwill towards
+all mankind appeared to have received a sudden and marvellous increase. I
+seemed to tread on eider-down, and, cigar in mouth, strolled along
+Fleet-street and the Strand, towards my domicile in Half-Moon
+street--"nescio quid meditans nugarum"--sometimes humming the fag end of
+an Irish melody; anon stopping to stare in a print-shop window; and then I
+would trudge on, chewing the cud of sweet and bitter fancy as I conned
+over the various ups and downs that had chequered my life since Jack
+Withers and I were thoughtless lads together "a long time ago."
+
+In this mood I found myself standing before the New Strand Theatre, my
+attention having been arrested by the word PUNCH blazoned in large letters
+on a play-bill.
+
+"What can this mean?" quoth I to myself. "I know a publication called
+Punch very well, but I never heard of a performance so named. I'll go in
+and see it. Who knows but it may be an avatar[1] of the Editor of that
+illustrious periodical, who condescends to discard his dread incognito for
+the nonce, in order to exhibit himself, for one night only, to the eyes
+and understandings of admiring London."
+
+ [1] The Avatar we do not allow--the illustrious periodical we
+ do.--ED. OF PUNCH.
+
+In another minute I was seated in the boxes, and found a crowded audience
+in full enjoyment of the quiet waggery of Keeley, who was fooling them to
+the top of their bent, accoutred from top to toe as Mynheer Punch the
+Great, while his clever little wife--who, by the way, possesses, I think,
+more of the "vis comica" than any actress of the day--caused sides to
+shake and eyes to water by her naive and humorous delineation of Mrs.
+Snozzle.
+
+The curtain had hardly fallen more than a couple of minutes, when a door
+behind me opened hastily, and a box-keeper thrusting in his head, called
+out--"Is there a medical man here?" "I am one," said I, getting up;
+"anything the matter?" "Come with me then, sir, if you please," said he;
+"a severe accident has just happened to Mrs. Keeley; a falling scene has
+struck her head, sir, and hurt her dreadfully."
+
+"Good heavens!" said I, much shocked; "I will come immediately."
+
+I followed the man to the stage door, and was ushered into a dressing-room
+with several people in it, where, extended on a sofa, lay the unfortunate
+lady, whom I had but a few minutes before seen full of life and spirits,
+delighting hundreds with her unrivalled humour and _espieglerie_,--there
+she lay, in the same fantastic dress she had worn on the stage, pale as
+death--a quantity of blood flowing from a fearful wound on her head, and
+uttering those low quick moans which are indicative of extreme suffering.
+
+Poor little Keeley stood beside the couch, holding her hand; he was still
+in full fig as _Polichinel_; and the grotesqueness of his attire
+contrasted strangely with the anguish depicted on his countenance. As I
+came forward, he slowly made way for me--looked in my face imploringly, as
+if to gather from its expression some gleam of hope, and then stood aside,
+in an attitude of profound dejection.
+
+Having felt the sufferer's pulse, I was about to turn her head gently, in
+order to examine the nature of the wound, when a hustling noise behind me
+causing me to turn round, to my infinite dismay, I perceived Mr. Keeley,
+having pushed the bystanders on one side, in the act of performing a kind
+of Punchean dance upon the floor, accompanying himself with the vigorous
+chuckling and crowing peculiar to the hero whose habiliments he wore. I
+was horror-stricken--conceiving that grief had suddenly turned his brain.
+
+All at once, he made a spring towards me, and, seizing my arm, thrust me
+into a corner of the room, where he held me fast, exclaiming--
+
+"Wretch! villain! restore me my wife--that talented woman your infernal
+arts have destroyed! You did for her!"
+
+"Mr. Keeley," said I, struggling to release myself from his grasp--"my
+dear sir, pray compose yourself."
+
+"Unhappy traitor!" he shouted, giving me an unmerciful tweak by the nose;
+"Look at her silver skin laced with her golden blood!--see, see! Oh, see!"
+
+This was rather too much, even from a man whose wits were astray. I began
+to lose patience, and was preparing to rid myself somewhat roughly of the
+madman's grasp, when a new phenomenon occurred.
+
+The patient on the sofa, whom I had judged well nigh moribund, and
+consequently incapable of any effort whatever, all at once sat up with a
+sudden jerk, and gave vent to a series of the most ear-piercing shrieks
+that ever assailed human tympanum.
+
+_"Oh! oh! Mon Dieu! je suis etouffee! levez-vous donc,
+monsieur--n'avez-vous pas honte!"_
+
+I started up--O misery!--I had fallen asleep, and my head, resting against
+a pillar, had slipped down, depositing itself upon the expansive bosom of
+a portly French dame in the next box, who seemed, by her vehement
+exclamations, to be quite shaken from the balance of her propriety by the
+unlooked-for burthen I had imposed upon her; whilst a _petit monsieur_
+poured forth a string of _sacres_ and _sapristies_ upon my devoted head
+with a volubility of utterance truly astonishing.
+
+I gazed about me with troubled and lack-lustre eye. Every lorgnette in the
+boxes was levelled at my miserable countenance; a sea of upturned and
+derisive faces grinned at me from the pit, and the gods in Olympus
+thundered from on high--"Turn him out; he's drunk!"
+
+This was the unkindest cut of all--thus publicly to be accused of
+intoxication, a vice of all others I have ever detested and eschewed.
+
+I cast one indignant glance around me, and left the theatre, lamenting the
+depravity of our nature, which is, alas! always ready to put the worst
+construction upon actions in themselves most innocent; for if I had gone
+to sleep in my own arm-chair, pray who would have accused me of inebriety?
+
+How I got home I know not. As I hurried through the streets, a legion of
+voices, in every variety of intonation, yelled in my ears--"Turn him
+out--he's drunk!" and when I woke in the middle of the night, tormented by
+a raging thirst (produced, I suppose, by the flurry of spirits I had
+undergone), I seemed to hear screams, groans, and hisses, above all which
+predominated loud and clear the malignant denunciation--"Turn him
+out--he's drunk!"
+
+Upon my subsequently mentioning the above adventure to Jack Withers, it
+will hardly be credited that this villain without shame at once roundly
+asserted that, when I left him on the afore-mentioned night, I was at
+least three sheets and three quarters in the wind; adding with
+praiseworthy candour, that he himself was so far gone as to be obliged, to
+the infinite scandal of his staid old housekeeper, to creep up stairs _a
+quatre pieds_, in order to gain his bedroom.
+
+Now this latter may be true enough, for it is probable that friend Jack
+freshened his nip a trifle after my departure, seeing that he was always
+something of a drunken knave. As for his calumnious and scandalous
+declaration, that _I_ was in the least degree tipsy, it is too ridiculous
+to be noticed. I scorn it with my heels--I was sober--sober, cool, and
+steady as the north star; and he that is inclined to question this solemn
+asseveration, let him send me his card; and if I don't drill a hole in his
+doublet before he's forty-eight hours older, then, as honest Slender has
+it, "I would I might never come in mine own great chamber again else."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"ARE YE SURE THE NEWS IS TRUE?"
+
+We learn from good authority that Lord TAMBOFF STANLEY, in answer to a
+deputation from Scotland, assured the gentlemen who waited upon him that
+"the subject of _emigration_ was under the serious consideration of Her
+Majesty's Ministers." We hope that those respectable gentlemen may soon
+resolve upon their departure--we care not "what clime they wander to, so
+not again to _this_;" or, as Shakspeare says, let them "stand not upon the
+order of their going, but GO." The country, we take it upon ourselves to
+say, will remember them when they are gone; they have left the nation too
+many weighty proofs of their regard to be forgotten in a
+hurry--Corruption, Starvation, and Taxation, and the National Debt by way
+of
+
+[Illustration: A HANDSOME LEG--I SEE (LEGACY).]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A DOSE OF CASTOR.
+
+Peter Borthwick, late of the Royal Surrey Nautical, having had the honour
+of "deep damnation" conferred upon his "taking off" the character of
+Prince Henry, upon that occasion, to appear in unison with the text of the
+Immortal Bard, "dressed" the part in a most elaborate "neck-or-nothing
+tile." Upon being expostulated with by the manager, he triumphantly
+referred to the description of the chivalrous Prince in which the narrator
+particularly states--
+
+[Illustration: I SAW YOUNG HARRY WITH HIS BEAVER ON.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CUTTING AT THE ROOT OF THE EVIL.
+
+"Good heavens, Sir Peter," said Hobler, confidentially, to our dearly
+beloved Alderman, "How could you have passed such a ridiculous sentence
+upon Jones, as to direct his hair to be cut off?" "All right, my dear
+Hobby," replied the sapient justice; "the fellow was found fighting in the
+streets, and I wanted to hinder him, at least for some time, from again
+
+[Illustration: COMING TO THE SCRATCH."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+TO PUNCH.
+
+We have received the following choice bit of poetic pathology from our old
+friend and jolly dog Toby, who, it seems, has taken to medicine. The dog,
+however, always had a great propensity to _bark_, owing doubtlessly to the
+strong _tincture_ of _canine_ there was in his constitution:--
+
+
+MY DEAR PUNCH,
+
+Nothing convinces me more of my treacherous memory than my not
+recollecting you at the memorable "New-boot Supper;" for I certainly must
+have been as long in that society as yourself. Be that as it may, you have
+induced me to scrape together a few reminiscences in an imperfect way,
+leaving to you, from your better recollection, to correct and flavour the
+specimen to the palate of your readers, who have, most deservedly, every
+reliance upon your good taste and moral tendency. I have in vain tried to
+meet with the music of "the good old days of Adam and Eve," consequently
+have lost the enjoyment of the chorus--"Sing hey, sing ho!" It would be
+too much to ask you to sing it, but perhaps you may too-te-too it in your
+next. May your good intentions to the would-be AEsculapius be attended with
+success.--I remain, dear Punch, your old friend,
+
+TOBY.
+
+
+ASCITES.
+
+ Abdomen swell'd, which fluctuates when struck upon the side, sirs;
+ Face pale and puff'd, and worse than that, with thirst and cough
+ beside, sirs;
+ Skin dry, and breathing difficult, and pains in epigastrium,
+ And watchfulness or partial sleep, with dreams would strike the
+ bravest dumb.
+ To cure--restore the balance of exhalants and absorbents,
+ With squill, blue-pill, and other means to soothe the patient's
+ torments.
+
+ GRINDER.
+
+ Sure this is not your climax, sir, to save from Davy's locker!
+
+ STUDENT.
+
+ Way, no,--I'd then with caution tap--when first I'd tied the knocker.
+ Sing hey! sing ho! if you cannot find a new plan,
+ In Puseyistic days like these, you'd better try a New-man.
+
+
+TYMPANITIS.
+
+ The swelling here is different--sonorous, tense, elastic;
+ On it you might a tattoo beat, with fingers or with a stick.
+ There's costiveness and atrophy, with features Hippocratic;
+ When these appear, there's much to fear, all safety is erratic.
+ Although a cordial laxative, mix'd up with some carminative,
+ Might be prescribed, with morphia, or hops, to keep the man alive;
+ Take care his diet's nutritive, avoiding food that's flatulent,
+ And each week let him have a dose of Punch from Mr. Bryant sent.
+ Sing hey! sing ho! &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ALARMING PROSPECTS FOR THE COUNTRY.
+
+It appears that no less than _one hundred and sixty-four_ Attorneys have
+given notice of their intention to practise in the Court of Queen's Bench;
+and _eleven_ of the fraternity have applied to be re-admitted Attorneys of
+the Court. We had no idea that such an alarming extension was about taking
+place in
+
+[Illustration: THE RIFLE CORPS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"ONE GOOD TURN DESERVES ANOTHER."
+
+ A poor man went to hang himself,
+ But treasure chanced to find;
+ He pocketed the miser's pelf
+ And left the rope behind.
+
+ His money gone, the miser hung
+ Himself in sheer despair:
+ Thus each the other's wants supplied,
+ And that was surely fair.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+We understand that Mr. Webster has solicited Sir Peter Laurie to make an
+early debut at the Haymarket Theatre in the _Heir_ (hair) _at Law_.
+
+Madame Vestris has also endeavoured to prevail upon the civic mercy.
+Andrew to appear in the afterpiece of the _Rape of the Lock_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE HEIR OF APPLEBITE.
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+WHEREIN THE READER WILL FIND GREAT CAUSE FOR REJOICING.
+
+
+[Illustration: C]Conducive as Uncle Peter's suggestion might have been to
+the restoration of peace in the family of our hero, it was decided to be
+impracticable by several medical gentlemen, who were consulted upon the
+matter. After sundry scenes of maternal and grandmaternal distress,
+Agamemnon succeeded in obtaining the victory, and the heir was vaccinated
+accordingly with the most favourable result. The pustule rose, budded,
+blossomed, and disappeared, exactly as it ought to have done, and a few
+days saw the health of the infant Applebite insured in the office of Dr.
+Jenner.
+
+Scarcely had the anxious parents been relieved by this auspicious
+termination, when that painful disorder which renders pork unwholesome and
+children fractious, made its appearance. Had we the plague-pen of the
+romancist of Rookwood, we would revel in the detail of this domesticated
+pestilence--we would picture the little sufferer in the hour of its
+agony--and be as minute as Mr. Hume in our calculations of its feverish
+pulsations; but our quill was moulted by the dove, not plucked from the
+wing of the carrion raven.
+
+And now, gentle reader, we come to a point of this history which we are
+assured has been anxiously looked forward to by you--a point at which the
+reader, already breathless with expectation, has fondly anticipated being
+suffocated with excitement. We may, without vanity, lay claim to
+originality, for we have introduced a new hero into the world of
+fiction--a baby three months old--we have traced his happy parents from
+the ball-room to St. George's church; from St. George's church to the
+ball-room; thence to the doctor's; and from thence to
+
+THE END.
+
+Reproach us not, mamas?--Discard us not, ye blushing divinities who have,
+with your sex's softness, dandled the heir of Applebite in your
+imaginations!--Wait!--Wait till we have explained! We have a motive; but
+as we are novices in this style of literature, we will avail ourselves, at
+our leave-taking, of the valedictory address of one who is more "up to the
+swindle."
+
+
+_To the Readers of the Heir of Applebite._
+
+DEAR FRIENDS,--Having finished the infanto-biography upon which we have
+been engaged, it is our design to cut off our heir, and bring our tale to
+a close. You may want to know why--or if you don't, we will tell you.
+
+We should not regard the anxiety, the close confinement, or the constant
+attention inseparable from a nursery, did we feel that the result was
+agreeable to you. But we have not done so. We have been strongly tempted
+to think, that after waiting from week to week, you have never arrived at
+anything interesting. We could not bear this jerking of our conscience,
+which was no sooner ended than begun again.
+
+Most "passages in a tale of _any length_ depend materially for the
+interest on the intimate relation they bear to what has gone before, or
+what is to follow." We sometimes found it difficult to accomplish this.
+
+Considerations of immediate profit ought, in such cases, to be of
+secondary importance; but, for the reasons we have just mentioned, we have
+(after some pains to resist the temptation) determined to abandon this
+_scheme_ of publication.
+
+Taking advantage of the respite which the close of this work will afford
+us, we have decided in January next to rent a second floor at Kentish
+Town.
+
+The pleasure we anticipate from the realisation of a wish we have long
+entertained and long hoped to gratify, is subdued by the reflection that
+we shall find it somewhat difficult to emancipate our moveables from the
+thraldom of Mrs. Gibbons, our respected but over-particular landlady.
+
+To console the numerous readers of PUNCH, we have it in command to
+announce, that on Saturday, Nov. 27th, the first chapter of a series under
+the title of the "Puff Papers," appropriately illustrated, will be
+commenced, with a desire to supply the hiatus in periodical fiction,
+occasioned by the temporary seclusion of one of the most popular novelists
+of the day.
+
+Dear friends, farewell! Should we again desire to resume the pen, we trust
+at your hands we shall not have to encounter a
+
+[Illustration: DISPUTED RETURN.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE LAMBETH DEMOSTHENES.
+
+We are happy to find that Dr. Tully Cicero Burke Sheridan Grattan Charles
+Phillips Hobler Bedford has not been deterred by the late unsatisfactory
+termination to the "public meeting" called by him to address the Queen,
+from prosecuting his patriotic views for his own personal advantage. Dr.
+&c. Bedford has kindly furnished us with the report of a meeting called by
+himself, which consisted of himself, for the purpose of considering the
+propriety of petitioning the Throne to appoint himself to be
+medical-adviser-in-general to her Majesty, and vaccinator-in-particular to
+his little Highness the Prince of Wales.
+
+At 10 o'clock precisely Dr. &c. Bedford entered the little back parlour of
+his surgery, and advancing to the looking-glass over the mantel-piece,
+made a polite bow to the reflection of himself. After a few complimentary
+gestures had passed between them, Dr &c. Bedford hemmed twice, and in a
+very elegant speech proposed that "Doctor &c. Bedford _shoold_ take the
+_cheer_."
+
+Dr. &c. Bedford rose to second the proposition. Dr. &c. Bedford said, "Dr.
+&c. Bedford is a gentleman what I have had the honour of knowing on for
+many long ears. His medikel requirement are sich as ris a Narvey and a
+Nunter to the summut of the temples of Fame. His political requisitions
+are summarily extinguished. It is, therefore, with no common pride that I
+second this abomination."
+
+Dr. &c. Bedford then bowed to his reflection in the glass, and proceeded
+to take his seat in his easy chair, thumping the table with one hand, and
+placing the other gracefully upon his breast, as though in token of
+gratitude for the honour conferred upon him.
+
+Order being restored, Dr. &c. Bedford rose and said,--
+
+"I never kotched myself in sich a sitchuation in my life--I mean not that
+I hasn't taken a cheer afore, perhaps carried one--but it never has been
+my proud extinction to preside over such a meeting--so numerous in its
+numbers and suspectable in its appearance. My friend, Dr. &c. Bedford,
+(_Hear, hear! from. Dr. &c. Bedford_,) his the hornament of natur in this
+19th cemetary. His prodigious outlays"--
+
+_Voice without_.--"Here they are, only a penny!"
+
+Dr. &c. Bedford.--"Order, order! His--his--you know what I mean that
+shoold distinguish the fisishun and the orator. I may say the Solus of
+orators,--renders him the most fittest and the most properest person to
+take care of the Royal health, and the Royal Infant Babby of these
+regions," (_Hear, hear! from Dr. &c. Bedford_.)
+
+The Doctor then proceeded to embody the foregoing observations into a
+resolution, which was proposed by Dr. &c. Bedford, and seconded by Dr. &c.
+Bedford, who having held up both his hands, declared it to be carried
+_nem. con._
+
+Dr. &c. Bedford then proposed a vote of thanks to Dr, &c. Bedford for his
+conduct in the chair. The meeting then dispersed, after Dr. &c. Bedford
+had returned thanks, and bowed to his own reflection in the looking-glass.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A LEGEND OF THE TOWER (NOT LONDON).
+
+In the immediate vicinity of the pretty little town of Kells stands one of
+those peculiar high round towers, the origin of which has so long puzzled
+the brains of antiquaries. It is invariably pointed out to the curious, as
+a fit subject for their contemplation, and may, in fact, be looked upon as
+the great local lion of the place. It appears almost inaccessible. But
+there is a story extant, and told in very choice Irish, how two small
+dare-devil urchins did succeed in reaching its lofty summit; and this is
+the way the legend was done into English by one Barney Riley, the
+narrator, to whom I am indebted for its knowledge:--
+
+"You see Masther Robert, sir,--though its murduring high, and almost
+entirely quite aqual in stapeness to the ould ancient Tower of Babel, yet,
+sir, there is them living now as have been at the top of that same; be the
+same token I knew both o' the spalpeens myself. It's grown up they are
+now; but whin they wint daws'-nesting to the top there, the little
+blackguards weren't above knee-high, if so much."
+
+"But how did they arrive at the summit?"
+
+"That's the wonder of it! but sure nobody knows but themselves; but the
+scamps managed somehow or other to insart themselves in through one of
+them small loopholes--whin little Danny Carroll gave Tom Sheeney a leg up
+and a back, and Tom Sheeney hauled little Danny up after him by the scruff
+o' the neck; and so they wint squeedging and scrummaging on till, by dad,
+they was up at the tip-top in something less than no time; and the trouble
+was all they had a chance o' gettin for their pains; for, by the hokey,
+the daws' nest they had been bruising their shins, breaking their necks,
+and tearing their frieze breeches to tatters to reach, was on the outside
+o' the building, and about as hard to get at as truth, or marcy from a
+thafe of a tythe proctor.
+
+"'Hubbabboo,' says little Danny; 'we are on the wrong side now, as Pat
+Murphy's carroty wig was whin it came through his hat; what will we do, at
+all, at all?'
+
+"'Divil a know I know. It would make a parson swear after takin' tythe. Do
+you hear the vagabones? Oh, then musha, bad luck to your cawings; its
+impedence, and nothing but it, to be shouting out in defiance of us, you
+dirty bastes. Danny, lad, you're but a little thrifle of a gossoon;
+couldn't you squeedge yourself through one o' them holes?'
+
+"'What will I stand--or, for the matter o' that, as I'm by no manes
+particular,--sit upon, whin I git out--that is, if I can?'
+
+"'Look here, lad, hear a dacent word--it will be just the dandy thing for
+yes entirely; go to it with a will, and make yourself as small as a little
+cock elven, and thin we'll have our revenge upon them aggravation thaves.'
+How the puck he done it nobody knows; but by dad there was his little,
+ragged, red poll, followed by the whole of his small body, seen coming out
+o' that trap-loop there, that doesn't look much bigger than a
+button-hole--and thin sitting astride the ould bit of rotten timbers, and
+laffing like mad, was the tiny Masther Danny, robbing the nests, and
+shouting with joy as he pulled bird after bird from their nate little
+feather-beds. 'This is elegant,' says he; 'here's lashins of 'em.'
+
+"'How many have you,' says Tom Sheeney.
+
+"'Seven big uns--full fledged, wid feathers as black as the priest's
+breeches on a Good Friday's fast.'
+
+"'Seven is it?'
+
+"'It is.'
+
+"'Well, then, hand them in.'
+
+"'By no manes.'
+
+"'Why not?'
+
+"'Seein they're as well wid me as you.
+
+"'Give me my half then--that's your'--
+
+"'Aisy wid you; who's had the trouble and the chance of breaking his
+good-looking neck but me, Mr. Tim Sheeney.'
+
+"'Devil a care I care; I'll have four, or I'll know why.'
+
+"'That you'll soon do: I won't give 'em you.'
+
+"'Aint I holding the wood?'
+
+"'By coorse you are; but aint I sitting outside upon it, and by the same
+token unseating my best breeches.'
+
+"'I bid you take care; give me four.'
+
+"'Ha, ha! what a buck your granny was, Mistet Tim Sheeney; it's three
+you'll have, or none.'
+
+"'Then by the puck I'll let you go.'
+
+"'I defy you to do it, you murdering robber.'
+
+"'Do you! by dad; once more, give me four.'
+
+"'To blazes wid you; three or none.'
+
+"'Then there you go!'
+
+"And, worse luck, sure enough he did, and that at the devil's own pace.
+
+"At this moment I turned my eyes in horror to the Tower, and the height
+was awful."
+
+"Poor child,--of course he was killed upon the spot?"
+
+"There's the wonder; not a ha'porth o' harm did the vagabone take at all
+at all. He held on by the birds' legs like a little nagur; he was but a
+shimpeen of a chap, and what with the flapping of their wings and the soft
+place he fell upon, barring a little thrifle of stunning, and it may be a
+small matter of fright, he was as comfortable as any one could expect
+under the circumstances; but it would have done your heart good to see the
+little gossoon jump up, shake his feathers, and shout out at the top of
+his small voice, 'Tim Sheeney, you thief, you'd better have taken the
+three,--for d--n the daw do you get now!'" And so ends the Legend of the
+Round Tower.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+IRISH INTELLIGENCE.
+
+AWFUL STATE OF THE COUNTRY!
+
+(_From our own Correspondent._)
+
+We are at length enabled to inform the Public that we have, at a vast
+expense, completed our arrangements for the transmission of the earliest
+news from Ireland. We have just received the _Over-bog Mail_, which
+contains facts of a most interesting nature. We hasten to lay our
+sagacious correspondent's remarks before our readers:--
+
+
+_Bally-ha-ghadera, Tuesday Night_.
+
+PUNCH will appreciate my unwillingness to furnish him with intelligence
+which might in any way disturb the commercial relations between this and
+the sister island, more particularly at the _present crisis_, when the
+interests of that prosperous class, the London Baked Potatoe vendors, are
+so intimately connected, with the preservation of good feeling among the
+Tipperary growers. However, my duty to PUNCH and the public compel me to
+speak.--I do feel that we are on the eve of a great popular commotion.
+Every day's occurrences strengthen my conviction. Bally-ha-ghadera was
+this morning at sunrise disturbed by noises of the most appalling kind,
+forming a wild chorus, in which screams and bellowings seemed to vie for
+supremacy; indeed words cannot adequately describe this terrific
+disturbance. As I expected, the depraved Whig Journalist, with
+characteristic mental tortuosity, has asserted that the sounds proceeded
+from a rookery in the adjoining wood, aided by the braying of the
+turf-man's donkey. But an enlightened public will see through this paltry
+subterfuge. Rooks and donkeys! Pooh! There cannot be a doubt but that the
+noises were the preparatory war-whoops of this ferocious and sanguinary
+people. We believe the Whig editor to be the only _donkey_ in the case;
+that he may have been a ravin(g) at the time is also very probable.
+
+No later than yesterday the _Cloonakilty Express_ was stopped by a _band
+of young men_, who savagely ill-treated our courier, a youth of tender
+age, having attempted to stone him to death. Our courier is ready to swear
+that at the time of the attack the young men were busily engaged counting
+a _vast store of ammunition_, consisting of _round white clay balls_ baked
+to the hardness of bullets, and _evidently_ intended for _shooting with_.
+
+I have to call particular attention to the fact that a countryman was this
+day observed to buy a threepenny loaf, and on leaving the baker's to _tear
+it asunder and distribute the fragments with three confederates_!!! an act
+which I need not say was evidently symbolical of their desire to rend
+asunder the _Corn Laws_, and to divide the landed property amongst
+themselves. The action also appears analogous to the custom of breaking
+bread and swearing alliance on it, a practice still observed by the
+inhabitants of some remote regions of the Caucasus. I must again solemnly
+express my conviction that we are standing on a _slumbering_ VOLCANO; the
+thoughtless and unobservant may suppose not; probably because in the
+present tee-total state of society they see nothing of the CRATER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+TAKING A SIGHT AT THE FIRE.
+
+A man bearing the very inapplicable name of _Virtue_ was brought up at
+Lambeth-street last week, on the charge of having stolen a telescope from
+the Ordnance-office in the Tower on the morning of the fire. The prisoner
+pleaded that, being short-sighted, he took the glass to have a sight of
+the fire. The magistrate, however, _saw through_ this excuse very clearly;
+and as it was apparent that _Virtue_ had taken a _glass_ too much on the
+occasion, he was fully committed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+JOE HUME'S FORTHCOMING WORK.
+
+We have received the following note from an old and esteemed
+correspondent, who, we are rejoiced to find, has returned from a tour in
+Switzerland, where he has been engaged in a prodigious work connected with
+the statistics of that country.
+
+
+_Reform Club-house_.
+
+DEAR PUNCH,
+
+Knowing the interest you take in anything relating to the advancement of
+science, I beg to apprise you that I am about publishing a statistical
+work, in which I have made it perfectly clear that an immense saving in
+the article of ice alone might be made in England by importing that which
+lies waste upon Mont Blanc. I have also calculated to a fraction the
+number of pints of milk produced in the canton of Berne, distinguishing
+the quantity used in the making of cheese from that which has been
+consumed in the manufacture of butter--and specifying in every instance
+whether the milk has been yielded by cows or goats. There will be also a
+valuable appendix to the work, containing a correct list of all the inns
+on the road between Frankfort and Geneva, with a copy of the bill of fare
+at each, and the prices charged; together with the colour of the
+postilion's jacket, the age of the landlord and the weight of his wife,
+and the height in inches of the cook and chambermaid. To which will be
+added, "Ten Minutes' Advice" upon making one shilling go as far as two. If
+you can give me a three-halfpenny puff in your admired publication, you
+will confer a favour on
+
+Your sincere friend,
+
+JOE HUME.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE ROMANCE OF A TEACUP.
+
+
+SIP THE FIRST.
+
+ In England one man's mated to one woman,
+ To spend their days in holy matrimony--
+ In fact, I _have_ heard from one or two men,
+ That one wife in a house is one too many--
+ But, be this as it may, in China no man
+ Who can afford it shuts himself to any
+ Fix'd number, but is variously encumber'd
+ With better halves, from twenty to a hundred.
+
+ These to provide for in a pleasant way,
+ And, maybe, to avoid their chat and worry,
+ He shuts up in a harem night and day--
+ With them contriving all his cares to bury--
+ A point of policy which, I should say,
+ Sweetens the dose to men about to marry;
+ For, though a wife's a charming thing enough,
+ Yet, like all other blessings, _quantum suff_.
+
+ So to my tale: Te-pott the Multifarious
+ Was, once upon a time, a mandarin--
+ In personal appearance but precarious,
+ Being incorrigibly bald and thin--
+ But then so rich, through jobs and pensions various,
+ Obtain'd by voting with the party "in,"
+ That he maintain'd, in grace and honour too,
+ Sixty-five years, and spouses fifty-two.
+
+ Fifty-two wives! and still he went about
+ Peering below the maiden ladies' veils--
+ Indeed, it _was_ said (but there hangs a doubt
+ Of scandal on such gossip-whisper'd tales),
+ He had a good one still to single out--
+ For all his wives had tongues, and _some_ had nails--
+ And still he hoped, though fifty-twice deferr'd,
+ To find an angel in his fifty-third.
+
+ In China, mind, and such outlandish places,
+ A gentleman who wishes to be wed
+ Looks round about among the pretty faces,
+ Nor for a moment doubts they may be had
+ For asking; and if any of them "nay" says,
+ He has his remedy as soon as said--
+ For, when the bridegrooms disapprove what they do,
+ They teach them manners with the bastinado.
+
+ Near Te-pott's palace lived an old Chinese--
+ About as poor a man as could be known
+ In lands where guardians leave them to their ease,
+ Nor pen the poor up in bastilles of stone:
+ He got a livelihood by picking teas;
+ And of possessions worldly had but one--
+ But one--the which, the reader must be told,
+ Was a fair daughter seventeen years old.
+
+ She was a lovely little girl, and one
+ To charm the wits of both the high and _the_ low;
+ And Te-pott's ancient heart was lost and won
+ In less time than 'twould take my pen to tell how:
+ So, as he was quite an experienced son-
+ In-law, and, too, a very wily fellow,
+ To make Hy-son his friend was no hard matter, I
+ Ween, with that specific for parents--flattery.
+
+ But, when they two had settled all between
+ Themselves, and Te-pott thought that he had caught her,
+ He found how premature his hopes had been
+ Without the approbation of the daughter--
+ Who talk'd with voice so loud and wit so keen,
+ That he thought all his Mrs. T's had taught her;
+ And, finding he was in the way there rather,
+ He left her to be lectured by her father.
+
+ "Pray, what were women made for" (so she said,
+ Though Heaven forbid I join such tender saying),
+ "If they to be accounted are as dead,
+ And strangled if they ever are caught straying?
+ Tis well to give us diamonds for the head,
+ And silken gauds for festival arraying;
+ But where of dress or diamonds is the use
+ If we mayn't go and show them? that's the deuce!"
+
+ The father answer'd, much as fathers do
+ In cases of like nature here in Britain,
+ Where fathers seldom let fortunes slip through
+ Their fingers, when they think that they can get one;
+ He said a many things extremely true--
+ Proving that girls are fine things to be quit on,
+ And that, could she accommodate her views to it,
+ She would find marriage very nice when used to it.
+
+ Now, 'tis no task to talk a woman into
+ Love, or a dance, or into dressing fine--
+ No task, I've heard, to talk her into sin too;
+ But, somehow, reason don't seem in her line.
+ And so Miss Hy-son, spite of kith and kin too,
+ Persisting such a husband to decline--
+ The eager mandarin issued a warrant,
+ And got her apprehended by her parent.
+
+ Thus the poor girl was caught, for there was no
+ Appeal against so wealthy lover's fiat:
+ She must e'en be a wife of his, and so
+ She yielded him her hand demure and quiet;
+ For ladies seldom cry unless they know
+ There's somebody convenient to cry _at_--
+ And; though it is consoling, on reflection
+ Such fierce emotions ruin the complexion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE.
+
+Yesterday Paddy Green honoured that great artist William Hogarth Teniers
+Raphael Bunks, Esq., with a sitting for a likeness. The portrait, which
+will doubtless be an admirable one, is stated to be destined to adorn one
+of Mr. Catnach's ballads, namely, "The Monks of Old!" which Mr. P. Green,
+in most obliging manner, has allowed to appear.
+
+William Paul took a walk yesterday as far as Houndsditch, in company with
+Jeremiah Donovan. A pair of left-off unmentionables is confidently
+reported to be the cause of their visit in the "far East."
+
+The lady of Paddy Green, Esquire, on Wednesday last, with that kindness
+which has always distinguished her, caused to be distributed a platterful
+of trotter bones amongst the starving dogs of the neighbourhood.
+
+From information exclusively our own, and for whose correctness we would
+stake our hump, we learn that James Burke, the honoured member of the
+P.R., was seen to walk home on the night of Tuesday last with three fresh
+herrings on a twig. After supper, he consoled himself with a pint of
+fourpenny ale.
+
+Charles Mears yesterday took a ride in a Whitechapel omnibus. He alighted
+at Aldgate Pump, at which he took a draught of water from the ladle. He
+afterwards regaled on a couple of polonies and a penny loaf.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE UNKINDEST CUT OF ALL.
+
+Jones, the journeyman tailor who was charged before Sir Peter Laurie with
+being drunk and disorderly in Fleet-street, escaped the penalty of his
+frolic by an extraordinary whim of justice. The young schneider, it
+appears, sported a luxuriant crop of hair, the fashion of which not
+pleasing the fancy of the city Rhadamanthus, he remitted the fine on
+condition that the delinquent should instantly cut off the offending
+hairs. A barber being sent for, the operation was instantly performed; and
+Sir Peter, with a spirit of generosity only to be equalled by his
+_cutting_ humour, actually put his hand in his breeches-pocket and handed
+over to the official Figaro his fee of one shilling. The shorn tailor left
+the office protesting that Sir Peter had not treated him handsomely, as he
+had only consented to sacrifice his flowing locks, but that the Alderman
+had cabbaged his whiskers as well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A CELESTIAL CON.
+
+Why is wit like a Chinese lady's foot?--Because brevity is the _sole_ of
+it!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE PRINCE OF WALES.--HIS FUTURE TIMES.
+
+A private letter from Hanover states that, precisely at twelve minutes to
+eleven in the morning on the ninth of the present November, his Majesty
+King ERNEST was suddenly attacked by a violent fit of blue devils. All the
+court doctors were immediately summoned, and as immediately dismissed, by
+his Majesty, who sent for the Wizard of the North (recently appointed
+royal astrologer), to divine the mysterious cause of this so sudden
+melancholy. In a trice the mystery was solved--Queen Victoria "was happily
+delivered of a Prince!" His Majesty was immediately assisted to his
+chamber--put to bed--the curtains drawn--all the royal household ordered
+to wear list slippers--the one knocker to the palace was carefully tied
+up--and (on the departure of our courier) half a load of straw was already
+deposited beneath the window of the royal chamber. The sentinels on duty
+were prohibited from even sneezing, under pain of death, and all things in
+and about the palace, to use a bran new simile, were silent as the grave!
+
+"Whilst there was only the Princess Royal there were many hopes. There was
+hope from severe teething--hope from measles--hope from hooping-cough--but
+with the addition of a Prince of Wales, the hopes of Hanover are below
+par." But we pause. We will no further invade the sanctity of the sorrows
+of a king; merely observing, that what makes his Majesty very savage,
+makes hundreds of thousands of Englishmen mighty glad. There are now two
+cradles between the Crown of England and the White Horse of Hanover.
+
+We have a Prince of Wales! Whilst, however, England is throwing up its
+million caps in rapture at the advent, let it not be forgotten to whom we
+owe the royal baby. In the clamourousness of our joy the fact would have
+escaped us, had we not received a letter from Colonel SIBTHORP, who
+assures us that we owe a Prince of Wales entirely to the present cabinet;
+had the Whigs remained in office, the infant would inevitably have been a
+girl.
+
+For our own part--but we confess we are sometimes apt to look too soberly
+at things--we think her Majesty (may all good angels make her caudle!) is,
+inadvertently no doubt, treated in a questionable spirit of compliment by
+these uproarious rejoicings at the sex of the illustrious little boy, who
+has cast, if possible, a new dignity upon Lord Mayor's day, and made the
+very giants of Guildhall shoot up an inch taller at the compliment he has
+paid them of visiting the world on the ninth of November. In our playful
+enthusiasm, we have--that is, the public _We_--declared we must have a
+Prince of Wales--we should be dreadfully in the dumps if the child were
+not a Prince--the Queen must have a Prince--a bouncing Prince--and nothing
+but a Prince. Now might not an ill-natured Philosopher (but all
+philosophers are ill-natured) interpret these yearnings for masculine
+royalty as something like pensive regrets that the throne should ever be
+filled by the feminine sex? For own part we are perfectly satisfied that
+the Queen (may she live to see the Prince of Wales wrinkled and
+white-headed!) is a Queen, and think VICTORIA THE FIRST sounds quite as
+musically--has in it as full a note of promise--as if the regal name had
+run--GEORGE THE FIFTH! We think there is a positive want of gallantry at
+this unequivocally shouted preference of a Prince of Wales. Nevertheless,
+we are happy to say, the pretty, good-tempered Princess Royal (she is
+_not_ blind, as the Tories once averred; but then the Whigs were _in_)
+still laughs and chirrups as if nothing had happened. Nay, as a proof of
+the happy nature of the infant (we beg to say that the fact is copyright,
+as we purchased it of the reporter of _The Observer_), whilst, on the
+ninth instant, the chimes of St. Martin's were sounding merrily for the
+birth of the Prince, the Princess magnanimously shook her coral-bells in
+welcome of her dispossessing brother!
+
+Independently of the sensation made in the City by the new glory that has
+fallen upon the ninth of November (it is said that Sir PETER LAURIE has
+been so rapt by the auspicious coincidence, that he has done nothing since
+but talk and think of "the Prince of Wales"--that on Wednesday last he
+rebuked an infant beggar with, "I've nothing for you, _Prince of
+Wales_")--independently of the lustre flung upon the new Lord Mayor and
+the Lord Mayor just out--who will, it is said, both be caudle-cup
+baronets, the occasion has given birth to much deep philosophy on the part
+of our contemporaries--so deep, that there is no getting to the end of it,
+and has also revived much black-letter learning connected with the birth
+of every Prince of Wales, from the first to the last--and, therefore,
+certainly not least--new-comer.
+
+An hour or so after George the Fourth was born, we are told that the
+waggons containing the treasure of the _Hermione_, a Spanish galleon,
+captured off St. Vincent by three English frigates, entered St. James's
+street, escorted by cavalry and infantry, with trumpets sounding, the
+enemy's flags waving over the waggons, and the whole surrounded by an
+immense multitude of spectators. Now here, to the vulgar mind, was a happy
+augury of the future golden reign of the Royal baby. He comes upon the
+earth amid a shower of gold! The melodious chink of doubloons and pieces
+of eight echo his first infant wailings! What a theme for the gipsies of
+the press--the fortune-tellers of the time! At the present hour that baby
+sleeps the last sleep in St. George's chapel; and we have his public and
+his social history before us. What does experience--the experience bought
+and paid for by hard, hard cash--_now_ read in the "waggons of treasure,"
+groaning musically to the rocking-cradle of the callow infant? Simply, the
+babe of Queen Charlotte would be a very expensive babe indeed; and that
+the wealth of a Spanish galleon was all insufficient for the youngling's
+future wants.
+
+We have been favoured, among a series of pictures, with the following of
+George the Fourth, exhibited in his babyhood. We are told that "all
+persons _of fashion_ were admitted to see the Prince, under the following
+restrictions, viz.--that in passing through the apartment _they stepped
+with the greatest caution_, and did not offer to touch his Royal Highness.
+For the greater security in this respect, a part of the apartment was
+latticed off _in the Chinese manner_, to prevent curious persons from
+approaching too nearly."
+
+That lattice "in the Chinese manner" was a small yet fatal fore-shadowing
+of the Chinese Pavilion at Brighton--of that temple, worthy of Pekin,
+wherein the Royal infant of threescore was wont to enshrine himself, not
+from the desecrating touch of the world, but even from the eyes of a
+curious people, who, having paid some millions toward manufacturing the
+most finished gentleman in Europe, had now and then a wish--an unregarded
+wish--to look at their expensive handiwork.
+
+What different prognostics have we in the natal day of our present Prince
+of Wales! What rational hopes from many circumstances that beset him. The
+Royal infant, we are told, is suckled by a person "named Brough, formerly
+a _housemaid_ at Esher." From this very fact, will not the Royal child
+grow up with the consciousness that he owes his nourishment even to the
+very humblest of the people? Will he not suck in the humanising truth with
+his very milk?
+
+And then for the Spanish treasure--"hard food for Midas"--that threw its
+jaundiced glory about the cradle of George the Fourth; what is that to the
+promise of plenty, augured by the natal day of our present Prince? Comes
+he not on the ninth of November? Is not his advent glorified by the
+aromatic clouds of the Lord Mayor's kitchen?--Let every man, woman, and
+child possess themselves of a _Times_ newspaper of the 10th ult.; for
+there, in genial companionship with the chronicle of the birth of the
+Prince, is the luscious history of the Lord Mayor's dinner. We quit
+Buckingham Palace, our mind full of our dear little Queen, the Royal baby,
+Prince Albert--(who, as _The Standard_ informs us subsequently, bows
+"bare-headed" to the populace,)--the Archbishop of Canterbury, Doctor
+Locock, the Duke of Wellington, and the monthly nurse, and immediately
+fall upon the civic "general bill of fare,"--the real turtle at the City
+board.
+
+Oh, men of Paisley--good folks of Bolton--what promise for ye is here!
+Turkeys, capons, sirloins, asparagus, pheasants, pine-apples, Savoy cakes,
+Chantilly baskets, mince pies, preserved ginger, brandy cherries, a
+thousand luscious cakes that "the sense aches at!" What are all these
+gifts of plenty, but a glad promise that in the time of the "sweetest
+young Prince," that on the birth-day of that Prince just vouchsafed to us,
+all England will be a large Lord Mayor's table! Will it be possible for
+Englishmen to dissassociate in their minds the Prince of Wales and the
+Prince of good Fellows? And whereas the reigns of other potentates are
+signalised by bloodshed and war, the time of the Prince will be glorified
+by cooking and good cheer. His drum-sticks will be the drum-sticks of
+turkeys--his cannon, the popping of corks. In his day, even weavers shall
+know the taste of geese, and factory-children smack their lips at the
+gravy of the great sirloin. Join your glasses! brandish your
+carving-knives! cry welcome to the Prince of Wales! for he comes garnished
+with all the world's good things. He shall live in the hearts, and (what
+is more) in the stomachs of his people!
+
+Q.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PROPER PRECAUTION.
+
+Everybody is talking of the great impropriety that has been practised in
+keeping gunpowder within the Tower; and the papers are _blowing up_ the
+authorities with astounding violence for their alleged laxity.
+"Gunpowder," say the angry journalists, "ought only to be kept where there
+is no possibility of a spark getting to it."--We suggest the bottom of the
+Thames, as the only place where, in future, this precious preparation can
+be securely deposited.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: OLIVIA'S RETURN TO HER FRIENDS.
+
+"I ENTREAT, WOMAN, THAT MY WORDS MAY BE NOW MARKED, ONCE FOR ALL; I HAVE
+HERE BROUGHT YOU BACK A POOR DELUDED WANDERER; HER RETURN TO DUTY DEMANDS
+THE REVIVAL OF OUR TENDERNESS. THE KINDNESS OF HEAVEN IS PROMISED TO THE
+PENITENT, AND LET OURS BE DIRECTED BY THE EXAMPLE."
+
+_Vicar of Wakefield_, Chap. XXII.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE LONDON MEDICAL STUDENT.
+
+8.--OF THE EXAMINATION AT APOTHECARIES' HALL.
+
+
+[Illustration: T]The last task that devolves upon our student before he
+goes up to the Hall is to hunt up his testimonials of attendance to
+lectures and good moral conduct in his apprenticeship, together with his
+parochial certificate of age and baptism. The first of these is the chief
+point to obtain; the two last he generally writes himself, in the style
+best consonant with his own feelings and the date of his indenture. His
+"morality ticket" is as follows:--
+
+
+(Copy.)
+
+"I hereby certify, that during the period Mr. Joseph Muff served his time
+with me he especially recommended himself to my notice by his studious and
+attentive habits, highly moral and gentlemanly conduct, and excellent
+disposition. He always availed himself of every opportunity to improve his
+professional knowledge."
+
+(Signed)
+
+According to the name on the indenture.
+
+
+The certificate of attendance upon lectures is only obtained in its most
+approved state by much clever manoeuvring. It is important to bear in mind
+that a lecturer should never be asked whilst he is loitering about the
+school for his signature of the student's diligence. He may then have time
+to recollect his ignorance of his pupil's face at his discourses. He
+should always be caught flying--either immediately before or after his
+lecture--in order that the whole business may be too hurried to admit of
+investigation. In the space left for the degree of attention which the
+student has shown, it is better that he subscribes nothing at all than an
+indifferent report; because, in the former case, the student can fill it
+up to his own satisfaction. He usually prefers the phrase--"with
+unremitting diligence."
+
+And having arrived at this important section of our Physiology, it behoves
+us to publish, for the benefit of medical students in general, and those
+about to go up in particular, the following
+
+
+CODE OF INSTRUCTIONS
+
+TO BE OBSERVED BY THOSE PREPARING FOR EXAMINATION AT THE HALL.
+
+1. Previously to going up, take some pills and get your hair cut. This not
+only clears your faculties, but improves your appearance. The Court of
+Examiners dislike long hair.
+
+2. Do not drink too much stout before you go in, with the idea that it
+will give you pluck. It renders you very valiant for half an hour and then
+muddles your notions with indescribable confusion.
+
+3. Having arrived at the Hall, put your rings and chains in your pocket,
+and, if practicable, publish a pair of spectacles. This will endow you
+with a grave look.
+
+4. On taking your place at the table, if you wish to gain time, feign to
+be intensely frightened. One of the examiners will then rise to give you a
+tumbler of water, which you may, with good effect, rattle tremulously
+against your teeth when drinking. This may possibly lead them to excuse
+bad answers on the score of extreme nervous trepidation.
+
+5. Should things appear to be going against you, get up a hectic cough,
+which is easily imitated, and look acutely miserable, which you will
+probably do without trying.
+
+6. Endeavour to assume an off-hand manner of answering; and when you have
+stated any pathological fact--right or wrong--_stick to it_; if they
+want a case for example, invent one, "that happened when you were an
+apprentice in the country." This assumed confidence will sometimes bother
+them. We knew a student who once swore at the Hall, that he gave opium in
+a case of concussion of the brain, and that the patient never required
+anything else. It was true--he never did.
+
+7. Should you be fortunate enough to pass, go to your hospital next day
+and report your examination, describing it as the most extraordinary
+ordeal of deep-searching questions ever undergone. This will make the
+professors think well of you, and the new men deem yon little less than a
+mental Colossus. Say, also, "you were complimented by the Court." This
+advice is, however, scarcely necessary, as we never know a student pass
+who was not thus honoured--according to his own account.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All things being arranged to his satisfaction, he deposits his papers
+under the care of Mr. Sayer, and passes the interval before the fatal day
+much in the same state of mind as a condemned criminal. At last Thursday
+arrives, and at a quarter to four, any person who takes the trouble to
+station himself at the corner of Union-street will see various groups of
+three and four young men wending their way towards the portals of
+Apothecaries' Hall, consisting of students about to be examined,
+accompanied by friends who come down with them to keep up their spirits.
+They approach the door, and shake hands as they give and receive wishes of
+success. The wicket closes on the candidates, and their friends adjourn to
+the "Retail Establishment" opposite, to _go the odd man_ and pledge their
+anxious companions in dissector's diet-drink--_vulgo_, half-and-half.
+
+Leaving them to their libations, we follow our old friend Mr. Joseph Muff.
+He crosses the paved court-yard with the air of a man who had lost
+half-a-crown and found a halfpenny; and through the windows sees the
+assistants dispensing plums, pepper, and prescriptions, with provoking
+indifference. Turning to the left, he ascends a solemn-looking staircase,
+adorned with severe black figures in niches, who support lamps. On the top
+of the staircase he enters a room, wherein the partners of his misery are
+collected. It is a long narrow apartment, commonly known as "the
+funking-room," ornamented with a savage-looking fireplace at one end, and
+a huge surly chest at the other; with gloomy presses against the walls,
+containing dry mouldy books in harsh, repulsive bindings. The windows look
+into the court; and the glass is scored by diamond rings, and the shutters
+pencilled with names and sentences, which Mr. Muff regards with feelings
+similar to those he would experience in contemplating the inscriptions on
+the walls of a condemned cell. The very chairs in the room look
+overbearing and unpleasant; and the whole locality is invested with an
+overallishness of unanswerable questions and intricate botheration. Some
+of the students are marching up and down the room in feverish
+restlessness; others, arm in arm, are worrying each other to death with
+questions; and the rest are grinding away to the last minute at a manual,
+or trying to write minute atomic numbers on their thumb-nail.
+
+The clock strikes five, and Mr. Sayer enters the room, exclaiming--"Mr.
+Manhug, Mr. Jones, Mr. Saxby, and Mr. Collins." The four depart to the
+chamber of examination, where the medical inquisition awaits them, with
+every species of mental torture to screw their brains instead of their
+thumbs, and rack their intellects instead of their limbs,--the chair on
+which the unfortunate student is placed being far more uneasy than the
+tightest fitting "Scavenger's daughter" in the Tower of London. After an
+anxious hour, Mr. Jones returns, with a light bounding step to a joyous
+extempore air of his own composing: he has passed. In another twenty
+minutes Mr. Saxby walks fiercely in, calls for his hat, condemns the
+examiners _ad inferos_, swears he shall cut the profession, and marches
+away. He has been plucked; and Mr. Muff, who stands sixth on the list, is
+called on to make his appearance before the awful tribunal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+REGULARLY CALLED IN--AND BOWLED OUT.
+
+Dr. Demosthenes &c. &c. &c. &c. Bedford, who has lately broken out in a
+new place, has been accused by the lieges of the Borough of having acted
+in a most unprofessional manner; in short, with having lost his
+_patience_. He, Dr. Demosthenes &c. begs to state, the only surgical
+operation he ever attempted was most successful, notwithstanding it was
+the difficult one of amputating his "mahogany;" and he further adds, the
+only case he ever had is still in his hand, it being a most obstinate
+
+[Illustration: CARD CASE.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE PRINCE OF WALES.
+
+(_By the Observer's Own Correspondent._)
+
+Knowing the anxiety that will be felt on this subject, though we doubt if
+the future King can be called _a subject_ at all, we have collected the
+following exclusive particulars:--
+
+THE PRINCE'S TITLE.
+
+His Royal Highness will for the present go by the title of "Poppet,"
+affectionately conferred upon him by Mrs. Lilly at the moment of his
+birth. Poppet is a title of very great antiquity, and has from time
+immemorial been used as a mark of endearment towards a newly-born child in
+all genteel families. Lovey-Dovey has been spoken of; but it is not likely
+that His Royal Highness will assume the style and dignity of Lovey-Dovey
+for a considerable period.
+
+THE PRINCE'S INCOME.
+
+Considerable mistakes have been fallen into by some of our contemporaries
+on this important subject. What may be the present wishes of His Royal
+Highness it is impossible for any one to ascertain, for he is able to
+articulate nothing on this point with his little pipe; but the piper, we
+know, must be eventually paid. He becomes immediately entitled to all the
+loose halfpence in his mother's reticule, and sixpence a-week will be at
+once payable out of his father's estates at Saxe Gotha. The whole of the
+revenues attached to the Duchy of Cornwall are also his by the mere fact
+of his birth: but there is a difficulty as to his giving a receipt for the
+money, if it should be paid to him. It is believed, that on the meeting of
+Parliament a Bill will pass for granting peg-top money to His Royal
+Highness, and a lollipop allowance will be among the earliest estimates.
+
+THE PRINCE'S MILITARY RANK.
+
+The Prince of Wales is by birth at the head of all the _Infantry_ in the
+kingdom, and is Colonel in his own right of a regiment of tin soldiers.
+
+THE PRINCE'S WARDROBE.
+
+The Prince falls at once into all the long frocks that are required, and
+has an estate tail in six dozen napkins.
+
+THE PRINCE'S EDUCATION.
+
+This important matter will be confined at present to teaching His Royal
+Highness how to take his pap without spilling it. A professor from the
+pap-al states will, it is expected, be entrusted with this branch of the
+royal economy.
+
+THE PRINCE'S WET-NURSE.
+
+Our contemporaries are wrong in stating that the individual to whom the
+post of wet-nurse has been assigned is nothing but a housemaid. We have
+full authority to state that she is no maid at all, but a respectable
+married woman.
+
+THE PRINCE'S HONOURS.
+
+His Royal Highness has not yet been created a Knight of the Garter, though
+Sir James Clark insisted on his being admitted to the Bath, against which
+ceremony the infant Prince entered a vociferous protest.
+
+The whole of the above particulars may be relied on as having been
+furnished from the very highest authority.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A BARROWKNIGHT.
+
+SIR WILLOUGHBY COTTON, during his visit to the Mansion-House Feast, in a
+moment of forgetfulness after the song of "Hurrah for the Road," being
+asked to take wine with the new Lord Mayor, declined the honour in the
+genuine long-stage phraseology, declaring he had already whacked his fare,
+and was quite
+
+[Illustration: FULL INSIDE.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MAGISTERIAL AXIOMS.
+
+VIDE POLICE REPORTS.
+
+An Irishman will _swear anything_.--_Mr. Grove_.
+
+A man who wears long hair is _capable of anything_.--_Sir Peter Laurie_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE ROYAL BULLETINS.
+
+The documents lately shown at Buckingham Palace are spurious, and the real
+ones have been suppressed from party motives, which we shall not allude
+to. The following are genuine; they relate only to the Prince, the
+convalescence of Her Majesty being, we are glad to say, so rapid as to
+require no official notice.
+
+_Half-past Twelve_.
+
+The Prince has sneezed, and it is believed has smiled, though the nurses
+are unable to pronounce whether the expression of pleasure arose from
+satisfaction or cholic.
+
+_Quarter past One_.
+
+The Prince has passed a comfortable minute, and is much easier.
+
+_Two O'Clock_.
+
+The Prince is fast asleep, and is more quiet.
+
+_Half-past Two_.
+
+The Prince has been shown to Sir Robert Peel, and was very fretful.
+
+_Three O'Clock_.
+
+Sir Robert Peel has left the Palace, and the Prince is again perfectly
+composed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DEVILLED DRUMSTICKS.
+
+Our own Sir Peter Laurie, upon witnessing the extraordinary performance of
+little Wieland in _Die Hexen am Rhein_, at the Adelphi Theatre, was so
+transported with his diabolic agility, that he determined upon
+endeavouring to arrive at the same perfection of pliability. As a guide
+for his undertaking, he instantly despatched old Hobler for a folio
+edition of
+
+[Illustration: IMPEY'S PRACTICE.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BRANDY AND WATERFORD. (A GO!)
+
+The Marquis of Waterford, upon his recent visit to Devonshire, was much
+struck with the peculiar notice upon the County Stretchers. Being
+overtaken by some of their extra-bottled apple-juice, he tested the truth
+of the statement, and found them literally "licensed to carry _one in
+cyder_" (_one insider_).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE WHEELS OF FORTUNE.
+
+SIR WYNDHAM ANSTRUTHER, whose "Young Rapid" connexion with the _Stage_ is
+pretty generally known, boasts that his stud was unrivalled for speed, as
+he managed with his four to "run through" his whole estates in six months,
+which he thinks a pretty decent proof that his might well be considered
+
+[Illustration: A FAST COACH.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SEEING NOTHING
+
+COMMISSIONER HARVEY and his old crony, Joe Hume, were talking lately of
+the wonders which the latter had seen in his travels--"You have been on
+Mont Blanc," said Whittle. "Certainly," replied the other. "And what did
+you see there?" "Why really," said Joe, "it is always so wrapped up in a
+double-milled fog, that there is nothing to be seen from it." "Nothing!"
+echoed he of the Blues; "I never knew till now why it was called Mount
+_Blank_." As this was the Commissioner's first attempt at a witticism, we
+forgive him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MORE FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE.
+
+(FROM OUR OWN ONE.)
+
+A marriage is on the _tapis_ between Mr. John Smith, the distinguished
+toll-collector at the Marsh Gate, and Miss Julia Belinda Snooks, the
+lovely and accomplished daughter of the gallant out-pensioner of Greenwich
+Hospital. Should the wedding take place, the bridegroom will be given away
+by Mr. Levy, the great toll-contractor; while the blushing bride will be
+attended to the altar by her mother-in-law, the well-known laundress of
+Tash-street. The _trousseau_, consisting of a selection from a bankrupt's
+stock of damaged _de laines_, has been purchased at Lambeth House; and a
+parasol carefully chosen from a lot of 500, all at one-and-ninepence, will
+be presented by the happy bridegroom on the morning of the marriage. A
+cabman has already been spoken to, and a shilling fare has been sketched
+out for the eventful morning, which is so arranged as to terminate at the
+toll-house, from which Mr. Smith can only be absent for about an hour,
+during which time the toll will be taken by an amateur of celebrity.
+
+Among the fashionables at the Bower Saloon, we observed Messrs. Jones and
+Brown, Mr. J. Jones, Mr. H. Jones, Mr. M. Brown, Mr. K. Brown, and several
+other distinguished leaders of the _ton_ in Stangate.
+
+There is no truth in the report that Tom Timkins intends resigning his
+seat at the apple-stall in the New Cut; and the rumours of a successor are
+therefore premature and indelicate.
+
+The vacant crossing opposite the Victoria has not been offered to Bill
+Swivel, nor is it intended that any one shall be appointed to the post in
+the Circus.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONS. WORTH CONNING.
+
+Why is the making a _mem._ of the number of a person's residence like a
+general election?--Because it's done to re-member _the house_.
+
+Why is Count D'Orsay a capital piece of furniture for a kitchen?--Because
+he's a _good dresser_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MORBID SYMPATHY FOR CRIMINALS.
+
+Our contemporary, the _Times_, for the last few days has been very justly
+deprecating the existing morbid sympathy for criminals. The moment that a
+man sins against the conventionalities of society he ought certainly to be
+excluded from all claims upon the sympathy of his fellows. It is very true
+that even the felon has kindred, parents, wife, children--for whom, and in
+whom, God has implanted an instinctive love. It is true that the criminal
+may have been led by the example of aristocratic sinners to disregard the
+injunctions of revealed religion against the adulterer, the gamester, and
+the drunkard; and having imitated the "pleasant follies" of the great
+without possessing the requisite means for such enjoyments, the man of
+pleasure has degenerated into the man of crime. It is true that the poor
+and ignorant may have claims upon the wealth and the intelligence of the
+rich and learned; but are we to pause to inquire whether want may have
+driven the destitute to theft, or the absence of early instruction have
+left the physical desires of the offender's nature superior to its moral
+restrictions.--Certainly not, whilst we have a gallows. There is, however,
+one difficulty which seems to interfere with a liberal exercise of the
+rope and the beam. Where are we to find executioners? for if "whoso
+sheddeth man's blood" be amenable to man, surely Jack Ketch is not to be
+exempted.
+
+The _Times_ condemns the late Lord Chamberlain for allowing the
+representation of "Jack Sheppard" and "Madame Laffarge" at the Adelphi; so
+do we. The _Times_ intimates, that "the newspapers teem with details about
+everything which such criminals 'as Dick Turpin and Jack Sheppard' say or
+do; that complete biographies of them are presented to the public; that
+report after report expatiates upon every refinement and peculiarity in
+their wickedness," for "the good purpose" of warning the embryo
+highwayman. We are something more than _duberous_ of this. We can see no
+difference between the exhibition of the stage and the gloating of the
+broadsheet; they are both "the agents by which the exploits of the gay
+highwayman are realised before his eyes, amid a brilliant and evidently
+sympathising" public. We deprecate both, as tending to excite the
+weak-minded to gratify "the ambition of this kind of notoriety;"--and yet
+we say, with the _Times_, there should be "no sympathy for criminals."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE MALE DALILAH.
+
+Sir Peter Laurie's aversion to long locks is accounted for by his change
+of political opinions, he having some time since _cut the W(h)igs_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A "PUNCH" TESTIMONIAL.
+
+We are virtuously happy to announce that a meeting has been held at the
+_Hum_-mums Hotel, Colonel Sibthorp in the chair, for the purpose of
+presenting to PUNCH some testimonial of public esteem for his exertions in
+the detection and exposure of fraudulent wits and would-be distinguished
+characters.
+
+COLONEL SIBTHORP thanked the meeting for the honour they had conferred
+upon him in electing him their chairman upon this occasion. None knew
+better than himself the service that PUNCH had rendered to the public. But
+for that fun fed individual his (Col. Sibthorp's) own brilliant effusions
+would have been left to have smouldered in his brain, or have hung like
+cobwebs about the House of Commons. (_Hear, hear_!) But PUNCH had stepped
+in to the rescue; he had not only preserved some of the brilliant things
+that he (Col. Sibthorp) had said, but had also reported many of the
+extremely original witticisms that he had intended to have uttered.
+(_Hear_!) There were many honourable gentlemen--(he begged
+pardon--gentlemen, he meant, without the honourable; but he had been so
+long a member of parliament that he had acquired a habit of calling men
+and things out of their proper names). Apologising for so lengthy a
+parenthesis, he would say that there were many gentlemen who were equally
+indebted (_hear! from Sir Peter Laurie, Peter Borthwick, and Pre-Adam
+Roebuck_) to this jocular benefactor. "It was PUNCH," said the gallant
+gentleman, with much feeling, "who first convinced me that the popular
+opinion of my asinine capabilities was erroneous. It was PUNCH who
+discovered that there was as much in my head as on it(_loud cheers,
+produced doubtlessly by the aptness of the simile, the gallant Colonel
+being perfectly bald_). I should, therefore, be the most ungrateful of
+Members for Lincoln, did I not entreat of this meeting to mark their high
+sense of Mr. PUNCH'S exertions by a liberal subscription" (_cheers_).
+
+SIR PETER LAURIE acknowledged himself equally in debt with their gallant
+Chairman to the object of the present meeting. He (Sir Peter) had tried
+all schemes to obtain popularity--he had made speeches without number or
+meaning--he had done double duty at the Mansion-house, and had made Mr.
+Hobler laugh more heartily than any Lord Mayor or Alderman since the days
+of Whittington (during whose mayoralty the venerable Chief Clerk first
+took office)--he (Sir P. Laurie) had, after much difficulty and four
+years' practice, received the Queen on horseback (_much cheering_); but
+(_continued cheering_)--but it was left for PUNCH to achieve his
+immortality (_immense cheering--several squares of glass in the
+conservatory opposite broken by the explosion_). He (Sir P. Laurie) had
+done all in his power to deserve the notice of that illustrious wooden
+individual. He had endeavoured to be much more ass--(_loud
+cheers_)--iduous than ever. PUNCH had rewarded him; and he therefore felt
+it his bounden duty to reward PUNCH. (_Hear! hear!_)
+
+MR. ROEBUCK fully concurred in the preceding eulogies. What had not PUNCH
+done for him? Had not PUNCH extinguished the _Times_ by the honest way in
+which he had advocated his (Roebuck's) injured genealogy? Had PUNCH not
+proved that he (Mr. Roebuck) had a father, which the "mendacious journal"
+had asserted was impossible? Had not PUNCH traced the Roebuck family as
+far back as 1801?--that was something! But he (Mr. Roebuck) believed that
+he had been injured by an error of the press, and that PUNCH had written
+the numerals 1081. Be that as it might, he (Mr. Roebuck) was anxious to
+discharge the overwhelming debt of gratitude which he owed to MR. PUNCH,
+and intended to subscribe very largely (_cheers_).
+
+MR. PETER BORTHWICK had been in former years a Shaksperian actor. He had
+for many seasons, at the "Royal Rugby Barn," had the honour of bearing the
+principal banners in all the imposing processions, "got up at an immense
+expense" in that unique establishment. (_Hear_!) He was, therefore, better
+qualified than any gentleman present to form an opinion of the services
+which Punch had rendered to the British Drama (_loud and continued cheers,
+during which Mr. Yates rushed on to the platform, and bowed several times
+to the assembled multitude_). Therefore, as a devoted admirer of that art
+which he (Peter) trusted HE and Shakspere had adorned (_cheers_), he
+fondly hoped that the meeting would at once take tickets, when he
+announced that the performance was for the benefit of Mr. PUNCH.
+
+LORD MORPETH next presented himself; but our reporter, having promised to
+take tea with his grandmother, left before the Noble Lord opened his
+mouth.
+
+We hope next week to furnish the remainder of the speeches, and a very
+long list of subscriptions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE RAPE OF THE LOCK-UP;
+
+OR, SIR PETER LAURIE ON CRIME AND THE CROPS.
+
+
+We believe no longing was ever more firmly planted in the human heart,
+than that of discovering some short cut to the high road of mental
+acquirement. The toilsome learner's "Progress" through the barren outset
+of the alphabet; the slough of despond of seven syllables, endangered as
+they both are by the frequent appearance of the compulsive birch of the
+Mr. Worldly-wisemen who teach the young idea how to shoot, must ever be
+looked upon as a probation, the power of avoiding which is "a consummation
+devoutly to be wished." Imbued with this feeling, the more speculative of
+past ages have frequently attempted to arrive, by external means, at the
+immediate possession of results otherwise requiring a long course of
+intense study and anxious inquiry. From these defunct illuminati
+originated the suppositionary virtues of the magically-endowed divining
+wand. The simple bending of a forked hazel twig, being the received sign
+of the deep-buried well, suited admirably with their notions of immediate
+information, and precluded the unpleasant and toilsome necessity for
+delving on speculation for the discovery of their desired object. But,
+alas, divining rods, like dogs, have had their day. The want of faith in
+the operators, or the growth of a new and obstinate assortment of hazel
+twigs, threw discredit on the mummery and the mummers. Still the passion
+existed; and in no case was it more observable than in that of the
+celebrated witch-finder. An actual presence at the demoniacal rites of the
+broom-riding sisterhood would have been attended with much danger and
+considerable difficulty; indeed, it has been asserted that the visitors,
+like those at Almack's, were expected to be balloted for, ticketed, and
+dressed in a manner suiting the occasion. Any infringement of these rules
+must have been at the proper peril of the contumacious infringer; and as
+it is more than probable some of the brooms carried double, there was a
+very decent chance of the intruder's discovering himself across one of the
+heavy-tailed and strong-backed breed, taking a trip to some distant
+bourne, from whence that compulsory aerial traveller would doubtless never
+have returned. Still witches were evils; and proof of evil is what the law
+seeks to enable evil's suppression. Now and again one of these short-cut
+gentry, by some railroad system of mental calculation, discovered certain
+external marks or moles that at a glance betrayed "the secret, dark, and
+midnight hags;" and the witch-finding process was instantaneously
+established. The outward and visible sign of their misdeeds authorised the
+further proceeding necessary for the clear proof of their delinquencies:
+thus the pinchings, beatings, starvings, trials, hangings, and burnings
+were made the goal of the shortest of all imaginable short cuts; and old
+women who had established pin manufactories in the stomachs of thousands,
+instead of receiving patents for their inventions, divided the honour of
+illuminating the land with the blazing tar-barrels provided for their
+peculiar use and benefit. Whether it was that aerial gambols on unsaddled
+and rough-backed broomsticks grew tiresome, or the small profit attending
+the vocation became smaller, or that all the elderly ladies with moles,
+and without anything else, were burnt up, we can't pretend to say; but
+certain it is, the art of witchcraft fell into disrepute. Corking,
+minikin, and all description of pins, were obliged to be made in the
+regular way; and cows even departed this world without the honour of the
+human immolations formerly considered the necessary sacrifice for the loss
+of their inestimable lives. Since the abovetimes Animal Magnetism and
+Mesmerism have followed in the wake of what has been; and now, just as
+despair, already poised upon its outstretched sable wings, was hovering
+for a brief moment previous to making its final swoop upon the External
+Doctrine, Peter--our Peter--Peter Laurie--the great, the glorious, the
+aldermanic Laurie--makes despair, like the Indian Juggler who swallowed
+himself, become the victim of its own insatiate maw.
+
+Our quill trembles as we proceed; it is unequal to the task. Oh, that we
+could write with the whole goose upon the wondrous merits of the wondrous
+Peter!
+
+We are better. That bumper has restored our nerve.
+
+Reader, fancy the gifted Peter seated in the dull dignity of civic
+magistracy: the court is thronged--a young delinquent blinks like an owl
+in sunshine 'neath the mighty flashing of his bench-lit eye. His crime,
+ay, what's his crime? it can't be much--so pale, so thin, so woe-begone!
+look, too, so tremulous of knee, and redolent of hair! what has he done?
+
+Here Roe interprets--"Please your worship, this young man, or tailor, has
+been assaulting several females with a blue bag and a pair of breeches."
+
+_Sir Peter_.--"I don't wonder at it; that man would do anything, I see it
+in his face, or rather in the back of his head, that's where the
+expression lies--look at his hair!"
+
+The whole court becomes a Cyclops--it has but one eye, and that is fixed
+upon the tailor's locks.
+
+"I say," resumes our Peter, "a man with that head of hair would do
+anything--pray, sir, do you wish to be taken for a German sausage, or a
+German student?--they're all the same, sir--speak at once."
+
+The faltering fraction denies the student, and repudiates the sausage.
+
+_Sir Peter_, still looking at the hair, from which external sign he
+evidently derived all his information--"You were drunk, sir."
+
+"I was," faltered the Samsonian schneider.
+
+"I know it, sir--you are fined five shillings, sir--but if you choose to
+submit to the deprivation of that iniquitous hair, which has brought you
+here, and which, I repeat, will make you do anything, I will remit the
+fine."
+
+A sigh, fine-drawn as the accidental rent in an unfinished skirt, escaped
+the hirsute stitcher: a melancholy reflection upon the infinite deal of
+nothing in his various pockets, and the slow revolving of the Brixton
+wheel in stern perspective, wrung from the quodded wretch a slow assent:
+Sir Peter sent a City officer with his warrant to secure the nearest
+barber: a few sharp clickings of the envious shears--and all was over!
+Crime fell from the shoulders of the quondam culprit, and the tonsorial
+innocent stood forth confessed!
+
+Sir Peter was entranced. That was his doing! He gazed with pride upon the
+new absolved from sin. He asked, "Are you not more comfortable?"
+
+All vice had gone, save one--the young man answered "Yes," and _lied_.
+
+"Then, sir, go home."
+
+"The barber," muttered "soft Roe" in as soft a voice.
+
+"What of him?"
+
+"Wants a shillin'."
+
+"There it is," exclaimed the Augustine Peter, "there, from my own pocket,
+paid with pleasure to preserve that youth from the evil influence of too
+much hair--I'll pay for all the City if they like--and banished suicide,
+and I'll pretty soon see if I can't settle all the City crops. Prisoner,
+you are discharged."
+
+The young man lost his hair, the Queen five shillings, and Sir Peter one;
+but then he gained his end,--and docking must henceforth be looked upon as
+the treadmill's antidote, and young man's fines' best friend. We therefore
+say, should the iniquity of your long locks, gentle reader, take you to
+the station (for, remember, Sir Peter says, _Long hair will do anything_),
+if you can't find bail, secure a barber, and command your liberation. We
+have been speculating of these externally-illustrated grades of crime; we
+think the following nearly correct:--
+
+The long and lank indicates larceny (petty and otherwise).
+
+The bushy and bountiful--burglary.
+
+The full and flowing--felony.
+
+The magnificent and mysterious--murder.
+
+And, for aught we know, pigtails--polygamy.
+
+For the future, a thinking man's motto will be, not to mind "his own eye,"
+but everybody else's hair.
+
+P.S. We have just received the following horrifying communication which
+establishes Sir Peter's opinion, "that a man with such hair would do
+anything," but unfortunately disproves the remedy, as those atrocities
+have been committed when he was without.
+
+Indignant at the loss of his head's glory, the evil-minded tailor,
+immediately upon leaving the court, sent for counsel's opinion as to
+whether he couldn't proceed against Sir Peter, under the act for "cutting
+and maiming, with intent to do him some grievous bodily harm." This, it
+appears he cannot do, inasmuch as these very learned gentlemen at the bar
+have decided, "the head" from which the hair was cut, and which, if any,
+is consequently the injured part, is not included in the meaning of the
+word _bodily_, as &c. &c. Foiled in this attempt, the monster, for the
+brutal gratification of his burning revenge, hit upon a scheme the most
+diabolical that human hair could conceive. He actually applied to the
+Society for the Suppression of _Cruelty to Animals_; and they, upon
+inspecting a portion of the dissevered locks, immediately took up the
+case, and are about to indict Sir Peter, Roe, and the barber, under one of
+the clauses of that tremendous act. If they proceed for penalties in
+individual cases, they must be immense, as the killed and wounded are
+beyond calculation,--not to mention all that the process has left
+homeless, foodless, and destitute.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BARBER-OUS ANNOUNCEMENT.
+
+We beg to inform our readers that Mr. Tanner, of Temple-bar and
+Shire-lane, whose salon extends from the city of London to the liberties
+of Westminster, has this day been appointed Hair-cutter Extraordinary to
+Sir Peter Laurie.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A NEW MILKY WAY.
+
+KIRCHOFF, a Prussian chemist, is reported to have discovered a process by
+which milk may be preserved for an indefinite period. Fresh milk is
+evaporated by a very gentle heat till it is reduced to a dry powder, which
+is to be kept perfectly dry in a bottle. When required for use it need
+only be diluted with a sufficient quantity of water. Mr. James Jones, who
+keeps a red cow--over his door--claims the original idea of making milk
+from a white powder, which, he states, may be done without the tedious
+process of evaporation, by using an article entirely known to London
+milk-vendors--namely _chalk_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+OH GEMINI!
+
+At the close of the Civic Festival last week, Sir William Follett inquired
+of the Recorder if he had seen his _Castor_. "No," replied Law (holding up
+the Attorney-General's fifty-seven penn'orth), "but here is your brother
+Pollock's" (_Pollux_.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"Well," said Sir Peter Hobler the other morning, "I should think you will
+be denied the _entree_ to the Palace after your decision of Saturday."
+"Why so?" inquired the knight of leather. "For fear you should cut off the
+heir to the Throne!" screamed Hobler, and vanished.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol.
+1, November 20, 1841, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
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