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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, Or The London Charivari, Vol. 103,
+November 19, 1892, 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. 103, November 19, 1892
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Francis Burnand
+
+Release Date: May 31, 2005 [EBook #15957]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer, William Flis, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH,
+
+OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOL. 103.
+
+
+
+November 19, 1892.
+
+
+
+
+THE MAN WHO WOULD.
+
+II.--THE MAN WHO WOULD PLAY GOLF.
+
+BULGER was no cricketer, no tennis-player, no sportsman, in fact.
+But his Doctor recommended exercise and fresh air. "And I'm thinking,
+Sir," he added, "that you cannot do better than just take yourself
+down to St. Andrews, and put yourself under TOM MORRIS." "Is he a
+great Scotch physician?" asked BULGER; "I don't seem to have heard of
+him." "The Head of the Faculty, Sir," said the medical man--"the Head
+of the Faculty in those parts."
+
+BULGER packed his effects, and, in process of time, he arrived at
+Leuchars. Here he observed some venerable towers within a short walk,
+and fancied that he would presently arrive at St. Andrews. In this he
+was reckoning without the railway system--he was compelled to wait at
+Leuchars for no inconsiderable time, which he occupied in extracting
+statistics about the consumption of whiskey from the young lady who
+ministered to travellers. The revelations now communicated, convinced
+BULGER that either Dr. MORRIS was not on the lines of Sir ANDREW
+CLARK, or, as an alternative, that his counsels were not listened to
+by travellers on that line.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Arriving in the dusk, BULGER went to his inn, and next morning
+inquired as to the address of the Head of the Faculty. "I dinna ken,"
+said an elderly person, to whom he appealed, "that the Professors
+had made TOM a Doctor, though it's a sair and sad oversicht, and a
+disgrace to the country, that they hae'na done sae lang syne. But I
+jalouse that your Doctor was jist making a gowk o' ye." "What!" said
+BULGER. "Jist playin' a plisky on ye, and he meant that TOM wad pit ye
+in the way o' becoming a player. Mon, ye're a bull-neckit, bow-leggit
+chiel', and ye'd shape fine for a Gowfer! Here's TOM." And, with this
+brief introduction, the old man strolled away.
+
+BULGER now found himself in the presence of Mr. MORRIS, whose
+courtesy soon put him on a footing of friendliness and confidence.
+He purchased, by his Mentor's advice, a driver, a cleek, a putter, a
+brassey, an iron, a niblick, and a mashy. Armed with these implements,
+which were "carried by an orphan boy," and, under the guidance of the
+Head of the Faculty himself, BULGER set forth on his first round. His
+first two strokes were dealt on the yielding air; his third carried
+no inconsiderable parcel of real property to some distance; but his
+fourth hit the ball, and drove it across the road. "As gude as a
+better," quoth the orphan boy, and bade BULGER propel the tiny sphere
+in the direction of a neighbouring rivulet. Into this affluent of the
+main, BULGER finally hit the ball; but an adroit lad of nine stamped
+it into the mud, while pretending to look for it, and BULGER had to
+put down another. When he got within putting range, he hit his ball
+careering back and forward over the hole, and, "Eh, man," quoth the
+orphan boy, "if ye could only drive as you put!"
+
+In some fifteen strokes he accomplished his task of holing out; and
+now, weary and desponding (for he had fancied Golf to be an easy
+game), he would have desisted for the day. But the Head of the Faculty
+pressed on him the necessity of "The daily round, the common task."
+So his ball was tee'd, and he lammed it into the Scholar's Bunker, at
+a distance of nearly thirty yards. A niblick was now placed in his
+grasp, and he was exhorted to "Take plenty sand." Presently a kind
+of simoom was observed to rage in the Scholars' Bunker, out of which
+emerged the head of the niblick, the ball, and, finally, BULGER
+himself. His next hit, however, was a fine one, over the wall, where,
+as the ball was lost, BULGER deposited a new one. This he, somehow,
+drove within a few feet of the hole, when he at once conceived an
+intense enthusiasm for the pastime. "It was a fine drive," said the
+Head of the Faculty. "Mr. BLACKWELL never hit a finer." Thus inflamed
+with ardour, BULGER persevered. He learned to waggle his club in a
+knowing way. He listened intently when he was bidden to "keep his eye
+on the ba'", and to be "slow up." True, he now missed the globe and
+all that it inhabit, but soon he hit a prodigious swipe, well over
+cover-point's head,--or rather, in the direction where cover-point
+would have been. "Ye're awfu' bad in the whuns," said the orphan
+boy; and, indeed, BULGER'S next strokes were played in distressing
+circumstances. The spikes of the gorse ran into his person--he could
+only see a small part of the ball, and, in a few minutes, he had made
+a useful clearing of about a quarter of an acre.
+
+It is unnecessary to follow his later achievements in detail. He
+returned a worn and weary man, having accomplished the round in
+about a hundred and eighty, but in possession of an appetite which
+astonished him and those with whom he lunched. In the afternoon, the
+luck of beginners attending him, he joined a foursome of Professors,
+and triumphantly brought in his partner an easy victor. In a day or
+two, he was drinking beer (which he would previously have rejected
+as poison), was sleeping like a top, and was laying down the law
+on stimy, and other "mysteries more than Eleusinian." True, after
+the first three days, his play entirely deserted BULGER, and even
+Professors gave him a wide berth in making up a match. But by steady
+perseverance, reading Sir WALTER SIMPSON, taking out a professional,
+and practising his iron in an adjacent field, BULGER soon developed
+to such an extent that few third-rate players could give him a stroke
+a hole. He had been in considerable danger of "a stroke" of quite a
+different character before he left London, and the delights of the
+Bar. But he returned to the Capital in rude health, and may now often
+be seen and heard, topping into the Pond at Wimbledon, and talking in
+a fine Fifeshire-accent. It must be acknowledged that his story about
+his drive at the second hole, "equal to BLACKWELL, himself, TOM MORRIS
+himself told me as much," has become rather a source of diversion to
+his intimates; but we have all our failings, and BULGER never dreams,
+when anyone says, "What is the record drive?" that he is being
+drawn for the entertainment of the sceptical and unfeeling. BULGER
+will never, indeed, be a player; but, if his handicap remains at
+twenty-four, he may, some day, carry off the monthly medal. With this
+great aim before him, and the consequent purchase of a red-coat and
+gilt-buttons, BULGER has a new purpose in existence, "something to
+live for, something to do." May this brief but accurate history convey
+a moral to the Pessimist, and encourage those who take a more radiant
+view of the possibilities of life!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A PLEBISCITE FOR PARNASSUS.
+
+ [The result of the _Pall Mall's_ competition for the
+ Laureateship has been to place Mr. ERIC MACKAY and Mr.
+ GILBART-SMITH first and second, and SWINBURNE and MORRIS
+ nowhere.]
+
+ A popular vote the Laureate's post to fill?
+ Ay! if Parnassus were but Primrose Hill.
+ The Penny Vote puts lion below monkey.
+ 'Tis "Tuppence more, Gents, and _up goes the donkey!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+QUITE MOVING.--_From Far and Near_ and _All Alive_, are two excellent
+"movable toy-books" that will please the little ones (when their
+seniors are tired of playing with them) far into the Yule-tide season.
+The author is LOTHAR MAGGENDORFER, a gentleman to whom _Mr. Punch_
+wishes a "Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year." This may appear a
+little premature, but it is a far cry from England to Germany, and the
+Sage of Fleet Street has allowed for any delays that may be caused by
+fogs, railway unpunctuality, and other necessary evils.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE AMERICAN GANYMEDE.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ [The extraordinary triumph of Mr. GROVER CLEVELAND, Democratic
+ Candidate for the American Presidency, is attributed to a
+ general revolt against the McKinley Bill.]
+
+ O plump and pant-striped boy, upborne,
+ Like Ganymede of old,
+ _Punch_ hails you, with your slack, untorn,
+ Fast in the Eagle's hold.
+ It is, indeed, a startling sight
+ That speculation tarries on;
+ And it must give an awful fright
+ To Hebe (_alias_ HARRISON!)
+
+ Up, up to the Olympus, where
+ The White House spreads its board,
+ Whirled high through the electoral air,
+ A boy less long than broad!
+ He looks not like the Tammany breed,
+ That with high tariffs dally;
+ He proves, this Yankee Ganymede,
+ The Democratic rally.
+
+ This eagle's a colossal fowl,
+ Like _Sindbad's_ monstrous Roc,
+ A bird of prey some say, a-prowl
+ Like that Stymphalian flock,
+ With iron claws and brazen beak,
+ Intent to clutch and collar,
+ Fired with devotion strong, yet weak,
+ To the Almighty Dollar.
+
+ Pooh! Plunder's not his only joy.
+ He hovered till he saw
+ "A something-pottle-bodied boy,"
+ Who spurned MCKINLEY'S Law.
+ He stooped and clutched him, fair and good,
+ Flew nigh o'er roof and casement,
+ Whilst the Republicans all stood
+ Agape in sheer amazement.
+
+ He soars with proudly swelling crest
+ And followed with acclaims,
+ A cause of wonder in the West,
+ And crowing by the Thames.
+ For England, glorying in the sight,
+ Greets Boy and Bird together;
+ Whilst watching with serene delight
+ That big, black, falling feather!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ROBERT ON LORD MARE'S DAY.
+
+The most ewentfoollest day of the hole year broke, as the poets says,
+without almost not no fog, on Wensday larst, to my grate serprise and
+joy; but noing, from long xperiens, how unsertain is whether at this
+orful seasun of the year, I took jest one leetel glass of hold brandy
+before setting out on my arjus dootys. I was encurraged to do so also
+by the horful rumers as was spread about, weeks afore, as to threttend
+atacks on the sacred Show by some disapinted prottestens, I think they
+called theirselves, as hadn't bin inwited to the Bankwet, and so meant
+to prottest accordingly.
+
+But I needn't a bin alarmd, for the most respekful mob as filled the
+streets was as quiet as mice, havin heard, I'm told, as how as the
+Copperashun had had the lectric light turned on at Gildhall, by which
+means, of course, they coud comunicate with any-wheres, and so know
+where to send an hole army of Waiters to, well fortyfide, and armed
+to the teeth with a splendid Lunch, to help the pore Perlice in their
+arjus dootys.
+
+From wot I seed of the butifool Sho, I shood give the cake to the
+Frute-Makers' splendid Car, all covered with the most butifool Frute,
+all made, too, in England, as it trewthfoolly said on both sides of
+the high-backed Car. The second plaice I shood give to the numerus
+butifool young Ladys, with most butifool flaxin air, all most bisily
+ingaged in a twistlin and a twiddlin of luvly gold and silver wire, on
+a Car belongin to the Makers of Gold and Silver Wire Drorers, wich I
+heard a most respectfool carpenter declare, must, he thort, be most
+uncomferal to wear. With that good fortun as allers atends the Hed
+Waiter, I seem to have atracted the notis of one of the most butifool
+of the young Ladys afoursaid, for she acshally tossed me a luvly
+littel bit of reel golden wire, which I shall trezure nex my art for
+years, if so be as how it don't skratch.
+
+The grand Bankwet, with its nine hunderd Gestes, was as ushal, about
+the grandest thing of the kind as the world has ever seen, but sumhows
+it struck me as the gents was much more impashent for their wittles
+than they ushally is. At my pertickler tabel, the two gents at the
+top was that trubblesum about the reel Turtel-soup as I ain't a tall
+accumstumed to, and I amost poured a hole ladel-full down the fine
+shirt-front of one of em; and then, trying at the next help to awoid
+him, I sent my helbow full into the face of the other, and a pretty
+fuss he made, you bet, and acshally torked of sending for the
+souperintendent, ewidently not knowing who I was.
+
+The same himpashent Gent amost worried my life out arterwards, and all
+about a glass of _plane_ water as he called it, and when I told him as
+I didn't think as we hadn't not none in the plaice, but I coud get him
+a bottel of amost any kind of Shampane as he liked to name; he again
+said as he wood call for the souperintendent. So in course I had
+to go for some, and a preshus long time it took me to get it; the
+wine-steward naterally sayin as he never before herd of sich a order
+on sich a ocasion, and he had only one bottel with him, and when I
+took it to the himpashent Gent, and told him so, he fairly roared with
+larfter, and told it all round as a capital joke! I wunders where the
+joke was.
+
+When the dinner was over and the speaches began, I got permishun to
+stand unner the gallery for to hear them; but strange to tell, not a
+word coud I hear, and them as I did hear I coudn't unnerstand. So I
+began for to fear as crewel age was a tarnishing of my 'earrings, so
+I moved to the other end of the 'All jest in time for to hear a werry
+dark but gennelmanly young feller, as was called the Gayqueer, or
+some such wonderfool name, and who, I was told, come all the way
+from Indier, make sitch a grand and nobel speach, and in quite as
+good Inglish as ewen I coud use, as got him more applorse from the
+distinguisht hordiens than all the speaches maid by Her Madjesty's
+Ministers put together. Always xceptin the Lawyers, for they seems to
+have sitch a jolly good time of it, that they are allers as reddy to
+cause a larf as to enjoy one. We all seemed sumhow to miss the werry
+PRIME MINISTER--we are all so acustomd to see the werry top of the
+tree, that we don't quite like being put off with a mere bow, however
+big and himportant it may be; besides, I must confess as I do like
+to hear his luvly woice, ewen when I don't quite unnerstand all as he
+says. So I don't suppose as any one of my numerus readers will quarrel
+with me when I says, better luck nex time.
+
+ROBERT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: CANDID CRITICISM.
+
+"LIKE MY NEW FROCK, AUNT JANE?"
+
+"WELL, _I_ SHOULD SAY YOU'D GOT SKIRTS FOR YOUR SLEEVES, AND A SLEEVE
+FOR YOUR SKIRT!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PROOFS BEFORE LETTERS.
+
+ Humbugs will always ape their betters,
+ Fools fancy the alphabet brings them fame;
+ But you don't become a man of letters
+ By tacking the letters after your name.
+ One suffix only the _fact_ expresses,
+ And that's an A and a couple of S's!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ANOTHER MEANING.--_I Rantzau_ is the title of MASCAGNI'S new Opera.
+The title, anglicised, would be suitable for an old-fashioned
+transpontine melodramatic tragedian, who could certainly say of
+himself, "_I rant so!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SHAKSPEARIAN CONUNDRUM.
+
+At what time would SHAKSPEARE'S heroine of _The Taming of the Shrew_
+have been eminently fitted to be a modern Sunday-School teacher?
+
+_Answer._ When _Petruchio_ kissed her; because then she was _a Kattie
+Kiss'd_. (Hem! A Cate-chist.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ALL ROUND THE FAIR.
+
+NO. I.
+
+ SCENE--_A street of Gingerbread, Sweetstuff, and Toy-stalls,
+ "Cocoa-nut Shies," "Box-pitching Saloons," &c., forming
+ the approach to the more festive portion of the Fair, from
+ which proceeds a cheerful cacophony of orchestrions,
+ barrel-organs, steam-whistles, gongs, big drums, rattles,
+ and speaking-trumpets._
+
+_Proprietors of Cocoa-nut Shies._ Now, then, play up all o'
+you--ar-har! There goes another on 'em! _That's_ the way to 'it
+'em--win all yer like, &c.
+
+_A Rival Proprietor_ (_pointing to his target, through the centre of
+which his partner's head is protruded_). Look at _that_! Ain't that
+better nor any coker-nut? Every time you 'it my mate's 'ed, you git
+a good cigar! (_As the by-standers hang back, from motives of
+humanity._) 'Ere, _'ave_ a go at 'im, some o' you--give 'im a little
+encouragement!
+
+_The Head_ (_plaintively_). Don't neglect a man as is doing his best
+to please yer, gen'l'men! (_A soft-hearted Bystander takes a shot at
+him, out of sheer compassion, and misses._) Try agen, Sir. I ain't
+'ere to be _idle_!
+
+_A Sharp Little Girl_ (_presiding over a sloping Chinese
+Billiard-board_). Now, my dears--(_To a group of boys, of about her
+own age_)--'ave what yer like. A penny a pull, and a prize every time!
+Wherever the marble rolls, you 'ave any one article on the board!
+
+[Illustration: "Now then, play up, all o' yea--ar-har!"]
+
+ [_One of the boys pays a penny, and pulls a handle, propelling
+ a marble, which, after striking a bell at the top of the
+ slope, wobbles down into a compartment._
+
+_The Boy_ (_indicating a gorgeous china ornament on the board_). I'll
+'ave one o' them--to take 'ome to mother.
+
+_The S.L.G._ (_with pitying superiority_). No, my boy, you can go to a
+shop and _buy_ one o' them for sixpence if you like--but 'ere you must
+'ave what you _git_!
+
+ [_She awards him a very dingy lead-pencil, with which he
+ departs, abashed, and evidently revolving her dark saying in
+ his perplexed mind._
+
+_Proprietor of a Box-pitching Saloon._ One penny a ball! For hevery
+ball that goes in the boxes, you choose any prize you like! (_With
+sorrow and sympathy, to a female Competitor._) Too 'ard, Lady, too
+_'ard_! (_To a male Comp., whose ball has struck the edge of the box,
+and bounced off._) Very _near_, Sir!
+
+ [_Several Competitors expend penny after penny unsuccessfully,
+ and walk away, with a grin of entire satisfaction._
+
+_Joe_ (_landing a ball in one of the boxes, after four failures_). I
+told 'ee I'd get _waun_ in! (_To his Young Woman._) What are ye goin'
+to 'ave, MELIA?
+
+_Melia_ (_hovering undecidedly over a glittering array of shell-boxes,
+cheap photograph-albums and crockery_). I'll take one o'--no, I won't
+neither.... I really don't know _what_ to 'ave!
+
+_Joe_ (_with masculine impatience_). Well, go on--take _summat_, can't
+ye! (_MELIA selects a cup and saucer, as the simplest solution of the
+problem._) I doan't carl that mooch of a show for fippence, I
+doan't. Theer, gi' us 'old on it. [_He stows the china away in his
+side-pockets._
+
+_Melia._ You took an' 'urried me so--else I don't know as I fancied
+a cup and sarcer so partickler. I wonder if the man 'ud change it,
+supposin' we was to go back and ast 'im!
+
+_Joe_ (_slapping his thigh_). Well, you _are_ a gell and no mistake!
+Come along back and git whatever 'tis you've a mind to. (_Returning._)
+'Ere, Master, will ye gi' this young woman summat else for this 'ere?
+(_He extracts the cup in fragments._) 'Ullo, look a' _that_ now! (_To
+MELIA._) Theer, it's all right--doan't take on 'bout it.--I'll 'ave
+another go to make it oop. (_He pitches ball after ball without
+success._) I wawn't be bett. I lay I'll git 'un in afoor I've done!
+(_He is at last successful._) Theer--now, ye can please yourself,
+and doan't choose nawthen' foolish _this_ time! (_He strolls on with
+lordly indifference, and is presently rejoined by MELIA._) Well, what
+did ye take arter all?
+
+_Melia._ I got so flustered like, for fear o' losin' you, I just up
+and took the first that came 'andy.
+
+_Joe._ Why, if ye ain't bin and took _another_ cup an' sarcer!
+hor--hor! that's a good 'un, that is! Take keer on it, it's cost money
+enough any 'ow--'t wouldn't be no bargain if it wur a 'ole tea-set!
+What's goin' on 'ere?
+
+ [_A venerable old Sportsman, whom the reader may possibly
+ recollect having met before, has collected a small crowd in
+ a convenient corner; his stock-in-trade consists of an
+ innocent-looking basket, with a linen-cover, upon which are a
+ sharpened skewer and a narrow strip of cloth._
+
+_The Sportsman._ I'll undertake to show you more fun in five minutes,
+than you'll get over there in two: (_with a vague suspicion that this
+is rather a lame conclusion_)--in ten, I _should_ say! This 'ere's a
+simple enough little game, when you know the trick of it, and I'm
+on'y a _learnin'_ it myself. I ain't doin' this for money. I got money
+enough to sink a ship--it's on'y for my own amusement. Now you watch
+me a doin' up this garter--keep yer eye on it. (_He coils up the
+strip._) It goes _up_ 'ere, ye see, and down _there_, and _in_ 'ere
+agin, and then round. Now, I'm ready to bet anything from a sovereign
+to a shilling, nobody 'ere can prick the middle. I'll tell ye if ye
+win. I'm ole BILLY FAIRPLAY, and I don't cheat! (_A Spotty-faced Man,
+after intently following the process, says he believes he could find
+the middle._) Well, don't tell--that's all. I'm 'ere all alone, agin
+the lot o' ye, and I want to win if I can--one dog to a bone! (_The_
+S.-F.M. _produces a florin from a mouldy purse, and stakes it, and
+makes a dab at the coil with the skewer._) No, ye're wrong--that's
+outside! (_O.B.F. pulls the strip out._) By Gum, ye've done it, after
+all! 'Ere's four bob for you, and I'm every bit as pleased as if I'd
+won myself! 'Oo'll try next?
+
+_A Smart Young Man_ (_with a brilliant pin in a dirty necktie, to
+JOE_). I don't see how it's done--do you?
+
+_Joe._ Ye will if you don't take yer eyes off it--theer, I could tell
+ye the middle now, I could.
+
+_The Sp.-F.M._ Law, yes, it's simple enough. I done it first time.
+
+_Old B.F._ Give an old man a chance to get a bit. If any party 'ere
+'as found me out, let him 'old 'is tongue--it's all _I_ ask. (_To
+JOE._) You've seen this afore, _I_ know!
+
+_Joe._ Noa, I ain't--but I could tell ye th' middle.
+
+_Old B.F._ Will ye bet on it? Come--not too 'igh, but just to show
+you've confidence in your opinion!
+
+_Joe_ (_cautiously_). I woant bet wi' ye, but I'll hev a try, just for
+nawthen, if ye like!
+
+_Old B.F._ Well, I want to see if you really _do_ know it--so, jest
+for once, I ain't no objection. (_JOE pricks the garter._) Yes, you've
+found the middle, sure enough! It's a good job there was no money
+on--for _me_, leastwise!
+
+_The Sp.-F.M._ I've a good mind to 'ave another try.
+
+_The Sm. Y.M._ I wouldn't. You'll lose. I could see you on'y guessed
+the first time. (_The Sp. F.M., however, extracts a shilling, stakes
+it--and loses._) There, _I_ could ha' told you you was wrong--(_To
+JOE_)--couldn't you?
+
+_Joe._ Yes, he art to ha' pricked moor to waun side of 'un. (_The
+Sp.-F.M. stakes another florin._) Now he's done it, if ye like!
+
+_O.B.F._ There, ye see, I'm as often wrong as not myself. (_To the
+Sp.-F.M._) There's your four bob, Sir. Now, jest once more!
+
+_Joe_ (_to MELIA_). I'll git the price o' that theer cup an' sarcer
+out of 'un, any'ow. (_To O.B.F._) I'll ha' a tanner wi' ye!
+
+_O.B.F._ 'Alf a soverin, if you like--it's all the same to me!
+
+_Joe_ (_after pricking_). I _thart_ I 'ad 'un that time, too, I did!
+
+_The Sm. Y.M._ You shouldn't ha' changed your mind--you were right
+enough afore!
+
+_Joe_. Yes, I should ha' stuck to it. (_To O.B.F._) I'll bet ye two
+bob on the next go--come!
+
+_O.B.F._ Well, I don't like to say no, though I can see, plain enough,
+you know too much. (_JOE pricks; O.B.F. pulls away the strip,
+and leaves the skewer outside._) I could ha' sworn you done me that
+time--but there ye _are_, ye see, there's never no tellin' at this
+game--and that's the charm on it!
+
+ [_JOE walks on with MELIA in a more subdued frame of mind._
+
+_The Sm. Y.M._ (_in the ear of the Spotty-faced One_). I say, I got
+a job o' my own to attend to--jest pass the word to the Old Man, when
+he's done with this pitch, to turn up beyind the swing-boats there,
+and come along yourself, if yer can. It's the old lay I'm on--the
+prize-packets fake.
+
+_The Sp.-F.M._ Right--we'll give yer a look in presently--it'll be a
+little change for the Ole Man--trades's somethin' cruel _'ere_!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HIS MAD-JESTY AT THE LYCEUM.
+
+Except when HENRY IRVING impersonated the hapless victim of false
+imprisonment in the Bastille, whence he issued forth after twenty
+years of durance, never has he been so curiously and wonderfully
+made-up as now, when he represents _Lear_, monarch of all he surveys.
+Bless thee, HENRY, how art thou transformed!
+
+[Illustration: Rather mixed. Mr. Irving as "Ophe-Lear."]
+
+Sure such a _King Lear_ was never seen on any stage, so perfect in
+appearance, so entirely the ideal of SHAKSPEARE'S ancient King.
+It must have been a vision of IRVING in this character that the
+divinely-inspired poet and dramatist saw when he had a _Lear_ in his
+eye. For a moment, too, he reminded me of BOOTH--the "General," not
+the "particular" American tragedian,--and when he appeared in thunder,
+lightning, hail, and rain, he suggested an embodiment of the "_Moses_"
+of MICHAEL ANGELO.
+
+A strange weird play; much for an audience, and more for an actor, all
+on his own shoulders, to bear. A one-part play it is too, for of the
+sweet _Cordelia_,--and sweet did ELLEN TERRY look and so tenderly did
+she play!--little is seen or heard. With _Goneril_ and _Regan_, the
+two proud and wicked sisters,--associated in the mind of the modernest
+British Public with Messrs. HERBERT CAMPBELL and HARRY NICHOLLS, as is
+also _Cordelia_ associated either with _Cinderella_ or with _Beauty_
+in the story of _Beauty and the Beast_--we have two fine commanding
+figures; and well are these parts played by Miss ADA DYAS and Miss
+MAUD MILTON. The audience can have no sympathy with the two wicked
+Princesses, and except in _Goneril's_ brief Lady-Macbethian scene with
+her husband, neither of the Misses LEAR has much dramatic chance. Pity
+that Mrs. LEAR--his Queen and their mother, wasn't alive! Let us hope
+she resembled her youngest daughter _Cordelia_, otherwise poor _Lear_
+must have had a hard life of it as a married man.
+
+Why should not Mr. IRVING give the first part of this play
+reconsideration? Why not just once a week try him as a different sort
+of _Lear_? For instance, suppose, to begin with, that he had had a bad
+time of it with his wife, that for many years as a widower he had been
+seeking for the opportunity of disposing of his daughters, handing
+over to them and to their husbands the lease and goodwill of "The
+Crown and Sceptre," while he would be, as King, "retired from
+business," and going out for a lark generally. Thus jovially would he
+commence the play, a rollicking, gay, old dog, ready for anything, up
+to anything, and, like old Anchises, when he jumped on to the back of
+Æneas, "a wonderful man for his years." In fact, _Lear_ might begin
+like an old King Cole, "a merry old soul," a "jolly old cock!" And
+then--"Oh, what a difference in the morning!"--when all his plans
+for a gay career had been shipwrecked by _Cordelia's_ capricious and
+unnatural affectation.
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Terriss as the Good Fairy.]
+
+Then must commence his senility; then he would begin to break up. A
+struggle, to show that there was life in the old dog yet, could be
+seen when the old dog had been out hunting, in Act II., and had shot
+some strange animal, something between a stag and a dromedary, which
+no doubt was a native of Britain in those good old sporting days.
+However, more of this anon. Suffice it to say now, that our HENRY
+IRVING'S _Lear_ is a triumph in every respect, and that the audience
+only wanted a little more of _Cordelia_, which is the fault of the
+immortal and unequal Bard.
+
+To those unacquainted with this play, Mr. TERRISS'S sudden appearance
+in somewhat anti-Lord-Chamberlain attire, as he bounded on, with a
+wand, and struck an attitude, was suggestive of the Good Fairy in
+the pantomime; and his subsequent proceedings, when he didn't change
+anybody into Harlequin, Clown, and so forth, puzzled the unlearned
+spectators considerably. But Mr. TERRISS came out all right, and
+acquitted himself (being his own judge and jury) to the satisfaction
+of the public. His speech about Dover Cliff, generally supposed to
+convey some allusion to the Channel Tunnel, was excellently delivered,
+and certainly after _Lear_, "on the spear side," Mr. TERRISS must take
+the Goodeley Cake.
+
+Next to him in order of merit comes Mr. FRANK COOPER, as the
+wicked _Edmund_, on whom the good EDMUND, "Edmundus Mundi," smiled
+benignantly from a private box. There was on the first night a great
+reception given to HOWE--the veteran actor, not the wreck, and very
+far from it--who took the small part of an old Evicted Tenant of the
+_Earl of Glo'ster_, a character very carefully played by Mr. ALFRED
+BISHOP, _Floreat Henricus!_ "Our HENRY" has his work cut out for him
+in this "Titanic work," as in his before-curtain and after-play speech
+he termed it. This particular "Titanic work" is (or certainly was that
+night) in favour with "the gods," who "very much applauded what he'd
+done." But the gods of old were not quite so favourable to "Titanic
+work" generally, and punished eternally Titanic workmen. To-night gods
+and groundlings applaud to the echo, and then everyone goes home as
+best he can in about as beautiful a specimen of a November fog as ever
+delighted a Jack-o'-Lantern or disgusted
+
+PRIVATE BOX.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN OPERATIC NOTE.--_Wednesday_.--Lord Mayor's Day and Sheriff Sir
+AUGUSTUS DRURIOLANUS'S Show. _L' Amico Fritz_, or "The old Min is
+friendly," as _Dick Swiveller_ would have put it. Not by any means as
+bright as _Cavalleria_. Mlle. DEL TORRE, del-lightful as _Suzel_.
+M. DUFRICHE, very good as _Rabbino_; CREMONINI, weak as _Fritz_; and
+Mlle. MARTHA-CUPID-BAUERMEISTER, good as usual in the part of the
+"harmless necessary _Cat"-erina._ Opera generally "going strong."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REPORTED DECISION.--Uganda is to be occupied till March next. Then,
+order of the day, "March in, March out!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"SAFE BIND, SAFE FIND!"
+
+P.C. JOHN BULL _LOQUITUR_:--
+
+ Keep them? Right my Gallic friend!
+ 'Tis my duty, sad but binding.
+ Free the Wolf--to what good end?
+ Loose the Snake--what vantage finding?
+ Faction flusters, Cant appeals
+ In the name of sham-humanity.
+ Right, not wrath, my bosom steels;
+ Softness here were sheer insanity.
+
+ _You_'ve my warmest sympathy,
+ Victim of the new Red Terror!
+ _My_ caged RAVACHOLS to free
+ Were the maddest kind of error.
+ Prison walls and dungeon wards
+ Love I not, I'm no born gaoler,
+ But just Law which Freedom guards
+ _Must_ ignore anarchic railer.
+
+ Blind offence of men half mad
+ 'Neath the goad of brute oppression,
+ Blunderings of fierce fools of fad,
+ Demoniacal possession
+ Of red rage at law unjust,
+ I can check with calm compassion;
+ But must firmly crush to dust
+ Murder--in the newest fashion.
+
+ Dynamite as Freedom's friend?
+ 'Tis the foul fiend's latest juggle.
+ We must fight it to the end,
+ Firm, unfaltering in this struggle.
+ Mere "Political Offence,"
+ All this murder, mashing, maiming?
+ 'Tis a pitiful pretence,
+ Honour-blinding, wisdom-shaming.
+
+ Indiscriminate, ruthless raid!
+ Mad chance--medly of disaster!
+ Sophistry, the fiend's sworn aid,
+ Never better served its master
+ Than in calling such hell-birth
+ A new gospel, holy, human,--
+ Blasting as with maniac mirth
+ Blameless men, and guiltless women!
+
+ No! The Dynamiter's creed--
+ Though hate swagger, though cant snivel--
+ Fires no "patriotic" deed;
+ Base-born, all its ends are evil.
+ Let caged wolves and tigers free?
+ What more wicked, what absurder?
+ Amnesty to Anarchy
+ Means encouragement to Murder?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHERE TO PLACE HIM.--Why ought the future Poet-Laureate, whoever he
+may be, to occupy rooms over or close to the stables at Buckingham
+Palace? Because he would then be inspired by the Royal Mews.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A TEST OF TRUE GENTILITY.
+
+"WHAT'S THE NEW LODGER LIKE, MARIARANN?"
+
+"HE'S NO GENTLEMAN, WHATEVER HE'S LIKE!"
+
+"NO GENTLEMAN! WHAT'S HE BEEN AND DONE?"
+
+"WHY, HE SEE ME A-CARRYIN' UP THE COALS, AN' HE SAYS, 'I'M AFRAID THAT
+SCUTTLE'S TOO HEAVY FOR YOU,' 'E SAYS,--'PRAY LET _ME_ CARRY IT!' 'E
+SAYS. AN' 'E UP AND CARRIES IT ISSELF, JUST LIKE A FOOTMAN!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO A MODEL YOUNG LADY.
+
+ [It is reported that it is a common custom in Paris, amongst
+ ladies of position, to pay for their dresses by wearing them
+ in public, and letting it be known from whom they obtained
+ them.]
+
+ My dear, I like your pretty dress,
+ It suits your figure to a T.
+ I'm free to own that I confess,
+ It's just the kind of dress for me.
+ Yet will you kindly tell me, dear,
+ Not merely was the costume made for
+ Yourself alone--but is it clear
+ And certain that your dress is paid for?
+
+ Mistake me not. I do not dread
+ That you'll think fit to run away
+ And leave the bill unpaid. Instead,
+ I fear that you will never pay,
+ Because no bill will ever come;
+ And since when you decide to toddle
+ Abroad, you'll go amidst a hum
+ Of praise for Madame's lovely Model
+
+ Oh! promise me that when I read
+ My paper (as I often do),
+ I shall not with remorseless speed
+ See endless pars in praise of you,
+ Or rather of the dress you wore,
+ For though, maybe, no harm or hurt is meant,
+ Remember, dearest, I implore,
+ I _won't_ be fond of an advertisement!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+"_Days with Sir Roger de Coverley!_" exclaimed the Baron, on seeing
+the charming little book brought out at this season by Messrs.
+MACMILLAN. "Delightful! Immortal! Ever fresh! Welcome, with or without
+illustration; some of Mr. THOMSON's would not be missed."
+
+There is a breezy, frank, boyish air about the "Reminiscences" of
+our great Baritone, CHARLES SANTLEY, which is as a tonic--a tonic
+sol-fa--to the reader a-weary of the many Reminiscences of these
+latter days. SANTLEY, who seems to have made his way by stolid pluck,
+and without very much luck, may be considered as the musical _Mark
+Tapley_, ready to look always on the sunny side. With a few rare
+exceptions, he appears to have taken life very easily.
+
+Muchly doth the Baron like Mr. HALL CAINE's story of _Captain Davy's
+Honeymoon_, only, short as it is, with greater effect it might have
+been shorter.
+
+The Baron, being in a reading humour, tried _The Veiled Hand_, by
+FREDERICK WICKS, a name awkward for anyone unable to manage his "r's."
+What Fwedewickwicks' idea of _A Veiled Hand_ is, the Baron has tried
+to ascertain, but without avail. Why not a Gloved Hand? Hands do not
+wear veils, any more than our old friends, the Hollow Hearts, wear
+masks. Hands take "vails," but "that is another story." However, _The
+Veiled Hand_ induced sleep, so the Baron extinguished both candles and
+Wicks at the same time, and slumbered.
+
+I have also had time to read _An Exquisite Fool_, published by OSGOOD.
+MCILVAINE & CO., and written by Nobody, Nobody's name being
+mentioned as being the author. It begins well, but it is an old,
+old tale--BLANCHE AMORY and the Chevalier, and so forth--and as _Sir
+Charles Coldstream_ observed, when he looked down the crater of Mount
+Vesuvius, "There's nothing in it."
+
+Most interesting is a short paper on "The Green Room of the Comédie
+Française," in the _English Illustrated Magazine_ for this month,
+pleasantly written by Mr. FREDERICK HAWKINS,--HAWKINS with an
+aspirate, not "'ENERY 'AWKINS" at present associated with "A
+CHEVALIER" in London. Mr. HAWKINS tells many amusing anecdotes, and
+gives a capital sketch of M. RENÉ MOLÉ. But the article would be
+damaged by extracts. Therefore, "_Tolle, lege_," says yours and
+everybody's, very truly,
+
+THE BARON DE BOOK-WORMS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "SAFE BIND, SAFE FIND!"
+
+SERGENT-DE-VILLE. "HA, M'SIEU!--_YOU_ HAVE YOUR DYNAMITERS UNDER LOCK
+AND KEY! TRÈS BIEN! _KEEP_ THEM!!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: WHAT ABOUT GLASS HOUSES?
+
+_First Jovial Cabby_ (_to Second Ditto_). "HI SAY, BILL, DID YER HEVER
+SEE SICH GUYS AS THESE 'ERE GIRLS MAKES OF THEIRSELVES? NOW, YE'D
+NIVER SEE A _MAN_ GO AND MAKE SUCH A RIDIK'LOUS HOBJICK OF 'ISSELF!!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A PUFF OF SMOKE.
+
+ (_What the heart of the young Vocalist said to the
+ Anti-Tobacconist, after reading Mr. Charles Santley's sage
+ observations on Singing and Smoking, in his new book "Student
+ and Singer."_)
+
+ ["Smoking is an art; it may be made useful or otherwise,
+ according as it is exercised."--Mr. SANTLEY.]
+
+ Tell me not, ye mournful croakers,
+ Smoking is a dirty habit.
+ Brainless are ye, sour non-smokers,
+ As a vivisected rabbit.
+
+ "Smoking is an Art," says SANTLEY;
+ There is Beauty in the bowl.
+ They who doubt it must be scantly
+ Blest with sense, or dowered with soul.
+
+ _As_ an Art it claims attention;
+ Study is the only way.
+ Smoking skill, _not_ smoke-prevention,
+ Is the thing we want to-day.
+
+ Art is long and smoke is fleeting;
+ But puff on until you learn
+ Good tobacco's not for _eating_!
+ Pipe-bowls are not meant to _burn_!
+
+ Smoke without expectorating,
+ Do not sputter, do not chew;
+ Puff not as though emulating
+ Some foul factory's sooty flue
+
+ Let not oily dark defilement
+ Sting your lips; there is no need.
+ Joy and care need reconcilement
+ For enjoyment of the weed.
+
+ Trust no "Germans," buy no "British,"
+ Sound Havanas only smoke!
+ "Lady Nicotine" is skittish,
+ Penny Pickwicks are no joke.
+
+ Smoke no strong shag, no rank "stinger,"
+ Pick your baccy, puff with skill,
+ And--although you are a singer,
+ You may smoke, and not feel ill.
+
+ Let us then be up and smoking,
+ An an Art the thing pursue;
+ As great SANTLEY, who's not joking,
+ Says _he_ does, and all _may_ do!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LADY GAY'S DISTRACTION.
+
+DEAR MR. PUNCH,--You are as fickle as the rest of your sex, I fear,
+otherwise you would not have requited my devotion to you and your
+interests in such an awful manner as you did in publishing my
+husband's letter last week!--and _such_ a letter! Oh, I could write
+such a _scathing_ reply to it!
+
+Of course, it was jealousy on the part of Sir CHARLES at my literary
+success--(setting aside the _wonderful_ tips)--which caused the
+explosion that led to his writing to you, but I never--never--thought
+you would insert his letter, especially as I slipped in a postscript
+which to my mind explained _everything_--as, indeed, postscripts
+_should_ do, or what is the good of writing a long letter about
+nothing in front of them? The wretch confesses that he laughed at my
+articles until he knew who wrote them, and then thought less of
+them! Isn't that like a husband?--I won't say like a _man_, as so few
+husbands _are_ men!--at least, in the eyes of their wives. The moment
+a wife does something her husband can't do, he dislikes and pooh-poohs
+it; whereas, the more accomplishments a husband displays, the more a
+wife appreciates him, or _says_ so even if she doesn't!--which is a
+noble falsehood, for how few women are large-minded enough to pretend
+to admire qualities which they despise because they don't possess
+them--I'm not sure that this is what I mean, nor do I quite understand
+it, but it reads well, which is more than Sir CHARLES'S stuff does!
+
+And then his impertinence in proposing to "edit" my letters!--as if
+anyone could be more capable of doing that than _you_?--(you will
+observe that it is solely on _your_ account that I am annoyed!)--I
+could not brook such interference!--I don't know exactly the meaning
+of "brooking" anything, but I know I wept enough tears of annoyance
+to form a decent "brook" of themselves! I need hardly tell you that it
+was a biting sarcasm on my part to suggest that he should finish his
+letter with a "verse," as I always do--but there--men don't
+understand sarcasm--(one of _our_ most frequently employed weapons of
+offence!)--and the poor thing thought I was in earnest, and did it!
+And _what_ a verse! I could write better with my left hand!
+
+I need scarcely tell you that I have left him--(this is why my address
+is not to be published)--as I consider my duty to the Public rendered
+it imperative that I should do so, for I should not think much of any
+woman who allowed a paltry consideration of domestic obligations to
+weigh against the pursuit of a career of usefulness.
+
+If, therefore, a vein of sadness and cynicism runs through this
+letter, you will understand that it does _not_ proceed from any regret
+at the "breaking up of the happy home," but rather from sorrow at the
+thought that once again the intellectual superiority of one of the
+softer sex has not been accepted in the right spirit by the possessor
+of the weaker mind, to whom she owes obedience!
+
+I trust I have done with Sir CHARLES for ever!--especially if
+he speaks the truth in saying that "following my tips has ruined
+him"--for why should any woman burden herself with an impecunious
+husband? He does not know where I am, and I feel still more secure in
+my retreat from having just heard that he has engaged the services of
+several of the most prominent London Detectives to trace me!
+
+Owing no devotion now to Sir CHARLES--who will appreciate the
+following tender lines with which I close my letter--
+
+ O woman! in our hours of ease,
+ Thou art not _very_ hard to please!
+ Thou takest what the gods may send;
+ But, thwarted!--thou wilt turn and rend!
+
+I am able to subscribe myself, dear _Mr. Punch_,
+
+Yours more devotedly than ever,
+
+LADY GAY.
+
+[From internal evidence, we are inclined to believe that this present
+letter, or the one last week from "Sir CHARLES," is a forgery. In
+former correspondence Lady GAY mentioned "Lord ARTHUR" as her husband.
+We pause for an explanation.--ED.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PROVERB FOR VOCALISTS, À PROPOS OF SIR JOSEPH BARNBY'S REMARKS ON
+ARTICULATION.--"Take care of the sense, and the sounds will take care
+of themselves."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Why is pepper essential to the health of the new LORD MAYOR?--Because
+without "Kn." (cayenne) he would be "ill."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: NATURE AND ART.
+
+_A.R.A._ "BY GEORGE, THIS VIEW'S MAGNIFICENT! I SAY, FLUFFER, YOU
+REALLY OUGHT TO HAVE THOSE WOODS PAINTED."
+
+_Mr. Fluffer_ (_late in the Upholstery line, retired._) "'M--M. DO YOU
+THINK THAT WOULD IMPROVE 'EM? WHAT COLOUR, NOW?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LEFT TO THE LADIES.
+
+MY DEAR MR. PUNCH,
+
+Everyone--I mean everyone with a right mind--will sympathise with
+those nice people at Bristol who have been holding a "Woman's
+Conference." So kind and thoughtful of them, isn't it? I notice
+that Lady BATTERSEA gave a spirited account of a Confederation
+of Temperance of some thirty villages in Norfolk. The dear, good
+inhabitants are to keep off the allurements of drink by "listening to
+such shining lights as Canon WILBERFORCE, and social teas, processions
+with banners, and magic-lanterns, play their part." How they are
+to listen to the teas, processions and lanterns, I don't quite
+understand, in spite of the fact that they (the aforesaid teas, &c.)
+seem to be "playing their parts." Evidently teas, &c., are amateur
+Actors.
+
+Then somebody who described herself as "a nobody from nowhere," is
+said to have "touched a moving chord, as she spoke with great feeling
+of the sympathy and the moral help the poor give back to those who
+work among them." What "moving chord?" Sounds like a bell-rope!
+
+Then another lady who wore "the black and lavender dress of the
+Sisters of the People," followed with a paper, "perhaps overfull
+of details." And here let me say that I am quoting from "a woman
+correspondent" who seems to be full of admiration for her talking
+sisters. But in spite of this admiration, she knows their little
+faults. For instance, she describes a speech as "vigorous, racy, and
+perhaps a trifle sensational." Then, when someone else delivered an
+"address to educated mothers," she says that it excited deep interest,
+and "almost too many educated mothers threw themselves into the
+discussion that followed."
+
+Then she observes, "It was disappointing that Lady ABERDEEN was at the
+last moment forbidden by her Doctor to undertake the long journey from
+Scotland." So it was, most disappointing; and "at the last moment,"
+too!
+
+Then she announces that "Some ladies expressed a feeling, that
+introducing young men and women in business to each other, when
+assembled in their hundreds at Prince's Hall, was an office fraught
+with considerable responsibility." To be sure! Great responsibility!
+Might even be improper! Everyone should be _so_ careful!
+
+However, there was one good thing in this Woman's Conference that
+everyone will praise. The delightful, genial, charitable females seem
+to have kept to themselves. No men were present. What a blessing--_for
+the men_! Yours gratefully,
+
+AN OLD BACHELOR.
+
+_The Growleries, Lostbuttonbury, Singleton_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CHRISTMAS IS COMING!
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ When the ruddy autumn leaves
+ Flutter down on golden sheaves,
+ And on plum-trees one perceives
+ No more plums--
+ All the swallows have not fled,
+ Hardly is the summer dead--
+ Then, alas, it must be said
+ Christmas comes!
+
+ Christmas! Hang it all! But how
+ Can that be? 'Tis weeks from now.
+ What a fearful thought, I vow
+ That it numbs!
+ "Order Christmas papers" fills
+ Bookshops, bookstalls. With its bills,
+ Taxes, tips, fogs, frosts, coughs, chills,
+ Christmas comes!
+
+ Even Christmas-cards appear,
+ They are with us half the year,
+ I would banish them from here,
+ Say, to Thrums,
+ Or to any mournful place,
+ Where I'd never show my face,
+ For they tell one that, apace,
+ Christmas comes!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SEASONABLE CHRISTMAS MOTTO FOR WELL-KNOWN FINE-ART PUBLISHERS.--"TUCK
+in!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: FOOTBALL FEVER. SATURDAY AFTERNOON IN THE MIDLANDS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO "THE LAZY MINSTREL"
+
+ _On the publication of his Eighth Edition, with therein
+ Nineteen Poems originally written for Mr. Punch._
+
+[Illustration: The Lazy Laureate of the Thames.]
+
+ Who would not be a Minstrel Lazy?
+ A trifle crazy,
+ The best of them! Ah!
+ Here's ASHBY STERRY, in punt or wherry,
+ He's ever merry! sing "hey down derry,"
+ Or anything very
+ Like Tra! la! la! la!
+
+ On sunny days he trolls his lays
+ With gay guitar and Tra! la! la! la!
+ From groves and glades come meadow-sweet maids,
+ None of your saucy minxes or jades;
+ The poet is there
+ Without a care.
+ With no regret, with mild cigarette.
+ With gay guitar, and whiskey from Leith,
+ Will he be crowned with the Laureate wreath?
+
+(_The Nymph Pantalettina is heard singing_.)
+
+ Come where my ASHBY lies dreaming,
+ Dreaming for hours after lunch.
+ Softly! for he is scheming
+ Poems for _Mister Punch_!
+ Graceful is his position--
+ Hark! how he sweeps the strings,
+ While of his Eighth Edition
+ The Warbler STERRY sings:--
+
+(_The Bard chirpeth his roundelay_.)
+
+ "On 'Spring's Delights' in 'Hambledon Lock'
+ 'My Country Cousin' may hap--
+ With her I'll go
+ 'In Rotten Row,'
+ Stop on an 'oss
+ 'At Charing-Cross,'
+ For a 'Tam O'Shanter Cap.'
+
+ No gout? Oh no! But I'm 'Taken in Tow,'
+ And suffering from dejection,
+ 'Spring Cleaning' I'll use for a pair of old shoes
+ (Queer rhyme upon reflection),
+ 'Sound without Sense,' I've no pretence,
+ To write Shakspearian Sonnets.
+ Of her and him,
+ As suits my whim,
+ I sing, and I hymn her bonnets!"
+
+(_Chorus of Pantalettina and River Nymphs._)
+
+ So, hail to the Bard so merry,
+ To Lazy Laureate STERRY!
+ He'll sing of a Lock on the Thames! oh rare!
+ Or hymn a Lock of his Lady's hair.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONVERSATIONAL HINTS FOR YOUNG SHOOTERS.
+
+The subject of Lunch, my dear young friends, has now been exhausted.
+We have done, for the time, with poetry, and descend again to the
+ordinary prose of every-day shooting. Yet stay--before we proceed
+further, there is one matter apart from the mere details of sport,
+which may be profitably considered in this treatise. It is the divine,
+the delightful subject of
+
+SMOKING.
+
+First, I ask, do you know--(1), the man who never smokes from the
+night of the 11th of August up to the night of the 1st of February in
+the following year, for fear of injuring his sight and his shooting
+nerve? (2), the host who forbids all smoking amongst the guests
+assembled at his house for a shooting-party?
+
+You, naturally enough, reply that you have not the honour of being
+acquainted with these severe, but enthusiastic gentlemen. Nobody does
+know them. They don't exist. But it is very useful to affect a sort of
+second-hand knowledge of these Gorgons of the weed, as thus:--
+
+ _A Party of Guns is walking to the first beat of the day.
+ Time, say about_ 10·20 A.M.
+
+_Young Sportsman_ (_who has a pipe in his mouth, to Second Sportsman,
+similarly adorned_). I always think the after-breakfast smoke is about
+the best of the day. Somehow, tobacco tastes sweeter then than at any
+other time of the day.
+
+_Second Sp._ (_puffing vigorously_). Yes, it's first class; but I hold
+with smoke at most times of the day, after breakfast, after lunch,
+after dinner, and in between.
+
+_Young Sp._ Well, I don't know. If I try to smoke when I'm actually
+shooting, I generally find I've got my pipe in the gun side of my
+mouth. I heard of a man the other day who knocked out three of his
+best teeth through bringing up his gun sharp, and forgetting he'd
+got a pipe in his mouth. Poor beggar! he was very plucky about it,
+I believe; but it made no end of a difference to his pronunciation
+till he got a new lot shoved in. Just like that old Johnnie in the
+play--Overland something or other--who lost his false set of teeth
+on a desert island, and couldn't make any of the other Johnnies
+understand him.
+
+_Second Sp._ I've never had any difficulty with my smoking. I always
+make a habit of carrying my smokes in the left side of my mouth.
+
+_Young Sp._ Oh, but you're pretty certain to get the smoke or the
+ashes or something, blown slap into your eyes just as you're going to
+loose off. No. (_With decision_.) I'm off my smoke when the popping
+begins.
+
+_Second Sp._ Don't be too hard on yourself, my boy. They tell me there
+are precious few birds in the old planting this year, so you can treat
+yourself to a cigarette when you get there. It never pays to trample
+on one's longing for tobacco too much.
+
+_Young Sp._ No, by Jove. Old REGGIE MORRIS told me of a fellow he met
+somewhere this year, who goes regularly into training for shooting.
+Never touches baccy from August to February, and limits his drink
+to three pints a day, and no whiskeys and sodas. And what's more, he
+won't let any of his guests smoke when he's got a shoot on, He's got
+"No Smoking" posted up in big letters in every room in the house.
+REGGIE said it was awful. He had to lock his bedroom door, shove the
+chest-of-drawers against it, and smoke with his head stuck right up
+the chimney. He got a peck of soot, one night, right on the top of his
+nut. Now I call that simple rot.
+
+_Second Sp._ Ah, I've heard of that man. Never met him though, I'm
+thankful to say. Let me see what's the beggar's name? JACKSON or
+BARRETT, or POLLARD, or something like that. He's got a big place
+somewhere in Suffolk, or Yorkshire, or somewhere about there.
+
+_Young Sp._ Yes, that's the chap, I fancy.
+
+Now that kind of thing starts you very nicely for the day. It isn't
+necessary that either of the sportsmen whose dialogue has been
+reported should believe implicitly in the absolute truth of what he is
+saying. Observe, neither of them says that he himself met this man.
+He merely gets conversation out of him on the strength of what someone
+else has told him. That, you see, is the real trick of the thing.
+Don't bind yourself to such a story as being part of your own personal
+experience. Work it in on another man's back. Of course there are
+exceptions even to this rule. But this question I shall be able to
+treat at greater length when I come to deal with the important subject
+of "Shooting Anecdotes."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Very often you can work up quite a nice little conversation on
+cigarettes. Every man believes, as is well-known, that he possesses
+the only decent cigarettes in the country. He either--(1), imports
+them himself from Cairo, or (2), he gets his tobacco straight from
+a firm of growers somewhere in Syria and makes it into cigarettes
+himself; or (3), he thinks Egyptian cigarettes are an abomination,
+and only smokes Russians or Americans; or (4), he knows a man,
+BACKASTOPOULO by name, somewhere in the Ratcliffe Highway, who
+has _the_ very best cigarettes you ever tasted. You wouldn't give
+two-pence a hundred for any others after smoking these, he tells you.
+And, lastly, there is the man who loathes cigarettes, despises those
+who smoke them, and never, smokes anything himself except a special
+kind of cigar ornamented with a sort of red and gold garter.
+
+Out of this conflict of preferences the young shooter can make
+capital. By flattering everybody in turn, he can practically get his
+smoking gratis, for everyone will be sure to offer him at least one
+cigarette, in order to prove the superiority of his own particular
+kind. And if the young shooter, after smoking it, expresses a proper
+amount of ecstasy, he is not at all unlikely to have a second offered
+to him. Most men are generous with cigarettes. Many a man I know
+would far rather give a beggar a cigarette than a shilling, though
+the cigarette may have cost, originally, a penny-halfpenny, or more--a
+strange and paradoxical state of affairs.
+
+Here is a final piece of advice. Admire all cigarette-cases, and say
+of each that it's the very best and prettiest you ever saw. You can
+have no notion how much innocent pleasure you will give.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NOTICE.--Rejected Communications or Contributions, whether MS.,
+Printed Matter, Drawings, or Pictures of any description, will in no
+case be returned, not even when accompanied by a Stamped and Addressed
+Envelope, Cover, or Wrapper. To this rule there will be no exception..
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, Or The London Charivari, Vol.
+103, November 19, 1892, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, Or The London Charivari, Vol. 103,
+November 19, 1892, 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. 103, November 19, 1892
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Francis Burnand
+
+Release Date: May 31, 2005 [EBook #15957]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer, William Flis, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <h1>PUNCH,<br />
+ OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.</h1>
+
+ <h2>Vol. 103.</h2>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <h2>November 19, 1982.</h2>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page229"
+ id="page229"></a>[pg 229]</span>
+
+ <h2>THE MAN WHO WOULD.</h2>
+
+ <h3>II.&mdash;THE MAN WHO WOULD PLAY GOLF.</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Bulger</span> was no cricketer, no
+ tennis-player, no sportsman, in fact. But his Doctor
+ recommended exercise and fresh air. "And I'm thinking, Sir," he
+ added, "that you cannot do better than just take yourself down
+ to St. Andrews, and put yourself under <span class="sc">Tom
+ Morris</span>." "Is he a great Scotch physician?" asked
+ <span class="sc">Bulger</span>; "I don't seem to have heard of
+ him." "The Head of the Faculty, Sir," said the medical
+ man&mdash;"the Head of the Faculty in those parts."</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Bulger</span> packed his effects, and, in
+ process of time, he arrived at Leuchars. Here he observed some
+ venerable towers within a short walk, and fancied that he would
+ presently arrive at St. Andrews. In this he was reckoning
+ without the railway system&mdash;he was compelled to wait at
+ Leuchars for no inconsiderable time, which he occupied in
+ extracting statistics about the consumption of whiskey from the
+ young lady who ministered to travellers. The revelations now
+ communicated, convinced <span class="sc">Bulger</span> that
+ either Dr. <span class="sc">Morris</span> was not on the lines
+ of Sir <span class="sc">Andrew Clark</span>, or, as an
+ alternative, that his counsels were not listened to by
+ travellers on that line.</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:55%;">
+ <a href="images/229.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/229.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Arriving in the dusk, <span class="sc">Bulger</span> went to
+ his inn, and next morning inquired as to the address of the
+ Head of the Faculty. "I dinna ken," said an elderly person, to
+ whom he appealed, "that the Professors had made
+ <span class="sc">Tom</span> a Doctor, though it's a sair and
+ sad oversicht, and a disgrace to the country, that they hae'na
+ done sae lang syne. But I jalouse that your Doctor was jist
+ making a gowk o' ye." "What!" said
+ <span class="sc">Bulger</span>. "Jist playin' a plisky on ye,
+ and he meant that <span class="sc">Tom</span> wad pit ye in the
+ way o' becoming a player. Mon, ye're a bull-neckit, bow-leggit
+ chiel', and ye'd shape fine for a Gowfer! Here's
+ <span class="sc">Tom</span>." And, with this brief
+ introduction, the old man strolled away.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Bulger</span> now found himself in the
+ presence of Mr. <span class="sc">Morris</span>, whose courtesy
+ soon put him on a footing of friendliness and confidence. He
+ purchased, by his Mentor's advice, a driver, a cleek, a putter,
+ a brassey, an iron, a niblick, and a mashy. Armed with these
+ implements, which were "carried by an orphan boy," and, under
+ the guidance of the Head of the Faculty himself,
+ <span class="sc">Bulger</span> set forth on his first round.
+ His first two strokes were dealt on the yielding air; his third
+ carried no inconsiderable parcel of real property to some
+ distance; but his fourth hit the ball, and drove it across the
+ road. "As gude as a better," quoth the orphan boy, and bade
+ <span class="sc">Bulger</span> propel the tiny sphere in the
+ direction of a neighbouring rivulet. Into this affluent of the
+ main, <span class="sc">Bulger</span> finally hit the ball; but
+ an adroit lad of nine stamped it into the mud, while pretending
+ to look for it, and <span class="sc">Bulger</span> had to put
+ down another. When he got within putting range, he hit his ball
+ careering back and forward over the hole, and, "Eh, man," quoth
+ the orphan boy, "if ye could only drive as you put!"</p>
+
+ <p>In some fifteen strokes he accomplished his task of holing
+ out; and now, weary and desponding (for he had fancied Golf to
+ be an easy game), he would have desisted for the day. But the
+ Head of the Faculty pressed on him the necessity of "The daily
+ round, the common task." So his ball was tee'd, and he lammed
+ it into the Scholar's Bunker, at a distance of nearly thirty
+ yards. A niblick was now placed in his grasp, and he was
+ exhorted to "Take plenty sand." Presently a kind of simoom was
+ observed to rage in the Scholars' Bunker, out of which emerged
+ the head of the niblick, the ball, and, finally,
+ <span class="sc">Bulger</span> himself. His next hit, however,
+ was a fine one, over the wall, where, as the ball was lost,
+ <span class="sc">Bulger</span> deposited a new one. This he,
+ somehow, drove within a few feet of the hole, when he at once
+ conceived an intense enthusiasm for the pastime. "It was a fine
+ drive," said the Head of the Faculty. "Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Blackwell</span> never hit a finer." Thus
+ inflamed with ardour, <span class="sc">Bulger</span>
+ persevered. He learned to waggle his club in a knowing way. He
+ listened intently when he was bidden to "keep his eye on the
+ ba'", and to be "slow up." True, he now missed the globe and
+ all that it inhabit, but soon he hit a prodigious swipe, well
+ over cover-point's head,&mdash;or rather, in the direction
+ where cover-point would have been. "Ye're awfu' bad in the
+ whuns," said the orphan boy; and, indeed,
+ <span class="sc">Bulger's</span> next strokes were played in
+ distressing circumstances. The spikes of the gorse ran into his
+ person&mdash;he could only see a small part of the ball, and,
+ in a few minutes, he had made a useful clearing of about a
+ quarter of an acre.</p>
+
+ <p>It is unnecessary to follow his later achievements in
+ detail. He returned a worn and weary man, having accomplished
+ the round in about a hundred and eighty, but in possession of
+ an appetite which astonished him and those with whom he
+ lunched. In the afternoon, the luck of beginners attending him,
+ he joined a foursome of Professors, and triumphantly brought in
+ his partner an easy victor. In a day or two, he was drinking
+ beer (which he would previously have rejected as poison), was
+ sleeping like a top, and was laying down the law on stimy, and
+ other "mysteries more than Eleusinian." True, after the first
+ three days, his play entirely deserted
+ <span class="sc">Bulger</span>, and even Professors gave him a
+ wide berth in making up a match. But by steady perseverance,
+ reading Sir <span class="sc">Walter Simpson</span>, taking out
+ a professional, and practising his iron in an adjacent field,
+ <span class="sc">Bulger</span> soon developed to such an extent
+ that few third-rate players could give him a stroke a hole. He
+ had been in considerable danger of "a stroke" of quite a
+ different character before he left London, and the delights of
+ the Bar. But he returned to the Capital in rude health, and may
+ now often be seen and heard, topping into the Pond at
+ Wimbledon, and talking in a fine Fifeshire-accent. It must be
+ acknowledged that his story about his drive at the second hole,
+ "equal to <span class="sc">Blackwell</span>, himself,
+ <span class="sc">Tom Morris</span> himself told me as much,"
+ has become rather a source of diversion to his intimates; but
+ we have all our failings, and <span class="sc">Bulger</span>
+ never dreams, when anyone says, "What is the record drive?"
+ that he is being drawn for the entertainment of the sceptical
+ and unfeeling. <span class="sc">Bulger</span> will never,
+ indeed, be a player; but, if his handicap remains at
+ twenty-four, he may, some day, carry off the monthly medal.
+ With this great aim before him, and the consequent purchase of
+ a red-coat and gilt-buttons, <span class="sc">Bulger</span> has
+ a new purpose in existence, "something to live for, something
+ to do." May this brief but accurate history convey a moral to
+ the Pessimist, and encourage those who take a more radiant view
+ of the possibilities of life!</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>A Plebiscite for Parnassus.</h3>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[The result of the <i>Pall Mall's</i> competition for
+ the Laureateship has been to place Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Eric Mackay</span> and Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Gilbart-Smith</span> first and second, and
+ <span class="sc">Swinburne</span> and
+ <span class="sc">Morris</span> nowhere.]</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>A popular vote the Laureate's post to fill?</p>
+
+ <p>Ay! if Parnassus were but Primrose Hill.</p>
+
+ <p>The Penny Vote puts lion below monkey.</p>
+
+ <p>'Tis "Tuppence more, Gents, and <i>up goes the
+ donkey!</i>"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Quite Moving</span>.&mdash;<i>From Far and
+ Near</i> and <i>All Alive</i>, are two excellent "movable
+ toy-books" that will please the little ones (when their seniors
+ are tired of playing with them) far into the Yule-tide season.
+ The author is <span class="sc">Lothar Maggendorfer</span>, a
+ gentleman to whom <i>Mr. Punch</i> wishes a "Merry Christmas
+ and a Happy New Year." This may appear a little premature, but
+ it is a far cry from England to Germany, and the Sage of Fleet
+ Street has allowed for any delays that may be caused by fogs,
+ railway unpunctuality, and other necessary evils.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page230"
+ id="page230"></a>[pg 230]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <h2>THE AMERICAN
+ GANYMEDE.</h2><a href="images/230.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/230.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ </div>
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <p>[The extraordinary triumph of Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Grover Cleveland</span>, Democratic
+ Candidate for the American Presidency, is attributed to a
+ general revolt against the McKinley Bill.]</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>O plump and pant-striped boy, upborne,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Like Ganymede of old,</p>
+
+ <p><i>Punch</i> hails you, with your slack, untorn,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Fast in the Eagle's hold.</p>
+
+ <p>It is, indeed, a startling sight</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">That speculation tarries on;</p>
+
+ <p>And it must give an awful fright</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To Hebe (<i>alias</i>
+ <span class="sc">Harrison</span>!)</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Up, up to the Olympus, where</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The White House spreads its board,</p>
+
+ <p>Whirled high through the electoral air,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">A boy less long than broad!</p>
+
+ <p>He looks not like the Tammany breed,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">That with high tariffs dally;</p>
+
+ <p>He proves, this Yankee Ganymede,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The Democratic rally.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>This eagle's a colossal fowl,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Like <i>Sindbad's</i> monstrous Roc,</p>
+
+ <p>A bird of prey some say, a-prowl</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Like that Stymphalian flock,</p>
+
+ <p>With iron claws and brazen beak,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Intent to clutch and collar,</p>
+
+ <p>Fired with devotion strong, yet weak,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To the Almighty Dollar.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Pooh! Plunder's not his only joy.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">He hovered till he saw</p>
+
+ <p>"A something-pottle-bodied boy,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Who spurned
+ <span class="sc">McKinley's</span> Law.</p>
+
+ <p>He stooped and clutched him, fair and good,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Flew nigh o'er roof and casement,</p>
+
+ <p>Whilst the Republicans all stood</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Agape in sheer
+ amazement.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page231"
+ id="page231"></a>[pg 231]</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>He soars with proudly swelling crest</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And followed with acclaims,</p>
+
+ <p>A cause of wonder in the West,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And crowing by the Thames.</p>
+
+ <p>For England, glorying in the sight,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Greets Boy and Bird together;</p>
+
+ <p>Whilst watching with serene delight</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">That big, black, falling feather!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>ROBERT ON LORD MARE'S DAY.</h2>
+
+ <p>The most ewentfoollest day of the hole year broke, as the
+ poets says, without almost not no fog, on Wensday larst, to my
+ grate serprise and joy; but noing, from long xperiens, how
+ unsertain is whether at this orful seasun of the year, I took
+ jest one leetel glass of hold brandy before setting out on my
+ arjus dootys. I was encurraged to do so also by the horful
+ rumers as was spread about, weeks afore, as to threttend atacks
+ on the sacred Show by some disapinted prottestens, I think they
+ called theirselves, as hadn't bin inwited to the Bankwet, and
+ so meant to prottest accordingly.</p>
+
+ <p>But I needn't a bin alarmd, for the most respekful mob as
+ filled the streets was as quiet as mice, havin heard, I'm told,
+ as how as the Copperashun had had the lectric light turned on
+ at Gildhall, by which means, of course, they coud comunicate
+ with any-wheres, and so know where to send an hole army of
+ Waiters to, well fortyfide, and armed to the teeth with a
+ splendid Lunch, to help the pore Perlice in their arjus
+ dootys.</p>
+
+ <p>From wot I seed of the butifool Sho, I shood give the cake
+ to the Frute-Makers' splendid Car, all covered with the most
+ butifool Frute, all made, too, in England, as it trewthfoolly
+ said on both sides of the high-backed Car. The second plaice I
+ shood give to the numerus butifool young Ladys, with most
+ butifool flaxin air, all most bisily ingaged in a twistlin and
+ a twiddlin of luvly gold and silver wire, on a Car belongin to
+ the Makers of Gold and Silver Wire Drorers, wich I heard a most
+ respectfool carpenter declare, must, he thort, be most
+ uncomferal to wear. With that good fortun as allers atends the
+ Hed Waiter, I seem to have atracted the notis of one of the
+ most butifool of the young Ladys afoursaid, for she acshally
+ tossed me a luvly littel bit of reel golden wire, which I shall
+ trezure nex my art for years, if so be as how it don't
+ skratch.</p>
+
+ <p>The grand Bankwet, with its nine hunderd Gestes, was as
+ ushal, about the grandest thing of the kind as the world has
+ ever seen, but sumhows it struck me as the gents was much more
+ impashent for their wittles than they ushally is. At my
+ pertickler tabel, the two gents at the top was that trubblesum
+ about the reel Turtel-soup as I ain't a tall accumstumed to,
+ and I amost poured a hole ladel-full down the fine shirt-front
+ of one of em; and then, trying at the next help to awoid him, I
+ sent my helbow full into the face of the other, and a pretty
+ fuss he made, you bet, and acshally torked of sending for the
+ souperintendent, ewidently not knowing who I was.</p>
+
+ <p>The same himpashent Gent amost worried my life out
+ arterwards, and all about a glass of <i>plane</i> water as he
+ called it, and when I told him as I didn't think as we hadn't
+ not none in the plaice, but I coud get him a bottel of amost
+ any kind of Shampane as he liked to name; he again said as he
+ wood call for the souperintendent. So in course I had to go for
+ some, and a preshus long time it took me to get it; the
+ wine-steward naterally sayin as he never before herd of sich a
+ order on sich a ocasion, and he had only one bottel with him,
+ and when I took it to the himpashent Gent, and told him so, he
+ fairly roared with larfter, and told it all round as a capital
+ joke! I wunders where the joke was.</p>
+
+ <p>When the dinner was over and the speaches began, I got
+ permishun to stand unner the gallery for to hear them; but
+ strange to tell, not a word coud I hear, and them as I did hear
+ I coudn't unnerstand. So I began for to fear as crewel age was
+ a tarnishing of my 'earrings, so I moved to the other end of
+ the 'All jest in time for to hear a werry dark but gennelmanly
+ young feller, as was called the Gayqueer, or some such
+ wonderfool name, and who, I was told, come all the way from
+ Indier, make sitch a grand and nobel speach, and in quite as
+ good Inglish as ewen I coud use, as got him more applorse from
+ the distinguisht hordiens than all the speaches maid by Her
+ Madjesty's Ministers put together. Always xceptin the Lawyers,
+ for they seems to have sitch a jolly good time of it, that they
+ are allers as reddy to cause a larf as to enjoy one. We all
+ seemed sumhow to miss the werry <span class="sc">Prime
+ Minister</span>&mdash;we are all so acustomd to see the werry
+ top of the tree, that we don't quite like being put off with a
+ mere bow, however big and himportant it may be; besides, I must
+ confess as I do like to hear his luvly woice, ewen when I don't
+ quite unnerstand all as he says. So I don't suppose as any one
+ of my numerus readers will quarrel with me when I says, better
+ luck nex time.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">Robert.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:60%;">
+ <a href="images/231.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/231.png"
+ alt="CANDID CRITICISM." /></a>
+
+ <h3>CANDID CRITICISM.</h3>
+
+ <p>"<span class="sc">Like my New Frock, Aunt
+ Jane?</span>"</p>
+
+ <p>"<span class="sc">Well, <i>I</i> should say you'd got
+ Skirts for your Sleeves, and a Sleeve for your
+ Skirt!</span>"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>Proofs before Letters.</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Humbugs will always ape their betters,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Fools fancy the alphabet brings them
+ fame;</p>
+
+ <p>But you don't become a man of letters</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">By tacking the letters after your
+ name.</p>
+
+ <p>One suffix only the <i>fact</i> expresses,</p>
+
+ <p>And that's an A and a couple of S's!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Another Meaning.</span>&mdash;<i>I
+ Rantzau</i> is the title of <span class="sc">Mascagni's</span>
+ new Opera. The title, anglicised, would be suitable for an
+ old-fashioned transpontine melodramatic tragedian, who could
+ certainly say of himself, "<i>I rant so!</i>"</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>Shakspearian Conundrum.</h3>
+
+ <p>At what time would <span class="sc">Shakspeare's</span>
+ heroine of <i>The Taming of the Shrew</i> have been eminently
+ fitted to be a modern Sunday-School teacher?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Answer.</i> When <i>Petruchio</i> kissed her; because
+ then she was <i>a Kattie Kiss'd</i>. (Hem! A Cate-chist.)</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page232"
+ id="page232"></a>[pg 232]</span>
+
+ <h2>ALL ROUND THE FAIR.</h2>
+
+ <h4 class="sc">No. I.</h4>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p><span class="sc">Scene</span>&mdash;<i>A street of
+ Gingerbread, Sweetstuff, and Toy-stalls, "Cocoa-nut Shies,"
+ "Box-pitching Saloons," &amp;c., forming the approach to
+ the more festive portion of the Fair, from which proceeds a
+ cheerful cacophony of orchestrions, barrel-organs,
+ steam-whistles, gongs, big drums, rattles, and
+ speaking-trumpets.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <div class="drama">
+ <p><i>Proprietors of Cocoa-nut Shies.</i> Now, then, play
+ up all o' you&mdash;ar-har! There goes another on 'em!
+ <i>That's</i> the way to 'it 'em&mdash;win all yer like,
+ &amp;c.</p>
+
+ <p><i>A Rival Proprietor</i> (<i>pointing to his target,
+ through the centre of which his partner's head is
+ protruded</i>). Look at <i>that</i>! Ain't that better nor
+ any coker-nut? Every time you 'it my mate's 'ed, you git a
+ good cigar! (<i>As the by-standers hang back, from motives
+ of humanity.</i>) 'Ere, <i>'ave</i> a go at 'im, some o'
+ you&mdash;give 'im a little encouragement!</p>
+
+ <p><i>The Head</i> (<i>plaintively</i>). Don't neglect a
+ man as is doing his best to please yer, gen'l'men! (<i>A
+ soft-hearted Bystander takes a shot at him, out of sheer
+ compassion, and misses.</i>) Try agen, Sir. I ain't 'ere to
+ be <i>idle</i>!</p>
+
+ <p><i>A Sharp Little Girl</i> (<i>presiding over a sloping
+ Chinese Billiard-board</i>). Now, my dears&mdash;(<i>To a
+ group of boys, of about her own age</i>)&mdash;'ave what
+ yer like. A penny a pull, and a prize every time! Wherever
+ the marble rolls, you 'ave any one article on the
+ board!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:55%;">
+ <a href="images/232.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/232.png"
+ alt="'Now then, play up, all o' yea&mdash;ar-har!'" />
+ </a>"Now then, play up, all o' yea&mdash;ar-har!"
+ </div>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[<i>One of the boys pays a penny, and pulls a handle,
+ propelling a marble, which, after striking a bell at the
+ top of the slope, wobbles down into a compartment.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <div class="drama">
+ <p><i>The Boy</i> (<i>indicating a gorgeous china ornament
+ on the board</i>). I'll 'ave one o' them&mdash;to take 'ome
+ to mother.</p>
+
+ <p><i>The S.L.G.</i> (<i>with pitying superiority</i>). No,
+ my boy, you can go to a shop and <i>buy</i> one o' them for
+ sixpence if you like&mdash;but 'ere you must 'ave what you
+ <i>git</i>!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[<i>She awards him a very dingy lead-pencil, with which
+ he departs, abashed, and evidently revolving her dark
+ saying in his perplexed mind.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <div class="drama">
+ <p><i>Proprietor of a Box-pitching Saloon.</i> One penny a
+ ball! For hevery ball that goes in the boxes, you choose
+ any prize you like! (<i>With sorrow and sympathy, to a
+ female Competitor.</i>) Too 'ard, Lady, too <i>'ard</i>!
+ (<i>To a male Comp., whose ball has struck the edge of the
+ box, and bounced off.</i>) Very <i>near</i>, Sir!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[<i>Several Competitors expend penny after penny
+ unsuccessfully, and walk away, with a grin of entire
+ satisfaction.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <div class="drama">
+ <p><i>Joe</i> (<i>landing a ball in one of the boxes, after
+ four failures</i>). I told 'ee I'd get <i>waun</i> in!
+ (<i>To his Young Woman.</i>) What are ye goin' to 'ave,
+ <span class="sc">Melia</span>?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Melia</i> (<i>hovering undecidedly over a glittering
+ array of shell-boxes, cheap photograph-albums and
+ crockery</i>). I'll take one o'&mdash;no, I won't
+ neither.... I really don't know <i>what</i> to 'ave!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Joe</i> (<i>with masculine impatience</i>). Well, go
+ on&mdash;take <i>summat</i>, can't ye!
+ (<span class="sc">Melia</span> <i>selects a cup and saucer,
+ as the simplest solution of the problem.</i>) I doan't carl
+ that mooch of a show for fippence, I doan't. Theer, gi' us
+ 'old on it. [<i>He stows the china away in his
+ side-pockets.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Melia.</i> You took an' 'urried me so&mdash;else I
+ don't know as I fancied a cup and sarcer so partickler. I
+ wonder if the man 'ud change it, supposin' we was to go
+ back and ast 'im!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Joe</i> (<i>slapping his thigh</i>). Well, you
+ <i>are</i> a gell and no mistake! Come along back and git
+ whatever 'tis you've a mind to. (<i>Returning.</i>) 'Ere,
+ Master, will ye gi' this young woman summat else for this
+ 'ere? (<i>He extracts the cup in fragments.</i>) 'Ullo,
+ look a' <i>that</i> now! (<i>To</i>
+ <span class="sc">Melia</span>.) Theer, it's all
+ right&mdash;doan't take on 'bout it.&mdash;I'll 'ave
+ another go to make it oop. (<i>He pitches ball after ball
+ without success.</i>) I wawn't be bett. I lay I'll git 'un
+ in afoor I've done! (<i>He is at last successful.</i>)
+ Theer&mdash;now, ye can please yourself, and doan't choose
+ nawthen' foolish <i>this</i> time! (<i>He strolls on with
+ lordly indifference, and is presently rejoined by</i>
+ <span class="sc">Melia</span>.) Well, what did ye take
+ arter all?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Melia.</i> I got so flustered like, for fear o'
+ losin' you, I just up and took the first that came
+ 'andy.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Joe.</i> Why, if ye ain't bin and took <i>another</i>
+ cup an' sarcer! hor&mdash;hor! that's a good 'un, that is!
+ Take keer on it, it's cost money enough any 'ow&mdash;'t
+ wouldn't be no bargain if it wur a 'ole tea-set! What's
+ goin' on 'ere?</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[<i>A venerable old Sportsman, whom the reader may
+ possibly recollect having met before, has collected a small
+ crowd in a convenient corner; his stock-in-trade consists
+ of an innocent-looking basket, with a linen-cover, upon
+ which are a sharpened skewer and a narrow strip of
+ cloth.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <div class="drama">
+ <p><i>The Sportsman.</i> I'll undertake to show you more
+ fun in five minutes, than you'll get over there in two:
+ (<i>with a vague suspicion that this is rather a lame
+ conclusion</i>)&mdash;in ten, I <i>should</i> say! This
+ 'ere's a simple enough little game, when you know the trick
+ of it, and I'm on'y a <i>learnin'</i> it myself. I ain't
+ doin' this for money. I got money enough to sink a
+ ship&mdash;it's on'y for my own amusement. Now you watch me
+ a doin' up this garter&mdash;keep yer eye on it. (<i>He
+ coils up the strip.</i>) It goes <i>up</i> 'ere, ye see,
+ and down <i>there</i>, and <i>in</i> 'ere agin, and then
+ round. Now, I'm ready to bet anything from a sovereign to a
+ shilling, nobody 'ere can prick the middle. I'll tell ye if
+ ye win. I'm ole <span class="sc">Billy Fairplay</span>, and
+ I don't cheat! (<i>A Spotty-faced Man, after intently
+ following the process, says he believes he could find the
+ middle.</i>) Well, don't tell&mdash;that's all. I'm 'ere
+ all alone, agin the lot o' ye, and I want to win if I
+ can&mdash;one dog to a bone! (<i>The</i> S.-F.M.
+ <i>produces a florin from a mouldy purse, and stakes it,
+ and makes a dab at the coil with the skewer.</i>) No, ye're
+ wrong&mdash;that's outside! (O.B.F. <i>pulls the strip
+ out.</i>) By Gum, ye've done it, after all! 'Ere's four bob
+ for you, and I'm every bit as pleased as if I'd won myself!
+ 'Oo'll try next?</p>
+
+ <p><i>A Smart Young Man</i> (<i>with a brilliant pin in a
+ dirty necktie, to</i> <span class="sc">Joe</span>). I don't
+ see how it's done&mdash;do you?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Joe.</i> Ye will if you don't take yer eyes off
+ it&mdash;theer, I could tell ye the middle now, I
+ could.</p>
+
+ <p><i>The Sp.-F.M.</i> Law, yes, it's simple enough. I done
+ it first time.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Old B.F.</i> Give an old man a chance to get a bit.
+ If any party 'ere 'as found me out, let him 'old 'is
+ tongue&mdash;it's all <i>I</i> ask. (<i>To</i>
+ <span class="sc">Joe</span>.) You've seen this afore,
+ <i>I</i> know!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Joe.</i> Noa, I ain't&mdash;but I could tell ye th'
+ middle.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Old B.F.</i> Will ye bet on it? Come&mdash;not too
+ 'igh, but just to show you've confidence in your
+ opinion!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Joe</i> (<i>cautiously</i>). I woant bet wi' ye, but
+ I'll hev a try, just for nawthen, if ye like!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Old B.F.</i> Well, I want to see if you really
+ <i>do</i> know it&mdash;so, jest for once, I ain't no
+ objection. (<span class="sc">Joe</span> <i>pricks the
+ garter.</i>) Yes, you've found the middle, sure enough!
+ It's a good job there was no money on&mdash;for <i>me</i>,
+ leastwise!</p>
+
+ <p><i>The Sp.-F.M.</i> I've a good mind to 'ave another
+ try.</p>
+
+ <p><i>The Sm. Y.M.</i> I wouldn't. You'll lose. I could see
+ you on'y guessed the first time. (<i>The Sp. F.M., however,
+ extracts a shilling, stakes it&mdash;and loses.</i>) There,
+ <i>I</i> could ha' told you you was wrong&mdash;(<i>To</i>
+ <span class="sc">Joe</span>)&mdash;couldn't you?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Joe.</i> Yes, he art to ha' pricked moor to waun side
+ of 'un. (<i>The Sp.-F.M. stakes another florin.</i>) Now
+ he's done it, if ye like!</p>
+
+ <p><i>O.B.F.</i> There, ye see, I'm as often wrong as not
+ myself. (<i>To the Sp.-F.M.</i>) There's your four bob,
+ Sir. Now, jest once
+ more!</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page233"
+ id="page233"></a>[pg 233]</span>
+
+ <p><i>Joe</i> (<i>to</i> <span class="sc">Melia</span>).
+ I'll git the price o' that theer cup an' sarcer out of 'un,
+ any'ow. (<i>To</i> O.B.F.) I'll ha' a tanner wi' ye!</p>
+
+ <p><i>O.B.F.</i> 'Alf a soverin, if you like&mdash;it's all
+ the same to me!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Joe</i> (<i>after pricking</i>). I <i>thart</i> I 'ad
+ 'un that time, too, I did!</p>
+
+ <p><i>The Sm. Y.M.</i> You shouldn't ha' changed your
+ mind&mdash;you were right enough afore!</p>
+
+ <p><i>Joe</i>. Yes, I should ha' stuck to it. (<i>To</i>
+ O.B.F.) I'll bet ye two bob on the next go&mdash;come!</p>
+
+ <p><i>O.B.F.</i> Well, I don't like to say no, though I can
+ see, plain enough, you know too much.
+ (<span class="sc">Joe</span> <i>pricks</i>; O.B.F. <i>pulls
+ away the strip, and leaves the skewer outside</i>.) I could
+ ha' sworn you done me that time&mdash;but there ye
+ <i>are</i>, ye see, there's never no tellin' at this
+ game&mdash;and that's the charm on it!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[<span class="sc">Joe</span> <i>walks on with</i>
+ <span class="sc">Melia</span> <i>in a more subdued frame of
+ mind.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <div class="drama">
+ <p><i>The Sm. Y.M.</i> (<i>in the ear of the Spotty-faced
+ One</i>). I say, I got a job o' my own to attend
+ to&mdash;jest pass the word to the Old Man, when he's done
+ with this pitch, to turn up beyind the swing-boats there,
+ and come along yourself, if yer can. It's the old lay I'm
+ on&mdash;the prize-packets fake.</p>
+
+ <p><i>The Sp.-F.M.</i> Right&mdash;we'll give yer a look in
+ presently&mdash;it'll be a little change for the Ole
+ Man&mdash;trades's somethin' cruel <i>'ere</i>!</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>HIS MAD-JESTY AT THE LYCEUM.</h2>
+
+ <p>Except when <span class="sc">Henry Irving</span>
+ impersonated the hapless victim of false imprisonment in the
+ Bastille, whence he issued forth after twenty years of durance,
+ never has he been so curiously and wonderfully made-up as now,
+ when he represents <i>Lear</i>, monarch of all he surveys.
+ Bless thee, <span class="sc">Henry</span>, how art thou
+ transformed!</p>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:35%;">
+ <a href="images/233-1.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/233-1.png"
+ alt="Rather mixed. Mr. Irving as 'Ophe-Lear.'" />
+ </a>Rather mixed. Mr. Irving as "Ophe-Lear."
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Sure such a <i>King Lear</i> was never seen on any stage, so
+ perfect in appearance, so entirely the ideal of
+ <span class="sc">Shakspeare's</span> ancient King. It must have
+ been a vision of <span class="sc">Irving</span> in this
+ character that the divinely-inspired poet and dramatist saw
+ when he had a <i>Lear</i> in his eye. For a moment, too, he
+ reminded me of <span class="sc">Booth</span>&mdash;the
+ "General," not the "particular" American tragedian,&mdash;and
+ when he appeared in thunder, lightning, hail, and rain, he
+ suggested an embodiment of the "<i>Moses</i>" of
+ <span class="sc">Michael Angelo</span>.</p>
+
+ <p>A strange weird play; much for an audience, and more for an
+ actor, all on his own shoulders, to bear. A one-part play it is
+ too, for of the sweet <i>Cordelia</i>,&mdash;and sweet did
+ <span class="sc">Ellen Terry</span> look and so tenderly did
+ she play!&mdash;little is seen or heard. With <i>Goneril</i>
+ and <i>Regan</i>, the two proud and wicked
+ sisters,&mdash;associated in the mind of the modernest British
+ Public with Messrs. <span class="sc">Herbert Campbell</span>
+ and <span class="sc">Harry Nicholls</span>, as is also
+ <i>Cordelia</i> associated either with <i>Cinderella</i> or
+ with <i>Beauty</i> in the story of <i>Beauty and the
+ Beast</i>&mdash;we have two fine commanding figures; and well
+ are these parts played by Miss <span class="sc">Ada Dyas</span>
+ and Miss <span class="sc">Maud Milton</span>. The audience can
+ have no sympathy with the two wicked Princesses, and except in
+ <i>Goneril's</i> brief Lady-Macbethian scene with her husband,
+ neither of the Misses <span class="sc">Lear</span> has much
+ dramatic chance. Pity that Mrs.
+ <span class="sc">Lear</span>&mdash;his Queen and their mother,
+ wasn't alive! Let us hope she resembled her youngest daughter
+ <i>Cordelia</i>, otherwise poor <i>Lear</i> must have had a
+ hard life of it as a married man.</p>
+
+ <p>Why should not Mr. <span class="sc">Irving</span> give the
+ first part of this play reconsideration? Why not just once a
+ week try him as a different sort of <i>Lear</i>? For instance,
+ suppose, to begin with, that he had had a bad time of it with
+ his wife, that for many years as a widower he had been seeking
+ for the opportunity of disposing of his daughters, handing over
+ to them and to their husbands the lease and goodwill of "The
+ Crown and Sceptre," while he would be, as King, "retired from
+ business," and going out for a lark generally. Thus jovially
+ would he commence the play, a rollicking, gay, old dog, ready
+ for anything, up to anything, and, like old Anchises, when he
+ jumped on to the back of Æneas, "a wonderful man for his
+ years." In fact, <i>Lear</i> might begin like an old King Cole,
+ "a merry old soul," a "jolly old cock!" And then&mdash;"Oh,
+ what a difference in the morning!"&mdash;when all his plans for
+ a gay career had been shipwrecked by <i>Cordelia's</i>
+ capricious and unnatural affectation.</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:50%;">
+ <a href="images/233-2.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/233-2.png"
+ alt="Mr. Terriss as the Good Fairy." /></a>Mr. Terriss
+ as the Good Fairy.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Then must commence his senility; then he would begin to
+ break up. A struggle, to show that there was life in the old
+ dog yet, could be seen when the old dog had been out hunting,
+ in Act II., and had shot some strange animal, something between
+ a stag and a dromedary, which no doubt was a native of Britain
+ in those good old sporting days. However, more of this anon.
+ Suffice it to say now, that our <span class="sc">Henry
+ Irving's</span> <i>Lear</i> is a triumph in every respect, and
+ that the audience only wanted a little more of <i>Cordelia</i>,
+ which is the fault of the immortal and unequal Bard.</p>
+
+ <p>To those unacquainted with this play, Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Terriss's</span> sudden appearance in somewhat
+ anti-Lord-Chamberlain attire, as he bounded on, with a wand,
+ and struck an attitude, was suggestive of the Good Fairy in the
+ pantomime; and his subsequent proceedings, when he didn't
+ change anybody into Harlequin, Clown, and so forth, puzzled the
+ unlearned spectators considerably. But Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Terriss</span> came out all right, and
+ acquitted himself (being his own judge and jury) to the
+ satisfaction of the public. His speech about Dover Cliff,
+ generally supposed to convey some allusion to the Channel
+ Tunnel, was excellently delivered, and certainly after
+ <i>Lear</i>, "on the spear side," Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Terriss</span> must take the Goodeley
+ Cake.</p>
+
+ <p>Next to him in order of merit comes Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Frank Cooper</span>, as the wicked
+ <i>Edmund</i>, on whom the good <span class="sc">Edmund</span>,
+ "Edmundus Mundi," smiled benignantly from a private box. There
+ was on the first night a great reception given to
+ <span class="sc">Howe</span>&mdash;the veteran actor, not the
+ wreck, and very far from it&mdash;who took the small part of an
+ old Evicted Tenant of the <i>Earl of Glo'ster</i>, a character
+ very carefully played by Mr. <span class="sc">Alfred
+ Bishop</span>, <i>Floreat Henricus!</i> "Our
+ <span class="sc">Henry</span>" has his work cut out for him in
+ this "Titanic work," as in his before-curtain and after-play
+ speech he termed it. This particular "Titanic work" is (or
+ certainly was that night) in favour with "the gods," who "very
+ much applauded what he'd done." But the gods of old were not
+ quite so favourable to "Titanic work" generally, and punished
+ eternally Titanic workmen. To-night gods and groundlings
+ applaud to the echo, and then everyone goes home as best he can
+ in about as beautiful a specimen of a November fog as ever
+ delighted a Jack-o'-Lantern or disgusted</p>
+
+ <p class="author">Private Box.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p><span class="sc">An Operatic
+ Note</span>.&mdash;<i>Wednesday</i>.&mdash;Lord Mayor's Day and
+ Sheriff Sir <span class="sc">Augustus Druriolanus's</span>
+ Show. <i>L' Amico Fritz</i>, or "The old Min is friendly," as
+ <i>Dick Swiveller</i> would have put it. Not by any means as
+ bright as <i>Cavalleria</i>. Mlle. <span class="sc">Del
+ Torre</span>, del-lightful as <i>Suzel</i>. M.
+ <span class="sc">Dufriche</span>, very good as <i>Rabbino</i>;
+ <span class="sc">Cremonini</span>, weak as <i>Fritz</i>; and
+ Mlle. <span class="sc">Martha-Cupid-Bauermeister</span>, good
+ as usual in the part of the "harmless necessary
+ <i>Cat"-erina.</i> Opera generally "going strong."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Reported Decision</span>.&mdash;Uganda is
+ to be occupied till March next. Then, order of the day, "March
+ in, March out!"</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page234"
+ id="page234"></a>[pg 234]</span>
+
+ <h2>"SAFE BIND, SAFE FIND!"</h2>
+
+ <h4>P.C. JOHN BULL <i>loquitur</i>:&mdash;</h4>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Keep them? Right my Gallic friend!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">'Tis my duty, sad but binding.</p>
+
+ <p>Free the Wolf&mdash;to what good end?</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Loose the Snake&mdash;what vantage
+ finding?</p>
+
+ <p>Faction flusters, Cant appeals</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In the name of sham-humanity.</p>
+
+ <p>Right, not wrath, my bosom steels;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Softness here were sheer insanity.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p><i>You</i>'ve my warmest sympathy,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Victim of the new Red Terror!</p>
+
+ <p><i>My</i> caged <span class="sc">Ravachols</span> to
+ free</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Were the maddest kind of error.</p>
+
+ <p>Prison walls and dungeon wards</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Love I not, I'm no born gaoler,</p>
+
+ <p>But just Law which Freedom guards</p>
+
+ <p class="i2"><i>Must</i> ignore anarchic railer.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Blind offence of men half mad</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">'Neath the goad of brute oppression,</p>
+
+ <p>Blunderings of fierce fools of fad,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Demoniacal possession</p>
+
+ <p>Of red rage at law unjust,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">I can check with calm compassion;</p>
+
+ <p>But must firmly crush to dust</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Murder&mdash;in the newest fashion.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Dynamite as Freedom's friend?</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">'Tis the foul fiend's latest juggle.</p>
+
+ <p>We must fight it to the end,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Firm, unfaltering in this struggle.</p>
+
+ <p>Mere "Political Offence,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">All this murder, mashing, maiming?</p>
+
+ <p>'Tis a pitiful pretence,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Honour-blinding, wisdom-shaming.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Indiscriminate, ruthless raid!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Mad chance&mdash;medly of disaster!</p>
+
+ <p>Sophistry, the fiend's sworn aid,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Never better served its master</p>
+
+ <p>Than in calling such hell-birth</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">A new gospel, holy, human,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Blasting as with maniac mirth</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Blameless men, and guiltless women!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>No! The Dynamiter's creed&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Though hate swagger, though cant
+ snivel&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Fires no "patriotic" deed;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Base-born, all its ends are evil.</p>
+
+ <p>Let caged wolves and tigers free?</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">What more wicked, what absurder?</p>
+
+ <p>Amnesty to Anarchy</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Means encouragement to Murder?</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Where to Place Him</span>.&mdash;Why ought
+ the future Poet-Laureate, whoever he may be, to occupy rooms
+ over or close to the stables at Buckingham Palace? Because he
+ would then be inspired by the Royal Mews.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:60%;">
+ <a href="images/234.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/234.png"
+ alt="A TEST OF TRUE GENTILITY." /></a>
+
+ <h3>A TEST OF TRUE GENTILITY.</h3>
+
+ <p class="sc">"What's the new Lodger like, Mariarann?"</p>
+
+ <p class="sc">"He's no Gentleman, whatever he's like!"</p>
+
+ <p class="sc">"No Gentleman! What's he been and done?"</p>
+
+ <p class="sc">"Why, he see me a-carryin' up the Coals, an'
+ he says, 'I'm afraid that Scuttle's too heavy for you,' 'e
+ says,&mdash;'pray let <i>me</i> carry it!' 'e says. An' 'e
+ up and carries it isself, just like a Footman!"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>TO A MODEL YOUNG LADY.</h2>
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <p>[It is reported that it is a common custom in Paris,
+ amongst ladies of position, to pay for their dresses by
+ wearing them in public, and letting it be known from whom
+ they obtained them.]</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>My dear, I like your pretty dress,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">It suits your figure to a T.</p>
+
+ <p>I'm free to own that I confess,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">It's just the kind of dress for me.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet will you kindly tell me, dear,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Not merely was the costume made for</p>
+
+ <p>Yourself alone&mdash;but is it clear</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And certain that your dress is paid
+ for?</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Mistake me not. I do not dread</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">That you'll think fit to run away</p>
+
+ <p>And leave the bill unpaid. Instead,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">I fear that you will never pay,</p>
+
+ <p>Because no bill will ever come;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And since when you decide to toddle</p>
+
+ <p>Abroad, you'll go amidst a hum</p>
+
+ <p>Of praise for Madame's lovely Model</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Oh! promise me that when I read</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">My paper (as I often do),</p>
+
+ <p>I shall not with remorseless speed</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">See endless pars in praise of you,</p>
+
+ <p>Or rather of the dress you wore,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">For though, maybe, no harm or hurt is
+ meant,</p>
+
+ <p>Remember, dearest, I implore,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">I <i>won't</i> be fond of an
+ advertisement!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.</h2>
+
+ <p>"<i>Days with Sir Roger de Coverley!</i>" exclaimed the
+ Baron, on seeing the charming little book brought out at this
+ season by Messrs. <span class="sc">Macmillan</span>.
+ "Delightful! Immortal! Ever fresh! Welcome, with or without
+ illustration; some of Mr. <span class="sc">Thomson's</span>
+ would not be missed."</p>
+
+ <p>There is a breezy, frank, boyish air about the
+ "Reminiscences" of our great Baritone, <span class="sc">Charles
+ Santley</span>, which is as a tonic&mdash;a tonic
+ sol-fa&mdash;to the reader a-weary of the many Reminiscences of
+ these latter days. <span class="sc">Santley</span>, who seems
+ to have made his way by stolid pluck, and without very much
+ luck, may be considered as the musical <i>Mark Tapley</i>,
+ ready to look always on the sunny side. With a few rare
+ exceptions, he appears to have taken life very easily.</p>
+
+ <p>Muchly doth the Baron like Mr. <span class="sc">Hall
+ Caine's</span> story of <i>Captain Davy's Honeymoon</i>, only,
+ short as it is, with greater effect it might have been
+ shorter.</p>
+
+ <p>The Baron, being in a reading humour, tried <i>The Veiled
+ Hand</i>, by <span class="sc">Frederick Wicks</span>, a name
+ awkward for anyone unable to manage his "r's." What
+ Fwedewickwicks' idea of <i>A Veiled Hand</i> is, the Baron has
+ tried to ascertain, but without avail. Why not a Gloved Hand?
+ Hands do not wear veils, any more than our old friends, the
+ Hollow Hearts, wear masks. Hands take "vails," but "that is
+ another story." However, <i>The Veiled Hand</i> induced sleep,
+ so the Baron extinguished both candles and Wicks at the same
+ time, and slumbered.</p>
+
+ <p>I have also had time to read <i>An Exquisite Fool</i>,
+ published by <span class="sc">Osgood</span>.
+ <span class="sc">McIlvaine &amp; Co.</span>, and written by
+ Nobody, Nobody's name being mentioned as being the author. It
+ begins well, but it is an old, old
+ tale&mdash;<span class="sc">Blanche Amory</span> and the
+ Chevalier, and so forth&mdash;and as <i>Sir Charles
+ Coldstream</i> observed, when he looked down the crater of
+ Mount Vesuvius, "There's nothing in it."</p>
+
+ <p>Most interesting is a short paper on "The Green Room of the
+ Comédie Française," in the <i>English Illustrated Magazine</i>
+ for this month, pleasantly written by Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Frederick
+ Hawkins</span>,&mdash;<span class="sc">Hawkins</span> with an
+ aspirate, not "<span class="sc">'Enery 'Awkins</span>" at
+ present associated with "<span class="sc">A Chevalier</span>"
+ in London. Mr. <span class="sc">Hawkins</span> tells many
+ amusing anecdotes, and gives a capital sketch of M.
+ <span class="sc">René Molé</span>. But the article would be
+ damaged by extracts. Therefore, "<i>Tolle, lege</i>," says
+ yours and everybody's, very truly,</p>
+
+ <p class="author">The Baron de Book-Worms.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page235"
+ id="page235"></a>[pg 235]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/235.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/235.png"
+ alt="'SAFE BIND, SAFE FIND!'" /></a>
+
+ <h3>"SAFE BIND, SAFE
+ FIND!"</h3><span class="sc">Sergent-de-Ville. "HA,
+ M'SIEU!&mdash;<i>YOU</i> HAVE YOUR DYNAMITERS UNDER LOCK
+ AND KEY! TRÈS BIEN! <i>KEEP</i> THEM!!"</span>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page237"
+ id="page237"></a>[pg 237]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:65%;">
+ <a href="images/237.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/237.png"
+ alt="WHAT ABOUT GLASS HOUSES?" /></a>
+
+ <h3>WHAT ABOUT GLASS HOUSES?</h3>
+
+ <p><i>First Jovial Cabby</i> (<i>to Second Ditto</i>).
+ <span class="sc">"Hi say, Bill, did yer hever see sich Guys
+ as these 'ere Girls makes of theirselves? Now, ye'd niver
+ see a <i>Man</i> go and make such a ridik'lous hobjick of
+ 'isself!!"</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>A PUFF OF SMOKE.</h2>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>(<i>What the heart of the young Vocalist said to the
+ Anti-Tobacconist, after reading Mr. Charles Santley's sage
+ observations on Singing and Smoking, in his new book
+ "Student and Singer."</i>)</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <p>["Smoking is an art; it may be made useful or otherwise,
+ according as it is exercised."&mdash;Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Santley</span>.]</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Tell me not, ye mournful croakers,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Smoking is a dirty habit.</p>
+
+ <p>Brainless are ye, sour non-smokers,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As a vivisected rabbit.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"Smoking is an Art," says
+ <span class="sc">Santley</span>;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">There is Beauty in the bowl.</p>
+
+ <p>They who doubt it must be scantly</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Blest with sense, or dowered with
+ soul.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p><i>As</i> an Art it claims attention;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Study is the only way.</p>
+
+ <p>Smoking skill, <i>not</i> smoke-prevention,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Is the thing we want to-day.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Art is long and smoke is fleeting;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">But puff on until you learn</p>
+
+ <p>Good tobacco's not for <i>eating</i>!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Pipe-bowls are not meant to
+ <i>burn</i>!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Smoke without expectorating,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Do not sputter, do not chew;</p>
+
+ <p>Puff not as though emulating</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Some foul factory's sooty flue</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Let not oily dark defilement</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Sting your lips; there is no need.</p>
+
+ <p>Joy and care need reconcilement</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">For enjoyment of the weed.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Trust no "Germans," buy no "British,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Sound Havanas only smoke!</p>
+
+ <p>"Lady Nicotine" is skittish,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Penny Pickwicks are no joke.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Smoke no strong shag, no rank "stinger,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Pick your baccy, puff with skill,</p>
+
+ <p>And&mdash;although you are a singer,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">You may smoke, and not feel ill.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Let us then be up and smoking,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">An an Art the thing pursue;</p>
+
+ <p>As great <span class="sc">Santley</span>, who's not
+ joking,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Says <i>he</i> does, and all <i>may</i>
+ do!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>LADY GAY'S DISTRACTION.</h2>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Dear Mr. Punch</span>,&mdash;You are as
+ fickle as the rest of your sex, I fear, otherwise you would not
+ have requited my devotion to you and your interests in such an
+ awful manner as you did in publishing my husband's letter last
+ week!&mdash;and <i>such</i> a letter! Oh, I could write such a
+ <i>scathing</i> reply to it!</p>
+
+ <p>Of course, it was jealousy on the part of Sir
+ <span class="sc">Charles</span> at my literary
+ success&mdash;(setting aside the <i>wonderful</i>
+ tips)&mdash;which caused the explosion that led to his writing
+ to you, but I never&mdash;never&mdash;thought you would insert
+ his letter, especially as I slipped in a postscript which to my
+ mind explained <i>everything</i>&mdash;as, indeed, postscripts
+ <i>should</i> do, or what is the good of writing a long letter
+ about nothing in front of them? The wretch confesses that he
+ laughed at my articles until he knew who wrote them, and then
+ thought less of them! Isn't that like a husband?&mdash;I won't
+ say like a <i>man</i>, as so few husbands <i>are</i>
+ men!&mdash;at least, in the eyes of their wives. The moment a
+ wife does something her husband can't do, he dislikes and
+ pooh-poohs it; whereas, the more accomplishments a husband
+ displays, the more a wife appreciates him, or <i>says</i> so
+ even if she doesn't!&mdash;which is a noble falsehood, for how
+ few women are large-minded enough to pretend to admire
+ qualities which they despise because they don't possess
+ them&mdash;I'm not sure that this is what I mean, nor do I
+ quite understand it, but it reads well, which is more than Sir
+ <span class="sc">Charles's</span> stuff does!</p>
+
+ <p>And then his impertinence in proposing to "edit" my
+ letters!&mdash;as if anyone could be more capable of doing that
+ than <i>you</i>?&mdash;(you will observe that it is solely on
+ <i>your</i> account that I am annoyed!)&mdash;I could not brook
+ such interference!&mdash;I don't know exactly the meaning of
+ "brooking" anything, but I know I wept enough tears of
+ annoyance to form a decent "brook" of themselves! I need hardly
+ tell you that it was a biting sarcasm on my part to suggest
+ that he should finish his letter with a "verse," as I always
+ do&mdash;but there&mdash;men don't understand
+ sarcasm&mdash;(one of <i>our</i> most frequently employed
+ weapons of offence!)&mdash;and the poor thing thought I was in
+ earnest, and did it! And <i>what</i> a verse! I could write
+ better with my left hand!</p>
+
+ <p>I need scarcely tell you that I have left him&mdash;(this is
+ why my address is not to be published)&mdash;as I consider my
+ duty to the Public rendered it imperative that I should do so,
+ for I should not think much of any woman who allowed a paltry
+ consideration of domestic obligations to weigh against the
+ pursuit of a career of usefulness.</p>
+
+ <p>If, therefore, a vein of sadness and cynicism runs through
+ this letter, you will understand that it does <i>not</i>
+ proceed from any regret at the "breaking up of the happy home,"
+ but rather from sorrow at the thought that once again the
+ intellectual superiority of one of the softer sex has not been
+ accepted in the right spirit by the possessor of the weaker
+ mind, to whom she owes obedience!</p>
+
+ <p>I trust I have done with Sir <span class="sc">Charles</span>
+ for ever!&mdash;especially if he speaks the truth in saying
+ that "following my tips has ruined him"&mdash;for why should
+ any woman burden herself with an impecunious husband? He does
+ not know where I am, and I feel still more secure in my retreat
+ from having just heard that he has engaged the services of
+ several of the most prominent London Detectives to trace
+ me!</p>
+
+ <p>Owing no devotion now to Sir
+ <span class="sc">Charles</span>&mdash;who will appreciate the
+ following tender lines with which I close my letter&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>O woman! in our hours of ease,</p>
+
+ <p>Thou art not <i>very</i> hard to please!</p>
+
+ <p>Thou takest what the gods may send;</p>
+
+ <p>But, thwarted!&mdash;thou wilt turn and rend!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>I am able to subscribe myself, dear <i>Mr. Punch</i>,</p>
+
+ <center>
+ Yours more devotedly than ever,
+ </center>
+
+ <p class="author">Lady Gay.</p>
+
+ <p>[From internal evidence, we are inclined to believe that
+ this present letter, or the one last week from "Sir
+ <span class="sc">Charles</span>," is a forgery. In former
+ correspondence Lady <span class="sc">Gay</span> mentioned "Lord
+ <span class="sc">Arthur</span>" as her husband. We pause for an
+ explanation.&mdash;ED.]</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Proverb for Vocalists, à propos of Sir
+ Joseph Barnby's Remarks on Articulation</span>.&mdash;"Take
+ care of the sense, and the sounds will take care of
+ themselves."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Why is pepper essential to the health of the new
+ <span class="sc">Lord Mayor</span>?&mdash;Because without "Kn."
+ (cayenne) he would be "ill."</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page238"
+ id="page238"></a>[pg 238]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:65%;">
+ <a href="images/238-1.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/238-1.png"
+ alt="NATURE AND ART." /></a>
+
+ <h3>NATURE AND ART.</h3>
+
+ <p class="sc"><i>A.R.A.</i> "By George, this View's
+ magnificent! I say, Fluffer, you really ought to have those
+ Woods painted."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. Fluffer</i> (<i>late in the Upholstery line,
+ retired.</i>) "<span class="sc">'M&mdash;M. Do you think
+ that would improve 'em? What Colour, now?</span>"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>LEFT TO THE LADIES.</h2>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">My dear Mr. Punch</span>,</p>
+
+ <p>Everyone&mdash;I mean everyone with a right mind&mdash;will
+ sympathise with those nice people at Bristol who have been
+ holding a "Woman's Conference." So kind and thoughtful of them,
+ isn't it? I notice that Lady <span class="sc">Battersea</span>
+ gave a spirited account of a Confederation of Temperance of
+ some thirty villages in Norfolk. The dear, good inhabitants are
+ to keep off the allurements of drink by "listening to such
+ shining lights as Canon <span class="sc">Wilberforce</span>,
+ and social teas, processions with banners, and magic-lanterns,
+ play their part." How they are to listen to the teas,
+ processions and lanterns, I don't quite understand, in spite of
+ the fact that they (the aforesaid teas, &amp;c.) seem to be
+ "playing their parts." Evidently teas, &amp;c., are amateur
+ Actors.</p>
+
+ <p>Then somebody who described herself as "a nobody from
+ nowhere," is said to have "touched a moving chord, as she spoke
+ with great feeling of the sympathy and the moral help the poor
+ give back to those who work among them." What "moving chord?"
+ Sounds like a bell-rope!</p>
+
+ <p>Then another lady who wore "the black and lavender dress of
+ the Sisters of the People," followed with a paper, "perhaps
+ overfull of details." And here let me say that I am quoting
+ from "a woman correspondent" who seems to be full of admiration
+ for her talking sisters. But in spite of this admiration, she
+ knows their little faults. For instance, she describes a speech
+ as "vigorous, racy, and perhaps a trifle sensational." Then,
+ when someone else delivered an "address to educated mothers,"
+ she says that it excited deep interest, and "almost too many
+ educated mothers threw themselves into the discussion that
+ followed."</p>
+
+ <p>Then she observes, "It was disappointing that Lady
+ <span class="sc">Aberdeen</span> was at the last moment
+ forbidden by her Doctor to undertake the long journey from
+ Scotland." So it was, most disappointing; and "at the last
+ moment," too!</p>
+
+ <p>Then she announces that "Some ladies expressed a feeling,
+ that introducing young men and women in business to each other,
+ when assembled in their hundreds at Prince's Hall, was an
+ office fraught with considerable responsibility." To be sure!
+ Great responsibility! Might even be improper! Everyone should
+ be <i>so</i> careful!</p>
+
+ <p>However, there was one good thing in this Woman's Conference
+ that everyone will praise. The delightful, genial, charitable
+ females seem to have kept to themselves. No men were present.
+ What a blessing&mdash;<i>for the men</i>! Yours gratefully,</p>
+
+ <p class="author">An Old Bachelor.</p>
+
+ <p><i>The Growleries, Lostbuttonbury, Singleton</i>.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>CHRISTMAS IS COMING!</h3>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:34%;">
+ <a href="images/238-2.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/238-2.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>When the ruddy autumn leaves</p>
+
+ <p>Flutter down on golden sheaves,</p>
+
+ <p>And on plum-trees one perceives</p>
+
+ <p class="i8">No more plums&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>All the swallows have not fled,</p>
+
+ <p>Hardly is the summer dead&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Then, alas, it must be said</p>
+
+ <p class="i8">Christmas comes!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Christmas! Hang it all! But how</p>
+
+ <p>Can that be? 'Tis weeks from now.</p>
+
+ <p>What a fearful thought, I vow</p>
+
+ <p class="i8">That it numbs!</p>
+
+ <p>"Order Christmas papers" fills</p>
+
+ <p>Bookshops, bookstalls. With its bills,</p>
+
+ <p>Taxes, tips, fogs, frosts, coughs, chills,</p>
+
+ <p class="i8">Christmas comes!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Even Christmas-cards appear,</p>
+
+ <p>They are with us half the year,</p>
+
+ <p>I would banish them from here,</p>
+
+ <p class="i8">Say, to Thrums,</p>
+
+ <p>Or to any mournful place,</p>
+
+ <p>Where I'd never show my face,</p>
+
+ <p>For they tell one that, apace,</p>
+
+ <p class="i8">Christmas comes!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Seasonable Christmas Motto for Well-Known
+ Fine-Art Publishers</span>.&mdash;"<span class="sc">Tuck</span>
+ in!"</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page239"
+ id="page239"></a>[pg 239]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/239.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/239.png"
+ alt="FOOTBALL FEVER. SATURDAY AFTERNOON IN THE MIDLANDS." />
+ </a>
+
+ <h3>FOOTBALL FEVER. SATURDAY AFTERNOON IN THE
+ MIDLANDS.</h3>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page240"
+ id="page240"></a>[pg 240]</span>
+
+ <h2>TO "THE LAZY MINSTREL"</h2>
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <p><i>On the publication of his Eighth Edition, with
+ therein Nineteen Poems originally written for Mr.
+ Punch.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:35%;">
+ <a href="images/240-1.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/240-1.png"
+ alt="The Lazy Laureate of the Thames." /></a>The Lazy
+ Laureate of the Thames.
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Who would not be a Minstrel Lazy?</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">A trifle crazy,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The best of them! Ah!</p>
+
+ <p>Here's <span class="sc">Ashby Sterry</span>, in punt
+ or wherry,</p>
+
+ <p>He's ever merry! sing "hey down derry,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Or anything very</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Like Tra! la! la! la!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>On sunny days he trolls his lays</p>
+
+ <p>With gay guitar and Tra! la! la! la!</p>
+
+ <p>From groves and glades come meadow-sweet maids,</p>
+
+ <p>None of your saucy minxes or jades;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">The poet is there</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Without a care.</p>
+
+ <p>With no regret, with mild cigarette.</p>
+
+ <p>With gay guitar, and whiskey from Leith,</p>
+
+ <p>Will he be crowned with the Laureate wreath?</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <center>
+ (<i>The Nymph Pantalettina is heard singing</i>.)
+ </center>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Come where my
+ <span class="sc">Ashby</span> lies dreaming,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Dreaming for hours after lunch.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Softly! for he is scheming</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Poems for <i>Mister Punch</i>!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Graceful is his position&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Hark! how he sweeps the strings,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">While of his Eighth Edition</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">The Warbler
+ <span class="sc">Sterry</span> sings:&mdash;</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <center>
+ (<i>The Bard chirpeth his roundelay</i>.)
+ </center>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"On 'Spring's Delights' in 'Hambledon Lock'</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">'My Country Cousin' may hap&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">With her I'll go</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">'In Rotten Row,'</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Stop on an 'oss</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">'At Charing-Cross,'</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">For a 'Tam O'Shanter Cap.'</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>No gout? Oh no! But I'm 'Taken in Tow,'</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And suffering from dejection,</p>
+
+ <p>'Spring Cleaning' I'll use for a pair of old
+ shoes</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">(Queer rhyme upon reflection),</p>
+
+ <p>'Sound without Sense,' I've no pretence,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To write Shakspearian Sonnets.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Of her and him,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">As suits my whim,</p>
+
+ <p>I sing, and I hymn her bonnets!"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <center>
+ (<i>Chorus of Pantalettina and River Nymphs.</i>)
+ </center>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i4">So, hail to the Bard so merry,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">To Lazy Laureate
+ <span class="sc">Sterry</span>!</p>
+
+ <p>He'll sing of a Lock on the Thames! oh rare!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Or hymn a Lock of his Lady's hair.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>CONVERSATIONAL HINTS FOR YOUNG SHOOTERS.</h2>
+
+ <p>The subject of Lunch, my dear young friends, has now been
+ exhausted. We have done, for the time, with poetry, and descend
+ again to the ordinary prose of every-day shooting. Yet
+ stay&mdash;before we proceed further, there is one matter apart
+ from the mere details of sport, which may be profitably
+ considered in this treatise. It is the divine, the delightful
+ subject of</p>
+
+ <h3>SMOKING.</h3>
+
+ <p>First, I ask, do you know&mdash;(1), the man who never
+ smokes from the night of the 11th of August up to the night of
+ the 1st of February in the following year, for fear of injuring
+ his sight and his shooting nerve? (2), the host who forbids all
+ smoking amongst the guests assembled at his house for a
+ shooting-party?</p>
+
+ <p>You, naturally enough, reply that you have not the honour of
+ being acquainted with these severe, but enthusiastic gentlemen.
+ Nobody does know them. They don't exist. But it is very useful
+ to affect a sort of second-hand knowledge of these Gorgons of
+ the weed, as thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p><i>A Party of Guns is walking to the first beat of the
+ day. Time, say about</i> 10·20 A.M.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <div class="drama">
+ <p><i>Young Sportsman</i> (<i>who has a pipe in his mouth,
+ to Second Sportsman, similarly adorned</i>). I always think
+ the after-breakfast smoke is about the best of the day.
+ Somehow, tobacco tastes sweeter then than at any other time
+ of the day.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Second Sp.</i> (<i>puffing vigorously</i>). Yes, it's
+ first class; but I hold with smoke at most times of the
+ day, after breakfast, after lunch, after dinner, and in
+ between.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Young Sp.</i> Well, I don't know. If I try to smoke
+ when I'm actually shooting, I generally find I've got my
+ pipe in the gun side of my mouth. I heard of a man the
+ other day who knocked out three of his best teeth through
+ bringing up his gun sharp, and forgetting he'd got a pipe
+ in his mouth. Poor beggar! he was very plucky about it, I
+ believe; but it made no end of a difference to his
+ pronunciation till he got a new lot shoved in. Just like
+ that old Johnnie in the play&mdash;Overland something or
+ other&mdash;who lost his false set of teeth on a desert
+ island, and couldn't make any of the other Johnnies
+ understand him.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Second Sp.</i> I've never had any difficulty with my
+ smoking. I always make a habit of carrying my smokes in the
+ left side of my mouth.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Young Sp.</i> Oh, but you're pretty certain to get
+ the smoke or the ashes or something, blown slap into your
+ eyes just as you're going to loose off. No. (<i>With
+ decision</i>.) I'm off my smoke when the popping
+ begins.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Second Sp.</i> Don't be too hard on yourself, my boy.
+ They tell me there are precious few birds in the old
+ planting this year, so you can treat yourself to a
+ cigarette when you get there. It never pays to trample on
+ one's longing for tobacco too much.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Young Sp.</i> No, by Jove. Old
+ <span class="sc">Reggie Morris</span> told me of a fellow
+ he met somewhere this year, who goes regularly into
+ training for shooting. Never touches baccy from August to
+ February, and limits his drink to three pints a day, and no
+ whiskeys and sodas. And what's more, he won't let any of
+ his guests smoke when he's got a shoot on, He's got "No
+ Smoking" posted up in big letters in every room in the
+ house. <span class="sc">Reggie</span> said it was awful. He
+ had to lock his bedroom door, shove the chest-of-drawers
+ against it, and smoke with his head stuck right up the
+ chimney. He got a peck of soot, one night, right on the top
+ of his nut. Now I call that simple rot.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Second Sp.</i> Ah, I've heard of that man. Never met
+ him though, I'm thankful to say. Let me see what's the
+ beggar's name? <span class="sc">Jackson</span> or
+ <span class="sc">Barrett</span>, or
+ <span class="sc">Pollard</span>, or something like that.
+ He's got a big place somewhere in Suffolk, or Yorkshire, or
+ somewhere about there.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Young Sp.</i> Yes, that's the chap, I fancy.</p>
+
+ <p>Now that kind of thing starts you very nicely for the
+ day. It isn't necessary that either of the sportsmen whose
+ dialogue has been reported should believe implicitly in the
+ absolute truth of what he is saying. Observe, neither of
+ them says that he himself met this man. He merely gets
+ conversation out of him on the strength of what someone
+ else has told him. That, you see, is the real trick of the
+ thing. Don't bind yourself to such a story as being part of
+ your own personal experience. Work it in on another man's
+ back. Of course there are exceptions even to this rule. But
+ this question I shall be able to treat at greater length
+ when I come to deal with the important subject of "Shooting
+ Anecdotes."</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:30%;">
+ <a href="images/240-2.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/240-2.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Very often you can work up quite a nice little
+ conversation on cigarettes. Every man believes, as is
+ well-known, that he possesses the only decent cigarettes in
+ the country. He either&mdash;(1), imports them himself from
+ Cairo, or (2), he gets his tobacco straight from a firm of
+ growers somewhere in Syria and makes it into cigarettes
+ himself; or (3), he thinks Egyptian cigarettes are an
+ abomination, and only smokes Russians or Americans; or (4),
+ he knows a man, <span class="sc">Backastopoulo</span> by
+ name, somewhere in the Ratcliffe Highway, who has
+ <i>the</i> very best cigarettes you ever tasted. You
+ wouldn't give two-pence a hundred for any others after
+ smoking these, he tells you. And, lastly, there is the man
+ who loathes cigarettes, despises those who smoke them, and
+ never, smokes anything himself except a special kind of
+ cigar ornamented with a sort of red and gold garter.</p>
+
+ <p>Out of this conflict of preferences the young shooter
+ can make capital. By flattering everybody in turn, he can
+ practically get his smoking gratis, for everyone will be
+ sure to offer him at least one cigarette, in order to prove
+ the superiority of his own particular kind. And if the
+ young shooter, after smoking it, expresses a proper amount
+ of ecstasy, he is not at all unlikely to have a second
+ offered to him. Most men are generous with cigarettes. Many
+ a man I know would far rather give a beggar a cigarette
+ than a shilling, though the cigarette may have cost,
+ originally, a penny-halfpenny, or more&mdash;a strange and
+ paradoxical state of affairs.</p>
+
+ <p>Here is a final piece of advice. Admire all
+ cigarette-cases, and say of each that it's the very best
+ and prettiest you ever saw. You can have no notion how much
+ innocent pleasure you will give.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p><font size="+1">&#9758;</font> NOTICE.&mdash;Rejected
+ Communications or Contributions, whether MS., Printed Matter,
+ Drawings, or Pictures of any description, will in no case be
+ returned, not even when accompanied by a Stamped and Addressed
+ Envelope, Cover, or Wrapper. To this rule there will be no
+ exception..</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, Or The London Charivari, Vol.
+103, November 19, 1892, by Various
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, Or The London Charivari, Vol. 103,
+November 19, 1892, 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. 103, November 19, 1892
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Francis Burnand
+
+Release Date: May 31, 2005 [EBook #15957]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer, William Flis, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH,
+
+OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOL. 103.
+
+
+
+November 19, 1892.
+
+
+
+
+THE MAN WHO WOULD.
+
+II.--THE MAN WHO WOULD PLAY GOLF.
+
+BULGER was no cricketer, no tennis-player, no sportsman, in fact.
+But his Doctor recommended exercise and fresh air. "And I'm thinking,
+Sir," he added, "that you cannot do better than just take yourself
+down to St. Andrews, and put yourself under TOM MORRIS." "Is he a
+great Scotch physician?" asked BULGER; "I don't seem to have heard of
+him." "The Head of the Faculty, Sir," said the medical man--"the Head
+of the Faculty in those parts."
+
+BULGER packed his effects, and, in process of time, he arrived at
+Leuchars. Here he observed some venerable towers within a short walk,
+and fancied that he would presently arrive at St. Andrews. In this he
+was reckoning without the railway system--he was compelled to wait at
+Leuchars for no inconsiderable time, which he occupied in extracting
+statistics about the consumption of whiskey from the young lady who
+ministered to travellers. The revelations now communicated, convinced
+BULGER that either Dr. MORRIS was not on the lines of Sir ANDREW
+CLARK, or, as an alternative, that his counsels were not listened to
+by travellers on that line.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Arriving in the dusk, BULGER went to his inn, and next morning
+inquired as to the address of the Head of the Faculty. "I dinna ken,"
+said an elderly person, to whom he appealed, "that the Professors
+had made TOM a Doctor, though it's a sair and sad oversicht, and a
+disgrace to the country, that they hae'na done sae lang syne. But I
+jalouse that your Doctor was jist making a gowk o' ye." "What!" said
+BULGER. "Jist playin' a plisky on ye, and he meant that TOM wad pit ye
+in the way o' becoming a player. Mon, ye're a bull-neckit, bow-leggit
+chiel', and ye'd shape fine for a Gowfer! Here's TOM." And, with this
+brief introduction, the old man strolled away.
+
+BULGER now found himself in the presence of Mr. MORRIS, whose
+courtesy soon put him on a footing of friendliness and confidence.
+He purchased, by his Mentor's advice, a driver, a cleek, a putter, a
+brassey, an iron, a niblick, and a mashy. Armed with these implements,
+which were "carried by an orphan boy," and, under the guidance of the
+Head of the Faculty himself, BULGER set forth on his first round. His
+first two strokes were dealt on the yielding air; his third carried
+no inconsiderable parcel of real property to some distance; but his
+fourth hit the ball, and drove it across the road. "As gude as a
+better," quoth the orphan boy, and bade BULGER propel the tiny sphere
+in the direction of a neighbouring rivulet. Into this affluent of the
+main, BULGER finally hit the ball; but an adroit lad of nine stamped
+it into the mud, while pretending to look for it, and BULGER had to
+put down another. When he got within putting range, he hit his ball
+careering back and forward over the hole, and, "Eh, man," quoth the
+orphan boy, "if ye could only drive as you put!"
+
+In some fifteen strokes he accomplished his task of holing out; and
+now, weary and desponding (for he had fancied Golf to be an easy
+game), he would have desisted for the day. But the Head of the Faculty
+pressed on him the necessity of "The daily round, the common task."
+So his ball was tee'd, and he lammed it into the Scholar's Bunker, at
+a distance of nearly thirty yards. A niblick was now placed in his
+grasp, and he was exhorted to "Take plenty sand." Presently a kind
+of simoom was observed to rage in the Scholars' Bunker, out of which
+emerged the head of the niblick, the ball, and, finally, BULGER
+himself. His next hit, however, was a fine one, over the wall, where,
+as the ball was lost, BULGER deposited a new one. This he, somehow,
+drove within a few feet of the hole, when he at once conceived an
+intense enthusiasm for the pastime. "It was a fine drive," said the
+Head of the Faculty. "Mr. BLACKWELL never hit a finer." Thus inflamed
+with ardour, BULGER persevered. He learned to waggle his club in a
+knowing way. He listened intently when he was bidden to "keep his eye
+on the ba'", and to be "slow up." True, he now missed the globe and
+all that it inhabit, but soon he hit a prodigious swipe, well over
+cover-point's head,--or rather, in the direction where cover-point
+would have been. "Ye're awfu' bad in the whuns," said the orphan
+boy; and, indeed, BULGER'S next strokes were played in distressing
+circumstances. The spikes of the gorse ran into his person--he could
+only see a small part of the ball, and, in a few minutes, he had made
+a useful clearing of about a quarter of an acre.
+
+It is unnecessary to follow his later achievements in detail. He
+returned a worn and weary man, having accomplished the round in
+about a hundred and eighty, but in possession of an appetite which
+astonished him and those with whom he lunched. In the afternoon, the
+luck of beginners attending him, he joined a foursome of Professors,
+and triumphantly brought in his partner an easy victor. In a day or
+two, he was drinking beer (which he would previously have rejected
+as poison), was sleeping like a top, and was laying down the law
+on stimy, and other "mysteries more than Eleusinian." True, after
+the first three days, his play entirely deserted BULGER, and even
+Professors gave him a wide berth in making up a match. But by steady
+perseverance, reading Sir WALTER SIMPSON, taking out a professional,
+and practising his iron in an adjacent field, BULGER soon developed
+to such an extent that few third-rate players could give him a stroke
+a hole. He had been in considerable danger of "a stroke" of quite a
+different character before he left London, and the delights of the
+Bar. But he returned to the Capital in rude health, and may now often
+be seen and heard, topping into the Pond at Wimbledon, and talking in
+a fine Fifeshire-accent. It must be acknowledged that his story about
+his drive at the second hole, "equal to BLACKWELL, himself, TOM MORRIS
+himself told me as much," has become rather a source of diversion to
+his intimates; but we have all our failings, and BULGER never dreams,
+when anyone says, "What is the record drive?" that he is being
+drawn for the entertainment of the sceptical and unfeeling. BULGER
+will never, indeed, be a player; but, if his handicap remains at
+twenty-four, he may, some day, carry off the monthly medal. With this
+great aim before him, and the consequent purchase of a red-coat and
+gilt-buttons, BULGER has a new purpose in existence, "something to
+live for, something to do." May this brief but accurate history convey
+a moral to the Pessimist, and encourage those who take a more radiant
+view of the possibilities of life!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A PLEBISCITE FOR PARNASSUS.
+
+ [The result of the _Pall Mall's_ competition for the
+ Laureateship has been to place Mr. ERIC MACKAY and Mr.
+ GILBART-SMITH first and second, and SWINBURNE and MORRIS
+ nowhere.]
+
+ A popular vote the Laureate's post to fill?
+ Ay! if Parnassus were but Primrose Hill.
+ The Penny Vote puts lion below monkey.
+ 'Tis "Tuppence more, Gents, and _up goes the donkey!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+QUITE MOVING.--_From Far and Near_ and _All Alive_, are two excellent
+"movable toy-books" that will please the little ones (when their
+seniors are tired of playing with them) far into the Yule-tide season.
+The author is LOTHAR MAGGENDORFER, a gentleman to whom _Mr. Punch_
+wishes a "Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year." This may appear a
+little premature, but it is a far cry from England to Germany, and the
+Sage of Fleet Street has allowed for any delays that may be caused by
+fogs, railway unpunctuality, and other necessary evils.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE AMERICAN GANYMEDE.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ [The extraordinary triumph of Mr. GROVER CLEVELAND, Democratic
+ Candidate for the American Presidency, is attributed to a
+ general revolt against the McKinley Bill.]
+
+ O plump and pant-striped boy, upborne,
+ Like Ganymede of old,
+ _Punch_ hails you, with your slack, untorn,
+ Fast in the Eagle's hold.
+ It is, indeed, a startling sight
+ That speculation tarries on;
+ And it must give an awful fright
+ To Hebe (_alias_ HARRISON!)
+
+ Up, up to the Olympus, where
+ The White House spreads its board,
+ Whirled high through the electoral air,
+ A boy less long than broad!
+ He looks not like the Tammany breed,
+ That with high tariffs dally;
+ He proves, this Yankee Ganymede,
+ The Democratic rally.
+
+ This eagle's a colossal fowl,
+ Like _Sindbad's_ monstrous Roc,
+ A bird of prey some say, a-prowl
+ Like that Stymphalian flock,
+ With iron claws and brazen beak,
+ Intent to clutch and collar,
+ Fired with devotion strong, yet weak,
+ To the Almighty Dollar.
+
+ Pooh! Plunder's not his only joy.
+ He hovered till he saw
+ "A something-pottle-bodied boy,"
+ Who spurned MCKINLEY'S Law.
+ He stooped and clutched him, fair and good,
+ Flew nigh o'er roof and casement,
+ Whilst the Republicans all stood
+ Agape in sheer amazement.
+
+ He soars with proudly swelling crest
+ And followed with acclaims,
+ A cause of wonder in the West,
+ And crowing by the Thames.
+ For England, glorying in the sight,
+ Greets Boy and Bird together;
+ Whilst watching with serene delight
+ That big, black, falling feather!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ROBERT ON LORD MARE'S DAY.
+
+The most ewentfoollest day of the hole year broke, as the poets says,
+without almost not no fog, on Wensday larst, to my grate serprise and
+joy; but noing, from long xperiens, how unsertain is whether at this
+orful seasun of the year, I took jest one leetel glass of hold brandy
+before setting out on my arjus dootys. I was encurraged to do so also
+by the horful rumers as was spread about, weeks afore, as to threttend
+atacks on the sacred Show by some disapinted prottestens, I think they
+called theirselves, as hadn't bin inwited to the Bankwet, and so meant
+to prottest accordingly.
+
+But I needn't a bin alarmd, for the most respekful mob as filled the
+streets was as quiet as mice, havin heard, I'm told, as how as the
+Copperashun had had the lectric light turned on at Gildhall, by which
+means, of course, they coud comunicate with any-wheres, and so know
+where to send an hole army of Waiters to, well fortyfide, and armed
+to the teeth with a splendid Lunch, to help the pore Perlice in their
+arjus dootys.
+
+From wot I seed of the butifool Sho, I shood give the cake to the
+Frute-Makers' splendid Car, all covered with the most butifool Frute,
+all made, too, in England, as it trewthfoolly said on both sides of
+the high-backed Car. The second plaice I shood give to the numerus
+butifool young Ladys, with most butifool flaxin air, all most bisily
+ingaged in a twistlin and a twiddlin of luvly gold and silver wire, on
+a Car belongin to the Makers of Gold and Silver Wire Drorers, wich I
+heard a most respectfool carpenter declare, must, he thort, be most
+uncomferal to wear. With that good fortun as allers atends the Hed
+Waiter, I seem to have atracted the notis of one of the most butifool
+of the young Ladys afoursaid, for she acshally tossed me a luvly
+littel bit of reel golden wire, which I shall trezure nex my art for
+years, if so be as how it don't skratch.
+
+The grand Bankwet, with its nine hunderd Gestes, was as ushal, about
+the grandest thing of the kind as the world has ever seen, but sumhows
+it struck me as the gents was much more impashent for their wittles
+than they ushally is. At my pertickler tabel, the two gents at the
+top was that trubblesum about the reel Turtel-soup as I ain't a tall
+accumstumed to, and I amost poured a hole ladel-full down the fine
+shirt-front of one of em; and then, trying at the next help to awoid
+him, I sent my helbow full into the face of the other, and a pretty
+fuss he made, you bet, and acshally torked of sending for the
+souperintendent, ewidently not knowing who I was.
+
+The same himpashent Gent amost worried my life out arterwards, and all
+about a glass of _plane_ water as he called it, and when I told him as
+I didn't think as we hadn't not none in the plaice, but I coud get him
+a bottel of amost any kind of Shampane as he liked to name; he again
+said as he wood call for the souperintendent. So in course I had
+to go for some, and a preshus long time it took me to get it; the
+wine-steward naterally sayin as he never before herd of sich a order
+on sich a ocasion, and he had only one bottel with him, and when I
+took it to the himpashent Gent, and told him so, he fairly roared with
+larfter, and told it all round as a capital joke! I wunders where the
+joke was.
+
+When the dinner was over and the speaches began, I got permishun to
+stand unner the gallery for to hear them; but strange to tell, not a
+word coud I hear, and them as I did hear I coudn't unnerstand. So I
+began for to fear as crewel age was a tarnishing of my 'earrings, so
+I moved to the other end of the 'All jest in time for to hear a werry
+dark but gennelmanly young feller, as was called the Gayqueer, or
+some such wonderfool name, and who, I was told, come all the way
+from Indier, make sitch a grand and nobel speach, and in quite as
+good Inglish as ewen I coud use, as got him more applorse from the
+distinguisht hordiens than all the speaches maid by Her Madjesty's
+Ministers put together. Always xceptin the Lawyers, for they seems to
+have sitch a jolly good time of it, that they are allers as reddy to
+cause a larf as to enjoy one. We all seemed sumhow to miss the werry
+PRIME MINISTER--we are all so acustomd to see the werry top of the
+tree, that we don't quite like being put off with a mere bow, however
+big and himportant it may be; besides, I must confess as I do like
+to hear his luvly woice, ewen when I don't quite unnerstand all as he
+says. So I don't suppose as any one of my numerus readers will quarrel
+with me when I says, better luck nex time.
+
+ROBERT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: CANDID CRITICISM.
+
+"LIKE MY NEW FROCK, AUNT JANE?"
+
+"WELL, _I_ SHOULD SAY YOU'D GOT SKIRTS FOR YOUR SLEEVES, AND A SLEEVE
+FOR YOUR SKIRT!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PROOFS BEFORE LETTERS.
+
+ Humbugs will always ape their betters,
+ Fools fancy the alphabet brings them fame;
+ But you don't become a man of letters
+ By tacking the letters after your name.
+ One suffix only the _fact_ expresses,
+ And that's an A and a couple of S's!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ANOTHER MEANING.--_I Rantzau_ is the title of MASCAGNI'S new Opera.
+The title, anglicised, would be suitable for an old-fashioned
+transpontine melodramatic tragedian, who could certainly say of
+himself, "_I rant so!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SHAKSPEARIAN CONUNDRUM.
+
+At what time would SHAKSPEARE'S heroine of _The Taming of the Shrew_
+have been eminently fitted to be a modern Sunday-School teacher?
+
+_Answer._ When _Petruchio_ kissed her; because then she was _a Kattie
+Kiss'd_. (Hem! A Cate-chist.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ALL ROUND THE FAIR.
+
+NO. I.
+
+ SCENE--_A street of Gingerbread, Sweetstuff, and Toy-stalls,
+ "Cocoa-nut Shies," "Box-pitching Saloons," &c., forming
+ the approach to the more festive portion of the Fair, from
+ which proceeds a cheerful cacophony of orchestrions,
+ barrel-organs, steam-whistles, gongs, big drums, rattles,
+ and speaking-trumpets._
+
+_Proprietors of Cocoa-nut Shies._ Now, then, play up all o'
+you--ar-har! There goes another on 'em! _That's_ the way to 'it
+'em--win all yer like, &c.
+
+_A Rival Proprietor_ (_pointing to his target, through the centre of
+which his partner's head is protruded_). Look at _that_! Ain't that
+better nor any coker-nut? Every time you 'it my mate's 'ed, you git
+a good cigar! (_As the by-standers hang back, from motives of
+humanity._) 'Ere, _'ave_ a go at 'im, some o' you--give 'im a little
+encouragement!
+
+_The Head_ (_plaintively_). Don't neglect a man as is doing his best
+to please yer, gen'l'men! (_A soft-hearted Bystander takes a shot at
+him, out of sheer compassion, and misses._) Try agen, Sir. I ain't
+'ere to be _idle_!
+
+_A Sharp Little Girl_ (_presiding over a sloping Chinese
+Billiard-board_). Now, my dears--(_To a group of boys, of about her
+own age_)--'ave what yer like. A penny a pull, and a prize every time!
+Wherever the marble rolls, you 'ave any one article on the board!
+
+[Illustration: "Now then, play up, all o' yea--ar-har!"]
+
+ [_One of the boys pays a penny, and pulls a handle, propelling
+ a marble, which, after striking a bell at the top of the
+ slope, wobbles down into a compartment._
+
+_The Boy_ (_indicating a gorgeous china ornament on the board_). I'll
+'ave one o' them--to take 'ome to mother.
+
+_The S.L.G._ (_with pitying superiority_). No, my boy, you can go to a
+shop and _buy_ one o' them for sixpence if you like--but 'ere you must
+'ave what you _git_!
+
+ [_She awards him a very dingy lead-pencil, with which he
+ departs, abashed, and evidently revolving her dark saying in
+ his perplexed mind._
+
+_Proprietor of a Box-pitching Saloon._ One penny a ball! For hevery
+ball that goes in the boxes, you choose any prize you like! (_With
+sorrow and sympathy, to a female Competitor._) Too 'ard, Lady, too
+_'ard_! (_To a male Comp., whose ball has struck the edge of the box,
+and bounced off._) Very _near_, Sir!
+
+ [_Several Competitors expend penny after penny unsuccessfully,
+ and walk away, with a grin of entire satisfaction._
+
+_Joe_ (_landing a ball in one of the boxes, after four failures_). I
+told 'ee I'd get _waun_ in! (_To his Young Woman._) What are ye goin'
+to 'ave, MELIA?
+
+_Melia_ (_hovering undecidedly over a glittering array of shell-boxes,
+cheap photograph-albums and crockery_). I'll take one o'--no, I won't
+neither.... I really don't know _what_ to 'ave!
+
+_Joe_ (_with masculine impatience_). Well, go on--take _summat_, can't
+ye! (_MELIA selects a cup and saucer, as the simplest solution of the
+problem._) I doan't carl that mooch of a show for fippence, I
+doan't. Theer, gi' us 'old on it. [_He stows the china away in his
+side-pockets._
+
+_Melia._ You took an' 'urried me so--else I don't know as I fancied
+a cup and sarcer so partickler. I wonder if the man 'ud change it,
+supposin' we was to go back and ast 'im!
+
+_Joe_ (_slapping his thigh_). Well, you _are_ a gell and no mistake!
+Come along back and git whatever 'tis you've a mind to. (_Returning._)
+'Ere, Master, will ye gi' this young woman summat else for this 'ere?
+(_He extracts the cup in fragments._) 'Ullo, look a' _that_ now! (_To
+MELIA._) Theer, it's all right--doan't take on 'bout it.--I'll 'ave
+another go to make it oop. (_He pitches ball after ball without
+success._) I wawn't be bett. I lay I'll git 'un in afoor I've done!
+(_He is at last successful._) Theer--now, ye can please yourself,
+and doan't choose nawthen' foolish _this_ time! (_He strolls on with
+lordly indifference, and is presently rejoined by MELIA._) Well, what
+did ye take arter all?
+
+_Melia._ I got so flustered like, for fear o' losin' you, I just up
+and took the first that came 'andy.
+
+_Joe._ Why, if ye ain't bin and took _another_ cup an' sarcer!
+hor--hor! that's a good 'un, that is! Take keer on it, it's cost money
+enough any 'ow--'t wouldn't be no bargain if it wur a 'ole tea-set!
+What's goin' on 'ere?
+
+ [_A venerable old Sportsman, whom the reader may possibly
+ recollect having met before, has collected a small crowd in
+ a convenient corner; his stock-in-trade consists of an
+ innocent-looking basket, with a linen-cover, upon which are a
+ sharpened skewer and a narrow strip of cloth._
+
+_The Sportsman._ I'll undertake to show you more fun in five minutes,
+than you'll get over there in two: (_with a vague suspicion that this
+is rather a lame conclusion_)--in ten, I _should_ say! This 'ere's a
+simple enough little game, when you know the trick of it, and I'm
+on'y a _learnin'_ it myself. I ain't doin' this for money. I got money
+enough to sink a ship--it's on'y for my own amusement. Now you watch
+me a doin' up this garter--keep yer eye on it. (_He coils up the
+strip._) It goes _up_ 'ere, ye see, and down _there_, and _in_ 'ere
+agin, and then round. Now, I'm ready to bet anything from a sovereign
+to a shilling, nobody 'ere can prick the middle. I'll tell ye if ye
+win. I'm ole BILLY FAIRPLAY, and I don't cheat! (_A Spotty-faced Man,
+after intently following the process, says he believes he could find
+the middle._) Well, don't tell--that's all. I'm 'ere all alone, agin
+the lot o' ye, and I want to win if I can--one dog to a bone! (_The_
+S.-F.M. _produces a florin from a mouldy purse, and stakes it, and
+makes a dab at the coil with the skewer._) No, ye're wrong--that's
+outside! (_O.B.F. pulls the strip out._) By Gum, ye've done it, after
+all! 'Ere's four bob for you, and I'm every bit as pleased as if I'd
+won myself! 'Oo'll try next?
+
+_A Smart Young Man_ (_with a brilliant pin in a dirty necktie, to
+JOE_). I don't see how it's done--do you?
+
+_Joe._ Ye will if you don't take yer eyes off it--theer, I could tell
+ye the middle now, I could.
+
+_The Sp.-F.M._ Law, yes, it's simple enough. I done it first time.
+
+_Old B.F._ Give an old man a chance to get a bit. If any party 'ere
+'as found me out, let him 'old 'is tongue--it's all _I_ ask. (_To
+JOE._) You've seen this afore, _I_ know!
+
+_Joe._ Noa, I ain't--but I could tell ye th' middle.
+
+_Old B.F._ Will ye bet on it? Come--not too 'igh, but just to show
+you've confidence in your opinion!
+
+_Joe_ (_cautiously_). I woant bet wi' ye, but I'll hev a try, just for
+nawthen, if ye like!
+
+_Old B.F._ Well, I want to see if you really _do_ know it--so, jest
+for once, I ain't no objection. (_JOE pricks the garter._) Yes, you've
+found the middle, sure enough! It's a good job there was no money
+on--for _me_, leastwise!
+
+_The Sp.-F.M._ I've a good mind to 'ave another try.
+
+_The Sm. Y.M._ I wouldn't. You'll lose. I could see you on'y guessed
+the first time. (_The Sp. F.M., however, extracts a shilling, stakes
+it--and loses._) There, _I_ could ha' told you you was wrong--(_To
+JOE_)--couldn't you?
+
+_Joe._ Yes, he art to ha' pricked moor to waun side of 'un. (_The
+Sp.-F.M. stakes another florin._) Now he's done it, if ye like!
+
+_O.B.F._ There, ye see, I'm as often wrong as not myself. (_To the
+Sp.-F.M._) There's your four bob, Sir. Now, jest once more!
+
+_Joe_ (_to MELIA_). I'll git the price o' that theer cup an' sarcer
+out of 'un, any'ow. (_To O.B.F._) I'll ha' a tanner wi' ye!
+
+_O.B.F._ 'Alf a soverin, if you like--it's all the same to me!
+
+_Joe_ (_after pricking_). I _thart_ I 'ad 'un that time, too, I did!
+
+_The Sm. Y.M._ You shouldn't ha' changed your mind--you were right
+enough afore!
+
+_Joe_. Yes, I should ha' stuck to it. (_To O.B.F._) I'll bet ye two
+bob on the next go--come!
+
+_O.B.F._ Well, I don't like to say no, though I can see, plain enough,
+you know too much. (_JOE pricks; O.B.F. pulls away the strip,
+and leaves the skewer outside._) I could ha' sworn you done me that
+time--but there ye _are_, ye see, there's never no tellin' at this
+game--and that's the charm on it!
+
+ [_JOE walks on with MELIA in a more subdued frame of mind._
+
+_The Sm. Y.M._ (_in the ear of the Spotty-faced One_). I say, I got
+a job o' my own to attend to--jest pass the word to the Old Man, when
+he's done with this pitch, to turn up beyind the swing-boats there,
+and come along yourself, if yer can. It's the old lay I'm on--the
+prize-packets fake.
+
+_The Sp.-F.M._ Right--we'll give yer a look in presently--it'll be a
+little change for the Ole Man--trades's somethin' cruel _'ere_!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HIS MAD-JESTY AT THE LYCEUM.
+
+Except when HENRY IRVING impersonated the hapless victim of false
+imprisonment in the Bastille, whence he issued forth after twenty
+years of durance, never has he been so curiously and wonderfully
+made-up as now, when he represents _Lear_, monarch of all he surveys.
+Bless thee, HENRY, how art thou transformed!
+
+[Illustration: Rather mixed. Mr. Irving as "Ophe-Lear."]
+
+Sure such a _King Lear_ was never seen on any stage, so perfect in
+appearance, so entirely the ideal of SHAKSPEARE'S ancient King.
+It must have been a vision of IRVING in this character that the
+divinely-inspired poet and dramatist saw when he had a _Lear_ in his
+eye. For a moment, too, he reminded me of BOOTH--the "General," not
+the "particular" American tragedian,--and when he appeared in thunder,
+lightning, hail, and rain, he suggested an embodiment of the "_Moses_"
+of MICHAEL ANGELO.
+
+A strange weird play; much for an audience, and more for an actor, all
+on his own shoulders, to bear. A one-part play it is too, for of the
+sweet _Cordelia_,--and sweet did ELLEN TERRY look and so tenderly did
+she play!--little is seen or heard. With _Goneril_ and _Regan_, the
+two proud and wicked sisters,--associated in the mind of the modernest
+British Public with Messrs. HERBERT CAMPBELL and HARRY NICHOLLS, as is
+also _Cordelia_ associated either with _Cinderella_ or with _Beauty_
+in the story of _Beauty and the Beast_--we have two fine commanding
+figures; and well are these parts played by Miss ADA DYAS and Miss
+MAUD MILTON. The audience can have no sympathy with the two wicked
+Princesses, and except in _Goneril's_ brief Lady-Macbethian scene with
+her husband, neither of the Misses LEAR has much dramatic chance. Pity
+that Mrs. LEAR--his Queen and their mother, wasn't alive! Let us hope
+she resembled her youngest daughter _Cordelia_, otherwise poor _Lear_
+must have had a hard life of it as a married man.
+
+Why should not Mr. IRVING give the first part of this play
+reconsideration? Why not just once a week try him as a different sort
+of _Lear_? For instance, suppose, to begin with, that he had had a bad
+time of it with his wife, that for many years as a widower he had been
+seeking for the opportunity of disposing of his daughters, handing
+over to them and to their husbands the lease and goodwill of "The
+Crown and Sceptre," while he would be, as King, "retired from
+business," and going out for a lark generally. Thus jovially would he
+commence the play, a rollicking, gay, old dog, ready for anything, up
+to anything, and, like old Anchises, when he jumped on to the back of
+AEneas, "a wonderful man for his years." In fact, _Lear_ might begin
+like an old King Cole, "a merry old soul," a "jolly old cock!" And
+then--"Oh, what a difference in the morning!"--when all his plans
+for a gay career had been shipwrecked by _Cordelia's_ capricious and
+unnatural affectation.
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Terriss as the Good Fairy.]
+
+Then must commence his senility; then he would begin to break up. A
+struggle, to show that there was life in the old dog yet, could be
+seen when the old dog had been out hunting, in Act II., and had shot
+some strange animal, something between a stag and a dromedary, which
+no doubt was a native of Britain in those good old sporting days.
+However, more of this anon. Suffice it to say now, that our HENRY
+IRVING'S _Lear_ is a triumph in every respect, and that the audience
+only wanted a little more of _Cordelia_, which is the fault of the
+immortal and unequal Bard.
+
+To those unacquainted with this play, Mr. TERRISS'S sudden appearance
+in somewhat anti-Lord-Chamberlain attire, as he bounded on, with a
+wand, and struck an attitude, was suggestive of the Good Fairy in
+the pantomime; and his subsequent proceedings, when he didn't change
+anybody into Harlequin, Clown, and so forth, puzzled the unlearned
+spectators considerably. But Mr. TERRISS came out all right, and
+acquitted himself (being his own judge and jury) to the satisfaction
+of the public. His speech about Dover Cliff, generally supposed to
+convey some allusion to the Channel Tunnel, was excellently delivered,
+and certainly after _Lear_, "on the spear side," Mr. TERRISS must take
+the Goodeley Cake.
+
+Next to him in order of merit comes Mr. FRANK COOPER, as the
+wicked _Edmund_, on whom the good EDMUND, "Edmundus Mundi," smiled
+benignantly from a private box. There was on the first night a great
+reception given to HOWE--the veteran actor, not the wreck, and very
+far from it--who took the small part of an old Evicted Tenant of the
+_Earl of Glo'ster_, a character very carefully played by Mr. ALFRED
+BISHOP, _Floreat Henricus!_ "Our HENRY" has his work cut out for him
+in this "Titanic work," as in his before-curtain and after-play speech
+he termed it. This particular "Titanic work" is (or certainly was that
+night) in favour with "the gods," who "very much applauded what he'd
+done." But the gods of old were not quite so favourable to "Titanic
+work" generally, and punished eternally Titanic workmen. To-night gods
+and groundlings applaud to the echo, and then everyone goes home as
+best he can in about as beautiful a specimen of a November fog as ever
+delighted a Jack-o'-Lantern or disgusted
+
+PRIVATE BOX.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN OPERATIC NOTE.--_Wednesday_.--Lord Mayor's Day and Sheriff Sir
+AUGUSTUS DRURIOLANUS'S Show. _L' Amico Fritz_, or "The old Min is
+friendly," as _Dick Swiveller_ would have put it. Not by any means as
+bright as _Cavalleria_. Mlle. DEL TORRE, del-lightful as _Suzel_.
+M. DUFRICHE, very good as _Rabbino_; CREMONINI, weak as _Fritz_; and
+Mlle. MARTHA-CUPID-BAUERMEISTER, good as usual in the part of the
+"harmless necessary _Cat"-erina._ Opera generally "going strong."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REPORTED DECISION.--Uganda is to be occupied till March next. Then,
+order of the day, "March in, March out!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"SAFE BIND, SAFE FIND!"
+
+P.C. JOHN BULL _LOQUITUR_:--
+
+ Keep them? Right my Gallic friend!
+ 'Tis my duty, sad but binding.
+ Free the Wolf--to what good end?
+ Loose the Snake--what vantage finding?
+ Faction flusters, Cant appeals
+ In the name of sham-humanity.
+ Right, not wrath, my bosom steels;
+ Softness here were sheer insanity.
+
+ _You_'ve my warmest sympathy,
+ Victim of the new Red Terror!
+ _My_ caged RAVACHOLS to free
+ Were the maddest kind of error.
+ Prison walls and dungeon wards
+ Love I not, I'm no born gaoler,
+ But just Law which Freedom guards
+ _Must_ ignore anarchic railer.
+
+ Blind offence of men half mad
+ 'Neath the goad of brute oppression,
+ Blunderings of fierce fools of fad,
+ Demoniacal possession
+ Of red rage at law unjust,
+ I can check with calm compassion;
+ But must firmly crush to dust
+ Murder--in the newest fashion.
+
+ Dynamite as Freedom's friend?
+ 'Tis the foul fiend's latest juggle.
+ We must fight it to the end,
+ Firm, unfaltering in this struggle.
+ Mere "Political Offence,"
+ All this murder, mashing, maiming?
+ 'Tis a pitiful pretence,
+ Honour-blinding, wisdom-shaming.
+
+ Indiscriminate, ruthless raid!
+ Mad chance--medly of disaster!
+ Sophistry, the fiend's sworn aid,
+ Never better served its master
+ Than in calling such hell-birth
+ A new gospel, holy, human,--
+ Blasting as with maniac mirth
+ Blameless men, and guiltless women!
+
+ No! The Dynamiter's creed--
+ Though hate swagger, though cant snivel--
+ Fires no "patriotic" deed;
+ Base-born, all its ends are evil.
+ Let caged wolves and tigers free?
+ What more wicked, what absurder?
+ Amnesty to Anarchy
+ Means encouragement to Murder?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHERE TO PLACE HIM.--Why ought the future Poet-Laureate, whoever he
+may be, to occupy rooms over or close to the stables at Buckingham
+Palace? Because he would then be inspired by the Royal Mews.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A TEST OF TRUE GENTILITY.
+
+"WHAT'S THE NEW LODGER LIKE, MARIARANN?"
+
+"HE'S NO GENTLEMAN, WHATEVER HE'S LIKE!"
+
+"NO GENTLEMAN! WHAT'S HE BEEN AND DONE?"
+
+"WHY, HE SEE ME A-CARRYIN' UP THE COALS, AN' HE SAYS, 'I'M AFRAID THAT
+SCUTTLE'S TOO HEAVY FOR YOU,' 'E SAYS,--'PRAY LET _ME_ CARRY IT!' 'E
+SAYS. AN' 'E UP AND CARRIES IT ISSELF, JUST LIKE A FOOTMAN!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO A MODEL YOUNG LADY.
+
+ [It is reported that it is a common custom in Paris, amongst
+ ladies of position, to pay for their dresses by wearing them
+ in public, and letting it be known from whom they obtained
+ them.]
+
+ My dear, I like your pretty dress,
+ It suits your figure to a T.
+ I'm free to own that I confess,
+ It's just the kind of dress for me.
+ Yet will you kindly tell me, dear,
+ Not merely was the costume made for
+ Yourself alone--but is it clear
+ And certain that your dress is paid for?
+
+ Mistake me not. I do not dread
+ That you'll think fit to run away
+ And leave the bill unpaid. Instead,
+ I fear that you will never pay,
+ Because no bill will ever come;
+ And since when you decide to toddle
+ Abroad, you'll go amidst a hum
+ Of praise for Madame's lovely Model
+
+ Oh! promise me that when I read
+ My paper (as I often do),
+ I shall not with remorseless speed
+ See endless pars in praise of you,
+ Or rather of the dress you wore,
+ For though, maybe, no harm or hurt is meant,
+ Remember, dearest, I implore,
+ I _won't_ be fond of an advertisement!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+"_Days with Sir Roger de Coverley!_" exclaimed the Baron, on seeing
+the charming little book brought out at this season by Messrs.
+MACMILLAN. "Delightful! Immortal! Ever fresh! Welcome, with or without
+illustration; some of Mr. THOMSON's would not be missed."
+
+There is a breezy, frank, boyish air about the "Reminiscences" of
+our great Baritone, CHARLES SANTLEY, which is as a tonic--a tonic
+sol-fa--to the reader a-weary of the many Reminiscences of these
+latter days. SANTLEY, who seems to have made his way by stolid pluck,
+and without very much luck, may be considered as the musical _Mark
+Tapley_, ready to look always on the sunny side. With a few rare
+exceptions, he appears to have taken life very easily.
+
+Muchly doth the Baron like Mr. HALL CAINE's story of _Captain Davy's
+Honeymoon_, only, short as it is, with greater effect it might have
+been shorter.
+
+The Baron, being in a reading humour, tried _The Veiled Hand_, by
+FREDERICK WICKS, a name awkward for anyone unable to manage his "r's."
+What Fwedewickwicks' idea of _A Veiled Hand_ is, the Baron has tried
+to ascertain, but without avail. Why not a Gloved Hand? Hands do not
+wear veils, any more than our old friends, the Hollow Hearts, wear
+masks. Hands take "vails," but "that is another story." However, _The
+Veiled Hand_ induced sleep, so the Baron extinguished both candles and
+Wicks at the same time, and slumbered.
+
+I have also had time to read _An Exquisite Fool_, published by OSGOOD.
+MCILVAINE & CO., and written by Nobody, Nobody's name being
+mentioned as being the author. It begins well, but it is an old,
+old tale--BLANCHE AMORY and the Chevalier, and so forth--and as _Sir
+Charles Coldstream_ observed, when he looked down the crater of Mount
+Vesuvius, "There's nothing in it."
+
+Most interesting is a short paper on "The Green Room of the Comedie
+Francaise," in the _English Illustrated Magazine_ for this month,
+pleasantly written by Mr. FREDERICK HAWKINS,--HAWKINS with an
+aspirate, not "'ENERY 'AWKINS" at present associated with "A
+CHEVALIER" in London. Mr. HAWKINS tells many amusing anecdotes, and
+gives a capital sketch of M. RENE MOLE. But the article would be
+damaged by extracts. Therefore, "_Tolle, lege_," says yours and
+everybody's, very truly,
+
+THE BARON DE BOOK-WORMS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "SAFE BIND, SAFE FIND!"
+
+SERGENT-DE-VILLE. "HA, M'SIEU!--_YOU_ HAVE YOUR DYNAMITERS UNDER LOCK
+AND KEY! TRES BIEN! _KEEP_ THEM!!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: WHAT ABOUT GLASS HOUSES?
+
+_First Jovial Cabby_ (_to Second Ditto_). "HI SAY, BILL, DID YER HEVER
+SEE SICH GUYS AS THESE 'ERE GIRLS MAKES OF THEIRSELVES? NOW, YE'D
+NIVER SEE A _MAN_ GO AND MAKE SUCH A RIDIK'LOUS HOBJICK OF 'ISSELF!!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A PUFF OF SMOKE.
+
+ (_What the heart of the young Vocalist said to the
+ Anti-Tobacconist, after reading Mr. Charles Santley's sage
+ observations on Singing and Smoking, in his new book "Student
+ and Singer."_)
+
+ ["Smoking is an art; it may be made useful or otherwise,
+ according as it is exercised."--Mr. SANTLEY.]
+
+ Tell me not, ye mournful croakers,
+ Smoking is a dirty habit.
+ Brainless are ye, sour non-smokers,
+ As a vivisected rabbit.
+
+ "Smoking is an Art," says SANTLEY;
+ There is Beauty in the bowl.
+ They who doubt it must be scantly
+ Blest with sense, or dowered with soul.
+
+ _As_ an Art it claims attention;
+ Study is the only way.
+ Smoking skill, _not_ smoke-prevention,
+ Is the thing we want to-day.
+
+ Art is long and smoke is fleeting;
+ But puff on until you learn
+ Good tobacco's not for _eating_!
+ Pipe-bowls are not meant to _burn_!
+
+ Smoke without expectorating,
+ Do not sputter, do not chew;
+ Puff not as though emulating
+ Some foul factory's sooty flue
+
+ Let not oily dark defilement
+ Sting your lips; there is no need.
+ Joy and care need reconcilement
+ For enjoyment of the weed.
+
+ Trust no "Germans," buy no "British,"
+ Sound Havanas only smoke!
+ "Lady Nicotine" is skittish,
+ Penny Pickwicks are no joke.
+
+ Smoke no strong shag, no rank "stinger,"
+ Pick your baccy, puff with skill,
+ And--although you are a singer,
+ You may smoke, and not feel ill.
+
+ Let us then be up and smoking,
+ An an Art the thing pursue;
+ As great SANTLEY, who's not joking,
+ Says _he_ does, and all _may_ do!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LADY GAY'S DISTRACTION.
+
+DEAR MR. PUNCH,--You are as fickle as the rest of your sex, I fear,
+otherwise you would not have requited my devotion to you and your
+interests in such an awful manner as you did in publishing my
+husband's letter last week!--and _such_ a letter! Oh, I could write
+such a _scathing_ reply to it!
+
+Of course, it was jealousy on the part of Sir CHARLES at my literary
+success--(setting aside the _wonderful_ tips)--which caused the
+explosion that led to his writing to you, but I never--never--thought
+you would insert his letter, especially as I slipped in a postscript
+which to my mind explained _everything_--as, indeed, postscripts
+_should_ do, or what is the good of writing a long letter about
+nothing in front of them? The wretch confesses that he laughed at my
+articles until he knew who wrote them, and then thought less of
+them! Isn't that like a husband?--I won't say like a _man_, as so few
+husbands _are_ men!--at least, in the eyes of their wives. The moment
+a wife does something her husband can't do, he dislikes and pooh-poohs
+it; whereas, the more accomplishments a husband displays, the more a
+wife appreciates him, or _says_ so even if she doesn't!--which is a
+noble falsehood, for how few women are large-minded enough to pretend
+to admire qualities which they despise because they don't possess
+them--I'm not sure that this is what I mean, nor do I quite understand
+it, but it reads well, which is more than Sir CHARLES'S stuff does!
+
+And then his impertinence in proposing to "edit" my letters!--as if
+anyone could be more capable of doing that than _you_?--(you will
+observe that it is solely on _your_ account that I am annoyed!)--I
+could not brook such interference!--I don't know exactly the meaning
+of "brooking" anything, but I know I wept enough tears of annoyance
+to form a decent "brook" of themselves! I need hardly tell you that it
+was a biting sarcasm on my part to suggest that he should finish his
+letter with a "verse," as I always do--but there--men don't
+understand sarcasm--(one of _our_ most frequently employed weapons of
+offence!)--and the poor thing thought I was in earnest, and did it!
+And _what_ a verse! I could write better with my left hand!
+
+I need scarcely tell you that I have left him--(this is why my address
+is not to be published)--as I consider my duty to the Public rendered
+it imperative that I should do so, for I should not think much of any
+woman who allowed a paltry consideration of domestic obligations to
+weigh against the pursuit of a career of usefulness.
+
+If, therefore, a vein of sadness and cynicism runs through this
+letter, you will understand that it does _not_ proceed from any regret
+at the "breaking up of the happy home," but rather from sorrow at the
+thought that once again the intellectual superiority of one of the
+softer sex has not been accepted in the right spirit by the possessor
+of the weaker mind, to whom she owes obedience!
+
+I trust I have done with Sir CHARLES for ever!--especially if
+he speaks the truth in saying that "following my tips has ruined
+him"--for why should any woman burden herself with an impecunious
+husband? He does not know where I am, and I feel still more secure in
+my retreat from having just heard that he has engaged the services of
+several of the most prominent London Detectives to trace me!
+
+Owing no devotion now to Sir CHARLES--who will appreciate the
+following tender lines with which I close my letter--
+
+ O woman! in our hours of ease,
+ Thou art not _very_ hard to please!
+ Thou takest what the gods may send;
+ But, thwarted!--thou wilt turn and rend!
+
+I am able to subscribe myself, dear _Mr. Punch_,
+
+Yours more devotedly than ever,
+
+LADY GAY.
+
+[From internal evidence, we are inclined to believe that this present
+letter, or the one last week from "Sir CHARLES," is a forgery. In
+former correspondence Lady GAY mentioned "Lord ARTHUR" as her husband.
+We pause for an explanation.--ED.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PROVERB FOR VOCALISTS, A PROPOS OF SIR JOSEPH BARNBY'S REMARKS ON
+ARTICULATION.--"Take care of the sense, and the sounds will take care
+of themselves."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Why is pepper essential to the health of the new LORD MAYOR?--Because
+without "Kn." (cayenne) he would be "ill."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: NATURE AND ART.
+
+_A.R.A._ "BY GEORGE, THIS VIEW'S MAGNIFICENT! I SAY, FLUFFER, YOU
+REALLY OUGHT TO HAVE THOSE WOODS PAINTED."
+
+_Mr. Fluffer_ (_late in the Upholstery line, retired._) "'M--M. DO YOU
+THINK THAT WOULD IMPROVE 'EM? WHAT COLOUR, NOW?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LEFT TO THE LADIES.
+
+MY DEAR MR. PUNCH,
+
+Everyone--I mean everyone with a right mind--will sympathise with
+those nice people at Bristol who have been holding a "Woman's
+Conference." So kind and thoughtful of them, isn't it? I notice
+that Lady BATTERSEA gave a spirited account of a Confederation
+of Temperance of some thirty villages in Norfolk. The dear, good
+inhabitants are to keep off the allurements of drink by "listening to
+such shining lights as Canon WILBERFORCE, and social teas, processions
+with banners, and magic-lanterns, play their part." How they are
+to listen to the teas, processions and lanterns, I don't quite
+understand, in spite of the fact that they (the aforesaid teas, &c.)
+seem to be "playing their parts." Evidently teas, &c., are amateur
+Actors.
+
+Then somebody who described herself as "a nobody from nowhere," is
+said to have "touched a moving chord, as she spoke with great feeling
+of the sympathy and the moral help the poor give back to those who
+work among them." What "moving chord?" Sounds like a bell-rope!
+
+Then another lady who wore "the black and lavender dress of the
+Sisters of the People," followed with a paper, "perhaps overfull
+of details." And here let me say that I am quoting from "a woman
+correspondent" who seems to be full of admiration for her talking
+sisters. But in spite of this admiration, she knows their little
+faults. For instance, she describes a speech as "vigorous, racy, and
+perhaps a trifle sensational." Then, when someone else delivered an
+"address to educated mothers," she says that it excited deep interest,
+and "almost too many educated mothers threw themselves into the
+discussion that followed."
+
+Then she observes, "It was disappointing that Lady ABERDEEN was at the
+last moment forbidden by her Doctor to undertake the long journey from
+Scotland." So it was, most disappointing; and "at the last moment,"
+too!
+
+Then she announces that "Some ladies expressed a feeling, that
+introducing young men and women in business to each other, when
+assembled in their hundreds at Prince's Hall, was an office fraught
+with considerable responsibility." To be sure! Great responsibility!
+Might even be improper! Everyone should be _so_ careful!
+
+However, there was one good thing in this Woman's Conference that
+everyone will praise. The delightful, genial, charitable females seem
+to have kept to themselves. No men were present. What a blessing--_for
+the men_! Yours gratefully,
+
+AN OLD BACHELOR.
+
+_The Growleries, Lostbuttonbury, Singleton_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CHRISTMAS IS COMING!
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ When the ruddy autumn leaves
+ Flutter down on golden sheaves,
+ And on plum-trees one perceives
+ No more plums--
+ All the swallows have not fled,
+ Hardly is the summer dead--
+ Then, alas, it must be said
+ Christmas comes!
+
+ Christmas! Hang it all! But how
+ Can that be? 'Tis weeks from now.
+ What a fearful thought, I vow
+ That it numbs!
+ "Order Christmas papers" fills
+ Bookshops, bookstalls. With its bills,
+ Taxes, tips, fogs, frosts, coughs, chills,
+ Christmas comes!
+
+ Even Christmas-cards appear,
+ They are with us half the year,
+ I would banish them from here,
+ Say, to Thrums,
+ Or to any mournful place,
+ Where I'd never show my face,
+ For they tell one that, apace,
+ Christmas comes!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SEASONABLE CHRISTMAS MOTTO FOR WELL-KNOWN FINE-ART PUBLISHERS.--"TUCK
+in!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: FOOTBALL FEVER. SATURDAY AFTERNOON IN THE MIDLANDS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO "THE LAZY MINSTREL"
+
+ _On the publication of his Eighth Edition, with therein
+ Nineteen Poems originally written for Mr. Punch._
+
+[Illustration: The Lazy Laureate of the Thames.]
+
+ Who would not be a Minstrel Lazy?
+ A trifle crazy,
+ The best of them! Ah!
+ Here's ASHBY STERRY, in punt or wherry,
+ He's ever merry! sing "hey down derry,"
+ Or anything very
+ Like Tra! la! la! la!
+
+ On sunny days he trolls his lays
+ With gay guitar and Tra! la! la! la!
+ From groves and glades come meadow-sweet maids,
+ None of your saucy minxes or jades;
+ The poet is there
+ Without a care.
+ With no regret, with mild cigarette.
+ With gay guitar, and whiskey from Leith,
+ Will he be crowned with the Laureate wreath?
+
+(_The Nymph Pantalettina is heard singing_.)
+
+ Come where my ASHBY lies dreaming,
+ Dreaming for hours after lunch.
+ Softly! for he is scheming
+ Poems for _Mister Punch_!
+ Graceful is his position--
+ Hark! how he sweeps the strings,
+ While of his Eighth Edition
+ The Warbler STERRY sings:--
+
+(_The Bard chirpeth his roundelay_.)
+
+ "On 'Spring's Delights' in 'Hambledon Lock'
+ 'My Country Cousin' may hap--
+ With her I'll go
+ 'In Rotten Row,'
+ Stop on an 'oss
+ 'At Charing-Cross,'
+ For a 'Tam O'Shanter Cap.'
+
+ No gout? Oh no! But I'm 'Taken in Tow,'
+ And suffering from dejection,
+ 'Spring Cleaning' I'll use for a pair of old shoes
+ (Queer rhyme upon reflection),
+ 'Sound without Sense,' I've no pretence,
+ To write Shakspearian Sonnets.
+ Of her and him,
+ As suits my whim,
+ I sing, and I hymn her bonnets!"
+
+(_Chorus of Pantalettina and River Nymphs._)
+
+ So, hail to the Bard so merry,
+ To Lazy Laureate STERRY!
+ He'll sing of a Lock on the Thames! oh rare!
+ Or hymn a Lock of his Lady's hair.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONVERSATIONAL HINTS FOR YOUNG SHOOTERS.
+
+The subject of Lunch, my dear young friends, has now been exhausted.
+We have done, for the time, with poetry, and descend again to the
+ordinary prose of every-day shooting. Yet stay--before we proceed
+further, there is one matter apart from the mere details of sport,
+which may be profitably considered in this treatise. It is the divine,
+the delightful subject of
+
+SMOKING.
+
+First, I ask, do you know--(1), the man who never smokes from the
+night of the 11th of August up to the night of the 1st of February in
+the following year, for fear of injuring his sight and his shooting
+nerve? (2), the host who forbids all smoking amongst the guests
+assembled at his house for a shooting-party?
+
+You, naturally enough, reply that you have not the honour of being
+acquainted with these severe, but enthusiastic gentlemen. Nobody does
+know them. They don't exist. But it is very useful to affect a sort of
+second-hand knowledge of these Gorgons of the weed, as thus:--
+
+ _A Party of Guns is walking to the first beat of the day.
+ Time, say about_ 10.20 A.M.
+
+_Young Sportsman_ (_who has a pipe in his mouth, to Second Sportsman,
+similarly adorned_). I always think the after-breakfast smoke is about
+the best of the day. Somehow, tobacco tastes sweeter then than at any
+other time of the day.
+
+_Second Sp._ (_puffing vigorously_). Yes, it's first class; but I hold
+with smoke at most times of the day, after breakfast, after lunch,
+after dinner, and in between.
+
+_Young Sp._ Well, I don't know. If I try to smoke when I'm actually
+shooting, I generally find I've got my pipe in the gun side of my
+mouth. I heard of a man the other day who knocked out three of his
+best teeth through bringing up his gun sharp, and forgetting he'd
+got a pipe in his mouth. Poor beggar! he was very plucky about it,
+I believe; but it made no end of a difference to his pronunciation
+till he got a new lot shoved in. Just like that old Johnnie in the
+play--Overland something or other--who lost his false set of teeth
+on a desert island, and couldn't make any of the other Johnnies
+understand him.
+
+_Second Sp._ I've never had any difficulty with my smoking. I always
+make a habit of carrying my smokes in the left side of my mouth.
+
+_Young Sp._ Oh, but you're pretty certain to get the smoke or the
+ashes or something, blown slap into your eyes just as you're going to
+loose off. No. (_With decision_.) I'm off my smoke when the popping
+begins.
+
+_Second Sp._ Don't be too hard on yourself, my boy. They tell me there
+are precious few birds in the old planting this year, so you can treat
+yourself to a cigarette when you get there. It never pays to trample
+on one's longing for tobacco too much.
+
+_Young Sp._ No, by Jove. Old REGGIE MORRIS told me of a fellow he met
+somewhere this year, who goes regularly into training for shooting.
+Never touches baccy from August to February, and limits his drink
+to three pints a day, and no whiskeys and sodas. And what's more, he
+won't let any of his guests smoke when he's got a shoot on, He's got
+"No Smoking" posted up in big letters in every room in the house.
+REGGIE said it was awful. He had to lock his bedroom door, shove the
+chest-of-drawers against it, and smoke with his head stuck right up
+the chimney. He got a peck of soot, one night, right on the top of his
+nut. Now I call that simple rot.
+
+_Second Sp._ Ah, I've heard of that man. Never met him though, I'm
+thankful to say. Let me see what's the beggar's name? JACKSON or
+BARRETT, or POLLARD, or something like that. He's got a big place
+somewhere in Suffolk, or Yorkshire, or somewhere about there.
+
+_Young Sp._ Yes, that's the chap, I fancy.
+
+Now that kind of thing starts you very nicely for the day. It isn't
+necessary that either of the sportsmen whose dialogue has been
+reported should believe implicitly in the absolute truth of what he is
+saying. Observe, neither of them says that he himself met this man.
+He merely gets conversation out of him on the strength of what someone
+else has told him. That, you see, is the real trick of the thing.
+Don't bind yourself to such a story as being part of your own personal
+experience. Work it in on another man's back. Of course there are
+exceptions even to this rule. But this question I shall be able to
+treat at greater length when I come to deal with the important subject
+of "Shooting Anecdotes."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Very often you can work up quite a nice little conversation on
+cigarettes. Every man believes, as is well-known, that he possesses
+the only decent cigarettes in the country. He either--(1), imports
+them himself from Cairo, or (2), he gets his tobacco straight from
+a firm of growers somewhere in Syria and makes it into cigarettes
+himself; or (3), he thinks Egyptian cigarettes are an abomination,
+and only smokes Russians or Americans; or (4), he knows a man,
+BACKASTOPOULO by name, somewhere in the Ratcliffe Highway, who
+has _the_ very best cigarettes you ever tasted. You wouldn't give
+two-pence a hundred for any others after smoking these, he tells you.
+And, lastly, there is the man who loathes cigarettes, despises those
+who smoke them, and never, smokes anything himself except a special
+kind of cigar ornamented with a sort of red and gold garter.
+
+Out of this conflict of preferences the young shooter can make
+capital. By flattering everybody in turn, he can practically get his
+smoking gratis, for everyone will be sure to offer him at least one
+cigarette, in order to prove the superiority of his own particular
+kind. And if the young shooter, after smoking it, expresses a proper
+amount of ecstasy, he is not at all unlikely to have a second offered
+to him. Most men are generous with cigarettes. Many a man I know
+would far rather give a beggar a cigarette than a shilling, though
+the cigarette may have cost, originally, a penny-halfpenny, or more--a
+strange and paradoxical state of affairs.
+
+Here is a final piece of advice. Admire all cigarette-cases, and say
+of each that it's the very best and prettiest you ever saw. You can
+have no notion how much innocent pleasure you will give.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NOTICE.--Rejected Communications or Contributions, whether MS.,
+Printed Matter, Drawings, or Pictures of any description, will in no
+case be returned, not even when accompanied by a Stamped and Addressed
+Envelope, Cover, or Wrapper. To this rule there will be no exception..
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, Or The London Charivari, Vol.
+103, November 19, 1892, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
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