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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 62,
+Jan 27, 1872, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 62, Jan 27, 1872
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2011 [EBook #38040]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer, Ernest Schaal, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+VOL. 62.
+JANUARY 27, 1872.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THE LIQUOR CONTROVERSY.
+
+'_Spectable Citizen_. "ISH MY OPI'ION THISH P'MISSIVE BILL 'SH
+VEXASH'IOUS MEASURE. (_Hic!_) WHY SHOULD I BE D'PRIVED OF NESH-SH-ARY
+R'FRESHMENT, 'CAUSE ANOTHER PARTY HASN'T--CAN'T--DOESN'T--KNOW WHEN
+HE'SH HAD ENOUGH? SHTAN' UP, OL' MAN!!!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A JINGLE FOR ST. JAMES'S.
+
+ (_By a Musical Enthusiast._)
+
+ THE Monday Pops! The Monday Pops!
+ Whoe'er admires what some call "Ops;"
+ Should go, and lick his mental chops,
+ While feasting at the Monday Pops.
+
+ The Monday Pops! The Monday Pops!
+ To me their music far o'er-tops,
+ The jingling polkas and galóps,
+ On cracked pianos played at hops.
+
+ Nor almond rock, nor lemon-drops,
+ Nor sugar-plums, nor lollipops,
+ With which small children cram their crops,
+ Are sweeter than the Monday Pops.
+
+ The Monday Pops! The Monday Pops!
+ Delight of fogies and of fops!
+ The music that all other wops,
+ Is given at the Monday Pops.
+
+ Their fame all rivals far o'er-tops:
+ You see their programmes at the shops;
+ And here the bard exhausted stops,
+ His rhymings on the Monday Pops.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ TRUE BILL?
+
+MUCH ingenuity has been expended in trying to prove that SHAKSPEARE was
+a lawyer, and, amongst other passages in his writings, the two first
+lines of the Sonnet which commences--
+
+ "When to the sessions of sweet silent thought
+ I summon up remembrance of things past,"
+
+may be thought to indicate that he possessed legal acquirements. Has it,
+however, occurred to the editors and commentators, that these lines are
+capable of another interpretation, and may be considered to add a new
+item to our scanty knowledge of SHAKSPEARE'S personal history, if we
+take the more probable view, that when he penned them he had in his
+mind's eye those familiar Tribunals--the Quarter Sessions--to which, it
+may be whilst residing in the Metropolis, but most undoubtedly after his
+retirement to Stratford, he would be summoned in the capacity of Grand
+Juryman?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SOUP AND SERMON.
+
+THE _Morning Post_ records an interesting case of--
+
+ "SUPPER TO CONVICTED FELONS.--On Tuesday evening a supper was
+ given to one hundred and fifty convicted felons by NED WRIGHT,
+ the well-known converted burglar, at the Mission Hall, Hales
+ Street, High Street, Deptford. The candidates for tickets of
+ admission were compelled to attend the night before the supper
+ and give an account of themselves to prove that they really were
+ convicted felons, and by the sharp and close questioning of MR.
+ WRIGHT, about fifty were refused tickets as impostors."
+
+The fifty impostors who were fain to palm themselves off as convicts for
+the sake of a supper, must have been poor knaves indeed. These
+supernumeraries, for whom there was no seat at the table of Society,
+constitute a spectacle on the stage of life which it may be painful to
+some people and pleasant to others to contemplate from the dress circle.
+It is too probable that this Capital contains very many more of these
+Esaus, as they might be called if they had anything of a character so
+valuable as a birthright to dispose of on ESAU'S terms, with the small
+extras undermentioned:--
+
+ "The recipients of this Charity were a very motley crew, and
+ ranged in years from six up to fifty. They were each served with
+ a quantity of soup and a bag containing bread and a bun, after
+ which MR. WRIGHT addressed them in his own peculiar manner,
+ being listened to with marked attention."
+
+MR. WRIGHT, we may suppose, took care to preach in a "tongue
+understanded of the people" who constituted his hearers, and accordingly
+delivered a considerable portion of his discourse in the language which
+our great-grandfathers called thieves' Latin. A sermon in slang,
+however, would, perhaps, be more curious than edifying. Let us hope that
+MR. WRIGHT'S may possibly have had the effect of converting the guests
+who would once have been his pals from the error of their ways, formerly
+his own. Such, at least, appears to have been his laudable intention:--
+
+ "A large number of ladies and gentlemen interested in such work
+ attended and gave the benefit of their advice and co-operation.
+ In the course of the evening MR. WRIGHT announced his intention
+ of taking under his patronage a number of the boys then present,
+ who might be desirous of earning an honest livelihood, and
+ furnishing them with money and clothes to make a fair start in
+ life."
+
+It would rejoice both ourselves and our benevolent readers to know that
+the acceptance of this offer by a considerable number of MR. WRIGHT'S
+young friends may be the commencement of a career of good living,
+wherein they will very soon attain to better fare than a quantity of
+soup, a bag of bread, and a bun, quite good enough as that is for
+convicted felons, besides being peculiarly suitable as precluding any
+necessity for knives and forks chained to the table.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Lawyers and Lunatics.=
+
+HOW hardly will Judges, for the most part, admit the plea of insanity in
+exculpation from a charge of murder! How readily are they wont to
+entertain it as a reason for setting aside a will! How right they are in
+either instance! Suppose a maniac is hanged as a man of sound mind, his
+execution serves just as well, for the purpose of example, as it would
+if he were. But my Luds would make a mistake on the wrong side by
+misdirecting Jurors to determine insanity to have been sanity in a case
+wherein a lunatic might possibly have misdisposed of property.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Serious Affair.=
+
+A MOST determined act of self-inflicted torture has recently
+caused a considerable sensation in a fashionable quarter of Town.
+A lady, young, lovely, and accomplished, with troops of friends,
+and all that makes life enjoyable at her command, was detected
+deliberately "screwing up" her face!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ EXTRACTS FROM THE DIARY OF THE COMING WOMAN.
+
+[Illustration: T]O the Temple of Untrammelled Thought.
+
+_Sunday, May 10, 1882._ Heard a transcendent oration from Althea Duxmore
+on "Dogmas and Dogmatics." Bi-monthly levy for the expenses of the
+Temple. Stephanotis Hewleigh and I the eleemosynars who collected in the
+new Septentrional Vestibule, where the men are put. Their united
+contributions amounted exactly to half a Victoria! Several dimes in the
+salver. The new Act, limiting the personal expenses of Adult Males, may
+have something to do with this. Shall move in the Saloon for Returns
+showing the working of the Act. Alfred nowhere to be seen in the
+Vestibule; perhaps detained by the children's toilette. In the afternoon
+at the new Museum of Natural History opened this Spring, at Kensington.
+The Galleries crowded. Several of us, including Professors Sara Sabina
+Thewes and Caroline Gostrong, delivered extemporary lectures on the
+animals; the men very attentive. In the evening to St. Paul's; heard the
+new organist, Charlotte Bach Stopmore, Mus. Doc. The Cathedral a blaze
+of splendour with the Tyndaluminospectric light. We Women have yet
+something to learn in physical science.
+
+_Monday, May 11._ Received, by appointment, a deputation from the
+electors of New Marylebone, inviting me to candidate that District at
+the next General Election. Mrs. Admiral Stenterton, and Miss Lydia Boss
+Wolloby, the dominant spokeswomen. Spread out my views on the Husbands'
+Regulation Movement, the Cigar-Tax, the Compulsory Inspection of Men's
+Clubs, and the Repudiation of the National Debt. All satisfactory, and I
+agreed to retire from Jutley. Deputation luncheoned with me. No place
+kept for Alfred, who had to sit at a side-table.
+
+To the Club (the Gynecium), and flashed a long private cryptogram to the
+Chairwoman of my Committee at Jutley. Dined at the Club. After dinner in
+the Fumitory. Took a Cabriole to the Saloon. Driver an extortionist; but
+I knew the exact distance, to the tenth of a kilometre. Saloon debating
+the Juries Exemption (Women) Bill. Spoke, I think, with sensation. The
+venerable Earl of Hughenden came in as I was perorating. Alfred, in the
+Gentlemen's Gallery, in tears. I wore my black velvet and point lace
+pelerine, with the diamond star he gave me after the Jutley election.
+That tiresome, tedious, insufferable Hannah Longbore (how South-West
+Suffolk stands her so long I cannot imagine) prosed on against the Bill,
+and sided with the Men, but we fidgeted her down at last. She had on
+that old crimson satin which has seen three sessions at least! Maiden
+speech from Marian Spray--pretty enough. Forget what Men spoke. Mrs.
+Leader Donne, the lovely (!) and accomplished Member for Ironville,
+closed the debate. Rather too great a parade of learning; positively she
+quoted Lycophron in the original! But we all see through Mrs. Leader's
+schemes--she means the Educational Under-Secretaryship, when Bella
+Falayse goes to the Upper Saloon as a Peeress _jure suo_. Home by
+Twelve. Alfred sitting up for me. What a resource that _Hortus Siccus_
+is to him!
+
+_Tuesday, May 12._--Card from Madge Bassingham, R.A., for her Inaugural
+Praelection, as Pigmentary Professor at the Royal Academy. Could not go,
+as I was engaged on a Committee at the Saloon--Metropolis Extension,
+Brighton Annexation Bill. Dined with Mrs. Abraham Skrooley, M.P. Woman's
+party. The Constantia exquisite. Discussed over our cigarettes the
+arrangements for the approximating Women's Cosmopolitan Congress. Alfred
+and one or two other Men came in the evening.
+
+_Wednesday, May 13._ Not well in the morning. Flashed for Dr. Martha
+Walkingholme. She was detained at the Spleen Hospital, but her partner,
+Harriet Chamomile, came and applied the Magnetic Detonator to my spine
+and the backs of my ears. Instant relief. In the evening at the Biennial
+Banquet of the Indigent Widowers' Pension Fund at Willis's. The Duchess
+of Middlesex in the chair. After dinner the Indigent Widowers circuited
+the tables, and attracted much attention by their neat and respectable
+appearance. I proposed the toast of "The Gentlemen." Alfred responsed,
+and for a wonder did _not_ break down.
+
+_Thursday, May 14._ Gave Cook a lesson on the harp before breakfast.
+Sitting in the Library reading Mill's "Woman Triumphant," when my
+electric alarum rang. Message from Oxford from my youngest sister,
+Bianca, to say that she had that instant been elected Fellow of Carlyle
+College. Three hundred and ten competitors. Tremendous examination,
+lasting three weeks. Bianca's thorough domination of Russian, Japanese,
+political economy, statistics, aërostatics, electrology, hygiene and
+thermapeutics, gave her the victory. Hope some day she will stand for
+the University. For joy I took a half holiday. (Left Alfred quite happy
+with his silkworms.) Gymnastic relaxation at the Palaestra on the
+Expanse at Hampstead. Then by Tube to Dover. Tunnelled over to Paris,
+shopped, and back by the six rapid. Might have stayed later for we could
+not make a Saloon: seven short of the legal Quorum, a hundred--so many
+Members (men, I need hardly say) absent at the Great International
+Croquet Tryst at the Crystal Palace. Passed an hour pleasantly at the
+Diatomaceous Society, of which I have lately been balloted a Fellow.
+
+_Friday, May 15._ Busy all the morning preparing my oration on the "Wise
+Sayings of Wise Women in all Countries and Epochs," for the Congress.
+(Interrupted twice by Alfred, who had got the housekeeping accounts and
+the washing-book into a fearful muddle.) Great meeting at 3'30 in
+Emancipation Hall, to welcome Mrs. Hale Columbia Spragg, the first
+female President of the United States. She has transited the Atlantic to
+attend our Congress, but can only be present at this evening's
+Inauguratory, as she must be in New York again before sundown to-morrow.
+Went to the Saloon, but it immediately adjourned, on the motion of Mr.
+Theodore Stuke, to enable the Lady Members to festinate to the Congress.
+Immense success. Fifteen hundred Delegates from every country in the
+world processed down the Hall, and then arranged themselves by
+Continents on the gilded dais. Twenty-five thousand women computed to be
+present in the Spectatorium. Our distinguished champion and unflinching
+Hegemon, Amelia Smackles, assumed the presidential throne. Incessant
+coruscations of enthusiasm, which culminated when a black sister moved
+the fourteenth resolution, demanding the total, immediate, and
+unconditional transfer of all menial labour from Woman to Man. Did not
+get home till 1 p.m. Left my key behind me, so obliged to rouse up
+Alfred, who was in bed, in great distress at the loss of one of his
+canaries, and had forgotten to order my stout. Vexatious!
+
+_Saturday, May 16._ Dejeuned at the Constellation Hotel with dear
+Amelia, to meet Mrs. President Spragg, Chief Justice Roberta Cokestone
+(from Liberia), the Lady Warden of the Cinque Ports, the Lady Mayoress,
+the Mistress of the Mint, and other forward Members of the Congress. The
+President left us at noon. She would balloon over to New York in five
+hours and a half. Quiet dinner at Richmond in the evening. Only Amelia,
+two of the elder Sisters of the Trinity House, and the Delegates from
+Germany, Turkey, Greece, and China. Bianca joined us unexpectedly from
+Oxford, and introduced her bosom friend, the Professor of Anatomy,
+Henrietta Stott Trawsell. Delightful promenade by the river before
+dinner. Met Alfred fishing for gudgeon.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ MORE EDUCATION-FIGHT.
+
+PUNCH shudders to see the Metric question raised again. Are we not in
+the thick of an Educational War already? Will our contemporaries abstain
+from putting new reasons for quarrel into the heads of fanatics. We
+shall certainly have the Decimal business taken up by Denominationalists
+and by Secularists. Ten fingers point out that the natural law is one of
+decimals. Also, there are ten commandments for the theologian. On the
+other hand, there are twelve signs of the Zodiac: this for nature; and
+twelve Apostles: this for theology. O, please let the matter alone, and
+let the little boys and girls be taught anyhow, so that they are taught
+at all.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ CHURCH DIS-ESTABLISHMENT.
+
+[Illustration: T]ERMINAL PUNCH,
+
+Five more London churches are to be immediately destroyed. Down with
+them! First down with St. Mildred's, in the Poultry. It was built by SIR
+CHRISTOPHER WREN, and somewhere about it rest the remains of THOMAS
+TUSSER, who wrote the "Five Hundred Points of Good Husbandry." Sweep it
+away, and then batter down St. Dionis Backchurch, also built by SIR
+CHRISTOPHER. There are monuments in it to the great benefactor to the
+Bodleian Library, and to the founder of the Saxon Lectureship in St.
+John's College, Oxford. Who cares? St. James's, Aldgate, is to be
+demolished: 'tis enough that Hebrews chiefly abide around that fane, and
+need it not. Out with St. Martin of Outwich; it hath stood less than a
+hundred years, and though it was consecrated by BISHOP PORTEUS, and
+holdeth fine old monuments, conserved through three centuries, away with
+it! Lastly (for the present) turn this pictured clown's pickaxe upon St.
+Anthony's, or St. Antholin's, Sise Lane. That, too, was the work of the
+Architect of St. Paul's, and sundry be the memories which our old
+dramatists and our WALTER SCOTT have hung on "St. Anthing's." It is very
+meet and right that the old City churches should all go, few persons now
+abiding near them on Sunday, and religion being a thing for Sunday. SIR
+CHRISTOPHER'S Cathedral, as it is also a Mausoleum, will probably be
+spared until some railway or tramway shall want the site.
+
+ Yours, delighted,
+ EROSTRATUS VANDAL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ ORGANS OF OFFENCE.
+
+ON Thursday last week a modification of the American Gatling Gun, called
+the "British Mitrailleuse," was tried for the first time at Woolwich.
+The following is a description of this benevolent machine:--
+
+ "It consists of ten barrels hooped together and revolving in the
+ centre, and fitted into a carriage like that of an ordinary
+ field-gun, which, at a short distance, it greatly resembles. The
+ barrels and cartridges are similar to those of the Henry-Martini
+ rifle--in diameter .45 in.; the cartridge-cases being of brass,
+ and bottle-necked."
+
+Tremendous, however, as may be the execution which this weapon is
+capable of doing among a flock of soldiers, authorities are of opinion
+that, "like small arms generally, it must give way to rifled ordnance."
+On its trial:--
+
+ "Indeed, most of the Royal Artillery Officers present seemed to
+ think that the machine-gun can never stand against Artillery,
+ even if its delicate machinery did not become disarranged by
+ mere musket-shot."
+
+So that a comparison is suggested to those who read, that when the
+"British Mitrailleuse" is made ready and placed in position--
+
+ "A handle like that of a street-organ, and fixed at the side of
+ the trail, is then turned at any degree of rapidity required,
+ and the barrels load and fire until the supply of cartridges is
+ exhausted, which takes about five minutes under favourable
+ conditions."
+
+One is led to compare the British Mitrailleuse with the Italian Grinding
+Organ, and to question if the latter be not, of the two, the more
+offensive instrument.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Corrigendum.=
+
+THE antiquity of the Athanasian Creed being now shown to be a myth, the
+date being that of CHARLEMAGNE, would it not be well, before the Prayer
+Book is finally revised, that the correction should be made? For it will
+take many a year to abolish the belief that St. Athanasius drew up the
+document, especially as divers theologians think nothing of some four
+hundred and fifty years of what they imagine to have been the Dark Ages.
+"Commonly (but absurdly) called the Creed of St. Athanasius" is a line
+that, in a century or so, might have an effect upon the less
+un-intelligent.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A PROFESSION'S UNION.
+
+AT Bas-Unterwald, according to the _Swiss Times_:--
+
+ "Strikes are becoming the fashion in the higher circles of
+ society. The physicians of this peaceful Arcadia have united and
+ struck work, demanding an increase in their fees. The Laudrath,
+ however, refuses to entertain their claims, and advises a strike
+ of the patients as the best answer to the physicians' demands."
+
+There was a time when a strike of patients anywhere would have been
+attended with a very great decrease of the rate of mortality. There is
+reason to suppose that in the present improved condition of medical
+science such would not be the case. The strikers, struck with fever, or
+other grave illness, would probably be struck down in rather alarming
+numbers.
+
+What justification of a medical strike there may be in Switzerland hath
+not appeared, but in this country there is, in some quarters, not a
+little. The ridiculously low wages, not to say salary, begrudged, not to
+say granted, to Medical Officers by many Poor-Law Unions would amply
+warrant the establishment of a Professional Union corresponding to a
+Trades' Union, and consisting of sons of ÆSCULAPIUS. The
+medico-chirurgical Unionists could manage a strike well enough without
+committing any outrage on the Non-Unionists, or Knobsticks. There would
+be no need for the Doctors on strike to picket, and waylay, and beat the
+others on their road to the Workhouse, or across country to the
+recipient of out-door relief; and they could do without rattening them
+and filching away their physic, stethoscopes, and surgical instruments.
+In dealing with unworthy members of an honourable Profession, capable of
+underselling their brother-chips, the practitioners forming the Union
+would require to have recourse to no proceedings associated with
+Sheffield; they would find it quite sufficient to send outsiders and
+recusants of co-operation in a strike to Coventry.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ OMINOUS INDEED!
+
+ALL England, that reads the newspapers, will have felt the shock of a
+truly--
+
+ "TERRIFIC EXPLOSION--Yesterday evening an explosion of a
+ frightful character occurred at GLADSTONE'S Cartridge Factory,
+ Greenwich Marshes, by which a large number of girls have been
+ seriously injured."
+
+Considering for what Constituency the PREMIER is Member of Parliament,
+the majority of people cannot but be, momentarily at least, startled and
+taken aback by the information in the first place that GLADSTONE has a
+Cartridge Factory in Greenwich Marshes, and, secondly, that it has been
+the scene of a terrific explosion. Nor certainly are they likely to be
+re-assured by the further intelligence that:--
+
+ "A few weeks ago the Government seized 365 cases of ball
+ cartridge, each containing 20 lb. weight, which had been
+ manufactured by MR. GLADSTONE for the French Government during
+ the late war."
+
+The obvious suggestion conveyed by this statement is, that there has
+occurred not only a terrific explosion in the borough of Greenwich, but
+also a not less alarming blow-up in the Cabinet. _Absit omen!_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ ELEGANT ADVERTISING.
+
+IF you like, read this advertisement from the _Christian World_:--
+
+ CO-PARTNER WANTED, by a highly respectable Man, aged 30,
+ member of Spurgeon's. A gentlemanly person required, a believer
+ with about £50, and who can travel.--Address, &c.
+
+Hm! In the first place a gentlemanly person would not wish to hear his
+partner talk in that exceedingly curt way of their minister and his
+flock. "Member of Spurgeon's." "One who regularly attends the
+ministrations of the Reverend C. H. SPURGEON, B.M." would be more
+gentlemanly language. Nextly, "a believer with about £50" reads rather
+Mammonish. It suggests that a sceptic with about £75, or a positivist
+with about £100, would not be unacceptable. Thirdly, "who can travel."
+Who _can't_ travel with about £50? MR. COOK will give you a
+return-ticket for the Pyramid for about that. Fourthly, the "and" is
+abominable English. We wish our esteemed friend the _Christian World_
+would edit its advertisements. We really can't be always doing it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Dignity for Doctors.=
+
+IT is suggested that a fitting honour to be conferred on meritorious
+Physicians and Surgeons would be that of the Order of the Bath. Nothing
+could be more suitable; but should the Bath be the Hot-Bath or the Cold?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: GENEROSITY.
+
+_Noble Lord_ (_whose Rifle has brought to a scarcely untimely end a very
+consumptive-looking Fallow Deer_). "TUT--T, T, T, T, TUT! O, I SAY,
+STUBBS!--(_to his Keeper_)--YOU SHOULDN'T HAVE LET ME KILL SUCH A POOR,
+LITTLE, SICKLY, SCRAGGY THING AS THIS, YOU KNOW! IT POSITIVELY ISN'T FIT
+FOR HUMAN FOOD! AH! LOOK HERE, NOW! I'LL TELL YOU WHAT. YOU AND MCFARLIN
+MAY HAVE THIS BUCK BETWEEN YOU!!!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A SEAT ON A SAFETY-VALVE.
+
+
+ AN Income-tax partial see THIERS oppose,
+ O WILLIAM the Earnest, O ROBERT the True!
+ A soul above fear of the Rabble he shows;
+ Is that to be said, British Statesmen, of you?
+
+ Or is it that you, whom mob-courtship doth move
+ With tribute from all due to load a part's purse.
+ Albeit your Honours both see and approve
+ The better arrangements, do follow the worse?
+
+ How bad are the worse, which poor fleeced Britons rue,
+ You have often confessed; but decline to advance
+ On that high path which upright financiers pursue;
+ They manage these matters much better in France.
+
+ For justice it is which disposes them there,
+ Political craft in this mighty free land,
+ Whose Rulers perpend not what impost were fair,
+ But what imposition tax-payers will stand.
+
+ It was not enough upon shoulders select
+ To pile your whole Budget; on folk thus oppressed
+ (As housebreakers use, the strong-box to detect)
+ The Screw has been put; they are over-assessed.
+
+ You fancy your Engine is working so well
+ By way of a Steam-Rack, 'twill yet more extort,
+ And bear any pressure your force can compel;
+ You sit on the safety-valve, therefore, in short.
+
+ O WILLIAM the Daring! O ROBERT the Rash!
+ Though deaf to remonstrance, to caution give ear,
+ Ere high-pressure boiler burst up with a crash,
+ And blow aloft Stoker and hoist Engineer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SAD ALTERATION.
+
+THE Dramatist has led us to think that "Music hath charms to soothe the
+savage breast," but the "Heavenly Maid" is not so "young" as she was
+when CONGREVE wrote, and increasing years seem to have changed her mood
+and spoiled her temper. What other conclusion can we come to, when we
+find in an article on "Music" in one of the newspapers, in some comments
+on the performance of a young lady on the piano at a Monday Popular
+Concert, the disquieting statement that she "left her mark as usual on
+the audience, the music, and the piano"? It is some little relief to
+find the writer adding that "this last was more than once punished
+severely;" as it is a fair inference to draw, that whatever the
+sufferings of the piano may have been, the music, and, which is far more
+important, the audience, escaped with only one assault.
+
+The Managers of the Monday Concerts should consider, before it is too
+late, whether they are not endangering the well-deserved popularity of
+their agreeable entertainments, by allowing performances which would
+seem to have rather too striking an effect upon the hearers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Nocens Absolvitur.=
+
+THE _South London News_ makes rather an unkind suggestion. Thieves enter
+tradesmen's shops, under pretence of selling something. The _News_
+thinks that people who would be exempt from such visits should "keep
+watch, and, on opportunity, hand the victims over to the police." This
+may be fair in South London, wherever that is, but in Fleet Street we do
+not dispense that kind of justice.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A HINT TO L. AND B. RAILWAY.
+
+THE Real "Nine Hours' Movement"--to Brighton and back for Half-a-Crown.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: TOO MUCH PRESSURE.
+
+BOB THE STOKER. "LOR' BLESS YOU, M'NSEER! THAT'S THE WAY _WE_ 'RAISE THE
+WIND;'--SIMPLEST THING IN THE WORLD!"
+
+M. THIERS. "HE, MON AMI! PRENEZ GARDE! HE SHALL 'BLOW UP' ONE DAY!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ FRESH. NOT TIGHT.
+
+[Illustration: T]HERE is, or was, in this town a Public-house, wherein
+the administration of justice was, and may still be, wont to be nightly
+burlesqued by certain buffoons under the name of a Judge and Jury Club.
+Let us hope that this was the only Court of Law which could possibly
+have been in the eye of the ATTORNEY-GENERAL when, in the course of his
+concise oration delivered on behalf of the Infant against the Claimant,
+he spoke, with reference to the latter, as follows:--
+
+ "Besides, such is the pleasantry--I would not say the profit--of
+ our English law, that if he fails in this case he may go at it
+ again with fresh witnesses, let us hope with fresh
+ counsel--(_laughter_)--at least with a fresh jury--I say nothing
+ of a fresh judge. (_Continued laughter._)"
+
+The members of the Temperance League, and the United Kingdom Alliance
+must surely have been shocked, as many as those who read and duly
+considered the foregoing words, by the idea which they suggest of a
+generally Fresh Court of Common Pleas. This horrid image was enough to
+have unfixed their hair and made their excited hearts knock at their
+ribs beyond the use of nature. Sobriety is so specially characteristic
+of the Ermine that "sober as a Judge" is an adage; not, indeed, because
+Judges are supposed not to drink, but to be able to drink any quantity.
+Irreproachable with laxity in the discharge of their high functions,
+British Judges are at all times incapable of getting tight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ EVENINGS FROM HOME.
+
+_MR. BARLOW, with MASTERS SANDFORD and MERTON, at the QUEEN'S THEATRE,
+to see "The Last Days of Pompeii."_
+
+_Tommy._ Pray, Sir, what and where was Pompeii?
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ It was, my dear TOMMY, a Roman municipality, full of
+eligible villas, pleasantly situated in the immediate neighbourhood of
+Mount Vesuvius, and within easy reach of the sea. It was "a place to
+spend a happy day," and "there and back" from Naples formed one of the
+chief excursions, at a very moderate rate, for the middle classes of
+Neapolis.
+
+They had just commenced this instructive and entertaining conversation,
+when the curtain rising discovered to their eager eyes as artistic and
+effective a scene (with the exception of stationary painted groups,
+whose fixed attitude strangely contrasted with the movement of the
+actors in front of them) as it had hitherto been their lot to behold.
+
+As the play went on, HARRY requested permission of MR. BARLOW to ask a
+question.
+
+_Harry._ Did you not tell us, Sir, that the "e" in Pompeii was long?
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ Indeed, HARRY, I did.
+
+_Harry._ And did you not also tell us that one of the purposes of a
+theatrical exhibition, such as this is, is the advancement of education
+among all sorts and conditions of people?
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ You are again correct, and truly I begin to perceive the
+drift of your remark. Therefore let me tell you that had any Eton boy
+said Pomp[ue]ii, instead of Pomp[=e]ii, he would speedily have been
+taught the force of an _argumentum_ addressed, as was one of HORACE'S
+Odes, _ad puerum_.
+
+_Harry._ Surely too, Sir, a diphthong is long; so that the name
+_Apoecides_ should not be rendered Appy-cides, as if the name were an
+unaspirated pronunciation of _H_appy Cides.
+
+To this MR. BARLOW replied that doubtless these honest folks had cogent
+reasons for their mode of pronunciation, with which he advised HARRY to
+become acquainted, before taking upon himself to pronounce an
+unmitigated condemnation of them.
+
+"You will now perceive, TOMMY," said MR. BARLOW, during the performance
+of the Third Scene of the First Act, "that the crafty _Arbaces_ is
+anxious to entice the sentimental young gentleman, _Appy Cides_, to
+partake of the repast with him."
+
+_Harry._ But, Sir, surely the young man's objection to accept the
+invitation of the Egyptian, must arise from a sense of politeness on his
+part, which, as there is nothing edible on the table, I fancy, except
+one plate of fruit, will not permit him to deprive _Arbaces_ of even a
+portion of a dessert that has, evidently, been only ordered for one.
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ Indeed, HARRY, I think you are right, and had _Arbaces_
+thought of it, I am certain he would willingly have extended his
+hospitality to a bag of nuts or some cakes of gingerbread. But you must
+remember that _Appy Cides_, or, as he seems to me, _Un-'appy Cides_, is
+only the pupil of _Arbaces_, and does not appear at his tutor's table
+until dessert-time.
+
+_Tommy._ If I were there I would go and eat everything, and then I would
+dance with one of the young ladies.
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ I am sorry, TOMMY, that you are of that mind; and at
+another time--for I perceive that the good people in the pit, by their
+repeated cries of hush, and by the direction of their attention towards
+us, wish rather to hear the dialogue on the stage than my discourse,
+which is, after all, of a personal and private character--at another
+time, I was about to say, I will read to you an instructive story on
+greediness, entitled _Chares and the Convulsive Tailor_.
+
+TOMMY looked on at the piece very sulkily for some time, being, indeed,
+intent upon the antique cups and goblets and upon the plate of luscious
+fruit which he had already noticed. But on seeing that neither _Arbaces_
+nor the sentimental young gentleman partook of anything that was
+provided for them, he began to have high opinion of their breeding, and
+before the scene was finished was heartily sorry for his error, and
+applauded all he saw and heard with increasing rapture and delight.
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ You may, indeed, evince your gratitude to these worthy
+people, since they have done all in their power to entertain and
+instruct us. And, indeed, where all is done so vastly well, I know not
+what to commend most, whether the sonorous voice and dignified
+scoundrelism of that twice-crushed Priest of Isis, the iniquitous and
+unprincipled _Arbaces_, played by the remarkably upright and
+conscientious actor, MR. RYDER; or whether the gentle pleadings of the
+blind _Nydia_--MISS HODSON is the young lady's name, my dear TOMMY, and
+I have no doubt she saw and appreciated your boyish enthusiasm--or the
+bearing of MR. RIGNOLD throughout a remarkably difficult and most trying
+part. But, HARRY, what is your opinion?
+
+_Harry._ Why, Sir, I am very little judge of these matters, but I
+protest that I feel mightily indebted to those clever gentlemen, MASTERS
+GORDON and HARFORD (I had well-nigh slipt into the error of saying
+MASTERS MERTON and SANDFORD) for the scenery which has so admirably
+served to illustrate this play. I am sorry that _Appy Cides_ was killed,
+as, having become a Christian, there would, I am sure, have been every
+opportunity open to him as an estimable young curate of evangelical
+proclivities.
+
+_Tommy_ (_during the cleverly arranged Amphitheatre Scene, Act IV._) I
+am glad to see, Sir, that in this scene where we have so much to admire,
+the tumblers----
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ These, my dear TOMMY, represent the gladiators. And you
+must remember that on the stage, where every combat has to be carefully
+arranged both as to the number and fashion of the blows given and
+received, and as to who shall be, and who shall not be the conqueror,
+the contest of two determined champions, or rather of two champions
+whose course has been previously determined, cannot fail to be of a most
+thrilling and exciting character.
+
+_Tommy._ O, Sir! they have given orders to let the Lion loose. O, Sir!
+the Lion is coming!
+
+_Harry._ I do not believe that all these fine gentlemen and ladies would
+remain so still if there were, indeed, a Lion approaching.
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ The Lion, my dear TOMMY, is a native of both India and
+Africa. When they are hungry, they kill every animal they meet, and will
+even devour little boys----
+
+Here poor TOMMY'S trepidation was increased to such an extent that he
+would have quitted his seat and the theatre, but for the sudden entry of
+the traitor _Calenus_, whose charge of murder brought against his
+master, the wily _Arbaces_, instantly distracted everyone's thoughts
+from the coming of the expected monster.
+
+Both MR. BARLOW and HARRY were loud in their praises of the dramatist
+who had contrived to arouse in the breasts of the spectators such
+emotions of fear, by the absence of the Lion, as could scarcely have
+been equalled by his formidable presence.
+
+"Indeed," said MR. BARLOW, "on reflection, I am led to consider the
+chiefest part in this piece to be the Lion's share in it. He is spoken
+of at the commencement of the play, he is often alluded to throughout,
+and the bare mention of his name sensibly electrifies the spectators on
+and off the stage. From the very first we are incited to expect his
+appearance. He has not to roar to make himself dreaded. He has not even
+to be present, either on or off, the scene.
+
+_Harry._ This device is, in my humble judgement, worthy of high
+commendation in the play-wright, who has thus evinced his reverence for
+the words of the immortal WILLIAM, and whose plan is in cordial
+agreement with _Bottom's_ opinion on this very matter, which, my dear
+TOMMY, as you are as yet unacquainted with the works of SHAKSPEARE, I
+will repeat to you. "_Masters_," says _Bottom_, "_You ought to consider
+with yourselves, to bring in a lion among ladies is a most dreadful
+thing, for there is not a more fearful wild fowl than your lion,
+living_."
+
+TOMMY was so forcibly struck by this adroit application of a famous
+passage from the plays of SHAKSPEARE, that he determined, on the first
+opportunity to read all these dramas through from beginning to end. And
+having already set himself to the study of astronomy and mechanics,
+solely in order to make himself as proficient in the art of applicable
+illustrations as was his friend HARRY MERTON, TOMMY now found that he
+had at least one hour of the day fully occupied.
+
+On their return from the theatre MR. BARLOW, ever anxious for the
+improvement of both his young friends, commenced reading to them the
+story of _The Magistrate and the Elephant_; but, seeing that both his
+young friends were fast asleep in their chairs, he lit his
+chamber-candle and retired for the night.
+
+On entering his room somewhat suddenly, a pair of boots, artfully placed
+so as to rest on the door, which had been standing ajar, descended on
+his head; and the next instant, on his taking one step forward, he came
+in contact with a stout string, so skilfully fastened, as not only to
+throw him sharply on the floor, but, being cunningly connected with the
+fire-irons and the washing-stand, it brought down these articles also
+with a great crash and much confusion. Before he could arise from his
+painful position, TOMMY and HARRY had rushed up-stairs to render to
+their revered preceptor what assistance was in their power. Being
+questioned as to the hand they had had in this strange affair, MASTER
+TOMMY, with becoming modesty, acknowledged that it was he who had
+devised the scheme. "And," said he, "I protest I think it is no
+inadequate representation of what must have been the consequence in
+several houses during the Eruption of Mount Vesuvius in the _Last Days
+of Pompeii_."
+
+So saying, both the boys withdrew themselves rapidly from their beloved
+tutor's apartment, and locked themselves into their own rooms. Soon
+after this, they were all in a sound slumber, which lasted until a late
+hour on the following morning.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A QUESTION FOR THE SHIRES.
+
+"NOW, DEAR, WHICH DO YOU PREFER FOR THE 'TOPS'?--THE DEEPER SHADE, OR
+VERY PALEST PINK?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ VINDICTIVE TEUTONS.
+
+THERE is a good deal of talk in France about revenge to be taken one of
+these days upon the Germans for having repelled and beaten their
+invaders. In the meanwhile, according to the _Post_, those barbarous
+Germans are trying to revenge themselves, in their heavy way, on the
+enemies who have been twitting them with stealing clocks and watches, by
+an--
+
+ "IMPORTANT RESTORATION OF SPECIE.--_The Courier de Meurthe et
+ Moselle_ announces that the six millions of francs which had
+ fallen into the hands of the German troops after the
+ capitulation of Strasburg, and belonging to the Bank of France,
+ are about to be restored to that establishment through its
+ branch bank at Nancy."
+
+This, of course, is a practical sarcasm at the expense of a nation
+represented by some of its orators and statesmen as having been
+aggrieved by being forced to restore pictures and works of Art which the
+First NAPOLEON and his gangs in uniform had pillaged from their
+neighbours. It is obviously meant to suggest an odious comparison
+between those who make restitution of even lawful plunder in hard cash,
+and those others who grumble because of having been compelled to replace
+Art-treasures actually stolen, and that in some cases from friends. This
+is clumsy German satire to be sure, but it tumbles down pretty heavily
+for all that on the heads of them that shouted "À Berlin!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Sporting News.=
+
+THE lovers of manly British sports will be glad to know that there is a
+chance of seeing another good fight, or so, before the law is altered. A
+rattling mill is to come off in the north of the West Riding. POWELL,
+the well-known Cambridge Slogger, is matched against HOLDEN, of the
+above parts, who has not fought in public, but is known in the Chapel
+districts as a determined cove. As this will be nearly the last of the
+real old English fights, much interest is excited. The white chokers are
+with POWELL, and HOLDEN is backed by the humbler humboxes. Both men will
+do all they know, and a clinking good contest may be expected.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "CONSERVATION OF TISSUE."
+
+_Uncle._ "WELL, TOMMY, YOU SEE I'M BACK; ARE YOU READY? WHAT HAVE I TO
+PAY FOR, MISS?"
+
+_Miss._ "THREE BUNS, FOUR SPONGE CAKES, TWO SANDWICHES, ONE JELLY, FIVE
+TARTS, AND--"
+
+_Uncle._ "GOOD GRACIOUS, BOY! ARE YOU NOT ILL?"
+
+_Tommy._ "NO, UNCLE; BUT I'M THIRSTY."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =NEGATIVE KNOWLEDGE.=
+
+WE never knew a cabman with an eyeglass, or a chimneysweep with
+spectacles.
+
+We never knew a lady buy a bargain at a shop sale, and not afterwards
+regret it.
+
+We never knew a man propose the toast of the evening, without his
+wishing that it had not been placed in abler hands.
+
+We never knew a waiter in a hurry, at a chop-house, who did not say that
+he was "Coming, Sir!" when really he was going.
+
+We never lost a game to a professional at billiards, without hearing him
+assign his triumph chiefly to his flukes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ TO THE STATE COACHMAN.
+
+ (_Suggested by a Passage in the new Q. R._)
+
+ "CANNING did not know that tadpoles
+ Turn to frogs." Each fool explodes:
+ But that Queller of the Yelpers
+ Knew that patriots turn to toads.
+
+ GLADSTONE goes in for omniscience;
+ Does the team obey the bit
+ As when PAM'S whip stung with banter,
+ Or when CANNING'S cut with wit?
+
+ WILLIAM! _Punch_, who likes you, counsels--
+ Mix some humour with your zeal,
+ Making humbugs think is hopeless:
+ Be content to make them _feel_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =No Misnomer.=
+
+A CORRESPONDENT of the _Times_, whose note is headed "Civil Service
+Grammar," writes a remonstrance because he has seen a Government Cart
+going about inscribed "Her Majesty's Stationary Office." He is evidently
+under a misconception as to what office is meant, for what man who
+reflects on the progress of the new Law Courts, the new National
+Gallery, the new Natural History Museum, the Wellington Monument, &c.,
+can doubt for a moment that "Her Majesty's Stationary Office" is the
+Office of Works and Public buildings?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ IN ANGELÆ HONOREM.
+
+ "A Meeting was held in the Hall of Columbia Market, on Monday
+ evening, SIR THOMAS DAKIN in the Chair, to consider what
+ testimonial of public respect and gratitude should be offered to
+ BARONESS BURDETT COUTTS."--_Daily News._
+
+SWEET names there are that carry sweet natures in their sound;
+Whose ring, like hallowed bells of old, seems to shed blessing round:
+Such a name of good omen, FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE, is thine;
+And hers, our ANGELA'S, for all in want and woe that pine.
+
+The QUEEN has made her noble; but ere that rank was given,
+She had donned robe and coronet of the peerage made in Heaven:
+Baptised in purer honour than from earthly fountain flows,
+Raised to a prouder Upper House than our proud island knows.
+
+The loftiest of that peerage are of lowliest mood and will;
+And this their proudest lordship, Love's service to fulfil:
+Chief Stewards and High Almoners of the goods Heaven bestows--
+'Tis theirs to see that Charity in Wisdom's channels flows.
+
+For e'en that stream, ill-guided, can poison goodly ground--
+For health, sow fever broadcast, for blessing, blight, around:
+'Tis not enough its waters to loose with lib'ral mind;
+If Reason lends not eyes to Love, Love strays--for he is blind.
+
+This _she_ has known, our ANGELA, for whom men ask, e'en now,
+"Fit tribute of our gratitude where shall we pay, and how?"
+If blessings clothed in substance, prayers made palpable, could be,
+When had Kaiser, King, or Conqueror, such monument as she?
+
+But what can gold, or silver, or bronze, or marble, pay
+Of the unsummed debt of gratitude owed her this many a day?
+What record, parchment-blazoned, closed in golden casket rare,
+Can with her love, in England's heart, for preciousness compare?
+
+If we needs must find her symbol, then carve and set on high
+A heavy-laden camel going through the needle's eye;
+Gold-burdened, by a gentle yet firm hand wisely driven,--
+Our ANGELA'S, that on it rides, riches and all, to Heaven!
+
+Or if a painted record be by the occasion claimed,
+Paint up Bethesda's Pool, and round, the sick, the halt, and maimed,
+Waiting until our ANGELA through Earth's afflicted go
+To stir wealth's healing waters, that await her hand to flow.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PIG-AND-BARGAIN-DRIVING.
+
+THE _Eastern Morning News_--what a pretty name--why not the
+_Dawn_?--hath a prosaic item: this:--
+
+ WANTED, a GROOM and Coachman, and to assist the Gardener. Wages,
+ 18s. per week to commence with, to be advanced 1s. per year for
+ every year he remains. Must understand horses and pigs, and be
+ able to drive one, or a pair.
+
+We do not think the wages too high. A celebrated Oxford Don, who could
+make Greek verses as fast as mill-wheels strike, yet who was not so
+ready with ordinary English, beheld, from the top of a coach, a drover
+striving to guide some pigs along the road. Wishing to be
+conversational, the Don observed to his neighbour, "A difficult Animal
+to drive is a Pig--one man--a good many--very." Here, observe, were the
+materials for a pleasing remark, but they needed arrangement. He was
+right, however. Pigs are difficult to drive, and the Yorkshire
+advertiser who wants a man able to drive one pig, or a pair, is right in
+offering him the above noble rise in wage. Correspondents will abstain
+from vulgar suggestions about a pig and a "hog"--we don't understand
+them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "HERE BE TRUTHS."
+
+_Mistress._ "BRING SOME MORE BREAD, MARTHA?"
+_Maid._ "THERE'S NANE, MEM!"
+_Mistress._ "O, NONSENSE! I SAW A LOAF IN THE PANTRY."
+_Maid._ "DID YE, MEM? I'M THINKING IT'S TIME YE WERE GETTING SPECS,
+ THEN, FOR IT'S A CHEESE!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "YOUR BONNET TO ITS RIGHT USE."
+
+ "LET me use my _biretta_,"
+ Says CARDINAL CULLEN,
+ "To fan Ireland's school-lamp,
+ That burns smoky and sullen."
+
+ "No," says England, "your motives
+ 'Twere cruel to doubt,--
+ But what if your rev'rence
+ Should put the lamp out?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LONDON GOLD DIGGINGS.
+
+DEAR Old England! well may one exclaim, on reading in the _Daily News_ a
+statement such as this:--
+
+ "VALUE OF LAND IN LOMBARD STREET.--A piece of land adjoining the
+ Lombard Exchange, in Lombard Street, has been sold for £9000, or
+ about £19 4s. 6d. per foot super."
+
+It used to be affirmed that London streets were paved with gold, and, by
+the side of the above, the story hardly seems beyond one's power of
+credulity. Land worth nineteen pounds per foot must be wellnigh as good
+as gold to its fortunate possessor, and the man who owned an acre of it
+would hardly need to emigrate to any other diggings. Assuredly, to any
+_Fortunatus_ who owns much land in Lombard Street, London may be looked
+on as the true Tom Tiddler's Ground.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =The New Judge.=
+
+_Mr. Punch_ hears that LORD CHIEF JUSTICE COCKBURN (one of our most
+accomplished Latin writers) intimated to the CHANCELLOR that the
+appointment of the new Judge for the Queen's Bench was a _Sine Quainon_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =WANTED--SIMPLICITY.=
+
+MR. PUNCH,
+
+Is the English language a thing to be ashamed of? I put the question,
+because in a weekly literary journal, printed and published in London in
+the mother tongue, I have just read, not without some rubbing of eyes
+and much mental bewilderment, the following singular announcement:--
+
+ "INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS.--The EMPEROR OF BRÉSIL was
+ elected an Honorary Member."
+
+I have never heard that Brazil has become a French possession, and I am
+positive that the Institution of Civil Engineers is not in Paris, but in
+Great George Street, Westminster. Why, then, Brésil? Crack this
+Brazil-nut for
+
+ Yours, unaffectedly,
+ JNO. SMITH.
+
+P.S.--Can fish talk? I ask this second question, after seeing that
+another periodical publication contains an article with the heading,
+"Perch Prattle."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =We Can't See It.=
+
+OF all the odd kinds of consolation under affliction, the last
+suggestion seems to _Mr. Punch_ the oddest. We are mourning the demise
+of the no-horned Infant Hippopotamus in the Regent's Park, and we are
+told to be cheerful, for a two-horned Infant Rhinoceros has gone to
+Madrid. The doctrine of compensations was never pushed much further,
+even in a Scotch sermon.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Platonic Politics.=
+
+Plato gives the best reason why Woman's Rights should be conceded, and
+Women be admitted to power. Listen, Dears, "Rulers should have Personal
+Beauty." Kiss ums own old _Punch_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Printed by Joseph Smith, of No. 24, Holford square, in the
+ Parish of St. James, Clerkenwell, in the County of Middlesex, at
+ the Printing Offices of Messrs. Bradbury, Evans, & Co., Lombard
+ Street, in the Precinct of Whitefriars, in the City of London,
+ and Published by him at No. 65, Fleet Street, in the Parish of
+ St. Bride, City of London.--SATURDAY, January 27, 1872.=
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes
+
+Passages in italics were indicated by _underscores_.
+
+Passages in bold were indicated by =equal signs=.
+
+Small caps were replaced with ALL CAPS.
+
+Throughout the document, the oe ligature was replaced with "oe".
+
+Throughout the dialogues, there were words used to mimic accents of the
+speakers. Those words were retained as-is.
+
+Some Illustrations were graphic capital letters. In those illustrations,
+the capital letter was included within the illustration tag, e.g.
+[Illustration: T].
+
+The illustrations have been moved so that they do not break up
+paragraphs and so that they are next the text they illustrate. Thus the
+page number of the illustration might not match the page number in the
+List of Illustrations, and the order of illustrations may not be the
+same in the List of Illustrations and in the book.
+
+Errors in punctuations and inconsistent hyphenation were not corrected
+unless otherwise noted below:
+
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+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol.
+62, Jan 27, 1872, by Various
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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" /> <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Punch, January 27, 1872.</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 62,
+Jan 27, 1872, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 62, Jan 27, 1872
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2011 [EBook #38040]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer, Ernest Schaal, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<h1>PUNCH,<br />
+OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.</h1>
+
+<h2>Vol. 62.</h2>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2>January 27, 1872.</h2>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page033" id="page033"></a>[pg&nbsp;33]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"> <a href="images/033.png"><img width="100%" src="images/033.png" alt="" /></a>
+<h3>THE LIQUOR CONTROVERSY.</h3>
+
+<p>'<i>Spectable Citizen</i>. &quot;<span class="smcap">Ish my Opi'ion thish P'missive Bill 'sh Vexash'ious
+Measure</span>. (<i>Hic!</i>) <span class="smcap">Why should I be D'prived of Nesh-sh-ary R'freshment,
+'cause another Party hasn't&mdash;can't&mdash;doesn't&mdash;know when he'sh had
+enough? Shtan' up, Ol' Man!!!&quot;</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>A JINGLE FOR ST. JAMES'S.</h2>
+
+<h3>(<i>By a Musical Enthusiast.</i>)</h3>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Monday Pops! The Monday Pops</p>
+<p>Whoe'er admires what some call &quot;Ops;&quot;</p>
+<p>Should go, and lick his mental chops</p>
+<p>While feasting at the Monday Pops.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>The Monday Pops! The Monday Pops</p>
+<p>To me their music far o'er-tops</p>
+<p>The jingling polkas and galóps</p>
+<p>On cracked pianos played at hops.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Nor almond rock, nor lemon-drops</p>
+<p>Nor sugar-plums, nor lollipops</p>
+<p>With which small children cram their crops</p>
+<p>Are sweeter than the Monday Pops.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>The Monday Pops! The Monday Pops</p>
+<p>Delight of fogies and of fops</p>
+<p>The music that all other wops</p>
+<p>Is given at the Monday Pops.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Their fame all rivals far o'er-tops</p>
+<p>You see their programmes at the shops</p>
+<p>And here the bard exhausted stops</p>
+<p>His rhymings on the Monday Pops.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>TRUE BILL?</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Much</span> ingenuity has been expended in trying to
+prove that <span class="smcap">Shakspeare</span> was a lawyer, and, amongst
+other passages in his writings, the two first lines of the
+Sonnet which commences&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&quot;When to the sessions of sweet silent thought</p>
+<p>I summon up remembrance of things past,&quot;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>may be thought to indicate that he possessed legal
+acquirements. Has it, however, occurred to the editors
+and commentators, that these lines are capable of another
+interpretation, and may be considered to add a new item
+to our scanty knowledge of <span class="smcap">Shakspeare's</span> personal history,
+if we take the more probable view, that when he
+penned them he had in his mind's eye those familiar
+Tribunals&mdash;the Quarter Sessions&mdash;to which, it may be
+whilst residing in the Metropolis, but most undoubtedly
+after his retirement to Stratford, he would be summoned
+in the capacity of Grand Juryman?</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>SOUP AND SERMON.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> <i>Morning Post</i> records an interesting case of&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+&quot;<span class="smcap">Supper To Convicted Felons.</span>&mdash;On Tuesday evening a supper was
+given to one hundred and fifty convicted felons by <span class="smcap">Ned Wright</span>, the well-known
+converted burglar, at the Mission Hall, Hales Street, High Street,
+Deptford. The candidates for tickets of admission were compelled to attend
+the night before the supper and give an account of themselves to prove that
+they really were convicted felons, and by the sharp and close questioning of
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Wright</span>, about fifty were refused tickets as impostors.&quot;
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The fifty impostors who were fain to palm themselves off as convicts
+for the sake of a supper, must have been poor knaves indeed.
+These supernumeraries, for whom there was no seat at the table of
+Society, constitute a spectacle on the stage of life which it may be
+painful to some people and pleasant to others to contemplate from
+the dress circle. It is too probable that this Capital contains very
+many more of these Esaus, as they might be called if they had
+anything of a character so valuable as a birthright to dispose of on
+<span class="smcap">Esau's</span> terms, with the small extras undermentioned:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+&quot;The recipients of this Charity were a very motley crew, and ranged in
+years from six up to fifty. They were each served with a quantity of soup and a
+bag containing bread and a bun, after which <span class="smcap">Mr. Wright</span> addressed them in
+his own peculiar manner, being listened to with marked attention.&quot;
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Wright</span>, we may suppose, took care to preach in a &quot;tongue
+understanded of the people&quot; who constituted his hearers, and
+accordingly delivered a considerable portion of his discourse in the
+language which our great-grandfathers called thieves' Latin. A
+sermon in slang, however, would, perhaps, be more curious than
+edifying. Let us hope that <span class="smcap">Mr. Wright's</span> may possibly have had
+the effect of converting the guests who would once have been his
+pals from the error of their ways, formerly his own. Such, at least,
+appears to have been his laudable intention:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+&quot;A large number of ladies and gentlemen interested in such work attended
+and gave the benefit of their advice and co-operation. In the course of the
+evening <span class="smcap">Mr. Wright</span> announced his intention of taking under his patronage
+a number of the boys then present, who might be desirous of earning an
+honest livelihood, and furnishing them with money and clothes to make a fair
+start in life.&quot;
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>It would rejoice both ourselves and our benevolent readers to
+know that the acceptance of this offer by a considerable number of
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Wright's</span> young friends may be the commencement of a career
+of good living, wherein they will very soon attain to better fare
+than a quantity of soup, a bag of bread, and a bun, quite good
+enough as that is for convicted felons, besides being peculiarly suitable
+as precluding any necessity for knives and forks chained to the
+table.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Lawyers and Lunatics.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">How</span> hardly will Judges, for the most part, admit the plea of
+insanity in exculpation from a charge of murder! How readily are
+they wont to entertain it as a reason for setting aside a will! How
+right they are in either instance! Suppose a maniac is hanged as a
+man of sound mind, his execution serves just as well, for the purpose
+of example, as it would if he were. But my Luds would make a
+mistake on the wrong side by misdirecting Jurors to determine
+insanity to have been sanity in a case wherein a lunatic might possibly
+have misdisposed of property.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Serious Affair.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A most</span> determined act of self-inflicted torture has recently
+caused a considerable sensation in a fashionable quarter of Town.
+A lady, young, lovely, and accomplished, with troops of friends,
+and all that makes life enjoyable at her command, was detected
+deliberately &quot;screwing up&quot; her face!</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page034" id="page034"></a>[pg&nbsp;34]</span></p>
+
+<h2>EXTRACTS FROM THE DIARY OF THE COMING
+WOMAN.</h2>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width:30%;"> <a href="images/034.png"><img width="100%" src="images/034.png" alt="T" /></a>
+</div>
+<p>O the Temple of Untrammelled
+Thought.</p>
+
+<p><i>Sunday, May 10,
+1882.</i> Heard a transcendent
+oration from
+Althea Duxmore on
+&quot;Dogmas and Dogmatics.&quot;
+Bi-monthly
+levy for the expenses
+of the Temple. Stephanotis
+Hewleigh
+and I the eleemosynars
+who collected in
+the new Septentrional
+Vestibule, where the
+men are put. Their
+united contributions
+amounted exactly to
+half a Victoria!
+Several dimes in the
+salver. The new Act,
+limiting the personal
+expenses of Adult
+Males, may have
+something to do with
+this. Shall move in
+the Saloon for Returns
+showing the
+working of the Act.
+Alfred nowhere to be
+seen in the Vestibule;
+perhaps detained by
+the children's toilette.
+In the afternoon at
+the new Museum
+of Natural History
+opened this Spring,
+at Kensington. The Galleries crowded. Several of us, including Professors Sara
+Sabina Thewes and Caroline Gostrong, delivered extemporary lectures on the
+animals; the men very attentive. In the evening to St. Paul's; heard the new
+organist, Charlotte Bach Stopmore, Mus. Doc. The Cathedral a blaze of splendour
+with the Tyndaluminospectric light. We Women have yet something to
+learn in physical science.</p>
+
+<p><i>Monday, May 11.</i> Received, by appointment, a deputation from the electors
+of New Marylebone, inviting me to candidate that District at the next General
+Election. Mrs. Admiral Stenterton, and Miss Lydia Boss Wolloby, the dominant
+spokeswomen. Spread out my views on the Husbands' Regulation Movement,
+the Cigar-Tax, the Compulsory Inspection of Men's Clubs, and the
+Repudiation of the National Debt. All satisfactory, and I agreed to retire from
+Jutley. Deputation luncheoned with me. No place kept for Alfred, who had to
+sit at a side-table.</p>
+
+<p>To the Club (the Gynecium), and flashed a long private cryptogram to the
+Chairwoman of my Committee at Jutley. Dined at the Club. After dinner in
+the Fumitory. Took a Cabriole to the Saloon. Driver an extortionist; but
+I knew the exact distance, to the tenth of a kilometre. Saloon debating the
+Juries Exemption (Women) Bill. Spoke, I think, with sensation. The venerable
+Earl of Hughenden came in as I was perorating. Alfred, in the Gentlemen's
+Gallery, in tears. I wore my black velvet and point lace pelerine, with the
+diamond star he gave me after the Jutley election. That tiresome, tedious,
+insufferable Hannah Longbore (how South-West Suffolk stands her so long
+I cannot imagine) prosed on against the Bill, and sided with the Men, but we
+fidgeted her down at last. She had on that old crimson satin which has seen
+three sessions at least! Maiden speech from Marian Spray&mdash;pretty enough.
+Forget what Men spoke. Mrs. Leader Donne, the lovely (!) and accomplished
+Member for Ironville, closed the debate. Rather too great a parade of learning;
+positively she quoted Lycophron in the original! But we all see through Mrs.
+Leader's schemes&mdash;she means the Educational Under-Secretaryship, when Bella
+Falayse goes to the Upper Saloon as a Peeress <i>jure suo</i>. Home by Twelve.
+Alfred sitting up for me. What a resource that <i>Hortus Siccus</i> is to him!</p>
+
+<p><i>Tuesday, May 12.</i>&mdash;Card from Madge Bassingham, R.A., for her Inaugural
+Praelection, as Pigmentary Professor at the Royal Academy. Could not go,
+as I was engaged on a Committee at the Saloon&mdash;Metropolis Extension, Brighton
+Annexation Bill. Dined with Mrs. Abraham Skrooley, M.P. Woman's party.
+The Constantia exquisite. Discussed over our cigarettes the arrangements for
+the approximating Women's Cosmopolitan Congress. Alfred and one or two
+other Men came in the evening.</p>
+
+<p><i>Wednesday, May 13.</i> Not well in the morning. Flashed for Dr. Martha
+Walkingholme. She was detained at the Spleen Hospital, but her partner,
+Harriet Chamomile, came and applied the Magnetic Detonator to my spine and
+the backs of my ears. Instant relief. In the evening at the Biennial Banquet
+of the Indigent Widowers' Pension Fund at Willis's. The Duchess of Middlesex
+in the chair. After dinner the Indigent Widowers circuited the tables, and
+attracted much attention by their neat and respectable
+appearance. I proposed the toast of &quot;The Gentlemen.&quot;
+Alfred responsed, and for a wonder did <i>not</i> break
+down.</p>
+
+<p><i>Thursday, May 14.</i> Gave Cook a lesson on the harp
+before breakfast. Sitting in the Library reading Mill's
+&quot;Woman Triumphant,&quot; when my electric alarum rang.
+Message from Oxford from my youngest sister, Bianca,
+to say that she had that instant been elected Fellow of
+Carlyle College. Three hundred and ten competitors.
+Tremendous examination, lasting three weeks. Bianca's
+thorough domination of Russian, Japanese, political
+economy, statistics, aërostatics, electrology, hygiene and
+thermapeutics, gave her the victory. Hope some day
+she will stand for the University. For joy I took a
+half holiday. (Left Alfred quite happy with his silkworms.)
+Gymnastic relaxation at the Palaestra on
+the Expanse at Hampstead. Then by Tube to Dover.
+Tunnelled over to Paris, shopped, and back by the six
+rapid. Might have stayed later for we could not make
+a Saloon: seven short of the legal Quorum, a hundred&mdash;so
+many Members (men, I need hardly say) absent at
+the Great International Croquet Tryst at the Crystal
+Palace. Passed an hour pleasantly at the Diatomaceous
+Society, of which I have lately been balloted a Fellow.</p>
+
+<p><i>Friday, May 15.</i> Busy all the morning preparing my
+oration on the &quot;Wise Sayings of Wise Women in all
+Countries and Epochs,&quot; for the Congress. (Interrupted
+twice by Alfred, who had got the housekeeping accounts
+and the washing-book into a fearful muddle.) Great
+meeting at 3'30 in Emancipation Hall, to welcome Mrs.
+Hale Columbia Spragg, the first female President of the
+United States. She has transited the Atlantic to attend
+our Congress, but can only be present at this evening's
+Inauguratory, as she must be in New York again before
+sundown to-morrow. Went to the Saloon, but it immediately
+adjourned, on the motion of Mr. Theodore
+Stuke, to enable the Lady Members to festinate to the
+Congress. Immense success. Fifteen hundred Delegates
+from every country in the world processed down the
+Hall, and then arranged themselves by Continents on
+the gilded dais. Twenty-five thousand women computed
+to be present in the Spectatorium. Our distinguished
+champion and unflinching Hegemon, Amelia Smackles,
+assumed the presidential throne. Incessant coruscations
+of enthusiasm, which culminated when a black sister
+moved the fourteenth resolution, demanding the total,
+immediate, and unconditional transfer of all menial
+labour from Woman to Man. Did not get home till
+1 p.m. Left my key behind me, so obliged to rouse
+up Alfred, who was in bed, in great distress at the loss
+of one of his canaries, and had forgotten to order my
+stout. Vexatious!</p>
+
+<p><i>Saturday, May 16.</i> Dejeuned at the Constellation
+Hotel with dear Amelia, to meet Mrs. President Spragg,
+Chief Justice Roberta Cokestone (from Liberia), the
+Lady Warden of the Cinque Ports, the Lady Mayoress,
+the Mistress of the Mint, and other forward Members
+of the Congress. The President left us at noon. She
+would balloon over to New York in five hours and a
+half. Quiet dinner at Richmond in the evening. Only
+Amelia, two of the elder Sisters of the Trinity House,
+and the Delegates from Germany, Turkey, Greece, and
+China. Bianca joined us unexpectedly from Oxford,
+and introduced her bosom friend, the Professor of
+Anatomy, Henrietta Stott Trawsell. Delightful promenade
+by the river before dinner. Met Alfred fishing
+for gudgeon.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>MORE EDUCATION-FIGHT.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Punch</span> shudders to see the Metric question raised
+again. Are we not in the thick of an Educational War
+already? Will our contemporaries abstain from putting
+new reasons for quarrel into the heads of fanatics.
+We shall certainly have the Decimal business taken
+up by Denominationalists and by Secularists. Ten
+fingers point out that the natural law is one of decimals.
+Also, there are ten commandments for the theologian.
+On the other hand, there are twelve signs of the Zodiac:
+this for nature; and twelve Apostles: this for theology.
+O, please let the matter alone, and let the little boys
+and girls be taught anyhow, so that they are taught
+at all.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page035" id="page035"></a>[pg&nbsp;35]</span></p>
+
+<h2>CHURCH DIS-ESTABLISHMENT.</h2>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width:30%;"> <a href="images/035.png"><img width="100%" src="images/035.png" alt="T" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">erminal Punch</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Five more London
+churches are to be immediately
+destroyed. Down
+with them! First down
+with St. Mildred's, in the
+Poultry. It was built by
+<span class="smcap">Sir Christopher Wren</span>,
+and somewhere about it
+rest the remains of <span class="smcap">Thomas
+Tusser</span>, who wrote the
+&quot;Five Hundred Points of
+Good Husbandry.&quot; Sweep
+it away, and then batter
+down St. Dionis Backchurch,
+also built by <span class="smcap">Sir
+Christopher</span>. There are
+monuments in it to the
+great benefactor to the
+Bodleian Library, and to
+the founder of the Saxon
+Lectureship in St. John's
+College, Oxford. Who
+cares? St. James's, Aldgate,
+is to be demolished:
+'tis enough that Hebrews
+chiefly abide around that
+fane, and need it not.
+Out with St. Martin of
+Outwich; it hath stood
+less than a hundred years, and though it was consecrated by <span class="smcap">Bishop
+Porteus</span>, and holdeth fine old monuments, conserved through three
+centuries, away with it! Lastly (for the present) turn this pictured
+clown's pickaxe upon St. Anthony's, or St. Antholin's, Sise
+Lane. That, too, was the work of the Architect of St. Paul's, and
+sundry be the memories which our old dramatists and our <span class="smcap">Walter
+Scott</span> have hung on &quot;St. Anthing's.&quot; It is very meet and right
+that the old City churches should all go, few persons now abiding
+near them on Sunday, and religion being a thing for Sunday. <span class="smcap">Sir
+Christopher's</span> Cathedral, as it is also a Mausoleum, will probably
+be spared until some railway or tramway shall want the site.</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="author">Yours, delighted,</p>
+<p class="author"><span class="smcap">Erostratus Vandal</span>.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>ORGANS OF OFFENCE.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">On</span> Thursday last week a modification of the American Gatling
+Gun, called the &quot;British Mitrailleuse,&quot; was tried for the first time
+at Woolwich. The following is a description of this benevolent
+machine:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+&quot;It consists of ten barrels hooped together and revolving in the centre, and
+fitted into a carriage like that of an ordinary field-gun, which, at a short
+distance, it greatly resembles. The barrels and cartridges are similar to
+those of the Henry-Martini rifle&mdash;in diameter .45 in.; the cartridge-cases
+being of brass, and bottle-necked.&quot;
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Tremendous, however, as may be the execution which this weapon
+is capable of doing among a flock of soldiers, authorities are of
+opinion that, &quot;like small arms generally, it must give way to rifled
+ordnance.&quot; On its trial:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+&quot;Indeed, most of the Royal Artillery Officers present seemed to think that the
+machine-gun can never stand against Artillery, even if its delicate machinery
+did not become disarranged by mere musket-shot.&quot;
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>So that a comparison is suggested to those who read, that when the
+&quot;British Mitrailleuse&quot; is made ready and placed in position&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+&quot;A handle like that of a street-organ, and fixed at the side of the trail, is
+then turned at any degree of rapidity required, and the barrels load and fire
+until the supply of cartridges is exhausted, which takes about five minutes
+under favourable conditions.&quot;
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>One is led to compare the British Mitrailleuse with the Italian
+Grinding Organ, and to question if the latter be not, of the two, the
+more offensive instrument.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Corrigendum.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> antiquity of the Athanasian Creed being now shown to be a
+myth, the date being that of <span class="smcap">Charlemagne</span>, would it not be well,
+before the Prayer Book is finally revised, that the correction should
+be made? For it will take many a year to abolish the belief that
+St. Athanasius drew up the document, especially as divers theologians
+think nothing of some four hundred and fifty years of what
+they imagine to have been the Dark Ages. &quot;Commonly (but
+absurdly) called the Creed of St. Athanasius&quot; is a line that, in a
+century or so, might have an effect upon the less un-intelligent.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>A PROFESSION'S UNION.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">At</span> Bas-Unterwald, according to the <i>Swiss Times</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+&quot;Strikes are becoming the fashion in the higher circles of society. The
+physicians of this peaceful Arcadia have united and struck work, demanding
+an increase in their fees. The Laudrath, however, refuses to entertain their
+claims, and advises a strike of the patients as the best answer to the physicians'
+demands.&quot;
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>There was a time when a strike of patients anywhere would have
+been attended with a very great decrease of the rate of mortality.
+There is reason to suppose that in the present improved condition of
+medical science such would not be the case. The strikers, struck
+with fever, or other grave illness, would probably be struck down
+in rather alarming numbers.</p>
+
+<p>What justification of a medical strike there may be in Switzerland
+hath not appeared, but in this country there is, in some quarters,
+not a little. The ridiculously low wages, not to say salary, begrudged,
+not to say granted, to Medical Officers by many Poor-Law
+Unions would amply warrant the establishment of a Professional
+Union corresponding to a Trades' Union, and consisting of sons of
+<span class="smcap">Æsculapius</span>. The medico-chirurgical Unionists could manage a
+strike well enough without committing any outrage on the Non-Unionists,
+or Knobsticks. There would be no need for the Doctors
+on strike to picket, and waylay, and beat the others on their road to
+the Workhouse, or across country to the recipient of out-door relief;
+and they could do without rattening them and filching away their
+physic, stethoscopes, and surgical instruments. In dealing with
+unworthy members of an honourable Profession, capable of underselling
+their brother-chips, the practitioners forming the Union
+would require to have recourse to no proceedings associated with
+Sheffield; they would find it quite sufficient to send outsiders and
+recusants of co-operation in a strike to Coventry.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>OMINOUS INDEED!</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">All</span> England, that reads the newspapers, will have felt the shock
+of a truly&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+&quot;<span class="smcap">Terrific Explosion</span>&mdash;Yesterday evening an explosion of a frightful
+character occurred at <span class="smcap">Gladstone's</span> Cartridge Factory, Greenwich Marshes,
+by which a large number of girls have been seriously injured.&quot;
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Considering for what Constituency the <span class="smcap">Premier</span> is Member of
+Parliament, the majority of people cannot but be, momentarily at
+least, startled and taken aback by the information in the first place
+that <span class="smcap">Gladstone</span> has a Cartridge Factory in Greenwich Marshes, and,
+secondly, that it has been the scene of a terrific explosion. Nor
+certainly are they likely to be re-assured by the further intelligence
+that:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+&quot;A few weeks ago the Government seized 365 cases of ball cartridge,
+each containing 20 lb. weight, which had been manufactured by <span class="smcap">Mr. Gladstone</span>
+for the French Government during the late war.&quot;
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The obvious suggestion conveyed by this statement is, that there
+has occurred not only a terrific explosion in the borough of Greenwich,
+but also a not less alarming blow-up in the Cabinet.
+<i>Absit omen!</i></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>ELEGANT ADVERTISING.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">If</span> you like, read this advertisement from the <i>Christian World</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+CO-PARTNER WANTED, by a highly respectable Man, aged 30,
+member of Spurgeon's. A gentlemanly person required, a believer
+with about £50, and who can travel.&mdash;Address, &amp;c.
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Hm! In the first place a gentlemanly person would not wish to
+hear his partner talk in that exceedingly curt way of their minister
+and his flock. &quot;Member of Spurgeon's.&quot; &quot;One who regularly
+attends the ministrations of the Reverend <span class="smcap">C. H. Spurgeon</span>, B.M.&quot;
+would be more gentlemanly language. Nextly, &quot;a believer with about
+£50&quot; reads rather Mammonish. It suggests that a sceptic with about
+£75, or a positivist with about £100, would not be unacceptable.
+Thirdly, &quot;who can travel.&quot; Who <i>can't</i> travel with about £50? <span class="smcap">Mr.
+Cook</span> will give you a return-ticket for the Pyramid for about that.
+Fourthly, the &quot;and&quot; is abominable English. We wish our
+esteemed friend the <i>Christian World</i> would edit its advertisements.
+We really can't be always doing it.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Dignity for Doctors.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is suggested that a fitting honour to be conferred on meritorious
+Physicians and Surgeons would be that of the Order of the Bath.
+Nothing could be more suitable; but should the Bath be the Hot-Bath
+or the Cold?</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page036" id="page036"></a>[pg&nbsp;36]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width:100%;"> <a href="images/036.png"><img width="100%" src="images/036.png" alt="" /></a>
+
+<h3>GENEROSITY.</h3>
+
+<p><i>Noble Lord</i> (<i>whose Rifle has brought to a scarcely untimely end a very consumptive-looking Fallow Deer</i>). &quot;<span class="smcap">Tut&mdash;t, t, t, t, Tut! O,
+I say, Stubbs!</span>&mdash;(<i>to his Keeper</i>)&mdash;<span class="smcap">you shouldn't have let me Kill such a poor, little, sickly, scraggy Thing as this, you
+know! It positively isn't fit for Human Food! Ah! look here, now! I'll Tell you what. You and McFarlin may
+have this Buck between you!!!</span>&quot;</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>A SEAT ON A SAFETY-VALVE.</h2>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p><span class="smcap">An</span> Income-tax partial see <span class="smcap">Thiers</span> oppose,</p>
+<p class="i2">O <span class="smcap">William</span> the Earnest, O <span class="smcap">Robert</span> the True!</p>
+<p>A soul above fear of the Rabble he shows;</p>
+<p class="i2">Is that to be said, British Statesmen, of you?</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Or is it that you, whom mob-courtship doth move</p>
+<p class="i2">With tribute from all due to load a part's purse.</p>
+<p>Albeit your Honours both see and approve</p>
+<p class="i2">The better arrangements, do follow the worse?</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>How bad are the worse, which poor fleeced Britons rue,</p>
+<p class="i2">You have often confessed; but decline to advance</p>
+<p>On that high path which upright financiers pursue;</p>
+<p class="i2">They manage these matters much better in France.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>For justice it is which disposes them there,</p>
+<p class="i2">Political craft in this mighty free land,</p>
+<p>Whose Rulers perpend not what impost were fair,</p>
+<p class="i2">But what imposition tax-payers will stand.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>It was not enough upon shoulders select</p>
+<p class="i2">To pile your whole Budget; on folk thus oppressed</p>
+<p>(As housebreakers use, the strong-box to detect)</p>
+<p class="i2">The Screw has been put; they are over-assessed.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>You fancy your Engine is working so well</p>
+<p class="i2">By way of a Steam-Rack, 'twill yet more extort,</p>
+<p>And bear any pressure your force can compel;</p>
+<p class="i2">You sit on the safety-valve, therefore, in short.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>O <span class="smcap">William</span> the Daring! O <span class="smcap">Robert</span> the Rash!</p>
+<p class="i2">Though deaf to remonstrance, to caution give ear,</p>
+<p>Ere high-pressure boiler burst up with a crash,</p>
+<p class="i2">And blow aloft Stoker and hoist Engineer.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>SAD ALTERATION.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Dramatist has led us to think that &quot;Music hath charms to
+soothe the savage breast,&quot; but the &quot;Heavenly Maid&quot; is not so
+&quot;young&quot; as she was when <span class="smcap">Congreve</span> wrote, and increasing years
+seem to have changed her mood and spoiled her temper. What
+other conclusion can we come to, when we find in an article on
+&quot;Music&quot; in one of the newspapers, in some comments on the performance
+of a young lady on the piano at a Monday Popular Concert,
+the disquieting statement that she &quot;left her mark as usual on the
+audience, the music, and the piano&quot;? It is some little relief to
+find the writer adding that &quot;this last was more than once punished
+severely;&quot; as it is a fair inference to draw, that whatever the
+sufferings of the piano may have been, the music, and, which is far
+more important, the audience, escaped with only one assault.</p>
+
+<p>The Managers of the Monday Concerts should consider, before it is
+too late, whether they are not endangering the well-deserved popularity
+of their agreeable entertainments, by allowing performances
+which would seem to have rather too striking an effect upon the
+hearers.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Nocens Absolvitur.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> <i>South London News</i> makes rather an unkind suggestion.
+Thieves enter tradesmen's shops, under pretence of selling something.
+The <i>News</i> thinks that people who would be exempt from
+such visits should &quot;keep watch, and, on opportunity, hand the
+victims over to the police.&quot; This may be fair in South London,
+wherever that is, but in Fleet Street we do not dispense that kind
+of justice.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>A HINT TO L. AND B. RAILWAY.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Real &quot;Nine Hours' Movement&quot;&mdash;to Brighton and back for
+Half-a-Crown.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page037" id="page037"></a>[pg&nbsp;37]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width:100%;"> <a href="images/037.png"><img width="100%" src="images/037.png" alt="" /></a>
+<h3>TOO MUCH PRESSURE.</h3>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bob the Stoker.</span> &quot;LOR' BLESS YOU, M'NSEER! THAT'S THE WAY <i>WE</i> 'RAISE THE WIND;'&mdash;SIMPLEST
+THING IN THE WORLD!&quot;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">M. Thiers.</span> &quot;HE, MON AMI! PRENEZ GARDE! HE SHALL 'BLOW UP' ONE DAY!&quot;</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page039" id="page039"></a>[pg&nbsp;39]</span></p>
+
+<h2>FRESH. NOT TIGHT.</h2>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width:25%;"> <a href="images/039.png"><img width="100%" src="images/039.png" alt="T" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">here</span> is, or was, in this
+town a Public-house,
+wherein the administration
+of justice was, and may
+still be, wont to be nightly
+burlesqued by certain
+buffoons under the name
+of a Judge and Jury Club.
+Let us hope that this was
+the only Court of Law
+which could possibly have
+been in the eye of the
+<span class="smcap">Attorney-general</span> when,
+in the course of his concise
+oration delivered on behalf
+of the Infant against the
+Claimant, he spoke, with
+reference to the latter, as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+&quot;Besides, such is the pleasantry&mdash;I
+would not say the
+profit&mdash;of our English law,
+that if he fails in this case he
+may go at it again with fresh
+witnesses, let us hope with
+fresh counsel&mdash;(<i>laughter</i>)&mdash;at least with a fresh jury&mdash;I say nothing of a
+fresh judge. (<i>Continued laughter.</i>)&quot;
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The members of the Temperance League, and the United Kingdom
+Alliance must surely have been shocked, as many as those who
+read and duly considered the foregoing words, by the idea which
+they suggest of a generally Fresh Court of Common Pleas. This
+horrid image was enough to have unfixed their hair and made their
+excited hearts knock at their ribs beyond the use of nature. Sobriety
+is so specially characteristic of the Ermine that &quot;sober as a Judge&quot;
+is an adage; not, indeed, because Judges are supposed not to
+drink, but to be able to drink any quantity. Irreproachable with
+laxity in the discharge of their high functions, British Judges are
+at all times incapable of getting tight.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>EVENINGS FROM HOME.</h2>
+
+<p><i><span class="smcap">Mr. Barlow</span>, with <span class="smcap">Masters Sandford</span> and <span class="smcap">Merton</span>, at the <span class="smcap">Queen's
+Theatre</span>, to see &quot;The Last Days of Pompeii.&quot;</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Tommy.</i> Pray, Sir, what and where was Pompeii?</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Barlow.</i> It was, my dear <span class="smcap">Tommy</span>, a Roman municipality,
+full of eligible villas, pleasantly situated in the immediate neighbourhood
+of Mount Vesuvius, and within easy reach of the sea. It
+was &quot;a place to spend a happy day,&quot; and &quot;there and back&quot; from
+Naples formed one of the chief excursions, at a very moderate rate,
+for the middle classes of Neapolis.</p>
+
+<p>They had just commenced this instructive and entertaining conversation,
+when the curtain rising discovered to their eager eyes as
+artistic and effective a scene (with the exception of stationary
+painted groups, whose fixed attitude strangely contrasted with the
+movement of the actors in front of them) as it had hitherto been
+their lot to behold.</p>
+
+<p>As the play went on, <span class="smcap">Harry</span> requested permission of <span class="smcap">Mr. Barlow</span>
+to ask a question.</p>
+
+<p><i>Harry.</i> Did you not tell us, Sir, that the &quot;e&quot; in Pompeii was long?</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Barlow.</i> Indeed, <span class="smcap">Harry</span>, I did.</p>
+
+<p><i>Harry.</i> And did you not also tell us that one of the purposes of a
+theatrical exhibition, such as this is, is the advancement of education
+among all sorts and conditions of people?</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Barlow.</i> You are again correct, and truly I begin to perceive
+the drift of your remark. Therefore let me tell you that had any
+Eton boy said Pomp&#0277;ii, instead of Pomp&#0275;ii, he would speedily have
+been taught the force of an <i>argumentum</i> addressed, as was one of
+<span class="smcap">Horace's</span> Odes, <i>ad puerum</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Harry.</i> Surely too, Sir, a diphthong is long; so that the name
+<i>Ap&oelig;cides</i> should not be rendered Appy-cides, as if the name were
+an unaspirated pronunciation of <i>H</i>appy Cides.</p>
+
+<p>To this <span class="smcap">Mr. Barlow</span> replied that doubtless these honest folks had
+cogent reasons for their mode of pronunciation, with which he
+advised <span class="smcap">Harry</span> to become acquainted, before taking upon himself
+to pronounce an unmitigated condemnation of them.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You will now perceive, <span class="smcap">Tommy</span>,&quot; said <span class="smcap">Mr. Barlow</span>, during the
+performance of the Third Scene of the First Act, &quot;that the crafty
+<i>Arbaces</i> is anxious to entice the sentimental young gentleman, <i>Appy
+Cides</i>, to partake of the repast with him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p><i>Harry.</i> But, Sir, surely the young man's objection to accept the
+invitation of the Egyptian, must arise from a sense of politeness on
+his part, which, as there is nothing edible on the table, I fancy,
+except one plate of fruit, will not permit him to deprive <i>Arbaces</i> of
+even a portion of a dessert that has, evidently, been only ordered
+for one.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Barlow.</i> Indeed, <span class="smcap">Harry</span>, I think you are right, and had
+<i>Arbaces</i> thought of it, I am certain he would willingly have extended
+his hospitality to a bag of nuts or some cakes of gingerbread.
+But you must remember that <i>Appy Cides</i>, or, as he seems to me,
+<i>Un-'appy Cides</i>, is only the pupil of <i>Arbaces</i>, and does not appear
+at his tutor's table until dessert-time.</p>
+
+<p><i>Tommy.</i> If I were there I would go and eat everything, and then
+I would dance with one of the young ladies.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Barlow.</i> I am sorry, <span class="smcap">Tommy</span>, that you are of that mind; and
+at another time&mdash;for I perceive that the good people in the pit, by
+their repeated cries of hush, and by the direction of their attention
+towards us, wish rather to hear the dialogue on the stage than my
+discourse, which is, after all, of a personal and private character&mdash;at
+another time, I was about to say, I will read to you an instructive
+story on greediness, entitled <i>Chares and the Convulsive Tailor</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Tommy</span> looked on at the piece very sulkily for some time, being,
+indeed, intent upon the antique cups and goblets and upon the
+plate of luscious fruit which he had already noticed. But on seeing
+that neither <i>Arbaces</i> nor the sentimental young gentleman partook
+of anything that was provided for them, he began to have high
+opinion of their breeding, and before the scene was finished was
+heartily sorry for his error, and applauded all he saw and heard
+with increasing rapture and delight.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Barlow.</i> You may, indeed, evince your gratitude to these
+worthy people, since they have done all in their power to entertain
+and instruct us. And, indeed, where all is done so vastly well, I
+know not what to commend most, whether the sonorous voice and
+dignified scoundrelism of that twice-crushed Priest of Isis, the
+iniquitous and unprincipled <i>Arbaces</i>, played by the remarkably
+upright and conscientious actor, <span class="smcap">Mr. Ryder</span>; or whether the
+gentle pleadings of the blind <i>Nydia</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Miss Hodson</span> is the young
+lady's name, my dear <span class="smcap">Tommy</span>, and I have no doubt she saw and
+appreciated your boyish enthusiasm&mdash;or the bearing of <span class="smcap">Mr. Rignold</span>
+throughout a remarkably difficult and most trying part. But,
+<span class="smcap">Harry</span>, what is your opinion?</p>
+
+<p><i>Harry.</i> Why, Sir, I am very little judge of these matters, but I
+protest that I feel mightily indebted to those clever gentlemen,
+<span class="smcap">Masters Gordon</span> and <span class="smcap">Harford</span> (I had well-nigh slipt into the
+error of saying <span class="smcap">Masters Merton</span> and <span class="smcap">Sandford</span>) for the scenery
+which has so admirably served to illustrate this play. I am sorry
+that <i>Appy Cides</i> was killed, as, having become a Christian, there
+would, I am sure, have been every opportunity open to him as an
+estimable young curate of evangelical proclivities.</p>
+
+<p><i>Tommy</i> (<i>during the cleverly arranged Amphitheatre Scene,
+Act IV.</i>) I am glad to see, Sir, that in this scene where we have so
+much to admire, the tumblers&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Barlow.</i> These, my dear <span class="smcap">Tommy</span>, represent the gladiators.
+And you must remember that on the stage, where every combat has
+to be carefully arranged both as to the number and fashion of the
+blows given and received, and as to who shall be, and who shall not
+be the conqueror, the contest of two determined champions, or
+rather of two champions whose course has been previously determined,
+cannot fail to be of a most thrilling and exciting character.</p>
+
+<p><i>Tommy.</i> O, Sir! they have given orders to let the Lion loose.
+O, Sir! the Lion is coming!</p>
+
+<p><i>Harry.</i> I do not believe that all these fine gentlemen and ladies
+would remain so still if there were, indeed, a Lion approaching.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Barlow.</i> The Lion, my dear <span class="smcap">Tommy</span>, is a native of both India
+and Africa. When they are hungry, they kill every animal they
+meet, and will even devour little boys&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Here poor <span class="smcap">Tommy's</span> trepidation was increased to such an extent
+that he would have quitted his seat and the theatre, but for the
+sudden entry of the traitor <i>Calenus</i>, whose charge of murder brought
+against his master, the wily <i>Arbaces</i>, instantly distracted everyone's
+thoughts from the coming of the expected monster.</p>
+
+<p>Both <span class="smcap">Mr. Barlow</span> and <span class="smcap">Harry</span> were loud in their praises of the
+dramatist who had contrived to arouse in the breasts of the spectators
+such emotions of fear, by the absence of the Lion, as could
+scarcely have been equalled by his formidable presence.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Indeed,&quot; said <span class="smcap">Mr. Barlow</span>, &quot;on reflection, I am led to consider
+the chiefest part in this piece to be the Lion's share in it. He is
+spoken of at the commencement of the play, he is often alluded to
+throughout, and the bare mention of his name sensibly electrifies
+the spectators on and off the stage. From the very first we are
+incited to expect his appearance. He has not to roar to make himself
+dreaded. He has not even to be present, either on or off, the
+scene.</p>
+
+<p><i>Harry.</i> This device is, in my humble judgement, worthy of high
+commendation in the play-wright, who has thus evinced his reverence
+for the words of the immortal <span class="smcap">William</span>, and whose plan is
+in cordial agreement with <i>Bottom's</i> opinion on this very matter,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page040" id="page040"></a>[pg&nbsp;40]</span>
+which, my dear <span class="smcap">Tommy</span>, as you are as yet unacquainted with the
+works of <span class="smcap">Shakspeare</span>, I will repeat to you. &quot;<i>Masters</i>,&quot; says
+<i>Bottom</i>, &quot;<i>You ought to consider with yourselves, to bring in a lion
+among ladies is a most dreadful thing, for there is not a more fearful
+wild fowl than your lion, living</i>.&quot;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Tommy</span> was so forcibly struck by this adroit application of a famous
+passage from the plays of <span class="smcap">Shakspeare</span>, that he determined, on the
+first opportunity to read all these dramas through from beginning to
+end. And having already set himself to the study of astronomy and
+mechanics, solely in order to make himself as proficient in the
+art of applicable illustrations as was his friend <span class="smcap">Harry Merton</span>,
+<span class="smcap">Tommy</span> now found that he had at least one hour of the day fully
+occupied.</p>
+
+<p>On their return from the theatre <span class="smcap">Mr. Barlow</span>, ever anxious for
+the improvement of both his young friends, commenced reading
+to them the story of <i>The Magistrate and the Elephant</i>; but, seeing
+that both his young friends were fast asleep in their chairs, he lit
+his chamber-candle and retired for the night.</p>
+
+<p>On entering his room somewhat suddenly, a pair of boots,
+artfully placed so as to rest on the door, which had been standing
+ajar, descended on his head; and the next instant, on his
+taking one step forward, he came in contact with a stout string, so
+skilfully fastened, as not only to throw him sharply on the floor, but,
+being cunningly connected with the fire-irons and the washing-stand,
+it brought down these articles also with a great crash and
+much confusion. Before he could arise from his painful position,
+<span class="smcap">Tommy</span> and <span class="smcap">Harry</span> had rushed up-stairs to render to their revered
+preceptor what assistance was in their power. Being questioned as
+to the hand they had had in this strange affair, <span class="smcap">Master Tommy</span>,
+with becoming modesty, acknowledged that it was he who had
+devised the scheme. &quot;And,&quot; said he, &quot;I protest I think it is no
+inadequate representation of what must have been the consequence
+in several houses during the Eruption of Mount Vesuvius in the
+<i>Last Days of Pompeii</i>.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So saying, both the boys withdrew themselves rapidly from their
+beloved tutor's apartment, and locked themselves into their own
+rooms. Soon after this, they were all in a sound slumber, which
+lasted until a late hour on the following morning.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width:100%;"> <a href="images/040.png"><img width="100%" src="images/040.png" alt="" /></a>
+<h3>A QUESTION FOR THE SHIRES.</h3>
+
+<p>&quot;<span class="smcap">Now, Dear, which do you Prefer for the 'Tops'?&mdash;the Deeper Shade, or very Palest Pink?</span>&quot;</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>VINDICTIVE TEUTONS.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">There</span> is a good deal of talk in France about revenge to be taken
+one of these days upon the Germans for having repelled and beaten
+their invaders. In the meanwhile, according to the <i>Post</i>, those
+barbarous Germans are trying to revenge themselves, in their heavy
+way, on the enemies who have been twitting them with stealing
+clocks and watches, by an&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+&quot;<span class="smcap">Important Restoration of Specie.</span>&mdash;<i>The Courier de Meurthe et
+Moselle</i> announces that the six millions of francs which had fallen into the
+hands of the German troops after the capitulation of Strasburg, and belonging
+to the Bank of France, are about to be restored to that establishment through
+its branch bank at Nancy.&quot;
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This, of course, is a practical sarcasm at the expense of a nation
+represented by some of its orators and statesmen as having been
+aggrieved by being forced to restore pictures and works of Art which
+the First <span class="smcap">Napoleon</span> and his gangs in uniform had pillaged from
+their neighbours. It is obviously meant to suggest an odious comparison
+between those who make restitution of even lawful plunder
+in hard cash, and those others who grumble because of having been
+compelled to replace Art-treasures actually stolen, and that in some
+cases from friends. This is clumsy German satire to be sure, but it
+tumbles down pretty heavily for all that on the heads of them that
+shouted &quot;À Berlin!&quot;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Sporting News.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> lovers of manly British sports will be glad to know that
+there is a chance of seeing another good fight, or so, before the law
+is altered. A rattling mill is to come off in the north of the West
+Riding. <span class="smcap">Powell</span>, the well-known Cambridge Slogger, is matched
+against <span class="smcap">Holden</span>, of the above parts, who has not fought in public,
+but is known in the Chapel districts as a determined cove. As this
+will be nearly the last of the real old English fights, much interest is
+excited. The white chokers are with <span class="smcap">Powell</span>, and <span class="smcap">Holden</span> is
+backed by the humbler humboxes. Both men will do all they know,
+and a clinking good contest may be expected.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page041" id="page041"></a>[pg&nbsp;41]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width:60%;"> <a href="images/041.png"><img width="100%" src="images/041.png" alt="" /></a>
+<p>&quot;CONSERVATION OF TISSUE.&quot;</p>
+
+<p><i>Uncle.</i> &quot;<span class="smcap">Well, Tommy, you See I'm Back; are you Ready? What
+have I to Pay for, Miss?</span>&quot;</p>
+
+<p><i>Miss.</i> &quot;<span class="smcap">Three Buns, Four Sponge Cakes, Two Sandwiches, One Jelly,
+Five Tarts, and</span>&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p><i>Uncle.</i> &quot;<span class="smcap">Good Gracious, Boy! Are you not Ill?</span>&quot;</p>
+
+<p><i>Tommy.</i> &quot;<span class="smcap">No, Uncle; but I'm Thirsty.</span>&quot;</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>NEGATIVE KNOWLEDGE.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">We</span> never knew a cabman with an eyeglass, or a
+chimneysweep with spectacles.</p>
+
+<p>We never knew a lady buy a bargain at a shop sale,
+and not afterwards regret it.</p>
+
+<p>We never knew a man propose the toast of the evening,
+without his wishing that it had not been placed in
+abler hands.</p>
+
+<p>We never knew a waiter in a hurry, at a chop-house,
+who did not say that he was &quot;Coming, Sir!&quot; when
+really he was going.</p>
+
+<p>We never lost a game to a professional at billiards,
+without hearing him assign his triumph chiefly to his
+flukes.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>TO THE STATE COACHMAN.</h2>
+
+<h3>(<i>Suggested by a Passage in the new Q. R.</i>)</h3>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&quot;<span class="smcap">Canning</span> did not know that tadpoles</p>
+<p class="i2">Turn to frogs.&quot; Each fool explodes:</p>
+<p>But that Queller of the Yelpers</p>
+<p class="i2">Knew that patriots turn to toads.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p><span class="smcap">Gladstone</span> goes in for omniscience;</p>
+<p class="i2">Does the team obey the bit</p>
+<p>As when <span class="smcap">Pam's</span> whip stung with banter,</p>
+<p class="i2">Or when <span class="smcap">Canning's</span> cut with wit?</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p><span class="smcap">William</span>! <i>Punch</i>, who likes you, counsels&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">Mix some humour with your zeal,</p>
+<p>Making humbugs think is hopeless:</p>
+<p class="i2">Be content to make them <i>feel</i>.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>No Misnomer.</h2>
+
+<p>A <span class="smcap">Correspondent</span> of the <i>Times</i>, whose note is
+headed &quot;Civil Service Grammar,&quot; writes a remonstrance
+because he has seen a Government Cart going about
+inscribed &quot;Her Majesty's Stationary Office.&quot; He is
+evidently under a misconception as to what office is
+meant, for what man who reflects on the progress of
+the new Law Courts, the new National Gallery, the new
+Natural History Museum, the Wellington Monument,
+&amp;c., can doubt for a moment that &quot;Her Majesty's Stationary
+Office&quot; is the Office of Works and Public
+buildings?</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>IN ANGELÆ HONOREM.</h2>
+
+<blockquote>
+&quot;A Meeting was held in the Hall of Columbia Market, on Monday evening,
+<span class="smcap">Sir Thomas Dakin</span> in the Chair, to consider what testimonial of public
+respect and gratitude should be offered to <span class="smcap">Baroness Burdett Coutts</span>.&quot;&mdash;<i>Daily
+News.</i>
+</blockquote>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p><span class="smcap">Sweet</span> names there are that carry sweet natures in their sound;</p>
+<p>Whose ring, like hallowed bells of old, seems to shed blessing round:</p>
+<p>Such a name of good omen, <span class="smcap">Florence Nightingale</span>, is thine;</p>
+<p>And hers, our <span class="smcap">Angela's</span>, for all in want and woe that pine.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Queen</span> has made her noble; but ere that rank was given,</p>
+<p>She had donned robe and coronet of the peerage made in Heaven:</p>
+<p>Baptised in purer honour than from earthly fountain flows,</p>
+<p>Raised to a prouder Upper House than our proud island knows.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>The loftiest of that peerage are of lowliest mood and will;</p>
+<p>And this their proudest lordship, Love's service to fulfil:</p>
+<p>Chief Stewards and High Almoners of the goods Heaven bestows&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Tis theirs to see that Charity in Wisdom's channels flows.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>For e'en that stream, ill-guided, can poison goodly ground&mdash;</p>
+<p>For health, sow fever broadcast, for blessing, blight, around:</p>
+<p>'Tis not enough its waters to loose with lib'ral mind;</p>
+<p>If Reason lends not eyes to Love, Love strays&mdash;for he is blind.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>This <i>she</i> has known, our <span class="smcap">Angela</span>, for whom men ask, e'en now,</p>
+<p>&quot;Fit tribute of our gratitude where shall we pay, and how?&quot;</p>
+<p>If blessings clothed in substance, prayers made palpable, could be,</p>
+<p>When had Kaiser, King, or Conqueror, such monument as she?</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>But what can gold, or silver, or bronze, or marble, pay</p>
+<p>Of the unsummed debt of gratitude owed her this many a day?</p>
+<p>What record, parchment-blazoned, closed in golden casket rare,</p>
+<p>Can with her love, in England's heart, for preciousness compare?</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>If we needs must find her symbol, then carve and set on high</p>
+<p>A heavy-laden camel going through the needle's eye;</p>
+<p>Gold-burdened, by a gentle yet firm hand wisely driven,&mdash;</p>
+<p>Our <span class="smcap">Angela's</span>, that on it rides, riches and all, to Heaven!</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Or if a painted record be by the occasion claimed,</p>
+<p>Paint up Bethesda's Pool, and round, the sick, the halt, and maimed,</p>
+<p>Waiting until our <span class="smcap">Angela</span> through Earth's afflicted go</p>
+<p>To stir wealth's healing waters, that await her hand to flow.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>PIG-AND-BARGAIN-DRIVING.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> <i>Eastern Morning News</i>&mdash;what a pretty name&mdash;why not the
+<i>Dawn</i>?&mdash;hath a prosaic item: this:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<span class="smcap">Wanted</span>, a GROOM and Coachman, and to assist the Gardener.
+Wages, 18s. per week to commence with, to be advanced 1s. per year
+for every year he remains. Must understand horses and pigs, and be able to
+drive one, or a pair.
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>We do not think the wages too high. A celebrated Oxford Don,
+who could make Greek verses as fast as mill-wheels strike, yet who
+was not so ready with ordinary English, beheld, from the top of a
+coach, a drover striving to guide some pigs along the road. Wishing
+to be conversational, the Don observed to his neighbour, &quot;A difficult
+Animal to drive is a Pig&mdash;one man&mdash;a good many&mdash;very.&quot; Here,
+observe, were the materials for a pleasing remark, but they needed
+arrangement. He was right, however. Pigs are difficult to drive,
+and the Yorkshire advertiser who wants a man able to drive one
+pig, or a pair, is right in offering him the above noble rise in wage.
+Correspondents will abstain from vulgar suggestions about a pig and
+a &quot;hog&quot;&mdash;we don't understand them.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page042" id="page042"></a>[pg&nbsp;42]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width:100%;"> <a href="images/042.png"> <img width="100%" src="images/042.png" alt="" /></a>
+<h3>&quot;HERE BE TRUTHS.&quot;</h3>
+
+<p><i>Mistress.</i> &quot;<span class="smcap">Bring some more Bread, Martha?</span>&quot;</p>
+
+<p><i>Maid.</i> &quot;<span class="smcap">There's nane, Mem!</span>&quot;</p>
+
+<p><i>Mistress.</i> &quot;<span class="smcap">O, Nonsense! I saw a Loaf in the Pantry.</span>&quot;</p>
+
+<p><i>Maid.</i> &quot;<span class="smcap">Did ye, Mem? I'm thinking it's Time ye were getting Specs, then, for it's a Cheese!</span>&quot;</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>&quot;YOUR BONNET TO ITS RIGHT USE.&quot;</h2>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&quot;<span class="smcap">Let</span> me use my <i>biretta</i>,&quot;</p>
+<p class="i2">Says <span class="smcap">Cardinal Cullen</span></p>
+<p>&quot;To fan Ireland's school-lamp</p>
+<p class="i2">That burns smoky and sullen.&quot;</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; says England, &quot;your motive</p>
+<p class="i2">'Twere cruel to doubt,&mdash;</p>
+<p>But what if your rev'renc</p>
+<p class="i2">Should put the lamp out?&quot;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>LONDON GOLD DIGGINGS.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear</span> Old England! well may one exclaim, on reading in the
+<i>Daily News</i> a statement such as this:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+&quot;<span class="smcap">Value of Land in Lombard Street.</span>&mdash;A piece of land adjoining the
+Lombard Exchange, in Lombard Street, has been sold for £9000, or about
+£19 4s. 6d. per foot super.&quot;
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>It used to be affirmed that London streets were paved with gold,
+and, by the side of the above, the story hardly seems beyond one's
+power of credulity. Land worth nineteen pounds per foot must be
+wellnigh as good as gold to its fortunate possessor, and the man who
+owned an acre of it would hardly need to emigrate to any other
+diggings. Assuredly, to any <i>Fortunatus</i> who owns much land in
+Lombard Street, London may be looked on as the true Tom Tiddler's
+Ground.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>The New Judge.</h2>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Punch</i> hears that <span class="smcap">Lord Chief Justice Cockburn</span> (one of
+our most accomplished Latin writers) intimated to the <span class="smcap">Chancellor</span>
+that the appointment of the new Judge for the Queen's Bench was
+a <i>Sine Quainon</i>.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>WANTED&mdash;SIMPLICITY.</h2>
+
+<p>Mr. Punch</p>
+
+<p>Is the English language a thing to be ashamed of? I put
+the question, because in a weekly literary journal, printed and published
+in London in the mother tongue, I have just read, not without
+some rubbing of eyes and much mental bewilderment, the following
+singular announcement:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+&quot;<span class="smcap">Institution of Civil Engineers.</span>&mdash;The <span class="smcap">Emperor of Brésil</span> was
+elected an Honorary Member.&quot;
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>I have never heard that Brazil has become a French possession,
+and I am positive that the Institution of Civil Engineers is not in
+Paris, but in Great George Street, Westminster. Why, then, Brésil?
+Crack this Brazil-nut for</p>
+
+<p class="author">Yours, unaffectedly,</p>
+
+<p class="author"><span class="smcap">Jno. Smith</span>.</p>
+
+<p>P.S.&mdash;Can fish talk? I ask this second question, after seeing that
+another periodical publication contains an article with the heading,
+&quot;Perch Prattle.&quot;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>We Can't See It.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Of</span> all the odd kinds of consolation under affliction, the last
+suggestion seems to <i>Mr. Punch</i> the oddest. We are mourning the
+demise of the no-horned Infant Hippopotamus in the Regent's Park,
+and we are told to be cheerful, for a two-horned Infant Rhinoceros
+has gone to Madrid. The doctrine of compensations was never
+pushed much further, even in a Scotch sermon.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Platonic Politics.</h2>
+
+<p>Plato gives the best reason why Woman's Rights should be conceded,
+and Women be admitted to power. Listen, Dears, &quot;Rulers
+should have Personal Beauty.&quot; Kiss ums own old <i>Punch</i>.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<blockquote>
+Printed by Joseph Smith, of No. 24, Holford square, in the Parish of St. James, Clerkenwell, in the County of Middlesex, at the Printing Offices of Messrs. Bradbury, Evans, &amp; Co., Lombard
+Street, in the Precinct of Whitefriars, in the City of London, and Published by him at No. 65, Fleet Street, in the Parish of St. Bride, City of London.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Saturday</span>, January 27, 1872.
+</blockquote>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Transcriber's Notes</h2>
+
+<p>Throughout the dialogues, there were words used to mimic accents of
+the speakers. Those words were retained as-is.</p>
+
+<p>The illustrations have been moved so that they do not break up
+paragraphs and so that they are next the text they illustrate.</p>
+
+<p>Errors in punctuations and inconsistent hyphenation were not corrected.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol.
+62, Jan 27, 1872, by Various
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 62,
+Jan 27, 1872, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 62, Jan 27, 1872
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2011 [EBook #38040]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer, Ernest Schaal, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+VOL. 62.
+JANUARY 27, 1872.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THE LIQUOR CONTROVERSY.
+
+'_Spectable Citizen_. "ISH MY OPI'ION THISH P'MISSIVE BILL 'SH
+VEXASH'IOUS MEASURE. (_Hic!_) WHY SHOULD I BE D'PRIVED OF NESH-SH-ARY
+R'FRESHMENT, 'CAUSE ANOTHER PARTY HASN'T--CAN'T--DOESN'T--KNOW WHEN
+HE'SH HAD ENOUGH? SHTAN' UP, OL' MAN!!!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A JINGLE FOR ST. JAMES'S.
+
+ (_By a Musical Enthusiast._)
+
+ THE Monday Pops! The Monday Pops!
+ Whoe'er admires what some call "Ops;"
+ Should go, and lick his mental chops,
+ While feasting at the Monday Pops.
+
+ The Monday Pops! The Monday Pops!
+ To me their music far o'er-tops,
+ The jingling polkas and galops,
+ On cracked pianos played at hops.
+
+ Nor almond rock, nor lemon-drops,
+ Nor sugar-plums, nor lollipops,
+ With which small children cram their crops,
+ Are sweeter than the Monday Pops.
+
+ The Monday Pops! The Monday Pops!
+ Delight of fogies and of fops!
+ The music that all other wops,
+ Is given at the Monday Pops.
+
+ Their fame all rivals far o'er-tops:
+ You see their programmes at the shops;
+ And here the bard exhausted stops,
+ His rhymings on the Monday Pops.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ TRUE BILL?
+
+MUCH ingenuity has been expended in trying to prove that SHAKSPEARE was
+a lawyer, and, amongst other passages in his writings, the two first
+lines of the Sonnet which commences--
+
+ "When to the sessions of sweet silent thought
+ I summon up remembrance of things past,"
+
+may be thought to indicate that he possessed legal acquirements. Has it,
+however, occurred to the editors and commentators, that these lines are
+capable of another interpretation, and may be considered to add a new
+item to our scanty knowledge of SHAKSPEARE'S personal history, if we
+take the more probable view, that when he penned them he had in his
+mind's eye those familiar Tribunals--the Quarter Sessions--to which, it
+may be whilst residing in the Metropolis, but most undoubtedly after his
+retirement to Stratford, he would be summoned in the capacity of Grand
+Juryman?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SOUP AND SERMON.
+
+THE _Morning Post_ records an interesting case of--
+
+ "SUPPER TO CONVICTED FELONS.--On Tuesday evening a supper was
+ given to one hundred and fifty convicted felons by NED WRIGHT,
+ the well-known converted burglar, at the Mission Hall, Hales
+ Street, High Street, Deptford. The candidates for tickets of
+ admission were compelled to attend the night before the supper
+ and give an account of themselves to prove that they really were
+ convicted felons, and by the sharp and close questioning of MR.
+ WRIGHT, about fifty were refused tickets as impostors."
+
+The fifty impostors who were fain to palm themselves off as convicts for
+the sake of a supper, must have been poor knaves indeed. These
+supernumeraries, for whom there was no seat at the table of Society,
+constitute a spectacle on the stage of life which it may be painful to
+some people and pleasant to others to contemplate from the dress circle.
+It is too probable that this Capital contains very many more of these
+Esaus, as they might be called if they had anything of a character so
+valuable as a birthright to dispose of on ESAU'S terms, with the small
+extras undermentioned:--
+
+ "The recipients of this Charity were a very motley crew, and
+ ranged in years from six up to fifty. They were each served with
+ a quantity of soup and a bag containing bread and a bun, after
+ which MR. WRIGHT addressed them in his own peculiar manner,
+ being listened to with marked attention."
+
+MR. WRIGHT, we may suppose, took care to preach in a "tongue
+understanded of the people" who constituted his hearers, and accordingly
+delivered a considerable portion of his discourse in the language which
+our great-grandfathers called thieves' Latin. A sermon in slang,
+however, would, perhaps, be more curious than edifying. Let us hope that
+MR. WRIGHT'S may possibly have had the effect of converting the guests
+who would once have been his pals from the error of their ways, formerly
+his own. Such, at least, appears to have been his laudable intention:--
+
+ "A large number of ladies and gentlemen interested in such work
+ attended and gave the benefit of their advice and co-operation.
+ In the course of the evening MR. WRIGHT announced his intention
+ of taking under his patronage a number of the boys then present,
+ who might be desirous of earning an honest livelihood, and
+ furnishing them with money and clothes to make a fair start in
+ life."
+
+It would rejoice both ourselves and our benevolent readers to know that
+the acceptance of this offer by a considerable number of MR. WRIGHT'S
+young friends may be the commencement of a career of good living,
+wherein they will very soon attain to better fare than a quantity of
+soup, a bag of bread, and a bun, quite good enough as that is for
+convicted felons, besides being peculiarly suitable as precluding any
+necessity for knives and forks chained to the table.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Lawyers and Lunatics.=
+
+HOW hardly will Judges, for the most part, admit the plea of insanity in
+exculpation from a charge of murder! How readily are they wont to
+entertain it as a reason for setting aside a will! How right they are in
+either instance! Suppose a maniac is hanged as a man of sound mind, his
+execution serves just as well, for the purpose of example, as it would
+if he were. But my Luds would make a mistake on the wrong side by
+misdirecting Jurors to determine insanity to have been sanity in a case
+wherein a lunatic might possibly have misdisposed of property.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Serious Affair.=
+
+A MOST determined act of self-inflicted torture has recently
+caused a considerable sensation in a fashionable quarter of Town.
+A lady, young, lovely, and accomplished, with troops of friends,
+and all that makes life enjoyable at her command, was detected
+deliberately "screwing up" her face!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ EXTRACTS FROM THE DIARY OF THE COMING WOMAN.
+
+[Illustration: T]O the Temple of Untrammelled Thought.
+
+_Sunday, May 10, 1882._ Heard a transcendent oration from Althea Duxmore
+on "Dogmas and Dogmatics." Bi-monthly levy for the expenses of the
+Temple. Stephanotis Hewleigh and I the eleemosynars who collected in the
+new Septentrional Vestibule, where the men are put. Their united
+contributions amounted exactly to half a Victoria! Several dimes in the
+salver. The new Act, limiting the personal expenses of Adult Males, may
+have something to do with this. Shall move in the Saloon for Returns
+showing the working of the Act. Alfred nowhere to be seen in the
+Vestibule; perhaps detained by the children's toilette. In the afternoon
+at the new Museum of Natural History opened this Spring, at Kensington.
+The Galleries crowded. Several of us, including Professors Sara Sabina
+Thewes and Caroline Gostrong, delivered extemporary lectures on the
+animals; the men very attentive. In the evening to St. Paul's; heard the
+new organist, Charlotte Bach Stopmore, Mus. Doc. The Cathedral a blaze
+of splendour with the Tyndaluminospectric light. We Women have yet
+something to learn in physical science.
+
+_Monday, May 11._ Received, by appointment, a deputation from the
+electors of New Marylebone, inviting me to candidate that District at
+the next General Election. Mrs. Admiral Stenterton, and Miss Lydia Boss
+Wolloby, the dominant spokeswomen. Spread out my views on the Husbands'
+Regulation Movement, the Cigar-Tax, the Compulsory Inspection of Men's
+Clubs, and the Repudiation of the National Debt. All satisfactory, and I
+agreed to retire from Jutley. Deputation luncheoned with me. No place
+kept for Alfred, who had to sit at a side-table.
+
+To the Club (the Gynecium), and flashed a long private cryptogram to the
+Chairwoman of my Committee at Jutley. Dined at the Club. After dinner in
+the Fumitory. Took a Cabriole to the Saloon. Driver an extortionist; but
+I knew the exact distance, to the tenth of a kilometre. Saloon debating
+the Juries Exemption (Women) Bill. Spoke, I think, with sensation. The
+venerable Earl of Hughenden came in as I was perorating. Alfred, in the
+Gentlemen's Gallery, in tears. I wore my black velvet and point lace
+pelerine, with the diamond star he gave me after the Jutley election.
+That tiresome, tedious, insufferable Hannah Longbore (how South-West
+Suffolk stands her so long I cannot imagine) prosed on against the Bill,
+and sided with the Men, but we fidgeted her down at last. She had on
+that old crimson satin which has seen three sessions at least! Maiden
+speech from Marian Spray--pretty enough. Forget what Men spoke. Mrs.
+Leader Donne, the lovely (!) and accomplished Member for Ironville,
+closed the debate. Rather too great a parade of learning; positively she
+quoted Lycophron in the original! But we all see through Mrs. Leader's
+schemes--she means the Educational Under-Secretaryship, when Bella
+Falayse goes to the Upper Saloon as a Peeress _jure suo_. Home by
+Twelve. Alfred sitting up for me. What a resource that _Hortus Siccus_
+is to him!
+
+_Tuesday, May 12._--Card from Madge Bassingham, R.A., for her Inaugural
+Praelection, as Pigmentary Professor at the Royal Academy. Could not go,
+as I was engaged on a Committee at the Saloon--Metropolis Extension,
+Brighton Annexation Bill. Dined with Mrs. Abraham Skrooley, M.P. Woman's
+party. The Constantia exquisite. Discussed over our cigarettes the
+arrangements for the approximating Women's Cosmopolitan Congress. Alfred
+and one or two other Men came in the evening.
+
+_Wednesday, May 13._ Not well in the morning. Flashed for Dr. Martha
+Walkingholme. She was detained at the Spleen Hospital, but her partner,
+Harriet Chamomile, came and applied the Magnetic Detonator to my spine
+and the backs of my ears. Instant relief. In the evening at the Biennial
+Banquet of the Indigent Widowers' Pension Fund at Willis's. The Duchess
+of Middlesex in the chair. After dinner the Indigent Widowers circuited
+the tables, and attracted much attention by their neat and respectable
+appearance. I proposed the toast of "The Gentlemen." Alfred responsed,
+and for a wonder did _not_ break down.
+
+_Thursday, May 14._ Gave Cook a lesson on the harp before breakfast.
+Sitting in the Library reading Mill's "Woman Triumphant," when my
+electric alarum rang. Message from Oxford from my youngest sister,
+Bianca, to say that she had that instant been elected Fellow of Carlyle
+College. Three hundred and ten competitors. Tremendous examination,
+lasting three weeks. Bianca's thorough domination of Russian, Japanese,
+political economy, statistics, aerostatics, electrology, hygiene and
+thermapeutics, gave her the victory. Hope some day she will stand for
+the University. For joy I took a half holiday. (Left Alfred quite happy
+with his silkworms.) Gymnastic relaxation at the Palaestra on the
+Expanse at Hampstead. Then by Tube to Dover. Tunnelled over to Paris,
+shopped, and back by the six rapid. Might have stayed later for we could
+not make a Saloon: seven short of the legal Quorum, a hundred--so many
+Members (men, I need hardly say) absent at the Great International
+Croquet Tryst at the Crystal Palace. Passed an hour pleasantly at the
+Diatomaceous Society, of which I have lately been balloted a Fellow.
+
+_Friday, May 15._ Busy all the morning preparing my oration on the "Wise
+Sayings of Wise Women in all Countries and Epochs," for the Congress.
+(Interrupted twice by Alfred, who had got the housekeeping accounts and
+the washing-book into a fearful muddle.) Great meeting at 3'30 in
+Emancipation Hall, to welcome Mrs. Hale Columbia Spragg, the first
+female President of the United States. She has transited the Atlantic to
+attend our Congress, but can only be present at this evening's
+Inauguratory, as she must be in New York again before sundown to-morrow.
+Went to the Saloon, but it immediately adjourned, on the motion of Mr.
+Theodore Stuke, to enable the Lady Members to festinate to the Congress.
+Immense success. Fifteen hundred Delegates from every country in the
+world processed down the Hall, and then arranged themselves by
+Continents on the gilded dais. Twenty-five thousand women computed to be
+present in the Spectatorium. Our distinguished champion and unflinching
+Hegemon, Amelia Smackles, assumed the presidential throne. Incessant
+coruscations of enthusiasm, which culminated when a black sister moved
+the fourteenth resolution, demanding the total, immediate, and
+unconditional transfer of all menial labour from Woman to Man. Did not
+get home till 1 p.m. Left my key behind me, so obliged to rouse up
+Alfred, who was in bed, in great distress at the loss of one of his
+canaries, and had forgotten to order my stout. Vexatious!
+
+_Saturday, May 16._ Dejeuned at the Constellation Hotel with dear
+Amelia, to meet Mrs. President Spragg, Chief Justice Roberta Cokestone
+(from Liberia), the Lady Warden of the Cinque Ports, the Lady Mayoress,
+the Mistress of the Mint, and other forward Members of the Congress. The
+President left us at noon. She would balloon over to New York in five
+hours and a half. Quiet dinner at Richmond in the evening. Only Amelia,
+two of the elder Sisters of the Trinity House, and the Delegates from
+Germany, Turkey, Greece, and China. Bianca joined us unexpectedly from
+Oxford, and introduced her bosom friend, the Professor of Anatomy,
+Henrietta Stott Trawsell. Delightful promenade by the river before
+dinner. Met Alfred fishing for gudgeon.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ MORE EDUCATION-FIGHT.
+
+PUNCH shudders to see the Metric question raised again. Are we not in
+the thick of an Educational War already? Will our contemporaries abstain
+from putting new reasons for quarrel into the heads of fanatics. We
+shall certainly have the Decimal business taken up by Denominationalists
+and by Secularists. Ten fingers point out that the natural law is one of
+decimals. Also, there are ten commandments for the theologian. On the
+other hand, there are twelve signs of the Zodiac: this for nature; and
+twelve Apostles: this for theology. O, please let the matter alone, and
+let the little boys and girls be taught anyhow, so that they are taught
+at all.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ CHURCH DIS-ESTABLISHMENT.
+
+[Illustration: T]ERMINAL PUNCH,
+
+Five more London churches are to be immediately destroyed. Down with
+them! First down with St. Mildred's, in the Poultry. It was built by SIR
+CHRISTOPHER WREN, and somewhere about it rest the remains of THOMAS
+TUSSER, who wrote the "Five Hundred Points of Good Husbandry." Sweep it
+away, and then batter down St. Dionis Backchurch, also built by SIR
+CHRISTOPHER. There are monuments in it to the great benefactor to the
+Bodleian Library, and to the founder of the Saxon Lectureship in St.
+John's College, Oxford. Who cares? St. James's, Aldgate, is to be
+demolished: 'tis enough that Hebrews chiefly abide around that fane, and
+need it not. Out with St. Martin of Outwich; it hath stood less than a
+hundred years, and though it was consecrated by BISHOP PORTEUS, and
+holdeth fine old monuments, conserved through three centuries, away with
+it! Lastly (for the present) turn this pictured clown's pickaxe upon St.
+Anthony's, or St. Antholin's, Sise Lane. That, too, was the work of the
+Architect of St. Paul's, and sundry be the memories which our old
+dramatists and our WALTER SCOTT have hung on "St. Anthing's." It is very
+meet and right that the old City churches should all go, few persons now
+abiding near them on Sunday, and religion being a thing for Sunday. SIR
+CHRISTOPHER'S Cathedral, as it is also a Mausoleum, will probably be
+spared until some railway or tramway shall want the site.
+
+ Yours, delighted,
+ EROSTRATUS VANDAL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ ORGANS OF OFFENCE.
+
+ON Thursday last week a modification of the American Gatling Gun, called
+the "British Mitrailleuse," was tried for the first time at Woolwich.
+The following is a description of this benevolent machine:--
+
+ "It consists of ten barrels hooped together and revolving in the
+ centre, and fitted into a carriage like that of an ordinary
+ field-gun, which, at a short distance, it greatly resembles. The
+ barrels and cartridges are similar to those of the Henry-Martini
+ rifle--in diameter .45 in.; the cartridge-cases being of brass,
+ and bottle-necked."
+
+Tremendous, however, as may be the execution which this weapon is
+capable of doing among a flock of soldiers, authorities are of opinion
+that, "like small arms generally, it must give way to rifled ordnance."
+On its trial:--
+
+ "Indeed, most of the Royal Artillery Officers present seemed to
+ think that the machine-gun can never stand against Artillery,
+ even if its delicate machinery did not become disarranged by
+ mere musket-shot."
+
+So that a comparison is suggested to those who read, that when the
+"British Mitrailleuse" is made ready and placed in position--
+
+ "A handle like that of a street-organ, and fixed at the side of
+ the trail, is then turned at any degree of rapidity required,
+ and the barrels load and fire until the supply of cartridges is
+ exhausted, which takes about five minutes under favourable
+ conditions."
+
+One is led to compare the British Mitrailleuse with the Italian Grinding
+Organ, and to question if the latter be not, of the two, the more
+offensive instrument.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Corrigendum.=
+
+THE antiquity of the Athanasian Creed being now shown to be a myth, the
+date being that of CHARLEMAGNE, would it not be well, before the Prayer
+Book is finally revised, that the correction should be made? For it will
+take many a year to abolish the belief that St. Athanasius drew up the
+document, especially as divers theologians think nothing of some four
+hundred and fifty years of what they imagine to have been the Dark Ages.
+"Commonly (but absurdly) called the Creed of St. Athanasius" is a line
+that, in a century or so, might have an effect upon the less
+un-intelligent.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A PROFESSION'S UNION.
+
+AT Bas-Unterwald, according to the _Swiss Times_:--
+
+ "Strikes are becoming the fashion in the higher circles of
+ society. The physicians of this peaceful Arcadia have united and
+ struck work, demanding an increase in their fees. The Laudrath,
+ however, refuses to entertain their claims, and advises a strike
+ of the patients as the best answer to the physicians' demands."
+
+There was a time when a strike of patients anywhere would have been
+attended with a very great decrease of the rate of mortality. There is
+reason to suppose that in the present improved condition of medical
+science such would not be the case. The strikers, struck with fever, or
+other grave illness, would probably be struck down in rather alarming
+numbers.
+
+What justification of a medical strike there may be in Switzerland hath
+not appeared, but in this country there is, in some quarters, not a
+little. The ridiculously low wages, not to say salary, begrudged, not to
+say granted, to Medical Officers by many Poor-Law Unions would amply
+warrant the establishment of a Professional Union corresponding to a
+Trades' Union, and consisting of sons of AESCULAPIUS. The
+medico-chirurgical Unionists could manage a strike well enough without
+committing any outrage on the Non-Unionists, or Knobsticks. There would
+be no need for the Doctors on strike to picket, and waylay, and beat the
+others on their road to the Workhouse, or across country to the
+recipient of out-door relief; and they could do without rattening them
+and filching away their physic, stethoscopes, and surgical instruments.
+In dealing with unworthy members of an honourable Profession, capable of
+underselling their brother-chips, the practitioners forming the Union
+would require to have recourse to no proceedings associated with
+Sheffield; they would find it quite sufficient to send outsiders and
+recusants of co-operation in a strike to Coventry.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ OMINOUS INDEED!
+
+ALL England, that reads the newspapers, will have felt the shock of a
+truly--
+
+ "TERRIFIC EXPLOSION--Yesterday evening an explosion of a
+ frightful character occurred at GLADSTONE'S Cartridge Factory,
+ Greenwich Marshes, by which a large number of girls have been
+ seriously injured."
+
+Considering for what Constituency the PREMIER is Member of Parliament,
+the majority of people cannot but be, momentarily at least, startled and
+taken aback by the information in the first place that GLADSTONE has a
+Cartridge Factory in Greenwich Marshes, and, secondly, that it has been
+the scene of a terrific explosion. Nor certainly are they likely to be
+re-assured by the further intelligence that:--
+
+ "A few weeks ago the Government seized 365 cases of ball
+ cartridge, each containing 20 lb. weight, which had been
+ manufactured by MR. GLADSTONE for the French Government during
+ the late war."
+
+The obvious suggestion conveyed by this statement is, that there has
+occurred not only a terrific explosion in the borough of Greenwich, but
+also a not less alarming blow-up in the Cabinet. _Absit omen!_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ ELEGANT ADVERTISING.
+
+IF you like, read this advertisement from the _Christian World_:--
+
+ CO-PARTNER WANTED, by a highly respectable Man, aged 30,
+ member of Spurgeon's. A gentlemanly person required, a believer
+ with about L50, and who can travel.--Address, &c.
+
+Hm! In the first place a gentlemanly person would not wish to hear his
+partner talk in that exceedingly curt way of their minister and his
+flock. "Member of Spurgeon's." "One who regularly attends the
+ministrations of the Reverend C. H. SPURGEON, B.M." would be more
+gentlemanly language. Nextly, "a believer with about L50" reads rather
+Mammonish. It suggests that a sceptic with about L75, or a positivist
+with about L100, would not be unacceptable. Thirdly, "who can travel."
+Who _can't_ travel with about L50? MR. COOK will give you a
+return-ticket for the Pyramid for about that. Fourthly, the "and" is
+abominable English. We wish our esteemed friend the _Christian World_
+would edit its advertisements. We really can't be always doing it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Dignity for Doctors.=
+
+IT is suggested that a fitting honour to be conferred on meritorious
+Physicians and Surgeons would be that of the Order of the Bath. Nothing
+could be more suitable; but should the Bath be the Hot-Bath or the Cold?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: GENEROSITY.
+
+_Noble Lord_ (_whose Rifle has brought to a scarcely untimely end a very
+consumptive-looking Fallow Deer_). "TUT--T, T, T, T, TUT! O, I SAY,
+STUBBS!--(_to his Keeper_)--YOU SHOULDN'T HAVE LET ME KILL SUCH A POOR,
+LITTLE, SICKLY, SCRAGGY THING AS THIS, YOU KNOW! IT POSITIVELY ISN'T FIT
+FOR HUMAN FOOD! AH! LOOK HERE, NOW! I'LL TELL YOU WHAT. YOU AND MCFARLIN
+MAY HAVE THIS BUCK BETWEEN YOU!!!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A SEAT ON A SAFETY-VALVE.
+
+
+ AN Income-tax partial see THIERS oppose,
+ O WILLIAM the Earnest, O ROBERT the True!
+ A soul above fear of the Rabble he shows;
+ Is that to be said, British Statesmen, of you?
+
+ Or is it that you, whom mob-courtship doth move
+ With tribute from all due to load a part's purse.
+ Albeit your Honours both see and approve
+ The better arrangements, do follow the worse?
+
+ How bad are the worse, which poor fleeced Britons rue,
+ You have often confessed; but decline to advance
+ On that high path which upright financiers pursue;
+ They manage these matters much better in France.
+
+ For justice it is which disposes them there,
+ Political craft in this mighty free land,
+ Whose Rulers perpend not what impost were fair,
+ But what imposition tax-payers will stand.
+
+ It was not enough upon shoulders select
+ To pile your whole Budget; on folk thus oppressed
+ (As housebreakers use, the strong-box to detect)
+ The Screw has been put; they are over-assessed.
+
+ You fancy your Engine is working so well
+ By way of a Steam-Rack, 'twill yet more extort,
+ And bear any pressure your force can compel;
+ You sit on the safety-valve, therefore, in short.
+
+ O WILLIAM the Daring! O ROBERT the Rash!
+ Though deaf to remonstrance, to caution give ear,
+ Ere high-pressure boiler burst up with a crash,
+ And blow aloft Stoker and hoist Engineer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SAD ALTERATION.
+
+THE Dramatist has led us to think that "Music hath charms to soothe the
+savage breast," but the "Heavenly Maid" is not so "young" as she was
+when CONGREVE wrote, and increasing years seem to have changed her mood
+and spoiled her temper. What other conclusion can we come to, when we
+find in an article on "Music" in one of the newspapers, in some comments
+on the performance of a young lady on the piano at a Monday Popular
+Concert, the disquieting statement that she "left her mark as usual on
+the audience, the music, and the piano"? It is some little relief to
+find the writer adding that "this last was more than once punished
+severely;" as it is a fair inference to draw, that whatever the
+sufferings of the piano may have been, the music, and, which is far more
+important, the audience, escaped with only one assault.
+
+The Managers of the Monday Concerts should consider, before it is too
+late, whether they are not endangering the well-deserved popularity of
+their agreeable entertainments, by allowing performances which would
+seem to have rather too striking an effect upon the hearers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Nocens Absolvitur.=
+
+THE _South London News_ makes rather an unkind suggestion. Thieves enter
+tradesmen's shops, under pretence of selling something. The _News_
+thinks that people who would be exempt from such visits should "keep
+watch, and, on opportunity, hand the victims over to the police." This
+may be fair in South London, wherever that is, but in Fleet Street we do
+not dispense that kind of justice.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A HINT TO L. AND B. RAILWAY.
+
+THE Real "Nine Hours' Movement"--to Brighton and back for Half-a-Crown.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: TOO MUCH PRESSURE.
+
+BOB THE STOKER. "LOR' BLESS YOU, M'NSEER! THAT'S THE WAY _WE_ 'RAISE THE
+WIND;'--SIMPLEST THING IN THE WORLD!"
+
+M. THIERS. "HE, MON AMI! PRENEZ GARDE! HE SHALL 'BLOW UP' ONE DAY!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ FRESH. NOT TIGHT.
+
+[Illustration: T]HERE is, or was, in this town a Public-house, wherein
+the administration of justice was, and may still be, wont to be nightly
+burlesqued by certain buffoons under the name of a Judge and Jury Club.
+Let us hope that this was the only Court of Law which could possibly
+have been in the eye of the ATTORNEY-GENERAL when, in the course of his
+concise oration delivered on behalf of the Infant against the Claimant,
+he spoke, with reference to the latter, as follows:--
+
+ "Besides, such is the pleasantry--I would not say the profit--of
+ our English law, that if he fails in this case he may go at it
+ again with fresh witnesses, let us hope with fresh
+ counsel--(_laughter_)--at least with a fresh jury--I say nothing
+ of a fresh judge. (_Continued laughter._)"
+
+The members of the Temperance League, and the United Kingdom Alliance
+must surely have been shocked, as many as those who read and duly
+considered the foregoing words, by the idea which they suggest of a
+generally Fresh Court of Common Pleas. This horrid image was enough to
+have unfixed their hair and made their excited hearts knock at their
+ribs beyond the use of nature. Sobriety is so specially characteristic
+of the Ermine that "sober as a Judge" is an adage; not, indeed, because
+Judges are supposed not to drink, but to be able to drink any quantity.
+Irreproachable with laxity in the discharge of their high functions,
+British Judges are at all times incapable of getting tight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ EVENINGS FROM HOME.
+
+_MR. BARLOW, with MASTERS SANDFORD and MERTON, at the QUEEN'S THEATRE,
+to see "The Last Days of Pompeii."_
+
+_Tommy._ Pray, Sir, what and where was Pompeii?
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ It was, my dear TOMMY, a Roman municipality, full of
+eligible villas, pleasantly situated in the immediate neighbourhood of
+Mount Vesuvius, and within easy reach of the sea. It was "a place to
+spend a happy day," and "there and back" from Naples formed one of the
+chief excursions, at a very moderate rate, for the middle classes of
+Neapolis.
+
+They had just commenced this instructive and entertaining conversation,
+when the curtain rising discovered to their eager eyes as artistic and
+effective a scene (with the exception of stationary painted groups,
+whose fixed attitude strangely contrasted with the movement of the
+actors in front of them) as it had hitherto been their lot to behold.
+
+As the play went on, HARRY requested permission of MR. BARLOW to ask a
+question.
+
+_Harry._ Did you not tell us, Sir, that the "e" in Pompeii was long?
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ Indeed, HARRY, I did.
+
+_Harry._ And did you not also tell us that one of the purposes of a
+theatrical exhibition, such as this is, is the advancement of education
+among all sorts and conditions of people?
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ You are again correct, and truly I begin to perceive the
+drift of your remark. Therefore let me tell you that had any Eton boy
+said Pomp[ue]ii, instead of Pomp[=e]ii, he would speedily have been
+taught the force of an _argumentum_ addressed, as was one of HORACE'S
+Odes, _ad puerum_.
+
+_Harry._ Surely too, Sir, a diphthong is long; so that the name
+_Apoecides_ should not be rendered Appy-cides, as if the name were an
+unaspirated pronunciation of _H_appy Cides.
+
+To this MR. BARLOW replied that doubtless these honest folks had cogent
+reasons for their mode of pronunciation, with which he advised HARRY to
+become acquainted, before taking upon himself to pronounce an
+unmitigated condemnation of them.
+
+"You will now perceive, TOMMY," said MR. BARLOW, during the performance
+of the Third Scene of the First Act, "that the crafty _Arbaces_ is
+anxious to entice the sentimental young gentleman, _Appy Cides_, to
+partake of the repast with him."
+
+_Harry._ But, Sir, surely the young man's objection to accept the
+invitation of the Egyptian, must arise from a sense of politeness on his
+part, which, as there is nothing edible on the table, I fancy, except
+one plate of fruit, will not permit him to deprive _Arbaces_ of even a
+portion of a dessert that has, evidently, been only ordered for one.
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ Indeed, HARRY, I think you are right, and had _Arbaces_
+thought of it, I am certain he would willingly have extended his
+hospitality to a bag of nuts or some cakes of gingerbread. But you must
+remember that _Appy Cides_, or, as he seems to me, _Un-'appy Cides_, is
+only the pupil of _Arbaces_, and does not appear at his tutor's table
+until dessert-time.
+
+_Tommy._ If I were there I would go and eat everything, and then I would
+dance with one of the young ladies.
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ I am sorry, TOMMY, that you are of that mind; and at
+another time--for I perceive that the good people in the pit, by their
+repeated cries of hush, and by the direction of their attention towards
+us, wish rather to hear the dialogue on the stage than my discourse,
+which is, after all, of a personal and private character--at another
+time, I was about to say, I will read to you an instructive story on
+greediness, entitled _Chares and the Convulsive Tailor_.
+
+TOMMY looked on at the piece very sulkily for some time, being, indeed,
+intent upon the antique cups and goblets and upon the plate of luscious
+fruit which he had already noticed. But on seeing that neither _Arbaces_
+nor the sentimental young gentleman partook of anything that was
+provided for them, he began to have high opinion of their breeding, and
+before the scene was finished was heartily sorry for his error, and
+applauded all he saw and heard with increasing rapture and delight.
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ You may, indeed, evince your gratitude to these worthy
+people, since they have done all in their power to entertain and
+instruct us. And, indeed, where all is done so vastly well, I know not
+what to commend most, whether the sonorous voice and dignified
+scoundrelism of that twice-crushed Priest of Isis, the iniquitous and
+unprincipled _Arbaces_, played by the remarkably upright and
+conscientious actor, MR. RYDER; or whether the gentle pleadings of the
+blind _Nydia_--MISS HODSON is the young lady's name, my dear TOMMY, and
+I have no doubt she saw and appreciated your boyish enthusiasm--or the
+bearing of MR. RIGNOLD throughout a remarkably difficult and most trying
+part. But, HARRY, what is your opinion?
+
+_Harry._ Why, Sir, I am very little judge of these matters, but I
+protest that I feel mightily indebted to those clever gentlemen, MASTERS
+GORDON and HARFORD (I had well-nigh slipt into the error of saying
+MASTERS MERTON and SANDFORD) for the scenery which has so admirably
+served to illustrate this play. I am sorry that _Appy Cides_ was killed,
+as, having become a Christian, there would, I am sure, have been every
+opportunity open to him as an estimable young curate of evangelical
+proclivities.
+
+_Tommy_ (_during the cleverly arranged Amphitheatre Scene, Act IV._) I
+am glad to see, Sir, that in this scene where we have so much to admire,
+the tumblers----
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ These, my dear TOMMY, represent the gladiators. And you
+must remember that on the stage, where every combat has to be carefully
+arranged both as to the number and fashion of the blows given and
+received, and as to who shall be, and who shall not be the conqueror,
+the contest of two determined champions, or rather of two champions
+whose course has been previously determined, cannot fail to be of a most
+thrilling and exciting character.
+
+_Tommy._ O, Sir! they have given orders to let the Lion loose. O, Sir!
+the Lion is coming!
+
+_Harry._ I do not believe that all these fine gentlemen and ladies would
+remain so still if there were, indeed, a Lion approaching.
+
+_Mr. Barlow._ The Lion, my dear TOMMY, is a native of both India and
+Africa. When they are hungry, they kill every animal they meet, and will
+even devour little boys----
+
+Here poor TOMMY'S trepidation was increased to such an extent that he
+would have quitted his seat and the theatre, but for the sudden entry of
+the traitor _Calenus_, whose charge of murder brought against his
+master, the wily _Arbaces_, instantly distracted everyone's thoughts
+from the coming of the expected monster.
+
+Both MR. BARLOW and HARRY were loud in their praises of the dramatist
+who had contrived to arouse in the breasts of the spectators such
+emotions of fear, by the absence of the Lion, as could scarcely have
+been equalled by his formidable presence.
+
+"Indeed," said MR. BARLOW, "on reflection, I am led to consider the
+chiefest part in this piece to be the Lion's share in it. He is spoken
+of at the commencement of the play, he is often alluded to throughout,
+and the bare mention of his name sensibly electrifies the spectators on
+and off the stage. From the very first we are incited to expect his
+appearance. He has not to roar to make himself dreaded. He has not even
+to be present, either on or off, the scene.
+
+_Harry._ This device is, in my humble judgement, worthy of high
+commendation in the play-wright, who has thus evinced his reverence for
+the words of the immortal WILLIAM, and whose plan is in cordial
+agreement with _Bottom's_ opinion on this very matter, which, my dear
+TOMMY, as you are as yet unacquainted with the works of SHAKSPEARE, I
+will repeat to you. "_Masters_," says _Bottom_, "_You ought to consider
+with yourselves, to bring in a lion among ladies is a most dreadful
+thing, for there is not a more fearful wild fowl than your lion,
+living_."
+
+TOMMY was so forcibly struck by this adroit application of a famous
+passage from the plays of SHAKSPEARE, that he determined, on the first
+opportunity to read all these dramas through from beginning to end. And
+having already set himself to the study of astronomy and mechanics,
+solely in order to make himself as proficient in the art of applicable
+illustrations as was his friend HARRY MERTON, TOMMY now found that he
+had at least one hour of the day fully occupied.
+
+On their return from the theatre MR. BARLOW, ever anxious for the
+improvement of both his young friends, commenced reading to them the
+story of _The Magistrate and the Elephant_; but, seeing that both his
+young friends were fast asleep in their chairs, he lit his
+chamber-candle and retired for the night.
+
+On entering his room somewhat suddenly, a pair of boots, artfully placed
+so as to rest on the door, which had been standing ajar, descended on
+his head; and the next instant, on his taking one step forward, he came
+in contact with a stout string, so skilfully fastened, as not only to
+throw him sharply on the floor, but, being cunningly connected with the
+fire-irons and the washing-stand, it brought down these articles also
+with a great crash and much confusion. Before he could arise from his
+painful position, TOMMY and HARRY had rushed up-stairs to render to
+their revered preceptor what assistance was in their power. Being
+questioned as to the hand they had had in this strange affair, MASTER
+TOMMY, with becoming modesty, acknowledged that it was he who had
+devised the scheme. "And," said he, "I protest I think it is no
+inadequate representation of what must have been the consequence in
+several houses during the Eruption of Mount Vesuvius in the _Last Days
+of Pompeii_."
+
+So saying, both the boys withdrew themselves rapidly from their beloved
+tutor's apartment, and locked themselves into their own rooms. Soon
+after this, they were all in a sound slumber, which lasted until a late
+hour on the following morning.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A QUESTION FOR THE SHIRES.
+
+"NOW, DEAR, WHICH DO YOU PREFER FOR THE 'TOPS'?--THE DEEPER SHADE, OR
+VERY PALEST PINK?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ VINDICTIVE TEUTONS.
+
+THERE is a good deal of talk in France about revenge to be taken one of
+these days upon the Germans for having repelled and beaten their
+invaders. In the meanwhile, according to the _Post_, those barbarous
+Germans are trying to revenge themselves, in their heavy way, on the
+enemies who have been twitting them with stealing clocks and watches, by
+an--
+
+ "IMPORTANT RESTORATION OF SPECIE.--_The Courier de Meurthe et
+ Moselle_ announces that the six millions of francs which had
+ fallen into the hands of the German troops after the
+ capitulation of Strasburg, and belonging to the Bank of France,
+ are about to be restored to that establishment through its
+ branch bank at Nancy."
+
+This, of course, is a practical sarcasm at the expense of a nation
+represented by some of its orators and statesmen as having been
+aggrieved by being forced to restore pictures and works of Art which the
+First NAPOLEON and his gangs in uniform had pillaged from their
+neighbours. It is obviously meant to suggest an odious comparison
+between those who make restitution of even lawful plunder in hard cash,
+and those others who grumble because of having been compelled to replace
+Art-treasures actually stolen, and that in some cases from friends. This
+is clumsy German satire to be sure, but it tumbles down pretty heavily
+for all that on the heads of them that shouted "A Berlin!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Sporting News.=
+
+THE lovers of manly British sports will be glad to know that there is a
+chance of seeing another good fight, or so, before the law is altered. A
+rattling mill is to come off in the north of the West Riding. POWELL,
+the well-known Cambridge Slogger, is matched against HOLDEN, of the
+above parts, who has not fought in public, but is known in the Chapel
+districts as a determined cove. As this will be nearly the last of the
+real old English fights, much interest is excited. The white chokers are
+with POWELL, and HOLDEN is backed by the humbler humboxes. Both men will
+do all they know, and a clinking good contest may be expected.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "CONSERVATION OF TISSUE."
+
+_Uncle._ "WELL, TOMMY, YOU SEE I'M BACK; ARE YOU READY? WHAT HAVE I TO
+PAY FOR, MISS?"
+
+_Miss._ "THREE BUNS, FOUR SPONGE CAKES, TWO SANDWICHES, ONE JELLY, FIVE
+TARTS, AND--"
+
+_Uncle._ "GOOD GRACIOUS, BOY! ARE YOU NOT ILL?"
+
+_Tommy._ "NO, UNCLE; BUT I'M THIRSTY."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =NEGATIVE KNOWLEDGE.=
+
+WE never knew a cabman with an eyeglass, or a chimneysweep with
+spectacles.
+
+We never knew a lady buy a bargain at a shop sale, and not afterwards
+regret it.
+
+We never knew a man propose the toast of the evening, without his
+wishing that it had not been placed in abler hands.
+
+We never knew a waiter in a hurry, at a chop-house, who did not say that
+he was "Coming, Sir!" when really he was going.
+
+We never lost a game to a professional at billiards, without hearing him
+assign his triumph chiefly to his flukes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ TO THE STATE COACHMAN.
+
+ (_Suggested by a Passage in the new Q. R._)
+
+ "CANNING did not know that tadpoles
+ Turn to frogs." Each fool explodes:
+ But that Queller of the Yelpers
+ Knew that patriots turn to toads.
+
+ GLADSTONE goes in for omniscience;
+ Does the team obey the bit
+ As when PAM'S whip stung with banter,
+ Or when CANNING'S cut with wit?
+
+ WILLIAM! _Punch_, who likes you, counsels--
+ Mix some humour with your zeal,
+ Making humbugs think is hopeless:
+ Be content to make them _feel_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =No Misnomer.=
+
+A CORRESPONDENT of the _Times_, whose note is headed "Civil Service
+Grammar," writes a remonstrance because he has seen a Government Cart
+going about inscribed "Her Majesty's Stationary Office." He is evidently
+under a misconception as to what office is meant, for what man who
+reflects on the progress of the new Law Courts, the new National
+Gallery, the new Natural History Museum, the Wellington Monument, &c.,
+can doubt for a moment that "Her Majesty's Stationary Office" is the
+Office of Works and Public buildings?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ IN ANGELAE HONOREM.
+
+ "A Meeting was held in the Hall of Columbia Market, on Monday
+ evening, SIR THOMAS DAKIN in the Chair, to consider what
+ testimonial of public respect and gratitude should be offered to
+ BARONESS BURDETT COUTTS."--_Daily News._
+
+SWEET names there are that carry sweet natures in their sound;
+Whose ring, like hallowed bells of old, seems to shed blessing round:
+Such a name of good omen, FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE, is thine;
+And hers, our ANGELA'S, for all in want and woe that pine.
+
+The QUEEN has made her noble; but ere that rank was given,
+She had donned robe and coronet of the peerage made in Heaven:
+Baptised in purer honour than from earthly fountain flows,
+Raised to a prouder Upper House than our proud island knows.
+
+The loftiest of that peerage are of lowliest mood and will;
+And this their proudest lordship, Love's service to fulfil:
+Chief Stewards and High Almoners of the goods Heaven bestows--
+'Tis theirs to see that Charity in Wisdom's channels flows.
+
+For e'en that stream, ill-guided, can poison goodly ground--
+For health, sow fever broadcast, for blessing, blight, around:
+'Tis not enough its waters to loose with lib'ral mind;
+If Reason lends not eyes to Love, Love strays--for he is blind.
+
+This _she_ has known, our ANGELA, for whom men ask, e'en now,
+"Fit tribute of our gratitude where shall we pay, and how?"
+If blessings clothed in substance, prayers made palpable, could be,
+When had Kaiser, King, or Conqueror, such monument as she?
+
+But what can gold, or silver, or bronze, or marble, pay
+Of the unsummed debt of gratitude owed her this many a day?
+What record, parchment-blazoned, closed in golden casket rare,
+Can with her love, in England's heart, for preciousness compare?
+
+If we needs must find her symbol, then carve and set on high
+A heavy-laden camel going through the needle's eye;
+Gold-burdened, by a gentle yet firm hand wisely driven,--
+Our ANGELA'S, that on it rides, riches and all, to Heaven!
+
+Or if a painted record be by the occasion claimed,
+Paint up Bethesda's Pool, and round, the sick, the halt, and maimed,
+Waiting until our ANGELA through Earth's afflicted go
+To stir wealth's healing waters, that await her hand to flow.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PIG-AND-BARGAIN-DRIVING.
+
+THE _Eastern Morning News_--what a pretty name--why not the
+_Dawn_?--hath a prosaic item: this:--
+
+ WANTED, a GROOM and Coachman, and to assist the Gardener. Wages,
+ 18s. per week to commence with, to be advanced 1s. per year for
+ every year he remains. Must understand horses and pigs, and be
+ able to drive one, or a pair.
+
+We do not think the wages too high. A celebrated Oxford Don, who could
+make Greek verses as fast as mill-wheels strike, yet who was not so
+ready with ordinary English, beheld, from the top of a coach, a drover
+striving to guide some pigs along the road. Wishing to be
+conversational, the Don observed to his neighbour, "A difficult Animal
+to drive is a Pig--one man--a good many--very." Here, observe, were the
+materials for a pleasing remark, but they needed arrangement. He was
+right, however. Pigs are difficult to drive, and the Yorkshire
+advertiser who wants a man able to drive one pig, or a pair, is right in
+offering him the above noble rise in wage. Correspondents will abstain
+from vulgar suggestions about a pig and a "hog"--we don't understand
+them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "HERE BE TRUTHS."
+
+_Mistress._ "BRING SOME MORE BREAD, MARTHA?"
+_Maid._ "THERE'S NANE, MEM!"
+_Mistress._ "O, NONSENSE! I SAW A LOAF IN THE PANTRY."
+_Maid._ "DID YE, MEM? I'M THINKING IT'S TIME YE WERE GETTING SPECS,
+ THEN, FOR IT'S A CHEESE!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "YOUR BONNET TO ITS RIGHT USE."
+
+ "LET me use my _biretta_,"
+ Says CARDINAL CULLEN,
+ "To fan Ireland's school-lamp,
+ That burns smoky and sullen."
+
+ "No," says England, "your motives
+ 'Twere cruel to doubt,--
+ But what if your rev'rence
+ Should put the lamp out?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LONDON GOLD DIGGINGS.
+
+DEAR Old England! well may one exclaim, on reading in the _Daily News_ a
+statement such as this:--
+
+ "VALUE OF LAND IN LOMBARD STREET.--A piece of land adjoining the
+ Lombard Exchange, in Lombard Street, has been sold for L9000, or
+ about L19 4s. 6d. per foot super."
+
+It used to be affirmed that London streets were paved with gold, and, by
+the side of the above, the story hardly seems beyond one's power of
+credulity. Land worth nineteen pounds per foot must be wellnigh as good
+as gold to its fortunate possessor, and the man who owned an acre of it
+would hardly need to emigrate to any other diggings. Assuredly, to any
+_Fortunatus_ who owns much land in Lombard Street, London may be looked
+on as the true Tom Tiddler's Ground.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =The New Judge.=
+
+_Mr. Punch_ hears that LORD CHIEF JUSTICE COCKBURN (one of our most
+accomplished Latin writers) intimated to the CHANCELLOR that the
+appointment of the new Judge for the Queen's Bench was a _Sine Quainon_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =WANTED--SIMPLICITY.=
+
+MR. PUNCH,
+
+Is the English language a thing to be ashamed of? I put the question,
+because in a weekly literary journal, printed and published in London in
+the mother tongue, I have just read, not without some rubbing of eyes
+and much mental bewilderment, the following singular announcement:--
+
+ "INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS.--The EMPEROR OF BRESIL was
+ elected an Honorary Member."
+
+I have never heard that Brazil has become a French possession, and I am
+positive that the Institution of Civil Engineers is not in Paris, but in
+Great George Street, Westminster. Why, then, Bresil? Crack this
+Brazil-nut for
+
+ Yours, unaffectedly,
+ JNO. SMITH.
+
+P.S.--Can fish talk? I ask this second question, after seeing that
+another periodical publication contains an article with the heading,
+"Perch Prattle."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =We Can't See It.=
+
+OF all the odd kinds of consolation under affliction, the last
+suggestion seems to _Mr. Punch_ the oddest. We are mourning the demise
+of the no-horned Infant Hippopotamus in the Regent's Park, and we are
+told to be cheerful, for a two-horned Infant Rhinoceros has gone to
+Madrid. The doctrine of compensations was never pushed much further,
+even in a Scotch sermon.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Platonic Politics.=
+
+Plato gives the best reason why Woman's Rights should be conceded, and
+Women be admitted to power. Listen, Dears, "Rulers should have Personal
+Beauty." Kiss ums own old _Punch_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Printed by Joseph Smith, of No. 24, Holford square, in the
+ Parish of St. James, Clerkenwell, in the County of Middlesex, at
+ the Printing Offices of Messrs. Bradbury, Evans, & Co., Lombard
+ Street, in the Precinct of Whitefriars, in the City of London,
+ and Published by him at No. 65, Fleet Street, in the Parish of
+ St. Bride, City of London.--SATURDAY, January 27, 1872.=
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes
+
+Passages in italics were indicated by _underscores_.
+
+Passages in bold were indicated by =equal signs=.
+
+Small caps were replaced with ALL CAPS.
+
+Throughout the document, the oe ligature was replaced with "oe".
+
+Throughout the dialogues, there were words used to mimic accents of the
+speakers. Those words were retained as-is.
+
+Some Illustrations were graphic capital letters. In those illustrations,
+the capital letter was included within the illustration tag, e.g.
+[Illustration: T].
+
+The illustrations have been moved so that they do not break up
+paragraphs and so that they are next the text they illustrate. Thus the
+page number of the illustration might not match the page number in the
+List of Illustrations, and the order of illustrations may not be the
+same in the List of Illustrations and in the book.
+
+Errors in punctuations and inconsistent hyphenation were not corrected
+unless otherwise noted below:
+
+On page 39, the latin small letter e with breve is represented by [ue]
+and the latin small letter e with macron is represented by [=e].
+
+On page 39, the paragraph beginning with "Indeed," seems to be missing
+a quotation mark.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol.
+62, Jan 27, 1872, by Various
+
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