summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/36775.txt
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to '36775.txt')
-rw-r--r--36775.txt7803
1 files changed, 7803 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/36775.txt b/36775.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..16a3500
--- /dev/null
+++ b/36775.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,7803 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Humorous Readings and Recitations, 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: Humorous Readings and Recitations
+ In prose and verse
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Leopold Wagner
+
+Release Date: July 18, 2011 [EBook #36775]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HUMOROUS READINGS AND RECITATIONS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Delphine Lettau and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ HUMOROUS READINGS
+ AND
+ RECITATIONS.
+
+
+
+ HUMOROUS READINGS
+ AND
+ RECITATIONS
+
+ _IN PROSE AND VERSE_.
+
+
+ SELECTED AND EDITED
+
+ BY
+ LEOPOLD WAGNER,
+
+ EDITOR OF
+ "MODERN READINGS AND RECITATIONS,"
+ "NEW READINGS FROM AMERICAN AUTHORS," ETC.
+
+
+ London and New York:
+ FREDERICK WARNE AND CO.
+ 1889.
+
+
+
+ LONDON:
+ BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+In introducing to the public a Third Series of "Popular Readings," I
+consider it merely necessary to state that the courtesy of authors and
+publishers has enabled me to bring together a choice selection of
+humorous pieces which have acquired a large share of popularity, in
+addition to a number of others that may justly be regarded as novelties.
+
+Concerning the former, I have so often had occasion to answer inquiries
+respecting particular pieces for recitation, that it occurred to me the
+handy collection of those most generally sought after, but hitherto
+scattered through various publications, would be welcomed by many; and I
+took steps accordingly. How far I have succeeded in my purpose a glance
+at the Contents-list will show. For the fresh matter admitted to these
+pages, I sincerely trust that from among so many new candidates for
+popularity, at least one or two of them may be elected to represent the
+Penny Reading Constituents of each respective Borough for some time to
+come.
+
+Once more I beg to express my indebtedness and thanks to those authors
+and publishers who have so generously placed their copyright pieces at
+my disposal.
+
+ L. W.
+
+BROMPTON.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ ACCOMPANIED ON THE FLUTE _F. Anstey_ 1
+ THE TROUBLES OF A TRIPLET _W. Beatty-Kingston_ 8
+ SLIGHTLY DEAF _Bracebridge Hemming_ 10
+ THE LADY FREEMASON _H. T. Craven_ 18
+ WHAT HAPPENED LAST NIGHT! _F. B. Harrison_ 24
+ THE FATAL LEGS _Walter Browne_ 27
+ THE CALIPH'S JESTER _From the Arabic_ 29
+ A JOURNEY IN SEARCH OF NOTHING _Wilkie Collins_ 32
+ GEMINI AND VIRGO _C. S. Calverley_ 37
+ KING BIBBS _James Albery_ 41
+ MOLLY MULDOON _Anonymous_ 48
+ THE HARMONIOUS LOBSTERS _Robert Reece_ 52
+ THE PROVINCIAL LANDLADY _H. Chance Newton_ 57
+ MY MATRIMONIAL PREDICAMENT _Leopold Wagner_ 58
+ ETIQUETTE _W. S. Gilbert_ 62
+ A LOST SHEPHERD _Frank Barrett_ 65
+ A MATHEMATIC MADNESS _F. P. Dempster_ 70
+ WAITING AT TOTTLEPOT _J. Ashby-Sterry_ 72
+ MARRIED TO A GIANTESS _Walter Parke_ 75
+ THE VISION OF THE ALDERMAN _Henry S. Leigh_ 79
+ THE DEMON SNUFFERS _Geo. Manville Fenn_ 80
+ THE WALRUS AND THE CARPENTER _Lewis Carroll_ 86
+ MY BROTHER HENRY _J. M. Barrie_ 89
+ A NIGHT WITH A STORK _W. E. Wilcox_ 92
+ THE FAITHFUL LOVERS _F. C. Burnand_ 95
+ THE WAIL OF A BANNER-BEARER _Arthur Matthison_ 96
+ THE DREAM OF THE BILIOUS BEADLE _Arthur Shirley_ 99
+ MY FRIEND TREACLE _Watkin-Elliott_ 101
+ THE VOICE OF THE SLUGGARD _Anonymous_ 107
+ ARTEMUS WARD'S VISIT TO THE TOWER
+ OF LONDON _Chas. Farrar Browne_ 108
+ MR. CAUDLE HAS LENT AN ACQUAINTANCE
+ THE FAMILY UMBRELLA _Douglas Jerrold_ 111
+ DOMESTIC ASIDES _Tom Hood_ 113
+ THE CHARITY DINNER _Litchfield Moseley_ 115
+ ACTING WITH A VENGEANCE _W. Sapte, Jun._ 120
+ MY FORTNIGHT AT WRETCHEDVILLE _George Augustus Sala_ 126
+ THE SORROWS OF WERTHER _W. M. Thackeray_ 132
+ MORAL MUSIC _Anonymous_ 133
+ BILLY DUMPS, THE TAILOR _Charles Clark_ 136
+ ON PUNNING _Theodore Hook_ 139
+ SEASIDE LODGINGS _Percy Reeve_ 140
+
+
+
+
+HUMOROUS READINGS
+
+AND
+
+RECITATIONS.
+
+
+
+
+ACCOMPANIED ON THE FLUTE.
+
+F. ANSTEY.
+
+
+The Consul Duilius was entertaining Rome in triumph after his celebrated
+defeat of the Carthaginian fleet at Mylae. He had won a great naval
+victory for his country with the first fleet that it had ever
+possessed--which was naturally a gratifying reflection, and he would
+have been perfectly happy now if he had only been a little more
+comfortable.
+
+But he was standing in an extremely rickety chariot, which was crammed
+with his nearer relations, and a few old friends, to whom he had been
+obliged to send tickets. At his back stood a slave, who held a heavy
+Etruscan crown on the Consul's head, and whenever he thought his master
+was growing conceited, threw in the reminder that he was only a man
+after all--a liberty which at any other time he might have had good
+reason to regret.
+
+Then the large Delphic wreath, which Duilius wore as well as the crown,
+had slipped down over one eye, and was tickling his nose, while (as both
+his hands were occupied, one with a sceptre the other with a laurel
+bough, and he had to hold on tightly to the rail of the chariot whenever
+it jolted) there was nothing to do but suffer in silence.
+
+They had insisted, too, upon painting him a beautiful bright red all
+over, and though it made him look quite new, and very shining and
+splendid, he had his doubts at times whether it was altogether becoming,
+and particularly whether he would ever be able to get it off again.
+
+But these were but trifles after all, and nothing compared with the
+honour and glory of it! Was not everybody straining to get a glimpse of
+him? Did not even the spotted and skittish horses which drew the
+chariot repeatedly turn round to gaze upon his vermilioned features? As
+Duilius remarked this he felt that he was, indeed, the central personage
+in all this magnificence, and that, on the whole, he liked it.
+
+He could see the beaks of the ships he had captured bobbing up and down
+in the middle distance; he could see the white bulls destined for
+sacrifice entering completely into the spirit of the thing, and
+redeeming the procession from any monotony by occasionally bolting down
+a back street, or tossing on their gilded horns some of the flamens who
+were walking solemnly in front of them.
+
+He could hear, too, above five distinct brass bands, the remarks of his
+friends as they predicted rain, or expressed a pained surprise at the
+smallness of the crowd and the absence of any genuine enthusiasm; and he
+caught the general purport of the very offensive ribaldry circulated at
+his own expense among the brave legions that brought up the rear.
+
+This was merely the usual course of things on such occasions, and a
+great compliment when properly understood, and Duilius felt it to be so.
+In spite of his friends, the red paint, and the familiar slave, in spite
+of the extreme heat of the weather and his itching nose, he told himself
+that this, and this alone, was worth living for.
+
+And it was a painful reflection to him that, after all, it would only
+last a day; he could not go on triumphing like this for the remainder of
+his natural life--he would not be able to afford it on his moderate
+income; and yet--and yet--existence would fall woefully flat after so
+much excitement.
+
+It may be supposed that Duilius was naturally fond of ostentation and
+notoriety, but this was far from being the case; on the contrary, at
+ordinary times his disposition was retiring and almost shy, but his
+sudden success had worked a temporary change in him, and in the very
+flush of triumph he found himself sighing to think, that in all human
+probability, he would never go about with trumpeters and trophies, with
+flute-players and white oxen, any more in his whole life.
+
+And then he reached the Porta Triumphalis, where the chief magistrates
+and the Senate awaited them, all seated upon spirited Roman-nosed
+chargers, which showed a lively emotion at the approach of the
+procession, and caused most of their riders to dismount with as much
+affectation of method and design as their dignity enjoined and the
+nature of the occasion permitted.
+
+There Duilius was presented with the freedom of the city and an address,
+which last he put in his pocket, as he explained, to read at home.
+
+And then an AEdile informed him in a speech, during which he twice lost
+his notes, and had to be prompted by a lictor, that the grateful
+Republic, taking into consideration the Consul's distinguished services,
+had resolved to disregard expense, and on that auspicious day to give
+him whatever reward he might choose to demand--"in reason," the AEdile
+added cautiously, as he quitted his saddle with an unexpectedness which
+scarcely seemed intentional.
+
+Duilius was naturally a little overwhelmed by such liberality, and, like
+every one else favoured suddenly with such an opportunity, was quite
+incapable of taking complete advantage of it.
+
+For a time he really could not remember in his confusion anything he
+would care for at all, and he thought it might look mean to ask for
+money.
+
+At last he recalled his yearning for a Perpetual Triumph, but his
+natural modesty made him moderate, and he could not find courage to ask
+for more than a fraction of the glory that now attended him.
+
+So, not without some hesitation, he replied that they were exceedingly
+kind, and since they left it entirely to his discretion, he would
+like--if they had no objection--he would like a flute-player to attend
+him whenever he went out.
+
+Duilius very nearly asked for a white bull as well; but, on second
+thoughts, he felt it might lead to inconvenience, and there were many
+difficulties connected with the proper management of such an animal. The
+Consul, from what he had seen that day, felt that it would be imprudent
+to trust himself in front of the bull, while, if he walked behind, he
+might be mistaken for a cattle-driver, which would be odious. And so he
+gave up that idea, and contented himself with a simple flute-player.
+
+The Senate, visibly relieved by so unassuming a request, granted it with
+positive effusion; Duilius was invited to select his musician, and chose
+the biggest, after which the procession moved on through the arch and up
+the Capitoline Hill, while the Consul had time to remember things he
+would have liked even better than a flute-player, and to suspect dimly
+that he might have made rather an ass of himself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That night Duilius was entertained at a supper given at the public
+expense; he went out with the proud resolve to show his sense of the
+compliment paid him by scaling the giddiest heights of intoxication. The
+Romans of that day only drank wine and water at their festivals, but it
+is astonishing how inebriated a person of powerful will can become, even
+on wine and water, if he only gives his mind to it. And Duilius, being a
+man of remarkable determination, returned from that hospitable board
+particularly drunk; the flute-player saw him home, however, helped him
+to bed, though he could not induce him to take off his sandals, and
+lulled him to a heavy slumber by a selection from the popular airs of
+the time.
+
+So that the Consul, although he awoke late next day with a bad headache
+and a perception of the vanity of most things, still found reason to
+congratulate himself upon his forethought in securing so invaluable an
+attendant, and planned, rather hopefully, sundry little ways of making
+him useful about the house.
+
+As the subsequent history of this great naval commander is examined with
+the impartiality that becomes the historian, it is impossible to be
+blind to the melancholy fact that in the first flush of his elation
+Duilius behaved with an utter want of tact and taste that must have gone
+far to undermine his popularity, and proved a source of much
+gratification to his friends.
+
+He would use that flute-player everywhere--he overdid the thing
+altogether: for example, he used to go out to pay formal calls, and
+leave the flute-player in the hall tootling to such an extent that at
+last his acquaintances were forced in self-defence to deny themselves to
+him.
+
+When he attended worship at the temples, too, he would bring the
+flute-player with him, on the flimsy pretext that he could assist the
+choir during service; and it was the same at the theatres, where
+Duilius--such was his arrogance--actually would not take a box unless
+the manager admitted the flute-player to the orchestra and guaranteed
+him at least one solo between the acts.
+
+And it was the Consul's constant habit to strut about the Forum with his
+musician executing marches behind him, until the spectacle became so
+utterly ridiculous that even the Romans of that age, who were as free
+from the slightest taint of humour as a self-respecting nation can
+possibly be, began to notice something peculiar.
+
+But the day of retribution dawned at last. Duilius worked the flute so
+incessantly that the musician's stock of airs was very soon exhausted,
+and then he was naturally obliged to blow them through once more.
+
+The excellent Consul had not a fine ear, but even he began to hail the
+fiftieth repetition of "Pugnare nolumus," for instance--the great
+national peace anthem of the period--with the feeling that he had heard
+the same tune at least twice before, and preferred something slightly
+fresher, while others had taken a much shorter time in arriving at the
+same conclusion.
+
+The elder Duilius, the Consul's father, was perhaps the most annoyed by
+it; he was a nice old man in his way--the glass and china way--but he
+was a typical old Roman, with a manly contempt for pomp, vanity, music,
+and the fine arts generally, so that his son's flute-player, performing
+all day in the courtyard, drove the old gentleman nearly mad, until he
+would rush to the windows and hurl the lighter articles of furniture at
+the head of the persistent musician, who, however, after dodging them
+with dexterity, affected to treat them as a recognition of his efforts
+and carried them away gratefully to sell.
+
+Duilius senior would have smashed the flute, only it was never laid
+aside for a single instant, even at meals; he would have made the
+player drunk and incapable, but he was a member of the _Manus Spei_, and
+he would with cheerfulness have given him a heavy bribe to go away, if
+the honest fellow had not proved absolutely incorruptible.
+
+So he would only sit down and swear, and then relieve his feelings by
+giving his son a severe thrashing, with threats to sell him for whatever
+he might fetch; for, in the curious conditions of ancient Roman society,
+a father possessed both these rights, however his offspring might have
+distinguished himself in public life.
+
+Naturally, Duilius did not like the idea of being put up to auction, and
+he began to feel that it was slightly undignified for a Roman general
+who had won a naval victory and been awarded a first-class Triumph to be
+undergoing corporeal punishment daily at the hands of an unflinching
+parent, and accordingly he determined to go and expostulate with his
+flute-player.
+
+He was beginning to find him a nuisance himself, for all his old shy
+reserve and unwillingness to attract attention had returned to him; he
+was fond of solitude, and yet he could never be alone; he was weary of
+doing everything to slow music, like the bold, bad man in a melodrama.
+
+He could not even go across the street to purchase a postage-stamp
+without the flute-player coming stalking out after him, playing away
+like a public fountain; while, owing to the well-known susceptibility of
+a rabble to the charm of music, the disgusted Consul had to take his
+walks abroad at the head of Rome's choicest scum.
+
+Duilius, with a lively recollection of these inconveniences, would have
+spoken very seriously indeed to his musician, but he shrank from hurting
+his feelings by plain truth. He simply explained that he had not
+intended the other to accompany him _always_, but only on special
+occasions; and, while professing the sincerest admiration for his
+musical proficiency, he felt, as he said, unwilling to monopolise it,
+and unable to enjoy it at the expense of a fellow-creature's rest and
+comfort.
+
+Perhaps he put the thing a little too delicately to secure the object he
+had in view, for the musician, although he was deeply touched by such
+unwonted consideration, waved it aside with a graceful fervour which was
+quite irresistible.
+
+He assured the Consul that he was only too happy to have been selected
+to render his humble tribute to the naval genius of so great a
+commander; he would not admit that his own rest and comfort were in the
+least affected by his exertions, for, being naturally fond of the flute,
+he could, he protested, perform upon it continuously for whole days
+without fatigue. And he concluded by pointing out very respectfully that
+for the Consul to dispense, even to a small extent, with an honour
+decreed (at his own particular request) by the Republic, would have the
+appearance of ingratitude, and expose him to the gravest suspicions.
+After which he rendered the ancient love-chant, "Ludus idem, ludus
+vetus," with singular sweetness and expression.
+
+Duilius felt the force of his arguments. Republics are proverbially
+forgetful, and he was aware that it might not be safe even for him, to
+risk offending the Senate.
+
+So he had nothing to do but just go on, and be followed about by the
+flute-player, and castigated by his parent in the old familiar way,
+until he had very little self-respect left.
+
+At last he found a distraction in his care-laden existence--he fell
+deeply in love. But even here a musical Nemesis attended him, to his
+infinite embarrassment, in the person of his devoted follower. Sometimes
+Duilius would manage to elude him, and slip out unseen to some sylvan
+retreat, where he had reason to hope for a meeting with the object of
+his adoration. He generally found that in this expectation he had not
+deceived himself; but, always, just as he had found courage to speak of
+the passion that consumed him, a faint tune would strike his ear from
+afar, and, turning his head in a fury, he would see his faithful
+flute-player striding over the fields in pursuit of him with
+unquenchable ardour.
+
+He gave in at last, and submitted to the necessity of speaking all his
+tender speeches "through music." Claudia did not seem to mind it,
+perhaps finding an additional romance in being wooed thus; and Duilius
+himself, who was not eloquent, found that the flute came in very well at
+awkward pauses in the conversation.
+
+Then they were married, and, as Claudia played very nicely herself upon
+the _tibiae_, she got up musical evenings, when she played duets with the
+flute-player, which Duilius, if he had only had a little more taste for
+music, might have enjoyed immensely.
+
+As it was, beginning to observe for the first time that the musician was
+far from uncomely, he forbade the duets. Claudia wept and sulked, and
+Claudia's mother said that Duilius was behaving like a brute, and she
+was not to mind him; but the harmony of their domestic life was broken,
+until the poor Consul was driven to take long country walks in sheer
+despair, not because he was fond of walking, for he hated it, but simply
+to keep the flute-player out of mischief.
+
+He was now debarred from all other society, for his old friends had long
+since cut him dead whenever he chanced to meet them. "How could he
+expect people to stop and talk," they asked indignantly, "when there was
+that confounded fellow blowing tunes down the backs of their necks all
+the time?"
+
+Duilius had had enough of it himself, and felt this so strongly that one
+day he took his flute-player a long walk through a lonely wood, and,
+choosing a moment when his companion had played "Id omnes faciunt" till
+he was somewhat out of breath, he turned on him suddenly. When he left
+the lonely wood he was alone, and near it something which looked as if
+it might once have been a musician.
+
+The Consul went home, and sat there waiting for the deed to become
+generally known. He waited with a certain uneasiness, because it was
+impossible to tell how the Senate might take the thing, or the means by
+which their vengeance would declare itself.
+
+And yet his uneasiness was counterbalanced by a delicious relief: the
+State might disgrace, banish, put him to death even, but he had got rid
+of slow music for ever; and as he thought of this, the stately Duilius
+would snap his fingers and dance with secret delight.
+
+All disposition to dance, however, was forgotten upon the arrival of
+lictors bearing an official missive. He looked at it for a long time
+before he dared to break the big seal, and cut the cord which bound the
+tablets which might contain his doom.
+
+He did it at last; and smiled with relief as he began to read: for the
+decree was courteously, if not affectionately, worded. The Senate,
+considering (or affecting to consider) the disappearance of the
+flute-player a mere accident, expressed their formal regret at the
+failure of the provision made in his honour.
+
+Then, as he read on, Duilius dashed the tablets into small fragments,
+and rolled on the ground, and tore his hair, and howled; for the
+senatorial decree concluded by a declaration that, in consideration of
+his brilliant exploits, the State hereby placed at his disposal two more
+flute-players, who, it was confidently hoped, would survive the wear and
+tear of their ministrations longer than the first.
+
+Duilius retired to his room and made his will, taking care to have it
+properly signed and attested. Then he fastened himself in; and when they
+broke down the door next day they found a lifeless corpse, with a
+strange sickly smile upon its pale lips.
+
+No one in Rome quite made out the reason of this smile, but it was
+generally thought to denote the gratification of the deceased at the
+idea of leaving his beloved ones in comfort, if not in luxury; for,
+though the bulk of his fortune was left to Carthaginian charities, he
+had had the forethought to bequeath a flute-player apiece to his wife
+and mother-in-law.
+
+ (_From_ "THE BLACK POODLE," _by permission of Messrs. Longmans,
+ Green, & Co._)
+
+
+
+
+THE TROUBLES OF A TRIPLET.
+
+W. BEATTY-KINGSTON.
+
+
+ I am, I really think, the most unlucky man on earth;
+ A triple sorrow haunts me, and has done so from my birth.
+ My lot in life's a gloomy one, I think you will agree;
+ 'Tis bad enough to be a twin--but I am one of three!
+
+ No sooner were we born than Pa and Ma the bounty claimed;
+ I scarce can bear to think they did--it makes me feel ashamed,
+ They got it, too, within a week, and spent it, I'll be bound,
+ Upon themselves--at least, I know I never had _my_ pound.
+
+ Our childhood's days in ignorance were lamentably spent,
+ Although I think we more than paid the taxes, and the rent;
+ For we were shown as marvels, and--unless I'm much deceived--
+ The smallest contributions were most thankfully received.
+
+ We grew up hale and hearty--would we never had been born!--
+ As like to one another as three peas, or ears of corn.
+ Between my brothers _Ichabod_, _Abimelech_ and me
+ No difference existed which the human eye could see.
+
+ This likeness was the cause of dreadful suffering and pain
+ To me in early life--it nearly broke my heart in twain;
+ For while my conduct as a youth was fervently admired,
+ That of my fellow-triplets left a deal to be desired.
+
+ I was amiable, and pious, too--good deeds were my delight,
+ I practised all the virtues--some by day and some by night;
+ Whilst _Ichabod_ imbrued himself in crime, and, sad to say,
+ _Abimelech_, when quite a lad, would rather swear than pray.
+
+ Think of my horror and dismay when, in the Park at noon,
+ An obvious burglar greeted me with, "Hullo, Ike, old coon!"
+ He vanished. Suddenly my wrists were gripped by Policeman X----,
+ "Young man, you are my prisoner on a charge of forgin' cheques."
+
+ He ran me in, and locked me up, to moulder in a cell,
+ The reason why he used me thus, alas! I know too well.
+ He took me for _Abimelech_, my erring brother dear,
+ Who was "wanted" by the Bank of which he'd been the chief cashier.
+
+ Next morn the magistrate remarked, "This is a sad mistake,
+ Though natural enough, I much regret it for your sake;
+ But if you will permit me to advise you, I should say
+ Leave England for some other country, very far away.
+
+ "For if you go on living in this happy sea-girt isle,
+ Although your conduct (like my own) be pure and free from guile,
+ Your likeness to those sinful men, your brothers twain, will lead,
+ I fear, to very serious inconveniences indeed."
+
+ I took the hint, and sailed next day for distant Owhyhee,--
+ As might have been expected, I was cast away at sea.
+ A Pirate Lugger picked me up, and--dreadful to relate--
+ _Abimelech_ her captain was, and _Ichabod_ her mate.
+
+ I loved them and they tempted me. To join them I agreed,
+ Forsook the path of virtue, and did many a ghastly deed.
+ For seven years I wallowed in my fellow-creatures' gore,
+ And then gave up the business, to settle down on shore.
+
+ My brothers on retiring from the buccaneering trade,
+ In which, I'm bound to say, colossal fortunes they had made,
+ Renounced their wicked courses, married young and lovely wives,
+ Went to church three times on Sundays, and led sanctimonious lives.
+
+ As for me,--I somehow drifted into vileness past belief,
+ Earned unsavoury distinction as a drunkard and a thief;
+ E'en in crime, ill-luck pursued me: I became extremely poor,
+ And was finally compelled to beg my bread from door to door.
+
+ I'm deep down in the social scale, no lower can I sink;
+ Upon the whole, experience induces me to think
+ That virtue is not lucrative, and honesty's all fudge,--
+ For _Ichabod's_ a Bishop--and _Abimelech's_ a Judge!
+
+ (_From_ "PUNCH," _by permission of the Proprietors_.)
+
+
+
+
+SLIGHTLY DEAF.
+
+BRACEBRIDGE HEMMING.
+
+
+Mr. Loyd was a retired shopkeeper residing at The Lodge, Norwood. He had
+amassed a fortune of thirty thousand pounds in the grocery business,
+principally by sanding his sugar and flouring his mustard, and other
+little tricks of the trade. Yet he went to church every Sunday with a
+clear conscience. At the time I introduce him to you he was a widower
+with one son, Joseph, aged eighteen.
+
+Joseph was a shy, putty-faced youth, who had the misfortune to be deaf.
+"Slightly deaf," his father called him, but he grew worse instead of
+better, and threatened to become as deaf as a post or a beetle in time.
+Of course his infirmity stood in the way of his getting employment, for
+he was always making mistakes of a ludicrous and sometimes aggravating
+nature. Add to this that Joseph was very lean and his father very fat,
+and you will understand why people called them "Feast and Famine," or
+"Substance and Shadow."
+
+One morning after breakfast, Mr. Loyd, who had been looking over some
+paid bills, exclaimed, "Joe."
+
+Joseph was reading the paper, and made no answer.
+
+"Joe," thundered his father.
+
+This time the glasses on the sideboard rang, and Joseph got up, walked
+to the window and looked out.
+
+"What are you doing?" shouted Mr. Loyd.
+
+"I thought I heard the wind blow," replied Joseph.
+
+"Well! I like that; it was I calling."
+
+"You!"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Joseph invariably grew very angry if he did not hear anybody, for he was
+ashamed of his deafness; but he often fell into a brown study and was as
+deaf as an adder.
+
+Besides this he was more deaf on one side than on the other, as is often
+the case, and he happened to have his very bad ear turned to his father.
+
+"Why don't you speak out?" said he.
+
+"I did," replied Mr. Loyd.
+
+"You always mumble."
+
+"I halloaed loud enough to wake the dead."
+
+"You know I'm slightly deaf."
+
+"Slightly! You'll have to buy an ear-trumpet."
+
+"Trumpet be blowed," answered Joseph.
+
+"Here, put these bills on the file," exclaimed Mr. Loyd, pointing to the
+bundle.
+
+Joseph advanced to the table, took up the bills, and deliberately threw
+them into the fire, where they were soon blazing merrily.
+
+Mr. Loyd uttered a cry of dismay, sprang up and ran to the grate, but he
+was too late to save them.
+
+"You double-barrelled idiot!" he cried.
+
+"What's the fuss now?" asked Joseph calmly.
+
+He always was as cool as a cucumber, no matter what he did.
+
+"You'll never be worth your salt."
+
+"What's my fault?"
+
+"I said salt."
+
+"Keep quiet and I'll get you some."
+
+"No!" roared Mr. Loyd.
+
+"What did you say so for then? It seems to me you don't know your own
+mind two minutes together."
+
+Mr. Loyd stamped his foot with impatience on the carpet.
+
+"Oh dear! what a trial you are," he exclaimed. "They are receipted
+bills, and I told you to put them on the file. F. I. L. E. Do you hear
+that?"
+
+"I hear it now," responded Joe. "It's a pity you won't speak up."
+
+"So I do."
+
+"They'll never call you leather-lungs."
+
+"Oh Joe, Joe! you'll be the death of me. You're a duffer, and it is no
+use saying you're not. I was going to tell you I'd got a berth for you,
+but I'm afraid you could not keep it."
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"Clerk in the office of my old friend, Mr. Maybrick, the stockbroker."
+
+"Eh!" said Joseph. "What's a mockstoker?"
+
+"A stockbroker," shouted Mr. Loyd.
+
+"Why didn't you say so at first. Do you think I don't know what that is?
+I'm not quite such a fool as that comes to."
+
+"You'd aggravate a saint, Joe."
+
+"Paint your toe! Have you gone mad?"
+
+"Great heavens! I shall hit you; get out," shrieked his father.
+
+"Got the gout. Oh! that's another thing. I thought you'd have it. You
+drink too much port after dinner."
+
+"I say, Joe," cried Mr. Loyd, "are you doing this on purpose? You don't
+understand a word I say; in fact, you misconstrue everything."
+
+"If that is so I can't help it."
+
+"You're getting worse."
+
+"Don't do that," replied Joe gravely.
+
+"Eh?"
+
+"Don't curse me. If I am deaf, that is to say slightly deaf, it is my
+misfortune, not my fault; you ought to make allowance for me, and speak
+louder."
+
+"Do you want me to be a foghorn, or a river steam tug?"
+
+"Certainly not."
+
+"Or a cavalry man's trumpet, or a bellowing bull?"
+
+"No, father."
+
+"Or," continued Mr. Loyd with rising temper, "a spouting whale, an Old
+Bailey barrister, a town-crier, a grampus, a locomotive blowing off
+steam, an Australian bell-bird, or a laughing jackass?"
+
+"I'm sure I never laugh, so you needn't fling that at me."
+
+"I wish you were dumb as well as deaf," groaned Mr. Loyd.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because I might then get you into the asylum."
+
+"File 'em," muttered Joseph. "He's still thinking of the bills."
+
+"Confound him," muttered his father. "He's worse than a county court
+judgment. I don't know what to do with him."
+
+To soothe his nerves he lighted a cigar, and looking in the fire puffed
+away at the weed, while Joe again took up the paper and went on reading.
+
+Half-an-hour passed.
+
+Then Mr. Loyd said, "You know you're getting worse, but you're so
+obstinate you won't admit it, and it's six to four you'll not yield."
+
+Joseph looked up with irritating calmness.
+
+"No, thanks," he exclaimed.
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I never bet."
+
+"Who talked about betting?" yelled his father.
+
+"You offered six to four on the field, and----"
+
+"I didn't. Yah!"
+
+"Never mind; I sha'n't take you," replied Joseph.
+
+Mr. Loyd got up and did a war dance.
+
+"Who asked you to?"
+
+"You did. It only wants six weeks to the Derby, and----"
+
+Mr. Loyd lost all control over himself for the moment. He took up the
+coal-scuttle and threw it at his son, which was a very reprehensible
+thing to do; but it did not hurt Joseph, for that intelligent youth saw
+it coming, and ducking his head, it went with a crash through the window
+into the street.
+
+"That's a clever thing to do," said Joseph, without so much as winking.
+"You need not get mad because I won't bet."
+
+His father shook his fist at him.
+
+"You'll be my death," he replied, sinking into a chair with a gasp.
+
+"I can't help it if I am deaf," rejoined the imperturbable Joseph.
+
+"You're sharper than a serpent's tooth."
+
+"It wasn't very sharp of you to break the window."
+
+"Go to Putney!"
+
+"Where am I to get putty?" said Joseph. "Send for a glazier."
+
+"Bless us and save us!" groaned Mr. Loyd.
+
+"There isn't much saving in having a broken window to catch cold by."
+
+Mr. Loyd rushed into the hall, and taking down his hat and coat from the
+rack, put them on.
+
+"Come up to town at once," he exclaimed; "we'll go and see Mr.
+Maybrick."
+
+"What's the good of a hayrick?" asked Joseph simply.
+
+"Eh?"
+
+"You can't stop a hole in a window with a hayrick."
+
+"I said Maybrick, the broker," roared Mr. Loyd, putting his hands to his
+mouth.
+
+"I do wish you'd speak out."
+
+"Get a trumpet. Yah!"
+
+"Trump it! we're not playing whist."
+
+"Oh dear!" sighed Mr. Loyd. "He must be apprenticed to Maybrick. I'll
+pay a premium if it's a hundred pounds. I'm not a hog, and don't want to
+enjoy this all by myself. I'll share it with another. It's too much for
+one to struggle with. I can't undertake the worry single-handed, it's
+too much."
+
+He had to go close up to Joseph and bawl in his ear to make him
+understand what he wanted, for he had never found his son's deafness so
+bad as it was that day.
+
+Joseph was quite willing to go, and quitting the house, they took the
+train and went to town together.
+
+It was yet early in the day, and they reached the broker's office about
+twelve, finding him in and at leisure. During the journey, Mr. Loyd had
+impressed upon Joseph the necessity of keeping his ears open as well as
+he could, for if he made any mistakes he would soon get "chucked," as
+they say in the City, and Joe promised to be as wideawake as his
+infirmity would permit him.
+
+How wideawake this was, we shall see.
+
+Mr. Maybrick had done business with Mr. Loyd for many years, and
+received him in his private office with all the cordiality of an old
+friend.
+
+"Brought my boy to introduce to you," exclaimed the retired grocer.
+
+"Very glad to know the young gentleman," replied Mr. Maybrick; "take a
+chair. Have a cigar. Quite a chip of the old block, I see; what's his
+name?"
+
+"Joseph. Joe for short."
+
+"Very good; now what can I do for you, are you going to open stock?"
+
+"Not to-day."
+
+"Markets are very firm."
+
+"I didn't come for that purpose, Maybrick; I want to get the youngster
+into your office."
+
+"Oh! yes," answered the broker, "I forgot; you spoke about it a little
+while ago."
+
+"Last time I was up, when I bought those 'Russians'!"
+
+"Against my advice, and burnt your fingers over them."
+
+"True."
+
+"Well, I'll take him. One hundred pounds premium, no salary first year,
+then seventy pounds and an annual rise according to ability."
+
+"That will do."
+
+"I hope he's smart."
+
+"Smart as a steel trap, though sometimes he's a little absent-minded;
+and you've got to speak loudly, maybe more than once, but that's only
+now and again. I'll write you a cheque and leave him here, so that he
+will know the ropes."
+
+"Very well, I daresay we shall get on. I've ten clerks, and I've only
+changed once in ten years."
+
+"That speaks well for you."
+
+"I read character, and I'm kind," said Mr. Maybrick. "Sit at my table,
+you'll find pen and ink."
+
+While Mr. Loyd was getting out his cheque-book and writing the draft,
+Mr. Maybrick turned his attention to his new clerk.
+
+"Have you ever been out before?" he queried.
+
+"Go out of the door?" replied Joe. "Yes sir, if you want to say anything
+of a private nature, I'll go with pleasure."
+
+"No! no! do you understand work?"
+
+"I beg your pardon, I sha'n't shirk anything."
+
+"Bless me!" cried the broker, "I mean do you know business?"
+
+"No business," answered Joseph, with a solemn shake of the head; "I am
+sorry for that; times are dull though, all round."
+
+"I've got plenty, you mistake me, don't run away with that idea, you
+won't find this an easy place."
+
+"Got a greasy face, have I?" responded Joseph. "It's not very polite of
+you to tell me that."
+
+"What the----" began Mr. Maybrick, when Joe's father handed him the
+cheque.
+
+"There's the needful," exclaimed Mr. Loyd.
+
+"Thanks," replied the broker, adding, "I say, old friend isn't Master
+Joseph a little hard of hearing?"
+
+"Oh! ah! not that exactly."
+
+"What then?"
+
+"He's got a cold in his head."
+
+"Is that all?"
+
+"Yes, he got his feet wet," said Mr. Loyd confidentially, "and I had to
+bawl at him this morning."
+
+"I thought he was, ahem! a little deaf."
+
+"Bless you no, raise your voice, that's all you've got to do."
+
+"Ah! I see. It's bad to be like that," answered Mr. Maybrick, whose
+doubts were removed. "The weather's been so bad, everyone has had cold
+more or less."
+
+Telling the intelligent Joseph that he should expect him home to dinner
+at seven, Mr. Loyd took leave of the broker, who gave his new clerk some
+accounts to enter in a book, saying that he might sit in his office for
+the remainder of that day and he would find him desk-room on the morrow,
+after which he hurried away to see what was going on in the general
+room.
+
+Joseph hung up his hat and coat, and set to work. He certainly meant to
+do his best. They say a certain place, which the Hebrews call Sheol, is
+paved with good intentions; anyhow the fates were against him. Never
+before had his deafness been so bad. It seemed to have swooped down upon
+and swamped him all at once.
+
+Scarcely had he begun his work than he was startled by the ringing of a
+bell.
+
+It was just over his head and proceeded from the telephone.
+
+Now Joseph knew just as much about a telephone as he did about the
+phonograph or the dot-and-dash system of telegraphy.
+
+He sprang from his chair, turned ghastly pale, and fancied it was an
+alarm of fire.
+
+What should he do?
+
+For fully a minute he stood gazing vacantly at the box and the bell.
+
+Then it rang again.
+
+Joseph jumped half-a-foot in the air.
+
+Then he rushed into the general room, where he found Mr. Maybrick
+talking to a client.
+
+"Please sir, can I disturb you for a moment?" he said.
+
+"I'm very particularly engaged, Loyd," replied the broker.
+
+"Excuse me, but----"
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"There's a bell ringing."
+
+"Oh! the telephone. I forgot to tell you to attend to it."
+
+"It's rung twice."
+
+"Then somebody is in a hurry. Answer and come and tell me what it is."
+
+"How do you do it, sir?"
+
+"Speak through the instrument, ask who it is, and what he wants, and put
+the tube to your ear."
+
+The fright had somewhat stimulated Joseph's powers of hearing, for he
+caught these instructions and hastened back to the inner office. After a
+little experimenting he put himself in communication, and the following
+colloquy ensued.
+
+"Who is it?" asked Joe.
+
+"Oliphant," was the reply.
+
+"Elephant," mused Joe. "That's funny."
+
+But he went at it again.
+
+"What do you want?"
+
+"By one o'clock, sell 10,000 Mex. Rails."
+
+Joe heard this order imperfectly.
+
+"Buy 10,000 ox-tails," he said to himself. "This is a queer business."
+
+Yet he was not discouraged.
+
+Joe had not come into the City for nothing. He meant to do his duty or
+perish in the attempt.
+
+"Right," he answered. "Is that all?"
+
+"Yes. I'll call after lunch for the contract note."
+
+"Very well, sir."
+
+Having received his instructions, Joe, very proud of his success in
+manipulating such a peculiar instrument as the telephone, sought his
+employer.
+
+"Well, Loyd," exclaimed that gentleman.
+
+"It's all right, sir," replied Joe.
+
+"What is?"
+
+"The elephant wants you to buy him 10,000 ox-tails."
+
+Mr. Maybrick elevated his eyebrows.
+
+"Who did you say?" he demanded in a loud voice.
+
+"The elephant."
+
+"Mr. Oliphant, I suppose you mean."
+
+"Ah! it might have been Oliphant, or Boliphant, it was something like
+that."
+
+"Ox-tails. Why not Mex. Rails.? Mexican Railways, you know."
+
+"Humph," said Joe, "very likely."
+
+"Are you sure he said 'buy?'"
+
+"Oh! yes, sir, that was distinct enough, and he said he'd come after
+lunch for the distracting note."
+
+"Contract note."
+
+"It may be that. The gentleman did not speak very distinctly."
+
+"Oliphant has a low voice," said Mr. Maybrick, thoughtfully, "but he's
+one of my best customers. Perhaps he's heard something; he must have got
+some information. I'll have a bit in this myself. Oliphant is a very
+shrewd and careful speculator. That will do, Loyd."
+
+Joseph departed, highly delighted.
+
+"Ha! ha! ha!" laughed Mr. Maybrick when Joe had gone, "my new clerk is
+an odd one; 'Buy 10,000 ox-tails for the elephant,' that's good. I must
+tell that story in the House."
+
+He beckoned to his manager, who was a man named Mappin, and told him to
+buy the required quantity of Mexican railway stock.
+
+"Market's very weak, sir. It's fallen to-day one half already in
+anticipation of a bad dividend," replied Mappin.
+
+"Can't help that."
+
+Mappin went away to execute the order.
+
+An hour elapsed, and a special edition of an evening paper was brought
+into the office.
+
+It contained a telegram from Mexico, stating that there had not been one
+revolution, and two earthquakes in that country before breakfast, as
+usual, that morning. The railway dividend was remarkably good, and
+Mexican Preference Stock went up five per cent., at which price the
+broker took upon himself to close the account, thinking his client would
+be well satisfied with his profits.
+
+"Clever fellow, Oliphant," muttered Mr. Maybrick; "up to every move on
+the board. Deuced clever!"
+
+At that moment Mr. Oliphant, who was a stout, red-faced man, inclined to
+apoplexy, rushed into the office.
+
+He was agitated, and looked as if he was going to have a fit.
+
+"Close the account," he gasped.
+
+"I have done so," was the reply.
+
+"What at?"
+
+"A rise of five per cent."
+
+"It will ruin me," groaned Oliphant.
+
+"How? you telephoned me to buy."
+
+"I said 'sell.'"
+
+"Then my clerk made a mistake," exclaimed Maybrick; "but it's a lucky
+mistake for both you and I, for I followed your lead."
+
+"You're joking!"
+
+"Never was more serious in my life. I'll give you a cheque at once."
+
+Mr. Oliphant's face brightened.
+
+"And I'll give your wooden-headed clerk a ten pound note," he said.
+
+"That may console him for his dismissal," said Maybrick, dryly.
+
+"Are you going to get rid of him?"
+
+"Most decidedly. I cannot afford to keep a clerk who makes errors of
+that kind. This time it has come out all right; next time it may be all
+wrong."
+
+"Just so," replied Mr. Oliphant.
+
+He handed Maybrick the ten pounds, which the broker gave to Mappin,
+telling him to present it to Joseph, and inform him that his services
+would not be any longer required, and the premium his father had paid
+should be returned by post. Then the broker gave Mr. Oliphant his
+unexpected profits, and they went out to have a bottle of champagne
+together.
+
+Mappin sought Joseph.
+
+"What are you doing?" he asked.
+
+"Doing sums," replied Joe, which was his idea of book-keeping.
+
+"Well, you need not do any more."
+
+"No, I don't think it a bore," said Joe. "It's all in the day's work,
+don't you know?"
+
+"You're not wanted here."
+
+"Can't I hear? what do you know about it?"
+
+"The fool's deaf," cried Mappin, raising his voice. "Take this tenner
+and go."
+
+Joe heard this plain enough.
+
+"Sacked!" he said, laconically.
+
+"Yes," replied Mappin, nodding his head vigorously.
+
+"What for?"
+
+"Playing the fool with the telephone. We've no use for you."
+
+"Oh! very well. I thought I shouldn't answer."
+
+"You see, we don't run our business on the silent system."
+
+Joe put on his hat and coat, with that perfect unconcern which always
+distinguished him.
+
+"Good morning," he said, pocketing the note. "I say, I don't think much
+of telephones, do you?"
+
+"Yes, it's a very clever invention."
+
+"Ah! there's no accounting for taste."
+
+With these words Joseph quitted the office, and took a walk in the City.
+
+ (_From_ "AWFUL STORIES," _by permission of_ Messrs. DIPROSE &
+ BATEMAN.)
+
+
+
+
+THE LADY FREEMASON.
+
+H. T. CRAVEN.
+
+
+ Vainly we seek it, Sanscrit or Greek writ
+ In hist'ry, the myst'ry of Solomon's secret:--
+ The dark queen of Sheba p'raps tried to get hold of it,
+ But didn't; at least if she _did_, we're not told of it.
+ If McAbel of Lodge number one lets it slip,
+ His brother O'Cain of Lodge two, gives the grip
+ _A la garotte_ they say. Be that as it may,
+ The Cowan is somehow put out of the way.
+ So now if you've fear for my prudence, dispel it;
+ First place, I don't know--next, I don't mean to tell it
+ But praise a shrewd guess, if you think I deserve it,
+ The cream of the secret is--_how to preserve it_!
+ A sworn brother mason who'd ever disseminate
+ His knowledge, or blab, would be worse than effeminate!
+ On feminine weakness, though, let me be reticent,
+ Rememb'ring the tale of the famous Miss Betty St.
+ Ledger, whose name sheds a permanent grace on
+ One fifty--the Lodge of the Lady Freemason.
+
+ My Lord Doneraile, Ne'er known to fail
+ In duties masonic, held land in entail
+ With a mansion near Dublin, of such wide dimension,
+ That a Freemason's Lodge of no little pretension
+ Was warranted, charter'd, and duly appointed,
+ And worshipful ruler my lord was anointed.
+ No master, 'twas said, ever laid down the law so;
+ No masons kept secrets so sacred--or swore so!
+ None drill'd and so skill'd were, in sep'rate degree,
+ By the P. M. presiding (of course my Lord D.)
+ It beggars description--you'd fail to appreciate
+ The hubbub within when they met to '_initiate_.'
+
+ Such tyling and tapping, Such knocking and rapping,
+ Such shrieks and such squeaks--such clapping and slapping
+ Such mauling and hauling and tearing and swearing,
+ Such whisp'ring of secrets and 'tell-if-you-dare'-ing--
+ Such groans and such yells, And such roast-goosey smells,
+ When the poker was used--like the scene in 'The Bells'
+ You doubtless have thought so appalling--enerving--
+ You'd think 'twas some madman, who thought himself Irving;
+ The cauterization, On good information,
+ Amounted, I say, to a partial cremation;
+ And sore on the subject were all Erin's gay sons
+ Next day, when the boys gave 'em sauce for 'fried masons.'
+
+ Be it known that Miss Betty was Doneraile's daughter,
+ And one Richard Aldworth aspired to court her,
+ Yet made his advances with progress so scanty,
+ He really remain'd much _in statu quo ante_;
+ His motto was '_Spero_,' But hope was at zero;
+ In the lady's eye Dick didn't pose as a hero
+ When her father, Lord Doneraile, ask'd of him, whether
+ He'd join the F.M.'s; he had shown the white feather!
+ Whereat the proud beauty declared that no other
+ Should e'er be _her_ slave than 'a man and a _brother_':
+ So Dick, having dined, and not quite _compos mentis_,
+ Agreed to go in for an 'entered apprentice.'
+
+ The eve had arrived, and the hall so baronial,
+ Was deck'd in due form for the night's ceremonial;
+ Miss Betty, in passing downstairs, chanced to see
+ Tho' the Chubb had been lock'd, they had left in the key
+ Of a small ante-room of some minor utility,
+ But prized by the Lodge for its accessibility:
+ Miss said to herself, 'Tho' I fear the attempt, I
+ Should like just to see what a Lodge is like--empty!'
+ Oh! daughters of Eve, There are some who believe
+ Your tongues are your weakness--your failing, verbosity;
+ While others contend, You'll never amend
+ Of that fault Mrs. Bluebeard possess'd--curiosity!
+ Now I--though I'd fain dub such slanders as petty--
+ Own they do say as much of dear, charming Miss Betty:
+ Tho' found to be equal, To hold tongue or speak well
+ With other good masons--but wait for the sequel!
+
+ In through this outer door--closing it warily;
+ Out through an inner door--softly and fairyly--
+ _She's there!_ In the Lodge, where wax tapers are blazing,
+ All deftly arranged with precision amazing:--
+ In the east for the Worshipful Boss is a throne.
+ In the west, Senior Warden--the places all shown
+ (No doubt to prevent any squabbles or wrangles)
+ Initiall'd on chair-backs, in gilded triangles;
+ On a table deep myst'ries we must not unravel--
+ The Mallet, the Plumb, and the Gauge, and the Gavel!
+ Other engines whose uses we fear to unriddle--
+ The Thumb-screw--the Pincers--a Poker--a Griddle!
+ With tapers and papers and paraphernalia,
+ Blue ribbons and jewels and things call'd 'Regalia!'
+ The silence and solitude there were delicious;
+ And any one caring to feel superstitious,
+ Might fancy the ghosts of freemasons, translated
+ To Lodges above--or below--reinstated,
+ Array'd in their mouldy old aprons; each brother
+ Past Master, who'd passed from this world to another.
+
+ But horror of horrors! whilst here she was musing,
+ Came footsteps without, and--oh! sound most confusing!
+ She heard the key turned. (That same key that beguiled
+ In the first-mention'd door.) _Now_ 'twas lock'd and fast tyled!
+ She rush'd to the ante-room, wild to get back,
+ But this cooled her courage, 'twas now _cul de sac_;
+ And hark! In the Lodge--to augment her disaster--
+ The Masons assembling, escorting the Master!
+ To hide while she thought how to 'scape from mishap,
+ She closed t'other door of this snug little trap;
+ That door has a crevice, and thereby new woes arise,
+ To secrets forbidden in vain 'tis to close her eyes;
+ How can she but note the masonic particulars,
+ With no cotton-wool to cram in her auriculars?
+ She heard her dad ask, most distinctly--and trembled
+ At Dogberry's words--"Are we here all dissembled?"
+
+ Then commenced ceremonials misty and mystical,
+ Questions and answers in form catechistical.
+ My lord, in a tone both emphatic and sonorous,
+ Impressing on each that his duties were onerous;
+ (One duty, to Betty, seem'd highly improper--
+ 'Twas 'kill, without questioning, any eavesdropper!')
+ When the master, with sudden and well-feigned dismay,
+ For he very well knew that he'd got it to say,
+ Cried 'Hark, there is danger, I feel that a stranger
+ Who's seeking for knowledge is coming this way!'
+ Each took up a napkin--the end dipt in water,
+ And cried '_Porkitotius!_ Give him no quarter!'
+ While outside the door sundry knocks loud and clamorous
+ (As Vulcan might deal when in humour sledge-hammerous)
+ Were echoed within by three knocks--just the same,
+ With the pertinent query--'How now! What's your game?'
+ And a chap (_deshabille_) in great perturbation
+ Is 'run in,' very much like a prig to a station.
+
+ Disguised as he was, through the _a-propos_ hole
+ The lady identified Aldworth's red poll,
+ And thought, 'Well, I wish you, poor fellow, good luck,
+ Or--more to the purpose--I wish you, good pluck!'
+ For her father was urging in solemn oration,
+ 'You need, my young friend, for your fearful probation
+ Endurance--true Courage--and strong Veneration!
+ We commence with (don't grin, sir!) a pleasant frivolity:--
+ Just give of Endurance a taste of your quality;
+ 'Tis nothing--a towelling. Brothers, prepare!'
+ Then each had a flick at Dick's legs--which were bare:
+ He danced and he pranced at each cut of the towel
+ And prod from the rear with a sharp-pointed trowel,
+ And look'd--as he caper'd in lily-white kilt--
+ The ghost of a Highlander dancing a lilt.
+ To Scotch eyes, however, The steps might seem clever,
+ Dick show'd less a hero in Betty's than ever,
+ And shock'd, when he cried--cutting up rather rough--
+ 'D longstroke your optics--hold hard! That's enough!'
+
+ 'Enough?' said the worshipful, 'Yes, of this fun!
+ Stern proof of your courage has not yet begun;
+ D'ye hear, sir, those knocks? Brothers, let in the stoker,
+ And form a procession to bring in the poker!
+ See the surgeon is ready to make all secure
+ With lancet and tourniquet, bandage and ligature!'
+ But why freeze your marrow--Your feelings why harrow?
+ Your hearts are too soft and our space is too narrow
+ To tell all the horrors! 'Twould fill you with awe
+ To listen to half that Elizabeth saw:--
+ Let us come to Dick's howl--such a howl!--which as soon
+ As she heard it, Miss Betty fell down in a swoon
+ All in a lump, With a bump and a thump
+ That made all the brothers to gape and to jump.
+ And turn pale and cry, 'Bedad there's a spy
+ Shut up in that closet, and there he shall die!
+
+ To rush to the chamber--to find what was in it
+ And seize the eavesdropper--was the work of a minute;
+ To lift up and shake her, To rouse up and wake her
+ To consciousness--then in the Lodge-room to take her,
+ Was work for six brothers, who cried as they brought her,
+ 'We've sought her and caught her!' My lord cried, 'My daughter!'
+ And sunk down as needing, himself, a supporter:--
+ In rush'd the tylers, Crusty old file-ers!
+ With anger 'a busting their blessed old bilers;'
+ Looking so grim at her, One raised his cimeter,
+ And to very short shift was advancing to limit her,
+ As 'Hold!' cried my lord, 'Hear your master--or rather,
+ I'd speak to you all, as her judge--not her father!
+ Perchance she knows nothing, and, if she will swear it,
+ Her life shall be spared--_I_, your _Master_, will spare it!
+ Oh, tell me, my child, what you've seen--what you've heard?'
+ The truthful girl sobb'd, 'Ev'ry act! ev'ry word!'
+ 'Alas,' faltered he, 'you have seal'd your own doom!'
+ And 'Down with the spy!' cried each one in the room;
+ One raised a dagger, Some shouted 'Scrag her!'
+ Some raised a trap-door, and rush'd forward to drag her,
+ When a voice like a thunder-clap topp'd all the rest,
+ And Dick semi-dress'd Presented his breast
+ Before her, 'Strike _here_!' was his manly request:
+ 'Strike me if you dare, By jingo, I swear
+ Of her you shall touch not so much as a hair!
+ I mean, my good sirs, Whatever occurs
+ To your lives or mine, you shall not take _hers_!
+ Her white arm how dare you place finger or fist on?'
+ And Dick, shooting out his own arm like a piston,
+ Knock'd over a senior warden who held her;
+ Sent spinning a middle-aged junior--his elder,
+ Hit out at a tyler, A blatant reviler,
+ Mash'd the mug of a masher call'd 'Tim' the Beguiler;
+ 'Look out!' cried another, 'The Saxon's a bruiser!'
+ And straightway got one on his 'conk'--a confuser!
+ A dozen unitedly Shouted excitedly
+ 'Fell him, or else this young fellow will wallop us!'
+ Down went two deacons, Not very weak ones,
+ And a blow on the nose of the third burst a polypus,
+ When the hero (Dick now at the title arrives,
+ Denied him before he had handled his fives,
+ So many bawling, Reeling and sprawling,
+ For each brother knocked down another in falling),
+ Had 'flutter'd the Voices' from east to the west,
+ He paused like a warrior taking his rest,
+ Or Spartan who'd caused lots of Persians to topple, he
+ Took breath--as _he_ did at a place call'd Thermopylae.
+
+ Now outspoke my lord in a masterful way,
+ 'A truce and a parley! I've something to say!
+ 'Tis writ in our laws "If an eavesdropper pries
+ And filches our secrets, he (mark the HE!) dies!"
+ Now this is a _she_--therefore _not_ an eavesdropper;
+ To kill her, I say, would be highly improper
+ Unless she objects. To do as directs
+ The master (c'est moi!). Now mark what I say next!
+ Let's make her a mason, And put a good face on
+ The matter, believing she'll prove not a base one;
+ I'll take on myself--ending doubt and confusion--
+ To write to Great Queen Street and get absolution!'
+ Then upspake the stoker--A regular croaker,
+ 'I'd like to know how you'll get over the poker!'
+ 'Long ago,' said my lord---the precise _annus mundi_
+ 'I can't call to mind--_regno Coli Jucundi_,
+ (A monarch whose province was Pipo-cum-Fiddlum--
+ A part of the region of Great Tarrididdlom)
+ Sundry by-laws were pass'd for emergencies various
+ Whereby the submission to brand is vicarious:
+ Will some volunteer (_Her_ substitute here)
+ Submit to the crucial test? 'Tis severe!'
+ Dick on now spake, 'E'en to the stake
+ 'I'll go, like a martyr, as proxy to take
+ All over again for the dear lady's sake;--
+ That is (here he tenderly glanced), she approving?'
+ 'I do!' said the maiden, in accent quite loving.
+ 'Agreed!' shouted all who'd been punch'd, 'Be it so!'
+ Glad, no doubt, of the chance to give Dick _quid pro quo_.
+
+ The lady withdrew, in well-guarded condition;
+ The deck's quickly clear'd for the second edition
+ Of flicks and of kicks, Pinching and licks,
+ Twingeing and singeing--but murmur of Dick's
+ None heard e'en a word; he was truly heroic,
+ And went through it all with a smile, like a stoic;
+ And when he--so rumpled from processes recent--
+ Retired to make himself decently decent,
+ Miss St. Ledger return'd--resolution her face on--
+ Took the oaths, and was enter'd a 'Prenticed Freemason!
+
+
+Moral.
+
+ When you meet with a mason, just mention this lass;
+ I warrant she'll prove an excuse for a glass!
+ If he's a true brother, the toast is a favourite,
+ He's good for a bottle, but mind _you_ don't pay for it!
+ You've but to edge her Name in, and pledge her,
+ The Lady Freemason--MISS BETTY ST. LEDGER!
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+WHAT HAPPENED LAST NIGHT!
+
+_From the French of M. Charles Monselet, by_ F. B. HARRISON.
+
+
+I cannot deceive myself--I was horribly tipsy last night. Let him who
+has never been in the like case throw the first empty bottle at me!
+
+How did it happen? In this way. I, a civilian, reading law, was invited
+to dine at the garrison mess. I had never been at a similar
+entertainment, and I cannot but think, now that I look back on it, that
+the officers played some trick on me. I only knew that they were
+prodigiously polite, which always looks suspicious. From a certain
+point, from the third course, I remember very little; a sort of cloudy
+curtain intercepts the view like the curtains that come down in a
+pantomime, and I don't know whether I was Clown, or Pantaloon, or
+Columbine.
+
+Yet something must have happened to me, a great many things. I've been
+sleeping in my white tie; and then my face! What a shockingly yellow,
+dissipated face! Upon my word, it is a pretty affair! At my time,
+one-and-twenty, to be overcome by wine like a schoolboy out for a
+holiday!
+
+I cannot express what I think of it.
+
+How am I to know what happened last night? Ask my landlady? No; I cannot
+let her see how ashamed I am. Besides, she would only know the condition
+in which I came home; and that I can guess.
+
+They say that from a single bone Professor Owen can reconstruct an
+entire antediluvian animal; I must try and do something similar to
+reconstruct my existence during the last twelve or fourteen hours. I
+must get hold of two or three clues.
+
+Where can I find them?
+
+In my pockets, perhaps.
+
+Since I was a small boy I have always had the habit of stuffing them
+with all manner of things. Now, this is the time for me to search them.
+
+I tremble. What shall I find?
+
+ [_Searches his waistcoat pocket._
+
+I have gently insinuated two fingers into my waistcoat-pocket,
+and have brought out my purse. Empty! Hang it!
+
+ [_Lifts his overcoat from the floor._
+
+On picking up my overcoat I have found my pocket-book, half open, and
+the papers fallen from it on the carpet.
+
+The first of these papers which catches my eye is the _carte_ of last
+night's dinner. Well, who was there? How many of us? Several of the
+fellows I knew, of course; but which of them? Happy thought! The _menu_
+will remind me of their various tastes and reveal their names to me.
+
+'Oysters.' Well, I know that the Colonel is a tremendous hand at
+oysters, so I am sure he was there.
+
+'Mulligatawny.' That is Captain Simpkin's soup, or rather liquid fire,
+so Simpkins was there. Two of them.
+
+'Roast Beef.' Makes me think of little Dumerque, the Jersey man, who
+wants to be a thorough Englishman. He was there.
+
+'Saddle of Mutton.' Tom Horsley, the inveterate steeple-chaser.
+
+'Charlotte Russe.' That is Ned Walker, who published his travels from
+"Peterborough to Petersburg." Now I know pretty well who some of my
+fellow-guests were. As for the others----
+
+ [_Picks up some photographs._
+
+Hallo! were there women at the mess? No, certainly not. Then we must
+have talked of women, and the men must have given me photographs of
+their female relatives. Strange thing to do! especially as I don't know
+the ladies. Here's an ancient and fish-like personage in a blue jersey.
+Dumerque's grandmother, I'll be bound. Here a stout, middle-aged dame,
+widow probably. I know Simpkins wants to marry a widow, but why give me
+her portrait?
+
+And this--this is charming! Quite in the modern style--low forehead,
+small nose, tiny mouth, all eyes, and what splendid eyes! and such
+lashes! She is fair, as well as one can judge from a photograph. And the
+little curls on her forehead are like rings of gold. And so young, a
+mere child. A lovely figure; our forefathers would have compared her to
+a rose-tree, but then our forefathers were not strong in similes. She
+has neither ear-rings nor necklace; perhaps that gives her that look of
+disdain. Disdain! she knows nothing yet of life, but tries to seem tired
+of it. They are all like that.
+
+Who is she? She must be the Colonel's daughter; I've heard that his
+daughter is a pretty girl. I must have expressed my warm admiration of
+the photograph, and he must have responded by giving it to me. Did I ask
+him for her hand? Did he refuse it? or did he put off his reply? Perhaps
+that was why I drank too much.
+
+Now let me proceed. What further happened? Let me continue my
+researches.
+
+ [_Tries the pockets of his overcoat._
+
+By Jingo! Two visiting cards! The first says:
+
+ "Captain Wellington Spearman,
+ FIRST ROYAL LANCER DRAGOONS."
+
+The other:
+
+ "Major Garnet Babelock Cannon,
+ RIFLE ARTILLERY."
+
+Now, what does it all mean? I do not know those military gentlemen. They
+must have been guests like myself. How do I come to have their cards?
+There must have been some dispute, some quarrel, some row. These two
+cards must have been given in exchange for two of mine.
+
+It all comes back to me!
+
+A duel--perhaps two duels!
+
+But duels about what? Whom did I affront? I know I'm an awful fire-eater
+when I've drank too much. But was I the challenger or the challenged? I
+think my left cheek is rather swollen as if from a blow; but that is
+mere fancy. What dreadful follies have I got myself into?
+
+I can make out some pencil marks on the first card, that of the Captain
+in the Lancer Dragoons. Yes. "Ten o'clock, behind St. Martin's Church."
+
+Ah, a hostile meeting, that is clear. I must run, perhaps I shall be in
+time.
+
+No, too late; it is half-past eleven.
+
+I am dishonoured, branded as a coward! No one will believe me when I say
+that I had a headache, and overslept myself on the morning of a duel.
+
+I have no energy to look further in my pocket. Still, one never
+knows----
+
+ [_Brings out a handkerchief._
+
+A handkerchief--a very fine one--thin cambric. But it is not one of
+mine. There is a coronet in the corner. How did I come by this
+handkerchief? Could I have stolen it? I seem to be on the road to the
+county gaol.
+
+Oh, how my head aches!
+
+A flower is in my button-hole. How did it come there? Forget-me-nots;
+their blue eyes closed, all withered and drooping. I could not have
+bought so humble a bouquet at the flower-shop; it must have been given
+me. It was given me, it came to me from the fair one with golden curls.
+Her father gave it to me from her, knowing that I was about to risk my
+life--to risk my life for her sake, no doubt.
+
+Yes, that is it. My fears increase. I dread to know more. I am afraid to
+prosecute my researches in my pockets. I may find my hands full of
+forget-me-nots--or of blood!
+
+Oh! ah! by jove!
+
+What now?
+
+This overcoat is not mine. No, mine is dark grey, this is light grey. I
+have not travelled through my pockets, but through the pockets of
+somebody else.
+
+But then--if the coat is not mine, neither is the duel.
+
+Not mine the _carte_.
+
+Not mine the photographs.
+
+Not mine the forget-me-nots.
+
+Not mine the cards.
+
+I have not stolen the handkerchief.
+
+I am all right; thank goodness I am all right!
+
+And my romance about the Colonel's lovely daughter--I am sorry about it,
+upon my word. At least, I am sorry for her, for I fear now she will
+never make my acquaintance.
+
+ (_By permission of_ MESSRS. R. BENTLEY & SON.)
+
+
+
+
+THE FATAL LEGS.
+
+WALTER BROWNE.
+
+
+I am an actor, or rather, I call myself one. I am, however,
+"disengaged;" the more so since Widow Walker has----. But let me not
+anticipate; which, by-the-bye, I never could have done--no matter. I
+took apartments, comfortably furnished, with a widow lady named Walker.
+I was "first floor back"; and "first floor front" was Mr. Simon Simpkin,
+of the ---- Theatre. The widow always called us "first floors," either
+"back" or "front," and never by our names, although we never called her
+out of hers. If we had, she would not have come. She was an obstinate
+woman, but at times she got confused. She always called me in the
+morning, and once she called me "front," and then went to Simpkin with
+my shaving water. When I called her back, she called me something else,
+and threw the pitcher at me. I was in hot water for a while.
+
+The Widow Walker was fair, fat, and forty--that is, rather fair,
+extremely fat, and very forty. She might be more; at any rate her voice
+was forte too. The actor, Simpkin, was fragile and long. He played heavy
+parts, which possibly was the cause of his constant complaint that he
+had not got his share of "fat." Although lengthy, he was even less in
+his various diameters than I was, still I longed for his length. And
+why? The Widow Walker wallowed in wealth untold, and I could see she
+smiled upon the suit of Simon Simpkin. Well she might. It was
+second-hand. He, too, was a widower, or rather, he would have been if
+his wife had lived. I mean, if she had lived to be his wife. But she
+didn't. She died before the fatal knot was tied; in fact, it was not
+tied at all. No matter, he had loved before, while my suit was brand
+new. I determined to try it on. I longed to win the widow for my wife--I
+should say for myself. One day I saw the actor kiss her through the
+keyhole. We were rivals from that moment--at least I was. He didn't see
+me, or he would have been one too; I mean one also. That is to say there
+would have been two of us, whereas there was only one of me--no matter.
+
+The widow went a good deal to the theatre. She ordered him, and he gave
+her orders--that is, "passes for two." He knew her size. She always took
+"twos" in seats. He did the villains at the theatre, while I did the
+hero at home. He bellowed in blank verse, while I blew the kitchen fire
+with the bellows. He mashed her, while I mashed the potatoes for supper.
+But I determined to beard the clean-shaved lion in his lair. In short,
+or rather, at length, I obtained an engagement, and became an actor. My
+rival and myself now stood on the same footing. I mean we should have
+done, only, in a word, we didn't. Simon Simpkin, as before observed,
+indeed observed anyhow, was slender as a willow wand, and appropriately
+pliable, especially about the legs. Still, on the stage, his nether
+limbs looked round and well proportioned. His calves might pass for
+cows, and his knees were second elbows, or rather, "Elba's"--they held a
+bony part in exile.
+
+On the other hand--I should say legs--my tights were always loose, and
+while the widow smiled on his understanding, she smiled _at_ mine. I
+thirsted for my hated rival's blood, or rather for his flesh, more
+correctly speaking, for the shape of his legs--technically, for his
+"leg-shapes." Having failed in an attempt to have his blood by means of
+a darning-needle, I determined to go for his shapes. I went for them one
+night before the performance. I went to his dressing-room and got them.
+That night the Widow Walker was in front. I was desperate. I was
+determined that she should see her Simpkin in all his naked--I should
+say his unpadded--deformity, and that mine--that is, my limbs--should be
+resplendent in his borrowed plumes. But alas, all my plans--and
+myself--were violently overthrown--by Simpkin.
+
+I had merely insinuated one leg in the woolly pads, when he insinuated
+another somewhere else. We argued the matter all over my dressing-room.
+Meanwhile, time jogged merrily along. The curtain was raised, and so
+were we eventually; but unfortunately I had only retained one half of
+those precious pads. The right was left on my leg, but Simpkin had
+carried off the left leg all right! What was I to do? My left leg would
+not look right, or if it did, my right would be wrong. There was no
+time, however, for consideration, as my face required sponging before
+applying the sticking-plaster, and eventually I had to hobble on to the
+stage with two odd understandings--that is, one odd one and one even
+one. Even that was odd, which appears odd--no matter.
+
+Fortunately I went on from the O.P. side, which enabled me to put my
+best leg foremost. In the centre of the stage I met Simpkin, who had
+entered from the prompt side. The widow gazed with rapture on us both,
+until, oh, horror! after a short scene it was necessary that each of us
+should retire to the place from whence we came. We advanced towards it,
+backwards, and mutually stumbling, our other legs became exposed to
+view. A yell from the audience, the sack from the management, and a
+week's notice from the widow, subsequently greeted us. Besides which,
+Simpkin and myself are not on the best of terms. We get into argument
+when we meet in the streets. I stay at home a good deal now.
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+THE CALIPH'S JESTER.
+
+(FROM THE ARABIC.)
+
+
+ On a _musnud_ of state was reclining the Caliph, the Mighty Haroun;
+ His brow like the sun it was shining, his face it was like the full moon,
+
+ And his courtiers around him were standing, like stars in an indigo sky,
+ And the _saki_ the wine-cup was handing--for the monarch, though pious,
+ was dry.
+
+ And the poets their works were reciting in Arabic numbers divine,
+ The hearts of all hearers delighting with verses like Afdhal's or mine.
+
+ Then the Caliph glared round the assembly, as a lion glares round on the
+ herd,
+ And the knees of the courtiers grew trembly, and their hearts fluttered
+ e'en as a bird;
+
+ And cold drops were distilled from each forehead, and each tongue to its
+ palate did cling,
+ For their fear of their Caliph was horrid--he was such a passionate king!
+
+ At length in a voice that with passion was shaking, it pleased him to
+ speak:--
+ "Does he know whom he treats in this fashion? Did you e'er behold aught
+ like his cheek?
+
+ "This poet, this jester, this chaffer, this pig's son, this bullock,
+ this ass,
+ This black-hearted, black-visaged Kaffir, this Infidel, ABU NUWAS!"
+
+ "I bade him come hither to meet us, in this serious Council of State;
+ And this is the way he dares treat us. Ye dogs, he is five minutes late!"
+
+ Then the heart of his Highness relented; Rashid was of changeable mood;
+ "Maybe he's been somehow prevented; to get in a rage does no good.
+
+ "His jests, too, are always so pleasant, one somehow his impudence
+ stands;
+ Besides, poor Mesrour just at present has plenty of work on his hands.
+
+ "But although I can't perfectly tame him till he goes to the Nita to
+ school,
+ At least I can thoroughly shame him, and make him appear like a fool.
+
+ "Slaves, fetch me some eggs--not new laid--you can find some stale ones
+ that will do.
+ Now execute quick what I bade you, or else I will execute _you_."
+
+ They brought him the eggs in a charger, all studded with many a pearl,
+ The same pattern--though just a bit larger--as that of Herodias' girl;
+
+ And the Caliph took one egg, and hid it away in his cushion, which done,
+ He bade them all do so. They did it; and sat down awaiting the fun.
+
+ With an air that was saucy and braggish, with a step that was jaunty and
+ spruce,
+ With a smile that was merry and waggish, with a mien that was reckless
+ and loose,
+
+ With a "How is your high disposition to-morrow, if God should so will?"
+ With a "Here in our ancient position, your Majesty seeth us still!"
+
+ With a face all be-chalked and be-painted, with a bound through the
+ portal doth pass
+ One with whom we're already acquainted, the world-renowned Abu Nuwas!
+
+ "Right welcome! Right welcome! my brother!" his Majesty smilingly spake,
+ "We were just now in want of another, a nice game at forfeits to make.
+
+ "Whatever I do you must watch it, and each do precisely the same--
+ If I catch you chaps laughing you'll catch it! sit still and attend to
+ the game.
+
+ "If you do just as I do, precisely, a _dinar_ apiece shall ye gain,
+ If you don't, won't I give it you nicely--Mesrour you stand by with the
+ cane!"
+
+ He spake: and the smile on his features was mischievous, cunning and
+ grim,
+ And the courtiers, poor awe-stricken creatures, smiled feebly and gazed
+ upon him.
+
+ "Cluck, cluck, cluck aroo!" representing the note of a jubilant hen,
+ The Caliph arises, presenting an egg, to the sight of all men.
+
+ "Cluck, cluck, cluck aroo!" and the rabble are all at once up on their
+ legs,
+ And with ornithological gabble display their mysterious eggs.
+
+ Then without in the least hesitating steps Abu Nuwas before all.
+ "Cock-a-doodle doo doo!" imitating a rooster's hilarious call.
+
+ "Now I know why it is that you cackle," said he, "when you're trying
+ to talk!
+ And you find me a hard one to tackle, because I am COCK OF THE WALK!"
+
+ (_From_ "TEMPLE BAR," _by permission of the Editor_.)
+
+
+
+
+A JOURNEY IN SEARCH OF NOTHING.
+
+WILKIE COLLINS.
+
+
+"Yes," said the doctor, pressing the tips of his fingers with a
+tremulous firmness on my pulse, and looking straight forward into the
+pupils of my eyes, "yes, I see: the symptoms all point unmistakeably
+towards one conclusion--Brain. My dear sir, you have been working too
+hard; you have been following the dangerous example of the rest of the
+world in this age of business and bustle. Your brain is over-taxed--that
+is your complaint. You must let it rest--there is your remedy."
+
+"You mean," I said, "that I must keep quiet, and do Nothing?"
+
+"Precisely so," replied the doctor. "You must not read or write; you
+must abstain from allowing yourself to be excited by society; you must
+have no annoyances; you must feel no anxieties; you must not think; you
+must be neither elated nor depressed; you must keep early hours and take
+an occasional tonic, with moderate exercise, and a nourishing but not
+too full a diet--above all, a perfect repose is essential to your
+restoration, you must go away into the country, taking any direction you
+please, and living just as you like, as long as you are quiet and as
+long as you do Nothing."
+
+"I presume he is not to go away into the country without ME," said my
+wife, who was present at the interview.
+
+"Certainly not," rejoined the doctor, with an acquiescent bow. "I look
+to your influence, my dear madam, to encourage our patient in following
+my directions. It is unnecessary to repeat them, they are so extremely
+simple and easy to carry out. I will answer for your husband's recovery
+if he will but remember that he has now only two objects in life--to
+keep quiet, and to do Nothing."
+
+My wife is a woman of business habits. As soon as the doctor had taken
+his leave, she produced her pocket-book, and made a brief abstract of
+his directions for our future guidance. I looked over her shoulder and
+observed that the entry ran thus:--
+
+ "RULES FOR DEAR WILLIAM'S RESTORATION TO HEALTH.--No reading; no
+ writing; no excitement; no annoyance; no anxiety; no thinking. Tonic.
+ No elation of spirits. Nice dinners. No depression of spirits. Dear
+ William to take little walks (with me). To go to bed early. To get up
+ early. _N.B._--Keep him quiet. _Mem._ Mind he does Nothing."
+
+Mind I do nothing? No need to mind that. I have not had a holiday since
+I was a boy. Oh, blessed Idleness, after the years of merciless
+industry that have separated us, are you and I to be brought together
+again at last? Oh, my weary right hand, are you really to ache no longer
+with driving the ceaseless pen? May I, indeed, put you in my pocket and
+let you rest there, indolently, for hours together? Yes! for I am now,
+at last, to begin--doing Nothing. Delightful task that performs itself!
+Welcome responsibility that carries its weight away smoothly on its own
+shoulders!
+
+These thoughts shine in pleasantly on my mind after the doctor has taken
+his departure, and diffuse an easy gaiety over my spirits when my wife
+and I set forth, the next day, for the journey. We are not going the
+round of the noisy watering-places, nor is it our intention to accept
+any invitations to join the circles assembled by festive country
+friends. My wife, guided solely by the abstract of the doctor's
+directions in her pocket-book, has decided that the only way to keep me
+absolutely quiet, and to make sure of my doing nothing, is to take me to
+some pretty, retired village, and to put me up at a little primitive,
+unsophisticated country inn. I offer no objection to this project--not
+because I have no will of my own, and am not master of all my
+movements--but only because I happen to agree with my wife. Considering
+what a very independent man I am naturally, it has sometimes struck me,
+as a rather remarkable circumstance, that I always do agree with her.
+
+We find the pretty, retired village. A charming place, full of thatched
+cottages, with creepers at the doors, like the first easy lessons in
+drawing-masters' copy-books. We find the unsophisticated inn--just the
+sort of house that the novelists are so fond of writing about, with the
+snowy curtains, and the sheets perfumed by lavender, and the matronly
+landlady, and the amusing signpost.
+
+This Elysium is called the Nag's Head.
+
+Can the Nag's Head accommodate us? Yes, with a delightful bedroom, and a
+sweet parlour. My wife takes off her bonnet, and makes herself at home
+directly. She nods her head at me with a look of triumph. "Yes, dear, on
+this occasion also I quite agree with you. Here we have found perfect
+quiet; here we may make sure of obeying the doctor's orders; here we
+have at last discovered--Nothing."
+
+Nothing! Did I say Nothing? We arrive at the Nag's Head late in the
+evening, have our tea, go to bed tired with our journey, sleep
+delightfully till about three o'clock in the morning, and, at that hour,
+begin to discover that there are actually noises, even in this remote
+country seclusion. They keep fowls at the Nag's Head; and at three
+o'clock, the cock begins to crow, and the hen to cluck, under our
+window. Pastoral, my dear, and suggestive of eggs for breakfast whose
+reputation is above suspicion; but I wish these cheerful fowls did not
+wake quite so early. Are there, likewise, dogs, love, at the Nag's
+Head, and are they trying to bark down the crowing and clucking of the
+cheerful fowls? I should wish to guard myself against the possibility of
+making a mistake, but I think I hear three dogs. A shrill dog, who barks
+rapidly; a melancholy dog, who howls monotonously; and a hoarse dog, who
+emits barks at intervals, like minute guns. Is this going on long?
+Apparently it is. My dear, if you will refer to your pocket-book, I
+think you will find that the doctor recommended early hours. We will not
+be fretful and complain of having our morning sleep disturbed; we will
+be contented, and will only say that it is time to get up.
+
+Breakfast. Delicious meal, let us linger over it as long as we can,--let
+us linger, if possible, till the drowsy mid-day tranquillity begins to
+sink over this secluded village.
+
+Strange! but now I think of it again, do I, or do I not, hear an
+incessant hammering over the way? No manufacture is being carried on in
+this peaceful place, no new houses are being built; and yet, there is
+such a hammering, that, if I shut my eyes, I can almost fancy myself in
+the neighbourhood of a dock-yard. Waggons, too. Why does a waggon which
+makes so little noise in London, make so much noise here? Is the dust on
+the road detonating powder, that goes off with a report at every turn of
+the heavy wheels? Does the waggoner crack his whip or fire a pistol to
+encourage his horses? Children, next. Only five of them, and they have
+not been able to settle for the last half-hour what game they shall play
+at. On two points alone do they appear to be unanimous--they are all
+agreed on making a noise, and on stopping to make it under our window. I
+think I am in some danger of forgetting one of the doctor's directions;
+I rather fancy I am actually allowing myself to be annoyed.
+
+Let us take a turn in the garden, at the back of the house. Dogs again.
+The yard is on one side of the garden. Every time our walk takes us near
+it, the shrill dog barks, and the hoarse dog growls. The doctor tells me
+to have no anxieties. I am suffering devouring anxieties. These dogs may
+break loose and fly at us, for anything I know to the contrary, at a
+moment's notice. What shall I do? Give myself a drop of tonic? or escape
+for a few hours from the perpetual noises of this retired spot, by
+taking a drive? My wife says, take a drive. I think I have already
+mentioned that I invariably agree with my wife.
+
+The drive is successful in procuring us a little quiet. My directions to
+the coachman are to take us where he pleases, so long as he keeps away
+from secluded villages. We suffer much jolting in by-lanes, and
+encounter a great variety of bad smells. But a bad smell is a noiseless
+nuisance, and I am ready to put up with it patiently. Towards dinner
+time we return to our inn. Meat, vegetables, pudding, all excellent,
+clean and perfectly cooked. As good a dinner as ever I wish to
+eat;--shall I get a little nap after it? The fowls, the dogs, the
+hammer, the children, the waggons, are quiet at last. Is there anything
+else left to make a noise? Yes: there is the working population of the
+place.
+
+It is getting on towards evening, and the sons of labour are assembling
+on the benches placed outside the inn, to drink. What a delightful scene
+they would make of this homely everyday event on the stage! How the
+simple creatures would clink their tin mugs, and drink each other's
+healths, and laugh joyously in chorus! How the peasant maidens would
+come tripping on the scene and lure the men tenderly to the dance! Where
+are the pipe and tabour that I have seen in so many pictures; where the
+simple songs that I have read about in so many poems? What do I hear as
+I listen, prone on the sofa, to the evening gathering of the rustic
+throng? Oaths,--nothing, on my word of honour, but oaths! I look out,
+and see gangs of cadaverous savages drinking gloomily from brown mugs,
+and swearing at each other every time they open their lips. Never in any
+large town, at home or abroad, have I been exposed to such an incessant
+fire of unprintable words, as now assail my ears in this primitive
+village. No man can drink to another without swearing at him first. No
+man can ask a question without adding a mark of interrogation at the end
+in the shape of an oath. Whether they quarrel (which they do for the
+most part), or whether they agree; whether they talk of their troubles
+in this place, or their good luck in that; whether they are telling a
+story, or proposing a toast, or giving an order, or finding fault with
+the beer, these men seem to be positively incapable of speaking without
+an allowance of at least five foul words for every one fair word that
+issues from their lips. English is reduced in their mouths to a brief
+vocabulary of all the vilest expressions in the language. This is an age
+of civilisation; this is a Christian country; opposite me I see a
+building with a spire, which is called, I believe, a church; past my
+window, not an hour since, there rattled a neat pony chaise with a
+gentleman inside clad in glossy black broad cloth, and popularly known
+by the style and title of clergyman. And yet, under all these good
+influences, here sit twenty or thirty men whose ordinary table-talk is
+so outrageously beastly and blasphemous, that not a single sentence of
+it, though it lasted the whole evening, could be printed as a specimen
+for public inspection, in these pages. When the intelligent foreigner
+comes to England, and when I tell him (as I am sure to do) that we are
+the most moral people in the universe, I will take good care that he
+does not set his foot in a secluded British village when the rural
+population is reposing over its mug of small beer after the labours of
+the day.
+
+I am not a squeamish person, neither is my wife, but the social
+intercourse of the villagers drives us out of our room, and sends us to
+take refuge at the back of the house. Do we gain anything by the change?
+None whatever.
+
+The back parlour to which we have now retreated, looks out on a
+bowling-green; and there are more benches, more mugs of beer, more
+foul-mouthed villagers on the bowling-green. Immediately under our
+window is a bench and table for two, and on it are seated a drunken old
+man and a drunken old woman. The aged sot in trousers is offering
+marriage to the aged sot in petticoats with frightful oaths of
+endearment. Never before did I imagine that swearing could be twisted to
+the purposes of courtship. Never before did I suppose that a man could
+make an offer of his hand by bellowing imprecations on his eyes, or that
+all the powers of the infernal regions could be appropriately summoned
+to bear witness to the beating of a lover's heart under the influence of
+the tender passion. I know it now, and I derive little satisfaction from
+gaining the knowledge of it. The ostler is lounging about the
+bowling-green, scratching his bare brawny arms and yawning grimly in the
+mellow evening sunlight. I beckon to him, and ask him at what time the
+tap closes? He tells me at eleven o'clock. It is hardly necessary to say
+that we put off going to bed until that time, when we retire for the
+night, drenched from head to foot, if I may so speak, in floods of bad
+language.
+
+I cautiously put my head out of window, and see that the lights of the
+tap-room are really extinguished at the appointed time. I hear the
+drinkers oozing out grossly into the pure freshness of the summer night.
+They all growl together; they all go together. All?
+
+Sinner and sufferer that I am, I have been premature in arriving at that
+happy conclusion! Six choice spirits, with a social horror in their
+souls of going home to bed, prop themselves against the wall of the inn,
+and continue the evening's conversazione in the darkness. I hear them
+cursing at each other by name. We have Tom, Dick, and Sam, Jem, Bill,
+and Bob, to enliven us under our window after we are in bed. They begin
+improving each other's minds, as a matter of course, by quarrelling.
+Music follows, and soothes the strife, in the shape of a local duet,
+sung by voices of vast compass, which soar in one note from howling bass
+to cracked treble. Yawning follows the duet; long, loud, weary yawning
+of all the company in chorus. This amusement over, Tom asks Dick for
+"backer," and Dick denies that he has got any, and Tom tells him he
+lies, and Sam strikes in and says, "No, he doan't," and Jem tells Sam he
+lies, and Bill tells him that if he was Sam he would punch Jem's head,
+and Bob, apparently snuffing the battle afar off, and not liking the
+scent of it, shouts suddenly a pacific "good night" in the distance. The
+farewell salutation seems to quiet the gathering storm. They all roar
+responsive to the good night of Bob. Next, a song in chorus from Bob's
+five friends. Outraged by this time beyond all endurance, I spring out
+of bed and seize the water-jug. I pause before I empty the water on the
+heads of the assembly beneath; I pause, and hear--O! most melodious,
+most welcome of sounds!--the sudden fall of rain. The merciful sky has
+anticipated me; the "clerk of the weather" has been struck by my idea of
+dispersing the Nag's Head Night Club by water. By the time I have put
+down the jug and got back to bed, silence--primeval silence, the first,
+the foremost of all earthly influences--falls sweetly over our tavern at
+last.
+
+That night, before sinking wearily to rest, I have once more the
+satisfaction of agreeing with my wife. Dear and admirable woman! she
+proposes to leave this secluded village the first thing to-morrow
+morning. Never did I share her opinion more cordially than I share it
+now. Instead of keeping myself composed, I have been living in a region
+of perpetual disturbance; and, as for doing nothing, my mind has been so
+agitated and perturbed that I have not even had time to think about it.
+We will go, love--as you so sensibly suggest--we will go the first thing
+in the morning to any place you like, so long as it is large enough to
+swallow up small sounds. Where, over all the surface of this noisy
+earth, the blessing of tranquility may be found, I know not; but this I
+do know: a secluded English village is the very last place towards which
+any man should think of turning his steps, if the main object of his
+walk through life is to discover quiet.
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+GEMINI AND VIRGO.
+
+C. S. CALVERLEY.
+
+
+ Some vast amount of years ago,
+ Ere all my youth had vanish'd from me,
+ A boy it was my lot to know,
+ Whom his familiar friends called Tommy.
+
+ I love to gaze upon a child;
+ A young bud bursting into blossom;
+ Artless, as Eve yet unbeguiled,
+ And agile as a young opossum:
+
+ And such was he. A calm-brow'd lad,
+ Yet mad, at moments, as a hatter:
+ Why hatters as a race are mad
+ I never knew, nor does it matter.
+
+ He was what nurses call a "limb;"
+ One of those small misguided creatures
+ Who, tho' their intellects are dim,
+ Are one too many for their teachers:
+
+ And, if you asked of him to say
+ What twice 10 was, or 3 times 7,
+ He'd glance (in quite a placid way)
+ From heaven to earth, from earth to heaven;
+
+ And smile, and look politely round,
+ To catch a casual suggestion;
+ But make no effort to propound
+ Any solution of the question.
+
+ And not so much esteemed was he
+ Of the authorities: and therefore
+ He fraternized by chance with me,
+ Needing a somebody to care for:
+
+ And three fair summers did we twain
+ Live (as they say) and love together;
+ And bore by turns the wholesome cane
+ Till our young skins became as leather:
+
+ And carved our names on every desk,
+ And tore our clothes, and inked our collars;
+ And looked unique and picturesque,
+ But not, it may be, model scholars.
+
+ We did much as we chose to do;
+ We'd never heard of Mrs. Grundy;
+ All the theology we knew
+ Was that we mighn't play on Sunday;
+
+ And all the general truths, that cakes
+ Were to be bought at half a penny,
+ And that excruciating aches
+ Resulted if we ate too many:
+
+ And seeing ignorance is bliss,
+ And wisdom consequently folly,
+ The obvious result is this--
+ That our two lives were very jolly.
+
+ At last the separation came,
+ Real love, at that time, was the fashion;
+ And by a horrid chance, the same
+ Young thing was, to us both, a passion.
+
+ Old Poser snorted like a horse:
+ His feet were large, his hands were pimply,
+ His manner, when excited, coarse:--
+ But Miss P. was an angel simply.
+
+ She was a blushing, gushing thing;
+ All--more than all--my fancy painted;
+ Once--when she helped me to a wing
+ Of goose--I thought I should have fainted.
+
+ The people said that she was blue:
+ But I was green, and loved her dearly.
+ She was approaching thirty-two;
+ And I was then eleven, nearly.
+
+ I did not love as others do;
+ (None ever did that I've heard tell of);
+ My passion was a byword through
+ The town she was, of course, the belle of:
+
+ Oh sweet--as to the toilworn man
+ The far-off sound of rippling river;
+ As to cadets in Hindostan
+ The fleeting remnant of their liver--
+
+ To me was ANNA; dear as gold
+ That fills the miser's sunless coffers;
+ As to the spinster, growing old,
+ The thought--the dream--that she had offers.
+
+ I'd sent her little gifts of fruit;
+ I'd written lines to her as Venus;
+ I'd sworn unflinchingly to shoot
+ The man who dared to come between us:
+
+ And it was you, my Thomas you,
+ The friend in whom my soul confided,
+ Who dared to gaze on--to do,
+ I may say, much the same as I did.
+
+ One night I saw him squeeze her hand;
+ There was no doubt about the matter;
+ I said he must resign, or stand
+ My vengeance--and he chose the latter.
+
+ We met, we "planted" blows on blows:
+ We fought as long as we were able:
+ My rival had a bottle-nose,
+ And both my speaking eyes were sable.
+
+ When the school-bell cut short our strife,
+ Miss P. gave both of us a plaister;
+ And in a week became the wife
+ Of Horace Nibbs, the writing-master.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I loved her then--I'd love her still,
+ Only one must not love Another's:
+ But thou and I, my Tommy, will,
+ When we again meet, meet as brothers.
+
+ It may be that in age one seeks
+ Peace only: that the blood is brisker
+ In boys' veins, than in theirs whose cheeks
+ Are partially obscured by whisker;
+
+ Or that the growing ages steal
+ The memories of past wrongs from us.
+ But this is certain--that I feel
+ Most friendly unto thee, oh Thomas!
+
+ And whereso'er we meet again,
+ On this or that side the equator,
+ If I've not turned teetotaller then,
+ And have wherewith to pay the waiter,
+
+ To thee I'll drain the modest cup,
+ Ignite with thee the mild Havannah;
+ And we will waft, while liquoring up,
+ Forgiveness to the heartless ANNA.
+
+ (_By permission of_ MRS. CALVERLEY.)
+
+
+
+
+KING BIBBS.
+
+JAMES ALBERY.
+
+
+"It's all through that Liberal Government."
+
+These were the words uttered by King Bibbs as he stood in the rain
+without an umbrella; and it was not the first time he had uttered them.
+
+Think of it! There stood King Bibbs in the rain without an umbrella.
+
+Once upon a time King Bibbs had a beautiful palace; but there came a
+Liberal Government, and they promised the nation economy.
+
+Their policy was to save and censure, to cut down everything they did
+pay for, and to cut up everything they did not.
+
+They contracted that every soldier in the army should have one nail less
+in his boots, and they blamed the last Government for not having
+soldiers who required no boots at all. They arranged that the royal
+charwomen should clean the floors of the Government offices with soap
+without sand or with sand without soap; and they censured the late
+Government for having floors that wanted any cleaning. They cut down the
+amount and the quality of the cheese required for the royal mousetraps,
+and they pointed out to a plundered people that the last Government were
+entirely to blame for there being any mice. They voted that the royal
+weather-cock on the national stable should be re-gilt only once in six
+years, instead of once in five, and they made it clear, at least to
+their own party, that it was entirely owing to the tactics of the late
+Government that weather-cocks were required at all; and it must be
+admitted that upon this point the late Government were a little bit with
+them.
+
+It was a _fine time_, and the nation that King Bibbs reigned over might
+well feel proud.
+
+They did.
+
+But you know that if you keep the stove going by what you can spare from
+your household furniture, the time will come when you will be a little
+at a loss for firewood.
+
+What would you do? You cannot part with the comfortable chair you sit
+in, and your friends must have their little places; so very likely, if
+you had no respect for time-honoured things, you would break up some
+grand old cabinet that your forefathers loved, but that to you appeared
+useless, and so you'd keep the stove going. And as long as the fire
+lasted, you and your friends would be warm and snug in your places.
+
+That's just what our Government did--not ours, of course--but the one I
+am talking of.
+
+They turned their eyes on the king's palace, and they said the nation
+cannot be saddled with this expense.
+
+They had already saved the nation about a farthing per head per annum,
+and this new sacrifice would save about an eighth as much more. But you
+must understand that every man looked at the amount saved in the lump;
+he never thought of the farthing that was put in his pocket in return
+for the time he wasted in attending public meetings, but had a vague
+idea that the golden thousands talked of were in some remote way his
+rescued property.
+
+What a splendid show of justice, wasn't it now, when bills were
+plastered all over King Bibbs's palace, to say those desirable premises
+would be sold by public auction on such a date?
+
+It touched the people to the core; they gave up half a day to flock
+round the palace, and read the bills; they lost another half-day's work
+to see the palace sold; they spent a day's wages to get drunk to
+celebrate this crowning stroke of economy, and in their wild delight at
+the justice done them, they quite forgot to bank the one-eighth of a
+farthing which the generous Government had put into their pockets.
+
+How common it is to say, we go from bad to worse, and on that principle
+I suppose it was that this Liberal Government went from good to better.
+
+If it was good that the poor king should give up his palace and live
+like a private gentleman, would it not be better that he should go a
+grade lower, and live like a retired tradesman?
+
+The odd fact was, that the more they stripped poor King Bibbs of the
+sacred paraphernalia that once adorned his life, the more useless he
+appeared in the eyes of his subjects; and he was cut down from a palace
+to a mansion, and from a mansion to a villa; from having one hundred
+horses to ten; and from ten to none. And so it was that King Bibbs came
+to be walking in the rain without an umbrella; and so it was, as he
+reflected on the past he exclaimed,--
+
+"It's all through that Liberal Government."
+
+His most gracious Majesty had been to the reading-rooms to look at the
+morning papers, and see what his Government were doing. It may seem
+wrong that he should thus waste a penny; but remember, it was his duty
+to see how his people were getting on. As he left the rooms there was a
+quiet, sad smile on the king's face.
+
+"Ah," he muttered, "my prime minister is very clever, but he is all
+ambition and vanity; he tries to sail the ship with nothing but flags. I
+do wish he would take in the bunting and put out some canvas, so that we
+might have a little real progress instead of so much show."
+
+At this time he was just turning the corner of Daisy Road on his way
+home, when suddenly it began to rain.
+
+"Bless me," said his Majesty, "it's going to pour, and I've forgotten my
+umbrella, I shall have my crown quite spoilt. Dear! dear! dear!"
+
+The rain fell faster, and the poor king had yet two miles to go. His
+ermine was getting quite damp.
+
+"What am I to do?" he exclaimed. "I shall be wet through. Dear! dear! I
+shall be obliged to take a cab."
+
+The king looked along the road, and saw one coming. "Hi! hi!" shouted
+his most gracious Majesty, and he waved his sceptre till it almost flew
+out of his hand.
+
+"Going home to change," said the cabman, with a careless air.
+
+"Don't you know I'm the king?" said poor Bibbs.
+
+"Oh, yes, you're know'd well enough," sneered the cabman; "give my love
+to the old woman."
+
+"There, there!" said the poor monarch, appealing plaintively to the
+empty street; "there, that comes of having a Liberal Government; as soon
+as I get a change I'll be a despot."
+
+You see the true royal spirit in him was not quite crushed.
+
+The rain fell faster, and King Bibbs took off his crown and was looking
+at the great wet spots on the red cotton velvet when a loud voice
+exclaimed:--"Does your most gracious Majesty want a cab?"
+
+The king was about to enter the cab without a word, when a ragged boy
+officiously stood by the wheel.
+
+"What do you want?" said the boy's sovereign.
+
+"To keep your most gracious Majesty's royal robe from touching the
+wheel," said the boy.
+
+"I can do it myself," said the king, in quite an angry tone.
+
+Now in the ordinary way a monarch would look upon such an attention as
+simply his due, but he knew this ragged young subject was looking for
+patronage; he wanted a copper, and the king felt he could not afford it.
+All who have studied the workings of the human heart know how we conceal
+our motives even from ourselves. To look at King Bibbs you would have
+thought he simply resented the boy's officiousness. He tried to persuade
+himself so, but the underlying feeling was his annoyance at not having a
+copper to spare. How he would have blushed if any of the Great Powers of
+Europe could have seen him at that moment!
+
+"Go to the devil," said the king to his subject. "Go away! go away!"
+
+"Blow'd if I pay my income tax next week!" said the young traitor as he
+made a very wicked face at the back of the cab.
+
+"That's a bad boy," muttered Bibbs, as the cab drove off.
+
+Now Bibbs, like many another proud spirit, had enjoyed the noble
+pleasure of refusing, which is only felt when you have full power to
+comply. When you are forced to refuse through weakness, it is very
+galling to a monarch, or even to one of us.
+
+"A d--d bad boy!" he exclaimed, and as if the truth would out in spite
+of him he muttered: "It's all thro' that Liberal Government."
+
+The house to which King Bibbs had directed the cabman to drive him, was
+what is now called a villa. It was one of a row, and was certainly not
+at all suggestive of a palace. Still it had a nice breakfast-parlour
+underground, and a handsome little drawing-room, with folding doors,
+upstairs. The rent was low, and the neighbourhood was considered, by
+those who lived there, fashionable.
+
+At first poor Bibbs was treated with some respect, but after a time he
+fell into contempt, for kings, like other people, must keep their
+places.
+
+On arriving at his house the king stepped from the cab and took out his
+purse. It would have done any Liberal Government good to see a
+constitutional monarch like Bibbs rubbing the edges of certain light
+coins to see if they were threepennies or fourpennies. But it would not
+have done any one good to see the look on the cabman's face as he
+received his fare. The king turned to go indoors.
+
+"Here, hi!" shouted the cabman.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked the king.
+
+"What's the matter? As if your most gracious Majesty did not know! I
+want another sixpence."
+
+"You've got your fare," said the king.
+
+"Got my fare!" retorted the cabman; "you're a pretty gracious Majesty,
+you are. You go about rolling in luxury and wealth out of the hard
+earnings of sich as me, and that's the way you use the money. Bah! The
+sooner you're done away with altogether the better. What good are you?
+Why you ain't worth the crown on your head."
+
+The cabman drove away to swear, and the king paused to reflect. It took
+the king some time to calculate, but he found he cost that cabman, at
+his present rate of expenditure--he cost that cabman about an eighth of
+a farthing every ten years.
+
+The king's lips moved, though he breathed no word; but any one who had
+watched the kind mouth would have seen that he was muttering something
+about that Liberal Government.
+
+He took out his latch-key and let himself in; he paused in the passage,
+gently wiped his crown on the sleeve of his robe, and hung it on a
+hat-peg, and, placing his sceptre in the stand beside his forgotten
+umbrella--forgetfulness that had cost him a shilling--walked slowly into
+the parlour.
+
+He sat down to meditate. You have only to read your Shakespeare to know
+this is the way of kings. He soliloquised somewhat in this fashion:
+
+"It's quite clear the cheaper I get the more useless I appear. While I
+was surrounded with pomp, the people ran after and applauded me; now I
+get abused by a low cabman. I was like a grand ruin: while the columns
+stand, and the broken entablatures lie about in picturesque profusion,
+it is visited, made pictures of, and admired. But take away the old
+adornments, clear away the ground, and leave only a little pile of
+useless earth to mark the spot, and Admiration and Wonder, as they turn
+their backs on it, will soon find Respect at their heels--I see my
+fate."
+
+The king grew reckless, and ordered an egg for his tea.
+
+You have only to read your poets, and you will see that these sudden
+desperate acts foreshadow impending doom.
+
+At the moment that Bibbs was wiping a small spot of egg from his beard,
+his ministers were holding a cabinet council to determine what should be
+their next move to keep up their popularity.
+
+There was nothing to cut down but the places of themselves and their
+friends and relations. That was out of the question. The labourer is
+worthy of his hire, and they had laboured hard to get into their present
+position.
+
+How would it be if they determined that the king should no longer
+receive any help from the State, but earn his own living? A little hard
+work would be good for the king's constitution.
+
+The idea was a popular one. It was carried out. But poor King Bibbs was
+too old to work, so it occurred to one of the ministers, who knew a City
+gentleman who had an ugly daughter that he wanted to marry to a person
+of rank, that by his influence the poor king might be got into an
+almshouse.
+
+After some difficulty it was done, and his most gracious Majesty found
+himself in possession of two small rooms and ten shillings a week.
+
+Any reasonable old monarch, you would think, might have been very
+comfortable under these circumstances, but wherever he turned he met
+unfriendly glances. People said almshouses were meant for industrious
+but unfortunate tradesmen and their wives, and not for bloated old
+emperors and kings. Here was a monarch not only grinding them down with
+taxation, but actually taking from them the just reward of virtuous old
+age.
+
+At last it happened that a shopkeeper died insolvent, and his aged widow
+was destitute. There was nothing for it but to put her on the parish,
+which would be an expense, or get her into an almshouse.
+
+The matter touched the pockets of the parishioners, and you may be
+pretty sure that soon a fine clamour was raised. What had the king done
+to deserve charity? Nothing. Meetings were held, bundles of letters were
+sent to the newspapers, and at last the influential City gentleman, who
+meant to stand for the borough at the next election, was forced to turn
+out King Bibbs or lose his popularity.
+
+The influential gentleman assured his most gracious Majesty that he
+turned him out with great reluctance.
+
+What was to be done now? It was pretty clear that the king must go on
+the parish. But what parish?
+
+It mattered not where he had lived, he had never paid his rates, and not
+a parish would have him. Vestries met and discussed the matter. It was
+referred to committees, minutes were brought up and referred back again;
+meantime poor Bibbs, who would not go in as a casual, was left, like old
+Lear, to perish.
+
+It is true that on the first night an old Chartist, who was once
+imprisoned for treason, took pity on him, and gave him a bed, but when
+the king found out who his benefactor was, his old pride arose within
+him, and he turned away.
+
+His most gracious Majesty might have been seen feeling with his
+thumb-nail the edge of his last coin. It was smooth; King Bibbs had but
+threepence in the world.
+
+At this moment he saw some men with advertising boards on their backs.
+He looked at them; they were old and feeble. Ah! thought the king, I
+think I am strong enough to carry boards. He went up to one of the men,
+and asked him most respectfully where he got his employment.
+
+The man turned round and sneered out,--
+
+"Oh, you want to rob _us_ now, do you? You want to take the crust out of
+our mouths. You ain't content with grinding _us_ poor working men down
+with taxes--you ain't content with having every luxury down to
+almhouses, but you must interfere with _us_. If I catch your most
+gracious Majesty with _half_ a board on your back, I'll just smash you.
+There!"
+
+It will be observed that the people had lost nothing of the outward show
+of respect, and always addressed the king in the proper way.
+
+Poor Bibbs bought a penny biscuit, and with the remaining twopence a
+piece of card and a bit of string. He wrote on the card,
+
+ "PRAY PITY A POOR CONSTITUTIONAL MONARCH."
+
+And with his crown in his hand to get whatever charity would give, he
+went into the bitter world to beg his way down to the grave.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Things went on merrily with the ministry for years. They filled all the
+old places and invented new. They put the king's head on the coin, and
+put the coin in their pockets.
+
+But one fine day a certain Eastern despot with whom they had been
+intriguing, thought it a politic thing to pay King Bibbs a visit IN
+STATE. Here was a pretty kettle of fish! What were they to do for a
+king?
+
+It would never do to tell the Eastern despot they didn't know where
+their king was, and they did not care; he would have broken with them at
+once.
+
+They sent in all directions to inquire for the king, but he was not to
+be found.
+
+They then tried an advertisement:--
+
+ IF THIS SHOULD MEET THE EYE OF KING BIBBS,
+ he is requested to return to his disconsolate ministers, and
+ all shall be forgiven.
+
+But poor Bibbs had not seen a newspaper for years, and his ministers
+were left disconsolate.
+
+Then appeared another advertisement:--
+
+ LOST, A KING ANSWERING TO THE NAME OF BIBBS.
+ If any one will take him to the Treasury he will be _liberally_
+ rewarded.
+
+Now it so happened that a quiet man of business, as he was passing along
+a country highway, saw a poor old half crazy man eating a few dry
+crusts. By his side was a bent sceptre, and on his head an old and
+battered crown, while his robe of royal purple was torn and soiled, and
+the ermine on it worn nearly bare and black.
+
+As the stranger approached him, the old man took off his crown, and in a
+feeble voice said, "Pray pity a poor constitutional monarch."
+
+The stranger looked in his face and exclaimed, "Good heaven, poor soul,
+what has brought you to this?"
+
+The old man brushed a tear away from his sunken eye, and muttered--
+
+"It was all through that Liberal Government!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A week after a great city was all aglare with flags, and ablare with
+trumpets. The streets were lined with people, and a procession passed,
+at the head of which was a grand carriage drawn by eight horses. In the
+carriage sat a feeble old man in a splendid robe, and with a new crown
+that he kept taking off as he bowed to the multitude. At his side was
+the splendid Eastern despot, who bowed too, for the people not only said
+"Long live King Bibbs!" but they wished the splendid Eastern despot long
+life as well. Near the palace gates as they returned, the king left off
+bowing, and some were shocked at his pride and some at his pallor.
+
+A few days after there was a grand and solemn procession.
+
+And again, a few days after that, a grand and glorious procession.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Government were true to their policy, and the wording of their
+advertisement. The stranger who had found King Bibbs, after wasting
+years in applications, received a note to say his affair was under
+consideration.
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+MOLLY MULDOON.
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ Molly Muldoon was an Irish girl,
+ And as fine a one
+ As you'd look upon
+ In the cot of a peasant or hall of an earl.
+ Her teeth were white, though not of pearl,--
+ And dark was her hair, but it did not curl;
+ Yet few who gazed on her teeth and her hair,
+ But owned that a power of beauty was there.
+ Now many a hearty and rattling gorsoon
+ Whose fancy had charmed his heart into tune,
+ Would dare to approach fair Molly Muldoon,
+ But for _that_ in her eye
+ Which made most of them shy
+ And look quite ashamed, though they couldn't tell why--
+ Her eyes were large, dark blue, and clear,
+ And _heart_ and _mind_ seemed in them blended.
+ If _intellect_ sent you one look severe
+ _Love_ instantly leapt in the next to mend it--
+ Hers was the eye to check the rude,
+ And hers the eye to stir emotion,
+ To keep the sense and soul subdued
+ And calm desire into devotion.
+
+ There was Jemmy O'Hare,
+ As fine a boy as you'd see in a fair,
+ And wherever Molly was he was there.
+ His face was round and his build was square,
+ And he sported as rare
+ And tight a pair
+ Of legs, to be sure, as are found anywhere.
+ And Jemmy would wear
+ His _caubeen_ and hair
+ With such a peculiar and rollicking air,
+ That I'd venture to swear
+ Not a girl in Kildare
+ Nor Victoria's self, if she chanced to be there,
+ Could resist his wild way--called "Devil-may-care."
+ Not a boy in the parish could match him for fun,
+ Nor wrestle, nor leap, nor hurl, nor run
+ With Jemmy--No gorsoon could equal him--None,
+ At wake, or at wedding, at feast or at fight,
+ At throwing the sledge with such dext'rous sleight,--
+ He was the envy of men, and the women's delight.
+
+ Now Molly Muldoon liked Jemmy O'Hare,
+ And in troth Jemmy loved in his heart Miss Muldoon.
+ I believe in my conscience a purtier pair
+ Never danced in a tent at a pattern in June,--
+ To a bagpipe or fiddle
+ On the rough cabin door
+ That is placed in the middle--
+ Ye may talk as ye will
+ There's a grace in the limbs of the peasantry there
+ With which people of quality couldn't compare;
+ And Molly and Jemmy were counted the two
+ That would keep up the longest and go the best through
+ All the jigs and the reels
+ That have occupied heels
+ Since the days of the Murtaghs and Brian Boru.
+
+ It was on a long bright sunny day
+ They sat on a green knoll side by side,
+ But neither just then had much to say;
+ Their hearts were so full that they only tried
+ To do anything foolish, just to hide
+ What both of them felt, but what Molly denied.
+ They plucked the speckled daisies that grew
+ Close by their arms,--then tore them too;
+ And the bright little leaves that they broke from the stalk
+ They threw at each other for want of talk;
+ While the heart-lit look and the sunny smile
+ Reflected pure souls without art or guile,
+ And every time Molly sighed or smiled,
+ Jem felt himself grow as soft as a child;
+ And he fancied the sky never looked so bright,
+ The grass so green, the daisies so white;
+ Everything looked so gay in his sight
+ That gladly he'd linger to watch them till night,--
+ And Molly herself thought each little bird
+ Whose warbling notes her calm soul stirred,--
+ Sang only his lay but by her to be heard.
+
+ An Irish courtship's short and sweet,
+ It's sometimes foolish and indiscreet;
+ But who is wise when his young heart's heat
+ Whips the pulse to a galloping beat--
+ Ties up his judgment neck and feet
+ And makes him the slave of a blind conceit?
+ Sneer not, therefore, at the loves of the poor,
+ Though their manners be rude their affections are pure;
+ They look not by art, and they love not by rule,
+ For their souls are not tempered in fashion's cold school.
+ Oh! give me the love that endures no control
+ But the delicate instinct that springs from the soul,
+ As the mountain stream gushes its freshness and force,
+ Yet obedient, wherever it flows to its source.
+ Yes, give me that but Nature has taught,
+ By rank unallured and by riches unbought;
+ Whose very simplicity keeps it secure--
+ The love that illumines the heart of the poor.
+
+ All blushful was Molly, or shy at least
+ As one week before Lent
+ Jem procured her consent
+ To go the next Sunday and spake to the priest,
+ Shrove-Tuesday was named for the wedding to be,
+ And it dawned as bright as they'd wish to see.
+ And Jemmy was up at the day's first peep
+ For the live-long night, no wink could he sleep;
+ A bran-new coat, with a bright big button,
+ He took from a chest, and carefully put on--
+ And brogues as well _lampblacked_ as ever went foot on
+ Were greased with the fat of _a quare sort of mutton_!
+ Then a tidier _gorsoon_ couldn't be seen
+ Treading the Emerald sod so green--
+ Light was his step and bright was his eye
+ As he walked through the _slobbery_ streets of Athy.
+ And each girl he passed, bid "God bless him," and sighed,
+ While she wished in her heart that herself was the bride.
+
+ Hush! here's the Priest--let not the least
+ Whisper be heard till the father has ceased.
+ "Come, bridegroom and bride,
+ That the knot may be tied
+ Which no power upon earth can hereafter divide."
+ Up rose the bride, and the bridegroom too,
+ And a passage was made for them both to walk through!
+ And his Rev'rence stood with a sanctified face,
+ Which spread its infection around the place.
+ The bridesmaid bustled and whispered the bride,
+ Who felt so confused that she almost cried,
+ But at last bore up and walked forward, where
+ The Father was standing with solemn air;
+ The bridegroom was following after with pride,
+ _When his piercing eye something awful espied_!
+ He stooped and sighed,
+ Looked round and tried
+ To tell what he saw, but his tongue denied:
+ With a spring and a roar,
+ He jumped to the door,
+ AND THE BRIDE LAID HER EYES ON THE BRIDEGROOM NO MORE!
+
+ Some years sped on
+ Yet heard no one
+ Of Jemmy O'Hare, or where he had gone.
+ But since the night of that widowed feast,
+ The strength of poor Molly had ever decreased;
+ Till, at length, from earth's sorrow her soul released,
+ Fled up to be ranked with the saints at least.
+
+ And the morning poor Molly to live had ceased,
+ Just five years after the widowed feast,
+ An American letter was brought to the priest,
+ Telling of Jemmy O'Hare deceased!
+ Who ere his death,
+ With his latest breath,
+ To a spiritual father unburdened his breast
+ And the cause of his sudden departure confest,--
+ "Oh! Father," says he, "I've not long to live,
+ So I'll freely confess, and hope you'll forgive--
+ That same Molly Muldoon, sure I loved her indeed;
+ Ay, as well, as the Creed
+ That was never forsaken by one of my breed;
+ But I couldn't have married her after I saw"--
+ "Saw what?" cried the Father desirous to hear--
+ And the chair that he sat in unconsciously rocking--
+ "Not in her 'karacter,' yer Rev'rince, a flaw"--
+ The sick man here dropped a significant tear
+ And died as he whispered in the clergyman's ear--
+ "But I saw, God forgive her, A HOLE IN HER STOCKING!"
+
+
+
+
+THE HARMONIOUS LOBSTERS.
+
+ROBERT REECE.
+
+
+It has always appeared to me as a remarkable fact that the practice of
+Music does not promote amongst its devotees the harmony which is its own
+very gist and soul. The "concord of sweet sounds" is not reflected in
+the good fellowship and friendly cohesion of musicians; and the
+spiritualising power of the divine art seems too often to evaporate with
+the notes produced, and leave with its professors the hard _residuum_ of
+an exact science and a mechanical art.
+
+The rivalry and jealousy so noticeable amongst musical people is
+peculiar to them; and, though you may with impunity neglect to demand
+from the actors, poets, painters, sculptors, preachers, physicians,
+surgeons, or lawyers an exhibition of their skill in their respective
+arts, you will make a foe for life if you omit to ask the musician to
+perform.
+
+We all know the "musical people" at parties; how cordially we welcome
+the production of that fatal waterproof roll, with its diabolical
+contents of "pieces" and "ballads;" how enthusiastically we press Jones
+to "give us another song," and how cheerfully and promptly (I might
+almost say "hastily") Jones obliges us. It is of no use suggesting to
+Miss Robinson that you "are afraid you are taxing her too far." Miss
+Robinson has another ballad, or another "piece"--"Tricklings at Eve," or
+"Wobblings at Noon," ready for you.
+
+I have belonged to several musical clubs in my time, and know something
+of my subject, especially the amateur section of it. I once officiated
+at a professional gathering to the great hurt of a very kind man. I was
+invited by a genial music publisher to join a "professional dinner"
+which he gave yearly to the principal musicians, his very good friends.
+The profession mustered very strongly, and did ample justice to
+excellent fare; on our repairing to the drawing-room, I expected, of
+course, to be entertained with some really good music, but I found that
+no one would "start the ball."
+
+In the full glare of professional eyes I opened the piano and the
+proceedings myself. Before I had played forty bars every "professional"
+was making for the instrument. I concluded. I had "started the ball," or
+rather a musical "boomerang," which was to return viciously upon me and
+my host.
+
+Every man present held the pianoforte in turn, and at half-past two in
+the morning (_I_ had commenced at ten in the evening), there were still
+some unwearied musicians insisting on playing their own compositions to
+unappreciative audiences of rival professors. Perhaps they are still
+playing. I never did any business with that music publisher again.
+
+Years ago I belonged to an amateur musical society which had its being
+in a fashionable suburb, and was known by the felicitous title, "The
+Harmonious Lobsters." To account for this name I may state that the
+society owed its origin to certain jovial meetings held at a friend's
+chambers, where these succulent _crustacea_ were discussed (to soft
+music) at supper, twice a month. As the club grew, the suppers deceased;
+and, as the society became important and pretentious, so the original
+joviality evaporated.
+
+"The Harmonious Lobsters" were as pleasant amongst themselves as the
+genuine uncooked articles are in a fishmonger's basket. Every member
+struggled to be "top-sawyer;" every artist, down to the little doctor
+who played the triangle regarded himself as the mainstay, sole prop, and
+presiding genius of the society.
+
+We mustered a small orchestra, consisting of two flutes, two cornets,
+two violins, one viola, one violoncello, a drum, a clarionet, and the
+triangle above mentioned.
+
+The performances of this "limited band" were more remarkable for their
+force than their precision; and a want of "tone" and completeness was
+the result of an endeavour on the part of each performer to make the
+instrument he played specially conspicuous. It didn't matter so much
+with the flutes, violins, and clarionet; but the two cornets were a
+serious nuisance.
+
+Gasper and Puffin (both "first" cornets, of course!) were deadly rivals,
+implacable foes. Each aspired to be the ruler of the club, each regarded
+himself as _the_ performer _par excellence_. The flutes were not
+friendly, and the violoncello was crabbed and unpleasant, but those
+cornets were insufferable.
+
+We all felt that a crisis was at hand, and we all devoutly wished it;
+for while Puffin and Gasper asserted themselves, we others were, to a
+defined extent, hiding our light under a bushel.
+
+The catastrophe was foreshadowed by a stormy meeting convened to arrange
+the programme of our fourth and last annual concert.
+
+"Of course," premised the First Violin, who was also Secretary and
+Librarian, "we have all a solo!"
+
+There was no doubt of _that_, except as regarded the "doubles," viz.,
+the two flutes and the two cornets. The first couple had so far
+coalesced as to submit to the prowess being displayed in a duet, which
+was destined to be less flute than elaborate flatulence.
+
+"Let's begin at the beginning," said Gasper. "No. 1: that's an overture
+for _tutti_; say, 'The Caliph of Bagdad.'"
+
+"_I_ don't mind," responded the Secretary. "It's easy enough, and
+there's lots of show for the violins."
+
+"The question now arises," jerked in Puffin, "who is to be the _first_
+soloist? _I_ won't."
+
+"Nor likely to be," sneered Gasper.
+
+"I understand your narrow-mindedness, Gasper," retorted Puffin; "but I
+shall choose my own place and my own solo."
+
+"So shall _I_," announced Gasper; "go on."
+
+The Secretary proceeded.
+
+"Shall we say: SOLO (_Clarionet_)--Mr. R. Lipsey."
+
+"Anything for a quiet life," said Lipsey. "_I_'m not afraid."
+
+So it went on for four more items, when it became obvious that the "best
+place," in the first part of the programme was open to competition.
+
+"_My_ solo," said Gasper, "comes in here."
+
+"Thank you," replied Puffin; "I claim it myself."
+
+"_Do_ you?" grinned Gasper; "I stick to this point."
+
+"So do _I_," said the undaunted Puffin.
+
+"No, but really, you know," argued the Secretary, "it must be settled:
+let _me_ cut the knot. _I_'ll play _my_ solo here."
+
+A howl of opposition now arose. Every performer, exclusive of the Drum
+and the Triangle, had decided to "go in" for the "show place" in the
+programme.
+
+"I leave the Society if I do not play my solo here," said Gasper. "I
+have no more to say!" and he sat down.
+
+"So do _I_," echoed Puffin, "and get on with 'The Caliph' if you can
+without a second cornet."
+
+This was clinching matters with a vengeance.
+
+"Look here," interposed the Doctor. "_I_ don't play a solo, so I speak
+impartially, I hope. Let Gasper play his solo in _this_ part, and Puffin
+_his_ solo in the best place of the _second_ part of the programme.
+That'll settle it."
+
+There was a tumult immediately; everybody seemed to be multiplied by
+ten.
+
+"Don't be a fool," whispered the Doctor to Gasper. "Stick to your right
+place in the first part; all the swells look for _that_. They'll be gone
+before Puffin gets _his_ turn."
+
+Gasper was quiet in a moment.
+
+The Doctor, winking at me, got hold of the stony but still excited
+Puffin.
+
+"Let him have his blessed solo _early_, my boy," said the Triangle. "The
+big people won't have taken their seats by then. You'll have it all your
+own way."
+
+To this day I believe the Doctor had a professional impulse in this
+advice.
+
+During a lull Puffin spoke.
+
+"_Let_ Mr. Gasper have his solo in the first part. I flatter myself I
+can face the inferior position without any fear."
+
+"You are _so_ modest," retorted the delighted Gasper. "Put it down,
+Basscleff. SOLO (_Cornet_) 'The Wind from the Sea,' _Vulvini_--George
+Gasper, Esq."
+
+"That's _my_ solo," shouted Puffin; "and I'll play it!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Spare me the recital of the ensuing scene.
+
+"Listen to _me_," said the Triangle, maliciously. "We must come to hard
+facts, I plainly see. The truth is, the difference between Mr. Gasper
+and Mr. Puffin (both admirable performers) has assumed the aspect of
+direct rivalry; I may go so far as to say, antagonism. Laudable, so far
+as art is concerned; lamentable for the ill-feeling promoted. I suggest
+that, for the setting at rest of the unfortunate dispute, and the better
+spirit of the Society, it be arranged that the two gentlemen _do_ play
+the same solo at the same concert."
+
+Loud shouts, of varied sentiment, followed this daring speech.
+
+"A moment, please," cried the Doctor; "as Treasurer of this Musical
+Society I may state that our financial condition is not so satisfactory
+as it might be: if this competition gets wind--I mean, of course, if
+people get to know of it, we shall have an enormous house."
+
+After some disputing, it was agreed that there was cogency in the
+Doctor's suggestion.
+
+Other members were appeased with situations in the programme more or
+less prominent, but when the twenty-four items had been satisfactorily
+arranged, and the club separated, the general feeling was that the
+interest of the concert, and the stake at issue, were the competitive
+performances of Messrs. Puffin and Gasper.
+
+The evening of the concert arrived: so did Doctor Martel at my rooms:
+the little man was suffused with delight.
+
+"My dear fellow!" he chuckled, "it'll be the funniest thing you ever
+saw. I've been running to and fro all the week. Now to Gasper, now to
+Puffin. 'You should hear Puffin phrase that passage about the 'wind
+moaning,' said I to Gasper, 'it's tiptop,' and Gasper grinds his teeth.
+Then I go to Puffin and say, 'Gasper's devoting himself to making a hit,
+old man; the way he imitates the surge of the wave in the passage 'The
+wild wave answers the winds,' will 'fetch' them, and no mistake!' and
+Puffin turns pale."
+
+"What does it all portend?" asked I.
+
+"Wait and see, my lad," said the sly Doctor. "Wait and see."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Eight o'clock! and I meet Puffin as I enter the "Artists' Room." I play
+the _violino secondo_. I am nobody.
+
+"Well," say I, "how do you feel?"
+
+"Never mind," says the astute Puffin; "I bide my time! _Only_ (mark my
+words), Gasper won't score as heavily as he expects." With these dark
+words he vanishes.
+
+The next moment I am face to face with Gasper.
+
+"How do you feel?" I ask of _him_.
+
+"Don't worry about _me_," replies Gasper. "I'm not afraid that Puffin
+will cover himself with glory, after all." And Gasper retires.
+
+We had a wonderful "house" that night. The "competition" _had_ been
+noised abroad, and the wily doctor's surmises were fulfilled. There was
+a Puffin and a Gasper faction ready to do battle for its respective
+champion when the clarion of defiance rang out from the platform.
+
+I pass the overture, a solo on the clarionet, which reduced the pug-nose
+of Lipsey to a severe aquiline during its performance; a flute and
+violin _duo_, and etc. The time had come for "The Wind from the Sea"
+(_George Gasper Esq._). The favourite performer was hailed with shouts
+of delight. The Puffin faction smiled silently.
+
+The opening bars of the symphony were played by the pianist.
+
+Gasper advanced with a half-restrained smile of self-satisfaction, and
+after some singular contortions of his lips began to play the _scena_
+for the cornet.
+
+But no sound followed his laboured effort! Again, and again, red in the
+face, and furious, he essayed to produce a note from his silver
+instrument. It was dumb!
+
+Not so the Puffin section of the audience; the titter soon became a
+laugh, the laugh a shout, and finally with a stamp, and a diabolical
+expression, Mr Gasper gave up the game, and retreated amidst a howl of
+displeasure.
+
+Meanwhile where was Puffin? Never mind.
+
+Slowly went on the programme, till the item for which Mr. Puffin was
+"set down" arrived in its place.
+
+More sensation in the audience. Puffin section cock-a-hoop. Similar
+symphony on the part of the pianist, and the placid Puffin, a foregone
+victory shaping his lips into a half-concealed smile, put his cornet to
+his mouth, and----
+
+Well! while the audience was fighting its way out, half hysterical with
+laughter (for the performance of Mr. Puffin had only reproduced Mr.
+Gasper's failure), I was the unwilling witness of a "set-to" between the
+rival cornet-players, who, having discovered that each had,
+respectively, placed a cork up the principal tube of his opponent's
+instrument, so far agreed, as to differ as to the justice of the
+process. From the appearance of their upper lips, I am sure no solos
+were to be apprehended for weeks to come. But, before our next club
+meeting, Messrs. Gasper and Puffin had retired.
+
+I don't belong to any musical clubs now.
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+THE PROVINCIAL LANDLADY.
+
+H. CHANCE NEWTON.
+
+
+ Oh, dear Mister Editor, sir, if you please, they say you're a kind and
+ humanious gent, sir,
+ Which listens attentive to troubles and woes sech as worry an
+ 'ard-working woman like me;
+ I'm worrited dreadful from morning to night with working and toilin'
+ and sech,--which the rent, sir,
+ Is not always quite so forthcoming as I, with my fam'ly, would wish
+ it to be!
+
+ Which I keeps a big house in the square, sir, not five minits' walk
+ from the R'yal Theaytre,
+ Jest oppersit Muggins's Music-hall, sir, which its "public" is known
+ as the "Linnet and Lamb"--
+ But I am a lamb, sir, to stand it as I do, a-working away up till
+ midnight, or later,
+ For a lot of purfessional folks, which the best of the bunch, sir, is
+ nothing but sham!
+
+ From them music-hall people as lodges with me is a set which I'm sure,
+ sir, is simply outragious,
+ A-rushin' all over the house when I've scrubbed it and cleaned it jest
+ like a new pin;--
+ And as for them second-floor folks (which is niggers) believe me their
+ conduct is something rampagious,
+ A-larkin' all over the landing, a-spoilin' the paper,--it's really a sin!
+
+ And the party wot sings comic songs, sir, goes in and out shouting
+ whenever he pleases,
+ And the next floor (the serio-comic)--well, there, she's a stuck-up,
+ impertinent miss,
+ Which the last ones as had them apartments wos folks as performed on
+ the "flyin' trapeeses,"
+ And went away two pun' thirteen in my debt, and I've never beheld 'em
+ from that day to this.
+
+ Than there's that ventrillikist party, as imitates different voices,
+ and that, sir,--
+ He frightens me out of my wits, which I'm sure as I haven't too many
+ to spare;
+ And as for that Muggins's chairman, I frequently finds him asleep on
+ the mat, sir,
+ Which I characterises behaviour like that as werry disgraceful and
+ shocking--so there!
+
+ Then the Sisters Mac-Jones (them duettists) comes bouncin' all over
+ the place, quite disdainful,
+ A fault-findin' day after day, sir, dressed up in their fal-de-rals,
+ looking like guys;
+ And the party that sings sentimental goes on in a way as to me, sir,
+ is painful,
+ He smokes a long pipe in the garding, which dreadful proceedings I
+ can't but despise.
+
+ Then a troop which I think is called ackribacks, knocks my best parlour
+ to rack and to ruin,
+ A-chucking of summersets over my splendid meeogany tables and chairs;
+ Why to-day they all stood on their heads in the passage: "Good gracious,"
+ I shouted, "why what are you doin'?"
+ When they twisted their legs round their necks, sir, made faces, and told
+ me to toddle downstairs!
+
+ Which I don't wish to make a remark, sir, that might be unpleasant, but
+ while I was at it
+ I thought as I'd mention the matters that cause me continual worry and
+ din,
+ For if you excuse the expression, I ses, as for lettin' of lodgins',--oh,
+ drat it!
+ "_If it wasn't for makin' it out of their board_," sir,--by jingers, I'd
+ never let lodgins' agin!
+
+ (_From_ "THE PENNY SHOWMAN," _by permission of the Author and_
+ MR. SAMUEL FRENCH.)
+
+
+
+
+MY MATRIMONIAL PREDICAMENT.
+
+LEOPOLD WAGNER.
+
+
+I dare say a great many men in my situation would think themselves
+highly honoured; but, however this may strike others, I fell bound to
+confess that I am far from happy. The truth is, I have become so
+entangled in the meshes of a really romantic love affair, that I can see
+no possible hope of freeing myself. Let me hasten to explain.
+
+About twelve months ago I engaged myself to a pretty young girl, who,
+out of sheer fickleness--it could have been nothing else--jilted me. I
+was much cut up at the time, since I had learnt to grow very fond of
+her. A little while after, I began to take an interest in another pretty
+girl whom I came in contact with almost daily; but, as I had no means of
+getting properly introduced to her, I never spoke. By-and-by she
+disappeared, and I soon forgot her. Things went on with me in the usual
+way until, suddenly growing tired of my lonely existence, I advertised
+for "a nice young girl, thoroughly domesticated, able and willing to
+make a good-looking young bachelor happy;" adding, "Previous experience
+not necessary." In this way I actually found one who answered my
+expectations to the letter. We met, took the usual walks; and in the
+course of a week or two, I could see she loved me with her whole heart.
+The arrangments for our wedding were soon made. I procured the ring and
+keeper; then put up the banns. Now the house I live in is peculiarly
+situated. When I lie in bed, my head is in Blankshire, while my feet
+extend over the boundary-line into Chumpshire. This may appear a slight
+matter enough; and yet, I fancy, that if hard times should ever overtake
+me, I would have two different parishes to fall back upon. However, I
+found it necessary to publish the banns in both parishes; added to which
+my _fiancee_, who is, or rather was, a lady's maid, a mile or two away
+in another direction, must needs put them up in her own parish also. So
+that I ought to reckon myself very much married, when it's all over. But
+here comes my predicament.
+
+I forgot to mention that the girl who jilted me is godmother to my
+landlady's new baby. This slight relationship enables my landlady to
+take the liberty of corresponding with her; and the other day, as it
+transpires, she let slip the news of my approaching marriage. About the
+same time, I not only met, but had the pleasure of being introduced to,
+the second pretty girl at a concert. She, too, had heard of my marriage;
+and presently confessed that she loved me herself; that, in fact, she
+would never have left the neighbourhood if I had only once spoken to
+her. This put me about considerably; and I heartily wished my wedding
+was not so far advanced. Arrived home, I found a letter from the first
+girl imploring me to pause before it was too late, and begging my
+forgiveness for her past conduct. I took no notice of it; but the next
+day brought her over, to stay, invited by my landlady. It was impossible
+for me to offer any objection, as I was only a lodger myself. Still, the
+girl's manner was convincing. She threw herself into my arms, and begged
+I would postpone the ceremony, until she could really prove her devotion
+to me. This was rather awkward; for, almost on the instant, all my old
+love came back to me again, and I could not let her go.
+
+The following day I took her about a bit, when I fell in love with her
+more than ever. In the afternoon I even went so far as to write to her
+mother, asking her to drop over to tea on Sunday afternoon. That night
+I also introduced her to the second pretty girl--whom I must now speak
+of as Miss No. 3. To my great surprise, the two became fast friends. On
+the Sunday morning, when the little godmother heard my banns called out
+in church, she fainted right away, and had to be carried outside. For
+myself, I felt like listening to my own death-warrant. At tea-time the
+mother came over; so she and my landlady soon settled it between
+themselves, that the little godmother had the greatest right to me. In
+the middle of all this, my _fiancee_ turned up, when a lively scene
+ensued. Eventually I left the house with her, to explain matters. But
+nothing would satisfy her short of my marrying her, as she had the right
+to demand. She swore that if I did not go through with the ceremony, she
+would make away with herself. No; she had no intention of bringing up a
+breach of promise case, for she loved me too much. Poor girl; I pitied
+her from the bottom of my heart, and went straight back to my place to
+give the little godmother her _conge_. But when we reached the house, I
+found the latter stretched upon the floor in a dead faint; and my
+courage completely gave way. I could not make up my mind which of the
+two girls I liked the best, so begged for a little time to decide. My
+_fiancee_ went into the back parlour to cry, while I, in a frenzy of
+distraction, rushed first to one girl, then to the other; and at last
+into the open air, full butt against the third girl, who, brokenhearted,
+was coming to see me. I thought the best thing I could do would be to go
+for a walk and try to console her. I did; but this little walk turned
+out so delightful, that I forgot all about the other two girls, and fell
+madly in love with _her_! On our way back to my place, we met my
+_fiancee_ just leaving. I introduced and saw them both home. When I
+reached home myself, Miss. No. 1 had been put to bed; her mother had
+gone, while I was left to reflect upon my singular position. In the
+morning at breakfast, the girl came to me crying; hanging round my neck,
+and telling me how much she loved me. "Don't marry her, marry me!" she
+pleaded, as I left the house on business. During the day I redeemed a
+promise exacted from me by No. 3 to visit her, when she told me the same
+tale. I also received a letter from my _fiancee_, demanding whether or
+not I intended to go through the ceremony; failing which she would end
+her life by poison. This was very dreadful; I went to see her, and
+begged time for consideration.
+
+The fact is, I could not--nor can I yet--make up my mind which I like
+best. I love them all, and am convinced they each love me. Position has
+nothing whatever to do with it, for I am only a poor man. Had I money, I
+might perhaps square the difficulty with the mothers; but the girls
+themselves are above mercenary ideas. I am sure, nay, _positive_ that
+they love me for myself alone. They are not even unfriendly disposed
+towards each other, which is the most awkward part of the business. If
+they would only consent to be locked up in a room together and fight it
+out amongst themselves, I might be able to marry whichever one was left
+alive. But no such thing. Each swears she will not stand in the others'
+way, yet vows suicide if I do not individually marry _her_. The other
+morning, because I would not give her a decided "Yes," No. 1 ran out of
+the house to drown herself, and I arrived on the scene just in the nick
+of time to pull her back at the water's edge, by the bustle. A day or so
+afterwards, No. 3 put the same question to me, and noticing my
+hesitation, had well-nigh leapt upon the railway metals before I could
+prevent her. I didn't see my _fiancee_ that night: but at six o'clock
+the next morning, my landlady knocked me up to say that according to a
+message left with her late at night Miss No. 2 had poisoned herself. For
+an hour or so I was completely stunned; but after that time I dressed
+and ran to the house, to find that the whole affair was a hoax. I intend
+to be even with the fellow who played it on me, yet.
+
+This kind of thing has been going on for more than a week, and I feel
+worried to death. The latest is that, in addition to No. 1, both the
+other girls have taken up their residence with my landlady. I would fly
+if I could, but my business compels me to remain on the spot. The three
+girls follow me about everywhere. I never have a minute's peace. Though
+the greatest of friends, they are at the same time jealous of trusting
+each other alone with me, lest I should commit myself to any rash
+promise. I suppose I am one of those susceptible fellows who falls in
+love with any girl who may encourage him. It must be so. Yet these girls
+are every bit as nice as they are loving and _different_. No. 1 is very
+young and pretty; my _fiancee_ has a splendid figure, and is thoroughly
+domesticated; No. 3 is my counterpart in everything. I love them all,
+and can't for the life of me tell which I like the best. Whatever I do,
+it will be a case of suicide for two of them, or a couple of breach of
+promise actions for me. I ought to have stated before that the mothers
+have taken lodgings in the house as well, so that I am in for a nice
+thing! I would marry all three if the law allowed me; but though the
+girls themselves might not object, yet the prospect of _three_
+mothers-in-law is too much for one man to contemplate. The most sensible
+arrangement would be, I think, not to marry anybody, but to go on loving
+all three in a perfectly platonic manner until something happened to
+make two of them throw the game up. I dare say the girls would be
+willing enough--one of them even suggested it herself yesterday; but the
+mothers won't hear of such a thing, their purpose being to bring me to
+the point at once. I am a great favourite with the mothers too; and
+their solicitations that I should marry their respective daughters are
+almost as pressing as are those of the girls themselves. Really I am in
+a most uncomfortable position. Out of doors, as I walk along followed by
+these three young creatures, I am regarded as a noted character, and
+the people everywhere whisper, "There goes the young man with his three
+wives!" I shouldn't mind this in the least if only the mothers would
+pack up their traps and go about their business. But they won't; here
+they stick at my very elbow, calmly waiting for me to say whose daughter
+I really mean to marry. So long as I refuse to give an answer to all
+three, I am safe; but the business is getting just a little bit
+tiresome, and I should heartily like to see my way out of it.
+
+Was there ever anybody in such a predicament before! What shall I do?
+What can I do? Is there any charitably-disposed person here who can
+advise me? No? Then I am a doomed man, and must meet my fate resignedly.
+However, I vow and declare that if by any chance I _should_ get over
+this, I'll not repeat the experiment as long as I live.
+
+ (_Copyright of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+ETIQUETTE.
+
+W. S. GILBERT.
+
+
+ The _Ballyshannon_ foundered off the coast of Cariboo,
+ And down in fathoms many went the captain and the crew;
+ Down went the owners--greedy men whom hope of gain allured:
+ Oh, dry the starting tear, for they were heavily insured.
+
+ Besides the captain and the mate, the owners and the crew,
+ The passengers were also drowned excepting only two:
+ Young PETER GRAY, who tasted teas for BARBER, CROOP, AND CO.,
+ And SOMERS, who from Eastern shores imported indigo.
+
+ These passengers, by reason of their clinging to a mast,
+ Upon a desert island were eventually cast.
+ They hunted for their meals, as ALEXANDER SELKIRK used,
+ But they couldn't chat together--they had not been introduced.
+
+ For PETER GRAY, and SOMERS too, though certainly in trade,
+ Were properly particular about the friends they made;
+ And somehow thus they settled it without a word of mouth--
+ That GRAY should take the northern half, while SOMERS took the south.
+
+ On PETER'S portion oysters grew--a delicacy rare,
+ But oysters were a delicacy PETER couldn't bear.
+ On SOMERS' side was turtle, on the shingle lying thick,
+ Which SOMERS couldn't eat, because it always made him sick.
+
+ GRAY gnashed his teeth with envy as he saw a mighty store
+ Of turtle unmolested on his fellow-creature's shore.
+ The oysters at his feet aside impatiently he shoved,
+ For turtle and his mother were the only things he loved.
+
+ And SOMERS sighed in sorrow as he settled in the south,
+ For the thought of PETER'S oysters brought the water to his mouth.
+ He longed to lay him down upon the shelly bed, and stuff;
+ He had often eaten oysters, but had never had enough.
+
+ How they wished an introduction to each other they had had
+ When on board the _Ballyshannon_! And it drove them nearly mad,
+ To think how very friendly with each other they might get,
+ If it wasn't for the arbitrary rule of etiquette!
+
+ One day when out hunting for the _mus ridiculus_,
+ GRAY overheard his fellow-man soliloquising thus:
+ "I wonder how the playmates of my youth are getting on,
+ MCCONNELL, S. B. WALTERS, PADDY BYLES, and ROBINSON?"
+
+ These simple words made PETER as delighted as could be,
+ Old chummies at the Charterhouse were ROBINSON and he!
+ He walked straight up to SOMERS, then he turned extremely red,
+ Hesitated, hummed and hawed a bit, then cleared his throat, and said:
+
+ "I beg your pardon--pray forgive me if I seem too bold,
+ But you have breathed a name I knew familiarly of old.
+ You spoke aloud of ROBINSON--I happened to be by.
+ You know him?" "Yes, extremely well." "Allow me, so do I."
+
+ It was enough: they felt they could more pleasantly get on,
+ For (ah, the magic of the fact!) they each knew ROBINSON!
+ And MR. SOMERS' turtle was at PETER'S service quite,
+ And MR. SOMERS punished PETER'S oyster-beds all night.
+
+ They soon became like brothers from community of wrongs:
+ They wrote each other little odes and sang each other songs;
+ They told each other anecdotes disparaging their wives;
+ On several occasions, too, they saved each other's lives.
+
+ They felt quite melancholy when they parted for the night,
+ And got up in the morning soon as ever it was light;
+ Each other's pleasant company they reckoned so upon,
+ And all because it happened that they both knew ROBINSON!
+
+ They lived for many years on that inhospitable shore,
+ And day by day they learned to love each other more and more.
+ At last, to their astonishment, on getting up one day,
+ They saw a frigate anchored in the offing of the bay.
+
+ To PETER an idea occurred, "Suppose we cross the main?
+ So good an opportunity may not be found again."
+ And SOMERS thought a minute, then ejaculated, "Done!
+ I wonder how my business in the City's getting on?"
+
+ "But stay," said MR. PETER: "when in England, as you know,
+ I earned a living tasting teas for BARBER, CROOP, AND CO.,
+ I may be superseded--my employers think me dead!"
+ "Then come with me," said SOMERS, "and taste indigo instead."
+
+ But all their plans were scattered in a moment when they found,
+ The vessel was a convict ship from Portland outward bound;
+ When a boat came off to fetch them, though they felt it very kind,
+ To go on board they firmly but respectfully declined.
+
+ As both the happy settlers roared with laughter at the joke,
+ They recognised a gentlemanly fellow pulling stroke:
+ 'Twas ROBINSON--a convict, in an unbecoming frock!
+ Condemned to seven years for misappropriating stock!!!
+
+ They laughed no more, for SOMERS thought he had been rather rash
+ In knowing one whose friend had misappropriated cash;
+ And PETER thought a foolish tack he must have gone upon
+ In making the acquaintance of a friend of ROBINSON.
+
+ At first they didn't quarrel very openly, I've heard;
+ They nodded when they met, and now and then exchanged a word:
+ The word grew rare, and rarer still the nodding of the head,
+ And when they meet each other now, they cut each other dead.
+
+ To allocate the island they agreed by word of mouth,
+ And PETER takes the north again, and SOMERS takes the south;
+ And PETER has the oysters, which he hates in layers thick,
+ And SOMERS has the turtle--turtle always makes him sick.
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+A LOST SHEPHERD.
+
+FRANK BARRETT.
+
+
+Winklehaven was once a very bad place. Roads, trade,
+drainage--everything was as bad as it could be. The fishermen were bad,
+and beat their wives, and their wives were bad and deserved all the
+beating they got, and more. The fish caught there was bad before it went
+to market. The very parson was bad, and preached the excisemen to sleep
+whilst Red Robert and Black Bill ran their cargo of smuggled bad brandy.
+
+Families who should have been respectable were not. Parents whipped
+their children into rebellion and then cut them off with shillings--bad
+ones, of course. Wards defied their guardians, and invariably fell in
+love contrary to the arrangements of their seniors. All the young men
+ran away with all the eligible young women.
+
+The natural result was that after a dozen years from the time when
+Winklehaven stood at its worst, the population of the town consisted of
+infirm old people suffering from remorse, gout, and other afflictions
+proceeding from the excesses of youth, and such spinsters as were
+rejected by the young rakes of the preceding era. The moral aspect of
+the place changed in those years; it was no longer unholy, but, indeed,
+the most virtuous of human settlements.
+
+The fishermen were too old and weak to beat their wives, and their
+failing memories could supply them with no oaths suitable to express
+their feelings. The wicked parson and the smugglers were no more; there
+wasn't a young man in the place, and the ladies who called themselves
+young were irreproachable.
+
+It might strike the unthinking as an extraordinary peculiarity that a
+place so very, very good should require a curate in addition to a deaf
+rector. Nevertheless such was the case--a curate was wanted, and wanted
+very much by the congregation of St. Tickleimpit's--the unblemished
+spinsters, who called themselves young. They would have a curate, and
+Mr. Lillywhite Lambe, B.A., they had.
+
+Now as the snow falls like a veil of purity over the face of the earth,
+only to melt and besmirch it before the lasting season of blossoming
+sweetness, so Mr. Lillywhite Lambe, B.A., came to Winklehaven and passed
+away before it attained to its present buttercup-and-daisy condition of
+virtue; and the manner of his going this pen shall tell.
+
+Mr. Lillywhite Lambe, B.A., was a curate of the deepest dye. He had not
+so much principle as a bankrupt, and he came to Winklehaven with the
+settled purpose of marrying the richest and least objectionable of his
+congregation. The difficulties in his way were few. In personal
+appearance and demeanour he was so simple and sweet that even the rector
+was mistaken and thought him a fool, and what more could a girl of
+five-and-forty desire?
+
+It was not a question which he _could_ marry from amongst the eighteen
+or twenty tempting creatures around him, but rather which he should
+reject. They surrounded him like a glory wherever he went, waiting for
+him at his coming out and never leaving him until his going in. Seldom
+less than half-a-dozen spinsters accompanied him; they liked him too
+much and each other too little to trust him with one alone. And they
+wrote letters to him marked "private," containing the burning thoughts
+they dared not express in the presence of their sisters. Each was
+tantamount to an offer of marriage; but he was yet undecided in his
+selection, and replied to all with touching yet ambiguous texts. At this
+time he suffered somewhat from bile, for his most active exercise was
+wool-winding, and the ladies buttered his toast on both sides and the
+edges.
+
+But anon there came a man with a black beard and a devil-may-care aspect
+to Winklehaven, and took for six months the cottage on the deserted West
+Cliff, which had belonged to Black Bill in the bad old times.
+
+The stranger snubbed the inquisitive tradesman of whom he bought his
+groceries; he ordered his bacon by the side, his beer by the barrel, and
+his whisky by the largest of stone bottles. He laughed aloud when he
+passed in the High Street Mr. Lambe with the three Misses Cockle on one
+side of him, and the three Misses Crabbe on the other. The ladies had
+not any doubt that he was a bold bad man, and declared one and all that
+nothing would tempt them to venture upon that dreadful West Cliff.
+
+But, sinners being so few, they could not but feel interested in this
+man with the black beard and dark eyes, and when he came not to church
+on Sunday they implored the rector to visit him.
+
+The rector said he would not go (and privately swore it, in episcopal
+terms, for he hated walking and sinners equally), but he offered the
+services of his curate; and the congregation, though it fain would have
+spared its pet curate so dangerous a mission, could not refuse to
+accept.
+
+Mr. Lillywhite Lambe, B.A., found it difficult to conceal his delight at
+the prospect before him, for an excess of ladies and butter was killing
+him. He had not enjoyed half an hour's freedom in the open air since his
+arrival at Winklehaven; it seemed to him years since he smoked a morning
+pipe. His bowels yearned towards beer from the barrel and whiskey from
+stone jars.
+
+That last evening he was ever to spend in his lodgings at Winklehaven he
+occupied in preparations for the morrow. He looked up the pipe he had
+brought with him but never smoked, and tobacco--dry and dusty, yet
+fragrant as hay new mown, and pipe-lights, and a French novel; these he
+stuffed into the pockets of his alpaca coat, ingeniously overlaying them
+with his pamphlet confuting the doctrines of the Primitive Bedlamites.
+In the morning he rose gaily; and when he had parted with his anxious
+flock at the foot of the west hill, he ascended the steep path, like a
+cherub climbing a cloud, without sense of exertion, and as one who is
+resolved to make a day of it.
+
+A walk of two miles was before him, but he did not hurry himself after
+he had lost sight of the spinsters and the church weathercock. He
+stopped, took off his collar and band, bared his shirt front to the
+breeze, and took a deep inspiration. Then he threw himself on the thymy
+grass and tasted liberty. He smoked three pipes; he read two chapters
+and a half of the novel, skipping the moral parts; he dropped the book,
+turned over on his chest, and with his clerical hat tilted sideways over
+his eyes, he watched the distant ships for half an hour; after that he
+lay on his back, drew a handkerchief over his eyes and went to sleep. He
+slumbered for two blessed hours, and then waking athirst, thought kindly
+of the sinner who kept his beer in barrels and whisky in cool stoneware.
+
+So he pulled himself into Evangelical shape again and stepped out
+briskly for the smuggler's cottage, smacking his lips. But, alas, the
+cottage door was barred, and there was no trace of the black-bearded
+sinner, save a flitch of bacon and the beer barrel which stood in the
+most inaccessible of pantries.
+
+He must wait. Once more he sat upon the short grass, and to beguile the
+time, drew out the budget of letters sent by his admiring congregation.
+He read them through, one after another, with the view of forming a
+comparative estimate of the writer's value, but the difficulty of
+selecting one seemed greater than ever.
+
+The temporal and spiritual worth of each was represented by
+_x_. With the chance of facilitating his choice he had recourse
+to his pencil, with which he was tolerably skilful, and on the
+back of each letter he drew a portrait of its sender. These
+spinsters were beyond flattery, so he caricatured them to find
+which must certainly be rejected as the worst looking.
+
+In this amusing occupation the time would have passed unheeded but for
+Mr. Lambe's increasing dryness. There was no water to be had, no, nor
+wine, and the interior of the young curate's mouth felt like brown paper
+to his tongue. It suddenly came to his mind that a dip in the cool sea
+would refresh his body, now suffering from external in addition to
+internal dryness. For the hour was two, the month July, and the sun
+unclouded, and he determined at once to bathe, wondering why he had not
+availed himself of this blessing of freedom. Except in a footbath he had
+not bathed during the term of his curacy at Winklehaven. How could he,
+where there was neither seclusion nor bathing machine?
+
+The tide was at ebb, and a long stretch of sand lay between the cliff
+and the sea; but near the water's edge stood a rock, and thither Mr.
+Lambe betook himself. On the cliff side was a little shelf dried by the
+sun, and on this he laid his clothes neatly; then with a smile
+irradiating his countenance, he slapped his thin legs and ran down into
+the bursting waves. Quickly he lost all thought of thirst--of
+everything, save the enjoyment of the moment. He swam in every
+conceivable position, bent in girlish fashion to meet the coming waves,
+and floundered about like a porpoise.
+
+It was whilst turning over head and heels that he caught sight of that
+which, in a moment, sobered him--a petticoat upon the cliff--another,
+another! yet others, each with a wearer! They were not a thousand yards
+from the cottage on the cliff--those ladies whose outlines he
+recognised, even at their remote distance from him. Full well he knew
+they had come to look for him. What was he to do? How could he face
+them, how avoid? He had thought to dry himself like a raisin in the sun;
+that now was impossible. Equally impracticable was it to clothe himself
+wet; before he had a sock on he would be observed, for there was no
+ledge upon the sea-ward side of the rock, and the flowing waves already
+touched its base.
+
+The only place of concealment was behind the rock, and there he must
+stay until the ladies retired.
+
+He lay in the water, and through a chink in the rock watched his
+pursuers; their voices, in high-pitched consultation, reached his ear.
+
+They examined the cottage on the cliff, and then descended to the rocks
+at its base. It was only natural that the ladies should think their
+beloved curate murdered. They had not seen him for six hours; and his
+destruction at the hands of the black-bearded man was the worst
+explanation of his protracted absence that entered their imagination.
+This fear had led them to follow in his footsteps; and now, as they
+poked their sun-shades in the fissures of the rocks, it was with the
+expectation of finding his corpse.
+
+Mr. Lambe was fervently thankful that the rising tide kept them from his
+place of concealment, and watched their movements fixedly, until the
+cramp seized his leg; and then, in the limited space of his seclusion,
+he exercised his ingenuity to keep the vital heat within him.
+
+Occasionally he glanced at the shore. When the ladies were fatigued,
+they systematically divided their number--one going to search, whilst
+the other rested. Hour after hour passed, and every minute brought fresh
+cramps and racking pains to the limbs of the sodden curate. He had to
+put his lips between his teeth, lest their violent chattering should
+proclaim his whereabouts; and he cried like a child when he found his
+body assuming the blue tints of an unboiled lobster.
+
+But still those doting spinsters poked amongst the sea-weed with
+unceasing zeal.
+
+The sun was wearing the horizon, when he heard a scream, and beheld the
+second Miss Cockle pointing in the direction of his rock.
+
+Mr. Lambe was perplexed: it was impossible that his eye, peeping through
+the small chink, had been discovered; but a moment later his perplexity
+gave place to horror, as he perceived his hat bobbing gaily on the waves
+between him and the shore. It was followed by his stockings, and behind
+them in procession his waistcoat, coat--everything! all washed away from
+the nice little ledge by the rising tide. He had never given his clothes
+a thought from the moment he neatly packed them. But had that
+consideration entered his mind, it could only have added to his anxiety:
+for it would have been impossible to get them from the place where they
+lay on the coast-side of the rock without displaying himself. Heedless
+of their boots, the ladies hooked at the oncoming vestments with their
+sunshades; and, now, one has his collar, another his dear hat, and a
+third his blessed braces, whilst their cries of woe echo along the
+coast.
+
+When his coat was fished out, what could be expected, but that the
+ladies all should dash at his pockets with a view to gratifying their
+curiosity, and rescuing the letters which betrayed their most private
+feelings.
+
+With groans, Mr. Lambe beheld his pipe and tobacco brought forth, amidst
+cries of astonishment, then the French novel; and, finally, the bundle
+of letters. He could not bear to see the result, when each, seizing the
+letter in her own handwriting, should find her caricature thereon; and
+dropping his head, he beat it with his fist--partly in frenzy, partly to
+promote the circulation of his stagnating blood.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The black-bearded man returned to the cottage as the ladies, carrying
+the only remains they could find of their curate, were leaving his
+vicinity. He was not displeased that he was later than usual in
+returning; for although he loved the beautiful, he did not like the
+ladies of Winklehaven.
+
+He lived by painting pictures, this pariah of the West Cliff;
+nevertheless, he had some good qualities, and when half an hour later a
+nude study, shivering and wet, presented itself in his doorway craving
+to be taken in out of the night wind, he asked no question until he had
+wrapped him in warm blankets, and filled him with strong liquors.
+
+Mr. Lillywhite Lambe never returned to his curacy, never married a rich
+spinster. His disappearance was not inquired into deeply. Some people
+preferred to think of him as dead and sainted. He was supposed to be
+drowned, and his ghost was said to be visible at times upon the West
+Cliff--generally with a pipe in his mouth. And as his costume was that
+of the black man, who was habitually at his side, it was further
+supposed that he had, in that first visit to the cottage on the cliff,
+sold himself to the D----.
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+A MATHEMATIC MADNESS.
+
+F. P. DEMPSTER.
+
+
+ For months I had been "grinding" Mathematics day and night
+ When Miss McGirton cast on my affections such a blight;
+ My mind unhinged now only creaks, and when I tell my woes
+ I'm forced to lisp in _numbers_ what I'd rather say in prose.
+
+ Sweet maiden _perpendicular_! She gave a _slanting_ sigh
+ As o'er my kneeling form she cast a calculating eye.
+ "Ah! well" said I, "you _cipher_ me, for if you'll not be mine
+ From out this pocket next my heart I'll _straight produce a line_;
+ So ere you are, dear _Polly_, _gone_, pray heed your lover's vow,
+ Or he dangles _at right angles_ to some _horizontal_ bough."
+
+ The maid flew in no _frustrum_--like your giddy gushing girls--
+ But standing calm and frigid, shook her strictly _spiral_ curls,
+ And said, "You see we're equal as to station: very well!
+ _Our paths in life could never meet, because they're parallel._"
+
+ Her voice was so serrated that I fled this maid antique;
+ Then, approaching her _obliquely_, _at a tangent_ took her cheek!
+ The kiss was too _elliptical_! She vanished into space!
+ And a circulating obelisk now marks the fatal place.
+
+ Weeks fled. My doctor shook his head and said, "You must embark
+ For an utter change." I did: and went aboard a leaky _Arc_
+ Bound for the hot _Quadratics_, where I landed for a week,
+ And joined the aborigines in every savage freak.
+ I felled primeval forests with the _axes of a cube_,
+ At the feathery _Parabolas_ I aimed the loaded tube;
+ (For while aboard the Arc, you see, I found on _deck a gun_,
+ And, cunning as a Crusoe, put it by for future fun.)
+ While safe within some _brackets_ I have watched those bulky brutes,
+ The snorting _Parallelograms_ that feed upon _square roots_;
+ Their noise would rouse the forest till each denizen therein
+ Woke up and did its "level best" to swell the horrid din.
+ Oh! the shrieking of the _Cylinder_! the _Pyramid's base_ moan,
+ The clucking of the _Sector_ and the cooing of the _Cone_!
+ Then a lull perhaps, while distant ululations would reveal
+ The natives chanting grace before their missionary meal.
+ In truth it was an evil place, for a _Vinculum_ might rise
+ At any moment in your path and wobble its wild eyes;
+ And oft, when looking for a _log_ I'd shake in ev'ry joint
+ For fear some deadly _Decimal_ might sting me with its _point_.
+ At last I plucked up courage, though, and even gained renown
+ In getting gallant trophies for my home in Camden Town:
+ I killed the cruel _Quatrefoil_ to take her snarling cub,
+ Or doubled up a cannibal to get his graven club;
+ I trapped the roaring _Rhombuses_, those beasts of fearful strength,
+ And the _Parallelopipedon_, a snake of awful length;
+ Oft I bestrode the _Algebra_ and charged in wild career
+ The proud opaque _Hypotenuse_ and jabbed him with my spear.
+
+ 'Tis past! I'm now in London: yet my reason's all awry.
+ I'm yearning for a vanished maid who gave a slanting sigh.
+ Nor may we meet in Dreamland: e'en there I'm robbed of rest,
+ For a wizened old _Trapezium_ sits sulking on my chest;
+ Or two _triangles_ she jangles with a semilunar leer,
+ Till I wake--with hair erect--in one _diagonal_ of fear!
+ And mark to the clang of _symbols_, phantom figures march all day
+ In _co-efficient_ cohorts--_Major Axis_ leads the way.
+ In short, from early morn until I shuffle off to bed,
+ But one equation's clear to me,--_o_=_ayz_.
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+WAITING AT TOTTLEPOT.
+
+J. ASHBY-STERRY.
+
+
+An hour to wait! Well that's a nuisance, but I suppose there is no help
+for it.
+
+I cannot possibly go on without my portmanteau. And they may send the
+wrong one after all. I believe my friend the dismal porter--the faded
+misanthrope in corduroys, only telegraphed for a brown portmanteau.
+There are probably twenty brown portmanteaux at this present moment
+waiting at Jigby Junction, and if I know anything of railway officials,
+they will be sure to send the wrong one. So here I must wait.
+
+I suppose I must have made a mistake in the train. No trap, dog-cart, or
+conveyance of any kind to meet me from Clewmere. Wonder whether they had
+my telegram. The Faded Misanthrope says he is quite certain nothing has
+been over from Clewmere since the day before yesterday. And then he says
+Sir Charles and some of the young ladies came in the waggonette. They
+waited to see two trains in, he told me, and then drove away saying
+there must be some mistake. Hope I did not say Tuesday instead of
+Thursday, or what is far more likely, write Thursday to look like
+Tuesday. I ask my friend the porter if there is any other way of getting
+to Clewmere. "No," he says, "it is a longish walk, a matter of twelve or
+thirteen miles, and a pretty rough road too."
+
+"Now," he says "if it had only been Saturday instead of Thursday, there
+is Smaggleton's 'bus, as 'ud put you down within five minutes' walk of
+the lodge. Smaggleton don't run every day, he don't; he only runs o'
+Saturdays, bein' market day at Stamborough, and a pooty full load he
+gets there and back, which pays Smaggleton very well. And Smaggleton
+wants it," he continues, "what with the branch line to Stamborough,
+Smaggleton's business ain't what it was; he can't afford to turn up his
+nose at a few farmers and their missusses now-a-days. Smaggleton must
+take things as they come--the good and the bad, the rough and the
+smooth--as well as the rest of us. Lor, bless you, Sir, I recollect when
+Smaggleton used to drive about in his dog-cart, in a light top coat, a
+white hat and a rose in his button-hole, he always was quite the----"
+
+As I do not feel particularly interested in the rise, progress or
+downfall of Smaggleton, I am obliged to interrupt my garrulous friend,
+and ask if they did not let out flys at the Crackleton Arms, hard by. He
+informs me, they certainly do "in a usual way." But he adds, they have
+only two flys. One is having something done to the wheels, and the other
+went away early this morning to take some friends of Squire Bullamore's
+to a pic-nic. He furthermore tells me that Cudgerry, the carrier, would
+perhaps be able to give me a lift, but he would not be here till seven
+o'clock this evening. As they dine at Clewmere at eight, of course
+Cudgerry is quite out of the question. My friend shakes his head, he
+retires into a dark, greasy room, which seems to be devoted to lamps,
+and I continue my walk up and down the platform.
+
+Cannot imagine why they ever built a station at Tottlepot. Nobody ever
+wants to stop at Tottlepot, there is no trade at Tottlepot--indeed,
+nobody ought to be allowed to stop at Tottlepot; and Tottlepot as a
+Station ought to be forthwith disestablished and erased from the railway
+map of Great Britain. If I had left the train at Jigby Junction, I
+should not have lost my portmanteau, I could have hired a fly, and
+should by this time have been quietly lunching at Clewmere Court instead
+of pacing up and down the Tottlepot platform like a wild beast in his
+den.
+
+I have often waited at stations before. Every kind of station, little
+and big, all over the Continent and England, and have generally found
+that waiting productive of considerable amusement. But Tottlepot is
+quite a different thing. I think it was Albert Smith who once spoke of
+the depth of dulness being achieved by "spending a wet Sunday, all by
+yourself, in a hack cab in the middle of Salisbury Plain." Had he been
+compelled to wait on a fine Thursday at Tottlepot he would have
+discovered a depth yet lower. The only thing in my favour is, it is
+fine. If it were wet I cannot imagine what I should do. There is a small
+room I see labelled "Waiting-Room." It is about the size of a
+bathing-machine and half filled with parcels and bandboxes. If you had
+to wait there you would be compelled to sit with your legs right across
+the down platform; the only use of that waiting-room would be to keep
+your hat dry.
+
+There is not a refreshment room, there is not even a book-stall. I cannot
+even cheer myself with an ancient bath bun, a glass of cloudy beer, or
+two penny-worth of acidulated drops. (If there happened to be a
+refreshment room at Tottlepot that is exactly the kind of refreshment
+they would give you). Neither can I pass away the time by purchasing a
+penny paper, and taking a free read of all the novels and publications
+awaiting purchasers. There are no advertisements, no lovely oil
+paintings of sea-side resorts, which are all the more charming from
+being not the least like the place they are supposed to represent; there
+are no bills of entertainments; no auctioneers' and house-agents'
+notices; no posters concerning hotels, nor glass-cases containing
+photographic specimens. It is just the place for Mark Tapley to come to
+as station-master. And he, with all his power of being jolly under the
+most disadvantageous circumstances, would probably be found under the
+wheels of a passing express within a fortnight.
+
+And talking about the station-master reminds me I have not yet seen
+him. Possibly my friend, the Faded Misanthrope in corduroys, is
+station-master. If so, he has to clean the lamps, send telegrams, take
+and issue tickets, look after the baggage, attend to the signals,
+cultivate his garden, pay visits to the Crackleton Arms, and superintend
+the traffic of the station generally. I do not wonder at his appearing
+to be somewhat depressed. The only thing of a lively nature I see about
+the place is a fine black cat, with enormous green eyes, which might be
+utilised as "caution" signals when the porter, in consequence of his
+multifarious duties, was unable to reach the signal-box. This cat was
+evidently very much pleased to see me indeed. It followed me up and down
+the platform like a dog, and it purred like a saw-pit in full work.
+
+A very tiny pale governess, with two big bouncing rosy girls, in the
+highest of spirits, the shortest of petticoats and the longest of hair,
+cross the line. I fancy those young ladies are daughters of the Vicar,
+and I may meet their excellent mamma at dinner to-night. The governess
+passes demurely through the side wicket. One of her charges tries to do
+a sort of Blondin feat by walking along the glistening iron rail and
+falls down; the eldest boldly clambers over the five-barred gate and
+shows a shapely pair of legs, clad in sable hose and snow-white frilled
+pantalettes. "What did I tell you, Lil?" says the governess in the
+mildest voice to the first. "Very well, Gil, wait till we get home!" she
+remarks in yet sweeter tones to the second. The two children rejoin her
+at once and take her hand, and disappear down the lane. I am left to
+wonder how she acquires this influence over them, for they are as tall
+as she is and infinitely stronger--they could eat her, were they so
+minded. I wonder too what will happen to Gil when they get home? Will
+mamma be told? No, I fancy this mild little governess is quite equal to
+controlling, unaided, these big bouncing girls.
+
+My friend the porter has by this time got through a quantity of business
+of a varied nature, and is enjoying a little light relaxation by digging
+violently in his garden. He has taken off his jacket, and a good deal of
+his depression seems to have been removed at the same time--it _must_ be
+depressing to be compelled to reside in a somewhat tight corduroy jacket
+all your life--and as he digs he hums to himself a sort of merry dirge.
+I endeavour to enter into the spirit of the thing, and sympathise with
+him in his relaxation. I say cheerfully, as if I knew all about it, "Ah!
+nice fine weather for the----!" I cannot for the life of me think what
+it is nice fine weather for. My friend says, "Eh?" I observe he is not
+so respectful in his private as in his porterial capacity. I reply,
+"Quite so!" whereupon he rejoins, "Ha! but we could do wi' a bit o' rain
+for the----." Cannot catch remainder of his sentence; but I never yet
+met a gardener who couldn't "do wi' a bit o' rain" for something or
+other.
+
+We begin to be quite voluble on the subject of plants and crops. I find
+he knows so much more on the subject than I do, but I merely nod my head
+and smile weakly and presently move quietly away. When I reach the other
+end of the platform I hear the sharp jingle of the telegraph bell and
+the jerk of the signal levers. Presently a very prim and neat
+station-master appears, who looks as if he had just been turned out of
+one of the band-boxes in the waiting room. There is also a very active
+boy porter, who is apparently trying to run over the station-master with
+a truck. My old friend is walking slowly along the platform. He has left
+the gay horticulturist in the garden, and has assumed the Faded
+Misanthrope with his corduroy jacket. He tells me that the train is now
+coming--the one that will bring my portmanteau. The train presently
+stops; a few dazed agriculturists, and a very stout fussy old lady,
+half-a-dozen milk cans, and my portmanteau are put out.
+
+I am gazing at the latter to be quite sure it is my own, when I hear
+myself addressed by name. I turn round and see a smart groom whose face
+I know well. "Anything else beside the portmanteau, sir?" he says,
+touching his hat. "Sir Charles is outside with the waggonette; the new
+pair is a little bit fresh, and he don't like to leave 'em."
+
+That is all right. I think to myself I shall dine at Clewmere after all.
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+MARRIED TO A GIANTESS.
+
+WALTER PARKE.
+
+
+I loved her with all my heart, and, indeed, it took all my heart to
+accomplish the feat; for, in sooth, there was a great deal--a very great
+deal--of her to love. Although only "sweet seventeen," she had reached
+the commanding stature of nine feet nine inches, and, to use the words
+of a familiar advertisement, she was "still growing."
+
+From my childhood I had doated on the gigantic, loved the lofty, admired
+the massive, and had a weakness for strength. The tales I best loved
+were those of giants.
+
+Can you wonder, then, that when I heard that the celebrated Samothracian
+Giantess, Goliathina Immensikoff, from the wilds of Wallachia, the
+largest woman in the world, was approaching London, my soul was stirred
+by the news as by a trumpet-call? I read with the deepest interest the
+accounts of her antecedents. I learnt how she was discovered in the
+Wilds of Wallachia by Whiteley, the World's Provider, who had "taken her
+from the bosom of her family"--and here I could not help exclaiming,
+"What a stupendous 'bosom' that 'family' must have had!"
+
+As I reclined on my sofa, smoking the largest possible meerschaum, and
+reading with absorbing interest these accounts of one who was certainly
+"born to greatness," I suddenly came to a terrific and almost appalling
+resolve. Involuntarily I exclaimed, aloud, "She shall be mine!"
+
+Yet how could I hope for success? To win so great a being one must be
+not only a lady-killer, but a giant-killer also; and though I bear a
+"big" name myself--Hector Gogmagog--Nature has denied me either
+extraordinary personal attractions or lofty stature. How hopeless, then,
+for me to aspire to the affection of the Monumental Maiden of
+Samothracia! Five feet five pitted against nine feet nine is to be
+pitted indeed!
+
+But love laughs at obstacles. That evening I went to the Royal Escurial
+Theatre, where Mademoiselle Goliathina was performing, and sat
+enthralled to witness her impersonation of the Queen of Brobdingnag. The
+pictures had not exaggerated. She was "every inch a queen"--a phrase of
+some significance when the number of inches mounts up to one hundred and
+seventeen.
+
+The next step was to get an introduction. This I accomplished to my
+satisfaction, and though at first naturally overawed by her Leviathan
+aspect, thenceforward my wooing proceeded rapidly. I had several
+interviews with the colossal charmer, at which I had the satisfaction of
+discovering that I was more in her eyes than some other men who were
+nearer to herself in point of stature. Words of encouragement coming
+from those lips, so near and yet so far away, words spoken in soft
+Wallachian, yet in tones that Stentor might have envied--elevated me to
+the seventh heaven of pride and delight. I already felt taller by
+inches--but what was _that_ to her nine feet nine?
+
+I sent her the very biggest bouquets, such as occupied a whole hansom
+cab each; love letters, their weight barely covered by eight stamps; and
+valentines that would only go by parcels delivery.
+
+All this had its effect. She would have been less than woman, instead of
+a very great deal _more_--had she been insensible to my devotion. Can I
+ever forget what the poet ecstatically calls "the first kiss of
+love"--how, at considerable inconvenience to herself, she bent that
+statuesque form to accommodate herself to my limited stature? That
+_was_, indeed, "stooping to conquer."
+
+Yet with all this encouragement, it was in fear and trembling that I
+approached the momentous question. Fancy a refusal from those lips. It
+would be crushing indeed!
+
+"Dearest Goliathina," I said, standing upon the head of the sofa, in
+order to place myself upon something like her own exalted level, "say,
+oh, say you will be mine. You may be sure of my lifelong devotion. You
+will be all in all to me, and, in fact, much more than all; for you are
+far too large to be merely my better half. I shall always make much of
+you, and look up to you as one infinitely above me. Fortunately, I have
+a large heart; but as you occupy it entirely, it would be perfectly
+impossible for me to find room for any other object. Were you to reject
+me, there would be an immeasurable void in my life, and who else is
+capable of filling it?"
+
+She was evidently affected; for what the poet calls a "big round
+tear"--and goodness knows _how_ big round tear it was in this
+case--could be perceived starting from each of her moonlike eyes. I
+clasped her hand--which in point of length was a _foot_--and she did not
+withdraw it.
+
+"Fondest Hector," she responded, "I am thine!"
+
+And she leant her head upon my shoulder. I staggered; but by the
+exertion of all my strength I was able for some moments to sustain that
+delicious burden.
+
+Our wedding took place before the Registrar, who, being of a nervous
+temperament, was so overwhelmed at the towering dimensions of the bride,
+that he could scarcely get through the ceremony. It was all as private
+as so abnormal an affair could possibly be kept, and for a time the
+famous female colossus figured no longer at the Royal Escurial as Queen
+Brobdingnag, a substitute only six feet two inches having been provided.
+
+Marrying a giantess has its inconveniences. I had to have a house built
+with exceptionally lofty rooms and doors ten feet high, with furniture
+on a corresponding scale. An ordinary carriage was of no use to my wife,
+whose size also frightened the horses; so we had a sort of triumphal car
+built, drawn by a circus elephant. It was expensive, but an excellent
+advertisement in a theatrical sense. She could never walk out without
+being mobbed, and terrifying babies. She dared not visit a friend's
+house for fear of frightening the children and destroying the furniture.
+And fancy her at a dance! Moreover, our housekeeping expenses were
+something frightful.
+
+Anon, darker shadows hovered around our domestic sphere. Her temper
+proved to be at times uncertain. At the least attempt to thwart any of
+her strange caprices, she grew infuriated; and when annoyed, she had a
+way of putting me on the top of a high bookcase, or locking me up in a
+cupboard, box, or trunk--for I have said all our belongings were on a
+gigantic scale--which was peculiarly humiliating.
+
+About this time we became acquainted with Morlock Mastodon, Drum-Major
+to his highness the Grand Duke of Samothracia. The Major, though of
+small stature compared with my wife, was considered a giant by ordinary
+men, being seven feet ten in height. My fondness for giants rendered
+him an eligible acquaintance to me. Mrs. Gogmagog naturally took to one
+of her own gigantic species; and the Major was pleased to say that ours
+was the only comfortable and commodious house in England--he meant the
+only one in which the doors were ten feet high, and the chair-seats four
+feet from the ground. Anyhow, he soon made himself at home with us--too
+_much_ at home, as I couldn't help thinking. I didn't mind him and my
+wife being good friends; but when, in their gigantic loftiness, they
+seemed to overlook me altogether, I began to entertain natural feelings
+of jealousy. Besides, the Major owed me money--large sums in proportion
+to his size, which he had borrowed under the obviously false pretence
+that he was "_very short_ just now;" and he seemed in no hurry to pay it
+back. What could I do? It was rather a risky thing to expostulate with a
+man of seven feet ten; and to turn him out of the house would have been
+a task altogether beyond my physical strength. At all events I could
+resolve that he should never enter it again; and I gave strict
+injunctions that always in future when Major Mastodon called there was
+to be "nobody at home."
+
+Moreover, I actually summoned up courage to tell my wife of my
+resolution, and even to remonstrate with her upon her own demeanour
+towards the gallant and gigantic Major. Then she got into a rage. And
+_such_ a rage! Heavens! what had I done? What would become of me? I was
+as one who had called down upon his devoted head the wrath of the gods
+or of the Titans.
+
+She drew herself up to her full height of nearly ten feet, her eyes
+glared like those of a demoniac, and grasping my arm in her Herculean
+clutch, she lifted me bodily from the ground.
+
+"Hands off!" I exclaimed, struggling. "Hit one your own size!"
+
+"_My_ own size!" she thundered, in a _contralto profundo_ voice that
+shook the very roof. "Where am I to find 'em? The only person
+approximating to my own size you have forbidden the house. You--_you_
+dare try and control my actions--you, whom I could crush like a
+blue-bottle--attempt to dictate to _me_! I will stand this no longer.
+You have offended me once too often. You die!"
+
+"Beware, fearful female!" I gasped. "Colossal as you are, the arm of the
+law is still longer and even stronger than yours. Kill me, and you will
+assuredly die for it!"
+
+She gave a laugh of scorn.
+
+"Me?" she cried. "Do you believe they would hang _me_? No; I am above
+all laws, and I have sworn that you shall die!"
+
+And in spite of my struggles she flung me, as easily as if I had been a
+doll, right out of the third storey window. Down I fell, down, down,
+till I--
+
+---- found myself on the floor. I had tumbled off the sofa, and so
+awakened from my terrific dream. Heavens! what a relief to find that
+after all I was _not_ married to a giantess, that it was all a vision
+due to my falling asleep over the advertisement, and that Mdlle.
+Goliathina was but a gigantic nightmare.
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+THE VISION OF THE ALDERMAN.
+
+HENRY S. LEIGH.
+
+
+ An Alderman sat at a festive board,
+ Quaffing the blood-red wine,
+ And many a Bacchanal stave outpour'd
+ In praise of the fruitful vine.
+ Turtle and salmon and Strasbourg pie
+ Pippins and cheese were there;
+ And the bibulous Alderman wink'd his eye,
+ For the sherris was old and rare.
+
+ But a cloud came o'er his gaze eftsoons,
+ And his wicked old orbs grew dim;
+ Then drink turn'd each of the silver spoons
+ To a couple of spoons for _him_.
+ He bow'd his head at the festive board,
+ By the gaslight's dazzling gleam:
+ He bow'd his head and he slept and snor'd,
+ And he dream'd a fearful dream.
+
+ Far, carried away on the wings of Sleep,
+ His spirit was onward borne,
+ Till he saw vast holiday crowds in Chepe
+ On a ninth November morn.
+ Guns were booming and bells ding-dong'd,
+ Ethiop minstrels play'd;
+ And still, wherever the burghers throng'd,
+ Brisk jongleurs drove their trade.
+
+ Scarlet Sheriffs, the City's pride,
+ With a portly presence fill'd
+ The whole of the courtyard just outside
+ The hall of their ancient Guild.
+ And in front of the central gateway there,
+ A marvellous chariot roll'd,
+ (Like gingerbread at a country fair
+ 'Twas cover'd with blazing gold).
+
+ And a being, array'd in pomp and pride
+ Was brought to the big stone gate;
+ And they begg'd that being to mount and ride
+ In that elegant coach of state.
+ But, oh! he was fat, so ghastly fat,
+ Was that being of pomp and pride,
+ That, in spite of many attempts thereat,
+ He _couldn't_ be pushed inside.
+
+ That being was press'd, but press'd in vain,
+ Till the drops bedew'd his cheek;
+ The gilded vehicle rock'd again,
+ And the springs began to creak.
+ The slumbering alderman groan'd a groan,
+ For a vision he seem'd to trace,
+ Some horrible semblance to _his own_
+ In that being's purple face.
+
+ And, "Oh!" he cried, as he started up;
+ "Sooner than come to _that_,
+ Farewell for ever the baneful cup
+ And the noxious turtle fat!"--
+ They carried him up the winding-stair;
+ They laid him upon the bed;
+ And they left him, sleeping the sleep of care,
+ With an ache in his nightcapp'd head.
+
+ (_By permission of_ MESSRS. CHATTO & WINDUS.)
+
+
+
+
+THE DEMON SNUFFERS.
+
+GEO. MANVILLE FENN.
+
+
+I'm not at all given to parading my troubles--nothing of the kind. I may
+be getting old, in fact, I am; and I may have had disappointments such
+as have left me slightly irritable and peevish; but I ask, as a man, who
+wouldn't be troubled in his nerves if he had suffered from snuffers?
+
+Snuffers? Yes--snuffers--a pair of cheap, black, iron snuffers, that
+screech when they are opened, and creak when they are shut; a pair that
+will not stay open, nor yet keep shut; a pair that gape at you
+incessantly, and point at you a horrid sharp iron beak, as a couple of
+leering eyes turn the finger and thumb holes into a pair of spectacles,
+and squint and wink at you maliciously. A word in your ear--this in a
+whisper--those snuffers are haunted! their insignificant iron frame is
+the habitation of a demon--an imp of darkness; and I've been troubled
+till I've got snuffers on the brain, and I shall have them till I'm
+snuffed out.
+
+It has been going on now for a couple of years, ever since my landlady
+sent the snuffers up to me first in my shiney crockery-ware candlestick,
+where those snuffers glide about like a snake in a tin pail. I remember
+the first night as well as can be. It was in November--a weird, wet,
+foggy night, when the river-side streets were wrapped in a yellow
+blanket of fog--and I was going to bed, when, at my first touch of the
+candlestick, those snuffers glided off with an angry snap, and lay,
+open-mouthed, glaring at me from the floor.
+
+I was somewhat startled, certainly, but far from alarmed; and I seized
+the fugitives and replaced them in the candlestick, opened the door, and
+ascended the stairs.
+
+Mind, I am only recording facts untinged by the pen of romance! Before I
+had ascended four steps, those hideous snuffers darted off, and plunged,
+point downwards, on to my left slippered foot, causing me an agonising
+pang, and the next moment a bead of starting blood stained my stocking.
+
+I will not declare this, but I believe it to be a fact: as I said
+something oathish, I am nearly certain that I heard a low, fiendish
+chuckle; and when I stooped to lift the snuffers, there was a bright
+spark in the open mouth, and a pungent blue smoke breathed out to annoy
+my nostrils!
+
+I was too bold in those days to take much notice of the incident, and I
+hurried upstairs--not, however, without seeing that there was a foul,
+black patch left upon my holland stair-cloth; and then I hurried into
+bed, and tried to sleep. But I could not, try as I would. In the
+darkness I could just make out the candlestick against the blind: and
+from that point incessantly the demon snuffers gradually approached me,
+till they sat spectacle-wise astride my nose, and a pair of burning eyes
+gazed through them right into mine.
+
+Need I say that I arose next morning feverish and unrefreshed to go
+about my daily duties?
+
+"I'll have no more of it to-night," I said to myself, as I rose early to
+go to bed and make up for the past bad night; and I smiled sardonically
+as I took up the highly-glazed candlestick and tried to shake the black,
+straddling reptile out upon the sideboard. I say _tried_; for, to my
+horror, the great eyeholes leered at me as they hugged round the upright
+portion of the stick and refused to be dislodged. I shook them again,
+and one part went round the extinguisher support, which the reptile
+dislodged, so that the extinguisher rattled upon the sideboard top. But
+the snuffers were there still. I tried again, and they, or it, dodged
+round and thrust a head through the handle, where they stuck fast,
+grinning at me till I set the candlestick down and stared.
+
+"Pooh!--stuff!--ridiculous!" I exclaimed, quite angry at my weak,
+imaginative folly; and, determined to act like a man, I seized the
+candlestick with one hand, the snuffers with the other, and, after a
+hard fight, succeeded in wriggling them out of their stronghold, banged
+them down upon the table cloth, seized them again, snuffed my candle
+viciously before replacing them on the table, and then marched out of
+the room, proud of my moral triumph, and rejoicing in having freed
+myself of the demon. But, as I stood upon the stairs, I could see that
+my hand was blackened; and the icy, galvanic feeling that assailed my
+nerves when I first touched the snuffers still tingled right to my
+elbow.
+
+But I was free of my enemy; and marching with freely playing lungs into
+my bedroom, I closed and locked the door, set down my empty candlestick,
+changed my coat and vest for a dressing-gown and began to brush my hair.
+
+It is my custom to brush my hair with a pair of brushes for ten minutes
+every night before retiring to rest. I find it strengthening to the
+brain. Upon this occasion I had brushed hard for five minutes, when
+there was a loud knock at my bed-room door.
+
+"Can I speak to you a moment, sir?" said the voice of my landlady.
+
+I rose and opened the door, and then started back in disgust, as I was
+greeted with--
+
+"Please, sir, you forgot your snuffers!"
+
+My snuffers! It was too horrible; but there was more to bear.
+
+"And please, sir, I do hope you'll be more careful. It's a mussy we
+warn't all burnt to death in our beds, for the snuffers have made a
+great hole as big as your hand in the tablecloth, and scorched the
+mahogany table; and it was a mussy I went into your room before I went
+up to bed."
+
+I couldn't speak, for I was drawn irresistibly on to obey, as my
+landlady held the snuffers-handle towards me, and pointed to the fungus
+snuff upon the common candle. I thrust in a finger and thumb, closed the
+door in desperation--for I could not refuse the snuffers--once more
+locked myself in, and stalked to the dressing-table; and, as I heard my
+landlady's retreating steps, I snuffed the candle, which started up
+instantly with a brighter flame, as the snuffers' mouth closed upon the
+incandescent wick.
+
+"I'm slightly nervous," I said to myself, as I essayed to put down my
+enemies. "I want tone--iron--iodine--tonic bitters--and--curse the
+thing!" I ejaculated, shaking my hand and trying to dislodge the
+snuffers. My efforts were but vain, for the rings clung tightly to my
+finger and thumb, cut into my flesh, and it was not until I had given
+them a frantic wrench, which broke the rivet and separated the halves,
+that I was able to tear out my bruised digits, and stand, panting, at
+the broken instrument.
+
+There was relief, though, here. I felt as if I had crushed out the
+reptile's life; and the two pieces--their living identity gone--lay
+nerveless, and devoid of terrors, in the candle tray.
+
+I slept excellently that night, and smiled as I dressed beside the
+broken fragments. I had achieved a victory over self, as well as over an
+enemy. I enjoyed my breakfast, after raising the white cloth to look at
+the damage, which I knew would appear as twenty shillings in the weekly
+bill; but I did not care, though I shuddered slightly as I thought of
+the snuffers' horrible designs. I dined that day with friends, played a
+few games afterwards at pool, and then we had oysters.
+
+I was in the best of spirits as I opened the door with my latchkey, and
+I laughed heartily at what I called my folly of the previous nights;
+but, as I entered my room, there was the great black hole in the green
+cloth table cover, and the charred wood beneath, while, upon the
+sideboard----
+
+I groaned as I stood, half transfixed. I could have imagined that I had
+on divers leaden-soled boots; for there, maliciously grinning at me with
+half-opened mouth, were the demon snuffers, joined together by a new,
+glistening rivet, which only added to their weird appearance, as the
+beak cocked itself at me, and the great eyes glared, as the black mouth
+seemed to say--
+
+"You'll never get rid of me!"
+
+Something seemed to draw me, and I went and took the candlestick, my
+eyes being fixed the while upon the snuffers; and I came in contact with
+several pieces of furniture as I went into the passage, where I held the
+candlestick very much on one side as I lit the candle at the little
+lamp. I hoped that the snuffers would fall out; but they grinned
+maliciously, and did not stir.
+
+The next moment I was obliged to use them, for the candle began to
+gutter; when, as nothing followed, I grew bolder, and began to ascend
+the stairs. In a minute, though before I was half way up the second
+flight, and though the candlestick was carried perfectly
+straight--crash! the demon snuffers darted out, and dashed themselves
+upon the floor.
+
+I did not stay to look, but hurried to my bed-room, closing and locking
+the door.
+
+"Safe this time!" I thought; for it was late, and I knew that my
+landlady must have been long in bed. Then I began to think of how they
+had hopped out of the candlestick, and I remembered what they had done
+on the previous night--how they had tried to set fire to the house.
+Suppose they should do so now? The cold perspiration trickled down my
+nose at the very thought. I dared not leave the demon, or twin
+demons--the horrid Siamese pair.
+
+I would, though--I was safe here. But, fire! Suppose they set the house
+on fire?
+
+Down I went in the dark--very softly, too, lest I should alarm the
+landlady and the other lodgers; but, though the odour was strong, I went
+right to the bottom, and stood upon the door-mat without finding my
+enemies.
+
+I stood and thought for a few minutes, and then began slowly to ascend,
+feeling carefully all over every step as I went up to my bed-room, where
+I arrived, without ever my hand coming in contact with that which I
+sought.
+
+"I'll go to bed and leave them!" I ejaculated, and I turned upon my
+heel; but, at that moment, the pungent burning odour came up stronger
+than ever, and I was compelled to descend, to find that the demon twins
+had been lying in ambush half-way down, so that I trod upon them,
+tripped, in my terror my foot glided, over them, and I fell with a crash
+into the umbrella stand, which I upset with a hideous noise upon the
+oilcloth--not so loud, though, but that I could hear the little black
+imps take three or four grasshopper leaps along the passage, ending by
+sticking the pointed beak into the street door.
+
+Before I could gather myself up, I heard doors opening upstairs, and
+screaming from the girls below who slept in the kitchen; and the next
+minute old Major O'Brien's voice came roaring down--
+
+"An' if ye shtir a shtep I'll blow out yer brains!"
+
+Of course I had to explain; and I had the horrible knowledge that they
+gave me the credit of being intoxicated--the Major saying he would not
+stop in a house where people went prowling about at all hours, ending by
+himself, at the landlady's request, examining the door to see if it was
+latched securely, and then seeing me safely to my room.
+
+"An' if I did me duty, sor, I should lock you in," he said by way of
+good night. "And now get into bed, sor, and at once; and--here are your
+snuffers!"
+
+I could fill volumes with the tortures inflicted upon me by those
+haunted snuffers, for they clung to me, and in spite of every effort
+never left me free. It was in vain that I came home early and shifted
+them into the Major's candlestick: they only came back. I threw them out
+of the bedroom window once, and they were found by the maid in the area.
+I threw them out again, and they were picked up by the policeman, and
+they made him bring them back. Then I tried it at midday; but an old
+woman brought them in, and made a row because they went through her
+parasol, so that I had to pay ten shillings, besides being looked upon
+by my landlady as a lunatic.
+
+I thrust them into the fire one night, and held them there with the
+tongs, lest they should leap out; but they would not burn, and my
+landlady, finding them in the ashes, had them japanned, and they were in
+their old place next day. I had no better luck when I thrust
+them--buried them--deep in a scuttle of ashes; they only turned up out
+of the dusthole when Mary sifted the cinders.
+
+They always came off black on to my hands when they did not anoint my
+fingers with soft tallow. If they fell out of the candlestick, it was
+always on to oilcloth or paint, where they could make a noise jumping
+about like a grasshopper, till they ended by standing upon the sharp
+beak, with the spectacle-like holes in the air. If I went up to dress,
+they would shoot into my collar-box, or amongst my clean shirts,
+smutting them all over. If I tried to kill a wasp with them upon an
+autumn evening, when the insect crept out of a plum at dessert, the
+wretches only snipped him in two, as if rejoicing at the inflicted
+torture. In short, they have worn me out--those snuffers; and, if it was
+not from fear, I should take and drop them from the parapet of a bridge.
+
+But, there! it would be in vain; they would be certain to turn up; and
+they are not mortal, so what can you expect? Let this communication be a
+secret, for it is written wholly by day, when the snuffers lie in the
+lower regions.
+
+A bright thought has occurred to me--the Major leaves this morning for
+Berlin.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I have done it--his carpet bag stood in the hall, waiting for the cab.
+The Major was in the drawing-room paying his bill. The maids were
+upstairs making the beds. I stole down, like a thief, into the kitchen.
+The snuffers were in my dirty candlestick upon the dresser. I seized the
+grinning, tallow-anointed demons, flew up the stairs, and, as I heard
+the drawing-room door open, tore the bag a little apart, and thrust them
+in. The next minute they were on the roof of a cab, and on their way to
+Berlin, where they will haunt the Major.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A month of uninterrupted joy has passed. On the day of the Major's
+departure I seemed to wed pleasure; and this has been the honeymoon.
+This morning, when I paid my bill, the landlady announced the coming
+back of the Major to his old apartments. I have been in dread ever
+since. But this is folly. I will be hopeful: my worst fears may not be
+confirmed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It's all over--he has brought them back!
+
+They grin at me as I write.
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+THE WALRUS AND THE CARPENTER.
+
+LEWIS CARROLL.
+
+
+ The sun was shining on the sea,
+ Shining with all his might;
+ He did his very best to make
+ The billows smooth and bright--
+ And this was odd, because it was
+ The middle of the night.
+
+ The moon was shining sulkily,
+ Because she thought the sun
+ Had got no business to be there
+ After the day was done.
+ "It's very rude of him," she said,
+ "To come and spoil the fun."
+
+ The sea was wet as wet could be,
+ The sands were dry as dry.
+ You could not see a cloud, because
+ No cloud was in the sky:
+ No birds were flying over-head--
+ There were no birds to fly.
+
+ The Walrus and the Carpenter
+ Were walking close at hand;
+ They wept like anything to see
+ Such quantities of sand:
+ "If this were only cleared away,"
+ They said, "It _would_ be grand!"
+
+ "If seven maids, with seven mops,
+ Swept it for half a year,
+ Do you suppose," the Walrus said,
+ "That they could get it clear?"
+ "I doubt it," said the Carpenter,
+ And shed a bitter tear.
+
+ "O, Oysters, come and walk with us!"
+ The Walrus did beseech.
+ "A pleasant walk, a pleasant talk,
+ Along the briny beach:
+ We cannot do with more than four,
+ To give a hand to each."
+
+ The eldest Oyster looked at him,
+ But never a word he said:
+ The eldest Oyster winked his eye,
+ And shook his heavy head--
+ Meaning to say he did not choose
+ To leave the oyster-bed.
+
+ But four young Oysters hurried up,
+ All eager for the treat:
+ Their coats were brushed, their faces washed,
+ Their shoes were clean and neat--
+ And this was odd, because, you know,
+ They hadn't any feet.
+
+ Four other Oysters followed them,
+ And yet another four;
+ And thick and fast they came at last,
+ And more, and more, and more--
+ All hopping through the frothy waves,
+ And scrambling to the shore.
+
+ The Walrus and the Carpenter
+ Walked on a mile or so,
+ And then they rested on a rock
+ Conveniently low:
+ And all the little Oysters stood
+ And waited in a row.
+
+ "The time has come," the Walrus said,
+ "To talk of many things:
+ Of shoes--and ships--and sealing-wax--
+ Of cabbages--and kings--
+ And why the sea is boiling hot--
+ And whether pigs have wings."
+
+ "But wait a bit," the Oysters cried,
+ "Before we have our chat;
+ For some of us are out of breath,
+ And all of us are fat!"
+ "No hurry," said the Carpenter:
+ They thanked him much for that.
+
+ "A loaf of bread," the Walrus said,
+ "Is what we chiefly need:
+ Pepper and vinegar besides
+ Are very good indeed--
+ Now, if you're ready, Oysters dear,
+ We can begin to feed."
+
+ "But not on us," the Oysters cried,
+ Turning a little blue.
+ "After such kindness, that would be
+ A dismal thing to do!"
+ "The night is fine," the Walrus said.
+ "Do you admire the view?
+
+ "It was so kind of you to come,
+ And you are very nice!"
+ The Carpenter said nothing but
+ "Cut us another slice:
+ I wish you were not quite so deaf--
+ I've had to ask you twice!"
+
+ "It seems a shame," the Walrus said,
+ "To play them such a trick,
+ After we've brought them out so far,
+ And made them trot so quick!"
+ The Carpenter said nothing but
+ "The butter's spread too thick!"
+
+ "I weep for you," the Walrus said:
+ "I deeply sympathize."
+ With sobs and tears he sorted out
+ Those of the largest size,
+ Holding his pocket-handkerchief
+ Before his streaming eyes.
+
+ "O, Oysters," said the Carpenter,
+ "You've had a pleasant run!
+ Shall we be trotting home again?"
+ But answer came there none--
+ And this was scarcely odd, because
+ They'd eaten every one.
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+MY BROTHER HENRY.
+
+J. M. BARRIE.
+
+
+At first sight it may not, perhaps, seem quite the thing that I should
+be hilarious because I have at last had the courage to kill my brother
+Henry. For some time, however, Henry had been annoying me. Strictly
+speaking, I never had a brother Henry. It is just fifteen months since I
+began to acknowledge that there was such a person. It came about in this
+way:--I have a friend of the name of Fenton, who, like myself, lives in
+London. His house is so conveniently situated that I can go there and
+back in one day. About a year and a half ago I was at Fenton's, and he
+remarked that he had met a man the day before who knew my brother Henry.
+Not having a brother Henry, I felt that there must be a mistake
+somewhere; so I suggested that Fenton's friend had gone wrong in the
+name. My only brother, I pointed out with the suavity of manner that
+makes me a general favourite, was called Alexander. "Yes," said Fenton,
+"but he spoke of Alexander also." Even this did not convince me that I
+had a brother Henry, and I asked Fenton the name of his friend.
+Scudamour was the name, and the gentleman had met my brothers Alexander
+and Henry some six years previously in Paris. When I heard this I
+probably frowned; for then I knew who my brother Henry was. Strange
+though it may seem, I was my own brother Henry. I distinctly remembered
+meeting this man Scudamour at Paris during the time that Alexander and I
+were there for a week's pleasure, and quarrelled every day. I explained
+this to Fenton; and there, for the time being, the matter rested. I had,
+however, by no means heard the last of Henry. Several times afterwards I
+heard from various persons that Scudamour wanted to meet me because he
+knew my brother Henry. At last we did meet, at a Bohemian supper-party
+in Furnival's Inn; and, almost as soon as he saw me, Scudamour asked
+where Henry was now. This was precisely what I feared. I am a man who
+always looks like a boy. There are few persons of my age in London who
+retain their boyish appearance as long as I have done; indeed, this is
+the curse of my life. Though I am approaching the age of thirty, I pass
+for twenty; and I have observed old gentlemen frown at my precocity when
+I said a good thing or helped myself to a second glass of wine. There
+was, therefore, nothing surprising in Scudamour's remark that, when he
+had the pleasure of meeting Henry, Henry must have been about the age
+that I had now reached. All would have been well had I explained the
+real state of affairs to this annoying man; but, unfortunately for
+myself, I loathe entering upon explanations to anybody about anything.
+When I ring for my boots and my servant thinks I want a glass of water,
+I drink the water and remain indoors. Much, then, did I dread a
+discussion with Scudamour, his surprise when he heard that I was Henry
+(my Christian name is Thomas), and his comments on my youthful
+appearance. Besides, I was at that moment carving a tough fowl; and, as
+I learned to carve from a handbook, I can make no progress unless I keep
+muttering to myself, "Cut from A to B, taking care to pass along the
+line C D, and sever the wing K from the body at the point F." There was
+no likelihood of my meeting Scudamour again, so the easiest way to get
+rid of him seemed to be to humour him. I therefore told him that Henry
+was in India, married, and doing well. "Remember me to Henry when you
+write to him," was Scudamour's last remark to me that evening. A few
+weeks later someone tapped me on the shoulder in Oxford Street. It was
+Scudamour. "Heard from Henry?" he asked. I said I had heard by the last
+mail. "Anything particular in the letter?" I felt it would not do to say
+there was nothing particular in a letter which had come all the way from
+India, so I hinted that Henry had had trouble with his wife. By this I
+meant that her health was bad; but he took it up in another way, and I
+did not set him right. "Ah, ah!" he said, shaking his head sagaciously,
+"I'm sorry to hear that. Poor Henry!" "Poor old boy!" was all I could
+think of replying. "How about the children?" Scudamour asked. "Oh, the
+children," I said, with what I thought presence of mind, "are coming to
+England." "To stay with Alexander?" he asked; for Alexander is a married
+man. My answer was that Alexander was expecting them by the middle of
+next month; and eventually Scudamour went away muttering "Poor Henry!"
+In a month or so we met again. "No word of Henry's getting leave of
+absence?" asked Scudamour. I replied shortly that Henry had gone to live
+in Bombay, and would not be home for years. He saw that I was brusque,
+so what does he do but draw me aside for a quiet explanation. "I
+suppose," he said, "you are annoyed because I told Fenton that Henry's
+wife had run away from him. The fact is I did it for your good. You see
+I happened to make a remark to Fenton about your brother Henry, and he
+said that there was no such person. Of course I laughed at that, and
+pointed out not only that I had the pleasure of Henry's acquaintance,
+but that you and I had a talk about the old fellow every time we met.
+'Well,' Fenton said, 'this is a most remarkable thing; for Tom,' meaning
+you, 'said to me in this very room, sitting in that very chair, that
+Alexander was his only brother.' I saw that Fenton resented your
+concealing the existence of your brother Henry from him, so I thought
+the most friendly thing I could do was to tell him that your reticence
+was doubtless due to the fact that Henry's private affairs were
+troubling you. Naturally, in the circumstances, you did not want to
+talk about Henry." I shook Scudamour by the hand, telling him that he
+had acted judiciously; but if I could have stabbed him quietly at that
+moment I dare say I should have done it. I did not see Scudamour again
+for a long time, for I took care to keep out of his way; but I heard
+first from him and then of him. One day he wrote to me saying that his
+nephew was going to Bombay, and would I be so good as to give the youth
+an introduction to my brother Henry? He also asked me to dine with him
+and his nephew. I declined the dinner, but I sent the nephew the
+required note of introduction to Henry. The next I heard of Scudamour
+was from Fenton. "By the way," said Fenton, "Scudamour is in Edinburgh
+at present." I trembled, for Edinburgh is where Alexander lives. "What
+has taken him there?" I asked, with assumed carelessness. Fenton
+believed it was business; "but," he added, "Scudamour asked me to tell
+you that he meant to call on Alexander, as he was anxious to see Henry's
+children." A few days afterwards I had a telegram from Alexander, who
+generally uses this means of communication when he corresponds with me.
+"Do you know a man Scudamour? reply," was what Alexander said. I thought
+of answering that we had met a man of that name when we were in Paris;
+but, on the whole, replied boldly: "Know no one of the name of
+Scudamour." About two months ago I passed Scudamour in Regent Street,
+and he did not recognise me. This I could have borne if there had been
+no more of Henry; but I knew that Scudamour was now telling everybody
+about Henry's wife. By-and-by I got a letter from an old friend of
+Alexander's, asking me if there was any truth in a report that Alexander
+was going to Bombay. Soon afterwards Alexander wrote to me to say that
+he had been told by several persons that I was going to Bombay. In
+short, I saw that the time had come for killing Henry. So I told Fenton
+that Henry had died of fever, deeply regretted; and asked him to be sure
+to tell Scudamour, who had always been interested in the deceased's
+welfare. The other day Fenton told me that he had communicated the sad
+intelligence to Scudamour. "How did he take it?" I asked. "Well," Fenton
+said, reluctantly, "he told me that when he was up in Edinburgh he did
+not get on well with Alexander; but he expressed great curiosity as to
+Henry's children." "Ah," I said, "the children were both drowned in the
+Forth; a sad affair--we can't bear to talk of it." I am not likely to
+see much of Scudamour again, nor is Alexander. Scudamour now goes about
+saying that Henry was the only one of us he really liked.
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+A NIGHT WITH A STORK.
+
+W. E. WILCOX.
+
+
+Four individuals--namely, my wife, my infant son, my maid-of-all work,
+and myself--occupy one of a row of very small houses in the suburbs of
+London. I am a thoroughly domestic man, and notwithstanding that my
+occupation necessitates absence from my mansion between the hours of
+9 a.m. and 5 p.m., my heart is generally at home, with my diminutive
+household. My wife, and I, love regularity and quiet above all things;
+and although, since the arrival of my son, and heir, we had not enjoyed
+that peace which we did during the first year of our married life, yet
+his juvenile, though somewhat powerful, little lungs, had as yet failed
+in making ours a noisy house. Our regularity had, moreover, remained
+undisturbed, and we got up, went to bed, dined, breakfasted, and took
+tea at the same time, day after day.
+
+We had been going on in this clockwork fashion for a year and a half,
+when one morning the postman brought to our door a letter of ominous
+appearance, and on looking at the direction, I found that it came from
+an old, rich, and very eccentric uncle of mine, with whom, for certain
+reasons, we wished to remain on the best of terms. "What can uncle
+Martin have to write about?" was our simultaneous exclamation, and I
+opened it with considerable curiosity.
+
+ "MARTIN HOUSE, HERTS, _Oct._ 17, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR NEPHEW,--
+
+ "You may perhaps have heard that I am forming an aviary here. A friend
+ in Rotterdam has written to me to say that he has sent by the boat,
+ which will arrive in London to-morrow afternoon, a very intelligent
+ parrot and a fine stork. As the vessel arrives too late for them to be
+ sent on the same night, I shall be obliged by your taking the birds
+ home, and forwarding them to me the next morning.--With my respects to
+ your good lady,
+
+ "I remain your affectionate uncle,
+ "RALPH MARTIN."
+
+I said nothing, but got a book on natural history, and turned to
+"Stork." With trembling fingers I passed over the fact of "his hind toe
+being short, the middle too long, and joined to the outer one by a large
+membrane, and by a smaller one to the inner toe," because that would not
+matter much for one night; but I groaned out to my wife the pleasant
+intelligence that "his height is four feet, his appetite extremely
+voracious," and "his food--frogs, mice, worms, snails, and eels." Where
+were we to provide a supper and breakfast of this description for him?
+
+I went to my office, and passed anything but a pleasant day, my thoughts
+constantly reverting to our expected visitors. At four o'clock I took a
+cab to the docks, and on arriving there, inquired for the ship, which
+was pointed out to me as "the one with the crowd upon the quay." On
+driving up, I discovered why there was a crowd, and the discovery did
+not bring comfort with it. On the deck, on one leg, stood the stork.
+Whether it was the sea-voyage, or the leaving his home, or, being a
+stork of high moral principle, he was grieving at the continual, and
+rather joyous and exulting swearing of the parrot, I do not know, but I
+never saw a more melancholy looking object in my life.
+
+I went down on the deck, and did not like the expression of relief that
+came over the captain's face when he found what I had come for. The
+transmission of the parrot from the ship to the cab was an easy matter,
+as he was in a cage, but the stork was merely tethered by one leg; and
+although he did his best, when brought to the foot of the ladder, in
+trying to get up, he failed utterly, and had to be half-shoved,
+half-hauled, all the way--which, as he got astride, after the manner of
+equestrians, on every other bar, was a work of some difficulty. I
+hurried him into the cab, and ordering the man to drive as quickly as
+possible, got in with my guests. At first, I had to keep dodging my head
+about, to keep my face away from his bill as he turned round; but all of
+a sudden he broke the little window at the back of the cab, thrust his
+head through, and would keep it there, notwithstanding I kept pulling
+him back. Consequently, when we drew up at my door, there was a mob of
+about a thousand strong around us. I got him in as well as I could, and
+shut the door.
+
+How can I describe the spending of that evening? how can I get
+sufficient power out of the English language to let you know what a
+nuisance that bird was to us? How can I tell you the cool manner in
+which he inspected our domestic arrangements?--walking slowly into
+rooms, and standing on one leg until his curiosity was satisfied; the
+expression of wretchedness that he threw over his entire person when he
+was tethered to the banisters, and had found out that, owing to our
+limited accommodation, he was to remain in the hall all night; the way
+in which he ate the snails specially provided for him, verifying to the
+letter the naturalist's description of his appetite. How can you, who
+have not had a stork staying with you, have any idea of the change which
+came over his temper after his supper--how he pecked at everybody who
+came near him; how he stood sentinel at the foot of the stairs; how my
+wife and I made fruitless attempts to get past, followed by ignominious
+retreats how; at last we outmanoeuvred him by throwing a table-cloth
+over his head, and then rushing by him, gaining the top of the stairs
+before he could disentangle himself.
+
+Added to all this, we had to endure language from that parrot which
+would have disgraced a pothouse; indeed, so scurrilous did he become,
+that we had to take him and lock him up in the coal-hole, where, from
+fatigue, or the darkness of his bedroom, he soon swore himself to sleep.
+
+We were quite ready for rest, and the forgetfulness which, we hoped,
+sleep, that "balm of hurt minds," would bring with it; but our peace was
+not to last long. About 2 a.m., I was awakened by my wife, and told to
+listen; I did so, and heard a sort of scrambling noise outside the door.
+"What can that be?" thought I. "He has broken his string, and is coming
+up stairs," said my wife; and then, remembering that the nursery door
+was generally left open, she urged my immediately stopping his further
+progress. "But, my dear," said I, "what am I to do in my present
+defenceless state of clothing, if he should take to pecking?" My wife's
+expression of the idea of my considering myself before the baby,
+determined me at once, come what might, to go and do him battle. Out I
+went, and sure enough there he was on the landing, resting himself,
+after his unusual exertion, by tucking one leg up. He looked so subdued,
+that I was about to take him by the string and lead him downstairs, when
+he drew back his head, and in less time than it takes to relate, I was
+back in my room, bleeding profusely from a very severe wound in my leg.
+I shouted out to the nurse to shut the door, and determined to let the
+infamous bird go where he liked. I bound up my leg and went to bed
+again; but the thought that there was a stork wandering about the house,
+prevented me from getting any more sleep. From certain sounds that we
+heard, we had little doubt but that he was passing some of his time in
+the cupboard where we kept our spare crockery, and an inspection the
+next day confirmed this.
+
+In the morning I ventured cautiously out, and finding he was in our
+spare bedroom, I shut the door upon him. I then went for a large sack,
+and with the help of the table-cloth, and the boy who cleans our shoes,
+we got him into it without any personal damage. I took him off in this
+way to the station, and sent him and the parrot off to my uncle by the
+first train.
+
+We have determined that, taking our chance about a place in my uncle's
+will or not, we will never again have anything to do with any foreign
+animals, however much he may ask and desire it.
+
+ (_By permission of_ MESSRS. W. & R. CHAMBERS.)
+
+
+
+
+THE FAITHFUL LOVERS.
+
+F. C. BURNAND.
+
+
+ I'd been away from her three years--about that--
+ And I returned to find my Mary true,
+ And though I'd question her, I did not doubt that
+ It was unnecessary so to do.
+
+ 'Twas by the chimney corner we were sitting,
+ "Mary," said I, "have you been always true?"
+ "Frankly," says she, just pausing in her knitting,
+ "I _don't_ think I've unfaithful been to you;
+ But for the three years past I'll tell you what
+ I've done; then say if I've been true or not.
+
+ "When first you left, my grief was uncontrollable,
+ Alone I mourned my miserable lot,
+ And all who saw me thought me inconsolable,
+ Till Captain Clifford came from Aldershot;
+ To flirt with him amused me while 'twas new,
+ I don't count _that_ unfaithfulness. Do you?
+
+ "The next--oh! let me see--was Frankie Phipps,
+ I met him at my uncle's Christmas-tide;
+ And 'neath the mistletoe, where lips met lips,
+ He gave me his first kiss"--and here she sighed;
+ "We stayed six weeks at uncle's--how time flew!
+ I don't count _that_ unfaithfulness. Do you?
+
+ "Lord Cecil Fossmote, only twenty-one,
+ Lent me his horse. Oh, how we rode and raced!
+ We scoured the downs--we rode to hounds--such fun!
+ And often was his arm around my waist--
+ That was to lift me up or down. But who
+ Would count _that_ as unfaithfulness? Do you?
+
+ "Do you know Reggy Vere? Ah, how he sings!
+ We met--'twas at a picnic. Ah, such weather!
+ He gave me, look, the first of these two rings,
+ When we were lost in Cliefden Woods together.
+ Ah, what a happy time we spent, we two!
+ I don't count _that_ unfaithfulness to you.
+
+ "I've yet another ring from him. D'you see
+ The plain gold circlet that is shining here?"
+ I took her hand: "Oh, Mary! Can it be
+ That you"--Quoth she, "that I am Mrs. Vere.
+ I don't count _that_ unfaithfulness. Do you?"
+ "_No," I replied, "for I am married, too._"
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+THE WAIL OF A BANNER-BEARER.
+
+ARTHUR MATTHISON.
+
+
+Well, what if I am only a banner-bearer? There's bigger blokes than me
+what begun as "supes," an' see where they've got to? _Why don't I get
+there?_ Cause I ain't never had the chance. You just let me get a
+"speaking part" as suits me, that's all! Oh--it "_would be all_," eh?
+Why--but there! you're a baby in the purfession! you are! When you've
+been Capting of the Guard, and Third Noble, and a Bandit Keerousin, and
+First Hancient Bard, and Fourth in the Council of Ten what listens to
+Otheller, and the Mob in the Capitol, and a Harcher of Merry England,
+and a Peer of France, what doesn't speak, but has to look as if he could
+say a lot; when you've been all this you may talk! _I needn't be
+offended?_ All right, old pal; I ain't. Though I was 'urt when that
+utilerty cove said as I was only a banner-bearer. "Only!" Why I should
+like to know where they'd be without us--all them old spoutin' tragedy
+merchants! They'd have no armies, consequently they couldn't rave at
+'em, and lead 'em on to victory and things. They wouldn't 'ave no
+sennits, so they'd 'ave to cut out their potent, grave, and reverent
+seniors--an' that 'ud worry em. They wouldn't 'ave no hexited citizens,
+and so they couldn't bury old Ceser nor praise him neither. They
+couldn't strew no fields with no dead soldiers. They'd 'ave nobody to
+chivy 'em when they come to the throne, or returned from the wars. They
+couldn't 'ave no percessions; as for balls, and parties, and
+torneymongs, why, they couldn't give 'em. And where 'ud they often be
+without the "distant ollerings" behind the scenes, allus a-comin' nerer
+and louder. Why, I remember a 'eavy lead one night, as had insulted his
+army fearful, at rehearsal; he stops sudden, and thumps his breastplate,
+and says, "'Ark, that toomult!" when there warn't no more toomult than
+two flies 'ud make in a milk-jug. We jest cut off his toomult, and
+quered his pitch, in a minnit, for the laugh come in 'ot. We're just as
+much wanted as they are, make no error.
+
+Only a banner-bearer! "Only," be blow'd! Oh, don't you bother, I ain't
+getting waxy. I'm only a standin' up for my purfession. What do you say?
+_They could do without me in the modden drarmer?_ The modden drarmer, my
+boy, ain't actin'! It's nothing but "cuff-shootin'." You just has to
+stand against a mankel-shelf, with your hands in Poole's pockets, and
+say nothing elegantly. You don't want no chest-notes; you don't want no
+action; you don't want no exsitement; you don't want no lungs, no heart,
+and no brain; only lungs an' soda, heart an' potash, brain an' selzer.
+Everything's dilooted, my boy, for the modden drarmer; and the old
+school, an' the old kostumes 'ud bust the sides and roof too of the
+swell band-boxes, where they does the new school and the new kostumes.
+_P'r'aps I'm right?_ Of course I'm right; and I'm in earnest, too! Why,
+my boy, if they was to offer me an engagement as a "guest" in one of
+them cuff-shootin' plays, and ask me to go on in evening-dress, I'm
+blest if I wouldn't throw up the part. Trousers and white ties cramps
+me. I wants a suit o' mail an' a 'alberd; a toonic, and my legs free; a
+dagger in my teeth--not a tooth-pick; a battle-axe in my 'and--not a
+crutch. I likes to be led to victory, I does. I likes to storm castles,
+and trampel on the foe! I does. I likes to hang our banners on the
+outward walls, I does. I'm a born banner-bearer, I am, and I glories in
+it. No, my boy! none of your milk-and-water "guests," and such, for the
+likes of me! An' if I was the Lord Chamberlain, I'd perhibit the modden
+drarmer altogether. Them's my sentiments. If he don't perhibit it,
+actin' 'ull soon be modden'd out of existence; an' we shall 'ave Macbeth
+in a two guinea tourist suit, and Looy the Eleventh in nickerbockers, on
+a bisykel. It's the old banner-bearing school as got us all our big
+actors, an' it stands to reason, my boy; for a cove can't spred hisself
+in a frock coat and droring-room langwidge. They're both on 'em too tame
+for what I calls real actin'. What! you _have heard say as us
+banner-bearers don't act--was only machines_? Well, some on us don't,
+p'r'aps, but some on us does, and no mistake.
+
+You can't, as a rule, expect much feeling, much dignerty, much
+patriertism, or much simperthy for a shillin' a night. If they was all
+the real articles, they'd fetch a lot more than that; but there is
+gentlemen in my line as goes in for all four--reg'lar comes nateral to
+'em. Why, I've been that work'd on when I've seen Joan o'Hark goin' in a
+perisher at the stake, an' makin' that last dyin' speech and confession
+of hers, that I've felt a real 'art beat against my property
+breast-plate, and felt real tears a tricklin' down to my false beard.
+I've been so struck with admirashun for some Othellos, that when they've
+been a addressin' of me as the sennit, I've felt as dignerfied as if I'd
+been the Doag of Venice hisself, and I bet he looked it.
+
+As for patriertism, there isn't a man living as has died for his
+country--willing, mind you--as often as I have; and I've strewed many a
+bloody field of batel with a ernest corpse, I have. An' as far as
+regards simperthy, it's stood in my way, for I've been that upset by
+Queen Katherines and Prince Arthurs, and even old Shylock (for Grashyano
+does giv' 'im a doin'), and Ophelias, and other sufferin' parties, as
+I've often forgot my hexits and been fined a tanner; and if that ain't
+actin', I should like to know what is.
+
+It's all very well for them noospaper crickets to harry us, and say as
+we're a set o' this and a set o' the other, and that we ain't got no
+hideas. They wouldn't 'ave many hideas if they wasn't paid more than a
+shilling a night (with often twopence off to the hagent) for the use of
+'em; the article's as good as the price, an' no mistake. Some on us gets
+a bit more, and accordin' some on us gives a bit more; for there's first
+heavy lead, and setterer, among the supes, just as there is among the
+principles, don't make no error! _Have to do as the "stars" tell us?_
+Well, of course, we does, only if the stars don't treat us like gents,
+we knows how to queer their pitches: rather! Why, it ain't so very long
+since as I was a-playing a Roman Licktor in "Virginius," and when we was
+a rehearsin' of it, 'im as played Happyus Clordyus called me a "pig."
+"All right," says I, "aside" like, "I'll pig yer." Accordin', when night
+comes, and he makes an exit in the third act, and says--didn't he enjoy
+hisself with it--"And I shall surely see that they reseve it!" he chucks
+his toger over his right shoulder, and turns round as magestick as a
+beedle to walk off--well, some'ow, just then I drops my bundle of sticks
+("fusses," they call 'em), all accidentle like, and Happyus Clordyus,
+with his heyes in the hair, comes to grief, slap over 'em. He was the
+un-happyest Clordyus all through that play as ever you see. What did he
+call me a "pig" for, the idiot?
+
+"_Seem to be important, after all?_" Important! I should think we was!
+There couldn't be no big drarmers without us, no gallant warryers, no
+'owling mobs, no "Down with the tirants!" no briggands reposin', no
+'appy pezzants, and no stage picturs of any account, if it warn't for
+the supes and banner-bearers, as ought to be made more on and seen to a
+bit better than they is; for what says the old Shyley, in the play, 'im
+what old Phellups us'd to warm 'em up in? "What?" says he, "what! Hath
+not a supe eyes, 'ands, horgans, somethin' else, and passions? fed with
+the same food?--(no! Shakey, old man, he ain't!) Well, if you prick us,
+don't us bleed? if we larf, don't you tickle us? and if you wrong us,
+ain't we goin' to take it out of you, like I took it out o' Happyus
+Clordyus?" _How I do wag?_ Well, ain't it enough to make me? Don't let
+that 'ere utilerty cuff-shooter allood to me as "only a banner-bearer,"
+then! Let 'im, and all the others, treat us more respectful, and he and
+them too 'ull find a feeling 'art and good manners too, at even a
+shilling a night, though we could throw 'em in a lot; more of both for
+an extra bob.--Good night, old man.
+
+ (_By permission of_ MESSRS. ROUTLEDGE & SONS.)
+
+
+
+
+THE DREAM OF THE BILIOUS BEADLE.
+
+ARTHUR SHIRLEY.
+
+
+ 'Twas in the grimy winter time, an evening cold and damp,
+ And four and twenty work'us boys, all of one ill-fed stamp,
+ Were blowing on blue finger tips, bent double with the cramp;
+ And when the skilly poured out fell into each urchin's pan
+ They swallowed it at such a pace as only boyhood can.
+ But the Beadle sat remote from all, a bilious-looking man--
+ His hat was off, red vest apart, to catch the evening breeze:
+ He thought that that might cool his brow; it only made him sneeze,
+ So pressed his side with his hand, and tried to seem as if at ease.
+
+ Heave after heave his waistcoat gave, to him was peace denied,
+ It tortured him to see them eat, he couldn't though he tried!
+ Good fare had made him much too fat, and rather goggle-eyed;
+ At length he started to his feet, some hurried steps he took,
+ Now up the ward, now down the ward, with wild dyspeptic look,
+ And lo! he saw a work'us boy, who read a penny book--
+ "You beastly brat! What is't you're at? I warrant 'tis no good!
+ What's this? 'The life of Turpin Bold!' or 'Death of Robin Hood'?"
+ "It's '_Hessays on the Crumpet_,' sir, as a harticle of food!"
+
+ He started from that boy as tho' in's ear he'd blown a trumpet,
+ His hand he pressed upon his chest, then with his fist did thump it,
+ And down he sat beside the brat and talked about The Crumpet.
+ How now and then that muffin men of whom tradition tells,
+ By pastry trade, fortunes had made, and come out awful swells,
+ While their old patrons suffered worse than Irving in "The Bells!"
+ "And well, I know," said he, "forsooth, for plenty have I bought,
+ The sufferings of foolish folk who eat more than they ought.
+
+ "With pepsine pills and liver pads is their consumption fraught,
+ Oh! oh! my boy, my pauper boy! Take my advice, 'tis best shun
+ All such tempting tasty things, tho' nice beyond all question,
+ Unless you wish like me to feel the pangs of indigestion!
+ One, who had ever made me long--a muffin man and old--
+ I watched into a public-house, he called for whisky cold,
+ And for one moment left his stock within green baize enrolled.
+ I crept up to them, thinking what an appetite I'd got,
+ I gloated o'er them lying there elastic and all hot;
+ I thought of butter laid on thick, and then I prigged the lot!
+
+ "I took them home, I toasted them, p'raps upwards of a score,
+ And never had so fine a feast on luscious fare before,
+ 'And now,' I said, 'I'll go to bed, and dream of eating more.'
+ All night I lay uneasily, and rolled from side to side,
+ At first without one wink of sleep, no matter how I tried;
+ And then I dreamt I was a 'bus, and gurgled 'Full inside!'
+ I was a 'bus by nightmares drawn on to some giddy crest,
+ Now launched like lightning through the air, now stop'd and now
+ compressed;
+ I felt a million muffin men were seated on my chest!
+
+ "I heard their bells--their horrid bells--in sound as loud as trumpets,
+ Oh, curses on ye, spongy tribe! Ye cruffins and ye mumpets!
+ I must be mad! I mean to say ye muffins and ye crumpets!
+ Then came a chill like Wenham ice; then hot as hottest steam;
+ I could not move a single limb! I could not even scream!
+ You pauper brat, remember that all this was but a dream!"
+
+ The boy gazed on his troubled brow, from which big drops were oozing,
+ And for the moment all respect for his dread function losing,
+ Made this remark, "Well, blow me tight, our Beadle's been a-boozing!"
+ That very week, before the beak, they brought that beadle burly;
+ He pleaded guilty in a tone dyspeptically surly,
+ And he lives still at Pentonville with hair not long or curly!
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+MY FRIEND TREACLE.
+
+WATKIN-ELLIOTT.
+
+
+"So Charley is going to marry 'the most charming girl in the world'!" I
+ejaculated, after a hearty laugh over the following epistle from my old
+friend:--
+
+ "DEAR BOB,--
+
+ "I am going to do for myself in earnest; no humbug this time. 'For
+ better or for worse,' and if it turns out the latter it will be a
+ scrape no one can get me out of. Of course, you understand I am about
+ to marry, and I need not add _she_ is the most charming girl in the
+ world: fair, sky-blue eyes, silk-worm--I mean spun silk hair, lovely
+ in fact! Come and be my best man: do, old fellow! You have backed me
+ up lots of times before, and although we have lost sight of one
+ another since 'we were boys together,' that goes for nothing between
+ us--does it? Write by return, and say you will support me: I have a
+ dread that I shall marry the wrong girl, or allow some one else to
+ marry Lucy--that's _her_ name!--or do something unlucky, unless you
+ look after me.
+
+ "Yours, as ever,
+ "CHARLEY BOSTON.
+
+ "P.S.--It comes off in a fortnight."
+
+"'It,'--well that is vague enough, but I suppose he means the happy
+event. Ye gods and little fishes!--to call a marriage 'it'! but that is
+like Boston. And 'sure to do something unlucky,' are you? Well, I guess
+you are not the 'Treacle' of old unless you get into some quandary over
+it," I muttered; and then I threw myself back in my chair and laughed
+again as some of our adventures, when we were at Dr. Omega's school--I
+mean college--presented themselves to my mind.
+
+Glorious times those! looking back upon them now, although we did not
+value them, in our careless youth, at their full worth.
+
+Treacle's--_i.e._, Boston's--daring always led him to some adventure,
+and I always backed him up--in a feeble way, perhaps,--and we always got
+found out somehow, and got our deserts in a manner more satisfactory to
+lovers of justice than to ourselves. Stunning times!
+
+The very fact of our being punished for the same crime, and at the same
+time, was a bond of union between Treacle and myself.
+
+"One touch of sympathy," or one touch of the rod, made us kin in a
+manner very peculiar;--a fellow feeling made us wondrous kind and
+sympathetic.
+
+You talk of little dinners and little suppers in these days, and think
+them epicurean feasts!--but, be really hungry--hungry as a school-boy,
+and enjoy a little supper off kippered herring _on the sly_--that _is_ a
+feast, if you like. Such feasts as these we enjoyed at Mother Kemp's,
+down the village, when the Doctor, tutors, and monitors imagined us
+safely tucked in our little beds.
+
+Looking upon Mother Kemp, in those days, I thought her a good fairy
+disguised as a witch. Looking back upon her, with manhood's enlightened
+judgment, I think she was an unprincipled old woman, who traded on our
+weaknesses. I confess myself to have been a hungry boy,--Boston, with a
+penitence which did him credit, used to confess the same: we both had a
+propensity to come through our trouser-legs and sleeve-jackets, and,
+what was worse, could not help ourselves doing so.
+
+Boston was of an ingenious turn of mind, and it was he who suggested
+that those boys, who could afford to be hungry with any satisfaction to
+themselves, should club together for a supper at Mother Kemp's once
+a-week; and it was through one of these suppers, or the search for one,
+that he got his sweet sobriquet of "Treacle."
+
+He having made the suggestion, we elected him chief of our expeditions,
+and thus to a certain extent he held the fate of our appetites in his
+hands.
+
+One night we had escaped, as usual, by means of a rope-ladder made by
+Boston, from the window of the room of which I was senior boy, to Mother
+Kemp's in the village.
+
+Mother Kemp kept a general shop--that is to say, she retailed tallow,
+treacle, rope, bacon, herrings, soap, cottons, tops, balls, butter,
+sweets, and so forth; and she not only, as a rule, sold us a supper out
+of her heterogeneous store, but cooked it, if needs were, and served it
+for us in her back parlour--that is, _if we could_ pay ready cash down.
+
+This night of which I speak we could not. We had appealed to Madame
+Kemp's motherly heart for "trust," in vain, and we were returning home
+in a state of double the hunger to that in which we had started, on
+account of our hopes being unfulfilled, when Charlie Boston made a
+remark in a melancholy tone: it was--
+
+"I wonder if the pantry window is open."
+
+We eyed him askance and in silence.
+
+"And if," with a frown of determination on his brow, "there is
+_anything_ inside!"
+
+Then we knew we were "in" for something, be it to eat or feel, and
+followed him half in hope, half in fear.
+
+The window was open. Looking upon that casement from my point of view
+now, I decide it was an architectural folly, being no more than seven
+feet from the ground, and innocent of bars or protection of any kind,
+and moreover large enough for any one of moderate size to creep through.
+
+From our point of view, then, we thought it a very jolly contrivance.
+
+"Hurrah!" shouted Boston, _sotto voce_--in fact, very much _sotto
+voce_--"we will indeed sup at the doctor's expense to-night, bless
+him!--eh, boys?"
+
+Either to the supper or blessing we assented, joyfully; but when our
+chief asked who was for reconnoitring, the question was received in
+silence.
+
+"Suppose it is missed in the morning--I mean, _what we eat_," suggested
+some one, timidly.
+
+"Cats!" settled Boston with laconic contempt.
+
+"But cats don't eat cheese, and--"
+
+"Bah! cats eat _anything_, from mice to stewed-eels' feet. Who will
+follow if I lead?"
+
+"Couldn't you get in and hand something out?" asked another, coolly.
+
+"Wish you may get it. Travers, _you_ will follow, will you not?"
+
+"Yes," I replied, with a little inward shudder. "'Lead on, Macduff,
+and'--and, what you may call it, be him that first cries 'Hold,
+enough!'"
+
+"Old enough for what?" queried the wit of the party.
+
+"Look here, Jenkins, don't you be a fool; this is not the time for vile
+puns, or Shakspeare either," with a frown at me.
+
+"It will take a jolly long time for us all to get in one after the
+other," I ruminated upon this snub.
+
+"And a jollier long time to get out, if we want to, in a hurry,"
+suggested the timid one.
+
+"That is true," agreed the chief. "We will toss up, and 'odd man' goes
+in and hands out--eh?"
+
+Faint applause.
+
+But the idea was not carried out, because, upon reflection, we
+remembered Mother Kemp had our last coin.
+
+"Never mind," cried Boston, in his happy dare-all way. "I'll do it! Lend
+me a back, somebody, and keep a sharp look out, mind!"
+
+We lent him a back with alacrity, it being a cheap and easy loan, and he
+drew himself up.
+
+"I see a pie!" he cried, and the words revived us. "Supposing it is
+steak!"
+
+We supposed, and felt more hungry than ever.
+
+Then we watched him with increased interest, as he squeezed his body
+through the casement, paused a moment to recover breath, descended
+gradually and carefully, and--Heavens, what was that? There was a
+scuffle and a gasp. Was it the doctor?
+
+I think at this juncture my knees began to tremble; so I cannot describe
+what the other sounds in the pantry were--at least, not with any
+accuracy.
+
+"I say," began some one of our party--he was always doing that, saying
+"I say," and stopping short; a nasty habit, you know, for when one's
+nerves are unstrung it makes you anxious, not to say alarmed.
+
+"Old Omega!" whispered another in an awed tone.
+
+"Can't be; there's no talking."
+
+"No, because he's such an artful old fox; he thinks he'll catch us
+all!--Eh?"
+
+The "eh" was to one who thought he had "_better go and see if the ladder
+was there all right_."
+
+It ended in their all going for the same commendable purpose, and
+leaving me behind to look after Boston. I was very much inclined to
+follow them, I confess, but I liked my friend too much to leave him, so,
+having a regard for my own personal safety, I got behind a laurel and
+waited.
+
+"Silence there, and nothing more."
+
+_Could_ it be the doctor! Could the doctor keep his anger so long
+bottled up--even to catch the rest of us--without bursting?
+
+I thought not: he would have had a fit by this time.
+
+In those days I remember revolving in my mind the advantage I would gain
+if Dr. Omega did have a fit and died. It was very horrible of me, of
+course, but then I was a boy, and as I looked at the doctor's purple
+visage--_was_ it coloured by the liquid et cetera?--I decided that if he
+were removed, no matter how, I might have a jolly holiday until another
+authority was placed over me, or I placed under another authority.
+
+O, it was wicked of me, I know, _terribly_ wicked!--but true. Mais
+revenons a Boston. If it is not the doctor in there with him, it may be
+the cook, I revolved behind the bushes. The cook ought to be in bed, by
+this time--so ought I: I was not, that was a certainty, perhaps the cook
+was not; if not--why it was very wrong of her not to be, I concluded
+virtuously.
+
+The moments passed, and still no sound from the pantry of voices. _Had_
+Charley fallen down in a fit instead of the doctor? I crept from my
+hiding place and essayed a faint whistle, recognised by us all as a
+call.
+
+No answer.
+
+"Boston!" I ejaculated, feeling sure now that the doctor could not
+possibly be there.
+
+Then, as I watched the casement, as anxiously as any lover could that of
+his mistress, I saw something appear at it: by the light of the moon it
+looked _black_ and _shiny_. If the shock had not deprived me of motion I
+should have fled. I could not flee, so I stood bravely to my post and
+shook like a jelly.
+
+What was it? I felt like Hamlet when he saw the ghost of his father; but
+I did not apostrophize it--I knew better,--at least I had not
+sufficient choice Shakespearian language at my tongue's end to do so
+becomingly.
+
+"Travers?"
+
+"Angels and ministers"--my name in Boston's voice. In a moment the
+roaring in my ears ceased, and my muscles gained strength.
+
+"Is that _you_, Charley?" I asked, sensibly enough.
+
+"Phew!"
+
+"Why--why, hang it, Boston, what's up--eh?"
+
+"'Up!'--all over me--choking me--Treacle!" gasped my friend, creeping
+through the window, with difficulty, as he spoke, and losing his
+balance, as he reached the ground, he fell against me, stuck to me,
+disengaged himself, and finally stood upright.
+
+"Treacle!" I ejaculated with a roar, which even though the doctor might
+have heard I could not suppress, as Charley began clearing out his eyes
+and mouth with his already sticky fists.
+
+"Yes, _treacle_," crossly. "You needn't laugh like that, Bob, and make
+such a confounded fool of yourself," he growled. "I stumbled, somehow,
+and fell face forward into a pan of it. Don't make such a row, Travers!"
+as I continued my cachination and held my aching sides, "I might have
+been smothered for all _you_ would have cared. By Jove! smothered in
+treacle! Why a butt of Malmsey would be a natural death in comparison."
+
+"The treacle we have for our puddings and with our brimstone?" I gasped
+at last.
+
+"Yes." Here the ludicrous aspect of affairs struck the martyr, and he
+joined me in my merriment.
+
+"I didn't know where I was going until I was in it," he continued. "Ugh!
+I shall hate treacle like poison for the rest of my life! Where are the
+other fellows?"
+
+"Sneaked away; thought Omega had caught you."
+
+"Cowards!"
+
+At this moment a low whistle, a danger signal, from the boys just
+denounced, caused us to hurry from the spot, and reaching the rope
+ladder, we were up it like cats, gaining our room just in time to find
+that, by the light shining under the door, some one was on the alert.
+
+"Get under my bed!" I whispered to Charley, as his escape to his own
+room was cut off.
+
+In his hurry and confusion, he got _into_ it. I had no time to demur,
+and jumped in after him, just as the doctor, suspicious and austere,
+entered, candlestick in hand.
+
+"Noise in number three: senior boy, report."
+
+I, senior boy, reported, and replied by a nasal demonstration which I
+flattered myself was a very good imitation of a sound snore.
+
+"Robert Travers!" in a voice which might, almost, have awakened the
+dead.
+
+"Sir," replied I--Robert--as sleepily as I could.
+
+"Somebody walking about this room, and talking."
+
+If brevity is the soul of wit, then old Omega was the wittiest fellow I
+ever came across,--although he never _looked_ it.
+
+He always spoke sharply and to the point, and gave us our due in the
+same manner.
+
+Now, as he jerked his sentence out, he approached nearer. Charley, like
+a certain big bird, seemed to fancy that, because his own face was
+hidden and he could see no one, it followed that no one could see him;
+whereas, half his head was exposed to view.
+
+I sat up in bed, hurriedly giving my companion a vicious kick of
+caution, as I explained to the doctor that "little Simpson walked and
+talked in his sleep;" at which "little Simpson," in a corner of the
+room, groaned audibly.
+
+"Simpson, junior, what do you mean by walking in your sleep, sir?"
+
+Simpson groaned again, and the doctor, thinking he was snoring,
+continued,--
+
+"He eats too much; must diet him. A dose of brimstone and treacle (I
+felt Boston jump) in the morning will do him good--cooling. Remind me,
+Travers. By the way, sir, how comes it you are awake?"
+
+"Please, sir, you woke me--awakened me, sir," I stammered.
+
+"Hem," doubtfully. "Whom have you in bed with you--eh?" as Boston,
+rendered uncomfortable by his sticky face, had moved.
+
+"With _me_, sir?" I murmured, vaguely.
+
+"Yes, sir, with you. Come out, whoever it is!" roared Omega, without
+further parley.
+
+But Boston remained still as a mouse.
+
+Struck dumb with anger and astonishment, that a boy should have the
+impudence to stop in when _he_ ordered him to come out, the doctor
+strode round to Charley's side, and laid hands on the miscreant to have
+him out by force; but, no sooner had he felt the viscous state of our
+hero, than he withdrew them precipitately, with the pious ejaculation,--
+
+"Good heavens! What is the matter with him!"
+
+"Necessitas non habet legem."
+
+I, being senior boy, had to report. I did so, tremblingly, and imitated
+the doctor in my brevity.
+
+"Matter, sir--treacle, sir."
+
+"Treacle!" in a voice of concentrated thunder, if you know what that is
+like.
+
+"His mother sent him a pot of treacle, sir, and he--and he thought it
+was pomatum, sir, and--and----" my imaginative powers fell before the
+lightning of the doctor's glance.
+
+"_Whose_ mother?"
+
+"Boston's, sir."
+
+"Boston, come out!"
+
+And Boston, after some little delay caused in having to detach himself
+from surroundings, came forth like a lamb--I mean, like a black sheep.
+
+"What the dev----!"
+
+But I draw a curtain over the rest; the doctor was profane, and he hurt
+my feelings _very much_.
+
+Poor old Treacle! The name stuck to him ever after.
+
+Well, I went to his wedding, and with the exception that at the critical
+part of the ceremony he dropped the ring, which, after we had all
+scrambled on our knees for, was found in the bride's veil, he went
+through the "happiest day of his life" without a mistake.
+
+As for myself, in searching for that ring, I knocked my head against
+Treacle's sister's, and it upset me. A thrill went through me, which was
+most painfully pleasant. At the breakfast-table I became sentimental; in
+making my speech for the ladies, I caught her--Treacle's sister's--eye,
+she smiled, and I lost the thread of my discourse. It was a very slender
+thread, and I never found it again until, one day, I was wandering round
+somebody's garden with my arm round Treacle's sister's waist, and,--but
+that doesn't matter! She is a jolly little thing, though--Treacle's
+sister is.
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+THE VOICE OF THE SLUGGARD.
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ Have you brought my boots, Jemima? Leave them at my chamber door.
+ Does the water boil, Jemima? Place it also on the floor.
+ Eight o'clock already, is it? How's the weather--pretty fine?
+ Eight is tolerably early; I can get away by nine.
+ Still I feel a little sleepy, though I came to bed at one.
+ Put the bacon on, Jemima; see the eggs are nicely done!
+ I'll be down in twenty minutes--or, if possible, in less;
+ I shall not be long, Jemima, when I once begin to dress.
+ She is gone, the brisk Jemima; she is gone, and little thinks
+ How the sluggard yearns to capture yet another forty winks,
+ Since the bard is human only--not an early village cock--
+ Why should he salute the morning at the hour of eight o'clock?
+ Stifled be the voice of Duty; Prudence, prythee, cease to chide,
+ While I turn me softly, gently, round upon my other side.
+ Sleep, resume thy downy empire; reassert thy sable reign!
+ Morpheus, why desert a fellow? Bring those poppies here again!
+ What's the matter, now, Jemima? Nine o'clock? It cannot be!
+ Hast prepared the eggs, the bacon, and the matutinal tea?
+ Take away the jug, Jemima, go, replenish it anon;
+ Since the charm of its caloric must be very nearly gone.
+ She has left me. Let me linger till she reappears again,
+ Let my lazy thoughts meander in a free and easy vein.
+ After Sleep's profoundest solace, nought refreshes like the doze.
+ Should I tumble off, no matter; she will wake me, I suppose.
+ Bless me, is it you, Jemima? Mercy on us, what a knock?
+ Can it be--I can't believe it--actually ten o'clock?
+ I will out of bed and shave me. Fetch me warmer water up!
+ Let the tea be strong, Jemima, I shall only want a cup!
+ Stop a minute! I remember some appointment by the way,
+ 'Twould have brought me mints of money; 'twas for ten o'clock to-day.
+ Let me drown my disappointment, Slumber, in thy seventh heaven!
+ You may go away, Jemima. Come and call me at eleven!
+
+ (_From the "Leeds Mercury."_)
+
+
+
+
+ARTEMUS WARD'S VISIT TO THE TOWER OF LONDON.
+
+CH. FARRAR BROWNE.
+
+
+I skurcely need inform you that the Tower is very pop'lar with pe'ple
+from the agricultooral districks, and it was chiefly them class which I
+found waitin' at the gates the other mornin'.
+
+I saw at once that the Tower was established on a firm basis. In the
+entire history of firm basises, I don't find a basis more firmer than
+this one.
+
+"You have no Tower in America?" said a man in the crowd, who had somehow
+detected my denomination.
+
+"Alars! no," I ansered; "we boste of our enterprise and improovements,
+and yit we are devoid of a Tower. America, oh my onhappy country! thou
+hast not got no Tower! It's a sweet Boon."
+
+The gates were opened after a while, and we all purchist tickets, and
+went into a waitin' room.
+
+"My frens," said a pale-faced little man, in black close, "that is a sad
+day."
+
+"Inasmuch as to how?" I said.
+
+"I mean it is sad to think that so many peple have been killed within
+these gloomy walls. My frens, let us drop a tear."
+
+"No!" I said, "you must excuse me. Others may drop one if they feel like
+it; but as for me, I decline. The early managers of this institootion
+were a bad lot, and their crimes were trooly orful; but I can't sob for
+those who died four or five hundred years ago. If they was my own
+relations I couldn't. It's absurd to shed sobs over things which occurd
+during the rain of Henry the Three. Let us be cheerful," I continnered.
+"Look at the festiv Warders, in their red flannel jackets. They are
+cheerful, and why should it not be thusly with us?"
+
+A Warder now took us in charge, and showed us the Trater's Gate, the
+armers, and things. The Trater's Gate is wide enuff to admit about
+twenty traters abrest, I should jedge; but beyond this, I couldn't see
+that it was superior to gates in gen'ral.
+
+Traters, I will here remark, are an onforchunit class of pe'ple. If they
+wasn't, they wouldn't be traters. They conspire to bust up a
+country--they fail, and they're traters. They bust her, and they become
+statesmen and heroes.
+
+Take the case of Gloster, afterwards Old Dick the Three, who may be seen
+at the Tower on horseback, in a heavy tin overcoat--take Mr. Gloster's
+case. Mr. G. was a conspirator of the basist dye, and if he'd failed, he
+would have been hung on a sour apple tree. But Mr. G. succeeded and
+became great. He was slewed by Col. Richmond, but he lives in history,
+and his equestrian figger may be seen daily for a sixpence, in
+conjunction with other em'nent persons, and no extra charge for the
+Warder's able and bootiful lectur.
+
+There's one King in this room who is mounted onto a foaming steed, his
+right hand graspin a barber's pole. I didn't learn his name.
+
+The room where the daggers and pistils and other weppins is kept is
+interestin. Among this collection of choice cutlery I notist the bow and
+arrer which those hot-heded old chaps used to conduct battles with. It
+is quite like the bow and arrer used at this date by certain tribes of
+American Injuns, and they shoot 'em off with such an excellent precision
+that I almost sigh'd to be an Injun when I was in the Rocky Mountain
+regin. They are a pleasant lot, them Injuns. Mr. Cooper and Dr. Catlin
+have told us of the red man's wonderful eloquence, and I found it so.
+Our party was stopt on the plains of Utah by a band of Shoshones, whose
+chief said:--
+
+"Brothers! the pale-face is welcome. Brothers! the sun is sinking in the
+west, and Wa-na-bucky-she will soon cease speakin. Brothers! the poor
+red man belongs to a race which is fast becomin extink."
+
+He then whooped in a shrill manner, stole our blankets, and whisky, and
+fled to the primeval forest to conceal his emotions.
+
+I will remark here, while on the subjeck of Injuns, that they are in the
+main a very shaky set, with even less sense than the Fenians; and when I
+hear philanthropists bewailin the fack that every year "carries the
+noble red man nearer the settin sun," I simply have to say I'm glad of
+it, tho' it is rough on the settin sun. They call you by the sweet name
+of Brother one minit, and the next they scalp you with their
+Thomas-hawks. But I wander. Let us return to the Tower.
+
+At one end of the room where the weppins is kept, is a wax figger of
+Queen Elizabeth, mounted on a fiery stuffed hoss, whose glass eye
+flashes with pride, and whose red morocker nostril dilates hawtily, as
+if, conscious of the royal burden he bears. I have associated Elizabeth
+with the Spanish Armady. She's mixed up with it at the Surrey Theatre,
+where _Troo to the Core_ is bein acted, and in which a full bally core
+is introjooced on board the Spanish Admiral's ship, givin' the audiens
+the idea that he intends openin a moosic-hall in Plymouth the moment he
+conkers that town. But a very interestin drammer is _Troo to the Core_,
+notwithstandin the eccentric conduct of the Spanish Admiral; and very
+nice it is in Queen Elizabeth to make Martin Truegold a baronet.
+
+The Warder shows us some instrooments of tortur, such as thumbscrews,
+throat collars, etc., statin' that these was conkered from the Spanish
+Armady, and addin what a crooil peple the Spaniards was in them
+days--which elissited from a bright-eyed little girl of about twelve
+summers the remark that she tho't it was rich to talk about the crooilty
+of the Spaniards usin thumbscrews, when he was in a tower where so many
+poor peple's heads had been cut off. This made the Warder stammer and
+turn red.
+
+I was so pleased with the little girl's brightness that I could have
+kissed the dear child, and I would if she'd been six years older.
+
+I think my companions intended makin a day of it, for they all had
+sandwiches, sassiges, etc. The sad-lookin man, who had wanted us to drop
+a tear afore we started to go round, fling'd such quantities of sassige
+into his mouth that I expected to see him choke hisself to death; he
+said to me, in the Beauchamp Tower, where the poor prisoners writ their
+onhappy names on the cold walls, "This is a sad sight."
+
+"It is indeed," I ansered. "You're black in the face. You shouldn't eat
+sassige in public without some rehearsals beforehand. You manage it
+orkwardly."
+
+"No," he said, "I mean this sad room."
+
+Indeed, he was quite right. Tho' so long ago all these drefful things
+happened, I was very glad to git away from this gloomy room, and go
+where the rich and sparklin Crown Jewils is kept. I was so pleased with
+the Queen's Crown, that it occurd to me what a agree'ble surprise it
+would be to send a sim'lar one home to my wife; and I asked the Warder
+what was the vally of a good well-constructed Crown like that. He told
+me, but on cypherin up with a pencil the amount of funs I have in the
+Jint Stock Bank, I conclooded I'd send her a genteel silver watch
+instid.
+
+And so I left the Tower. It is a solid and commandin edifis, but I deny
+that it is cheerful. I bid it adoo without a pang.
+
+ (_From_ "PUNCH," _by permission of the Proprietors_.)
+
+
+
+
+MR. CAUDLE HAS LENT AN ACQUAINTANCE THE FAMILY UMBRELLA.
+
+DOUGLAS JERROLD.
+
+
+"That's the third umbrella gone since Christmas. _What were you to do?_
+Why let him go home in the rain, to be sure. I'm very certain there was
+nothing about _him_ that could spoil. Take cold, indeed! He doesn't look
+like one of the sort to take cold. Besides, he'd have better taken cold
+than take our only umbrella. Do you hear the rain, Mr. Caudle? I say, do
+you hear the rain? And as I'm alive, if it isn't St. Swithin's day! Do
+you hear it, against the windows? Nonsense; you don't impose upon me.
+You can't be asleep with such a shower as that! Do you hear it, I say?
+Oh, you _do_ hear it! Well, that's a pretty flood, I think, to last for
+six weeks; and no stirring all the time out of the house. Pooh! don't
+think me a fool, Mr. Caudle. Don't insult _me_. _He_ return the
+umbrella! Anybody would think you were born yesterday. As if anybody
+ever _did_ return an umbrella! There--do you hear it? Worse and worse?
+Cats and dogs, and for six weeks--always six weeks. And no umbrella!
+
+"I should like to know how the children are to go to school to-morrow?
+They shan't go through such weather, I'm determined. No: they shall
+stop at home and never learn anything--the blessed creatures!--sooner
+than go and get wet. And when they grow up, I wonder who they'll have to
+thank for knowing nothing--who, indeed, but their father? People who
+can't feel for their own children ought never to be fathers.
+
+"But I know why you lent the umbrella. Oh, yes; I know very well. I was
+going out to tea at dear mother's to-morrow--you knew that; and you did
+it on purpose. Don't tell me; you hate me to go there, and take every
+mean advantage to hinder me. But don't you think it, Mr. Caudle. No,
+sir; if it comes down in buckets-full, I'll go all the more. No: and I
+won't have a cab, where do you think the money's to come from? You've
+got nice high notions at that club of yours. A cab, indeed! Cost me
+sixteen-pence at least--sixteen pence! two and sixpence, for there's
+back again. Cabs, indeed! I should like to know who's to pay for 'em; I
+can't pay for 'em; and I'm sure you can't, if you go on as you do;
+throwing away your property, and beggaring your children--buying
+umbrellas!
+
+"Do you hear the rain, Mr. Caudle? I say, do you hear it? But I don't
+care--I'll go to mother's to-morrow, I will; and what's more, I'll walk
+every step of the way--and you know that will give me my death. Don't
+call me a foolish woman, it's you that's the foolish man. You know I
+can't wear clogs; and with no umbrella, the wet's sure to give me a
+cold--it always does. But what do you care for that? Nothing at all. I
+may be laid up for what you care, as I dare say I shall--and a pretty
+doctor's bill there'll be. I hope there will! It will teach you to lend
+your umbrellas again. I shouldn't wonder if I caught my death; yes; and
+that's what you lent the umbrella for. Of course!
+
+"Nice clothes I shall get too, trapesing through weather like this. My
+gown and bonnet will be spoilt quite. _Needn't I wear 'em, then?_
+Indeed, Mr. Caudle, I _shall_ wear 'em. No, sir, I'm not going out a
+dowdy to please you or anybody else. Gracious knows! it isn't often that
+I step over the threshold; indeed, I might as well be a slave at
+once,--better, I should say. But when I do go out, Mr. Caudle, I choose
+to go like a lady. Oh! that rain--if it isn't enough to break in the
+windows.
+
+"Ugh! I do look forward with dread for to-morrow! How I am to go to
+mother's I'm sure I can't tell. But if I die, I'll do it. No, sir; I
+won't borrow an umbrella. No; and you shan't buy one. Now, Mr. Caudle,
+only listen to this; if you bring home another umbrella, I'll throw it
+in the street. I'll have my own umbrella, or none at all.
+
+"Ha! and it was only last week I had a new nozzle put to that umbrella.
+I'm sure, if I'd have known as much as I do now, it might have gone
+without one for me. Paying for new nozzles, for other people to laugh at
+you. Oh, it's all very well for you--you can go to sleep. You've no
+thought of your poor patient wife, and your own dear children. You think
+of nothing but lending umbrellas.
+
+"Men, indeed!--call themselves lords of the creation!--pretty lords,
+when they can't even take care of an umbrella.
+
+"I know that walk to-morrow will be the death of me. But that's what you
+want--then you may go to your club, and do as you like--and then, nicely
+my poor dear children will be used--but then, sir, then you'll be happy.
+Oh, don't tell me! I know you will. Else you'd never have lent the
+umbrella!
+
+"You have to go on Thursday about that summons; and, of course, you
+can't go. No, indeed, you _don't_ go without the umbrella. You may lose
+the debt for what I care--it won't be so much as spoiling your
+clothes--better lose it: people deserve to lose debts who lend
+umbrellas!
+
+"And I should like to know how I'm to go to mother's without the
+umbrella? Oh, don't tell me that I said I would go--that's nothing to do
+with it; nothing at all. She'll think I'm neglecting her, and the little
+money we were to have, we shan't have at all--because we've no umbrella.
+
+"The children, too! Dear things! They'll be sopping wet: for they shan't
+stop at home--they shan't lose their learning; it's all their father
+will leave 'em, I'm sure. But they _shall_ go to school. Don't tell me I
+said they shouldn't: you are so aggravating, Caudle; you'd spoil the
+temper of an angel. They _shall_ go to school; mark that. And if they
+get their deaths of cold, it's not my fault--I didn't lend the
+umbrella!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"At length," writes Caudle, "I fell asleep; and dreamt that the sky was
+turned into green calico, with whalebone ribs; that, in fact, the whole
+world turned round under a tremendous umbrella!"
+
+ (_By permission of_ MESSRS. BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO.)
+
+
+
+
+DOMESTIC ASIDES.
+
+TOM HOOD.
+
+
+ "I really take it very kind,
+ This visit, Mrs. Skinner,
+ I have not seen you such an age--
+ (The wretch has come to dinner!)
+
+ "Your daughters, too, what loves of girls--
+ What heads for painters' easels!
+ Come here, and kiss the infant, dears--
+ (And give it, p'raps, the measles!)
+
+ "Your charming boys I see are home
+ From Reverend Mr. Russell's;
+ 'Twas very kind to bring them both--
+ (What boots for my new Brussels!)
+
+ "What! little Clara left at home?
+ Well now, I call that shabby:
+ I should have loved to kiss her so--
+ (A flabby, dabby, babby!)
+
+ "And Mr. S., I hope he's well,
+ Ah! though he lives so handy,
+ He never drops in now to sup--
+ (The better for our brandy!)
+
+ "Come, take a seat--I long to hear
+ About Matilda's marriage;
+ You've come, of course, to spend the day!
+ (Thank heaven, I hear the carriage!)
+
+ "What! must you go? Next time I hope
+ You'll give me longer measure;
+ Nay--I shall see you down the stairs--
+ (With most uncommon pleasure!)
+
+ "Good-bye! good-bye! remember all,
+ Next time you'll take your dinners!
+ (Now, David, mind I'm not at home
+ In future to the Skinners!")
+
+ (_By permission of_ MESSRS. WARD, LOCK, & CO.)
+
+
+
+
+THE CHARITY DINNER.
+
+LITCHFIELD MOSELEY.
+
+
+TIME: half-past six o'clock. Place: The London Tavern. Occasion:
+Fifteenth Annual Festival of the Society for the Distribution of
+Blankets and Top-Boots among the Natives of the Cannibal Islands.
+
+On entering the room, we find more than two hundred noblemen, and
+gentlemen already assembled; and the number is increasing every minute.
+There are many well-known city diners here this evening. That very
+ordinary looking personage, with the rubicund complexion and pimply
+features, is old Moneypenny, senior partner of the great firm of
+Moneypenny, Blodgers, and Wobbles, corn factors of Mark Lane. He began
+the world as a fellowship porter, and always makes a rule of attending
+the principal dinners at the London Tavern, "because," as he says
+confidentially, to Wobbles, "don't you see, my boy, it's a very cheap
+way of getting into society." He is talking now to Sir Sandy McHaggis, a
+Scotch baronet, with a slender purse and a large appetite, with whom he
+has scraped an acquaintance, and presented with a spare ticket for the
+festival; knowing that the Scotchman is "varra fond o' a gude dinner,
+specially when it costs a mon nothing at all." The preparations are now
+complete, and we are in readiness to receive the chairman. After a short
+pause, a little door at the end of the room opens, and the great man
+appears, attended by an admiring circle of stewards and toadies,
+carrying white wands, like a parcel of charity-school boys bent on
+beating the bounds. He advances smilingly to his post at the principal
+table, amid deafening and long-continued cheers.
+
+He is a very popular man, this chairman; for is he not the Earl of
+Mount-Stuart, late one of Her Majesty's Cabinet Ministers? and his
+wealth and party influence are known to be enormous.
+
+The dinner now makes its appearance, and we yield up ourselves to the
+enjoyments of eating and drinking. These important duties finished, and
+grace having been beautifully sung by the vocalists, the real business
+of the evening commences. The usual loyal toasts having been given, the
+noble chairman rises, and, after passing his fingers through his hair,
+he places his thumbs in the armholes of his waistcoat, gives a short
+preparatory cough, accompanied by a vacant stare round the room, and
+commences as follows:--
+
+ "MY LORDS AND GENTLEMEN--It is with mingled pleasure and regret that I
+ appear before you this evening: of pleasure, to find that this
+ excellent and world-wide-known society is in so promising a
+ condition; and, of regret, that you have not chosen a worthier
+ chairman; in fact, one who is more capable than myself of dealing with
+ a subject of such vital importance as this. (Loud cheers). But,
+ although I may be unworthy of the honour, I am proud to state that I
+ have been a subscriber to this society from its commencement; feeling
+ sure that nothing can tend more to the advancement of civilization,
+ social reform, fireside comfort, and domestic economy among the
+ cannibals, than the diffusion of blankets and top-boots. (Tremendous
+ cheering, which lasts for several minutes.) Here, in this England of
+ ours, which is an island surrounded by water, as I suppose you all
+ know--or, as our great poet so truthfully and beautifully expresses
+ the same fact, 'England bound in by the triumphant sea'--what, down
+ the long vista of years, have conduced more to our successes in arms,
+ and arts and song, than blankets? Indeed, I never gaze upon a blanket
+ without my thoughts reverting fondly to the days of my early
+ childhood. Where should we all have been now but for those warm and
+ fleecy coverings? My Lords and Gentlemen! Our first and tender
+ memories are all associated with blankets: blankets when in our
+ nurses' arms, blankets in our cradles, blankets in our cribs, blankets
+ to our French bedsteads in our schooldays, and blankets to our marital
+ four-posters now. Therefore, I say, it becomes our bounden duty as
+ men,--and, with feelings of pride, I add, as Englishmen--to initiate
+ the untutored savage, the wild and somewhat uncultivated denizen of
+ the prairie, into the comfort and warmth of blankets; and to supply
+ him, as far as practicable, with those reasonable, seasonable,
+ luxurious, and useful appendages. At such a moment as this, the lines
+ of another poet strike familiarly upon the ears. Let me see, they are
+ something like this--
+
+ "Blankets have charms to soothe the savage breast,
+ And to--to, do--a----"
+
+ I forget the rest. (Loud cheers.) Do we grudge our money for such a
+ purpose? I answer, fearlessly, No! Could we spend it better at home? I
+ reply most emphatically, No! True, it may be said that there are
+ thousands of our own people who at this moment are wandering about the
+ streets of this great metropolis without food to eat or rags to cover
+ them. But what have we to do with them? Our thoughts, our feelings,
+ and our sympathies, are all wafted on the wings of charity to the dear
+ and interesting cannibals in the far-off islands of the green Pacific
+ Ocean. (Hear, hear.) Besides, have not our own poor the workhouses to
+ go to; the luxurious straw of the casual wards to repose upon, if they
+ please; the mutton broth to bathe in; and the ever toothsome, although
+ somewhat scanty, allowance of 'toke' provided for them? And let it
+ ever be remembered that our own people are not savages, and
+ man-eaters; and, therefore, our philanthropy would be wasted upon
+ them. (Overwhelming applause.) To return to our subject. Perhaps some
+ person or persons here may wonder why we should not send out
+ side-springs and bluchers, as well as top-boots. To those I will say,
+ that top-boots alone answer the object desired--namely, not only to
+ keep the feet dry, but the legs warm, and thus to combine the double
+ use of shoes and stockings. Is it not an instance of the remarkable
+ foresight of this society, that it purposely abstains from sending out
+ any other than top-boots? To show the gratitude of the cannibals for
+ the benefits conferred upon them, I will just mention that, within the
+ last few weeks, his Illustrious Majesty, Hokee Pokey Wankey Fum the
+ First, surnamed by his loving subjects, 'The Magnificent,' from the
+ fact of his wearing, on Sundays, a shirt-collar and an eye-glass as
+ full court costume--has forwarded the president of this society a very
+ handsome present, consisting of two live alligators, a boa
+ constrictor, and three pots of preserved Indian, to be eaten with
+ toast; and I am told, by competent judges, that it is quite equal to
+ Russian caviare.
+
+ "MY LORDS AND GENTLEMEN--I will not trespass on your patience by
+ making any further remarks; knowing how incompetent I am--no, no! I
+ don't mean that--how incompetent you all are--no! I don't mean
+ either--but you all know what I mean. Like the ancient Roman lawgiver,
+ I am in a peculiar position; for the fact is, I cannot sit down--I
+ mean to say, that I cannot sit down without saying that, if there ever
+ _was_ an institution, it is _this_ institution; and therefore, I beg
+ to propose, 'Prosperity to the Society for the Distribution of
+ Blankets and Top-boots among the Natives of the Cannibal Islands.'"
+
+The toast having been cordially responded to, his lordship calls upon
+Mr. Duffer, the secretary, to read the report. Whereupon that gentlemen,
+who is of a bland and oily temperament, and whose eyes are concealed by
+a pair of green spectacles, produces the necessary document, and reads,
+in the orthodox manner,--
+
+ "Thirtieth Half-yearly Report of the Society for the Distribution of
+ Blankets and Top-boots to the Natives of the Cannibal Islands.
+
+ "The society having now reached its fifteenth anniversary, the
+ committee of management beg to congratulate their friends and
+ subscribers on the success that has been attained.
+
+ "When the society first commenced its labours, the generous and
+ noble-minded natives of the islands, together with their king--a chief
+ whose name is well known in connexion with one of the most stirring
+ and heroic ballads of this country--attired themselves in the light
+ but somewhat insufficient costume of their tribe--viz., little before,
+ nothing behind, and no sleeves, with the occasional addition of a pair
+ of spectacles; but now, thanks to this useful association, the upper
+ classes of the cannibals seldom appear in public without their bodies
+ being enveloped in blankets and their feet encased in top-boots.
+
+ "When the latter useful articles were first introduced into the
+ islands, the society's agents had a vast amount of trouble to prevail
+ upon the natives to apply them to their proper purposes; and, in their
+ work of civilization, no less than twenty of its representatives were
+ massacred, roasted, and eaten. But we persevered; we overcame the
+ natural antipathy of the cannibals to wear any covering to their feet;
+ until after a time, the natives discovered the warmth and utility of
+ boots; and now they can scarcely be induced to remove them until they
+ fall off through old age.
+
+ "During the past half year, the society has distributed no less than
+ 71 blankets and 128 pairs of top-boots; and your committee, therefore,
+ feel convinced that they will not be accused of inaction. But a great
+ work is still before them; and they earnestly invite co-operation, in
+ order that they may be enabled to supply the whole of the cannibals
+ with these comfortable, nutritious, and savoury articles.
+
+ "As the balance-sheet is rather a lengthy document, I will merely
+ quote a few of the figures for your satisfaction. We have received,
+ during the half-year, in subscriptions, donations, and legacies, the
+ sum of L5,403 6_s._ 83/4_d._ Rent, rates, and taxes, L305 10_s._
+ 01/4_d._ Seventy-one pairs of blankets, at 20_s._ per pair, have
+ taken L71 exactly; and 128 pairs of tops-boots, at 21_s._ per pair,
+ cost us L134 some odd shillings. The salaries and expenses of
+ management amount to L1,307 4_s._ 21/2_d._; and sundries, which
+ include committee meetings and travelling expenses, have absorbed the
+ remainder of the sum, and amount to L3,268 9_s._ 13/4_d._ So that we
+ have expended on the dear and interesting cannibals the sum of L205,
+ and the remainder of the sum--amounting to L5,198--has been devoted to
+ the working expenses of the society."
+
+The reading concluded, the secretary resumes his seat amid heavy
+applause, which continues until Mr. Alderman Gobbleton rises, and, in a
+somewhat lengthy and discursive speech--in which the phrases, "the
+Corporation of the City of London," "suit and service," "ancient guild,"
+"liberties and privileges," and "Court of Common Council," figure
+frequently, states that he agrees with everything the noble chairman has
+said; and has, moreover, never listened to a more comprehensive and
+exhaustive document than the one just read; which is calculated to
+satisfy even the most obtuse and hard-headed of individuals.
+
+Gobbleton is a great man in the City. He has either been Lord Mayor, or
+sheriff, or something of the sort; and, as a few words of his go a long
+way with his friends and admirers, his remarks are very favourably
+received.
+
+"Clever man, Gobbleton!" says a common councilman, sitting near us, to
+his neighbour, a languid swell of the period.
+
+"Ya-as, vewy! Wemarkable style of owatowy--and gweat fluency," replies
+the other.
+
+But attention, if you please!--for M. Hector de Longuebeau, the great
+French writer, is on his legs. He is staying in England for a short
+time, to become acquainted with our manners and customs.
+
+ "MILORS AND GENTLEMANS!" commences the Frenchman, elevating his
+ eyebrows, and shrugging his shoulders. "Milors and Gentlemans--You
+ excellent chairman, M. le Baron de Mount-Stuart, he have say to me,
+ 'Make de toast.' Den I say to him dat I have no toast to us; but he
+ nudge my elbow ver soft, and say dat dere is von toast dat nobody but
+ von Frenchman can make proper; and, derefore, wid you kind permission,
+ I will make de toast. 'De brevete is de sole of de feet,' as you great
+ philosopher, Dr. Johnson, do say, in dat amusing little work of his,
+ de Pronouncing Dictionnaire; and derefore, I vill not say ver moch to
+ de point. Ven I vas a boy, about so moch tall, and used for to
+ promenade de streets of Marseilles et of Rouen, vid no feet to put
+ onto my shoe, I nevare to have expose dat dis day vould to have
+ arrive. I vas to begin de vorld as von garcon--or, vat you call in dis
+ countrie, von vaitaire in a cafe--vere I vork ver hard, vid no
+ habillemens at all to put onto myself, and ver little food to eat,
+ excep' von old bleu blouse vat vas give to me by de proprietaire, just
+ for to keep myself fit to be showed at, but, tank goodness, tings dey
+ have change ver moch for me since dat time, and I have rose myself,
+ seulement par mon industrie et perseverance. (Loud cheers.) Ah! mes
+ amis! ven I hear to myself de flowing speech, de oration magnifique of
+ you Lor' Maire, Monsieur Gobbledown, I feel dat it is von great
+ privilige for von etranger to sit at de same table, and to eat de same
+ food, as that grand, dat majestique man, who are de terreur of de
+ voleurs and de brigands of de metropolis; and who is also, I for to
+ suppose, a halterman and de chef of you common scoundrel. Milors and
+ gentlemans, I feel dat I can perspire to no greatare honneur dan to be
+ von common scoundrelman myself; but helas! dat plaisir are not for me,
+ as I are not freeman of your great cite, not von liveryman servant of
+ von of you compagnies joint-stock. But I must not forget de toast.
+ Milors and Gentlemans! De immortal Shakespeare he have write, 'De ting
+ of beauty are de joy for nevermore.' It is de ladies who are de toast.
+ Vat is more entrancing dan de charmante smile, de soft voice, de
+ vinking eye of de beautiful lady? It is de ladies who do sweeten de
+ cares of life. It is de ladies who are de guiding stars of our
+ existence. It is de ladies who do cheer but not inebriate; and,
+ derefore, vid all homage to dere sex, de toast dat I have to propose
+ is, 'De Ladies! God bless dem all!'"
+
+And the little Frenchman sits down amid a perfect tempest of cheers.
+
+A few more toasts are given, the list of subscriptions is read, a vote
+of thanks is passed to the noble chairman; and the Fifteenth Annual
+Festival of the Society for the Distribution of Blankets and Top-boots
+among the Natives of the Cannibal Islands is at an end.
+
+ (_Copyright of_ MESSRS. F. WARNE & CO.)
+
+
+
+
+ACTING WITH A VENGEANCE.
+
+W. SAPTE, JUN.
+
+
+ Methinks 'tis a very remarkable "sign
+ Of the times"--I must own this expression's not mine--
+ How in these latter days
+ The theatrical craze
+ Has obtained such a hold on all grades of society;
+ And this love of the stage
+ Is a mark of the age
+ Which is not in accord with _my_ views of propriety.
+
+ 'Twas only last week a young lady I know
+ Invited the world in a body to go
+ (On a wretched wet day)
+ To a dull _matinee_,
+ When she made her _debut_ in the "Hunchback," as Julia;
+ A part which to act is
+ A thing of long practice,
+ Surely ne'er was conceit more absurd or unrulier.
+
+ How can amateur actors commence at the top
+ Of the Thespian Tree, and avoid coming flop?
+ It would seem very queer
+ If a young volunteer
+ Should begin by commanding the Royal Horse Artillery,
+ Or if babies should bilk
+ Their allowance of milk
+ And insist upon sucking from bottles of Sillery.
+ So it mostly occurs
+ That an amateur errs,
+ And gets chaffed for possessing less skill than audacity,
+ When he tackles a part
+ Without learning the art,
+ And exposes his natural want of capacity--
+ And what is more painful, his lack of sagacity.
+
+ I'm bound to admit
+ I was rather once bit
+ By the mania myself in a mild sort of way;
+ Paid a half-guinea fee
+ To the Zeus A.D.C.,
+ And found myself cast for a part in a play.
+ I think 'twas the Bandit Brothers of Brighton--
+ Or Eastbourne, or Yarmouth--
+ Or Hastings, or Barmouth--
+ I forget for the moment which place was the right 'un--
+ But I know there's a chief,
+ Who at last comes to grief,
+ After numerous blood-curdling adventures and rescues,
+ Such as frequently writers in modern burlesque use.
+
+ Now the part of the chief
+ Who comes to grief
+ Was secured by a hot-tempered youth, named O'Keefe;
+ In spite of the jealousy
+ Of two other fellows, he
+ Cast himself as the leader, without hesitation,
+ And resented remarks with extreme indignation.
+ So the others were fain
+ Their rage to contain,
+ And one e'en accepted the part which was reckoned
+ To be, on the whole, the one that ranked second.
+
+ The local Town Hall was engaged, which would hold
+ Some three hundred people--the tickets were sold--
+ The purchasers wishing to help the good charity
+ We played for; some adding
+ Donations, and gladding
+ The treasurer's heart to a state of hilarity.
+ Rehearsals galore
+ Were to take place before
+ The _debut_ on the boards of the Zeus A.D.C.--
+ For the members were earnest as earnest could be.
+ Well, the opening one
+ Was rather good fun,
+ For we found that the practice of vigorous fighting
+ 'Twixt Bandits and Coastguards was rather exciting;
+ But later, you know
+ It got rather slow
+ For those who were "supers" to constantly go
+ And lay the same victims perpetually low,
+ With time after time the identical blow.
+
+ But Mr. O'Keefe,
+ Who played the chief,
+ Had a time less monotonous, greatly, than ours,
+ And always kept up the rehearsals for hours.
+ Still he wasn't quite happy,
+ And often got snappy,
+ For Richard McEwen, who'd wanted to play
+ The part of the chief, and used often to say
+ He'd have done it himself in a much better way,
+ Was by no means contented, thus feeling superior
+ To play "seconds" to Keefe, his decided inferior.
+
+ So he did what he could
+ To annoy the great K.,
+ And misunderstood,
+ In a scandalous way,
+ All the stage-manager's proper directions,
+ And refused to accept either hints or corrections.
+
+ Now in the third act, the time being night,
+ The scene on the beach, there's a hand-to-hand fight
+ 'Twixt the Bandit chief
+ (That's Mr. O'Keefe)
+ And the coastguard captain, Mr. McEwen,
+ In which 'tis agreed
+ That the first shall succeed,
+ While the latter comes in for no end of a hewing.
+
+ But Richard McEwen was strong and quick,
+ And a very good hand with the single-stick,
+ And he didn't see why
+ He should quietly die
+ By the sword of a man, much less clever at fencing.
+ So he _would_ give a twist
+ Of his muscular wrist,
+ Which disarmed the brave Bandit soon after commencing.
+
+ The rage of O'Keefe
+ Exceeded belief,
+ For McEwen _would_ do it at ev'ry rehearsal;
+ The manager vowed
+ It could not be allowed,
+ And the company's protests became universal.
+
+ McEwen explained
+ That he thought the piece gained
+ By his showing his skill--how could anyone doubt it?
+ "There's more credit," said he,
+ "To the chief than there'd be
+ If he killed a weak chap who knew nothing about it."
+ And he went on to say that O'Keefe wasn't fit
+ For the part of the chief, and could not fence a bit.
+ O'Keefe in reply,
+ Gave McEwen the lie,
+ And vowed he would kick him
+ Or otherwise "lick" him,
+ While his eyes flashed like those of a tiger or leopard. He
+ Induced us to think
+ That his rival must shrink
+ From placing himself in such obvious jeopardy.
+
+ He did so--and afterwards things all went smoothly,
+ While O'Keefe played his part in a manner quite Booth-ly,
+ Or, as somebody said, without meaning to gush,
+ He'd have put Henry Irving himself to the blush.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ As soon as the public performance drew nigh
+ The local excitement ran awfully high,
+ For reports had been spread
+ (By the club, be it said)
+ That something uncommonly good was expected,
+ And so on the day
+ We turned people away
+ From the doors, where quite early a crowd had collected.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Well, the overture over, the drama began,
+ But, thanks to our casual property man,
+ The rise of the curtain
+ Was somewhat uncertain.
+ In fact, for five minutes or so the thing _stuck_--
+ Which was terrible luck!
+ And affected the play,
+ At least, so I should say,
+ For the opening act went decidedly tamely,
+ Though O'Keefe and his bandits stuck to it most gamely.
+ There was not much applause,
+ Which perhaps was because
+ Our audience was certainly very genteel,
+ And thought it was rude folks should show what they feel;
+ Still, we should have preferred
+ Some "bravos!" to have heard.
+ And two or three gentlemen seemingly napping,
+ We thought might have better employed themselves clapping.
+
+ If first act went badly
+ The second quite dragged;
+ The actors worked sadly,
+ All interest flagged.
+ And though very often we caught people laughing,
+ The occasions they chose made us think they were chaffing.
+
+ Next came act the third, in which the O'Keefe
+ Was to be very great as the terrible chief,
+ For in it he killed
+ His rival, and spilled
+ The gore of the coastguards all over the coast,
+ And eloped with a bride,
+ Who beheld him with pride
+ Though she could herself of a coronet boast.
+ As a matter of fact
+ We hoped that this act
+ Would redeem in a measure the ones that preceded,
+ And it opened so well,
+ And O'Keefe looked so swell,
+ That at last we obtained the encouragement needed.
+ And then came the fight.
+ No one thought, on that night,
+ That McEwen would dare try his vile _tour de force_;
+ And the battle began
+ On the well-rehearsed plan,
+ While the supers made ready to bear off his corse.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Whatever induced him to do it? Who knows?
+ He says 'twas an accident. Well, I suppose,
+ When a man tells you that,
+ A denial too flat
+ Might perhaps lead to arguments, even to blows.
+ But, be that as it may,
+ The O'Keefe _couldn't_ slay
+ His opponent, whose wrist
+ All at once gave a twist,
+ And the brave bandit's weapon went flying away!
+ The supers stood spellbound, as over the stage
+ Strode the maddened O'Keefe; in a frenzy of rage
+ He picked up his sword, and then went for his foe
+ In terrible earnest.
+ Oh, that was the sternest,
+ Most truculent fight
+ Ever fought in the sight
+ Of innocent people, who shouted "Bravo!"
+ Little knowing how soon the real blood was to flow.
+
+ Thank Heaven, the swords
+ Were as blunt as two boards!
+ Otherwise the result would have been simply frightful.
+ As it was, every whack
+ Make the deuce of a crack,
+ While the audience considered it clearly delightful.
+ With th' applause at its height,
+ This most bloodthirsty fight,
+ By a blow from the skilful McEwen was ended.
+ O'Keefe fell as if dead,
+ With a gash on his head;
+ The supers rushed forward, the curtain descended.
+
+ Talk about clapping!
+ And walking-stick rapping!
+ While even the gentlemen formerly napping,
+ "Bravoed" themselves hoarse
+ With the whole of their force,
+ And made their fat palms quite tender with slapping.
+ "O'Keefe! and McEwen!" was shouted by all,
+ Why the deuce don't they come and acknowledge the call?
+ Then some people said
+ "That blow on the head--
+ Was it part of the play?--or"--ah, see, in the hall
+ A youth--he's a member, as that ribbon shows--
+ See! to Doctor Pomander he stealthily goes--
+ To the doctor, who sat
+ With his coat and his hat
+ Just under his seat, that he need not delay
+ If a patient should send to fetch him away;
+ But who never expected to find _in_ the hall
+ A patient--and much less a bandit--at all!
+
+ Anxiety now
+ Takes the place of the row,
+ And people talk low
+ And ask "Shall they go?"
+ When before the dropped curtain there comes with a bow
+ The stage-manager suave,
+ With a countenance grave,
+ To announce that although there's nought serious the matter,
+ (Here applause and some chatter)
+ Still, in the late fight
+ The _wrong_ man beat the _right_,
+ And that therefore the show was at end for the night.
+
+ Thus the bandit chief
+ Came duly to grief,
+ Though not in the way that the author intended,
+ And as for his head
+ Ere he went home to bed,
+ The doctor had seen that 'twas properly mended.
+ This, friends, was the end of the drama for me,
+ And for most, I believe, of the Zeus A.D.C.,
+ Whose need of success
+ May indeed have been less
+ Than that usually obtained by such clubs and societies;
+ But be that as it may,
+ I have e'er from that day
+ Placed amateur acting among th' improprieties.
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+MY FORTNIGHT AT WRETCHEDVILLE.
+
+GEORGE AUGUSTUS SALA.
+
+
+How I came to be acquainted with Wretchedville was in this wise. I was
+in quest last autumn of a nice quiet place within a convenient distance
+of town, where I could finish an epic poem--or stay, was it a five-act
+drama?--on which I had been long engaged, and where I could be secure
+from the annoyance of organ-grinders, and of reverend gentlemen leaving
+little subscription books one day and calling for them the next. I pined
+for a place where one could be very snug, and where one's friends didn't
+drop in "just to look you up, old fellow," and where the post didn't
+come in too often. So I picked up a bag of needments, and availing
+myself of a mid-day train on the Great Domdaniel Railway, alighted
+haphazard at a station.
+
+It turned out to be Sobbington. I saw at a glance that Sobbington was
+too fashionable, not to say stuck-up for me. The waltz from "Faust" was
+pianofortetically audible from at least half-a-dozen semi-detached
+windows; and this, combined with some painful variations on "Take,
+then, the sabre," and a cursory glance into a stationer's shop and fancy
+warehouse, where two stern mammas of low-church aspect were purchasing
+the back numbers of "The New Pugwell Square Pulpit," and three young
+ladies were telegraphically inquiring, behind their parents' backs, of
+the young person at the counter whether any letters had been left for
+them, sufficed to accelerate my departure from Sobbington. The next
+station on the road, I was told, was Doleful Hill, and then came
+Deadwood Junction. I thought I would take a little walk, and see what
+the open and what the covert yielded.
+
+I left my bag with a moody porter at the Sobbington Station, and trudged
+along the road which had been indicated to me as leading to Doleful
+Hill. It is true that I had not the remotest idea of where I was going
+to live. I walked onwards and onwards, admiring the field cows in the
+far-off pastures--cows the white specks on whose hides recurred so
+artistically that one might have thought the scenic arrangement of the
+landscape had been entrusted to Mr. Birket Foster. Anon I saw coming
+towards me, a butcher-boy in his cart, drawn by a fast trotting pony. I
+asked him when he neared me, how far it might be to Doleful Hill.
+
+"Good two mile," quoth the butcher-boy, pulling up. "But you'll have to
+pass Wretchedville first. Lays in a 'ole a little to the left, 'arf a
+mile on."
+
+"Wretchedville," thought I; what an odd name! "What sort of a place is
+it?" I inquired.
+
+"Well," replied the butcher-boy; "it's a lively place, a werry lively
+place. I should say it was lively enough to make a cricket burst himself
+for spite: it's so uncommon lively." And with this enigmatical
+deliverance the butcher-boy relapsed into a whistle of the utmost
+shrillness, and rattled away towards Sobbington.
+
+I wish that it had not been quite so golden an afternoon. A little
+dulness, a few clouds in the sky, might have acted as a caveat against
+Wretchedville. But I plodded on and on, finding all things looking
+beautiful in that autumn glow, until at last I found myself descending
+the declivitous road into Wretchedville and to destruction.
+
+"Were there any apartments to let?" Of course there were. The very first
+house I came to was, as regards the parlour-window, nearly blocked up by
+a placard treating of "Apartments Furnished." Am I right in describing
+it as the parlour-window? I scarcely know; for the front door, with
+which it was on a level, was approached by such a very steep flight of
+steps, that when you stood on the topmost grade, it seemed as though,
+with a very slight effort, you could have peeped in at the bed-room
+window, or touched one of the chimney-pots; while as concerns the
+basement, the front kitchen--I beg pardon, the breakfast
+parlour--appeared to be a good way above the level of the street.
+
+The space in the first-floor window not occupied by the placard, was
+filled by a monstrous group of wax fruit, the lemons as big as pumpkins,
+and the leaves of an unnaturally vivid green. The window below--it was a
+single-windowed front--served merely as a frame for the half-length
+portrait of a lady in a cap, ringlets, and a colossal cameo brooch. The
+eyes of this portrait were fixed upon me; and before almost I had lifted
+a very small light knocker, decorated, so far as I could make out, with
+the cast-iron effigy of a desponding ape, and had struck this against a
+door, which to judge from the amount of percussion produced, was
+composed of Bristol board highly varnished, the portal itself flew open
+and the portrait of the basement appeared in the flesh; indeed, it was
+the same portrait. Downstairs it had been Mrs. Primpris looking out into
+the Wretchedville Road for lodgers. Upstairs it was Mrs. Primpris
+letting her lodgings and glorying in the act.
+
+She didn't ask for any references. She didn't hasten to inform me that
+there were no children or any other lodgers. She didn't look doubtful
+when I told her that the whole of my luggage consisted of a black bag
+which I had left at the Sobbington Station. She seemed rather pleased
+with the idea of the bag, and said that her Alfred should step round for
+it. She didn't object to smoking; and she at once invested me with the
+Order of the Latchkey--a latchkey at Wretchedville, ha! ha! She further
+held me with her glittering eye, and I listened like a two-years' child
+while she let me the lodgings for a fortnight certain.
+
+She had converted me into a single gentleman lodger of quiet and retired
+habits--or was I a widower of independent means seeking a home in a
+cheerful family?--so suddenly that I beheld all things as in a dream.
+Thinking, perchance, that the first stone of that monumental edifice,
+the bill, could not be laid too quickly, she immediately provided me
+with tea. There was a little cottage-loaf, so hard, round, shiny, and
+compact, that I experienced a well-nigh uncontrollable desire to fling
+it up to the ceiling to ascertain whether it would chip off any portion
+of a preposterous rosette in stucco in the centre, representing a
+sunflower surrounded by cabbage-leaves. This terrible ornament was, by
+the way, one of the chief sources of my misery at Wretchedville: I was
+continually apprehensive that it would tumble down bodily on the table.
+In addition to the cottage-loaf there was a pretentious tea-pot, which,
+had it been of sterling silver, would have been worth fifty guineas, but
+which in its ghastly gleaming, said plainly, "Sheffield" and
+"imposture." There was a piece of butter in a "shape" like a diminutive
+haystack, and with a cow sprawling on the top in unctuous plasticity. It
+was a pallid kind of butter, from which with difficulty you shaved off
+adipocerous scales, which would not be persuaded to adhere to the bread,
+but flew off at tangents and went rolling about an intolerably large
+tea-tray on whose papier-mache surface was depicted the death of Captain
+Hedley Vicars. The Crimean sky was inlaid with mother-of-pearl, and the
+gallant captain's face was highly enriched with blue and crimson
+foil-paper.
+
+As for the tea, I don't think I ever tasted such a peculiar mixture. Did
+you ever sip warm catsup sweetened with borax? _That_ might have been
+something like it. And what was that sediment, strongly resembling the
+sand at Great Yarmouth, at the bottom of the cup? I sat down to my meal,
+however, and made as much play with the cottage-loaf as I could. Had the
+loaf been varnished? It smelt and looked as though it had undergone that
+process. Everything in the house smelt of varnish. I was uncomfortably
+conscious, too, during my repast--one side of the room being all
+window--that I was performing the part of a "Portrait of the Gentleman
+on the first floor," and that, as such, I was "sitting" to Mrs. Lucknow
+at Number Twelve opposite--I knew her name was Lucknow, for a brass
+plate on the door said so--whose own half-length effigy was visible in
+her own breakfast-parlour window glowering at me reproachfully because I
+had not taken her first floor, in the window of which was, not a group
+of wax fruit, but a sham alabaster vase full of artificial flowers.
+Every window in Wretchedville exhibited one or other of these ornaments,
+and it was from their contemplation that I began to understand how it
+was that the "fancy goods" trade in the Minories and Houndsditch throve
+so well. They made things there to be purchased by the housekeepers of
+Wretchedville.
+
+The shades of evening fell, and Mrs. Primpris brought me in a monstrous
+paraffin-lamp, the flame of which wouldn't do anything but lick the
+chimney-glass till it smoked it to the proper hue to observe eclipses
+by, and then splutter into extinction and charnel-like odour. After that
+we tried a couple of composites (six to the pound) in green glass
+candlesticks. I asked Mrs. Primpris if she could send me up a book to
+read, and she favoured me, _per_ Alfred and Selina, with her whole
+library, consisting of the Asylum Press Almanack for 1860; two odd
+volumes of the Calcutta Directory; the Brewer and Distiller's Assistant;
+Julia de Crespigny, or a Winter in London; Dunoyer's French Idioms; and
+the Reverend Mr. Huntingdon's Bank of Faith.
+
+I took out my cigar-case after this and began to smoke; and then I heard
+Mrs. Primpris coughing and a number of doors being thrown wide open.
+Upon this I concluded that I would go to bed. My sleeping apartment--the
+first-floor back--was a perfect cube. One side was a window overlooking
+a strip of clay-soil hemmed in between brick walls. There were no
+tombstones yet, but if it wasn't a cemetery, why, when I opened the
+window to get rid of the odour of the varnish, did it smell like one?
+The opposite side of the cube was composed of a chest of drawers. I am
+not impertinently curious by nature, but as I was the first-floor
+lodger, bethought myself entitled to open the top long drawer with a
+view to the bestowal of the contents of my black bag. The drawer was not
+empty; but that which it held made me feel very nervous. I suppose the
+weird figure I saw stretched out there with pink arms and legs sprouting
+from a shroud of silver paper, a quantity of ghastly auburn curls, and
+two blue glass eyes unnaturally gleaming in the midst of a mask of
+salmon-coloured wax, was Selina's best doll; the present perhaps of her
+uncle, who was, haply, a Calcutta director, or an Asylum Press Almanack
+maker, or a brewer and distiller, or a cashier in the Bank of Faith. I
+shut the drawer again hurriedly, and that doll in its silver paper
+cerecloth haunted me all night.
+
+The third side of my bedroom consisted of chimney--the coldest, hardest,
+brightest-looking fire-place I ever saw out of Hampton Court Palace
+guardroom. The fourth side was door. I forget into which corner was
+hitched a wash-hand stand. The ceiling was mainly stucco rosette, of the
+pattern of the one in my sitting-room. Among the crazes which came over
+me at this time, was one to the effect that this bedroom was a cabin on
+board ship, and that if the ship should happen to lurch or roll in the
+trough of the sea, I must infallibly tumble out of the door or the
+window, or into the drawer where the doll was--unless the drawer and the
+doll came out to me--or up the chimney. I think that I murmured
+"Steady!" as I clomb into bed.
+
+My couch--an "Arabian" one, Mrs. Primpris said proudly--seemingly
+consisted of the Logan, or celebrated rocking-stone of Cornwall, loosely
+covered with bleached canvas, under which was certain loose foreign
+matter, but whether composed of flocculi of wool or of the halves of
+kidney potatoes I am not in a position to state. At all events I awoke
+in the morning veined all over like a scagliola column. I never knew,
+too, before, that any blankets were manufactured in Yorkshire, or
+elsewhere, so remarkably small and thin as the two seeming flannel
+pocket-handkerchiefs with blue-and-crimson edging, which formed part of
+Mrs. Primpris's Arabian bed-furniture. Nor had I hitherto been aware, as
+I was when I lay with that window at my feet, that the moon was so very
+large. The orb of night seemed to tumble on me flat, until I felt as
+though I were lying in a cold frying-pan. It was a "watery moon," I have
+reason to think; for when I awoke the next morning, much battered with
+visionary conflicts with the doll, I found that it was raining cats and
+dogs.
+
+"The rain," the poet tells us, "it raineth every day." It rained most
+prosaically all that day at Wretchedville, and the next, and from Monday
+morning till Saturday night, and then until the middle of the next week!
+Dear me! dear me! how wretched I was! I hasten to declare that I have no
+kind of complaint to make against Mrs. Primpris. Not a flea was felt in
+her house. The cleanliness of the villa was so scrupulous as to be
+distressing. It smelt of soap and scrubbing-brush like a Refuge. Mrs.
+Primpris was strictly honest, even to the extent of inquiring what I
+would like to have done with the fat of cold mutton-chops, and sending
+me up antediluvian crusts, the remnants of last week's cottage-loaves,
+with which I would play moodily at knock-'em-downs, using the
+pepper-caster as a pin. I have nothing to say against Alfred's fondness
+for art. India-rubber to be sure, is apter to smear than to obliterate
+drawings in chalk; but a three-penny piece is not much; and you cannot
+too early encourage the imitative faculties. And again, if Selina did
+require correction, I am not prepared to deny that a shoe may be the
+best implement and the blade bones the most fitting portion of the human
+anatomy for such an exercitation.
+
+I merely say that I was wretched at Wretchedville, and that Mrs.
+Primpris's apartments very much aggravated my misery. The usual
+objections taken to a lodging-house are to the effect that the furniture
+is dingy, the cooking execrable, the servant a slattern, and the
+landlady either a crocodile or a tigress. Now my indictment against my
+Wretchedville apartments simply amounts to this: that everything was too
+new. Never were there such staring paper-hangings, such gaudily printed
+druggets for carpets, such blazing hearthrugs--one representing the dog
+of Montargis seizing the murderer of the Forest of Bondy--such gleaming
+fire-irons, and such remarkably shiny looking-glasses with gilt halters
+for frames. The crockery was new, and the glue on the chairs and tables
+was scarcely dry. The new veneer peeled off the new chiffonier. The
+roller-blinds to the windows were so new that they wouldn't work. The
+new stair-carpeting used to dazzle my eyes so, that I was always
+tripping myself up; the new oil-cloth in the hall smelt like the Trinity
+House repository for new buoys; and Mrs. Primpris was always full
+dressed by nine o'clock in the morning. She confessed once or twice
+during my stay that her house was not quite "seasoned." It was not even
+seasoned to sound. Every time the kitchen-fire was poked you heard the
+sound in the sitting-room. As to perfumes, whenever the lid of the
+copper in the wash-house was raised, the first-floor lodger was aware of
+the fact. I knew by the simple evidence of my olfactory organs what Mrs.
+Primpris had for dinner every day. Pork, accompanied by some green
+esculent, boiled, predominated.
+
+When my fortnight's tenancy had expired--I never went outside the house
+until I left it for good--and my epic poem, or whatever it was, had more
+or less been completed, I returned to London, and had a rare bilious
+attack. The doctor said it was painter's colic; I said at the time it
+was disappointed ambition, for the booksellers had looked very coldly on
+my poetical proposals, and the managers to a man had refused to read my
+play; but at this present writing I believe the sole cause of my malady
+to have been Wretchedville. I hope they will pull down the villas and
+build the jail there soon, and that the rascal convicts will be as
+wretched as I was.
+
+ (_From_ "UNDER THE SUN," _by permission of_ MESSRS. VIZETELLY & CO.)
+
+
+
+
+THE SORROWS OF WERTHER.
+
+W. M. THACKERAY.
+
+
+ Werther had a love for Charlotte
+ Such as words could never utter;
+ Would you know how first he met her
+ She was cutting bread and butter.
+
+ Charlotte was a married lady,
+ And a moral man was Werther,
+ And for all the wealth of Indies
+ Would do nothing for to hurt her.
+
+ So he sighed, and pined, and ogled,
+ And his passion boiled, and bubbled,
+ Till he blew his silly brains out,
+ And no more was by it troubled.
+
+ Charlotte having seen his body
+ Borne before her on a shutter,
+ Like a well-conducted person,
+ Went on cutting bread and butter.
+
+
+
+
+MORAL MUSIC.
+
+(BY AN EXPERIMENTER.)
+
+
+I am in a humble sphere of life--a hairdresser's assistant, in fact; but
+I have a thirst for improving my mind, and regularly attend the evening
+classes at our institute. It was there I read in a magazine about morals
+and music. The writer discussed the question whether music by itself,
+unpolluted by words, had any "mental significance or moral power." I
+left off reading, rather puzzled, but I am of a practical turn of mind.
+I joined our bricklaying class at the institute last term, and, although
+I nip my fingers a good deal, still it has made me inclined to put all
+new truths to the test of experiment. So I determined to experiment on
+myself, and see what mental significance and moral power music
+possessed, if any. I regulated my life very carefully during the trial,
+so that no outside influence should spoil the result. I weighed and
+measured out my food and drink, abstained from pickles and sensation
+literature, denied myself the exciting pleasure of Jemima's company on
+Thursday and Sunday, and, to counterbalance the language of some of our
+ruder customers, and to give morals an even chance, I slept with a tract
+under my pillow. I started with a quite unprejudiced mind, for the
+attention I had paid to music before was mostly measured by the loudness
+of it. I took a seat at St. James's Hall in good time, and opened my
+mind and morals for impressions. First of all, a man came on the
+platform and began, as far as I could see, to tune the piano. I thought
+he ought to have done this before the advertised time of opening, but
+when he got off the stool, the people all began to applaud him, and on
+inquiring, I found that the man I had taken for the tuner was really the
+giver of the concert, and that he had been playing one of his own
+compositions. So I lost this experiment altogether. However, soon after
+the player returned with a violinist, and they started a duet. I set my
+teeth. If there was any significance or moral in a violin and piano
+mixed, I determined to have it. I had first fleeting visions before my
+mind of all the creatures I had ever seen in pain. There was the squeak
+of a rat caught in a trap; there was the same sort of shriek Jemima gave
+when I took her to have a tooth out; and there was the loud wail which
+accompanies the conversion of pig into pork. But this was only the first
+chapter. The players stopped, and began again; and the next chapter
+plunged me among the industrial arts. Under the influence of the magic
+instruments I saw the foundation of England's greatness. There was an
+athletic carpenter industriously sawing wood. There was a grindstone
+putting an edge on an axe. There were a number of whirrs, which brought
+back vividly a loom I had seen at work at an exhibition, and there was a
+rather asthmatic smith striking his anvil and coughing between every
+blow.
+
+But this was not all. They began a third chapter, and I was immediately
+among lolly-pops. All the nicest things I had ever tasted stood before
+me in a row. There was a pot full of apricot jam; there was some roast
+beef gravy, than which, taken on the knife, I know nothing more
+toothsome; there was a sixpenny strawberry ice, and a nice cut of lamb
+and mint sauce to finish up with. I was sorry when they left off, but
+glad to find I was on the trace of a moral. The piece was evidently a
+musical embodiment of a clean shave: the first part was the misery of
+laying your head back and having your nose tweaked; the second was the
+being scraped; and the last was the happy moment when you stretch your
+limbs, pass your satisfied hand over your smooth chin, and nod to
+yourself complacently in the glass. The moral was obvious; that it is a
+duty to get shaved, and not to shave yourself, but to go to the
+professional man. My next experiment was to hear a young lady sing. She
+came on the platform, looking lovely, and she had on a sash and a dress
+improver that I never saw equalled for elegance. My hopes rose at the
+sight of her. I felt sure that so much beauty could not be otherwise
+than moral. "Oh, do be moral! do be moral!" I kept saying to myself, as
+the accompanist opened fire on her song. A dreadful thought then arose:
+the words of her song would taint the experiment, which was to be on
+music alone. But, to my delight, I could not catch a word of what she
+sang. It was all pure music. Her sweet song suggested to me as follows:
+I first saw her running up stairs and down again as fast as ever she
+could, and then she sat down on the mat to rest, while the piano panted.
+Then she drew out from somewhere one long, straight note, thick in the
+middle and tapering off at each end, so seductive that I fancied myself
+a storm-tossed mariner listening to a mermaid. I could almost feel the
+waves of the Margate boat gurgle around me. Then she drew a jug of hot
+water out of the boiler--at least, that was its intellectual
+significance to me, because the note went steadily rising upwards, with
+little splashes in between, just like the sound of the water when I draw
+a jug to shave a customer. Then she ran upstairs again like lightning,
+and disappeared through the tiles, while the pianist banged the front
+door to. I am sure there was a splendid moral to all this, for she
+looked so beautiful and smiled so sweetly; but I am undecided whether
+the moral was that I was to sign the pledge, or that I was not to go to
+concerts without Jemima as a safeguard.
+
+I next gave myself up bodily to what they called a "concerto." When I
+saw several gentlemen come on to the platform, with a variety of
+instruments, I thought it would be a more serious experiment than the
+others, and so it proved. I kept my eyes on them when they first began,
+but they looked so comical--one with his cheeks blown out, another with
+his hair as if it had just been machined, another trying to get his arm
+round his fiddle's waist, and another jerking his eyes out of his
+head--that I felt it was not giving the music a fair chance, so I shut
+my own eyes tight. As soon as I had done so there was no end of
+intellectual significance. I was in a pleasure van just starting for
+Hampton Court, with Jemima. There was the jog trot of the horses, and
+every now and then the skid put on; there was laughter and the puffing
+of pipes, and occasionally a loud roar, as we crossed a big
+thoroughfare. We soon got into the country and heard the birds chirping,
+and there was a sweet gurgling sound, which intimated to me that the men
+on the box had broached the four-gallon cask. I was just getting ready
+for a glass, when all at once the whole scene vanished. The music had
+stopped, and when it began again things were much altered for the worse.
+With the first note I felt a shudder go down my vitals. Something was
+coming, I did not know what. I felt just like being woke up in bed by a
+strange noise, and no matches handy, and my razors open to everybody on
+the table. Then I heard the bass fiddle say distinctly, "Prepare to meet
+your doom" several times over, while the violins tried to sneer at me,
+and the piano rattled chains in the corner. This was very trying, but
+worse was to follow. There were faint cries and sobs from the next room,
+as though murder was going on; there were long silences which were worse
+to bear than any sound; then someone began to work softly at the door
+with a centre bit, and there were rumblings as though someone else was
+letting himself down the chimney. I fancied I could almost see his leg.
+Then there was another hush, and thank heaven, I could tell by the
+hand-clapping that that part was over. It was about time, for the mental
+significance had got quite over-powering. There was then a total change.
+The music took me back in a second to the last ball I had been to--the
+eighteen-penny one, refreshments extra. I was dancing all the dances at
+once, and all the girls were making up to me, and it only made Jemima
+smile. That was a really delightful mental significance, and I could
+have done with more of it. But I doubt whether the concerto on the whole
+was moral. I am sure that ice down the back cannot be good for anyone,
+nor can I see, in cool moments, that raising the animal spirits so many
+degrees above proof is proper. I have not yet concluded my experiments.
+I have still to try the effects of a cornet solo; and the flute, as well
+as the concertina, the bones, and the banjo. But I have no doubt that if
+more people would try my plan, and honestly state the results, we should
+in time get at the truth of this matter of moral music.
+
+ (_From the_ "EVENING STANDARD.")
+
+
+
+
+BILLY DUMPS, THE TAILOR.
+
+CHARLES CLARK.
+
+
+Billy Dumps was very fond of spending his evenings with his two cronies,
+Natty Dyer, a shoemaker, and Neddy Tueson, an umbrella mender, at the
+"Cunning Cat," just round the corner. This worthy trio seldom left their
+favourite haunt before closing time, much to the disgust of their
+respective helpmates, Mrs. Dumps in particular.
+
+Billy Dumps was a tailor, working as _he_ termed it on his own hook. As
+his prices were moderate, and his work durable, he earned a pretty good
+living, making and mending for his neighbours, chiefly of the dock
+labouring class; but his nightly orgies at the "Cunning Cat" made sad
+inroads into his hard earnings, which tended much to sour Betsy's
+otherwise naturally good temper.
+
+The climax was reached one eventful evening, on the occasion of a
+Free-and-Easy being held at the old quarters, after which, Billy, for
+prudential reasons, was escorted home at midnight by his two associates,
+all fully bent on informing the sleeping neighbourhood at the top of
+their voices that they were "jolly good fellows," supplemented by a
+further assertion of, "and so say all of us!" Finishing up by depositing
+the confiding tailor at full length in his own front passage, through
+the door being inadvertently left ajar, where he laid and snored in
+blissful ignorance of the trials and troubles of this life until rather
+rudely awakened, and then somewhat briskly assisted upstairs, by Betsy
+and a broom handle.
+
+"Now, Mister Billy Dumps, I am tired of sitting up for you night after
+night, and mean to do so no longer. So if you are not in when our clock
+strikes ten, I locks the door and you finds other lodgings," exclaimed
+Betsy his wife, on the morning after the Free-and-Easy.
+
+Tailor Dumps felt small after the previous night's dissipation, and
+determined to get home earlier and sober that evening. But under the
+influence of the soothing pipe, the nut-brown ale, and the merry laugh
+and jest of his boon companions, he was induced to forget his late
+resolution, and to prolong his stay at the "Cunning Cat" until aroused
+to the fact that it was ten o'clock and closing-time. On reaching home,
+all was still and dark. Strange! he went round to the back door and
+thumped loudly. The bed-room casement flew open with a bang, from which
+instantly protruded the night-capped head of the wife of his bosom.
+Billy at once tried the high hand, shouting, "Now then, sleepy, what's
+yer game? Be spry and open sharp!"
+
+No. She wasn't going to be spry, neither was she sleepy; and as to her
+little game--she had locked him out according to promise, so didn't
+intend unlocking again that night. Not if she knew it. Oh no!
+
+"Now, Betsy, don't be a fool, you'll repent it," he urged.
+
+_She_ wasn't a fool, she answered. In her opinion, he was the biggest
+fool to be hammering and shivering outside at that time of night, when
+he might have been comfortably lying in a warm bed hours ago. As for
+repentance--she thought that would be more on his side of the door, for
+she felt comfortable--very.
+
+Billy fumed and stormed, and fully felt the ridiculousness of his
+position, especially as he heard sounds of the neighbouring casements
+stealthily unclose, and suppressed indications of merriment issuing
+therefrom. But Billy stormed to no purpose. Betsy coolly recommended him
+to go back where he had spent such a pleasant evening. She was sure Mrs.
+Mudge, the landlady, would be only too pleased to accommodate him with a
+lodging. If she wasn't, she ought to be, considering the time and money
+he spent in her house.
+
+But Billy had his own ideas of that arrangement, so still lingered,
+determined to try another tack. He promised amendment, but Betsy was
+sceptical. He appealed to her feelings. "Let me in, Betsy, for I am
+cold!" That she could not help; as he had made his bed so he must lie.
+He then became affectionate. "Oh Betsy, you are unkind: remember old
+times, remember our wedding-day!" he pleaded, thinking to touch her that
+way. But Betsy was not going to be had by soft sawder, for she promptly
+rejoined, "Remember our wedding-day, you drunken sot? _I do_ to my
+sorrow, no fear of my forgetting that great mistake. But, as I told you
+before, into this house this blessed night you do not step. No, not if
+you were to go on your knees and beg for it!"
+
+"Ah, Betsy. You'll be sorry for this when too late. I'm determined to
+end my misery. I'll jump down the well and drown myself. And you'll be
+the cause of it!" whined Billy.
+
+The night was dark. Betsy felt a little relenting as she heard her
+husband groping about in the wood shed. Then she could dimly discern him
+making for the well; plainly hear the creaking of the hinges and the lid
+thrown back with a thud. Then came the cry of "Good bye, Betsy, I'm
+gone!" The dull sound of a heavy body plunging into the water--a gasping
+moan, and all was still.
+
+Betsy's old affection for her erring husband at once returned with
+tenfold force, for she raced downstairs, rushing into the darkness,
+shrieking for help.
+
+The neighbours were aroused. Men and women tumbled out of their back
+doors in such scanty dishabille that would have charmed a sculptor.
+Betsy, still screeching like a bagpipe, had to be forcibly restrained
+from jumping to the rescue by the bystanders.
+
+Dick Ward, the blacksmith, thrust the bucket-pole into the well, singing
+out, "Lay hold, Billy, if ye ain't too fur gone!"
+
+"I can feel un," shouted Dick, as the pole struck some hard substance
+with a sounding smack.
+
+"My eye, Dick! he'll feel you too, if that's Billy's head you tapped,"
+said Nat; "it 'ud be one for his nob and no mistake."
+
+They caught a glimpse, by the uncertain light of a flaming candle, of a
+something floating low on the surface of the water.
+
+"His head feels as hard as a koker nut," said Dick, as the pole rattled
+on the dark object.
+
+"Why it seems off his shoulders, for it goes bobbing up and down like a
+dumplin in a soup-kettle!"
+
+Just then, to the astonishment of all, the well known voice of Billy
+Dumps was heard from the identical bed-room window that his wife had so
+lately vacated, shouting, "Hullo, you people. What the deuce are ye
+making such a rumpas for?"
+
+"A ghost! A ghost!" was the cry.
+
+"No fear," laughed the tailor. "But, Dick, as you have the pole in hand,
+I should feel obliged if you'd fish up my chopping-block which I dropped
+in there awhile ago!"
+
+Betsy Dumps at the sound of her husband's voice, made for the door, but
+found it fastened. "Let me in! Let me in! I am so glad you are safe!"
+she joyously exclaimed.
+
+"Not if I know it, Betsy. It's my turn now. _Into this house this
+blessed night you do not step. No, not if you were to go on your knees
+and beg for it!_"
+
+A loud laugh broke from the crowd, as the joke dawned on them. Betsy was
+being paid back in her own coin. The neighbourhood had been sold. The
+crafty tailor had secured the chopping-block from the wood shed, and
+popped it down the well as his substitute, then, in the darkness and
+confusion slipped back into the house unseen. Betsy, having been
+accommodated for the night by a friendly neighbour, the crowd dispersed,
+highly amused at the adventure. Early the next morning, Mrs. Dumps on
+returning home was surprised to find her husband up, a cheerful fire
+burning, and the breakfast ready. Taking her hand he gave her a hearty
+kiss, with this greeting, "Dear old woman, let bygones be bygones!" And
+they were, too; for from that time the "Cunning Cat" knew him no more.
+It struck him strongly that his wife's true affection shown in the hour
+of his supposed great danger was too precious to trifle with; as a proof
+that he kept his word, let it be added that anyone visiting that large
+thriving tailoring establishment in the High Street, would hardly
+recognise in the respectable dapper proprietor, Mr. William Dumps, the
+once drunken tailor so long a nightly nuisance to the neighbourhood.
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+
+
+ON PUNNING.
+
+THEODORE HOOK.
+
+
+ My little dears who learn to read, pray early learn to shun
+ That very silly thing indeed, which people call a pun.
+ Read Entick's rules, and 'twill be found, how simple an offence
+ It is to make the self-same sound afford a double sense.
+
+ For instance, _ale_ may make you _ail_, your _aunt_ an _ant_ may kill,
+ You in a _vale_ may buy a _veil_ and _Bill_ may pay the _bill_.
+ Or, if to France your bark may steer, at Dover it may be,
+ A _peer_ appears upon the _pier_, who, blind, still goes to _sea_.
+
+ Thus, one might say, when to a treat good friends accept our greeting,
+ 'Tis _meet_ that men who _meet_ to eat should eat their _meat_ when
+ _meeting_.
+ Brawn on the _board's_ no bore indeed although from _boar_ prepared;
+ Nor can the _fowl_, on which we feed, _foul_ feeding he declared.
+
+ Thus, one ripe fruit may be a _pear_, and yet be _pared_ again,
+ And still no _one_, which seemeth rare until we do explain.
+ It therefore should be all your aim to spell with ample care;
+ For who, however fond of _game_, would choose to swallow _hair_?
+
+ A fat man's _gait_ may make us smile, who has no _gate_ to close;
+ The farmer, sitting on his _stile_ no _sty_lish person knows.
+ Perfumers, men of _scents_ must be, some _Scilly_ men are bright;
+ A _brown_ man oft _deep read_ we see, a _black_ a wicked _wight_.
+
+ Most wealthy men good _manors_ have, however vulgar they;
+ And actors still the harder slave the oftener they _play_.
+ So poets can't the _baize_ obtain, unless their tailors choose;
+ While grooms and coachmen not in vain each evening seek the _Mews_.
+
+ The _dyer_, who by _dying_ lives, a _dire_ life maintains;
+ The glazier, it is known, receives his profits for his _panes_.
+ By gardeners _thyme_ is tied, 'tis true, when spring is in its prime;
+ But _time_ and _tide_ won't wait for you if you are _tied_ for _time_.
+
+ Thus now you see, my little dears, the way to make a pun;
+ A trick which you, through coming years, should sedulously shun.
+ The fault admits of no defence, for wheresoe'er 'tis found,
+ You sacrifice the _sound_ for _sense_; the _sense_ is never _sound_.
+
+ So let your words and actions, too, one single meaning prove,
+ And just in all you say or do, you'll gain esteem and love.
+ In mirth and play no harm you'll know when duty's task is done;
+ But parents ne'er should let ye go un_pun_ished for a PUN.
+
+
+
+
+SEASIDE LODGINGS.
+
+PERCY REEVE.
+
+
+"Oh!" said Georgina Honeybee one afternoon, just before Good Friday,
+"_wouldn't_ it be nice to go away for Easter?"
+
+Now it so happened, that the notion was by no means displeasing to Mr.
+Honeybee. He longed for a change; the thought of sea-breezes enchanted
+him. He felt worried with work, and yearned to hie him away somewhere
+without leaving his address behind him. So it fell out that, almost for
+the first time in his married existence, he agreed to his wife's
+proposition without demur--and long before a week was over, he never
+regretted anything so much in all his life.
+
+With husband and wife of one mind (for a wonder), the preliminaries were
+speedily arranged. Swineleigh-on-Sea was selected as their destination.
+In less time than it takes to tell, Georgina was bustling about the
+house, giving parting instructions to the servants as to what they were
+to do during her absence (one would have thought she was going away for
+a year at least). Fanny (Mrs. Honeybee's maid, if you please) was
+packing-up her mistress's luggage, while John was being abused by his
+master for having no more idea than a child of how to fill a
+portmanteau. Everybody was hot and flurried, and the hall-door bell rang
+four times before it received the attention to which it was accustomed.
+
+Honeybee stood in his shirt-sleeves, and in his dressing-room, while his
+perspiring and nervous man endeavoured to put boots on the top of clean
+shirts. Georgina flitted about her bedroom, saying--"Yes; thank you; if
+you'll put in my tea-gown. Yes; thank you--now the linen. Yes; thank
+you--no, I shouldn't lay the sponge-bag on the top of my handkerchief
+case. Yes; thank you--now the braided dress;" and sundry pretty babble
+of that kind.
+
+At length everything was ready. A four-wheeled cab was called, and Mr.
+Honeybee, Georgina, and Fanny the maid, were soon driving across London
+to the railway-station. Their tickets got, the trio proceeded without
+adventure to Swineleigh, where, when she emerged from the slightly
+inferior class in which she had travelled, Fanny remarked to her
+mistress:
+
+"This don't seem half a bad sort of place, mum."
+
+Honeybee was beaming. His face seemed to say: "Ah! I tell you, when I
+_do_ take it into my head to go out for a holiday with my wife and her
+maid, I go to the right place, and I have things done properly." Poor
+man--he little knew.
+
+Swineleigh is, fortunately, not a large place, or its death rate would
+have more influence on the mortality statistics; but it is quite large
+enough to be unpleasant, and to make those who have once visited it
+swear they will never do so again. Honeybee had heard it was cheap from
+a gentleman friend, and Georgina had gathered from a lady acquaintance
+that it was quiet and respectable--hence the praiseworthy unanimity
+which had characterised their selection of this spot for the enjoyment
+of an Easter holiday. They had meant to put up at the Marine Hotel, but
+when they reached that modest edifice they found that all the rooms were
+engaged, excepting a couple of dog-holes somewhere near the roof, which,
+from their description, our party did not care to inspect. Honeybee was,
+however, directed to some lodgings which sounded as if they might suit,
+and with a crack of the whip, and a curse from the flyman, who had
+conveyed them thus far, the party started off on a fresh tack. When they
+reached Cronstadt Villa--for it was hither they were referred--Mr.
+Honeybee opened fire as follows upon the landlady who opened the door:
+
+"We come from the Marine Hotel. Can we have a large bed-room, a small
+bed-room, a dressing-room and a sitting-room?"
+
+"Yes," replied the landlady, somewhat reflectively, as if she felt
+inclined to add, "But what you mean by such impertinence I am at a loss
+to inquire."
+
+"Good!" rejoined Honeybee. "Will you have our luggage sent up as soon as
+may be? And we should like dinner pretty soon, as we have not had much
+lunch."
+
+"Come inside, please," said the landlady, grandly, to the trio in
+general. Then elbowing Fanny out of the way, she said to Mrs. Honeybee
+particularly: "Would you like to see your room?"
+
+"Thank you very much," returned Georgina, "I should."
+
+Then the newly-made friends walked upstairs together, leaving Honeybee
+and Fanny to get the luggage up, and to fight the flyman. Mercifully, a
+loafer turned up and volunteered to carry the boxes. Mr. Honeybee only
+paid the flyman three times his fare, but escaped without loss of blood.
+It is true the driver thought proper to curse him to the nethermost
+depths of hell, but what are you to do in a place like Swineleigh, where
+you might as well look for the Pope as for a policeman?
+
+At last the baggage was stowed in the different rooms indicated by the
+landlady. Fanny could not help smiling when the loafer set down
+Honeybee's portmanteau with a plump on her bed; and Georgina could not
+help saying "Oh!" when Fanny's box was hauled into _her_ room; but these
+little mistakes were soon rectified, and the loafer being evidently one
+of nature's noblemen, withdrew without further parley when he had
+received all the loose silver there was in the house. The landlady had
+not any change.
+
+"Now then," said Honeybee, when the door was fairly shut, "when can we
+have dinner, and of what will it consist?"
+
+"Dinner!" repeated the landlady, as if recalling by an effort the
+meaning of a word once familiar. "Have you not dined?"
+
+"Not to-day," replied Honeybee, jocosely; "but we do not want
+much--anything will do. How about a fried sole and a roast chicken?"
+
+It was now seven o'clock, and the landlady verified the fact by
+reference to a silver watch, which she plucked with a jerk from her
+waistband.
+
+"Shops are all closed now," she said, as it seemed, with some relief. "I
+might get you a steak, or a couple of chops."
+
+"If you will add bread and butter, the use of the cruets, and perchance
+some cheese or jam," suggested Honeybee in his most caressing tones,
+while his wife endeavoured vainly to prevent him treading upon what she
+knew was volcanic ground, "I'm sure we could manage for to-night."
+
+"Well, you'll have to," replied the landlady, in a surly voice, and then
+she rang the bell in the room, which was to be the Honeybee's dining,
+drawing, and smoking room for a week. To this summons a most horrible
+"maid" responded, and to her were consigned Georgina and her spouse. The
+landlady never was seen again until she came eventually to present the
+bill; but her voice was frequently heard. Honeybee's good-nature by this
+time was giving out; but he controlled himself.
+
+"Will you," said he, "get us some food ready as soon as you can? We
+would like a beef-steak. Will half-past seven be too early?"
+
+"No, sir," replied the maid, in a far-off voice; and she left the room.
+
+"Now," said Honeybee, "Georgina, my dearest, you must be tired. Come
+upstairs and change your dress; Fanny will get you hot water and see to
+you. I will just wash my hands and then take a short stroll. Come
+along."
+
+When they reached the bedroom they found Fanny in a great undertaking.
+Having unpacked Georgina's trunk, and littered the floor with dresses
+and parcels, she was about to arrange the different articles in the
+chest of drawers, when she found them all locked up.
+
+"This is absurd," said Honeybee; and he rang the bell. After a very
+long time the horrible maid appeared, and when asked why all the drawers
+were looked, replied, with a wild-eyed expression of face, that she
+supposed "missus's things was there." Desired to ask missus to remove
+them, or to provide other accommodation for her tenants, the wild-eyed
+one remarked that she "dursen't do it."
+
+Georgina, always trying to soothe troubled waters, observed, "Never
+mind; we shall get straight to-morrow somehow. I'm so tired; it does not
+matter for to-night. Only unpack what I absolutely want, Fanny; and you,
+dear," to her husband, "go and have a nice stroll, but be back by
+half-past seven, as I'm famishing."
+
+So enjoined, Honeybee kissed his wife, and withdrew.
+
+A cursory inspection of the contents of his portmanteau soon convinced
+him that John had omitted to put in a good many useful articles; and as
+Mr. Honeybee made a hasty toilette, he was pained to observe that he had
+brought with him an odd coat and waistcoat. Even this might have been
+borne, if the bottle containing his boot-varnish had not broken over his
+shirts; and with a heavy heart he sallied forth into the town to buy a
+tooth-brush.
+
+Having made his purchase, and also ordered some wine, he returned to the
+lodgings, where he found his wife waiting in the sitting-room warming
+her feet, while the maid laid the table. About five minutes to eight
+"dinner" was served. It consisted of a beef-steak that was raw, except
+in those parts which had been burnt to a cinder; some potatoes which
+were very black under the eyes, and extremely hard, were also served;
+and some of last week's bread, together with some pale butterine,
+completed the repast. The Honeybees endeavoured to eat a few mouthfuls,
+washed down with cold and not particularly pure water. Although the wine
+merchant had assured Honeybee that the rare vintage he had ordered would
+be "there before he was," the young man did not arrive with the bottles
+until the next morning.
+
+"Perhaps the night is too inclement for him to venture out," said
+Honeybee; "or perhaps he reflects that we shall drink coffee with our
+dinner, and only require wine at breakfast time."
+
+After dinner the Honeybees had a game of cribbage, but they did not
+enjoy it, and soon Georgina went up to bed. Honeybee left her with
+Fanny, and then came downstairs again to smoke. He rang the bell and
+asked the maid if he could have a bottle of soda-water.
+
+"The public 'ouses is all closed now," said she, as if repeating a
+lesson.
+
+"Then some plain water please," returned Honeybee dolefully.
+
+"You'll find some in your bedroom," was the reply.
+
+With a heavy heart Honeybee went upstairs and took a long and strong
+drink of brandy from his flask, diluted from the bottle on his
+wash-stand. A fearful night it was--the miserable couple passed it in
+fear and trembling. Outside the wind howled and made the ill-fitting
+windows rattle continuously. Within the blinds refused to draw down, and
+the feather bed was so meagrely filled with feathers that when sleep
+began to steal upon Honeybee, he awoke to find himself with his hip-bone
+grating against the iron frame of the bedstead. The draught came in
+under the door with some force. This was not surprising when one came to
+examine the distance between it and the floor. The interval seemed
+contrived so as to admit of the carpet being drawn out of the room
+without opening the door.
+
+Bruised and weary, the Honeybees rose next morning. It was raining very
+hard, as it had been all night. For breakfast they had some fried eggs
+and bacon. The eggs would have been all right if they had been warmed
+through; but Honeybee said raw egg was good for the voice. The bacon
+would have brought its own punishment to the Jew wicked enough to
+indulge in it. They read novels most of the morning. Georgina and Fanny
+were occasionally in consultation as to some proposed alterations to a
+dress. Honeybee looked out of the window like a caged lion.
+
+Ah, Heavens! but why should I follow further the agonies of these
+wretched people. Indeed, I shrink from recording the sickening details
+of their week's stay. The disgusting round of impertinence,
+uncleanliness, stupidity, and brutality to which they were subjected is
+too odious to recount. Suffice it to say that never had Waterloo Villa
+looked so fair as when the Honeybees returned to it after their
+"holiday," and Georgina literally danced round the bright clean
+dining-room table laid ready for dinner, while Honeybee threw himself
+groaning on to his bed, where he lay till aroused by the rattle of
+plates and dishes. My goodness, how he did eat! And how Georgina beamed!
+
+ (_By permission of the Author._)
+
+
+ THE END.
+
+
+ BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE: Obvious misprints and punctuation errors have been
+silently corrected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Humorous Readings and Recitations, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HUMOROUS READINGS AND RECITATIONS ***
+
+***** This file should be named 36775.txt or 36775.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/6/7/7/36775/
+
+Produced by Delphine Lettau and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+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
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.