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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 1,
+December 25, 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, December 25, 1841
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: February 7, 2005 [EBook #14942]
+
+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
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOL. 1.
+
+
+
+FOR THE WEEK ENDING DECEMBER 25, 1841.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+HOW MR. CHOKEPEAR KEEPS A MERRY CHRISTMAS.
+
+Mr. CHOKEPEAR is, to the finger-nails, a respectable man. The tax-gatherer
+was never known to call at his door a second time for the same rate; he
+takes the sacrament two or three times a year, and has in his cellar the
+oldest port in the parish. He has more than once subscribed to the fund
+for the conversion of the Jews; and, as a proof of his devotion to the
+interests of the established church, it was he who started the
+subscription to present the excellent Doctor MANNAMOUTH with a superb
+silver tea-pot, cream-jug, and spoons. He did this, as he has often
+proudly declared, to show to the infidel world that there were some men in
+the parish who were true Christians. He has acquired a profound respect
+for Sir PETER LAURIE, since the alderman's judgments upon "the starving
+villains who would fly in the face of their Maker;" and, having a very
+comfortable balance at his banker's, considers all despair very weak, very
+foolish, and very sinful. He, however, blesses himself that for such
+miscreants there is Newgate; and more--there is Sir PETER LAURIE.
+
+Mr. CHOKEPEAR loves Christmas! Yes, he is an Englishman, and he will tell
+you that he loves to keep Christmas-day in the true old English fashion.
+How does he keep it?
+
+It is eight o'clock, and Mr. CHOKEPEAR rises from his goose-down. He
+dresses himself, says his short morning thanksgiving, and being an
+economist of time, unconsciously polishes his gold watch-chain the while.
+He descends to the breakfast parlour, and receives from lips of ice, the
+wishes of a happy Christmas, pronounced by sons and daughters, to whom, as
+he himself declares, he is "the best of fathers"--the most indulgent of
+men.
+
+The church-bell tolls, and the CHOKEPEARS, prepare for worship. What
+meekness, what self-abasement sits on the Christian face of TOBIAS
+CHOKEPEAR as he walks up the aisle to his cosey pew; where the woman, with
+turned key and hopes of Christmas half-crown lighting her withered face,
+sinks a curtsey as she lets "the miserable sinner" in; having carefully
+pre-arranged the soft cushions and hassocks for the said sinner, his wife,
+his sons, and daughters. The female CHOKEPEARS with half the produce of a
+Canadian winter's hunting in their tippets, muffs, and dresses, and with
+their noses, like pens stained with red ink,--prepare themselves to
+receive the religious blessings of the day. They then venture to look
+around the church, and recognising CHOKEPEARS of kindred nature, though
+not of name, in pews--(none of course among the _most_ "miserable sinners"
+on the bare benches)--they smile a bland salutation, and--but hush! the
+service is about to begin.
+
+And now will TOBIAS CHOKEPEAR perform the religious duties of a Christian!
+Look at him, how he feeds upon every syllable of the minister. He turns
+the Prayer-book familiarly, as if it were his bank account, and, in a
+moment, lights upon the prayers set apart for the day. With what a
+composed, assured face he listens to the decalogue--how firm his voice in
+the responses--and though the effrontery of scandal avows that he shifts
+somewhat from Mrs. CHOKEPEAR'S eye at the mention of "the
+maid-servant"--we do not believe it.
+
+It is thus CHOKEPEAR begins his Christmas-day. He comes to celebrate the
+event of the Incarnation of all goodness; to return "his most humble and
+hearty thanks" for the glory that Providence has vouchsafed to him in
+making him a Christian. He--Tobias CHOKEPEAR--might have been born a
+Gentoo! Gracious powers! he might have been doomed to trim the lamps in
+the Temple of Juggernaut--he might have come into this world to sweep the
+marble of the Mosque at Mecca--he might have been a faquir, with iron and
+wooden pins "stuck in his mortified bare flesh"--he might, we shudder to
+think upon the probability, have brandished his club as a New Zealander;
+and his stomach, in a state of heathen darkness to the humanising beauties
+of goose and apple-sauce, might, with unblessed appetite, have fed upon
+the flesh of his enemies. He might, as a Laplander, have driven a sledge,
+and fed upon walrus-blubber; and now is he an Englishman--a Christian--a
+carriage holder, and an eater of venison!
+
+It is plain that all these thoughts--called up by the eloquence of Doctor
+MANNAMOUTH, who preaches on the occasion--are busy in the bosom of
+CHOKEPEAR; and he sits on his soft cushion, with his eyelids declined,
+swelling and melting with gratitude for his blissful condition. Yes; he
+feels the glorious prerogative of his birth--the exquisite beauty of his
+religion. He ought to feel himself a happy man; and, glancing round his
+handsomely-appointed pew--he _does_.
+
+"A sweet discourse--a very sweet discourse," says CHOKEPEAR to several
+respectable acquaintance, as the organ plays the congregation out; and
+CHOKEPEAR looks round about him airily, contentedly; as though his
+conscience was as unseared as the green holly that decorates the pews; as
+though his heart was fresh, and red, and spotless as its berries.
+
+Well, the religious ceremonies of the day being duly observed, CHOKEPEAR
+resolves to enjoy Christmas in the true old English fashion. Oh! ye gods,
+that bless the larders of the respectable,--what a dinner! The board is
+enough to give Plenty a plethora, and the whole house is odoriferous as
+the airs of Araby. And then, what delightful evidences of old observing
+friendship on the table! There is a turkey--"only a little lower" than an
+ostrich--despatched all the way from an acquaintance in Norfolk, to smoke
+a Christmas salutation to good Mr. CHOKEPEAR. Another county sends a
+goose--another pheasants--another brawn; and CHOKEPEAR, with his eye half
+slumbering in delight upon the gifts, inwardly avows that the friendship
+of friends really well to do is a fine, a noble thing.
+
+The dinner passes off most admirably. Not one single culinary accident has
+marred a single dish. The pudding is delicious; the custards are something
+better than manna--the mince pies a conglomeration of ambrosial sweets.
+And then the Port! Mr. CHOKEPEAR smacks his lips like a whip, and gazes on
+the bee's wing, as HERSCHELL would gaze upon a new-found star, "swimming
+in the blue profound." Mr. CHOKEPEAR wishes all a merry Christmas, and
+tosses off the wine, its flavour by no means injured by the declared
+conviction of the drinker, that "there isn't such another glass in the
+parish!"
+
+The evening comes on. Cards, snap-dragons, quadrilles, country-dances,
+with a hundred devices to make people eat and drink, send night into
+morning; and it may be at six or seven on the twenty-sixth of December,
+our friend CHOKEPEAR, a little mellow, but not at all too mellow for the
+season, returns to his sheets, and when he rises declares that he has
+passed a very merry Christmas. If the human animal were all stomach--all
+one large paunch--we should agree with CHOKEPEAR that he _had_ passed a
+merry Christmas: but was it the Christmas of a good man or a Christian?
+Let us see.
+
+We have said all CHOKEPEAR'S daughters dined with him. We forgot: one was
+absent. Some seven years ago she married a poorer husband, and poverty was
+his only, but certainly his sufficient fault; and her father vowed that
+she should never again cross his threshold. The Christian keeps his word.
+He has been to church to celebrate the event which preached to all men
+mutual love and mutual forgiveness, and he comes home, and with rancour in
+his heart--keeps a merry Christmas!
+
+We have briefly touched upon the banquet spread before CHOKEPEAR. There is
+a poor debtor of his in Horsemonger-lane prison--a debtor to the amount of
+at least a hundred shillings. Does _he_ dine on Christmas-day? Oh! yes;
+Mr. CHOKEPEAR will read in _The Times_ of Monday how the under-marshal
+served to each prisoner a pound of beef, a slice of pudding, and a pint of
+porter! The man might have spent the day in freedom with his wife and
+children; but Mr. CHOKEPEAR in his pew thought not of his debtor, and the
+creditor at least--kept a merry Christmas!
+
+How many shivering wretches pass CHOKEPEAR'S door! How many, with the
+wintry air biting their naked limbs, and freezing within them the very
+springs of human hope! In CHOKEPEAR'S house there are, it may be, a dozen
+coats, nay, a hundred articles of cast-off dress, flung aside for the
+moth--piles of stuff and flannel, that would at this season wrap the limbs
+of the wretched in comparative Elysium. Does Mr. CHOKEPEAR, the
+respectable, the Christian CHOKEPEAR, order these (to him unnecessary)
+things to be given to the naked? He thinks not of them; for he wears
+fleecy hosiery next his skin, and being in all things dressed in defiance
+of the season--keeps a merry Christmas.
+
+Gentle reader, we wish you a merry Christmas; but to be truly, wisely
+merry, it must not be the Christmas of the CHOKEPEARS. That is the
+Christmas of the belly: keep you the Christmas of the heart. Give--give.
+
+Q.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+COMMERCIAL PANIC.--RUMOURED STOPPAGE IN THE CITY.
+
+There is in the city a noted place for deposits, much resorted to by
+certain parties, who are in the habit of giving drafts upon it very
+freely, when applied to for payment. We regret to state that if the
+severity of the weather continues, a stoppage is expected in the quarter
+hinted at, and as the issues are at all times exceedingly copious, the
+worst results may be anticipated. Our readers will at once perceive that,
+in attributing such an effect as total stoppage to such a cause as
+continued frost, we can only point to one quarter which is in the habit of
+answering drafts; and, as further delicacy would be useless, we avow at
+once that _Aldgate Pump_ is here alluded to. We understand that, as the
+customers are chiefly people of straw, it is intended to see what effect
+straw will have in averting the calamity. We were sorry to see the other
+day a very large _bill_ upon a quarter hitherto so respectable. We are
+aware that its exposed condition gives every one a handle against it, and
+we are, therefore, the more circumspect in giving currency to every idle
+rumour. We should be no less sorry to see _Aldgate Pump_ stop from
+external causes, than to know that it had been swamped by its own
+excessive issues. Though as yet quite above water, it is feared that it
+will soon be in _an-ice_ predicament.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE.
+
+_Arrivals._--Jack Frost, from the North.
+
+_Departures._--Several members of the Swellmobocracy have, within the last
+few days, quitted Deptford for South Australia. The periods of their
+intended sojourn are various.
+
+_Changes._--Ned Morris has changed his collar, but continues his shirt for
+the present. Among the other changes we have to record one effected by Sam
+Smasher, of a counterfeit sovereign.
+
+It is a remarkable fact that the weathercocks have recently changed their
+quarters, and have left the West in favour of the East: a predilection of
+astounding vulgarity.
+
+Timothy Tomkins has had another splendid turn-out from his lodgings, the
+landlord having complained of want of punctuality in payments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A LETTER FROM AN OLD FRIEND,
+
+SHOWING HOW HE IS GETTING ON.
+
+
+_Clodpole, Dec. 23, 1841_.
+
+MY DEAR PUNCH,
+
+Here I am, you see, keeping Christmas, and having no end of fun amongst
+the jolly innocent grubs that vegetate in these rural districts. All I
+regret is that you are not here. I would give a ten-pound note to see you,
+if I had it;--I would, indeed--so help me several strong men and a
+steam-engine!
+
+We had a great night in London before I started, only I got rascally
+screwed: not exactly sewed up, you know but hit under the wing, so that I
+could not very well fly. I managed to break the window on the third-floor
+landing of my lodgings, and let my water-jug fall slap through the
+wash-hand basin upon a looking-glass that was lying face upwards
+underneath; but as I was off early in the morning it did not signify.
+
+The people down here are a queer lot; but I have hunted up two or three
+jolly cocks, and we contrive to keep the place alive between us. Of
+course, all the knockers came off the first night I arrived, and to-morrow
+we are going to climb out upon the roof of my abode, and make a tour along
+the tops of the neighbouring houses, putting turfs on the tops of all the
+practicable chimneys. Jack Randall--such a jolly chick! you must be
+introduced to him--has promised to tie a cord across the pavement at the
+corner, from the lamp-post to a door-scraper; and we have made a careful
+estimate that, out of every half-dozen people who pass, six will fall
+down, four cut their faces more or less arterially, and two contuse their
+foreheads. I, you may imagine, shall wait at home all the evening for the
+crippled ones, and Jack is to go halves in what I get for plastering them
+up. We may be so lucky as to procure a case of concussion--who knows? Jack
+is a real friend: he cannot be of much use to me in the way of
+recommendation, because the people here think he is a little wild; but as
+far as seriously injuring the parishioners goes, he declares he will lose
+no chance. He says he knows some gipsies on the common who have got
+scarlet-fever in their tent; and he is going to give them half-a-crown if
+they can bring it into the village, to be paid upon the breaking out of
+the first undoubted case. This will fag the Union doctor to death, who is
+my chief opponent, and I shall come in for some of the private patients.
+
+My surgery is not very well stocked at present, but I shall write to
+Ansell and Hawke after Christmas. I have got a pickle-bottle full of
+liquorice-powder, which has brought me in a good deal already, and
+assisted to perform several wonderful cures. I administer it in powders,
+two drachms in six, to be taken morning, noon, and night; and it appears
+to be a valuable medicine for young practitioners, as you may give a large
+dose, without producing any very serious effects. Somebody was insane
+enough to send to me the other night for a pill and draught; and if Jack
+Randall had not been there, I should have been regularly stumped, having
+nothing but Epsom salts. He cut a glorious calomel pill out of pipeclay,
+and then we concocted a black-draught of salts and bottled stout, with a
+little patent boot-polish. Next day, the patient finding himself worse,
+sent for me, and I am trying the exhibition of linseed-meal and rose-pink
+in small doses, under which treatment he is gradually recovering. It has
+since struck me that a minute portion of sulphuric acid enters into the
+composition of the polish, possibly causing the indisposition which he
+describes "as if he was tied all up in a double-knot, and pulled tight."
+
+I have had one case of fracture in the leg of Mrs. Finkey's Italian
+greyhound, which Jack threw a flower-pot at in the dark the other night. I
+tied it up in two splints cut out of a clothes-peg in a manner which I
+stated to be the most popular at the Hôtel Dieu at Paris; and the old girl
+was so pleased that she has asked me to keep Christmas-day at her house,
+where she burns the Yule log, makes a bowl of wassail, and all manner of
+games. We are going to bore a hole in the Yule log with an old trephine,
+and ram it chuck-full of gunpowder; and Jack's little brother is to catch
+six or seven frogs, under pain of a severe licking, which are to be put
+into one of the vegetable dishes. The old girl has her two nieces home for
+the holidays--devilish handsome, larky girls--so we have determined to
+take some mistletoe, and give a practical demonstration of the action of
+the _orbicularis oris_ and _ievatores labiæ superioris et inferioris_. If
+either of them have got any tin, I shall try and get all right with them;
+but if the brads don't flourish I shall leave it alone, for a wife is just
+the worst piece of furniture a fellow can bring into his house, especially
+if he inclines to conviviality; although to be sure a medical man ought to
+consider her as part of his stock in trade, to be taken at a fair
+valuation amidst his stopple-bottles, mortars, measures, and pill-rollers.
+
+If business does not tumble in well, in the course of a few weeks, we have
+another plan in view; but I only wish to resort to it on emergency, in
+case we should be found out. The railway passes at the bottom of my
+garden, and Jack thinks, with a few pieces of board, he can contrive to
+run the engine and tender off the line, which is upon a tolerably high
+embankment. I need not tell you all this is in strict confidence; and if
+the plan does not jib, which is not very probable, will bring lots of
+grist to the mill. I have put the engineer and stoker at a sure guinea a
+head for the inquest; and the concussions in the second class will be of
+unknown value. If practicable, I mean to have an elderly gentleman "who
+must not be moved under any consideration;" so I shall get him into my
+house for the term of his indisposition, which may possibly be a very long
+one. I can give him up my own bedroom, and sleep myself in an old
+harpsichord, which I bought cheap at a sale, and disembowelled into a
+species of deceptive bed. I think the hint might put "people about to
+marry" up to a dodge in the way of spare beds. Everybody now sees through
+the old chiffonier and wardrobe turn-up impositions, but the grand piano
+would beat them; only it should be kept locked, for fear any one given to
+harmony might commence playing a fantasia on the bolster.
+
+Our parishioners have very little idea of the Cider-cellars and Coal-hole,
+both of which places they take in their literal sense. I think that, with
+Jack's assistance, we can establish something of the kind at the Swan,
+which is the principal inn. Should it not succeed, I shall turn my
+attention to getting up a literary and scientific institution, and give a
+lecture. I have not yet settled on what subject, but Jack votes for
+Astronomy, for two reasons: firstly, because the room is dark nearly all
+the time; and secondly, because you can smug in some pots of half-and-half
+behind the transparent orrery. He says the dissolving views in London put
+him up to the value of a dark exhibition. We also think we can manage a
+concert, which will he sure of a good attendance if we say it is for some
+parish charity. Jack has volunteered a solo on the cornet-à-piston: he has
+never tried the instrument, but he says he is sure he can play it, as it
+looks remarkably easy hanging up in the windows of the music-shops. He
+thinks one might drill the children and get up the Macbeth music.
+
+It is turning very cold to-night, and I think will turn to a frost. Jack
+has thrown some water on the pavement before my door; and should it
+freeze, I have given strict orders to my old housekeeper not to strew any
+ashes, or sand, or sawdust, or any similar rubbish about. People's bones
+are very brittle in frosty weather, and this may bring a job. I hope it
+will.
+
+If, in your London rambles, as you seem to be everywhere at once, you
+pitch upon Manhug, Rapp, or Jones, give my love to them, and tell them to
+keep their powder dry, and not to think of practising in the country,
+which is after all a species of social suicide. And with the best
+compliments of the season to yourself, and "through the medium of the
+columns of your valuable journal" to your readers, believe me to remain,
+
+My dear old bean,
+
+Yours very considerably,
+
+JOSEPH MUFF.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE SECRET SORROW.
+
+ Oh! let me from the festive board
+ To thee, my mother, flee;
+ And be my secret sorrow shared
+ By thee--by only thee!
+
+ In vain they spread the glitt'ring store,
+ The rich repast, in vain;
+ Let others seek enjoyment there,
+ To me 'tis only pain.
+
+ There _was_ a word of kind advice--
+ A whisper, soft and low;
+ But oh! that _one_ resistless smile!
+ Alas! why was it so?
+
+ No blame, no blame, my mother dear,
+ Do I impute to _you_.
+ But since I ate that currant tart
+ I don't know what to do!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+PUNCH'S POSTSCRIPT.
+
+
+MR. AUGUSTUS SWIVEL, (_Professor of the Drum and Mouth-organ, and
+Stage-Manager to_ PUNCH'S _Theatre_,)
+
+LOQUITUR.
+
+
+[Illustration: P]PATRONS OF "PUNCH,"--LADIES AND GENTLEMEN,--
+
+We has dropped the curtain and rowled up the baize on the first
+half-annivel performance of "PUNCH." The pleasing task now dewolves upon
+me, on behoof of the Lessee and the whole strength off the Puppets, to
+come forrard and acknowledge the liberal showers of applause and 'apence
+what a generous and enlightened British public has powered upon the
+performances and pitched into our goss. Steamilated by this St. Swiffin's
+of success, the Lessee fearlessly launches his bark upon the high road of
+public favor, and enters his Theaytre for the grand steeple-chase of
+general approbation.
+
+Ourn hasn't been a bed of roses. We've had our rivals and our troubles. We
+came out as a great hint, and everybody took us.
+
+First and foremost, the great Juggeler in Printing-house Square, walks in
+like the Sheriff and takes our comic effects.
+
+Then the Black Doctor, as blowed the bellows to the late ministerial
+organ, starts a fantoccini and collars our dialect.
+
+Then, the unhappy wight what acts as dry-nuss to his _Grandmother_,
+finding his writing on the pavement with red and white chalk and
+sentiment, won't friz,--gives over appealing to the sympathies, kidnaps
+our comic offspring, and (as our brother dramatist Muster Sheridan says)
+disfigures 'em to make 'em look like his own.
+
+Then, the whole biling of our other hoppositioners who puts their
+shoulders together, to "hoist up a donkey," tries to ornament their werry
+wulgar exhibitions with our vitticisms.
+
+Now this was cruel, deceitful condick on the part of the juggeler,--a side
+wind blow from the organ,--didn't show much of the milk of human kindness
+with the chalk; and as for the ass,--but no,--brotherly love is our
+weakness, and we throws a veil over the donkey.
+
+During the recess the exterior of the Theaytre will be re-decorated by
+Muster Phiz; and the first artists in pen, ink, black-lead, and box-wood,
+has been secured to see if any improvements _can_ be made in the interior.
+
+I have the honor to inform you that we shall commence our next campaign on
+January 1, 1842, with renewed henergy, all the old-established wooden
+heads, and several new hands.
+
+And now, Ladies and Gentlemen, on behalf of "PUNCH," the Puppets, the
+Properrieters, and the Orchestra (which is myself), I most respectfully
+touches my hat, and wishes you all a merry Christmas and a happy New Year.
+_Au rewoir_.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol.
+1, December 25, 1841, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 1,
+December 25, 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, December 25, 1841
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: February 7, 2005 [EBook #14942]
+
+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
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<h1>PUNCH,<br />
+OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.</h1>
+<h2>VOL. 1.</h2>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>DECEMBER 25, 1841.</h2>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page277" name="page277"></a>[pg
+277]</span>
+<h2>HOW MR. CHOKEPEAR KEEPS A MERRY CHRISTMAS.</h2>
+<p>Mr. CHOKEPEAR is, to the finger-nails, a respectable man. The
+tax-gatherer was never known to call at his door a second time for
+the same rate; he takes the sacrament two or three times a year,
+and has in his cellar the oldest port in the parish. He has more
+than once subscribed to the fund for the conversion of the Jews;
+and, as a proof of his devotion to the interests of the established
+church, it was he who started the subscription to present the
+excellent Doctor MANNAMOUTH with a superb silver tea-pot,
+cream-jug, and spoons. He did this, as he has often proudly
+declared, to show to the infidel world that there were some men in
+the parish who were true Christians. He has acquired a profound
+respect for Sir PETER LAURIE, since the alderman&rsquo;s judgments
+upon &ldquo;the starving villains who would fly in the face of
+their Maker;&rdquo; and, having a very comfortable balance at his
+banker&rsquo;s, considers all despair very weak, very foolish, and
+very sinful. He, however, blesses himself that for such miscreants
+there is Newgate; and more&mdash;there is Sir PETER LAURIE.</p>
+<p>Mr. CHOKEPEAR loves Christmas! Yes, he is an Englishman, and he
+will tell you that he loves to keep Christmas-day in the true old
+English fashion. How does he keep it?</p>
+<p>It is eight o&rsquo;clock, and Mr. CHOKEPEAR rises from his
+goose-down. He dresses himself, says his short morning
+thanksgiving, and being an economist of time, unconsciously
+polishes his gold watch-chain the while. He descends to the
+breakfast parlour, and receives from lips of ice, the wishes of a
+happy Christmas, pronounced by sons and daughters, to whom, as he
+himself declares, he is &ldquo;the best of fathers&rdquo;&mdash;the
+most indulgent of men.</p>
+<p>The church-bell tolls, and the CHOKEPEARS, prepare for worship.
+What meekness, what self-abasement sits on the Christian face of
+TOBIAS CHOKEPEAR as he walks up the aisle to his cosey pew; where
+the woman, with turned key and hopes of Christmas half-crown
+lighting her withered face, sinks a curtsey as she lets &ldquo;the
+miserable sinner&rdquo; in; having carefully pre-arranged the soft
+cushions and hassocks for the said sinner, his wife, his sons, and
+daughters. The female CHOKEPEARS with half the produce of a
+Canadian winter&rsquo;s hunting in their tippets, muffs, and
+dresses, and with their noses, like pens stained with red
+ink,&mdash;prepare themselves to receive the religious blessings of
+the day. They then venture to look around the church, and
+recognising CHOKEPEARS of kindred nature, though not of name, in
+pews&mdash;(none of course among the <em>most</em> &ldquo;miserable
+sinners&rdquo; on the bare benches)&mdash;they smile a bland
+salutation, and&mdash;but hush! the service is about to begin.</p>
+<p>And now will TOBIAS CHOKEPEAR perform the religious duties of a
+Christian! Look at him, how he feeds upon every syllable of the
+minister. He turns the Prayer-book familiarly, as if it were his
+bank account, and, in a moment, lights upon the prayers set apart
+for the day. With what a composed, assured face he listens to the
+decalogue&mdash;how firm his voice in the responses&mdash;and
+though the effrontery of scandal avows that he shifts somewhat from
+Mrs. CHOKEPEAR&rsquo;S eye at the mention of &ldquo;the
+maid-servant&rdquo;&mdash;we do not believe it.</p>
+<p>It is thus CHOKEPEAR begins his Christmas-day. He comes to
+celebrate the event of the Incarnation of all goodness; to return
+&ldquo;his most humble and hearty thanks&rdquo; for the glory that
+Providence has vouchsafed to him in making him a Christian.
+He&mdash;Tobias CHOKEPEAR&mdash;might have been born a Gentoo!
+Gracious powers! he might have been doomed to trim the lamps in the
+Temple of Juggernaut&mdash;he might have come into this world to
+sweep the marble of the Mosque at Mecca&mdash;he might have been a
+faquir, with iron and wooden pins &ldquo;stuck in his mortified
+bare flesh&rdquo;&mdash;he might, we shudder to think upon the
+probability, have brandished his club as a New Zealander; and his
+stomach, in a state of heathen darkness to the humanising beauties
+of goose and apple-sauce, might, with unblessed appetite, have fed
+upon the flesh of his enemies. He might, as a Laplander, have
+driven a sledge, and fed upon walrus-blubber; and now is he an
+Englishman&mdash;a Christian&mdash;a carriage holder, and an eater
+of venison!</p>
+<p>It is plain that all these thoughts&mdash;called up by the
+eloquence of Doctor MANNAMOUTH, who preaches on the
+occasion&mdash;are busy in the bosom of CHOKEPEAR; and he sits on
+his soft cushion, with his eyelids declined, swelling and melting
+with gratitude for his blissful condition. Yes; he feels the
+glorious prerogative of his birth&mdash;the exquisite beauty of his
+religion. He ought to feel himself a happy man; and, glancing round
+his handsomely-appointed pew&mdash;he <em>does</em>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A sweet discourse&mdash;a very sweet discourse,&rdquo;
+says CHOKEPEAR to several respectable acquaintance, as the organ
+plays the congregation out; and CHOKEPEAR looks round about him
+airily, contentedly; as though his conscience was as unseared as
+the green holly that decorates the pews; as though his heart was
+fresh, and red, and spotless as its berries.</p>
+<p>Well, the religious ceremonies of the day being duly observed,
+CHOKEPEAR resolves to enjoy Christmas in the true old English
+fashion. Oh! ye gods, that bless the larders of the
+respectable,&mdash;what a dinner! The board is enough to give
+Plenty a plethora, and the whole house is odoriferous as the airs
+of Araby. And then, what delightful evidences of old observing
+friendship on the table! There is a turkey&mdash;&ldquo;only a
+little lower&rdquo; than an ostrich&mdash;despatched all the way
+from an acquaintance in Norfolk, to smoke a Christmas salutation to
+good Mr. CHOKEPEAR. Another county sends a goose&mdash;another
+pheasants&mdash;another brawn; and CHOKEPEAR, with his eye half
+slumbering in delight upon the gifts, inwardly avows that the
+friendship of friends really well to do is a fine, a noble
+thing.</p>
+<p>The dinner passes off most admirably. Not one single culinary
+accident has marred a single dish. The pudding is delicious; the
+custards are something better than manna&mdash;the mince pies a
+conglomeration of ambrosial sweets. And then the Port! Mr.
+CHOKEPEAR smacks his lips like a whip, and gazes on the bee&rsquo;s
+wing, as HERSCHELL would gaze upon a new-found star,
+&ldquo;swimming in the blue profound.&rdquo; Mr. CHOKEPEAR wishes
+all a merry Christmas, and tosses off the wine, its flavour by no
+means injured by the declared conviction of the drinker, that
+&ldquo;there isn&rsquo;t such another glass in the
+parish!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The evening comes on. Cards, snap-dragons, quadrilles,
+country-dances, with a hundred devices to make people eat and
+drink, send night into morning; and it may be at six or seven on
+the twenty-sixth of December, our friend CHOKEPEAR, a little
+mellow, but not at all too mellow for the season, returns to his
+sheets, and when he rises declares that he has passed a very merry
+Christmas. If the human animal were all stomach&mdash;all one large
+paunch&mdash;we should agree with CHOKEPEAR that he <em>had</em>
+passed a merry Christmas: but was it the Christmas of a good man or
+a Christian? Let us see.</p>
+<p>We have said all CHOKEPEAR&rsquo;S daughters dined with him. We
+forgot: one was absent. Some seven years ago she married a poorer
+husband, and poverty was his only, but certainly his sufficient
+fault; and her father vowed that she should never again cross his
+threshold. The Christian keeps his word. He has been to church to
+celebrate the event which preached to all men mutual love and
+mutual forgiveness, and he comes home, and with rancour in his
+heart&mdash;keeps a merry Christmas!</p>
+<p>We have briefly touched upon the banquet spread before
+CHOKEPEAR. There is a poor debtor of his in Horsemonger-lane
+prison&mdash;a debtor to the amount of at least a hundred
+shillings. Does <em>he</em> dine on Christmas-day? Oh! yes; Mr.
+CHOKEPEAR will read in <em>The Times</em> of Monday how the
+under-marshal served to each prisoner a pound of beef, a slice of
+pudding, and a pint of porter! The man might have spent the day in
+freedom with his wife and children; but Mr. CHOKEPEAR in his pew
+thought not of his debtor, and the creditor at least&mdash;kept a
+merry Christmas!</p>
+<p>How many shivering wretches pass CHOKEPEAR&rsquo;S door! How
+many, with the wintry air biting their naked limbs, and freezing
+within them the very springs of human hope! In CHOKEPEAR&rsquo;S
+house there are, it may be, a dozen coats, nay, a hundred articles
+of cast-off dress, flung aside for the moth&mdash;piles of stuff
+and flannel, that would at this season wrap the limbs of the
+wretched in comparative Elysium. Does Mr. CHOKEPEAR, the
+respectable, the Christian CHOKEPEAR, order these (to him
+unnecessary) things to be given to the naked? He thinks not of
+them; for he wears fleecy hosiery next his skin, and being in all
+things dressed in defiance of the season&mdash;keeps a merry
+Christmas.</p>
+<p>Gentle reader, we wish you a merry Christmas; but to be truly,
+wisely merry, it must not be the Christmas of the CHOKEPEARS. That
+is the Christmas of the belly: keep you the Christmas of the heart.
+Give&mdash;give.</p>
+<p class="rgt">Q.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>COMMERCIAL PANIC.&mdash;RUMOURED STOPPAGE IN THE CITY.</h3>
+<p>There is in the city a noted place for deposits, much resorted
+to by certain parties, who are in the habit of giving drafts upon
+it very freely, when applied to for payment. We regret to state
+that if the severity of the weather continues, a stoppage is
+expected in the quarter hinted at, and as the issues are at all
+times exceedingly copious, the worst results may be anticipated.
+Our readers will at once perceive that, in attributing such an
+effect as total stoppage to such a cause as continued frost, we can
+only point to one quarter which is in the habit of answering
+drafts; and, as further delicacy would be useless, we avow at once
+that <em>Aldgate Pump</em> is here alluded to. We understand that,
+as the customers are chiefly people of straw, it is intended to see
+what effect straw will have in averting the calamity. We were sorry
+to see the other day a very large <em>bill</em> upon a quarter
+hitherto so respectable. We are aware that its exposed condition
+gives every one a handle against it, and we are, therefore, the
+more circumspect in giving currency to every idle rumour. We should
+be no less sorry to see <em>Aldgate Pump</em> stop from external
+causes, than to know that it had been swamped by its own excessive
+issues. Though as yet quite above water, it is feared that it will
+soon be in <em>an-ice</em> predicament.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE.</h3>
+<p><em>Arrivals.</em>&mdash;Jack Frost, from the North.</p>
+<p><em>Departures.</em>&mdash;Several members of the Swellmobocracy
+have, within the last few days, quitted Deptford for South
+Australia. The periods of their intended sojourn are various.</p>
+<p><em>Changes.</em>&mdash;Ned Morris has changed his collar, but
+continues his shirt for the present. Among the other changes we
+have to record one effected by Sam Smasher, of a counterfeit
+sovereign.</p>
+<p>It is a remarkable fact that the weathercocks have recently
+changed their quarters, and have left the West in favour of the
+East: a predilection of astounding vulgarity.</p>
+<p>Timothy Tomkins has had another splendid turn-out from his
+lodgings, the landlord having complained of want of punctuality in
+payments.</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page278" name="page278"></a>[pg
+278]</span>
+<h2>A LETTER FROM AN OLD FRIEND,</h2>
+<h4>SHOWING HOW HE IS GETTING ON.</h4>
+<p class="rgt"><em>Clodpole, Dec.</em> 23, 1841.</p>
+<p>MY DEAR PUNCH,</p>
+<p>Here I am, you see, keeping Christmas, and having no end of fun
+amongst the jolly innocent grubs that vegetate in these rural
+districts. All I regret is that you are not here. I would give a
+ten-pound note to see you, if I had it;&mdash;I would,
+indeed&mdash;so help me several strong men and a steam-engine!</p>
+<p>We had a great night in London before I started, only I got
+rascally screwed: not exactly sewed up, you know but hit under the
+wing, so that I could not very well fly. I managed to break the
+window on the third-floor landing of my lodgings, and let my
+water-jug fall slap through the wash-hand basin upon a
+looking-glass that was lying face upwards underneath; but as I was
+off early in the morning it did not signify.</p>
+<p>The people down here are a queer lot; but I have hunted up two
+or three jolly cocks, and we contrive to keep the place alive
+between us. Of course, all the knockers came off the first night I
+arrived, and to-morrow we are going to climb out upon the roof of
+my abode, and make a tour along the tops of the neighbouring
+houses, putting turfs on the tops of all the practicable chimneys.
+Jack Randall&mdash;such a jolly chick! you must be introduced to
+him&mdash;has promised to tie a cord across the pavement at the
+corner, from the lamp-post to a door-scraper; and we have made a
+careful estimate that, out of every half-dozen people who pass, six
+will fall down, four cut their faces more or less arterially, and
+two contuse their foreheads. I, you may imagine, shall wait at home
+all the evening for the crippled ones, and Jack is to go halves in
+what I get for plastering them up. We may be so lucky as to procure
+a case of concussion&mdash;who knows? Jack is a real friend: he
+cannot be of much use to me in the way of recommendation, because
+the people here think he is a little wild; but as far as seriously
+injuring the parishioners goes, he declares he will lose no chance.
+He says he knows some gipsies on the common who have got
+scarlet-fever in their tent; and he is going to give them
+half-a-crown if they can bring it into the village, to be paid upon
+the breaking out of the first undoubted case. This will fag the
+Union doctor to death, who is my chief opponent, and I shall come
+in for some of the private patients.</p>
+<p>My surgery is not very well stocked at present, but I shall
+write to Ansell and Hawke after Christmas. I have got a
+pickle-bottle full of liquorice-powder, which has brought me in a
+good deal already, and assisted to perform several wonderful cures.
+I administer it in powders, two drachms in six, to be taken
+morning, noon, and night; and it appears to be a valuable medicine
+for young practitioners, as you may give a large dose, without
+producing any very serious effects. Somebody was insane enough to
+send to me the other night for a pill and draught; and if Jack
+Randall had not been there, I should have been regularly stumped,
+having nothing but Epsom salts. He cut a glorious calomel pill out
+of pipeclay, and then we concocted a black-draught of salts and
+bottled stout, with a little patent boot-polish. Next day, the
+patient finding himself worse, sent for me, and I am trying the
+exhibition of linseed-meal and rose-pink in small doses, under
+which treatment he is gradually recovering. It has since struck me
+that a minute portion of sulphuric acid enters into the composition
+of the polish, possibly causing the indisposition which he
+describes &ldquo;as if he was tied all up in a double-knot, and
+pulled tight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I have had one case of fracture in the leg of Mrs.
+Finkey&rsquo;s Italian greyhound, which Jack threw a flower-pot at
+in the dark the other night. I tied it up in two splints cut out of
+a clothes-peg in a manner which I stated to be the most popular at
+the H&ocirc;tel Dieu at Paris; and the old girl was so pleased that
+she has asked me to keep Christmas-day at her house, where she
+burns the Yule log, makes a bowl of wassail, and all manner of
+games. We are going to bore a hole in the Yule log with an old
+trephine, and ram it chuck-full of gunpowder; and Jack&rsquo;s
+little brother is to catch six or seven frogs, under pain of a
+severe licking, which are to be put into one of the vegetable
+dishes. The old girl has her two nieces home for the
+holidays&mdash;devilish handsome, larky girls&mdash;so we have
+determined to take some mistletoe, and give a practical
+demonstration of the action of the <em>orbicularis oris</em> and
+<em>ievatores labi&aelig; superioris et inferioris</em>. If either
+of them have got any tin, I shall try and get all right with them;
+but if the brads don&rsquo;t flourish I shall leave it alone, for a
+wife is just the worst piece of furniture a fellow can bring into
+his house, especially if he inclines to conviviality; although to
+be sure a medical man ought to consider her as part of his stock in
+trade, to be taken at a fair valuation amidst his stopple-bottles,
+mortars, measures, and pill-rollers.</p>
+<p>If business does not tumble in well, in the course of a few
+weeks, we have another plan in view; but I only wish to resort to
+it on emergency, in case we should be found out. The railway passes
+at the bottom of my garden, and Jack thinks, with a few pieces of
+board, he can contrive to run the engine and tender off the line,
+which is upon a tolerably high embankment. I need not tell you all
+this is in strict confidence; and if the plan does not jib, which
+is not very probable, will bring lots of grist to the mill. I have
+put the engineer and stoker at a sure guinea a head for the
+inquest; and the concussions in the second class will be of unknown
+value. If practicable, I mean to have an elderly gentleman
+&ldquo;who must not be moved under any consideration;&rdquo; so I
+shall get him into my house for the term of his indisposition,
+which may possibly be a very long one. I can give him up my own
+bedroom, and sleep myself in an old harpsichord, which I bought
+cheap at a sale, and disembowelled into a species of deceptive bed.
+I think the hint might put &ldquo;people about to marry&rdquo; up
+to a dodge in the way of spare beds. Everybody now sees through the
+old chiffonier and wardrobe turn-up impositions, but the grand
+piano would beat them; only it should be kept locked, for fear any
+one given to harmony might commence playing a fantasia on the
+bolster.</p>
+<p>Our parishioners have very little idea of the Cider-cellars and
+Coal-hole, both of which places they take in their literal sense. I
+think that, with Jack&rsquo;s assistance, we can establish
+something of the kind at the Swan, which is the principal inn.
+Should it not succeed, I shall turn my attention to getting up a
+literary and scientific institution, and give a lecture. I have not
+yet settled on what subject, but Jack votes for Astronomy, for two
+reasons: firstly, because the room is dark nearly all the time; and
+secondly, because you can smug in some pots of half-and-half behind
+the transparent orrery. He says the dissolving views in London put
+him up to the value of a dark exhibition. We also think we can
+manage a concert, which will he sure of a good attendance if we say
+it is for some parish charity. Jack has volunteered a solo on the
+cornet-&agrave;-piston: he has never tried the instrument, but he
+says he is sure he can play it, as it looks remarkably easy hanging
+up in the windows of the music-shops. He thinks one might drill the
+children and get up the Macbeth music.</p>
+<p>It is turning very cold to-night, and I think will turn to a
+frost. Jack has thrown some water on the pavement before my door;
+and should it freeze, I have given strict orders to my old
+housekeeper not to strew any ashes, or sand, or sawdust, or any
+similar rubbish about. People&rsquo;s bones are very brittle in
+frosty weather, and this may bring a job. I hope it will.</p>
+<p>If, in your London rambles, as you seem to be everywhere at
+once, you pitch upon Manhug, Rapp, or Jones, give my love to them,
+and tell them to keep their powder dry, and not to think of
+practising in the country, which is after all a species of social
+suicide. And with the best compliments of the season to yourself,
+and &ldquo;through the medium of the columns of your valuable
+journal&rdquo; to your readers, believe me to remain,</p>
+<p class="rgt">My dear old bean,<br />
+Yours very considerably,<br />
+JOSEPH MUFF.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>THE SECRET SORROW.</h3>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Oh! let me from the festive board</p>
+<p class="i2">To thee, my mother, flee;</p>
+<p>And be my secret sorrow shared</p>
+<p class="i2">By thee&mdash;by only thee!</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>In vain they spread the glitt&rsquo;ring store,</p>
+<p class="i2">The rich repast, in vain;</p>
+<p>Let others seek enjoyment there,</p>
+<p class="i2">To me &rsquo;tis only pain.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>There <em>was</em> a word of kind advice&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">A whisper, soft and low;</p>
+<p>But oh! that <em>one</em> resistless smile!</p>
+<p class="i2">Alas! why was it so?</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>No blame, no blame, my mother dear,</p>
+<p class="i2">Do I impute to <em>you</em>.</p>
+<p>But since I ate that currant tart</p>
+<p class="i2">I don&rsquo;t know what to do!</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page279" name="page279"></a>[pg
+279]</span>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/024-01.png"><img src=
+"images/024-01.png" alt="PUNCH nails a notce to a post." id=
+"img024-01" name="img024-01" width="50%" /></a></div>
+<h2>PUNCH&rsquo;S POSTSCRIPT.</h2>
+<hr class="short" />
+<p class="cen">MR. AUGUSTUS SWIVEL, (<em>Professor of the Drum and
+Mouth-organ, and Stage-Manager to</em> PUNCH&rsquo;S
+<em>Theatre</em>,)</p>
+<h5>LOQUITUR.</h5>
+<div class="dropcap"><a href="images/024-02.png"><img src=
+"images/024-02.png" alt=
+"A man with a bass drum on his back forms a letter P." id=
+"img024-02" name="img024-02" width="100%" /></a></div>
+<p><span class="hide">P</span>ATRONS OF
+&ldquo;PUNCH,&rdquo;&mdash;LADIES AND GENTLEMEN,&mdash;</p>
+<p>We has dropped the curtain and rowled up the baize on the first
+half-annivel performance of &ldquo;PUNCH.&rdquo; The pleasing task
+now dewolves upon me, on behoof of the Lessee and the whole
+strength off the Puppets, to come forrard and acknowledge the
+liberal showers of applause and &rsquo;apence what a generous and
+enlightened British public has powered upon the performances and
+pitched into our goss. Steamilated by this St. Swiffin&rsquo;s of
+success, the Lessee fearlessly launches his bark upon the high road
+of public favor, and enters his Theaytre for the grand
+steeple-chase of general approbation.</p>
+<p>Ourn hasn&rsquo;t been a bed of roses. We&rsquo;ve had our
+rivals and our troubles. We came out as a great hint, and everybody
+took us.</p>
+<p>First and foremost, the great Juggeler in Printing-house Square,
+walks in like the Sheriff and takes our comic effects.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page280" name="page280"></a>[pg
+280]</span>
+<p>Then the Black Doctor, as blowed the bellows to the late
+ministerial organ, starts a fantoccini and collars our dialect.</p>
+<p>Then, the unhappy wight what acts as dry-nuss to his
+<em>Grandmother</em>, finding his writing on the pavement with red
+and white chalk and sentiment, won&rsquo;t friz,&mdash;gives over
+appealing to the sympathies, kidnaps our comic offspring, and (as
+our brother dramatist Muster Sheridan says) disfigures &rsquo;em to
+make &rsquo;em look like his own.</p>
+<p>Then, the whole biling of our other hoppositioners who puts
+their shoulders together, to &ldquo;hoist up a donkey,&rdquo; tries
+to ornament their werry wulgar exhibitions with our vitticisms.</p>
+<p>Now this was cruel, deceitful condick on the part of the
+juggeler,&mdash;a side wind blow from the organ,&mdash;didn&rsquo;t
+show much of the milk of human kindness with the chalk; and as for
+the ass,&mdash;but no,&mdash;brotherly love is our weakness, and we
+throws a veil over the donkey.</p>
+<p>During the recess the exterior of the Theaytre will be
+re-decorated by Muster Phiz; and the first artists in pen, ink,
+black-lead, and box-wood, has been secured to see if any
+improvements <em>can</em> be made in the interior.</p>
+<p>I have the honor to inform you that we shall commence our next
+campaign on January 1, 1842, with renewed henergy, all the
+old-established wooden heads, and several new hands.</p>
+<p>And now, Ladies and Gentlemen, on behalf of &ldquo;PUNCH,&rdquo;
+the Puppets, the Properrieters, and the Orchestra (which is
+myself), I most respectfully touches my hat, and wishes you all a
+merry Christmas and a happy New Year. <em>Au rewoir</em>.</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/024-03.png"><img src=
+"images/024-03.png" alt="PUNCH doffs his hat and takes a bow." id=
+"img024-03" name="img024-03" width="80%" /></a></div>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol.
+1, December 25, 1841, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 1,
+December 25, 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, December 25, 1841
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: February 7, 2005 [EBook #14942]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Syamanta Saikia, Jon Ingram, Barbara Tozier and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOL. 1.
+
+
+
+FOR THE WEEK ENDING DECEMBER 25, 1841.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+HOW MR. CHOKEPEAR KEEPS A MERRY CHRISTMAS.
+
+Mr. CHOKEPEAR is, to the finger-nails, a respectable man. The tax-gatherer
+was never known to call at his door a second time for the same rate; he
+takes the sacrament two or three times a year, and has in his cellar the
+oldest port in the parish. He has more than once subscribed to the fund
+for the conversion of the Jews; and, as a proof of his devotion to the
+interests of the established church, it was he who started the
+subscription to present the excellent Doctor MANNAMOUTH with a superb
+silver tea-pot, cream-jug, and spoons. He did this, as he has often
+proudly declared, to show to the infidel world that there were some men in
+the parish who were true Christians. He has acquired a profound respect
+for Sir PETER LAURIE, since the alderman's judgments upon "the starving
+villains who would fly in the face of their Maker;" and, having a very
+comfortable balance at his banker's, considers all despair very weak, very
+foolish, and very sinful. He, however, blesses himself that for such
+miscreants there is Newgate; and more--there is Sir PETER LAURIE.
+
+Mr. CHOKEPEAR loves Christmas! Yes, he is an Englishman, and he will tell
+you that he loves to keep Christmas-day in the true old English fashion.
+How does he keep it?
+
+It is eight o'clock, and Mr. CHOKEPEAR rises from his goose-down. He
+dresses himself, says his short morning thanksgiving, and being an
+economist of time, unconsciously polishes his gold watch-chain the while.
+He descends to the breakfast parlour, and receives from lips of ice, the
+wishes of a happy Christmas, pronounced by sons and daughters, to whom, as
+he himself declares, he is "the best of fathers"--the most indulgent of
+men.
+
+The church-bell tolls, and the CHOKEPEARS, prepare for worship. What
+meekness, what self-abasement sits on the Christian face of TOBIAS
+CHOKEPEAR as he walks up the aisle to his cosey pew; where the woman, with
+turned key and hopes of Christmas half-crown lighting her withered face,
+sinks a curtsey as she lets "the miserable sinner" in; having carefully
+pre-arranged the soft cushions and hassocks for the said sinner, his wife,
+his sons, and daughters. The female CHOKEPEARS with half the produce of a
+Canadian winter's hunting in their tippets, muffs, and dresses, and with
+their noses, like pens stained with red ink,--prepare themselves to
+receive the religious blessings of the day. They then venture to look
+around the church, and recognising CHOKEPEARS of kindred nature, though
+not of name, in pews--(none of course among the _most_ "miserable sinners"
+on the bare benches)--they smile a bland salutation, and--but hush! the
+service is about to begin.
+
+And now will TOBIAS CHOKEPEAR perform the religious duties of a Christian!
+Look at him, how he feeds upon every syllable of the minister. He turns
+the Prayer-book familiarly, as if it were his bank account, and, in a
+moment, lights upon the prayers set apart for the day. With what a
+composed, assured face he listens to the decalogue--how firm his voice in
+the responses--and though the effrontery of scandal avows that he shifts
+somewhat from Mrs. CHOKEPEAR'S eye at the mention of "the
+maid-servant"--we do not believe it.
+
+It is thus CHOKEPEAR begins his Christmas-day. He comes to celebrate the
+event of the Incarnation of all goodness; to return "his most humble and
+hearty thanks" for the glory that Providence has vouchsafed to him in
+making him a Christian. He--Tobias CHOKEPEAR--might have been born a
+Gentoo! Gracious powers! he might have been doomed to trim the lamps in
+the Temple of Juggernaut--he might have come into this world to sweep the
+marble of the Mosque at Mecca--he might have been a faquir, with iron and
+wooden pins "stuck in his mortified bare flesh"--he might, we shudder to
+think upon the probability, have brandished his club as a New Zealander;
+and his stomach, in a state of heathen darkness to the humanising beauties
+of goose and apple-sauce, might, with unblessed appetite, have fed upon
+the flesh of his enemies. He might, as a Laplander, have driven a sledge,
+and fed upon walrus-blubber; and now is he an Englishman--a Christian--a
+carriage holder, and an eater of venison!
+
+It is plain that all these thoughts--called up by the eloquence of Doctor
+MANNAMOUTH, who preaches on the occasion--are busy in the bosom of
+CHOKEPEAR; and he sits on his soft cushion, with his eyelids declined,
+swelling and melting with gratitude for his blissful condition. Yes; he
+feels the glorious prerogative of his birth--the exquisite beauty of his
+religion. He ought to feel himself a happy man; and, glancing round his
+handsomely-appointed pew--he _does_.
+
+"A sweet discourse--a very sweet discourse," says CHOKEPEAR to several
+respectable acquaintance, as the organ plays the congregation out; and
+CHOKEPEAR looks round about him airily, contentedly; as though his
+conscience was as unseared as the green holly that decorates the pews; as
+though his heart was fresh, and red, and spotless as its berries.
+
+Well, the religious ceremonies of the day being duly observed, CHOKEPEAR
+resolves to enjoy Christmas in the true old English fashion. Oh! ye gods,
+that bless the larders of the respectable,--what a dinner! The board is
+enough to give Plenty a plethora, and the whole house is odoriferous as
+the airs of Araby. And then, what delightful evidences of old observing
+friendship on the table! There is a turkey--"only a little lower" than an
+ostrich--despatched all the way from an acquaintance in Norfolk, to smoke
+a Christmas salutation to good Mr. CHOKEPEAR. Another county sends a
+goose--another pheasants--another brawn; and CHOKEPEAR, with his eye half
+slumbering in delight upon the gifts, inwardly avows that the friendship
+of friends really well to do is a fine, a noble thing.
+
+The dinner passes off most admirably. Not one single culinary accident has
+marred a single dish. The pudding is delicious; the custards are something
+better than manna--the mince pies a conglomeration of ambrosial sweets.
+And then the Port! Mr. CHOKEPEAR smacks his lips like a whip, and gazes on
+the bee's wing, as HERSCHELL would gaze upon a new-found star, "swimming
+in the blue profound." Mr. CHOKEPEAR wishes all a merry Christmas, and
+tosses off the wine, its flavour by no means injured by the declared
+conviction of the drinker, that "there isn't such another glass in the
+parish!"
+
+The evening comes on. Cards, snap-dragons, quadrilles, country-dances,
+with a hundred devices to make people eat and drink, send night into
+morning; and it may be at six or seven on the twenty-sixth of December,
+our friend CHOKEPEAR, a little mellow, but not at all too mellow for the
+season, returns to his sheets, and when he rises declares that he has
+passed a very merry Christmas. If the human animal were all stomach--all
+one large paunch--we should agree with CHOKEPEAR that he _had_ passed a
+merry Christmas: but was it the Christmas of a good man or a Christian?
+Let us see.
+
+We have said all CHOKEPEAR'S daughters dined with him. We forgot: one was
+absent. Some seven years ago she married a poorer husband, and poverty was
+his only, but certainly his sufficient fault; and her father vowed that
+she should never again cross his threshold. The Christian keeps his word.
+He has been to church to celebrate the event which preached to all men
+mutual love and mutual forgiveness, and he comes home, and with rancour in
+his heart--keeps a merry Christmas!
+
+We have briefly touched upon the banquet spread before CHOKEPEAR. There is
+a poor debtor of his in Horsemonger-lane prison--a debtor to the amount of
+at least a hundred shillings. Does _he_ dine on Christmas-day? Oh! yes;
+Mr. CHOKEPEAR will read in _The Times_ of Monday how the under-marshal
+served to each prisoner a pound of beef, a slice of pudding, and a pint of
+porter! The man might have spent the day in freedom with his wife and
+children; but Mr. CHOKEPEAR in his pew thought not of his debtor, and the
+creditor at least--kept a merry Christmas!
+
+How many shivering wretches pass CHOKEPEAR'S door! How many, with the
+wintry air biting their naked limbs, and freezing within them the very
+springs of human hope! In CHOKEPEAR'S house there are, it may be, a dozen
+coats, nay, a hundred articles of cast-off dress, flung aside for the
+moth--piles of stuff and flannel, that would at this season wrap the limbs
+of the wretched in comparative Elysium. Does Mr. CHOKEPEAR, the
+respectable, the Christian CHOKEPEAR, order these (to him unnecessary)
+things to be given to the naked? He thinks not of them; for he wears
+fleecy hosiery next his skin, and being in all things dressed in defiance
+of the season--keeps a merry Christmas.
+
+Gentle reader, we wish you a merry Christmas; but to be truly, wisely
+merry, it must not be the Christmas of the CHOKEPEARS. That is the
+Christmas of the belly: keep you the Christmas of the heart. Give--give.
+
+Q.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+COMMERCIAL PANIC.--RUMOURED STOPPAGE IN THE CITY.
+
+There is in the city a noted place for deposits, much resorted to by
+certain parties, who are in the habit of giving drafts upon it very
+freely, when applied to for payment. We regret to state that if the
+severity of the weather continues, a stoppage is expected in the quarter
+hinted at, and as the issues are at all times exceedingly copious, the
+worst results may be anticipated. Our readers will at once perceive that,
+in attributing such an effect as total stoppage to such a cause as
+continued frost, we can only point to one quarter which is in the habit of
+answering drafts; and, as further delicacy would be useless, we avow at
+once that _Aldgate Pump_ is here alluded to. We understand that, as the
+customers are chiefly people of straw, it is intended to see what effect
+straw will have in averting the calamity. We were sorry to see the other
+day a very large _bill_ upon a quarter hitherto so respectable. We are
+aware that its exposed condition gives every one a handle against it, and
+we are, therefore, the more circumspect in giving currency to every idle
+rumour. We should be no less sorry to see _Aldgate Pump_ stop from
+external causes, than to know that it had been swamped by its own
+excessive issues. Though as yet quite above water, it is feared that it
+will soon be in _an-ice_ predicament.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE.
+
+_Arrivals._--Jack Frost, from the North.
+
+_Departures._--Several members of the Swellmobocracy have, within the last
+few days, quitted Deptford for South Australia. The periods of their
+intended sojourn are various.
+
+_Changes._--Ned Morris has changed his collar, but continues his shirt for
+the present. Among the other changes we have to record one effected by Sam
+Smasher, of a counterfeit sovereign.
+
+It is a remarkable fact that the weathercocks have recently changed their
+quarters, and have left the West in favour of the East: a predilection of
+astounding vulgarity.
+
+Timothy Tomkins has had another splendid turn-out from his lodgings, the
+landlord having complained of want of punctuality in payments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A LETTER FROM AN OLD FRIEND,
+
+SHOWING HOW HE IS GETTING ON.
+
+
+_Clodpole, Dec. 23, 1841_.
+
+MY DEAR PUNCH,
+
+Here I am, you see, keeping Christmas, and having no end of fun amongst
+the jolly innocent grubs that vegetate in these rural districts. All I
+regret is that you are not here. I would give a ten-pound note to see you,
+if I had it;--I would, indeed--so help me several strong men and a
+steam-engine!
+
+We had a great night in London before I started, only I got rascally
+screwed: not exactly sewed up, you know but hit under the wing, so that I
+could not very well fly. I managed to break the window on the third-floor
+landing of my lodgings, and let my water-jug fall slap through the
+wash-hand basin upon a looking-glass that was lying face upwards
+underneath; but as I was off early in the morning it did not signify.
+
+The people down here are a queer lot; but I have hunted up two or three
+jolly cocks, and we contrive to keep the place alive between us. Of
+course, all the knockers came off the first night I arrived, and to-morrow
+we are going to climb out upon the roof of my abode, and make a tour along
+the tops of the neighbouring houses, putting turfs on the tops of all the
+practicable chimneys. Jack Randall--such a jolly chick! you must be
+introduced to him--has promised to tie a cord across the pavement at the
+corner, from the lamp-post to a door-scraper; and we have made a careful
+estimate that, out of every half-dozen people who pass, six will fall
+down, four cut their faces more or less arterially, and two contuse their
+foreheads. I, you may imagine, shall wait at home all the evening for the
+crippled ones, and Jack is to go halves in what I get for plastering them
+up. We may be so lucky as to procure a case of concussion--who knows? Jack
+is a real friend: he cannot be of much use to me in the way of
+recommendation, because the people here think he is a little wild; but as
+far as seriously injuring the parishioners goes, he declares he will lose
+no chance. He says he knows some gipsies on the common who have got
+scarlet-fever in their tent; and he is going to give them half-a-crown if
+they can bring it into the village, to be paid upon the breaking out of
+the first undoubted case. This will fag the Union doctor to death, who is
+my chief opponent, and I shall come in for some of the private patients.
+
+My surgery is not very well stocked at present, but I shall write to
+Ansell and Hawke after Christmas. I have got a pickle-bottle full of
+liquorice-powder, which has brought me in a good deal already, and
+assisted to perform several wonderful cures. I administer it in powders,
+two drachms in six, to be taken morning, noon, and night; and it appears
+to be a valuable medicine for young practitioners, as you may give a large
+dose, without producing any very serious effects. Somebody was insane
+enough to send to me the other night for a pill and draught; and if Jack
+Randall had not been there, I should have been regularly stumped, having
+nothing but Epsom salts. He cut a glorious calomel pill out of pipeclay,
+and then we concocted a black-draught of salts and bottled stout, with a
+little patent boot-polish. Next day, the patient finding himself worse,
+sent for me, and I am trying the exhibition of linseed-meal and rose-pink
+in small doses, under which treatment he is gradually recovering. It has
+since struck me that a minute portion of sulphuric acid enters into the
+composition of the polish, possibly causing the indisposition which he
+describes "as if he was tied all up in a double-knot, and pulled tight."
+
+I have had one case of fracture in the leg of Mrs. Finkey's Italian
+greyhound, which Jack threw a flower-pot at in the dark the other night. I
+tied it up in two splints cut out of a clothes-peg in a manner which I
+stated to be the most popular at the Hotel Dieu at Paris; and the old girl
+was so pleased that she has asked me to keep Christmas-day at her house,
+where she burns the Yule log, makes a bowl of wassail, and all manner of
+games. We are going to bore a hole in the Yule log with an old trephine,
+and ram it chuck-full of gunpowder; and Jack's little brother is to catch
+six or seven frogs, under pain of a severe licking, which are to be put
+into one of the vegetable dishes. The old girl has her two nieces home for
+the holidays--devilish handsome, larky girls--so we have determined to
+take some mistletoe, and give a practical demonstration of the action of
+the _orbicularis oris_ and _ievatores labiae superioris et inferioris_. If
+either of them have got any tin, I shall try and get all right with them;
+but if the brads don't flourish I shall leave it alone, for a wife is just
+the worst piece of furniture a fellow can bring into his house, especially
+if he inclines to conviviality; although to be sure a medical man ought to
+consider her as part of his stock in trade, to be taken at a fair
+valuation amidst his stopple-bottles, mortars, measures, and pill-rollers.
+
+If business does not tumble in well, in the course of a few weeks, we have
+another plan in view; but I only wish to resort to it on emergency, in
+case we should be found out. The railway passes at the bottom of my
+garden, and Jack thinks, with a few pieces of board, he can contrive to
+run the engine and tender off the line, which is upon a tolerably high
+embankment. I need not tell you all this is in strict confidence; and if
+the plan does not jib, which is not very probable, will bring lots of
+grist to the mill. I have put the engineer and stoker at a sure guinea a
+head for the inquest; and the concussions in the second class will be of
+unknown value. If practicable, I mean to have an elderly gentleman "who
+must not be moved under any consideration;" so I shall get him into my
+house for the term of his indisposition, which may possibly be a very long
+one. I can give him up my own bedroom, and sleep myself in an old
+harpsichord, which I bought cheap at a sale, and disembowelled into a
+species of deceptive bed. I think the hint might put "people about to
+marry" up to a dodge in the way of spare beds. Everybody now sees through
+the old chiffonier and wardrobe turn-up impositions, but the grand piano
+would beat them; only it should be kept locked, for fear any one given to
+harmony might commence playing a fantasia on the bolster.
+
+Our parishioners have very little idea of the Cider-cellars and Coal-hole,
+both of which places they take in their literal sense. I think that, with
+Jack's assistance, we can establish something of the kind at the Swan,
+which is the principal inn. Should it not succeed, I shall turn my
+attention to getting up a literary and scientific institution, and give a
+lecture. I have not yet settled on what subject, but Jack votes for
+Astronomy, for two reasons: firstly, because the room is dark nearly all
+the time; and secondly, because you can smug in some pots of half-and-half
+behind the transparent orrery. He says the dissolving views in London put
+him up to the value of a dark exhibition. We also think we can manage a
+concert, which will he sure of a good attendance if we say it is for some
+parish charity. Jack has volunteered a solo on the cornet-a-piston: he has
+never tried the instrument, but he says he is sure he can play it, as it
+looks remarkably easy hanging up in the windows of the music-shops. He
+thinks one might drill the children and get up the Macbeth music.
+
+It is turning very cold to-night, and I think will turn to a frost. Jack
+has thrown some water on the pavement before my door; and should it
+freeze, I have given strict orders to my old housekeeper not to strew any
+ashes, or sand, or sawdust, or any similar rubbish about. People's bones
+are very brittle in frosty weather, and this may bring a job. I hope it
+will.
+
+If, in your London rambles, as you seem to be everywhere at once, you
+pitch upon Manhug, Rapp, or Jones, give my love to them, and tell them to
+keep their powder dry, and not to think of practising in the country,
+which is after all a species of social suicide. And with the best
+compliments of the season to yourself, and "through the medium of the
+columns of your valuable journal" to your readers, believe me to remain,
+
+My dear old bean,
+
+Yours very considerably,
+
+JOSEPH MUFF.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE SECRET SORROW.
+
+ Oh! let me from the festive board
+ To thee, my mother, flee;
+ And be my secret sorrow shared
+ By thee--by only thee!
+
+ In vain they spread the glitt'ring store,
+ The rich repast, in vain;
+ Let others seek enjoyment there,
+ To me 'tis only pain.
+
+ There _was_ a word of kind advice--
+ A whisper, soft and low;
+ But oh! that _one_ resistless smile!
+ Alas! why was it so?
+
+ No blame, no blame, my mother dear,
+ Do I impute to _you_.
+ But since I ate that currant tart
+ I don't know what to do!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+PUNCH'S POSTSCRIPT.
+
+
+MR. AUGUSTUS SWIVEL, (_Professor of the Drum and Mouth-organ, and
+Stage-Manager to_ PUNCH'S _Theatre_,)
+
+LOQUITUR.
+
+
+[Illustration: P]PATRONS OF "PUNCH,"--LADIES AND GENTLEMEN,--
+
+We has dropped the curtain and rowled up the baize on the first
+half-annivel performance of "PUNCH." The pleasing task now dewolves upon
+me, on behoof of the Lessee and the whole strength off the Puppets, to
+come forrard and acknowledge the liberal showers of applause and 'apence
+what a generous and enlightened British public has powered upon the
+performances and pitched into our goss. Steamilated by this St. Swiffin's
+of success, the Lessee fearlessly launches his bark upon the high road of
+public favor, and enters his Theaytre for the grand steeple-chase of
+general approbation.
+
+Ourn hasn't been a bed of roses. We've had our rivals and our troubles. We
+came out as a great hint, and everybody took us.
+
+First and foremost, the great Juggeler in Printing-house Square, walks in
+like the Sheriff and takes our comic effects.
+
+Then the Black Doctor, as blowed the bellows to the late ministerial
+organ, starts a fantoccini and collars our dialect.
+
+Then, the unhappy wight what acts as dry-nuss to his _Grandmother_,
+finding his writing on the pavement with red and white chalk and
+sentiment, won't friz,--gives over appealing to the sympathies, kidnaps
+our comic offspring, and (as our brother dramatist Muster Sheridan says)
+disfigures 'em to make 'em look like his own.
+
+Then, the whole biling of our other hoppositioners who puts their
+shoulders together, to "hoist up a donkey," tries to ornament their werry
+wulgar exhibitions with our vitticisms.
+
+Now this was cruel, deceitful condick on the part of the juggeler,--a side
+wind blow from the organ,--didn't show much of the milk of human kindness
+with the chalk; and as for the ass,--but no,--brotherly love is our
+weakness, and we throws a veil over the donkey.
+
+During the recess the exterior of the Theaytre will be re-decorated by
+Muster Phiz; and the first artists in pen, ink, black-lead, and box-wood,
+has been secured to see if any improvements _can_ be made in the interior.
+
+I have the honor to inform you that we shall commence our next campaign on
+January 1, 1842, with renewed henergy, all the old-established wooden
+heads, and several new hands.
+
+And now, Ladies and Gentlemen, on behalf of "PUNCH," the Puppets, the
+Properrieters, and the Orchestra (which is myself), I most respectfully
+touches my hat, and wishes you all a merry Christmas and a happy New Year.
+_Au rewoir_.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol.
+1, December 25, 1841, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #14942 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14942)